ALL THE SAD YOUNG MEN
BY F. SCOTT FITZGERALD
NEW YORK, CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS 1926
CONTENTS
1.THE RICH BOY 2.WINTER DREAMS 3.THE BABY PARTY 4.ABSOLUTION
5.RAGS MARTIN-JONES
AND THE PR-NCE OF W-LES 6.THE ADJUSTER
7.HOT AND COLD BLOOD 8."THE SENSIBLE
THING" 9.GRETCHEN'S FORTY
WINKS
1.THE RICH BOY
Begin with an
individual, and before you know it you find that you have created a type; begin
with a type, and you find that you have created—nothing. That is because we are
all queer fish, queerer behind our faces and voices than we want any one to
know or than we know ourselves. When I hear a man proclaiming himself an
"average, honest, open fellow," I feel pretty sure that he has some
definite and perhaps terrible abnormality which he has agreed to conceal—and
his protestation of being average and honest and open is his way of reminding
himself of his misprision.
There are no types, no
plurals. There is a rich boy, and this is his and not his brothers' story. All
my life I have lived among his brothers but this one has been my friend.
Besides, if I wrote about his brothers I should have to begin by attacking all
the lies that the poor have told about the rich and the rich have told about
themselves—such a wild structure they have erected that when we pick up a book
about the rich, some instinct prepares us for unreality. Even the intelligent
and impassioned reporters of life have made the country of the rich as unreal
as fairy-land.
Let me tell you about
the very rich. They are different from you and me. They possess and enjoy
early, and it does something to them, makes them soft where we are hard, and
cynical where we are trustful, in a way that, unless you were born rich, it is
very difficult to understand. They think, deep in their hearts, that they are
better than we are because we had to discover the compensations and refuges of
life for ourselves. Even when they enter deep into our world or sink below us,
they still think that they are better than we are. They are different. The only
way I can describe young Anson Hunter is to approach him as if he were a
foreigner and cling stubbornly to my point of view. If I accept his for a
moment I am lost—I have nothing to show but a preposterous movie.
II
Anson was the eldest of
six children who would some day divide a fortune of fifteen million dollars,
and he reached the age of reason—is it seven?—at the beginning of the century
when daring young women were already gliding along Fifth Avenue in electric
"mobiles." In those days he and his brother had an English governess
who spoke the language very clearly and crisply and well, so that the two boys
grew to speak as she did—their words and sentences were all crisp and clear and
not run together as ours are. They didn't talk exactly like English children
but acquired an accent that is peculiar to fashionable people in the city of
New York.
In the summer the six
children were moved from the house on 71st Street to a big estate in northern
Connecticut. It was not a fashionable locality—Anson's father wanted to delay
as long as possible his children's knowledge of that side of life. He was a man
somewhat superior to his class, which composed New York society, and to his
period, which was the snobbish and formalized vulgarity of the Gilded Age, and
he wanted his sons to learn habits of concentration and have sound
constitutions and grow up into right-living and successful men. He and his wife
kept an eye on them as well as they were able until the two older boys went
away to school, but in huge establishments this is difficult—it was much
simpler in the series of small and medium-sized houses in which my own youth
was spent—I was never far out of the reach of my mother's voice, of the sense
of her presence, her approval or disapproval.
Anson's first sense of
his superiority came to him when he realized the half-grudging American
deference that was paid to him in the Connecticut village. The parents of the
boys he played with always inquired after his father and mother, and were
vaguely excited when their own children were asked to the Hunters' house. He
accepted this as the natural state of things, and a sort of impatience with all
groups of which he was not the centre—in money, in position, in
authority—remained with him for the rest of his life. He disdained to struggle
with other boys for precedence—he expected it to be given him freely, and when
it wasn't he withdrew into his family. His family was sufficient, for in the
East money is still a I somewhat feudal thing, a clan-forming thing. In the
snobbish West, money separates families to form "sets."
At eighteen, when he
went to New Haven, Anson was tall and thick-set, with a clear complexion and a
healthy color from the ordered life he had led in school. His hair was yellow
and grew in a funny way on his head, his nose was beaked—these two things kept
him from being handsome—but he had a confident charm and a certain brusque
style, and the upper-class men who passed him on the street knew without being
told that he was a rich boy and had gone to one of the best schools.
Nevertheless, his very superiority kept him from being a success in college—the
independence was mistaken for egotism, and the refusal to accept Yale standards
with the proper awe seemed to belittle all those who had. So, long before he
graduated, he began to shift the centre of his life to New York.
He was at home in New
York—there was his own house with "the kind of servants you can't get any
more"—and his own family, of which, because of his good humor and a
certain ability to make things go, he was rapidly becoming the centre, and the
débutante parties, and the correct manly world of the men's clubs, and the
occasional wild spree with the gallant girls whom New Haven only knew from the
fifth row. His aspirations were conventional enough—they included even the
irreproachable shadow he would some day marry, but they differed from the
aspirations of the majority of young men in that there was no mist over them,
none of that quality which is variously known as "idealism" or
"illusion." Anson accepted without reservation the world of high
finance and high extravagance, of divorce and dissipation, of snobbery and of
privilege. Most of our lives end as a compromise—it was as a compromise that
his life began.
He and I first met in
the late summer of 1917 when he was just out of Yale, and, like the rest of us,
was swept up into the systematized hysteria of the war. In the blue-green
uniform of the naval aviation he came down to Pensacola, where the hotel
orchestras played "I'm sorry, dear," and we young officers danced
with the girls. Every one liked him, and though he ran with the drinkers and
wasn't an especially good pilot, even the instructors treated him with a
certain respect. He was always having long talks with them in his confident,
logical voice—talks which ended by his getting himself, or, more frequently,
another officer, out of some impending trouble. He was convivial, bawdy,
robustly avid for pleasure, and we were all surprised when he fell in love with
a conservative and rather proper girl.
Her name was Paula
Legendre, a dark, serious beauty from somewhere in California. Her family kept
a winter residence just outside of town, and in spite of her primness she was
enormously popular; there is a large class of men whose egotism can't endure
humor in a woman. But Anson wasn't that sort, and I couldn't understand the
attraction of her "sincerity"—that was the thing to say about her—for
his keen and somewhat sardonic mind.
Nevertheless, they fell
in love—and on her terms. He no longer joined the twilight gathering at the De
Sota bar, and whenever they were seen together they were engaged in a long,
serious dialogue, which must have gone on several weeks. Long afterward he told
me that it was not about anything in particular but was composed on both sides
of immature and even meaningless statements—the emotional content that
gradually came to fill it grew up not out of the words but out of its enormous
seriousness. It was a sort of hypnosis. Often it was interrupted, giving way to
that emasculated humor we call fun; when they were alone it was resumed again,
solemn, low-keyed, and pitched so as to give each other a sense of unity in
feeling and thought. They came to resent any interruptions of it, to be
unresponsive to facetiousness about life, even to the mild cynicism of their
contemporaries. They were only happy when the dialogue was going on, and its
seriousness bathed them like the amber glow of an open fire. Toward the end
there came an interruption they did not resent—it began to be interrupted by
passion.
Oddly enough, Anson was
as engrossed in the dialogue as she was and as profoundly affected by it, yet
at the same time aware that on his side much was insincere, and on hers much
was merely simple. At first, too, he despised her emotional simplicity as well,
but with his love her nature deepened and blossomed, and he could despise it no
longer. He felt that if he could enter into Paula's warm safe life he would be
happy. The long preparation of the dialogue removed any constraint—he taught
her some of what he had learned from more adventurous women, and she responded
with a rapt holy intensity. One evening after a dance they agreed to marry, and
he wrote a long letter about her to his mother. The next day Paula told him
that she was rich, that she had a personal fortune of nearly a million dollars.
III
It was exactly as if
they could say "Neither of us has anything: we shall be poor
together"—just as delightful that they should be rich instead. It gave
them the same communion of adventure. Yet when Anson got leave in April, and
Paula and her mother accompanied him North, she was impressed with the standing
of his family in New York and with the scale on which they lived. Alone with
Anson for the first time in the rooms where he had played as a boy, she was filled
with a comfortable emotion, as though she were pre-eminently safe and taken
care of. The pictures of Anson in a skull cap at his first school, of Anson on
horseback with the sweetheart of a mysterious forgotten summer, of Anson in a
gay group of ushers and bridesmaid at a wedding, made her jealous of his life
apart from her in the past, and so completely did his authoritative person seem
to sum up and typify these possessions of his that she was inspired with the
idea of being married immediately and returning to Pensacola as his wife.
But an immediate
marriage wasn't discussed—even the engagement was to be secret until after the
war. When she realized that only two days of his leave remained, her
dissatisfaction crystallized in the intention of making him as unwilling to
wait as she was. They were driving to the country for dinner, and she
determined to force the issue that night.
Now a cousin of Paula's
was staying with them at the Ritz, a severe, bitter girl who loved Paula but
was somewhat jealous of her impressive engagement, and as Paula was late in
dressing, the cousin, who wasn't going to the party, received Anson in the
parlor of the suite.
Anson had met friends at
five o'clock and drunk freely and indiscreetly with them for an hour. He left
the Yale Club at a proper time, and his mother's chauffeur drove him to the
Ritz, but his usual capacity was not in evidence, and the impact of the
steam-heated sitting-room made him suddenly dizzy. He knew it, and he was both
amused and sorry.
Paula's cousin was
twenty-five, but she was exceptionally naïve; and at first failed to realize
what was up. She had never met Anson before, and she was surprised when he
mumbled strange information and nearly fell off his chair, but until Paula
appeared it didn't occur to her that what she had taken for the odor of a
dry-cleaned uniform was really whiskey. But Paula understood as soon as she
appeared; her only thought was to get Anson away before her mother saw him, and
at the look in her eyes the cousin understood too.
When Paula and Anson
descended to the limousine they found two men inside, both asleep; they were
the men with whom he had been drinking at the Yale Club, and they were also
going to the party. He had entirely forgotten their presence in the car. On the
way to Hempstead they awoke and sang. Some of the songs were rough, and though
Paula tried to reconcile herself to the fact that Anson had few verbal
inhibitions, her lips tightened with shame and distaste.
Back at the hotel the
cousin, confused and agitated, considered the incident, and then walked into
Mrs. Legendre's bedroom, saying: "Isn't he funny?"
"Who is
funny?"
"Why—Mr. Hunter. He
seemed so funny."
Mrs. Legendre looked at
her sharply.
"How is he
funny?"
"Why, he said he
was French. I didn't know he was French."
"That's absurd. You
must have misunderstood." She smiled: "It was a joke."
The cousin shook her
head stubbornly.
"No. He said he was
brought up in France. He said he couldn't speak any English, and that's why he
couldn't talk to me. And he couldn't!"
Mrs. Legendre looked
away with impatience just as the cousin added thoughtfully, "Perhaps it
was because he was so drunk," and walked out of the room.
This curious report was
true. Anson, finding his voice thick and uncontrollable, had taken the unusual
refuge of announcing that he spoke no English. Years afterward he used to tell
that part of the story; and he invariably communicated the uproarious laughter
which the memory aroused in him.
Five times in the next
hour Mrs. Legendre tried to get Hempstead on the phone. When she succeeded,
there was a ten-minute delay before she heard Paula's voice on the wire.
"Cousin Jo told me
Anson was intoxicated."
"Oh, no...."
"Oh, yes. Cousin Jo
says he was intoxicated. He told her he was French, and fell off his chair and
behaved as if he was very intoxicated. I don't want you to come home with
him."
"Mother, he's all
right! Please don't worry about——"
"But I do worry. I
think it's dreadful. I want you to promise me not to come home with him."
"I'll take care of it,
mother...."
"I don't want you
to come home with him."
"All right, mother.
Good-by."
"Be sure now,
Paula. Ask some one to bring you."
Deliberately Paula took
the receiver from her ear and hung it up. Her face was flushed with helpless
annoyance. Anson was stretched asleep out in a bedroom up-stairs, while the
dinner-party below was proceeding lamely toward conclusion.
The hour's drive had
sobered him somewhat—his arrival was merely hilarious—and Paula hoped that the
evening was not spoiled, after all, but two imprudent cocktails before dinner
completed the disaster. He talked boisterously and somewhat offensively to the
party at large for fifteen minutes, and then slid silently under the table;
like a man in an old print—but, unlike an old print, it was rather horrible
without being at all quaint. None of the young girls present remarked upon the
incident—it seemed to merit only silence. His uncle and two other men carried
him up-stairs, and it was just after this that Paula was called to the phone.
An hour later Anson
awoke in a fog of nervous agony, through which he perceived after a moment the
figure of his uncle Robert standing by the door.
"... I said are you
better?"
"What?"
"Do you feel
better, old man?"
"Terrible,"
said Anson.
"I'm going to try
you on another bromo-seltzer. If you can hold it down, it'll do you good to
sleep."
With an effort Anson
slid his legs from the bed and stood up.
"I'm all
right," he said dully.
"Take it
easy."
"I thin' if you
gave me a glassbrandy I could go down-stairs."
"Oh, no——"
"Yes, that's the
only thin'. I'm all right now.... I suppose I'm in Dutch dow' there."
"They know you're a
little under the weather," said his uncle deprecatingly. "But don't
worry about it. Schuyler didn't even get here. He passed away in the locker-room
over at the Links."
Indifferent to any
opinion, except Paula's, Anson was nevertheless determined to save the débris
of the evening, but when after a cold bath he made his appearance most of the
party had already left. Paula got up immediately to go home.
In the limousine the old
serious dialogue began. She had known that he drank, she admitted, but she had
never expected anything like this—it seemed to her that perhaps they were not
suited to each other, after all. Their ideas about life were too different, and
so forth. When she finished speaking, Anson spoke in turn, very soberly. Then
Paula said she'd have to think it over; she wouldn't decide to-night; she was
not angry but she was terribly sorry. Nor would she let him come into the hotel
with her, but just before she got out of the car she leaned and kissed him
unhappily on the cheek.
The next afternoon Anson
had a long talk with Mrs. Legendre while Paula sat listening in silence. It was
agreed that Paula was to brood over the incident for a proper period and then,
if mother and daughter thought it best, they would follow Anson to Pensacola.
On his part he apologized with sincerity and dignity—that was all; with every
card in her hand Mrs. Legendre was unable to establish any advantage over him. He
made no promises, showed no humility, only delivered a few serious comments on
life which brought him off with rather a moral superiority at the end. When
they came South three weeks later, neither Anson in his satisfaction nor Paula
in her relief at the reunion realized that the psychological moment had passed
forever.
IV
He dominated and
attracted her, and at the same time filled her with anxiety. Confused by his
mixture of solidity and self-indulgence, of sentiment and
cynicism—incongruities which her gentle mind was unable to resolve—Paula grew
to think of him as two alternating personalities. When she saw him alone, or at
a formal party, or with his casual inferiors, she felt a tremendous pride in
his strong, attractive presence, the paternal, understanding stature of his
mind. In other company she became uneasy when what had been a fine
imperviousness to mere gentility showed its other face. The other face was
gross, humorous, reckless of everything but pleasure. It startled her mind
temporarily away from him, even led her into a short covert experiment with an
old beau, but it was no use—after four months of Anson's enveloping vitality
there was an anæmic pallor in all other men.
In July he was ordered
abroad, and their tenderness and desire reached a crescendo. Paula considered a
last-minute marriage—decided against it only because there were always
cocktails on his breath now, but the parting itself made her physically ill
with grief. After his departure she wrote him long letters of regret for the days
of love they had missed by waiting. In August Anson's plane slipped down into
the North Sea. He was pulled onto a destroyer after a night in the water and
sent to hospital with pneumonia; the armistice was signed before he was finally
sent home.
Then, with every
opportunity given back to them, with no material obstacle to overcome, the
secret weavings of their temperaments came between them, drying up their kisses
and their tears, making their voices less loud to one another, muffling the
intimate chatter of their hearts until the old communication was only possible
by letters, from far away. One afternoon a society reporter waited for two
hours in the Hunters' house for a confirmation of their engagement. Anson
denied it; nevertheless an early issue carried the report as a leading
paragraph—they were "constantly seen together at Southampton, Hot Springs,
and Tuxedo Park." But the serious dialogue had turned a corner into a
long-sustained quarrel, and the affair was almost played out. Anson got drunk
flagrantly and missed an engagement with her, whereupon Paula made certain
behavioristic demands. His despair was helpless before his pride and his
knowledge of himself: the engagement was definitely broken.
"Dearest,"
said their letters now, "Dearest, Dearest, when I wake up in the middle of
the night and realize that after all it was not to be, I feel that I want to
die. I can't go on living any more. Perhaps when we meet this summer we may
talk things over and decide differently—we were so excited and sad that day,
and I don't feel that I can live all my life without you. You speak of other
people. Don't you know there are no other people for me, but only you...."
But as Paula drifted
here and there around the East she would sometimes mention her gaieties to make
him wonder. Anson was too acute to wonder. When he saw a man's name in her
letters he felt more sure of her and a little disdainful—he was always superior
to such things. But he still hoped that they would some day marry.
Meanwhile he plunged
vigorously into all the movement and glitter of post-bellum New York, entering
a brokerage house, joining half a dozen clubs, dancing late, and moving in
three worlds—his own world, the world of young Yale graduates, and that section
of the half-world which rests one end on Broadway. But there was always a
thorough and infractible eight hours devoted to his work in Wall Street, where
the combination of his influential family connection, his sharp intelligence,
and his abundance of sheer physical energy brought him almost immediately
forward. He had one of those invaluable minds with partitions in it; sometimes
he appeared at his office refreshed by less than an hour's sleep, but such
occurrences were rare. So early as 1920 his income in salary and commissions
exceeded twelve thousand dollars.
As the Yale tradition
slipped into the past he became more and more of a popular figure among his
classmates in New York, more popular than he had ever been in college. He lived
in a great house, and had the means of introducing young men into other great
houses. Moreover, his life already seemed secure, while theirs, for the most
part, had arrived again at precarious beginnings. They commenced to turn to him
for amusement and escape, and Anson responded readily, taking pleasure in
helping people and arranging their affairs.
There were no men in
Paula's letters now, but a note of tenderness ran through them that had not
been there before. From several sources he heard that she had "a heavy
beau," Lowell Thayer, a Bostonian of wealth and position, and though he
was sure she still loved him, it made him uneasy to think that he might lose
her, after all. Save for one unsatisfactory day she had not been in New York
for almost five months, and as the rumors multiplied he became increasingly
anxious to see her. In February he took his vacation and went down to Florida.
Palm Beach sprawled
plump and opulent between the sparkling sapphire of Lake Worth, flawed here and
there by house-boats at anchor, and the great turquoise bar of the Atlantic
Ocean. The huge bulks of the Breakers and the Royal Poinciana rose as twin
paunches from the bright level of the sand, and around them clustered the
Dancing Glade, Bradley's House of Chance, and a dozen modistes and milliners
with goods at triple prices from New York. Upon the trellissed veranda of the
Breakers two hundred women stepped right, stepped left, wheeled, and slid in
that then celebrated calisthenic known as the double-shuffle, while in
half-time to the music two thousand bracelets clicked up and down on two
hundred arms.
At the Everglades Club
after dark Paula and Lowell Thayer and Anson and a casual fourth played bridge
with hot cards. It seemed to Anson that her kind, serious face was wan and
tired—she had been around now for four, five, years. He had known her for
three.
"Two spades."
"Cigarette? ... Oh,
I beg your pardon. By me."
"By."
"I'll double three
spades."
There were a dozen
tables of bridge in the room, which was filling up with smoke. Anson's eyes met
Paula's, held them persistently even when Thayer's glance fell between them....
"What was
bid?" he asked abstractedly.
"Rose of
Washington Square"
sang the young people in
the corners:
"I'm withering
thereIn basement air——"
The smoke banked like
fog, and the opening of a door filled the room with blown swirls of ectoplasm.
Little Bright Eyes streaked past the tables seeking Mr. Conan Doyle among the
Englishmen who were posing as Englishmen about the lobby.
"You could cut it
with a knife."
"... cut it with a
knife."
"... a knife."
At the end of the rubber
Paula suddenly got up and spoke to Anson in a tense, low voice. With scarcely a
glance at Lowell Thayer, they walked out the door and descended a long flight
of stone steps—in a moment they were walking hand in hand along the moonlit beach.
"Darling,
darling...." They embraced recklessly, passionately, in a shadow.... Then
Paula drew back her face to let his lips say what she wanted to hear—she could
feel the words forming as they kissed again.... Again she broke away,
listening, but as he pulled her close once more she realized that he had said
nothing—only "Darling! Darling!" in that deep, sad
whisper that always made her cry. Humbly, obediently, her emotions yielded to
him and the tears streamed down her face, but her heart kept on crying:
"Ask me—oh, Anson, dearest, ask me!"
"Paula.... Paula!"
The words wrung her
heart like hands, and Anson, feeling her tremble, knew that emotion was enough.
He need say no more, commit their destinies to no practical enigma. Why should
he, when he might hold her so, biding his own time, for another year—forever?
He was considering them both, her more than himself. For a moment, when she
said suddenly that she must go back to her hotel, he hesitated, thinking,
first, "This is the moment, after all," and then: "No, let it
wait—she is mine...."
He had forgotten that
Paula too was worn away inside with the strain of three years. Her mood passed
forever in the night.
He went back to New York
next morning filled with a certain restless dissatisfaction. Late in April,
without warning, he received a telegram from Bar Harbor in which Paula told him
that she was engaged to Lowell Thayer, and that they would be married
immediately in Boston. What he never really believed could happen had happened
at last.
Anson filled himself
with whiskey that morning, and going to the office, carried on his work without
a break—rather with a fear of what would happen if he stopped. In the evening
he went out as usual, saying nothing of what had occurred; he was cordial,
humorous, unabstracted. But one thing he could not help—for three days, in any
place, in any company, he would suddenly bend his head into his hands and cry
like a child.
V
In 1922 when Anson went
abroad with the junior partner to investigate some London loans, the journey
intimated that he was to be taken into the firm. He was twenty-seven now, a
little heavy without being definitely stout, and with a manner older than his
years. Old people and young people liked him and trusted him, and mothers felt
safe when their daughters were in his charge, for he had a way, when he came
into a room, of putting himself on a footing with the oldest and most
conservative people there. "You and I," he seemed to say, "we're
solid. We understand."
He had an instinctive
and rather charitable knowledge of the weaknesses of men and women, and, like a
priest, it made him the more concerned for the maintenance of outward forms. It
was typical of him that every Sunday morning he taught in a fashionable
Episcopal Sunday-school—even though a cold shower and a quick change into a
cutaway coat were all that separated him from the wild night before.
After his father's death
he was the practical head of his family, and, in effect, guided the destinies
of the younger children. Through a complication his authority did not extend to
his father's estate, which was administrated by his Uncle Robert, who was the
horsey member of the family, a good-natured, hard-drinking member of that set
which centres about Wheatley Hills.
Uncle Robert and his
wife, Edna, had been great friends of Anson's youth, and the former was
disappointed when his nephew's superiority failed to take a horsey form. He
backed him for a city club which was the most difficult in America to enter—one
could only join if one's family had "helped to build up New York"
(or, in other words, were rich before 1880)—and when Anson, after his election,
neglected it for the Yale Club, Uncle Robert gave him a little talk on the
subject. But when on top of that Anson declined to enter Robert Hunter's own
conservative and somewhat neglected brokerage house, his manner grew cooler.
Like a primary teacher who has taught all he knew, he slipped out of Anson's
life.
There were so many
friends in Anson's life—scarcely one for whom he had not done some unusual
kindness and scarcely one whom he did not occasionally embarrass by his bursts
of rough conversation or his habit of getting drunk whenever and however he
liked. It annoyed him when any one else blundered in that regard—about his own
lapses he was always humorous. Odd things happened to him and he told them with
infectious laughter.
I was working in New
York that spring, and I used to lunch with him at the Yale Club, which my
university was sharing until the completion of our own. I had read of Paula's marriage,
and one afternoon, when I asked him about her, something moved him to tell me
the story. After that he frequently invited me to family dinners at his house
and behaved as though there was a special relation between us, as though with
his confidence a little of that consuming memory had passed into me.
I found that despite the
trusting mothers, his attitude toward girls was not indiscriminately
protective. It was up to the girl—if she showed an inclination toward
looseness, she must take care of herself, even with him.
"Life," he
would explain sometimes, "has made a cynic of me."
By life he meant Paula.
Sometimes, especially when he was drinking, it became a little twisted in his
mind, and he thought that she had callously thrown him over.
This "cynicism,"
or rather his realization that naturally fast girls were not worth sparing, led
to his affair with Dolly Karger. It wasn't his only affair in those years, but
it came nearest to touching him deeply, and it had a profound effect upon his
attitude toward life.
Dolly was the daughter
of a notorious "publicist" who had married into society. She herself
grew up into the Junior League, came out at the Plaza, and went to the
Assembly; and only a few old families like the Hunters could question whether
or not she "belonged," for her picture was often in the papers, and
she had more enviable attention than many girls who undoubtedly did. She was
dark-haired, with carmine lips and a high, lovely color, which she concealed
under pinkish-gray powder all through the first year out, because high color
was unfashionable—Victorian-pale was the thing to be. She wore black, severe
suits and stood with her hands in her pockets leaning a little forward, with a
humorous restraint on her face. She danced exquisitely—better than anything she
liked to dance—better than anything except making love. Since she was ten she
had always been in love, and, usually, with some boy who didn't respond to her.
Those who did—and there were many—bored her after a brief encounter, but for her
failures she reserved the warmest spot in her heart. When she met them she
would always try once more—sometimes she succeeded, more often she failed.
It never occurred to
this gypsy of the unattainable that there was a certain resemblance in those
who refused to love her—they shared a hard intuition that saw through to her
weakness, not a weakness of emotion but a weakness of rudder. Anson perceived
this when he first met her, less than a month after Paula's marriage. He was
drinking rather heavily, and he pretended for a week that he was falling in
love with her. Then he dropped her abruptly and forgot—immediately he took up
the commanding position in her heart.
Like so many girls of
that day Dolly was slackly and indiscreetly wild. The unconventionality of a
slightly older generation had been simply one facet of a post-war movement to
discredit obsolete manners—Dolly's was both older and shabbier, and she saw in
Anson the two extremes which the emotionally shiftless woman seeks, an abandon
to indulgence alternating with a protective strength. In his character she felt
both the sybarite and the solid rock, and these two satisfied every need of her
nature.
She felt that it was
going to be difficult, but she mistook the reason—she thought that Anson and
his family expected a more spectacular marriage, but she guessed immediately
that her advantage lay in his tendency to drink.
They met at the large
débutante dances, but as her infatuation increased they managed to be more and
more together. Like most mothers, Mrs. Karger believed that Anson was
exceptionally reliable, so she allowed Dolly to go with him to distant country
clubs and suburban houses without inquiring closely into their activities or
questioning her explanations when they came in late. At first these
explanations might have been accurate, but Dolly's worldly ideas of capturing
Anson were soon engulfed in the rising sweep of her emotion. Kisses in the back
of taxis and motor-cars were no longer enough; they did a curious thing:
They dropped out of their
world for a while and made another world just beneath it where Anson's tippling
and Dolly's irregular hours would be less noticed and commented on. It was
composed, this world, of varying elements—several of Anson's Yale friends and
their wives, two or three young brokers and bond salesmen and a handful of
unattached men, fresh from college, with money and a propensity to dissipation.
What this world lacked in spaciousness and scale it made up for by allowing
them a liberty that it scarcely permitted itself. Moreover, it centred around
them and permitted Dolly the pleasure of a faint condescension—a pleasure which
Anson, whose whole life was a condescension from the certitudes of his
childhood, was unable to share.
He was not in love with
her, and in the long feverish winter of their affair he frequently told her so.
In the spring he was weary—he wanted to renew his life at some other
source—moreover, he saw that either he must break with her now or accept the
responsibility of a definite seduction. Her family's encouraging attitude
precipitated his decision—one evening when Mr. Karger knocked discreetly at the
library door to announce that he had left a bottle of old brandy in the
dining-room, Anson felt that life was hemming him in. That night he wrote her a
short letter in which he told her that he was going on his vacation, and that
in view of all the circumstances they had better meet no more.
It was June. His family
had closed up the house and gone to the country, so he was living temporarily
at the Yale Club. I had heard about his affair with Dolly as it
developed—accounts salted with humor, for he despised unstable women, and
granted them no place in the social edifice in which he believed—and when he
told me that night that he was definitely breaking with her I was glad. I had
seen Dolly here and there, and each time with a feeling of pity at the
hopelessness of her struggle, and of shame at knowing so much about her that I
had no right to know. She was what is known as "a pretty little thing,"
but there was a certain recklessness which rather fascinated me. Her dedication
to the goddess of waste would have been less obvious had she been less
spirited—she would most certainly throw herself away, but I was glad when I
heard that the sacrifice would not be consummated in my sight.
Anson was going to leave
the letter of farewell at her house next morning. It was one of the few houses
left open in the Fifth Avenue district, and he knew that the Kargers, acting
upon erroneous information from Dolly, had foregone a trip abroad to give their
daughter her chance. As he stepped out the door of the Yale Club into Madison
Avenue the postman passed him, and he followed back inside. The first letter
that caught his eye was in Dolly's hand.
He knew what it would
be—a lonely and tragic monologue, full of the reproaches he knew, the invoked
memories, the "I wonder if's"—all the immemorial intimacies that he
had communicated to Paula Legendre in what seemed another age. Thumbing over
some bills, he brought it on top again and opened it. To his surprise it was a
short, somewhat formal note, which said that Dolly would be unable to go to the
country with him for the week-end, because Perry Hull from Chicago had
unexpectedly come to town. It added that Anson had brought this on himself:
"—if I felt that you loved me as I love you I would go with you at any
time, any place, but Perry is so nice, and he so much wants me
to marry him——"
Anson smiled
contemptuously—he had had experience with such decoy epistles. Moreover, he knew
how Dolly had labored over this plan, probably sent for the faithful Perry and
calculated the time of his arrival—even labored over the note so that it would
make him jealous without driving him away. Like most compromises, it had
neither force nor vitality but only a timorous despair.
Suddenly he was angry.
He sat down in the lobby and read it again. Then he went to the phone, called
Dolly and told her in his clear, compelling voice that he had received her note
and would call for her at five o'clock as they had previously planned. Scarcely
waiting for the pretended uncertainty of her "Perhaps I can see you for an
hour," he hung up the receiver and went down to his office. On the way he
tore his own letter into bits and dropped it in the street.
He was not jealous—she
meant nothing to him—but at her pathetic ruse everything stubborn and
self-indulgent in him came to the surface. It was a presumption from a mental
inferior and it could not be overlooked. If she wanted to know to whom she
belonged she would see.
He was on the door-step
at quarter past five. Dolly was dressed for the street, and he listened in
silence to the paragraph of "I can only see you for an hour," which
she had begun on the phone.
"Put on your hat,
Dolly," he said, "we'll take a walk."
They strolled up Madison
Avenue and over to Fifth while Anson's shirt dampened upon his portly body in
the deep heat. He talked little, scolding her, making no love to her, but
before they had walked six blocks she was his again, apologizing for the note, offering
not to see Perry at all as an atonement, offering anything. She thought that he
had come because he was beginning to love her.
"I'm hot," he
said when they reached 71st Street. "This is a winter suit. If I stop by
the house and change, would you mind waiting for me down-stairs? I'll only be a
minute."
She was happy; the
intimacy of his being hot, of any physical fact about him, thrilled her. When
they came to the iron-grated door and Anson took out his key she experienced a
sort of delight.
Down-stairs it was dark,
and after he ascended in the lift Dolly raised a curtain and looked out through
opaque lace at the houses over the way. She heard the lift machinery stop, and
with the notion of teasing him pressed the button that brought it down. Then on
what was more than an impulse she got into it and sent it up to what she
guessed was his floor.
"Anson," she
called, laughing a little.
"Just a
minute," he answered from his bedroom ... then after a brief delay:
"Now you can come in."
He had changed and was
buttoning his vest. "This is my room," he said lightly. "How do
you like it?"
She caught sight of
Paula's picture on the wall and stared at it in fascination, just as Paula had
stared at the pictures of Anson's childish sweethearts five years before. She
knew something about Paula—sometimes she tortured herself with fragments of the
story.
Suddenly she came close
to Anson, raising her arms. They embraced. Outside the area window a soft
artificial twilight already hovered, though the sun was still bright on a back
roof across the way. In half an hour the room would be quite dark. The
uncalculated opportunity overwhelmed them, made them both breathless, and they
clung more closely. It was eminent, inevitable. Still holding one another, they
raised their heads—their eyes fell together upon Paula's picture, staring down
at them from the wall.
Suddenly Anson dropped
his arms, and sitting down at his desk tried the drawer with a bunch of keys.
"Like a
drink?" he asked in a gruff voice.
"No, Anson."
He poured himself half a
tumbler of whiskey, swallowed it, and then opened the door into the hall.
"Come on," he
said.
Dolly hesitated.
"Anson—I'm going to
the country with you to-night, after all. You understand that, don't you?"
"Of course,"
he answered brusquely.
In Dolly's car they rode
on to Long Island, closer in their emotions than they had ever been before.
They knew what would happen—not with Paula's face to remind them that something
was lacking, but when they were alone in the still, hot Long Island night they
did not care.
The estate in Port
Washington where they were to spend the week-end belonged to a cousin of
Anson's who had married a Montana copper operator. An interminable drive began
at the lodge and twisted under imported poplar saplings toward a huge, pink,
Spanish house. Anson had often visited there before.
After dinner they danced
at the Linx Club. About midnight Anson assured himself that his cousins would
not leave before two—then he explained that Dolly was tired; he would take her
home and return to the dance later. Trembling a little with excitement, they
got into a borrowed car together and drove to Port Washington. As they reached
the lodge he stopped and spoke to the night-watchman.
"When are you
making a round, Carl?"
"Right away."
"Then you'll be
here till everybody's in?"
"Yes, sir."
"All right. Listen:
if any automobile, no matter whose it is, turns in at this gate, I want you to
phone the house immediately." He put a five-dollar bill into Carl's hand.
"Is that clear?"
"Yes, Mr.
Anson." Being of the Old World, he neither winked nor smiled. Yet Dolly
sat with her face turned slightly away.
Anson had a key. Once
inside he poured a drink for both of them—Dolly left hers untouched—then he
ascertained definitely the location of the phone, and found that it was within
easy hearing distance of their rooms, both of which were on the first floor.
Five minutes later he
knocked at the door of Dolly's room.
"Anson?" He
went in, closing the door behind him. She was in bed, leaning up anxiously with
elbows on the pillow; sitting beside her he took her in his arms.
"Anson,
darling."
He didn't answer.
"Anson.... Anson! I
love you.... Say you love me. Say it now—can't you say it now? Even if you
don't mean it?"
He did not listen. Over
her head he perceived that the picture of Paula was hanging here upon this
wall.
He got up and went close
to it. The frame gleamed faintly with thrice-reflected moonlight—within was a
blurred shadow of a face that he saw he did not know. Almost sobbing, he turned
around and stared with abomination at the little figure on the bed.
"This is all
foolishness," he said thickly. "I don't know what I was thinking
about. I don't love you and you'd better wait for somebody that loves you. I
don't love you a bit, can't you understand?"
His voice broke, and he
went hurriedly out. Back in the salon he was pouring himself a drink with
uneasy fingers, when the front door opened suddenly, and his cousin came in.
"Why, Anson, I hear
Dolly's sick," she began solicitously. "I hear she's sick...."
"It was
nothing," he interrupted, raising his voice so that it would carry into
Dolly's room. "She was a little tired. She went to bed."
For a long time
afterward Anson believed that a protective God sometimes interfered in human
affairs. But Dolly Karger, lying awake and staring at the ceiling, never again
believed in anything at all.
VI
When Dolly married
during the following autumn, Anson was in London on business. Like Paula's
marriage, it was sudden, but it affected him in a different way. At first he
felt that it was funny, and had an inclination to laugh when he thought of it.
Later it depressed him—it made him feel old.
There was something
repetitive about it—why, Paula and Dolly had belonged to different generations.
He had a foretaste of the sensation of a man of forty who hears that the
daughter of an old flame has married. He wired congratulations and, as was not
the case with Paula, they were sincere—he had never really hoped that Paula
would be happy.
When he returned to New
York, he was made a partner in the firm, and, as his responsibilities
increased, he had less time on his hands. The refusal of a life-insurance
company to issue him a policy made such an impression on him that he stopped
drinking for a year, and claimed that he felt better physically, though I think
he missed the convivial recounting of those Celliniesque adventures which, in
his early twenties, had played such a part of his life. But he never abandoned
the Yale Club. He was a figure there, a personality, and the tendency of his
class, who were now seven years out of college, to drift away to more sober
haunts was checked by his presence.
His day was never too
full nor his mind too weary to give any sort of aid to any one who asked it.
What had been done at first through pride and superiority had become a habit
and a passion. And there was always something—a younger brother in trouble at
New Haven, a quarrel to be patched up between a friend and his wife, a position
to be found for this man, an investment for that. But his specialty was the
solving of problems for young married people. Young married people fascinated
him and their apartments were almost sacred to him—he knew the story of their
love-affair, advised them where to live and how, and remembered their babies'
names. Toward young wives his attitude was circumspect: he never abused the
trust which their husbands—strangely enough in view of his unconcealed
irregularities—invariably reposed in him.
He came to take a
vicarious pleasure in happy marriages, and to be inspired to an almost equally
pleasant melancholy by those that went astray. Not a season passed that he did
not witness the collapse of an affair that perhaps he himself had fathered.
When Paula was divorced and almost immediately remarried to another Bostonian, he
talked about her to me all one afternoon. He would never love any one as he had
loved Paula, but he insisted that he no longer cared.
"I'll never
marry," he came to say; "I've seen too much of it, and I know a happy
marriage is a very rare thing. Besides, I'm too old."
But he did believe in
marriage. Like all men who spring from a happy and successful marriage, he
believed in it passionately—nothing he had seen would change his belief, his
cynicism dissolved upon it like air. But he did really believe he was too old.
At twenty-eight he began to accept with equanimity the prospect of marrying
without romantic love; he resolutely chose a New York girl of his own class,
pretty, intelligent, congenial, above reproach—and set about falling in love
with her. The things he had said to Paula with sincerity, to other girls with
grace, he could no longer say at all without smiling, or with the force
necessary to convince.
"When I'm
forty," he told his friends, "I'll be ripe. I'll fall for some chorus
girl like the rest."
Nevertheless, he
persisted in his attempt. His mother wanted to see him married, and he could
now well afford it—he had a seat on the Stock Exchange, and his earned income
came to twenty-five thousand a year. The idea was agreeable: when his friends—he
spent most of his time with the set he and Dolly had evolved—closed themselves
in behind domestic doors at night, he no longer rejoiced in his freedom. He
even wondered if he should have married Dolly. Not even Paula had loved him
more, and he was learning the rarity, in a single life, of encountering true
emotion.
Just as this mood began
to creep over him a disquieting story reached his ear. His aunt Edna, a woman
just this side of forty, was carrying on an open intrigue with a dissolute,
hard-drinking young man named Cary Sloane. Every one knew of it except Anson's
Uncle Robert, who for fifteen years had talked long in clubs and taken his wife
for granted.
Anson heard the story
again and again with increasing annoyance. Something of his old feeling for his
uncle came back to him, a feeling that was more than personal, a reversion
toward that family solidarity on which he had based his pride. His intuition
singled out the essential point of the affair, which was that his uncle
shouldn't be hurt. It was his first experiment in unsolicited meddling, but
with his knowledge of Edna's character he felt that he could handle the matter
better than a district judge or his uncle.
His uncle was in Hot
Springs. Anson traced down the sources of the scandal so that there should be
no possibility of mistake and then he called Edna and asked her to lunch with
him at the Plaza next day. Something in his tone must have frightened her, for
she was reluctant, but he insisted, putting off the date until she had no
excuse for refusing.
She met him at the
appointed time in the Plaza lobby, a lovely, faded, gray-eyed blonde in a coat
of Russian sable. Five great rings, cold with diamonds and emeralds, sparkled
on her slender hands. It occurred to Anson that it was his father's intelligence
and not his uncle's that had earned the fur and the stones, the rich brilliance
that buoyed up her passing beauty.
Though Edna scented his
hostility, she was unprepared for the directness of his approach.
"Edna, I'm
astonished at the way you've been acting," he said in a strong, frank
voice. "At first I couldn't believe it."
"Believe
what?" she demanded sharply.
"You needn't
pretend with me, Edna. I'm talking about Cary Sloane. Aside from any other
consideration, I didn't think you could treat Uncle Robert——"
"Now look here,
Anson—" she began angrily, but his peremptory voice broke through hers:
"—and your children
in such a way. You've been married eighteen years, and you're old enough to
know better."
"You can't talk to
me like that! You——"
"Yes, I can. Uncle
Robert has always been my best friend." He was tremendously moved. He felt
a real distress about his uncle, about his three young cousins.
Edna stood up, leaving
her crab-flake cocktail untasted.
"This is the
silliest thing——"
"Very well, if you
won't listen to me I'll go to Uncle Robert and tell him the whole story—he's
bound to hear it sooner or later. And afterward I'll go to old Moses
Sloane."
Edna faltered back into
her chair.
"Don't talk so
loud," she begged him. Her eyes blurred with tears. "You have no idea
how your voice carries. You might have chosen a less public place to make all
these crazy accusations."
He didn't answer.
"Oh, you never
liked me, I know," she went on. "You're just taking advantage of some
silly gossip to try and break up the only interesting friendship I've ever had.
What did I ever do to make you hate me so?"
Still Anson waited.
There would be the appeal to his chivalry, then to his pity, finally to his
superior sophistication—when he had shouldered his way through all these there
would be admissions, and he could come to grips with her. By being silent, by
being impervious, by returning constantly to his main weapon, which was his own
true emotion, he bullied her into frantic despair as the luncheon hour slipped away.
At two o'clock she took out a mirror and a handkerchief, shined away the marks
of her tears and powdered the slight hollows where they had lain. She had
agreed to meet him at her own house at five.
When he arrived she was
stretched on a chaise-longue which was covered with cretonne
for the summer, and the tears he had called up at luncheon seemed still to be
standing in her eyes. Then he was aware of Cary Sloane's dark anxious presence
upon the cold hearth.
"What's this idea
of yours?" broke out Sloane immediately. "I understand you invited
Edna to lunch and then threatened her on the basis of some cheap scandal."
Anson sat down.
"I have no reason
to think it's only scandal."
"I hear you're
going to take it to Robert Hunter, and to my father."
Anson nodded.
"Either you break
it off—or I will," he said.
"What God damned
business is it of yours, Hunter?"
"Don't lose your
temper, Cary," said Edna nervously. "It's only a question of showing
him how absurd——"
"For one thing,
it's my name that's being handed around," interrupted Anson. "That's
all that concerns you, Cary."
"Edna isn't a
member of your family."
"She most certainly
is!" His anger mounted. "Why—she owes this house and the rings on her
fingers to my father's brains. When Uncle Robert married her she didn't have a
penny."
They all looked at the
rings as if they had a significant bearing on the situation. Edna made a
gesture to take them from her hand.
"I guess they're
not the only rings in the world," said Sloane.
"Oh, this is
absurd," cried Edna. "Anson, will you listen to me? I've found out
how the silly story started. It was a maid I discharged who went right to the
Chilicheffs—all these Russians pump things out of their servants and then put a
false meaning on them." She brought down her fist angrily on the table:
"And after Tom lent them the limousine for a whole month when we were
South last winter——"
"Do you see?"
demanded Sloane eagerly. "This maid got hold of the wrong end of the
thing. She knew that Edna and I were friends, and she carried it to the
Chilicheffs. In Russia they assume that if a man and a woman——"
He enlarged the theme to
a disquisition upon social relations in the Caucasus.
"If that's the case
it better be explained to Uncle Robert," said Anson dryly, "so that
when the rumors do reach him he'll know they're not true."
Adopting the method he
had followed with Edna at luncheon he let them explain it all away. He knew
that they were guilty and that presently they would cross the line from
explanation into justification and convict themselves more definitely than he
could ever do. By seven they had taken the desperate step of telling him the
truth—Robert Hunter's neglect, Edna's empty life, the casual dalliance that had
flamed up into passion—but like so many true stories it had the misfortune of
being old, and its enfeebled body beat helplessly against the armor of Anson's
will. The threat to go to Sloane's father sealed their helplessness, for the
latter, a retired cotton broker out of Alabama, was a notorious fundamentalist
who controlled his son by a rigid allowance and the promise that at his next
vagary the allowance would stop forever.
They dined at a small
French restaurant, and the discussion continued—at one time Sloane resorted to
physical threats, a little later they were both imploring him to give them
time. But Anson was obdurate. He saw that Edna was breaking up, and that her
spirit must not be refreshed by any renewal of their passion.
At two o'clock in a
small night-club on 53d Street, Edna's nerves suddenly collapsed, and she cried
to go home. Sloane had been drinking heavily all evening, and he was faintly
maudlin, leaning on the table and weeping a little with his face in his hands.
Quickly Anson gave them his terms. Sloane was to leave town for six months, and
he must be gone within forty-eight hours. When he returned there was to be no
resumption of the affair, but at the end of a year Edna might, if she wished,
tell Robert Hunter that she wanted a divorce and go about it in the usual way.
He paused, gaining
confidence from their faces for his final word.
"Or there's another
thing you can do," he said slowly, "if Edna wants to leave her
children, there's nothing I can do to prevent your running off together."
"I want to go
home!" cried Edna again. "Oh, haven't you done enough to us for one
day?"
Outside it was dark,
save for a blurred glow from Sixth Avenue down the street. In that light those
two who had been lovers looked for the last time into each other's tragic
faces, realizing that between them there was not enough youth and strength to
avert their eternal parting. Sloane walked suddenly off down the street and
Anson tapped a dozing taxi-driver on the arm.
It was almost four;
there was a patient flow of cleaning water along the ghostly pavement of Fifth
Avenue, and the shadows of two night women flitted over the dark façade of St.
Thomas's church. Then the desolate shrubbery of Central Park where Anson had
often played as a child, and the mounting numbers, significant as names, of the
marching streets. This was his city, he thought, where his name had flourished
through five generations. No change could alter the permanence of its place
here, for change itself was the essential substratum by which he and those of
his name identified themselves with the spirit of New York. Resourcefulness and
a powerful will—for his threats in weaker hands would have been less than
nothing—had beaten the gathering dust from his uncle's name, from the name of
his family, from even this shivering figure that sat beside him in the car.
Cary Sloane's body was
found next morning on the lower shelf of a pillar of Queensboro Bridge. In the
darkness and in his excitement he had thought that it was the water flowing
black beneath him, but in less than a second it made no possible difference—unless
he had planned to think one last thought of Edna, and call out her name as he
struggled feebly in the water.
VII
Anson never blamed
himself for his part in this affair—the situation which brought it about had
not been of his making. But the just suffer with the unjust, and he found that
his oldest and somehow his most precious friendship was over. He never knew
what distorted story Edna told, but he was welcome in his uncle's house no
longer.
Just before Christmas
Mrs. Hunter retired to a select Episcopal heaven, and Anson became the
responsible head of his family. An unmarried aunt who had lived with them for
years ran the house, and attempted with helpless inefficiency to chaperone the
younger girls. All the children were less self-reliant than Anson, more
conventional both in their virtues and in their shortcomings. Mrs. Hunter's
death had postponed the début of one daughter and the wedding of another. Also
it had taken something deeply material from all of them, for with her passing
the quiet, expensive superiority of the Hunters came to an end.
For one thing, the
estate, considerably diminished by two inheritance taxes and soon to be divided
among six children, was not a notable fortune any more. Anson saw a tendency in
his youngest sisters to speak rather respectfully of families that hadn't
"existed" twenty years ago. His own feeling of precedence was not
echoed in them—sometimes they were conventionally snobbish, that was all. For
another thing, this was the last summer they would spend on the Connecticut
estate; the clamor against it was too loud: "Who wants to waste the best
months of the year shut up in that dead old town?" Reluctantly he
yielded—the house would go into the market in the fall, and next summer they
would rent a smaller place in Westchester County. It was a step down from the
expensive simplicity of his father's idea, and, while he sympathized with the
revolt, it also annoyed him; during his mother's lifetime he had gone up there
at least every other week-end—even in the gayest summers.
Yet he himself was part
of this change, and his strong instinct for life had turned him in his twenties
from the hollow obsequies of that abortive leisure class. He did not see this
clearly—he still felt that there was a norm, a standard of society. But there
was no norm, it was doubtful if there had ever been a true norm in New York.
The few who still paid and fought to enter a particular set succeeded only to
find that as a society it scarcely functioned—or, what was more alarming, that
the Bohemia from which they fled sat above them at table.
At twenty-nine Anson's
chief concern was his own growing loneliness. He was sure now that he would
never marry. The number of weddings at which he had officiated as best man or
usher was past all counting—there was a drawer at home that bulged with the
official neckties of this or that wedding-party, neckties standing for romances
that had not endured a year, for couples who had passed completely from his
life. Scarf-pins, gold pencils, cuff-buttons, presents from a generation of
grooms had passed through his jewel-box and been lost—and with every ceremony
he was less and less able to imagine himself in the groom's place. Under his
hearty good-will toward all those marriages there was despair about his own.
And as he neared thirty
he became not a little depressed at the inroads that marriage, especially
lately, had made upon his friendships. Groups of people had a disconcerting
tendency to dissolve and disappear. The men from his own college—and it was
upon them he had expended the most time and affection—were the most elusive of
all. Most of them were drawn deep into domesticity, two were dead, one lived
abroad, one was in Hollywood writing continuities for pictures that Anson went
faithfully to see.
Most of them, however,
were permanent commuters with an intricate family life centring around some
suburban country club, and it was from these that he felt his estrangement most
keenly.
In the early days of
their married life they had all needed him; he gave them advice about their
slim finances, he exorcised their doubts about the advisability of bringing a
baby into two rooms and a bath, especially he stood for the great world
outside. But now their financial troubles were in the past and the fearfully
expected child had evolved into an absorbing family. They were always glad to
see old Anson, but they dressed up for him and tried to impress him with their
present importance, and kept their troubles to themselves. They needed him no
longer.
A few weeks before his
thirtieth birthday the last of his early and intimate friends was married.
Anson acted in his usual rôle of best man, gave his usual silver tea-service,
and went down to the usual Homeric to say good-by. It was a
hot Friday afternoon in May, and as he walked from the pier he realized that
Saturday closing had begun and he was free until Monday morning.
"Go where?" he
asked himself.
The Yale Club, of
course; bridge until dinner, then four or five raw cocktails in somebody's room
and a pleasant confused evening. He regretted that this afternoon's groom
wouldn't be along—they had always been able to cram so much into such nights:
they knew how to attach women and how to get rid of them, how much
consideration any girl deserved from their intelligent hedonism. A party was an
adjusted thing—you took certain girls to certain places and spent just so much
on their amusement; you drank a little, not much, more than you ought to drink,
and at a certain time in the morning you stood up and said you were going home.
You avoided college boys, sponges, future engagements, fights, sentiment, and
indiscretions. That was the way it was done. All the rest was dissipation.
In the morning you were
never violently sorry—you made no resolutions, but if you had overdone it and
your heart was slightly out of order, you went on the wagon for a few days
without saying anything about it, and waited until an accumulation of nervous
boredom projected you into another party.
The lobby of the Yale
Club was unpopulated. In the bar three very young alumni looked up at him,
momentarily and without curiosity.
"Hello there,
Oscar," he said to the bartender. "Mr. Cahill been around this
afternoon?"
"Mr. Cahill's gone
to New Haven."
"Oh ... that
so?"
"Gone to the ball
game. Lot of men gone up."
Anson looked once again
into the lobby, considered for a moment, and then walked out and over to Fifth
Avenue. From the broad window of one of his clubs—one that he had scarcely
visited in five years—a gray man with watery eyes stared down at him. Anson
looked quickly away—that figure sitting in vacant resignation, in supercilious
solitude, depressed him. He stopped and, retracing his steps, started over 47th
Street toward Teak Warden's apartment. Teak and his wife had once been his most
familiar friends—it was a household where he and Dolly Karger had been used to
go in the days of their affair. But Teak had taken to drink, and his wife had
remarked publicly that Anson was a bad influence on him. The remark reached
Anson in an exaggerated form—when it was finally cleared up, the delicate spell
of intimacy was broken, never to be renewed.
"Is Mr. Warden at
home?" he inquired.
"They've gone to
the country."
The fact unexpectedly
cut at him. They were gone to the country and he hadn't known. Two years before
he would have known the date, the hour, come up at the last moment for a final
drink, and planned his first visit to them. Now they had gone without a word.
Anson looked at his
watch and considered a week-end with his family, but the only train was a local
that would jolt through the aggressive heat for three hours. And to-morrow in
the country, and Sunday—he was in no mood for porch-bridge with polite
undergraduates, and dancing after dinner at a rural road-house, a diminutive of
gaiety which his father had estimated too well.
"Oh, no," he
said to himself.... "No."
He was a dignified,
impressive young man, rather stout now, but otherwise unmarked by dissipation.
He could have been cast for a pillar of something—at times you were sure it was
not society, at others nothing else—for the law, for the church. He stood for a
few minutes motionless on the sidewalk in front of a 47th Street
apartment-house; for almost the first time in his life he had nothing whatever
to do.
Then he began to walk
briskly up Fifth Avenue, as if he had just been reminded of an important
engagement there. The necessity of dissimulation is one of the few
characteristics that we share with dogs, and I think of Anson on that day as
some well-bred specimen who had been disappointed at a familiar back door. He
was going to see Nick, once a fashionable bartender in demand at all private
dances, and now employed in cooling non-alcoholic champagne among the
labyrinthine cellars of the Plaza Hotel.
"Nick," he
said, "what's happened to everything?"
"Dead," Nick
said.
"Make me a whiskey
sour." Anson handed a pint bottle over the counter. "Nick, the girls
are different; I had a little girl in Brooklyn and she got married last week
without letting me know."
"That a fact?
Ha-ha-ha," responded Nick diplomatically. "Slipped it over on
you."
"Absolutely,"
said Anson. "And I was out with her the night before."
"Ha-ha-ha,"
said Nick, "ha-ha-ha!"
"Do you remember
the wedding, Nick, in Hot Springs where I had the waiters and the musicians
singing 'God save the King'?"
"Now where was
that, Mr. Hunter?" Nick concentrated doubtfully. "Seems to me that
was——"
"Next time they
were back for more, and I began to wonder how much I'd paid them,"
continued Anson.
"—seems to me that
was at Mr. Trenholm's wedding."
"Don't know
him," said Anson decisively. He was offended that a strange name should
intrude upon his reminiscences; Nick perceived this.
"Naw—aw—" he
admitted, "I ought to know that. It was one of your crowd—Brakins
.... Baker——"
"Bicker
Baker," said Anson responsively. "They put me in a hearse after it
was over and covered me up with flowers and drove me away."
"Ha-ha-ha,"
said Nick. "Ha-ha-ha."
Nick's simulation of the
old family servant paled presently and Anson went up-stairs to the lobby. He
looked around—his eyes met the glance of an unfamiliar clerk at the desk, then
fell upon a flower from the morning's marriage hesitating in the mouth of a
brass cuspidor. He went out and walked slowly toward the blood-red sun over
Columbus Circle. Suddenly he turned around and, retracing his steps to the
Plaza, immured himself in a telephone-booth.
Later he said that he
tried to get me three times that afternoon, that he tried every one who might
be in New York—men and girls he had not seen for years, an artist's model of
his college days whose faded number was still in his address book—Central told
him that even the exchange existed no longer. At length his quest roved into
the country, and he held brief disappointing conversations with emphatic
butlers and maids. So-and-so was out, riding, swimming, playing golf, sailed to
Europe last week. Who shall I say phoned?
It was intolerable that
he should pass the evening alone—the private reckonings which one plans for a
moment of leisure lose every charm when the solitude is enforced. There were
always women of a sort, but the ones he knew had temporarily vanished, and to
pass a New York evening in the hired company of a stranger never occurred to
him—he would have considered that that was something shameful and secret, the
diversion of a travelling salesman in a strange town.
Anson paid the telephone
bill—the girl tried unsuccessfully to joke with him about its size—and for the
second time that afternoon started to leave the Plaza and go he knew not where.
Near the revolving door the figure of a woman, obviously with child, stood
sideways to the light—a sheer beige cape fluttered at her shoulders when the
door turned and, each time, she looked impatiently toward it as if she were
weary of waiting. At the first sight of her a strong nervous thrill of
familiarity went over him, but not until he was within five feet of her did he
realize that it was Paula.
"Why, Anson
Hunter!"
His heart turned over.
"Why, Paula——"
"Why, this is
wonderful. I can't believe it, Anson!"
She took both his hands,
and he saw in the freedom of the gesture that the memory of him had lost
poignancy to her. But not to him—he felt that old mood that she evoked in him
stealing over his brain, that gentleness with which he had always met her
optimism as if afraid to mar its surface.
"We're at Rye for
the summer. Pete had to come East on business—you know of course I'm Mrs. Peter
Hagerty now—so we brought the children and took a house. You've got to come out
and see us."
"Can I?" he
asked directly. "When?"
"When you like.
Here's Pete." The revolving door functioned, giving up a fine tall man of
thirty with a tanned face and a trim mustache. His immaculate fitness made a
sharp contrast with Anson's increasing bulk, which was obvious under the
faintly tight cut-away coat.
"You oughtn't to be
standing," said Hagerty to his wife. "Let's sit down here." He
indicated lobby chairs, but Paula hesitated.
"I've got to go
right home," she said. "Anson, why don't you—why don't you come out
and have dinner with us to-night? We're just getting settled, but if you can
stand that——"
Hagerty confirmed the
invitation cordially.
"Come out for the
night."
Their car waited in
front of the hotel, and Paula with a tired gesture sank back against silk
cushions in the corner.
"There's so much I
want to talk to you about," she said, "it seems hopeless."
"I want to hear
about you."
"Well"—she
smiled at Hagerty—"that would take a long time too. I have three
children—by my first marriage. The oldest is five, then four, then three."
She smiled again. "I didn't waste much time having them, did I?"
"Boys?"
"A boy and two
girls. Then—oh, a lot of things happened, and I got a divorce in Paris a year
ago and married Pete. That's all—except that I'm awfully happy."
In Rye they drove up to
a large house near the Beach Club, from which there issued presently three
dark, slim children who broke from an English governess and approached them
with an esoteric cry. Abstractedly and with difficulty Paula took each one into
her arms, a caress which they accepted stiffly, as they had evidently been told
not to bump into Mummy. Even against their fresh faces Paula's skin showed
scarcely any weariness—for all her physical languor she seemed younger than
when he had last seen her at Palm Beach seven years ago.
At dinner she was preoccupied,
and afterward, during the homage to the radio, she lay with closed eyes on the
sofa, until Anson wondered if his presence at this time were not an intrusion.
But at nine o'clock, when Hagerty rose and said pleasantly that he was going to
leave them by themselves for a while, she began to talk slowly about herself
and the past.
"My first
baby," she said—"the one we call Darling, the biggest little girl—I
wanted to die when I knew I was going to have her, because Lowell was like a
stranger to me. It didn't seem as though she could be my own. I wrote you a
letter and tore it up. Oh, you were so bad to me, Anson."
It was the dialogue
again, rising and falling. Anson felt a sudden quickening of memory.
"Weren't you
engaged once?" she asked—"a girl named Dolly something?"
"I wasn't ever
engaged. I tried to be engaged, but I never loved anybody but you, Paula."
"Oh," she
said. Then after a moment: "This baby is the first one I ever really
wanted. You see, I'm in love now—at last."
He didn't answer,
shocked at the treachery of her remembrance. She must have seen that the
"at last" bruised him, for she continued:
"I was infatuated
with you, Anson—you could make me do anything you liked. But we wouldn't have
been happy. I'm not smart enough for you. I don't like things to be complicated
like you do." She paused. "You'll never settle down," she said.
The phrase struck at him
from behind—it was an accusation that of all accusations he had never merited.
"I could settle
down if women were different," he said. "If I didn't understand so
much about them, if women didn't spoil you for other women, if they had only a
little pride. If I could go to sleep for a while and wake up into a home that
was really mine—why, that's what I'm made for, Paula, that's what women have seen
in me and liked in me. It's only that I can't get through the preliminaries any
more."
Hagerty came in a little
before eleven; after a whiskey Paula stood up and announced that she was going
to bed. She went over and stood by her husband.
"Where did you go,
dearest?" she demanded.
"I had a drink with
Ed Saunders."
"I was worried. I
thought maybe you'd run away."
She rested her head
against his coat.
"He's sweet, isn't
he, Anson?" she demanded.
"Absolutely,"
said Anson, laughing.
She raised her face to her
husband.
"Well, I'm
ready," she said. She turned to Anson: "Do you want to see our family
gymnastic stunt?"
"Yes," he said
in an interested voice.
"All right. Here we
go!"
Hagerty picked her up
easily in his arms.
"This is called the
family acrobatic stunt," said Paula. "He carries me up-stairs. Isn't
it sweet of him?"
"Yes," said
Anson.
Hagerty bent his head
slightly until his face touched Paula's.
"And I love
him," she said. "I've just been telling you, haven't I, Anson?"
"Yes," he
said.
"He's the dearest
thing that ever lived in this world; aren't you, darling? ... Well, good night.
Here we go. Isn't he strong?"
"Yes," Anson
said.
"You'll find a pair
of Pete's pajamas laid out for you. Sweet dreams—see you at breakfast."
"Yes," Anson
said.
VIII
The older members of the
firm insisted that Anson should go abroad for the summer. He had scarcely had a
vacation in seven years, they said. He was stale and needed a change. Anson
resisted.
"If I go," he
declared, "I won't come back any more."
"That's absurd, old
man. You'll be back in three months with all this depression gone. Fit as
ever."
"No." He shook
his head stubbornly. "If I stop, I won't go back to work. If I stop, that
means I've given up—I'm through."
"We'll take a
chance on that. Stay six months if you like—we're not afraid you'll leave us.
Why, you'd be miserable if you didn't work."
They arranged his
passage for him. They liked Anson—every one liked Anson—and the change that had
been coming over him cast a sort of pall over the office. The enthusiasm that
had invariably signalled up business, the consideration toward his equals and
his inferiors, the lift of his vital presence—within the past four months his
intense nervousness had melted down these qualities into the fussy pessimism of
a man of forty. On every transaction in which he was involved he acted as a
drag and a strain.
"If I go I'll never
come back," he said.
Three days before he
sailed Paula Legendre Hagerty died in childbirth. I was with him a great deal
then, for we were crossing together, but for the first time in our friendship
he told me not a word of how he felt, nor did I see the slightest sign of
emotion. His chief preoccupation was with the fact that he was thirty years
old—he would turn the conversation to the point where he could remind you of it
and then fall silent, as if he assumed that the statement would start a chain
of thought sufficient to itself. Like his partners, I was amazed at the change
in him, and I was glad when the Paris moved off into the wet
space between the worlds, leaving his principality behind.
"How about a
drink?" he suggested.
We walked into the bar
with that defiant feeling that characterizes the day of departure and ordered
four Martinis. After one cocktail a change came over him—he suddenly reached across
and slapped my knee with the first joviality I had seen him exhibit for months.
"Did you see that
girl in the red tam?" he demanded, "the one with the high color who
had the two police dogs down to bid her good-by."
"She's
pretty," I agreed.
"I looked her up in
the purser's office and found out that she's alone. I'm going down to see the
steward in a few minutes. We'll have dinner with her to-night."
After a while he left
me, and within an hour he was walking up and down the deck with her, talking to
her in his strong, clear voice. Her red tam was a bright spot of color against
the steel-green sea, and from time to time she looked up with a flashing bob of
her head, and smiled with amusement and interest, and anticipation. At dinner
we had champagne, and were very joyous—afterward Anson ran the pool with
infectious gusto, and several people who had seen me with him asked me his
name. He and the girl were talking and laughing together on a lounge in the bar
when I went to bed.
I saw less of him on the
trip than I had hoped. He wanted to arrange a foursome, but there was no one
available, so I saw him only at meals. Sometimes, though, he would have a
cocktail in the bar, and he told me about the girl in the red tam, and his
adventures with her, making them all bizarre and amusing, as he had a way of
doing, and I was glad that he was himself again, or at least the self that I
knew, and with which I felt at home. I don't think he was ever happy unless
some one was in love with him, responding to him like filings to a magnet,
helping him to explain himself, promising him something. What it was I do not
know. Perhaps they promised that there would always be women in the world who
would spend their brightest, freshest, rarest hours to nurse and protect that
superiority he cherished in his heart.
2.WINTER DREAMS
Some of the caddies were
poor as sin and lived in one-room houses with a neurasthenic cow in the front
yard, but Dexter Green's father owned the second best grocery-store in Black
Bear—the best one was "The Hub," patronized by the wealthy people
from Sherry Island—and Dexter caddied only for pocket-money.
In the fall when the
days became crisp and gray, and the long Minnesota winter shut down like the
white lid of a box, Dexter's skis moved over the snow that hid the fairways of
the golf course. At these times the country gave him a feeling of profound
melancholy—it offended him that the links should lie in enforced fallowness,
haunted by ragged sparrows for the long season. It was dreary, too, that on the
tees where the gay colors fluttered in summer there were now only the desolate
sand-boxes knee-deep in crusted ice. When he crossed the hills the wind blew
cold as misery, and if the sun was out he tramped with his eyes squinted up
against the hard dimensionless glare.
In April the winter
ceased abruptly. The snow ran down into Black Bear Lake scarcely tarrying for
the early golfers to brave the season with red and black balls. Without
elation, without an interval of moist glory, the cold was gone.
Dexter knew that there
was something dismal about this Northern spring, just as he knew there was
something gorgeous about the fall. Fall made him clinch his hands and tremble
and repeat idiotic sentences to himself, and make brisk abrupt gestures of
command to imaginary audiences and armies. October filled him with hope which
November raised to a sort of ecstatic triumph, and in this mood the fleeting
brilliant impressions of the summer at Sherry Island were ready grist to his
mill. He became a golf champion and defeated Mr. T. A. Hedrick in a marvellous
match played a hundred times over the fairways of his imagination, a match each
detail of which he changed about untiringly—sometimes he won with almost
laughable ease, sometimes he came up magnificently from behind. Again, stepping
from a Pierce-Arrow automobile, like Mr. Mortimer Jones, he strolled frigidly
into the lounge of the Sherry Island Golf Club—or perhaps, surrounded by an
admiring crowd, he gave an exhibition of fancy diving from the spring-board of
the club raft.... Among those who watched him in open-mouthed wonder was Mr.
Mortimer Jones.
And one day it came to
pass that Mr. Jones—himself and not his ghost—came up to Dexter with tears in
his eyes and said that Dexter was the —— best caddy in the club, and wouldn't
he decide not to quit if Mr. Jones made it worth his while, because every other
—— caddy in the club lost one ball a hole for him—regularly——
"No, sir,"
said Dexter decisively, "I don't want to caddy any more." Then, after
a pause: "I'm too old."
"You're not more
than fourteen. Why the devil did you decide just this morning that you wanted
to quit? You promised that next week you'd go over to the State tournament with
me."
"I decided I was
too old."
Dexter handed in his
"A Class" badge, collected what money was due him from the caddy
master, and walked home to Black Bear Village.
"The best —— caddy
I ever saw," shouted Mr. Mortimer Jones over a drink that afternoon.
"Never lost a ball! Willing! Intelligent! Quiet! Honest! Grateful!"
The little girl who had
done this was eleven—beautifully ugly as little girls are apt to be who are
destined after a few years to be inexpressibly lovely and bring no end of
misery to a great number of men. The spark, however, was perceptible. There was
a general ungodliness in the way her lips twisted down at the corners when she
smiled, and in the—Heaven help us!—in the almost passionate quality of her
eyes. Vitality is born early in such women. It was utterly in evidence now,
shining through her thin frame in a sort of glow.
She had come eagerly out
on to the course at nine o'clock with a white linen nurse and five small new
golf-clubs in a white canvas bag which the nurse was carrying. When Dexter
first saw her she was standing by the caddy house, rather ill at ease and
trying to conceal the fact by engaging her nurse in an obviously unnatural
conversation graced by startling and irrevelant grimaces from herself.
"Well, it's
certainly a nice day, Hilda," Dexter heard her say. She drew down the
corners of her mouth, smiled, and glanced furtively around, her eyes in transit
falling for an instant on Dexter.
Then to the nurse:
"Well, I guess
there aren't very many people out here this morning, are there?"
The smile again—radiant,
blatantly artificial—convincing.
"I don't know what
we're supposed to do now," said the nurse, looking nowhere in particular.
"Oh, that's all
right. I'll fix it up."
Dexter stood perfectly
still, his mouth slightly ajar. He knew that if he moved forward a step his
stare would be in her line of vision—if he moved backward he would lose his
full view of her face. For a moment he had not realized how young she was. Now
he remembered having seen her several times the year before—in bloomers.
Suddenly, involuntarily,
he laughed, a short abrupt laugh—then, startled by himself, he turned and began
to walk quickly away.
"Boy!"
Dexter stopped.
"Boy——"
Beyond question he was
addressed. Not only that, but he was treated to that absurd smile, that
preposterous smile—the memory of which at least a dozen men were to carry into
middle age.
"Boy, do you know
where the golf teacher is?"
"He's giving a
lesson."
"Well, do you know
where the caddy-master is?"
"He isn't here yet
this morning."
"Oh." For a
moment this baffled her. She stood alternately on her right and left foot.
"We'd like to get a
caddy," said the nurse. "Mrs. Mortimer Jones sent us out to play
golf, and we don't know how without we get a caddy."
Here she was stopped by
an ominous glance from Miss Jones, followed immediately by the smile.
"There aren't any
caddies here except me," said Dexter to the nurse, "and I got to stay
here in charge until the caddy-master gets here."
"Oh."
Miss Jones and her
retinue now withdrew, and at a proper distance from Dexter became involved in a
heated conversation, which was concluded by Miss Jones taking one of the clubs
and hitting it on the ground with violence. For further emphasis she raised it
again and was about to bring it down smartly upon the nurse's bosom, when the
nurse seized the club and twisted it from her hands.
"You damn little
mean old thing!" cried Miss Jones wildly.
Another argument ensued.
Realizing that the elements of the comedy were implied in the scene, Dexter
several times began to laugh, but each time restrained the laugh before it
reached audibility. He could not resist the monstrous conviction that the
little girl was justified in beating the nurse.
The situation was
resolved by the fortuitous appearance of the caddy-master, who was appealed to
immediately by the nurse.
"Miss Jones is to
have a little caddy, and this one says he can't go."
"Mr. McKenna said I
was to wait here till you came," said Dexter quickly.
"Well, he's here
now." Miss Jones smiled cheerfully at the caddy-master. Then she dropped
her bag and set off at a haughty mince toward the first tee.
"Well?" The
caddy-master turned to Dexter. "What you standing there like a dummy for?
Go pick up the young lady's clubs."
"I don't think I'll
go out to-day," said Dexter.
"You don't——"
"I think I'll
quit."
The enormity of his
decision frightened him. He was a favorite caddy, and the thirty dollars a
month he earned through the summer were not to be made elsewhere around the
lake. But he had received a strong emotional shock, and his perturbation
required a violent and immediate outlet.
It is not so simple as
that, either. As so frequently would be the case in the future, Dexter was
unconsciously dictated to by his winter dreams.
II
Now, of course, the
quality and the seasonability of these winter dreams varied, but the stuff of
them remained. They persuaded Dexter several years later to pass up a business
course at the State university—his father, prospering now, would have paid his
way—for the precarious advantage of attending an older and more famous
university in the East, where he was bothered by his scanty funds. But do not
get the impression, because his winter dreams happened to be concerned at first
with musings on the rich, that there was anything merely snobbish in the boy.
He wanted not association with glittering things and glittering people—he
wanted the glittering things themselves. Often he reached out for the best
without knowing why he wanted it—and sometimes he ran up against the mysterious
denials and prohibitions in which life indulges. It is with one of those
denials and not with his career as a whole that this story deals.
He made money. It was
rather amazing. After college he went to the city from which Black Bear Lake
draws its wealthy patrons. When he was only twenty-three and had been there not
quite two years, there were already people who liked to say: "Now there's a
boy—" All about him rich men's sons were peddling bonds precariously, or
investing patrimonies precariously, or plodding through the two dozen volumes
of the "George Washington Commercial Course," but Dexter borrowed a
thousand dollars on his college degree and his confident mouth, and bought a
partnership in a laundry.
It was a small laundry
when he went into it but Dexter made a specialty of learning how the English
washed fine woollen golf-stockings without shrinking them, and within a year he
was catering to the trade that wore knickerbockers. Men were insisting that
their Shetland hose and sweaters go to his laundry just as they had insisted on
a caddy who could find golf-balls. A little later he was doing their wives'
lingerie as well—and running five branches in different parts of the city.
Before he was twenty-seven he owned the largest string of laundries in his
section of the country. It was then that he sold out and went to New York. But
the part of his story that concerns us goes back to the days when he was making
his first big success.
When he was twenty-three
Mr. Hart—one of the gray-haired men who like to say "Now there's a
boy"—gave him a guest card to the Sherry Island Golf Club for a week-end. So
he signed his name one day on the register, and that afternoon played golf in a
foursome with Mr. Hart and Mr. Sandwood and Mr. T. A. Hedrick. He did not
consider it necessary to remark that he had once carried Mr. Hart's bag over
this same links, and that he knew every trap and gully with his eyes shut—but
he found himself glancing at the four caddies who trailed them, trying to catch
a gleam or gesture that would remind him of himself, that would lessen the gap
which lay between his present and his past.
It was a curious day,
slashed abruptly with fleeting, familiar impressions. One minute he had the
sense of being a trespasser—in the next he was impressed by the tremendous
superiority he felt toward Mr. T. A. Hedrick, who was a bore and not even a
good golfer any more.
Then, because of a ball
Mr. Hart lost near the fifteenth green, an enormous thing happened. While they
were searching the stiff grasses of the rough there was a clear call of
"Fore!" from behind a hill in their rear. And as they all turned
abruptly from their search a bright new ball sliced abruptly over the hill and
caught Mr. T. A. Hedrick in the abdomen.
"By Gad!"
cried Mr. T. A. Hedrick, "they ought to put some of these crazy women off
the course. It's getting to be outrageous."
A head and a voice came
up together over the hill:
"Do you mind if we
go through?"
"You hit me in the
stomach!" declared Mr. Hedrick wildly.
"Did I?" The
girl approached the group of men. "I'm sorry. I yelled 'Fore!'"
Her glance fell casually
on each of the men—then scanned the fairway for her ball.
"Did I bounce into
the rough?"
It was impossible to
determine whether this question was ingenuous or malicious. In a moment,
however, she left no doubt, for as her partner came up over the hill she called
cheerfully:
"Here I am! I'd
have gone on the green except that I hit something."
As she took her stance
for a short mashie shot, Dexter looked at her closely. She wore a blue gingham
dress, rimmed at throat and shoulders with a white edging that accentuated her
tan. The quality of exaggeration, of thinness, which had made her passionate
eyes and down-turning mouth absurd at eleven, was gone now. She was arrestingly
beautiful. The color in her cheeks was centred like the color in a picture—it
was not a "high" color, but a sort of fluctuating and feverish
warmth, so shaded that it seemed at any moment it would recede and disappear.
This color and the mobility of her mouth gave a continual impression of flux,
of intense life, of passionate vitality—balanced only partially by the sad
luxury of her eyes.
She swung her mashie
impatiently and without interest, pitching the ball into a sand-pit on the
other side of the green. With a quick, insincere smile and a careless
"Thank you!" she went on after it.
"That Judy
Jones!" remarked Mr. Hedrick on the next tee, as they waited—some
moments—for her to play on ahead. "All she needs is to be turned up and
spanked for six months and then to be married off to an old-fashioned cavalry
captain."
"My God, she's
good-looking!" said Mr. Sandwood, who was just over thirty.
"Good-looking!"
cried Mr. Hedrick contemptuously, "she always looks as if she wanted to be
kissed! Turning those big cow-eyes on every calf in town!"
It was doubtful if Mr.
Hedrick intended a reference to the maternal instinct.
"She'd play pretty
good golf if she'd try," said Mr. Sandwood.
"She has no
form," said Mr. Hedrick solemnly.
"She has a nice
figure," said Mr. Sandwood.
"Better thank the
Lord she doesn't drive a swifter ball," said Mr. Hart, winking at Dexter.
Later in the afternoon
the sun went down with a riotous swirl of gold and varying blues and scarlets,
and left the dry, rustling night of Western summer. Dexter watched from the
veranda of the Golf Club, watched the even overlap of the waters in the little
wind, silver molasses under the harvest-moon. Then the moon held a finger to
her lips and the lake became a clear pool, pale and quiet. Dexter put on his
bathing-suit and swam out to the farthest raft, where he stretched dripping on
the wet canvas of the spring-board.
There was a fish jumping
and a star shining and the lights around the lake were gleaming. Over on a dark
peninsula a piano was playing the songs of last summer and of summers before
that—songs from "Chin-Chin" and "The Count of Luxemburg"
and "The Chocolate Soldier"—and because the sound of a piano over a
stretch of water had always seemed beautiful to Dexter he lay perfectly quiet
and listened.
The tune the piano was
playing at that moment had been gay and new five years before when Dexter was a
sophomore at college. They had played it at a prom once when he could not
afford the luxury of proms, and he had stood outside the gymnasium and
listened. The sound of the tune precipitated in him a sort of ecstasy and it
was with that ecstasy he viewed what happened to him now. It was a mood of
intense appreciation, a sense that, for once, he was magnificently attune to
life and that everything about him was radiating a brightness and a glamour he
might never know again.
A low, pale oblong
detached itself suddenly from the darkness of the Island, spitting forth the
reverberate sound of a racing motor-boat. Two white streamers of cleft water
rolled themselves out behind it and almost immediately the boat was beside him,
drowning out the hot tinkle of the piano in the drone of its spray. Dexter
raising himself on his arms was aware of a figure standing at the wheel, of two
dark eyes regarding him over the lengthening space of water—then the boat had
gone by and was sweeping in an immense and purposeless circle of spray round
and round in the middle of the lake. With equal eccentricity one of the circles
flattened out and headed back toward the raft.
"Who's that?"
she called, shutting off her motor. She was so near now that Dexter could see
her bathing-suit, which consisted apparently of pink rompers.
The nose of the boat
bumped the raft, and as the latter tilted rakishly he was precipitated toward
her. With different degrees of interest they recognized each other.
"Aren't you one of
those men we played through this afternoon?" she demanded.
He was.
"Well, do you know
how to drive a motor-boat? Because if you do I wish you'd drive this one so I
can ride on the surf-board behind. My name is Judy Jones"—she favored him
with an absurd smirk—rather, what tried to be a smirk, for, twist her mouth as
she might, it was not grotesque, it was merely beautiful—"and I live in a
house over there on the Island, and in that house there is a man waiting for
me. When he drove up at the door I drove out of the dock because he says I'm
his ideal."
There was a fish jumping
and a star shining and the lights around the lake were gleaming. Dexter sat
beside Judy Jones and she explained how her boat was driven. Then she was in
the water, swimming to the floating surf-board with a sinuous crawl. Watching
her was without effort to the eye, watching a branch waving or a sea-gull
flying. Her arms, burned to butternut, moved sinuously among the dull platinum
ripples, elbow appearing first, casting the forearm back with a cadence of
falling water, then reaching out and down, stabbing a path ahead.
They moved out into the
lake; turning, Dexter saw that she was kneeling on the low rear of the now
uptilted surf-board.
"Go faster,"
she called, "fast as it'll go."
Obediently he jammed the
lever forward and the white spray mounted at the bow. When he looked around
again the girl was standing up on the rushing board, her arms spread wide, her
eyes lifted toward the moon.
"It's awful
cold," she shouted. "What's your name?"
He told her.
"Well, why don't
you come to dinner to-morrow night?"
His heart turned over
like the fly-wheel of the boat, and, for the second time, her casual whim gave
a new direction to his life.
III
Next evening while he
waited for her to come down-stairs, Dexter peopled the soft deep summer room
and the sun-porch that opened from it with the men who had already loved Judy
Jones. He knew the sort of men they were—the men who when he first went to
college had entered from the great prep schools with graceful clothes and the
deep tan of healthy summers. He had seen that, in one sense, he was better than
these men. He was newer and stronger. Yet in acknowledging to himself that he
wished his children to be like them he was admitting that he was but the rough,
strong stuff from which they eternally sprang.
When the time had come
for him to wear good clothes, he had known who were the best tailors in
America, and the best tailors in America had made him the suit he wore this
evening. He had acquired that particular reserve peculiar to his university,
that set it off from other universities. He recognized the value to him of such
a mannerism and he had adopted it; he knew that to be careless in dress and
manner required more confidence than to be careful. But carelessness was for
his children. His mother's name had been Krimslich. She was a Bohemian of the
peasant class and she had talked broken English to the end of her days. Her son
must keep to the set patterns.
At a little after seven
Judy Jones came down-stairs. She wore a blue silk afternoon dress, and he was
disappointed at first that she had not put on something more elaborate. This
feeling was accentuated when, after a brief greeting, she went to the door of a
butler's pantry and pushing it open called: "You can serve dinner, Martha."
He had rather expected that a butler would announce dinner, that there would be
a cocktail. Then he put these thoughts behind him as they sat down side by side
on a lounge and looked at each other.
"Father and mother
won't be here," she said thoughtfully.
He remembered the last
time he had seen her father, and he was glad the parents were not to be here
to-night—they might wonder who he was. He had been born in Keeble, a Minnesota
village fifty miles farther north, and he always gave Keeble as his home instead
of Black Bear Village. Country towns were well enough to come from if they
weren't inconveniently in sight and used as footstools by fashionable lakes.
They talked of his
university, which she had visited frequently during the past two years, and of
the near-by city which supplied Sherry Island with its patrons, and whither
Dexter would return next day to his prospering laundries.
During dinner she
slipped into a moody depression which gave Dexter a feeling of uneasiness.
Whatever petulance she uttered in her throaty voice worried him. Whatever she
smiled at—at him, at a chicken liver, at nothing—it disturbed him that her
smile could have no root in mirth, or even in amusement. When the scarlet
corners of her lips curved down, it was less a smile than an invitation to a
kiss.
Then, after dinner, she
led him out on the dark sun-porch and deliberately changed the atmosphere.
"Do you mind if I
weep a little?" she said.
"I'm afraid I'm
boring you," he responded quickly.
"You're not. I like
you. But I've just had a terrible afternoon. There was a man I cared about, and
this afternoon he told me out of a clear sky that he was poor as a
church-mouse. He'd never even hinted it before. Does this sound horribly
mundane?"
"Perhaps he was
afraid to tell you."
"Suppose he was,"
she answered. "He didn't start right. You see, if I'd thought of him as
poor—well, I've been mad about loads of poor men, and fully intended to marry
them all. But in this case, I hadn't thought of him that way, and my interest
in him wasn't strong enough to survive the shock. As if a girl calmly informed
her fiancé that she was a widow. He might not object to widows, but——
"Let's start
right," she interrupted herself suddenly. "Who are you, anyhow?"
For a moment Dexter
hesitated. Then:
"I'm nobody," he
announced. "My career is largely a matter of futures."
"Are you
poor?"
"No," he said
frankly, "I'm probably making more money than any man my age in the
Northwest. I know that's an obnoxious remark, but you advised me to start
right."
There was a pause. Then
she smiled and the corners of her mouth drooped and an almost imperceptible
sway brought her closer to him, looking up into his eyes. A lump rose in
Dexter's throat, and he waited breathless for the experiment, facing the
unpredictable compound that would form mysteriously from the elements of their
lips. Then he saw—she communicated her excitement to him, lavishly, deeply,
with kisses that were not a promise but a fulfilment. They aroused in him not
hunger demanding renewal but surfeit that would demand more surfeit ... kisses
that were like charity, creating want by holding back nothing at all.
It did not take him many
hours to decide that he had wanted Judy Jones ever since he was a proud,
desirous little boy.
IV
It began like that—and
continued, with varying shades of intensity, on such a note right up to the
dénouement. Dexter surrendered a part of himself to the most direct and
unprincipled personality with which he had ever come in contact. Whatever Judy
wanted, she went after with the full pressure of her charm. There was no
divergence of method, no jockeying for position or premeditation of
effects—there was a very little mental side to any of her affairs. She simply
made men conscious to the highest degree of her physical loveliness. Dexter had
no desire to change her. Her deficiencies were knit up with a passionate energy
that transcended and justified them.
When, as Judy's head lay
against his shoulder that first night, she whispered, "I don't know what's
the matter with me. Last night I thought I was in love with a man and to-night
I think I'm in love with you——"—it seemed to him a beautiful and romantic
thing to say. It was the exquisite excitability that for the moment he
controlled and owned. But a week later he was compelled to view this same
quality in a different light. She took him in her roadster to a picnic supper,
and after supper she disappeared, likewise in her roadster, with another man.
Dexter became enormously upset and was scarcely able to be decently civil to
the other people present. When she assured him that she had not kissed the
other man, he knew she was lying—yet he was glad that she had taken the trouble
to lie to him.
He was, as he found
before the summer ended, one of a varying dozen who circulated about her. Each
of them had at one time been favored above all others—about half of them still
basked in the solace of occasional sentimental revivals. Whenever one showed
signs of dropping out through long neglect, she granted him a brief honeyed
hour, which encouraged him to tag along for a year or so longer. Judy made
these forays upon the helpless and defeated without malice, indeed half
unconscious that there was anything mischievous in what she did.
When a new man came to
town every one dropped out—dates were automatically cancelled.
The helpless part of
trying to do anything about it was that she did it all herself. She was not a
girl who could be "won" in the kinetic sense—she was proof against
cleverness, she was proof against charm; if any of these assailed her too strongly
she would immediately resolve the affair to a physical basis, and under the
magic of her physical splendor the strong as well as the brilliant played her
game and not their own. She was entertained only by the gratification of her
desires and by the direct exercise of her own charm. Perhaps from so much
youthful love, so many youthful lovers, she had come, in self-defense, to
nourish herself wholly from within.
Succeeding Dexter's
first exhilaration came restlessness and dissatisfaction. The helpless ecstasy
of losing himself in her was opiate rather than tonic. It was fortunate for his
work during the winter that those moments of ecstasy came infrequently. Early
in their acquaintance it had seemed for a while that there was a deep and
spontaneous mutual attraction—that first August, for example—three days of long
evenings on her dusky veranda, of strange wan kisses through the late
afternoon, in shadowy alcoves or behind the protecting trellises of the garden
arbors, of mornings when she was fresh as a dream and almost shy at meeting him
in the clarity of the rising day. There was all the ecstasy of an engagement
about it, sharpened by his realization that there was no engagement. It was
during those three days that, for the first time, he had asked her to marry
him. She said "maybe some day," she said "kiss me," she
said "I'd like to marry you," she said "I love you"—she
said—nothing.
The three days were
interrupted by the arrival of a New York man who visited at her house for half
September. To Dexter's agony, rumor engaged them. The man was the son of the
president of a great trust company. But at the end of a month it was reported
that Judy was yawning. At a dance one night she sat all evening in a motor-boat
with a local beau, while the New Yorker searched the club for her frantically.
She told the local beau that she was bored with her visitor, and two days later
he left. She was seen with him at the station, and it was reported that he
looked very mournful indeed.
On this note the summer
ended. Dexter was twenty-four, and he found himself increasingly in a position
to do as he wished. He joined two clubs in the city and lived at one of them.
Though he was by no means an integral part of the stag-lines at these clubs, he
managed to be on hand at dances where Judy Jones was likely to appear. He could
have gone out socially as much as he liked—he was an eligible young man, now,
and popular with down-town fathers. His confessed devotion to Judy Jones had
rather solidified his position. But he had no social aspirations and rather
despised the dancing men who were always on tap for the Thursday or Saturday
parties and who filled in at dinners with the younger married set. Already he
was playing with the idea of going East to New York. He wanted to take Judy
Jones with him. No disillusion as to the world in which she had grown up could
cure his illusion as to her desirability.
Remember that—for only
in the light of it can what he did for her be understood.
Eighteen months after he
first met Judy Jones he became engaged to another girl. Her name was Irene
Scheerer, and her father was one of the men who had always believed in Dexter.
Irene was light-haired and sweet and honorable, and a little stout, and she had
two suitors whom she pleasantly relinquished when Dexter formally asked her to
marry him.
Summer, fall, winter,
spring, another summer, another fall—so much he had given of his active life to
the incorrigible lips of Judy Jones. She had treated him with interest, with
encouragement, with malice, with indifference, with contempt. She had inflicted
on him the innumerable little slights and indignities possible in such a
case—as if in revenge for having ever cared for him at all. She had beckoned
him and yawned at him and beckoned him again and he had responded often with
bitterness and narrowed eyes. She had brought him ecstatic happiness and
intolerable agony of spirit. She had caused him untold inconvenience and not a
little trouble. She had insulted him, and she had ridden over him, and she had
played his interest in her against his interest in his work—for fun. She had
done everything to him except to criticise him—this she had not done—it seemed
to him only because it might have sullied the utter indifference she manifested
and sincerely felt toward him.
When autumn had come and
gone again it occurred to him that he could not have Judy Jones. He had to beat
this into his mind but he convinced himself at last. He lay awake at night for
a while and argued it over. He told himself the trouble and the pain she had
caused him, he enumerated her glaring deficiencies as a wife. Then he said to
himself that he loved her, and after a while he fell asleep. For a week, lest
he imagined her husky voice over the telephone or her eyes opposite him at
lunch, he worked hard and late, and at night he went to his office and plotted
out his years.
At the end of a week he
went to a dance and cut in on her once. For almost the first time since they
had met he did not ask her to sit out with him or tell her that she was lovely.
It hurt him that she did not miss these things—that was all. He was not jealous
when he saw that there was a new man to-night. He had been hardened against
jealousy long before.
He stayed late at the
dance. He sat for an hour with Irene Scheerer and talked about books and about
music. He knew very little about either. But he was beginning to be master of
his own time now, and he had a rather priggish notion that he—the young and
already fabulously successful Dexter Green—should know more about such things.
That was in October,
when he was twenty-five. In January, Dexter and Irene became engaged. It was to
be announced in June, and they were to be married three months later.
The Minnesota winter
prolonged itself interminably, and it was almost May when the winds came soft
and the snow ran down into Black Bear Lake at last. For the first time in over
a year Dexter was enjoying a certain tranquillity of spirit. Judy Jones had
been in Florida, and afterward in Hot Springs, and somewhere she had been
engaged, and somewhere she had broken it off. At first, when Dexter had
definitely given her up, it had made him sad that people still linked them
together and asked for news of her, but when he began to be placed at dinner
next to Irene Scheerer people didn't ask him about her any more—they told him
about her. He ceased to be an authority on her.
May at last. Dexter
walked the streets at night when the darkness was damp as rain, wondering that
so soon, with so little done, so much of ecstasy had gone from him. May one year
back had been marked by Judy's poignant, unforgivable, yet forgiven
turbulence—it had been one of those rare times when he fancied she had grown to
care for him. That old penny's worth of happiness he had spent for this bushel
of content. He knew that Irene would be no more than a curtain spread behind
him, a hand moving among gleaming tea-cups, a voice calling to children ...
fire and loveliness were gone, the magic of nights and the wonder of the
varying hours and seasons ... slender lips, down-turning, dropping to his lips
and bearing him up into a heaven of eyes.... The thing was deep in him. He was
too strong and alive for it to die lightly.
In the middle of May
when the weather balanced for a few days on the thin bridge that led to deep
summer he turned in one night at Irene's house. Their engagement was to be
announced in a week now—no one would be surprised at it. And to-night they
would sit together on the lounge at the University Club and look on for an hour
at the dancers. It gave him a sense of solidity to go with her—she was so
sturdily popular, so intensely "great."
He mounted the steps of
the brownstone house and stepped inside.
"Irene," he
called.
Mrs. Scheerer came out
of the living-room to meet him.
"Dexter," she
said, "Irene's gone up-stairs with a splitting headache. She wanted to go
with you but I made her go to bed."
"Nothing serious,
I——"
"Oh, no. She's
going to play golf with you in the morning. You can spare her for just one
night, can't you, Dexter?"
Her smile was kind. She
and Dexter liked each other. In the living-room he talked for a moment before
he said good-night.
Returning to the
University Club, where he had rooms, he stood in the doorway for a moment and
watched the dancers. He leaned against the door-post, nodded at a man or
two—yawned.
"Hello,
darling."
The familiar voice at
his elbow startled him. Judy Jones had left a man and crossed the room to
him—Judy Jones, a slender enamelled doll in cloth of gold: gold in a band at
her head, gold in two slipper points at her dress's hem. The fragile glow of
her face seemed to blossom as she smiled at him. A breeze of warmth and light
blew through the room. His hands in the pockets of his dinner-jacket tightened
spasmodically. He was filled with a sudden excitement.
"When did you get
back?" he asked casually.
"Come here and I'll
tell you about it."
She turned and he
followed her. She had been away—he could have wept at the wonder of her return.
She had passed through enchanted streets, doing things that were like
provocative music. All mysterious happenings, all fresh and quickening hopes,
had gone away with her, come back with her now.
She turned in the
doorway.
"Have you a car
here? If you haven't, I have."
"I have a
coupé."
In then, with a rustle
of golden cloth. He slammed the door. Into so many cars she had stepped—like
this—like that—her back against the leather, so—her elbow resting on the
door—waiting. She would have been soiled long since had there been anything to
soil her—except herself—but this was her own self outpouring.
With an effort he forced
himself to start the car and back into the street. This was nothing, he must
remember. She had done this before, and he had put her behind him, as he would
have crossed a bad account from his books.
He drove slowly
down-town and, affecting abstraction, traversed the deserted streets of the
business section, peopled here and there where a movie was giving out its crowd
or where consumptive or pugilistic youth lounged in front of pool halls. The
clink of glasses and the slap of hands on the bars issued from saloons,
cloisters of glazed glass and dirty yellow light.
She was watching him
closely and the silence was embarrassing; yet in this crisis he could find no
casual word with which to profane the hour. At a convenient turning he began to
zigzag back toward the University Club.
"Have you missed
me?" she asked suddenly.
"Everybody missed
you."
He wondered if she knew
of Irene Scheerer. She had been back only a day—her absence had been almost
contemporaneous with his engagement.
"What a
remark!" Judy laughed sadly—without sadness. She looked at him
searchingly. He became absorbed in the dashboard.
"You're handsomer
than you used to be," she said thoughtfully. "Dexter, you have the
most rememberable eyes."
He could have laughed at
this, but he did not laugh. It was the sort of thing that was said to
sophomores. Yet it stabbed at him.
"I'm awfully tired
of everything, darling." She called every one darling, endowing the
endearment with careless, individual comraderie. "I wish you'd marry me."
The directness of this
confused him. He should have told her now that he was going to marry another
girl, but he could not tell her. He could as easily have sworn that he had
never loved her.
"I think we'd get
along," she continued, on the same note, "unless probably you've
forgotten me and fallen in love with another girl."
Her confidence was
obviously enormous. She had said, in effect, that she found such a thing
impossible to believe, that if it were true he had merely committed a childish
indiscretion—and probably to show off. She would forgive him, because it was
not a matter of any moment but rather something to be brushed aside lightly.
"Of course you
could never love anybody but me," she continued, "I like the way you
love me. Oh, Dexter, have you forgotten last year?"
"No, I haven't
forgotten."
"Neither have
I!"
Was she sincerely
moved—or was she carried along by the wave of her own acting?
"I wish we could be
like that again," she said, and he forced himself to answer:
"I don't think we
can."
"I suppose not....
I hear you're giving Irene Scheerer a violent rush."
There was not the
faintest emphasis on the name, yet Dexter was suddenly ashamed.
"Oh, take me
home," cried Judy suddenly; "I don't want to go back to that idiotic
dance—with those children."
Then, as he turned up
the street that led to the residence district, Judy began to cry quietly to
herself. He had never seen her cry before.
The dark street
lightened, the dwellings of the rich loomed up around them, he stopped his
coupé in front of the great white bulk of the Mortimer Joneses house,
somnolent, gorgeous, drenched with the splendor of the damp moonlight. Its
solidity startled him. The strong walls, the steel of the girders, the breadth
and beam and pomp of it were there only to bring out the contrast with the
young beauty beside him. It was sturdy to accentuate her slightness—as if to
show what a breeze could be generated by a butterfly's wing.
He sat perfectly quiet,
his nerves in wild clamor, afraid that if he moved he would find her irresistibly
in his arms. Two tears had rolled down her wet face and trembled on her upper
lip.
"I'm more beautiful
than anybody else," she said brokenly, "why can't I be happy?"
Her moist eyes tore at his stability—her mouth turned slowly downward with an exquisite
sadness: "I'd like to marry you if you'll have me, Dexter. I suppose you
think I'm not worth having, but I'll be so beautiful for you, Dexter."
A million phrases of
anger, pride, passion, hatred, tenderness fought on his lips. Then a perfect
wave of emotion washed over him, carrying off with it a sediment of wisdom, of
convention, of doubt, of honor. This was his girl who was speaking, his own,
his beautiful, his pride.
"Won't you come
in?" He heard her draw in her breath sharply.
Waiting.
"All right,"
his voice was trembling, "I'll come in."
V
It was strange that
neither when it was over nor a long time afterward did he regret that night.
Looking at it from the perspective of ten years, the fact that Judy's flare for
him endured just one month seemed of little importance. Nor did it matter that
by his yielding he subjected himself to a deeper agony in the end and gave
serious hurt to Irene Scheerer and to Irene's parents, who had befriended him.
There was nothing sufficiently pictorial about Irene's grief to stamp itself on
his mind.
Dexter was at bottom
hard-minded. The attitude of the city on his action was of no importance to
him, not because he was going to leave the city, but because any outside
attitude on the situation seemed superficial. He was completely indifferent to
popular opinion. Nor, when he had seen that it was no use, that he did not
possess in himself the power to move fundamentally or to hold Judy Jones, did
he bear any malice toward her. He loved her, and he would love her until the
day he was too old for loving—but he could not have her. So he tasted the deep
pain that is reserved only for the strong, just as he had tasted for a little
while the deep happiness.
Even the ultimate
falsity of the grounds upon which Judy terminated the engagement that she did
not want to "take him away" from Irene—Judy, who had wanted nothing
else—did not revolt him. He was beyond any revulsion or any amusement.
He went East in February
with the intention of selling out his laundries and settling in New York—but
the war came to America in March and changed his plans. He returned to the
West, handed over the management of the business to his partner, and went into
the first officers' training-camp in late April. He was one of those young
thousands who greeted the war with a certain amount of relief, welcoming the
liberation from webs of tangled emotion.
VI
This story is not his
biography, remember, although things creep into it which have nothing to do
with those dreams he had when he was young. We are almost done with them and
with him now. There is only one more incident to be related here, and it
happens seven years farther on.
It took place in New
York, where he had done well—so well that there were no barriers too high for
him. He was thirty-two years old, and, except for one flying trip immediately
after the war, he had not been West in seven years. A man named Devlin from
Detroit came into his office to see him in a business way, and then and there
this incident occurred, and closed out, so to speak, this particular side of
his life.
"So you're from the
Middle West," said the man Devlin with careless curiosity. "That's
funny—I thought men like you were probably born and raised on Wall Street. You
know—wife of one of my best friends in Detroit came from your city. I was an
usher at the wedding."
Dexter waited with no
apprehension of what was coming.
"Judy Simms,"
said Devlin with no particular interest; "Judy Jones she was once."
"Yes, I knew
her." A dull impatience spread over him. He had heard, of course, that she
was married—perhaps deliberately he had heard no more.
"Awfully nice
girl," brooded Devlin meaninglessly, "I'm sort of sorry for
her."
"Why?"
Something in Dexter was alert, receptive, at once.
"Oh, Lud Simms has
gone to pieces in a way. I don't mean he ill-uses her, but he drinks and runs
around——-"
"Doesn't she run
around?"
"No. Stays at home
with her kids."
"Oh."
"She's a little too
old for him," said Devlin.
"Too old!"
cried Dexter. "Why, man, she's only twenty-seven."
He was possessed with a
wild notion of rushing out into the streets and taking a train to Detroit. He
rose to his feet spasmodically.
"I guess you're
busy," Devlin apologized quickly. "I didn't realize——"
"No, I'm not
busy," said Dexter, steadying his voice. "I'm not busy at all. Not
busy at all. Did you say she was—twenty-seven? No, I said she was
twenty-seven."
"Yes, you
did," agreed Devlin dryly.
"Go on, then. Go
on."
"What do you
mean?"
"About Judy
Jones."
Devlin looked at him
helplessly.
"Well, that's—I
told you all there is to it. He treats her like the devil. Oh, they're not
going to get divorced or anything. When he's particularly outrageous she
forgives him. In fact, I'm inclined to think she loves him. She was a pretty
girl when she first came to Detroit."
A pretty girl! The
phrase struck Dexter as ludicrous.
"Isn't she—a pretty
girl, any more?"
"Oh, she's all
right."
"Look here,"
said Dexter, sitting down suddenly, "I don't understand. You say she was a
'pretty girl' and now you say she's 'all right.' I don't understand what you
mean—Judy Jones wasn't a pretty girl, at all. She was a great beauty. Why, I
knew her, I knew her. She was——"
Devlin laughed
pleasantly.
"I'm not trying to
start a row," he said. "I think Judy's a nice girl and I like her. I
can't understand how a man like Lud Simms could fall madly in love with her,
but he did." Then he added: "Most of the women like her."
Dexter looked closely at
Devlin, thinking wildly that there must be a reason for this, some
insensitivity in the man or some private malice.
"Lots of women fade
just like that" Devlin snapped his fingers. "You must
have seen it happen. Perhaps I've forgotten how pretty she was at her wedding.
I've seen her so much since then, you see. She has nice eyes."
A sort of dulness
settled down upon Dexter. For the first time in his life he felt like getting
very drunk. He knew that he was laughing loudly at something Devlin had said,
but he did not know what it was or why it was funny. When, in a few minutes,
Devlin went he lay down on his lounge and looked out the window at the New York
sky-line into which the sun was sinking in dull lovely shades of pink and gold.
He had thought that
having nothing else to lose he was invulnerable at last—but he knew that he had
just lost something more, as surely as if he had married Judy Jones and seen
her fade away before his eyes.
The dream was gone.
Something had been taken from him. In a sort of panic he pushed the palms of
his hands into his eyes and tried to bring up a picture of the waters lapping
on Sherry Island and the moonlit veranda, and gingham on the golf-links and the
dry sun and the gold color of her neck's soft down. And her mouth damp to his
kisses and her eyes plaintive with melancholy and her freshness like new fine
linen in the morning. Why, these things were no longer in the world! They had
existed and they existed no longer.
For the first time in
years the tears were streaming down his face. But they were for himself now. He
did not care about mouth and eyes and moving hands. He wanted to care, and he
could not care. For he had gone away and he could never go back any more. The
gates were closed, the sun was gone down, and there was no beauty but the gray
beauty of steel that withstands all time. Even the grief he could have borne
was left behind in the country of illusion, of youth, of the richness of life,
where his winter dreams had flourished.
"Long ago," he
said, "long ago, there was something in me, but now that thing is gone.
Now that thing is gone, that thing is gone. I cannot cry. I cannot care. That
thing will come back no more."
3.THE BABY PARTY
When John Andros felt
old he found solace in the thought of life continuing through his child. The
dark trumpets of oblivion were less loud at the patter of his child's feet or
at the sound of his child's voice babbling mad non sequiturs to him over the
telephone. The latter incident occurred every afternoon at three when his wife
called the office from the country, and he came to look forward to it as one of
the vivid minutes of his day.
He was not physically
old, but his life had been a series of struggles up a series of rugged hills,
and here at thirty-eight having won his battles against ill-health and poverty
he cherished less than the usual number of illusions. Even his feeling about
his little girl was qualified. She had interrupted his rather intense
love-affair with his wife, and she was the reason for their living in a
suburban town, where they paid for country air with endless servant troubles
and the weary merry-go-round of the commuting train.
It was little Ede as a
definite piece of youth that chiefly interested him. He liked to take her on
his lap and examine minutely her fragrant, downy scalp and her eyes with their
irises of morning blue. Having paid this homage John was content that the nurse
should take her away. After ten minutes the very vitality of the child
irritated him; he was inclined to lose his temper when things were broken, and
one Sunday afternoon when she had disrupted a bridge game by permanently hiding
up the ace of spades, he had made a scene that had reduced his wife to tears.
This was absurd and John
was ashamed of himself. It was inevitable that such things would happen, and it
was impossible that little Ede should spend all her indoor hours in the nursery
up-stairs when she was becoming, as her mother said, more nearly a "real
person" every day.
She was two and a half,
and this afternoon, for instance, she was going to a baby party. Grown-up
Edith, her mother, had telephoned the information to the office, and little Ede
had confirmed the business by shouting "I yam going to a pantry!"
into John's unsuspecting left ear.
"Drop in at the
Markeys' when you get home, won't you, dear?" resumed her mother.
"It'll be funny. Ede's going to be all dressed up in her new pink
dress——"
The conversation
terminated abruptly with a squawk which indicated that the telephone had been
pulled violently to the floor. John laughed and decided to get an early train
out; the prospect of a baby party in some one else's house amused him.
"What a peach of a
mess!" he thought humorously. "A dozen mothers, and each one looking
at nothing but her own child. All the babies breaking things and grabbing at
the cake, and each mama going home thinking about the subtle superiority of her
own child to every other child there."
He was in a good humor
to-day—all the things in his life were going better than they had ever gone
before. When he got off the train at his station he shook his head at an
importunate taxi man, and began to walk up the long hill toward his house
through the crisp December twilight. It was only six o'clock but the moon was
out, shining with proud brilliance on the thin sugary snow that lay over the
lawns.
As he walked along
drawing his lungs full of cold air his happiness increased, and the idea of a
baby party appealed to him more and more. He began to wonder how Ede compared
to other children of her own age, and if the pink dress she was to wear was
something radical and mature. Increasing his gait he came in sight of his own
house, where the lights of a defunct Christmas-tree still blossomed in the
window, but he continued on past the walk. The party was at the Markeys' next
door.
As he mounted the brick
step and rang the bell he became aware of voices inside, and he was glad he was
not too late. Then he raised his head and listened—the voices were not
children's voices, but they were loud and pitched high with anger; there were
at least three of them and one, which rose as he listened to a hysterical sob,
he recognized immediately as his wife's.
"There's been some
trouble," he thought quickly.
Trying the door, he
found it unlocked and pushed it open.
The baby party began at
half past four, but Edith Andros, calculating shrewdly that the new dress would
stand out more sensationally against vestments already rumpled, planned the
arrival of herself and little Ede for five. When they appeared it was already a
flourishing affair. Four baby girls and nine baby boys, each one curled and
washed and dressed with all the care of a proud and jealous heart, were dancing
to the music of a phonograph. Never more than two or three were dancing at
once, but as all were continually in motion running to and from their mothers
for encouragement, the general effect was the same.
As Edith and her daughter
entered, the music was temporarily drowned out by a sustained chorus,
consisting largely of the word cute and directed toward little
Ede, who stood looking timidly about and fingering the edges of her pink dress.
She was not kissed—this is the sanitary age—but she was passed along a row of
mamas each one of whom said "cu-u-ute" to her and held her pink
little hand before passing her on to the next. After some encouragement and a
few mild pushes she was absorbed into the dance, and became an active member of
the party.
Edith stood near the
door talking to Mrs. Markey, and keeping one eye on the tiny figure in the pink
dress. She did not care for Mrs. Markey; she considered her both snippy and
common, but John and Joe Markey were congenial and went in together on the
commuting train every morning, so the two women kept up an elaborate pretense
of warm amity. They were always reproaching each other for "not coming to
see me," and they were always planning the kind of parties that began with
"You'll have to come to dinner with us soon, and we'll go in to the
theatre," but never matured further.
"Little Ede looks
perfectly darling," said Mrs. Markey, smiling and moistening her lips in a
way that Edith found particularly repulsive. "So grown-up—I
can't believe it!"
Edith wondered if
"little Ede" referred to the fact that Billy Markey, though several
months younger, weighed almost five pounds more. Accepting a cup of tea she
took a seat with two other ladies on a divan and launched into the real
business of the afternoon, which of course lay in relating the recent
accomplishments and insouciances of her child.
An hour passed. Dancing
palled and the babies took to sterner sport. They ran into the dining-room,
rounded the big table, and essayed the kitchen door, from which they were
rescued by an expeditionary force of mothers. Having been rounded up they
immediately broke loose, and rushing back to the dining-room tried the familiar
swinging door again. The word "overheated" began to be used, and
small white brows were dried with small white handkerchiefs. A general attempt
to make the babies sit down began, but the babies squirmed off laps with
peremptory cries of "Down! Down!" and the rush into the fascinating
dining-room began anew.
This phase of the party
came to an end with the arrival of refreshments, a large cake with two candles,
and saucers of vanilla ice-cream. Billy Markey, a stout laughing baby with red
hair and legs somewhat bowed, blew out the candles, and placed an experimental
thumb on the white frosting. The refreshments were distributed, and the
children ate, greedily but without confusion—they had behaved remarkably well
all afternoon. They were modern babies who ate and slept at regular hours, so
their dispositions were good, and their faces healthy and pink—such a peaceful
party would not have been possible thirty years ago.
After the refreshments a
gradual exodus began. Edith glanced anxiously at her watch—it was almost six,
and John had not arrived. She wanted him to see Ede with the other children—to
see how dignified and polite and intelligent she was, and how the only
ice-cream spot on her dress was some that had dropped from her chin when she
was joggled from behind.
"You're a
darling," she whispered to her child, drawing her suddenly against her knee.
"Do you know you're a darling? Do you know you're a
darling?"
Ede laughed.
"Bow-wow," she said suddenly.
"Bow-wow?"
Edith looked around. "There isn't any bow-wow."
"Bow-wow,"
repeated Ede. "I want a bow-wow."
Edith followed the small
pointing finger.
"That isn't a
bow-wow, dearest, that's a teddy-bear."
"Bear?"
"Yes, that's a
teddy-bear, and it belongs to Billy Markey. You don't want Billy Markey's
teddy-bear, do you?"
Ede did want it.
She broke away from her
mother and approached Billy Markey, who held the toy closely in his arms. Ede
stood regarding him with inscrutable eyes, and Billy laughed.
Grown-up Edith looked at
her watch again, this time impatiently.
The party had dwindled
until, besides Ede and Billy, there were only two babies remaining—and one of
the two remained only by virtue of having hidden himself under the dining-room
table. It was selfish of John not to come. It showed so little pride in the
child. Other fathers had come, half a dozen of them, to call for their wives,
and they had stayed for a while and looked on.
There was a sudden wail.
Ede had obtained Billy's teddy-bear by pulling it forcibly from his arms, and
on Billy's attempt to recover it, she had pushed him casually to the floor.
"Why, Ede!"
cried her mother, repressing an inclination to laugh.
Joe Markey, a handsome,
broad-shouldered man of thirty-five, picked up his son and set him on his feet.
"You're a fine fellow," he said jovially. "Let a girl knock you
over! You're a fine fellow."
"Did he bump his
head?" Mrs. Markey returned anxiously from bowing the next to last
remaining mother out the door.
"No-o-o-o,"
exclaimed Markey. "He bumped something else, didn't you, Billy? He bumped
something else."
Billy had so far
forgotten the bump that he was already making an attempt to recover his
property. He seized a leg of the bear which projected from Ede's enveloping
arms and tugged at it but without success.
"No," said Ede
emphatically.
Suddenly, encouraged by
the success of her former half-accidental manœuvre, Ede dropped the teddy-bear,
placed her hands on Billy's shoulders and pushed him backward off his feet.
This time he landed less
harmlessly; his head hit the bare floor just off the rug with a dull hollow
sound, whereupon he drew in his breath and delivered an agonized yell.
Immediately the room was
in confusion. With an exclamation Markey hurried to his son, but his wife was
first to reach the injured baby and catch him up into her arms.
"Oh, Billy,"
she cried, "what a terrible bump! She ought to be spanked."
Edith, who had rushed
immediately to her daughter, heard this remark, and her lips came sharply
together.
"Why, Ede,"
she whispered perfunctorily, "you bad girl!"
Ede put back her little
head suddenly and laughed. It was a loud laugh, a triumphant laugh with victory
in it and challenge and contempt. Unfortunately it was also an infectious
laugh. Before her mother realized the delicacy of the situation, she too had
laughed, an audible, distinct laugh not unlike the baby's, and partaking of the
same overtones.
Then, as suddenly, she
stopped.
Mrs. Markey's face had
grown red with anger, and Markey, who had been feeling the back of the baby's
head with one finger, looked at her, frowning.
"It's swollen
already," he said with a note of reproof in his voice. "I'll get some
witch-hazel."
But Mrs. Markey had lost
her temper. "I don't see anything funny about a child being hurt!"
she said in a trembling voice.
Little Ede meanwhile had
been looking at her mother curiously. She noted that her own laugh had produced
her mother's, and she wondered if the same cause would always produce the same
effect. So she chose this moment to throw back her head and laugh again.
To her mother the
additional mirth added the final touch of hysteria to the situation. Pressing
her handkerchief to her mouth she giggled irrepressibly. It was more than
nervousness—she felt that in a peculiar way she was laughing with her
child—they were laughing together.
It was in a way a
defiance—those two against the world.
While Markey rushed
up-stairs to the bathroom for ointment, his wife was walking up and down
rocking the yelling boy in her arms.
"Please go
home!" she broke out suddenly. "The child's badly hurt, and if you
haven't the decency to be quiet, you'd better go home."
"Very well,"
said Edith, her own temper rising. "I've never seen any one make such a
mountain out of——"
"Get out!"
cried Mrs. Markey frantically. "There's the door, get out—I never want to
see you in our house again. You or your brat either!"
Edith had taken her
daughter's hand and was moving quickly toward the door, but at this remark she
stopped and turned around, her face contracting with indignation.
"Don't you dare
call her that!"
Mrs. Markey did not
answer but continued walking up and down, muttering to herself and to Billy in
an inaudible voice.
Edith began to cry.
"I will get
out!" she sobbed, "I've never heard anybody so rude and c-common in
my life. I'm glad your baby did get pushed down—he's nothing but a f-fat little
fool anyhow."
Joe Markey reached the
foot of the stairs just in time to hear this remark.
"Why, Mrs.
Andros," he said sharply, "can't you see the child's hurt? You really
ought to control yourself."
"Control
m-myself!" exclaimed Edith brokenly. "You better ask her to c-control
herself. I've never heard anybody so c-common in my life."
"She's insulting
me!" Mrs. Markey was now livid with rage. "Did you hear what she
said, Joe? I wish you'd put her out. If she won't go, just take her by the
shoulders and put her out!"
"Don't you dare
touch me!" cried Edith. "I'm going just as quick as I can find my
c-coat!"
Blind with tears she
took a step toward the hall. It was just at this moment that the door opened
and John Andros walked anxiously in.
"John!" cried
Edith, and fled to him wildly.
"What's the matter?
Why, what's the matter?"
"They're—they're
putting me out!" she wailed, collapsing against him. "He'd just
started to take me by the shoulders and put me out. I want my coat!"
"That's not
true," objected Markey hurriedly. "Nobody's going to put you
out." He turned to John. "Nobody's going to put her out," he
repeated. "She's——"
"What do you mean
'put her out'?" demanded John abruptly. "What's all this talk,
anyhow?"
"Oh, let's
go!" cried Edith. "I want to go. They're so common,
John!"
"Look here!"
Markey's face darkened. "You've said that about enough. You're acting sort
of crazy."
"They called Ede a
brat!"
For the second time that
afternoon little Ede expressed emotion at an inopportune moment. Confused and
frightened at the shouting voices, she began to cry, and her tears had the effect
of conveying that she felt the insult in her heart.
"What's the idea of
this?" broke out John. "Do you insult your guests in your own
house?"
"It seems to me
it's your wife that's done the insulting!" answered Markey crisply.
"In fact, your baby there started all the trouble."
John gave a contemptuous
snort. "Are you calling names at a little baby?" he inquired.
"That's a fine manly business!"
"Don't talk to him,
John," insisted Edith. "Find my coat!"
"You must be in a
bad way," went on John angrily, "if you have to take out your temper
on a helpless little baby."
"I never heard
anything so damn twisted in my life," shouted Markey. "If that wife
of yours would shut her mouth for a minute——"
"Wait a minute!
You're not talking to a woman and child now——"
There was an incidental
interruption. Edith had been fumbling on a chair for her coat, and Mrs. Markey
had been watching her with hot, angry eyes. Suddenly she laid Billy down on the
sofa, where he immediately stopped crying and pulled himself upright, and
coming into the hall she quickly found Edith's coat and handed it to her
without a word. Then she went back to the sofa, picked up Billy, and rocking
him in her arms looked again at Edith with hot, angry eyes. The interruption
had taken less than half a minute.
"Your wife comes in
here and begins shouting around about how common we are!" burst out Markey
violently. "Well, if we're so damn common, you'd better stay away! And,
what's more, you'd better get out now!"
Again John gave a short,
contemptuous laugh.
"You're not only
common," he returned, "you're evidently an awful bully—when there's
any helpless women and children around." He felt for the knob and swung
the door open. "Come on, Edith."
Taking up her daughter
in her arms, his wife stepped outside and John, still looking contemptuously at
Markey, started to follow.
"Wait a
minute!" Markey took a step forward; he was trembling slightly, and two
large veins on his temple were suddenly full of blood. "You don't think
you can get away with that, do you? With me?"
Without a word John
walked out the door, leaving it open.
Edith, still weeping,
had started for home. After following her with his eyes until she reached her
own walk, John turned back toward the lighted doorway where Markey was slowly
coming down the slippery steps. He took off his overcoat and hat, tossed them
off the path onto the snow. Then, sliding a little on the iced walk, he took a
step forward.
At the first blow, they
both slipped and fell heavily to the sidewalk, half rising then, and again
pulling each other to the ground. They found a better foothold in the thin snow
to the side of the walk and rushed at each other, both swinging wildly and
pressing out the snow into a pasty mud underfoot.
The street was deserted,
and except for their short tired gasps and the padded sound as one or the other
slipped down into the slushy mud, they fought in silence, clearly defined to
each other by the full moonlight as well as by the amber glow that shone out of
the open door. Several times they both slipped down together, and then for a
while the conflict threshed about wildly on the lawn.
For ten, fifteen, twenty
minutes they fought there senselessly in the moonlight. They had both taken off
coats and vests at some silently agreed upon interval and now their shirts
dripped from their backs in wet pulpy shreds. Both were torn and bleeding and
so exhausted that they could stand only when by their position they mutually
supported each other—the impact, the mere effort of a blow, would send them
both to their hands and knees.
But it was not weariness
that ended the business, and the very meaninglessness of the fight was a reason
for not stopping. They stopped because once when they were straining at each
other on the ground, they heard a man's footsteps coming along the sidewalk.
They had rolled somehow into the shadow, and when they heard these footsteps
they stopped fighting, stopped moving, stopped breathing, lay huddled together
like two boys playing Indian until the footsteps had passed. Then, staggering
to their feet, they looked at each other like two drunken men.
"I'll be damned if
I'm going on with this thing any more," cried Markey thickly.
"I'm not going on
any more either," said John Andros. "I've had enough of this
thing."
Again they looked at each
other, sulkily this time, as if each suspected the other of urging him to a
renewal of the fight. Markey spat out a mouthful of blood from a cut lip; then
he cursed softly, and picking up his coat and vest, shook off the snow from
them in a surprised way, as if their comparative dampness was his only worry in
the world.
"Want to come in
and wash up?" he asked suddenly.
"No, thanks,"
said John. "I ought to be going home—my wife'll be worried."
He too picked up his
coat and vest and then his overcoat and hat. Soaking wet and dripping with
perspiration, it seemed absurd that less than half an hour ago he had been
wearing all these clothes.
"Well—good
night," he said hesitantly.
Suddenly they both
walked toward each other and shook hands. It was no perfunctory hand-shake:
John Andros's arm went around Markey's shoulder, and he patted him softly on
the back for a little while.
"No harm
done," he said brokenly.
"No—you?"
"No, no harm
done."
"Well," said
John Andros after a minute, "I guess I'll say good night."
"Good night."
Limping slightly and
with his clothes over his arm, John Andros turned away. The moonlight was still
bright as he left the dark patch of trampled ground and walked over the
intervening lawn. Down at the station, half a mile away, he could hear the
rumble of the seven o'clock train.
"But you must have
been crazy," cried Edith brokenly. "I thought you were going to fix
it all up there and shake hands. That's why I went away."
"Did you want us to
fix it up?" "Of course not, I never want to see them again. But I
thought of course that was what you were going to do." She was touching
the bruises on his neck and back with iodine as he sat placidly in a hot bath.
"I'm going to get the doctor," she said insistently. "You may be
hurt internally."
He shook his head.
"Not a chance," he answered. "I don't want this to get all over
town."
"I don't understand
yet how it all happened."
"Neither do
I." He smiled grimly. "I guess these baby parties are pretty rough
affairs."
"Well, one
thing—" suggested Edith hopefully, "I'm certainly glad we have
beefsteak in the house for to-morrow's dinner."
"Why?"
"For your eye, of
course. Do you know I came within an ace of ordering veal? Wasn't that the
luckiest thing?"
Half an hour later,
dressed except that his neck would accommodate no collar, John moved his limbs
experimentally before the glass. "I believe I'll get myself in better
shape," he said thoughtfully. "I must be getting old."
"You mean so that
next time you can beat him?"
"I did beat
him," he announced. "At least, I beat him as much as he beat me. And
there isn't going to be any next time. Don't you go calling people common any
more. If you get in any trouble, you just take your coat and go home.
Understand?"
"Yes, dear,"
she said meekly. "I was very foolish and now I understand."
Out in the hall, he
paused abruptly by the baby's door.
"Is she
asleep?"
"Sound asleep. But
you can go in and peek at her—just to say good night."
They tiptoed in and bent
together over the bed. Little Ede, her cheeks flushed with health, her pink
hands clasped tight together, was sleeping soundly in the cool, dark room. John
reached over the railing of the bed and passed his hand lightly over the silken
hair.
"She's
asleep," he murmured in a puzzled way.
"Naturally, after
such an afternoon."
"Miz Andros,"
the colored maid's stage whisper floated in from the hall, "Mr. and Miz
Markey down-stairs an' want to see you. Mr. Markey he's all cut up in pieces,
mam'n. His face look like a roast beef. An' Miz Markey she 'pear mighty mad."
"Why, what
incomparable nerve!" exclaimed Edith. "Just tell them we're not home.
I wouldn't go down for anything in the world."
"You most certainly
will." John's voice was hard and set.
"What?"
"You'll go down
right now, and, what's more, whatever that other woman does, you'll apologize
for what you said this afternoon. After that you don't ever have to see her
again."
"Why—John, I
can't."
"You've got to. And
just remember that she probably hated to come over here just twice as much as
you hate to go down-stairs."
"Aren't you coming?
Do I have to go alone?" "I'll be down—in just a minute."
John Andros waited until
she had closed the door behind her; then he reached over into the bed, and
picking up his daughter, blankets and all, sat down in the rocking-chair holding
her tightly in his arms. She moved a little, and he held his breath, but she
was sleeping soundly, and in a moment she was resting quietly in the hollow of
his elbow. Slowly he bent his head until his cheek was against her bright hair.
"Dear little girl," he whispered. "Dear little girl, dear little
girl."
John Andros knew at
length what it was he had fought for so savagely that evening. He had it now,
he possessed it forever, and for some time he sat there rocking very slowly to
and fro in the darkness.
4.ABSOLUTION
There was once a priest
with cold, watery eyes, who, in the still of the night, wept cold tears. He
wept because the afternoons were warm and long, and he was unable to attain a
complete mystical union with our Lord. Sometimes, near four o'clock, there was
a rustle of Swede girls along the path by his window, and in their shrill
laughter he found a terrible dissonance that made him pray aloud for the
twilight to come. At twilight the laughter and the voices were quieter, but
several times he had walked past Romberg's Drug Store when it was dusk and the
yellow lights shone inside and the nickel taps of the soda-fountain were
gleaming, and he had found the scent of cheap toilet soap desperately sweet
upon the air. He passed that way when he returned from hearing confessions on
Saturday nights, and he grew careful to walk on the other side of the street so
that the smell of the soap would float upward before it reached his nostrils as
it drifted, rather like incense, toward the summer moon.
But there was no escape
from the hot madness of four o'clock. From his window, as far as he could see,
the Dakota wheat thronged the valley of the Red River. The wheat was terrible
to look upon and the carpet pattern to which in agony he bent his eyes sent his
thought brooding through grotesque labyrinths, open always to the unavoidable
sun.
One afternoon when he
had reached the point where the mind runs down like an old clock, his
housekeeper brought into his study a beautiful, intense little boy of eleven
named Rudolph Miller. The little boy sat down in a patch of sunshine, and the
priest, at his walnut desk, pretended to be very busy. This was to conceal his
relief that some one had come into his haunted room.
Presently he turned
around and found himself staring into two enormous, staccato eyes, lit with
gleaming points of cobalt light. For a moment their expression startled
him—then he saw that his visitor was in a state of abject fear.
"Your mouth is
trembling," said Father Schwartz, in a haggard voice.
The little boy covered
his quivering mouth with his hand.
"Are you in
trouble?" asked Father Schwartz, sharply. "Take your hand away from
your mouth and tell me what's the matter."
The boy—Father Schwartz
recognized him now as the son of a parishioner, Mr. Miller, the
freight-agent—moved his hand reluctantly off his mouth and became articulate in
a despairing whisper.
"Father
Schwartz—I've committed a terrible sin."
"A sin against
purity?"
"No, Father ...
worse."
Father Schwartz's body
jerked sharply.
"Have you killed
somebody?"
"No—but I'm
afraid—" the voice rose to a shrill whimper.
"Do you want to go
to confession?"
The little boy shook his
head miserably. Father Schwartz cleared his throat so that he could make his
voice soft and say some quiet, kind thing. In this moment he should forget his
own agony, and try to act like God. He repeated to himself a devotional phrase,
hoping that in return God would help him to act correctly.
"Tell me what
you've done," said his new soft voice.
The little boy looked at
him through his tears, and was reassured by the impression of moral resiliency
which the distraught priest had created. Abandoning as much of himself as he
was able to this man, Rudolph Miller began to tell his story.
"On Saturday, three
days ago, my father he said I had to go to confession, because I hadn't been
for a month, and the family they go every week, and I hadn't been. So I just as
leave go, I didn't care. So I put it off till after supper because I was
playing with a bunch of kids and father asked me if I went, and I said 'no,'
and he took me by the neck and he said 'You go now,' so I said 'All right,' so
I went over to church. And he yelled after me: 'Don't come back till you
go.'..."
II
"On Saturday, Three Days Ago."
The plush curtain of the
confessional rearranged its dismal creases, leaving exposed only the bottom of
an old man's old shoe. Behind the curtain an immortal soul was alone with God
and the Reverend Adolphus Schwartz, priest of the parish. Sound began, a
labored whispering, sibilant and discreet, broken at intervals by the voice of
the priest in audible question.
Rudolph Miller knelt in
the pew beside the confessional and waited, straining nervously to hear, and
yet not to hear what was being said within. The fact that the priest was audible
alarmed him. His own turn came next, and the three or four others who waited
might listen unscrupulously while he admitted his violations of the Sixth and
Ninth Commandments.
Rudolph had never
committed adultery, nor even coveted his neighbor's wife—but it was the
confession of the associate sins that was particularly hard to contemplate. In
comparison he relished the less shameful fallings away—they formed a grayish
background which relieved the ebony mark of sexual offenses upon his soul.
He had been covering his
ears with his hands, hoping that his refusal to hear would be noticed, and a
like courtesy rendered to him in turn, when a sharp movement of the penitent in
the confessional made him sink his face precipitately into the crook of his
elbow. Fear assumed solid form, and pressed out a lodging between his heart and
his lungs. He must try now with all his might to be sorry for his sins—not
because he was afraid, but because he had offended God. He must convince God
that he was sorry and to do so he must first convince himself. After a tense
emotional struggle he achieved a tremulous self-pity, and decided that he was
now ready. If, by allowing no other thought to enter his head, he could
preserve this state of emotion unimpaired until he went into that large coffin
set on end, he would have survived another crisis in his religious life.
For some time, however,
a demoniac notion had partially possessed him. He could go home now, before his
turn came, and tell his mother that he had arrived too late, and found the
priest gone. This, unfortunately, involved the risk of being caught in a lie.
As an alternative he could say that he had gone to confession,
but this meant that he must avoid communion next day, for communion taken upon
an uncleansed soul would turn to poison in his mouth, and he would crumple limp
and damned from the altar-rail.
Again Father Schwartz's
voice became audible.
"And for
your——"
The words blurred to a
husky mumble, and Rudolph got excitedly to his feet. He felt that it was
impossible for him to go to confession this afternoon. He hesitated tensely.
Then from the confessional came a tap, a creak, and a sustained rustle. The
slide had fallen and the plush curtain trembled. Temptation had come to him too
late....
"Bless me, Father,
for I have sinned.... I confess to Almighty God and to you, Father, that I have
sinned.... Since my last confession it has been one month and three days.... I
accuse myself of—taking the Name of the Lord in vain...."
This was an easy sin.
His curses had been but bravado—telling of them was little less than a brag.
"... of being mean
to an old lady."
The wan shadow moved a
little on the latticed slat.
"How, my
child?"
"Old lady
Swenson," Rudolph's murmur soared jubilantly. "She got our baseball
that we knocked in her window, and she wouldn't give it back, so we yelled
'Twenty-three, Skidoo,' at her all afternoon. Then about five o'clock she had a
fit, and they had to have the doctor."
"Go on, my
child."
"Of—of not
believing I was the son of my parents."
"What?" The
interrogation was distinctly startled.
"Of not believing
that I was the son of my parents."
"Why not?"
"Oh, just
pride," answered the penitent airily.
"You mean you
thought you were too good to be the son of your parents?"
"Yes, Father."
On a less jubilant note.
"Go on."
"Of being
disobedient and calling my mother names. Of slandering people behind my back.
Of smoking——"
Rudolph had now
exhausted the minor offenses, and was approaching the sins it was agony to
tell. He held his fingers against his face like bars as if to press out between
them the shame in his heart.
"Of dirty words and
immodest thoughts and desires," he whispered very low.
"How often?"
"I don't
know."
"Once a week? Twice
a week?"
"Twice a
week."
"Did you yield to
these desires?"
"No, Father."
"Were you alone
when you had them?"
"No, Father. I was
with two boys and a girl."
"Don't you know, my
child, that you should avoid the occasions of sin as well as the sin itself?
Evil companionship leads to evil desires and evil desires to evil actions.
Where were you when this happened?"
"In a barn in back
of——"
"I don't want to
hear any names," interrupted the priest sharply.
"Well, it was up in
the loft of this barn and this girl and—a fella, they were saying things—saying
immodest things, and I stayed."
"You should have
gone—you should have told the girl to go."
He should have gone! He
could not tell Father Schwartz how his pulse had bumped in his wrist, how a
strange, romantic excitement had possessed him when those curious things had
been said. Perhaps in the houses of delinquency among the dull and hard-eyed
incorrigible girls can be found those for whom has burned the whitest fire.
"Have you anything
else to tell me?"
"I don't think so,
Father."
Rudolph felt a great
relief. Perspiration had broken out under his tight-pressed fingers.
"Have you told any
lies?"
The question startled
him. Like all those who habitually and instinctively lie, he had an enormous
respect and awe for the truth. Something almost exterior to himself dictated a
quick, hurt answer.
"Oh, no, Father, I
never tell lies."
For a moment, like the
commoner in the king's chair, he tasted the pride of the situation. Then as the
priest began to murmur conventional admonitions he realized that in heroically
denying he had told lies, he had committed a terrible sin—he had told a lie in
confession.
In automatic response to
Father Schwartz's "Make an act of contrition," he began to repeat
aloud meaninglessly:
"Oh, my God, I am
heartily sorry for having offended Thee...."
He must fix this now—it
was a bad mistake—but as his teeth shut on the last words of his prayer there
was a sharp sound, and the slat was closed.
A minute later when he
emerged into the twilight the relief in coming from the muggy church into an
open world of wheat and sky postponed the full realization of what he had done.
Instead of worrying he took a deep breath of the crisp air and began to say
over and over to himself the words "Blatchford Sarnemington, Blatchford
Sarnemington!"
Blatchford Sarnemington
was himself, and these words were in effect a lyric. When he became Blatchford
Sarnemington a suave nobility flowed from him. Blatchford Sarnemington lived in
great sweeping triumphs. When Rudolph half closed his eyes it meant that
Blatchford had established dominance over him and, as he went by, there were
envious mutters in the air: "Blatchford Sarnemington! There goes
Blatchford Sarnemington."
He was Blatchford now
for a while as he strutted homeward along the staggering road, but when the
road braced itself in macadam in order to become the main street of Ludwig,
Rudolph's exhilaration faded out and his mind cooled, and he felt the horror of
his lie. God, of course, already knew of it—but Rudolph reserved a corner of
his mind where he was safe from God, where he prepared the subterfuges with
which he often tricked God. Hiding now in this corner he considered how he
could best avoid the consequences of his misstatement.
At all costs he must
avoid communion next day. The risk of angering God to such an extent was too
great. He would have to drink water "by accident" in the morning, and
thus, in accordance with a church law, render himself unfit to receive
communion that day. In spite of its flimsiness this subterfuge was the most
feasible that occurred to him. He accepted its risks and was concentrating on
how best to put it into effect, as he turned the corner by Romberg's Drug Store
and came in sight of his father's house.
III
Rudolph's father, the
local freight-agent, had floated with the second wave of German and Irish stock
to the Minnesota-Dakota country. Theoretically, great opportunities lay ahead
of a young man of energy in that day and place, but Carl Miller had been
incapable of establishing either with his superiors or his subordinates the
reputation for approximate immutability which is essential to success in a
hierarchic industry. Somewhat gross, he was, nevertheless, insufficiently
hard-headed and unable to take fundamental relationships for granted, and this
inability made him suspicious, unrestful, and continually dismayed.
His two bonds with the
colorful life were his faith in the Roman Catholic Church and his mystical
worship of the Empire Builder, James J. Hill. Hill was the apotheosis of that
quality in which Miller himself was deficient—the sense of things, the feel of
things, the hint of rain in the wind on the cheek. Miller's mind worked late on
the old decisions of other men, and he had never in his life felt the balance
of any single thing in his hands. His weary, sprightly, undersized body was
growing old in Hill's gigantic shadow. For twenty years he had lived alone with
Hill's name and God.
On Sunday morning Carl
Miller awoke in the dustless quiet of six o'clock. Kneeling by the side of the
bed he bent his yellow-gray hair and the full dapple bangs of his mustache into
the pillow, and prayed for several minutes. Then he drew off his
night-shirt—like the rest of his generation he had never been able to endure
pajamas—and clothed his thin, white, hairless body in woollen underwear.
He shaved. Silence in
the other bedroom where his wife lay nervously asleep. Silence from the
screened-off corner of the hall where his son's cot stood, and his son slept
among his Alger books, his collection of cigar-bands, his mothy
pennants—"Cornell," "Hamlin," and "Greetings from
Pueblo, New Mexico"—and the other possessions of his private life. From
outside Miller could hear the shrill birds and the whirring movement of the
poultry, and, as an undertone, the low, swelling click-a-tick of the
six-fifteen through-train for Montana and the green coast beyond. Then as the
cold water dripped from the wash-rag in his hand he raised his head suddenly—he
had heard a furtive sound from the kitchen below.
He dried his razor
hastily, slipped his dangling suspenders to his shoulder, and listened. Some
one was walking in the kitchen, and he knew by the light footfall that it was
not his wife. With his mouth faintly ajar he ran quickly down the stairs and
opened the kitchen door.
Standing by the sink,
with one hand on the still dripping faucet and the other clutching a full glass
of water, stood his son. The boy's eyes, still heavy with sleep, met his
father's with a frightened, reproachful beauty. He was barefooted, and his
pajamas were rolled up at the knees and sleeves.
For a moment they both
remained motionless—Carl Miller's brow went down and his son's went up, as
though they were striking a balance between the extremes of emotion which
filled them. Then the bangs of the parent's moustache descended portentously
until they obscured his mouth, and he gave a short glance around to see if
anything had been disturbed.
The kitchen was
garnished with sunlight which beat on the pans and made the smooth boards of
the floor and table yellow and clean as wheat. It was the centre of the house
where the fire burned and the tins fitted into tins like toys, and the steam
whistled all day on a thin pastel note. Nothing was moved, nothing
touched—except the faucet where beads of water still formed and dripped with a
white flash into the sink below.
"What are you
doing?"
"I got awful
thirsty, so I thought I'd just come down and get——"
"I thought you were
going to communion."
A look of vehement
astonishment spread over his son's face.
"I forgot all about
it."
"Have you drunk any
water?"
"No——"
As the word left his
mouth Rudolph knew it was the wrong answer, but the faded indignant eyes facing
him had signalled up the truth before the boy's will could act. He realized,
too, that he should never have come down-stairs; some vague necessity for
verisimilitude had made him want to leave a wet glass as evidence by the sink;
the honesty of his imagination had betrayed him.
"Pour it out,"
commanded his father, "that water!"
Rudolph despairingly
inverted the tumbler.
"What's the matter
with you, anyways?" demanded Miller angrily.
"Nothing."
"Did you go to
confession yesterday?"
"Yes."
"Then why were you
going to drink water?"
"I don't know—I
forgot."
"Maybe you care
more about being a little bit thirsty than you do about your religion."
"I forgot."
Rudolph could feel the tears straining in his eyes.
"That's no
answer."
"Well, I did."
"You better look
out!" His father held to a high, persistent, inquisitory note: "If
you're so forgetful that you can't remember your religion something better be
done about it."
Rudolph filled a sharp
pause with:
"I can remember it
all right."
"First you begin to
neglect your religion," cried his father, fanning his own fierceness,
"the next thing you'll begin to lie and steal, and the next thing
is the reform school!"
Not even this familiar
threat could deepen the abyss that Rudolph saw before him. He must either tell
all now, offering his body for what he knew would be a ferocious beating, or
else tempt the thunderbolts by receiving the Body and Blood of Christ with
sacrilege upon his soul. And of the two the former seemed more terrible—it was
not so much the beating he dreaded as the savage ferocity, outlet of the
ineffectual man, which would lie behind it.
"Put down that
glass and go up-stairs and dress!" his father ordered, "and when we get
to church, before you go to communion, you better kneel down and ask God to
forgive you for your carelessness."
Some accidental emphasis
in the phrasing of this command acted like a catalytic agent on the confusion
and terror of Rudolph's mind. A wild, proud anger rose in him, and he dashed
the tumbler passionately into the sink.
His father uttered a
strained, husky sound, and sprang for him. Rudolph dodged to the side, tipped
over a chair, and tried to get beyond the kitchen table. He cried out sharply
when a hand grasped his pajama shoulder, then he felt the dull impact of a fist
against the side of his head, and glancing blows on the upper part of his body.
As he slipped here and there in his father's grasp, dragged or lifted when he
clung instinctively to an arm, aware of sharp smarts and strains, he made no
sound except that he laughed hysterically several times. Then in less than a
minute the blows abruptly ceased. After a lull during which Rudolph was tightly
held, and during which they both trembled violently and uttered strange,
truncated words, Carl Miller half dragged, half threatened his son up-stairs.
"Put on your
clothes!"
Rudolph was now both
hysterical and cold. His head hurt him, and there was a long, shallow scratch
on his neck from his father's finger-nail, and he sobbed and trembled as he
dressed. He was aware of his mother standing at the doorway in a wrapper, her
wrinkled face compressing and squeezing and opening out into new series of
wrinkles which floated and eddied from neck to brow. Despising her nervous
ineffectuality and avoiding her rudely when she tried to touch his neck with
witch-hazel, he made a hasty, choking toilet. Then he followed his father out
of the house and along the road toward the Catholic church.
IV
They walked without
speaking except when Carl Miller acknowledged automatically the existence of
passers-by. Rudolph's uneven breathing alone ruffled the hot Sunday silence.
His father stopped
decisively at the door of the church.
"I've decided you'd
better go to confession again. Go in and tell Father Schwartz what you did and
ask God's pardon."
"You lost your
temper, too!" said Rudolph quickly.
Carl Miller took a step
toward his son, who moved cautiously backward.
"All right, I'll
go."
"Are you going to
do what I say?" cried his father in a hoarse whisper.
"All right."
Rudolph walked into the
church, and for the second time in two days entered the confessional and knelt
down. The slat went up almost at once.
"I accuse myself of
missing my morning prayers."
"Is that all?"
"That's all."
A maudlin exultation
filled him. Not easily ever again would he be able to put an abstraction before
the necessities of his ease and pride. An invisible line had been crossed, and
he had become aware of his isolation—aware that it applied not only to those
moments when he was Blatchford Sarnemington but that it applied to all his
inner life. Hitherto such phenomena as "crazy" ambitions and petty
shames and fears had been but private reservations, unacknowledged before the
throne of his official soul. Now he realized unconsciously that his private
reservations were himself—and all the rest a garnished front and a conventional
flag. The pressure of his environment had driven him into the lonely secret
road of adolescence.
He knelt in the pew
beside his father. Mass began. Rudolph knelt up—when he was alone he slumped
his posterior back against the seat—and tasted the consciousness of a sharp,
subtle revenge. Beside him his father prayed that God would forgive Rudolph,
and asked also that his own outbreak of temper would be pardoned. He glanced
sidewise at this son, and was relieved to see that the strained, wild look had
gone from his face and that he had ceased sobbing. The Grace of God, inherent
in the Sacrament, would do the rest, and perhaps after Mass everything would be
better. He was proud of Rudolph in his heart, and beginning to be truly as well
as formally sorry for what he had done.
Usually, the passing of
the collection box was a significant point for Rudolph in the services. If, as
was often the case, he had no money to drop in he would be furiously ashamed
and bow his head and pretend not to see the box, lest Jeanne Brady in the pew
behind should take notice and suspect an acute family poverty. But to-day he
glanced coldly into it as it skimmed under his eyes, noting with casual
interest the large number of pennies it contained.
When the bell rang for
communion, however, he quivered. There was no reason why God should not stop
his heart. During the past twelve hours he had committed a series of mortal
sins increasing in gravity, and he was now to crown them all with a blasphemous
sacrilege.
"Domini, non sum
dignus; ut interes sub tectum meum; sed tantum dic verbo, et sanabitur anima
mea...."
There was a rustle in
the pews, and the communicants worked their ways into the aisle with downcast
eyes and joined hands. Those of larger piety pressed together their finger-tips
to form steeples. Among these latter was Carl Miller. Rudolph followed him
toward the altar-rail and knelt down, automatically taking up the napkin under
his chin. The bell rang sharply, and the priest turned from the altar with the
white Host held above the chalice:
"Corpus Domini
nostri Jesu Christi custodiat animam meam in vitam æternam."
A cold sweat broke out
on Rudolph's forehead as the communion began. Along the line Father Schwartz
moved, and with gathering nausea Rudolph felt his heart-valves weakening at the
will of God. It seemed to him that the church was darker and that a great quiet
had fallen, broken only by the inarticulate mumble which announced the approach
of the Creator of Heaven and Earth. He dropped his head down between his
shoulders and waited for the blow.
Then he felt a sharp
nudge in his side. His father was poking him to sit up, not to slump against
the rail; the priest was only two places away.
"Corpus Domini
nostri Jesu Christi custodiat animam meam in vitam æternam."
Rudolph opened his
mouth. He felt the sticky wax taste of the wafer on his tongue. He remained
motionless for what seemed an interminable period of time, his head still
raised, the wafer undissolved in his mouth. Then again he started at the
pressure of his father's elbow, and saw that the people were falling away from
the altar like leaves and turning with blind downcast eyes to their pews, alone
with God.
Rudolph was alone with
himself, drenched with perspiration and deep in mortal sin. As he walked back
to his pew the sharp taps of his cloven hoofs were loud upon the floor, and he
knew that it was a dark poison he carried in his heart.
V
"Sagitta Volante in Dei"
The beautiful little boy
with eyes like blue stones, and lashes that sprayed open from them like
flower-petals had finished telling his sin to Father Schwartz—and the square of
sunshine in which he sat had moved forward half an hour into the room. Rudolph
had become less frightened now; once eased of the story a reaction had set in.
He knew that as long as he was in the room with this priest God would not stop
his heart, so he sighed and sat quietly, waiting for the priest to speak.
Father Schwartz's cold
watery eyes were fixed upon the carpet pattern on which the sun had brought out
the swastikas and the flat bloomless vines and the pale echoes of flowers. The
hall-clock ticked insistently toward sunset, and from the ugly room and from
the afternoon outside the window arose a stiff monotony, shattered now and then
by the reverberate clapping of a far-away hammer on the dry air. The priest's
nerves were strung thin and the beads of his rosary were crawling and squirming
like snakes upon the green felt of his table top. He could not remember now
what it was he should say.
Of all the things in
this lost Swede town he was most aware of this little boy's eyes—the beautiful
eyes, with lashes that left them reluctantly and curved back as though to meet
them once more.
For a moment longer the
silence persisted while Rudolph waited, and the priest struggled to remember
something that was slipping farther and farther away from him, and the clock
ticked in the broken house. Then Father Schwartz stared hard at the little boy
and remarked in a peculiar voice:
"When a lot of
people get together in the best places things go glimmering."
Rudolph started and
looked quickly at Father Schwartz's face.
"I said—"
began the priest, and paused, listening. "Do you hear the hammer and the
clock ticking and the bees? Well, that's no good. The thing is to have a lot of
people in the centre of the world, wherever that happens to be. Then"—his
watery eyes widened knowingly—"things go glimmering."
"Yes, Father,"
agreed Rudolph, feeling a little frightened.
"What are you going
to be when you grow up?"
"Well, I was going
to be a baseball-player for a while," answered Rudolph nervously,
"but I don't think that's a very good ambition, so I think I'll be an actor
or a Navy officer."
Again the priest stared
at him.
"I see exactly what
you mean," he said, with a fierce air.
Rudolph had not meant
anything in particular, and at the implication that he had, he became more
uneasy.
"This man is
crazy," he thought, "and I'm scared of him. He wants me to help him
out some way, and I don't want to."
"You look as if
things went glimmering," cried Father Schwartz wildly. "Did you ever
go to a party?"
"Yes, Father."
"And did you notice
that everybody was properly dressed? That's what I mean. Just as you went into
the party there was a moment when everybody was properly dressed. Maybe two
little girls were standing by the door and some boys were leaning over the
banisters, and there were bowls around full of flowers."
"I've been to a lot
of parties," said Rudolph, rather relieved that the conversation had taken
this turn.
"Of course,"
continued Father Schwartz triumphantly, "I knew you'd agree with me. But
my theory is that when a whole lot of people get together in the best places
things go glimmering all the time."
Rudolph found himself
thinking of Blatchford Sarnemington.
"Please listen to
me!" commanded the priest impatiently. "Stop worrying about last
Saturday. Apostasy implies an absolute damnation only on the supposition of a
previous perfect faith. Does that fix it?"
Rudolph had not the
faintest idea what Father Schwartz was talking about, but he nodded and the
priest nodded back at him and returned to his mysterious preoccupation.
"Why," he
cried, "they have lights now as big as stars—do you realize that? I heard
of one light they had in Paris or somewhere that was as big as a star. A lot of
people had it—a lot of gay people. They have all sorts of things now that you
never dreamed of."
"Look here—"
He came nearer to Rudolph, but the boy drew away, so Father Schwartz went back
and sat down in his chair, his eyes dried out and hot. "Did you ever see
an amusement park?"
"No, Father."
"Well, go and see
an amusement park." The priest waved his hand vaguely. "It's a thing
like a fair, only much more glittering. Go to one at night and stand a little
way off from it in a dark place—under dark trees. You'll see a big wheel made
of lights turning in the air, and a long slide shooting boats down into the
water. A band playing somewhere, and a smell of peanuts—and everything will
twinkle. But it won't remind you of anything, you see. It will all just hang
out there in the night like a colored balloon—like a big yellow lantern on a
pole."
Father Schwartz frowned
as he suddenly thought of something.
"But don't get up
close," he warned Rudolph, "because if you do you'll only feel the
heat and the sweat and the life."
All this talking seemed
particularly strange and awful to Rudolph, because this man was a priest. He
sat there, half terrified, his beautiful eyes open wide and staring at Father
Schwartz. But underneath his terror he felt that his own inner convictions were
confirmed. There was something ineffably gorgeous somewhere that had nothing to
do with God. He no longer thought that God was angry at him about the original
lie, because He must have understood that Rudolph had done it to make things
finer in the confessional, brightening up the dinginess of his admissions by
saying a thing radiant and proud. At the moment when he had affirmed immaculate
honor a silver pennon had flapped out into the breeze somewhere and there had
been the crunch of leather and the shine of silver spurs and a troop of
horsemen waiting for dawn on a low green hill. The sun had made stars of light
on their breastplates like the picture at home of the German cuirassiers at
Sedan.
But now the priest was
muttering inarticulate and heart-broken words, and the boy became wildly
afraid. Horror entered suddenly in at the open window, and the atmosphere of
the room changed. Father Schwartz collapsed precipitously down on his knees,
and let his body settle back against a chair.
"Oh, my God!"
he cried out, in a strange voice, and wilted to the floor.
Then a human oppression
rose from the priest's worn clothes, and mingled with the faint smell of old
food in the corners. Rudolph gave a sharp cry and ran in a panic from the
house—while the collapsed man lay there quite still, filling his room, filling
it with voices and faces until it was crowded with echolalia, and rang loud
with a steady, shrill note of laughter.
Outside the window the
blue sirocco trembled over the wheat, and girls with yellow hair walked
sensuously along roads that bounded the fields, calling innocent, exciting
things to the young men who were working in the lines between the grain. Legs
were shaped under starchless gingham, and rims of the necks of dresses were
warm and damp. For five hours now hot fertile life had burned in the afternoon.
It would be night in three hours, and all along the land there would be these
blonde Northern girls and the tall young men from the farms lying out beside
the wheat, under the moon.
5.RAGS MARTIN-JONES AND THE
PR-NCE OF W-LES
The Majestic came
gliding into New York harbor on an April morning. She sniffed at the tugboats and
turtle-gaited ferries, winked at a gaudy young yacht, and ordered a cattle-boat
out of her way with a snarling whistle of steam. Then she parked at her private
dock with all the fuss of a stout lady sitting down, and announced complacently
that she had just come from Cherbourg and Southampton with a cargo of the very
best people in the world.
The very best people in
the world stood on the deck and waved idiotically to their poor relations who
were waiting on the dock for gloves from Paris. Before long a great toboggan
had connected the Majestic with the North American continent,
and the ship began to disgorge these very best people in the world—who turned
out to be Gloria Swanson, two buyers from Lord & Taylor, the financial
minister from Graustark with a proposal for funding the debt, and an African
king who had been trying to land somewhere all winter and was feeling violently
seasick.
The photographers worked
passionately as the stream of passengers flowed on to the dock. There was a
burst of cheering at the appearance of a pair of stretchers laden with two
Middle-Westerners who had drunk themselves delirious on the last night out.
The deck gradually
emptied, but when the last bottle of Benedictine had reached shore the
photographers still remained at their posts. And the officer in charge of
debarkation still stood at the foot of the gangway, glancing first at his watch
and then at the deck as if some important part of the cargo was still on board.
At last from the watchers on the pier there arose a long-drawn
"Ah-h-h!" as a final entourage began to stream down from deck B.
First came two French
maids, carrying small, purple dogs, and followed by a squad of porters, blind
and invisible under innumerable bunches and bouquets of fresh flowers. Another
maid followed, leading a sad-eyed orphan child of a French flavor, and close
upon its heels walked the second officer pulling along three neurasthenic
wolfhounds, much to their reluctance and his own.
A pause. Then the
captain, Sir Howard George Witchcraft, appeared at the rail, with something
that might have been a pile of gorgeous silver-fox fur standing by his side.
Rags Martin-Jones, after
five years in the capitals of Europe, was returning to her native land!
Rags Martin-Jones was
not a dog. She was half a girl and half a flower, and as she shook hands with
Captain Sir Howard George Witchcraft she smiled as if some one had told her the
newest, freshest joke in the world. All the people who had not already left the
pier felt that smile trembling on the April air and turned around to see.
She came slowly down the
gangway. Her hat, an expensive, inscrutable experiment, was crushed under her
arm, so that her scant boy's hair, convict's hair, tried unsuccessfully to toss
and flop a little in the harbor wind. Her face was like seven o'clock on a
wedding morning save where she had slipped a preposterous monocle into an eye
of clear childish blue. At every few steps her long lashes would tilt out the
monocle, and she would laugh, a bored, happy laugh, and replace the supercilious
spectacle in the other eye.
Tap! Her one hundred and
five pounds reached the pier and it seemed to sway and bend from the shock of
her beauty. A few porters fainted. A large, sentimental shark which had
followed the ship across made a despairing leap to see her once more, and then
dove, broken-hearted, back into the deep sea. Rags Martin-Jones had come home.
There was no member of
her family there to meet her, for the simple reason that she was the only
member of her family left alive. In 1913 her parents had gone down on the Titanic together
rather than be separated in this world, and so the Martin-Jones fortune of
seventy-five millions had been inherited by a very little girl on her tenth
birthday. It was what the consumer always refers to as a "shame."
Rags Martin-Jones
(everybody had forgotten her real name long ago) was now photographed from all
sides. The monocle persistently fell out, and she kept laughing and yawning and
replacing it, so no very clear picture of her was taken—except by the
motion-picture camera. All the photographs, however, included a flustered,
handsome young man, with an almost ferocious love-light burning in his eyes,
who had met her on the dock. His name was John M. Chestnut, he had already
written the story of his success for the American Magazine, and he
had been hopelessly in love with Rags ever since the time when she, like the
tides, had come under the influence of the summer moon.
When Rags became really
aware of his presence they were walking down the pier, and she looked at him
blankly as though she had never seen him before in this world.
"Rags," he
began, "Rags——"
"John M.
Chestnut?" she inquired, inspecting him with great interest.
"Of course!"
he exclaimed angrily. "Are you trying to pretend you don't know me? That
you didn't write me to meet you here?"
She laughed. A chauffeur
appeared at her elbow, and she twisted out of her coat, revealing a dress made
in great splashy checks of sea-blue and gray. She shook herself like a wet
bird.
"I've got a lot of
junk to declare," she remarked absently.
"So have I,"
said Chestnut anxiously, "and the first thing I want to declare is that
I've loved you, Rags, every minute since you've been away."
She stopped him with a
groan.
"Please! There were
some young Americans on the boat. The subject has become a bore."
"My God!"
cried Chestnut, "do you mean to say that you class my love
with what was said to you on a boat?"
His voice had risen, and
several people in the vicinity turned to hear.
"Sh!" she
warned him, "I'm not giving a circus. If you want me to even see you while
I'm here, you'll have to be less violent."
But John M. Chestnut
seemed unable to control his voice.
"Do you mean to
say"—it trembled to a carrying pitch—"that you've forgotten what you
said on this very pier five years ago last Thursday?"
Half the passengers from
the ship were now watching the scene on the dock, and another little eddy
drifted out of the customs-house to see.
"John"—her
displeasure was increasing—"if you raise your voice again I'll arrange it
so you'll have plenty of chance to cool off. I'm going to the Ritz. Come and
see me there this afternoon."
"But, Rags!"
he protested hoarsely. "Listen to me. Five years ago——"
Then the watchers on the
dock were treated to a curious sight. A beautiful lady in a checkered dress of
sea-blue and gray took a brisk step forward so that her hands came into contact
with an excited young man by her side. The young man retreating instinctively
reached back with his foot, but, finding nothing, relapsed gently off the
thirty-foot dock and plopped, after a not ungraceful revolution, into the
Hudson River.
A shout of alarm went
up, and there was a rush to the edge just as his head appeared above water. He
was swimming easily, and, perceiving this, the young lady who had apparently
been the cause of the accident leaned over the pier and made a megaphone of her
hands.
"I'll be in at half
past four," she cried.
And with a cheerful wave
of her hand, which the engulfed gentleman was unable to return, she adjusted
her monocle, threw one haughty glance at the gathered crowd, and walked
leisurely from the scene.
II
The five dogs, the three
maids, and the French orphan were installed in the largest suite at the Ritz,
and Rags tumbled lazily into a steaming bath, fragrant with herbs, where she
dozed for the greater part of an hour. At the end of that time she received
business calls from a masseuse, a manicure, and finally a Parisian
hair-dresser, who restored her hair-cut to criminal's length. When John M.
Chestnut arrived at four he found half a dozen lawyers and bankers, the
administrators of the Martin-Jones trust fund, waiting in the hall. They had
been there since half past one, and were now in a state of considerable
agitation.
After one of the maids
had subjected him to a severe scrutiny, possibly to be sure that he was
thoroughly dry, John was conducted immediately into the presence of m'selle.
M'selle was in her bedroom reclining on the chaise-longue among two dozen silk
pillows that had accompanied her from the other side. John came into the room
somewhat stiffly and greeted her with a formal bow.
"You look
better," she said, raising herself from her pillows and staring at him
appraisingly. "It gave you a color."
He thanked her coldly
for the compliment.
"You ought to go in
every morning." And then she added irrelevantly: "I'm going back to
Paris to-morrow."
John Chestnut gasped.
"I wrote you that I
didn't intend to stay more than a week anyhow," she added.
"But, Rags——"
"Why should I?
There isn't an amusing man in New York."
"But listen, Rags,
won't you give me a chance? Won't you stay for, say, ten days and get to know
me a little?"
"Know you!"
Her tone implied that he was already a far too open book. "I want a man
who's capable of a gallant gesture."
"Do you mean you
want me to express myself entirely in pantomime?"
Rags uttered a disgusted
sigh.
"I mean you haven't
any imagination," she explained patiently. "No Americans have any
imagination. Paris is the only large city where a civilized woman can
breathe."
"Don't you care for
me at all any more?"
"I wouldn't have
crossed the Atlantic to see you if I didn't. But as soon as I looked over the
Americans on the boat, I knew I couldn't marry one. I'd just hate you, John,
and the only fun I'd have out of it would be the fun of breaking your
heart."
She began to twist
herself down among the cushions until she almost disappeared from view.
"I've lost my
monocle," she explained.
After an unsuccessful
search in the silken depths she discovered the illusive glass hanging down the
back of her neck.
"I'd love to be in
love," she went on, replacing the monocle in her childish eye. "Last
spring in Sorrento I almost eloped with an Indian rajah, but he was half a
shade too dark, and I took an intense dislike to one of his other wives."
"Don't talk that
rubbish!" cried John, sinking his face into his hands.
"Well, I didn't
marry him," she protested. "But in one way he had a lot to offer. He
was the third richest subject of the British Empire. That's another thing—are
you rich?"
"Not as rich as
you."
"There you are.
What have you to offer me?"
"Love."
"Love!" She
disappeared again among the cushions. "Listen, John. Life to me is a
series of glistening bazaars with a merchant in front of each one rubbing his
hands together and saying 'Patronize this place here. Best bazaar in the
world.' So I go in with my purse full of beauty and money and youth, all
prepared to buy. 'What have you got for sale?' I ask him, and he rubs his hands
together and says: 'Well, Mademoiselle, to-day we have some perfectly be-oo-tiful
love.' Sometimes he hasn't even got that in stock, but he sends out for it when
he finds I have so much money to spend. Oh, he always gives me love before I
go—and for nothing. That's the one revenge I have."
John Chestnut rose
despairingly to his feet and took a step toward the window.
"Don't throw
yourself out," Rags exclaimed quickly.
"All right."
He tossed his cigarette down into Madison Avenue.
"It isn't just
you," she said in a softer voice. "Dull and uninspired as you are, I
care for you more than I can say. But life's so endless here. Nothing ever
comes off."
"Loads of things
come off," he insisted. "Why, to-day there was an intellectual murder
in Hoboken and a suicide by proxy in Maine. A bill to sterilize agnostics is
before Congress——"
"I have no interest
in humor," she objected, "but I have an almost archaic predilection
for romance. Why, John, last month I sat at a dinner-table while two men
flipped a coin for the kingdom of Schwartzberg-Rhineminster. In Paris I knew a
man named Blutchdak who really started the war, and has a new one planned for
year after next."
"Well, just for a
rest you come out with me to-night," he said doggedly.
"Where to?"
demanded Rags with scorn. "Do you think I still thrill at a night-club and
a bottle of sugary mousseaux? I prefer my own gaudy dreams."
"I'll take you to
the most highly-strung place in the city."
"What'll happen?
You've got to tell me what'll happen."
John Chestnut suddenly
drew a long breath and looked cautiously around as if he were afraid of being
overheard.
"Well, to tell you
the truth," he said in a low, worried tone, "if everything was known,
something pretty awful would be liable to happen to me."
She sat upright and the
pillows tumbled about her like leaves.
"Do you mean to
imply that there's anything shady in your life?" she cried, with laughter
in her voice. "Do you expect me to believe that? No, John, you'll have
your fun by plugging ahead on the beaten path—just plugging ahead."
Her mouth, a small
insolent rose, dropped the words on him like thorns. John took his hat and coat
from the chair and picked up his cane.
"For the last
time—will you come along with me to-night and see what you will see?"
"See what? See who?
Is there anything in this country worth seeing?"
"Well," he
said, in a matter-of-fact tone, "for one thing you'll see the Prince of
Wales."
"What?" She
left the chaise-longue at a bound. "Is he back in New York?"
"He will be
to-night. Would you care to see him?"
"Would I? I've
never seen him. I've missed him everywhere. I'd give a year of my life to see
him for an hour." Her voice trembled with excitement.
"He's been in
Canada. He's down here incognito for the big prize-fight this afternoon. And I
happen to know where he's going to be to-night."
Rags gave a sharp
ecstatic cry:
"Dominic! Louise!
Germaine!"
The three maids came
running. The room filled suddenly with vibrations of wild, startled light.
"Dominic, the
car!" cried Rags in French. "St. Raphael, my gold dress and the
slippers with the real gold heels. The big pearls too—all the pearls, and the
egg-diamond and the stockings with the sapphire clocks. Germaine—send for a
beauty-parlor on the run. My bath again—ice cold and half full of almond cream.
Dominic—Tiffany's, like lightning, before they close. Find me a brooch, a
pendant, a tiara, anything—it doesn't matter—with the arms of the house of
Windsor."
She was fumbling at the
buttons of her dress—and as John turned quickly to go, it was already sliding
from her shoulders.
"Orchids!" she
called after him, "orchids, for the love of heaven! Four dozen, so I can
choose four."
And then maids flew here
and there about the room like frightened birds. "Perfume, St. Raphael,
open the perfume trunk, and my rose-colored sables, and my diamond garters, and
the sweet-oil for my hands! Here, take these things! This too—and
this—ouch!—and this!"
With becoming modesty
John Chestnut closed the outside door. The six trustees in various postures of
fatigue, of ennui, of resignation, of despair, were still cluttering up the
outer hall.
"Gentlemen,"
announced John Chestnut, "I fear that Miss Martin-Jones is much too weary
from her trip to talk to you this afternoon."
III
"This place, for no
particular reason, is called the Hole in the Sky."
Rags looked around her.
They were on a roof-garden wide open to the April night. Overhead the true
stars winked cold, and there was a lunar sliver of ice in the dark west. But
where they stood it was warm as June, and the couples dining or dancing on the
opaque glass floor were unconcerned with the forbidding sky.
"What makes it so
warm?" she whispered as they moved toward a table.
"It's some new
invention that keeps the warm air from rising. I don't know the principle of
the thing, but I know that they can keep it open like this even in the middle
of winter—"
"Where's the Prince
of Wales?" she demanded tensely.
John looked around.
"He hasn't arrived
yet. He won't be here for about half an hour."
She sighed profoundly.
"It's the first
time I've been excited in four years."
Four years—one year less
than he had loved her. He wondered if when she was sixteen, a wild lovely
child, sitting up all night in restaurants with officers who were to leave for
Brest next day, losing the glamour of life too soon in the old, sad, poignant
days of the war, she had ever been so lovely as under these amber lights and
this dark sky. From her excited eyes to her tiny slipper heels, which were
striped with layers of real silver and gold, she was like one of those amazing
ships that are carved complete in a bottle. She was finished with that
delicacy, with that care; as though the long lifetime of some worker in
fragility had been used to make her so. John Chestnut wanted to take her up in
his hands, turn her this way and that, examine the tip of a slipper or the tip
of an ear or squint closely at the fairy stuff from which her lashes were made.
"Who's that?"
She pointed suddenly to a handsome Latin at a table over the way.
"That's Roderigo
Minerlino, the movie and face-cream star. Perhaps he'll dance after a
while."
Rags became suddenly
aware of the sound of violins and drums, but the music seemed to come from far
away, seemed to float over the crisp night and on to the floor with the added
remoteness of a dream.
"The orchestra's on
another roof," explained John. "It's a new idea— Look, the
entertainment's beginning."
A negro girl, thin as a
reed, emerged suddenly from a masked entrance into a circle of harsh barbaric
light, startled the music to a wild minor, and commenced to sing a rhythmic,
tragic song. The pipe of her body broke abruptly and she began a slow incessant
step, without progress and without hope, like the failure of a savage
insufficient dream. She had lost Papa Jack, she cried over and over with a
hysterical monotony at once despairing and unreconciled. One by one the loud
horns tried to force her from the steady beat of madness but she listened only
to the mutter of the drums which were isolating her in some lost place in time,
among many thousand forgotten years. After the failure of the piccolo, she made
herself again into a thin brown line, wailed once with sharp and terrible
intensity, then vanished into sudden darkness.
"If you lived in
New York you wouldn't need to be told who she is," said John when the
amber light flashed on. "The next fella is Sheik B. Smith, a comedian of
the fatuous, garrulous sort——"
He broke off. Just as
the lights went down for the second number Rags had given a long sigh, and
leaned forward tensely in her chair. Her eyes were rigid like the eyes of a
pointer dog, and John saw that they were fixed on a party that had come through
a side entrance, and were arranging themselves around a table in the
half-darkness.
The table was shielded
with palms, and Rags at first made out only three dim forms. Then she
distinguished a fourth who seemed to be placed well behind the other three—a
pale oval of a face topped with a glimmer of dark-yellow hair.
"Hello!"
ejaculated John. "There's his majesty now."
Her breath seemed to die
murmurously in her throat. She was dimly aware that the comedian was now standing
in a glow of white light on the dancing floor, that he had been talking for
some moments, and that there was a constant ripple of laughter in the air. But
her eyes remained motionless, enchanted. She saw one of the party bend and
whisper to another, and after the low glitter of a match the bright button of a
cigarette end gleamed in the background. How long it was before she moved she
did not know. Then something seemed to happen to her eyes, something white,
something terribly urgent, and she wrenched about sharply to find herself full
in the centre of a baby spot-light from above. She became aware that words were
being said to her from somewhere, and that a quick trail of laughter was
circling the roof, but the light blinded her, and instinctively she made a
half-movement from her chair.
"Sit still!"
John was whispering across the table. "He picks somebody out for this
every night."
Then she realized—it was
the comedian, Sheik B. Smith. He was talking to her, arguing with her—about
something that seemed incredibly funny to every one else, but came to her ears
only as a blur of muddled sound. Instinctively she had composed her face at the
first shock of the light and now she smiled. It was a gesture of rare
self-possession. Into this smile she insinuated a vast impersonality, as if she
were unconscious of the light, unconscious of his attempt to play upon her
loveliness—but amused at an infinitely removed him, whose darts
might have been thrown just as successfully at the moon. She was no longer a
"lady"—a lady would have been harsh or pitiful or absurd; Rags
stripped her attitude to a sheer consciousness of her own impervious beauty,
sat there glittering until the comedian began to feel alone as he had never
felt alone before. At a signal from him the spot-light was switched suddenly
out. The moment was over.
The moment was over, the
comedian left the floor, and the far-away music began. John leaned toward her.
"I'm sorry. There
really wasn't anything to do. You were wonderful."
She dismissed the incident
with a casual laugh—then she started, there were now only two men sitting at
the table across the floor.
"He's gone!"
she exclaimed in quick distress.
"Don't worry—he'll
be back. He's got to be awfully careful, you see, so he's probably waiting
outside with one of his aides until it gets dark again."
"Why has he got to
be careful?"
"Because he's not
supposed to be in New York. He's even under one of his second-string
names."
The lights dimmed again,
and almost immediately a tall man appeared out of the darkness and approached
their table.
"May I introduce
myself?" he said rapidly to John in a supercilious British voice.
"Lord Charles Este, of Baron Marchbanks' party." He glanced at John
closely as if to be sure that he appreciated the significance of the name.
John nodded.
"That is between
ourselves, you understand."
"Of course."
Rags groped on the table
for her untouched champagne, and tipped the glassful down her throat.
"Baron Marchbanks
requests that your companion will join his party during this number."
Both men looked at Rags.
There was a moment's pause.
"Very well,"
she said, and glanced back again interrogatively at John. Again he nodded. She
rose and with her heart beating wildly threaded the tables, making the
half-circuit of the room; then melted, a slim figure in shimmering gold, into
the table set in half-darkness.
IV
The number drew to a
close, and John Chestnut sat alone at his table, stirring auxiliary bubbles in
his glass of champagne. Just before the lights went on, there was a soft rasp
of gold cloth, and Rags, flushed and breathing quickly, sank into her chair.
Her eyes were shining with tears.
John looked at her
moodily.
"Well, what did he
say?"
"He was very
quiet."
"Didn't he say a
word?"
Her hand trembled as she
took up her glass of champagne.
"He just looked at
me while it was dark. And he said a few conventional things. He was like his
pictures, only he looks very bored and tired. He didn't even ask my name."
"Is he leaving New
York to-night?"
"In half an hour.
He and his aides have a car outside, and they expect to be over the border
before dawn."
"Did you find
him—fascinating?"
She hesitated and then
slowly nodded her head.
"That's what
everybody says," admitted John glumly. "Do they expect you back
there?"
"I don't
know." She looked uncertainly across the floor but the celebrated
personage had again withdrawn from his table to some retreat outside. As she
turned back an utterly strange young man who had been standing for a moment in
the main entrance came toward them hurriedly. He was a deathly pale person in a
dishevelled and inappropriate business suit, and he had laid a trembling hand
on John Chestnut's shoulder.
"Monte!"
exclaimed John, starting up so suddenly that he upset his champagne. "What
is it? What's the matter?"
"They've picked up
the trail!" said the young man in a shaken whisper. He looked around.
"I've got to speak to you alone."
John Chestnut jumped to
his feet, and Rags noticed that his face too had become white as the napkin in
his hand. He excused himself and they retreated to an unoccupied table a few
feet away. Rags watched them curiously for a moment, then she resumed her
scrutiny of the table across the floor. Would she be asked to come back? The
prince had simply risen and bowed and gone outside. Perhaps she should have
waited until he returned, but though she was still tense with excitement she
had, to some extent, become Rags Martin-Jones again. Her curiosity was
satisfied—any new urge must come from him. She wondered if she had really felt
an intrinsic charm—she wondered especially if he had in any marked way
responded to her beauty.
The pale person called
Monte disappeared and John returned to the table. Rags was startled to find
that a tremendous change had come over him. He lurched into his chair like a drunken
man.
"John! What's the
matter?"
Instead of answering, he
reached for the champagne bottle, but his fingers were trembling so that the
splattered wine made a wet yellow ring around his glass.
"Are you
sick?"
"Rags," he
said unsteadily, "I'm all through."
"What do you
mean?"
"I'm all through, I
tell you." He managed a sickly smile. "There's been a warrant out for
me for over an hour."
"What have you
done?" she demanded in a frightened voice. "What's the warrant
for?"
The lights went out for
the next number, and he collapsed suddenly over the table.
"What is it?"
she insisted, with rising apprehension. She leaned forward—his answer was
barely audible.
"Murder?" She
could feel her body grow cold as ice.
He nodded. She took hold
of both arms and tried to shake him upright, as one shakes a coat into place.
His eyes were rolling in his head.
"Is it true? Have
they got proof?"
Again he nodded
drunkenly.
"Then you've got to
get out of the country now! Do you understand, John? You've got to get
out now, before they come looking for you here!"
He loosed a wild glance
of terror toward the entrance.
"Oh, God!"
cried Rags, "why don't you do something?" Her eyes strayed here and
there in desperation, became suddenly fixed. She drew in her breath sharply,
hesitated, and then whispered fiercely into his ear.
"If I arrange it,
will you go to Canada to-night?"
"How?"
"I'll arrange it—if
you'll pull yourself together a little. This is Rags talking to you, don't you
understand, John? I want you to sit here and not move until I come back!"
A minute later she had
crossed the room under cover of the darkness.
"Baron
Marchbanks," she whispered softly, standing just behind his chair.
He motioned her to sit
down.
"Have you room in
your car for two more passengers to-night?"
One of the aides turned
around abruptly.
"His lordship's car
is full," he said shortly.
"It's terribly
urgent." Her voice was trembling.
"Well," said
the prince hesitantly, "I don't know."
Lord Charles Este looked
at the prince and shook his head.
"I don't think it's
advisable. This is a ticklish business anyhow with contrary orders from home.
You know we agreed there'd be no complications."
The prince frowned.
"This isn't a
complication," he objected.
Este turned frankly to
Rags.
"Why is it
urgent?"
Rags hesitated.
"Why"—she
flushed suddenly—"it's a runaway marriage."
The prince laughed.
"Good!" he
exclaimed. "That settles it. Este is just being official. Bring him over
right away. We're leaving shortly, what?"
Este looked at his
watch.
"Right now!"
Rags rushed away. She
wanted to move the whole party from the roof while the lights were still down.
"Hurry!" she
cried in John's ear. "We're going over the border—with the Prince of
Wales. You'll be safe by morning."
He looked up at her with
dazed eyes. She hurriedly paid the check, and seizing his arm piloted him as
inconspicuously as possible to the other table, where she introduced him with a
word. The prince acknowledged his presence by shaking hands—the aides nodded,
only faintly concealing their displeasure.
"We'd better
start," said Este, looking impatiently at his watch.
They were on their feet
when suddenly an exclamation broke from all of them—two policemen and a
red-haired man in plain clothes had come in at the main door.
"Out we go,"
breathed Este, impelling the party toward the side entrance. "There's
going to be some kind of riot here." He swore—two more bluecoats barred
the exit there. They paused uncertainly. The plain-clothes man was beginning a
careful inspection of the people at the tables.
Este looked sharply at
Rags and then at John, who shrank back behind the palms.
"Is that one of
your revenue fellas out there?" demanded Este.
"No,"
whispered Rags. "There's going to be trouble. Can't we get out this
entrance?"
The prince with rising
impatience sat down again in his chair.
"Let me know when
you chaps are ready to go." He smiled at Rags. "Now just suppose we
all get in trouble just for that jolly face of yours."
Then suddenly the lights
went up. The plain-clothes man whirled around quickly and sprang to the middle
of the cabaret floor.
"Nobody try to
leave this room!" he shouted. "Sit down, that party behind the palms!
Is John M. Chestnut in this room?"
Rags gave a short
involuntary cry.
"Here!" cried
the detective to the policeman behind him. "Take a look at that funny
bunch across over there. Hands up, you men!"
"My God!"
whispered Este, "we've got to get out of here!" He turned to the
prince. "This won't do, Ted. You can't be seen here. I'll stall them off
while you get down to the car."
He took a step toward
the side entrance.
"Hands up,
there!" shouted the plain-clothes man. "And when I say hands up I
mean it! Which one of you's Chestnut?"
"You're mad!"
cried Este. "We're British subjects. We're not involved in this affair in
any way!"
A woman screamed
somewhere, and there was a general movement toward the elevator, a movement
which stopped short before the muzzles of two automatic pistols. A girl next to
Rags collapsed in a dead faint to the floor, and at the same moment the music
on the other roof began to play.
"Stop that
music!" bellowed the plain-clothes man. "And get some earrings on
that whole bunch—quick!"
Two policemen advanced
toward the party, and simultaneously Este and the other aides drew their
revolvers, and, shielding the prince as they best could, began to edge toward
the side. A shot rang out and then another, followed by a crash of silver and
china as half a dozen diners overturned their tables and dropped quickly
behind.
The panic became
general. There were three shots in quick succession, and then a fusillade. Rags
saw Este firing coolly at the eight amber lights above, and a thick fume of
gray smoke began to fill the air. As a strange undertone to the shouting and
screaming came the incessant clamor of the distant jazz band.
Then in a moment it was
all over. A shrill whistle rang out over the roof, and through the smoke Rags
saw John Chestnut advancing toward the plain-clothes man, his hands held out in
a gesture of surrender. There was a last nervous cry, a chill clatter as some one
inadvertently stepped into a pile of dishes, and then a heavy silence fell on
the roof—even the band seemed to have died away.
"It's all
over!" John Chestnut's voice rang out wildly on the night air. "The
party's over. Everybody who wants to can go home!"
Still there was
silence—Rags knew it was the silence of awe—the strain of guilt had driven John
Chestnut insane.
"It was a great
performance," he was shouting. "I want to thank you one and all. If
you can find any tables still standing, champagne will be served as long as you
care to stay."
It seemed to Rags that
the roof and the high stars suddenly began to swim round and round. She saw
John take the detective's hand and shake it heartily, and she watched the
detective grin and pocket his gun. The music had recommenced, and the girl who
had fainted was suddenly dancing with Lord Charles Este in the corner. John was
running here and there patting people on the back, and laughing and shaking
hands. Then he was coming toward her, fresh and innocent as a child.
"Wasn't it
wonderful?" he cried.
Rags felt a faintness
stealing over her. She groped backward with her hand toward a chair.
"What was it?"
she cried dazedly. "Am I dreaming?"
"Of course not!
You're wide awake. I made it up, Rags, don't you see? I made up the whole thing
for you. I had it invented! The only thing real about it was my name!"
She collapsed suddenly
against his coat, clung to his lapels, and would have wilted to the floor if he
had not caught her quickly in his arms.
"Some
champagne—quick!" he called, and then he shouted at the Prince of Wales,
who stood near by. "Order my car quick, you! Miss Martin-Jones has fainted
from excitement."
V
The skyscraper rose
bulkily through thirty tiers of windows before it attenuated itself to a
graceful sugar-loaf of shining white. Then it darted up again another hundred
feet, thinned to a mere oblong tower in its last fragile aspiration toward the
sky. At the highest of its high windows Rags Martin-Jones stood full in the
stiff breeze, gazing down at the city.
"Mr. Chestnut wants
to know if you'll come right in to his private office."
Obediently her slim feet
moved along the carpet into a high, cool chamber overlooking the harbor and the
wide sea.
John Chestnut sat at his
desk, waiting, and Rags walked to him and put her arms around his shoulder.
"Are you sure you're real?"
she asked anxiously. "Are you absolutely sure?"
"You only wrote me
a week before you came," he protested modestly, "or I could have
arranged a revolution."
"Was the whole
thing just mine?" she demanded. "Was it a perfectly
useless, gorgeous thing, just for me?"
"Useless?" He
considered. "Well, it started out to be. At the last minute I invited a
big restaurant man to be there, and while you were at the other table I sold
him the whole idea of the night-club."
He looked at his watch.
"I've got one more
thing to do—and then we've got just time to be married before lunch." He
picked up his telephone. "Jackson? ... Send a triplicated cable to Paris,
Berlin, and Budapest and have those two bogus dukes who tossed up for
Schwartzberg-Rhineminster chased over the Polish border. If the Dutchy won't
act, lower the rate of exchange to point triple zero naught two. Also, that
idiot Blutchdak is in the Balkans again, trying to start a new war. Put him on the
first boat for New York or else throw him in a Greek jail."
He rang off, turned to
the startled cosmopolite with a laugh.
"The next stop is
the City Hall. Then, if you like, we'll run over to Paris."
"John," she
asked him intently, "who was the Prince of Wales?"
He waited till they were
in the elevator, dropping twenty floors at a swoop. Then he leaned forward and
tapped the lift-boy on the shoulder.
"Not so fast,
Cedric. This lady isn't used to falls from high places."
The elevator-boy turned
around, smiled. His face was pale, oval, framed in yellow hair. Rags blushed
like fire.
"Cedric's from
Wessex," explained John. "The resemblance is, to say the least,
amazing. Princes are not particularly discreet, and I suspect Cedric of being a
Guelph in some left-handed way."
Rags took the monocle
from around her neck and threw the ribbon over Cedric's head.
"Thank you,"
she said simply, "for the second greatest thrill of my life."
John Chestnut began
rubbing his hands together in a commercial gesture.
"Patronize this
place, lady," he besought her. "Best bazaar in the city!"
"What have you got
for sale?"
"Well, m'selle,
to-day we have some perfectly bee-oo-tiful love."
"Wrap it up, Mr.
Merchant," cried Rags Martin-Jones. "It looks like a bargain to
me."
6.THE ADJUSTER
At five o'clock the
sombre egg-shaped room at the Ritz ripens to a subtle melody—the light clat-clat of
one lump, two lumps, into the cup, and the ding of the shining
teapots and cream-pots as they kiss elegantly in transit upon a silver tray.
There are those who cherish that amber hour above all other hours, for now the
pale, pleasant toil of the lilies who inhabit the Ritz is over—the singing
decorative part of the day remains.
Moving your eyes around
the slightly raised horseshoe balcony you might, one spring afternoon, have
seen young Mrs. Alphonse Karr and young Mrs. Charles Hemple at a table for two.
The one in the dress was Mrs. Hemple—when I say "the dress" I refer
to that black immaculate affair with the big buttons and the red ghost of a
cape at the shoulders, a gown suggesting with faint and fashionable irreverence
the garb of a French cardinal, as it was meant to do when it was invented in
the Rue de la Paix. Mrs. Karr and Mrs. Hemple were twenty-three years old, and
their enemies said that they had done very well for themselves. Either might
have had her limousine waiting at the hotel door, but both of them much
preferred to walk home (up Park Avenue) through the April twilight.
Luella Hemple was tall,
with the sort of flaxen hair that English country girls should have, but seldom
do. Her skin was radiant, and there was no need of putting anything on it at
all, but in deference to an antiquated fashion—this was the year 1920—she had
powdered out its high roses and drawn on it a new mouth and new eyebrows—which
were no more successful than such meddling deserves. This, of course, is said
from the vantage-point of 1925. In those days the effect she gave was exactly
right.
"I've been married
three years," she was saying as she squashed out a cigarette in an
exhausted lemon. "The baby will be two years old to-morrow. I must
remember to get——"
She took a gold pencil
from her case and wrote "Candles" and "Things you pull, with
paper caps," on an ivory date-pad. Then, raising her eyes, she looked at
Mrs. Karr and hesitated.
"Shall I tell you
something outrageous?"
"Try," said
Mrs. Karr cheerfully.
"Even my baby bores
me. That sounds unnatural, Ede, but it's true. He doesn't begin to
fill my life. I love him with all my heart, but when I have him to take care of
for an afternoon, I get so nervous that I want to scream. After two hours I
begin praying for the moment the nurse'll walk in the door."
When she had made this
confession, Luella breathed quickly and looked closely at her friend. She
didn't really feel unnatural at all. This was the truth. There couldn't be
anything vicious in the truth.
"It may be because
you don't love Charles," ventured Mrs. Karr, unmoved.
"But I do! I hope I
haven't given you that impression with all this talk." She decided that
Ede Karr was stupid. "It's the very fact that I do love Charles that
complicates matters. I cried myself to sleep last night because I know we're
drifting slowly but surely toward a divorce. It's the baby that keeps us
together."
Ede Karr, who had been married
five years, looked at her critically to see if this was a pose, but Luella's
lovely eyes were grave and sad.
"And what is the
trouble?" Ede inquired.
"It's plural,"
said Luella, frowning. "First, there's food. I'm a vile housekeeper, and I
have no intention of turning into a good one. I hate to order groceries, and I
hate to go into the kitchen and poke around to see if the ice-box is clean, and
I hate to pretend to the servants that I'm interested in their work, when
really I never want to hear about food until it comes on the table. You see, I
never learned to cook, and consequently a kitchen is about as interesting to me
as a—as a boiler-room. It's simply a machine that I don't understand. It's easy
to say, 'Go to cooking school,' the way people do in books—but, Ede, in real
life does anybody ever change into a model Hausfrau unless
they have to?"
"Go on," said
Ede non-committally. "Tell me more."
"Well, as a result,
the house is always in a riot. The servants leave every week. If they're young
and incompetent, I can't train them, so we have to let them go. If they're
experienced, they hate a house where a woman doesn't take an intense interest
in the price of asparagus. So they leave—and half the time we eat at
restaurants and hotels."
"I don't suppose
Charles likes that."
"Hates it. In fact,
he hates about everything that I like. He's lukewarm about the theatre, hates
the opera, hates dancing, hates cocktail parties—sometimes I think he hates
everything pleasant in the world. I sat home for a year or so. While Chuck was
on the way, and while I was nursing him, I didn't mind. But this year I told
Charles frankly that I was still young enough to want some fun. And since then
we've been going out whether he wants to or not." She paused, brooding.
"I'm so sorry for him I don't know what to do, Ede—but if we sat home, I'd
just be sorry for myself. And to tell you another true thing, I'd rather that
he'd be unhappy than me."
Luella was not so much
stating a case as thinking aloud. She considered that she was being very fair.
Before her marriage men had always told her that she was "a good
sport," and she had tried to carry this fairness into her married life. So
she always saw Charley's point of view as clearly as she saw her own.
If she had been a
pioneer wife, she would probably have fought the fight side by side with her
husband. But here in New York there wasn't any fight. They weren't struggling
together to obtain a far-off peace and leisure—she had more of either than she
could use. Luella, like several thousand other young wives in New York,
honestly wanted something to do. If she had had a little more money and a
little less love, she could have gone in for horses or for vagarious amour. Or
if they had had a little less money, her surplus energy would have been
absorbed by hope and even by effort. But the Charles Hemples were in between.
They were of that enormous American class who wander over Europe every summer,
sneering rather pathetically and wistfully at the customs and traditions and
pastimes of other countries, because they have no customs or traditions or
pastimes of their own. It is a class sprung yesterday from fathers and mothers
who might just as well have lived two hundred years ago.
The tea-hour had turned
abruptly into the before-dinner hour. Most of the tables had emptied until the
room was dotted rather than crowded with shrill isolated voices and remote,
surprising laughter—in one corner the waiters were already covering the tables
with white for dinner.
"Charles and I are
on each other's nerves." In the new silence Luella's voice rang out with
startling clearness, and she lowered it precipitately. "Little things. He
keeps rubbing his face with his hand—all the time, at table, at the
theatre—even when he's in bed. It drives me wild, and when things like that
begin to irritate you, it's nearly over." She broke off and, reaching
backward, drew up a light fur around her neck. "I hope I haven't bored
you, Ede. It's on my mind, because to-night tells the story. I made an
engagement for to-night—an interesting engagement, a supper after the theatre
to meet some Russians, singers or dancers or something, and Charles says he
won't go. If he doesn't—then I'm going alone. And that's the end."
She put her elbows on
the table suddenly and, bending her eyes down into her smooth gloves, began to
cry, stubbornly and quietly. There was no one near to see, but Ede Karr wished
that she had taken her gloves off. She would have reached out consolingly and
touched her bare hand. But the gloves were a symbol of the difficulty of
sympathizing with a woman to whom life had given so much. Ede wanted to say
that it would "come out all right," that it wasn't "so bad as it
seemed," but she said nothing. Her only reaction was impatience and
distaste.
A waiter stepped near
and laid a folded paper on the table, and Mrs. Karr reached for it.
"No, you
mustn't," murmured Luella brokenly. "No, I invited you!
I've got the money right here."
II
The Hemples'
apartment—they owned it—was in one of those impersonal white palaces that are
known by number instead of name. They had furnished it on their honeymoon, gone
to England for the big pieces, to Florence for the bric-à-brac, and to Venice
for the lace and sheer linen of the curtains and for the glass of many colors
which littered the table when they entertained. Luella enjoyed choosing things
on her honeymoon. It gave a purposeful air to the trip, and saved it from ever
turning into the rather dismal wandering among big hotels and desolate ruins
which European honeymoons are apt to be.
They returned, and life
began. On the grand scale. Luella found herself a lady of substance. It amazed
her sometimes that the specially created apartment and the specially created
limousine were hers, just as indisputably as the mortgaged suburban bungalow
out of The Ladies' Home Journal and the last year's car that
fate might have given her instead. She was even more amazed when it all began
to bore her. But it did....
The evening was at seven
when she turned out of the April dusk, let herself into the hall, and saw her
husband waiting in the living-room before an open fire. She came in without a
sound, closed the door noiselessly behind her, and stood watching him for a
moment through the pleasant effective vista of the small salon which
intervened. Charles Hemple was in the middle thirties, with a young serious
face and distinguished iron-gray hair which would be white in ten years more.
That and his deep-set, dark-gray eyes were his most noticeable features—women
always thought his hair was romantic; most of the time Luella thought so too.
At this moment she found
herself hating him a little, for she saw that he had raised his hand to his
face and was rubbing it nervously over his chin and mouth. It gave him an air
of unflattering abstraction, and sometimes even obscured his words, so that she
was continually saying "What?" She had spoken about it several times,
and he had apologized in a surprised way. But obviously he didn't realize how
noticeable and how irritating it was, for he continued to do it. Things had now
reached such a precarious state that Luella dreaded speaking of such matters
any more—a certain sort of word might precipitate the imminent scene.
Luella tossed her gloves
and purse abruptly on the table. Hearing the faint sound, her husband looked
out toward the hall.
"Is that you,
dear?"
"Yes, dear."
She went into the
living-room, and walked into his arms and kissed him tensely. Charles Hemple
responded with unusual formality, and then turned her slowly around so that she
faced across the room.
"I've brought some
one home to dinner."
She saw then that they
were not alone, and her first feeling was of strong relief; the rigid
expression on her face softened into a shy, charming smile as she held out her
hand.
"This is Doctor
Moon—this is my wife."
A man a little older
than her husband, with a round, pale, slightly lined face, came forward to meet
her.
"Good evening, Mrs.
Hemple," he said. "I hope I'm not interfering with any arrangement of
yours."
"Oh, no,"
Luella cried quickly. "I'm delighted that you're coming to dinner. We're
quite alone."
Simultaneously she
thought of her engagement to-night, and wondered if this could be a clumsy trap
of Charles' to keep her at home. If it were, he had chosen his bait badly. This
man—a tired placidity radiated from him, from his face, from his heavy,
leisurely voice, even from the three-year-old shine of his clothes.
Nevertheless, she
excused herself and went into the kitchen to see what was planned for dinner.
As usual they were trying a new pair of servants, the luncheon had been
ill-cooked and ill-served—she would let them go to-morrow. She hoped Charles
would talk to them—she hated to get rid of servants. Sometimes they wept, and
sometimes they were insolent, but Charles had a way with him. And they were
always afraid of a man.
The cooking on the
stove, however, had a soothing savor. Luella gave instructions about
"which china," and unlocked a bottle of precious chianti from the
buffet. Then she went in to kiss young Chuck good night.
"Has he been good?"
she demanded as he crawled enthusiastically into her arms.
"Very good,"
said the governess. "We went for a long walk over by Central Park."
"Well, aren't you a
smart boy!" She kissed him ecstatically.
"And he put his
foot into the fountain, so we had to come home in a taxi right away and change
his little shoe and stocking."
"That's right.
Here, wait a minute, Chuck!" Luella unclasped the great yellow
beads from around her neck and handed them to him. "You mustn't break
mama's beads." She turned to the nurse. "Put them on my dresser, will
you, after he's asleep?"
She felt a certain
compassion for her son as she went away—the small enclosed life he led, that
all children led, except in big families. He was a dear little rose, except on
the days when she took care of him. His face was the same shape as hers; she
was thrilled sometimes, and formed new resolves about life when his heart beat
against her own.
In her own pink and
lovely bedroom, she confined her attentions to her face, which she washed and
restored. Doctor Moon didn't deserve a change of dress, and Luella found
herself oddly tired, though she had done very little all day. She returned to
the living-room, and they went in to dinner.
"Such a nice house,
Mrs. Hemple," said Doctor Moon impersonally; "and let me congratulate
you on your fine little boy."
"Thanks. Coming
from a doctor, that's a nice compliment." She hesitated. "Do you
specialize in children?"
"I'm not a
specialist at all," he said. "I'm about the last of my kind—a general
practitioner."
"The last in New
York, anyhow," remarked Charles. He had begun rubbing his face nervously,
and Luella fixed her eyes on Doctor Moon so that she wouldn't see. But at
Charles's next words she looked back at him sharply.
"In fact," he
said unexpectedly, "I've invited Doctor Moon here because I wanted you to
have a talk with him to-night."
Luella sat up straight
in her chair.
"A talk with me?"
"Doctor Moon's an
old friend of mine, and I think he can tell you a few things, Luella, that you
ought to know."
"Why—" She
tried to laugh, but she was surprised and annoyed. "I don't see, exactly,
what you mean. There's nothing the matter with me. I don't believe I've ever
felt better in my life."
Doctor Moon looked at
Charles, asking permission to speak. Charles nodded, and his hand went up
automatically to his face.
"Your husband has
told me a great deal about your unsatisfactory life together," said Doctor
Moon, still impersonally. "He wonders if I can be of any help in smoothing
things out."
Luella's face was
burning.
"I have no
particular faith in psychoanalysis," she said coldly, "and I scarcely
consider myself a subject for it."
"Neither have
I," answered Doctor Moon, apparently unconscious of the snub; "I have
no particular faith in anything but myself. I told you I am not a specialist,
nor, I may add, a faddist of any sort. I promise nothing."
For a moment Luella
considered leaving the room. But the effrontery of the suggestion aroused her
curiosity too.
"I can't imagine
what Charles has told you," she said, controlling herself with difficulty,
"much less why. But I assure you that our affairs are a matter entirely
between my husband and me. If you have no objections, Doctor Moon, I'd much
prefer to discuss something—less personal."
Doctor Moon nodded
heavily and politely. He made no further attempt to open the subject, and
dinner proceeded in what was little more than a defeated silence. Luella
determined that, whatever happened, she would adhere to her plans for to-night.
An hour ago her independence had demanded it, but now some gesture of defiance
had become necessary to her self-respect. She would stay in the living-room for
a short moment after dinner; then, when the coffee came, she would excuse
herself and dress to go out.
But when they did leave
the dining-room, it was Charles who, in a quick, unarguable way, vanished.
"I have a letter to
write," he said; "I'll be back in a moment." Before Luella could
make a diplomatic objection, he went quickly down the corridor to his room, and
she heard him shut his door.
Angry and confused,
Luella poured the coffee and sank into a corner of the couch, looking intently
at the fire.
"Don't be afraid,
Mrs. Hemple," said Doctor Moon suddenly. "This was forced upon me. I
do not act as a free agent——"
"I'm not afraid of
you," she interrupted. But she knew that she was lying. She was a little
afraid of him, if only for his dull insensitiveness to her distaste.
"Tell me about your
trouble," he said very naturally, as though she were not a free agent
either. He wasn't even looking at her, and except that they were alone in the
room, he scarcely seemed to be addressing her at all.
The words that were in
Luella's mind, her will, on her lips, were: "I'll do no such thing."
What she actually said amazed her. It came out of her spontaneously, with
apparently no co-operation of her own.
"Didn't you see him
rubbing his face at dinner?" she said despairingly. "Are you blind?
He's become so irritating to me that I think I'll go mad."
"I see."
Doctor Moon's round face nodded.
"Don't you see I've
had enough of home?" Her breasts seemed to struggle for air under her
dress. "Don't you see how bored I am with keeping house, with the
baby—everything seems as if it's going on forever and ever? I want excitement;
and I don't care what form it takes or what I pay for it, so long as it makes
my heart beat."
"I see."
It infuriated Luella
that he claimed to understand. Her feeling of defiance had reached such a pitch
that she preferred that no one should understand. She was content to be
justified by the impassioned sincerity of her desires.
"I've tried to be
good, and I'm not going to try any more. If I'm one of those women who wreck
their lives for nothing, then I'll do it now. You can call me selfish, or
silly, and be quite right; but in five minutes I'm going out of this house and
begin to be alive."
This time Doctor Moon
didn't answer, but he raised his head as if he were listening to something that
was taking place a little distance away.
"You're not going
out," he said after a moment; "I'm quite sure you're not going
out."
Luella laughed.
"I am going
out."
He disregarded this.
"You see, Mrs.
Hemple, your husband isn't well. He's been trying to live your kind of life,
and the strain of it has been too much for him. When he rubs his mouth——"
Light steps came down
the corridor, and the maid, with a frightened expression on her face, tiptoed
into the room.
"Mrs.
Hemple——"
Startled at the
interruption, Luella turned quickly.
"Yes?"
"Can I speak
to—?" Her fear broke precipitately through her slight training. "Mr.
Hemple, he's sick! He came into the kitchen a while ago and began throwing all
the food out of the ice-box, and now he's in his room, crying and
singing——"
Suddenly Luella heard
his voice.
III
Charles Hemple had had a
nervous collapse. There were twenty years of almost uninterrupted toil upon his
shoulders, and the recent pressure at home had been too much for him to bear.
His attitude toward his wife was the weak point in what had otherwise been a
strong-minded and well-organized career—he was aware of her intense
selfishness, but it is one of the many flaws in the scheme of human
relationships that selfishness in women has an irresistible appeal to many men.
Luella's selfishness existed side by side with a childish beauty, and, in
consequence, Charles Hemple had begun to take the blame upon himself for
situations which she had obviously brought about. It was an unhealthy attitude,
and his mind had sickened, at length, with his attempts to put himself in the
wrong.
After the first shock
and the momentary flush of pity that followed it, Luella looked at the
situation with impatience. She was "a good sport"—she couldn't take
advantage of Charles when he was sick. The question of her liberties had to be
postponed until he was on his feet. Just when she had determined to be a wife
no longer, Luella was compelled to be a nurse as well. She sat beside his bed
while he talked about her in his delirium—about the days of their engagement,
and how some friend had told him then that he was making a mistake, and about
his happiness in the early months of their marriage, and his growing disquiet
as the gap appeared. Evidently he had been more aware of it than she had
thought—more than he ever said.
"Luella!" He
would lurch up in bed. "Luella! Where are you?"
"I'm right here,
Charles, beside you." She tried to make her voice cheerful and warm.
"If you want to go,
Luella, you'd better go. I don't seem to be enough for you any more."
She denied this
soothingly.
"I've thought it
over, Luella, and I can't ruin my health on account of you—" Then quickly,
and passionately: "Don't go, Luella, for God's sake, don't go away and
leave me! Promise me you won't! I'll do anything you say if you won't go."
His humility annoyed her
most; he was a reserved man, and she had never guessed at the extent of his
devotion before.
"I'm only going for
a minute. It's Doctor Moon, your friend, Charles. He came to-day to see how you
were, don't you remember? And he wants to talk to me before he goes."
"You'll come
back?" he persisted.
"In just a little
while. There—lie quiet."
She raised his head and
plumped his pillow into freshness. A new trained nurse would arrive to-morrow.
In the living-room
Doctor Moon was waiting—his suit more worn and shabby in the afternoon light.
She disliked him inordinately, with an illogical conviction that he was in some
way to blame for her misfortune, but he was so deeply interested that she
couldn't refuse to see him. She hadn't asked him to consult with the
specialists, though—a doctor who was so down at the heel....
"Mrs. Hemple."
He came forward, holding out his hand, and Luella touched it, lightly and
uneasily.
"You seem
well," he said.
"I am well, thank
you."
"I congratulate you
on the way you've taken hold of things."
"But I haven't
taken hold of things at all," she said coldly. "I do what I have
to——"
"That's just
it."
Her impatience mounted
rapidly.
"I do what I have
to, and nothing more," she continued; "and with no particular
good-will."
Suddenly she opened up
to him again, as she had the night of the catastrophe—realizing that she was
putting herself on a footing of intimacy with him, yet unable to restrain her
words.
"The house isn't
going," she broke out bitterly. "I had to discharge the servants, and
now I've got a woman in by the day. And the baby has a cold, and I've found out
that his nurse doesn't know her business, and everything's just as messy and
terrible as it can be!"
"Would you mind
telling me how you found out the nurse didn't know her business?"
"You find out
various unpleasant things when you're forced to stay around the house."
He nodded, his weary
face turning here and there about the room.
"I feel somewhat
encouraged," he said slowly. "As I told you, I promise nothing; I
only do the best I can."
Luella looked up at him,
startled.
"What do you
mean?" she protested. "You've done nothing for me—nothing at
all!"
"Nothing
much—yet," he said heavily. "It takes time, Mrs. Hemple."
The words were said in a
dry monotone that was somehow without offense, but Luella felt that he had gone
too far. She got to her feet.
"I've met your type
before," she said coldly. "For some reason you seem to think that you
have a standing here as 'the old friend of the family.' But I don't make
friends quickly, and I haven't given you the privilege of being so"—she
wanted to say "insolent," but the word eluded her—"so personal
with me."
When the front door had
closed behind him, Luella went into the kitchen to see if the woman understood
about the three different dinners—one for Charles, one for the baby, and one
for herself. It was hard to do with only a single servant when things were so
complicated. She must try another employment agency—this one had begun to sound
bored.
To her surprise, she
found the cook with hat and coat on, reading a newspaper at the kitchen table.
"Why"—Luella tried to think of the name—"why, what's the matter,
Mrs.——"
"Mrs. Danski is my
name."
"What's the
matter?"
"I'm afraid I won't
be able to accommodate you," said Mrs. Danski. "You see, I'm only a
plain cook, and I'm not used to preparing invalid's food."
"But I've counted
on you."
"I'm very
sorry." She shook her head stubbornly. "I've got my own health to
think of. I'm sure they didn't tell me what kind of a job it was when I came.
And when you asked me to clean out your husband's room, I knew it was way
beyond my powers."
"I won't ask you to
clean anything," said Luella desperately. "If you'll just stay until
to-morrow. I can't possibly get anybody else to-night."
Mrs. Danski smiled
politely.
"I got my own
children to think of, just like you." It was on Luella's tongue to offer
her more money, but suddenly her temper gave way.
"I've never heard
of anything so selfish in my life!" she broke out. "To leave me at a
time like this! You're an old fool!"
"If you'd pay me
for my time, I'd go," said Mrs. Danski calmly.
"I won't pay you a
cent unless you'll stay!"
She was immediately
sorry she had said this, but she was too proud to withdraw the threat.
"You will so pay
me!"
"You go out that
door!"
"I'll go when I get
my money," asserted Mrs. Danski indignantly. "I got my children to
think of."
Luella drew in her
breath sharply, and took a step forward. Intimidated by her intensity, Mrs.
Danski turned and flounced, muttering, out of the door.
Luella went to the phone
and, calling up the agency, explained that the woman had left.
"Can you send me
some one right away? My husband is sick and the baby's sick——"
"I'm sorry, Mrs.
Hemple; there's no one in the office now. It's after four o'clock."
Luella argued for a
while. Finally she obtained a promise that they would telephone to an emergency
woman they knew. That was the best they could do until to-morrow.
She called several other
agencies, but the servant industry had apparently ceased to function for the
day. After giving Charles his medicine, she tiptoed softly into the nursery.
"How's baby?"
she asked abstractedly.
"Ninety-nine
one," whispered the nurse, holding the thermometer to the light. "I
just took it."
"Is that
much?" asked Luella, frowning.
"It's just
three-fifths of a degree. That isn't so much for the afternoon. They often run
up a little with a cold."
Luella went over to the
cot and laid her hand on her son's flushed cheek, thinking, in the midst of her
anxiety, how much he resembled the incredible cherub of the "Lux"
advertisement in the bus.
She turned to the nurse.
"Do you know how to
cook?"
"Why—I'm not a good
cook."
"Well, can you do
the baby's food to-night? That old fool has left, and I can't get anyone, and I
don't know what to do."
"Oh, yes, I can do
the baby's food."
"That's all right,
then. I'll try to fix something for Mr. Hemple. Please have your door open so
you can hear the bell when the doctor comes. And let me know."
So many doctors! There
had scarcely been an hour all day when there wasn't a doctor in the house. The
specialist and their family physician every morning, then the baby doctor—and
this afternoon there had been Doctor Moon, placid, persistent, unwelcome, in
the parlor. Luella went into the kitchen. She could cook bacon and eggs for
herself—she had often done that after the theatre. But the vegetables for
Charles were a different matter—they must be left to boil or stew or something,
and the stove had so many doors and ovens that she couldn't decide which to
use. She chose a blue pan that looked new, sliced carrots into it, and covered
them with a little water. As she put it on the stove and tried to remember what
to do next, the phone rang. It was the agency.
"Yes, this is Mrs.
Hemple speaking."
"Why, the woman we
sent to you has returned here with the claim that you refused to pay her for
her time."
"I explained to you
that she refused to stay," said Luella hotly. "She didn't keep her
agreement, and I didn't feel I was under any obligation——"
"We have to see
that our people are paid," the agency informed her; "otherwise we wouldn't
be helping them at all, would we? I'm sorry, Mrs. Hemple, but we won't be able
to furnish you with any one else until this little matter is arranged."
"Oh, I'll pay, I'll
pay!" she cried.
"Of course we like
to keep on good terms with our clients——"
"Yes—yes!"
"So if you'll send
her money around to-morrow? It's seventy-five cents an hour."
"But how about
to-night?" she exclaimed. "I've got to have some one to-night."
"Why—it's pretty
late now. I was just going home myself."
"But I'm Mrs.
Charles Hemple! Don't you understand? I'm perfectly good for what I say I'll
do. I'm the wife of Charles Hemple, of 14 Broadway——"
Simultaneously she
realized that Charles Hemple of 14 Broadway was a helpless invalid—he was
neither a reference nor a refuge any more. In despair at the sudden callousness
of the world, she hung up the receiver.
After another ten
minutes of frantic muddling in the kitchen, she went to the baby's nurse, whom
she disliked, and confessed that she was unable to cook her husband's dinner.
The nurse announced that she had a splitting headache, and that with a sick
child her hands were full already, but she consented, without enthusiasm, to
show Luella what to do.
Swallowing her
humiliation, Luella obeyed orders while the nurse experimented, grumbling, with
the unfamiliar stove. Dinner was started after a fashion. Then it was time for
the nurse to bathe Chuck, and Luella sat down alone at the kitchen table, and
listened to the bubbling perfume that escaped from the pans.
"And women do this
every day," she thought. "Thousands of women. Cook and take care of
sick people—and go out to work too."
But she didn't think of
those women as being like her, except in the superficial aspect of having two
feet and two hands. She said it as she might have said "South Sea
Islanders wear nose-rings." She was merely slumming to-day in her own
home, and she wasn't enjoying it. For her, it was merely a ridiculous
exception.
Suddenly she became
aware of slow approaching steps in the dining-room and then in the butler's pantry.
Half afraid that it was Doctor Moon coming to pay another call, she looked
up—and saw the nurse coming through the pantry door. It flashed through
Luella's mind that the nurse was going to be sick too. And she was right—the
nurse had hardly reached the kitchen door when she lurched and clutched at the
handle as a winged bird clings to a branch. Then she receded wordlessly to the
floor. Simultaneously the door-bell rang; and Luella, getting to her feet,
gasped with relief that the baby doctor had come.
"Fainted, that's
all," he said, taking the girl's head into his lap. The eyes fluttered.
"Yep, she fainted, that's all."
"Everybody's
sick!" cried Luella with a sort of despairing humor. "Everybody's
sick but me, doctor."
"This one's not
sick," he said after a moment. "Her heart is normal already. She just
fainted."
When she had helped the
doctor raise the quickening body to a chair, Luella hurried into the nursery
and bent over the baby's bed. She let down one of the iron sides quietly. The
fever seemed to be gone now—the flush had faded away. She bent over to touch
the small cheek.
Suddenly Luella began to
scream.
IV
Even after her baby's
funeral, Luella still couldn't believe that she had lost him. She came back to
the apartment and walked around the nursery in a circle, saying his name. Then,
frightened by grief, she sat down and stared at his white rocker with the red
chicken painted on the side.
"What will become
of me now?" she whispered to herself. "Something awful is going to
happen to me when I realize that I'll never see Chuck any more!"
She wasn't sure yet. If
she waited here till twilight, the nurse might still bring him in from his
walk. She remembered a tragic confusion in the midst of which some one had told
her that Chuck was dead, but if that was so, then why was his room waiting,
with his small brush and comb still on the bureau, and why was she here at all?
"Mrs. Hemple."
She looked up. The
weary, shabby figure of Doctor Moon stood in the door.
"You go away,"
Luella said dully.
"Your husband needs
you."
"I don't
care."
Doctor Moon came a
little way into the room.
"I don't think you
understand, Mrs. Hemple. He's been calling for you. You haven't any one now
except him."
"I hate you,"
she said suddenly.
"If you like. I
promised nothing, you know. I do the best I can. You'll be better when you
realize that your baby is gone, that you're not going to see him any
more."
Luella sprang to her
feet.
"My baby isn't
dead!" she cried. "You lie! You always lie!" Her flashing eyes
looked into his and caught something there, at once brutal and kind, that awed
her and made her impotent and acquiescent. She lowered her own eyes in tired
despair.
"All right,"
she said wearily. "My baby is gone. What shall I do now?"
"Your husband is
much better. All he needs is rest and kindness. But you must go to him and tell
him what's happened."
"I suppose you
think you made him better," said Luella bitterly.
"Perhaps. He's
nearly well."
Nearly well—then the
last link that held her to her home was broken. This part of her life was
over—she could cut it off here, with its grief and oppression, and be off now,
free as the wind.
"I'll go to him in
a minute," Luella said in a far-away voice. "Please leave me
alone."
Doctor Moon's unwelcome
shadow melted into the darkness of the hall.
"I can go
away," Luella whispered to herself. "Life has given me back freedom,
in place of what it took away from me."
But she mustn't linger
even a minute, or Life would bind her again and make her suffer once more. She
called the apartment porter and asked that her trunk be brought up from the
storeroom. Then she began taking things from the bureau and wardrobe, trying to
approximate as nearly as possible the possessions that she had brought to her
married life. She even found two old dresses that had formed part of her
trousseau—out of style now, and a little tight in the hips—which she threw in
with the rest. A new life. Charles was well again; and her baby, whom she had
worshipped, and who had bored her a little, was dead.
When she had packed her
trunk, she went into the kitchen automatically, to see about the preparations
for dinner. She spoke to the cook about the special things for Charles and said
that she herself was dining out. The sight of one of the small pans that had
been used to cook Chuck's food caught her attention for a moment—but she stared
at it unmoved. She looked into the ice-box and saw it was clean and fresh
inside. Then she went into Charles's room. He was sitting up in bed, and the
nurse was reading to him. His hair was almost white now, silvery white, and
underneath it his eyes were huge and dark in his thin young face.
"The baby is
sick?" he asked in his own natural voice.
She nodded.
He hesitated, closing
his eyes for a moment. Then he asked:
"The baby is
dead?"
"Yes."
For a long time he
didn't speak. The nurse came over and put her hand on his forehead. Two large,
strange tears welled from his eyes.
"I knew the baby
was dead."
After another long wait,
the nurse spoke:
"The doctor said he
could be taken out for a drive to-day while there was still sunshine. He needs
a little change."
"Yes."
"I
thought"—the nurse hesitated—"I thought perhaps it would do you both
good, Mrs. Hemple, if you took him instead of me."
Luella shook her head
hastily.
"Oh, no," she
said. "I don't feel able to, to-day."
The nurse looked at her
oddly. With a sudden feeling of pity for Charles, Luella bent down gently and
kissed his cheek. Then, without a word, she went to her own room, put on her
hat and coat, and with her suitcase started for the front door.
Immediately she saw that
there was a shadow in the hall. If she could get past that shadow, she was
free. If she could go to the right or left of it, or order it out of her way!
But, stubbornly, it refused to move, and with a little cry she sank down into a
hall chair.
"I thought you'd
gone," she wailed. "I told you to go away."
"I'm going
soon," said Doctor Moon, "but I don't want you to make an old
mistake."
"I'm not making a
mistake—I'm leaving my mistakes behind."
"You're trying to
leave yourself behind, but you can't. The more you try to run away from
yourself, the more you'll have yourself with you."
"But I've got to go
away," she insisted wildly. "Out of this house of death and
failure!"
"You haven't failed
yet. You've only begun." She stood up.
"Let me pass."
"No."
Abruptly she gave way,
as she always did when he talked to her. She covered her face with her hands
and burst into tears.
"Go back into that
room and tell the nurse you'll take your husband for a drive," he
suggested.
"I can't."
"Oh, yes."
Once more Luella looked
at him, and knew that she would obey. With the conviction that her spirit was
broken at last, she took up her suitcase and walked back through the hall.
V
The nature of the
curious influence that Doctor Moon exerted upon her, Luella could not guess.
But as the days passed, she found herself doing many things that had been
repugnant to her before. She stayed at home with Charles; and when he grew
better, she went out with him sometimes to dinner, or the theatre, but only when
he expressed a wish. She visited the kitchen every day, and kept an unwilling
eye on the house, at first with a horror that it would go wrong again, then
from habit. And she felt that it was all somehow mixed up with Doctor Moon—it
was something he kept telling her about life, or almost telling her, and yet
concealing from her, as though he were afraid to have her know.
With the resumption of
their normal life, she found that Charles was less nervous. His habit of
rubbing his face had left him, and if the world seemed less gay and happy to
her than it had before, she experienced a certain peace, sometimes, that she
had never known.
Then, one afternoon,
Doctor Moon told her suddenly that he was going away.
"Do you mean for
good?" she demanded with a touch of panic.
"For good."
For a strange moment she
wasn't sure whether she was glad or sorry.
"You don't need me
any more," he said quietly. "You don't realize it, but you've grown
up."
He came over and,
sitting on the couch beside her, took her hand.
Luella sat silent and
tense—listening.
"We make an
agreement with children that they can sit in the audience without helping to
make the play," he said, "but if they still sit in the audience after
they're grown, somebody's got to work double time for them, so that they can
enjoy the light and glitter of the world."
"But I want the
light and glitter," she protested. "That's all there is in life.
There can't be anything wrong in wanting to have things warm."
"Things will still
be warm."
"How?"
"Things will warm
themselves from you."
Luella looked at him,
startled.
"It's your turn to
be the centre, to give others what was given to you for so long. You've got to
give security to young people and peace to your husband, and a sort of charity
to the old. You've got to let the people who work for you depend on you. You've
got to cover up a few more troubles than you show, and be a little more patient
than the average person, and do a little more instead of a little less than
your share. The light and glitter of the world is in your hands."
He broke off suddenly.
"Get up," he
said, "and go to that mirror and tell me what you see."
Obediently Luella got up
and went close to a purchase of her honeymoon, a Venetian pier-glass on the
wall.
"I see new lines in
my face here," she said, raising her finger and placing it between her
eyes, "and a few shadows at the sides that might be—that are little
wrinkles."
"Do you care?"
She turned quickly.
"No," she said.
"Do you realize
that Chuck is gone? That you'll never see him any more?"
"Yes." She
passed her hands slowly over her eyes. "But that all seems so vague and
far away."
"Vague and far
away," he repeated; and then: "And are you afraid of me now?"
"Not any
longer," she said, and she added frankly, "now that you're going
away."
He moved toward the
door. He seemed particularly weary to-night, as though he could hardly move
about at all.
"The household here
is in your keeping," he said in a tired whisper. "If there is any
light and warmth in it, it will be your light and warmth; if it is happy, it
will be because you've made it so. Happy things may come to you in life, but
you must never go seeking them any more. It is your turn to make the
fire."
"Won't you sit down
a moment longer?" Luella ventured.
"There isn't
time." His voice was so low now that she could scarcely hear the words.
"But remember that whatever suffering comes to you, I can always help
you—if it is something that can be helped. I promise nothing."
He opened the door. She
must find out now what she most wanted to know, before it was too late.
"What have you done
to me?" she cried. "Why have I no sorrow left for Chuck—for anything
at all? Tell me; I almost see, yet I can't see. Before you go—tell me who you
are!"
"Who am I?—"
His worn suit paused in the doorway. His round, pale face seemed to dissolve
into two faces, a dozen faces, a score, each one different yet the same—sad,
happy, tragic, indifferent, resigned—until threescore Doctor Moons were ranged
like an infinite series of reflections, like months stretching into the vista
of the past.
"Who am I?" he
repeated; "I am five years." The door closed.
At six o'clock Charles
Hemple came home, and as usual Luella met him in the hall. Except that now his
hair was dead white, his long illness of two years had left no mark upon him.
Luella herself was more noticeably changed—she was a little stouter, and there
were those lines around her eyes that had come when Chuck died one evening back
in 1921. But she was still lovely, and there was a mature kindness about her
face at twenty-eight, as if suffering had touched her only reluctantly and then
hurried away.
"Ede and her
husband are coming to dinner," she said. "I've got theatre tickets,
but if you're tired, I don't care whether we go or not."
"I'd like to
go."
She looked at him.
"You
wouldn't."
"I really
would."
"We'll see how you
feel after dinner."
He put his arm around
her waist. Together they walked into the nursery where the two children were
waiting up to say good night.
7.HOT AND COLD BLOOD
One day when the young
Mathers had been married for about a year, Jaqueline walked into the rooms of
the hardware brokerage which her husband carried on with more than average
success. At the open door of the inner office she stopped and said: "Oh,
excuse me—" She had interrupted an apparently trivial yet somehow
intriguing scene. A young man named Bronson whom she knew slightly was standing
with her husband; the latter had risen from his desk. Bronson seized her
husband's hand and shook it earnestly—something more than earnestly. When they heard
Jaqueline's step in the doorway both men turned and Jaqueline saw that
Bronson's eyes were red.
A moment later he came
out, passing her with a somewhat embarrassed "How do you do?" She
walked into her husband's office.
"What was Ed
Bronson doing here?" she demanded curiously, and at once.
Jim Mather smiled at
her, half shutting his gray eyes, and drew her quietly to a sitting position on
his desk.
"He just dropped in
for a minute," he answered easily. "How's everything at home?"
"All right."
She looked at him with curiosity. "What did he want?" she insisted.
"Oh, he just wanted
to see me about something."
"What?"
"Oh, just
something. Business."
"Why were his eyes
red?"
"Were they?"
He looked at her innocently, and then suddenly they both began to laugh. Jaqueline
rose and walked around the desk and plumped down into his swivel chair.
"You might as well
tell me," she announced cheerfully, "because I'm going to stay right
here till you do."
"Well—" he
hesitated, frowning. "He wanted me to do him a little favor."
Then Jaqueline
understood, or rather her mind leaped half accidentally to the truth.
"Oh." Her
voice tightened a little. "You've been lending him some money."
"Only a
little."
"How much?"
"Only three
hundred."
"Only three
hundred." The voice was of the texture of Bessemer cooled. "How much
do we spend a month, Jim?"
"Why—why, about
five or six hundred, I guess." He shifted uneasily. "Listen, Jack.
Bronson'll pay that back. He's in a little trouble. He's made a mistake about a
girl out in Woodmere——"
"And he knows
you're famous for being an easy mark, so he comes to you," interrupted
Jaqueline.
"No." He
denied this formally.
"Don't you suppose
I could use that three hundred dollars?" she demanded. "How about
that trip to New York we couldn't afford last November?"
The lingering smile
faded from Mather's face. He went over and shut the door to the outer office.
"Listen,
Jack," he began, "you don't understand this. Bronson's one of the men
I eat lunch with almost every day. We used to play together when we were kids,
we went to school together. Don't you see that I'm just the person he'd be
right to come to in trouble? And that's just why I couldn't refuse."
Jaqueline gave her
shoulders a twist as if to shake off this reasoning.
"Well," she
answered decidedly, "all I know is that he's no good. He's always lit and
if he doesn't choose to work he has no business living off the work you
do."
They were sitting now on
either side of the desk, each having adopted the attitude of one talking to a
child. They began their sentences with "Listen!" and their faces wore
expressions of rather tried patience.
"If you can't
understand, I can't tell you," Mather concluded, at the end of fifteen
minutes, on what was, for him, an irritated key. "Such obligations do
happen to exist sometimes among men and they have to be met. It's more
complicated than just refusing to lend money, especially in a business like
mine where so much depends on the good-will of men down-town."
Mather was putting on
his coat as he said this. He was going home with her on the street-car to
lunch. They were between automobiles—they had sold their old one and were going
to get a new one in the spring.
Now the street-car, on
this particular day, was distinctly unfortunate. The argument in the office
might have been forgotten under other circumstances, but what followed
irritated the scratch until it became a serious temperamental infection.
They found a seat near
the front of the car. It was late February and an eager, unpunctilious sun was
turning the scrawny street snow into dirty, cheerful rivulets that echoed in
the gutters. Because of this the car was less full than usual—there was no one
standing. The motorman had even opened his window and a yellow breeze was
blowing the late breath of winter from the car.
It occurred pleasurably
to Jaqueline that her husband sitting beside her was handsome and kind above
other men. It was silly to try to change him. Perhaps Bronson might return the
money after all, and anyhow three hundred dollars wasn't a fortune. Of course
he had no business doing it—but then—
Her musings were
interrupted as an eddy of passengers pushed up the aisle. Jaqueline wished
they'd put their hands over their mouths when they coughed, and she hoped that
Jim would get a new machine pretty soon. You couldn't tell what disease you'd
run into in these trolleys.
She turned to Jim to
discuss the subject—but Jim had stood up and was offering his seat to a woman
who had been standing beside him in the aisle. The woman, without so much as a
grunt, sat down. Jaqueline frowned.
The woman was about
fifty and enormous. When she first sat down she was content merely to fill the
unoccupied part of the seat, but after a moment she began to expand and to
spread her great rolls of fat over a larger and larger area until the process
took on the aspect of violent trespassing. When the car rocked in Jaqueline's
direction the woman slid with it, but when it rocked back she managed by some
exercise of ingenuity to dig in and hold the ground won.
Jaqueline caught her husband's
eye—he was swaying on a strap—and in an angry glance conveyed to him her entire
disapproval of his action. He apologized mutely and became urgently engrossed
in a row of car cards. The fat woman moved once more against Jaqueline—she was
now practically overlapping her. Then she turned puffy, disagreeable eyes full
on Mrs. James Mather, and coughed rousingly in her face.
With a smothered
exclamation Jaqueline got to her feet, squeezed with brisk violence past the
fleshy knees, and made her way, pink with rage, toward the rear of the car.
There she seized a strap, and there she was presently joined by her husband in
a state of considerable alarm.
They exchanged no word,
but stood silently side by side for ten minutes while a row of men sitting in
front of them crackled their newspapers and kept their eyes fixed virtuously
upon the day's cartoons.
When they left the car
at last Jaqueline exploded.
"You big fool!"
she cried wildly. "Did you see that horrible woman you gave your seat to?
Why don't you consider me occasionally instead of every fat
selfish washwoman you meet?"
"How should I
know——"
But Jaqueline was as
angry at him as she had ever been—it was unusual for any one to get angry at
him.
"You didn't see any
of those men getting up for me, did you? No wonder you were too
tired to go out last Monday night. You'd probably given your seat to some—to
some horrible, Polish washwoman that's strong as an ox and likes to
stand up!"
They were walking along
the slushy street stepping wildly into great pools of water. Confused and
distressed, Mather could utter neither apology nor defense.
Jaqueline broke off and
then turned to him with a curious light in her eyes. The words in which she
couched her summary of the situation were probably the most disagreeable that
had ever been addressed to him in his life.
"The trouble with
you, Jim, the reason you're such an easy mark, is that you've got the ideas of
a college freshman—you're a professional nice fellow."
II
The incident and the
unpleasantness were forgotten. Mather's vast good nature had smoothed over the
roughness within an hour. References to it fell with a dying cadence throughout
several days—then ceased and tumbled into the limbo of oblivion. I say
"limbo," for oblivion is, unfortunately, never quite oblivious. The
subject was drowned out by the fact that Jaqueline with her customary spirit
and coolness began the long, arduous, up-hill business of bearing a child. Her
natural traits and prejudices became intensified and she was less inclined to
let things pass.
It was April now, and as
yet they had not bought a car. Mather had discovered that he was saving
practically nothing and that in another half-year he would have a family on his
hands. It worried him. A wrinkle—small, tentative, undisturbing—appeared for
the first time as a shadow around his honest, friendly eyes. He worked far into
the spring twilight now, and frequently brought home with him the overflow from
his office day. The new car would have to be postponed for a while.
April afternoon, and all
the city shopping on Washington Street. Jaqueline walked slowly past the shops,
brooding without fear or depression on the shape into which her life was now
being arbitrarily forced. Dry summer dust was in the wind; the sun bounded
cheerily from the plate-glass windows and made radiant gasoline rainbows where
automobile drippings had formed pools on the street.
Jaqueline stopped. Not
six feet from her a bright new sport roadster was parked at the curb. Beside it
stood two men in conversation, and at the moment when she identified one of
them as young Bronson she heard him say to the other in a casual tone:
"What do you think
of it? Just got it this morning."
Jaqueline turned
abruptly and walked with quick tapping steps to her husband's office. With her
usual curt nod to the stenographer she strode by her to the inner room. Mather
looked up from his desk in surprise at her brusque entry.
"Jim," she
began breathlessly, "did Bronson ever pay you that three hundred?"
"Why—no," he
answered hesitantly, "not yet. He was in here last week and he explained
that he was a little bit hard up."
Her eyes gleamed with
angry triumph.
"Oh, he did?"
she snapped. "Well, he's just bought a new sport roadster that must have
cost anyhow twenty-five hundred dollars."
He shook his head,
unbelieving.
"I saw it,"
she insisted. "I heard him say he'd just bought it."
"He told me
he was hard up," repeated Mather helplessly.
Jaqueline audibly gave
up by heaving a profound noise, a sort of groanish sigh.
"He was using
you! He knew you were easy and he was using you. Can't you see? He
wanted you to buy him the car and you did!"
She laughed bitterly. "He's probably roaring his sides out to think how
easily he worked you."
"Oh, no,"
protested Mather with a shocked expression, "you must have mistaken
somebody for him——"
"We walk—and he
rides on our money," she interrupted excitedly. "Oh, it's rich—it's
rich. If it wasn't so maddening, it'd be just absurd. Look here—!" Her
voice grew sharper, more restrained—there was a touch of contempt in it now.
"You spend half your time doing things for people who don't give a damn
about you or what becomes of you. You give up your seat on the street-car
to hogs, and come home too dead tired to even move.
You're on all sorts of committees that take at least an hour a day out of your
business and you don't get a cent out of them. You're—eternally—being used!
I won't stand it! I thought I married a man—not a professional Samaritan who's
going to fetch and carry for the world!"
As she finished her
invective Jaqueline reeled suddenly and sank into a chair—nervously exhausted.
"Just at this
time," she went on brokenly, "I need you. I need your strength and
your health and your arms around me. And if you—if you just give it to every one,
it's spread so thin when it reaches me——"
He knelt by her side,
moving her tired young head until it lay against his shoulder.
"I'm sorry,
Jaqueline," he said humbly, "I'll be more careful. I didn't realize
what I was doing."
"You're the dearest
person in the world," murmured Jaqueline huskily, "but I want all of
you and the best of you for me."
He smoothed her hair
over and over. For a few minutes they rested there silently, having attained a
sort of Nirvana of peace and understanding. Then Jaqueline reluctantly raised
her head as they were interrupted by the voice of Miss Clancy in the doorway.
"Oh, I beg your
pardon."
"What is it?"
"A boy's here with
some boxes. It's C.O.D."
Mather rose and followed
Miss Clancy into the outer office.
"It's fifty
dollars."
He searched his
wallet—he had omitted to go to the bank that morning.
"Just a
minute," he said abstractedly. His mind was on Jaqueline, Jaqueline who
seemed forlorn in her trouble, waiting for him in the other room. He walked
into the corridor, and opening the door of "Clayton and Drake,
Brokers" across the way, swung wide a low gate and went up to a man seated
at a desk.
"Morning,
Fred," said Mather.
Drake, a little man of
thirty with pince-nez and bald head, rose and shook hands.
"Morning, Jim. What
can I do for you?"
"Why, a boy's in my
office with some stuff C.O.D. and I haven't a cent. Can you let me have fifty
till this afternoon?"
Drake looked closely at
Mather. Then, slowly and startlingly, he shook his head—not up and down but
from side to side.
"Sorry, Jim,"
he answered stiffly, "I've made a rule never to make a personal loan to
anybody on any conditions. I've seen it break up too many friendships."
"What?"
Mather had come out of
his abstraction now, and the monosyllable held an undisguised quality of shock.
Then his natural tact acted automatically, springing to his aid and dictating
his words though his brain was suddenly numb. His immediate instinct was to put
Drake at ease in his refusal.
"Oh, I see."
He nodded his head as if in full agreement, as if he himself had often considered
adopting just such a rule. "Oh, I see how you feel. Well—I just—I wouldn't
have you break a rule like that for anything. It's probably a good thing."
They talked for a minute
longer. Drake justified his position easily; he had evidently rehearsed the
part a great deal. He treated Mather to an exquisitely frank smile.
Mather went politely
back to his office leaving Drake under the impression that the latter was the
most tactful man in the city. Mather knew how to leave people with that
impression. But when he entered his own office and saw his wife staring
dismally out the window into the sunshine he clinched his hands, and his mouth
moved in an unfamiliar shape.
"All right,
Jack," he said slowly, "I guess you're right about most things, and
I'm wrong as hell."
III
During the next three
months Mather thought back through many years. He had had an unusually happy
life. Those frictions between man and man, between man and society, which
harden most of us into a rough and cynical quarrelling trim, had been
conspicuous by their infrequency in his life. It had never occurred to him
before that he had paid a price for this immunity, but now he perceived how
here and there, and constantly, he had taken the rough side of the road to
avoid enmity or argument, or even question.
There was, for instance,
much money that he had lent privately, about thirteen hundred dollars in all,
which he realized, in his new enlightenment, he would never see again. It had
taken Jaqueline's harder, feminine intelligence to know this. It was only now
when he owed it to Jaqueline to have money in the bank that he missed these
loans at all.
He realized too the
truth of her assertions that he was continually doing favors—a little something
here, a little something there; the sum total, in time and energy expended, was
appalling. It had pleased him to do the favors. He reacted warmly to being
thought well of, but he wondered now if he had not been merely indulging a
selfish vanity of his own. In suspecting this, he was, as usual, not quite fair
to himself. The truth was that Mather was essentially and enormously romantic.
He decided that these
expenditures of himself made him tired at night, less efficient in his work,
and less of a prop to Jaqueline, who, as the months passed, grew more heavy and
bored, and sat through the long summer afternoons on the screened veranda
waiting for his step at the end of the walk.
Lest that step falter,
Mather gave up many things—among them the presidency of his college alumni
association. He let slip other labors less prized. When he was put on a
committee, men had a habit of electing him chairman and retiring into a dim
background, where they were inconveniently hard to find. He was done with such
things now. Also he avoided those who were prone to ask favors—fleeing a
certain eager look that would be turned on him from some group at his club.
The change in him came
slowly. He was not exceptionally unworldly—under other circumstances Drake's
refusal of money would not have surprised him. Had it come to him as a story he
would scarcely have given it a thought. But it had broken in with harsh
abruptness upon a situation existing in his own mind, and the shock had given
it a powerful and literal significance.
It was mid-August now,
and the last of a baking week. The curtains of his wide-open office windows had
scarcely rippled all the day, but lay like sails becalmed in warm juxtaposition
with the smothering screens. Mather was worried—Jaqueline had over-tired
herself, and was paying for it by violent sick headaches, and business seemed
to have come to an apathetic standstill. That morning he had been so irritable
with Miss Clancy that she had looked at him in surprise. He had immediately
apologized, wishing afterward that he hadn't. He was working at high speed
through this heat—why shouldn't she?
She came to his door
now, and he looked up faintly frowning.
"Mr. Edward
Lacy."
"All right,"
he answered listlessly. Old man Lacy—he knew him slightly. A melancholy
figure—a brilliant start back in the eighties, and now one of the city's
failures. He couldn't imagine what Lacy wanted unless he were soliciting.
"Good afternoon,
Mr. Mather."
A little, solemn,
gray-haired man stood on the threshold. Mather rose and greeted him politely.
"Are you busy, Mr.
Mather?"
"Well, not so very."
He stressed the qualifying word slightly.
Mr. Lacy sat down,
obviously ill at ease. He kept his hat in his hands, and clung to it tightly as
he began to speak.
"Mr. Mather, if
you've got five minutes to spare, I'm going to tell you something that—that I
find at present it's necessary for me to tell you."
Mather nodded. His
instinct warned him that there was a favor to be asked, but he was tired, and
with a sort of lassitude he let his chin sink into his hand, welcoming any
distraction from his more immediate cares.
"You see,"
went on Mr. Lacy—Mather noticed that the hands which fingered at the hat were
trembling—"back in eighty-four your father and I were very good friends.
You've heard him speak of me no doubt."
Mather nodded.
"I was asked to be
one of the pallbearers. Once we were—very close. It's because of that that I
come to you now. Never before in my life have I ever had to come to any one as
I've come to you now, Mr. Mather—come to a stranger. But as you grow older your
friends die or move away or some misunderstanding separates you. And your
children die unless you're fortunate enough to go first—and pretty soon you get
to be alone, so that you don't have any friends at all. You're isolated."
He smiled faintly. His hands were trembling violently now.
"Once upon a time
almost forty years ago your father came to me and asked me for a thousand
dollars. I was a few years older than he was, and though I knew him only
slightly, I had a high opinion of him. That was a lot of money in those days,
and he had no security—he had nothing but a plan in his head—but I liked the
way he had of looking out of his eyes—you'll pardon me if I say you look not
unlike him—so I gave it to him without security."
Mr. Lacy paused.
"Without
security," he repeated. "I could afford it then. I didn't lose by it.
He paid it back with interest at six per cent before the year was up."
Mather was looking down
at his blotter, tapping out a series of triangles with his pencil. He knew what
was coming now, and his muscles physically tightened as he mustered his forces
for the refusal he would have to make.
"I'm now an old
man, Mr. Mather," the cracked voice went on. "I've made a
failure—I am a failure—only we needn't go into that now. I
have a daughter, an unmarried daughter who lives with me. She does stenographic
work and has been very kind to me. We live together, you know, on Selby
Avenue—we have an apartment, quite a nice apartment."
The old man sighed
quaveringly. He was trying—and at the same time was afraid—to get to his
request. It was insurance, it seemed. He had a ten-thousand-dollar policy, he
had borrowed on it up to the limit, and he stood to lose the whole amount
unless he could raise four hundred and fifty dollars. He and his daughter had
about seventy-five dollars between them. They had no friends—he had explained
that—and they had found it impossible to raise the money....
Mather could stand the
miserable story no longer. He could not spare the money, but he could at least
relieve the old man of the blistered agony of asking for it.
"I'm sorry, Mr.
Lacy," he interrupted as gently as possible, "but I can't lend you
that money."
"No?" The old
man looked at him with faded, blinking eyes that were beyond all shock, almost,
it seemed, beyond any human emotion except ceaseless care. The only change in
his expression was that his mouth dropped slowly ajar.
Mather fixed his eyes
determinately upon his blotter.
"We're going to
have a baby in a few months, and I've been saving for that. It wouldn't be fair
to my wife to take anything from her—or the child—right now."
His voice sank to a sort
of mumble. He found himself saying platitudinously that business was bad—saying
it with revolting facility.
Mr. Lacy made no
argument. He rose without visible signs of disappointment. Only his hands were
still trembling and they worried Mather. The old man was apologetic—he was
sorry to have bothered him at a time like this. Perhaps something would turn
up. He had thought that if Mr. Mather did happen to have a good deal extra—why,
he might be the person to go to because he was the son of an old friend.
As he left the office he
had trouble opening the outer door. Miss Clancy helped him. He went shabbily
and unhappily down the corridor with his faded eyes blinking and his mouth
still faintly ajar.
Jim Mather stood by his
desk, and put his hand over his face and shivered suddenly as if he were cold.
But the five-o'clock air outside was hot as a tropic noon.
IV
The twilight was hotter
still an hour later as he stood at the corner waiting for his car. The
trolley-ride to his house was twenty-five minutes, and he bought a
pink-jacketed newspaper to appetize his listless mind. Life had seemed less
happy, less glamourous of late. Perhaps he had learned more of the world's
ways—perhaps its glamour was evaporating little by little with the hurried
years.
Nothing like this
afternoon, for instance, had ever happened to him before. He could not dismiss
the old man from his mind. He pictured him plodding home in the weary heat—on
foot, probably, to save carfare—opening the door of a hot little flat, and
confessing to his daughter that the son of his friend had not been able to help
him out. All evening they would plan helplessly until they said good night to
each other—father and daughter, isolated by chance in this world—and went to
lie awake with a pathetic loneliness in their two beds.
Mather's street-car came
along, and he found a seat near the front, next to an old lady who looked at
him grudgingly as she moved over. At the next block a crowd of girls from the
department-store district flowed up the aisle, and Mather unfolded his paper.
Of late he had not indulged his habit of giving up his seat. Jaqueline was
right—the average young girl was able to stand as well as he was. Giving up his
seat was silly, a mere gesture. Nowadays not one woman in a dozen even bothered
to thank him.
It was stifling hot in
the car, and he wiped the heavy damp from his forehead. The aisle was thickly
packed now, and a woman standing beside his seat was thrown momentarily against
his shoulder as the car turned a corner. Mather took a long breath of the hot
foul air, which persistently refused to circulate, and tried to centre his mind
on a cartoon at the top of the sporting page.
"Move for'ard ina
car, please!" The conductor's voice pierced the opaque column of humanity
with raucous irritation. "Plen'y of room for'ard!"
The crowd made a feeble
attempt to shove forward, but the unfortunate fact that there was no space into
which to move precluded any marked success. The car turned another corner, and
again the woman next to Mather swayed against his shoulder. Ordinarily he would
have given up his seat if only to avoid this reminder that she was there. It
made him feel unpleasantly cold-blooded. And the car was horrible—horrible.
They ought to put more of them on the line these sweltering days.
For the fifth time he
looked at the pictures in the comic strip. There was a beggar in the second
picture, and the wavering image of Mr. Lacy persistently inserted itself in the
beggar's place. God! Suppose the old man really did starve to death—suppose he
threw himself into the river.
"Once,"
thought Mather, "he helped my father. Perhaps, if he hadn't, my own life
would have been different than it has been. But Lacy could afford it then—and I
can't."
To force out the picture
of Mr. Lacy, Mather tried to think of Jaqueline. He said to himself over and
over that he would have been sacrificing Jaqueline to a played-out man who had
had his chance and failed. Jaqueline needed her chance now as never before.
Mather looked at his
watch. He had been on the car ten minutes. Fifteen minutes still to ride, and
the heat increasing with breathless intensity. The woman swayed against him
once more, and looking out the window he saw that they were turning the last
down-town corner.
It occurred to him that
perhaps he ought, after all, to give the woman his seat—her last sway toward
him had been a particularly tired sway. If he were sure she was an older
woman—but the texture of her dress as it brushed his hand gave somehow the
impression that she was a young girl. He did not dare look up to see. He was
afraid of the appeal that might look out of her eyes if they were old eyes or
the sharp contempt if they were young.
For the next five
minutes his mind worked in a vague suffocated way on what now seemed to him the
enormous problem of whether or not to give her the seat. He felt dimly that
doing so would partially atone for his refusal to Mr. Lacy that afternoon. It
would be rather terrible to have done those two cold-blooded things in
succession—and on such a day.
He tried the cartoon
again, but in vain. He must concentrate on Jaqueline. He was dead tired now,
and if he stood up he would be more tired. Jaqueline would be waiting for him,
needing him. She would be depressed and she would want him to hold her quietly
in his arms for an hour after dinner. When he was tired this was rather a
strain. And afterward when they went to bed she would ask him from time to time
to get her her medicine or a glass of ice-water. He hated to show any weariness
in doing these things. She might notice and, needing something, refrain from
asking for it.
The girl in the aisle
swayed against him once more—this time it was more like a sag. She was tired,
too. Well, it was weary to work. The ends of many proverbs that had to do with
toil and the long day floated fragmentarily through his mind. Everybody in the
world was tired—this woman, for instance, whose body was sagging so wearily, so
strangely against his. But his home came first and his girl that he loved was
waiting for him there. He must keep his strength for her, and he said to
himself over and over that he would not give up his seat.
Then he heard a long
sigh, followed by a sudden exclamation, and he realized that the girl was no
longer leaning against him. The exclamation multiplied into a clatter of
voices—then came a pause—then a renewed clatter that travelled down the car in
calls and little staccato cries to the conductor. The bell clanged violently,
and the hot car jolted to a sudden stop.
"Girl fainted up
here!"
"Too hot for
her!"
"Just keeled right
over!"
"Get back there!
Gangway, you!"
The crowd eddied apart.
The passengers in front squeezed back and those on the rear platform
temporarily disembarked. Curiosity and pity bubbled out of suddenly conversing
groups. People tried to help, got in the way. Then the bell rang and voices
rose stridently again.
"Get her out all
right?"
"Say, did you see
that?"
"This damn' company
ought to——"
"Did you see the
man that carried her out? He was pale as a ghost, too."
"Yes, but did you
hear——?"
"What?"
"That fella. That
pale fella that carried her out. He was sittin' beside her—he says she's his
wife!"
The house was quiet. A
breeze pressed back the dark vine leaves of the veranda, letting in thin yellow
rods of moonlight on the wicker chairs. Jaqueline rested placidly on the long
settee with her head in his arms. After a while she stirred lazily; her hand
reaching up patted his cheek.
"I think I'll go to
bed now. I'm so tired. Will you help me up?"
He lifted her and then
laid her back among the pillows.
"I'll be with you
in a minute," he said gently. "Can you wait for just a minute?"
He passed into the
lighted living-room, and she heard him thumbing the pages of a telephone
directory; then she listened as he called a number.
"Hello, is Mr. Lacy
there? Why—yes, it is pretty important—if he hasn't gone to
sleep."
A pause. Jaqueline could
hear restless sparrows splattering through the leaves of the magnolia over the
way. Then her husband at the telephone:
"Is this Mr. Lacy?
Oh, this is Mather. Why—why, in regard to that matter we talked about this
afternoon, I think I'll be able to fix that up after all." He raised his
voice a little as though some one at the other end found it difficult to hear.
"James Mather's son, I said— About that little matter this
afternoon——"
8."THE SENSIBLE THING"
At the Great American
Lunch Hour young George O'Kelly straightened his desk deliberately and with an
assumed air of interest. No one in the office must know that he was in a hurry,
for success is a matter of atmosphere, and it is not well to advertise the fact
that your mind is separated from your work by a distance of seven hundred
miles.
But once out of the
building he set his teeth and began to run, glancing now and then at the gay
noon of early spring which filled Times Square and loitered less than twenty
feet over the heads of the crowd. The crowd all looked slightly upward and took
deep March breaths, and the sun dazzled their eyes so that scarcely any one saw
any one else but only their own reflection on the sky.
George O'Kelly, whose
mind was over seven hundred miles away, thought that all outdoors was horrible.
He rushed into the subway, and for ninety-five blocks bent a frenzied glance on
a car-card which showed vividly how he had only one chance in five of keeping
his teeth for ten years. At 137th Street he broke off his study of commercial
art, left the subway, and began to run again, a tireless, anxious run that
brought him this time to his home—one room in a high, horrible apartment-house
in the middle of nowhere.
There it was on the
bureau, the letter—in sacred ink, on blessed paper—all over the city, people,
if they listened, could hear the beating of George O'Kelly's heart. He read the
commas, the blots, and the thumb-smudge on the margin—then he threw himself
hopelessly upon his bed.
He was in a mess, one of
those terrific messes which are ordinary incidents in the life of the poor,
which follow poverty like birds of prey. The poor go under or go up or go wrong
or even go on, somehow, in a way the poor have—but George O'Kelly was so new to
poverty that had any one denied the uniqueness of his case he would have been
astounded.
Less than two years ago
he had been graduated with honors from The Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and had taken a position with a firm of construction engineers in
southern Tennessee. All his life he had thought in terms of tunnels and
skyscrapers and great squat dams and tall, three-towered bridges, that were
like dancers holding hands in a row, with heads as tall as cities and skirts of
cable strand. It had seemed romantic to George O'Kelly to change the sweep of
rivers and the shape of mountains so that life could flourish in the old bad
lands of the world where it had never taken root before. He loved steel, and
there was always steel near him in his dreams, liquid steel, steel in bars, and
blocks and beams and formless plastic masses, waiting for him, as paint and
canvas to his hand. Steel inexhaustible, to be made lovely and austere in his
imaginative fire ...
At present he was an
insurance clerk at forty dollars a week with his dream slipping fast behind
him. The dark little girl who had made this mess, this terrible and intolerable
mess, was waiting to be sent for in a town in Tennessee.
In fifteen minutes the
woman from whom he sublet his room knocked and asked him with maddening
kindness if, since he was home, he would have some lunch. He shook his head,
but the interruption aroused him, and getting up from the bed he wrote a
telegram.
"Letter depressed
me have you lost your nerve you are foolish and just upset to think of breaking
off why not marry me immediately sure we can make it all right——"
He hesitated for a wild
minute, and then added in a hand that could scarcely be recognized as his own:
"In any case I will arrive to-morrow at six o'clock."
When he finished he ran
out of the apartment and down to the telegraph office near the subway stop. He
possessed in this world not quite one hundred dollars, but the letter showed
that she was "nervous" and this left him no choice. He knew what
"nervous" meant—that she was emotionally depressed, that the prospect
of marrying into a life of poverty and struggle was putting too much strain
upon her love.
George O'Kelly reached
the insurance company at his usual run, the run that had become almost second
nature to him, that seemed best to express the tension under which he lived. He
went straight to the manager's office.
"I want to see you,
Mr. Chambers," he announced breathlessly.
"Well?" Two
eyes, eyes like winter windows, glared at him with ruthless impersonality.
"I want to get four
days' vacation."
"Why, you had a
vacation just two weeks ago!" said Mr. Chambers in surprise.
"That's true,"
admitted the distraught young man, "but now I've got to have
another."
"Where'd you go
last time? To your home?"
"No, I went to—a
place in Tennessee."
"Well, where do you
want to go this time?"
"Well, this time I
want to go to—a place in Tennessee."
"You're consistent,
anyhow," said the manager dryly. "But I didn't realize you were
employed here as a travelling salesman."
"I'm not,"
cried George desperately, "but I've got to go."
"All right,"
agreed Mr. Chambers, "but you don't have to come back. So don't!"
"I won't." And
to his own astonishment as well as Mr. Chambers' George's face grew pink with
pleasure. He felt happy, exultant—for the first time in six months he was
absolutely free. Tears of gratitude stood in his eyes, and he seized Mr.
Chambers warmly by the hand.
"I want to thank you,"
he said with a rush of emotion, "I don't want to come back. I think I'd
have gone crazy if you'd said that I could come back. Only I couldn't quit
myself, you see, and I want to thank you for—for quitting for me."
He waved his hand
magnanimously, shouted aloud, "You owe me three days' salary but you can
keep it!" and rushed from the office. Mr. Chambers rang for his
stenographer to ask if O'Kelly had seemed queer lately. He had fired many men
in the course of his career, and they had taken it in many different ways, but
none of them had thanked him—ever before.
II
Jonquil Cary was her
name, and to George O'Kelly nothing had ever looked so fresh and pale as her
face when she saw him and fled to him eagerly along the station platform. Her
arms were raised to him, her mouth was half parted for his kiss, when she held
him off suddenly and lightly and, with a touch of embarrassment, looked around.
Two boys, somewhat younger than George, were standing in the background.
"This is Mr.
Craddock and Mr. Holt," she announced cheerfully. "You met them when
you were here before."
Disturbed by the
transition of a kiss into an introduction and suspecting some hidden
significance, George was more confused when he found that the automobile which
was to carry them to Jonquil's house belonged to one of the two young men. It
seemed to put him at a disadvantage. On the way Jonquil chattered between the
front and back seats, and when he tried to slip his arm around her under cover
of the twilight she compelled him with a quick movement to take her hand
instead.
"Is this street on
the way to your house?" he whispered. "I don't recognize it."
"It's the new
boulevard. Jerry just got this car to-day, and he wants to show it to me before
he takes us home."
When, after twenty
minutes, they were deposited at Jonquil's house, George felt that the first
happiness of the meeting, the joy he had recognized so surely in her eyes back
in the station, had been dissipated by the intrusion of the ride. Something
that he had looked forward to had been rather casually lost, and he was
brooding on this as he said good night stiffly to the two young men. Then his
ill-humor faded as Jonquil drew him into a familiar embrace under the dim light
of the front hall and told him in a dozen ways, of which the best was without
words, how she had missed him. Her emotion reassured him, promised his anxious
heart that everything would be all right.
They sat together on the
sofa, overcome by each other's presence, beyond all except fragmentary
endearments. At the supper hour Jonquil's father and mother appeared and were
glad to see George. They liked him, and had been interested in his engineering
career when he had first come to Tennessee over a year before. They had been
sorry when he had given it up and gone to New York to look for something more
immediately profitable, but while they deplored the curtailment of his career
they sympathized with him and were ready to recognize the engagement. During
dinner they asked about his progress in New York.
"Everything's going
fine," he told them with enthusiasm. "I've been promoted—better
salary."
He was miserable as he
said this—but they were all so glad.
"They must like
you," said Mrs. Cary, "that's certain—or they wouldn't let you off
twice in three weeks to come down here."
"I told them they
had to," explained George hastily; "I told them if they didn't I
wouldn't work for them any more."
"But you ought to
save your money," Mrs. Cary reproached him gently. "Not spend it all
on this expensive trip."
Dinner was over—he and
Jonquil were alone and she came back into his arms.
"So glad you're
here," she sighed. "Wish you never were going away again,
darling."
"Do you miss
me?"
"Oh, so much, so
much."
"Do you—do other
men come to see you often? Like those two kids?"
The question surprised
her. The dark velvet eyes stared at him.
"Why, of course
they do. All the time. Why—I've told you in letters that they did,
dearest."
This was true—when he
had first come to the city there had been already a dozen boys around her,
responding to her picturesque fragility with adolescent worship, and a few of
them perceiving that her beautiful eyes were also sane and kind.
"Do you expect me
never to go anywhere"—Jonquil demanded, leaning back against the
sofa-pillows until she seemed to look at him from many miles away—"and
just fold my hands and sit still—forever?"
"What do you
mean?" he blurted out in a panic. "Do you mean you think I'll never
have enough money to marry you?"
"Oh, don't jump at
conclusions so, George."
"I'm not jumping at
conclusions. That's what you said."
George decided suddenly
that he was on dangerous grounds. He had not intended to let anything spoil
this night. He tried to take her again in his arms, but she resisted
unexpectedly, saying:
"It's hot. I'm
going to get the electric fan."
When the fan was
adjusted they sat down again, but he was in a supersensitive mood and
involuntarily he plunged into the specific world he had intended to avoid.
"When will you
marry me?"
"Are you ready for
me to marry you?"
All at once his nerves
gave way, and he sprang to his feet.
"Let's shut off
that damned fan," he cried, "it drives me wild. It's like a clock
ticking away all the time I'll be with you. I came here to be happy and forget
everything about New York and time——"
He sank down on the sofa
as suddenly as he had risen. Jonquil turned off the fan, and drawing his head
down into her lap began stroking his hair.
"Let's sit like
this," she said softly, "just sit quiet like this, and I'll put you
to sleep. You're all tired and nervous, and your sweetheart'll take care of
you."
"But I don't want
to sit like this," he complained, jerking up suddenly, "I don't want
to sit like this at all. I want you to kiss me. That's the only thing that
makes me rest. And anyways I'm not nervous—it's you that's nervous. I'm not
nervous at all."
To prove that he wasn't
nervous he left the couch and plumped himself into a rocking-chair across the
room.
"Just when I'm
ready to marry you you write me the most nervous letters, as if you're going to
back out, and I have to come rushing down here——"
"You don't have to
come if you don't want to."
"But I do want
to!" insisted George.
It seemed to him that he
was being very cool and logical and that she was putting him deliberately in
the wrong. With every word they were drawing farther and farther apart—and he
was unable to stop himself or to keep worry and pain out of his voice.
But in a minute Jonquil
began to cry sorrowfully and he came back to the sofa and put his arm around
her. He was the comforter now, drawing her head close to his shoulder,
murmuring old familiar things until she grew calmer and only trembled a little,
spasmodically, in his arms. For over an hour they sat there, while the evening
pianos thumped their last cadences into the street outside. George did not
move, or think, or hope, lulled into numbness by the premonition of disaster.
The clock would tick on, past eleven, past twelve, and then Mrs. Cary would
call down gently over the banister—beyond that he saw only to-morrow and
despair.
III
In the heat of the next
day the breaking-point came. They had each guessed the truth about the other,
but of the two she was the more ready to admit the situation.
"There's no use
going on," she said miserably, "you know you hate the insurance
business, and you'll never do well in it."
"That's not
it," he insisted stubbornly; "I hate going on alone. If you'll marry
me and come with me and take a chance with me, I can make good at anything, but
not while I'm worrying about you down here."
She was silent a long time
before she answered, not thinking—for she had seen the end—but only waiting,
because she knew that every word would seem more cruel than the last. Finally
she spoke:
"George, I love you
with all my heart, and I don't see how I can ever love any one else but you. If
you'd been ready for me two months ago I'd have married you—now I can't because
it doesn't seem to be the sensible thing."
He made wild
accusations—there was some one else—she was keeping something from him!
"No, there's no one
else."
This was true. But
reacting from the strain of this affair she had found relief in the company of
young boys like Jerry Holt, who had the merit of meaning absolutely nothing in
her life.
George didn't take the
situation well, at all. He seized her in his arms and tried literally to kiss
her into marrying him at once. When this failed, he broke into a long monologue
of self-pity, and ceased only when he saw that he was making himself despicable
in her sight. He threatened to leave when he had no intention of leaving, and
refused to go when she told him that, after all, it was best that he should.
For a while she was
sorry, then for another while she was merely kind.
"You'd better go
now," she cried at last, so loud that Mrs. Cary came down-stairs in alarm.
"Is something the
matter?"
"I'm going away,
Mrs. Cary," said George brokenly. Jonquil had left the room.
"Don't feel so
badly, George." Mrs. Cary blinked at him in helpless sympathy—sorry and,
in the same breath, glad that the little tragedy was almost done. "If I
were you I'd go home to your mother for a week or so. Perhaps after all this is
the sensible thing——"
"Please don't
talk," he cried. "Please don't say anything to me now!"
Jonquil came into the
room again, her sorrow and her nervousness alike tucked under powder and rouge
and hat.
"I've ordered a
taxicab," she said impersonally. "We can drive around until your
train leaves."
She walked out on the
front porch. George put on his coat and hat and stood for a minute exhausted in
the hall—he had eaten scarcely a bite since he had left New York. Mrs. Cary
came over, drew his head down and kissed him on the cheek, and he felt very
ridiculous and weak in his knowledge that the scene had been ridiculous and
weak at the end. If he had only gone the night before—left her for the last
time with a decent pride.
The taxi had come, and
for an hour these two that had been lovers rode along the less-frequented
streets. He held her hand and grew calmer in the sunshine, seeing too late that
there had been nothing all along to do or say.
"I'll come
back," he told her.
"I know you
will," she answered, trying to put a cheery faith into her voice.
"And we'll write each other—sometimes."
"No," he said,
"we won't write. I couldn't stand that. Some day I'll come back."
"I'll never forget
you, George."
They reached the
station, and she went with him while he bought his ticket....
"Why, George
O'Kelly and Jonquil Cary!"
It was a man and a girl
whom George had known when he had worked in town, and Jonquil seemed to greet
their presence with relief. For an interminable five minutes they all stood
there talking; then the train roared into the station, and with ill-concealed
agony in his face George held out his arms toward Jonquil. She took an
uncertain step toward him, faltered, and then pressed his hand quickly as if
she were taking leave of a chance friend.
"Good-by,
George," she was saying, "I hope you have a pleasant trip.
"Good-by, George.
Come back and see us all again."
Dumb, almost blind with
pain, he seized his suitcase, and in some dazed way got himself aboard the
train.
Past clanging
street-crossings, gathering speed through wide suburban spaces toward the
sunset. Perhaps she too would see the sunset and pause for a moment, turning,
remembering, before he faded with her sleep into the past. This night's dusk
would cover up forever the sun and the trees and the flowers and laughter of
his young world.
IV
On a damp afternoon in
September of the following year a young man with his face burned to a deep
copper glow got off a train at a city in Tennessee. He looked around anxiously,
and seemed relieved when he found that there was no one in the station to meet
him. He taxied to the best hotel in the city where he registered with some
satisfaction as George O'Kelly, Cuzco, Peru.
Up in his room he sat
for a few minutes at the window looking down into the familiar street below.
Then with his hand trembling faintly he took off the telephone receiver and
called a number.
"Is Miss Jonquil
in?"
"This is she."
"Oh—" His
voice after overcoming a faint tendency to waver went on with friendly
formality.
"This is George
Rollins. Did you get my letter?"
"Yes. I thought
you'd be in to-day."
Her voice, cool and
unmoved, disturbed him, but not as he had expected. This was the voice of a
stranger, unexcited, pleasantly glad to see him—that was all. He wanted to put
down the telephone and catch his breath.
"I haven't seen you
for—a long time." He succeeded in making this sound offhand. "Over a
year."
He knew how long it had
been—to the day.
"It'll be awfully
nice to talk to you again."
"I'll be there in
about an hour."
He hung up. For four
long seasons every minute of his leisure had been crowded with anticipation of
this hour, and now this hour was here. He had thought of finding her married,
engaged, in love—he had not thought she would be unstirred at his return.
There would never again
in his life, he felt, be another ten months like these he had just gone
through. He had made an admittedly remarkable showing for a young
engineer—stumbled into two unusual opportunities, one in Peru, whence he had
just returned, and another, consequent upon it, in New York, whither he was
bound. In this short time he had risen from poverty into a position of
unlimited opportunity.
He looked at himself in
the dressing-table mirror. He was almost black with tan, but it was a romantic
black, and in the last week, since he had had time to think about it, it had
given him considerable pleasure. The hardiness of his frame, too, he appraised
with a sort of fascination. He had lost part of an eyebrow somewhere, and he
still wore an elastic bandage on his knee, but he was too young not to realize
that on the steamer many women had looked at him with unusual tributary
interest.
His clothes, of course,
were frightful. They had been made for him by a Greek tailor in Lima—in two
days. He was young enough, too, to have explained this sartorial deficiency to
Jonquil in his otherwise laconic note. The only further detail it contained was
a request that he should not be met at the station.
George O'Kelly, of
Cuzco, Peru, waited an hour and a half in the hotel, until, to be exact, the
sun had reached a midway position in the sky. Then, freshly shaven and
talcum-powdered toward a somewhat more Caucasian hue, for vanity at the last
minute had overcome romance, he engaged a taxicab and set out for the house he
knew so well.
He was breathing hard—he
noticed this but he told himself that it was excitement, not emotion. He was
here; she was not married—that was enough. He was not even sure what he had to
say to her. But this was the moment of his life that he felt he could least
easily have dispensed with. There was no triumph, after all, without a girl
concerned, and if he did not lay his spoils at her feet he could at least hold
them for a passing moment before her eyes.
The house loomed up
suddenly beside him, and his first thought was that it had assumed a strange
unreality. There was nothing changed—only everything was changed. It was
smaller and it seemed shabbier than before—there was no cloud of magic hovering
over its roof and issuing from the windows of the upper floor. He rang the
door-bell and an unfamiliar colored maid appeared. Miss Jonquil would be down
in a moment. He wet his lips nervously and walked into the sitting-room—and the
feeling of unreality increased. After all, he saw, this was only a room, and
not the enchanted chamber where he had passed those poignant hours. He sat in a
chair, amazed to find it a chair, realizing that his imagination had distorted
and colored all these simple familiar things.
Then the door opened and
Jonquil came into the room—and it was as though everything in it suddenly
blurred before his eyes. He had not remembered how beautiful she was, and he
felt his face grow pale and his voice diminish to a poor sigh in his throat.
She was dressed in pale
green, and a gold ribbon bound back her dark, straight hair like a crown. The
familiar velvet eyes caught his as she came through the door, and a spasm of
fright went through him at her beauty's power of inflicting pain.
He said
"Hello," and they each took a few steps forward and shook hands. Then
they sat in chairs quite far apart and gazed at each other across the room.
"You've come
back," she said, and he answered just as tritely: "I wanted to stop
in and see you as I came through."
He tried to neutralize
the tremor in his voice by looking anywhere but at her face. The obligation to
speak was on him, but, unless he immediately began to boast, it seemed that
there was nothing to say. There had never been anything casual in their
previous relations—it didn't seem possible that people in this position would
talk about the weather.
"This is
ridiculous," he broke out in sudden embarrassment. "I don't know
exactly what to do. Does my being here bother you?"
"No." The
answer was both reticent and impersonally sad. It depressed him.
"Are you
engaged?" he demanded.
"No."
"Are you in love
with some one?"
She shook her head.
"Oh." He
leaned back in his chair. Another subject seemed exhausted—the interview was
not taking the course he had intended.
"Jonquil," he
began, this time on a softer key, "after all that's happened between us, I
wanted to come back and see you. Whatever I do in the future I'll never love
another girl as I've loved you."
This was one of the
speeches he had rehearsed. On the steamer it had seemed to have just the right
note—a reference to the tenderness he would always feel for her combined with a
non-committal attitude toward his present state of mind. Here with the past
around him, beside him, growing minute by minute more heavy on the air, it
seemed theatrical and stale.
She made no comment, sat
without moving, her eyes fixed on him with an expression that might have meant
everything or nothing.
"You don't love me
any more, do you?" he asked her in a level voice.
"No."
When Mrs. Cary came in a
minute later, and spoke to him about his success—there had been a half-column
about him in the local paper—he was a mixture of emotions. He knew now that he
still wanted this girl, and he knew that the past sometimes comes back—that was
all. For the rest he must be strong and watchful and he would see.
"And now,"
Mrs. Cary was saying, "I want you two to go and see the lady who has the
chrysanthemums. She particularly told me she wanted to see you because she'd
read about you in the paper."
They went to see the
lady with the chrysanthemums. They walked along the street, and he recognized
with a sort of excitement just how her shorter footsteps always fell in between
his own. The lady turned out to be nice, and the chrysanthemums were enormous
and extraordinarily beautiful. The lady's gardens were full of them, white and
pink and yellow, so that to be among them was a trip back into the heart of
summer. There were two gardens full, and a gate between them; when they strolled
toward the second garden the lady went first through the gate.
And then a curious thing
happened. George stepped aside to let Jonquil pass, but instead of going
through she stood still and stared at him for a minute. It was not so much the
look, which was not a smile, as it was the moment of silence. They saw each
other's eyes, and both took a short, faintly accelerated breath, and then they
went on into the second garden. That was all.
The afternoon waned.
They thanked the lady and walked home slowly, thoughtfully, side by side.
Through dinner too they were silent. George told Mr. Cary something of what had
happened in South America, and managed to let it be known that everything would
be plain sailing for him in the future.
Then dinner was over,
and he and Jonquil were alone in the room which had seen the beginning of their
love affair and the end. It seemed to him long ago and inexpressibly sad. On
that sofa he had felt agony and grief such as he would never feel again. He
would never be so weak or so tired and miserable and poor. Yet he knew that
that boy of fifteen months before had had something, a trust, a warmth that was
gone forever. The sensible thing—they had done the sensible thing. He had
traded his first youth for strength and carved success out of despair. But with
his youth, life had carried away the freshness of his love.
"You won't marry
me, will you?" he said quietly.
Jonquil shook her dark
head.
"I'm never going to
marry," she answered.
He nodded.
"I'm going on to
Washington in the morning," he said.
"Oh——"
"I have to go. I've
got to be in New York by the first, and meanwhile I want to stop off in
Washington."
"Business!"
"No-o," he
said as if reluctantly. "There's some one there I must see who was very
kind to me when I was so—down and out."
This was invented. There
was no one in Washington for him to see—but he was watching Jonquil narrowly,
and he was sure that she winced a little, that her eyes closed and then opened
wide again.
"But before I go I
want to tell you the things that happened to me since I saw you, and, as maybe
we won't meet again, I wonder if—if just this once you'd sit in my lap like you
used to. I wouldn't ask except since there's no one else—yet—perhaps it doesn't
matter."
She nodded, and in a
moment was sitting in his lap as she had sat so often in that vanished spring.
The feel of her head against his shoulder, of her familiar body, sent a shock
of emotion over him. His arms holding her had a tendency to tighten around her,
so he leaned back and began to talk thoughtfully into the air.
He told her of a
despairing two weeks in New York which had terminated with an attractive if not
very profitable job in a construction plant in Jersey City. When the Peru
business had first presented itself it had not seemed an extraordinary
opportunity. He was to be third assistant engineer on the expedition, but only
ten of the American party, including eight rodmen and surveyors, had ever
reached Cuzco. Ten days later the chief of the expedition was dead of yellow
fever. That had been his chance, a chance for anybody but a fool, a marvellous
chance——
"A chance for
anybody but a fool?" she interrupted innocently.
"Even for a
fool," he continued. "It was wonderful. Well, I wired New
York——"
"And so," she
interrupted again, "they wired that you ought to take a chance?"
"Ought to!" he
exclaimed, still leaning back. "That I had to. There was
no time to lose——"
"Not a
minute?"
"Not a
minute."
"Not even time
for—" she paused.
"For what?"
"Look."
He bent his head forward
suddenly, and she drew herself to him in the same moment, her lips half open
like a flower.
"Yes," he
whispered into her lips. "There's all the time in the world...."
All the time in the
world—his life and hers. But for an instant as he kissed her he knew that
though he search through eternity he could never recapture those lost April
hours. He might press her close now till the muscles knotted on his arms—she
was something desirable and rare that he had fought for and made his own—but
never again an intangible whisper in the dusk, or on the breeze of night....
Well, let it pass, he
thought; April is over, April is over. There are all kinds of love in the
world, but never the same love twice.
9.GRETCHEN'S FORTY WINKS
The sidewalks were
scratched with brittle leaves, and the bad little boy next door froze his
tongue to the iron mail-box. Snow before night, sure. Autumn was over. This, of
course, raised the coal question and the Christmas question; but Roger Halsey,
standing on his own front porch, assured the dead suburban sky that he hadn't
time for worrying about the weather. Then he let himself hurriedly into the
house, and shut the subject out into the cold twilight.
The hall was dark, but
from above he heard the voices of his wife and the nursemaid and the baby in
one of their interminable conversations, which consisted chiefly of
"Don't!" and "Look out, Maxy!" and "Oh, there he goes!"
punctuated by wild threats and vague bumpings and the recurrent sound of small,
venturing feet.
Roger turned on the
hall-light and walked into the living-room and turned on the red silk lamp. He
put his bulging portfolio on the table, and sitting down rested his intense
young face in his hand for a few minutes, shading his eyes carefully from the
light. Then he lit a cigarette, squashed it out, and going to the foot of the
stairs called for his wife.
"Gretchen!"
"Hello, dear."
Her voice was full of laughter. "Come see baby."
He swore softly.
"I can't see baby
now," he said aloud. "How long 'fore you'll be down?"
There was a mysterious
pause, and then a succession of "Don'ts" and "Look outs,
Maxy" evidently meant to avert some threatened catastrophe.
"How long 'fore
you'll be down?" repeated Roger, slightly irritated.
"Oh, I'll be right
down."
"How soon?" he
shouted.
He had trouble every day
at this hour in adapting his voice from the urgent key of the city to the
proper casualness for a model home. But to-night he was deliberately impatient.
It almost disappointed him when Gretchen came running down the stairs, three at
a time, crying "What is it?" in a rather surprised voice.
They kissed—lingered
over it some moments. They had been married three years, and they were much
more in love than that implies. It was seldom that they hated each other with
that violent hate of which only young couples are capable, for Roger was still
actively sensitive to her beauty.
"Come in
here," he said abruptly. "I want to talk to you."
His wife, a
bright-colored, Titian-haired girl, vivid as a French rag doll, followed him
into the living-room.
"Listen,
Gretchen"—he sat down at the end of the sofa—"beginning with to-night
I'm going to—What's the matter?"
"Nothing. I'm just
looking for a cigarette. Go on."
She tiptoed breathlessly
back to the sofa and settled at the other end.
"Gretchen—"
Again he broke off. Her hand, palm upward, was extended toward him. "Well,
what is it?" he asked wildly.
"Matches."
"What?"
In his impatience it
seemed incredible that she should ask for matches, but he fumbled automatically
in his pocket.
"Thank you,"
she whispered. "I didn't mean to interrupt you. Go on."
"Gretch——"
Scratch! The match
flared. They exchanged a tense look.
Her fawn's eyes
apologized mutely this time, and he laughed. After all, she had done no more
than light a cigarette; but when he was in this mood her slightest positive
action irritated him beyond measure.
"When you've got
time to listen," he said crossly, "you might be interested in
discussing the poorhouse question with me."
"What
poorhouse?" Her eyes were wide, startled; she sat quiet as a mouse.
"That was just to
get your attention. But, beginning to-night, I start on what'll probably be the
most important six weeks of my life—the six weeks that'll decide whether we're
going on forever in this rotten little house in this rotten little suburban
town."
Boredom replaced alarm
in Gretchen's black eyes. She was a Southern girl, and any question that had to
do with getting ahead in the world always tended to give her a headache.
"Six months ago I
left the New York Lithographic Company," announced Roger, "and went
in the advertising business for myself."
"I know,"
interrupted Gretchen resentfully; "and now instead of getting six hundred
a month sure, we're living on a risky five hundred."
"Gretchen,"
said Roger sharply, "if you'll just believe in me as hard as you can for
six weeks more we'll be rich. I've got a chance now to get some of the biggest
accounts in the country." He hesitated. "And for these six weeks we
won't go out at all, and we won't have any one here. I'm going to bring home
work every night, and we'll pull down all the blinds and if any one rings the
door-bell we won't answer."
He smiled airily as if
it were a new game they were going to play. Then, as Gretchen was silent, his
smile faded, and he looked at her uncertainly.
"Well, what's the
matter?" she broke out finally. "Do you expect me to jump up and
sing? You do enough work as it is. If you try to do any more you'll end up with
a nervous breakdown. I read about a——"
"Don't worry about
me," he interrupted; "I'm all right. But you're going to be bored to
death sitting here every evening."
"No, I won't,"
she said without conviction—"except to-night."
"What about
to-night?"
"George Tompkins
asked us to dinner."
"Did you
accept?"
"Of course I
did," she said impatiently. "Why not? You're always talking about
what a terrible neighborhood this is, and I thought maybe you'd like to go to a
nicer one for a change."
"When I go to a
nicer neighborhood I want to go for good," he said grimly.
"Well, can we
go?"
"I suppose we'll
have to if you've accepted."
Somewhat to his
annoyance the conversation abruptly ended. Gretchen jumped up and kissed him
sketchily and rushed into the kitchen to light the hot water for a bath. With a
sigh he carefully deposited his portfolio behind the bookcase—it contained only
sketches and layouts for display advertising, but it seemed to him the first
thing a burglar would look for. Then he went abstractedly up-stairs, dropped
into the baby's room for a casual moist kiss, and began dressing for dinner.
They had no automobile,
so George Tompkins called for them at 6.30. Tompkins was a successful interior
decorator, a broad, rosy man with a handsome mustache and a strong odor of
jasmine. He and Roger had once roomed side by side in a boarding-house in New
York, but they had met only intermittently in the past five years.
"We ought to see
each other more," he told Roger to-night. "You ought to go out more
often, old boy. Cocktail?"
"No, thanks."
"No? Well, your
fair wife will—won't you, Gretchen?"
"I love this
house," she exclaimed, taking the glass and looking admiringly at ship
models, Colonial whiskey bottles, and other fashionable débris of 1925.
"I like it,"
said Tompkins with satisfaction. "I did it to please myself, and I
succeeded."
Roger stared moodily
around the stiff, plain room, wondering if they could have blundered into the
kitchen by mistake.
"You look like the
devil, Roger," said his host. "Have a cocktail and cheer up."
"Have one,"
urged Gretchen.
"What?" Roger
turned around absently. "Oh, no, thanks. I've got to work after I get
home."
"Work!" Tompkins
smiled. "Listen, Roger, you'll kill yourself with work. Why don't you
bring a little balance into your life—work a little, then play a little?"
"That's what I tell
him," said Gretchen.
"Do you know an
average business man's day?" demanded Tompkins as they went in to dinner.
"Coffee in the morning, eight hours' work interrupted by a bolted
luncheon, and then home again with dyspepsia and a bad temper to give the wife
a pleasant evening."
Roger laughed shortly.
"You've been going
to the movies too much," he said dryly.
"What?"
Tompkins looked at him with some irritation. "Movies? I've hardly ever
been to the movies in my life. I think the movies are atrocious. My opinions on
life are drawn from my own observations. I believe in a balanced life."
"What's that?"
demanded Roger.
"Well"—he
hesitated—"probably the best way to tell you would be to describe my own
day. Would that seem horribly egotistic?"
"Oh, no!"
Gretchen looked at him with interest. "I'd love to hear about it."
"Well, in the
morning I get up and go through a series of exercises. I've got one room fitted
up as a little gymnasium, and I punch the bag and do shadow-boxing and
weight-pulling for an hour. Then after a cold bath— There's a thing now! Do you
take a daily cold bath?"
"No," admitted
Roger, "I take a hot bath in the evening three or four times a week."
A horrified silence
fell. Tompkins and Gretchen exchanged a glance as if something obscene had been
said.
"What's the
matter?" broke out Roger, glancing from one to the other in some irritation.
"You know I don't take a bath every day—I haven't got the time."
Tompkins gave a
prolonged sigh.
"After my
bath," he continued, drawing a merciful veil of silence over the matter,
"I have breakfast and drive to my office in New York, where I work until
four. Then I lay off, and if it's summer I hurry out here for nine holes of
golf, or if it's winter I play squash for an hour at my club. Then a good
snappy game of bridge until dinner. Dinner is liable to have something to do
with business, but in a pleasant way. Perhaps I've just finished a house for
some customer, and he wants me to be on hand for his first party to see that
the lighting is soft enough and all that sort of thing. Or maybe I sit down
with a good book of poetry and spend the evening alone. At any rate, I do
something every night to get me out of myself."
"It must be
wonderful," said Gretchen enthusiastically. "I wish we lived like
that."
Tompkins bent forward
earnestly over the table.
"You can," he
said impressively. "There's no reason why you shouldn't. Look here, if
Roger'll play nine holes of golf every day it'll do wonders for him. He won't
know himself. He'll do his work better, never get that tired, nervous feeling—
What's the matter?"
He broke off. Roger had
perceptibly yawned.
"Roger," cried
Gretchen sharply, "there's no need to be so rude. If you did what George
said, you'd be a lot better off." She turned indignantly to their host.
"The latest is that he's going to work at night for the next six weeks. He
says he's going to pull down the blinds and shut us up like hermits in a cave.
He's been doing it every Sunday for the last year; now he's going to do it
every night for six weeks."
Tompkins shook his head
sadly.
"At the end of six
weeks," he remarked, "he'll be starting for the sanitarium. Let me
tell you, every private hospital in New York is full of cases like yours. You
just strain the human nervous system a little too far, and bang!—you've broken
something. And in order to save sixty hours you're laid up sixty weeks for repairs."
He broke off, changed his tone, and turned to Gretchen with a smile. "Not
to mention what happens to you. It seems to me it's the wife rather than the
husband who bears the brunt of these insane periods of overwork."
"I don't
mind," protested Gretchen loyally.
"Yes, she
does," said Roger grimly; "she minds like the devil. She's a
shortsighted little egg, and she thinks it's going to be forever until I get
started and she can have some new clothes. But it can't be helped. The saddest
thing about women is that, after all, their best trick is to sit down and fold
their hands."
"Your ideas on
women are about twenty years out of date," said Tompkins pityingly.
"Women won't sit down and wait any more."
"Then they'd better
marry men of forty," insisted Roger stubbornly. "If a girl marries a
young man for love she ought to be willing to make any sacrifice within reason,
so long as her husband keeps going ahead."
"Let's not talk
about it," said Gretchen impatiently. "Please, Roger, let's have a
good time just this once."
When Tompkins dropped
them in front of their house at eleven Roger and Gretchen stood for a moment on
the sidewalk looking at the winter moon. There was a fine, damp, dusty snow in
the air, and Roger drew a long breath of it and put his arm around Gretchen
exultantly.
"I can make more
money than he can," he said tensely. "And I'll be doing it in just
forty days."
"Forty days,"
she sighed. "It seems such a long time—when everybody else is always
having fun. If I could only sleep for forty days."
"Why don't you,
honey? Just take forty winks, and when you wake up everything'll be fine."
She was silent for a
moment.
"Roger," she
asked thoughtfully, "do you think George meant what he said about taking
me horseback riding on Sunday?"
Roger frowned.
"I don't know.
Probably not—I hope to Heaven he didn't." He hesitated. "As a matter
of fact, he made me sort of sore to-night—all that junk about his cold
bath."
With their arms about
each other, they started up the walk to the house.
"I'll bet he
doesn't take a cold bath every morning," continued Roger ruminatively;
"or three times a week, either." He fumbled in his pocket for the key
and inserted it in the lock with savage precision. Then he turned around
defiantly. "I'll bet he hasn't had a bath for a month."
II
After a fortnight of
intensive work, Roger Halsey's days blurred into each other and passed by in
blocks of twos and threes and fours. From eight until 5.30 he was in his
office. Then a half-hour on the commuting train, where he scrawled notes on the
backs of envelopes under the dull yellow light. By 7.30 his crayons, shears,
and sheets of white cardboard were spread over the living-room table, and he
labored there with much grunting and sighing until midnight, while Gretchen lay
on the sofa with a book, and the door-bell tinkled occasionally behind the
drawn blinds. At twelve there was always an argument as to whether he would
come to bed. He would agree to come after he had cleared up everything; but as
he was invariably sidetracked by half a dozen new ideas, he usually found
Gretchen sound asleep when he tiptoed up-stairs.
Sometimes it was three
o'clock before Roger squashed his last cigarette into the overloaded ashtray,
and he would undress in the darkness, disembodied with fatigue, but with a sense
of triumph that he had lasted out another day.
Christmas came and went
and he scarcely noticed that it was gone. He remembered it afterward as the day
he completed the window-cards for Garrod's shoes. This was one of the eight
large accounts for which he was pointing in January—if he got half of them he
was assured a quarter of a million dollars' worth of business during the year.
But the world outside
his business became a chaotic dream. He was aware that on two cool December
Sundays George Tompkins had taken Gretchen horseback riding, and that another
time she had gone out with him in his automobile to spend the afternoon skiing
on the country-club hill. A picture of Tompkins, in an expensive frame, had
appeared one morning on their bedroom wall. And one night he was shocked into a
startled protest when Gretchen went to the theatre with Tompkins in town.
But his work was almost
done. Daily now his layouts arrived from the printers until seven of them were
piled and docketed in his office safe. He knew how good they were. Money alone
couldn't buy such work; more than he realized himself, it had been a labor of
love.
December tumbled like a
dead leaf from the calendar. There was an agonizing week when he had to give up
coffee because it made his heart pound so. If he could hold on now for four
days—three days——
On Thursday afternoon H.
G. Garrod was to arrive in New York. On Wednesday evening Roger came home at
seven to find Gretchen poring over the December bills with a strange expression
in her eyes.
"What's the
matter?"
She nodded at the bills.
He ran through them, his brow wrinkling in a frown.
"Gosh!"
"I can't help
it," she burst out suddenly. "They're terrible."
"Well, I didn't
marry you because you were a wonderful housekeeper. I'll manage about the bills
some way. Don't worry your little head over it."
She regarded him coldly.
"You talk as if I
were a child."
"I have to,"
he said with sudden irritation.
"Well, at least I'm
not a piece of bric-à-brac that you can just put somewhere and forget."
He knelt down by her
quickly, and took her arms in his hands.
"Gretchen,
listen!" he said breathlessly. "For God's sake, don't go to pieces
now! We're both all stored up with malice and reproach, and if we had a quarrel
it'd be terrible. I love you, Gretchen. Say you love me—quick!"
"You know I love
you."
The quarrel was averted,
but there was an unnatural tenseness all through dinner. It came to a climax
afterward when he began to spread his working materials on the table.
"Oh, Roger,"
she protested, "I thought you didn't have to work to-night."
"I didn't think I'd
have to, but something came up."
"I've invited
George Tompkins over."
"Oh, gosh!" he
exclaimed. "Well, I'm sorry, honey, but you'll have to phone him not to
come."
"He's left,"
she said. "He's coming straight from town. He'll be here any minute
now."
Roger groaned. It
occurred to him to send them both to the movies, but somehow the suggestion
stuck on his lips. He did not want her at the movies; he wanted her here, where
he could look up and know she was by his side.
George Tompkins arrived
breezily at eight o'clock.
"Aha!" he
cried reprovingly, coming into the room. "Still at it."
Roger agreed coolly that
he was.
"Better quit—better
quit before you have to."
He sat down with a long
sigh of physical comfort and lit a cigarette. "Take it from a fellow who's
looked into the question scientifically. We can stand so much, and
then—bang!"
"If you'll excuse
me"—Roger made his voice as polite as possible—"I'm going up-stairs
and finish this work."
"Just as you like,
Roger." George waved his hand carelessly. "It isn't that I mind. I'm
the friend of the family and I'd just as soon see the missus as the
mister." He smiled playfully. "But if I were you, old boy, I'd put
away my work and get a good night's sleep."
When Roger had spread
out his materials on the bed up-stairs he found that he could still hear the
rumble and murmur of their voices through the thin floor. He began wondering
what they found to talk about. As he plunged deeper into his work his mind had
a tendency to revert sharply to his question, and several times he arose and
paced nervously up and down the room.
The bed was ill adapted
to his work. Several times the paper slipped from the board on which it rested,
and the pencil punched through. Everything was wrong to-night. Letters and
figures blurred before his eyes, and as an accompaniment to the beating of his
temples came those persistent murmuring voices.
At ten he realized that
he had done nothing for more than an hour, and with a sudden exclamation he
gathered together his papers, replaced them in his portfolio, and went
down-stairs. They were sitting together on the sofa when he came in.
"Oh, hello!"
cried Gretchen, rather unnecessarily, he thought. "We were just discussing
you."
"Thank you,"
he answered ironically. "What particular part of my anatomy was under the
scalpel?"
"Your health,"
said Tompkins jovially.
"My health's all
right," answered Roger shortly.
"But you look at it
so selfishly, old fella," cried Tompkins. "You only consider yourself
in the matter. Don't you think Gretchen has any rights? If you were working on
a wonderful sonnet or a—a portrait of some madonna or something"—he
glanced at Gretchen's Titian hair—"why, then I'd say go ahead. But you're
not. It's just some silly advertisement about how to sell Nobald's hair tonic,
and if all the hair tonic ever made was dumped into the ocean to-morrow the
world wouldn't be one bit the worse for it."
"Wait a
minute," said Roger angrily; "that's not quite fair. I'm not kidding
myself about the importance of my work—it's just as useless as the stuff you
do. But to Gretchen and me it's just about the most important thing in the
world."
"Are you implying
that my work is useless?" demanded Tompkins incredulously.
"No; not if it
brings happiness to some poor sucker of a pants manufacturer who doesn't know
how to spend his money."
Tompkins and Gretchen
exchanged a glance.
"Oh-h-h!"
exclaimed Tompkins ironically. "I didn't realize that all these years I've
just been wasting my time."
"You're a loafer,"
said Roger rudely.
"Me?" cried
Tompkins angrily. "You call me a loafer because I have a little balance in
my life and find time to do interesting things? Because I play hard as well as
work hard and don't let myself get to be a dull, tiresome drudge?"
Both men were angry now,
and their voices had risen, though on Tompkins's face there still remained the
semblance of a smile.
"What I object
to," said Roger steadily, "is that for the last six weeks you seem to
have done all your playing around here."
"Roger!" cried
Gretchen. "What do you mean by talking like that?"
"Just what I
said."
"You've just lost
your temper." Tompkins lit a cigarette with ostentatious coolness.
"You're so nervous from overwork you don't know what you're saying. You're
on the verge of a nervous break——"
"You get out of
here!" cried Roger fiercely. "You get out of here right now—before I
throw you out!"
Tompkins got angrily to
his feet.
"You—you throw me
out?" he cried incredulously.
They were actually
moving toward each other when Gretchen stepped between them, and grabbing
Tompkins's arm urged him toward the door.
"He's acting like a
fool, George, but you better get out," she cried, groping in the hall for
his hat.
"He insulted
me!" shouted Tompkins. "He threatened to throw me out!"
"Never mind,
George," pleaded Gretchen. "He doesn't know what he's saying. Please
go! I'll see you at ten o'clock to-morrow."
She opened the door.
"You won't see him
at ten o'clock to-morrow," said Roger steadily. "He's not coming to
this house any more."
Tompkins turned to
Gretchen.
"It's his
house," he suggested. "Perhaps we'd better meet at mine."
Then he was gone, and
Gretchen had shut the door behind him. Her eyes were full of angry tears.
"See what you've
done!" she sobbed. "The only friend I had, the only person in the
world who liked me enough to treat me decently, is insulted by my husband in my
own house."
She threw herself on the
sofa and began to cry passionately into the pillows.
"He brought it on
himself," said Roger stubbornly. "I've stood as much as my
self-respect will allow. I don't want you going out with him any more."
"I will go out with
him!" cried Gretchen wildly. "I'll go out with him all I want! Do you
think it's any fun living here with you?"
"Gretchen," he
said coldly, "get up and put on your hat and coat and go out that door and
never come back!"
Her mouth fell slightly
ajar.
"But I don't want
to get out," she said dazedly.
"Well, then, behave
yourself." And he added in a gentler voice: "I thought you were going
to sleep for this forty days."
"Oh, yes," she
cried bitterly, "easy enough to say! But I'm tired of sleeping." She
got up, faced him defiantly. "And what's more, I'm going riding with
George Tompkins to-morrow."
"You won't go out
with him if I have to take you to New York and sit you down in my office until
I get through."
She looked at him with
rage in her eyes.
"I hate you,"
she said slowly. "And I'd like to take all the work you've done and tear
it up and throw it in the fire. And just to give you something to worry about to-morrow,
I probably won't be here when you get back."
She got up from the
sofa, and very deliberately looked at her flushed, tear-stained face in the
mirror. Then she ran up-stairs and slammed herself into the bedroom.
Automatically Roger
spread out his work on the living-room table. The bright colors of the designs,
the vivid ladies—Gretchen had posed for one of them—holding orange ginger ale
or glistening silk hosiery, dazzled his mind into a sort of coma. His restless
crayon moved here and there over the pictures, shifting a block of letters half
an inch to the right, trying a dozen blues for a cool blue, and eliminating the
word that made a phrase anæmic and pale. Half an hour passed—he was deep in the
work now; there was no sound in the room but the velvety scratch of the crayon
over the glossy board.
After a long while he
looked at his watch—it was after three. The wind had come up outside and was
rushing by the house corners in loud, alarming swoops, like a heavy body
falling through space. He stopped his work and listened. He was not tired now,
but his head felt as if it was covered with bulging veins like those pictures
that hang in doctors' offices showing a body stripped of decent skin. He put
his hands to his head and felt it all over. It seemed to him that on his temple
the veins were knotty and brittle around an old scar.
Suddenly he began to be
afraid. A hundred warnings he had heard swept into his mind. People did wreck
themselves with overwork, and his body and brain were of the same vulnerable
and perishable stuff. For the first time he found himself envying George
Tompkins's calm nerves and healthy routine. He arose and began pacing the room
in a panic.
"I've got to
sleep," he whispered to himself tensely. "Otherwise I'm going
crazy."
He rubbed his hand over
his eyes, and returned to the table to put up his work, but his fingers were
shaking so that he could scarcely grasp the board. The sway of a bare branch
against the window made him start and cry out. He sat down on the sofa and
tried to think.
"Stop! Stop!
Stop!" the clock said. "Stop! Stop! Stop!"
"I can't
stop," he answered aloud. "I can't afford to stop."
Listen! Why, there was
the wolf at the door now! He could hear its sharp claws scrape along the
varnished woodwork. He jumped up, and running to the front door flung it open;
then started back with a ghastly cry. An enormous wolf was standing on the
porch, glaring at him with red, malignant eyes. As he watched it the hair
bristled on its neck; it gave a low growl and disappeared in the darkness. Then
Roger realized with a silent, mirthless laugh that it was the police dog from
over the way.
Dragging his limbs
wearily into the kitchen, he brought the alarm-clock into the living-room and
set it for seven. Then he wrapped himself in his overcoat, lay down on the sofa
and fell immediately into a heavy, dreamless sleep.
When he awoke the light
was still shining feebly, but the room was the gray color of a winter morning.
He got up, and looking anxiously at his hands found to his relief that they no
longer trembled. He felt much better. Then he began to remember in detail the
events of the night before, and his brow drew up again in three shallow
wrinkles. There was work ahead of him, twenty-four hours of work; and Gretchen,
whether she wanted to or not, must sleep for one more day.
Roger's mind glowed
suddenly as if he had just thought of a new advertising idea. A few minutes
later he was hurrying through the sharp morning air to Kingsley's drug-store.
"Is Mr. Kingsley
down yet?"
The druggist's head
appeared around the corner of the prescription-room.
"I wonder if I can
talk to you alone."
At 7.30, back home
again, Roger walked into his own kitchen. The general housework girl had just
arrived and was taking off her hat.
"Bebé"—he was
not on familiar terms with her; this was her name—"I want you to cook Mrs.
Halsey's breakfast right away. I'll take it up myself."
It struck Bebé that this
was an unusual service for so busy a man to render his wife, but if she had
seen his conduct when he had carried the tray from the kitchen she would have
been even more surprised. For he set it down on the dining-room table and put
into the coffee half a teaspoonful of a white substance that was not powdered
sugar. Then he mounted the stairs and opened the door of the bedroom.
Gretchen woke up with a
start, glanced at the twin bed which had not been slept in, and bent on Roger a
glance of astonishment, which changed to contempt when she saw the breakfast in
his hand. She thought he was bringing it as a capitulation.
"I don't want any
breakfast," she said coldly, and his heart sank, "except some
coffee."
"No
breakfast?" Roger's voice expressed disappointment.
"I said I'd take
some coffee."
Roger discreetly
deposited the tray on a table beside the bed and returned quickly to the
kitchen.
"We're going away
until to-morrow afternoon," he told Bebé, "and I want to close up the
house right now. So you just put on your hat and go home."
He looked at his watch.
It was ten minutes to eight, and he wanted to catch the 8.10 train. He waited
five minutes and then tiptoed softly up-stairs and into Gretchen's room. She
was sound asleep. The coffee cup was empty save for black dregs and a film of
thin brown paste on the bottom. He looked at her rather anxiously, but her
breathing was regular and clear.
From the closet he took
a suitcase and very quickly began filling it with her shoes—street shoes,
evening slippers, rubber-soled oxfords—he had not realized that she owned so
many pairs. When he closed the suitcase it was bulging.
He hesitated a minute,
took a pair of sewing scissors from a box, and following the telephone-wire
until it went out of sight behind the dresser, severed it in one neat clip. He
jumped as there was a soft knock at the door. It was the nursemaid. He had
forgotten her existence.
"Mrs. Halsey and I
are going up to the city till to-morrow," he said glibly. "Take Maxy
to the beach and have lunch there. Stay all day."
Back in the room, a wave
of pity passed over him. Gretchen seemed suddenly lovely and helpless, sleeping
there. It was somehow terrible to rob her young life of a day. He touched her
hair with his fingers, and as she murmured something in her dream he leaned
over and kissed her bright cheek. Then he picked up the suitcase full of shoes,
locked the door, and ran briskly down the stairs.
III
By five o'clock that
afternoon the last package of cards for Garrod's shoes had been sent by
messenger to H. G. Garrod at the Biltmore Hotel. He was to give a decision next
morning. At 5.30 Roger's stenographer tapped him on the shoulder.
"Mr. Golden, the
superintendent of the building, to see you."
Roger turned around
dazedly.
"Oh, how do?"
Mr. Golden came directly
to the point. If Mr. Halsey intended to keep the office any longer, the little
oversight about the rent had better be remedied right away.
"Mr. Golden,"
said Roger wearily, "everything'll be all right to-morrow. If you worry me
now maybe you'll never get your money. After to-morrow nothing'll matter."
Mr. Golden looked at the
tenant uneasily. Young men sometimes did away with themselves when business
went wrong. Then his eye fell unpleasantly on the initialled suitcase beside
the desk.
"Going on a
trip?" he asked pointedly.
"What? Oh, no.
That's just some clothes."
"Clothes, eh? Well,
Mr. Halsey, just to prove that you mean what you say, suppose you let me keep
that suitcase until to-morrow noon."
"Help
yourself."
Mr. Golden picked it up
with a deprecatory gesture.
"Just a matter of
form," he remarked.
"I
understand," said Roger, swinging around to his desk. "Good
afternoon."
Mr. Golden seemed to
feel that the conversation should close on a softer key.
"And don't work too
hard, Mr. Halsey. You don't want to have a nervous break——"
"No," shouted
Roger, "I don't. But I will if you don't leave me alone."
As the door closed
behind Mr. Golden, Roger's stenographer turned sympathetically around.
"You shouldn't have
let him get away with that," she said. "What's in there?
Clothes?"
"No," answered
Roger absently. "Just all my wife's shoes."
He slept in the office
that night on a sofa beside his desk. At dawn he awoke with a nervous start,
rushed out into the street for coffee, and returned in ten minutes in a
panic—afraid that he might have missed Mr. Garrod's telephone call. It was then
6.30.
By eight o'clock his
whole body seemed to be on fire. When his two artists arrived he was stretched
on the couch in almost physical pain. The phone rang imperatively at 9.30, and
he picked up the receiver with trembling hands.
"Hello."
"Is this the Halsey
agency?"
"Yes, this is Mr.
Halsey speaking."
"This is Mr. H. G.
Garrod."
Roger's heart stopped
beating.
"I called up, young
fellow, to say that this is wonderful work you've given us here. We want all of
it and as much more as your office can do."
"Oh, God!"
cried Roger into the transmitter.
"What?" Mr. H.
G. Garrod was considerably startled. "Say, wait a minute there!"
But he was talking to
nobody. The phone had clattered to the floor, and Roger, stretched full length
on the couch, was sobbing as if his heart would break.
IV
Three hours later, his
face somewhat pale, but his eyes calm as a child's, Roger opened the door of
his wife's bedroom with the morning paper under his arm. At the sound of his
footsteps she started awake.
"What time is
it?" she demanded.
He looked at his watch.
"Twelve
o'clock."
Suddenly she began to
cry.
"Roger," she
said brokenly, "I'm sorry I was so bad last night."
He nodded coolly.
"Everything's all
right now," he answered. Then, after a pause: "I've got the
account—the biggest one."
She turned toward him quickly.
"You have?"
Then, after a minute's silence: "Can I get a new dress?"
"Dress?" He
laughed shortly. "You can get a dozen. This account alone will bring us in
forty thousand a year. It's one of the biggest in the West."
She looked at him,
startled.
"Forty thousand a
year!"
"Yes."
"Gosh"—and
then faintly—"I didn't know it'd really be anything like that." Again
she thought a minute. "We can have a house like George Tompkins'."
"I don't want an
interior-decoration shop."
"Forty thousand a
year!" she repeated again, and then added softly: "Oh, Roger——"
"Yes?"
"I'm not going out
with George Tompkins."
"I wouldn't let
you, even if you wanted to," he said shortly.
She made a show of
indignation.
"Why, I've had a
date with him for this Thursday for weeks."
"It isn't
Thursday."
"It is."
"It's Friday."
"Why, Roger, you
must be crazy! Don't you think I know what day it is?"
"It isn't
Thursday," he said stubbornly. "Look!" And he held out the
morning paper.
"Friday!" she
exclaimed. "Why, this is a mistake! This must be last week's paper.
To-day's Thursday."
She closed her eyes and
thought for a moment.
"Yesterday was
Wednesday," she said decisively. "The laundress came yesterday. I
guess I know."
"Well," he
said smugly, "look at the paper. There isn't any question about it."
With a bewildered look
on her face she got out of bed and began searching for her clothes. Roger went
into the bathroom to shave. A minute later he heard the springs creak again.
Gretchen was getting back into bed.
"What's the
matter?" he inquired, putting his head around the corner of the bathroom.
"I'm scared,"
she said in a trembling voice. "I think my nerves are giving away. I can't
find any of my shoes."
"Your shoes? Why,
the closet's full of them."
"I know, but I
can't see one." Her face was pale with fear. "Oh, Roger!"
Roger came to her
bedside and put his arm around her.
"Oh, Roger,"
she cried, "what's the matter with me? First that newspaper, and now all
my shoes. Take care of me, Roger."
"I'll get the
doctor," he said.
He walked remorselessly
to the telephone and took up the receiver.
"Phone seems to be
out of order," he remarked after a minute; "I'll send Bebé."
The doctor arrived in
ten minutes.
"I think I'm on the
verge of a collapse," Gretchen told him in a strained voice.
Doctor Gregory sat down
on the edge of the bed and took her wrist in his hand.
"It seems to be in
the air this morning."
"I got up,"
said Gretchen in an awed voice, "and I found that I'd lost a whole day. I
had an engagement to go riding with George Tompkins——"
"What?" exclaimed
the doctor in surprise. Then he laughed.
"George Tompkins
won't go riding with any one for many days to come."
"Has he gone
away?" asked Gretchen curiously.
"He's going
West."
"Why?"
demanded Roger. "Is he running away with somebody's wife?"
"No," said
Doctor Gregory. "He 's had a nervous breakdown."
"What?" they
exclaimed in unison.
"He just collapsed
like an opera-hat in his cold shower."
"But he was always
talking about his—his balanced life," gasped Gretchen. "He had it on
his mind."
"I know," said
the doctor. "He's been babbling about it all morning. I think it's driven
him a little mad. He worked pretty hard at it, you know."
"At what?"
demanded Roger in bewilderment.
"At keeping his
life balanced." He turned to Gretchen. "Now all I'll prescribe for
this lady here is a good rest. If she'll just stay around the house for a few
days and take forty winks of sleep she'll be as fit as ever. She's been under
some strain."
"Doctor,"
exclaimed Roger hoarsely, "don't you think I'd better have a rest or
something? I've been working pretty hard lately."
"You!" Doctor
Gregory laughed, slapped him violently on the back. "My boy, I never saw
you looking better in your life."
Roger turned away
quickly to conceal his smile—winked forty times, or almost forty times, at the
autographed picture of Mr. George Tompkins, which hung slightly askew on the
bedroom wall.
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