Project
Gutenberg Consortia
Center's
World Public
Library Collection
Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Collection, a member of the World
Public Library,http://WorldLibrary.net,
bringing the world's eBook collections together.
Conditions
of Use:
This
eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use
it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with
this eBook or full complete details are online at: http://gutenberg.net/license.
Here are 3 of the more major items to consider:
The eBooks
on the PG sites are not 100% public domain, some of them are copyrighted
and used by permission and thus you may charge for redistribution
only via direct permission from the copyright holders.
Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark [TM]. For any other purpose
than to redistribute eBooks containing the entire Project Gutenberg
file free of charge and with the headers intact, permission is
required.
The public
domain status is per U.S. copyright law. This eBook is from the
Project Gutenberg Consortia Center of the United States.
The mission of the Project Gutenberg Consortia Center is to provide
a similar framework for the collection of eBook collections as does
Project Gutenberg for single eBooks, operating under the practices,
and general guidelines of Project Gutenberg. The major additional
function of Project Gutenberg Consortia Center is to manage the addition
of large collections of eBooks from other eBook creation and collection
centers around the world.
For more great classic literature visit:
The
World Public Library and Project Gutenberg Consortia Center, bringing
the world's eBook collections together http://www.Gutenberg.us
JOHN T. UNGER came from a family that had been well known in
Hades--a small town on the Mississippi River--for several
generations.
John's father had held the amateur golf championship through many
a heated contest; Mrs. Unger was known "from hot-box to hot-bed,"
as the local phrase went, for her political addresses; and young
John T. Unger, who had just turned sixteen, had danced all the
latest dances from New York before he put on long trousers. And
now, for a certain time, he was to be away from home. That
respect for a New England education which is the bane of all
provincial places, which drains them yearly of their most
promising young men, had seized upon his parents. Nothing would
suit them but that he should go to St. Midas' School near Boston--
Hades was too small to hold their darling and gifted son.
Now in Hades--as you know if you ever have been there--the
names of the more fashionable preparatory schools and colleges
mean very little. The inhabitants have been so long out of the
world that, though they make a show of keeping up to date in
dress and manners and literature, they depend to a great extent
on hearsay, and a function that in Hades would be considered
elaborate would doubtless be hailed by a Chicago beef-princess as
"perhaps a little tacky."
John T. Unger was on the eve of departure. Mrs. Unger, with
maternal fatuity, packed his trunks full of linen suits and
electric fans, and Mr. Unger presented his son with an asbestos
pocket-book stuffed with money.
"Remember, you are always welcome here," he said. "You can
be sure boy, that we'll keep the home fires burning."
"I know," answered John huskily.
"Don't forget who you are and where you come from,"
continued his father proudly, "and you can do nothing to harm
you. You are an Unger--from Hades."
So the old man and the young shook hands and John walked
away with tears streaming from his eyes. Ten minutes later he
had passed outside the city limits, and he stopped to glance back
for the last time. Over the gates the old-fashioned Victorian
motto seemed strangely attractive to him. His father had tried
time and time again to have it changed to something with a little
more push and verve about it, such as "Hades--Your Opportunity,"
or else a plain "Welcome" sign set over a hearty handshake
pricked out in electric lights. The old motto was a little
depressing, Mr. Unger had thought--but now....
So John took his look and then set his face resolutely
toward his destination. And, as he turned away, the lights of
Hades against the sky seemed full of a warm and passionate
beauty.
St. Midas' School is half an hour from Boston in a
Rolls-Pierce motorcar. The actual distance will never be known,
for no one, except John T. Unger, had ever arrived there save in
a Rolls-Pierce and probably no one ever will again. St. Midas'
is the most expensive and the most exclusive boys' preparatory
school in the world.
John's first two years there passed pleasantly. The fathers of
all the boys were money-kings and John spent his summers visiting
at fashionable resorts. While he was very fond of all the boys
he visited, their fathers struck him as being much of a piece,
and in his boyish way he often wondered at their exceeding
sameness. When he told them where his home was they would ask
jovially, "Pretty hot down there?" and John would muster a faint
smile and answer, "It certainly is." His response would have been
heartier had they not all made this joke--at best varying it
with, "Is it hot enough for you down there?" which he hated just
as much.
In the middle of his second year at school, a quiet,
handsome boy named Percy Washington had been put in John's form.
The newcomer was pleasant in his manner and exceedingly well
dressed even for St. Midas', but for some reason he kept aloof
from the other boys. The only person with whom he was intimate
was John T. Unger, but even to John he was entirely uncommunicative
concerning his home or his family. That he was
wealthy went without saying, but beyond a few such deductions
John knew little of his friend, so it promised rich confectionery
for his curiosity when Percy invited him to spend the summer at
his home "in the West." He accepted, without hesitation.
It was only when they were in the train that Percy became,
for the first time, rather communicative. One day while they
were eating lunch in the dining-car and discussing the imperfect
characters of several of the boys at school, Percy suddenly
changed his tone and made an abrupt remark.
"My father," he said, "is by far the richest man in the
world."
"Oh," said John, politely. He could think of no answer to make
to this confidence. He considered "That's very nice," but it
sounded hollow and was on the point of saying, "Really?" but
refrained since it would seem to question Percy's statement. And
such an astounding statement could scarcely be questioned.
"By far the richest," repeated Percy.
"I was reading in the World Almanac," began John, "that
there was one man in America with an income of over five million
a year and four men with incomes of over three million a year,
and--"
"Oh, they're nothing." Percy's mouth was a half-moon of
scorn. "Catchpenny capitalists, financial small-fry, petty
merchants and money-lenders. My father could buy them out and
not know he'd done it."
"But how does he--"
"Why haven't they put down his income tax? Because he
doesn't pay any. At least he pays a little one--but he doesn't
pay any on his real income."
"He must be very rich," said John simply. "I'm glad. I
like very rich people.
"The richer a fella is, the better I like him." There was a
look of passionate frankness upon his dark face. "I visited the
Schnlitzer-Murphys last Easter. Vivian Schnlitzer-Murphy had
rubies as big as hen's eggs, and sapphires that were like globes
with lights inside them--"
"I love jewels," agreed Percy enthusiastically. "Of course
I wouldn't want any one at school to know about it, but I've got
quite a collection myself I used to collect them instead of
stamps."
"And diamonds," continued John eagerly. "The
Schnlitzer-Murphys had diamonds as big as walnuts--"
"That's nothing." Percy had leaned forward and dropped his
voice to a low whisper. "That's nothing at all. My father has a
diamond bigger than the Ritz-Carlton Hotel."
II
THE MONTANA sunset lay between two mountains like a gigantic
bruise from which dark arteries spread themselves over a poisoned
sky. An immense distance under the sky crouched the village of
Fish, minute, dismal, and forgotten. There were twelve men, so
it was said, in the village of Fish, twelve somber and
inexplicable souls who sucked a lean milk from the almost
literally bare rock upon which a mysterious populatory force had
begotten them. They had become a race apart, these twelve men of
Fish, like some species developed by an early whim of nature,
which on second thought had abandoned them to struggle and extermination.
Out of the blue-black bruise in the distance crept a long
line of moving lights upon the desolation of the land, and the
twelve men of Fish gathered like ghosts at the shanty depot to
watch the passing of the seven o'clock train, the
Transcontinental Express from Chicago. Six times or so a year
the Transcontinental Express, through some inconceivable
jurisdiction, stopped at the village of Fish, and when this
occurred a figure or so would disembark, mount into a buggy that
always appeared from out of the dusk, and drive off toward the
bruised sunset. The observation of this pointless and
preposterous phenomenon had become a sort of cult among the men
of Fish. To observe, that was all; there remained in them none
of the vital quality of illusion which would make them wonder or
speculate, else a religion might have grown up around these
mysterious visitations. But the men of Fish were beyond all
religion--the barest and most savage tenets of even Christianity
could gain no foothold on that barren rock--so there was no
altar, no priest, no sacrifice; only each night at seven the
silent concourse by the shanty depot, a congregation who lifted
up a prayer of dim, anaemic wonder.
On this June night, the Great Brakeman, whom, had they
deified any one, they might well have chosen as their celestial
protagonist, had ordained that the seven o'clock train should
leave its human (or inhuman) deposit at Fish. At two minutes
after seven Percy Washington and John T. Unger disembarked,
hurried past the spellbound, the agape, the fearsome eyes of the
twelve men of Fish, mounted into a buggy which had obviously
appeared from nowhere, and drove away.
After half an hour, when the twilight had coagulated into
dark, the silent negro who was driving the buggy hailed an opaque
body somewhere ahead of them in the gloom. In response to his
cry, it turned upon them a luminous disk which regarded them like
a malignant eye out of the unfathomable night. As they came
closer, John saw that it was the tail-light of an immense
automobile, larger and more magnificent than any he had ever
seen. Its body was of gleaming metal richer than nickel and
lighter than silver, and the hubs of the wheels were studded with
iridescent geometric figures of green and yellow--John did not
dare to guess whether they were glass or jewel.
Two negroes, dressed in glittering livery such as one sees
in pictures of royal processions in London, were standing at
attention beside the car and as the two young men dismounted from
the buggy they were greeted in some language which the guest
could not understand, but which seemed to be an extreme form of
the Southern negro's dialect.
"Get in," said Percy to his friend, as their trunks were
tossed to the ebony roof of the limousine. "Sorry we had to
bring you this far in that buggy, but of course it wouldn't do
for the people on the train or those Godforsaken fellas in Fish
to see this automobile."
"Gosh! What a car!" This ejaculation was provoked by its interior.
John saw that the upholstery consisted of a thousand
minute and exquisite tapestries of silk, woven with jewels and
embroideries, and set upon a background of cloth of gold. The
two armchair seats in which the boys luxuriated were covered with
stuff that resembled duvetyn, but seemed woven in numberless
colors of the ends of ostrich feathers.
"What a car!" cried John again, in amazement.
"This thing?" Percy laughed. "Why, it's just an old junk we
use for a station wagon."
By this time they were gliding along through the darkness
toward the break between the two mountains.
"We'll be there in an hour and a half," said Percy, looking
at the clock. "I may as well tell you it's not going to be like
anything you ever saw before."
If the car was any indication of what John would see, he was
prepared to be astonished indeed. The simple piety prevalent in
Hades has the earnest worship of and respect for riches as the
first article of its creed--had John felt otherwise than
radiantly humble before them, his parents would have turned away
in horror at the blasphemy.
They had now reached and were entering the break between the
two mountains and almost immediately the way became much rougher.
"If the moon shone down here, you'd see that we're in a big
gulch," said Percy, trying to peer out of the window. He spoke a
few words into the mouthpiece and immediately the footman turned
on a search-light and swept the hillsides with an immense beam.
"Rocky, you see. An ordinary car would be knocked to pieces
in half an hour. In fact, it'd take a tank to navigate it unless
you knew the way. You notice we're going uphill now."
They were obviously ascending, and within a few minutes the
car was crossing a high rise, where they caught a glimpse of a
pale moon newly risen in the distance. The car stopped suddenly
and several figures took shape out of the dark beside it--these
were negroes also. Again the two young men were saluted in the
same dimly recognizable dialect; then the negroes set to work and
four immense cables dangling from overhead were attached with
hooks to the hubs of the great jeweled wheels. At a resounding
"Hey-yah!" John felt the car being lifted slowly from the ground--
up and up--clear of the tallest rocks on both sides--then
higher, until he could see a wavy, moonlit valley stretched out
before him in sharp contrast to the quagmire of rocks that they
had just left. Only on one side was there still rock--and then
suddenly there was no rock beside them or anywhere around.
It was apparent that they had surmounted some immense
knife-blade of stone, projecting perpendicularly into the air.
In a moment they were going down again, and finally with a soft
bump they were landed upon the smooth earth.
"The worst is over," said Percy, squinting out the window.
"It's only five miles from here, and our own road--tapestry
brick--all the way. This belongs to us. This is where the
United States ends, father says."
"Are we in Canada?"
"We are not. We're in the middle of the Montana Rockies.
But you are now on the only five square miles of land in the
country that's never been surveyed."
"Why hasn't it? Did they forget it?"
"No," said Percy, grinning, "they tried to do it three
times. The first time my grandfather corrupted a whole department
of the State survey; the second time he had the official maps of
the United States tinkered with--that held them for fifteen
years. The last time was harder. My father fixed it so that
their compasses were in the strongest magnetic field ever
artificially set up. He had a whole set of surveying instruments
made with a slight defection that would allow for this territory
not to appear, and he substituted them for the ones that were to
be used. Then he had a river deflected and he had what looked
like a village built up on its banks--so that they'd see it, and
think it was a town ten miles farther up the valley. There's
only one thing my father's afraid of," he concluded, "only one
thing in the world that could be used to find us out."
"What's that?"
Percy sank his voice to a whisper.
"Aeroplanes," he breathed. "We've got half a dozen
anti-aircraft guns and we've arranged it so far--but there've
been a few deaths and a great many prisoners. Not that we mind
that, you know, father and I, but it upsets mother and the girls,
and there's always the chance that some time we won't be able to
arrange it."
Shreds and tatters of chinchilla, courtesy clouds in the
green moon's heaven, were passing the green moon like precious
Eastern stuffs paraded for the inspection of some Tartar Khan.
It seemed to John that it was day, and that he was looking at
some lads sailing above him in the air, showering down tracts and
patent medicine circulars, with their messages of hope for
despairing, rockbound hamlets. It seemed to him that he could
see them look down out of the clouds and stare--and stare at
whatever there was to stare at in this place whither he was
bound--What then? Were they induced to land by some insidious
device there to be immured far from patent medicines and from
tracts until the judgment day--or, should they fail to fall into
the trap, did a quick puff of smoke and the sharp round of a
splitting shell bring them drooping to earth--and "upset" Percy's
mother and sisters. John shook his head and the wraith of a
hollow laugh issued silently from his parted lips. What
desperate transaction lay hidden here? What a moral expedient of
a bizarre Croesus? What terrible and golden mystery? . . .
The chinchilla clouds had drifted past now and outside the
Montana night was bright as day. The tapestry brick of the road
was smooth to the tread of the great tires as they rounded a
still, moonlit lake; they passed into darkness for a moment, a
pine grove, pungent and cool, then they came out into a broad
avenue of lawn and John's exclamation of pleasure was simultaneous
with Percy's taciturn "We're home."
Full in the light of the stars, an exquisite ch_teau rose from the
borders of the lake, climbed in marble radiance half the
height of an adjoining mountain, then melted in grace, in perfect
symmetry, in translucent feminine languor, into the massed
darkness of a forest of pine. The many towers, the slender
tracery of the sloping parapets, the chiselled wonder of a
thousand yellow windows with their oblongs and hectagons and
triangles of golden light, the shattered softness of the
intersecting planes of star-shine and blue shade, all trembled on
John's spirit like a chord of music. On one of the towers, the
tallest, the blackest at its base, an arrangement of exterior
lights at the top made a sort of floating fairyland--and as John
gazed up in warm enchantment the faint acciaccare sound of
violins drifted down in a rococo harmony that was like nothing he
had ever heard before. Then in a moment the car stopped before
wide, high marble steps around which the night air was fragrant
with a host of flowers. At the top of the steps two great doors
swung silently open and amber light flooded out upon the
darkness, silhouetting the figure of an exquisite lady with
black, high-piled hair, who held out her arms toward them.
"Mother," Percy was saying, "this is my friend, John Unger,
from Hades."
Afterward John remembered that first night as a daze of many
colors, of quick sensory impressions, of music soft as a voice in
love, and of the beauty of things, lights and shadows, and
motions and faces. There was a whitehaired man who stood
drinking a many-hued cordial from a crystal thimble set on a
golden stem. There was a girl with a flowery face, dressed like
Titania with braided sapphires in her hair. There was a room
where the solid, soft gold of the walls yielded to the pressure
of his hand, and a room that was like a platonic conception of
the ultimate prism--ceiling, floor, and all, it was lined with
an unbroken mass of diamonds, diamonds of every size and shape,
until, lit with tall violet lamps in the corners, it dazzled the
eyes with a whiteness that could be compared only with itself,
beyond human wish or dream.
Through a maze of these rooms the two boys wandered.
Sometimes the floor under their feet would flame in brilliant
patterns from lighting below, patterns of barbaric clashing
colors, of pastel delicacy, of sheer whiteness, or of subtle and
intricate mosaic, surely from some mosque on the Adriatic Sea.
Sometimes beneath layers of thick crystal he would see blue or
green water swirling, inhabited by vivid fish and growths of
rainbow foliage. Then they would be treading on furs of every
texture and color or along corridors of palest ivory, unbroken as
though carved complete from the gigantic tusks of dinosaurs
extinct before the age of man. . . .
Then a hazily remembered transition, and they were at
dinner--where each plate was of two almost imperceptible layers
of solid diamond between which was curiously worked a filigree of
emerald design, a shaving sliced from green air. Music, plangent
and unobtrusive, drifted down through far corridors--his chair,
feathered and curved insidiously to his back, seemed to engulf
and overpower him as he drank his first glass of port. He tried
drowsily to answer a question that had been asked him, but the
honeyed luxury that clasped his body added to the illusion of
sleep--jewels, fabrics, wines, and metals blurred before his eyes
into a sweet mist. . . .
"Yes," he replied with a polite effort, "it certainly is hot
enough for me down there."
He managed to add a ghostly laugh; then, without movement,
without resistance, he seemed to float off and away, leaving an
iced dessert that was pink as a dream. . . . He fell asleep.
When he awoke he knew that several hours had passed. He was
in a great quiet room with ebony walls and a dull illumination
that was too faint, too subtle, to be called a light. His young
host was standing over him.
"You fell asleep at dinner," Percy was saying. "I nearly
did, too--it was such a treat to be comfortable again after this
year of school. Servants undressed and bathed you while you were
sleeping."
"Is this a bed or a cloud?" sighed John. "Percy, Percy--before
you go, I want to apologize."
"For what?"
"For doubting you when you said you had a diamond as big as
the Ritz-Carlton Hotel."
Percy smiled.
"I thought you didn't believe me. It's that mountain, you
know."
"What mountain?"
"The mountain the ch_teau rests on. It's not very big, for
a mountain. But except about fifty feet of sod and gravel on top
it's solid diamond.One diamond, one cubic mile without a flaw.
Aren't you listening? Say----"
But John T. Unger had again fallen asleep.
III
MORNING. As he awoke he perceived drowsily that the room had at
the same moment become dense with sunlight. The ebony panels of
one wall had slid aside on a sort of track, leaving his chamber
half open to the day. A large negro in a white uniform stood
beside his bed.
"Good-evening," muttered John, summoning his brains from the
wild places.
"Good-morning, sir. Are you ready for your bath, sir? Oh,
don't get up--I'll put you in, if you'll just unbutton your
pajamas--there. Thank you, sir."
John lay quietly as his pajamas were removed--he was amused
and delighted; he expected to be lifted like a child by this
black Gargantua who was tending him, but nothing of the sort
happened; instead he felt the bed tilt up slowly on its side--he
began to roll, startled at first, in the direction of the wall,
but when he reached the wall its drapery gave way, and sliding
two yards farther down a fleecy incline he plumped gently into
water the same temperature as his body.
He looked about him. The runway or rollway on which he had
arrived had folded gently back into place. He had been projected
into another chamber and was sitting in a sunken bath with his
head just above the level of the floor. All about him, lining
the walls of the room and the sides and bottom of the bath
itself, was a blue aquarium, and gazing through the crystal
surface on which he sat, he could see fish swimming among amber
lights and even gliding without curiosity past his outstretched
toes, which were separated from them only by the thickness of the
crystal. From overhead, sunlight came down through sea-green
glass.
I suppose, sir, that you'd like hot rosewater and soapsuds
this morning sir--and perhaps cold salt water to finish."
The negro was standing beside him.
"Yes," agreed John, smiling inanely, "as you please." Any
idea of ordering this bath according to his own meager standards
of living would have been priggish and not a little wicked.
The negro pressed a button and a warm rain began to fall,
apparently from overhead, but really, so John discovered after a
moment, from a fountain arrangement near by. The water turned to
a pale rose color and jets of liquid soap spurted into it from
four miniature walrus heads at the corners of the bath. In a
moment a dozen little paddle-wheels, fixed to the sides, had
churned the mixture into a radiant rainbow of pink foam which
enveloped him softly with its delicious lightness, and burst in
shining, rosy bubbles here and there about him.
"Shall I turn on the moving-picture machine, sir?" suggested
the negro deferentially. "There's a good one-reel comedy in this
machine to-day, or can put in a serious piece in a moment, if you
prefer it."
"No, thanks," answered John, politely but firmly. He was
enjoying his at too much to desire any distraction. But
distraction came. In a moment he was listening intently to the
sound of flutes from just outside, flutes ripping a melody that
was like a waterfall, cool and green as the room itself,
accompanying a frothy piccolo, in play more fragile than the lace
of u s that covered and charmed him.
After a cold salt-water bracer and a cold fresh finish, he
stepped out and into a fleecy robe, and upon a couch covered with
the same material he was rubbed with oil, alcohol, and spice.
Later he sat in a voluptuous chair while he was shaved and his
hair was trimmed.
"Mr. Percy is waiting in your sitting-room," said the negro,
when these operations were finished. "My name is Gygsum, Mr.
Unger, sir. I am to see to Mr. Unger every morning."
John walked out into the brisk sunshine of his living-room,
where he found breakfast waiting for him and Percy, gorgeous in
white kid knickerbockers, smoking in an easy chair.
IV
THIS IS A STORY of the Washington family as Percy sketched it for
John during breakfast.
The father of the present Mr. Washington had been a
Virginian, a direct descendant of George Washington, and Lord
Baltimore. At the close of the Civil War he was a
twenty-five-year-old Colonel with a played-out plantation and
about a thousand dollars in gold.
Fitz-Norman Culpepper Washington, for that was the young
Colonel's name, decided to present the Virginia estate to his
younger brother and go West. He selected two dozen of the most
faithful blacks, who, of course, worshipped him, and bought
twenty-five tickets to the West, where he intended to take out
land in their names and start a sheep and cattle ranch.
When he had been in Montana for less than a month and things
were going very poorly indeed, he stumbled on his great
discovery. He had lost his way when riding in the hills, and
after a day without food he began to grow hungry. As he was
without his rifle, he was forced to pursue a squirrel, and in the
course of the pursuit he noticed that it was carrying something
shiny in its mouth. Just before it vanished into its hole--for
Providence did not intend that this squirrel should alleviate his
hunger--it dropped its burden. Sitting down to consider the situation
Fitz-Norman's eye was caught by a gleam in the grass
beside him. In ten seconds he had completely lost his appetite
and gained one hundred thousand dollars. The squirrel, which had
refused with annoying persistence to become food, had made him a
present of a large and perfect diamond.
Late that night he found his way to camp and twelve hours
later all the males among his darkies were back by the squirrel
hole digging furiously at the side of the mountain. He told them
he had discovered a rhinestone mine, and, as only one or two of
them had ever seen even a small diamond before, they believed
him, without question. When the magnitude of his discovery
became apparent to him, he found himself in a quandary. The
mountain was a diamond--it was literally nothing else but solid
diamond. He filled four saddle bags full of glittering samples
and started on horseback for St. Paul. There he managed to
dispose of half a dozen small stones--when he tried a larger one
a storekeeper fainted and Fitz-Norman was arrested as a public
disturber. He escaped from jail and caught the train for New
York, where he sold a few medium-sized diamonds and received in
exchange about two hundred thousand dollars in gold. But he did
not dare to produce any exceptional gems--in fact, he left New
York just in time. Tremendous excitement had been created in
jewelry circles, not so much by the size of his diamonds as by
their appearance in the city from mysterious sources. Wild
rumors became current that a diamond mine had been discovered in
the Catskills, on the Jersey coast, on Long Island, beneath
Washington Square. Excursion trains, packed with men carrying picks
and shovels, began to leave New York hourly, bound for various
neighboring El Dorados. But by that time young Fitz-Norman was
on his way back to Montana.
By the end of a fortnight he had estimated that the diamond
in the mountain was approximately equal in quantity to all the
rest of the diamonds known to exist in the world. There was no
valuing it by any regular computation, however, for it was one
solid diamond--and if it were offered for sale not only would the
bottom fall out of the market, but also, if the value should vary
with its size in the usual arithmetical progression, there would
not be enough gold in the world to buy a tenth part of it. And
what could any one do with a diamond that size?
It was an amazing predicament. He was, in one sense, the
richest man that ever lived--and yet was he worth anything at
all? If his secret should transpire there was no telling to what
measures the Government might resort in order to prevent a panic,
in gold as well as in jewels. They might take over the claim
immediately and institute a monopoly.
There was no alternative--he must market his mountain in
secret. He sent South for his younger brother and put him in
charge of his colored following--darkies who had never realized
that slavery was abolished. To make sure of this, he read them a
proclamation that he had composed, which announced that General
Forrest had reorganized the shattered Southern armies and
defeated the North in one pitched battle. The negroes believed
him implicitly. They passed a vote declaring it a good thing and
held revival services immediately.
Fitz-Norman himself set out for foreign parts with one
hundred thousand dollars and two trunks filled with rough
diamonds of all sizes. He sailed for Russia in a Chinese junk
and six months after his departure from Montana he was in St.
Petersburg. He took obscure lodgings and called immediately upon
the court jeweller, announcing that he had a diamond for the
Czar. He remained in St. Petersburg for two weeks, in constant
danger of being murdered, living from lodging to lodging, and
afraid to visit his trunks more than three or four times during
the whole fortnight.
On his promise to return in a year with larger and finer
stones, he was allowed to leave for India. Before he left,
however, the Court Treasurers had deposited to his credit, in
American banks, the sum of fifteen million dollars--under four
different aliases.
He returned to America in 1868, having been gone a little
over two years. He had visited the capitals of twenty-two
countries and talked with five emperors, eleven kings, three
princes, a shah, a khan, and a sultan. At that time Fitz-Norman
estimated his own wealth at one billion dollars. One fact worked
consistently against the disclosure of his secret. No one of his
larger diamonds remained in the public eye for a week before
being invested with a history of enough fatalities, amours,
revolutions, and wars to have occupied it from the days of the
first Babylonian Empire.
From 1870 until his death in 1900, the history of
Fitz-Norman Washington was a long epic in gold. There were side
issues, of course--he evaded the surveys, he married a Virginia
lady, by whom he had a single son, and he was compelled, due to a
series of unfortunate complications, to murder his brother, whose
unfortunate habit of drinking himself into an indiscreet stupor
had several times endangered their safety. But very few other
murders stained these happy years of progress and expansion.
Just before he died he changed his policy, and with all but
a few million dollars of his outside wealth bought up rare
minerals in bulk, which he deposited in the safety vaults of
banks all over the world, marked as bric-_-brac. His son,
Braddock Tarleton Washington, followed this policy on an even
more tensive scale. The minerals were converted into the rarest
of all elements--radium--so that the equivalent of a billion
dollars in gold could be placed in a receptacle no bigger than a
cigar box.
When Fitz-Norman had been dead three years his son,
Braddock, decided that the business had gone far enough. The
amount of wealth that he and his father had taken out of the
mountain was beyond all exact computation. He kept a note-book
in cipher in which he set down the approximate quantity of radium
in each of the thousand banks he patronized, and recorded the
alias under which it was held. Then he did a very simple thing--he
sealed up the mine.
He sealed up the mine. What had been taken out of it would
support all the Washingtons yet to be born in unparalleled luxury
for generations. His one care must be the protection of his
secret, lest in the possible panic attendant on its discovery he
should be reduced with all the property-holders in the world to
utter poverty.
This was the family among whom John T. Unger was staying.
This was the story he heard in his silver-walled living-room the
morning after his arrival.
IV
AFTER BREAKFAST, John found his way out the great marble entrance
and looked curiously at the scene before him. The whole valley,
from the diamond mountain to the steep granite cliff five miles
away, still gave off a breath of golden haze which hovered idly
above the fine sweep of lawns and lakes and gardens. Here and
there clusters of elms made delicate groves of shade, contrasting
strangely with the tough masses of pine forest that held the
hills in a grip of dark-blue green. Even as John looked he saw
three fawns in single file patter out from one clump about a half
mile away and disappear with awkward gayety into the black-ribbed
half-light of another. John would not have been surprised to see
a goat-foot piping his way among the trees or to catch a glimpse
of pink nymph-skin and flying yellow hair between the greenest of
the green leaves.
In some such cool hope he descended the marble steps,
disturbing faintly the sleep of two silky Russian wolfhounds at
the bottom, and set off along a walk of white and blue brick that
seemed to lead in no particular direction.
He was enjoying himself as much as he was able. It is
youth's felicity as well as its insufficiency that it can never
live in the present, but must always be measuring up the day
against its own radiantly imagined future--flowers and gold,
girls and stars, they are only prefigurations and prophecies of
that incomparable, unattainable young dream.
John rounded a soft corner where the massed rose-bushes
filled the air with heavy scent, and struck off across a park
toward a patch of moss under some trees. He had never lain upon
moss, and he wanted to see whether it was really soft enough to
justify the use of its name as an adjective. Then he saw a girl
coming toward him over the grass. She was the most beautiful
person he had ever seen
She was dressed in a white little gown that came just below
her knees, and a wreath of mignonettes clasped with blue slices
of sapphire bound up her hair. Her pink bare feet scattered the
dew before them as she came. She was younger than John--not more
than sixteen.
"Hello," she cried softly, "I'm Kismine."
She was much more than that to John already. He advanced
toward her, scarcely moving as he drew near lest he should tread
on her bare toes.
"You haven't met me," said her soft voice. Her blue eyes
added, "Oh, but you've missed a great deal!" . . . "You met my
sister, Jasmine, last night. I was sick with lettuce poisoning,"
went on her soft voice, and her eyes continued, "and when I'm
sick I'm sweet--and when I'm well."
"You have made an enormous impression on me," said John's
eyes, "and I'm not so slow myself"--"How do you do?" said his
voice. "I hope you're better this morning."--"You darling,"
added his eyes tremulously.
John observed that they had been walking along the path. On
her suggestion they sat down together upon the moss, the softness
of which he failed to determine.
He was critical about women. A single defect--a thick
ankle, a hoarse voice, a glass eye--was enough to make him
utterly indifferent. And here for the first time in his life he
was beside a girl who seemed to him the incarnation of physical
perfection.
"Are you from the East?" asked Kismine with charming
interest.
"No," answered John simply. "I'm from Hades."
Either she had never heard of Hades, or she could think of
no pleasant comment to make upon it, for she did not discuss it
further.
"I'm going East to school this fall," she said. "D'you
think I'll like it? I'm going to New York to Miss Bulge's. It's
very strict, but you see over the weekends I'm going to live at
home with the family in our New York house, because father heard
that the girls had to go walking two by two."
"Your father wants you to be proud," observed John.
"We are," she answered, her eyes shining with dignity."None of us
has ever been punished. Father said we never should
be. Once when my sister Jasmine was a little girl she pushed him
down-stairs and he just got up and limped away.
"Mother was--well, a little startled," continued Kismine,
"when she heard that you were from--from where you are from, you
know. She said that when she was a young girl--but then, you
see, she's a Spaniard and old-fashioned."
"Do you spend much time out here?" asked John, to conceal
the fact that he was somewhat hurt by this remark. It seemed an
unkind allusion to his provincialism.
"Percy and Jasmine and I are here every summer, but next
summer Jasmine is going to Newport. She's coming out in London a
year from this fall. She'll be presented at court."
"Do you know, " began John hesitantly, "you're much more
sophisticated than I thought you were when I first saw you?"
"Oh, no, I'm not," she exclaimed hurriedly. "Oh, I wouldn't
think of being. I think that sophisticated young people are
terriblycommon, don't you? I'm not at all, really. If you say
I am, I'm going to cry."
She was so distressed that her lip was trembling. John was
impelled to protest:
I didn't mean that; I only said it to tease you."
"Because I wouldn't mind if I were," she persisted. "but
I'm not. I'm very innocent and girlish. I never smoke, or
drink, or read anything except poetry. I know scarcely any
mathematics or chemistry. I dress very simply--in fact, I
scarcely dress at all. I think sophisticated is the last thing
you can say about me. I believe that girls ought to enjoy their
youths in a wholesome way."
"I do, too," said John heartily.
Kismine was cheerful again. She smiled at him, and a still-born
tear dripped from the corner of one blue eye.
"I like you," she whispered, intimately. "Are you going to
spend all your time with Percy while you're here, or will you be
nice to me. Just think--I'm absolutely fresh ground. I've never
had a boy in love with me in all my life. I've never been
allowed even to see boys alone--except Percy. I came all the way
out here into this grove hoping to run into you, where the family
wouldn't be around.
Deeply flattered, John bowed from the hips as he had been
taught at dancing school in Hades.
"We'd better go now," said Kismine sweetly. "I have to be
with mother at eleven. You haven't asked me to kiss you once. I
thought boys always did that nowadays."
John drew himself up proudly.
"Some of them do," he answered, "but not me. Girls don't do
that sort of thing--in Hades."
Side by side they walked back toward the house.
VI
JOHN STOOD facing Mr. Braddock Washington in the full
sunlight. The elder man was about forty with a proud, vacuous
face, intelligent eyes, and a robust figure. In the mornings he
smelt of horses--the best horses. He carried a plain
walking-stick of gray birch with a single large opal for a grip.
He and Percy were showing John around.
"The slaves' quarters are there." His walking-stick
indicated a cloister of marble on their left that ran in graceful
Gothic along the side of the mountain. "In my youth I was
distracted for a while from the business of life by a period of
absurd idealism. During that time they lived in luxury. For
instance, I equipped every one of their rooms with a tile bath."
"I suppose," ventured John, with an ingratiating laugh,
"that they used the bathtubs to keep coal in. Mr.
Schnlitzer-Murphy told me that once he----"
"The opinions of Mr. Schnlitzer-Murphy are of little
importance, I should imagine," interrupted Braddock Washington,
coldly. "My slaves did not keep coal in their bathtubs. They
had orders to bathe every day, and they did. If they hadn't I
might have ordered a sulphuric acid shampoo. I discontinued the
baths for quite another reason. Several of them caught cold
and died. Water is not good for certain races--except as a
beverage."
John laughed, and then decided to nod his head in sober
agreement. Braddock Washington made him uncomfortable.
"All these negroes are descendants of the ones my father
brought North with him. There are about two hundred and fifty
now. You notice that they've lived so long apart from the world
that their original dialect has become an almost
indistinguishable patois. We bring a few of them up to speak
English--my secretary and two or three of the house servants.
"This is the golf course," he continued, as they strolled
along the velvet winter grass. "It's all a green, you see--no
fairway, no rough, no hazards."
He smiled pleasantly at John.
"Many men in the cage, father?" asked Percy suddenly.
Braddock Washington stumbled, and let forth an involuntary
curse.
"One less than there should be," he ejaculated darkly--and
then added after a moment, "We've had difficulties."
"Mother was telling me," exclaimed Percy, "that Italian
teacher----"
"A ghastly error," said Braddock Washington angrily. "But
of course there's a good chance that we may have got him.
Perhaps he fell somewhere in the woods or stumbled over a cliff.
And then there's always the probability that if he did get away
his story wouldn't be believed. Nevertheless, I've had two dozen
men looking for him in different towns around here."
"And no luck?"
"Some. Fourteen of them reported to my agent that they'd
each killed a man answering to that description, but of course it
was probably only the reward they were after----"
He broke off. They had come to a large cavity in the earth
about the circumference of a merry-go-round and covered by a
strong iron grating. Braddock Washington beckoned to John, and
pointed his cane down through the grating. John stepped to the
edge and gazed. Immediately his ears were assailed by a wild
clamor from below.
"Come on down to Hell!"
"Hello, kiddo, how's the air up there?"
"Hey! Throw us a rope!"
"Got an old doughnut, Buddy, or a couple of second-hand
sandwiches?"
"Say, fella, if you'll push down that guy you're with, we'll
show you a quick disappearance scene."
"Paste him one for me, will you?"
It was too dark to see clearly into the pit below, but John
could tell from the coarse optimism and rugged vitality of the
remarks and voices that they proceeded from middle-class
Americans of the more spirited type. Then Mr. Washington put out
his cane and touched a button in the grass, and the scene below
sprang into light.
"These are some adventurous mariners who had the misfortune
to discover El Dorado," he remarked.
Below them there had appeared a large hollow in the earth
shaped like the interior of a bowl. The sides were steep and
apparently of polished glass, and on its slightly concave surface
stood about two dozen men clad in the half costume, half uniform,
of aviators. Their upturned faces, lit with wrath with malice,
with despair, with cynical humor, were covered by long growths of
beard, but with the exception of a few who had pined perceptibly
away, they seemed to be a well-fed, healthy lot.
Braddock Washington drew a garden chair to the edge of the
pit and sat down.
"Well, how are you, boys?" he inquired genially.
A chorus of execration in which all joined except a few too
dispirited to cry out, rose up into the sunny air, but Braddock
Washington heard it with unruffled composure. When its last echo
had died away he spoke again.
"Have you thought up a way out of your difficulty?"
From here and there among them a remark floated up.
"We decided to stay here for love!"
"Bring us up there and we'll find us a way!"
Braddock Washington waited until they were again quiet.
Then he said:
"I've told you the situation. I don't want you here. I
wish to heaven I'd never seen you. Your own curiosity got you
here, and any time that you can think of a way out which protects
me and my interests I'll be glad to consider it. But so long as
you confine your efforts to digging tunnels--yes, I know about
the new one you've started--you won't get very far. This isn't
as hard on you as you make it out, with all your howling for the
loved ones at home. If you were the type who worried much about
the loved ones at home, you'd never have taken up aviation."
A tall man moved apart from the others, and held up his hand
to call his captor's attention to what he was about to say.
"Let me ask you a few questions!" he cried. "You pretend to
be a fair-minded man."
"How absurd. How could a man of my position be fair-minded
toward you? You might as well speak of a Spaniard being
fair-minded toward a piece of steak."
At this harsh observation the faces of the two dozen steaks
fell, but the tall man continued:
"All right!" he cried. "We've argued this out before.
You're not a humanitarian and you're not fair-minded, but you're
human--at least you say you are--and you ought to be able to put
yourself in our place for long enough to think how--how--how----
"How what?" demanded Washington, coldly.
"--how unnecessary----"
"Not to me."
"Well,--how cruel----"
"We've covered that. Cruelty doesn't exist where
self-preservation is involved. You've been soldiers; you know
that. Try another."
"Well, then, how stupid."
"There," admitted Washington, "I grant you that. But try to
think of an alternative. I've offered to have all or any of you
painlessly executed if you wish. I've offered to have your
wives, sweethearts, children, and mothers kidnapped and brought
out here. I'll enlarge your place down there and feed and clothe
you the rest of your lives. If there was some method of
producing permanent amnesia I'd have all of you operated on and
released immediately, somewhere outside of my preserves. But
that's as far as my ideas go."
"How about trusting us not to peach on you?" cried some one.
"You don't proffer that suggestion seriously," said
Washington, with an expression of scorn. "I did take out one man
to teach my daughter Italian. Last week he got away."
A wild yell of jubilation went up suddenly from two dozen
throats and a pandemonium of joy ensued. The prisoners
clog-danced and cheered and yodled and wrestled with one another
in a sudden uprush of animal spirits. They even ran up the glass
sides of the bowl as far as they could, and slid back to the
bottom upon the natural cushions of their bodies. The tall man
started a song in which they all joined--
"oh, we'll hang the kaiser
on a sour apple tree----"
Braddock Washington sat in inscrutable silence until the
song was over. "You see," he remarked, when he could gain a
modicum of attention. "I bear you no ill-will. I like to see
you enjoying yourselves. That's why I didn't tell you the whole
story at once. The man--what was his name? Critchtichiello?
--was shot by some of my agents in fourteen different places."
Not guessing that the places referred to were cities, the
tumult of rejoicing subsided immediately.
"Nevertheless," cried Washington with a touch of anger, "he
tried to run away. Do you expect me to take chances with any of
you after an experience like that?"
Again a series of ejaculations went up.
"Sure!"
"Would your daughter like to learn Chinese?"
"Hey, I can speak Italian! My mother was a wop."
"Maybe she'd like t'learna speak N'Yawk!"
"If she's the little one with the big blue eyes I can teach
her a lot of things better than Italian."
"I know some Irish songs--and I could hammer brass once't.
Mr. Washington reached forward suddenly with his cane and
pushed the button in the grass so that the picture below went out
instantly, and there remained only that great dark mouth covered
dismally with the black teeth of the grating.
"Hey!" called a single voice from below, "you ain't goin'
away without givin' us your blessing?"
But Mr. Washington, followed by the two boys, was already
strolling on toward the ninth hole of the golf course, as though
the pit and its contents were no more than a hazard over which his
facile iron had triumphed with ease.
VII
JULY UNDER the lee of the diamond mountain was a month of
blanket nights and of warm, glowing days. John and Kismine were
in love. He did not know that the little gold football
(inscribed with the legend Pro deo et patria et St. Midas) which
he had given her rested on a platinum chain next to her bosom.
But it did. And she for her part was not aware that a large
sapphire which had dropped one day from her simple coiffure was
stowed away tenderly in John's jewel box.
Late one afternoon when the ruby and ermine music room was
quiet, they spent an hour there together. He held her hand and
she gave him such a look that he whispered her name aloud. She
bent toward him--then hesitated.
"Did you say 'Kismine'?" she asked softly, "or----"
She had wanted to be sure. She thought she might have
misunderstood.
Neither of them had ever kissed before, but in the course of
an hour it seemed to make little difference.
The afternoon drifted away. That night when a last breath
of music drifted down from the highest tower, they each lay
awake, happily dreaming over the separate minutes of the day.
They had decided to be married as soon as possible.
VIII
EVERY DAY Mr. Washington and the two young men went hunting
or fishing in the deep forests or played golf around the
somnolent course--games which John diplomatically allowed his
host to win--or swam in the mountain coolness of the lake. John
found Mr. Washington a somewhat exacting personality--utterly
uninterested in any ideas or opinions except his own. Mrs.
Washington was aloof and reserved at all times. She was
apparently indifferent to her two daughters, and entirely
absorbed in her son Percy, with whom she held interminable
conversations in rapid Spanish at dinner.
Jasmine, the elder daughter, resembled Kismine in
appearance--except that she was somewhat bow-legged, and
terminated in large hands and feet--but was utterly unlike her in
temperament. Her favorite books had to do with poor girls who
kept house for widowed fathers. John learned from Kismine that
Jasmine had never recovered from the shock and disappointment
caused her by the termination of the World War, just as she was
about to start for Europe as a canteen expert. She had even
pined away for a time, and Braddock Washington had taken steps to
promote a new war in the Balkans--but she had seen a photograph
of some wounded Serbian soldiers and lost interest in the whole
proceedings. But Percy and Kismine seemed to have inherited the
arrogant attitude in all its harsh magnificence from their
father. A chaste and consistent selfishness ran like a pattern
through their every idea.
John was enchanted by the wonders of the ch_teau and the
valley. Braddock Washington, so Percy told him, had caused to be
kidnapped a landscape gardener, an architect, a designer of state
settings, and a French decadent poet left over from the last
century. He had put his entire force of negroes at their
disposal, guaranteed to supply them with any materials that the
world could offer, and left them to work out some ideas of their
own. But one by one they had shown their uselessness. The
decadent poet had at once begun bewailing his separation from the
boulevards in spring--he made some vague remarks about spices,
apes, and ivories, but said nothing that was of any practical
value. The stage designer on his part wanted to make the whole
valley a series of tricks and sensational effects--a state of
things that the Washingtons would soon have grown tired of. And
as for the architect and the landscape gardener, they thought
only in terms of convention. They must make this like this and
that like that.
But they had, at least, solved the problem of what was to be
done with them--they all went mad early one morning after
spending the night in a single room trying to agree upon the
location of a fountain, and were now confined comfortably in an
insane asylum at Westport, Connecticut.
"But," inquired John curiously, "who did plan all your wonderful
reception rooms and halls, and approaches and
bathrooms----?"
"Well," answered Percy, "I blush to tell you, but it was a
moving-picture fella. He was the only man we found who was used
to playing with an unlimited amount of money, though he did tuck
his napkin in his collar and couldn't read or write."
As August drew to a close John began to regret that he must
soon go back to school. He and Kismine had decided to elope the
following June.
"It would be nicer to be married here," Kismine confessed,
"but of course I could never get father's permission to marry you
at all. Next to that I'd rather elope. It's terrible for
wealthy people to be married in America at present--they always
have to send out bulletins to the press saying that they're going
to be married in remnants, when what they mean is just a peck of
old second-hand pearls and some used lace worn once by the
Empress Eug_nie."
"I know," agreed John fervently. "When I was visiting the
Schnlitzer-Murphys, the eldest daughter, Gwendolyn, married a man
whose father owns half of West Virginia. She wrote home saying
what a tough struggle she was carrying on on his salary as a bank
clerk--and then she ended up by saying that 'Thank God, I have
four good maids anyhow, and that helps a little.'"
"It's absurd," commented Kismine. "Think of the millions
and millions of people in the world, laborers and all, who get
along with only two maids."
One afternoon late in August a chance remark of Kismine's
changed the face of the entire situation, and threw John into a
state of terror.
They were in their favorite grove, and between kisses John
was indulging in some romantic forebodings which he fancied added
poignancy to their relations.
"Sometimes I think we'll never marry," he said sadly.
"You're too wealthy, too magnificent. No one as rich as you are
can be like other girls. I should marry the daughter of some
well-to-do wholesale hardware man from Omaha or Sioux City, and
be content with her half-million."
"I knew the daughter of a wholesale hardware man once,"
remarked Kismine. "I don't think you'd have been contented with
her. She was a friend of my sister's. She visited here."
"Oh, then you've had other guests?" exclaimed John in
surprise.
Kismine seemed to regret her words.
"Oh, yes," she said hurriedly, "we've had a few."
"But aren't you--wasn't your father afraid they'd talk
outside?"
"Oh, to some extent, to some extent," she answered. "Let's
talk about something pleasanter."
But John's curiosity was aroused.
"Something pleasanter!" he demanded. "What's unpleasant
about that? Weren't they nice girls?"
To his great surprise Kismine began to weep.
"Yes--th--that's the--the whole t-trouble. I grew qu-quite
attached to some of them. So did Jasmine, but she kept
inv-viting them anyway. I couldn't understand it."
A dark suspicion was born in John's heart.
"Do you mean that they told, and your father had them--removed?"
"Worse than that," she muttered brokenly. "Father took no
chances--and Jasmine kept writing them to come, and they had such
a good time!"
She was overcome by a paroxysm of grief.
Stunned with the horror of this revelation, John sat there
open-mouthed, feeling the nerves of his body twitter like so many
sparrows perched upon his spinal column.
"Now, I've told you, and I shouldn't have," she said,
calming suddenly and drying her dark blue eyes.
"Do you mean to say that your father had them murdered
before they left?"
She nodded.
"In August usually--or early in September. It's only
natural for us to get all the pleasure out of them that we can
first."
"How abdominable! How--why, I must be going crazy! Did you
really admit that--"
"I did," interrupted Kismine, shrugging her shoulders. "We
can't very well imprison them like those aviators, where they'd
be a continual reproach to us every day. And it's always been
made easier for Jasmine and me because father had it done sooner
than we expected. In that way we avoided any farewell scene----"
"So you murdered them! Uh!" cried John.
"It was done very nicely. They were drugged while they were
asleep--and their families were always told that they died of
scarlet fever in Butte."
"But--I fail to understand why you kept on inviting them!"
"I didn't," burst out Kismine. "I never invited one.
Jasmine did. And they always had a very good time. She'd give
them the nicest presents toward the last. I shall probably have
visitors too--I'll harden up to it. We can't let such an
inevitable thing as death stand in the way of enjoying life while
we have it. Think how lonesome it'd be out here if we never had
any one. Why, father and mother have sacrificed some of their
best friends just as we have."
"And so," cried John accusingly, "and so you were letting me
make love to you and pretending to return it, and talking about
marriage, all the time knowing perfectly well that I'd never get
out of here alive--"
"No," she protested passionately. "Not any more. I did at
first. You were here. I couldn't help that, and I thought your
last days might as well be pleasant for both of us. But then I
fell in love with you, and--and I'm honestly sorry you're going
to--going to be put away--though I'd rather you'd be put away
than ever kiss another girl."
"Oh, you would, would you?" cried John ferociously.
"Much rather. Besides, I've always heard that a girl can
have more fun with a man whom she knows she can never marry. Oh,
why did I tell you? I've probably spoiled your whole good time
now, and we were really enjoying things when you didn't know it.
I knew it would make things sort of depressing for you."
"Oh, you did, did you?" John's voice trembled with anger.
"I've heard about enough of this. If you haven't any more pride
and decency than to have an affair with a fellow that you know
isn't much better than a corpse, I don't want to have any more to
do with you!"
"You're not a corpse!" she protested in horror. "You're not
a corpse! I won't have you saying that I kissed a corpse!"
"I said nothing of the sort!"
"You did! You said I kissed a corpse!"
"I didn't ! "
Their voices had risen, but upon a sudden interruption they
both subsided into immediate silence. Footsteps were coming
along the path in their direction, and a moment later the rose
bushes were parted displaying Braddock Washington, whose
intelligent eyes set in his good-looking vacuous face were
peering in at them.
"Who kissed a corpse?" he demanded in obvious disapproval.
"Nobody," answered Kismine quickly. "We were just joking."
"What are you two doing here, anyhow?" he demanded gruffly.
"Kismine, you ought to be--to be reading or playing golf with
your sister. Go read! Go play golf! Don't let me find you here
when I come back!"
Then he bowed at John and went up the path.
"See?" said Kismine crossly, when he was out of hearing.
"You've spoiled it all. We can never meet any more. He won't
let me meet you. He'd have you poisoned if he thought we were in
love."
"We're not, any more!" cried John fiercely, "so he can set
his mind at rest upon that. Moreover, don't fool yourself that
I'm going to stay around here. Inside of six hours I'll be over
those mountains, if I have to gnaw a passage through them, and on
my way East."
They had both got to their feet, and at this remark Kismine
came close and put her arm through his.
"I'm going, too."
"You must be crazy----"
"Of course I'm going," she interrupted impatiently.
"You most certainly are not. You----"
"Very well," she said quietly, "we'll catch up with father
now and talk it over with him."
Defeated, John mustered a sickly smile.
"Very well, dearest," he agreed, with pale and unconvincing
affection, "we'll go together."
His love for her returned and settled placidly on his heart.
She was his--she would go with him to share his dangers. He put
his arms about her and kissed her fervently. After all she loved
him; she had saved him, in fact.
Discussing the matter, they walked slowly back toward the
ch_teau. They decided that since Braddock Washington had seen
them together they had best depart the next night. Nevertheless,
John's lips were unusually dry at dinner, and he nervously
emptied a great spoonful of peacock soup into his left lung. He
had to be carried into the turquoise and sable card-room and
pounded on the back by one of the under-butlers, which Percy
considered a great joke.
IX
LONG AFTER midnight John's body gave a nervous jerk, and he
sat suddenly upright, staring into the veils of somnolence that
draped the room. Through the squares of blue darkness that were
his open windows, he had heard a faint far-away sound that died
upon a bed of wind before identifying itself on his memory,
clouded with uneasy dreams. But the sharp noise that had
succeeded it was nearer, was just outside the room--the click of
a turned knob, a footstep, a whisper, he could not tell; a hard
lump gathered in the pit of his stomach, and his whole body ached
in the moment that he strained agonizingly to hear. Then one of
the veils seemed to dissolve, and he saw a vague figure standing
by the door, a figure only faintly limned and blocked in upon the
darkness, mingled so with the folds of the drapery as to seem
distorted, like a reflection seen in a dirty pane of glass.
With a sudden movement of fright or resolution John pressed
the button by his bedside, and the next moment he was sitting in
the green sunken bath of the adjoining room, waked into alertness
by the shock of the cold water which half filled it.
He sprang out, and, his wet pajamas scattering a heavy
trickle of water behind him, ran for the aquamarine door which he
knew led out onto the ivory landing of the second floor. The
door opened noiselessly. A single crimson lamp burning in a
great dome above lit the magnificent sweep of the carved
stairways with a poignant beauty. For a moment John hesitated,
appalled by the silent splendor massed about him, seeming to
envelop in its gigantic folds and contours the solitary drenched
little figure shivering upon the ivory landing. Then
simultaneously two things happened. The door of his own
sitting-room swung open, precipitating three naked negroes into
the hall--and, as John swayed in wild terror toward the stairway,
another door slid back in the wall on the other side of the
corridor, and John saw Braddock Washington standing in the
lighted lift, wearing a fur coat and a pair of riding boots which
reached to his knees and displayed, above, the glow of his
rose-colored pajamas.
On the instant the three negroes--John had never seen any of
them before, and it flashed through his mind that they must be
the professional executioners--paused in their movement toward
John, and turned expectantly to the man in the lift, who burst
out with an imperious command:
"Get in here! All three of you! Quick as hell!"
Then, within the instant, the three negroes darted into the
cage, the oblong of light was blotted out as the lift door slid
shut, and John was again alone in the hall. He slumped weakly
down against an ivory stair.
It was apparent that something portentous had occurred,
something which, for the moment at least, had postponed his own
petty disaster. What was it? Had the negroes risen in revolt?
Had the aviators forced aside the iron bars of the grating? Or
had the men of Fish stumbled blindly through the hills and gazed
with bleak, joyless eyes upon the gaudy valley? John did not
know. He heard a faint whir of air as the lift whizzed up again,
and then, a moment later, as it descended. It was probable that
Percy was hurrying to his father's assistance, and it occurred to
John that this was his opportunity to join Kismine and plan an
immediate escape. He waited until the lift had been silent for
several minutes; shivering a little with the night cool that
whipped in through his wet pajamas, he returned to his room and
dressed himself quickly. Then he mounted a long flight of stairs
and turned down the corridor carpeted with Russian sable which
led to Kismine's suite.
The door of her sitting-room was open and the lamps were
lighted. Kismine, in an angora kimono, stood near the window of
the room in a listening attitude, and as John entered noiselessly
she turned toward him.
"Oh, it's you!" she whispered, crossing the room to him.
"Did you hear them?"
"I heard your father's slaves in my----"
"No," she interrupted excitedly. "Aeroplanes!"
"Aeroplanes? Perhaps that was the sound that woke me."
"There're at least a dozen. I saw one a few moments ago
dead against the moon. The guard back by the cliff fired his
rifle and that's what roused father. We're going to open on them
right away."
"Are they here on purpose?"
"Yes--it's that Italian who got away----"
Simultaneously with her last word, a succession of sharp
cracks tumbled in through the open window. Kismine uttered a
little cry, took a penny with fumbling fingers from a box on her
dresser, and ran to one of the electric lights. In an instant
the entire ch_teau was in darkness--she had blown out the fuse.
"Come on!" she cried to him. "We'll go up to the roof
garden, and watch it from there!"
Drawing a cape about her, she took his hand, and they found
their way out the door. It was only a step to the tower lift,
and as she pressed the button that shot them upward he put his
arms around her in the darkness and kissed her mouth. Romance
had come to John Unger at last. A minute later they had stepped
out upon the star-white platform. Above, under the misty moon,
sliding in and out of the patches of cloud that eddied below it,
floated a dozen dark-winged bodies in a constant circling course.
From here and there in the valley flashes of fire leaped toward
them, followed by sharp detonations. Kismine clapped her hands
with pleasure, which, a moment later, turned to dismay as the
aeroplanes at some prearranged signal, began to release their
bombs and the whole of the valley became a panorama of deep
reverberate sound and lurid light.
Before long the aim of the attackers became concentrated
upon the points where the anti-aircraft guns were situated, and
one of them was almost immediately reduced to a giant cinder to
lie smouldering in a park of rose bushes.
"Kismine," begged John, "you'll be glad when I tell you that
this attack came on the eve of my murder. If I hadn't heard that
guard shoot off his gun back by the pass I should now be stone
dead----"
"I can't hear you!" cried Kismine, intent on the scene
before her. "You'll have to talk louder!"
"I simply said, " shouted John, "that we'd better get out
before they begin to shell the ch_teau!"
Suddenly the whole portico of the negro quarters cracked
asunder, a geyser of flame shot up from under the colonnades, and
great fragments of jagged marble were hurled as far as the
borders of the lake.
"There go fifty thousand dollars' worth of slaves," cried
Kismine, "at prewar prices. So few Americans have any respect
for property."
John renewed his efforts to compel her to leave. The aim of
the aeroplanes was becoming more precise minute by minute, and
only two of the antiaircraft guns were still retaliating. It was
obvious that the garrison, encircled with fire, could not hold
out much longer.
"Come on!" cried John, pulling Kismine's arm, "we've got to
go. Do you realize that those aviators will kill you without
question if they find you ?"
She consented reluctantly.
"We'll have to wake Jasmine!" she said, as they hurried
toward the lift. Then she added in a sort of childish delight:
"We'll be poor, won't we? Like people in books. And I'll be an
orphan and utterly free. Free and poor! What fun!" She stopped
and raised her lips to him in a delighted kiss.
"It's impossible to be both together," said John grimly.
"People have found that out. And I should choose to be free as
preferable of the two. As an extra caution you'd better dump the
contents of your jewel box into your pockets."
Ten minutes later the two girls met John in the dark
corridor and they descended to the main floor of the ch_teau.
Passing for the last time through the magnificence of the
splendid halls, they stood for a moment out on the terrace,
watching the burning negro quarters and the flaming embers of two
planes which had fallen on the other side of the lake. A
solitary gun was still keeping up a sturdy popping, and the
attackers seemed timorous about descending lower, but sent their
thunderous fireworks in a circle around it, until any chance shot
might annihilate its Ethiopian crew.
John and the two sisters passed down the marble steps,
turned sharply to the left, and began to ascend a narrow path
that wound like a garter about the diamond mountain. Kismine
knew a heavily wooded spot half-way up where they could lie
concealed and yet be able to observe the wild night in the
valley--finally to make an escape, when it should be necessary,
along a secret path laid in a rocky gully.
X
IT WAS THREE O'CLOCK when they attained their destination. The
obliging and phlegmatic Jasmine fell off to sleep immediately,
leaning against the trunk of a large tree, while John and Kismine
sat, his arm around her, and watched the desperate ebb and flow
of the dying battle among the ruins of a vista that had been a
garden spot that morning. Shortly after four o'clock the last
remaining gun gave out a clanging sound and went out of action in
a swift tongue of red smoke. Though the moon was down, they saw
that the flying bodies were circling closer to the earth. When
the planes had made certain that the beleaguered possessed no
further resources, they would land and the dark and glittering
reign of the Washingtons would be over.
With the cessation of the firing the valley grew quiet. The
embers of the two aeroplanes glowed like the eyes of some monster
crouching in the grass. The ch_teau stood dark and silent,
beautiful without light as it had been beautiful in the sun,
while the woody rattles of Nemesis filled the air above with a
growing and receding complaint. Then John perceived that
Kismine, like her sister, had fallen sound asleep.
It was long after four when he became aware of footsteps
along the path they had lately followed, and he waited in
breathless silence until the persons to whom they belonged had
passed the vantage-point he occupied. There was a faint stir in
the air now that was not of human origin, and the dew was cold;
he knew that the dawn would break soon. John waited until the
steps had gone a safe distance up the mountain and were
inaudible. Then he followed. About half-way to the steep summit
the trees fell away and a hard saddle of rock spread itself over
the diamond beneath. Just before he reached this point he slowed
down his pace, warned by an animal sense that there was life just
ahead of him. Coming to a high boulder, he lifted his head
gradually above its edge. His curiosity was rewarded; this is
what he saw:
Braddock Washington was standing there motionless,
silhouetted against the gray sky without sound or sign of life.
As the dawn came up out of the east, lending a cold green color
to the earth, it brought the solitary figure into insignificant
contrast with the new day.
While John watched, his host remained for a few moments
absorbed in some inscrutable contemplation; then he signalled to
the two negroes who crouched at his feet to lift the burden which
lay between them. As they struggled upright, the first yellow
beam of the sun struck through the innumerable prisms of an
immense and exquisitely chiselled diamond--and a white radiance
was kindled that glowed upon the air like a fragment of the
morning star. The bearers staggered beneath its weight for a
moment--then their rippling muscles caught and hardened under the
wet shine of the skins and the three figures were again
motionless in their defiant impotency before the heavens.
After a while the white man lifted his head and slowly
raised his arms in a gesture of attention, as one who would call
a great crowd to hear--but there was no crowd, only the vast
silence of the mountain and the sky, broken by faint bird voices
down among the trees. The figure on the saddle of rock began to
speak ponderously and with an inextinguishable pride.
"You out there--" he cried in a trembling voice. "You--
there--!" He paused, his arms still uplifted, his head held
attentively as though he were expecting an answer. John strained
his eyes to see whether there might be men coming down the
mountain, but the mountain was bare of human life. There was
only sky and a mocking flute of wind along the tree-tops. Could
Washington be praying? For a moment John wondered. Then the
illusion passed--there was something in the man's whole attitude
antithetical to prayer.
"Oh, you above there!"
The voice was become strong and confident. This was no
forlorn supplication. If anything, there was in it a quality of
monstrous condescension.
"You there----"
Words, too quickly uttered to be understood, flowing one
into the other. . . . John listened breathlessly, catching a
phrase here and there, while the voice broke off, resumed, broke
off again--now strong and argumentative, now colored with a slow,
puzzled impatience. Then a conviction commenced to dawn on the
single listener, and as realization crept over him a spray of
quick blood rushed through his arteries. Braddock Washington was
offering a bribe to God!
That was it--there was no doubt. The diamond in the arms of
his slaves was some advance sample, a promise of more to follow.
That, John perceived after a time, was the thread running
through his sentences. Prometheus Enriched was calling to
witness forgotten sacrifices, forgotten rituals, prayers obsolete
before the birth of Christ. For a while his discourse took the
form of reminding God of this gift or that which Divinity had
deigned to accept from men--great churches if he would rescue
cities from the plague, gifts of myrrh and gold, of human lives
and beautiful women and captive armies, of children and queens,
of beasts of the forest and field, sheep and goats, harvests and
cities, whole conquered lands that had been offered up in lust or
blood for His appeasal, buying a meed's worth of alleviation from
the Divine wrath--and now he, Braddock Washington, Emperor of
Diamonds, king and priest of the age of gold, arbiter of splendor
and luxury, would offer up a treasure such as princes before him
had never dreamed of, offer it up not in suppliance, but in
pride.
He would give to God, he continued, getting down to
specifications, the greatest diamond in the world. This diamond
would be cut with many more thousand facets than there were
leaves on a tree, and yet the whole diamond would be shaped with
the perfection of a stone no bigger than a fly. Many men would
work upon it for many years. It would be set in a great dome of
beaten gold, wonderfully carved and equipped with gates of opal
and crusted sapphire. In the middle would be hollowed out a
chapel presided over by an altar of iridescent, decomposing,
ever-changing radium which would burn out the eyes of any
worshipper who lifted up his head from prayer--and on this altar
there would be slain for the amusement of the Divine Benefactor
any victim He should choose, even though it should be the
greatest and most powerful man alive.
In return he asked only a simple thing, a thing that for God
would be absurdly easy--only that matters should be as they were
yesterday at this hour and that they should so remain. So very
simple! Let but the heavens open, swallowing these men and their
aeroplanes--and then close again. Let him have his slaves once
more, restored to life and well.
There was no one else with whom he had ever needed to treat
or bargain.
He doubted only whether he had made his bribe big enough.
God had His price, of course. God was made in man's image, so it
had been said: He must have His price. And the price would be
rare--no cathedral whose building consumed many years, no pyramid
constructed by ten thousand workmen, would be like this
cathedral, this pyramid.
He paused here. That was his proposition. Everything would
be up to specifications and there was nothing vulgar in his
assertion that it would be cheap at the price. He implied that
Providence could take it or leave it.
As he approached the end his sentences became broken, became
short and uncertain, and his body seemed tense, seemed strained
to catch the slightest pressure or whisper of life in the spaces
around him. His hair had turned gradually white as he talked,
and now he lifted his head high to the heavens like a prophet of
old--magnificently mad.
Then, as John stared in giddy fascination, it seemed to him
that a curious phenomenon took place somewhere around him. It
was as though the sky had darkened for an instant, as though
there had been a sudden murmur in a gust of wind, a sound of
far-away trumpets, a sighing like the rustle of a great silken
robe--for a time the whole of nature round about partook of this
darkness; the birds' song ceased; the trees were still, and far
over the mountain there was a mutter of dull, menacing thunder.
That was all. The wind died along the tall grasses of the
valley. The dawn and the day resumed their place in a time, and
the risen sun sent hot waves of yellow mist that made its path
bright before it. The leaves laughed in the sun, and their
laughter shook the trees until each bough was like a girl's
school in fairyland. God had refused to accept the bribe.
For another moment John watched the triumph of the day.
Then, turning he saw a flutter of brown down by the lake, then
another flutter, then another, like the dance of golden angels
alighting from the clouds. The aeroplanes had come to earth.
John slid off the boulder and ran down the side of the
mountain to the clump of trees, where the two girls were awake
and waiting for him. Kismine sprang to her feet, the jewels in
her pockets jingling, a question on her parted lips, but instinct
told John that there was no time for words. They must get off
the mountain without losing a moment. He seized a hand of each
and in silence they threaded the tree-trunks, washed with light
now and with the rising mist. Behind them from the valley came
no sound at all, except the complaint of the peacocks far away
and the pleasant undertone of morning.
When they had gone about half a mile, they avoided the park
land and entered a narrow path that led over the next rise of
ground. At the highest point of this they paused and turned
around. Their eyes rested upon the mountainside they had just
left--oppressed by some dark sense of tragic impendency.
Clear against the sky a broken, white-haired man was slowly
descending the steep slope, followed by two gigantic and
emotionless negroes, who carried a burden between them which
still flashed and glittered in the sun. Half-way down two other
figures joined them--John could see that they were Mrs. Washington
and her son, upon whose arm she leaned. The aviators
had clambered from their machines to the sweeping lawn in front
of the ch_teau, and with rifles in hand were starting up the
diamond mountain in skirmishing formation.
But the little group of five which had formed farther up and
was engrossing all the watchers' attention had stopped upon a
ledge of rock. The negroes stooped and pulled up what appeared
to be a trap-door in the side of the mountain. Into this they
all disappeared, the white-haired man first, then his wife and
son, finally the two negroes, the glittering tips of whose
jeweled head-dresses caught the sun for a moment before the
trap-door descended and engulfed them all.
Kismine clutched John's arm.
"Oh," she cried wildly, "where are they going? What are they
going to do?"
"It must be some underground way of escape "
A little scream from the two girls interrupted his sentence.
"Don't you see?" sobbed Kismine hysterically. "The mountain
is wired!"
Even as she spoke John put up his hands to shield his sight.
Before their eyes the whole surface of the mountain had changed
suddenly to a dazzling burning yellow, which showed up through
the jacket of turf as light shows through a human hand. For a
moment the intolerable glow continued, and then like an
extinguished filament it disappeared, revealing a black waste
from which blue smoke arose slowly, carrying off with it what
remained of vegetation and of human flesh. Of the aviators there
was left neither blood, nor bone--they were consumed as
completely as the five souls who had gone inside.
Simultaneously, and with an immense concussion, the ch_teau
literally threw itself into the air, bursting into flaming
fragments as it rose, and then tumbling back upon itself in a
smoking pile that lay projecting half into the water of the lake.
There was no fire--what smoke there was drifted off mingling with
the sunshine, and for a few minutes longer a powdery dust of
marble drifted from the great featureless pile that had once been
the house of jewels. There was no more sound and the three
people were alone in the valley.
XI
AT SUNSET John and his two companions reached the high cliff
which had marked the boundaries of the Washingtons' dominion, and
looking back found the valley tranquil and lovely in the dusk.
They sat down to finish the food which Jasmine had brought with
her in a basket.
"There!" she said, as she spread the table-cloth and put the
sandwiches in a neat pile upon it. "Don't they look tempting? I
always think that food tastes better outdoors."
"With that remark," remarked Kismine, "Jasmine enters the
middle class."
"Now," said John eagerly, "turn out your pocket and let's
see what jewels you brought along. If you made a good selection
we three ought to live comfortably all the rest of our lives."
Obediently Kismine put her hand in her pocket and tossed two
handfuls of glittering stones before him.
"Not so bad," cried John, enthusiastically. "They aren't
very big, but-- Hello!" His expression changed as he held one of
them up to the declining sun. "Why, these aren't diamonds!
There's something the matter!"
"By golly!" exclaimed Kismine, with a startled look. "What
an idiot I am!"
"Why, these are rhinestones!" cried John.
"I know." She broke into a laugh. "I opened the wrong
drawer. They belonged on the dress of a girl who visited
Jasmine. I got her to give them to me in exchange for diamonds.
I'd never seen anything but precious stones before."
"And this is what you brought?"
"I'm afraid so." She fingered the brilliants wistfully. "I
think I like these better. I'm a little tired of diamonds."
"Very well," said John gloomily. "We'll have to live in
Hades. And you will grow old telling incredulous women that you
got the wrong drawer. Unfortunately your father's bank-books
were consumed with him."
"Well, what's the matter with Hades?"
"If I come home with a wife at my age my father is just as
liable as not to cut me off with a hot coal, as they say down there."
Jasmine spoke up.
"I love washing," she said quietly. "I have always washed
my own handkerchiefs. I'll take in laundry and support you
both."
"Do they have washwomen in Hades?" asked Kismine innocently.
"Of course," answered John. "It's just like anywhere else."
"I thought--perhaps it was too hot to wear any clothes."
John laughed.
"Just try it!" he suggested. "They'll run you out before
you're half started."
"Will father be there?" she asked.
John turned to her in astonishment.
"Your father is dead," he replied somberly. "Why should he
go to Hades? You have it confused with another place that was
abolished long ago."
After supper they folded up the table-cloth and spread their
blankets for the night.
"What a dream it was," Kismine sighed, gazing up at the
stars. "How strange it seems to be here with one dress and a
penniless fianc_!
"Under the stars," she repeated. "I never noticed the stars
before. I always thought of them as great big diamonds that
belonged to some one. Now they frighten me. They make me feel
that it was all a dream, all my youth."
"It was a dream," said John quietly. "Everybody's youth is
a dream, a form of chemical madness."
"How pleasant then to be insane!"
"So I'm told," said John gloomily. "I don't know any
longer. At any rate, let us love for a while, for a year or so,
you and me. That's a form of divine drunkenness that we can all
try. There are only diamonds in the whole world, diamonds and
perhaps the shabby gift of disillusion. Well, I have that last
and I will make the usual nothing of it." He shivered. "Turn up
your coat collar, little girl, the night's full of chill and
you'll get pneumonia. His was a great sin who first invented
consciousness. Let us lose it for a few hours."
So wrapping himself in his blanket he fell off to sleep.
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 irrelevant
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 caddymaster, 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 golfballs. 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 centered 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 oldfashioned 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 springboard.
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 surfboard 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 fianc_ 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 fulfillment. 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 d_nouement. 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 tranquility 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 coup_."
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 coup_ 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."
Jo Powell was a Jelly-bean. Much as I desire to make him an appealing character, I feel
that it would be unscrupulous to deceive you on that point. He was a bred-in-the-bone,
dyed-in-the-wool, ninety-nine three-quarters per cent Jelly-bean and he grew lazily all
during Jelly-bean season, which is every season, down in the land of the Jelly-beans
well below the Mason-Dixon line.
Now if you call a Memphis man a Jelly-bean he will quite possibly pull a long sinewy
rope from his hip pocket and hang you to a convenient telegraph-pole. If you call a New
Orleans man a Jelly-bean he will probably grin and ask you who is taking your girl to
the Mardi Gras ball. The particular Jelly-bean patch which produced the protagonist of
this history lies somewhere between the two--a little city of forty thousand that has
dozed sleepily for forty thousand years in southern Georgia, occasionally stirring in
its slumbers and muttering something about a war that took place sometime, somewhere,
and that everyone else has forgotten long ago.
Jim was a Jelly-bean. I write that again because it has such a pleasant sound--rather
like the beginning of a fairy story--as if Jim were nice. It somehow gives me a picture
of him with a round, appetizing face and all sorts of leaves and vegetables growing out
of his cap. But Jim was long and thin and bent at the waist from stooping over
pool-tables, and he was what might have been known in the indiscriminating North as a
corner loafer. "Jelly-bean" is the name throughout the undissolved Confederacy for one
who spends his life conjugating the verb to idle in the first person singular--I am
idling, I have idled, I will idle.
Jim was born in a white house on a green corner. It had four weather-beaten pillars in front and a great amount of
lattice-work in the rear that made a cheerful criss-cross background for a flowery sun-drenched lawn. Originally
the dwellers in the white house had owned the ground next door and next door to that and next door to that, but this
had been so long ago that even Jim's father scarcely remembered it. He had, in fact, thought it a matter of so little
moment that when he was dying from a pistol wound got in a brawl he neglected even to tell little Jim, who was five
years old and miserably frightened. The white house became a boarding-house run by a tight-lipped lady from Macon,
whom Jim called Aunt Mamie and detested with all his soul.
He became fifteen, went to high school, wore his hair in black snarls, and was afraid of girls. He hated his home
where four women and one old man prolonged an interminable chatter from summer to summer about what lots the
Powell place had originally included and what sort of flowers would be out next. Sometimes the parents of little girls
in town, remembering Jim's mother and fancying a resemblance in the dark eyes and hair, invited him to parties, but
parties made him shy and he much preferred sitting on a disconnected axle in Tilly's Garage, rolling the bones or
exploring his mouth endlessly with a long straw. For pocket money, he picked up odd jobs, and it was due to this that
he stopped going to parties. At his third party little Marjorie Haight had whispered indiscreetly and within hearing
distance that he was a boy who brought the groceries sometimes. So instead of the two-step and polka, Jim had
learned to throw any number he desired on the dice and had listened to spicy tales of all the shootings that had
occurred in the surrounding country during the past fifty years.
He became eighteen. The war broke out and he enlisted as a gob and polished brass in the Charleston Navy-yard for a
year. Then, by way of variety, he went North and polished brass in the Brooklyn Navy-yard for a year.
When the war was over he came home. He was twenty-one, his trousers were too short and too tight. His buttoned
shoes were long and narrow. His tie was an alarming conspiracy of purple and pink marvellously scrolled, and over it
were two blue eyes faded like a piece of very good old cloth long exposed to the sun.
In the twilight of one April evening when a soft gray had drifted down along the cotton fields and over the sultry
town, he was a vague figure leaning against a board fence, whistling and gazing at the moon's rim above the lights of
Jackson Street. His mind was working persistently on a problem that had held his attention for an hour. The
Jelly-bean had been invited to a party.
Back in the days when all the boys had detested all the girls, Clark Darrow and Jim had sat side by side in school.
But, while Jim's social aspirations had died in the oily air of the garage, Clark had alternately fallen in and out of
love, gone to college, taken to drink, given it up, and, in short, become one of the best beaux of the town.
Nevertheless Clark and Jim had retained a friendship that, though casual, was perfectly definite. That afternoon
Clark's ancient Ford had slowed up beside Jim, who was on the sidewalk and, out of a clear sky, Clark had invited
him to a party at the country club. The impulse that made him do this was no stranger than the impulse which made
Jim accept. The latter was probably an unconscious ennui, a half-frightened sense of adventure. And now Jim was
soberly thinking it over.
He began to sing, drumming his long foot idly on a stone block in the sidewalk till it wobbled up and down in time to
the low throaty tune:
"One mile from home in Jelly-bean town,
Lives Jeanne, the Jelly-bean Queen.
She loves her dice and treats 'em nice;
No dice would treat her mean."
He broke off and agitated the sidewalk to a bumpy gallop.
"Daggone!" he muttered, half aloud.
They would all be there--the old crowd, the crowd to which, by right of the white house,
sold long since, and the portrait of the officer in gray over the mantel, Jim should
have belonged. But that crowd had grown up together into a tight little set as gradually
as the girls' dresses had lengthened inch by inch, as definitely as the boys' trousers
had dropped suddenly to their ankles. And to that society of first names and dead
puppy-loves Jim was an outsider--a running mate of poor whites. Most of the men knew
him, condescendingly; he tipped his hat to three or four girls. That was all.
When the dusk had thickened into a blue setting for the moon, he walked through the hot,
pleasantly pungent town to Jackson Street. The stores were closing and the last shoppers
were drifting homeward, as if borne on the dreamy revolution of a slow merry-go-round. A
street-fair farther down made a brilliant alley of vari-colored booths and contributed a
blend of music to the night--an oriental dance on a calliope, a melancholy bugle in
front of a freak show, a cheerful rendition of "Back Home in Tennessee" on a hand-organ.
The Jelly-bean stopped in a store and bought a collar. Then he sauntered along toward
Soda Sam's, where he found the usual three or four cars of a summer evening parked in
front and the little darkies running back and forth with sundaes and lemonades.
"Hello, Jim."
It was a voice at his elbow--Joe Ewing sitting in an automobile with Marylyn Wade. Nancy
Lamar and a strange man were in the back seat.
The Jelly-bean tipped his hat quickly.
"Hi, Ben--" then, after an almost imperceptible pause--"How y' all?"
Passing, he ambled on toward the garage where he had a room up-stairs. His "How y' all"
had been said to Nancy Lamar, to whom he had not spoken in fifteen years.
Nancy had a mouth like a remembered kiss and shadowy eyes and blue-black hair inherited
from her mother who had been born in Budapest. Jim passed her often in the street,
walking small-boy fashion with her hands in her pockets and he knew that with her
inseparable Sally Carrol Hopper she had left a trail of broken hearts from Atlanta to
New Orleans.
For a few fleeting moments Jim wished he could dance. Then he laughed and as he reached
his door began to sing softly to himself:
"Her Jelly Roll can twist your soul,
Her eyes are big and brown,
She's the Queen of the Queens of the Jelly-beans--
My Jeanne of Jelly-bean Town."
II
At nine-thirty Jim and Clark met in front of Soda Sam's and started for the Country Club
in Clark's Ford.
"Jim," asked Clark casually, as they rattled through the jasmine-scented night, "how do
you keep alive?"
The Jelly-bean paused, considered.
"Well," he said finally, "I got a room over Tilly's garage. I help him some with the
cars in the afternoon an' he gives it to me free. Sometimes I drive one of his taxies
and pick up a little thataway. I get fed up doin' that regular though."
"That all?"
"Well, when there's a lot of work I help him by the day--Saturdays usually--and then
there's one main source of revenue I don't generally mention. Maybe you don't recollect
I'm about the champion crap-shooter of this town. They make me shoot from a cup now
because once I get the feel of a pair of dice they just roll for me."
Clark grinned appreciatively.
"I never could learn to set 'em so's they'd do what I wanted. Wish you'd shoot with
Nancy Lamar some day and take all her money away from her. She will roll 'em with the
boys and she loses more than her daddy can afford to give her. I happen to know she sold
a good ring last month to pay a debt."
The Jelly-bean was non-committal.
"The white house on Elm Street still belong to you?"
Jim shook his head.
"Sold. Got a pretty good price, seein' it wasn't in a good part of town no more. Lawyer
told me to put it into Liberty bonds. But Aunt Mamie got so she didn't have no sense, so
it takes all the interest to keep her up at Great Farms Sanitarium.
"Hm."
"I got an old uncle up-state an' I reckin I kin go up there if ever I get sure enough
pore. Nice farm, but not enough niggers around to work it. He's asked me to come up and
help him, but I don't guess I'd take much to it. Too doggone lonesome----" He broke off
suddenly. "Clark, I want to tell you I'm much obliged to you for askin' me out, but I'd
be a lot happier if you'd just stop the car right here an' let me walk back into town."
"Shucks!" Clark grunted. "Do you good to step out. You don't have to dance--just get out
there on the floor and shake."
"Hold on," exclaimed Jim uneasily, "Don't you go leadin' me up to any girls and leavin'
me there so I'll have to dance with 'em."
Clark laughed.
"'Cause," continued Jim desperately, "without you swear you won't do that I'm agoin' to
get out right here an' my good legs goin' carry me back to Jackson Street."
They agreed after some argument that Jim, unmolested by females, was to view the
spectacle from a secluded settee in the corner where Clark would join him whenever he
wasn't dancing.
So ten o'clock found the Jelly-bean with his legs crossed and his arms conservatively
folded, trying to look casually at home and politely uninterested in the dancers. At
heart he was torn between overwhelming self-consciousness and an intense curiosity as to
all that went on around him. He saw the girls emerge one by one from the dressing-room,
stretching and pluming themselves like bright birds, smiling over their powdered
shoulders at the chaperones, casting a quick glance around to take in the room and,
simultaneously, the room's reaction to their entrance--and then, again like birds,
alighting and nestling in the sober arms of their waiting escorts. Sally Carrol Hopper,
blonde and lazy-eyed, appeared clad in her favorite pink and blinking like an awakened
rose. Marjorie Haight, Marylyn Wade, Harriet Cary, all the girls he had seen loitering
down Jackson Street by noon, now, curled and brilliantined and delicately tinted for the
overhead lights, were miraculously strange Dresden figures of pink and blue and red and
gold, fresh from the shop and not yet fully dried.
He had been there half an hour, totally uncheered by Clark's jovial visits which were
each one accompanied by a "Hello, old boy, how you making out?" and a slap at his knee.
A dozen males had spoken to him or stopped for a moment beside him, but he knew that
they were each one surprised at finding him there and fancied that one or two were even
slightly resentful. But at half past ten his embarrassment suddenly left him and a pull
of breathless interest took him completely out of himself--Nancy Lamar had come out of
the dressing-room.
She was dressed in yellow organdie, a costume of a hundred cool corners, with three
tiers of ruffles and a big bow in back until she shed black and yellow around her in a
sort of phosphorescent lustre. The Jelly-bean's eyes opened wide and a lump arose in his
throat. For a minute she stood beside the door until her partner hurried up. Jim
recognized him as the stranger who had been with her in Joe Ewing's car that afternoon.
He saw her set her arms akimbo and say something in a low voice, and laugh. The man
laughed too and Jim experienced the quick pang of a weird new kind of pain. Some ray had
passed between the pair, a shaft of beauty from that sun that had warmed him a moment
since. The Jelly-bean felt suddenly like a weed in a shadow.
A minute later Clark approached him, bright-eyed and glowing.
"Hi, old man," he cried with some lack of originality. "How you making out?"
Jim replied that he was making out as well as could be expected.
"You come along with me," commanded Clark. "I've got something that'll put an edge on
the evening."
Jim followed him awkwardly across the floor and up the stairs to the locker-room where
Clark produced a flask of nameless yellow liquid.
"Good old corn."
Ginger ale arrived on a tray. Such potent nectar as "good old corn" needed some disguise
beyond seltzer.
"Say, boy," exclaimed Clark breathlessly, "doesn't Nancy Lamar look beautiful?"
Jim nodded.
"Mighty beautiful," he agreed.
"She's all dolled up to a fare-you-well to-night," continued Clark. "Notice that fellow
she's with?"
"Big fella? White pants?"
"Yeah. Well, that's Ogden Merritt from Savannah. Old man Merritt makes the Merritt
safety razors. This fella's crazy about her. Been chasing after her all year.
"She's a wild baby," continued Clark, "but I like her. So does everybody. But she sure
does do crazy stunts. She usually gets out alive, but she's got scars all over her
reputation from one thing or another she's done."
"That so?" Jim passed over his glass. "That's good corn."
"Not so bad. Oh, she's a wild one. Shoots craps, say, boy! And she do like her high-balls. Promised I'd give her one later on."
"She in love with this--Merritt?"
"Damned if I know. Seems like all the best girls around here marry fellas and go off
somewhere."
He poured himself one more drink and carefully corked the bottle.
"Listen, Jim, I got to go dance and I'd be much obliged if you just stick this corn
right on your hip as long as you're not dancing. If a man notices I've had a drink he'll
come up and ask me and before I know it it's all gone and somebody else is having my
good time."
So Nancy Lamar was going to marry. This toast of a town was to become the private
property of an individual in white trousers--and all because white trousers' father had
made a better razor than his neighbor. As they descended the stairs Jim found the idea
inexplicably depressing. For the first time in his life he felt a vague and romantic
yearning. A picture of her began to form in his imagination--Nancy walking boylike and
debonnaire along the street, talking an orange as tithe from a worshipful fruit-dealer,
charging a dope on a mythical account at Soda Sam's, assembling a convoy of beaux and
then driving off in triumphal state for an afternoon of splashing and singing.
The Jelly-bean walked out on the porch to a deserted corner, dark between the moon on
the lawn and the single lighted door of the ballroom. There he found a chair and,
lighting a cigarette, drifted into the thoughtless reverie that was his usual mood. Yet
now it was a reverie made sensuous by the night and by the hot smell of damp powder
puffs, tucked in the fronts of low dresses and distilling a thousand rich scents to
float out through the open door. The music itself, blurred by a loud trombone, became
hot and shadowy, a languorous overtone to the scraping of many shoes and slippers.
Suddenly the square of yellow light that fell through the door was obscured by a dark
figure. A girl had come out of the dressing-room and was standing on the porch not more
than ten feet away. Jim heard a low-breathed "doggone" and then she turned and saw him.
It was Nancy Lamar.
Jim rose to his feet.
"Howdy?"
"Hello--" she paused, hesitated and then approached. "Oh, it's--Jim Powell."
He bowed slightly, tried to think of a casual remark.
"Do you suppose," she began quickly, "I mean--do you know anything about gum?"
"What?"
"I've got gum on my shoe. Some utter ass left his or her gum on the floor and of course
I stepped in it."
Jim blushed, inappropriately.
"Do you know how to get it off?" she demanded petulantly. "I've tried a knife. I've
tried every damn thing in the dressing-room. I've tried soap and water-- and even
perfume and I've ruined my powder-puff trying to make it stick to that."
Jim considered the question in some agitation.
"Why--I think maybe gasolene----"
The words had scarcely left his lips when she grasped his hand and pulled him at a run
off the low veranda, over a flower bed and at a gallop toward a group of cars parked in
the moonlight by the first hole of the golf course.
"Turn on the gasolene," she commanded breathlessly.
"What?"
"For the gum of course. I've got to get it off. I can't dance with gum on."
Obediently Jim turned to the cars and began inspecting them with a view to obtaining the
desired solvent. Had she demanded a cylinder he would have done his best to wrench one
out.
"Here," he said after a moment's search. "Here's one that's easy. Got a handkerchief?"
"It's up-stairs wet. I used it for the soap and water."
Jim laboriously explored his pockets.
"Don't believe I got one either."
"Doggone it! Well, we can turn it on and let it run on the ground."
He turned the spout; a dripping began.
"More!"
He turned it on fuller. The dripping became a flow and formed an oily pool that
glistened brightly, reflecting a dozen tremulous moons on its quivering bosom.
"Ah," she sighed contentedly, "let it all out. The only thing to do is to wade in it."
In desperation he turned on the tap full and the pool suddenly widened sending tiny
rivers and trickles in all directions.
"That's fine. That's something like."
Raising her skirts she stepped gracefully in.
"I know this'll take it off," she murmured.
Jim smiled.
"There's lots more cars."
She stepped daintily out of the gasolene and began scraping her slippers, side and
bottom, on the running- board of the automobile. The Jelly-bean contained himself no
longer. He bent double with explosive laughter and after a second she joined in.
"You're here with Clark Darrow, aren't you?" she asked as they walked back toward the
veranda.
"Yes."
"You know where he is now?"
"Out dancin', I reckin."
"The deuce. He promised me a highball."
"Well," said Jim, "I guess that'll be all right. I got his bottle right here in my
pocket."
She smiled at him radiantly.
"I guess maybe you'll need ginger ale though," he added.
"Not me. Just the bottle."
"Sure enough?"
She laughed scornfully.
"Try me. I can drink anything any man can. Let's sit down."
She perched herself on the side of a table and he dropped into one of the wicker chairs
beside her. Taking out the cork she held the flask to her lips and took a long drink. He
watched her fascinated.
"Like it?"
She shook her head breathlessly.
"No, but I like the way it makes me feel. I think most people are that way."
Jim agreed.
"My daddy liked it too well. It got him."
"American men," said Nancy gravely, "don't know how to drink."
"What?" Jim was startled.
"In fact," she went on carelessly, "they don't know how to do anything very well. The
one thing I regret in my life is that I wasn't born in England."
"In England?"
"Yes. It's the one regret of my life that I wasn't."
"Do you like it over there."
"Yes. Immensely. I've never been there in person, but I've met a lot of Englishmen who
were over here in the army, Oxford and Cambridge men--you know, that's like Sewanee and
University of Georgia are here--and of course I've read a lot of English novels."
Jim was interested, amazed.
"D' you ever hear of Lady Diana Manners?" she asked earnestly.
No, Jim had not.
"Well, she's what I'd like to be. Dark, you know, like me, and wild as sin. She's the
girl who rode her horse up the steps of some cathedral or church or something and all
the novelists made their heroines do it afterwards."
Jim nodded politely. He was out of his depths.
"Pass the bottle," suggested Nancy. "I'm going to take another little one. A little
drink wouldn't hurt a baby.
"You see," she continued, again breathless after a draught. "People over there have
style. Nobody has style here. I mean the boys here aren't really worth dressing up for
or doing sensational things for. Don't you know?"
"I suppose so--I mean I suppose not," murmured Jim.
"And I'd like to do 'em an' all. I'm really the only girl in town that has style."
She stretched out her arms and yawned pleasantly.
"Pretty evening."
"Sure is," agreed Jim.
"Like to have boat," she suggested dreamily. "Like to sail out on a silver lake, say the
Thames, for instance. Have champagne and caviare sandwiches along. Have about eight
people. And one of the men would jump overboard to amuse the party and get drowned like
a man did with Lady Diana Manners once."
"Did he do it to please her?"
"Didn't mean drown himself to please her. He just meant to jump overboard and make
everybody laugh."
"I reckin they just died laughin' when he drowned."
"Oh, I suppose they laughed a little," she admitted. "I imagine she did, anyway. She's
pretty hard, I guess--like I am."
"You hard?"
"Like nails." She yawned again and added, "Give me a little more from that bottle."
Jim hesitated but she held out her hand defiantly.
"Don't treat me like a girl," she warned him. "I'm not like any girl you ever saw." She
considered. "Still, perhaps you're right. You got--you got old head on young
shoulders."
She jumped to her feet and moved toward the door. The Jelly-bean rose also.
"Good-bye," she said politely, "good-bye. Thanks, Jelly-bean."
Then she stepped inside and left him wide-eyed upon the porch.
III
At twelve o'clock a procession of cloaks issued single file from the women's
dressing-room and, each one pairing with a coated beau like dancers meeting in a
cotillion figure, drifted through the door with sleepy happy laughter--through the door
into the dark where autos backed and snorted and parties called to one another and
gathered around the water-cooler.
Jim, sitting in his corner, rose to look for Clark. They had met at eleven; then Clark
had gone in to dance. So, seeking him, Jim wandered into the soft-drink stand that had
once been a bar. The room was deserted except for a sleepy negro dozing behind the
counter and two boys lazily fingering a pair of dice at one of the tables. Jim was about
to leave when he saw Clark coming in. At the same moment Clark looked up.
"Hi, Jim!" he commanded. "C'mon over and help us with this bottle. I guess there's not
much left, but there's one all around."
Nancy, the man from Savannah, Marylyn Wade, and Joe Ewing were lolling and laughing in
the doorway. Nancy caught Jim's eye and winked at him humorously.
They drifted over to a table and arranging themselves around it waited for the waiter to
bring ginger ale. Jim, faintly ill at ease, turned his eyes on Nancy, who had drifted
into a nickel crap game with the two boys at the next table.
"Bring them over here," suggested Clark.
Joe looked around.
"We don't want to draw a crowd. It's against club rules."
"Nobody's around," insisted Clark, "except Mr. Taylor. He's walking up and down like a
wild-man trying to find out who let all the gasolene out of his car."
There was a general laugh.
"I bet a million Nancy got something on her shoe again. You can't park when she's
around."
"O Nancy, Mr. Taylor's looking for you!"
Nancy's cheeks were glowing with excitement over the game. "I haven't seen his silly
little flivver in two weeks."
Jim felt a sudden silence. He turned and saw an individual of uncertain age standing in
the doorway.
Clark's voice punctuated the embarrassment.
"Won't you join us, Mr. Taylor?"
"Thanks."
Mr. Taylor spread his unwelcome presence over a chair. "Have to, I guess. I'm waiting
till they dig me up some gasolene. Somebody got funny with my car."
His eyes narrowed and he looked quickly from one to the other. Jim wondered what he
had heard from the doorway--tried to remember what had been said.
"I'm right to-night," Nancy sang out, "and my four bits is in the ring."
"Faded!" snapped Taylor suddenly.
"Why, Mr. Taylor, I didn't know you shot craps!" Nancy was overjoyed to find that he had
seated himself and instantly covered her bet. They had openly disliked each other since
the night she had definitely discouraged a series of rather pointed advances.
"All right, babies, do it for your mamma. Just one little seven." Nancy was cooing to
the dice. She rattled them with a brave underhand flourish, and rolled them out on the
table.
"Ah-h! I suspected it. And now again with the dollar up."
Five passes to her credit found Taylor a bad loser. She was making it personal, and
after each success Jim watched triumph flutter across her face. She was doubling with
each throw--such luck could scarcely last.
"Better go easy," he cautioned her timidly.
"Ah, but watch this one," she whispered. It was eight on the dice and she called her
number.
"Little Ada, this time we're going South."
Ada from Decatur rolled over the table. Nancy was flushed and half-hysterical, but her
luck was holding. She drove the pot up and up, refusing to drag. Taylor was drumming
with his fingers on the table, but he was in to stay.
Then Nancy tried for a ten and lost the dice. Taylor seized them avidly. He shot in
silence, and in the hush of excitement the clatter of one pass after another on the
table was the only sound.
Now Nancy had the dice again, but her luck had broken. An hour passed. Back and forth it
went. Taylor had been at it again--and again and again. They were even at last--Nancy
lost her ultimate five dollars.
"Will you take my check," she said quickly, "for fifty, and we'll shoot it all?" Her
voice was a little unsteady and her hand shook as she reached to the money.
Clark exchanged an uncertain but alarmed glance with Joe Ewing. Taylor shot again. He
had Nancy's check.
"How 'bout another?" she said wildly. "Jes' any bank'll do--money everywhere as a matter
of fact."
Jim understood--the "good old corn" he had given her--the "good old corn" she had taken
since. He wished he dared interfere--a girl of that age and position would hardly have
two bank accounts. When the clock struck two he contained himself no longer.
"May I--can't you let me roll 'em for you?" he suggested, his low, lazy voice a little
strained.
Suddenly sleepy and listless, Nancy flung the dice down before him.
"All right--old boy! As Lady Diana Manners says, `Shoot 'em, Jelly-bean'--My luck's
gone."
"Mr. Taylor," said Jim, carelessly, "well shoot for one of those there checks against
the cash."
Half an hour later Nancy swayed forward and clapped him on the back.
"Stole my luck, you did." She was nodding her head sagely.
Jim swept up the last check and putting it with the others tore them into confetti and
scattered them on the floor. Someone started singing, and Nancy kicking her chair
backward rose to her feet.
"Ladies and gentlemen," she announced. "Ladies--that's you Marylyn. I want to tell the
world that Mr. Jim Powell, who is a well-known Jelly-bean of this city, is an exception
to a great rule--`lucky in dice--unlucky in love.' He's lucky in dice, and as matter
fact I--I love him. Ladies and gentlemen, Nancy Lamar, famous dark-haired beauty often
featured in the Herald as one th' most popular members of younger set as other girls are
often featured in this particular case. Wish to announce--wish to announce, anyway,
Gentlemen----" She tipped suddenly. Clark caught her and restored her balance.
"My error," she laughed, "she stoops to--stoops to--anyways---- We'll drink to
Jelly-bean . . . Mr. Jim Powell, King of the Jelly-beans."
And a few minutes later as Jim waited hat in hand for Clark in the darkness of that same
corner of the porch where she had come searching for gasolene, she appeared suddenly
beside him.
"Jelly-bean," she said, "are you here, Jelly-bean? I think--" and her slight
unsteadiness seemed part of an enchanted dream--"I think you deserve one of my sweetest
kisses for that, Jelly-bean."
For an instant her arms were around his neck--her lips were pressed to his.
"I'm a wild part of the world, Jelly-bean, but you did me a good turn."
Then she was gone, down the porch, over the cricket-loud lawn. Jim saw Merritt come out
the front door and say something to her angrily--saw her laugh and, turning away, walk
with averted eyes to his car. Marylyn and Joe followed, singing a drowsy song about a
Jazz baby.
Clark came out and joined Jim on the steps. "All pretty lit, I guess," he yawned.
"Merritt's in a mean mood. He's certainly off Nancy."
Over east along the golf course a faint rug of gray spread itself across the feet of the
night. The party in the car began to chant a chorus as the engine warmed up.
"Good-night everybody," called Clark.
"Good-night, Clark."
"Good-night."
There was a pause, and then a soft, happy voice added, "Good-night, Jelly-bean."
The car drove off to a burst of singing. A rooster on a farm across the way took up a
solitary mournful crow, and behind them a last negro waiter turned out the porch light.
Jim and Clark strolled over toward the Ford, their shoes crunching raucously on the
gravel drive.
"Oh boy!" sighed Clark softly, "how you can set those dice!"
It was still too dark for him to see the flush on Jim's thin cheeks--or to know that it
was a flush of unfamiliar shame.
IV
Over Tilly's garage a bleak room echoed all day to the rumble and snorting down-stairs
and the singing of the negro washers as they turned the hose on the cars outside. It was
a cheerless square of a room, punctuated with a bed and a battered table on which lay
half a dozen books--Joe Miller's "Slow Train thru Arkansas," "Lucille," in an old
edition very much annotated in an old-fashioned hand; "The Eyes of the World," by Harold
Bell Wright, and an ancient prayer-book of the Church of England with the name Alice
Powell and the date 1831 written on the fly-leaf.
The East, gray when the Jelly-bean entered the garage, became a rich and vivid blue as he turned on his solitary electric light. He snapped it out again, and going to the window rested his elbows on the sill and stared into the deepening morning. With the awakening of his emotions, his first perception was a sense of futility, a dull ache at the utter grayness of his life. A wall had sprung up suddenly around him hedging him in, a wall as definite and tangible as the white wall of his bare room. And with his perception of this wall all that had been the romance of his existence, the casualness, the lighthearted improvidence, the miraculous open-handedness of life faded out. The Jelly-bean strolling up Jackson Street humming a lazy song, known at every shop and street stand, cropful of easy greeting and local wit, sad sometimes for only the sake of sadness and the flight of time--that Jelly-bean was suddenly vanished. The very name was a reproach, a triviality. With a flood of insight he knew that Merritt must despise him, that even Nancy's kiss in the dawn would have awakened not jealousy but only a contempt for Nancy's so lowering herself. And on his part the Jelly-bean had used for her a dingy subterfuge learned from the garage. He had been her moral laundry; the stains were his.
As the gray became blue, brightened and filled the room, he crossed to his bed and threw himself down on it, gripping the edges fiercely.
"I love her," he cried aloud, "God!"
As he said his something gave way within him like a lump melting in his throat. The air
cleared and became radiant with dawn, and turning over on his face he began to sob dully
into the pillow.
In the sunshine of three o'clock Clark Darrow chugging painfully along Jackson Street
was hailed by the Jelly-bean, who stood on the curb with his fingers in his vest
pockets.
"Hi!" called Clark, bringing his Ford to an astonishing stop alongside. "Just get up?"
The Jelly-bean shook his head.
"Never did go to bed. Felt sorta restless, so I took a long walk this morning out in the
country. Just got into town this minute."
"Should think you would feel restless. I been feeling that away all day----"
"I'm thinkin' of leavin' town," continued the Jelly- bean, absorbed by his own thoughts.
"Been thinkin' of goin' up on the farm, and takin' a little that work off Uncle Dun.
Reckin I been bummin' too long."
Clark was silent and the Jelly-bean continued:
"I reckin maybe after Aunt Mamie dies I could sink that money of mine in the farm and
make somethin' out of it. All my people originally came from that part up there. Had a
big place."
Clark looked at him curiously.
"That's funny," he said. "This--this sort of affected me the same way."
The Jelly-bean hesitated.
"I don't know," he began slowly, "somethin' about--about that girl last night talkin'
about a lady named Diana Manners--an English lady, sorta got me thinkin'!" He drew
himself up and looked oddly at Clark, "I had a family once," he said defiantly.
Clark nodded.
"I know."
"And I'm the last of 'em," continued the Jelly-bean, his voice rising slightly, "and I
ain't worth shucks. Name they call me by means jelly--weak and wobbly like. People who
weren't nothin' when my folks was a lot turn up their noses when they pass me on the
street."
Again Clark was silent.
"So I'm through. I'm goin' to-day. And when I come back to this town it's going to be
like a gentleman."
Clark took out his handkerchief and wiped his damp brow.
"Reckon you're not the only one it shook up," he admitted gloomily. "All this thing of girls going round like they do is going to stop right quick. Too bad, too, but everybody'll have to see it thataway."
"Do you mean," demanded Jim in surprise, "that all that's leaked out?"
"Leaked out? How on earth could they keep it secret. It'll be announced in the papers
to-night. Doctor Lamar's got to save his name somehow."
Jim put his hands on the sides of the car and tightened his long fingers on the metal.
"Do you mean Taylor investigated those checks?"
It was Clark's turn to be surprised.
"Haven't you heard what happened?"
Jim's startled eyes were answer enough.
"Why," announced Clark dramatically, "those four got another bottle of corn, got tight
and decided to shock the town--so Nancy and that fella Merritt were married in Rockville
at seven o'clock this morning."
A tiny indentation appeared in the metal under the Jelly-bean's fingers.
"Married?"
"Sure enough. Nancy sobered up and rushed back into town, crying and frightened to
death--claimed it'd all been a mistake. First Doctor Lamar went wild and was going to
kill Merritt, but finally they got it patched up some way, and Nancy and Merritt went to
Savannah on the two-thirty train."
Jim closed his eyes and with an effort overcame a sudden sickness.
"It's too bad," said Clark philosophically. "I don't mean the wedding--reckon that's all
right, though I don't guess Nancy cared a darn about him. But it's a crime for a nice
girl like that to hurt her family that way."
The Jelly-bean let go the car and turned away. Again something was going on inside him,
some inexplicable but almost chemical change.
"Where you going?" asked Clark.
The Jelly-bean turned and looked dully back over his shoulder.
"Got to go," he muttered. "Been up too long; feelin' right sick."
"Oh."
The street was hot at three and hotter still at four, the April dust seeming to enmesh
the sun and give it forth again as a world-old joke forever played on an eternity of
afternoons. But at half past four a first layer of quiet fell and the shades lengthened
under the awnings and heavy foliaged trees. In this heat nothing mattered. All life was
weather, a waiting through the hot where events had no significance for the cool that
was soft and caressing like a woman's hand on a tired forehead. Down in Georgia there is
a feeling--perhaps inarticulate--that this is the greatest wisdom of the South--so after
a while the Jelly-bean turned into a pool-hall on Jackson Street where he was sure to
find a congenial crowd who would make all the old jokes--the ones he knew.
After dark on Saturday night one could stand on the first tee of the
golf-course and see the country-club windows as a yellow expanse over a very
black and wavy ocean. The waves of this ocean, so to speak, were the heads of
many curious caddies, a few of the more ingenious chauffeurs, the golf
professional's deaf sister--and there were usually several stray, diffident
waves who might have rolled inside had they so desired. This was the gallery.
The balcony was inside. It consisted of the circle of wicker chairs that
lined the wall of the combination clubroom and ballroom. At these
Saturday-night dances it was largely feminine; a great babel of middle-aged
ladies with sharp eyes and icy hearts behind lorgnettes and large bosoms. The
main function of the balcony was critical. It occasionally showed grudging
admiration, but never approval, for it is well known among ladies over
thirty-five that when the younger set dance in the summer-time it is with the
very worst intentions in the world, and if they are not bombarded with stony
eyes stray couples will dance weird barbaric interludes in the corners, and
the more popular, more dangerous, girls will sometimes be kissed in the parked
limousines of unsuspecting dowagers.
But, after all, this critical circle
is not close enough to the stage to see the actors' faces and catch the
subtler byplay. It can only frown and lean, ask questions and make
satisfactory deductions from its set of postulates, such as the one which
states that every young man with a large income leads the life of a hunted
partridge. It never really appreciates the drama of the shifting, semicruel
world of adolescence. No; boxes, orchestra-circle, principals, and chorus are
represented by the medley of faces and voices that sway to the plaintive
African rhythm of Dyer's dance orchestra.
From sixteen-year-old Otis
Ormonde, who has two more years at Hill School, to G. Reece Stoddard, over
whose bureau at home hangs a Harvard law diploma; from little Madeleine Hogue,
whose hair still feels strange and uncomfortable on top of her head, to Bessie
MacRae, who has been the life of the party a little too long--more than ten
years--the medley is not only the centre of the stage but contains the only
people capable of getting an un-obstructed view of it.
With a flourish and
a bang the music stops. The couples exchange artificial, effortless smiles,
facetiously repeat "la-de-da-da dum-dum," and then the
clatter of young feminine voices soars over the burst of clapping.
A few disappointed stags caught in midfloor as they had been about to cut in
subsided listlessly back to the walls, because this was not like the riotous
Christmas dances--these summer hops were considered just pleasantly warm and
exciting, where even the younger marrieds rose and performed ancient waltzes
and terrifying fox trots to the tolerant amusement of their younger brothers
and sisters.
Warren McIntyre, who casually attended Yale, being one of the unfortunate
stags, felt in his dinner-coat pocket for a cigarette and strolled out onto
the wide, semidark veranda, where couples were scattered at tables, filling
the lantern-hung night with vague words and hazy laughter. He nodded here and
there at the less absorbed and as he passed each couple some half-forgotten
fragment of a story played in his mind, for it was not a large city and every
one was Who's Who to every one else's past. There, for example, were Jim
Strain and Ethel Demorest, who had been privately engaged for three years.
Every one knew that as soon as Jim managed to hold a job for more than two
months she would marry him. Yet how bored they both looked, and how wearily
Ethel regarded Jim sometimes, as if she wondered why she had trained the vines
of her affection on such a wind-shaken poplar.
Warren was nineteen and rather pitying with those of his friends who hadn't
gone East to college. But, like most boys, he bragged tremendously about the
girls of his city when he was away from it. There was Genevieve Ormonde, who
regularly made the rounds of dances, house-parties, and football games at
Princeton, Yale, Williams, and Cornell; there was black-eyed Roberta Dillon,
who was quite as famous to her own generation as Hiram Johnson or Ty Cobb;
and, of course, there was Marjorie Harvey, who besides having a fairylike face
and a dazzling, bewildering tongue was already justly celebrated for having
turned five cart-wheels in succession during the last pump-and-slipper dance
at New Haven.
Warren, who had grown up across the street from Marjorie, had long been "crazy
about her." Sometimes she seemed to reciprocate his feeling with a faint
gratitude, but she had tried him by her infallible test and informed him
gravely that she did not love him. Her test was that when she was away from
him she forgot him and had affairs with other boys. Warren found this
discouraging, especially as Marjorie had been making little trips all summer,
and for the first two or three days after each arrival home he saw great heaps
of mail on the Harveys' hall table addressed to her in various masculine
handwritings. To make matters worse, all during the month of August she had
been visited by her cousin Bernice from Eau Claire, and it seemed impossible
to see her alone. It was always necessary to hunt round and find some one to
take care of Bernice. As August waned this was becoming more and more
difficult.
Much as Warren worshipped Marjorie, he had to admit that Cousin Bernice was
sorta dopeless. She was pretty, with dark hair and high color, but she was no
fun on a party. Every Saturday night he danced a long arduous duty dance with
her to please Marjorie, but he had never been anything but bored in her
company.
"Warren"--a soft voice at his elbow broke in upon his thoughts, and he turned
to see Marjorie, flushed and radiant as usual. She laid a hand on his shoulder
and a glow settled almost imperceptibly over him.
"Warren," she whispered, "do something for me--dance with Bernice. She's been
stuck with little Otis Ormonde for almost an hour."
Warren's glow faded.
"Why--sure," he answered half-heartedly.
"You don't mind, do you? I'll see that you don't get stuck."
"'Sall right."
Marjorie smiled--that smile that was thanks enough.
"You're an angel, and I'm obliged loads."
With a sigh the angel glanced round the veranda, but Bernice and Otis were not
in sight. He wandered back inside, and there in front of the women's
dressing-room he found Otis in the centre of a group of young men who were
convulsed with laughter. Otis was brandishing a piece of timber he had picked
up, and discoursing volubly.
"She's gone in to fix her hair," he announced wildly. "I'm waiting to dance
another hour with her."
Their laughter was renewed.
"Why don't some of you cut in?" cried Otis resentfully. "She likes more
variety."
"Why, Otis," suggested a friend, "you've just barely got used to her."
"Why the two-by-four, Otis?" inquired Warren, smiling.
"The two-by-four? Oh, this? This is a club. When she comes out I'll hit her on
the head and knock her in again."
Warren collapsed on a settee and howled with glee.
"Never mind, Otis," he articulated finally. "I'm relieving you this time."
Otis simulated a sudden fainting attack and handed the stick to Warren.
"If you need it, old man," he said hoarsely.
No matter how beautiful or brilliant a girl may be, the reputation of not
being frequently cut in on makes her position at a dance unfortunate. Perhaps
boys prefer her company to that of the butterflies with whom they dance a
dozen times an evening, but youth in this jazz-nourished generation is
temperamentally restless, and the idea of fox-trotting more than one full fox
trot with the same girl is distasteful, not to say odious. When it comes to
several dances and the intermissions between she can be quite sure that a
young man, once relieved, will never tread on her wayward toes again.
Warren danced the next full dance with Bernice, and finally, thankful for the
intermission, he led her to a table on the veranda. There was a moment's
silence while she did unimpressive things with her fan.
"It's hotter here than in Eau Claire," she said.
Warren stifled a sigh and nodded. It might be for all he knew or cared. He
wondered idly whether she was a poor conversationalist because she got no
attention or got no attention because she was a poor conversationalist.
"You going to be here much longer?" he asked, and then turned rather red. She
might suspect his reasons for asking.
"Another week," she answered, and stared at him as if to lunge at his next
remark when it left his lips.
Warren fidgeted. Then with a sudden charitable impulse he decided to try part
of his line on her. He turned and looked at her eyes.
"You've got an awfully kissable mouth," he began quietly.
This was a remark that he sometimes made to girls at college proms when they
were talking in just such half dark as this. Bernice distinctly jumped. She
turned an ungraceful red and became clumsy with her fan. No one had ever made
such a remark to her before.
"Fresh!"--the word had slipped out before she realized it, and she bit her
lip. Too late she decided to be amused, and offered him a flustered smile.
Warren was annoyed. Though not accustomed to have that remark taken seriously,
still it usually provoked a laugh or a paragraph of sentimental banter. And he
hated to be called fresh, except in a joking way. His charitable impulse died
and he switched the topic.
"Jim Strain and Ethel Demorest sitting out as usual," he commented.
This was more in Bernice's line, but a faint regret mingled with her relief as
the subject changed. Men did not talk to her about kissable mouths, but she
knew that they talked in some such way to other girls.
"Oh, yes," she said, and laughed. "I hear they've been mooning round for years
without a red penny.
Isn't it silly?"
Warren's disgust increased. Jim Strain was a close friend of his brother's,
and anyway he considered it bad form to sneer at people for not having money.
But Bernice had had no intention of sneering. She was merely nervous.
II
When Marjorie and Bernice reached home at half after midnight they
said good night at the top of the stairs. Though cousins, they were not
intimates. As a matter of fact Marjorie had no female intimates--she
considered girls stupid. Bernice on the contrary all through this
parent-arranged visit had rather longed to exchange those confidences flavored
with giggles and tears that she considered an indispensable factor in all
feminine intercourse. But in this respect she found Marjorie rather cold; felt
somehow the same difficulty in talking to her that she had in talking to men.
Marjorie never giggled, was never frightened, seldom embarrassed, and in fact
had very few of the qualities which Bernice considered appropriately and
blessedly feminine.
As Bernice busied herself with tooth-brush and paste this night she wondered
for the hundredth time why she never had any attention when she was away from
home. That her family were the wealthiest in Eau Claire; that her mother
entertained tremendously, gave little dinners for her daughter before all
dances and bought her a car of her own to drive round in, never occurred to
her as factors in her home-town social success. Like most girls she had been
brought up on the warm milk prepared by Annie Fellows Johnston and on novels
in which the female was beloved because of certain mysterious womanly
qualities. always mentioned but never displayed.
Bernice felt a vague pain that she was not at present engaged in being
popular. She did not know that had it not been for Marjorie's campaigning she
would have danced the entire evening with one man; but she knew that even in
Eau Claire other girls with less position and less pulchritude were given a
much bigger rush. She attributed this to something subtly unscrupulous in
those girls. It had never worried her, and if it had her mother would have
assured her that the other girls cheapened themselves and that men really
respected girls like Bernice.
She turned out the light in her bathroom, and on an impulse decided to go in
and chat for a moment with her aunt Josephine, whose light was still on. Her
soft slippers bore her noiselessly down the carpeted hall, but hearing voices
inside she stopped near the partly opened door. Then she caught her own name,
and without any definite intention of eavesdropping lingered--and the thread
of the conversation going on inside pierced her consciousness sharply as if it
had been drawn through with a needle.
"She's absolutely hopeless!" It was Marjorie's voice. "Oh, I know what you're
going to say! So many people have told you how pretty and sweet she is, and
how she can cook! What of it? She has a bum time. Men don't like her."
"What's a little cheap popularity?"
Mrs. Harvey sounded annoyed.
"It's everything when you're eighteen," said Marjorie emphatically. "I've done
my best. I've been polite and I've made men dance with her, but they just
won't stand being bored. When I think of that gorgeous coloring wasted on such
a ninny, and think what Martha Carey could do with it--oh!"
"There's no courtesy these days."
Mrs. Harvey's voice implied that modern situations were too much for her. When
she was a girl all young ladies who belonged to nice families had glorious
times.
"Well," said Marjorie, "no girl can permanently bolster up a lame-duck
visitor, because these days it's every girl for herself. I've even tried to
drop her hints about clothes and things, and she's been furious--given me the
funniest looks. She's sensitive enough to know she's not getting away with
much, but I'll bet she consoles herself by thinking that she's very virtuous
and that I'm too gay and fickle and will come to a bad end. All unpopular
girls think that way. Sour grapes! Sarah Hopkins refers to Genevieve and
Roberta and me as gardenia girls! I'll bet she'd give ten years of her life
and her European education to be a gardenia girl and have three or four men in
love with her and be cut in on every few feet at dances."
"It seems to me," interrupted Mrs. Harvey rather wearily, "that you ought to
be able to do something for Bernice. I know she's not very vivacious."
Marjorie groaned.
"Vivacious! Good grief! I've never heard her say anything to a boy except that
it's hot or the floor's crowded or that she's going to school in New York next
year. Sometimes she asks them what kind of car they have and tells them the
kind she has. Thrilling!"
There was a short silence, and then Mrs. Harvey took up her refrain:
"All I know is that other girls not half so sweet and attractive get partners.
Martha Carey, for instance, is stout and loud, and her mother is distinctly
common. Roberta Dillon is so thin this year that she looks as though Arizona
were the place for her. She's dancing herself to death."
"But, mother," objected Marjorie impatiently, "Martha is cheerful and awfully
witty and an awfully slick girl, and Roberta's a marvellous dancer. She's been
popular for ages!"
Mrs. Harvey yawned.
"I think it's that crazy Indian blood in Bernice," continued Marjorie. "Maybe
she's a reversion to type. Indian women all just sat round and never said
anything."
"Go to bed, you silly child," laughed Mrs. Harvey. "I wouldn't have told you
that if I'd thought you were going to remember it. And I think most of your
ideas are perfectly idiotic," she finished sleepily.
There was another silence, while Marjorie considered whether or not convincing
her mother was worth the trouble. People over forty can seldom be permanently
convinced of anything. At eighteen our convictions are hills from which we
look; at forty-five they are caves in which we hide.
Having decided this, Marjorie said good night. When she came out into the hall
it was quite empty.
III
While Marjorie was breakfasting late next day Bernice came into the room with
a rather formal good morning, sat down opposite, stared intently over and
slightly moistened her lips.
"What's on your mind?" inquired Marjorie, rather puzzled.
Bernice paused before she threw her hand-grenade.
"I heard what you said about me to your mother last night."
Marjorie was startled, but she showed only a faintly heightened color and her
voice was quite even when she spoke.
"Where were you?"
"In the hall. I didn't mean to listen--at first."
After an involuntary look of contempt Marjorie dropped her eyes and became
very interested in balancing a stray corn-flake on her finger.
"I guess I'd better go back to Eau Claire--if I'm such a nuisance." Bernice's
lower lip was trembling violently and she continued on a wavering note: "I've
tried to be nice, and--and I've been first neglected and then insulted. No one
ever visited me and got such treatment."
Marjorie was silent.
"But I'm in the way, I see. I'm a drag on you. Your friends don't like me."
She paused, and then remembered another one of her grievances. "Of course I
was furious last week when you tried to hint to me that that dress was
unbecoming. Don't you think I know how to dress myself?"
"No," murmured Marjorie less than half-aloud.
"What?"
"I didn't hint anything," said Marjorie succinctly. "I said, as I remember,
that it was better to wear a becoming dress three times straight than to
alternate it with two frights."
"Do you think that was a very nice thing to say?"
"I wasn't trying to be nice." Then after a pause: "When do you want to go?"
Bernice drew in her breath sharply.
"Oh!" It was a little half-cry.
Marjorie looked up in surprise.
"Didn't you say you were going?"
"Yes, but----"
"Oh, you were only bluffing!"
They stared at each other across the breakfast-table for a moment. Misty waves
were passing before Bernice's eyes, while Marjorie's face wore that rather
hard expression that she used when slightly intoxicated undergraduates were
making love to her.
"So you were bluffing," she repeated as if it were what she might have
expected.
Bernice admitted it by bursting into tears. Marjorie's eyes showed boredom.
"You're my cousin," sobbed Bernice. "I'm v-v-visiting you. I was to stay a
month, and if I go home my mother will know and she'll wah-wonder----"
Marjorie waited until the shower of broken words collapsed into little
sniffles.
"I'll give you my month's allowance," she said coldly, "and you can spend this
last week anywhere you want. There's a very nice hotel----"
Bernice's sobs rose to a flute note, and rising of a sudden she fled from the
room.
An hour later, while Marjorie was in the library absorbed in composing one of
those non-committal, marvellously elusive letters that only a young girl can
write, Bernice reappeared, very red-eyed and consciously calm. She cast no
glance at Marjorie but took a book at random from the shelf and sat down as if
to read. Marjorie seemed absorbed in her letter and continued writing. When
the clock showed noon Bernice closed her book with a snap.
"I suppose I'd better get my railroad ticket."
This was not the beginning of the speech she had rehearsed up-stairs, but as
Marjorie was not getting her cues--wasn't urging her to be reasonable; it's
all a mistake--it was the best opening she could muster.
"Just wait till I finish this letter," said Marjorie without looking round. "I
want to get it off in the next mail."
After another minute, during which her pen scratched busily, she turned round
and relaxed with an air of "at your service." Again Bernice had to speak.
"Do you want me to go home?"
"Well," said Marjorie, considering, "I suppose if you're not having a good
time you'd better go. No use being miserable."
"Don't you think common kindness----"
"Oh, please don't quote `Little Women'!" cried Marjorie impatiently. "That's
out of style."
"You think so?"
"Heavens, yes! What modern girl could live like those inane females?"
"They were the models for our mothers."
Marjorie laughed.
"Yes, they were--not! Besides, our mothers were all very well in their way,
but they know very little about their daughters' problems."
Bernice drew herself up.
"Please don't talk about my mother."
Marjorie laughed.
"I don't think I mentioned her."
Bernice felt that she was being led away from her subject.
"Do you think you've treated me very well?"
"I've done my best. You're rather hard material to work with."
The lids of Bernice's eyes reddened.
"I think you're hard and selfish, and you haven't a feminine quality in
you."
"Oh, my Lord!" cried Marjorie in desperation. "You little nut! Girls like you
are responsible for all the tiresome colorless marriages; all those ghastly
inefficiencies that pass as feminine qualities. What a blow it must be when a
man with imagination marries the beautiful bundle of clothes that he's been
building ideals round, and finds that she's just a weak, whining, cowardly
mass of affectations!"
Bernice's mouth had slipped half open.
"The womanly woman!" continued Marjorie. "Her whole early life is occupied in
whining criticisms of girls like me who really do have a good time."
Bernice's jaw descended farther as Marjorie's voice rose.
"There's some excuse for an ugly girl whining. If I'd been irretrievably ugly
I'd never have forgiven my parents for bringing me into the world. But you're
starting life without any handicap--" Marjorie's little fist clinched. "If you
expect me to weep with you you'll be disappointed. Go or stay, just as you
like." And picking up her letters she left the room.
Bernice claimed a headache and failed to appear at luncheon. They had a
matinee date for the afternoon, but the headache persisting, Marjorie
made explanation to a not very downcast boy. But when she returned late in the
afternoon she found Bernice with a strangely set face waiting for her in her
bedroom.
"I've decided," began Bernice without preliminaries, "that maybe you're right
about things--possibly not. But if you'll tell me why your friends
aren't--aren't interested in me I'll see if I can do what you want me to."
Marjorie was at the mirror shaking down her hair.
"Do you mean it?"
"Yes."
"Without reservations? Will you do exactly what I say?"
"Well, I----"
"Well nothing! Will you do exactly as I say?"
"If they're sensible things."
"They're not! You're no case for sensible things."
" Are you going to make--to recommend----"
"Yes, everything. If I tell you to take boxing-
lessons you'll have to do it. Write home and tell your mother you're going to
stay another two weeks."
"If you'll tell me----"
"All right--I'll just give you a few examples now. First, you have no ease of
manner. Why? Because you're never sure about your personal appearance. When a
girl feels that she's perfectly groomed and dressed she can forget that part
of her. That's charm. The more parts of yourself you can afford to forget the
more charm you have."
"Don't I look all right?"
"No; for instance, you never take care of your eyebrows. They're black and
lustrous, but by leaving them straggly they're a blemish. They'd be beautiful
if you'd take care of them in one-tenth the time you take doing nothing.
You're going to brush them so that they'll grow straight."
Bernice raised the brows in question.
"Do you mean to say that men notice eyebrows?"
"Yes--subconsciously. And when you go home you ought to have your teeth
straightened a little. It's almost imperceptible, still----"
"But I thought," interrupted Bernice in bewilderment, "that you despised
little dainty feminine things like that."
"I hate dainty minds," answered Marjorie. "But a girl has to be dainty in
person. If she looks like a million dollars she can talk about Russia,
ping-pong, or the League of Nations and get away with it."
"What else?"
"Oh, I'm just beginning! There's your dancing."
"Don't I dance all right?"
"No, you don't--you lean on a man; yes, you do--ever so slightly. I noticed it
when we were dancing together yesterday. And you dance standing up straight
instead of bending over a little. Probably some old lady on the side-line once
told you that you looked so dignified that way. But except with a very small
girl it's much harder on the man, and he's the one that counts."
"Go on." Bernice's brain was reeling.
"Well, you've got to learn to be nice to men who are sad birds. You look as if
you'd been insulted whenever you're thrown with any except the most popular
boys. Why, Bernice, I'm cut in on every few feet--and who does most of it?
Why, those very sad birds. No girl can afford to neglect them. They're the big
part of any crowd. Young boys too shy to talk are the very best conversational
practice. Clumsy boys are the best dancing practice. If you can follow them
and yet look graceful you can follow a baby tank across a barb-wire
sky-scraper."
Bernice sighed profoundly, but Marjorie was not through.
"If you go to a dance and really amuse, say, three sad birds that dance with
you; if you talk so well to them that they forget they're stuck with you,
you've done something. They'll come back next time, and gradually so many sad
birds will dance with you that the attractive boys will see there's no danger
of being stuck--then they'll dance with you."
"Yes," agreed Bernice faintly. "I think I begin to see."
"And finally," concluded Marjorie, "poise and charm will just come. You'll
wake up some morning knowing you've attained it, and men will know it too."
Bernice rose.
"It's been awfully kind of you--but nobody's ever talked to me like this
before, and I feel sort of startled."
Marjorie made no answer but gazed pensively at her own image in the mirror.
"You're a peach to help me," continued Bernice.
Still Marjorie did not answer, and Bernice thought she had seemed too
grateful.
"I know you don't like sentiment," she said timidly.
Marjorie turned to her quickly.
"Oh, I wasn't thinking about that. I was considering whether we hadn't better
bob your hair."
Bernice collapsed backward upon the bed.
IV
On the following Wednesday evening there was a dinner-dance at the country
club. When the guests strolled in Bernice found her place-card with a slight
feeling of irritation. Though at her right sat G. Reece Stoddard, a most
desirable and distinguished young bachelor, the all-important left held only
Charley Paulson. Charley lacked height, beauty, and social shrewdness, and in
her new enlightenment Bernice decided that his only qualification to be her
partner was that he had never been stuck with her. But this feeling of
irritation left with the last of the soup-plates, and Marjorie's specific
instruction came to her. Swallowing her pride she turned to Charley Paulson
and plunged.
"Do you think I ought to bob my hair, Mr. Charley Paulson?"
Charley looked up in surprise.
"Why?"
"Because I'm considering it. It's such a sure and easy way of attracting
attention."
Charley smiled pleasantly. He could not know this had been rehearsed. He
replied that he didn't know much about bobbed hair. But Bernice was there to
tell him.
"I want to be a society vampire, you see," she announced coolly, and went on
to inform him that bobbed hair was the necessary prelude. She added that she
wanted to ask his advice, because she had heard he was so critical about
girls.
Charley, who knew as much about the psychology of women as he did of the
mental states of Buddhist contemplatives, felt vaguely flattered.
"So I've decided," she continued, her voice rising slightly, "that early next
week I'm going down to the Sevier Hotel barber-shop, sit in the first chair,
and get my hair bobbed." She faltered, noticing that the people near her had
paused in their conversation and were listening; but after a confused second
Marjorie's coaching told, and she finished her paragraph to the vicinity at
large. "Of course I'm charging admission, but if you'll all come down and
encourage me I'll issue passes for the inside seats."
There was a ripple of appreciative laughter, and under cover of it G. Reece
Stoddard leaned over quickly and said close to her ear: "I'll take a box right
now."
She met his eyes and smiled as if he had said something surpassingly
brilliant.
"Do you believe in bobbed hair?" asked G. Reece in the same undertone.
"I think it's unmoral," affirmed Bernice gravely. "But, of course, you've
either got to amuse people or feed 'em or shock 'em." Marjorie had culled this
from Oscar Wilde. It was greeted with a ripple of laughter from the men and a
series of quick, intent looks from the girls. And then as though she had said
nothing of wit or moment Bernice turned again to Charley and spoke
confidentially in his ear.
"I want to ask you your opinion of several people. I imagine you're a
wonderful judge of character."
Charley thrilled faintly--paid her a subtle compliment by overturning her
water.
Two hours later, while Warren McIntyre was standing passively in the stag line
abstractedly watching the dancers and wondering whither and with whom Marjorie
had disappeared, an unrelated perception began to creep slowly upon him--a
perception that Bernice, cousin to Marjorie, had been cut in on several times
in the past five minutes. He closed his eyes, opened them and looked again.
Several minutes back she had been dancing with a visiting boy, a matter easily
accounted for; a visiting boy would know no better. But now she was dancing
with some one else, and there was Charley Paulson headed for her with
enthusiastic determination in his eye. Funny--Charley seldom danced with more
than three girls an evening.
Warren was distinctly surprised when--the exchange having been effected--the
man relieved proved to be none other than G. Reece Stoddard himself. And G.
Reece seemed not at all jubilant at being relieved. Next time Bernice danced
near, Warren regarded her intently. Yes, she was pretty, distinctly pretty;
and to-night her face seemed really vivacious. She had that look that no
woman, however histrionically proficient, can successfully counterfeit--she
looked as if she were having a good time. He liked the way she had her hair
arranged, wondered if it was brilliantine that made it glisten so. And that
dress was becoming--a dark red that set off her shadowy eyes and high
coloring. He remembered that he had thought her pretty when she first came to
town, before he had realized that she was dull. Too bad she was dull--dull
girls unbearable--certainly pretty though.
His thoughts zigzagged back to Marjorie. This disappearance would be like
other disappearances. When she reappeared he would demand where she had
been--would be told emphatically that it was none of his business. What a pity
she was so sure of him! She basked in the knowledge that no other girl in town
interested him; she defied him to fall in love with Genevieve or Roberta.
Warren sighed. The way to Marjorie's affections was a labyrinth indeed. He
looked up. Bernice was again dancing with the visiting boy. Half unconsciously
he took a step out from the stag line in her direction, and hesitated. Then he
said to himself that it was charity. He walked toward her --collided suddenly
with G. Reece Stoddard.
"Pardon me," said Warren.
But G. Reece had not stopped to apologize. He had again cut in on Bernice.
That night at one o'clock Marjorie, with one hand on the electric-light switch
in the hall, turned to take a last look at Bernice's sparkling eyes.
"So it worked?"
"Oh, Marjorie, yes!" cried Bernice.
"I saw you were having a gay time."
"I did! The only trouble was that about midnight I ran short of talk. I had to
repeat myself--with different men of course. I hope they won't compare
notes."
"Men don't," said Marjorie, yawning, "and it wouldn't matter if they
did--they'd think you were even trickier."
She snapped out the light, and as they started up the stairs Bernice grasped
the banister thankfully. For the first time in her life she had been danced
tired.
"You see," said Marjorie at the top of the stairs, "one man sees another man
cut in and he thinks there must be something there. Well, we'll fix up some
new stuff to-morrow. Good night."
"Good night."
As Bernice took down her hair she passed the evening before her in review. She
had followed instructions exactly. Even when Charley Paulson cut in for the
eighth time she had simulated delight and had apparently been both interested
and flattered. She had not talked about the weather or Eau Claire or
automobiles or her school, but had confined her conversation to me, you, and
us.
But a few minutes before she fell asleep a rebellious thought was churning
drowsily in her brain--after all, it was she who had done it. Marjorie, to be
sure, had given her her conversation, but then Marjorie got much of her
conversation out of things she read. Bernice had bought the red dress, though
she had never valued it highly before Marjorie dug it out of her trunk--and
her own voice had said the words, her own lips had smiled, her own feet had
danced. Marjorie nice girl--vain, though--nice evening--nice boys--like
Warren--Warren--Warren--what's-his-name--Warren----
She fell asleep.
V
To Bernice the next week was a revelation. With the feeling that people really
enjoyed looking at her and listening to her came the foundation of
self-confidence. Of course there were numerous mistakes at first. She did not
know, for instance, that Draycott Deyo was studying for the ministry; she was
unaware that he had cut in on her because he thought she was a quiet, reserved
girl. Had she known these things she would not have treated him to the line
which began "Hello, Shell Shock!" and continued with the bathtub story--"It
takes a frightful lot of energy to fix my hair in the summer--there's so much
of it--so I always fix it first and powder my face and put on my hat; then I
get into the bathtub, and dress afterward. Don't you think that's the best
plan?"
Though Draycott Deyo was in the throes of difficulties concerning baptism by
immersion and might possibly have seen a connection, it must be admitted that
he did not. He considered feminine bathing an immoral subject, and gave her
some of his ideas on the depravity of modern society.
But to offset that unfortunate occurrence Bernice had several signal successes
to her credit. Little Otis Ormonde pleaded off from a trip East and elected
instead to follow her with a puppy-like devotion, to the amusement of his
crowd and to the irritation of G. Reece Stoddard, several of whose afternoon
calls Otis completely ruined by the disgusting tenderness of the glances he
bent on Bernice. He even told her the story of the two-by-four and the
dressing-room to show her how frightfully mistaken he and every one else had
been in their first judgment of her. Bernice laughed off that incident with a
slight sinking sensation.
Of all Bernice's conversation perhaps the best known and most universally
approved was the line about the bobbing of her hair.
"Oh, Bernice, when you goin' to get the hair bobbed?"
"Day after to-morrow maybe," she would reply, laughing. "Will you come and see
me? Because I'm counting on you, you know."
"Will we? You know! But you better hurry up."
Bernice, whose tonsorial intentions were strictly dishonorable, would laugh
again.
"Pretty soon now. You'd be surprised."
But perhaps the most significant symbol of her success was the gray car of the
hypercritical Warren McIntyre, parked daily in front of the Harvey house. At
first the parlor-maid was distinctly startled when he asked for Bernice
instead of Marjorie; after a week of it she told the cook that Miss Bernice
had gotta hold a Miss Marjorie's best fella.
And Miss Bernice had. Perhaps it began with Warren's desire to rouse jealousy
in Marjorie; perhaps it was the familiar though unrecognized strain of
Marjorie in Bernice's conversation; perhaps it was both of these and something
of sincere attraction besides. But somehow the collective mind of the younger
set knew within a week that Marjorie's most reliable beau had made an amazing
face-about and was giving an indisputable rush to Marjorie's guest. The
question of the moment was how Marjorie would take it. Warren called Bernice
on the 'phone twice a day, sent her notes, and they were frequently seen
together in his roadster, obviously engrossed in one of those tense, significant conversations as to whether or not he was sincere.
Marjorie on being twitted only laughed. She said she was mighty glad that
Warren had at last found some one who appreciated him. So the younger set
laughed, too, and guessed that Marjorie didn't care and let it go at that.
One afternoon when there were only three days left of her visit Bernice was
waiting in the hall for Warren, with whom she was going to a bridge party. She
was in rather a blissful mood, and when Marjorie--also bound for the
party--appeared beside her and began casually to adjust her hat in the mirror,
Bernice was utterly unprepared for anything in the nature of a clash. Marjorie
did her work very coldly and succinctly in three sentences.
"You may as well get Warren out of your head," she said coldly.
"What?" Bernice was utterly astounded.
"You may as well stop making a fool of yourself over Warren McIntyre. He
doesn't care a snap of his fingers about you."
For a tense moment they regarded each other--Marjorie scornful, aloof; Bernice
astounded, half-angry, half-afraid. Then two cars drove up in front of the
house and there was a riotous honking. Both of them gasped faintly, turned,
and side by side hurried out.
All through the bridge party Bernice strove in vain to master a rising
uneasiness. She had offended Marjorie, the sphinx of sphinxes. With the most
wholesome and innocent intentions in the world she had stolen Marjorie's
property. She felt suddenly and horribly guilty. After the bridge game, when
they sat in an informal circle and the conversation became general, the storm
gradually broke. Little Otis Ormonde inadvertently precipitated it.
"When you going back to kindergarten, Otis?" some one had asked.
"Me? Day Bernice gets her hair bobbed."
"Then your education's over," said Marjorie quickly. "That's only a bluff of
hers. I should think you'd have realized."
"That a fact?" demanded Otis, giving Bernice a reproachful glance.
Bernice's ears burned as she tried to think up an effectual come-back. In the
face of this direct attack her imagination was paralyzed.
"There's a lot of bluffs in the world," continued Marjorie quite pleasantly.
"I should think you'd be young enough to know that, Otis."
"Well," said Otis, "maybe so. But gee! With a line like Bernice's--"
"Really?" yawned Marjorie. "What's her latest bon mot?"
No one seemed to know. In fact, Bernice, having trifled with her muse's beau,
had said nothing memorable of late.
"Was that really all a line?" asked Roberta curiously.
Bernice hesitated. She felt that wit in some form
was demanded of her, but under her cousin's suddenly frigid eyes she was
completely incapacitated.
"I don't know," she stalled.
"Splush!" said Marjorie. "Admit it!"
Bernice saw that Warren's eyes had left a ukulele he had been tinkering with
and were fixed on her questioningly.
"Oh, I don't know!" she repeated steadily. Her cheeks were glowing.
"Splush!" remarked Marjorie again.
"Come through, Bernice," urged Otis. "Tell her where to get off."
Bernice looked round again--she seemed unable to get away from Warren's
eyes.
"I like bobbed hair," she said hurriedly, as if he had asked her a question,
"and I intend to bob mine."
"When?" demanded Marjorie.
"Any time."
"No time like the present," suggested Roberta.
Otis jumped to his feet.
"Good stuff!" he cried. "We'll have a summer bobbing party. Sevier Hotel
barber-shop, I think you said."
In an instant all were on their feet. Bernice's heart throbbed violently.
"What?" she gasped.
Out of the group came Marjorie's voice, very clear and contemptuous.
"Don't worry--she'll back out!"
"Come on, Bernice!" cried Otis, starting toward the door.
Four eyes--Warren's and Marjorie's--stared at her, challenged her, defied her.
For another second she wavered wildly.
"All right," she said swiftly, "I don't care if I do."
An eternity of minutes later, riding down-town through the late afternoon
beside Warren, the others following in Roberta's car close behind, Bernice had
all the sensations of Marie Antoinette bound for the guillotine in a tumbrel.
Vaguely she wondered why she did not cry out that it was all a mistake. It was
all she could do to keep from clutching her hair with both hands to protect it
from the suddenly hostile world. Yet she did neither. Even the thought of her
mother was no deterrent now. This was the test supreme of her sportsmanship;
her right to walk unchallenged in the starry heaven of popular girls.
Warren was moodily silent, and when they came to the hotel he drew up at the
curb and nodded to Bernice to precede him out. Roberta's car emptied a
laughing crowd into the shop, which presented two bold plate-glass windows to
the street.
Bernice stood on the curb and looked at the sign, Sevier Barber-Shop. It was a
guillotine indeed, and the hangman was the first barber, who, attired in a
white coat and smoking a cigarette, leaned nonchalantly against the first
chair. He must have heard of her; he must have been waiting all week, smoking
eternal cigarettes beside that portentous, too-often-mentioned first chair.
Would they blindfold her? No, but they would tie a white cloth round her neck
lest any of her blood--nonsense--hair--should get on her clothes.
"All right, Bernice," said Warren quickly.
With her chin in the air she crossed the sidewalk, pushed open the swinging
screen-door, and giving not a glance to the uproarious, riotous row that
occupied the waiting bench, went up to the first barber.
"I want you to bob my hair."
The first barber's mouth slid somewhat open. His cigarette dropped to the
floor.
"Huh?"
"My hair--bob it!"
Refusing further preliminaries, Bernice took her seat on high. A man in the
chair next to her turned on his side and gave her a glance, half lather, half
amazement. One barber started and spoiled little Willy Schuneman's monthly
haircut. Mr. O'Reilly in the last chair grunted and swore musically in ancient
Gaelic as a razor bit into his cheek. Two bootblacks became wide-eyed and
rushed for her feet. No, Bernice didn't care for a shine.
Outside a passer-by stopped and stared; a couple joined him; half a dozen
small boys' noses sprang into life, flattened against the glass; and snatches
of conversation borne on the summer breeze drifted in through the
screen-door.
"Lookada long hair on a kid!"
"Where'd yuh get 'at stuff? 'At's a bearded lady he just finished shavin'."
But Bernice saw nothing, heard nothing. Her only living sense told her that
this man in the white coat had removed one tortoise-shell comb and then
another; that his fingers were fumbling clumsily with unfamiliar hairpins;
that this hair, this wonderful hair of hers, was going--she would never again
feel its long voluptuous pull as it hung in a dark-brown glory down her back.
For a second she was near breaking down, and then the picture before her swam
mechanically into her vision--Marjorie's mouth curling in a faint ironic smile
as if to say:
"Give up and get down! You tried to buck me and I called your bluff. You see
you haven't got a prayer."
And some last energy rose up in Bernice, for she clinched her hands under the
white cloth, and there was a curious narrowing of her eyes that Marjorie
remarked on to some one long afterward.
Twenty minutes later the barber swung her round to face the mirror, and she
flinched at the full extent of the damage that had been wrought. Her hair was
not curly, and now it lay in lank lifeless blocks on both sides of her
suddenly pale face. It was ugly as sin--she had known it would be ugly as sin.
Her face's chief charm had been a Madonna-like simplicity. Now that was gone
and she was--well, frightfully mediocre--not stagy; only ridiculous, like a
Greenwich Villager who had left her spectacles at home.
As she climbed down from the chair she tried to smile--failed miserably. She
saw two of the girls exchange glances; noticed Marjorie's mouth curved in
attenuated mockery--and that Warren's eyes were suddenly very cold.
"You see"--her words fell into an awkward pause--"I've done it."
"Yes, you've--done it," admitted Warren.
"Do you like it?"
There was a half-hearted "Sure" from two or three voices, another awkward
pause, and then Marjorie turned swiftly and with serpentlike intensity to
Warren.
"Would you mind running me down to the cleaners?" she asked. "I've simply got
to get a dress there before supper. Roberta's driving right home and she can
take the others."
Warren stared abstractedly at some infinite speck out the window. Then for an
instant his eyes rested coldly on Bernice before they turned to Marjorie.
"Be glad to," he said slowly.
VI
Bernice did not fully realize the outrageous trap that had been set for her
until she met her aunt's amazed glance just before dinner.
"Why, Bernice!"
"I've bobbed it, Aunt Josephine."
"Why, child!"
"Do you like it?"
"Why, Ber-nice!"
"I suppose I've shocked you."
"No, but what'll Mrs. Deyo think tomorrow night? Bernice, you should have
waited until after the Deyos' dance--you should have waited if you wanted to
do that."
"It was sudden, Aunt Josephine. Anyway, why does it matter to Mrs. Deyo
particularly?"
"Why, child," cried Mrs. Harvey, "in her paper on `The Foibles of the Younger
Generation' that she read at the last meeting of the Thursday Club she devoted
fifteen minutes to bobbed hair. It's her pet abomination. And the dance is for
you and Marjorie!"
"I'm sorry."
"Oh, Bernice, what'll your mother say? She'll think I let you do it."
"I'm sorry."
Dinner was an agony. She had made a hasty attempt with a curling-iron, and
burned her finger and much hair. She could see that her aunt was both worried
and grieved, and her uncle kept saying, "Well, I'll be darned!" over and over
in a hurt and faintly hostile tone. And Marjorie sat very quietly, intrenched
behind a faint smile, a faintly mocking smile.
Somehow she got through the evening. Three boys called; Marjorie disappeared
with one of them, and Bernice made a listless unsuccessful attempt to
entertain the two others--sighed thankfully as she climbed the stairs to her
room at half past ten. What a day!
When she had undressed for the night the door opened and Marjorie came in.
"Bernice," she said, "I'm awfully sorry about the Deyo dance. I'll give you my
word of honor I'd forgotten all about it."
"'Sall right," said Bernice shortly. Standing before the mirror she passed her
comb slowly through her short hair.
"I'll take you down-town to-morrow," continued Marjorie, "and the
hairdresser'll fix it so you'll look slick. I didn't imagine you'd go through
with it. I'm really mighty sorry."
"Oh, 'sall right!"
"Still it's your last night, so I suppose it won't matter much."
Then Bernice winced as Marjorie tossed her own hair over her shoulders and
began to twist it slowly into two long blond braids until in her cream-colored
negligée she looked like a delicate painting of some Saxon princess.
Fascinated, Bernice watched the braids grow. Heavy and luxurious they were,
moving under the supple fingers like restive snakes--and to Bernice remained
this relic and the curling-iron and a to-morrow full of eyes. She could see G.
Reece Stoddard, who liked her, assuming his Harvard manner and telling his
dinner partner that Bernice shouldn't have been allowed to go to the movies so
much; she could see Draycott Deyo exchanging glances with his mother and then
being conscientiously charitable to her. But then perhaps by to-morrow Mrs.
Deyo would have heard the news; would send round an icy little note requesting
that she fail to appear--and behind her back they would all laugh and know
that Marjorie had made a fool of her; that her chance at beauty had been
sacrificed to the jealous whim of a selfish girl. She sat down suddenly before
the mirror, biting the inside of her cheek.
"I like it," she said with an effort. "I think it'll be becoming."
Marjorie smiled.
"It looks all right. For heaven's sake, don't let it worry you!"
"I won't."
"Good night, Bernice."
But as the door closed something snapped within Bernice. She sprang
dynamically to her feet, clinching her hands, then swiftly and noiselessly
crossed over to her bed and from underneath it dragged out her suitcase. Into
it she tossed toilet articles and a change of clothing. Then she turned to her
trunk and quickly dumped in two drawerfuls of lingerie and summer dresses. She
moved quietly, but with deadly efficiency, and in three-quarters of an hour
her trunk was locked and strapped and she was fully dressed in a becoming new
travelling suit that Marjorie had helped her pick out.
Sitting down at her desk she wrote a short note to Mrs. Harvey, in which she
briefly outlined her reasons for going. She sealed it, addressed it, and laid
it on her pillow. She glanced at her watch. The train left at one, and she
knew that if she walked down to the Marborough Hotel two blocks away she could
easily get a taxicab.
Suddenly she drew in her breath sharply and an expression flashed into her
eyes that a practised character reader might have connected vaguely with the
set look she had worn in the barber's chair-- somehow a development of it. It
was quite a new look for Bernice and it carried consequences.
She went stealthily to the bureau, picked up an article that lay there, and
turning out all the lights stood quietly until her eyes became accustomed to
the darkness. Softly she pushed open the door to Marjorie's room. She heard
the quiet, even breathing of an untroubled conscience asleep.
She was by the bedside now, very deliberate and calm. She acted swiftly.
Bending over she found one of the braids of Marjorie's hair, followed it up
with her hand to the point nearest the head, and then holding it a little
slack so that the sleeper would feel no pull, she reached down with the shears
and severed it. With the pigtail in her hand she held her breath. Marjorie had
muttered something in her sleep. Bernice deftly amputated the other braid,
paused for an instant, and then flitted swiftly and silently back to her own
room.
Down-stairs she opened the big front door, closed it carefully behind her, and
feeling oddly happy and exuberant stepped off the porch into the moonlight,
swinging her heavy grip like a shopping-bag. After a minute's brisk walk she
discovered that her left hand still held the two blond braids. She laughed
unexpectedly--had to shut her mouth hard to keep from emitting an absolute
peal. She was passing Warren's house now, and on the impulse she set down her
baggage, and swinging the braids like pieces of rope flung them at the wooden
porch, where they landed with a slight thud. She laughed again, no longer
restraining herself.
"Huh!" she giggled wildly. "Scalp the selfish thing!"
Then picking up her suitcase she set off at a half-run down the moonlit
street.
The glazed eye of the tired reader resting for a second on the above
title will presume it to be merely metaphorical. Stories about the cup
and the lip and the bad penny and the new broom rarely have anything to
do with cups or lips or pennies or brooms. This story is the exception.
It has to do with a material, visible and large-as-life camel's back.
Starting from the neck we shall work toward the tail. I want you to meet
Mr. Perry Parkhurst, twenty-eight, lawyer, native of Toledo. Perry has
nice teeth, a Harvard diploma, parts his hair in the middle. You have
met him before--in Cleveland, Portland, St. Paul, Indianapolis, Kansas
City, and so forth. Baker Brothers, New York, pause on their semi-annual
trip through the West to clothe him; Montmorency & Co. dispatch a
young man post-haste every three months to see that he has the correct
number of little punctures on his shoes. He has a domestic roadster now,
will have a French roadster if he lives long enough, and doubtless a
Chinese tank if it comes into fashion. He looks like the advertisement
of the young man rubbing his sunset-colored chest with liniment and goes
East every other year to his class reunion.
I want you to meet his Love. Her name is Betty Medill, and she would
take well in the movies. Her father gives her three hundred a month to
dress on, and she has tawny eyes and hair and feather fans of five
colors. I shall also introduce her father, Cyrus Medill. Though he is to
all appearances flesh and blood, he is, strange to say, commonly known
in Toledo as the Aluminum Man. But when he sits in his club window with
two or three Iron Men, and the White Pine Man, and the Brass Man, they
look very much as you and I do, only more so, if you know what I
mean.
Now during the Christmas holidays of 1919 there took place in Toledo,
counting only the people with the italicized the, forty-one dinner
parties, sixteen dances, six luncheons, male and female, twelve teas,
four stag dinners, two weddings, and thirteen bridge parties. It was the
cumulative effect of all this that moved Perry Parkhurst on the
twenty-ninth day of December to a decision.
This Medill girl would marry him and she wouldn't marry him. She was
having such a good time that she hated to take such a definite step.
Meanwhile, their secret engagement had got so long that it seemed as if
any day it might break off of its own weight. A little man named
Warburton, who knew it all, persuaded Perry to superman her, to get a
marriage license and go up to the Medill house and tell her she'd have
to marry him at once or call it off forever. So he presented himself,
his heart, his license, and his ultimatum, and within five minutes they
were in the midst of a violent quarrel, a burst of sporadic open
fighting such as occurs near the end of all long wars and engagements.
It brought about one of those ghastly lapses in which two people who are
in love pull up sharp, look at each other coolly and think it's all been
a mistake. Afterward they usually kiss wholesomely and assure the other
person it was all their fault. Say it all was my fault! Say it was! I
want to hear you say it!
But while reconciliation was trembling in the air, while each was, in a
measure, stalling it off, so that they might the more voluptuously and
sentimentally enjoy it when it came, they were permanently interrupted
by a twenty-minute phone call for Betty from a garrulous aunt. At the
end of eighteen minutes Perry Parkhurst, urged on by pride and suspicion
and injured dignity, put on his long fur coat, picked up his light brown
soft hat, and stalked out the door.
"It's all over," he muttered brokenly as he tried to jam his car into
first. "It's all over--if I have to choke you for an hour, damn you!"
This last to the car, which had been standing some time and was quite
cold.
He drove downtown--that is, he got into a snow rut that led him
downtown. He sat slouched down very low in his seat, much too dispirited
to care where he went.
In front of the Clarendon Hotel he was hailed from the sidewalk by a bad
man named Baily, who had big teeth and lived at the hotel and had never
been in love.
"Perry," said the bad man softly when the roadster drew up beside him at
the curb, "I've got six quarts of the doggonedest still champagne you
ever tasted. A third of it's yours, Perry, if you'll come up-stairs and
help Martin Macy and me drink it."
"Baily," said Perry tensely, "I'll drink your champagne. I'll drink
every drop of it. I don't care if it kills me."
"Shut up, you nut!" said the bad man gently. "They don't put wood
alcohol in champagne. This is the stuff that proves the world is more
than six thousand years old. It's so ancient that the cork is petrified.
You have to pull it with a stone drill."
"Take me up-stairs," said Perry moodily. "If that cork sees my heart
it'll fall out from pure mortification."
The room up-stairs was full of those innocent hotel pictures of little
girls eating apples and sitting in swings and talking to dogs. The other
decorations were neckties and a pink man reading a pink paper devoted to
ladies in pink tights.
"When you have to go into the highways and byways----" said the pink
man, looking reproachfully at Baily and Perry.
"Hello, Martin Macy," said Perry shortly, "where's this stone-age
champagne?"
"What's the rush? This isn't an operation, understand. This is a
party."
Perry sat down dully and looked disapprovingly at all the neckties.
Baily leisurely opened the door of a wardrobe and brought out six
handsome bottles.
"Take off that darn fur coat!" said Martin Macy to Perry. "Or maybe
you'd like to have us open all the windows."
"Give me champagne," said Perry.
"Going to the Townsends' circus ball to-night?"
"Am not!"
"'Vited?"
"Uh-huh."
"Why not go?"
"Oh, I'm sick of parties," exclaimed Perry. "I'm sick of 'em. I've been
to so many that I'm sick of 'em."
"Maybe you're going to the Howard Tates' party?"
"No, I tell you; I'm sick of 'em."
"Well," said Macy consolingly, "the Tates' is just for college kids any
ways."
"I tell you----"
"I thought you'd be going to one of 'em anyways. I see by the papers you
haven't missed a one this Christmas."
"Hm," grunted Perry morosely.
He would never go to any more parties. Classical phrases played in his
mind--that side of his life was closed, closed. Now when a man says
"closed, closed" like that, you can be pretty sure that some woman has
double-closed him, so to speak. Perry was also thinking that other
classical thought, about how cowardly suicide is. A noble thought that
one--warm and inspiring. Think of all the fine men we should lose if
suicide were not so cowardly!
An hour later was six o'clock, and Perry had lost all resemblance to the
young man in the liniment advertisement. He looked like a rough draft
for a riotous cartoon. They were singing--an impromptu song of Baily's
improvisation:
"One Lump Perry, the parlor snake,
Famous through the city for the way he drinks his tea;
Plays with it, toys with it,
Makes no noise with it,
Balanced on a napkin on his well-trained knee----"
"Trouble is," said Perry, who had just banged his hair with Baily's comb
and was tying an orange tie round it to get the effect of Julius Csar,
"that you fellas can't sing worth a damn. Soon's I leave th' air and
start singin' tenor you start singin' tenor too."
"'M a natural tenor," said Macy gravely. "Voice lacks cultivation, tha's
all. Gotta natural voice, m'aunt used say. Naturally good singer."
"Singers, singers, all good singers," remarked Baily, who was at the
telephone. "No, not the cabaret; I want night egg. I mean some dog-gone
clerk 'at's got food--food! I want----"
"Julius Csar," announced Perry, turning round from the mirror. "Man of
iron will and stern 'termination."
"Shut up!" yelled Baily. "Say, iss Mr. Baily. Sen' up enormous supper.
Use y'own judgment. Right away."
He connected the receiver and the hook with some difficulty, and then
with his lips closed and an expression of solemn intensity in his eyes
went to the lower drawer of his dresser and pulled it open.
"Lookit!" he commanded. In his hands he held a truncated garment of pink
gingham.
"Pants," he exclaimed gravely. "Lookit!"
This was a pink blouse, a red tie, and a Buster Brown collar.
"Lookit!" he repeated. "Costume for the Townsends' circus ball. I'm
li'l' boy carries water for the elephants."
Perry was impressed in spite of himself.
"I'm going to be Julius Csar," he announced after a moment of
concentration.
"Thought you weren't going!" said Macy.
"Me? Sure, I'm goin'. Never miss a party. Good for the nerves--like
celery."
"Csar!" scoffed Baily. "Can't be Csar! He is not about a circus. Csar's
Shakespeare. Go as a clown."
Perry shook his head.
"Nope; Csar."
"Csar?"
"Sure. Chariot."
Light dawned on Baily.
"That's right. Good idea."
Perry looked round the room searchingly.
"You lend me a bathrobe and this tie," he said finally.
Baily considered.
"No good."
"Sure, tha's all I need. Csar was a savage. They can't kick if I come as
Csar, if he was a savage."
"No," said Baily, shaking his head slowly. "Get a costume over at a
costumer's. Over at Nolak's."
"Closed up."
"Find out."
After a puzzling five minutes at the phone a small, weary voice managed
to convince Perry that it was Mr. Nolak speaking, and that they would
remain open until eight because of the Townsends' ball. Thus assured,
Perry ate a great amount of filet mignon and drank his third of the last
bottle of champagne. At eight-fifteen the man in the tall hat who stands
in front of the Clarendon found him trying to start his roadster.
"Froze up," said Perry wisely. "The cold froze it. The cold air."
"Froze, eh?"
"Yes. Cold air froze it."
"Can't start it?"
"Nope. Let it stand here till summer. One those hot ole August days'll
thaw it out awright."
"Goin' let it stand?"
"Sure. Let 'er stand. Take a hot thief to steal it. Gemme taxi."
The man in the tall hat summoned a taxi.
"Where to, mister?"
"Go to Nolak's--costume fella."
II
Mrs. Nolak was short and ineffectual looking, and on the cessation of
the world war had belonged for a while to one of the new nationalities.
Owing to unsettled European conditions she had never since been quite
sure what she was. The shop in which she and her husband performed their
daily stint was dim and ghostly, and peopled with suits of armor and
Chinese mandarins, and enormous papier-mch birds suspended from the
ceiling. In a vague background many rows of masks glared eyelessly at
the visitor, and there were glass cases full of crowns and scepters, and
jewels and enormous stomachers, and paints, and crape hair, and wigs of
all colors.
When Perry ambled into the shop Mrs. Nolak was folding up the last
troubles of a strenuous day, so she thought, in a drawer full of pink
silk stockings.
"Something for you?" she queried pessimistically.
"Want costume of Julius Hur, the charioteer."
Mrs. Nolak was sorry, but every stitch of charioteer had been rented
long ago. Was it for the Townsends' circus ball?
It was.
"Sorry," she said, "but I don't think there's anything left that's
really circus."
This was an obstacle.
"Hm," said Perry. An idea struck him suddenly. "If you've got a piece of
canvas I could go's a tent."
"Sorry, but we haven't anything like that. A hardware store is where
you'd have to go to. We have some very nice Confederate soldiers."
"No. No soldiers."
"And I have a very handsome king."
He shook his head.
"Several of the gentlemen," she continued hopefully, "are wearing
stovepipe hats and swallow-tail coats and going as ringmasters--but
we're all out of tall hats. I can let you have some crape hair for a
mustache."
"Want somep'n 'stinctive."
"Something--let's see. Well, we have a lion's head, and a goose, and a
camel "
"Camel?" The idea seized Perry's imagination, gripped it fiercely.
"Yes, but it needs two people."
"Camel. That's the idea. Lemme see it."
The camel was produced from his resting place on a top shelf. At first
glance he appeared to consist entirely of a very gaunt, cadaverous head
and a sizable hump, but on being spread out he was found to possess a
dark brown, unwholesome-looking body made of thick, cottony cloth.
"You see it takes two people," explained Mrs. Nolak, holding the camel
in frank admiration. "If you have a friend he could be part of it. You
see there's sorta pants for two people. One pair is for the fella in
front, and the other pair for the fella in back. The fella in front does
the lookin' out through these here eyes, an' the fella in back he's just
gotta stoop over an' folla the front fella round."
"Put it on," commanded Perry.
Obediently Mrs. Nolak put her tabby-cat face inside the camel's head and
turned it from side to side ferociously.
Perry was fascinated.
"What noise does a camel make?"
"What?" asked Mrs. Nolak as her face emerged, somewhat smudgy. "Oh, what
noise? Why, he sorta brays."
"Lemme see it in a mirror."
Before a wide mirror Perry tried on the head and turned from side to
side appraisingly. In the dim light the effect was distinctly pleasing.
The camel's face was a study in pessimism, decorated with numerous
abrasions, and it must be admitted that his coat was in that state of
general negligence peculiar to camels--in fact, he needed to be cleaned
and pressed--but distinctive he certainly was. He was majestic. He would
have attracted attention in any gathering, if only by his melancholy
cast of feature and the look of hunger lurking round his shadowy
eyes.
"You see you have to have two people," said Mrs. Nolak again.
Perry tentatively gathered up the body and legs and wrapped them about
him, tying the hind legs as a girdle round his waist. The effect on the
whole was bad. It was even irreverent--like one of those medival
pictures of a monk changed into a beast by the ministrations of Satan.
At the very best the ensemble resembled a humpbacked cow sitting on her
haunches among blankets.
"Don't look like anything at all," objected Perry gloomily.
"No," said Mrs. Nolak; "you see you got to have two people."
A solution flashed upon Perry.
"You got a date to-night ?"
"Oh, I couldn't possibly----"
"Oh, come on," said Perry encouragingly. "Sure you can. Here! Be good
sport, and climb into these hind legs."
With difficulty he located them, and extended their yawning depths
ingratiatingly. But Mrs. Nolak seemed loath. She backed perversely
away.
"Oh, no----"
"C'm on! You can be the front if you want to. Or we'll flip a coin."
"Oh, no----"
"Make it worth your while."
Mrs. Nolak set her lips firmly together.
"Now you just stop!" she said with no coyness implied. "None of the
gentlemen ever acted up this way before. My husband----"
"You got a husband?" demanded Perry. "Where is he?"
"He's home."
"Wha's telephone number?"
After considerable parley he obtained the telephone number pertaining to
the Nolak penates and got into communication with that small, weary
voice he had heard once before that day. But Mr. Nolak, though taken off
his guard and somewhat confused by Perry's brilliant flow of logic,
stuck staunchly to his point. He refused firmly, but with dignity, to
help out Mr. Parkhurst in the capacity of back part of a camel.
Having rung off, or rather having been rung off on, Perry sat down on a
three-legged stool to think it over. He named over to himself those
friends on whom he might call, and then his mind paused as Betty
Medill's name hazily and sorrowfully occurred to him. He had a
sentimental thought. He would ask her. Their love affair was over, but
she could not refuse this last request. Surely it was not much to
ask--to help him keep up his end of social obligation for one short
night. And if she insisted, she could be the front part of the camel and
he would go as the back. His magnanimity pleased him. His mind even
turned to rosy-colored dreams of a tender reconciliation inside the
camel--there hidden away from all the world. . . .
"Now you'd better decide right off."
The bourgeois voice of Mrs. Nolak broke in upon his mellow fancies and
roused him to action. He went to the phone and called up the Medill
house. Miss Betty was out; had gone out to dinner.
Then, when all seemed lost, the camel's back wandered curiously into the
store. He was a dilapidated individual with a cold in his head and a
general trend about him of downwardness. His cap was pulled down low on
his head, and his chin was pulled down low on his chest, his coat hung
down to his shoes, he looked run-down, down at the heels, and--Salvation
Army to the contrary--down and out. He said that he was the
taxicab-driver that the gentleman had hired at the Clarendon Hotel. He
had been instructed to wait outside, but he had waited some time, and a
suspicion had grown upon him that the gentleman had gone out the back
way with purpose to defraud him--gentlemen sometimes did--so he had come
in. He sank down onto the three-legged stool.
"Want a go to a party?" demanded Perry sternly.
"I gotta work," answered the taxi-driver lugubriously. "I gotta keep my
job."
"It's a very good party."
"'S a very good job."
"Come on!" urged Perry. "Be a good fella. See--it's pretty!" He held the
camel up and the taxi-driver looked at it cynically.
"Huh!"
Perry searched feverishly among the folds of the cloth.
"See!" he cried enthusiastically, holding up a selection of folds. "This
is your part. You don't even have to talk. All you have to do is to
walk--and sit down occasionally. You do all the sitting down. Think of
it. I'm on my feet all the time and you can sit down some of the time.
The only time I can sit down is when we're lying down, and you can sit
down when--oh, any time. See?"
"What's 'at thing?" demanded the individual dubiously. "A shroud?"
"Not at all," said Perry indignantly. "It's a camel."
"Huh?"
Then Perry mentioned a sum of money, and the conversation left the land
of grunts and assumed a practical tinge. Perry and the taxi-driver tried
on the camel in front of the mirror.
"You can't see it," explained Perry, peering anxiously out through the
eye holes, "but honestly, ole man, you look sim'ly great! Honestly!"
A grunt from the hump acknowledged this somewhat dubious compliment.
"Honestly, you look great!" repeated Perry enthusiastically. "Move round
a little."
The hind legs moved forward, giving the effect of a huge cat-camel
hunching his back preparatory to a spring.
"No; move sideways."
The camel's hips went neatly out of joint; a hula dancer would have
writhed in envy.
"Good, isn't it?" demanded Perry, turning to Mrs. Nolak for approval.
"It looks lovely," agreed Mrs. Nolak.
"We'll take it," said Perry.
The bundle was stowed under Perry's arm and they left the shop.
"Go to the party!" he commanded as he took his seat in the back.
"What party?"
"Fanzy-dress party."
"Where'bouts is it?"
This presented a new problem. Perry tried to remember, but the names of
all those who had given parties during the holidays danced confusedly
before his eyes. He could ask Mrs. Nolak, but on looking out the window
he saw that the shop was dark. Mrs. Nolak had already faded out, a
little black smudge far down the snowy street.
"Drive uptown," directed Perry with fine confidence. "If you see a
party, stop. Otherwise I'll tell you when we get there."
He fell into a hazy daydream and his thoughts wandered again to
Betty--he imagined vaguely that they had had a disagreement because she
refused to go to the party as the back part of the camel. He was just
slipping off into a chilly doze when he was wakened by the taxi-driver
opening the door and shaking him by the arm.
"Here we are, maybe."
Perry looked out sleepily. A striped awning led from the curb up to a
spreading gray stone house, from which issued the low drummy whine of
expensive jazz. He recognized the Howard Tate house.
"Sure," he said emphatically; "'at's it! Tate's party to-night. Sure,
everybody's goin'."
"Say," said the individual anxiously after another look at the awning,
"you sure these people ain't gonna romp on me for comin' here?"
Perry drew himself up with dignity.
"'F anybody says anything to you, just tell 'em you're part of my
costume."
The visualization of himself as a thing rather than a person seemed to
reassure the individual.
"All right," he said reluctantly.
Perry stepped out under the shelter of the awning and began unrolling
the camel.
"Let's go," he commanded.
Several minutes later a melancholy, hungry-looking camel, emitting
clouds of smoke from his mouth and from the tip of his noble hump, might
have been seen crossing the threshhold of the Howard Tate residence,
passing a startled footman without so much as a snort, and heading
directly for the main stairs that led up to the ballroom. The beast
walked with a peculiar gait which varied between an uncertain lockstep
and a stampede--but can best be described by the word "halting." The
camel had a halting gait--and as he walked he alternately elongated and
contracted like a gigantic concertina.
III
The Howard Tates are, as every one who lives in Toledo knows, the most
formidable people in town. Mrs. Howard Tate was a Chicago Todd before
she became a Toledo Tate, and the family generally affect that conscious
simplicity which has begun to be the earmark of American aristocracy.
The Tates have reached the stage where they talk about pigs and farms
and look at you icy-eyed if you are not amused. They have begun to
prefer retainers rather than friends as dinner guests, spend a lot of
money in a quiet way, and, having lost all sense of competition, are in
process of growing quite dull.
The dance this evening was for little Millicent Tate, and though all
ages were represented, the dancers were mostly from school and
college--the younger married crowd was at the Townsends' circus ball up
at the Tallyho Club. Mrs. Tate was standing just inside the ballroom,
following Millicent round with her eyes, and beaming whenever she caught
her eye. Beside her were two middle-aged sycophants, who were saying
what a perfectly exquisite child Millicent was. It was at this moment
that Mrs. Tate was grasped firmly by the skirt and her youngest
daughter, Emily, aged eleven, hurled herself with an "Oof!" into her
mother's arms.
"Why, Emily, what's the trouble?"
"Mamma," said Emily, wild-eyed but voluble, "there's something out on
the stairs."
"What?"
"There's a thing out on the stairs, mamma. I think it's a big dog,
mamma, but it doesn't look like a dog."
"What-do you mean, Emily?"
The sycophants waved their heads sympathetically.
"Mamma, it looks like a--like a camel."
Mrs. Tate laughed.
"You saw a mean old shadow, dear, that's all."
"No, I didn't. No, it was some kind of thing, mamma--big. I was going
down-stairs to see if there were any more people, and this dog or
something, he was coming up-stairs. Kind a funny, mamma, like he was
lame. And then he saw me and gave a sort of growl, and then he slipped
at the top of the landing, and I ran."
Mrs. Tate's laugh faded.
"The child must have seen something," she said.
The sycophants agreed that the child must have seen something--and
suddenly all three women took an instinctive step away from the door as
the sounds of muffled steps were audible just outside.
And then three startled gasps rang out as a dark brown form rounded the
corner, and they saw what was apparently a huge beast looking down at
them hungrily.
"Oof!" cried Mrs. Tate.
"O-o-oh!" cried the ladies in a chorus.
The camel suddenly humped his back, and the gasps turned to shrieks.
"Oh--look!"
"What is it?"
The dancing stopped, but the dancers hurrying over got quite a different
impression of the invader; in fact, the young people immediately
suspected that it was a stunt, a hired entertainer come to amuse the
party. The boys in long trousers looked at it rather disdainfully, and
sauntered over with their hands in their pockets, feeling that their
intelligence was being insulted. But the girls uttered little shouts of
glee.
"It's a camel!"
"Well, if he isn't the funniest!"
The camel stood there uncertainly, swaying slightly from side to side,
and seeming to take in the room in a careful, appraising glance; then as
if he had come to an abrupt decision he turned and ambled swiftly out
the door.
Mr. Howard Tate had just come out of the library on the lower floor, and
was standing chatting with a young man in the hall. Suddenly they heard
the noise of shouting up-stairs, and almost immediately a succession of
bumping sounds, followed by the precipitous appearance at the foot of
the stairway of a large brown beast that seemed to be going somewhere in
a great hurry.
"Now what the devil!" said Mr. Tate, starting.
The beast picked itself up not without dignity and, affecting an air of
extreme nonchalance, as if he had just remembered an important
engagement, started at a mixed gait toward the front door. In fact, his
front legs began casually to run.
"See here now," said Mr. Tate sternly. "Here! Grab it, Butterfield! Grab
it!"
The young man enveloped the rear of the camel in a pair of compelling
arms, and, realizing that further locomotion was impossible, the front
end submitted to capture and stood resignedly in a state of some
agitation. By this time a flood of young people was pouring down-stairs,
and Mr. Tate, suspecting everything from an ingenious burglar to an
escaped lunatic, gave crisp directions to the young man:
"Hold him! Lead him in here; we'll soon see."
The camel consented to be led into the library, and Mr. Tate, after
locking the door, took a revolver from a table drawer and instructed the
young man to take the thing's head off. Then he gasped and returned the
revolver to its hiding-place.
"Well, Perry Parkhurst!" he exclaimed in amazement.
"Got the wrong party, Mr. Tate," said Perry sheepishly. "Hope I didn't
scare you."
"Well--you gave us a thrill, Perry." Realization dawned on him. "You're
bound for the Townsends' circus ball."
"That's the general idea."
"Let me introduce Mr. Butterfield, Mr. Parkhurst." Then turning to
Perry: "Butterfield is staying with us for a few days."
"I got a little mixed up," mumbled Perry. "I'm very sorry."
"Perfectly all right; most natural mistake in the world. I've got a
clown rig and I'm going down there myself after a while." He turned to
Butterfield. "Better change your mind and come down with us."
The young man demurred. He was going to bed.
"Have a drink, Perry?" suggested Mr. Tate.
"Thanks, I will."
"And, say," continued Tate quickly, "I'd forgotten all about
your--friend here." He indicated the rear part of the camel. "I didn't
mean to seem discourteous. Is it any one I know? Bring him out."
"It's not a friend," explained Perry hurriedly. "I just rented him."
"Does he drink?"
"Do you?" demanded Perry, twisting himself tortuously round.
There was a faint sound of assent.
"Sure he does!" said Mr. Tate heartily. "A really efficient camel ought
to be able to drink enough so it'd last him three days."
"Tell you," said Perry anxiously, "he isn't exactly dressed up enough to
come out. If you give me the bottle I can hand it back to him and he can
take his inside."
From under the cloth was audible the enthusiastic smacking sound
inspired by this suggestion. When a butler had appeared with bottles,
glasses, and siphon one of the bottles was handed back; thereafter the
silent partner could be heard imbibing long potations at frequent
intervals.
Thus passed a benign hour. At ten o'clock Mr. Tate decided that they'd
better be starting. He donned his clown's costume; Perry replaced the
camel's head, and side by side they traversed on foot the single block
between the Tate house and the Tallyho Club.
The circus ball was in full swing. A great tent fly had been put up
inside the ballroom and round the walls had been built rows of booths
representing the various attractions of a circus side show, but these
were now vacated and over the floor swarmed a shouting, laughing medley
of youth and color--clowns, bearded ladies, acrobats, bareback riders,
ringmasters, tattooed men, and charioteers. The Townsends had determined
to assure their party of success, so a great quantity of liquor had been
surreptitiously brought over from their house and was now flowing
freely. A green ribbon ran along the wall completely round the ballroom,
with pointing arrows alongside and signs which instructed the
uninitiated to "Follow the green line!" The green line led down to the
bar, where waited pure punch and wicked punch and plain dark-green
bottles.
On the wall above the bar was another arrow, red and very wavy, and
under it the slogan: "Now follow this!"
But even amid the luxury of costume and high spirits represented there,
the entrance of the camel created something of a stir, and Perry was
immediately surrounded by a curious, laughing crowd attempting to
penetrate the identity of this beast that stood by the wide doorway
eying the dancers with his hungry, melancholy gaze.
And then Perry saw Betty standing in front of a booth, talking to a
comic policeman. She was dressed in the costume of an Egyptian
snake-charmer: her tawny hair was braided and drawn through brass rings,
the effect crowned with a glittering Oriental tiara. Her fair face was
stained to a warm olive glow and on her arms and the half moon of her
back writhed painted serpents with single eyes of venomous green. Her
feet were in sandals and her skirt was slit to the knees, so that when
she walked one caught a glimpse of other slim serpents painted just
above her bare ankles. Wound about her neck was a glittering cobra.
Altogether a charming costume--one that caused the more nervous among
the older women to shrink away from her when she passed, and the more
troublesome ones to make great talk about "shouldn't be allowed" and
"perfectly disgraceful."
But Perry, peering through the uncertain eyes of the camel, saw only her
face, radiant, animated, and glowing with excitement, and her arms and
shoulders, whose mobile, expressive gestures made her always the
outstanding figure in any group. He was fascinated and his fascination
exercised a sobering effect on him. With a growing clarity the events of
the day came back--rage rose within him, and with a half-formed
intention of taking her away from the crowd he started toward her--or
rather he elongated slightly, for he had neglected to issue the
preparatory command necessary to locomotion.
But at this point fickle Kismet, who for a day had played with him
bitterly and sardonically, decided to reward him in full for the
amusement he had afforded her. Kismet turned the tawny eyes of the
snake-charmer to the camel. Kismet led her to lean toward the man beside
her and say, "Who's that? That camel?"
"Darned if I know."
But a little man named Warburton, who knew it all, found it necessary to
hazard an opinion:
"It came in with Mr. Tate. I think part of it's probably Warren
Butterfield, the architect from New York, who's visiting the Tates."
Something stirred in Betty Medill--that age-old interest of the
provincial girl in the visiting man.
"Oh," she said casually after a slight pause.
At the end of the next dance Betty and her partner finished up within a
few feet of the camel. With the informal audacity that was the key-note
of the evening she reached out and gently rubbed the camel's nose.
"Hello, old camel."
The camel stirred uneasily.
"You 'fraid of me?" said Betty, lifting her eyebrows in reproof. "Don't
be. You see I'm a snake-charmer, but I'm pretty good at camels too."
The camel bowed very low and some one made the obvious remark about
beauty and the beast.
Mrs. Townsend approached the group.
"Well, Mr. Butterfield," she said helpfully, "I wouldn't have recognized
you."
Perry bowed again and smiled gleefully behind his mask.
"And who is this with you?" she inquired.
"Oh," said Perry, his voice muffled by the thick cloth and quite
unrecognizable, "he isn't a fellow, Mrs. Townsend. He's just part of my
costume."
Mrs. Townsend laughed and moved away. Perry turned again to Betty.
"So," he thought, "this is how much she cares! On the very day of our
final rupture she starts a flirtation with another man--an absolute
stranger."
On an impulse he gave her a soft nudge with his shoulder and waved his
head suggestively toward the hall, making it clear that he desired her
to leave her partner and accompany him.
"By-by, Rus," she called to her partner. "This old camel's got me. Where
we going, Prince of Beasts?"
The noble animal made no rejoinder, but stalked gravely along in the
direction of a secluded nook on the side stairs.
There she seated herself, and the camel, after some seconds of confusion
which included gruff orders and sounds of a heated dispute going on in
his interior, placed himself beside her--his hind legs stretching out
uncomfortably across two steps.
"Well, old egg," said Betty cheerfully, "how do you like our happy
party?"
The old egg indicated that he liked it by rolling his head ecstatically
and executing a gleeful kick with his hoofs.
"This is the first time that I ever had a tte--tte with a man's valet
'round"--she pointed to the hind legs--"or whatever that is."
"Oh," mumbled Perry, "he's deaf and blind."
"I should think you'd feel rather handicapped--you can't very well
toddle, even if you want to."
The camel hung his head lugubriously.
"I wish you'd say something," continued Betty sweetly. "Say you like me,
camel. Say you think I'm beautiful. Say you'd like to belong to a pretty
snake-charmer. "
The camel would.
"Will you dance with me, camel?"
The camel would try.
Betty devoted half an hour to the camel. She devoted at least half an
hour to all visiting men. It was usually sufficient. When she approached
a new man the current dbutantes were accustomed to scatter right and
left like a close column deploying before a machine-gun. And so to Perry
Parkhurst was awarded the unique privilege of seeing his love as others
saw her. He was flirted with violently!
IV
This paradise of frail foundation was broken into by the sounds of a
general ingress to the ballroom; the cotillion was beginning. Betty and
the camel joined the crowd, her brown hand resting lightly on his
shoulder, defiantly symbolizing her complete adoption of him.
When they entered the couples were already seating themselves at tables
round the walls, and Mrs. Townsend, resplendent as a super bareback
rider with rather too rotund calves, was standing in the centre with the
ringmaster in charge of arrangements. At a signal to the band every one
rose and began to dance.
"Isn't it just slick!" sighed Betty. "Do you think you can possibly
dance?"
Perry nodded enthusiastically. He felt suddenly exuberant. After all, he
was here incognito talking to his love--he could wink patronizingly at
the world.
So Perry danced the cotillion. I say danced, but that is stretching the
word far beyond the wildest dreams of the jazziest terpsichorean. He
suffered his partner to put her hands on his helpless shoulders and pull
him here and there over the floor while he hung his huge head docilely
over her shoulder and made futile dummy motions with his feet. His hind
legs danced in a manner all their own, chiefly by hopping first on one
foot and then on the other. Never being sure whether dancing was going
on or not, the hind legs played safe by going through a series of steps
whenever the music started playing. So the spectacle was frequently
presented of the front part of the camel standing at ease and the rear
keeping up a constant energetic motion calculated to rouse a sympathetic
perspiration in any soft-hearted observer.
He was frequently favored. He danced first with a tall lady covered with
straw who announced jovially that she was a bale of hay and coyly begged
him not to eat her.
"I'd like to; you're so sweet," said the camel gallantly.
Each time the ringmaster shouted his call of "Men up!" he lumbered
ferociously for Betty with the cardboard wienerwurst or the photograph
of the bearded lady or whatever the favor chanced to be. Sometimes he
reached her first, but usually his rushes were unsuccessful and resulted
in intense interior arguments.
"For Heaven's sake," Perry would snarl fiercely between his clenched
teeth, "get a little pep! I could have gotten her that time if you'd
picked your feet up."
"Well, gimme a little warnin'!"
"I did, darn you."
"I can't see a dog-gone thing in here."
"All you have to do is follow me. It's just like draging a load of sand
round to walk with you."
"Maybe you want a try back here."
"You shut up! If these people found you in this room they'd give you the
worst beating you ever had. They'd take your taxi license away from
you!"
Perry surprised himself by the ease with which he made this monstrous
threat, but it seemed to have a soporific influence on his companion,
for he gave out an "aw gwan" and subsided into abashed silence.
The ringmaster mounted to the top of the piano and waved his hand for
silence.
"Prizes!" he cried. "Gather round!"
"Yea! Prizes!"
Self-consciously the circle swayed forward. The rather pretty girl who
had mustered the nerve to come as a bearded lady trembled with
excitement, thinking to be rewarded for an evening's hideousness. The
man who had spent the afternoon having tattoo marks painted on him
skulked on the edge of the crowd, blushing furiously when any one told
him he was sure to get it.
"Lady and gent performers of this circus," announced the ringmaster
jovially, "I am sure we will all agree that a good time has been had by
all. We will now bestow honor where honor is due by bestowing the
prizes. Mrs. Townsend has asked me to bestow the prizes. Now, fellow
performers, the first prize is for that lady who has displayed this
evening the most striking, becoming"--at this point the bearded lady
sighed resignedly--"and original costume." Here the bale of hay pricked
up her ears. "Now I am sure that the decision which has been agreed upon
will be unanimous with all here present. The first prize goes to Miss
Betty Medill, the charming Egyptian snake-charmer."
There was a burst of applause, chiefly masculine, and Miss Betty Medill,
blushing beautifully through her olive paint, was passed up to receive
her award. With a tender glance the ringmaster handed down to her a huge
bouquet of orchids.
"And now," he continued, looking round him, "the other prize is for that
man who has the most amusing and original costume. This prize goes
without dispute to a guest in our midst, a gentleman who is visiting
here but whose stay we all hope will be long and merry--in short, to the
noble camel who has entertained us all by his hungry look and his
brilliant dancing throughout the evening."
He ceased and there was a violent clapping and yeaing, for it was a
popular choice. The prize, a large box of cigars, was put aside for the
camel, as he was anatomically unable to accept it in person.
"And now," continued the ringmaster, "we will wind up the cotillion with
the marriage of Mirth to Folly!"
"Form for the grand wedding march, the beautiful snake-charmer and the
noble camel in front!"
Betty skipped forward cheerily and wound an olive arm round the camel's
neck. Behind them formed the procession of little boys, little girls,
country jakes, fat ladies, thin men, sword-swallowers, wild men of
Borneo, and armless wonders, many of them well in their cups, all of
them excited and happy and dazzled by the flow of light and color round
them, and by the familiar faces, strangely unfamiliar under bizarre wigs
and barbaric paint. The voluptuous chords of the wedding march done in
blasphemous syncopation issued in a delirious blend from the trombones
and saxophones--and the march began.
"Aren't you glad, camel?" demanded Betty sweetly as they stepped off.
"Aren't you glad we're going to be married and you're going to belong to
the nice snake-charmer ever afterward?"
The camel's front legs pranced, expressing excessive joy.
"Minister! Minister! Where's the minister?" cried voices out of the
revel. "Who's going to be the clergyman?"
The head of Jumbo, obese negro, waiter at the Tallyho Club for many
years, appeared rashly through a half-opened pantry door.
"Oh, Jumbo!"
"Get old Jumbo. He's the fella!"
"Come on, Jumbo. How 'bout marrying us a couple?"
"Yea!"
Jumbo was seized by four comedians, stripped of his apron, and escorted
to a raised das at the head of the ball. There his collar was removed
and replaced back side forward with ecclesiastical effect. The parade
separated into two lines, leaving an aisle for the bride and groom.
He produced a battered Bible from an interior pocket.
"Yea! Jumbo's got a Bible!"
"Razor, too, I'll bet!"
Together the snake-charmer and the camel ascended the cheering aisle and
stopped in front of Jumbo.
"Where's yo license, camel?"
A man near by prodded Perry.
"Give him a piece of paper. Anything'll do."
Perry fumbled confusedly in his pocket, found a folded paper, and pushed
it out through the camel's mouth. Holding it upside down Jumbo pretended
to scan it earnestly.
"Dis yeah's a special camel's license," he said. "Get you ring ready,
camel."
Inside the camel Perry turned round and addressed his worse half.
"Gimme a ring, for Heaven's sake!"
"I ain't got none," protested a weary voice.
"You have. I saw it."
"I ain't goin' to take it offen my hand."
"If you don't I'll kill you."
There was a gasp and Perry felt a huge affair of rhinestone and brass
inserted into his hand.
Again he was nudged from the outside.
"Speak up!"
"I do!" cried Perry quickly.
He heard Betty's responses given in a debonair tone, and even in this
burlesque the sound thrilled him.
Then he had pushed the rhinestone through a tear in the camel's coat and
was slipping it on her finger, muttering ancient and historic words
after Jumbo. He didn't want any one to know about this ever. His one
idea was to slip away without having to disclose his identity, for Mr.
Tate had so far kept his secret well. A dignified young man, Perry--and
this might injure his infant law practice.
"Embrace the bride!"
"Unmask, camel, and kiss her!"
Instinctively his heart beat high as Betty turned to him laughingly and
began to stroke the card-board muzzle. He felt his self-control giving
way, he longed to surround her with his arms and declare his identity
and kiss those lips that smiled only a foot away--when suddenly the
laughter and applause round them died off and a curious hush fell over
the hall. Perry and Betty looked up in surprise. Jumbo had given vent to
a huge "Hello!" in such a startled voice that all eyes were bent on
him.
"Hello!" he said again. He had turned round the camel's marriage
license, which he had been holding upside down, produced spectacles, and
was studying it agonizingly.
"Why," he exclaimed, and in the pervading silence his words were heard
plainly by every one in the room, "this yeah's a sho-nuff marriage
permit."
"What?"
"Huh?"
"Say it again, Jumbo!"
"Sure you can read?"
Jumbo waved them to silence and Perry's blood burned to fire in his
veins as he realized the break he had made.
"Yassuh!" repeated Jumbo. "This yeah's a sho-nuff license, and the
pa'ties concerned one of 'em is dis yeah young lady, Miz Betty Medill,
and th' other's Mistah Perry Pa'khurst."
There was a general gasp, and a low rumble broke out as all eyes fell on
the camel. Betty shrank away from him quickly, her tawny eyes giving out
sparks of fury.
"Is you Mistah Pa'khurst, you camel?"
Perry made no answer. The crowd pressed up closer and stared at him. He
stood frozen rigid with embarrassment, his cardboard face still hungry
and sardonic as he regarded the ominous Jumbo.
"Y'all bettah speak up!" said Jumbo slowly, "this yeah's a mighty
serious mattah. Outside mah duties at this club ah happens to be a
sho-nuff minister in the Firs' Cullud Baptis' Church. It done look to me
as though y'all is gone an' got married."
V
The scene that followed will go down forever in the annals of the
Tallyho Club. Stout matrons fainted, one hundred per cent Americans
swore, wild-eyed dbutantes babbled in lightning groups instantly formed
and instantly dissolved, and a great buzz of chatter, virulent yet oddly
subdued, hummed through the chaotic ballroom. Feverish youths swore they
would kill Perry or Jumbo or themselves or some one, and the Baptis'
preacheh was besieged by a tempestuous covey of clamorous amateur
lawyers, asking questions, making threats, demanding precedents,
ordering the bonds annulled, and especially trying to ferret out any
hint of prearrangement in what had occurred.
In the corner Mrs. Townsend was crying softly on the shoulder of Mr.
Howard Tate, who was trying vainly to comfort her; they were exchanging
"all my fault's" volubly and voluminously. Outside on a snow-covered
walk Mr. Cyrus Medill, the Aluminum Man, was being paced slowly up and
down between two brawny charioteers, giving vent now to a string of
unrepeatables, now to wild pleadings that they'd just let him get at
Jumbo. He was facetiously attired for the evening as a wild man of
Borneo, and the most exacting stage-manager would have acknowledged any
improvement in casting the part to be quite impossible.
Meanwhile the two principals held the real centre of the stage. Betty
Medill--or was it Betty Parkhurst?--storming furiously, was surrounded
by the plainer girls--the prettier ones were too busy talking about her
to pay much attention to her--and over on the other side of the hall
stood the camel, still intact except for his headpiece, which dangled
pathetically on his chest. Perry was earnestly engaged in making
protestations of his innocence to a ring of angry, puzzled men. Every
few minutes, just as he had apparently proved his case, some one would
mention the marriage certificate, and the inquisition would begin
again.
A girl named Marion Cloud, considered the second best belle of Toledo,
changed the gist of the situation by a remark she made to Betty.
"Well," she said maliciously, "it'll all blow over, dear. The courts
will annul it without question."
Betty's angry tears dried miraculously in her eyes, her lips shut tight
together, and she looked stonily at Marion. Then she rose and,
scattering her sympathizers right and left, walked directly across the
room to Perry, who stared at her in terror. Again silence crept down
upon the room.
"Will you have the decency to grant me five minutes' conversation--or
wasn't that included in your plans?"
He nodded, his mouth unable to form words.
Indicating coldly that he was to follow her she walked out into the hall
with her chin up tilted and headed for the privacy of one of the little
card-rooms.
Perry started after her, but was brought to a jerky halt by the failure
of his hind legs to function.
"You stay here!" he commanded savagely.
"I can't," whined a voice from the hump, "unless you get out first and
let me get out."
Perry hesitated, but unable any longer to tolerate the eyes of the
curious crowd he muttered a command and the camel moved carefully from
the room on its four legs.
Betty was waiting for him.
"Well," she began furiously, "you see what you've done! You and that
crazy license! I told you you shouldn't have gotten it!"
"My dear girl, I----"
"Don't say `dear girl' to me! Save that for your real wife if you ever
get one after this disgraceful performance. And don't try to pretend it
wasn't all arranged. You know you gave that colored waiter money! You
know you did! Do you mean to say you didn't try to marry me?"
"No--of course----"
"Yes, you'd better admit it! You tried it, and now what are you going to
do? Do you know my father's nearly crazy? It'll serve you right if he
tries to kill you. He'll take his gun and put some cold steel in you.
Even if this wed--this thing can be annulled it'll hang over me all the
rest of my life!"
Perry could not resist quoting softly: "`Oh, camel, wouldn't you like to
belong to the pretty snake-charmer for all your----"
"Shut up!" cried Betty.
There was a pause.
"Betty," said Perry finally, "there's only one thing to do that will
really get us out clear. That's for you to marry me."
"Marry you!"
"Yes. Really it's the only----"
"You shut up! I wouldn't marry you if--if----"
"I know. If I were the last man on earth. But if you care anything about
your reputation----"
"Reputation!" she cried. " You're a nice one to think about my
reputation now. Why didn't you think about my reputation before you
hired that horrible Jumbo to--to----"
Perry tossed up his hands hopelessly.
"Very well. I'll do anything you want. Lord Knows I renounce all
claims!"
"But," said a new voice, "I don't."
Perry and Betty started, and she put her hand to her heart.
"For Heaven's sake, what was that?"
"It's me," said the camel's back.
In a minute Perry had whipped off the camel's skin, and a lax, limp
object, his clothes hanging on him damply, his hand clenched tightly on
an almost empty bottle, stood defiantly before them.
"Oh," cried Betty, "you brought that object in here to frighten me! You
told me he was deaf--that awful person!"
The camel's back sat down on a chair with a sigh of satisfaction.
"Don't talk 'at way about me, lady. I ain't no person. I'm your
husband."
"Husband!"
The cry was wrung simultaneously from Betty and Perry.
"Why, sure. I'm as much your husband as that gink is. The smoke didn't
marry you to the camel's front. He married you to the whole camel. Why,
that's my ring you got on your finger!"
With a little yelp she snatched the ring from her finger and flung it
passionately at the floor.
"What's all this?" demanded Perry dazedly.
"Jes' that you better fix me an' fix me right. If you don't I'm a-gonna
have the same claim you got to bein' married to her!"
"That's bigamy," said Perry, turning gravely to Betty.
Then came the supreme moment of Perry's evening, the ultimate chance on
which he risked his fortunes. He rose and looked first at Betty, where
she sat weakly, aghast at this new complication, and then at the
individual who swayed from side to side on his chair, uncertainly,
menacingly.
"Very well," said Perry slowly to the individual, "you can have her.
Betty, I'm going to prove to you that as far as I'm concerned our
marriage was entirely accidental. I'm going to renounce utterly my
rights to have you as my wife, and give you to--to the man whose ring
you wear--your lawful husband."
There was a pause and four horror-stricken eyes were turned on him.
"Good-by, Betty," he said brokenly. "Don't forget me in your new-found
happiness. I'm going to leave for the Far West on the morning train.
Think of me kindly, Betty."
With a last glance at them he turned and his head rested on his chest as
his hand touched the door-knob.
"Good-by," he repeated. He turned the door-knob.
But at this sound the snakes and silk and tawny hair precipitated
themselves violently toward him.
"Oh, Perry, don't leave me! Perry, Perry, take me with you!"
Her tears flowed damply on his neck. Calmly he folded his arms about
her.
"I don't care," she cried. "I love you and if you can wake up a minister
at this hour and have it done over again I'll go West with you."
Over her shoulder the front part of the camel looked at the back part of
the camel--and they exchanged a particularly subtle, esoteric sort of
wink that only true camels can understand.
In 1915 Horace Tarbox was thirteen years old. In that year he took the
examinations for entrance to Princeton University and received the Grade A--
excellent-- in Csar, Cicero, Vergil, Xenophon, Homer, Algebra, Plane Geometry,
Solid Geometry, and Chemistry.
Two years later, while George M. Cohan was composing "Over There," Horace
was leading the sophomore class by several lengths and digging out theses on "The
Syllogism as an Obsolete Scholastic Form," and during the battle of Chateau-Thierry he was
sitting at his desk deciding whether or not to wait until his seventeenth birthday before beginning
his series of essays on "The Pragmatic Bias of the New Realists."
After a while some newsboy told him that the war was over, and he was glad,
because it meant that Peat Brothers, publishers, would get out their new edition of
"Spinoza's Improvement of the Understanding." Wars were all very well in their way, made young men
self-reliant or something, but Horace felt that he could never forgive the President for
allowing a brass band to play under his window on the night of the false armistice, causing him to leave
three important sentences out of his thesis on "German Idealism."
The next year he went up to Yale to take his degree as Master of Arts.
He was seventeen then, tall and slender, with near-sighted gray eyes and an
air of keeping himself utterly detached from the mere words he let drop.
"I never feel as though I'm talking to him," expostulated Professor
Dillinger to a sympathetic colleague. "He makes me feel as though I were talking to his
representative. I always expect him to say: 'Well, I'll ask myself and find out.'"
And then, just as nonchalantly as though Horace Tarbox had been Mr. Beef
the butcher or Mr. Hat the haberdasher, life reached in, seized him, handled him, stretched
him, and unrolled him like a piece of Irish lace on a Saturday-afternoon bargain-counter.
To move in the literary fashion I should say that this was all because when
way back in colonial days the hardy pioneers had come to a bald place in Connecticut and
asked of each other, "Now, what shall we build here?" the hardiest one among 'em had answered:
"Let's build a town where theatrical managers can try out musical comedies!" How afterward they
founded Yale College there, to try the musical comedies on, is a story every one knows. At
any rate one December, "Home James" opened at the Shubert, and all the students encored
Marcia Meadow, who sang a song about the Blundering Blimp in the first act and did a shaky,
shivery, celebrated dance in the last.
Marcia was nineteen. She didn't have wings, but audiences agreed generally
that she didn't need them. She was a blonde by natural pigment, and she wore no paint on the
streets at high noon. Outside of that she was no better than most women.
It was Charlie Moon who promised her five thousand Pall Malls if she would
pay a call on Horace Tarbox, prodigy extraordinary. Charlie was a senior in Sheffield, and he
and Horace were first cousins. They liked and pitied each other.
Horace had been particularly busy that night. The failure of the Frenchman
Laurier to appreciate the significance of the new realists was preying on his mind. In
fact, his only reaction to a low, clear-cut rap at his study was to make him speculate as to whether any
rap would have actual existence without an ear there to hear it. He fancied he was verging
more and more toward pragmatism. But at that moment, though he did not know it, he was verging with
astounding rapidity toward something quite different.
The rap sounded-- three seconds leaked by-- the rap sounded.
"Come in," muttered Horace automatically.
He heard the door open and then close, but, bent over his book in the big
armchair before the fire, he did not look up.
"Leave it on the bed in the other room," he said absently.
"Leave what on the bed in the other room?"
Marcia Meadow had to talk her songs, but her speaking voice was like byplay
on a harp.
"The laundry."
"I can't."
Horace stirred impatiently in his chair.
"Why can't you?"
"Why, because I haven't got it."
"Hm!" he replied testily. "Suppose you go back and get it."
Across the fire from Horace was another easy-chair. He was accustomed to
change to it in the course of an evening by way of exercise and variety. One chair he called
Berkeley, the other he called Hume. He suddenly heard a sound as of a rustling, diaphanous form
sinking into Hume. He glanced up.
"Well," said Marcia with the sweet smile she used in Act Two ("Oh, so the
Duke liked my dancing!"), "Well, Omar Khayyam, here I am beside you singing in the
wilderness."
Horace stared at her dazedly. The momentary suspicion came to him that she
existed there only as a phantom of his imagination. Women didn't come into men's rooms and
sink into men's Humes. Women brought laundry and took your seat in the street-car and married
you later on when you were old enough to know fetters.
This woman had clearly materialized out of Hume. The very froth of her
brown gauzy dress was an emanation from Hume's leather arm there! If he looked long enough
he would see Hume right through her and then he would be alone again in the room. He passed
his fist across his eyes. He really must take up those trapeze exercises again.
"For Pete's sake, don't look so critical!" objected the emanation
pleasantly. "I feel as if you were going to wish me away with that patent dome of yours. And then there
wouldn't be anything left of me except my shadow in your eyes."
Horace coughed. Coughing was one of his two gestures. When he talked you
forgot he had a body at all. It was like hearing a phonograph record by a singer who had
been dead a long time.
"What do you want?" he asked.
"I want them letters," whined Marcia melodramatically-- "them letters of
mine you bought from my grandsire in 1881."
Horace considered.
"I haven't got your letters," he said evenly. "I am only seventeen years
old. My father was not born until March 3, 1879. You evidently have me confused with some one
else."
"You're only seventeen?" repeated Marcia suspiciously.
"Only seventeen."
"I knew a girl," said Marcia reminiscently, "who went on the
ten-twenty-thirty when she was sixteen. She was so stuck on herself that she could never say 'sixteen'
without putting the 'only' before it. We got to calling her 'Only Jessie.' And she's just where she
was when she started-- only worse. 'Only' is a bad habit, Omar-- sounds like an alibi."
"My name is not Omar."
"I know." agreed Marcia, nodding-- "your name's Horace. I just call you
Omar because you remind me of a smoked cigarette."
"And I haven't your letters. I doubt if I've ever met your grandfather. In
fact, I think it very improbable that you yourself were alive in 1881.
Marcia stared at him in wonder.
"Me-- 1881? Why sure! I was second-line stuff when the Florodora Sextette
was still in the convent. I was the original nurse to Mrs. Sol Smith's Juliette. Why, Omar, I
was a canteen singer during the War of 1812."
Horace's mind made a sudden successful leap, and he grinned.
"Did Charlie Moon put you up to this?"
Marcia regarded him inscrutably.
"Who's Charlie Moon?"
"Small-- wide nostrils-- big ears."
She grew several inches and sniffed.
"I'm not in the habit of noticing my friends' nostrils."
"Then it was Charlie?"
Marcia bit her lip-- and then yawned.
"Oh, let's change the subject, Omar. I'll pull a snore in this chair in a minute."
"Yes," replied Horace gravely, "Hume has often been considered soporific."
"Who's your friend-- and will he die?"
Then of a sudden Horace Tarbox rose slenderly and began to pace the room
with his hands in his pockets. This was his other gesture.
"I don't care for this," he said as if he were talking to himself-- "at
all. Not that I mind your being here-- I don't. You're quite a pretty little thing, but I don't like
Charlie Moon's sending you up here. Am I a laboratory experiment on which the janitors as well as the
chemists can make experiments? Is my intellectual development humorous in any way? Do I look like
the pictures of the little Boston boy in the comic magazines? Has that callow ass, Moon, with
his eternal tales about his week in Paris, any right to-- -- "
"No," interrupted Marcia emphatically. "And you're a sweet boy. Come here
and kiss me."
Horace stopped quickly in front of her.
"Why do you want me to kiss you?" he asked intently. "Do you just go round
kissing people?"
"Why, yes," admitted Marcia, unruffled. "'At's all life is. Just going
round kissing people."
"Well," replied Horace emphatically, "I must say your ideas are horribly
garbled! In the first place life isn't just that, and in the second place I won't kiss you. It
might get to be a habit and I can't get rid of habits. This year I've got in the habit of lolling in bed
until seven-thirty."
Marcia nodded understandingly.
"Do you ever have any fun?" she asked.
"What do you mean by fun?"
"See here," said Marcia sternly, "I like you, Omar, but I wish you'd talk
as if you had a line on what you were saying. You sound as if you were gargling a lot of words in
your mouth and lost a bet every time you spilled a few. I asked you if you ever had any
fun."
Horace shook his head.
"Later, perhaps," he answered. "You see I'm a plan. I'm an experiment. I
don't say that I don't get tired of it sometimes-- I do. Yet-- oh, I can't explain! But what you
and Charlie Moon call fun wouldn't be fun to me."
"Please explain."
Horace stared at her, started to speak and then, changing his mind, resumed
his walk. After an unsuccessful attempt to determine whether or not he was looking at her Marcia smiled at him.
"Please explain."
Horace turned.
"If I do, will you promise to tell Charlie Moon that I wasn't in?"
"Uh-uh."
"Very well, then. Here's my history: I was a 'why' child. I wanted to see
the wheels go round. My father was a young economics professor at Princeton. He brought me
up on the system of answering every question I asked him to the best of his ability. My
response to that gave him the idea of making an experiment in precocity. To aid in the massacre
I had ear trouble-- seven operations between the ages of nine and twelve. Of course this
kept me apart from other boys and made me ripe for forcing. Anyway, while my generation was
laboring through Uncle Remus I was honestly enjoying Catullus in the original.
"I passed off my college examinations when I was thirteen because I
couldn't help it. My chief associates were professors, and I took a tremendous pride in knowing that
I had a fine intelligence, for though I was unusually gifted I was not abnormal in other
ways. When I was sixteen I got tired of being a freak; I decided that some one had made a bad
mistake. Still as I'd gone that far I concluded to finish it up by taking my degree of Master of
Arts. My chief interest in life is the study of modern philosophy. I am a realist of the School of
Anton Laurier-- with Bergsonian trimmings-- and I'll be eighteen years old in two months. That's
all."
"Whew!" exclaimed Marcia. "That's enough! You do a neat job with the parts
of speech."
"Satisfied?"
"No, you haven't kissed me."
"It's not in my programme," demurred Horace. "Understand that I don't
pretend to be above physical things. They have their place, but-- -- "
"Oh, don't be so darned reasonable!"
"I can't help it."
"I hate these slot-machine people."
"I assure you I-- " began Horace.
"Oh, shut up!"
"My own rationality-- -- "
"I didn't say anything about your nationality. You're an Amuricun, ar'n't
you?"
"Yes."
"Well, that's O.K. with me. I got a notion I want to see you do something
that isn't in your highbrow programme. I want to see if a what-ch-call-em with Brazilian
trimmings-- that thing you said you were-- can be a little human."
Horace shook his head again.
"I won't kiss you."
"My life is blighted," muttered Marcia tragically. "I'm a beaten woman.
I'll go through life without ever having a kiss with Brazilian trimmings." She sighed. "Anyways,
Omar, will you come and see my show?"
"What show?"
"I'm a wicked actress from 'Home James'!"
"Light opera?"
"Yes-- at a stretch. One of the characters is a Brazilian rice-planter.
That might interest you."
"I saw 'The Bohemian Girl' once," reflected Horace aloud. "I enjoyed it--
to
some extent."
"Then you'll come?"
"Well, I'm-- I'm-- -- "
"Oh, I know-- you've got to run down to Brazil for the week-end."
"Not at all. I'd be delighted to come."
Marcia clapped her hands.
"Goodyforyou! I'll mail you a ticket-- Thursday night?"
"Why, I-- -- "
"Good! Thursday night it is."
She stood up and walking close to him laid both hands on his shoulders.
"I like you, Omar. I'm sorry I tried to kid you. I thought you'd be sort of
frozen, but you're a nice boy."
He eyed her sardonically.
"I'm several thousand generations older than you are."
"You carry your age well."
They shook hands gravely.
"My name's Marcia Meadow," she said emphatically. "'Member it-- Marcia
Meadow. And I won't tell Charlie Moon you were in."
An instant later as she was skimming down the last flight of stairs three
at a time she heard a voice call over the upper banister: "Oh, say-- -- "
She stopped and looked up-- made out a vague form leaning over.
"Oh, say!" called the prodigy again. "Can you hear me?"
"Here's your connection, Omar."
"I hope I haven't given you the impression that I consider kissing
intrinsically irrational."
"Impression? Why, you didn't even give me the kiss! Never fret-- so
long."
Two doors near her opened curiously at the sound of a feminine voice. A
tentative cough sounded from above. Gathering her skirts, Marcia dived wildly down the last
flight, and was swallowed up in the murky Connecticut air outside.
Up-stairs Horace paced the floor of his study. From time to time he glanced
toward Berkeley waiting there in suave dark-red respectability, an open book lying
suggestively on his cushions. And then he found that his circuit of the floor was bringing him each
time nearer to Hume. There was something about Hume that was strangely and inexpressibly
different. The diaphanous form still seemed hovering near, and had Horace sat there he would
have felt as if he were sitting on a lady's lap. And though Horace couldn't have named the quality
of difference, there was such a quality-- quite intangible to the speculative mind, but real,
nevertheless. Hume was radiating something that in all the two hundred years of his influence he
had never radiated before.
Hume was radiating attar of roses.
II
On Thursday night Horace Tarbox sat in an aisle seat in the fifth row and
witnessed "Home James." Oddly enough he found that he was enjoying himself. The cynical
students near him were annoyed at his audible appreciation of time-honored jokes in the
Hammerstein tradition. But Horace was waiting with anxiety for Marcia Meadow singing her song about a
Jazz-bound Blundering Blimp. When she did appear, radiant under a floppity flower-faced
hat, a warm glow settled over him, and when the song was over he did not join in the storm of
applause. He felt somewhat numb.
In the intermission after the second act an usher materialized beside him,
demanded to know if he were Mr. Tarbox, and then handed him a note written in a round
adolescent hand. Horace read it in some confusion, while the usher lingered with withering
patience in the aisle.
"DEAR OMAR: After the show I always grow an awful hunger. If you want to
satisfy it for me in the Taft Grill just communicate your answer to the big-timber guide
that brought this and oblige.
Your friend,
MARCIA MEADOW.
"Tell her"-- he coughed-- "tell her that it will be quite all right. I'll
meet her in front of the theatre."
The big-timber guide smiled arrogantly.
"I giss she meant for you to come roun' t' the stage door."
"Where-- where is it?"
"Ou'side. Tunayulef. Down ee alley.
"What?"
"Ou'side. Turn to y' left! Down ee alley!"
The arrogant person withdrew. A freshman behind Horace snickered.
Then half an hour later, sitting in the Taft Grill opposite the hair that
was yellow by natural pigment, the prodigy was saying an odd thing.
"Do you have to do that dance in the last act?" he was saying earnestly--
"I
mean, would they dismiss you if you refused to do it?"
Marcia grinned.
"It's fun to do it. I like to do it."
And then Horace came out with a faux pas.
"I should think you'd detest it," he remarked succinctly. "The people
behind me were making remarks about your bosom."
Marcia blushed fiery red.
"I can't help that," she said quickly. "The dance to me is only a sort of
acrobatic stunt. Lord, it's hard enough to do! I rub liniment into my shoulders for an hour
every night."
"Do you have fun while you're on the stage?"
"Uh-huh-- sure! I got in the habit of having people look at me, Omar, and I
like it."
"Hm!" Horace sank into a brownish study
"How's the Brazilian trimmings?"
"Hm!" repeated Horace, and then after a pause: "Where does the play go from
here?"
"New York."
"For how long?"
"All depends. Winter-- maybe."
"Oh!"
"Coming up to lay eyes on me, Omar, or aren't you int'rested? Not as nice
here, is it, as it was up in your room? I wish we was there now."
"I feel idiotic in this place," confessed Horace, looking round him
nervously.
"Too bad! We got along pretty well."
At this he looked suddenly so melancholy that she changed her tone, and
reaching over patted his hand.
"Ever take an actress out to supper before?"
"No," said Horace miserably, "and I never will again. I don't know why I
came to-night. Here under all these lights and with all these people laughing and chattering I
feel completely out of my sphere. I don't know what to talk to you about."
"We'll talk about me. We talked about you last time."
"Very well."
"Well, my name really is Meadow, but my first name isn't Marcia-- it's
Veronica. I'm nineteen. Question-- how did the girl make her leap to the footlights?
Answer-- she was born in Passaic, New Jersey, and up to a year ago she got the right to breathe by
pushing Nabiscoes in Marcel's tea-room in Trenton. She started going with a guy named Robbins, a
singer in the Trent House cabaret, and he got her to try a song and dance with him one evening. In
a month we were filling the supper-room every night. Then we went to New York with
meet-my-friend letters thick as a pile of napkins.
"In two days we'd landed a job at Divinerries', and I learned to shimmy
from a kid at the Palais Royal. We stayed at Divinerries' six months until one night Peter Boyce
Wendell, the columnist, ate his milk-toast there. Next morning a poem about Marvellous
Marcia came out in his newspaper, and within two days I had three vaudeville offers and a chance
at the Midnight Frolic. I wrote Wendell a thank-you letter, and he printed it in his column
said that the style was like Carlyle's, only more rugged, and that I ought to quit dancing and do North
American literature. This got me a coupla more vaudeville offers and a chance as an
ingenu in a regular show. I took it-- and here I am, Omar."
When she finished they sat for a moment in silence, she draping the last
skeins of a Welsh rabbit on her fork and waiting for him to speak.
"Let's get out of here," he said suddenly.
Marcia's eyes hardened.
"What's the idea? Am I making you sick?"
"No, but I don't like it here. I don't like to be sitting here with
you."
Without another word Marcia signalled for the waiter.
"What's the check?" she demanded briskly. "My part-- the rabbit and the
ginger ale."
Horace watched blankly as the waiter figured it.
"See here," he began, "I intended to pay for yours too. You're my
guest."
With a half-sigh Marcia rose from the table and walked from the room.
Horace, his face a document in bewilderment, laid a bill down and followed her out, up the stairs
and into the lobby. He overtook her in front of the elevator and they faced each other.
"See here," he repeated, "you're my guest. Have I said something to offend
you?"
After an instant of wonder Marcia's eyes softened.
"You're a rude fella," she said slowly. "Don't you know you're rude?"
"I can't help it," said Horace with a directness she found quite disarming.
"You know I like you."
"You said you didn't like being with me."
"I didn't like it."
"Why not?"
Fire blazed suddenly from the gray forests of his eyes.
"Because I didn't. I've formed the habit of liking you. I've been thinking
of nothing much else for two days."
"Well, if you-- -- "
"Wait a minute," he interrupted. "I've got something to say. It's this: in
six weeks I'll be eighteen years old. When I'm eighteen years old I'm coming up to New York to
see you. Is there some place in New York where we can go and not have a lot of people in the
room?"
"Sure!" smiled Marcia. "You can come up to my 'partment. Sleep on the
couch, if you want to."
"I can't sleep on couches," he said shortly. "But I want to talk to
you."
"Why, sure," repeated Marcia-- "in my 'partment."
In his excitement Horace put his hands in his pockets.
"All right-- just so I can see you alone. I want to talk to you as we
talked
up in my room."
"Honey boy," cried Marcia, laughing, "is it that you want to kiss me?"
"Yes," Horace almost shouted. "I'll kiss you if you want me to."
The elevator man was looking at them reproachfully. Marcia edged toward the
grated door.
"I'll drop you a post-card," she said.
Horace's eyes were quite wild.
"Send me a post-card! I'll come up any time after January first. I'll be
eighteen then."
And as she stepped into the elevator he coughed enigmatically, yet with a
vague challenge, at the ceiling, and walked quickly away.
III
He was there again. She saw him when she took her first glance at the
restless Manhattan audience -- down in the front row with his head bent a bit forward and his gray
eyes fixed on her. And she knew that to him they were alone together in a world where the
high-rouged row of ballet faces and the massed whines of the violins were as imperceivable as
powder on a marble Venus. An instinctive defiance rose within her.
"Silly boy!" she said to herself hurriedly, and she didn't take her
encore.
"What do they expect for a hundred a week-- perpetual motion?" she grumbled
to herself in the wings.
"What's the trouble, Marcia?"
"Guy I don't like down in front."
During the last act as she waited for her specialty she had an odd attack
of stage fright. She had never sent Horace the promised post-card. Last night she had pretended
not to see him-- had hurried from the theatre immediately after her dance to pass a
sleepless night in her apartment, thinking-- as she had so often in the last month-- of his pale,
rather intent face, his slim, boyish figure, the merciless, unworldly abstraction that made him charming to
her.
And now that he had come she felt vaguely sorry-- as though an unwonted
responsibility was being forced on her.
"Infant prodigy!" she said aloud.
"What?" demanded the negro comedian standing beside her.
"Nothing-- just talking about myself."
On the stage she felt better. This was her dance -- and she always felt
that
the way she did it wasn't suggestive any more than to some men every pretty girl is suggestive.
She made it a stunt.
"Uptown, downtown, jelly on a spoon,
After sundown shiver by the moon."
He was not watching her now. She saw that clearly. He was looking very
deliberately at a castle on the back drop, wearing that expression he had worn in the Taft Grill.
A wave of exasperation swept over her-- he was criticising her.
"That's the vibration that thr-ills me,
Funny how affection fi-lls me,
Uptown, downtown-- --
Unconquerable revulsion seized her. She was suddenly and horribly conscious
of her audience as she had never been since her first appearance. Was that a leer on a
pallid face in the front row, a droop of disgust on one young girl's mouth? These shoulders of
hers-- these shoulders shaking-- were they hers? Were they real? Surely shoulders weren't made for
this!
"Then you'll see at a glance
I'll need some funeral ushers with St. Vitus dance
At the end of the world I'II-- -- "
The bassoon and two cellos crashed into a final chord. She paused and
poised a moment on her toes with every muscle tense, her young face looking out dully at the
audience in what one young girl afterward called "such a curious, puzzled look," and then without
bowing rushed from the stage. Into the dressing-room she sped, kicked out of one dress and into
another, and caught a taxi outside.
Her apartment was very warm-- small, it was, with a row of professional
pictures and sets of Kipling and O. Henry which she had bought once from a blue-eyed agent and
read occasionally. And there were several chairs which matched, but were none of
them comfortable, and a pink-shaded lamp with blackbirds painted on it and an atmosphere of
rather stifled pink throughout. There were nice things in it-- nice things unrelentingly hostile to
each other, offsprings of a vicarious, impatient taste acting in stray moments. The worst was typified
by a great picture framed in oak bark of Passaic as seen from the Erie Railroad-- altogether a
frantic, oddly extravagant, oddly penurious attempt to make a cheerful room. Marcia knew it
was a failure.
Into this room came the prodigy and took her two hands awkwardly.
"I followed you this time," he said.
"Oh!"
"I want you to marry me," he said.
Her arms went out to him. She kissed his mouth with a sort of passionate
wholesomeness.
"There!"
"I love you," he said.
She kissed him again and then with a little sigh flung herself into an
armchair and half lay there, shaken with absurd laughter.
"Why, you infant prodigy!" she cried.
"Very well, call me that if you want to. I once told you that I was ten
thousand years older than you-- I am."
She laughed again.
"I don't like to be disapproved of."
"No one's ever going to disapprove of you again."
"Omar," she asked, "why do you want to marry me?"
The prodigy rose and put his hands in his pockets.
"Because I love you, Marcia Meadow."
And then she stopped calling him Omar.
"Dear boy," she said, "you know I sort of love you. There's something about
you-- I can't tell what-- that just puts my heart through the wringer every time I'm round
you. But, honey-- " She paused.
"But what?"
"But lots of things. But you're only just eighteen, and I'm nearly
twenty."
"Nonsense!" he interrupted. "Put it this way -- that I'm in my nineteenth
year and you're nineteen. That makes us pretty close-- without counting that other ten thousand
years I mentioned."
Marcia laughed.
"But there are some more 'buts.' Your people-- -- "
"My people!" exclaimed the prodigy ferociously. "My people tried to make a
monstrosity out of me." His face grew quite crimson at the enormity of what he was going to
say. "My people can go way back and sit down!"
"My heavens!" cried Marcia in alarm. "All that? On tacks, I suppose."
"Tacks-- yes," he agreed wildly-- "on anything. The more I think of how
they
allowed me to become a little dried-up mummy-- "
"What makes you think you're that?" asked Marcia quietly-- "me?"
"Yes. Every person I've met on the streets since I met you has made me
jealous because they knew what love was before I did. I used to call it the 'sex impulse.'
Heavens!"
"There's more 'buts,'" said Marcia.
"What are they?"
"How could we live?"
"I'll make a living."
"You're in college."
"Do you think I care anything about taking a Master of Arts degree?"
"You want to be Master of Me, hey?"
"Yes! What? I mean, no!"
Marcia laughed, and crossing swiftly over sat in his lap. He put his arm
round her wildly and implanted the vestige of a kiss somewhere near her neck.
"There's something white about you," mused Marcia, "but it doesn't sound
very logical."
"Oh, don't be so darned reasonable!"
"I can't help it," said Marcia.
"I hate these slot-machine people!"
"But we-- -- "
"Oh, shut up!"
And as Marcia couldn't talk through her ears she had to.
IV
Horace and Marcia were married early in February. The sensation in academic
circles both at Yale and Princeton was tremendous. Horace Tarbox, who at fourteen had been
played up in the Sunday magazines sections of metropolitan newspapers, was throwing over his
career, his chance of being a world authority on American philosophy, by marrying a chorus
girl-- they made Marcia a chorus girl. But like all modern stories it was a four-and-a-half-day
wonder.
They took a flat in Harlem. After two weeks' search, during which his idea
of the value of academic knowledge faded unmercifully, Horace took a position as clerk with a
South American export company-- some one had told him that exporting was the coming thing.
Marcia was to stay in her show for a few months-- anyway until he got on his feet. He was getting
a
hundred and twenty-five to start with, and though of course they told him it was only a
question of months until he would be earning double that, Marcia refused even to consider giving
up the hundred and fifty a week that she was getting at the time.
"We'll call ourselves Head and Shoulders, dear," she said softly, "and the
shoulders'll have to keep shaking a little longer until the old head gets started."
"I hate it," he objected gloomily.
"Well," she replied emphatically, "your salary wouldn't keep us in a
tenement. Don't think I want to be public-- I don't. I want to be yours. But I'd be a half-wit to sit
in one room and count the sunflowers on the wall-paper while I waited for you. When you pull down
three hundred a month I'll quit."
And much as it hurt his pride, Horace had to admit that hers was the wiser
course.
March mellowed into April. May read a gorgeous riot act to the parks and
waters of Manhattan, and they were very happy. Horace, who had no habits whatsoever-- he
had never had time to form any-- proved the most adaptable of husbands, and as Marcia
entirely
lacked opinions on the subjects that engrossed him there were very few jottings and bumpings.
Their minds moved in different spheres. Marcia acted as practical factotum, and Horace lived
either in his old world of abstract ideas or in a sort of triumphantly earthy worship and adoration of
his wife. She was a continual source of astonishment to him-- the freshness and originality of her
mind, her dynamic, clear-headed energy, and her unfailing good humor.
And Marcia's co-workers in the nine-o'clock show, whither she had
transferred her talents, were impressed with her tremendous pride in her husband's mental powers. Horace
they knew only as a very slim, tight-lipped, and immature-looking young man, who waited
every night to take her home.
"Horace," said Marcia one evening when she met him as usual at eleven, "you
looked like a ghost standing there against the street lights. You losing weight?"
He shook his head vaguely.
"I don't know. They raised me to a hundred and thirty-five dollars to-day,
and-- -- "
"I don't care," said Marcia severely. "You're killing yourself working at
night. You read those big books on economy-- -- "
"Economics," corrected Horace.
"Well, you read 'em every night long after I'm asleep. And you're getting
all stooped over like you were before we were married."
"But, Marcia, I've got to-- -- "
"No, you haven't, dear. I guess I'm running this shop for the present, and
I won't let my fella ruin his health and eyes. You got to get some exercise."
"I do. Every morning I-- -- "
"Oh, I know! But those dumb-bells of yours wouldn't give a consumptive two
degrees of fever. I mean real exercise. You've got to join a gymnasium. 'Member you told
me you were such a trick gymnast once that they tried to get you out for the team in college and
they couldn't because you had a standing date with Herb Spencer?"
"I used to enjoy it," mused Horace, "but it would take up too much time
now."
"All right," said Marcia. "I'll make a bargain with you. You join a gym and
I'll read one of those books from the brown row of 'em."
"'Pepys' Diary'? Why, that ought to be enjoyable. He's very light."
"Not for me-- he isn't. It'll be like digesting plate glass. But you been
telling me how much it'd broaden my lookout. Well, you go to a gym three nights a week and I'll
take one big dose of Sammy."
Horace hesitated.
"Well-- -- "
"Come on, now! You do some giant swings for me and I'll chase some culture
for you."
So Horace finally consented, and all through a baking summer he spent three
and sometimes four evenings a week experimenting on the trapeze in Skipper's
Gymnasium. And in August he admitted to Marcia that it made him capable of more mental work
during the day.
"Mens sana in corpore sano," he said.
"Don't believe in it," replied Marcia. "I tried one of those patent
medicines once and they're all bunk. You stick to gymnastics."
One night in early September while he was going through one of his
contortions on the rings in the nearly deserted room he was addressed by a meditative fat man whom
he had noticed watching him for several nights.
"Say, lad, do that stunt you were doin' last night."
Horace grinned at him from his perch.
"I invented it," he said. "I got the idea from the fourth proposition of
Euclid."
"What circus he with?"
"He's dead."
"Well, he must of broke his neck doin' that stunt. I set here last night
thinkin' sure you was goin' to break yours."
"Like this!" said Horace, and swinging onto the trapeze he did his
stunt.
"Don't it kill your neck an' shoulder muscles?"
"It did at first, but inside of a week I wrote the quod eras demonstrandum
on it."
"Hm!"
Horace swung idly on the trapeze.
"Ever think of takin' it up professionally?" asked the fat man.
"Not I."
'Good money in it if you're willin' to do stunts like 'at an' can get away
with it."
"Here's another," chirped Horace eagerly, and the fat man's mouth dropped
suddenly agape as he watched this pink-jerseyed Prometheus again defy the gods and Isaac
Newton.
The night following this encounter Horace got home from work to find a
rather pale Marcia stretched out on the sofa waiting for him.
"I fainted twice to-day," she began without preliminaries.
"What?"
"Yep. You see baby's due in four months now. Doctor says I ought to have
quit dancing two weeks ago."
Horace sat down and thought it over.
"I'm glad, of course," he said pensively-- "I mean glad that we're going to
have a baby. But this means a lot of expense."
"I've got two hundred and fifty in the bank," said Marcia hopefully, "and
two weeks' pay coming."
Horace computed quickly.
"Including my salary, that'll give us nearly fourteen hundred for the next
six months."
Marcia looked blue.
"That all? Course I can get a job singing somewhere this month. And I can
go to work again in March."
"Of course nothing!" said Horace gruffly. "You'll stay right here. Let's
see now-- there'll be doctor's bills and a nurse, besides the maid. We've got to have some more
money."
"Well," said Marcia wearily, "I don't know where it's coming from. It's up
to the old head now. Shoulders is out of business."
Horace rose and pulled on his coat.
"Where are you going?"
"I've got an idea," he answered. "I'll be right back."
Ten minutes later as he headed down the street toward Skipper's Gymnasium
he felt a placid wonder, quite unmixed with humor, at what he was going to do. How he
would have gaped at himself a year before! How every one would have gaped! But when you
opened your door at the rap of life you let in many things.
The gymnasium was brightly lit, and when his eyes became accustomed to the
glare he found the meditative fat man seated on a pile of canvas mats smoking a big
cigar.
"Say," began Horace directly, "were you in earnest last night when you said
I could make money on my trapeze stunts?"
"Why, yes," said the fat man in surprise.
"Well, I've been thinking it over, and I believe I'd like to try it. I
could work at night and on Saturday afternoons-- and regularly if the pay is high enough."
The fat man looked at his watch.
"Well," he said, "Charlie Paulson's the man to see. He'll book you inside
of four days, once he sees you work out. He won't be in now, but I'll get hold of him for
to-morrow night."
The fat man was as good as his word. Charlie Paulson arrived next night and
put in a wondrous hour watching the prodigy swoop through the air in amazing parabolas,
and on the night following he brought two large men with him who looked as though they had
been born smoking black cigars and talking about money in low, passionate voices. Then on
the succeeding Saturday Horace Tarbox's torso made its first professional appearance in a
gymnastic exhibition at the Coleman Street Gardens. But though the audience numbered nearly five
thousand people, Horace felt no nervousness. From his childhood he had read papers to
audiences-- learned that trick of detaching himself.
"Marcia," he said cheerfully later that same night, "I think we're out of
the woods. Paulson thinks he can get me an opening at the Hippodrome, and that means an all-winter
engagement. The Hippodrome, you know, is a big-- -- "
"Yes, I believe I've heard of it," interrupted Marcia, "but I want to know
about this stunt you're doing. It isn't any spectacular suicide, is it?"
"It's nothing," said Horace quietly. "But if you can think of any nicer way
of a man killing himself than taking a risk for you, why that's the way I want to die."
Marcia reached up and wound both arms tightly round his neck.
"Kiss me," she whispered, "and call me 'dear heart.' I love to hear you say
'dear heart.' And bring me a book to read to-morrow. No more Sam Pepys, but something trick and
trashy. I've been wild for something to do all day. I felt like writing letters, but I
didn't have anybody to write to."
"Write to me," said Horace. "I'll read them."
"I wish I could," breathed Marcia. "If I knew words enough I could write
you the longest love-letter in the world-- and never get tired."
But after two more months Marcia grew very tired indeed, and for a row of
nights it was a very anxious, weary-looking young athlete who walked out before the Hippodrome
crowd. Then there were two days when his place was taken by a young man who wore pale blue
instead of white, and got very little applause. But after the two days Horace appeared
again, and those who sat close to the stage remarked an expression of beatific happiness on that
young acrobat's face, even when he was twisting breathlessly in the air in the middle of his amazing
and original shoulder swing. After that performance he laughed at the elevator man and
dashed up the stairs to the flat five steps at a time-- and then tiptoed very carefully into a quiet
room.
" Marcia," he whispered.
"Hello!" She smiled up at him wanly. "Horace, there's something I want you
to do. Look in my top bureau drawer and you'll find a big stack of paper. It's a book--
sort
of-- Horace. I wrote it down in these last three months while I've been laid up. I wish you'd take
it to that Peter Boyce Wendell who put my letter in his paper. He could tell you whether it'd be a
good book. I wrote it just the way I talk, just the way I wrote that letter to him. It's just a story
about a lot of things that happened to me. Will you take it to him, Horace?"
"Yes, darling."
He leaned over the bed until his head was beside her on the pillow, and
began stroking back her yellow hair.
"Dearest Marcia," he said softly.
"No," she murmured, "call me what I told you to call me."
"Dear heart," he whispered passionately-- "dearest, dearest heart."
"What'll we call her?"
They rested a minute in happy, drowsy content, while Horace considered.
"We'll call her Marcia Hume Tarbox," he said at length.
"Why the Hume?"
"Because he's the fellow who first introduced us."
"That so?" she murmured, sleepily surprised. "I thought his name was
Moon."
Her eyes closed, and after a moment the slow, lengthening surge of the
bedclothes over her breast showed that she was asleep.
Horace tiptoed over to the bureau and opening the top drawer found a heap
of closely scrawled, lead-smeared pages. He looked at the first sheet:
SANDRA PEPYS, SYNCOPATED
BY MARCIA TARBOX
He smiled. So Samuel Pepys had made an impression on her after all. He
turned a page and began to read. His smile deepened-- he read on. Half an hour passed and he
became aware that Marcia had waked and was watching him from the bed.
"Honey," came in a whisper.
"What, Marcia?"
"Do you like it?"
Horace coughed.
"I seem to be reading on. It's bright."
"Take it to Peter Boyce Wendell. Tell him you got the highest marks in
Princeton once and that you ought to know when a book's good. Tell him this one's a world
beater."
"All right, Marcia," said Horace gently.
Her eyes closed again and Horace crossing over kissed her forehead-- stood
there for a moment with a look of tender pity. Then he left the room.
All that night the scrawly writing on the pages, the constant mistakes in
spelling and grammar, and the weird punctuation danced before his eyes. He woke several
times in the night, each time full of a welling chaotic sympathy for this desire of Marcia's soul
to express itself in words. To him there was something infinitely pathetic about it, and for the
first time in months he began to turn over in his mind his own half-forgotten dreams.
He had meant to write a series of books, to popularize the new realism as
Schopenhauer had popularized pessimism and William James pragmatism.
But life hadn't come that way. Life took hold of people and forced them
into flying rings. He laughed to think of that rap at his door, the diaphanous shadow in Hume,
Marcia's threatened kiss.
"And it's still me," he said aloud in wonder as he lay awake in the
darkness. "I'm the man who sat in Berkeley with temerity to wonder if that rap would have had actual
existence had my ear not been there to hear it. I'm still that man. I could be electrocuted for
the crimes he committed.
"Poor gauzy souls trying to express ourselves in something tangible. Marcia
with her written book; I with my unwritten ones. Trying to choose our mediums and then
taking what we get-- and being glad."
V
"Sandra Pepys, Syncopated," with an introduction by Peter Boyce Wendell,
the columnist, appeared serially in Jordan's Magazine, and came out in book form in March.
From its first published instalment it attracted attention far and wide. A trite enough
subject-- a girl from a small New Jersey town coming to New York to go on the stage-- treated simply, with a
peculiar vividness of phrasing and a haunting undertone of sadness in the very
inadequacy of its vocabulary, it made an irresistible appeal.
Peter Boyce Wendell, who happened at that time to be advocating the
enrichment of the American language by the immediate adoption of expressive vernacular words,
stood as its sponsor and thundered his indorsement over the placid bromides of the
conventional reviewers.
Marcia received three hundred dollars an instalment for the serial
publication, which came at an opportune time, for though Horace's monthly salary at the Hippodrome was
now more than Marcia's had ever been, young Marcia was emitting shrill cries which they
interpreted as a demand for country air. So early April found them installed in a bungalow in
Westchester County, with a place for a lawn, a place for a garage, and a place for everything, including a
sound-proof impregnable study, in which Marcia faithfully promised Mr. Jordan she would
shut herself up when her daughter's demands began to be abated, and compose immortally
illiterate literature.
"It's not half bad," thought Horace one night as he was on his way from the
station to his house. He was considering several prospects that had opened up, a four months'
vaudeville offer in five figures, a chance to go back to Princeton in charge of all gymnasium
work. Odd! He had once intended to go back there in charge of all philosophic work, and now he
had not even been stirred by the arrival in New York of Anton Laurier, his old idol.
The gravel crunched raucously under his heel. He saw the lights of his
sitting-room gleaming and noticed a big car standing in the drive. Probably Mr. Jordan
again, come to persuade Marcia to settle down to work.
She had heard the sound of his approach and her form was silhouetted
against the lighted door as she came out to meet him.
"There's some Frenchman here," she whispered nervously. "I can't pronounce
his name, but he sounds awful deep. You'll have to jaw with him."
"What Frenchman?"
"You can't prove it by me. He drove up an hour ago with Mr. Jordan, and
said he wanted to meet Sandra Pepys, and all that sort of thing."
Two men rose from chairs as they went inside.
"Hello, Tarbox," said Jordan. "I've just been bringing together two
celebrities. I've brought M'sieur Laurier out with me. M'sieur Laurier, let me present Mr. Tarbox, Mrs.
Tarbox's husband."
"Not Anton Laurier!" exclaimed Horace.
"But, yes. I must come. I have to come. I have read the book of Madame, and
I have been charmed"-- he fumbled in his pocket-- "ah, I have read of you too. In this
newspaper which I read to-day it has your name."
He finally produced a clipping from a magazine.
"Read it!" he said eagerly. "It has about you too."
Horace's eye skipped down the page.
"A distinct contribution to American dialect literature," it said. "No
attempt at literary tone; the book derives its very quality from this fact, as did 'Huckleberry
Finn.'"
Horace's eyes caught a passage lower down; he became suddenly aghast-- read
on hurriedly:
"Marcia Tarbox's connection with the stage is not only as a spectator but
as the wife of a performer. She was married last year to Horace Tarbox, who every evening
delights the children at the Hippodrome with his wondrous flying-ring performance. It is said that
the young couple have dubbed themselves Head and Shoulders, referring doubtless to the fact that
Mrs. Tarbox supplies the literary and mental qualities, while the supple and agile
shoulders of her husband contribute their share to the family fortunes.
"Mrs. Tarbox seems to merit that much-abused title-- 'prodigy.' Only
twenty-- -- "
Horace stopped reading, and with a very odd expression in his eyes gazed
intently at Anton Laurier.
"I want to advise you-- " he began hoarsely.
"What?"
"About raps. Don't answer them! Let them alone-- have a padded door."
The sunlight dripped over the house like golden paint over an art jar, and
the freckling shadows here and there only intensified the rigor of the bath of
light. The Butterworth and Larkin houses flanking were intrenched behind great
stodgy trees; only the Happer house took the full sun, and all day long faced
the dusty road-street with a tolerant kindly patience. This was the city of
Tarleton in southernmost Georgia, September afternoon.
Up in her bedroom window Sally Carrol Happer rested her nineteen-year-old chin
on a fifty-two-year-old sill and watched Clark Darrow's ancient Ford turn the
corner. The car was hot-- being partly metallic it retained all the heat it
absorbed or evolved -- and Clark Darrow sitting bolt upright at the wheel wore a
pained, strained expression as though he considered himself a spare part, and
rather likely to break. He laboriously crossed two dust ruts, the wheels
squeaking indignantly at the encounter, and then with a terrifying expression
he gave the steering-gear a final wrench and deposited self and car
approximately in front of the Happer steps. There was a plaintive heaving
sound, a death-rattle, followed by a short silence; and then the air was rent
by a startling whistle.
Sally Carrol gazed down sleepily. She started to yawn, but finding this quite
impossible unless she raised her chin from the window-sill, changed her mind
and continued silently to regard the car, whose owner sat brilliantly if
perfunctorily at attention as he waited for an answer to his signal. After a
moment the whistle once more split the dusty air.
"Good mawnin'."
With difficulty Clark twisted his tall body round and bent a distorted glance
on the window.
"'Tain't mawnin', Sally Carrol."
"Isn't it, sure enough?"
"What you do in'?"
"Eatin' 'n apple."
"Come on go swimmin'-- want to?"
"Reckon so."
"How 'bout hurryin' up?"
"Sure enough."
Sally Carrol sighed voluminously and raised herself with profound inertia from
the floor, where she had been occupied in alternately destroying parts of a
green apple and painting paper tops for her younger sister. She approached a
mirror, regarded her expression with a pleassd and pleasant languor, dabbed two
spots of rouge on her lips and a grain of powder on her nose, and covered her
bobbed corn-colored hair with a rose littered sun bonnet. Then she kicked over
the painting water, said, "Oh, damn!" -- but let it lay-- and left the room.
"How you, Clark?" she inquired a minute later as she slipped nimbly over the
side of the car.
"Mighty fine, Sally Carrol."
"Where we go swimmin'?"
"Out to Walley's pool. Told Marylyn we'd call by an' get her an' Joe Ewing."
Clark was dark and lean, and when on foot was rather inclined to stoop. His
eyes were ominous and his expression somewhat petulant except when startlingly
illuminated by one of his frequent smiles. Clark had "a income"-- just enough to
keep himself in ease and his car in gasolene-- and he had spent the two years
since he graduated from Georgia Tech in dozing round the lazy streets of his
home town, discussing how he could best invest his capital for an immediate
fortune.
Hanging round he found not at all difficult; a crowd of little girls had grown
up beautifully, the amazing Sally Carrol foremost among them; and they enjoyed
being swum with and danced with and made love to in the flower-filled summery
evenings -- and they all liked Clark immensely. When feminine company palled
there were half a dozen other youths who were always just about to do
something, and meanwhile were quite willing to join him in a few holes of golf,
or a game of billiards, or the consumption of a quart of "hard yella licker."
Every once in a while one of these contemporaries made a farewell round of
calls before going up to New York or Philadelphia or Pittsburgh to go into
business, but mostly they just stayed round in this languid parade of dreamy
skies and fireily evenings and noisy niggery street fairs-- and especially of
gracious, soft-voiced girls, who were brought up on memories instead of
money.
The Ford having been excited into a sort of restless resentful life Clark and
Sally Carrol rolled and rattled down Valley Avenue into Jefferson Street, where
the dust road became a pavement; along opiate Millicent Place, where there were
half a dozen prosperous, substantial mansions; and on into the down-town
section. Driving was perilous here, for it was shopping time; the population
idled casually across the streets and a drove of low-moaning oxen were being
urged along in front of a placid street-car; even the shops seemed only yawning
their doors and blinking their windows in the sunshine before retiring into a
state of utter and finite coma.
"Sally Carrol," said Clark suddenly, "it a fact that you're engaged?"
She looked at him quickly.
"Where'd you hear that?"
"Sure enough, you engaged?"
"'At's a nice question!"
"Girl told me you were engaged to a Yankee you met up in Asheville last
summer."
Sally Carrol sighed.
"Never saw such an old town for rumors."
"Don't marry a Yankee, Sally Carrol. We need you round here."
Sally Carrol was silent a moment.
"Clark," she demanded suddenly, "who on earth shall I marry?"
"I offer my services."
"Honey, you couldn't support a wife," she answered cheerfully. "Anyway, I know
you too well to fall in love with you."
"'At doesn't mean you ought to marry a Yankee," he persisted.
"S'pose I love him?"
He shook his head.
"You couldn't. He'd be a lot different from us, every way."
He broke off as he halted the car in front of a rambling, dilapidated house.
Marylyn Wade and Joe Ewing appeared in the doorway.
"'Lo, Sally Carrol."
"Hi!"
"How you-all?"
" Sally Carrol," demanded Marylyn as they started off again, "you engaged?"
"Lawdy, where'd all this start? Can't I look at a man 'thout everybody in town
engagin' me to him?"
Clark stared straight in front of him at a bolt on the clattering
wind-shield.
"Sally Carrol," he said with a curious intensity, "don't you like us?"
"What?"
"Us down here?"
`Why, Clark, you know I do. I adore all you boys."
"Then why you gettin' engaged to a Yankee?"
"Clark, I don't know. I'm not sure what I'll do,
but-- well, I want to go places and see people. I want my mind to grow. I want
to live where things happen on a big scale."
"What you mean?"
"Oh, Clark, I love you, and I love Joe here, and Ben Arrot, and you-all, but
you'll-- you'll-- -- "
"We'll all be failures?"
"Yes. I don't mean only money failures, but just sort of-- of ineffectual and
sad, and-- oh, how can I tell you?"
"You mean because we stay here in Tarleton?"
"Yes, Clark; and because you like it and never want to change things or think
or go ahead."
He nodded and she reached over and pressed his hand.
"Clark," she said softly, "I wouldn't change you for the world. You're sweet
the way you are. The things that'll make you fail I'll love always-- the living
in the past, the lazy days and nights you have, and all your carelessness and
generosity."
"But you're goin' away?"
"Yes-- because I couldn't ever marry you. You've a place in my heart no one else
ever could have, but tied down here I'd get restless. I'd feel I was-- wastin'
myself. There's two sides to me, you see. There's the sleepy old side you love;
an' there's a sort of energy-- the feelin' that makes me do wild things. That's
the part of me that may be useful somewhere, that'll last when I'm not
beautiful any more."
She broke off with characteristic suddenness and sighed, "Oh, sweet cooky!" as
her mood changed.
Half closing her eyes and tipping back her head till it rested on the seat-back
she let the savory breeze fan her eyes and ripple the fluffy curls of her
bobbed hair. They were in the country now, hurrying between tangled growths of
bright-green coppice and grass and tall trees that sent sprays of foliage to
hang a cool welcome over the road. Here and there they passed a battered negro
cabin, its oldest white-haired inhabitant smoking a corncob pipe beside the
door, and half a dozen scantily clothed pickaninnies parading tattered dolls on
the wild-grown grass in front. Farther out were lazy cotton-fields, where even
the workers seemed intangible shadows lent by the sun to the earth, not for
toil, but to while away some age-old tradition in the golden September fields.
And round the drowsy picturesqueness, over the trees and shacks and muddy
rivers, flowed the heat, never hostile, only comforting, like a great warm
nourishing bosom for the infant earth.
"Water, Sally Carrol! Cool water waitin' for you!"
Her eyes opened sleepily.
"Hi!" she murmured, smiling.
II
In November Harry Bellamy, tall, broad, and brisk, came down from his Northern
city to spend four days. His intention was to settle a matter that had been
hanging fire since he and Sally Carrol had met in Asheville, North Carolina, in
midsummer. The settlement took only a quiet afternoon and an evening in front
of a glowing open fire, for Harry Bellamy had everything she wanted; and,
besides, she loved him-- loved him with that side of her she kept especially for
loving. Sally Carrol had several rather clearly defined sides.
On his last afternoon they walked, and she found their steps tending
half-unconsciously toward one of her favorite haunts, the cemetery. When it
came in sight, gray-white and golden-green under the cheerful late sun, she
paused, irresolute, by the iron gate.
"Are you mournful by nature, Harry?" she asked with a faint smile.
"Mournful? Not I."
"Then let's go in here. It depresses some folks, but I like it."
They passed through the gateway and followed a path that led through a wavy
valley of graves-- dusty-gray and mouldy for the fifties; quaintly carved with
flowers and jars for the seventies; ornate and hideous for the nineties, with
fat marble cherubs lying in sodden sleep on stone pillows, and great impossible
growths of nameless granite flowers. Occasionally they saw a kneeling figure
with tributary flowers, but over most of the graves lay silence and withered
leaves with only the fragrance that their own shadowy memories could waken in
living minds.
They reached the top of a hill where they were fronted by a tall, round
head-stone, freckled with dark spots of damp and half grown over with vines.
"Margery Lee," she read; "1844-1873. Wasn't she nice? She died when she was
twenty-nine. Dear Margery Lee," she added softly. "Can't you see her,
Harry?"
"Yes, Sally Carrol."
He felt a little hand insert itself into his.
"She was dark, I think; and she always wore her hair with a ribbon in it, and
gorgeous hoop-skirts of alice blue and old rose."
"Yes."
"Oh, she was sweet, Harry! And she was the sort of girl born to stand on a
wide, pillared porch and welcome folks in. I think perhaps a lot of men went
away to war meanin' to come back to her; but maybe none of 'em ever did."
He stooped down close to the stone, hunting for any record of marriage.
"There's nothing here to show."
"Of course not. How could there be anything there better than just 'Margery
Lee,' and that eloquent date?"
She drew close to him and an unexpected lump
came into his throat as her yellow hair brushed his cheek.
"You see how she was, don't you, Harry?"
"I see," he agreed gently. "I see through your precious eyes. You're beautiful
now, so I know she must have been."
Silent and close they stood, and he could feel her shoulders trembling a
little. An ambling breeze swept up the hill and stirred the brim of her
floppidy
hat.
"Let's go down there!"
She was pointing to a flat stretch on the other side of the hill where along
the green-turf were a thousand grayish-white crosses stretching in endless,
ordered rows like the stacked arms of a battalion.
"Those are the Confederate dead," said Sally Carrol simply.
They walked along and read the inscriptions, always only a name and a date,
sometimes quite indecipherable.
"The last row is the saddest-- see, 'way over there. Every cross has just a date
on it, and the word `Unknown.'"
She looked at him and her eyes brimmed with tears.
"I can't tell you how real it is to me, darling-- if you don't know."
"How you feel about it is beautiful to me."
"No, no, it's not me, it's them-- that old time that I've tried to have live in
me. These were just men, unimportant evidently or they wouldn't have been
`unknown'; but they died for the most beautiful thing in the world-- the dead
South. You see," she continued, her voice still husky, her eyes glistening with
tears, "people have these dreams they fasten onto things, and I've always grown
up with that dream. It was so easy because it was all dead and there weren't
any disillusions comin' to me. I've tried in a way to live up to those past
standards of noblesse oblige-- there's just the last remnants of it, you know,
like the roses of an old garden dying all round us-- streaks of strange
courtliness and chivalry in some of these boys an' stories I used to hear from
a Confederate soldier who lived next door, and a few old darkies. Oh, Harry,
there was something, there was something! I couldn't ever make you understand,
but it was there."
"I understand," he assured her again quietly.
Sally Carrol smiled and dried her eyes on the tip of a handkerchief protruding
from his breast pocket.
"You don't feel depressed, do you, lover? Even when I cry I'm happy here, and I
get a sort of strength from it."
Hand in hand they turned and walked slowly away. Finding soft grass she drew
him down to a seat beside her with their backs against the remnants of a low
broken wall.
"Wish those three old women would clear out," he complained. "I want to kiss
you, Sally Carrol."
"Me, too."
They waited impatiently for the three bent figures to move off, and then she
kissed him until the sky seemed to fade out and all her smiles and tears to
vanish in an ecstasy of eternal seconds.
Afterward they walked slowly back together, while on the corners twilight
played at somnolent black-and-white checkers with the end of day.
"You'll be up about mid-January," he said, "and you've got to stay a month at
least. It'll be slick. There's a winter carnival on, and if you've never really
seen snow it'll be like fairy-land to you. There'll be skating and skiing and
tobogganing and sleigh-riding, and all sorts of torchlight parades on
snow-shoes. They haven't had one for years, so they're going to make it a
knock-out."
"Will I be cold, Harry?" she asked suddenly.
"You certainly won't. You may freeze your nose, but you won't be shivery cold.
It's hard and dry, you know."
"I guess I'm a summer child. I don't like any cold I've ever seen."
She broke off and they were both silent for a minute.
"Sally Carrol," he said very slowly, "what do you say to-- March?"
"I say I love you."
"March?"
"March, Harry."
III
All night in the Pullman it was very cold. She rang for the porter to ask for
another blanket, and when he couldn't give her one she tried vainly, by
squeezing down into the bottom of her berth and doubling back the bedclothes,
to snatch a few hours' sleep. She wanted to look her best in the morning.
She rose at six and sliding uncomfortably into her clothes stumbled up to the
diner for a cup of coffee. The snow had filtered into the vestibules and
covered the floor with a slippery coating. It was intriguing, this cold, it
crept in everywhere. Her breath was quite visible and she blew into the air
with a nave enjoyment. Seated in the diner she stared out the window at white
hills and valleys and scattered pines whose every branch was a green platter
for a cold feast of snow. Sometimes a solitary farmhouse would fly by, ugly and
bleak and lone on the white waste; and with each one she had an instant of
chill compassion for the souls shut in there waiting for spring.
As she left the diner and swayed back into the Pullman she experienced a
surging rush of energy and wondered if she was feeling the bracing air of which
Harry had spoken. This was the North, the North-- her land now!
"Then blow, ye winds, heigho!
A-roving I will go,"
she chanted exultantly to herself.
"What's 'at?" inquired the porter politely.
"I said: `Brush me off.'"
The long wires of the telegraph-poles doubled; two tracks ran up beside the
train-- three-- four; came a succession of white-roofed houses, a glimpse of a
trolley-car with frosted windows, streets-- more streets-- the city.
She stood for a dazed moment in the frosty station before she saw three
fur-bundled figures descending upon her.
"There she is!"
"Oh, Sally Carrol!"
Sally Carrol dropped her bag.
"Hi!"
A faintly familiar icy-cold face kissed her, and then she was in a group of
faces all apparently emitting great clouds of heavy smoke; she was shaking
hands. There were Gordon, a short, eager man of thirty who looked like an
amateur knocked-about model for Harry, and his wife, Myra, a listless lady with
flaxen hair under a fur automobile cap. Almost immediately Sally Carrol thought
of her as vaguely Scandinavian. A cheerful chauffeur adopted her bag, and amid
ricochets of half-phrases, exclamations, and perfunctory listless "my dears"
from Myra, they swept each other from the station.
Then they were in a sedan bound through a crooked succession of snowy streets
where dozens of little boys were hitching sleds behind grocery wagons and
automobiles.
"Oh," cried Sally Carrol, "I want to do that! Can we, Harry?"
"That's for kids. But we might-- -- "
"It looks like such a circus " she said regretfully.
Home was a rambling frame house set on a white lap of snow, and there she met a
big, gray-haired man of whom she approved, and a lady who was like an egg, and
who kissed her-- these were Harry's parents. There was a breathless
indescribable hour crammed full of half-sentences, hot water, bacon and eggs
and confusion; and after that she was alone with Harry in the library, asking
him if she dared smoke.
It was a large room with a Madonna over the fireplace and rows upon rows of
books in covers of light gold and dark gold and shiny red. All the chairs had
little lace squares where one's head should rest, the couch was just
comfortable, the books looked as if they had been read-- some-- and Sally Carrol
had an instantaneous vision of the battered old library at home, with her
father's huge medical books, and the oil-paintings of her three great-uncles,
and the old couch that had been mended up for forty-five years and was still
luxurious to dream in. This room struck her as being neither attractive nor
particularly otherwise. It was simply a room with a lot of fairly expensive
things in it that all looked about fifteen years old.
"What do you think of it up here?" demanded Harry eagerly. "Does it surprise
you? Is it what you expected, I mean?"
"You are, Harry," she said quietly, and reached out her arms to him.
But after a brief kiss he seemed anxious to extort enthusiasm from her.
"The town, I mean. Do you like it? Can you feel the pep in the air?"
"Oh, Harry," she laughed, "you'll have to give me time. You can't just fling
questions at me."
She puffed at her cigarette with a sigh of contentment.
"One thing I want to ask you," he began rather apologetically; "you Southerners
put quite an emphasis on family, and all that-- not that it isn't quite all
right, but you'll find it a little different here. I mean-- you'll notice a lot
of things that'll seem to you sort of vulgar display at first, Sally Carrol;
but just remember that this is a three-generation town. Everybody has a father,
and about half of us have grandfathers. Back of that we don't go."
"Of course," she murmured.
"Our grandfathers, you see, founded the place, and a lot of them had to take
some pretty queer jobs while they were doing the founding. For instance,
there's one woman who at present is about the social model for the town; well,
her father was the first public ash man-- things like that."
"Why," said Sally Carrol, puzzled, "did you s'pose I was goin' to make remarks
about people?"
"Not at all," interrupted Harry; "and I'm not apologizing for any one either.
It's just that-- well, a Southern girl came up here last summer and said some
unfortunate things, and-- oh, I just thought I'd tell you."
Sally Carrol felt suddenly indignant-- as though she had been unjustly
spanked-- but Harry evidently considered the subject closed, for he went on with
a great surge of enthusiasm.
"It's carnival time, you know. First in ten years. And there's an ice palace
they're building now that's the first they've had since eighty-five. Built out
of blocks of the clearest ice they could find-- on a tremendous scale."
She rose and walking to the window pushed aside the heavy Turkish portires and
looked out.
"Oh!" she cried suddenly. "There's two little boys makin' a snow man! Harry, do
you reckon I can go out an' help 'em?"
"You dream! Come here and kiss me."
She left the window rather reluctantly.
"I don't guess this is a very kissable climate, is it? I mean, it makes you so
you don't want to sit round, doesn't it?"
"We're not going to. I've got a vacation for the first week you're here, and
there's a dinner-dance to-night."
"Oh, Harry," she confessed, subsiding in a heap, half in his lap, half in the
pillows, "I sure do feel confused. I haven't got an idea whether I'll like it
or not, an' I don't know what people expect, or anythin'. You'll have to tell
me, honey."
"I'll tell you," he said softly, "if you'll just tell me you're glad to be
here."
"Glad-- just awful glad!" she whispered, insinuating herself into his arms in
her own peculiar way. "Where you are is home for me, Harry."
And as she said this she had the feeling for almost the first time in her life
that she was acting a part.
That night, amid the gleaming candles of a dinner-party, where the men seemed
to do most of the talking while the girls sat in a haughty and expensive
aloofness, even Harry's presence on her left failed to make her feel at
home.
"They're a good-looking crowd, don't you think?" he demanded. "Just look round.
There's Spud Hubbard, tackle at Princeton last year, and Junie Morton-- he and
the red-haired fellow next to him were both Yale hockey captains; Junie was in
my class. Why, the best athletes in the world come from these States round
here. This is a man's country, I tell you. Look at John J. Fishburn!"
"Who's he?" asked Sally Carol innocently.
"Don't you know?"
"I've heard the name."
"Greatest wheat man in the Northwest, and one of the greatest financiers in the
country."
She turned suddenly to a voice on her right.
"I guess they forgot to introduce us. My name's Roger Patton."
"My name is Sally Carol Happer," she said graciously.
"Yes, I know. Harry told me you were coming."
"You a relative?"
"No, I'm a professor."
"Oh," she laughed.
"At the university. You're from the South, aren't you?"
"Yes; Tarleton, Georgia."
She liked him immediately-- a reddish-brown mustache under watery blue eyes that
had something in them that these other eyes lacked, some quality of
appreciation. They exchanged stray sentences through dinner, and she made up
her mind to see him again.
After coffee she was introduced to numerous good-looking young men who danced
with conscious precision and seemed to take it for granted that she wanted to
talk about nothing except Harry.
"Heavens," she thought, "they talk as if my being engaged made me older than
they are-- as if I'd tell their mothers on them!"
In the South an engaged girl, even a young married woman, expected the same
amount of half-affectionate badinage and flattery that would be accorded a
dbutante, but here all that seemed banned. One young man, after getting well
started on the subject of Sally Carrol's eyes, and how they had allured him
ever since she entered the room, went into a violent confusion when he found
she was visiting the Bellamys-- was Harry's fiance. He seemed to feel as though
he had made some risque and inexcusable blunder, became immediately formal, and
left her at the first opportunity.
She was rather glad when Roger Patton cut in on her and suggested that they sit
out a while.
"Well," he inquired, blinking cheerily, "how's Carmen from the South?"
"Mighty fine. How's-- how's Dangerous Dan
McGrew? Sorry, but he's the only Northerner I know much about."
He seemed to enjoy that.
"Of course," he confessed, "as a professor of literature I'm not supposed to
have read Dangerous Dan McGrew."
"Are you a native?"
"No, I'm a Philadelphian. Imported from Harvard to teach French. But I've been
here ten years."
"Nine years, three hundred and sixty-four days longer than me."
"Like it here?"
"Uh-huh. Sure do!"
"Really?"
"Well, why not? Don't I look as if I were havin' a good time?"
"I saw you look out the window a minute ago-- and shiver."
"Just my imagination," laughed Sally Carrol. "I'm used to havin' everythin'
quiet outside, an' sometimes I look out an' see a flurry of snow, an' it's just
as if somethin' dead was movin'."
He nodded appreciatively.
"Ever been North before?"
"Spent two Julys in Asheville, North Carolina."
"Nice-looking crowd, aren't they?" suggested Patton, indicating the swirling
floor.
Sally Carrol started. This had been Harry's remark.
"Sure are! They're-- canine."
"What?"
She flushed.
"I'm sorry; that sounded worse than I meant it. You see I always think of
people as feline or canine, irrespective of sex."
"Which are you?"
"I'm feline. So are you. So are most Southern men an' most of these girls
here."
"What's Harry?"
"Harry's canine distinctly. All the men I've met to-night seem to be
canine."
"What does `canine' imply? A certain conscious masculinity as opposed to
subtlety?"
"Reckon so. I never analyzed it-- only I just look at people an' say `canine' or
`feline' right off. It's right absurd, I guess."
"Not at all. I'm interested. I used to have a theory about these people. I
think they're freezing up."
"What?"
"I think they're growing like Swedes-- Ibsenesque, you know. Very gradually
getting gloomy and melancholy. It's these long winters. Ever read any
Ibsen?"
She shook her head.
"Well, you find in his characters a certain brooding rigidity. They're
righteous, narrow, and cheerless, without infinite possibilities for great
sorrow or joy."
"Without smiles or tears?"
"Exactly. That's my theory. You see there are thousands of Swedes up here. They
come, I imagine, because the climate is very much like their own, and there's
been a gradual mingling. There're probably not half a dozen here to-night,
but-- we've had four Swedish governors. Am I boring you?'
"I'm mighty interested."
"Your future sister-in-law is half Swedish. Personally I like her, but my
theory is that Swedes react rather badly on us as a whole. Scandinavians, you
know, have the largest suicide rate in the world."
"Why do you live here if it's so depressing?"
"Oh, it doesn't get me. I'm pretty well cloistered, and I suppose, books mean
more than people to me anyway."
"But writers all speak about the South being tragic. You know-- Spanish
seoritas, black hair and daggers an' haunting music."
He shook his head.
"No, the Northern races are the tragic races-- they don't indulge in the
cheering luxury of tears."
Sally Carrol thought of her graveyard. She supposed that that was vaguely what
she had meant when she said it didn't depress her.
"The Italians are about the gayest people in the world-- but it's a dull
subject," he broke off. "Anyway, I want to tell you you're marrying a pretty
fine man."
Sally Carrol was moved by an impulse of confidence.
"I know. I'm the sort of person who wants to be taken care of after a certain
point, and I feel sure I will be."
"Shall we dance? You know," he continued as they rose, "it's encouraging to
find a girl who knows what she's marrying for. Nine-tenths of them think of it
as a sort of walking into a moving-picture sunset."
She laughed, and liked him immensely.
Two hours later on the way home she nestled near Harry in the back seat.
"Oh, Harry," she whispered, "it's so co-old!"
"But it's warm in here, darling girl."
"But outside it's cold; and oh, that howling wind!"
She buried her face deep in his fur coat and trembled involuntarily as his cold
lips kissed the tip of her ear.
IV
The first week of her visit passed in a whirl. She had her promised
toboggan-ride at the back of an automobile through a chill January twilight.
Swathed in furs she put in a morning tobogganing on the country-club hill; even
tried skiing, to sail through the air for a glorious moment and then land in a
tangled laughing bundle on a soft snowdrift. She liked all the winter sports,
except an afternoon spent snow-shoeing over a glaring plain under pale yellow
sunshine, but she soon realized that these things were for children-- that she
was being humored and that the enjoyment round her was only a reflection of her
own.
At first the Bellamy family puzzled her. The men were reliable and she liked
them; to Mr. Bellamy especially, with his iron-gray hair and energetic dignity,
she took an immediate fancy, once she found that he was born in Kentucky; this
made of him a link between the old life and the new. But toward the women she
felt a definite hostility. Myra, her future sister-in-law, seemed the essence
of spiritless conventionality. Her conversation was so utterly devoid of
personality that Sally Carrol, who came from a country where a certain amount
of charm and assurance could be taken for granted in the women, was inclined to
despise her.
"If those women aren't beautiful," she thought, "they're nothing. They just
fade out when you look at them. They're glorified domestics. Men are the centre
of every mixed group."
Lastly there was Mrs. Bellamy, whom Sally Carrol detested. The first day's
impression of an egg had been confirmed-- an egg with a cracked, veiny voice and
such an ungracious dumpiness of carriage that Sally Carrol felt that if she
once fell she would surely scramble. In addition, Mrs. Bellamy seemed to typify
the town in being innately hostile to strangers. She called Sally Carrol
"Sally," and could not be persuaded that the double name was anything more than
a tedious ridiculous nickname. To Sally Carrol this shortening of her name was
like presenting her to the public half clothed. She loved "Sally Carrol"; she
loathed "Sally." She knew also that Harry's mother dispproved of her bobbed
hair; and she had never dared smoke down-stairs after that first day when Mrs.
Bellamy had come into the library sniffing violently.
Of all the men she met she preferred Roger Patton, who was a frequent visitor
at the house. He never again alluded to the Ibsenesque tendency of the
populace, but when he came in one day and found her curled upon the sofa bent
over "Peer Gynt" he laughed and told her to forget what he'd said-- that it was
all rot.
And then one afternoon in her second week she and Harry hovered on the edge of
a dangerously steep quarrel. She considered that he precipitated it entirely,
though the Serbia in the case was an unknown man who had not had his trousers
pressed.
They had been walking homeward between mounds of high-piled snow and under a
sun which Sally Carrol scarcely recognized. They passed a little girl done up
in gray wool until she resembled a small Teddy bear, and Sally Carrol could not
resist a gasp of maternal appreciation.
"Look! Harry!"
"What?"
"That little girl-- did you see her face?"
"Yes, why?"
"It was red as a little strawberry. Oh, she was cute!"
"Why, your own face is almost as red as that already! Everybody's healthy here.
We're out in
the cold as soon as we're old enough to walk. Wonderful climate!"
She looked at him and had to agree. He was mighty healthy-looking; so was his
brother. And she had noticed the new red in her own cheeks that very
morning.
Suddenly their glances were caught and held, and they stared for a moment at
the street-corner ahead of them. A man was standing there, his knees bent, his
eyes gazing upward with a tense expression as though he were about to make a
leap toward the chilly sky. And then they both exploded into a shout of
laughter, for coming closer they discovered it had been a ludicrous momentary
illusion produced by the extreme bagginess of the man's trousers.
"Reckon that's one on us," she laughed.
"He must be a Southerner, judging by those trousers," suggested Earry
mischievously.
"Why, Harry!"
Her surprised look must have irritated him.
"Those damn Southerners!"
Sally Carrol's eyes flashed.
"Don't call 'em that!"
"I'm sorry, dear," said Harry, malignantly apologetic, "but you know what I
think of them. They're sort of-- sort of degenerates-- not at all like the old
Southerners. They've lived so long down there with all the colored people that
they've gotten lazy and shiftless."
"Hush your mouth, Harry!" she cried angrily.
"They're not! They may be lazy-- anybody would be in that climate-- but they're
my best friends, an' I don't want to hear 'em criticised in any such sweepin'
way. Some of 'em are the finest men in the world."
"Oh, I know. They're all right when they come North to college, but of all the
hangdog, ill-dressed, slovenly lot I ever saw, a hunch of small-town
Southerners are the worst!"
Sally Carrol was clinching her gloved hands and biting her lip furiously.
"Why," continued Harry, "there was one in my class at New Haven, and we all
thought that at last we'd found the true type of Southern aristocrat, but it
turned out that he wasn't an aristocrat at all -- just the son of a Northern
carpetbagger, who owned about all the cotton round Mobile."
"A Southerner wouldn't talk the way you're talking now," she said evenly.
"They haven't the energy!"
"Or the somethin' else."
"I'm sorry, Sally Carrol, but I've heard you say yourself that you'd never
marry-- -- "
"That's quite different. I told you I wouldn't want to tie my life to any of
the boys that are round Tarleton now, but I never made any sweepin'
generalities."
They walked along in silence.
"I probably spread it on a bit thick, Sally Carrol. I'm sorry."
She nodded but made no answer. Five minutes later as they stood in the hallway
she suddenly threw her arms round him.
"Oh, Harry," she cried, her eyes brimming with tears, "let's get married next
week. I'm afraid of having fusses like that. I'm afraid, Harry. It wouldn't be
that way if we were married."
But Harry, being in the wrong, was still irritated.
"That'd be idiotic. We decided on March."
The tears in Sally Carrol's eyes faded; her expression hardened slightly.
"Very well-- I suppose I shouldn't have said that."
Harry melted.
"Dear little nut!" he cried. "Come and kiss me and let's forget."
That very night at the end of a vaudeville performance the orchestra played
"Dixie" and Sally Carrol felt something stronger and more enduring than her
tears and smiles of the day brim up inside her. She leaned forward gripping the
arms of her chair until her face grew crimson.
"Sort of get you, dear?" whispered Harry.
But she did not hear him. To the spirited throb of the violins and the
inspiring beat of the kettledrums her own old ghosts were marching by and on
into the darkness, and as fifes whistled and sighed in the low encore they
seemed so nearly out of sight that she could have waved good-by.
"Away, Away,
Away down South in Dixie!
Away, away,
Away down South in Dixie!"
V
It was a particularly cold night. A sudden thaw had nearly cleared the streets
the day before, but now they were traversed again with a powdery wraith of
loose snow that travelled in wavy lines before the feet of the wind, and filled
the lower air with a fine-particled mist. There was no sky-- only a dark,
ominous tent that draped in the tops of the streets and was in reality a vast
approaching army of snowflakes-- while over it all, chilling away the comfort
from the brown-and-green glow of lighted windows and muffling the steady trot
of the horse pulling their sleigh, interminably washed the north wind. It was a
dismal town after all, she thought-- dismal.
Sometimes at night it had seemed to her as though no one lived here-- they had
all gone long ago-- leaving lighted houses to be covered in time by tombing
heaps of sleet. Oh, if there should be snow on her grave! To be beneath great
piles of it all winter long, where even her headstone would be a light shadow
against light shadows. Her grave-- a grave that should be flower-strewn and
washed with sun and rain.
She thought again of those isolated country houses that her train had passed,
and of the life there the long winter through-- the ceaseless glare through the
windows, the crust forming on the soft drifts of snow, finally the slow,
cheerless melting, and the harsh spring of which Roger Patton had told her.
Her spring-- to lose it forever-- with its lilacs and the lazy sweetness it
stirred in her heart. She was laying away that spring-- afterward she would lay
away that sweetness.
With a gradual insistence the storm broke. Sally Carrol felt a film of flakes
melt quickly on her eyelashes, and Harry reached over a furry arm and drew down
her complicated flannel cap. Then the small flakes came in skirmish-line, and
the horse bent his neck patiently as a transparency of white appeared
momentarily on his coat.
"Oh, he's cold, Harry," she said quickly.
"Who? The horse? Oh, no, he isn't. He likes it!"
After another ten minutes they turned a corner and came in sight of their
destination. On a tall hill outlined in vivid glaring green against the wintry
sky stood the ice palace. It was three stories in the air, with battlements and
embrasures and narrow icicled windows, and the innumerable electric lights
inside made a gorgeous transparency of the great central hall. Sally Carrol
clutched Harry's hand under the fur robe.
"It's beautiful!" he cried excitedly. "My golly, it's beautiful, isn't it! They
haven't had one here since eighty-five!"
Somehow the notion of there not having been one since eighty-five oppressed
her. Ice was a ghost, and this mansion of it was surely peopled by those shades
of the eighties, with pale faces and blurred snow-filled hair.
"Come on, dear," said Harry.
She followed him out of the sleigh and waited while he hitched the horse. A
party of four-- Gordon, Myra, Roger Patton, and another girl-- drew up beside
them with a mighty jingle of bells. There were quite a crowd already, bundled
in fur or sheepskin, shouting and calling to each other as they moved through
the snow, which was now so thick that people could scarcely be distinguished a
few yards away.
"It's a hundred and seventy feet tall," Harry was saying to a muffled figure
beside him as they trudged toward the entrance; "covers six thousand square
yards."
She caught snatches of conversation: "One main hall"-- "walls twenty to forty
inches thick"-- "and the ice cave has almost a mile of-- "-- "this Canuck who
built it-- -- "
They found their way inside, and dazed by the magic of the great crystal walls
Sally Carrol found herself repeating over and over two lines from "Kubla
Khan":
"It was a miracle of rare device,
A sunny pleasure-dome with caves of ice!"
In the great glittering cavern with the dark shut out she took a seat on a
wooden bench, and the evening's oppression lifted. Harry was right-- it was
beautiful; and her gaze travelled the smooth surface of the walls, the blocks
for which had been selected for their purity and clearness to obtain this
opalescent, translucent effect.
"Look! Here we go-- oh, boy!" cried Harry.
A band in a far corner struck up "Hail, Hail, the Gang's All Here!" which
echoed over to them in wild muddled acoustics, and then the lights suddenly
went out; silence seemed to flow down the icy sides and sweep over them. Sally
Carrol could still see her white breath in the darkness, and a dim row of pale
faces over on the other side.
The music eased to a sighing complaint, and from outside drifted in the
full-throated resonant chant of the marching clubs. It grew louder like some
pan of a viking tribe traversing an ancient wild; it swelled-- they were coming
nearer; then a row of torches appeared, and another and another, and keeping
time with their moccasined feet a long column of gray-mackinawed figures swept
in, snowshoes slung at their shoulders, torches soaring and flickering as their
voices rose along the great walls.
The gray column ended and another followed, the light streaming luridly this
time over red toboggan caps and flaming crimson mackinaws, and as they entered
they took up the refrain; then came a long platoon of blue and white, of green,
of white, of brown and yellow.
"Those white ones are the Wacouta Club," whispered Harry eagerly. "Those are
the men you've met round at dances."
The volume of the voices grew; the great cavern was a phantasmagoria of torches
waving in great banks of fire, of colors and the rhythm of soft-leather steps.
The leading column turned and halted, platoon deployed in front of platoon
until the whole procession made a solid flag of flame, and then from thousands
of voices burst a mighty shout that filled the air like a crash of thunder, and
sent the torches wavering. It was magnificent, it was tremendous! To Sally
Carrol it was the North offering sacrifice on some mighty altar to the gray
pagan God of Snow. As the shout died the band struck up again and there came
more singing, and then long reverberating cheers by each club. She sat very
quiet listening while the staccato cries rent the stillness; and then she
started, for there was a volley of explosion, and great clouds of smoke went up
here and there through the cavern-- the flash-light photographers at work-- and
the council was over. With the band at their head the clubs formed in column
once more, took up their chant, and began to march out.
"Come on!" shouted Harry. "We want to see the labyrinths down-stairs before
they turn the lights off!"
They all rose and started toward the chute-- Harry and Sally Carrol in the lead,
her little mitten buried in his big fur gantlet. At the bottom of the chute was
a long empty room of ice, with the ceiling so low that they had to stoop-- and
their hands were parted. Before she realized what he intended Harry had darted
down one of the half-dozen glittering passages that opened into the room and
was only a vague receding blot against the green shimmer.
"Harry!" she called.
"Come on!" he cried back.
She looked round the empty chamber; the rest of the party had evidently decided
to go home, were already outside somewhere in the blundering snow. She
hesitated and then darted in after Harry.
"Harry!" she shouted.
She had reached a turning-point thirty feet down; she heard a faint muffled
answer far to the left, and with a touch of panic fled toward it. She passed
another turning, two more yawning alleys.
"Harry!"
No answer. She started to run straight forward, and then turned like lightning
and sped back the way she had come, enveloped in a sudden icy terror.
She reached a turn-- was it here?-- took the left and came to what should have
been the outlet into the long, low room, but it was only another glittering
passage with darkness at the end. She called again, but the walls gave back a
flat, lifeless echo with no reverberations. Retracing her steps she turned
another corner, this time following a wide passage. It was like the green lane
between the parted waters of the Red Sea, like a damp vault connecting empty
tombs.
She slipped a little now as she walked, for ice had formed on the bottom of her
overshoes; she had to run her gloves along the half-slippery, half-sticky walls
to keep her balance.
"Harry!"
Still no answer. The sound she made bounced mockingly down to the end of the
passage.
Then on an instant the lights went out, and she was in complete darkness. She
gave a small, frightened cry, and sank down into a cold little heap on the ice.
She felt her left knee do something as she fell, but she scarcely noticed it as
some deep terror far greater than any fear of being lost settled upon her. She
was alone with this presence that came out of the North, the dreary loneliness
that rose from ice-bound whalers in the Arctic seas, from smokeless, trackless
wastes where were strewn the whitened bones of adventure. It was an icy breath
of death; it was rolling down low across the land to clutch at her.
With a furious, despairing energy she rose again and started blindly down the
darkness. She must get out. She might be lost in here for days, freeze to death
and lie embedded in the ice like corpses she had read of, kept perfectly
preserved until the melting of a glacier. Harry probably thought she had left
with the others-- he had gone by now; no one would know until late next day. She
reached pitifully for the wall. Forty inches thick, they had said-- forty inches
thick!
"Oh!"
On both sides of her along the walls she felt things creeping, damp souls that
haunted this palace, this town, this North.
"Oh, send somebody-- send somebody!" she cried aloud.
Clark Darrow-- he would understand; or Joe Ewing; she couldn't be left here to
wander forever -- to be frozen, heart, body, and soul. This her-- this Sally
Carrol! Why, she was a happy thing. She was a happy little girl. She liked
warmth and summer and Dixie. These things were foreign-- foreign.
"You're not crying," something said aloud.
"You'll never cry any more. Your tears would just freeze; all tears freeze up
here!"
She sprawled full length on the ice.
"Oh, God!" she faltered.
A long single file of minutes went by, and with a great weariness she felt her
eyes closing. Then some one seemed to sit down near here and take her face in
warm, soft hands. She looked up gratefully.
"Why, it's Margery Lee," she crooned softly to herself. "I knew you'd come."
It really was Margery Lee, and she was just as Sally Carrol had known she would
be, with a young, white brow, and wide, welcoming eyes, and a hoop-skirt of
some soft material that was quite comforting to rest on.
"Margery Lee."
It was getting darker now and darker-- all those tombstones ought to be
repainted, sure enough, only that would spoil 'em, of course. Still, you ought
to be able to see 'em.
Then after a succession of moments that went fast and then slow, but seemed to
be ultimately resolving themselves into a multitude of blurred rays converging
toward a pale-yellow sun, she heard a great cracking noise break her new-found
stillness.
It was the sun, it was a light; a torch, and a torch beyond that, and another
one, and voices; a face took flesh below the torch, heavy arms raised her, and
she felt something on her cheek-- it felt wet. Some one had seized her and was
rubbing her face with snow. How ridiculous-- with snow!
"Sally Carrol! Sally Carrol!
It was Dangerous Dan McGrew; and two other faces she didn't know.
"Child, child! We've been looking for you two
hours! Harry's half-crazy!"
Things came rushing back into place-- the singing, the torches, the great shout
of the marching clubs. She squirmed in Patton's arms and gave a long low
cry.
"Oh, I want to get out of here! I'm going back home. Take me home"-- her voice
rose to a scream that sent a chill to Harry's heart as he came racing down the
next passage-- "to-morrow!" she cried with delirious, unrestrained
passion-- "To-morrow! To-morrow! To-morrow!"
VI
The wealth of golden sunlight poured a quite enervating yet oddly comforting
heat over the house where day long it faced the dusty stretch of road. Two
birds were making a great to-do in a cool spot found among the branches of a
tree next door, and down the street a colored woman was announcing herself
melodiously as a purveyor of strawberries. It was April afternoon.
Sally Carrol Happer, resting her chin on her arm, and her arm on an old
window-seat, gazed sleepily down over the spangled dust whence the heat waves
were rising for the first time this spring. She was watching a very ancient
Ford turn a perilous corner and rattle and groan to a jolting stop at the end
of the walls. She made no sound, and in a minute a strident familiar whistle
rent the air. Sally Carrol smiled and blinked.
"Good mawnin'."
A head appeared tortuously from under the cartop below.
"'Tain't mawnin'."
"Sure enough!" she said in affected surprise. "I guess maybe not."
"What you doin'?"
"Eatin' green peach. 'Spect to die any minute."
Clark twisted himself a last impossible notch to get a view of her face.
"Water's warm as a kettla steam, Sally Carrol. Wanta go swimmin'?"
"Hate to move," sighed Sally Carrol lazily, "but I reckon so."
There had been a war fought and won and the great city of the
conquering people was crossed with triumphal arches and vivid with
thrown flowers of white, red, and rose. All through the long spring
days the returning soldiers marched up the chief highway behind the
strump of drums and the joyous, resonant wind of the brasses, while
merchants and clerks left their bickerings and figurings and, crowding
to the windows, turned their white-bunched faces gravely upon the
passing battalions.
Never had there been such splendor in the great city, for the
victorious war had brought plenty in its train, and the merchants had
flocked thither from the South and West with their households to taste
of all the luscious feasts and witness the lavish entertainments
prepared --and to buy for their women furs against the next winter and
bags of golden mesh and varicolored slippers of silk and silver and
rose satin and cloth of gold.
So gaily and noisily were the peace and prosperity impending hymned by
the scribes and poets of the conquering people that more and more
spenders had gathered from the provinces to drink the wine of
excitement, and faster and faster did the merchants dispose of their
trinkets and slippers until they sent up a mighty cry for more
trinkets and more slippers in order that they might give in barter
what was demanded of them. Some even of them flung up their hands
helplessly, shouting:
"Alas! I have no more slippers! and alas! I have no more trinkets! May
Heaven help me, for I know not what I shall do!"
But no one listened to their great outcry, for the throngs were far
too busy --day by day, the foot-soldiers trod jauntily the highway and
all exulted because the young men returning were pure and brave, sound
of tooth and pink of cheek, and the young women of the land were
virgins and comely both of face and of figure.
So during all this time there were many adventures that happened in
the great city, and, of these, several --or perhaps one --are here set
down.
I
At nine o'clock on the morning of the first of May, 1919, a young man
spoke to the room clerk at the Biltmore Hotel, asking if Mr. Philip
Dean were registered there, and if so, could he be connected with Mr.
Dean's rooms. The inquirer was dressed in a well-cut, shabby suit. He
was small, slender, and darkly handsome; his eyes were framed above
with unusually long eyelashes and below with the blue semicircle of
ill health, this latter effect heightened by an unnatural glow which
colored his face like a low, incessant fever.
Mr. Dean was staying there. The young man was directed to a telephone
at the side.
After a second his connection was made; a sleepy voice hello'd from
somewhere above.
"Mr. Dean?" --this very eagerly --"it's Gordon, Phil. It's Gordon
Sterrett. I'm down-stairs. I heard you were in New York and I had a
hunch you'd be here."
The sleepy voice became gradually enthusiastic. Well, how was Gordy,
old boy! Well, he certainly was surprised and tickled! Would Gordy
come right up, for Pete's sake!
A few minutes later Philip Dean, dressed in blue silk pajamas, opened
his door and the two young men greeted each other with a
half-embarrassed exuberance. They were both about twenty-four, Yale
graduates of the year before the war; but there the resemblance
stopped abruptly. Dean was blond, ruddy, and rugged under his thin
pajamas. Everything about him radiated fitness and bodily comfort. He
smiled frequently, showing large and prominent teeth.
"I was going to look you up," he cried enthusiastically. "I'm taking a
couple of weeks off. If you'll sit down a sec I'll be right with you.
Going to take a shower."
As he vanished into the bathroom his visitor's dark eyes roved
nervously around the room, resting for a moment on a great English
travelling bag in the corner and on a family of thick silk shirts
littered on the chairs amid impressive neckties and soft woollen
socks.
Gordon rose and, picking up one of the shirts, gave it a minute
examination. It was of very heavy silk, yellow, with a pale blue
stripe --and there were nearly a dozen of them. He stared involuntarily
at his own shirt-cuffs --they were ragged and linty at the edges and
soiled to a faint gray. Dropping the silk shirt, he held his
coat-sleeves down and worked the frayed shirt-cuffs up till they were
out of sight. Then he went to the mirror and looked at himself with
listless, unhappy interest. His tie, of former glory, was faded and
thumb-creased --it served no longer to hide the jagged buttonholes of
his collar. He thought, quite without amusement, that only three years
before he had received a scattering vote in the senior elections at
college for being the best-dressed man in his class.
Dean emerged from the bathroom polishing his body.
"Saw an old friend of yours last night," he remarked.
"Passed her in the lobby and couldn't think of her name to save my
neck. That girl you brought up to New Haven senior year."
Gordon started.
"Edith Bradin? That whom you mean?"
"'At's the one. Damn good looking. She's still sort of a pretty
doll --you know what I mean: as if you touched her she'd smear."
He surveyed his shining self complacently in the mirror, smiled
faintly, exposing a section of teeth.
"She must be twenty-three anyway," he continued.
"Twenty-two last month," said Gordon absently.
"What? Oh, last month. Well, I imagine she's down for the Gamma Psi
dance. Did you know we're having a Yale Gamma Psi dance to-night at
Delmonico's? You better come up, Gordy. Half of New Haven'll probably
be there. I can get you an invitation."
Draping himself reluctantly in fresh underwear, Dean lit a cigarette
and sat down by the open window, inspecting his calves and knees under
the morning sunshine which poured into the room.
"Sit down, Gordy," he suggested, "and tell me all about what you've
been doing and what you're doing now and everything."
Gordon collapsed unexpectedly upon the bed; lay there inert and
spiritless. His mouth, which habitually dropped a little open when his
face was in repose, became suddenly helpless and pathetic.
"What's the matter?" asked Dean quickly.
"Oh, God!"
"What's the matter?"
"Every God damn thing in the world," he said miserably. "I've
absolutely gone to pieces, Phil. I'm all in."
"Huh?"
"I'm all in." His voice was shaking.
Dean scrutinized him more closely with appraising blue eyes.
"You certainly look all shot."
"I am. I've made a hell of a mess of everything." He paused. "I'd
better start at the beginning --or will it bore you?"
"Not at all; go on." There was, however, a hesitant note in Dean's
voice. This trip East had been planned for a holiday --to find Gordon
Sterrett in trouble exasperated him a little.
"Go on," he repeated, and then added half under his breath, "Get it
over with."
"Well," began Gordon unsteadily, "I got back from France in February,
went home to Harrisburg for a month, and then came down to New York to
get a job. I got one --with an export company. They fired me
yesterday."
"Fired you?"
"I'm coming to that, Phil. I want to tell you frankly.
You're about the only man I can turn to in a matter like this. You
won't mind if I just tell you frankly, will you, Phil?"
Dean stiffened a bit more. The pats he was bestowing on his knees grew
perfunctory. He felt vaguely that he was being unfairly saddled with
responsibility; he was not even sure he wanted to be told. Though
never surprised at finding Gordon Sterrett in mild difficulty, there
was something in this present misery that repelled him and hardened
him, even though it excited his curiosity.
"Go on."
"It's a girl."
"Hm." Dean resolved that nothing was going to spoil his trip. If
Gordon was going to be depressing, then he'd have to see less of
Gordon.
"Her name is Jewel Hudson," went on the distressed voice from the bed.
"She used to be `pure,' I guess, up to about a year ago. Lived here in
New York --poor family. Her people are dead now and she lives with an
old aunt. You see it was just about the time I met her that everybody
began to come back from France in droves --and all I did was to welcome
the newly arrived and go on parties with 'em. That's the way it
started, Phil, just from being glad to see everybody and having them
glad to see me."
"You ought to've had more sense."
"I know," Gordon paused, and then continued listlessly. "I'm on my own
now, you know, and Phil, I can't stand being poor. Then came this darn
girl. She sort of fell in love with me for a while and, though I never
intended to get so involved, I'd always seem to run into her
somewhere. You can imagine the sort of work I was doing for those
exporting people --of course, I always intended to draw; do
illustrating for magazines; there's a pile of money in it."
"Why didn't you? You've got to buckle down if you want to make good,"
suggested Dean with cold formalism.
"I tried, a little, but my stuff's crude. I've got talent, Phil; I can
draw --but I just don't know how. I ought to go to art school and I
can't afford it. Well, things came to a crisis about a week ago. Just
as I was down to about my last dollar this girl began bothering me.
She wants some money; claims she can make trouble for me if she
doesn't get it.
"Can she?"
"I'm afraid she can. That's one reason I lost my job --she kept calling
up the office all the time, and that was sort of the last straw down
there. She's got a letter all written to send to my family. Oh, she's
got me, all right. I've got to have some money for her."
There was an awkward pause. Gordon lay very still, his hands clenched
by his side.
"I'm all in," he continued, his voice trembling. "I'm half crazy,
Phil. If I hadn't known you were coming East, I think I'd have killed
myself. I want you to lend me three hundred dollars."
Dean's hands, which had been patting his bare ankles, were suddenly
quiet --and the curious uncertainty playing between the two became taut
and strained.
After a second Gordon continued:
"I've bled the family until I'm ashamed to ask for another nickel."
Still Dean made no answer.
"Jewel says she's got to have two hundred dollars."
"Tell her where she can go."
"Yes, that sounds easy, but she's got a couple of drunken letters I
wrote her. Unfortunately she's not at all the flabby sort of person
you'd expect."
Dean made an expression of distaste.
"I can't stand that sort of woman. You ought to have kept away."
"I know," admitted Gordon wearily.
"You've got to look at things as they are. If you haven't got money
you've got to work and stay away from women."
"That's easy for you to say," began Gordon, his eyes narrowing.
"You've got all the money in the world."
"I most certainly have not. My family keep darn close tab on what I
spend. Just because I have a little leeway I have to be extra careful
not to abuse it."
He raised the blind and let in a further flood of sunshine.
"I'm no prig, Lord knows," he went on deliberately. "I like
pleasure --and I like a lot of it on a vacation like this, but
you're --you're in awful shape. I never heard you talk just this way
before. You seem to be sort of bankrupt --morally as well as
financially."
"Don't they usually go together?"
Dean shook his head impatiently.
"There's a regular aura about you that I don't understand. It's a sort
of evil."
"It's an air of worry and poverty and sleepless nights," said Gordon,
rather defiantly.
"I don't know."
"Oh, I admit I'm depressing. I depress myself. But, my God, Phil, a
week's rest and a new suit and some ready money and I'd be like --like
I was. Phil, I can draw like a streak, and you know it. But half the
time I haven't had the money to buy decent drawing materials --and I
can't draw when I'm tired and discouraged and all in. With a little
ready money I can take a few weeks off and get started."
"How do I know you wouldn't use it on some other woman?"
"Why rub it in?" said Gordon quietly.
"I'm not rubbing it in. I hate to see you this way."
"Will you lend me the money, Phil?"
"I can't decide right off. That's a lot of money and it'll be darn
inconvenient for me."
"It'll be hell for me if you can't --I know I'm whining, and it's all
my own fault but --that doesn't change it."
"When could you pay it back?"
This was encouraging. Gordon considered. It was probably wisest to be
frank.
"Of course, I could promise to send it back next month, but --I'd
better say three months. Just as soon as I start to sell drawings."
"How do I know you'll sell any drawings?"
A new hardness in Dean's voice sent a faint chill of doubt over
Gordon. Was it possible that he wouldn't get the money?
"I supposed you had a little confidence in me."
"I did have --but when I see you like this I begin to wonder."
"Do you suppose if I wasn't at the end of my rope I'd come to you like
this? Do you think I'm enjoying it?" He broke off and bit his lip,
feeling that he had better subdue the rising anger in his voice. After
all, he was the suppliant.
"You seem to manage it pretty easily," said Dean angrily. "You put me
in the position where, if I don't lend it to you, I'm a sucker --oh,
yes, you do. And let me tell you it's no easy thing for me to get hold
of three hundred dollars. My income isn't so big but that a slice like
that won't play the deuce with it."
He left his chair and began to dress, choosing his clothes carefully.
Gordon stretched out his arms and clenched the edges of the bed,
fighting back a desire to cry out. His head was splitting and
whirring, his mouth was dry and bitter and he could feel the fever in
his blood resolving itself into innumerable regular counts like a slow
dripping from a roof.
Dean tied his tie precisely, brushed his eyebrows, and removed a piece
of tobacco from his teeth with solemnity. Next he filled his cigarette
case, tossed the empty box thoughtfully into the waste basket, and
settled the case in his vest pocket.
"Had breakfast?" he demanded.
"No; I don't eat it any more."
"Well, we'll go out and have some. We'll decide about that money
later. I'm sick of the subject. I came East to have a good time.
"Let's go over to the Yale Club," he continued moodily, and then added
with an implied reproof:
"You've given up your job. You've got nothing else to do."
"I'd have a lot to do if I had a little money," said Gordon
pointedly.
"Oh, for Heaven's sake drop the subject for a while! No point in
glooming on my whole trip. Here, here's some money."
He took a five-dollar bill from his wallet and tossed it over to
Gordon, who folded it carefully and put it in his pocket. There was an
added spot of color in his cheeks, an added glow that was not fever.
For an instant before they turned to go out their eyes met and in that
instant each found something that made him lower his own glance
quickly. For in that instant they quite suddenly and definitely hated
each other.
II
Fifth Avenue and Forty-fourth Street swarmed with the noon crowd. The
wealthy, happy sun glittered in transient gold through the thick
windows of the smart shops, lighting upon mesh bags and purses and
strings of pearls in gray velvet cases; upon gaudy feather fans of
many colors; upon the laces and silks of expensive dresses; upon the
bad paintings and the fine period furniture in the elaborate show
rooms of interior decorators.
Working-girls, in pairs and groups and swarms, loitered by these
windows, choosing their future boudoirs from some resplendent display
which included even a man's silk pajamas laid domestically across the
bed. They stood in front of the jewelry stores and picked out their
engagement rings, and their wedding rings and their platinum wrist
watches, and then drifted on to inspect the feather fans and opera
cloaks; meanwhile digesting the sandwiches and sundaes they had eaten
for lunch.
All through the crowd were men in uniform, sailors from the great
fleet anchored in the Hudson, soldiers with divisional insignia from
Massachusetts to California, wanting fearfully to be noticed, and
finding the great city thoroughly fed up with soldiers unless they
were nicely massed into pretty formations and uncomfortable under the
weight of a pack and rifle.
Through this medley Dean and Gordon wandered; the former interested,
made alert by the display of humanity at its frothiest and gaudiest;
the latter reminded of how often he had been one of the crowd, tired,
casually fed, overworked, and dissipated. To Dean the struggle was
significant, young, cheerful; to Gordon it was dismal, meaningless,
endless.
In the Yale Club they met a group of their former classmates who
greeted the visiting Dean vociferously. Sitting in a semicircle of
lounges and great chairs, they had a highball all around.
Gordon found the conversation tiresome and interminable. They lunched
together en masse, warmed with liquor as the afternoon began. They
were all going to the Gamma Psi dance that night --it promised to be
the best party since the war.
"Edith Bradin's coming," said some one to Gordon. "Didn't she used to
be an old flame of yours? Aren't you both from Harrisburg?"
"Yes." He tried to change the subject. "I see her brother
occasionally. He's sort of a socialistic nut. Runs a paper or
something here in New York."
"Not like his gay sister, eh?" continued his eager informant. "Well,
she's coming to night with a junior named Peter Himmel."
Gordon was to meet Jewel Hudson at eight o'clock --he had promised to
have some money for her. Several times he glanced nervously at his
wrist watch. At four, to his relief, Dean rose and announced that he
was going over to Rivers Brothers to buy some collars and ties. But as
they left the Club another of the party joined them, to Gordon's great
dismay. Dean was in a jovial mood now, happy, expectant of the
evening's party, faintly hilarious. Over in Rivers' he chose a dozen
neckties, selecting each one after long consultations with the other
man. Did he think narrow ties were coming back? And wasn't it a shame
that Rivers couldn't get any more Welsh Margotson collars? There never
was a collar like the "Covington."
Gordon was in something of a panic. He wanted the money immediately.
And he was now inspired also with a vague idea of attending the Gamma
Psi dance. He wanted to see Edith --Edith whom he hadn't met since one
romantic night at the Harrisburg Country Club just before he went to
France. The affair had died, drowned in the turmoil of the war and
quite forgotten in the arabesque of these three months, but a picture
of her, poignant, debonnaire, immersed in her own inconsequential
chatter, recurred to him unexpectedly and brought a hundred memories
with it. It was Edith's face that he had cherished through college
with a sort of detached yet affectionate admiration. He had loved to
draw her --around his room had been a dozen sketches of her --playing
golf, swimming --he could draw her pert, arresting profile with his
eyes shut.
They left Rivers' at five-thirty and paused for a moment on the
sidewalk.
"Well," said Dean genially, " I'm all set now. Think I'll go back to
the hotel and get a shave, haircut, and massage."
"Good enough," said the other man, "I think I'll join you."
Gordon wondered if he was to be beaten after all. With difficulty he
restrained himself from turning to the man and snarling out, "Go on
away, damn you!" In despair he suspected that perhaps Dean had spoken
to him, was keeping him along in order to avoid a dispute about the
money.
They went into the Biltmore --a Biltmore alive with girls --mostly from
the West and South, the stellar debutantes of many cities gathered for
the dance of a famous fraternity of a famous university. But to Gordon
they were faces in a dream. He gathered together his forces for a last
appeal, was about to come out with he knew not what, when Dean
suddenly excused himself to the other man and taking Gordon's arm led
him aside.
"Gordy," he said quickly, "I've thought the whole thing over carefully
and I've decided that I can't lend you that money. I'd like to oblige
you, but I don't feel I ought to --it'd put a crimp in me for a
month."
Gordon, watching him dully, wondered why he had never before noticed
how much those upper teeth projected.
" --I'm mighty sorry, Gordon," continued Dean, "but that's the way it
is."
He took out his wallet and deliberately counted out seventy-five
dollars in bills.
"Here," he said, holding them out, "here's seventy-five; that makes
eighty all together. That's all the actual cash I have with me,
besides what I'll actually spend on the trip."
Gordon raised his clenched hand automatically, opened it as though it
were a tongs he was holding, and clenched it again on the money.
"I'll see you at the dance," continued Dean. "I've got to get along to
the barber shop."
"So-long," said Gordon in a strained and husky voice.
"So-long."
Dean began to smile, but seemed to change his mind. He nodded briskly
and disappeared.
But Gordon stood there, his handsome face awry with distress, the roll
of bills clenched tightly in his hand. Then, blinded by sudden tears,
he stumbled clumsily down the Biltmore steps.
III
About nine o'clock of the same night two human beings came out of a
cheap restaurant in Sixth Avenue. They were ugly, ill-nourished,
devoid of all except the very lowest form of intelligence, and without
even that animal exuberance that in itself brings color into life;
they were lately vermin-ridden, cold, and hungry in a dirty town of a
strange land; they were poor, friendless; tossed as driftwood from
their births, they would be tossed as driftwood to their deaths. They
were dressed in the uniform of the United States Army, and on the
shoulder of each was the insignia of a drafted division from New
Jersey, landed three days before.
The taller of the two was named Carrol Key, a name hinting that in his
veins, however thinly diluted by generations of degeneration, ran
blood of some potentiality. But one could stare endlessly at the long,
chinless face, the dull, watery eyes, and high cheek-bones, without
finding a suggestion of either ancestral worth or native
resourcefulness.
His companion was aware and bandy-legged, with rat-eyes and a
much-broken hooked nose. His defiant air was obviously a pretense, a
weapon of protection borrowed from that world of snarl and snap, of
physical bluff and physical menace, in which he had always lived. His
name was Gus Rose.
Leaving the cafe they sauntered down Sixth Avenue, wielding toothpicks
with great gusto and complete detachment.
"Where to?" asked Rose, in a tone which implied that he would not be
surprised if Key suggested the South Sea Islands.
"What you say we see if we can getta holda some liquor?" Prohibition
was not yet. The ginger in the suggestion was caused by the law
forbidding the selling of liquor to soldiers.
Rose agreed enthusiastically.
"I got an idea," continued Key, after a moment's thought, "I got a
brother somewhere."
"In New York?"
"Yeah. He's an old fella." He meant that he was an elder brother.
"He's a waiter in a hash joint."
"Maybe he can get us some."
"I'll say he can!"
"B'lieve me, I'm goin' to get this darn uniform off me to-morra. Never
get me in it again, neither. I'm goin' to get me some regular
clothes."
"Say, maybe I'm not."
As their combined finances were something less than five dollars, this
intention can be taken largely as a pleasant game of words, harmless
and consoling. It seemed to please both of them, however, for they
reinforced it with chuckling and mention of personages high in
biblical circles, adding such further emphasis as "Oh, boy!" "You
know!" and "I'll say so!" repeated many times over.
The entire mental pabulum of these two men consisted of an offended
nasal comment extended through the years upon the institution --army,
business, or poor-house --which kept them alive, and toward their
immediate superior in that institution. Until that very morning the
institution had been the "government" and the immediate superior had
been the "Cap'n" --from these two they had glided out and were now in
the vaguely uncomfortable state before they should adopt their next
bondage. They were uncertain, resentful, and somewhat ill at ease.
This they hid by pretending an elaborate relief at being out of the
army, and by assuring each other that military discipline should never
again rule their stubborn, liberty-loving wills. Yet, as a matter of
fact, they would have felt more at home in a prison than in this
new-found and unquestionable freedom.
Suddenly Key increased his gait. Rose, looking up and following his
glance, discovered a crowd that was collecting fifty yards down the
street. Key chuckled and began to run in the direction of the crowd;
Rose thereupon also chuckled and his short bandy legs twinkled beside
the long, awkward strides of his companion.
Reaching the outskirts of the crowd they immediately became an
indistinguishable part of it. It was composed of ragged civilians
somewhat the worse for liquor, and of soldiers representing many
divisions and many stages of sobriety, all clustered around a
gesticulating little Jew with long black whiskers, who was waving his
arms and delivering an excited but succinct harangue. Key and Rose,
having wedged themselves into the approximate parquet, scrutinized him
with acute suspicion, as his words penetrated their common
consciousness.
" --What have you got out a the war?" he was crying fiercely. "Look
arounja, look arounja! Are you rich? Have you got a lot of money
offered you? --no; you're lucky if you're alive and got both your legs;
you're lucky if you came back an' find your wife ain't gone off with
some other fella that had the money to buy himself out of the war!
That's when you're lucky! Who got anything out of it except J. P.
Morgan an' John D. Rockerfeller?"
At this point the little Jew's oration was interrupted by the hostile
impact of a fist upon the point of his bearded chin and he toppled
backward to a sprawl on the pavement.
"God damn Bolsheviki!" cried the big soldier-blacksmith who had
delivered the blow. There was a rumble of approval, the crowd closed
in nearer.
The Jew staggered to his feet, and immediately went down again before
a half-dozen reaching-in fists. This time he stayed down, breathing
heavily, blood oozing from his lip where it was cut within and
without.
There was a riot of voices, and in a minute Rose and Key found
themselves flowing with the jumbled crowd down Sixth Avenue under the
leadership of a thin civilian in a slouch hat and the brawny soldier
who had summarily ended the oration. The crowd had marvellously
swollen to formidable proportions and a stream of more non-committal
citizens followed it along the sidewalks lending their moral support
by intermittent huzzas.
"Where we goin'?" yelled Key to the man nearest him.
His neighbor pointed up to the leader in the slouch hat.
"That guy knows where there's a lot of 'em! We're goin' to show
'em!"
"We're goin' to show 'em!" whispered Key delightedly to Rose, who
repeated the phrase rapturously to a man on the other side.
Down Sixth Avenue swept the procession, joined here and there by
soldiers and marines, and now and then by civilians, who came up with
the inevitable cry that they were just out of the army themselves, as
if presenting it as a card of admission to a newly formed Sporting and
Amusement Club.
Then the procession swerved down a cross street and headed for Fifth
Avenue and the word filtered here and there that they were bound for a
Red meeting at Tolliver Hall.
"Where is it?"
The question went up the line and a moment later the answer floated
back. Tolliver Hall was down on Tenth Street. There was a bunch of
other sojers who was goin' to break it up and was down there now!
But Tenth Street had a faraway sound and at the word a general groan
went up and a score of the procession dropped out. Among these were
Rose and Key, who slowed down to a saunter and let the more
enthusiastic sweep on by.
"I'd rather get some liquor," said Key as they halted and made their
way to the sidewalk amid cries of "Shell hole!" and "Quitters!"
"Does your brother work around here?" asked Rose, assuming the air of
one passing from the superficial to the eternal.
"He oughta," replied Key. "I ain't seen him for a coupla years. I
been out to Pennsylvania since. Maybe he don't work at night anyhow.
It's right along here. He can get us some o'right if he ain't
gone."
They found the place after a few minutes' patrol of the street --a
shoddy tablecloth restaurant between Fifth Avenue and Broadway. Here
Key went inside to inquire for his brother George, while Rose waited
on the sidewalk.
"He ain't here no more," said Key emerging. "He's a waiter up to
Delmonico's."
Rose nodded wisely, as if he'd expected as much. One should not be
surprised at a capable man changing jobs occasionally. He knew a
waiter once --there ensued a long conversation as they walked as to
whether waiters made more in actual wages than in tips --it was decided
that it depended on the social tone of the joint wherein the waiter
labored. After having given each other vivid pictures of millionaires
dining at Delmonico's and throwing away fifty-dollar bills after their
first quart of champagne, both men thought privately of becoming
waiters. In fact, Key's narrow brow was secreting a resolution to ask
his brother to get him a job.
"A waiter can drink up all the champagne those fellas leave in
bottles," suggested Rose with some relish, and then added as an
afterthought, "Oh, boy!"
By the time they reached Delmonico's it was half past ten, and they
were surprised to see a stream of taxis driving up to the door one
after the other and emitting marvelous, hatless young ladies, each one
attended by a stiff young gentleman in evening clothes.
"It's a party," said Rose with some awe. "Maybe we better not go in.
He'll be busy."
"No, he won't. He'll be o'right."
After some hesitation they entered what appeared to them to be the
least elaborate door and, indecision falling upon them immediately,
stationed themselves nervously in an inconspicuous corner of the small
dining-room in which they found themselves. They took off their caps
and held them in their hands. A cloud of gloom fell upon them and both
started when a door at one end of the room crashed open, emitting a
comet-like waiter who streaked across the floor and vanished through
another door on the other side.
There had been three of these lightning passages before the seekers
mustered the acumen to hail a waiter. He turned, looked at them
suspiciously, and then approached with soft, catlike steps, as if
prepared at any moment to turn and flee.
"Say," began Key, "say, do you know my brother? He's a waiter
here."
"His name is Key," annotated Rose.
Yes, the waiter knew Key. He was up-stairs, he thought. There was a
big dance going on in the main ballroom. He'd tell him.
Ten minutes later George Key appeared and greeted his brother with
the utmost suspicion; his first and most natural thought being that he
was going to be asked for money.
George was tall and weak chinned, but there his resemblance to his
brother ceased. The waiter's eyes were not dull, they were alert and
twinkling, and his manner was suave, in-door, and faintly superior.
They exchanged formalities. George was married and had three children.
He seemed fairly interested, but not impressed by the news that Carrol
had been abroad in the army. This disappointed Carrol.
"George," said the younger brother, these amenities having been
disposed of, "we want to get some booze, and they won't sell us none.
Can you get us some?"
George considered.
"Sure. Maybe I can. It may be half an hour, though."
"All right," agreed Carrol, "we'll wait."
At this Rose started to sit down in a convenient chair, but was
hailed to his feet by the indignant George.
"Hey! Watch out, you! Can't sit down here! This room's all set for a
twelve o'clock banquet."
"I ain't goin' to hurt it," said Rose resentfully. "I been through
the delouser."
"Never mind," said George sternly, "if the head waiter seen me here
talkin' he'd romp all over me."
"Oh."
The mention of the head waiter was full explanation to the other two;
they fingered their overseas caps nervously and waited for a
suggestion.
"I tell you," said George, after a pause, "I got a place you can
wait; you just come here with me."
They followed him out the far door, through a deserted pantry and up
a pair of dark winding stairs, emerging finally into a small room
chiefly furnished by piles of pails and stacks of scrubbing brushes,
and illuminated by a single dim electric light. There he left them,
after soliciting two dollars and agreeing to return in half an hour
with a quart of whiskey.
"George is makin' money, I bet," said Key gloomily as he seated
himself on an inverted pail. "I bet he's making fifty dollars a
week."
Rose nodded his head and spat.
"I bet he is, too."
"What'd he say the dance was of?"
"A lot of college fellas. Yale College."
They both nodded solemnly at each other.
"Wonder where that crowd a sojers is now?"
"I don't know. I know that's too damn long to walk for me."
"Me too. You don't catch me walkin' that far."
Ten minutes later restlessness seized them.
"I'm goin' to see what's out here," said Rose, stepping cautiously
toward the other door.
It was a swinging door of green baize and he pushed it open a
cautious inch.
"See anything?"
For answer Rose drew in his breath sharply.
"Doggone! Here's some liquor I'll say!"
"Liquor?"
Key joined Rose at the door, and looked eagerly.
"I'll tell the world that's liquor," he said, after a moment of
concentrated gazing.
It was a room about twice as large as the one they were in --and in it
was prepared a radiant feast of spirits. There were long walls of
alternating bottles set along two white covered tables; whiskey, gin,
brandy, French and Italian vermouths, and orange juice, not to mention
an array of syphons and two great empty punch bowls. The room was as
yet uninhabited.
"It's for this dance they're just starting," whispered Key; "hear the
violins playin'? Say, boy, I wouldn't mind havin' a dance."
They closed the door softly and exchanged a glance of mutual
comprehension. There was no need of feeling each other out.
"I'd like to get my hands on a coupla those bottles," said Rose
emphatically.
"Me too."
"Do you suppose we'd get seen?"
Key considered.
"Maybe we better wait till they start drinkin' 'em. They got 'em all
laid out now, and they know how many of them there are."
They debated this point for several minutes. Rose was all for getting
his hands on a bottle now and tucking it under his coat before any one
came into the room. Key, however, advocated caution. He was afraid he
might get his brother in trouble. If they waited till some of the
bottles were opened it'd be all right to take one, and everybody'd
think it was one of the college fellas.
While they were still engaged in argument George Key hurried through
the room and, barely grunting at them, disappeared by way of the green
baize door. A minute later they heard several corks pop, and then the
sound of cracking ice and splashing liquid. George was mixing the
punch.
The soldiers exchanged delighted grins.
"Oh, boy!" whispered Rose.
George reappeared.
"Just keep low, boys," he said quickly. "I'll have your stuff for you
in five minutes."
He disappeared through the door by which he had come.
As soon as his footsteps receded down the stairs, Rose, after a
cautious look, darted into the room of delights and reappeared with a
bottle in his hand.
"Here's what I say," he said, as they sat radiantly
digesting their first drink. "We'll wait till he comes up, and we'll
ask him if we can't just stay here and drink what he brings us --see.
We'll tell him we haven't got any place to drink it --see. Then we can
sneak in there whenever there ain't nobody in that there room and tuck
a bottle under our coats. We'll have enough to last us a coupla
days --see?"
"Sure," agreed Rose enthusiastically. "Oh, boy! And if we want to we
can sell it to sojers any time we want to."
They were silent for a moment thinking rosily of this idea. Then Key
reached up and unhooked the collar of his O. D. coat.
"It's hot in here, ain't it?"
Rose agreed earnestly.
"Hot as hell."
IV
She was still quite angry when she came out of the dressing-room and
crossed the intervening parlor of politeness that opened onto the
hall --angry not so much at the actual happening which was, after all,
the merest commonplace of her social existence, but because it had
occurred on this particular night. She had no quarrel with herself.
She had acted with that correct mixture of dignity and reticent pity
which she always employed. She had succinctly and deftly snubbed
him.
It had happened when their taxi was leaving the Biltmore --hadn't gone
half a block. He had lifted his right arm awkwardly --she was on his
right side --and attempted to settle it snugly around the crimson
fur-trimmed opera cloak she wore. This in itself had been a mistake.
It was inevitably more graceful for a young man attempting to embrace
a young lady of whose acquiescence he was not certain, to first put
his far arm around her. It avoided that awkward movement of raising
the near arm.
His second faux pas was unconscious. She had spent the afternoon at
the hairdresser's; the idea of any calamity overtaking her hair was
extremely repugnant --yet as Peter made his unfortunate attempt the
point of his elbow had just faintly brushed it. That was his second
faux pas. Two were quite enough.
He had begun to murmur. At the first murmur she had decided that he
was nothing but a college boy --Edith was twenty-two, and anyhow, this
dance, first of its kind since the war, was reminding her, with the
accelerating rhythm of its associations, of something else --of another
dance and another man, a man for whom her feelings had been little
more than a sad-eyed, adolescent mooniness. Edith Bradin was falling
in love with her recollection of Gordon Sterrett.
So she came out of the dressing-room at Delmonico's and stood for a
second in the doorway looking over the shoulders of a black dress in
front of her at the groups of Yale men who flitted like dignified
black moths around the head of the stairs. From the room she had left
drifted out the heavy fragrance left by the passage to and fro of many
scented young beauties --rich perfumes and the fragile memory-laden
dust of fragrant powders. This odor drifting out acquired the tang of
cigarette smoke in the hall, and then settled sensuously down the
stairs and permeated the ballroom where the Gamma Psi dance was to be
held. It was an odor she knew well, exciting, stimulating, restlessly
sweet --the odor of a fashionable dance.
She thought of her own appearance. Her bare arms and shoulders were
powdered to a creamy white. She knew they looked very soft and would
gleam like milk against the black backs that were to silhouette them
tonight. The hairdressing had been a success; her reddish mass of hair
was piled and crushed and creased to an arrogant marvel of mobile
curves. Her lips were finely made of deep carmine; the irises of her
eyes were delicate, breakable blue, like china eyes. She was a
complete, infinitely delicate, quite perfect thing of beauty, flowing
in an even line from a complex coiffure to two small slim feet.
She thought of what she would say to-night at this revel, faintly
prestiged already by the sounds of high and low laughter and slippered
footsteps, and movements of couples up and down the stairs. She would
talk the language she had talked for many years --her line --made up of
the current expressions, bits of journalese and college slang strung
together into an intrinsic whole, careless, faintly provocative,
delicately sentimental. She smiled faintly as she heard a girl sitting
on the stairs near her say: "You don't know the half of it,
dearie!"
And as she smiled her anger melted for a moment, and closing her eyes
she drew in a deep breath of pleasure. She dropped her arms to her
side until they were faintly touching the sleek sheath that covered
and suggested her figure. She had never felt her own softness so much
nor so enjoyed the whiteness of her own arms.
"I smell sweet," she said to herself simply, and then came another
thought --"I'm made for love."
She liked the sound of this and thought it again; then in inevitable
succession came her new-born riot of dreams about Gordon. The twist of
her imagination which, two months before, had disclosed to her her
unguessed desire to see him again, seemed now to have been leading up
to this dance, this hour.
For all her sleek beauty, Edith was a grave, slow-thinking girl.
There was a streak in her of that same desire to ponder, of that
adolescent idealism that had turned her brother socialist and
pacifist. Henry Bradin had left Cornell, where he had been an
instructor in economics, and had come to New York to pour the latest
cures for incurable evils into the columns of a radical weekly
newspaper.
Edith, less fatuously, would have been content to cure Gordon
Sterrett. There was a quality of weakness in Gordon that she wanted to
take care of; there was a helplessness in him that she wanted to
protect. And she wanted someone she had known a long while, someone
who had loved her a long while. She was a little tired; she wanted to
get married. Out of a pile of letters, half a dozen pictures and as
many memories, and this weariness, she had decided that next time she
saw Gordon their relations were going to be changed. She would say
something that would change them. There was this evening. This was her
evening. All evenings were her evenings.
Then her thoughts were interrupted by a solemn undergraduate with a
hurt look and an air of strained formality who presented himself
before her and bowed unusually low. It was the man she had come with,
Peter Himmel. He was tall and humorous, with horned-rimmed glasses and
an air of attractive whimsicality. She suddenly rather disliked
him --probably because he had not succeeded in kissing her.
"Well," she began, "are you still furious at me?"
"Not at all."
She stepped forward and took his arm.
"I'm sorry," she said softly. "I don't know why I snapped out that
way. I'm in a bum humor to-night for some strange reason. I'm
sorry."
"S'all right," he mumbled, "don't mention it."
He felt disagreeably embarrassed. Was she rubbing in the fact of his
late failure?
"It was a mistake," she continued, on the same consciously gentle
key. "We'll both forget it." For this he hated her.
A few minutes later they drifted out on the floor while the dozen
swaying, sighing members of the specially hired jazz orchestra
informed the crowded ballroom that "if a saxophone and me are left
alone why then two is com-pan-ee!"
A man with a mustache cut in. "Hello," he began reprovingly. "You
don't remember me."
"I can't just think of your name," she said lightly --"and I know you
so well."
"I met you up at --" His voice trailed disconsolately off as a man
with very fair hair cut in. Edith murmured a conventional "Thanks,
loads --cut in later," to the inconnu.
The very fair man insisted on shaking hands enthusiastically. She
placed him as one of the numerous Jims of her acquaintance --last name
a mystery. She remembered even that he had a peculiar rhythm in
dancing and found as they started that she was right.
"Going to be here long?" he breathed confidentially. She leaned back
and looked up at him.
"Couple of weeks."
"Where are you?"
"Biltmore. Call me up some day."
"I mean it," he assured her. "I will. We'll go to tea."
"So do I --Do."
A dark man cut in with intense formality.
"You don't remember me, do you?" he said gravely. "I should say I
do. Your name's Harlan."
"No-ope. Barlow."
"Well, I knew there were two syllables anyway. You're the boy that
played the ukulele so well up at Howard Marshall's house party.
"I played --but not -- --"
A man with prominent teeth cut in. Edith inhaled a slight cloud of
whiskey. She liked men to have had something to drink; they were so
much more cheerful, and appreciative and complimentary --much easier to
talk to.
"My name's Dean, Philip Dean," he said cheerfully. "You don't
remember me, I know, but you used to come up to New Haven with a
fellow I roomed with senior year, Gordon Sterrett."
Edith looked up quickly.
"Yes, I went up with him twice --to the Pump and Slipper and the
Junior prom."
"You've seen him, of course," said Dean carelessly. "He's here
to-night. I saw him just a minute ago."
Edith started. Yet she had felt quite sure he would be here.
"Why, no, I haven't -- --"
A fat man with red hair cut in.
"Hello, Edith," he began.
"Why --hello there -- --"
She slipped, stumbled lightly.
"I'm sorry, dear," she murmured mechanically.
She had seen Gordon --Gordon very white and listless, leaning against
the side of a doorway, smoking and looking into the ballroom. Edith
could see that his face was thin and wan --that the hand he raised to
his lips with a cigarette was trembling. They were dancing quite close
to him now.
" --They invite so darn many extra fellas that you --" the short man
was saying.
"Hello, Gordon," called Edith over her partner's shoulder. Her heart
was pounding wildly.
His large dark eyes were fixed on her. He took a step in her
direction. Her partner turned her away --she heard his voice
bleating -- -- " --but half the stags get lit and leave before long,
so -- --"
Then a low tone at her side.
"May I, please?"
She was dancing suddenly with Gordon; one of his arms was around her;
she felt it tighten spasmodically; felt his hand on her back with the
fingers spread. Her hand holding the little lace handkerchief was
crushed in his.
"Why Gordon," she began breathlessly.
"Hello, Edith."
She slipped again --was tossed forward by her recovery until her face
touched the black cloth of his dinner coat. She loved him --she knew
she loved him --then for a minute there was silence while a strange
feeling of uneasiness crept over her. Something was wrong.
Of a sudden her heart wrenched, and turned over as she realized what
it was. He was pitiful and wretched, a little drunk, and miserably
tired.
"Oh -- --" she cried involuntarily.
His eyes looked down at her. She saw suddenly that they were
blood-streaked and rolling uncontrollably.
"Gordon," she murmured, "we'll sit down; I want to sit down."
They were nearly in mid-floor, but she had seen two men start toward
her from opposite sides of the room, so she halted, seized Gordon's
limp hand and led him bumping through the crowd, her mouth tight shut,
her face a little pale under her rouge, her eyes trembling with
tears.
She found a place high up on the soft-carpeted stairs, and he sat
down heavily beside her.
"Well," he began, staring at her unsteadily, "I certainly am glad to
see you, Edith."
She looked at him without answering. The effect of this on her was
immeasurable. For years she had seen men in various stages of
intoxication, from uncles all the way down to chauffeurs, and her
feelings had varied from amusement to disgust, but here for the first
time she was seized with a new feeling --an unutterable horror.
"Gordon," she said accusingly and almost crying, "you look like the
devil."
He nodded. "I've had trouble, Edith."
"Trouble?"
"All sorts of trouble. Don't you say anything to the family, but I'm
all gone to pieces. I'm a mess, Edith."
His lower lip was sagging. He seemed scarcely to see her.
"Can't you --can't you," she hesitated, "can't you tell me about it,
Gordon? You know I'm always interested in you."
She bit her lip --she had intended to say something stronger, but
found at the end that she couldn't bring it out.
Gordon shook his head dully. "I can't tell you. You're a good woman.
I can't tell a good woman the story."
"Rot," she said, defiantly. "I think it's a perfect insult to call
any one a good woman in that way. It's a slam. You've been drinking,
Gordon."
"Thanks." He inclined his head gravely. "Thanks for the
information."
"Why do you drink?"
"Because I'm so damn miserable."
"Do you think drinking's going to make it any better?"
"What you doing --trying to reform me?"
"No; I'm trying to help you, Gordon. Can't you tell me about it?"
"I'm in an awful mess. Best thing you can do is to pretend not to
know me."
"Why, Gordon?"
"I'm sorry I cut in on you --its unfair to you. You're pure woman --and
all that sort of thing. Here, I'll get some one else to dance with
you."
He rose clumsily to his feet, but she reached up and pulled him down
beside her on the stairs.
"Here, Gordon. You're ridiculous. You're hurting me. You're acting
like a --like a crazy man -- --"
"I admit it. I'm a little crazy. Something's wrong with me, Edith.
There's something left me. It doesn't matter."
"It does, tell me."
"Just that. I was always queer --little bit different from other boys.
All right in college, but now it's all wrong. Things have been
snapping inside me for four months like little hooks on a dress, and
it's about to come off when a few more hooks go. I'm very gradually
going loony."
He turned his eyes full on her and began to laugh, and she shrank
away from him.
"What is the matter?"
"Just me," he repeated. "I'm going loony. This whole place is like a
dream to me --this Delmonico's -- --"
As he talked she saw he had changed utterly. He wasn't at all light
and gay and careless --a great lethargy and discouragement had come
over him. Revulsion seized her, followed by a faint, surprising
boredom. His voice seemed to come out of a great void.
"Edith," he said, "I used to think I was clever, talented, an artist.
Now I know I'm nothing. Can't draw, Edith. Don't know why I'm telling
you this."
She nodded absently.
"I can't draw, I can't do anything. I'm poor as a church mouse." He
laughed, bitterly and rather too loud. "I've become a damn beggar, a
leech on my friends. I'm a failure. I'm poor as hell."
Her distaste was growing. She barely nodded this time, waiting for
her first possible cue to rise.
Suddenly Gordon's eyes filled with tears.
"Edith," he said, turning to her with what was evidently a strong
effort at self-control, "I can't tell you what it means to me to know
there's one person left who's interested in me."
He reached out and patted her hand, and involuntarily she drew it
away.
"It's mighty fine of you," he repeated.
"Well," she said slowly, looking him in the eye, "any one's always
glad to see an old friend --but I'm sorry to see you like this,
Gordon."
There was a pause while they looked at each other, and the momentary
eagerness in his eyes wavered. She rose and stood looking at him, her
face quite expressionless.
"Shall we dance?" she suggested, coolly.
--Love is fragile --she was thinking --but perhaps the pieces are
saved, the things that hovered on lips, that might have been said. The
new love words, the tendernesses learned, are treasured up for the
next lover.
V
Peter Himmel, escort to the lovely Edith, was unaccustomed to being
snubbed; having been snubbed, he was hurt and embarrassed, and ashamed
of himself. For a matter of two months he had been on special delivery
terms with Edith Bradin, and knowing that the one excuse and
explanation of the special delivery letter is its value in sentimental
correspondence, he had believed himself quite sure of his ground. He
searched in vain for any reason why she should have taken this
attitude in the matter of a simple kiss.
Therefore when he was cut in on by the man with the mustache he went
out into the hall and, making up a sentence, said it over to himself
several times. Considerably deleted, this was it:
"Well, if any girl ever led a man on and then jolted him, she
did --and she has no kick coming if I go out and get beautifully
boiled."
So he walked through the supper room into a small room adjoining it,
which he had located earlier in the evening. It was a room in which
there were several large bowls of punch flanked by many bottles. He
took a seat beside the table which held the bottles.
At the second highball, boredom, disgust, the monotony of time, the
turbidity of events, sank into a vague background before which
glittering cobwebs formed. Things became reconciled to themselves,
things lay quietly on their shelves; the troubles of the day arranged
themselves in trim formation and at his curt wish of dismissal,
marched off and disappeared. And with the departure of worry came
brilliant, permeating symbolism. Edith became a flighty, negligible
girl, not to be worried over; rather to be laughed at. She fitted like
a figure of his own dream into the surface world forming about him. He
himself became in a measure symbolic, a type of the continent
bacchanal, the brilliant dreamer at play.
Then the symbolic mood faded and as he sipped his third highball his
imagination yielded to the warm glow and he lapsed into a state
similar to floating on his back in pleasant water. It was at this
point that he noticed that a green baize door near him was open about
two inches, and that through the aperture a pair of eyes were watching
him intently.
"Hm," murmured Peter calmly.
The green door closed --and then opened again --a bare half inch this
time.
"Peek-a-boo," murmured Peter.
The door remained stationary and then he became aware of a series of
tense intermittent whispers.
"One guy."
"What's he doin'?"
"He's sittin' lookin'."
"He better beat it off. We gotta get another li'l' bottle."
Peter listened while the words filtered into his consciousness.
"Now this," he thought, "is most remarkable."
He was excited. He was jubilant. He felt that he had stumbled upon a
mystery. Affecting an elaborate carelessness he arose and walked
around the table --then, turning quickly, pulled open the green door,
precipitating Private Rose into the room.
Peter bowed.
"How do you do?" he said.
Private Rose set one foot slightly in front of the other, poised for
fight, flight, or compromise.
"How do you do?" repeated Peter politely.
"I'm o'right."
"Can I offer you a drink?"
Private Rose looked at him searchingly, suspecting possible
sarcasm.
"O'right," he said finally.
Peter indicated a chair.
"Sit down."
"I got a friend," said Rose, "I got a friend in there." He pointed to
the green door.
"By all means let's have him in."
Peter crossed over, opened the door and welcomed in Private Key, very
suspicious and uncertain and guilty. Chairs were found and the three
took their seats around the punch bowl. Peter gave them each a
highball and offered them a cigarette from his case. They accepted
both with some diffidence.
"Now," continued Peter easily, "may I ask why you gentlemen prefer to
lounge away your leisure hours in a room which is chiefly furnished,
as far as I can see, with scrubbing brushes. And when the human race
has progressed to the stage where seventeen thousand chairs are
manufactured on every day except Sunday --" he paused. Rose and Key
regarded him vacantly. "Will you tell me," went on Peter, "why you
choose to rest yourselves on articles intended for the transportation
of water from one place to another?"
At this point Rose contributed a grunt to the conversation.
"And lastly," finished Peter, "will you tell me why, when you are in
a building beautifully hung with enormous candelabra, you prefer to
spend these evening hours under one anemic electric light?"
Rose looked at Key; Key looked at Rose. They laughed; they laughed
uproariously; they found it was impossible to look at each other
without laughing. But they were not laughing with this man --they were
laughing at him. To them a man who talked after this fashion was
either raving drunk or raving crazy.
"You are Yale men, I presume," said Peter, finishing his highball and
preparing another.
They laughed again.
"Na-ah."
"So? I thought perhaps you might be members of that lowly section of
the university known as the Sheffield Scientific School."
"Na-ah."
"Hm. Well, that's too bad. No doubt you are Harvard men, anxious to
preserve your incognito in this --this paradise of violet blue, as the
newspapers say."
"Na-ah," said Key scornfully, "we was just waitin' for somebody."
"Ah," exclaimed Peter, rising and filling their glasses,
"very interestin'. Had a date with a scrub lady, eh?"
They both denied this indignantly.
"It's all right," Peter reassured them, "don't apologize. A scrub
lady's as good as any lady in the world. Kipling says `Any lady and
Judy O'Grady under the skin.'"
"Sure," said Key, winking broadly at Rose.
"My case, for instance," continued Peter, finishing his glass. "I got
a girl up here that's spoiled. Spoildest darn girl I ever saw. Refused
to kiss me; no reason whatsoever. Led me on deliberately to think sure
I want to kiss you and then plunk! Threw me over! What's the younger
generation comin' to?"
"Say tha's hard luck," said Key --"that's awful hard luck."
"Oh, boy!" said Rose.
"Have another?" said Peter.
"We got in a sort of fight for a while," said Key after a pause, "but
it was too far away."
"A fight? --tha's stuff!" said Peter, seating himself unsteadily.
"Fight 'em all! I was in the army."
"This was with a Bolshevik fella."
"Tha's stuff!" exclaimed Peter, enthusiastic. "That's what I say!
Kill the Bolshevik! Exterminate 'em!"
"We're Americuns," said Rose, implying a sturdy, defiant
patriotism.
"Sure," said Peter. "Greatest race in the world! We're all Americuns!
Have another."
They had another.
VI
At one o'clock a special orchestra, special even in a day of special
orchestras, arrived at Delmonico's, and its members, seating
themselves arrogantly around the piano, took up the burden of
providing music for the Gamma Psi Fraternity. They were headed by a
famous flute-player, distinguished throughout New York for his feat of
standing on his head and shimmying with his shoulders while he played
the latest jazz on his flute. During his performance the lights were
extinguished except for the spotlight on the flute-player and another
roving beam that threw flickering shadows and changing kaleidoscopic
colors over the massed dancers.
Edith had danced herself into that tired, dreamy state habitual only
with debutantes, a state equivalent to the glow of a noble soul after
several long highballs. Her mind floated vaguely on the bosom of her
music; her partners changed with the unreality of phantoms under the
colorful shifting dusk, and to her present coma it seemed as if days
had passed since the dance began. She had talked on many fragmentary
subjects with many men. She had been kissed once and made love to six
times. Earlier in the evening different under-graduates had danced
with her, but now, like all the more popular girls there, she had her
own entourage --that is, half a dozen gallants had singled her out or
were alternating her charms with those of some other chosen beauty;
they cut in on her in regular, inevitable succession.
Several times she had seen Gordon --he had been sitting a long time on
the stairway with his palm to his head, his dull eyes fixed at an
infinite speck on-the floor before him, very depressed, he looked, and
quite drunk --but Edith each time had averted her glance hurriedly. All
that seemed long ago; her mind was passive now, her senses were lulled
to trance-like sleep; only her feet danced and her voice talked on in
hazy sentimental banter.
But Edith was not nearly so tired as to be incapable of moral
indignation when Peter Himmel cut in on her, sublimely and happily
drunk. She gasped and looked up at him.
" Why, Peter!"
"I'm a li'l' stewed, Edith."
"Why, Peter, you're a peach, you are! Don't you think it's a bum way
of doing --when you're with me?"
Then she smiled unwillingly, for he was looking at her with owlish
sentimentality varied with a silly spasmodic smile.
"Darlin' Edith," he began earnestly, "you know I love you, don't
you?"
"You tell it well."
"I love you --and I merely wanted you to kiss me," he added sadly.
His embarrassment, his shame, were both gone. She was a mos'
beautiful girl in whole worl'. Mos' beautiful eyes, like stars above.
He wanted to 'pologize --firs', for presuming try to kiss her; second,
for drinking --but he'd been so discouraged 'cause he had thought she
was mad at him -- -- The red-fat man cut in, and looking up at Edith
smiled radiantly.
"Did you bring any one?" she asked.
No. The red-fat man was a stag.
"Well, would you mind --would it be an awful bother for you to --to
take me home to-night?" (this extreme diffidence was a charming
affectation on Edith's part --she knew that the red-fat man would
immediately dissolve into a paroxysm of delight).
"Bother? Why, good Lord, I'd be darn glad to! You know I'd be darn
glad to."
"Thanks loads! You're awfully sweet."
She glanced at her wrist-watch. It was half-past one. And, as she
said "half-past one" to herself, it floated vaguely into her mind that
her brother had told her at luncheon that he worked in the office of
his newspaper until after one-thirty every evening.
Edith turned suddenly to her current partner.
"What street is Delmonico's on, anyway?"
"Street? Oh, why Fifth Avenue, of course."
"I mean, what cross street?"
"Why --let's see it's on Forty-fourth Street."
This verified what she had thought. Henry's office must be across the
street and just around the corner, and it occurred to her immediately
that she might slip over for a moment and surprise him, float in on
him, a shimmering marvel in her new crimson opera cloak and "cheer him
up." It was exactly the sort of thing Edith revelled in doing --an
unconventional, jaunty thing. The idea reached out and gripped at her
imagination --after an instant's hesitation she had decided.
"My hair is just about to tumble entirely down," she said pleasantly
to her partner; "would you mind if I go and fix it?"
"Not at all."
"You're a peach."
A few minutes later, wrapped in her crimson opera cloak, she flitted
down a side-stairs, her cheeks glowing with excitement at her little
adventure. She ran by a couple who stood at the door --a weak-chinned
waiter and an over-rouged young lady, in hot dispute --and opening the
outer door stepped into the warm May night.
VII
The over-rouged young lady followed her with a brief, bitter
glance --then turned again to the weak-chinned waiter and took up her
argument.
"You better go up and tell him I'm here," she said defiantly, "or
I'll go up myself."
"No, you don't!" said George sternly.
The girl smiled sardonically.
"Oh, I don't, don't I? Well, let me tell you I know more college
fellas and more of 'em know me, and are glad to take me out on a
party, than you ever saw in your whole life."
"Maybe so -- --"
"Maybe so," she interrupted. "Oh, it's all right for any of 'em like
that one that just ran out --God knows where she went --it's all right
for them that are asked here to come or go as they like --but when I
want to see a friend they have some cheap, ham-slinging,
bring-me-a-doughnut waiter to stand here and keep me out."
"See here," said the elder Key indignantly, "I can't lose my job.
Maybe this fella you're talkin' about doesn't want to see you."
"Oh, he wants to see me all right."
"Any ways, how could I find him in all that crowd?"
"Oh, he'll be there," she asserted confidently. "You just ask anybody
for Gordon Sterrett and they'll point him out to you. They all know
each other, those fellas."
She produced a mesh bag, and taking out a dollar bill handed it to
George.
"Here," she said, "here's a bribe. You find him and give him my
message. You tell him if he isn't here in five minutes I'm coming
up."
George shook his head pessimistically, considered the question for a
moment, wavered violently, and then withdrew.
In less than the allotted time Gordon came down-stairs. He was
drunker than he had been earlier in the evening and in a different
way. The liquor seemed to have hardened on him like a crust. He was
heavy and lurching almost incoherent when he talked.
"'Lo, Jewel," he said thickly. "Came right away. Jewel, I couldn't
get that money. Tried my best."
"Money nothing!" she snapped. " You haven't been near me for ten
days. What's the matter?"
He shook his head slowly.
"Been very low, Jewel. Been sick."
"Why didn't you tell me if you were sick. I don't care about the
money that bad. I didn't start bothering you about it at all until you
began neglecting me."
Again he shook his head.
"Haven't been neglecting you. Not at all."
"Haven't! You haven't been near me for three weeks, unless you been
so drunk you didn't know what you were doing."
"Been sick, Jewel," he repeated, turning his eyes upon her
wearily.
"You're well enough to come and play with your society friends here
all right. You told me you'd meet me for dinner, and you said you'd
have some money for me. You didn't even bother to ring me up."
"I couldn't get any money."
"Haven't I just been saying that doesn't matter? I wanted to see you,
Gordon, but you seem to prefer your somebody else."
He denied this bitterly.
"Then get your hat and come along," she suggested.
Gordon hesitated --and she came suddenly close to him and slipped her
arms around his neck.
"Come on with me, Gordon," she said in a half whisper. "We'll go over
to Devineries' and have a drink, and then we can go up to my
apartment."
"I can't, Jewel, -- --"
"You can," she said intensely.
"I'm sick as a dog!"
"Well, then, you oughtn't to stay here and dance."
With a glance around him in which relief and despair were mingled,
Gordon hesitated; then she suddenly pulled him to her and kissed him
with soft, pulpy lips.
"All right," he said heavily. "I'll get my hat.
VIII
When Edith came out into the clear blue of the May night she found
the Avenue deserted. The windows of the big shops were dark; over
their doors were drawn great iron masks until they were only shadowy
tombs of the late day's splendor. Glancing down toward Forty-second
Street she saw a commingled blur of lights from the all-night
restaurants. Over on Sixth Avenue the elevated, a flare of fire,
roared across the street between the glimmering parallels of light at
the station and streaked along into the crisp dark. But at
Forty-fourth Street it was very quiet.
Pulling her cloak close about her Edith darted across the Avenue. She
started nervously as a solitary man passed her and said in a hoarse
whisper --"Where bound, kid do?" She was reminded of a night in her
childhood when she had walked around the block in her pajamas and a
dog had howled at her from a mystery-big back yard.
In a minute she had reached her destination, a two-story,
comparatively old building on Forty-fourth, in the upper window of
which she thankfully detected a wisp of light. It was bright enough
outside for her to make out the sign beside the window --the New York
Trumpet. She stepped inside a dark hall and after a second saw the
stairs in the corner.
Then she was in a long, low room furnished with many desks and hung
on all sides with file copies of news-papers. There were only two
occupants. They were sitting at different ends of the room, each
wearing a green eye-shade and writing by a solitary desk light.
For a moment she stood uncertainly in the doorway, and then both men
turned around simultaneously and she recognized her brother.
"Why, Edith!" He rose quickly and approached her in surprise,
removing his eye-shade. He was tall, lean, and dark, with black,
piercing eyes under very thick glasses. They were far-away eyes that
seemed always fixed just over the head of the person to whom he was
talking.
He put his hands on her arms and kissed her cheek.
"What is it?" he repeated in some alarm.
"I was at a dance across at Delmonico's, Henry," she said excitedly,
"and I couldn't resist tearing over to see you."
"I'm glad you did." His alertness gave way quickly to a habitual
vagueness. " You oughtn't to be out alone at night though, ought
you?"
The man at the other end of the room had been looking at them
curiously, but at Henry's beckoning gesture he approached. He was
loosely fat with little twinkling eyes, and, having removed his collar
and tie, he gave the impression of a Middle-Western farmer on a Sunday
afternoon.
"This is my sister," said Henry. "She dropped in to see me."
"How do you do?" said the fat man, smiling. "My name's Bartholomew,
Miss Bradin. I know your brother has forgotten it long ago."
Edith laughed politely.
"Well," he continued, "not exactly gorgeous quarters we have here,
are they?"
Edith looked around the room.
"They seem very nice," she replied. "Where do you keep the bombs?"
"The bombs?" repeated Bartholomew, laughing. "That's pretty good --the
bombs. Did you hear her, Henry? She wants to know where we keep the
bombs. Say, that's pretty good."
Edith swung herself onto a vacant desk and sat dangling her feet over
the edge. Her brother took a seat beside her.
"Well," he asked, absent-mindedly, "how do you like New York this
trip?"
"Not bad. I'll be over at the Biltmore with the Hoyts until Sunday.
Can't you come to luncheon to-morrow?"
He thought a moment.
"I'm especially busy," he objected, "and I hate women in groups."
"All right," she agreed, unruffled. "Let's you and me have luncheon
together."
"Very well."
"I'll call for you at twelve."
Bartholomew was obviously anxious to return to his desk, but
apparently considered that it would be rude to leave without some
parting pleasantry.
"Well" --he began awkwardly.
They both turned to him.
"Well, we --we had an exciting time earlier in the evening."
The two men exchanged glances.
"You should have come earlier," continued Bartholomew, somewhat
encouraged. "We had a regular vaudeville."
"Did you really?"
"A serenade," said Henry. "A lot of soldiers gathered down there in
the street and began to yell at the sign."
"Why?" she demanded.
"Just a crowd," said Henry, abstractedly. "All crowds have to howl.
They didn't have anybody with much initiative in the lead, or they'd
probably have forced their way in here and smashed things up."
"Yes," said Bartholomew, turning again to Edith, "you should have
been here."
He seemed to consider this a sufficient cue for withdrawal, for he
turned abruptly and went back to his desk.
"Are the soldiers all set against the Socialists?" demanded Edith of
her brother. "I mean do they attack you violently and all that?"
Henry replaced his eye-shade and yawned.
"The human race has come a long way," he said casually, "but most of
us are throw-backs; the soldiers don't know what they want, or what
they hate, or what they like. They're used to acting in large bodies,
and they seem to have to make demonstrations. So it happens to be
against us. There've been riots all over the city to-night. It's May
Day, you see."
"Was the disturbance here pretty serious?"
"Not a bit," he said scornfully. "About twenty-five of them stopped
in the street about nine o'clock, and began to bellow at the moon."
"Oh" -- She changed the subject. "You're glad to see me, Henry?"
"Why, sure."
"You don't seem to be."
"I am."
"I suppose you think I'm a --a waster. Sort of the World's Worst
Butterfly."
Henry laughed.
"Not at all. Have a good time while you're young. Why? Do I seem like
the priggish and earnest youth?"
"No --" She paused, " --but somehow I began thinking how absolutely
different the party I'm on is from --from all your purposes. It seems
sort of --of incongruous, doesn't it? --me being at a party like that,
and you over here working for a thing that'll make that sort of party
impossible ever any more, if your ideas work."
"I don't think of it that way. You're young, and you're acting just
as you were brought up to act. Go ahead --have a good time?"
Her feet, which had been idly swinging, stopped and her voice dropped
a note.
"I wish you'd --you'd come back to Harrisburg and have a good time. Do
you feel sure that you're on the right track -- --"
"You're wearing beautiful stockings," he interrupted. "What on earth
are they?"
"They're embroidered," she replied, glancing down. "Aren't they
cunning?" She raised her skirts and uncovered slim, silk-sheathed
calves. "Or do you disapprove of silk stockings?"
He seemed slightly exasperated, bent his dark eyes on her
piercingly.
"Are you trying to make me out as criticizing you in any way,
Edith?"
"Not at all -- --"
She paused. Bartholomew had uttered a grunt. She turned and saw that
he had left his desk and was standing at the window.
"What is it?" demanded Henry.
"People," said Bartholomew, and then after an instant:
"Whole jam of them . They're coming from Sixth Avenue."
"People?"
The fat man pressed his nose to the pane.
"Soldiers, by God!" he said emphatically. "I had an idea they'd come
back."
Edith jumped to her feet, and running over joined Bartholomew at the
window.
"There's a lot of them!" she cried excitedly. "Come here, Henry!"
Henry readjusted his shade, but kept his seat.
"Hadn't we better turn out the lights?" suggested Bartholomew.
"No. They'll go away in a minute."
"They're not," said Edith, peering from the window. "They're not even
thinking of going away. There's more of them coming. Look --there's a
whole crowd turning the corner of Sixth Avenue."
By the yellow glow and blue shadows of the street lamp she could see
that the sidewalk was crowded with men. They were mostly in uniform,
some sober, some enthusiastically drunk, and over the whole swept an
incoherent clamor and shouting.
Henry rose, and going to the window exposed himself as a long
silhouette against the office lights. Immediately the shouting became
a steady yell, and a rattling fusillade of small missiles, corners of
tobacco plugs, cigarette-boxes, and even pennies beat against the
window. The sounds of the racket now began floating up the stairs as
the folding doors revolved.
"They're coming up!" cried Bartholomew.
Edith turned anxiously to Henry.
"They're corning up, Henry."
From down-stairs in the lower hall their cries were now quite
audible.
" --God damn Socialists!"
"Pro-Germans! Boche-lovers!"
"Second floor, front! Come on!"
"We'll get the sons -- --"
The next five minutes passed in a dream. Edith was conscious that the
clamor burst suddenly upon the three of them like a cloud of rain,
that there was a thunder of many feet on the stairs, that Henry had
seized her arm and drawn her back toward the rear of the office. Then
the door opened and an overflow of men were forced into the room --not
the leaders, but simply those who happened to be in front.
"Hello, Bo!"
"Up late, ain't you?"
"You an' your girl. Damn you!"
She noticed that two very drunken soldiers had been forced to the
front, where they wobbled fatuously --one of them was short and dark,
the other was tall and weak of chin.
Henry stepped forward and raised his hand.
"Friends!" he said.
The clamor faded into a momentary stillness, punctuated with
mutterings.
"Friends!" he repeated, his far-away eyes fixed over the heads of the
crowd, "you're injuring no one but yourselves by breaking in here
to-night. Do we look like rich men? Do we look like Germans? I ask you
in all fairness -- --"
"Pipe down!"
"I'll say you do!"
"Say, who's your lady friend, buddy?"
A man in civilian clothes, who had been pawing over a table, suddenly
held up a newspaper.
"Here it is!" he shouted. "They wanted the Germans to win the
war!"
A new overflow from the stairs was shouldered in and of a sudden the
room was full of men all closing around the pale little group at the
back. Edith saw that the tall soldier with the weak chin was still in
front. The short dark one had disappeared.
She edged slightly backward, stood close to the open window, through
which came a clear breath of cool night air.
Then the room was a riot. She realized that the soldiers were surging
forward, glimpsed the fat man swinging a chair over his
head --instantly the lights went out, and she felt the push of warm
bodies under rough cloth, and her ears were full of shouting and
trampling and hard breathing.
A figure flashed by her out of nowhere, tottered, was edged sideways,
and of a sudden disappeared helplessly out through the open window
with a frightened, fragmentary cry that died staccato on the bosom of
the clamor. By the faint light streaming from the building backing on
the area Edith had a quick impression that it had been the tall
soldier with the weak chin.
Anger rose astonishingly in her. She swung her arms wildly, edged
blindly toward the thickest of the scuffling. She heard grunts,
curses, the muffled impact of fists.
"Henry!" she called frantically, "Henry!"
Then, it was minutes later, she felt suddenly that there were other
figures in the room. She heard a voice, deep, bullying, authoritative;
she saw yellow rays of light sweeping here and there in the fracas.
The cries became more scattered. The scuffling increased and then
stopped.
Suddenly the lights were on and the room was full of policemen,
clubbing left and right. The deep voice boomed out:
"Here now! Here now! Here now!"
And then:
"Quiet down and get out! Here now!"
The room seemed to empty like a wash-bowl. A policeman fast-grappled
in the corner released his hold on his soldier antagonist and started
him with a shove toward the door. The deep voice continued. Edith
perceived now that it came from a bull-necked police captain standing
near the door.
"Here now! This is no way! One of your own sojers got shoved out of
the back window an' killed hisself!"
"Henry!" called Edith, "Henry!"
She beat wildly with her fists on the back of the man in front of
her; she brushed between two others; fought, shrieked, and beat her
way to a very pale figure sitting on the floor close to a desk.
"Henry," she cried passionately, "what's the matter? What's the
matter? Did they hurt you?"
His eyes were shut. He groaned and then looking up said
disgustedly -- --
"They broke my leg. My God, the fools!"
"Here now!" called the police captain. "Here now! Here now!"
IX
"Childs', Fifty-ninth Street," at eight o'clock of any morning
differs from its sisters by less than the width of their marble tables
or the degree of polish on the frying-pans. You will see there a crowd
of poor people with sleep in the comers of their eyes, trying to look
straight before them at their food so as not to see the other poor
people. But Childs', Fifty-ninth, four hours earlier is quite unlike
any Childs' restaurant from Portland, Oregon, to Portland, Maine.
Within its pale but sanitary walls one finds a noisy medley of chorus
girls, college boys, dÚbutantes, rakes, filles de joie --a not
unrepresentative mixture of the gayest of Broadway, and even of Fifth
Avenue.
In the early morning of May the second it was unusually full. Over
the marble-topped tables were bent the excited faces of flappers whose
fathers owned individual villages. They were eating buckwheat cakes
and scrambled eggs with relish and gusto, an accomplishment that it
would have been utterly impossible for them to repeat in the same
place four hours later.
Almost the entire crowd were from the Gamma Psi dance at Delmonico's
except for several chorus girls from a midnight revue who sat at a
side table and wished they'd taken off a little more make-up after the
show. Here and there a drab, mouse-like figure, desperately out of
place, watched the butterflies with a weary, puzzled curiosity. But
the drab figure was the exception. This was the morning after May Day,
and celebration was still in the air.
Gus Rose, sober but a little dazed, must be classed as one of the
drab figures. How he had got himself from Forty-fourth Street to
Fifty-ninth Street after the riot was only a hazy half-memory. He had
seen the body of Carrol Key put in an ambulance and driven off, and
then he had started up town with two or three soldiers. Somewhere
between Forty-fourth Street and Fifty-ninth Street the other soldiers
had met some women and disappeared. Rose had wandered to Columbus
Circle and chosen the gleaming lights of Childs' to minister to his
craving for coffee and doughnuts. He walked in and sat down.
All around him floated airy, inconsequential chatter and high-pitched
laughter. At first he failed to understand, but after a puzzled five
minutes he realized that this was the aftermath of some gay party.
Here and there a restless, hilarious young man wandered fraternally
and familiarly between the tables, shaking hands indiscriminately and
pausing occasionally for a facetious chat, while excited waiters,
bearing cakes and eggs aloft, swore at him silently, and bumped him
out of the way. To Rose, seated at the most inconspicuous and least
crowded table, the whole scene was a colorful circus of beauty and
riotous pleasure.
He became gradually aware, after a few moments, that the couple
seated diagonally across from him, with their backs to the crowd, were
not the least interesting pair in the room. The man was drunk. He wore
a dinner coat with a dishevel led tie and shirt swollen by spillings
of water and wine. His eyes, dim and blood-shot, roved unnaturally
from side to side. His breath came short between his lips.
"He's been on a spree!" thought Rose.
The woman was almost if not quite sober. She was pretty, with dark
eyes and feverish high color, and she kept her active eyes fixed on
her companion with the alertness of a hawk. From time to time she
would lean and whisper intently to him, and he would answer by
inclining his head heavily or by a particularly ghoulish and repellent
wink.
Rose scrutinized them dumbly for some minutes, until the woman gave
him a quick, resentful look; then he shifted his gaze to two of the
most conspicuously hilarious of the promenaders who were on a
protracted circuit of the tables. To his surprise he recognized in one
of them the young man by whom he had been so ludicrously entertained
at Delmonico's. This started him thinking of Key with a vague
sentimentality, not unmixed with awe. Key was dead. He had fallen
thirty-five feet and split his skull like a cracked cocoanut.
"He was a darn good guy," thought Rose mournfully. "He was a darn
good guy, o'right. That was awful hard luck about him."
The two promenaders approached and started down between Rose's table
and the next, addressing friends and strangers alike with jovial
familiarity. Suddenly Rose saw the fair-haired one with the prominent
teeth stop, look unsteadily at the man and girl opposite, and then
begin to move his head disapprovingly from side to side.
The man with the blood-shot eyes looked up.
"Gordy," said the promenader with the prominent teeth, "Gordy."
"Hello," said the man with the stained shirt thickly.
Prominent Teeth shook his finger pessimistically at the pair, giving
the woman a glance of aloof condemnation.
"What'd I tell you Gordy?"
Gordon stirred in his seat.
"Go to hell!" he said.
Dean continued to stand there shaking his finger. The woman began to
get angry.
"You go way!" she cried fiercely. "You're drunk, that's what you
are!"
"So's he," suggested Dean, staying the motion of his finger and
pointing it at Gordon.
Peter Himmel ambled up, owlish now and oratorically inclined.
"Here now," he began as if called upon to deal with some petty
dispute between children. "Wha's all trouble?"
"You take your friend away," said Jewel tartly. "He's bothering
us."
"What's at?"
"You heard me!" she said shrilly. "I said to take your drunken friend
away."
Her rising voice rang out above the clatter of the restaurant and a
waiter came hurrying up.
"You gotta be more quiet!"
"That fella's drunk," she cried. "He's insulting us."
"Ah-ha, Gordy," persisted the accused. "What'd I tell you." He turned
to the waiter. "Gordy an' I friends. Been tryin' help him, haven't I,
Gordy?"
Gordy looked up.
"Help me? Hell, no!"
Jewel rose suddenly, and seizing Gordon's arm assisted him to his
feet.
"Come on, Gordy!" she said, leaning toward him and speaking in a half
whisper. "Let's us get out of here. This fella's got a mean drunk
on."
Gordon allowed himself to be urged to his feet and started toward the
door. Jewel turned for a second and addressed the provoker of their
flight.
"I know all about you!" she said fiercely. "Nice friend, you are,
I'll say. He told me about you."
Then she seized Gordon's arm, and together they made their way
through the curious crowd, paid their check, and went out.
"You'll have to sit down," said the waiter to Peter after they had
gone.
"What's 'at? Sit down?"
"Yes --or get out."
Peter turned to Dean.
"Come on," he suggested. "Let's beat up this waiter."
"All right."
They advanced toward him, their faces grown stern. The waiter
retreated.
Peter suddenly reached over to a plate on the table beside him and
picking up a handful of hash tossed it into the air. It descended as a
languid parabola in snowflake effect on the heads of those near by.
"Hey! Ease up!"
"Put him out!"
"Sit down, Peter!"
"Cut out that stuff!"
Peter laughed and bowed.
"Thank you for your kind applause, ladies and gents. If some one will
lend me some more hash and a tall hat we will go on with the act."
The bouncer bustled up.
"You've gotta get out!" he said to Peter.
"Hell, no!"
"He's my friend!" put in Dean indignantly.
A crowd of waiters were gathering. " Put him out!" "Better go,
Peter."
There was a short struggle and the two were edged and pushed toward
the door.
"I got a hat and a coat here!" cried Peter.
"Well, go get 'em and be spry about it!"
The bouncer released his hold on Peter, who, adopting a ludicrous air
of extreme cunning, rushed immediately around to the other table,
where he burst into derisive laughter and thumbed his nose at the
exasperated waiters.
"Think I just better wait a l'il' longer," he announced. The chase
began. Four waiters were sent around one way and four another. Dean
caught hold of two of them by the coat, and another struggle took
place before the pursuit of Peter could be resumed; he was finally
pinioned after overturning a sugar-bowl and several cups of coffee. A
fresh argument ensued at the cashier's desk, where Peter attempted to
buy another dish of hash to take with him and throw at policemen.
But the commotion upon his exit proper was dwarfed by another
phenomenon which drew admiring glances and a prolonged involuntary "
Oh-h-h!" from every person in the restaurant.
The great plate-glass front had turned to a deep creamy blue, the
color of a Maxfield Parrish moonlight -- a blue that seemed to press
close upon the pane as if to crowd its way into the restaurant. Dawn
had come up in Columbus Circle, magical, breathless dawn, silhouetting
the great statue of the immortal Christopher, and mingling in a
curious and uncanny manner with the fading yellow electric light
inside.
X
Mr. In and Mr. Out are not listed by the census-taker. You will
search for them in vain through the social register or the births,
marriages, and deaths, or the grocer's credit list. Oblivion has
swallowed them and the testimony that they ever existed at all is
vague and shadowy, and inadmissible in a court of law. Yet I have it
upon the best authority that for a brief space Mr. In and Mr. Out
lived, breathed, answered to their names and radiated vivid
personalities of their own.
During the brief span of their lives they walked in their native
garments down the great highway of a great nation; were laughed at,
sworn at, chased, and fled from. Then they passed and were heard of no
more.
They were already taking form dimly, when a taxi-cab with the top
open breezed down Broadway in the faintest glimmer of May dawn. In
this car sat the souls of Mr. In and Mr. Out discussing with amazement
the blue light that had so precipitately colored the sky behind the
statue of Christopher Columbus, discussing with bewilderment the old,
gray faces of the early risers which skimmed palely along the street
like blown bits of paper on a gray lake. They were agreed on all
things, from the absurdity of the bouncer in Childs' to the absurdity
of the business of life. They were dizzy with the extreme maudlin
happiness that the morning had awakened in their glowing souls.
Indeed, so fresh and vigorous was their pleasure in living that they
felt it should be expressed by loud cries.
"Ye-ow-ow!" hooted Peter, making a megaphone with his hands --and Dean
joined in with a call that, though equally significant and symbolic,
derived its resonance from its very inarticulateness.
"Yo-ho! Yea! Yoho! Yo-buba!"
Fifty-third Street was a bus with a dark, bobbed-hair beauty atop;
Fifty-second was a street cleaner who dodged, escaped, and sent up a
yell of, "Look where you're aimin' ! " in a pained and grieved voice.
At Fiftieth Street a group of men on a very white sidewalk in front of
a very white building turned to stare after them, and shouted:
"Some party, boys!"
At Forty-ninth Street Peter turned to Dean. "Beautiful morning," he
said gravely, squinting up his owlish eyes.
"Probably is."
"Go get some breakfast, hey?"
Dean agreed --with additions.
"Breakfast and liquor."
"Breakfast and liquor," repeated Peter, and they looked at each
other, nodding. "That's logical."
Then they both burst into loud laughter.
"Breakfast and liquor! Oh, gosh!"
"No such thing," announced Peter.
"Don't serve it? Ne'mind. We force 'em serve it. Bring pressure
bear."
"Bring logic bear."
The taxi cut suddenly off Broadway, sailed along a cross street, and
stopped in front of a heavy tomb-like building in Fifth Avenue.
"What's idea?"
The taxi-driver informed them that this was Delmonico's.
This was somewhat puzzling. They were forced to devote several
minutes to intense concentration, for if such an order had been given
there must have been a reason for it.
"Somep'm 'bout a coat," suggested the taxi-man.
That was it. Peter's overcoat and hat. He had left them at
Delmonico's. Having decided this, they disembarked from the taxi and
strolled toward the entrance arm in arm.
"Hey!" said the taxi-driver.
"Huh?"
"You better pay me."
They shook their heads in shocked negation.
"Later, not now --we give orders, you wait."
The taxi-driver objected; he wanted his money now. With the scornful
condescension of men exercising tremendous self-control they paid
him.
Inside Peter groped in vain through a dim, deserted check-room in
search of his coat and derby.
"Gone, I guess. Somebody stole it."
"Some Sheff student."
"All probability."
"Never mind," said Dean, nobly. "I'll leave mine here too --then we'll
both be dressed the same."
He removed his overcoat and hat and was hanging them up when his
roving glance was caught and held magnetically by two large squares of
cardboard tacked to the two coat-room doors. The one on the left-hand
door bore the word "In" in big black letters, and the one on the
right-hand door flaunted the equally emphatic word "Out."
"Look!" he exclaimed happily -- --
Peter's eyes followed his pointing finger.
"What?"
"Look at the signs. Let's take 'em."
"Good idea."
"Probably pair very rare an' valuable signs. Probably come in
handy."
Peter removed the left-hand sign from the door and endeavored to
conceal it about his person. The sign being of considerable
proportions, this was a matter of some difficulty. An idea flung
itself at him, and with an air of dignified mystery he turned his
back. After an instant he wheeled dramatically around, and stretching
out his arms displayed himself to the admiring Dean. He had inserted
the sign in his vest, completely covering his shirt front. In effect,
the word "In" had been painted upon his shirt in large black
letters.
"Yoho!" cheered Dean. "Mister In."
He inserted his own sign in like manner.
"Mister Out!" he announced triumphantly. "Mr. In meet Mr. Out."
They advanced and shook hands. Again laughter overcame them and they
rocked in a shaken spasm of mirth.
"Yoho!"
"We probably get a flock of breakfast."
"We'll go --go to the Commodore."
Arm in arm they sallied out the door, and turning east in
Forty-fourth Street set out for the Commodore.
As they came out a short dark soldier, very pale and tired, who had
been wandering listlessly along the side-walk, turned to look at
them.
He started over as though to address them, but as they immediately
bent on him glances of withering unrecognition, he waited until they
had started unsteadily down the street, and then followed at about
forty paces, chuckling to himself and saying "Oh, boy!" over and over
under his breath, in delighted, anticipatory tones.
Mr. In and Mr. Out were meanwhile exchanging pleasantries concerning
their future plans.
"We want liquor; we want breakfast. Neither without the other. One
and indivisible."
"We want both 'em!"
"Both 'em!"
It was quite light now, and passers-by began to bend curious eyes on
the pair. Obviously they were engaged in a discussion, which afford
each of them intense amusement, for occasionally a fit of laughter
would seize upon them so violently that, still with their arms
interlocked, they would bend nearly double.
Reaching the Commodore, they exchanged a few spicy epigrams with the
sleepy-eyed doorman, navigated the revolving door with some
difficulty, and then made their way through a thinly populated but
startled lobby to the dining-room, where a puzzled waiter showed them
an obscure table in a corner. They studied the bill of fare
helplessly, telling over the items to each other in puzzled
mumbles.
"Don't see any liquor here," said Peter reproachfully.
The waiter became audible but unintelligible.
"Repeat," continued Peter, with patient tolerance, "that there seems
to be unexplained and quite distasteful lack of liquor upon bill of
fare."
"Here!" said Dean confidently, "let me handle him." He turned to the
waiter --"Bring us --bring us --" he scanned the bill of fare anxiously.
"Bring us a quart of champagne and a --a --probably ham sandwich."
The waiter looked doubtful.
"Bring it!" roared Mr. In and Mr. Out in chorus.
The waiter coughed and disappeared. There was a short wait during
which they were subjected without their knowledge to a careful
scrutiny by the head-waiter. Then the champagne arrived, and at the
sight of it Mr. In and Mr. Out became jubilant.
"Imagine their objecting to us having champagne for breakfast --jus'
imagine."
They both concentrated upon the vision of such an awesome
possibility, but the feat was too much for them. It was impossible for
their joint imaginations to conjure up a world where any one might
object to any one else having champagne for breakfast. The waiter drew
the cork with an enormous pop --and their glasses immediately foamed
with pale yellow froth.
"Here's health, Mr. In."
"Here's same to you, Mr. Out."
The waiter withdrew; the minutes passed; the champagne became low in
the bottle.
"It's --it's mortifying," said Dean suddenly.
"Wha's mortifying?"
"The idea their objecting us having champagne breakfast."
"Mortifying?" Peter considered. " Yes, tha's word --mortifying."
Again they collapsed into laughter, howled, swayed, rocked back and
forth in their chairs, repeating the word "mortifying" over and over
to each other --each repetition seeming to make it only more
brilliantly absurd.
After a few more gorgeous minutes they decided on another quart.
Their anxious waiter consulted his immediate superior, and this
discreet person gave implicit instructions that no more champagne
should be served. Their check was brought.
Five minutes later, arm in arm, they left the Commodore and made
their way through a curious, staring crowd along Forty-second Street,
and up Vanderbilt Avenue to the Biltmore. There, with sudden cunning,
they rose to the occasion and traversed the lobby, walking fast and
standing unnaturally erect.
Once in the dining-room they repeated their performance. They were
torn between intermittent convulsive laughter and sudden spasmodic
discussions of politics, college, and the sunny state of their
dispositions. Their watches told them that it was now nine o'clock,
and a dim idea was born in them that they were on a memorable party,
something that they would remember always. They lingered over the
second bottle. Either of them had only to mention the word
"mortifying" to send them both into riotous gasps. The dining-room was
whirring and shifting now; a curious lightness permeated and rarefied
the heavy air.
They paid their check and walked out into the lobby.
It was at this moment that the exterior doors revolved for the
thousandth time that morning, and admitted into the lobby a very pale
young beauty with dark circles under her eyes, attired in a
much-rumpled evening dress. She was accompanied by a plain stout man,
obviously not an appropriate escort.
At the top of the stairs this couple encountered Mr. In and Mr.
Out.
"Edith," began Mr. In, stepping toward her hilariously and making a
sweeping bow, " darling, good morning."
The stout man glanced questioningly at Edith, as if merely asking her
permission to throw this man summarily out of the way.
"'Scuse familiarity," added Peter, as an afterthought. "Edith,
good-morning."
He seized Dean's elbow and impelled him into the foreground.
"Meet Mr. In, Edith, my bes' frien'. Inseparable. Mr. In and Mr.
Out."
Mr. Out advanced and bowed; in fact, he advanced so far and bowed so
low that he tipped slightly forward and only kept his balance by
placing a hand lightly on Edith's shoulder.
"I'm Mr. Out, Edith," he mumbled pleasantly, " S'misterin Mister
out."
"'Smisterinanout," said Peter proudly.
But Edith stared straight by them, her eyes fixed on some infinite
speck in the gallery above her. She nodded slightly to the stout man,
who advanced bulllike and with a sturdy brisk gesture pushed Mr. In
and Mr. Out to either side. Through this alley he and Edith walked.
But ten paces farther on Edith stopped again --stopped and pointed to
a short, dark soldier who was eying the crowd in general, and the
tableau of Mr. In and Mr. Out in particular, with a sort of puzzled,
spell-bound awe.
"There," cried Edith. "See there!"
Her voice rose, became somewhat shrill. Her pointing finger shook
slightly.
"There's the soldier who broke my brother's leg."
There were a dozen exclamations; a man in a cutaway coat left his
place near the desk and advanced alertly; the stout person made a sort
of lightning-like spring toward the short, dark soldier, and then the
lobby closed around the little group and blotted them from the sight
of Mr. In and Mr. Out.
But to Mr. In and Mr. Out this event was merely a particolored
iridescent segment of a whirring, spinning world.
They heard loud voices; they saw the stout man spring; the picture
suddenly blurred.
Then they were in an elevator bound skyward.
"What floor, please?" said the elevator man.
"Any floor," said Mr. In.
"Top floor," said Mr. Out.
"This is the top floor," said the elevator man.
"Have another floor put on," said Mr. Out.
"Higher," said Mr. In.
"Heaven," said Mr. Out.
XI
In a bedroom of a small hotel just off Sixth Avenue Gordon Sterrett
awoke with a pain in the back of his head and a sick throbbing in all
his veins. He looked at the dusky gray shadows in the corners of the
room and at a raw place on a large leather chair in the corner where
it had long been in use. He saw clothes, dishevelled, rumpled clothes
on the floor and he smelt stale cigarette smoke and stale liquor. The
windows were tight shut. Outside the bright sunlight had thrown a
dust-filled beam across the sill --a beam broken by the head of the
wide wooden bed in which he had slept. He lay very quiet -- comatose,
drugged, his eyes wide, his mind clicking wildly like an unoiled
machine.
It must have been thirty seconds after he perceived the sunbeam with
the dust on it and the rip on the large leather chair that he had the
sense of life close beside him, and it was another thirty seconds
after that before that he realized that he was irrevocably married to
Jewel Hudson.
He went out half an hour later and bought a revolver at a sporting
goods store. Then he took a taxi to the room where he had been living
on East Twenty-seventh Street, and, leaning across the table that held
his drawing materials, fired a cartridge into his head just behind the
temple.
Probably every boy who has attended an Eastern college in the last ten years has met Myra half a dozen
times, for the Myras live on the Eastern colleges, as kittens live on warm milk. When Myra is young,
seventeen or so, they call her a "wonderful kid"; in her prime--say, at nineteen--she is tendered the subtle
compliment of being referred to by her name alone; and after that she is a "prom trotter" or "the famous
coast-to-coast Myra."
You can see her practically any winter afternoon if you stroll through the Biltmore lobby. She will be
standing in a group of sophomores just in from Princeton or New Haven, trying to decide whether to
dance away the mellow hours at the Club de Vingt or the Plaza Red Room. Afterward one of the
sophomores will take her to the theater and ask her down to the February prom--and then dive for a taxi
to catch the last train back to college.
Invariably she has a somnolent mother sharing a suite with her on one of the floors above.
When Myra is about twenty-four she thinks over all the nice boys she might have married at one time or
other, sighs a little and does the best she can. But no remarks, please! She has given her youth to you; she
has blown fragrantly through many ballrooms to the tender tribute of many eyes; she has roused strange
surges of romance in a hundred pagan young breasts; and who shall say she hasn't counted?
The particular Myra whom this story concerns will have to have a paragraph of history. I will get it over
with as swiftly as possible.
When she was sixteen she lived in a big house in Cleveland and attended Derby School in Connecticut,
and it was while she was still there that she started going to prep-school dances and college proms. She
decided to spend the war at Smith College, but in January of her freshman year, falling violently in love
with a young infantry officer, she failed all her midyear examinations and retired to Cleveland in disgrace.
The young infantry officer arrived about a week later.
Just as she had about decided that she didn't love him after all he was ordered abroad, and in a great
revival of sentiment she rushed down to the port of embarkation with her mother to bid him good-by. She
wrote him daily for two months, and then weekly for two months, and then once more. This last letter he
never got, for a machine-gun bullet ripped through his head one rainy July morning. Perhaps this was just
as well, for the letter informed him that it had all been a mistake, and that something told her they would
never be happy together, and so on.
The "something" wore boots and silver wings and was tall and dark. Myra was quite sure that it was the
real thing at last, but as an engine went through his chest at Kelly Field in mid-August she never had a
chance to find out.
Instead she came East again, a little slimmer, with a becoming pallor and new shadows under her eyes,
and throughout armistice year she left the ends of cigarettes all over New York on little china trays
marked "Midnight Frolic" and "Coconut Grove" and "Palais Royal." She was twenty-one now, and
Cleveland people said that her mother ought to take her back home--that New York was spoiling her.
You will have to do your best with that. The story should have started long ago.
It was an afternoon in September when she broke a theater date in order to have tea with young Mrs.
Arthur Elkins, once her roommate at school.
"I wish, " began Myra as they sat down exquisitely, "that I'd been a senorita or a mademoiselle or
something. Good grief! What is there to do over here once you're out, except marry and retire!"
Lilah Elkins had seen this form of ennui before.
"Nothing," she replied coolly; "do it."
"I can't seem to get interested, Lilah," said Myra, bending forward earnestly. "I've played round so much
that even while I'm kissing the man I just wonder how soon I'll get tired of him. I never get carried away
like I used to."
"How old are you, Myra?"
"Twenty-one last spring."
"Well," said Lilah complacently, "take it from me, don't get married unless you're absolutely through
playing round. It means giving up an awful lot, you know."
"Through! I'm sick and tired of my whole pointless existence. Funny, Lilah, but I do feel ancient. Up at
New Haven last spring men danced with me that seemed like little boys--and once I overheard a girl say
in the dressing room, 'There's Myra Harper! She's been coming up here for eight years.' Of course she
was about three years off, but it did give me the calendar blues."
"You and I went to our first prom when we were sixteen--five years ago."
"Heavens!" sighed Myra. "And now some men are afraid of me. Isn't that odd? Some of the nicest boys.
One man dropped me like a hotcake after coming down from Morristown for three straight weekends.
Some kind friend told him I was husband hunting this year, and he was afraid of getting in too deep."
"Well, you are husband hunting, aren't you?"
"I suppose so--after a fashion." Myra paused and looked about her rather cautiously. "Have you ever met
Knowleton Whitney? You know what a wiz he is on looks, and his father's worth a fortune, they say.
Well, I noticed that the first time he met me he started when he heard my name and fought shy--and,
Lilah darling, I'm not so ancient and homely as all that, am I?"
"You certainly are not!" laughed Lilah. "And here's my advice: Pick out the best thing in sight--the man
who has all the mental, physical, social and financial qualities you want, and then go after him hammer and
tongs--the way we used to. After you've got him don't say to yourself 'Well, he can't sing like Billy,' or 'I
wish.he played better golf.' You can't have everything. Shut your eyes and turn off your sense of humor,
and then after you're married it'll be very different and you'll be mighty glad."
"Yes," said Myra absently; "I've had that advice before."
"Drifting into romance is easy when you're eighteen," continued Lilah emphatically; "but after five years
of it your capacity for it simply burns out."
"I've had such nice times," sighed Myra, "and such sweet men. To tell you the truth I have decided to go
after someone."
"Who?"
"Knowleton Whitney. Believe me, I may be a bit blase, but I can still get any man I want."
"You really want him?"
"Yes--as much as I'll ever want anyone. He's smart as a whip, and shy--rather sweetly shy--and they say
his family have the best-looking place in Westchester County."
Lilah sipped the last of her tea and glanced at her wrist watch.
"I've got to tear, dear."
They rose together and, sauntering out on Park Avenue, hailed taxicabs.
"I'm awfully glad, Myra; and I know you'll be glad too."
Myra skipped a little pool of water and, reaching her taxi, balanced on the running board like a ballet
dancer.
" 'By, Lilah. See you soon."
"Good-by, Myra. Good luck!"
And knowing Myra as she did, Lilah felt that her last remark was distinctly superfluous.
II
That was essentially the reason that one Friday night six weeks later Knowleton Whitney paid a taxi bill
of seven dollars and ten cents and with a mixture of emotions paused beside Myra on the Biltmore steps.
The outer surface of his mind was deliriously happy, but just below that was a slowly hardening fright at
what he had done. He, protected since his freshman year at Harvard from the snares of fascinating fortune
hunters, dragged away from several sweet young things by the acquiescent nape of his neck, had taken
advantage of his family's absence in the West to become so enmeshed in the toils that it was hard to say
which was toils and which was he.
The afternoon had been like a dream: November twilight along Fifth Avenue after the matinee, and he
and Myra looking out at the swarming crowds from the romantic privacy of a hansom cab-- quaint
device--then tea at the Ritz and her white hand gleaming on the arm of a chair beside him; and suddenly
quick broken words. After that had come the trip to the jeweler's and a mad dinner in some little Italian
restaurant where he had written "Do you?" on the back of the bill of fare and pushed it over for her to
add the ever-miraculous "You know I do!" And now at the day's end they paused on the Biltmore steps.
"Say it," breathed Myra close to his ear.
He said it. Ah, Myra, how many ghosts must have flitted across your memory then!
"You've made me so happy, dear," she said softly.
"No--you've made me happy. Don't you know--Myra----"
"I know."
"For good?"
"For good. I've got this, you see." And she raised the diamond solitaire to her lips. She knew how to
do things, did Myra.
"Good night."
"Good night. Good night."
Like a gossamer fairy in shimmering rose she ran up the wide stairs and her cheeks were glowing
wildly as she rang the elevator bell.
At the end of a fortnight she got a telegraph from him saying that his family had returned from the
West and expected her up in Westchester County for a week's visit. Myra wired her train time, bought
three new evening dresses and packed her trunk.
It was a cool November evening when she arrived, and stepping from the train in the late twilight she
shivered slightly and looked eagerly round for Knowleton. The station platform swarmed for a moment
with men returning from the city; there was a shouting-medley of wives and chauffeurs, and a great
snorting of automobiles as they backed and turned and slid away. Then before she realized it the platform
was quite deserted and not a single one of the luxurious cars remained. Knowleton must have expected
her on another train.
With an almost inaudible "Damn!" she started toward the Elizabethan station to telephone, when
suddenly she was accosted by a very dirty, dilapidated man who touched his ancient cap to her and
addressed her in a cracked, querulous voice.
"You Miss Harper?"
"Yes," she confessed, rather startled. Was this unmentionable person by any wild chance the
chauffeur?
"The chauffeur's sick," he continued in a high whine. "I'm his son.
Myra gasped.
"You mean Mr. Whitney's chauffeur?"
"Yes; he only keeps just one since the war. Great on economizin'--regelar Hoover." He stamped his
feet nervously and smacked enormous gauntlets together. "Well, no use waitin' here gabbin' in the cold.
Le's have your grip."
Too amazed for words and not a little dismayed, Myra followed her guide to the edge of the
platform, where she looked in vain for a car. But she was not left to wonder long, for the person led her
steps to a battered old flivver, wherein was deposited her grip.
"Big car's broke," he explained. "Have to use this or walk."
He opened the front door for her and nodded.
"Step in."
"I b'lieve I'll sit in back if you don't mind."
"Surest thing you know," he cackled, opening the back door. "I thought the trunk bumpin' round
back there might make you nervous."
"What trunk?"
"Yourn."
"Oh, didn't Mr. Whitney--can't you make two trips?"
He shook his head obstinately.
"Wouldn't allow it. Not since the war. Up to rich people to set 'n example; that's what Mr. Whitney
says. Le's have your check, please. "
As he disappeared Myra tried in vain to conjure up a picture of the chauffeur if this was his son. After
a mysterious argument with the station agent he returned, gasping violently, with the trunk on his back.
He deposited it in the rear seat and climbed up front beside her.
It was quite dark when they swerved out of the road and up a long dusky driveway to the Whitney
place, whence lighted windows flung great blots of cheerful, yellow light over the gravel and grass and
trees. Even now she could see that it was very beautiful, that its blurred outline was Georgian Colonial
and that great shadowy garden parks were flung out at both sides. The car plumped to a full stop before a
square stone doorway and the chauffeur's son climbed out after her and pushed open the outer door.
"Just go right in, " he cackled; and as she passed the threshold she heard him softly shut the door,
closing out himself and the dark.
Myra looked round her. She was in a large somber hall paneled in old English oak and lit by dim
shaded lights clinging like luminous yellow turtles at intervals along the wall. Ahead of her was a broad
staircase and on both sides there were several doors, but there was no sight or sound of life, and an
intense stillness seemed to rise ceaselessly from the deep crimson carpet.
She must have waited there a full minute before she began to have that unmistakable sense of
someone looking at her. She forced herself to turn casually round.
A sallow little man, bald and clean shaven, trimly dressed in a frock coat and white spats, was
standing a few yards away regarding her quizzically. He must have been fifty at the least, but even before
he moved she had noticed a curious alertness about him--something in his pose which promised that it
had been instantaneously assumed and would be instantaneously changed in a moment. His tiny hands and
feet and the odd twist to his eyebrows gave him a faintly elfish expression, and she had one of those
vague transient convictions that she had seen him before, many years ago.
For a minute they stared at each other in silence and then she flushed slightly and discovered a desire
to swallow.
"I suppose you're Mr. Whitney." She smiled faintly and advanced a step toward him. "I'm Myra
Harper."
For an instant longer he remained silent and motionless, and it flashed across Myra that he might be
deaf; then suddenly he jerked into spirited life exactly like a mechanical toy started by the pressure of a
button.
"Why, of course--why, naturally. I know--ah!" he exclaimed excitedly in a high-pitched elfin voice.
Then raising himself on his toes in a sort of attenuated ecstasy of enthusiasm and smiling a wizened smile,
he minced toward her across the dark carpet.
She blushed appropriately.
"That's awfully nice of----"
"Ah!" he went on. "You must be tired; a rickety, cindery, ghastly trip, I know. Tired and hungry and
thirsty, no doubt, no doubt!" He looked round him indignantly. "The servants are frightfully inefficient in
this house!"
Myra did not know what to say to this, so she made no answer. After an instant's abstraction Mr.
Whitney crossed over with his furious energy and pressed a button; then almost as if he were dancing he
was by her side again, making thin, disparaging gestures with his hands.
"A little minute," he assured her, "sixty seconds, scarcely more. Here!"
He rushed suddenly to the wall and with some effort lifted a great carved Louis Fourteenth chair and
set it down carefully in the geometrical center of the carpet.
"Sit down--won't you? Sit down! I'll go get you something. Sixty seconds at the outside."
She demurred faintly, but he kept on repeating "Sit down!" in such an aggrieved yet hopeful tone that
Myra sat down. Instantly her host disappeared.
She sat there for five minutes and a feeling of oppression fell over her. Of all the receptions she had
ever received this was decidedly the oddest--for though she had read somewhere that Ludlow Whitney
was considered one of the most eccentric figures in the financial world, to find a sallow, elfin little man
who, when he walked, danced was rather a blow to her sense of form. Had he gone to get Knowleton!
She revolved her thumbs in interminable concentric circles.
Then she started nervously at a quick cough at her elbow. It was Mr. Whitney again. In one hand he
held a glass of milk and in the other a blue kitchen bowl full of those hard cubical crackers used in soup.
"Hungry from your trip! " he exclaimed compassionately. "Poor girl, poor little girl, starving!" He
brought out this last word with such emphasis that some of the milk plopped gently over the side of the
glass.
Myra took the refreshments submissively. She was not hungry, but it had taken him ten minutes to
get them so it seemed ungracious to refuse. She sipped gingerly at the milk and ate a cracker, wondering
vaguely what to say. Mr. Whitney, however, solved the problem for her by disappearing again--this time
by way of the wide stairs--four steps at a hop--the back of his bald head gleaming oddly for a moment in
the half dark.
Minutes passed. Myra was torn between resentment and bewilderment that she should be sitting on a
high comfortless chair in the middle of this big hall munching crackers. By what code was a visiting
fiancee ever thus received!
Her heart gave a jump of relief as she heard a familiar whistle on the stairs. It was Knowleton at last,
and when he came in sight he gasped with astonishment.
"Myra!"
She carefully placed the bowl and glass on the carpet and rose, smiling.
"Why," he exclaimed, "they didn't tell me you were here!"
"Your father--welcomed me."
"Lordy! He must have gone upstairs and forgotten all about it. Did he insist on your eating this stuff?
Why didn't you just tell him you didn't want any?"
"Why--I don't know."
"You musn't mind father, dear. He's forgetful and a little unconventional in some ways, but you'll get
used to him."
He pressed a button and a butler appeared.
"Show Miss Harper to her room and have her bag carried up-- and her trunk if it isn't there already."
He turned to Myra. "Dear, I'm awfully sorry I didn't know you were here. How long have you been
waiting?"
"Oh, only a few minutes."
It had been twenty at the least, but she saw no advantage in stressing it. Nevertheless it had given her
an oddly uncomfortable feeling.
Half an hour later as she was hooking the last eye on her dinner dress there was a knock on the door.
"It's Knowleton, Myra; if you're about ready we'll go in and see mother for a minute before dinner."
She threw a final approving glance at her reflection in the mirror and turning out the light joined him
in the hall. He led her down a central passage which crossed to the other wing of the house, and stopping
before a closed door he pushed it open and ushered Myra into the weirdest room upon which her young
eyes had ever rested.
It was a large luxurious boudoir, paneled, like the lower hall, in dark English oak and bathed by
several lamps in a mellow orange glow that blurred its every outline into misty amber. In a great armchair
piled high with cushions and draped with a curiously figured cloth of silk reclined a very sturdy old lady
with bright white hair, heavy features, and an air about her of having been there for many years. She lay
somnolently against the cushions, her eyes half closed, her great bust rising and falling under her black
negligee.
But it was something else that made the room remarkable, and Myra's eyes scarcely rested on the
woman, so engrossed was she in another feature of her surroundings. On the carpet, on the chairs and
sofas, on the great canopied bed and on the soft Angora rug in front of the fire sat and sprawled and slept
a great array of white poodle dogs. There must have been almost two dozen of them, with curly hair
twisting in front of their wistful eyes and wide yellow bows flaunting from their necks. As Myra and
Knowleton entered a stir went over the dogs; they raised one-and-twenty cold black noses in the air and
from one-and-twenty little throats went up a great clatter of staccato barks until the room was filled with
such an uproar that Myra stepped back in alarm.
But at the din the somnolent fat lady's eyes trembled open and in a low husky voice that was in itself
oddly like a bark she snapped out "Hush that racket!" and the clatter instantly ceased. The two or three
poodles round the fire turned their silky eyes on each other reproachfully, and lying down with little sighs
faded out on the white Angora rug; the tousled ball on the lady's lap dug his nose into the crook of an
elbow and went back to sleep, and except for the patches of white wool scattered about the room Myra
would have thought it all a dream.
"Mother," said Knowleton after an instant's pause, "this is Myra."
From the lady's lips flooded one low husky word: "Myra?"
"She's visiting us, I told you."
Mrs. Whitney raised a large arm and passed her hand across her forehead wearily.
"Child!" she said--and Myra started, for again the voice was like a low sort of growl--"you want to
marry my son Knowleton?"
Myra felt that this was putting the tonneau before the radiator, but she nodded. "Yes, Mrs. Whitney."
"How old are you?" This very suddenly.
"I'm twenty-one, Mrs. Whitney."
"Ah--and you're from Cleveland?" This was in what was surely a series of articulate barks.
"Yes, Mrs. Whitney."
"Ah.----"
Myra was not certain whether this last ejaculation was conversation or merely a groan, so she did not
answer.
"You'll excuse me if I don't appear downstairs," continued Mrs. Whitney; "but when we're in the East
I seldom leave this room and my dear little doggies."
Myra nodded and a conventional health question was trembling on her lips when she caught
Knowleton's warning glance and checked it.
"Well," said Mrs. Whitney with an air of finality, "you seem like a very nice girl. Come in again."
"Good night, mother," said Knowleton.
" 'Night!" barked Mrs. Whitney drowsily, and her eyes sealed gradually up as her head receded back
again into the cushions.
Knowleton held open the door and Myra feeling a bit blank left the room. As they walked down the
corridor she heard a burst of furious sound behind them; the noise of the closing door had again roused
the poodle dogs.
When they went downstairs they found Mr. Whitney already seated at the dinner table.
"Utterly charming, completely delightful!" he exclaimed, beaming nervously. "One big family, and
you the jewel of it, my dear."
Myra smiled, Knowleton frowned and Mr. Whitney tittered.
"It's been lonely here," he continued; "desolate, with only us three. We expect you to bring sunlight
and warmth, the peculiar radiance and efflorescence of youth. It will be quite delightful. Do you sing?"
"Why--I have. I mean, I do, some."
He clapped his hands enthusiastically.
"Splendid! Magnificent! What do you sing? Opera? Ballads? Popular music?"
"Well, mostly popular music."
"Good; personally I prefer popular music. By the way, there's a dance to-night."
"Father, " demanded Knowleton sulkily, "did you go and invite a crowd here?"
"I had Monroe call up a few people--just some of the neighbors," he explained to Myra. "We're all
very friendly hereabouts; give informal things continually. Oh, it's quite delightful."
Myra caught Knowleton's eye and gave him a sympathetic glance. It was obvious that he had wanted
to be alone with her this first evening and was quite put out.
"I want them to meet Myra," continued his father. "I want them to know this delightful jewel we've
added to our little household."
"Father," said Knowleton suddenly, "eventually of course Myra and I will want to live here with you
and mother, but for the first two or three years I think an apartment in New York would be more the
thing for us."
Crash! Mr. Whitney had raked across the tablecloth with his fingers and swept his silver to a jangling
heap on the floor.
"Nonsense!" he cried furiously, pointing a tiny finger at his son. "Don't talk that utter nonsense!
You'll live here, do you understand me? Here! What's a home without children?"
"But, father----"
In his excitement Mr. Whitney rose and a faint unnatural color crept into his sallow face.
"Silence!" he shrieked. "If you expect one bit of help from me you can have it under my roof--nowhere else! Is that clear? As for you my exquisite young lady," he continued, turning his wavering
finger on Myra, "you'd better understand that the best thing you can do is to decide to settle down right
here. This is my home, and I mean to keep it so."
He stood then for a moment on his tiptoes, bending furiously indignant glances first on one, then on
the other, and then suddenly he turned and skipped from the room.
"Well," gasped Myra, turning to Knowleton in amazement "what do you know about that!"
III
Some hours later she crept into bed in a great state of restless discontent. One thing she knew--she
was not going to live in this house. Knowleton would have to make his father see reason to the extent of
giving them an apartment in the city. The sallow little man made her nervous, she was sure Mrs.
Whitney's dogs would haunt her dreams- and there was a general casualness in the chauffeur, the butler,
the maids and even the guests she had met that night, that did not in the least coincide with her ideas on
the conduct of a big estate.
She had lain there an hour perhaps when she was startled from a slow reverie by a sharp cry which
seemed to proceed from the adjoining room. She sat up in bed and listened, and in a minute it was
repeated. It sounded exactly like the plaint of a weary child stopped summarily by the placing of a hand
over its mouth. In the dark silence her bewilderment shaded gradually off into uneasiness. She waited for
the cry to recur, but straining her ears she heard only the intense crowded stillness of three o'clock. She
wondered where Knowleton slept, remembered that his bedroom was over in the other wing just beyond
his mother's. She was alone over here--or was she?
With a little gasp she slid down into bed again and lay listening. Not since childhood had she been
afraid of the dark, but the unforeseen presence of someone next door startled her and sent her
imagination racing through a host of mystery stories that at one time or another had whiled away a long
afternoon.
She heard the clock strike four and found she was very tired. A curtain drifted slowly down in front
of her imagination, and changing her position she fell suddenly to sleep.
Next morning, walking with Knowleton under starry frosted bushes in one of the bare gardens, she
grew quite light-hearted and wondered at her depression of the night before. Probably all families seemed
odd when one visited them for the first time in such an intimate capacity. Yet her determination that she
and Knowleton were going to live elsewhere than with the white dogs and the jumpy little man was not
abated. And if the near-by Westchester County society was typified by the chilly crowd she had met at the
dance----
"The family," said Knowleton, "must seem rather unusual. I've been brought up in an odd
atmosphere, I suppose, but mother is really quite normal outside of her penchant for poodles in great
quantities, and father in spite of his eccentricities seems to hold a secure position in Wall Street."
"Knowleton," she demanded suddenly, "who lives in the room next door to me?"
Did he start and flush slightly--or was that her imagination?
"Because," she went on deliberately, "I'm almost sure I heard someone crying in there during the
night. It sounded like a child Knowleton."
"There's no one in there," he said decidedly. "It was either your imagination or something you ate. Or
possibly one of the maids was sick."
Seeming to dismiss the matter without effort he changed the subject.
The day passed quickly. At lunch Mr. Whitney seemed to have forgotten his temper of the previous
night; he was as nervously enthusiastic as ever; and watching him Myra again had that impression that she
had seen him somewhere before. She and Knowleton paid another visit to Mrs. Whitney--and again the
poodles stirred uneasily and set up a barking, to be summarily silenced by the harsh throaty voice. The
conversation was short and of inquisitional flavor. It was terminated as before by the lady's drowsy
eyelids and a p‘an of farewell from the dogs.
In the evening she found that Mr. Whitney had insisted on organizing an informal neighborhood
vaudeville. A stage had been erected in the ballroom and Myra sat beside Knowleton in the front row and
watched proceedings curiously. Two slim and haughty ladies sang, a man performed some ancient card
tricks, a girl gave impersonations, and then to Myra's astonishment Mr. Whitney appeared and did a
rather effective buck-and-wing dance. There was something inexpressibly weird in the motion of the
well-known financier flitting solemnly back and forth across the stag on his tiny feet. Yet he danced well,
with an effortless grace and an unexpected suppleness, and h