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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/26242-8.txt b/26242-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2aab2d --- /dev/null +++ b/26242-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,12270 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bill-Toppers, by Andre Castaigne + +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 online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bill-Toppers + +Author: Andre Castaigne + +Release Date: August 9, 2008 [EBook #26242] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BILL-TOPPERS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: Poland, the Parisienne. Page 123. Frontispiece.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +By +ANDRÉ CASTAIGNE + +With Illustrations +BY THE AUTHOR + +A. L. BURT COMPANY +Publishers--New York + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Copyright, 1909 +The Bobbs-Merrill Company + +August + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +TO MY LITTLE FRIENDS +THE STARS! + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +OVERTURE + +All around stretched the great blue sky and the blue sea of the Gulf of +Bengal. + +Mrs. Clifton lay dozing at full length on a pillowed bench and her husband +sat near her and followed his Lily, his daughter, with his eyes: his Lily, +eight years old, "that high," waving among the passengers the white coral +necklace which Pa had bought her on leaving Australia; his Lily, his star, +his New Zealander on Wheels! His Lily who had had such successes at +Melbourne, at Sidney: bouquets, tons and cart-loads of bouquets! And the +past would be nothing compared with the future, with the astounding tricks +which he was inventing for his Lily. The mere sight of her raised his +enthusiasm to boiling-point. And he was going to show them, in Calcutta +and elsewhere, if they knew how to make stars in New Zealand or if they +were only fit for raising mutton. + +Clifton was an artist, an "artiste," a born artiste: starting as a mere +clerk in an office, he had become an amateur cyclist and then a +professional on the track. He married an Englishwoman at Wellington and, +at Lily's birth, decided upon a career: the stage, with Lily for a star +later on! And he set to work, with vim and vigor, learned a few tricks on +his bike, taught his wife the business in less than no time; and Lily's +first memories as a four-year-old were: + +"I was sitting on Ma's shoulders, Ma on Pa's and Pa on the bike." + +And Lily zigzagged through New Zealand, from east to west and north to +south, and Australia after, where she received plenty of applause for her +tricks, childish in themselves, but well presented. Her triumphant path +wound among tinseled bottles containing paper flowers, with a faultless +standstill for the climax, one hand on the handle-bar, the other blowing +kisses to the audience. This procured Pa an engagement for India. He +ordered a beautiful colored poster, "The Clifton Family, Trick Cyclists," +with a portrait in the corner of his own strong face and bristling +mustache--"P. T. Clifton, Manager"--one more rung in the ladder of life +mounted, thanks to his Lily. + +And Pa smiled to his daughter and, as she ran past him, lifted her on his +knee and stroked her fair curls; and the child cuddled up to her Pa, +opened her lips to ask questions, but was silent, with her eyes lost in +space, puckering her little forehead, in which were heaped so many mingled +memories of the stage and the great world outside: the Boxing Kangaroo; +tall cliffs; green islands; the bike; Batavia among the trees; Singapore, +with its noise and dust. And Lily, wearily, dreamed and murmured things, +while the steamer sped on, thud, thud, thud, flat as a stage in its blue +"set." + +Lily's impressions of India were months of jolting and bumping, stops in +the dead of night while the tent was pitched, rains, strong smells, +oppressive heats--months and months of it, Ma on Pa, Pa on the wheel and +she on top, waving flags. Yellow faces on the benches, red flowers and, +somewhere, on a river-bank, two eyes glittering in the dark: a tiger, +somebody said! And every night the artistes, carrying lanterns, walked in +file between the circus and the hotel, with the ladies in the center and +Lily clinging to Ma's skirt. + +She did more now, in addition to the bike: a song-and-dance turn. In a +piping falsetto, she quavered: + +"Star light! Star bright!" + +She was spoiled by the ladies, the wives of the officers stationed in +those out-of-the-way holes. She played with smart children, was taken for +drives, had her social successes! Chocolates, sweets, kisses. And a lady +gave her such a pretty dress: his Lily! Pa burst with delighted pride to +see her treated like that; and Ma scolded her a bit, for the little flirt +that she was, while fondly tying the two satin bows over her ears. + +Lily was a regular tomboy, with pranks invented by herself, from ideas +which she picked up in traveling: for instance, she would choose her +moment and chuck a piece of bacon among the Mohammedans sitting under her +window; and she would revel in her own fright at those furious faces +suddenly glaring up at her from below! And she would stand with drooping +head, one finger in her mouth: + +"Oh, _so_ sorry!" + +What fun! And as an artiste she was spoiled and petted everywhere. Goa, +Bangalore, Tanjore and then Colombo, and a ship with elephants, tigers, +camels, children, men, women, wagons, one great mix-up, a circus and +menagerie in one, steaming toward South Africa; and Miss Lily of the +Clifton Troupe paraded her well-brushed, neatly-parted curls in the midst +of it all, gazed open-mouthed at the blue expanse of water until, her eyes +drunk and dazed with light, she went and lay in her cabin.... And more and +more blue water. And thud, thud, thud. And Cape Town in the mountains. +Africa behind it: a country all yellow, where the trains wound in and out +of the rocks; villages, up, up, up, or else right low down, on the yellow +veldt; and, at night, on the benches, crowds and crowds. Immediately after +the show came sleep, troubled by the jolting of the train; and the circus +was always there next day, on the right or on the left, with its Chinamen +and its niggers driving stakes or tugging at ropes. A bell for dinner, a +whistle for the show; and, as soon as the show was over, to bed,--and off +again. + +Pa made her practice harder now, wanted to make a great artiste of her. +And there was a class, too, kept by a "marm" who traveled with the circus +and taught spelling and arithmetic and the art of letter-writing, from +"Yours to hand with thanks" down to "Believe me to be." Lily would have +been bored to death but for the accidents of travel: sometimes the engine +broke down, bringing the train to a dead stop amid the great African +silence, near a field of Indian corn, in which the children played +hide-and-seek. Or else there were locusts, locusts "that thick," right +inside the carriages. Lily would tie them by the leg and: + +"Flip! Flap! Lively now! Jump!" + +But funniest of all was the caravan--she couldn't remember where, in Natal +or thereabouts--wagons with ten yoke of oxen. They climbed up endless +winding roads. The men shot at birds and prospected for diamonds along the +wayside; and at night they took the hay from the mattresses to give to the +cattle. Lolling indolence was in the air and plenty in the larder: big +fruits, strange game, which they cooked in a makeshift oven consisting of +a few stones. Then they rolled themselves up in a blanket, near the +elephants tugging at their chains, and slept under the tent in the cool, +bright, starry night. + +[Illustration: LILY IN INDIA] + +Months and months passed. Lily was becoming very clever: the New Zealander +on Wheels! She was cleverer than Pa, who no longer performed, nor Ma +either. On their return to Australia, Lily appeared by herself in the +music-halls, and P. T. Clifton, Manager, watched her from the wings, in +growing admiration: his Lily was a star now, too good for a circus! And +Australia, pooh! Sidney, Melbourne, pooh! What Lily wanted was New York, +London, the Hippodromes, the Palaces! He'd show them a star that was a +star! And Clifton clenched his fists and pretended not to see when Lily +made a blunder on the stage: his Lily missing a trick! Disgracing her Pa +like that! He blushed to the eyes at the thought of it! And, when she +returned to the wings, he twitted her proudly: + +"What next, Lily! An artiste like you!" + +And Ma adopted a sarcastic air and congratulated "mademoiselle" as she +threw the white wrapper over "mademoiselle's" shoulders. + +Ma detested the stage. She did not think it a nice place for herself; but +for a brat like Lily, Lord, it was quite different! And she ought to have +tried to please her Pa and Ma. Mrs. Clifton, though she never voiced the +wish, had visions of a trip to London, to stagger some relations, a +sister-in-law she had there, and sneer at the old country, in the usual +colonial fashion, and show them what the new countries can do, countries +where you make a fortune in less than no time! And, little by little, +smitten with Mr. Clifton's enthusiasm, she came to believe that, in Lily, +they really possessed the infant prodigy, the treasure-child upon whom +their fortune depended. And Ma, too, was vexed when Lily missed a trick on +the stage. + +Lily laughed at their anger. Ma had never raised a hand to her; and, as +for Pa, when he scolded, Lily had such a way of looking at him, with +lowered head--"Oh, _so_ sorry!"--that Pa simmered down again at once. +Lily, a regular "tenter," shot up freely, grew up a real tomboy, went a +bit too far, in fact, Ma said: at Honolulu, for instance, on the road to +'Frisco and New York, where Pa had resolved to go, at all costs, come what +might--it was one step nearer London!--at Honolulu--ten days there and +such a success!--the child played truant in the gardens teeming with birds +and fruit, climbed apple-trees, was caught one day and scampered off at +full speed, pursued by Ma, who threatened to give her a sound smacking +this time, the little thief! But Pa thought it ridiculous, for the sake of +an apple.... + +"And suppose Lily had broken her leg with her nonsense?" asked Ma +indignantly. "Where would your New York be?" + +Pa felt himself a conquering hero when they steamed through the Golden +Gate: the States at last! And no sooner was his foot on the wharf at +'Frisco than off to the agents at once, with his photographs, his +contracts, his posters! But it was her birth-certificate they asked to +see. And no babes and sucklings allowed on the stage here. It was all +right down yonder, but the law prevented it here. + +"Damn your laws!" snapped Pa furiously. "Do you think we make stars to +hide them under bushels?" + +And whoosh! Off for Mexico, where children are allowed to perform. + +Now, in Arizona, near Phoenix, where the train stopped for some hours, +owing to an accident to the Rio Gila bridge, Pa happened upon a +merrymaking which reminded him of West Australia. Cow-boys, galloping +horses, a pretense at fighting, lassoing, revolvers, a track for amateur +cyclists and--yes, there, in the desert!--on a platform, right in the +middle, what should Pa see but an amazing artiste, riding on the +back-wheel, with the other in the air! And such twirls! And the boys +shouted to him: + +"Hullo, Trampy! Have a drink, Trampy!" + +And Trampy accepted: + +"With you, my lord! As soon as I've done, my lord!" + +And off he wheeled, head on the saddle, feet in the air, whistling _Yankee +Doodle_! + +It was impossible! Pa rubbed his eyes: what! Was this what they did in the +States in the desert? And he who had hoped, with Lily ... why, damn it, +Lily knew nothing! He himself, her manager, knew less than nothing! He, +who thought he had formed a star! Pa was red with shame. And, suddenly, he +had a happy thought: he, too, offered Trampy a drink, something to propose +to him.... + +"All right." + +They shook hands, went to the bar, lit a cigar, like men, by Jove! Clifton +loved to talk business, to pull out notebooks, quick, and jot things down +with a knowing air. Trampy, a mere boy, easy-going, genial, without a red +cent for the time being, didn't care a hang about business and was soon +telling Clifton the story of his life: drummer, reporter, racer; his +descent,--"Two whiskies, boy!"--what was he saying? Oh, yes, his descent +of a staircase on the bike, yes, siree, with a red-hot stove under his +arm--a stove painted to look red-hot--pursued by a policeman, leaping over +obstacles on the bike; great success at Duluth and Denver as a tramp +cyclist: hence his name of Trampy Wheel-Pad. But those girls, by Jove! +Well, he who fights and runs away lives to fight another day. Still, a +rolling stone doesn't climb hills. Here he was, stranded. Go to Mexico? So +much a week? Such and such a turn? Teach the child? Cert! + +Lily never alluded to Mexico afterward without shaking with anger. My, to +listen to her, how badly they treated her in Mexico! Worse than a Dago! To +tell the truth, it was hot; and Lily, already tired by those long journeys +in varying climates, Lily would have preferred to do nothing and to +continue to lead her careless life as a playful filly. But no, poor Lily +was caught by the hind-leg in Mexico! Ambition had seized upon Pa, body +and soul, and life became a more serious matter for the child. + +"Look here!" said Pa, pointing to Trampy. "What he, a man, does, you can +do! I'll see to that!" + +Pa arranged for a place in which to practise at their ease. In the +evening, on the stage, he watched and studied Trampy's tricks and, in the +morning, quick, out of bed, look alive, the bike! Pa no longer had his +open-mouthed admiration for Lily, as in South Africa and Asia: his Lily +knew nothing at all! But in three months, six months, if necessary, if it +cost him every penny he possessed. And it was: + +"Come along, Lily ... to work! Show what you can do!" + +Trampy, in this country of _mañolas_--"Grand, by Jove!"--came round about +eleven; and Pa, all out of breath, passed Lily on to him: + +"You have a go at her, Trampy! I give up, she won't do what I say!" + +And Trampy put down his cigar, took off his collar and cuffs and it was, +"Come along, Lily!" till lunch-time. The child, her eyes blinking with +fatigue, fell fast asleep before the end of the meal. + +Pa was delighted. + +And he confided her to Trampy more and more, with orders not to spare +smackings in case of need: + +"Eh, Lily? Eh?" + +As for him, he had business to do, letters to write, great schemes in his +head! for instance, he must try to get permission for Lily to appear in +the States. + +"Time for a cigar, I guess," said Trampy, as soon as Clifton was gone. + +Work stopped abruptly; a tumbler's carpet rolled up in a corner formed an +inviting lounge; and Lily, panting from her practice, would stretch +herself beside him and enjoy a few happy moments, the only really happy +moments of the day; for there were matinées in the afternoon and the +evening performance at night, till she was ready to drop with weariness. +Trampy treated Lily nicely, like a grown-up person, called her by the name +of a fruit, or a flower, or a bird, jollied her, called her "little +wifie:" it was all one to her. He made her laugh with his funny stories, +his fairy tales about himself, his terrible struggle with a snake in the +streets of 'Frisco, after a champagne supper: girls, by Jove! He toned +down his anecdotes and dished them up for Lily's entertainment; told her +absurd yarns enlivened with mimicry, in which he excelled, like the real +mummer that he was, and Lily shrieked with laughter, head thrown back, +full-throated. + +And there was a spice of fear in it all: was that Pa coming back? No, a +carpenter or scene-shifter, perhaps, or else the Martellos, brother and +sister, going to practise slack-wire, head and hand balancing. Their +father, old Martello, a famous name, lived in London, it appeared, alone +with his Bambinis, mere babes still. His other children and his +apprentices had all run away, to escape his horsewhip, and the brother in +Mexico was continuing the tradition. His brutality, in fact, got him into +trouble wherever he went, so much so that the big music-halls were closed +to him, for fear of scandal. And he terrorized his sister, Ave Maria, a +girl of sixteen, a dark girl with great dark eyes. Ave Maria never spoke +to anybody; when she passed through the room where Lily was having fun +with Trampy, she fixed a fiery glance upon them, even ventured on a smile, +for Trampy in particular, whose lively stories reached her through the +partition behind which she dressed. Oh, how she envied Lily! But she +passed very quickly, because of her brother. + +And this time it was Pa! Lily jumped on to the saddle like mad, played her +part to perfection, puffed and panted, as if the last drop of strength +were oozing out of her, and Trampy joined in the little comedy of fibbing +and dissembling: + +"There, like that, Lily, or I'll smack you!" + +"That's right," said Pa. "Make her work!" + +And, just to show Lily what work meant and that her Pa was not so unkind +after all--"It's for your good, Lily! You'll thank me one of these +days!"--he took her to the stage, where Ave Maria was practising. Now, of +course, in the circuses, Lily, occasionally, had seen children knocked and +cut about with blows and trained to say, "It was the cat," when any one +asked them about the marks. They were ordinary children; she had rolled +about in the sawdust with them, played hide-and-seek with them in the +fields of Indian corn; they were children who romped and ran about and +laughed. Ave Maria was different. The brother, a savage, scowling brute, +was always after her, harrying her with muttered threats. She was in a +constant, visible tremble of fear; and, if she slipped on her wire, the +fellow snarled as if to bite her in the foot, pinched her black and blue, +restored her balance with a blow of the belt, shook the supports to make +her fall just to see!... + +"Oh, Pa, he'll kill her!" whispered Lily, when she saw Ave Maria +practising. + +"It's none of our damned business," replied Pa curtly. + +Martello's evil example ended by catching hold of Pa: that's how artistes +were formed, damn it! And, at the thought of the time wasted, he clenched +his fists. To have a Lily of his own, all his own, and to have made +nothing out of her yet! Still, it was not Lily's fault. Yes, though, it +was her fault, she was so stubborn, so wilful! When he told her to do a +thing, why not do it? Instead of bleating: + +"Pa, I can't! Pa, I can't!" + +A brief struggle, in a way, followed between Lily and her Pa. Lily was not +built for passive obedience, wasn't used to it. She no longer knew her Pa. +When he came at her with his hand lifted to strike, when he spoke of +unbuckling his belt--"Damn those blasted brats!"--Lily eyed him with a +look of anguish: + +"But Pa, I'm not Ave Maria!" she said. "I'm not a Dago." + +And she raised her little rebellious face to him. He humbled her with a +smack on the cheek: + +"On the saddle! Up! Quick!" + +The child, mastered by her Pa's strength and energy, ceased to be the +spoiled child, became an artiste.... Head on the saddle, back-wheel: just +like Trampy! Pooh, Trampy, after a few months of this life, was nowhere, +Clifton admired him less and less, Lily was doing all that he did, more +than he did; and without a fault, without a hitch, unerring and exact! Pa +swelled with pride at the mere sight of his Lily, his four stone ten of +flesh and bones fitted to the machine, his Lily, the Lily of his dreams! + +"I'll dress you in velvet and satin!" he said, in his enthusiasm. "I'll +cover you with diamonds." + +Pa, thanks to his indomitable energy, had made something of his Lily, a +real artiste, at last! And business was moving, too! He had a contract in +his pocket for the States, where Lily would no doubt get permission to do +her "childish tricks," seeing that she was traveling with her Pa and Ma. +As for Trampy, Pa had no use for Trampy, made no bones about sacking him +on some pretext or other: + +"Run away and play with your girls, by Jove! Or whatever you please! +Good-by! Ta-ta!" + +And off for Denver, whence they were to continue the journey up to +Chicago. + + * * * * * + +It was the dive for good and all into the stuffy atmosphere behind the +scenes, which Lily was never again to leave, brick walls, where she waited +her turn on the elaborate program of the "continuous performances," amid +the thunder of the orchestra and the lightning of the reflectors. No time +to go out, meals consumed in your dressing-room on the top of the basket +trunk. In the mornings, new tricks to practise on the stage, in the midst +of a herd of girls whom gentlemen in their shirtsleeves were training to +sing in chorus and to keep step to the strum of the piano. And ever and +ever so many new faces, a tumult of tongues which Lily heard on the stage, +in the dressing-room, and even in her room at the hotel, through the thin +partition walls: a lingo made up of coarse remarks and thick stories, +punctuated with spitting and oaths strong enough to carry a tower of +Babel. Lily opened her eyes and ears, heaping it all up, storing it all +away behind her stubborn forehead.... + +And new people, new people: "families," "brothers," "sisters," troupes, +troupes, troupes! Or else stars by themselves, "bests," "uniques:" a +female-impersonator, a green-eyed boy who wagged his hips like the very +devil and took off the girls; Poland, a Warsaw Jewess, a redheaded, +overscented beauty, who did the "Parisienne," and ever and ever so many +others. And Lily, so slender and frail, was the pet of them all. They +called her their pretty baby, their _petit chéri_, and, with their painted +mugs, kissed her full on the lips. + +Pa detested this "rotten lot" and Pa was not always in a good temper. Lily +"under age,"--again! Why, there were even managers who informed the +police, so as to be on the safe side; "traveling with her parents; +childish tricks; nothing difficult."... Ma's indignation knew no bounds: +what nonsense to prevent a great big girl of fifteen from earning her +living! For she aged Lily as much as she could, to obtain the permission, +when no papers were asked for; and she had trained Lily to reply to the +indiscreet questions of the officials: was her trick hard? Was she forced +into doing it? Lily answered mechanically that she liked the bike very +much. And then they allowed her to perform. + +As for practising, permission or none, that was nobody's damned business. +And if some old sheep took to bleating--"Poor child, you'll be the death +of her!"--Pa sent the old sheep to eat coke; and it was: + +"Up, Lily! Get on your bike! Look alive!" + +And the bloomers that Lily wore out! Ma was kept busy in the dressing-room +mending the rents at the knees and patching the seats: + +"What a tomboy!" Ma cried. + +And this went on for months and months. And then came Chicago; a visit of +Pa's to the agents; and a contract with the New York Olympians, a +variety-show coming from the West and returning to New York by Columbus +and Pittsburg. And new people, new people; stars of every kind: the Para +woman, a rheumatic juggler, who was obliged to change her turn and become +an exhibitor of performing parrots, a ragged, molting troupe, picked up +cheap at second-hand; an infant prodigy who topped the bill, a +boy-violinist, leading an orchestra, too, at fourteen, a pretentious +little humbug trained to make a few movements, while others did the work. +Lily thought him so good-looking she simply couldn't take her eyes off +him. And then she had some big girl-friends who had had love affairs! They +were the Three Graces, gymnasts endowed with bodies like so many Apollos, +honest German faces and a bewildering amount of strength, pluck and +precision.... + +"What smackings that must have taken!" thought Pa. + +But no, their uncle and manager, Mr. Fuchs--a name as famous in its way as +Martello's--was known for his gentleness and adored and coddled and +pampered by the Three Graces, who, at a sign from "Nunkie," as they called +him, joyously rushed to practice, taking a pride in pleasing their dear +Nunkie. + +"The old rogue!" said Pa enviously. "He has an easy time of it; whereas I, +with my skinny kitten, damn it ...!" + +Well, well, he mustn't complain, as he himself admitted: one more rung +which he had mounted, thanks to his Lily, that engagement with the best +variety-show in the States; nothing but big theaters: Orpheums! Dominions! +And New York next! And then London! Things were moving, moving! And Pa +looked lovingly at his Lily, as she played at being grown up with the +Three Graces, in the train on Sunday, traveling from town to town, while +Ma was knitting things for her tomboy. He talked to Mr. Fuchs as between +equals, as between man and man, as between the manager of a star and the +owner of a troupe; and the train rushed on, rushed on, with an indistinct +sound of the engine-bell, now and again, when they crossed a street. Mr. +Fuchs, heavy-jawed, slow of speech, said that he had had enough of +traveling, at his age, if it were not for his dear nieces. He would like +to retire to the country, to his little home, and grow his roses, as soon +as he had married off his dear nieces, which would not be long, no doubt. +As it was, one of them, Thea, the one who did five pullings-up with her +left hand, had his permission to receive letters from her sweetheart, a +young man at St. Louis, quite well-off. The idyl made good Mr. Fuchs +blossom into a genial smile: family life! Simple joys! The only true ones! +Worth more than the stage! And Nunkie talked and talked: the Parisienne, a +perpetual scandal! And wait a bit: what was that he heard at an agent's +the other day? Yes, the daughter of his old friend Martello, Ave Maria her +name was, had left her brother, and run away from Mexico with a man! Tut, +tut, the things one saw nowadays! + +Pa hardly listened to the old crock, preferred to dream of New York and +the success his Lily would achieve there! And Lily, sitting close by, +listened with all her ears, puckered her little forehead: love, love.... +And Ave Maria, who had run away with a man.... Why with a man? And she +squeezed up against Thea, the Grace who was in love ... put question after +question.... She talked of her boy-violinist, of Trampy. And they all +laughed boisterously, with heads thrown back, full-throated, and Nunkie, +very paternally, congratulated Mr. Clifton on his daughter's niceness. + +"For goodness' sake, don't go putting it into her head that she's pretty, +the little devil!" protested Ma. "That would be the last straw!" + + * * * * * + +The arrival in New York was a disappointment to Pa. The authorities +insisted on seeing the papers this time. Lily was under age; just as at +'Frisco. What! Why? Because of former scandals, it appeared: Martello and +Ave Maria. What had he, a British subject, to do with those Dagoes who +spoil the profession? growled Pa. He ended by rebelling against the +injustice of it, thought of the Three Graces hard at work rehearsing under +Nunkie's eye, while he, Clifton, had not even the right to set foot on a +stage and let Lily practise there. To work, to work, damn it! And he +locked her up all day in her room doing her balancings, the boomerang on +the front wheel, the standstill on the back-wheel, or the bike upside +down, with Lily standing on the pedals, like a convict on the tread-mill. +The pack of fools! Because a Dago had whipped his sister, wasn't a Pa to +have the right to bring his own daughter up? To work, to work! And he kept +her at it for hours and hours, watched and knit his brows, like a sage +pondering for hours over the solution of a problem. + +Lily, breathless, would turn a look of entreaty upon her Ma, but Mrs. +Clifton, with her nose bent over her work, pretended not to see, +obstinately went on cutting out, patching, sewing her tomboy's bloomers. +Lily longed for Trampy.... + +At night, Pa ran from theater to theater: from Fourteenth Street, where +they lodged, to Twenty-third Street; took the elevated to Fifty-eighth +Street, to Hundred and-twenty-fifth Street! All theaters at which Lily +would have triumphed but for those dirty Dagoes! And the things that were +served up to the public, pooh! Clifton laughed with scorn. Troupes of +English dancing-girls--the famous Roofers--with movements like stuffed +dolls; and cyclists, pooh! Hauptmanns, fat freaks turned out in Berlin: if +that was the best they could do, pooh! Oh, if he had only had the right to +send his New Zealander on Wheels scooting in among their legs, just to +show the public what a star really was! And all the morning he ran about +the town talking of "childish tricks--a big girl" to the police and +"wonderful tricks--the only girl of her age who can do them" to the agents +in the St. James' Building. Oh, if he could have London! He longed to +measure his strength against all those famous names--Marjutti, Laurence, +the Pawnees--just to show them his Lily! + + * * * * * + +And now it was the last stage. All around stretched the dark sea; and the +liner sped--thud, thud, thud--through a gloomy set. Three days more and +then Liverpool; and London at last! Pa was about to realize his dream. He +had signed, at last, for the Castle, in London! It was all right, it was +all right! Prospects fine! And Harrasford was on board; it seemed a sign +of good luck! He was traveling with his architect. Harrasford, the great +English manager--Pa knew them all by name--Harrasford, the man for whom a +whole nation of "artistes" toiled and moiled nightly. Pa had caught a +glimpse of him.... He would have liked to introduce his Lily to him; no +matter, he would know her one day, when she was starring in his halls! And +on the Bill and Boom Tour! And elsewhere! She would soon be famous. + +Ma, who remained lying in her bunk sucking lemons, would have liked to +have her Lily by her, within call, to keep her mother company, that great +big girl spoiled by her Pa, even when she was not performing, as in New +York; ... a new cloak and boots and gewgaws ... a couple of fools +together, that's what Ma called them! And she needed watching, that +tomboy, who would break her leg one of these days, tumbling up and down +the companion-way. But Lily preferred to enjoy herself and expended on +running about the energies which she no longer had to devote to her +practising. Her accumulated weariness disappeared under the influence of +the sleep and the good meals, which she had not the boredom of having to +get ready, as in Fourteenth Street, where Lily, big girl that she was, had +to help her Ma. + +She flitted all over the deck, munching candies, showed everybody her new +boots and her red cloak, held her head high, was very proud of being +looked at. Lily dreamed of the Three Graces; of the boy-violinist; of +Trampy. She made conquest upon conquest, down to the electrician of the +ship, quite a young lad, who looked as cold as ice. + +She sometimes stopped at his door, watched him handling levers, pressing +buttons. It was like the switchboard of a theater. She pointed to this and +to that. The lad smiled, told the New Zealander on Wheels all about his +little world.... + +As for Lily, she was going to star in London, where her Pa would cover her +with diamonds! And she went on to tell him stories, like a little +school-girl who has read a book or two: India, two eyes glittering in the +dark, gee! And elephants she had known, little birds which she had kept in +a cage in Natal, and kangaroos. The lion, who stands up on his hind legs +when he's angry; and the tiger, who lies down flat. And parrots. And +starry nights in Africa: stars "that big." And storms: waves "miles high!" +And successes at Gangpur; and in Chicago, where she shared a dressing-room +with three girls who, when they were undressed, were all over muscles, +just like men. She liked the bike well enough, but those falls: oh, damn +it! + +"That little monkey has seen everything in her time," thought Jimmy, the +electrician. + +And he mused upon the numberless things which she had seen, the countries, +the cities, and all that she would yet see, in her life as a wandering +star, while he would remain walled up in his cabin, with his nose to the +switchboard. + +And the steamer sped--thud, thud, thud--over the dark sea, where the noise +of the waves sounded like the roar of multitudes of men. Huge clouds in +the east were tinged with red, as though London were about to loom above +the horizon in all its glory, filling the vast expanse with its rumors and +its lights.... + + + + +CURTAIN RISES + +I + + +"Lily ... who's Lily? A New Zealander: really? Ah well, we will look into +the matter; it will be settled later on ..." + +Clifton, when he returned home that evening, gnawed his mustache and +clenched his fists with rage. Ah, he would not soon forget his arrival in +London! To get there and be chucked! Was that what he had come from New +York for? To see Lily's place at the Castle filled by another troupe of +the Hauptmanns--the Hauptmanns again, those fat freaks!--and nothing to be +said or done? + +"Engagement not valid. Ought at least to have waited for the London +agency's signed contract before leaving!" + +Intent upon his vexations of the moment, he described his day to Mrs. +Clifton. What had staggered him, done for him, was his visit to the agent, +where they hadn't seemed to know Lily! + +He had rushed at once to others, just to show them who Miss Lily was! But +he got the same reply wherever he went: + +"Lily? Who's Lily? A Maori? Let's see the photograph." + +And would Mrs. Clifton ever believe, asked the indignant Pa, what they +said when they handed him back the photograph? Yes, to him, the father, to +his face, they said: + +"She's too thin, that Lily of yours!" "If that's the way they welcome +British subjects returning to the mother-country, it's jolly encouraging, +on my word it is!" concluded Clifton. + +Ma, among the open boxes, listened and said nothing; she was exasperated. +Their entry into the metropolis struck her, too, as anything but +triumphal. For all her dislike of those breakneck trades, for all her +contempt for the bike, she displayed even more anxiety than Pa. With those +fat freaks at the Castle and if engagements continued scarce, how would +they manage, later on, lost in that huge London, with no money, and a +child to feed? Her vanity was wounded as well. She had dreamed of dazzling +her sister-in-law, making them all burst with jealousy over the splendid +engagement at the Castle; and now everything was slipping from their +hands, on the very day of their arrival, and there was nothing for them +but to sit at home and keep quiet. + +But Pa, the next day, tore through London like one possessed, grinding his +teeth and clenching his fists, railing at everybody, himself included. He +thought of Lily, who had lost a week on the voyage and who was now messing +about in the house, instead of practising her bike. This idea pursued him, +clung to him; but his perseverance was indomitable, his courage ready to +face anything or anybody. Lily should perform at the Castle! She had come +to perform there and perform there she should! There were more visits to +the agents, to this one and that one, to one and all, indefatigable +visits. Clifton insisted on his Lily's merits, pulled out his pocket-book, +bursting with press-cuttings, offered to prove his statements. The agent, +on his side, had made inquiries. Lily was very clever for her age: a +little thin, it was true, but very graceful; and the New Zealander on +Wheels ought to get on. Clifton would work up her turn, no doubt. And, at +last, Pa obtained a promise in writing--and signed--of an engagement in +eight months' time ... at the Castle, damn it! + +An engagement in eight months was better than nothing; but what to do in +the meanwhile? It wasn't the money question that bothered him; Pa had +money; but Lily worried him: he wanted work for Lily, bike all the time +and hard at it. Now, London was closed to him; he couldn't let her perform +in London before appearing at the Castle; that was in the contract; and +there was nothing for the provinces. + +His tenacity continued to do him good service. He got a few offers, in the +London suburbs; that could do him no harm, he knew, though his Lily did +appear at Dulwich, Deptford or West Ham: who would think of going there to +discover that shrimp?... damn their impudence! And meantime the shrimp +would work and her day would come, you pack of fat freaks, you! + +Pa, on the whole, was satisfied. To show Lily, that was all he asked for! +He was quieter, now that she could practise. And Lily, also, was delighted +and relieved. At first it was jolly, doing nothing; but to be always at +home with Ma had its drawbacks; only the other day, because she had asked +for a tam-o'-shanter with a feather in it, like those she saw the little +girls wear in the street, she had nearly had a box on the ear, the +extravagant little beast, who would bring them all to the workhouse! + +Better biking with Pa, from morning till night, and only coming home after +the show. Besides, away from the work, Pa was nice to her: a packet of +sweets here, a bunch of violets there; and then there were the train +journeys out of London and back, over the roofs: all those little yellow +houses, with white curtains, and those little back yards, no bigger than +that--real dolls' houses, all alike--and such lots of little chimneys, +such lots and lots of little chimneys; and those gorgeous posters: +Hippodrome, Olympia, Bovril, mustard, elephants, the Hauptmanns. Pa +wouldn't look at them, those fat freaks; but, oh, if he had them here--and +a whip--just for five minutes ... and the chance of saying a word or two! +To think that they were working at the Castle, while he was puffing out to +the suburbs! And he racked his brain, as he traveled over the town--that +town which he had to conquer and which was veiled from him between-whiles +by the curtain of posters in the railway-stations, on the hoardings, +everywhere--again, again; and imperial troupes and royal troupes, endless +troupes, arrays of pink tights, lines of legs uplifted amid a flight of +scarlet skirts, alternating with Sunlight and Van Houten and national and +colonial troupes, loud as a trumpet-blare and with nothing behind them, he +dared say.... + +Those "troupes," those "families"--he turned it all over in his mind--yes, +they judged talent by weight; the public wanted a lot for its money: well, +why shouldn't he have a troupe? Why not? Lily--he had noticed it in the +few shows she had given--Lily didn't cut much of a figure in London: five +stone of flesh and bones, a mite, a minnow, a nothing. Well, if Lily +wasn't enough by herself, he'd give them more: a whole troupe, if need be! +Why, he'd set about it at once! + +With his customary determination, yielding to a fixed idea, he devoted +himself to it. And, in the halls, at the agents', in the bars, at the +Internationale Artisten-Klause in Lisle Street, that universal +meeting-place, Pa, ever on the watch, strove to make people talk, listened +with all his ears, took notes. It was very difficult to get at the real +facts; one had to ferret them out; the owners of the troupes jealously +concealed their methods, endeavored to put you off, talked of apprentices +at five or six shillings a day, plus food and expenses. Pa saw through +these tricks and, to arrive at the truth, discounted the six shillings +down to sixpence. Lily, her Pa's own daughter, easily obtained information +from the apprentices themselves which she afterward repeated to him. He +studied _The Era_, the paper of the Profession, got the names by heart: +the managers, the "Pas", the "bosses", the "profs." He got acquainted with +some of them personally. Old Martello, for instance, the father of Ave +Maria and the "Bambinis." Martello could have given Pa hints; but he no +longer interested himself in anything except his Bambinis, whom the poor +man, grown calm with age and overwork, was now spoiling. The rest left him +indifferent; he hardly listened, spoke in short sentences, like a man too +old to care: + +"Train apprentices? What's the good? Run a troupe? Pooh, madness!" + +Pa thought this exclusive admiration very touching, but it wasn't what he +wanted and, madness or not, damn it, he was resolved to carry out his idea +to the end! + +There were imperial and royal troupes, "Risleys," carpet acrobats, +pyramids of tumblers, some of them undergoing an apprenticeship of cuffs +and thumps. Pa was not interested in these methods, did not approve of +them; he had never knocked Lily about, never let her fall on +purpose--"Have I, Lily?"--whereas in the imperial and royal they sent the +apprentice sprawling on his back, just to teach him, when he started +wrong. + +Still, all these were boys; and it was the little girls that interested +him, for he meant to have only girls among his apprentices. The rest +wasn't his damned business; but the different troupes of Roofer girls, for +instance, affected him directly: where did old Roofer fish those girls +out? That's what Pa wanted to know. He had even, in order to visit the +school, pretended to bring Lily as a pupil. He had seen the place in Broad +Street, where they turned out "sisters" by the gross; had watched the +squads in knickerbockers, scattered over the immense room, like recruits +drilling in a barrack-yard: groups engaged in club-swinging, juggling, +clog-dancing, all together, a tangle of different movements timed "one, +two, three!" Roofer chose among the heap, sorted out the sizes, called +this lot the Merry Wives, that lot the Crazy Things, christened them after +an insect or a flower, packed them up in lots of ten or twelve girls, with +snub-noses or Greek profiles, as preferred, despatched them, +carriage-paid, C. O. D., with words, music and muslin skirts complete, and +received every day a detailed account of his Honeysuckles and Bees, +scattered all over the world, from the Klondike to Calcutta. + +This superlative organization produced upon Pa the effect of a state +affair; it was something beyond him, above him; it interested him +especially from the recruiting point of view; and what stimulated him +above all was the troupes of trick cyclists. He had seen plenty of them in +America, but then, wholly occupied as he was with his Lily, they did not +interest him, whereas now he was seeking to fathom their lives, so that he +might know. Some of them, who went cheap, slept three in a bed, niggers +and whites all mixed; others, who were well paid, lived easily and +comfortably and put themselves forward with less work and for more money +than Lily, Lily who possessed artistic talent, and who had toiled harder +than all the rest of them put together! Patience, his turn would come ... +when she was a bit less thin. And he would have the troupe of troupes, +he'd show them, jolly soon! + +Mrs. Clifton was terrified at her husband's boldness, but dared not +protest; however, she observed that it was a big undertaking. + +"We shall have five apprentices," interrupted Clifton, "six including +Lily. We must find lodgings." + +"But, dear...!" + +"Don't you think...?" + +"Yes, dear." + +As for the apprentices, he would see to that to-morrow. Ma suggested that +her sister-in-law's daughter might do, but Pa wouldn't have relatives at +any price--blubbering for a smacking bestowed upon their daughters--he +knew all about them, thank you. Let such sheep bleat elsewhere. No, give +him strangers. He could be freer with them and get as many as he wished. +An advertisement in _The Daily Mail_--"Wanted, young girls for trick +cycling," followed by the address--fetched them the same day. The pavement +before the house was blocked with white aprons, sailor-hats and +tam-o'-shanters. There were consumptive-looking girls, long hanks of +girls, chunky girls, all crowding outside the door, until the landlady +drove them away with her broom and threatened to do as much for Pa and Ma +if all the street-arabs of London were to go on soiling her nice white +steps. + +Pa, for that matter, found nothing in the bunch, not one in twenty that +was any good; or else they made exhorbitant demands--two shillings a day +those guttersnipes expected--as though shillings were to be had for the +asking! But why look so far? There were girls, sometimes, at the back +entrances of the theaters: stage-struck kids who devoured Lily with their +eyes and looked at Pa as though to say, "Take me, take me!" That's what he +wanted, damn it, girls who had the business in their blood and who +wouldn't go whining over a professional slap or two, which he dared say +he'd have to distribute to make up for lost time. + +[Illustration: "TAKE ME, TAKE ME!"] + +The first girl whom he engaged he had already seen gazing ecstatically at +Lily, as they left the theater, far away down the Mile End Road, and he +saw her again, one morning, in front of his house in the very heart of +London! He could not believe his eyes. She must have followed his scent, +slept on the threshold like a lost dog. Her Pa? Gone away. Her Ma? Dead. +Her name? Maud. Her age? Didn't know. Born somewhere in the immensity of +Whitechapel, towheaded, round-faced. Nothing to eat for two days. She'd +do! He would go to the police-court, get the license later; meantime, he +netted her and that was one! + +As regards the others, he had to make a selection. He chose them by +preference in families which were overstocked with brats, so that one more +or less, in the heap, made no difference. He got one this way; that made +two! Next, a "local girl," seized with ambition, came and offered herself. +Three! He found two others: a little Beak Street shop-girl and a +Shoreditch Jewess. That made five. It did not take him long to judge the +girls. He gave them a few days' trial before signing a contract; and what +an anxiety for them, Mr. Clifton's final decision! If one trembled too +much, was caught holding Pa's shoulder for no reason, for fear of falling, +or blubbered because of a scratch on the skin, her fate was settled. + +"Pack up, my lady," Pa would say quite calmly. + +There was no getting out of it: off she had to go, before dinner, and home +she went, through the gloomy streets, after a brief glimpse of paradise. + +He had to replace some of them: they were slack; or else, independent at +times, they looked at him for the least push, as if they would fly at his +throat. He asked himself whether he wouldn't be compelled to get some over +from Germany or else to pick up on the highroads, in the Gipsies' +caravans, children with skins tanned like donkeys', a troupe of +blackamoors on wheels, who, perched up on the handle-bars of the bikes, +would have looked like cockroaches mounted as brooches, damn it! + +However, by dint of selection, he ended by having only good ones left; and +then he made a contract in due form with the parents for three years, or +even five, such was his faith in the future. A few pence a week to the +family, a few pence to the baggage herself: he to dress, lodge and board +her and engage to make an artiste of her. Everything was provided for: +during the training, just the board and the rest; when she began to work, +a shilling a day in addition. Over and above, she would be looked after by +a lady, Mrs. Clifton. Was that all right? Both parties signed; the girl +was an artiste, became a New Zealander. + +They brought their little wardrobe: one spare chemise, on the average, one +pair of stockings; their only protection against the weather was the dress +they had on, a factory-girl's ulster and a tam-o'-shanter. Later on, when +performing, they would be entitled to a celluloid collar, satinette +knickers and pumps. + +Pa, though at first he took one extra room and then two in the same house +and though he also made his apprentices sleep three in a bed, Pa soon +found himself cramped. It would have been nice to have a little house +somewhere in good air, next door to the country. But there was one thing +which made Pa decide to remain in the West Central district. Jimmy, the +young electrician with whom Lily used to chat on shipboard, had given up +traveling. Harrasford and his architect had noticed him on board and the +great man had engaged him to manage the electric installation of his +theaters. Jimmy had taken possession of a lodging in Gresse Street, +Tottenham Court Road. He slept over the shop, which, for the rest, served +him rather as a place in which to keep the tools for his outside work. Pa +often ran upon him in the neighborhood and had a nodding acquaintance with +him which turned out to be useful, as Jimmy, being in Harrasford's +employment, was more or less at home in the variety-theaters and nothing +was easier than for him to obtain leave for Clifton to practise on the +stage. This it was that persuaded Clifton to settle in the west end. In +any case, it would be cheaper than dragging the six girls and himself +daily from one end of London to the other. The house in which he took up +his quarters, in Rathbone Place, quite close to Jimmy, was small and dark, +but not dear. The upper story was occupied by people who were out all day +and the basement served as a lumber room. They would feel quite at home +here ... with no old sheep to listen at the keyholes. + +[Illustration: TOM, THE SHOEBLACK] + +And then he would have slept in the parks, if necessary, anywhere, rather +than waste more precious time! His Lily, his troupe, before everything. +What he had to do was to get a move on. He went so far as to engage a boy, +a shoeblack at the corner of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road for +the rest of the time, to attend to the bikes and the girls at practice. + +Pa gave his mind to the gear, the expenses, the general business. Ma saw +to good order, to domestic discipline. It was no longer the quiet life of +a Pa and Ma trotting round the world in the company of their one and only +bread-winning star. As for Lily, the daughter of the boss and manager, she +owed a good example to one and all. In the morning, with Maud, she went +down to the kitchen, lit the stove, made the coffee. Next, she carried up +the breakfast to Pa and Ma in bed, then distributed their rations to the +famished girls. And off they went, all six of them, with Pa following at +their heels. + +The stage-door gave the apprentices a thrill the first day they entered. +The passage, gently sloping, tall and wide, because of the scenery, +smelt of elephants and cheap scent. It was blocked with properties, with +queer-shaped cases, flat as a slab or round as a ball. There were long, +narrow boxes, for the horizontal bars; sometimes a row of wicker +coffins, with a ventriloquist's figures inside. And labels from +everywhere--Melbourne, Chicago, Berlin, Lisbon--and "Rlys." and "S. S." +that made you feel in the hold of a liner, off to foreign ports. + +At the end, beyond an iron door, was the stage, very dark, pricked here +and there with electric lamps. There were things that glittered with +spangles. To the girls it seemed like the Kingdom of Puss-in-Boots or +Blue-Beard; but to Lily it was an old story. She was a little like the +school-girl in the good days long past, for whom the master was always +waiting, cane in hand. The rest she didn't care about. + +Nevertheless, huge as the stage was, there was not always room to +practise: ponies or elephants would monopolize it for hours at a time. Or +else, when Roofer was supplying a ballet, he took up the whole stage, all +day long: Lily, secretly delighted, sat down modestly in a corner, so as +to be in no one's way. Roofer made his collection of calves and ankles +flutter about, followed the new dances with an expert eye, throwing his +hat back on his head, mopping his forehead, grumbling, finding fault: + +"Don't eat chocolates while you're dancing, you, Eva! Hi, you, +Gwendolen!" + +And, to emphasize his remarks, he threw his felt hat at them. + +"Silly old ass!" thought Pa, with a grin. "To think you can train artistes +like that. You'll use up fifty hats, you old fool, while my belt remains +as good as new!" + +For that was now Pa's system, the strap--"à la Mexico!"--not that he used +it often nor very hard; but he terrorized Lily with it and the other girls +were afraid of it, too, though they never got more than the threat, seeing +that they were apprentices, who might have run away if he had struck out. + +All this did not prevent them from working with a will--trot, trot, +trot--when there was no Roofer on the stage and no elephants or ponies: +yoop, on to the bikes and the fun began! The sight of Pa training his star +made the apprentices shake in their knickers. Lily was to do everything +and to do it very well: Pa ran after her, in a never-ending circle, and, +from the corner of his eye, watched Tom, who held the girls and made them +work, upon his instructions; and when they got off their bikes to wipe +their foreheads: + +"Bravo, Miss Woolly-legs!" said Pa sarcastically. "Tired, eh? Dead, eh? +Suppose you tried to get up again ... and be quick about it! And as for +you, Tom, don't let them fall, or I'll catch you one on the side of the +head!" + +For Pa already knew by experience that their little ladyships shirked +work; that they shook with fright; that they lost confidence after a bad +fall; and that then it was finished, nothing to be done with them: they'd +let themselves be killed sooner. + +Maud, for instance, that Jonah, ever after one day she had seen her blood +flow, trembled before her bike like a sheep that scents the +slaughter-house. It was no use Pa's threatening her with his belt: she +wouldn't let herself go, on the contrary, held on to everything, no matter +what, for fear of falling. He ought to have sent her away long ago; he +would pack her off that very night ... and made no bones about telling her +so, that Jonah! + +Then Pa, giving Lily a rest, occupied himself with the girls: taught them +the principle of the standstill, of side-riding, of the "swan," of the +"frog." And,--quickly!--the indefatigable Pa went back to Lily, made her +begin a trick ten times, twenty times over, so great was his rage at the +lost time, the elephants, the Hauptmanns, Roofer. He pulled faces, +clenched his fists: + +"Why don't you do as I say when I tell you, damn it!" + +"But, Pa, I can't!" protested Lily. + +"You can, if you like," said Pa, exasperated this time and unbuckling his +belt. + +Crash! A heap behind him, a medley of limbs and steel fittings! Maud, who +was still trying, on her bike, startled by Pa's threatening movement, had +fallen flat down. + +"Maud again! That damned Jonah!" cried Pa, going up to her. "Well, Miss +Woolly-legs, do you mean to stay there all night?" + +But she did not move; and, when they had disentangled her from the bike, +Pa saw an eye that was quite red and a little stream of blood trickling +down her cheek. + +"Let's look!" said Pa anxiously. + +A spoke sprung from the felly had scratched her eye. + +It was a serious accident. Sprained wrists, barked shins didn't count; but +a spoke in the eye.... Luckily, Maud had no relations; there was no claim +to be feared: not a vestige of old sheep on the mother's side. Pa said all +this to himself as he ran to the chemist, and Lily consoled poor Maud as +best she could, said that, after all, it was part of the game: she'd know +better another time, eh? She'd be a great star yet, eh, Maud? + +The poor maimed thing lifted her face to Lily, stammered through her tears +that it was nothing ... all right again now ... Pa's fault, with his +belt. + +"For a little thing like that!" said Lily, laughing. "Fancy falling from +your bike for that! Why, I'd rather have twenty 'contracts on the back' +than lose an eye." + +For that was what it amounted to. Pa realized it, after he had dressed the +wound. Clifton's mind was not at ease: a glass eye was not a very +difficult matter ... but, who knows, some callous person might inform +Harrasford, who stood no nonsense on that subject. Fortunately the +artistes present had not paid much attention ... had hardly noticed +anything, in the dim light of the stage.... + +And soon after the New Zealanders were walking back to Rathbone place with +Maud in their midst, her head a roll of bandages, leaning on Lily's arm. + +It was a pathetic home-coming. Ma had told them what would happen! That +would teach them to take in vagabonds from the streets. Mrs. Clifton +thought that, in a respectable house.... + +"That'll do," said Pa, dropping into the easy-chair in the dining-room. +"I'm worn out. If you'd been like me, Mrs. Clifton, running after those +Woolly-legs all the morning"--and he pointed to the apprentices standing +round the table--"gee, you wouldn't talk so much! I'll take Maud to the +hospital this afternoon; it's only a trifle. Is dinner ready?" + +"Yes, dear." + +"Come along, then, all of you Woolly-legs," said Pa jovially. + +Pa was sorry for poor Maud, as a rule, but he felt a need to shed a little +gaiety, to extenuate the accident as far as possible, to turn it into a +joke, so as to prevent his girls from being panic-stricken. He talked of +heads smashed to a jelly, of legs in smithereens, of a bicyclist who had +had not one, but both eyes caught in the chain. As for himself, when he +was a small boy--that was in the time when they brought up artistes, real +ones, mind you; not, as nowadays, on sugar and sweets; no, real ones, on +the whip and the stick, damn it!--why, the accidents which he'd seen! Yes, +he himself, to go no farther, he could have shown them, here, there, +there, here, damn it, all over his body, scars deep enough to put your +finger in! + +"Eh? Frightens you, does it? Never fear," added Pa, in a good-humored +voice, "that sort of thing won't happen to any of you Woolley-legs; a good +Irish stew is better than a kick of the pedal, eh?" + +And Pa, after a last cup of strong tea, dismissed the girls, lit his pipe, +threw himself into the easy-chair, with his legs long out in front of him; +but soon: + +"Well, Maud, what is it? What are you crying for now? I tell you, I'll buy +you a glass one," said Pa, at the sight of Maud, who blubbered silently +and sat glued to her chair instead of getting up to go. + +Poor lost dog! Clifton, at the theater, had threatened to send her away. +She knew what that meant: leaving Miss Lily, losing those good meals.... + +Maud faltered something about packing up; pain in her eye; not her fault. + +"So what you want is to stay with us?" asked Pa. + +"Oh!" gasped Maud. + +"Well, then, stay! But no more bike; you shall be Lily's lady's maid," +said Pa, puffing at his pipe. + +It went down so well, as an effort of dry humor, that Ma could not help +laughing. But Mr. Clifton was talking seriously. Then Ma, amazed, +protested: what, a servant in her house! A lady's maid for Lily! He would +end by giving her the moon! And what would Lily do all day? She'd sit +twiddling her thumbs! Had Mr. Clifton thought of that? + +Yes, Mr. Clifton had thought of it. He was too tired to explain his +reasons; but take it from him, it was best like that. Pa, in fact, feared +lest that smashed eye might prove a worry to him: the papers weren't in +order. He had made no declaration to the police; there was the Workmen's +Compensation Act.... Much better keep Maud safe in the house, for a while +... + +"Lily won't sit twiddling her thumbs for all that, will you, Lily?" +continued Pa, smiling to his star. + +A touch of the brush and comb, a stroll through the streets with the +girls, by leave of Pa, who wished Lily to take the air, then home again, +more housework.... The apprentices, who did not yet perform in public, +were sent to bed early, while Lily, escorted by Pa, went off to East, +West, South or North London. An hour to get there; then undress, dress, +appear on the stage under Pa's eye, undress and dress again; another hour +to get back; a morsel of cold Irish stew, a cup of tea; and drowsily up to +her room and bed.... + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +"Lily!" + +Ma's voice woke her with a start in the morning. Lily dressed quickly and +quickly ran down-stairs to the kitchen, where Maud had gone before her; +and it was the same thing every day, except on tour, when discipline was +less strict. It had gone on for months and months, for two years, ever +since they came to London. Pa, with his iron will, had overcome +everything. He felt at home in the old country, at last. After his +engagements in the London suburbs, he had obtained a triumph at the +Castle, a Bill and Boom tour of forty weeks, a season at Blackpool, the +Harrasford tour now, successes everywhere. Before his boyish little girls, +before his own particular troupe, the fat freaks trembled in their +knickers! For Clifton, the new-comer, but yesterday unknown, it was an +unhoped-for success and fame and fortune. + +Ma nearly always remained in London with Maud. Lily was not big enough yet +to need the supervision of a Ma. Therefore, on tour,--when she was not +practising with her Pa,--Lily did the catering, saw to the porridge and +the Irish stew; Pa was not hard to please. Provided Lily was "great" on +the stage, he asked for nothing more. Dishes burned for want of butter, +salad mixed in the wash-hand basin: he swallowed everything with an +appetite, ate standing, with his plate on the trunk, or else seated with +the girls round a little table hardly large enough for three. This +Bohemian life pleased him. He loved youth, gaiety and good fellowship. He +was fond of a laugh, took Lily on his knee after dinner, played with her, +praised her home-made cakes, her tough chops, and then began talking bike +to Lily ... who hated bikes, and who got something different from a hat +flung at her, when she missed a trick. + +No matter, hard as it was, she preferred touring to staying in London. The +work was the same, but, at least, it was a change. She was spoiled by +every one, down to that landlady who cried when she left.... After all +there were many worse off than she, everlastingly set about by "profs," +confined to their rooms all day to practise their balancing; she had had a +taste of it in New York; no, thank you! She preferred having good times +with the girls, practical jokes, boxing-matches even, scrimmages, +pillow-fights. In the boarding-houses, they flirted with the boys; they +kept pet pigeons, white mice, a lizard; they exchanged secrets, stories of +every country, professionals all! Sometimes, they consoled one another; +promised to send kisses--x x x--on post-cards. And then there were new +faces, always; a week in each town, no longer; a real life of adventure +from one end of England to the other. Now it wasn't like that in London; +she felt less free there. Ma was particular and hard to please; there were +no pillow-fights, no romps; Ma hated those ways. The stage, yes, she put +up with that because it was Lily's profession; but one came in contact +with all sorts there; and that little devil of a Lily was wicked enough +already! It took all the home influence to thwart the bad examples which +she received outside; and it was Ma's business to see to it. + +The house in Rathbone Place had been smartened up. There was a dining-room +which was used only for meals and which never had a bed put into it at +night. There were things on what-nots: little photograph-frames, loose +photographs, lucky charms, china cups; all shining and bright, thanks to +the adjunction of a lady's maid, as Pa called Maud, in his funny way. At +first, after the accident, it was terrible. Her natural awkwardness was +made worse by a glass eye; she could not tell one side from the other, +spilt the tea on the cloth, broke the crockery. Maud did the heavy work, +washed and scrubbed all day long. When the girls were in London, she went +with them to the theater, as dresser. Maud stood in the wings and admired +the New Zealanders whirling about in the light. She stretched out her face +in ecstasy toward Lily: that Lily who had traveled everywhere, who was +born so far away, in a land full of monkeys and parrots. She followed Lily +to her dressing-room, trotted after her like a dog, worshiped her +open-mouthed. + +Lily had ripened out, was becoming more beautiful, more of a woman daily, +despite the fact that her Pa still treated her like a kid. She no longer +looked at things from the point of view of the child-girl who had been +delighted with a satin hair-ribbon in India; now her pride was not +appeased with such trifles. Ma, according to Lily, seemed ashamed of her, +dressed her badly: an odd skirt here, an odd frock there, of a cheap make. +That was not what Lily wanted. She was an artiste: she wanted a hat with +big feathers and a gown with gold braid to it; but, when she showed Ma a +dress which she liked in the shop windows, Ma would exclaim: + +"What do you want with that? My poor Lily, you must be mad! That's for +rich little girls, girls who have time to be pretty; it wouldn't suit you +at all. Why, if we listened to you, we'd soon be in the workhouse!" + +[Illustration: P.T. CLIFTON, MANAGER] + +Ma always said no, pretending that she had no money; whereas Lily knew to +the contrary. She knew that the troupe earned a great deal and that the +troupe was herself. The other day, at the theater, she had heard her aunt, +who felt bitter that Mr. Clifton had not accepted her daughter Daisy--who +could have learned the business and later on have starred by herself!--she +had heard that "old sheep" say, speaking of her: + +"What a shame to dress her like that! A girl who brings them in capital to +invest!" + +So Pa was investing capital. She didn't exactly know what investing +capital meant; no doubt it meant making a lot of money. She asked for none +of it! Children belong to their parents! But she would have liked to be +treated with more consideration, to be spoiled; to get presents, nice +things. She had plenty from her Pa, true enough: presents, my! But they +were cheap gifts, for all that.... She was always having promises made her +of more important things; and the promises were never kept: that big gold +watch, for instance. She had a thirsting for luxury. It seemed to her that +she was being treated like a performing dog, not a bit better. Ma, without +exactly knowing, but with an infallible instinct, saw all this budding +under that obstinate brow. Mr. Clifton might see nothing in it; but it was +not so easy to take in a mother! Was there a love affair beneath it all, +Ma asked herself. No, not yet; it might come later on, as with that +apprentice who had run away, or that other one whom she had had to send +packing for being too free with men. But Lily would not leave them like +that. + +She did not let her go out. "Glass-eye Maud" ran the errands and Lily +stayed at home, like a good little girl of whom her mother wished to make +a lady. When she did happen to go out, she must not be long, or else it +was, "Where have you been? Tell me at once!" At the theater, when Pa lost +his temper, she could reckon on a mighty fillip, and then it was over: Pa +was sorry, rather than otherwise. Ma, on the contrary, would nag for +hours; muttered inarticulate phrases about "devil," "wild bull," and +"taming her;" there was no end to it. Lily champed the bit! A star, +indeed! Was that being a star? She thought differently! She had seen +others drive up to the theater in their motors, accompanied by gentlemen +carrying flowers, like that famous "M'dlle" at the Palace. Yes, those were +stars: they dined at the Horse Shoe and did not spend their time in +useless housework. Oh, she was quite sick and tired of that life! She'd +had enough of it. Meanwhile, the days passed and the weeks and it was +always the same thing: housework and stage-work; work, work, work.... + +It was late that morning; they were not practising. Pa had run down on the +previous day to see a troupe of cyclists, the famous Pawnees, who were +back from the Continent, on their way to New York, and performing that +week at the Brighton Hippodrome. Lily was in her room later than usual, as +Ma was not awake. Maud had gone down to the kitchen. The apprentices were +getting up, joking with one another, like tom-boys used to sharing the +same bed at home, the same room at the theater, to dressing, undressing, +splashing about naked in the same bath-tub. + +"Get up, Lily," said one of them, laughing and raising her sturdy little +hand. "Get up, or...." + +"No," said Lily, "let me alone, I'm dead." + +As it happened, on the day before there had been a general tumble, six in +a row, on the back-wheel; one of them, losing her balance, had dragged the +others with her and the lot had fallen flat in a tangle of steel and +flesh. Bucking Horse, Old Jigger, Street Donkey--the nicknames they gave +their bikes--had kicked them to the raw. They showed one another the +bruises on their limbs: "Oh, don't it hurt, just!" "What about mine?" +"Look here!" like young recruits bragging of their wounds after the +skirmish. + +"Lily!" + +"Yes, Ma!" + +And Lily washed quickly, put on her frock and ran down-stairs to prepare +the coffee, but her Ma stopped her on her way. + +"Lily, you light the fire." + +"What about Maud?" said Lily. "Why can't Maud do it?" + +"You young impudence," ... said Ma; "Maud has gone to Jimmy's to take the +bike which Tom couldn't get to him yesterday; he was shut. It's the bike +you spoiled, you little bedlamite!" + +Lily had to laugh at the thought of Maud struggling with Old Jigger: Maud, +who couldn't lead the machine by the handle-bar, or even walk beside it, +without barking her shins. + +"Why!" cried Lily. "She'll explain everything wrong to Jimmy, and the bike +will be no use!" + +"Well, then, go yourself," said Ma, after a pause. "And mind you, come +back quickly; don't go loitering in the street; and don't stay long with +that drunkard." + +"Yes, Ma." + +Gresse Street, where Jimmy lived, was quite as dreary as Rathbone Place: +here and there, a few posters on the walls; some low-fronted shops, +displaying sweets and candies, or else a dazzling case of oranges on the +muddy pavement; alleys, stables, cab-yards.... + +It was here that Jimmy had his workshop, or rather his tool-store, for he +did not do much work there. The time which his occupation at the theater +left him he devoted to improving himself. Electricity and its manifold +uses held his interest. There was no doubt that, had he given all his time +to it, he would have become very clever, for he had an inventor's brain +and, moreover, possessed an astonishing manual skill for altering and +perfecting things. He worked in copper and steel, was glad to make and +repair bikes for a few customers, the New Zealanders, among others. While +working, he brewed all manner of plans in his brain. They all revealed a +practical intelligence. Saddle-supports which reduced the shaking on a +bike, improved carriage-springs and so on; and, on the stage, inventions +to dispense with men in the flies and wings; to work everything--scenery, +curtain, lime-light--by means of the switchboard; and ever so many other +things.... + +Since joining the theater, Jimmy had naturally undergone the influence of +the stage. It had affected his ideas, with all its new-fangled "turns," +which owed their success to a maximum of daring--or bluff--coupled with a +minimum of scientific knowledge: illusionists basing their effects upon +the reflections of invisible mirrors and the cunning use of combined +lights; "looping the loop," "circles of death," in which sheer weight did +the cyclist's work for him, his arrival at a given point depending upon +his accelerated and calculated speed. From seeing so many of this sort +scouring the world--erstwhile acrobats, former laboratory-students, who +now, venturing all and risking all, topped the bills at the +music-halls--Jimmy, greatly interested in this scientific side, had +himself made researches in that direction. _Engineering_ and other +journals had printed some of his schemes, including that of an apparatus +based upon the notion of exterior ballistics: the resistance of the air +proportional to the square of the velocity and, according to this +velocity, the exact proportion of the angle of incidence to the angle of +projection. Theoretically, it was perfect; in reality there might be some +unexpected hitch. It was a question for the venturesome performer, who +allowed himself to be projected by a series of powerful springs, to fall +accurately from pedestal to pedestal, preserving a faultless balance; in a +word, to risk his life six times in as many seconds. The daring of a +Laurence and the agility of a Lily combined would not have been enough for +the task; and so Jimmy had prudently contented himself with pinning his +diagrams on the walls of the workshop and dismissing the idea from his +mind. Not that he was afraid, rather not; but simply because it appeared +impossible to him. + +Other plans had interested him, besides; flying machines, for instance, +etc. He was a real enthusiast about flying machines! One day, perhaps, +when he knew more ... to say nothing of the theater, which did not leave +him much leisure; yet he managed, somehow, for he took but little sleep +and the rest of the time he devoted to study. + +This was the Jimmy of whom Ma made a bugbear to Lily--in Lily's +interest--for he was one of the few men whom she saw often; and you can +never tell ... with those devils of the stage.... + +Meanwhile, Lily, as soon as she had turned the corner of the street, drew +herself up and, with a light step, went down Percy Street and Tottenham +Court Road, instead of keeping straight on. It took her only five minutes +longer and it suggested luxury, fine shops, handsome furniture, +patent-leather shoes. She adored shopping, even if it was only with the +eyes, through the plate-glass windows. + +She loved to pass in front of the Horse Shoe, where stars lived, real +ones, not performing dogs. And then, round a piece of waste land, there +was a hoarding covered with advertisements that interested her: the +Hippodrome, the Kingdom, the Castle were displayed between extract of beef +and mustard; and there were always new programs; always new names; and +elephants, horses, lions; and tights.... + +Lily looked at this for a few seconds. And, suddenly, she felt a thrill; +on a scarlet poster, dazzling as the sun, she read: + +"Great success! Trampy Wheel-Pad!! At the Kingdom!!!" Trampy in London! + +Not that Lily was astonished: it seemed to her quite simple that he should +be there, as simple as for her to be in Chicago, Bombay or Capetown; +people do sometimes meet on tour, it all depends: you can be separated for +years and then perform at the same theater for months. No, she was not in +the least astonished: a little excited, that was all, without exactly +knowing why.... + +"But, if I should meet him," she thought, "what shall I say to him? What +will he say to me? Will he think me grown prettier or uglier?" + +Lily came to herself again and continued on her errand; crossed Tottenham +Court Road, plunged into a labyrinth of blocked alleys, of dark courts, +and, suddenly, was at Jimmy's. + +Lily did not like him much; she considered him good-looking, for a man, +but too shy. He never paid her a compliment. He seemed to think her ugly, +whereas many others admired her and made no bones about telling her so, +especially since the last few months; but he was ashamed of himself, no +doubt: a drunkard, as Ma said. + +Poor Lily had no luck. She would have been so happy to be courted, to +relieve her boredom. But nothing disgusted her so much as drink. And yet +it didn't show in Jimmy. He always walked straight, never fell, like that +head-balancer who, the other night, had come tumbling down from his perch. +Besides, that one had an excuse; he drank because he was crossed in love; +to forget, they said. Lily forgave everything the moment there was love in +it; but an icicle like Jimmy, who loved nobody and who drank for the sake +of drinking ... ugh! + +Jimmy was at work when Lily entered. The small, dark shop, crammed with +things in steel, with loose wheels, queer-shaped objects, reminded Lily of +a property store, only it was dirtier. There were tools everywhere; +designs for machinery pinned on the walls; it was all very ugly. + +And Jimmy's greeting was none too engaging either. A curt smile--"Glad to +see you, Miss Lily"--and, as for the bike, he hadn't understood a word of +what the one-eyed creature who had just left had tried to say. + +"I thought as much," said Lily, laughing. "That's why I came." + +And, in a few words, she explained what she wanted. First, repair the +twisted frame; next, a slight alteration for a new trick; a step here, +another there. + +"Always fresh tricks, Lily?" + +"Always, Jimmy. No end of bruises, I tell you!" + +"It's part of the game," said Jimmy. + +"I should like to see you try it," retorted Lily contemptuously, +"squeezing through the frame while it's going, with that pedal barking +your back," and she rubbed herself as she spoke. "Only yesterday I got a +kick; gee! It's like those new tricks in which I don't feel safe: riding +with one foot on the saddle and the other on the bar and playing a banjo; +it makes me shiver as I go past the footlights; and Pa watching me, you +know; and, if I lose my balance, I get black and blue somewhere." + +"Pooh!" said Jimmy. "One can't expect a white skin at the game." + +Lily didn't care for this. If she couldn't be courted, at least she liked +to be pitied: that flattered her pride.... It was all very well for Pa to +say, "It's part of the game, my little lady." But that josser of a Jimmy, +talking like that at his ease! + +"I'm glad I'm not your daughter!" she said. "My! You'd be harder than +Pa." + +"Your Pa is hard, sometimes; but he's very fond of you, for all that." + +"Of course," said Lily, "he wouldn't like me to break my neck; I bring him +in too much for that, eh?" + +"Come," interrupted Jimmy, "don't talk nonsense. It's not right to speak +as you're doing. You'll be sorry for it, I'm sure. Tell me, rather: you +were saying you wanted a step here, another there; do you mean like +this?" + +And he rummaged among his tools, looked for loose pieces, showed them to +Lily, while thinking of other things: + +"Look here," he went on, "do you think you're the only one that's got to +work? Suppose you were shut up all day in a factory? Have you ever been to +a factory? Do you know the life of a metal-buffer girl at Sheffield, +standing in front of her wheel, from morning till night, and work, work, +work?" + +"But I'm not a work-girl, you great silly! You know I'm an artiste! And, +now, shall I tell you what I think of you, Jimmy?" said Lily, pouting. +"You're a bad man, that's what you are!" + +And thereupon she put out her tongue, turned her back on him and began to +look at the walls, the diagrams, the drawings, an illustration out of +_Engineering_. + +There was a pause. + +Jimmy, while handling the bike, gazed at Lily. There was no sentimentality +about Jimmy, but his lively imagination made him see things through and +through; and, whatever he might be, Jimmy was not bad. That little Lily: +to think that, among all the girls of her own age, she was the only one to +do that trick! He pitied her and all child prodigies. To his mind, there +was something unsportsmanlike about it; something like a race won by a +one-year-old, with jockey, whip and spurs. He did not believe all he +heard, of course. He knew, he lived with them, he was one of them. He knew +the peculiar mania of the music-hall, the instinctive lie, uttered as if +to discourage competition by giving it a fright at the start. To listen to +them, it meant the horsewhip, the belt, all day long; going "through the +mill," all the time. Among the people with the painted faces, it was a +shot at martyrdom, a chance for professional boasting. The most +commonplace, the most coddled lives were made more interesting by means of +imaginary wounds and scars, like those explorers, in the books, who cross +Africa without food or drink, barefooted, with a crocodile snapping at +their heels. + +He took good care not to exaggerate. Life in the halls was no worse than +anywhere else, thank God! It had its good side and its bad side and its +professional risks. The "pros," taking them all round, were as good as the +"jossers." He wanted to be just. He had seen many who were very happy; one +could get anything done by firm kindness. He could also understand, in the +terrible struggle for bread, that a man went on toiling hard in the trade +in which he was born. A pro could not make a blue-stocking of his +daughter; some were born duchesses, on satin; others artistes on the +boards. One trade was as good as another; but dangerous practicings, +bruised flesh, seamed skins: no, he didn't approve of that. He had seen +the Laurences, mad with ambition, beginning all over again, in spite of +falls calculated to stave in the stage; had seen girls who "do knots" +lying in the dressing-rooms, gasping, exhausted. Even when professional +vanity alone prompted such excesses, Jimmy protested within himself; and +then there were so many abuses.... Besides, the stage so often spoiled a +woman: every branch of the stage, from the highest to the lowest. All that +coaxing familiarity! What he said was, if Lily had been his daughter, she +should not be on the stage; but there she was and he couldn't help it; +and, as it was her natural place to be there, he would not be guilty of +the meanness of disgusting a poor girl with the profession which she had +been at pains to learn. He preferred to let her call him "a bad man." And +that required a certain courage; for it was no longer a child talking to +him, but an exquisitely pretty girl. Jimmy could not believe his eyes. +What a change! Was it possible? Having been away from London, on +Harrasford's service, he had not seen her for many months, except the day +before, just in time to shake hands behind the scenes, in the dusk; but +here, in his shop, he hardly recognized her, he could not exactly say why. +One thing was certain: he had left her a child and he now found her a +beautiful girl. + +"Tush!" he said to himself. "She's a child for all that. Only, if she +keeps on like this, what a handsome woman she will be!" + +That familiarity on the stage: he reproached himself for thinking of it; +it seemed to him an insult to Lily. And he began to talk to her of +different things, kindly and pleasantly, changing from subject to subject. +He explained his drawings on the wall, his ideas: exterior ballistics; the +resistance of the air; risking his life six times in as many seconds.... + +"He's drunk," thought Lily. + +And, to stop this flow of words, as though talking to herself, Lily said +she did not complain; no, she would quite like the bike, if she hadn't got +to practise so hard; she only complained that they didn't treat her "fair" +at home: + +"And look how I'm dressed! I've had the same toque two years. And what do +you think of this frock? The material cost four-three a yard. I look like +a tenter in it." + +Jimmy did not share Lily's indignation. He thought her neatly and nicely +dressed, in spite of her performing-dog's toque, as she said. It all +suited her so well. But, on examining that clear-cut little face, lifted +toward him with a rebellious air, he felt that the fatigue, even the blows +didn't count; that the hardest thing, for Lily, was to be "badly dressed;" +that she would never swallow that. + +"But, look here," said Jimmy, "all this isn't worth making a fuss for; you +get cross about nothing at all; when you came, you were all smiles; and +now ..." + +"That's because," Lily began, with a sly laugh--oh, she was exasperated +with Jimmy's coldness! She'd show him, the icicle, and have a bit of fun +with him--"on my way here, Jimmy, I met ... now you won't give me away, +Jimmy? ... I met my ... sweetheart." + +"A sweetheart? You? Lily?" + +"Yes, yes, yes," said Lily, nodding her head and looking at him archly, +for she could see, by Jimmy's expression, that he was caught. + +"And your father and mother know nothing about it?" insisted Jimmy, +nonplussed. + +"No, no; it doesn't concern them: at my age, a girl earns a living for her +Pa and Ma; I have as much right to a sweetheart as any one else, I +suppose." + +And, greatly amused, she fixed Jimmy with her mocking eyes. + +Jimmy stared at her in amazement. + +Then she understood that it was not a thing to joke about and that what +she had just said was terrible. And, suddenly: + +"No, it's not true, Jimmy! I was only laughing! Oh, Jimmy, you're going to +give me away!" cried Lily, squeezing Jimmy's arm with a convulsive little +hand. "Oh, Jimmy, don't tell Ma, please, please, Jimmy!" + +And there was something so sincere in her voice that Jimmy saw that she +was speaking the truth, that it was only the jest of a flapper used to the +manners of the stage. + +"No," he said briskly, "I shan't tell; don't be afraid, Lily; only ..." + +"Ah, that's nice of you," said Lily, much relieved. "Marriage! If you only +knew! And what would become of the troupe? I shall never marry. I +think...." + +"Still, some day, it's bound to come," said Jimmy, interrupting her. "You +won't spend all your life on a bike. You are sure to marry some day...." + +"Don't talk to me about marriage! No, not that. Gee!" + +"But--" + +"Love stories! With men! I! And you believed it," said Lily, drawing back +her shoulder and raising her hand. "I could smack you, you great silly!" +And, all of a sudden, "I must go," she cried, "I've stayed too long; Ma +will be waiting for me with her broom!" + +And Lily rushed outside, without giving Jimmy time to answer. He could +just see her turn the corner of the street. + +Jimmy went back to his work, silently, wrapped up in his thoughts. That +nice little Lily! She could be easy in her mind. No, he would never be a +cause of worry to her.... + +Meanwhile, Lily ran home as fast as she could and, on entering, saw that +it was no use; her Ma was waiting for her, furious. + +"Where have you been?" + +"Why, I've come straight from Jimmy's, Ma." + +"That's a lie! The butcher's boy, who has just left, saw you outside the +Horse Shoe. Who were you waiting for?" + +"I wasn't waiting for any one!" cried Lily, her eyes blazing with anger. + +"You devil!" said Ma, looking round for a stick, an umbrella.... + +And, when she saw nothing within reach, her anger increased. Then she +stiffened her arm and made for Lily, who sprang behind the table.... + +But Ma, tripping on the carpet, fell at full length, dragging down with +her the table-cloth and two cups that were on it. + +"My two china cups! You viper!" she yelled. + +At that moment, the door opened; Clifton entered. He seemed preoccupied; +looked at his watch: + +"Nine o'clock. We ought to be at the theater! Where are the girls? And +what ... what's all this?" he asked, on seeing the disorder, Mrs. Clifton +scrambling up from the floor, Lily scowling in a corner. + +Ma grunted an explanation. Two cups broken, Lily a gadabout who would +bring them to the grave with shame! + +"But, Pa, I was only looking at the posters." + +"Posters?" repeated Clifton. "Which posters? What's all this nonsense?" + +And, when Ma had told him, interrupted by despairing "But, Pas," and "No, +Pas," from Lily, he very calmly asked, was he going to have peace in his +own house, or was he not? All this fuss about two broken cups; beating +Lily for nothing! + +Never, in any circumstances, would Clifton have snubbed Mrs. Clifton like +this before Lily. He would have waited until she had gone. But to come +upon all this rot when there were so many serious things to discuss! The +sisters Pawnee whom he had seen last night: Polly, Edith, Lillian. Yes, +that Lillian, damn it, a winged rose! And the things they did on their +bike without seeming to touch it! + +"My poor Lily," Pa went on, going up to his daughter and stroking her +hair. "I'm not saying it to vex you; but you're not in it with the +Pawnees! Come on! Beg your Ma's pardon; and let's be off to the theater. +I'm in form this morning. We shall have a great practice." + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +A few minutes later, Pa was hustling his herd before him: + +"Quicker, my Woolly-legs! No time to lose!" + +He thought of the tricks which he had jotted down the evening before in +his note-book. Lily would learn them quick enough: she was as clever as +the Pawnees, when all was said, only less graceful. She had the balancing +power all right; but grace, grace, damn it, to do a thing like that as +though it were child's play: that's what she hadn't got! You saw the +effort. And the apprentices had no precision in their groupings. Now the +fat freaks had. To combine German discipline with English gracefulness, +that was the question; to have the troupe of troupes; to have a Lily who +would be worth more by herself than Polly, Edith and Lillian put together. +But that meant work and going through the mill! This last made Pa think of +the old sheep and their bleatings. He gave a nervous little laugh and his +hand had a convulsive movement, as though to strangle those pests. + +Pa had recovered his good humor and was grinning by the time they reached +the theater. Merely by his way of taking the key of his dressing-room from +the stage-doorkeeper one recognized the owner of a troupe, the man with a +"permanent address," the manager, the boss, the prof, the Pa. On entering +the lobby, he, with his six girls, took possession of the theater. He +nodded to the staff; growled a "Lazybones!" as the Roofers passed out two +by two, always two by two: a fair one with made-up eyes, a dark one with +kiss-me-quick lips; sniffed their cheap perfumes amid the tarry smell of +the packages marked Sidney, New York, Paris.... + +[Illustration: "QUICKER, MY WOOLLY-LEGS!"] + +On reaching the stage, Pa first gave a glance to make sure that there were +no elephants, or ponies, or Merry Wives, that they could practise at their +ease, without having to burrow in a corner, like rats. The stage was +almost empty. After the live street, it was a pallid light, in which +ghosts moved. The New Zealanders, it need not be said, no longer fancied +themselves in the cavern of Bluebeard or Puss-in-Boots; they had seen too +many stages during the past two years. The slant of the floor, the +roughness or smoothness of the boards was what interested them, for fear +of falls and barked shins. Pa hurried them to their dressing-room to get +into their knickers, while he took off his jacket and turned up his +trousers, so as to run better. No more time to lose, with his Lily! He was +still in a fever from seeing those Pawnees last night. As for the stage +and the boards, a lot he cared, slanting or straight, rough or smooth! To +work! to work! And he got ready the bikes, which Tom had brought down, +without a glance around him. + +To a poet, to a painter, that glance would have been worth the taking. The +iron curtain was raised, the house loomed vaguely; the balconies, covered +with cloth, stood out like cliffs; the pit, with its seats under a gray +drugget, because of the dust, lifted toward the stage its rows of +motionless waves. The stage itself was strange: a sort of huge cave, with +strips of scenery hanging like stalactites; near the wall, a metal +pedestal, with a red velvet platform, looked like a blood-stained +scaffold; one suspected the presence of properties: wheels, iron +implements, tangled ropes, like so many instruments of torture. At the New +Zealanders' feet, half-naked bodies, suggesting the souls of the damned, +were tumbling, practising falls; a woman in a white wrap hovered round; +and, near the proscenium, a pack of trained seals, lying in their moist +boxes, raised their frightened heads, as who should say corpses cast up on +the shores of hell by the silent waves of the pit. + +But three slender forms, spinning on their trapeze almost above Pa's head, +sprang lightly to the stage, near an old fellow in spectacles. + +"Why, Mr. Fuchs and the Three Graces! Here's a surprise!" said Pa, who had +not seen them since the New York Olympians. "When did you get here? +Yesterday?" + +There was a general shaking of hands. Fuchs congratulated Pa on his +success, said he had followed his progress in the papers. Pa owned a +troupe now and had a name. + +"So this is your Lily," said Fuchs, tapping her on the cheek as she joined +the group. "A real lady! And good, eh?" + +The Three Graces also congratulated Pa ... kissed Lily: + +"How sweet you've grown! Why, Lily, how pretty you are!" + +Lily was so surprised, so pleased; and her Pa was very proud. He thanked +Mr. Fuchs, complimented the Three Graces in his turn, to their delight: + +"What arms! What muscles!" Then, "Excuse us, eh? Lily must get ready. We +shall meet again presently, after practice." + +The Graces had gone back to it already. Pa tested the bikes; took a +hurried turn at the pumps; and, when the apprentices and Lily returned: + +"Yoop, up with you!" + +The round began. Tom looked to the girls, constantly; ran after them; kept +an eye on their falls. Pa, constantly, hung on to Lily. Nothing else +existed when he was handling his star. His wish to do well, his love of +art for art's sake worked him up, stimulated him, made him hit out but not +in anger: it was the spark of enthusiasm, of which the apprentices caught +the reflection. + +"Hi, you there, Mary! I'll pull your ear! Birdie, if I take my belt to +you!" + +But his Lily above all; his Lily! his seven stone of flesh and bones! Pa +was an artiste; he had thought of a thousand things since his trip to +Brighton. New and astounding tricks; and easy at that ... if Lily only +would! Oh, he'd soon make her graceful! But, for that, she would have to +obey, to let go the handle-bar at a sign, instead of endlessly seeking her +balance. For instance, Pa held her rein to prevent falls--there was +nothing spiteful about Pa, he never let you fall on purpose--and +Lily--"One! Two!--Count together, Lily!"--put one foot on the saddle, the +other on the handle-bar: "Three!" That's where she had to let go her +hands, smartly, and stand erect as she rode. The machine slipped under +her. Lily, shaking with fear, stooped to seize the handle-bar. + +"Stand up, Lily! Show pluck, Lily!" said Pa. + +Lily, accustomed to obeying blindly, drew herself up again. But, +sometimes, crash! The whole came tumbling down. Notwithstanding the rein, +Lily fell to the ground; and the bike, in addition, caught her a kick in +passing. + +"Nothing broken? A tiny scratch; it's nothing. Tom, the white stuff!" + +Tom left his Woolley-legs, brought a bottle of embrocation; a few drops of +that on the skin, a bit of sticking-plaster; there, that was all right. + +"You see, Lily, you're not dead yet! Nothing to be frightened about. Come, +try again!" + +The great thing was to hustle. Pa displayed so much enthusiasm--"Those +Pawnees, damn it!"--that Lily, for all her fears, was smitten in her turn, +ended by becoming exasperated against those Pawnees, felt a longing to +wring their necks! + +She obeyed her Pa like an automaton, in her anxiety to do well. + +"More graceful! That's it! Not so stiff!" said Pa. + +"But, Pa, I can't!" protested Lily, soaked in perspiration. + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +They passed from one practice to another, almost without resting. Lily was +worn out, Pa seemed indefatigable. + +Sometimes, practising was marked by interruptions. Maud's gouged eye +remained the typical accident. Another time, a girl lay fainting for ten +minutes after falling on her head; or else the stage was invaded by a +ballet. There was no end to it. On this particular day, they had a visit +from Harrasford himself, Harrasford the chief and master, who came along +with Jimmy; a visit which was the more sensational for being quite rare. +Pa, now that he was the owner of a troupe and sure of his position, would +not have been sorry to be noticed by Harrasford, just to impress Mr. Fuchs +and show him what they thought of Lily in London. + +"Do your best, my Lily," said Pa. "He's watching us." + +But bill-toppers, New Zealanders though they might be, were nobodies to +"him;" Lily--one of a thousand, among all those of both sexes who +performed in his theaters. There might have been ten cycling rhinoceroses +on the boards; he might have seen Lily swallow her bike, and change into a +butterfly: he would have paid no attention. Those were details that +concerned the stage-manager. He hurried across the stage to the +fly-ladder, made Jimmy explain things, took notes as he went, wanted to +see for himself, pointed to the first batten, to the electric switches. + +"How much for so many lamps? And that? What does that come to, roughly?" + +And he stopped for a second in his course, his ear stretched toward Jimmy +to catch his answer flying; then both of them went on again, quickly. + +Jimmy was now following Harrasford along the bridges, with the whole stage +below him, in the ruddy semi-darkness; at one side, the half-naked bodies +fell with a heavy thud after their somersaults; or else it was the sharp +sound of a bike skidding; and distant voices rose up to him: + +"But, Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +"Poor little thing!" thought Jimmy, disappearing in the flies, toward the +side-rails, at Harrasford's heels. And Lily went on riding and Pa running +after her, round and round and round. She seemed to be fleeing madly, +pursued by a devil. Suddenly, Pa stopped, having exhausted his strength, +and Lily fell rather than sat upon a hamper by the wall. + +"Here, Lily, put this over your shoulders," said Pa, giving her his +jacket. "You'll catch cold, darling. Oof, let's take breath a bit!" + +But a glad voice burst through the silence: it came from the Three Graces, +who always worked on stubbornly, even during the absence of Nunkie, who +had been out for a smoke. Thea greeted his return with a cry of triumph: + +"Ten pullings-up with one arm, Nunkie! Ten without stopping!" + +"Well done! I'm very pleased with you," said Mr. Fuchs; and he crowned +their excitement by declaring that, as a reward, he would that very day +buy Thea the sleeve-links which he had promised her ever since last year. + +"Dear Nunkie!" + +A spasm of vanity made them rush back to their work; and soon the three of +them formed, in mid-air, an involved group of ropes, bars and hardened +limbs. + +Lily, in spite of her fatigue, was amused at those mad girls. To take all +that trouble for the sake of a pair of sleeve-links! Her shoulders shook +with nervous laughter, in spite of Pa's presence. He quieted her with a +gesture, scolded her under his breath, kindly: + +"Shut up, Lily!... Aren't you ashamed of yourself, Lily?" + +And he looked at Nunkie with an air of saying: + +"You old rogue!" + +As for the Three Graces, it was a pleasure to watch them: their pluck was +infectious. + +"To work!" said Pa. "Let's have a somersault, eh?" + +And, at a sign from him, two of the apprentices, assisted by Tom, fixed a +little steel-legged table in the middle of the stage, bore down upon it +with all their weight. The bike, set at full speed, stopped short as it +struck the table; and Lily, carried on by the impulse, continued her +whirl, full on her back, and, carrying the machine with her, came to the +ground on the other side of the table and went on riding. But that shook +her, in her stomach, her heart, everywhere. Each time, she was nearly +succeeding, but it wasn't quite right. + +"I can see," said Pa, "you want to make me lose my temper!" + +"But, Pa, it hurts!" + +"Oh, those blasted little brats!" shouted Pa angrily. "Rickety machines, +every one of them: no more energy than a sparrow and lazy into the +bargain!" + +Then, suddenly, Lily succeeded magnificently. + +"You see you can do it when you like, you obstinate little wretch!" said +Pa. "Now try not to miss it again, next time! That will do for to-day," he +added, seeing Lily out of breath. "Go and get dressed, my Lily." + +The Three Graces were finishing also. Good old Nunkie wiped the +perspiration from their foreheads with his big checked handkerchief, +invited Clifton to come with Lily and choose the sleeve-links and +suggested that they could have a chat at the restaurant. + +"Would you like to, Lily?" asked Pa. + +"Yes, Pa." + +"Very well, then." + +The girls would go back alone. Tom, having carried up the bikes, was told +to run home and fetch Miss Lily's new dress and boots, Mrs. Clifton's +brooch and big hat. And, half an hour later, Lily, who had crawled up to +her dressing-room stiff-legged, exhausted, feeling sixty, came tripping +down the stairs all freshly dressed, wearing the great hat of her mother, +and a pair of creaking boots. She soon recovered when she was dressed out. +She drew up her dainty figure, so as to be level with the imposing group +of Pa, Nunkie and the Three Graces. + +Lily, very proud of herself, spun out the pleasure of drawing on her +gloves to go shopping with those big girls, who had had love stories. Then +they discussed what restaurant.... Nunkie, long ago--"Zæo's year at the +Aquarium:--that doesn't make me any younger, eh?"--had discovered a little +German place.... + +Lily would have liked to propose the Horse Shoe, to walk in there with her +big hat and creaking boots as though the place belonged to her. But they +decided upon a "Lyons" in Wardour Street. At the table, it was touching to +watch the attentions which the Three Graces lavished upon their Nunkie, +the respect they showed him. Pa was not sorry that Lily should see that, +but Lily took no notice at all: she just removed her gloves, held her +knife and fork with the tips of her fingers, let Pa help her, thanked him +with a pretty "'K you." From the corner of her eye, she watched other +groups, to pick up good manners. She seemed to have frequented smart +restaurants all her life: beside her, Nunkie and the Three Graces, who cut +their bread with their knives and made a noise when eating, looked like a +family of small farmers on a visit to London town. Pa was greatly amused, +enjoyed his daughter's aristocratic ways, admired her refined air. When +they went out, in obedience to a look from Lily, he bought her a bunch of +violets, which he pinned to her bodice himself: + +"Well, Lily, are you happy? Do you love your Pa? Tell me you love your +Pa," and he looked at her gently as if in regret at having been so harsh +at practice. + +"It's for your good, my Lily, you'll thank me one of these days. I'll give +you lovely dresses, I'll cover you with diamonds!" + +"Why not to-day?" asked Lily, with a comic pout. + +Then both of them laughed and Lily forgot everything, even the blow with +the fist, at being treated so like a lady. + +"If I was married," she said to the Three Graces, "I should like to go +shopping all day long and have fine dresses, a gold watch and no bike!" + +The Three Graces, with their heroic strength, had no thought of such +luxuries. Thea told Lily of her successes in America: + +"Five pullings-up with one arm at Boston. Six at 'Frisco. Eight when we +got back to New York! Eight, Lily! And to-day...." + +"And your lover in America, tell me about your lover ..." interrupted +Lily, pressing Thea's arm. + +"Talk low," said Thea, looking back at Nunkie, who was walking behind with +Pa. "Nunkie is furious with him. If he ever meets him! He says it's +disgraceful, not writing to me, after asking leave to. It's an insult that +ought to disgust me with men for good and all, Nunkie says." + +She told Lily everything, her unhappiness at first, for she loved him. +Lily, with her little nose in the air, sniffed those love stories, gulped +them down, so to speak, with an instinctive movement of the lips. + +"And did you write to him?" + +"I wrote to him, but he never answered. Oh, if Nunkie knew! He forbids us +to write, because writing, you know, Lily, puts out the muscles of the +arms, interferes with the pullings-up, Nunkie says...." + +[Illustration: NUNKIE] + +But they turned into Regent Street: to Lily it was the entrance to the +paradise of shops. The huge curve displayed its window fronts; and ladies +and gentlemen and little girls: not dressed in their Ma's leavings, these +last, but a superior branch of mankind, similar to that in the front +boxes. + +Nunkie blinked his eyes behind his spectacles: all this luxury terrified +him; he had almost forgotten the sleeve-links, talking with Clifton of +people they had known: + +"The boy-violinist? Not up to much. Ave Maria? A disgrace: married, +deserted, I don't know what. Poland, the Parisienne? A scandal!" As for +him, he had but one wish, after getting his girls married: to retire to +his home, grow his roses, look after his pigeons; simple joys, the only +ones.... + +"Look, Thea!" Lily broke in, pointing through the plate-glass to a heap of +imitation jewelry, lying, among watches, on red and black velvet. + +"Come on!" said Mr. Fuchs. + +But, when Thea saw the prices--ten shillings, twelve shilling's--she +refused to go in, saying she could have it just as pretty in Wardour +Street and ever so much cheaper. + +"Just as you please, my darling. I'll do whatever you like. I don't know +anything about it!" + +Clifton felt something rise in revolt within him, he was unable to resist +it; a case of showing that old curmudgeon what a Pa was and that his +little girl, too, did pullings-up in her way and that he knew how to treat +her as a Pa should: + +"Your watch, Lily," he said, opening the door and pushing her in. "Now's +the chance to get it. Come, choose for yourself!" + +"Oh, Pa! Do you really mean it, Pa?" she said incredulously. + +"Now look here, I'll smack you, Lily! When your Pa tells you a thing!" + +Lily seemed a princess, with her way of saying, "'K you," of touching the +ornaments, the watches, like a little creature thirsting for luxury and +yielding to her inclination at the first opportunity. There was so great a +look of happiness in her eyes; and Clifton was so proud of his Lily, that +he offered her a chain as well, to go with the watch. Lily refused at +first, for form's sake, and then took courage--like a poor little martyr +who did not like to disoblige her Pa--and chose a very pretty watch-chain, +to the great wonderment of the Three Graces and of Nunkie, who thought, as +they left the shop, that the children of to-day ... upon his word ... the +parents of to-day ... it was all very different in his time.... + +Clifton laughed to himself at that old curmudgeon as he left him to go +home, with his star. Lily hung heavily on her father's arm, passed the +draper's shops with a serious air. + +"No, another time!" said Pa, who felt what she was after. + +And he hurried his daughter off, for he might have yielded, she was so +nice. + +Lily set her watch in Piccadilly, as they passed; then at the Café de +l'Europe, by the big clock at the back; and again, twenty steps farther, +at the bar of the Crown. Lily looked at the time and Pa showed his Lily +off. He was proud to be seen with her in the neighborhood of Lisle Street, +where everybody knew him. True, he seemed to have the name of being hard +with Lily. But, come, was he hard? Did she look like a martyr? It was +preposterous, all those stories. And he redoubled his attentions to his +daughter, who talked a heap of nonsense, asked funny questions: + +"Why should writing a letter interfere with the trapeze, when a girl has +arms harder than a horse's hocks?" + +"What? What?" asked Pa, taken aback, and when he understood, he would have +held his sides for laughing, if he had been at home: + +"Oh, the old rogue!" he said admiringly. "He loves his dear girls, does +Nunkie!" + +He was still laughing when they reached Tottenham Court Road; and, as they +passed the Horse Shoe, a voice, which Lily seemed to remember, called to +them from behind: + +"Hullo, Clifton!" + +Pa turned his head in surprise: + +"Hullo, Trampy!" + +For he recognized him at once, though he was much changed. Besides, he +knew him to be in London. But it was a prosperous and gorgeous Trampy, +quite unlike the old days; and forthwith Trampy explained: a champagne +supper last night, just come from the bar; glass of Vichy water, you know. +Huge success in London. Girls, by Jove! And then, pretending not to know +Lily: + +"I congratulate you, Clifton; what a dear little wife!" + +Pa, greatly amused, protested: not his wife, no, his Lily! Then Trampy +went into ecstasies: how pretty she had grown, one of the handsomest girls +in London, sure! And in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland! +And in all the British dominions beyond the seas, by Jove! And what a +change since Mexico! She was a woman now, a peach, a regular peach! + +Lily seemed fascinated by Trampy, examined him, his shiny hat, his gold +rings, his patent-leather shoes. A swell, Trampy, a toff, a gentleman like +those in the front boxes. + +"Yes, Lily," said Trampy, guessing her thoughts, "yes, that's the way it +is; one's not always hard up. I've struck oil since leaving America. Heaps +of money! Eh, what!" he continued, offering Clifton an expensive cigar. +"You wouldn't have thought it, would you, when you left me stranded in +Mexico? That was a nice dirty trick you played me! Come and have a drain, +old man, to drink Miss Lily's health and show there's no ill feeling!" + +"No, another time," said Clifton, vexed at this recollection of Mexico, +now that he was the established owner of a troupe, a man whose word was as +good as gold. "I'm in a hurry to get home: a very nice home, Trampy, a +real good one. Come and see us some day. _Au revoir_." + +But Trampy was so pleased at meeting them, he never stopped shaking them +by the hand. Lily had to accept a bag of cakes to share with the troupe +when they had their tea. Then, at last: + +"_Au revoir_, old man; _au revoir_, my love, my little peach!" + +Lily's head was quite turned by this jolly day: it made her forget six +months of worries. To think that, for some people, every day was like +that! However, she mustn't complain: a watch, a chain as well, the +somersault pulled off, compliments from Trampy.... + +Ma's reception of them, when they got home, was icy. Pa looked a little +like a school-boy caught at fault; and Lily, none too easy in her mind, +put the cakes on the sideboard, and hastened to take off her mother's big +hat. Ma grumbled, under her breath: it was nothing but going out, now. Old +Cinderella could stay at home, bareheaded, while my lady went shopping! A +fine thing, my word, for a great sensible girl to abuse her Pa's weakness! +There was nothing to do at home, of course! Well, if it pleased Mr. +Clifton, she had no more to say!... And, while she grumbled, Ma prepared +the tea and shot glances at Lily, a Lily with red cheeks and bright eyes +and looking so pretty that Ma, full of mixed pride and anxiety, felt +sudden longings to eat her up with kisses, "ugly" that she was! + +Pa did his best to calm Mrs. Clifton, tried to amuse her with the story of +the sleeve-links, of the horse's hocks, and Pa laughed, my! + +"He laughs best who laughs last," growled Ma. + +"Just think, Ma," said Lily, taking courage from Pa's merriment. "That old +rogue forbids his daughter to write, he pretends that...." + +"And quite right too!" said Ma. "What do girls want with writing? And who +do you mean? What old rogue? You don't mean Mr. Fuchs, I suppose?" + +"Why, yes, Ma, old Fuchs." + +"Old Fuchs! You chit, to talk like that of respectable people! Go to your +room, impudence! Dry bread for you!" + +"But, Ma...!" said Lily rebelliously. + +"That's what comes of it," said Mrs. Clifton, addressing her husband, +"when a mother no longer has the right to correct her daughter." + +And she pointed to Lily, who persisted in remaining, who was even +beginning an explanation: + +"But, Pa ... but...." + +"Obey your mother first," said Clifton. + +"Yes, Pa." + +And Lily went out, very anxious at the turn which things had taken. + +Clifton realized that he had perhaps been wrong that morning to blame Mrs. +Clifton in Lily's presence. He was wrong also to laugh at old Fuchs before +Lily. But, all the same, that old rogue ... and they had believed it, +those Graces! That wouldn't go down with Lily! + +"It's an example you ought to follow, instead of laughing at it, Mr. +Clifton!" + +"Upon my word, I'm very proud of my Lily; she works well, she really +does," said Pa, stretching himself in the easy-chair. "I'm pleased with +her; you know as well as I do, a girl is not a boy. She can do with a +little spoiling. And only just now I made Lily a present of a gold watch +and chain." + +"Then I give up!" said Ma, in a voice of exasperation. "Then I give up! +Why should I take all this trouble bringing up your daughter? A little +spendthrift who will bring us all to the workhouse! And a good thing when +she does!" + +But Pa wanted peace in his own house. That was enough of it! Peace was +what he wanted, damn it, and not a monkey-and-parrot life! + +And, jumping up from his chair, he opened the door and shouted up the +staircase: + +"Come down, my Lily! Your Ma says you may! The cakes are on the table." + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Pa would have covered his Lily with diamonds, if he had the money ... and +if Ma had allowed it! But, on this special point, she ventured to oppose +him. She had been Lily's age herself, had Ma, and she enlarged upon the +necessity of keeping a tight rein on Lily. + +Ma enumerated the fugitives: Ave Maria, and this one, and that one, and +ever so many others who had bolted; and troupes ruined by the flight,--or +the marriage,--of the star.... + +"Lily has changed a good deal lately, dear, are you sure she hasn't a man +in her mind?" + +"There we are again!" said Pa. "Always the same old story! But just tell +me, who does she see? Who does she know? Jimmy? You don't mean him, I +suppose? Very well! Trampy, then? A married man, divorced, married again, +goodness knows what! and then ... and then ... Oh, well, let's have peace +at home, at any rate! Damn it, Lily may be a bit of a flirt: why shouldn't +she be, a pretty girl like that? Beauty, in the profession, is half the +battle." + +And Pa entered into details, comforted Ma with good news: a fresh contract +signed with Bill and Boom, after that, the Harrasford tour: big salaries +now.... + +"No, dear, this isn't the time to worry Lily about trifles. And I don't +want her to be bothered with useless work, either." + +"Call home work useless! A woman's greatest charm!" exclaimed Ma. + +Lily was a subject of friendly discussion to them. Both adored her +equally: both were proud of her at heart. For Lily was growing very +beautiful; everybody said so at the theater: the stage-manager; the acting +manager, down to Jimmy, who stammered things. It was an endless series of +compliments; Harrasford's friend, the architect, who had not seen her for +a long time, fell into raptures when he met her on the stage: + +"Magneeficent!" he exclaimed, in his Franco-Belgian accent. "How old is +she: sixteen? seventeen?" + +"Fourteen," said Ma, with a mincing air, for to that damned "parley-voo" +she was as anxious to make Lily out a child now, in order to keep a firmer +hold of her, as she had been to increase her age in America, so as to make +her work. + +"What, fourteen, Ma!" protested Lily. + +"Yes, fourteen, of course; do you think you know better than your mother, +you little fool? Can't you see everybody's laughing at you?" + +Ma dreaded those irresponsible jossers, who filled Lily's head with a pack +of false notions, and kept a good watch, in her growing anxiety. + +Ma, in the early days of their arrival in London, had been terribly +obsessed by the dread of being left without means in the huge city. Lily +had got them out of that difficulty. And now she was earning such a lot of +money: one day, who knows, they would have made enough to assure their +independence for good and all! When she thought of this possibility, Ma's +eyes lit up with yellow gleams; she felt like catching hold of Lily and +locking her up in a safe. + +Pa was less eager for gain, less ant-like in his economies; he was an +artiste, above all; he knew how to make allowances; there was a time for +work and a time for play. He often treated himself to the pleasure of +taking Lily out; and, each time, as usual, she got a nice little +present--he liked to pass for a Pa who spoiled his daughter, loved to hear +himself so described, and took a wicked delight in repeating it all to +Mrs. Clifton. + +Lily was the gainer by the difference in opinion; she felt herself a +little freer. When she went out in the morning, she considered herself at +liberty to walk less fast, and no longer trembled on returning. She loved +to loiter in the Tottenham Court Road; her little person assumed an air of +importance; if, after practice, some artiste passed her in the street and +gave her a smile, she believed that he was waiting for her; a "comic +quartet," the Out-of-Tune Musicals, happening to come out of a bar and +blow a kiss to her, were there on her account, she thought--four lovers at +a swoop! + +It was almost impossible that she should not meet Trampy, who was always +prowling about from bar to bar, between Oxford Street and Leicester +Square. She did meet him, in fact. Trampy, that day, wore a felt hat, a +blue suit, a red tie, with a sixpenny Murias cocked in the corner of his +mouth, and he greeted her with a triumphant "Hullo, peach!" as she passed. +Lily was quite excited, stopped just long enough to refuse a drink and +then left him very quickly. She was afraid it showed on her face, when she +got home, and his words still rang in her ears, that she was awfully +pretty, the prettiest girl on the stage, a peach, a duck, a pearl, a +daisy, a bird. + +All that she had seen and heard in her jostled existence, now came back to +her, grew and sprouted in her ... now that Lily was being made love to by +gentlemen, not the monkey-faces or the blue-chins, but men like Trampy, +her craving for admiration oozed out of her at every pore.... + +Trampy! Lily did not care for Trampy; but she thought him amiable, polite +with the girls.... She was grateful to him for being there to say pretty +things to her when she passed. She preferred that type to men like Jimmy, +for instance, savages who always seemed on the point of speaking and never +opened their mouths; with them, she thought, a wife would be bored to +death. Besides, Jimmy, pooh, a common workman, a josser! While Trampy was +an artiste, a bill-topper and rich, no doubt. You had only to listen to +Trampy to see that he was very well off! Chocolates, sweets, jewelry, +ostrich-feathers, patent-leather boots, everything! He would have loaded +her with presents, if she had let him, but she had never accepted anything +except a little gold ring, which she hid in her pocket when she came in, +for, if Ma had caught sight of it, gee, what a smacking! + +Trampy often met her; he seemed almost to do so on purpose; he found +pretty speeches, compliments which he had already uttered a score of times +to ever so many girls, on ever so many stages, like a real Don Juan who +had been all over the world and everywhere picked up love-speeches and +jokes to "fetch" the ladies with. He tickled her vanity, told her that a +dear little girl like her was cut out for dress, that a big hat with +ostrich feathers would go well with her fair hair and that men, by Jove, +ought to go on their knees whenever they spoke to her! + +All this hummed and buzzed in her head. At night, when she fell asleep in +Maud's arms, she dreamed of big hats and fine dresses and referred to it +during the day. Pa hardly knew what to think; if she did as well as last +night--three encores--Lily could have half a sovereign, to buy a new hat +in the Tottenham Court Road with, said Pa. + +"Oh, Pa, I shall do all right, you'll see. Will you be very nice? Then get +me that one at two guineas, you know, in Regent Street." + +"But you're mad, Lily!" said Pa, without attaching too much importance to +it, for he had other cares: agents to see, letters to write, business, +damn it! + +That took down Lily's cheek a bit; but her luxurious ideas returned, +nevertheless. For instance, from admiring the Three Graces or the Gilson +girl, who looked like Venuses in their silk tights and whose entrance on +the stage caused every opera-glass to glint upon them, the wish to appear +in tights began to grow on Lily. Oh, not the plain tights of living +statues; no, but with flowers and leaves embroidered here and there and +jet braid laced about the right arm. She was tired of bloomers and told Pa +so, straight out, when the apprentices had left the room and Pa, stretched +in his easy-chair, seemed in a good temper. Pa thought this notion about +tights, silly: + +"They're very nice, those bloomers; those little shirts. Ask your +mother." + +"Oh, yes," said Ma sarcastically, "but bloomers are made at home, in the +afternoon; you have to stitch them yourself, dear. Tights, which you buy +ready-made and which cost just ten times as much and last only half as +long, are much more convenient, aren't they, Lily? To say nothing of the +absurdity of an ugly girl like you showing yourself in tights!" + +"And the troupe," said Pa. "What would the troupe look like? Might as well +not have a troupe; there'd be no one but you!" + +"Well, what harm would that do? I _am_ the troupe!" said Lily, tossing her +obstinate forehead. "And all the money you give them you could give me!" + +"Lily," said Pa, alarmed, "you deserve to be smacked for that!" + +"Oh, Pa, what an idea!" said Lily, who was just arranging her fringe +before the glass. "A Pa to beat his Lily for a little thing like that, +away from work!" And, darting a bright smile at Pa, "You never would, Pa, +would you?" she ventured. + +Clifton, taken aback, looked at his Lily, as if to say that she was right, +damn it! But Ma, in her fury, cried: + +"Wait a bit! You shall see if _I_ would!" + +Bang! A box on the ears, followed by an order to go to her room, on dry +bread and water, impudence! And practise her banjo till the evening! + +The blow itself was nothing, but what an humiliation for Lily, who, only +yesterday, had been told that she had the sweetest nose in the world, +cheeks to cover with kisses, eyes, lovely eyes: there wasn't a girl in a +hundred with eyes like that, by Jove! And those lovely eyes were only fit +to cry with! And those pretty cheeks Ma had covered with smacks! When she +thought of it, she felt inclined to kick over the traces. Did they think +her such a kid, then, her Pa and Ma? She'd show Ma if she was fourteen! +She'd be off like the others. Lily, at this idea, felt her heart come into +her mouth: no, no; she would never dare; she never would. She swore it to +herself; took the great oath of the stage: three fingers of her right hand +uplifted, the left hand on her lucky charm. And yet, one day, she would +marry. She didn't lack chances, if she wanted them. And a gentleman, too! +And her Pa and Ma, to disgust her, of course, pretended that he was +married! They must take her for an idiot: how could Trampy be married, +considering that he had suggested ... suggested different things to +her?... + +Lily brooded like this, reviewing the tiny events of which her life was +made up. Then a gleam of sunshine came to change her thoughts. She amused +herself by breathing on the window-pane, making a circle ... wrote a name +with her finger and quickly licked it out with her tongue ... and Lily +brooded ... brooded.... + +But Ma's voice made her jump: + +"What are you doing there, you good-for-nothing? I told you to take your +banjo!" + +"Yes, Ma," Lily replied mechanically, with her nose glued to the window. + +"Do you hear, Mr. Clifton?" said Ma furiously. "That's the way she +obeys!" + +Mrs. Clifton had no doubt whatever that there was a man at the bottom of +it ... a flirtation ... something or other. It was useless for Ma to +provide for everything, to do her best to oppose Mr. Clifton's weakness. +There was Lily now, taking up an independent attitude. She thought herself +pretty, no doubt; some booby must have been stuffing her up, making love +to her, to laugh at her later on! If she, Mrs. Clifton, had been a man, +she would certainly never look at that ill-mannered baggage; but the +London jossers liked that brazen type! And to think that time was passing +... passing!... Oh, Ma would have liked to get hold of the man who +invented the law about girls coming of age ... and love ... and marriage! +A fierce jealousy seized upon her at the thought. Lily would have +bouquets, champagne suppers; Lily would be loved by gentlemen! Tell Lily +that she was pretty and, in less than six months the little hussy would +think herself a fine lady! And, on that day, Mrs. Clifton would wash her +hands of her! + +These continued attacks ended by shaking Pa. He didn't quite know what to +say; there was a certain amount of truth in it: + +"But," he persisted, "why should she go? She has everything she wants +here?" + +But he was more and more annoyed; yes, he admitted, he was wrong to laugh +at Mr. Fuchs: you must never set children a bad example. And, from that +moment, once his attention had been called to the matter, he daily +discovered fresh causes for uneasiness: where the devil did she get that +love of dress from? And who sent her that bouquet behind the scenes the +other night? Why, Lily wanted to have it handed to her across the +footlights, like a singer! + +And Pa and Ma watched Lily like a bag of money on which one keeps one's +hand, for fear of pickpockets. Ma doubled her precautions. + +The gentlemen in the front boxes, especially, alarmed her, even more than +the Jim Crows: creatures apart, devilish creatures, the gentlemen in the +front boxes! She fancied she saw a reflection of hell in the eye-glass of +every one of them. If ever Lily dared to smile to them, she knew what +awaited her! Ma would get angry for nothing at all; she even scolded Lily +for allowing herself to be approached on the stage by a contributor to +_The Piccadilly Magazine_, which was publishing articles on _The Little +Favorites of the Public_. + +"I am sure you only told him a lot of nonsense," said Ma. "A girl should +call her mother in a case like that. What have you to do with the public? +Aren't you ashamed?" + +No, Lily was not ashamed. She was exasperated rather. And she had not told +the journalist any lies: just the plain truth, in her own little way. +Sweat and blood! Broken legs! Broken arms! And here, there, there, all +over her body, scars deep enough to put your finger in! That would revenge +her a bit for the way in which she was treated. She knew that, when the +article appeared, she would catch it at Pa's hands; but never mind! She +had told everything, everything, in revenge; just as she might have flung +her bike at their heads in a fit of anger! + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +There had been a terrible scene at home that day. Ma had searched Lily's +trunk and had not, it is true, discovered the love letters which she +believed to be hidden there, but she had found a ring! It was Trampy's +ring, which Lily, who usually concealed it about her person, had left by +accident in the trunk among her things. Ma's face was a sight, when she +came down to the dining-room. She was so upset that Pa asked her: + +"Are you ill, dear?" + +Ma, without answering the question, pushed the ring under his nose and +screamed that she had told him so: + +"An engagement ring, dear; an engagement ring! Perhaps you'll believe me +now!" + +Pa and Ma, when they had recovered from their surprise, had time to lay +their heads together and replace the ring, pretending to know nothing, to +be watching more closely than ever ... and then Pa had gone out; for, if +Lily, who was walking with the apprentices, had come home just then, he +could not have resisted the temptation to smack her face. It was better to +go out and postpone the explanation until later. He had, indeed, resolved +never to beat his daughter again ... but still! And he clenched his fists +and ground his teeth when he reached the theater. + +On the stage, he looked round for Tom, who should have been there to mend +a tire. He saw nothing at first: only a few electric lamps studding the +darkness; a faint glimmer lighting up a number of properties; farther on, +the dull gleam of stacked-up bikes; and, lastly, Tom, with his cap cocked +back and trousers turned up, trying--brrr!--to do a clog-dance! + +"Bravo, Tom!" shouted Clifton, the moment he saw him. "Just you wait a +bit. I'll teach you to dance: with the clogs on your hands and your head +downwards, damn it! Here, take this to go on with!" continued Pa, fetching +him a clout on the shoulder. "And get to the bikes and hurry up, or I'll +smash your jaw in!" + +Meanwhile, Jimmy had also come, unseen by Pa. And the great batten lit up: +the stage came to life again. Right up above, in the galleries from which +the ropes were worked, mysterious forms moved to and fro. The iron curtain +rose ... there was a clash of orchestra ... Jimmy, with his back against +the drop-scene and his face to the stage, gave sharp orders.... + +Pa watched the scene vaguely from the wings. He gnawed his mustache: the +apprentices would be there soon, with his Lily. And he had something to +say to the stage-manager; something of a delicate character. + +But Clifton was surprised to see Jimmy instead of the usual +stage-manager: + +"Hullo! So it's you now," he couldn't help saying. + +"Why, yes, Mr. Clifton; since this morning. The other chap's ill, you +know. Harrasford asked me to take his place ... for a few days, I suppose +... or perhaps longer. Do you want to speak to me, Mr. Clifton?" added +Jimmy, observing Pa's look of embarrassment. "Just a minute and I am +yours." + +Two tall footmen, caparisoned in velvet and gold, disappeared behind the +curtain with the number of the next turn. They came back in a few seconds. +Jimmy pressed a button. The stage filled with light and noise, the turn +marked on the program entered and, suddenly, under the dazzling light, it +was a series of somersaults, of flights from shoulder to shoulder, and the +muffled fall of feet on the thick carpet. + +"There will be eight minutes of this," said Jimmy, taking out his watch. +"What have you to say to me, Mr. Clifton?" + +Oh, what he had to say was very simple; he wouldn't have mentioned it +himself, but Mrs. Clifton had asked him to. To cut a long story short, +wasn't it a shame that gentlemen should throw bouquets on the stage when +Lily was giving her show? Like last night, for instance: why, it was +making game of a child, putting ideas into her head! Lily, of course, paid +no attention to it. However, was it or was it not allowed to throw or send +bouquets on the stage? + +"Why, you know it is!" said Jimmy. "How would you have me prevent it?" + +If he could have prevented it, he would. To begin with, Jimmy realized the +bothers which it brought down upon Lily. Moreover, Jimmy, who was vaguely +uneasy himself, wondered who that ardent admirer could be. Some of +Roofer's girls thought they had recognized Trampy, from the stage, in the +front seats. What Jimmy had heard of Trampy did not inspire him with +confidence. And Trampy, it appeared, was making love to Lily. Mr. Fuchs +had met them at the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street. The story +was quite definite. + +Jimmy was astonished at the audacity of a Trampy: what could he say to +her? he asked himself, what could he propose to her? Marriage? He was +married, they said, in America. To run away with him? His scandalous life, +his habit of easy conquest made this very likely. Jimmy had seen plenty of +others, big ones who topped the bill and who did not despise a girl's +companionship--on the contrary--and six months later, a year, two years +later, left the girl in a hole, stranded, undone; mustard and game for Jim +Crow. And he grew more and more anxious on Lily's behalf: not that Lily +would come to that! Yet he had seen plenty of them, since he had +frequented the stage, plenty of Lilies who had taken to flight for +injuries often less serious than hers. He could have mentioned names: his +head was full of those who let their anger, or their folly, get the better +of them and escaped at random, and who went back to every-day +life--through the door of scandal--sometimes to meet with worse: martyrdom +of the heart, base exploitation in the name of love. Oh, he pitied them +from the bottom of his soul! No, Lily shouldn't run away: it was +impossible! But what a pity, all the same, that he could think of it! And +what chance, what meeting would settle her fate and make her--who could +say?--the companion of a loving heart, or a prey to some footy rotter? Oh, +how he would have liked to go for Trampy, to break his jaw for him, to +teach him to mind his business and leave Lily alone! And what Jimmy wanted +to do he was never far from doing! And, then, oh, if he could procure a +good position for Clifton, as an equivalent for his star and make Lily +love him, marry him: that would be better still! + +This idea, perhaps, without his knowing it, dominated his present life, +doubled his power of work: to invent something! To get himself talked +about! To make money, plenty of money, become somebody! Others before him +had risen from nothing. Harrasford, to go no farther ... a chap who had +climbed every rung of the ladder: a small music-hall first; then two; then +a big one; then two; then ten. And a whole army now toiling and moiling +for him every night, for him the chief and master. + +"Oh!" thought Jimmy. "If I could only climb the ladder too!" + +First of all, he must choose his line, for his efforts to tell. And, since +chance had given him a start at the theater, why not go on? Here his +scientific luggage would be of use to him. It was only a question of +adding pluck to it. He was the man to do so and now more than ever. Things +which used to seem impossible to him, such as his invention published in +_Engineering_, appeared quite feasible, now that he had watched Lily do +her wonderful feats of balancing on the stage. It was only a question of +courage and hard practice. Another line suggested itself: to find capital +and start a theater. As regards the stage itself, by this time he +understood the management of it from grid to cellar. He seemed to take in +at a glance that huge entirety, from the flies with their windlasses, +their bridges, the labyrinth of stairs, the maze of passages, down to the +dressing-rooms and the painted faces that filled them: here, a Lily; +there, a buck nigger; farther on, a living-picture girl. He felt all this +rustle round him, carried it all in his head: he knew it all, from the +porter's box at the stage-door to the glittering front of the house, with +its palm-trees and its liveried chuckers-out. Jimmy knew what to think of +the enchantments of the stage, those luminous visions which the audience +admired to the tune of the orchestra: jealousies, vanities, hatreds to +knock up against and calm down; recruits to put through their paces; and +the whole day of it--and the whole night, too--for a few pounds a week, +including the tips received from the artistes, twenty-five to forty +shillings a month. + +But Jimmy had his idea: he was determined to obtain a thorough grasp of +the business; he had already taken possession of the stage-manager's room +and of his desk with the many compartments: photographs, programs, +contracts, electric light, staff, scenery. A whole small people depended +upon him, and asked his advice, bragged of its successes or told him of +its misfortunes. And here again was Clifton continuing his jeremiads: they +would drive his daughter silly by making game of her, pretending to be in +love with her, at her age! Jimmy listened attentively, with one eye on the +stage and the other on his watch: + +"Tut!" he said, trying to arrange things. "There's no great harm in +receiving bouquets on the stage. However, as you object, if any more of +them come, they shall be handed to you, to dispose of as you please. +That's all that I can do." + +It was gradually filling up behind Clifton and Jimmy; the iron door was +constantly slamming upon the passage; knowing-looking Roofer girls passed, +two by two, always two by two, joked for a moment with the scene shifters, +shook hands here and there, disappeared up the dressing-room staircase. +There was life, swarming life, everywhere, in the corners, behind the +back-cloth. The New Zealanders arrived, with Lily and her Ma, for Ma never +left her now, for fear of the gentlemen who prowled around like famished +hyenas: villains who did not hesitate to throw bouquets on the stage to +make ugly girls think they were pretty! + +Lily seemed sad. She stopped for a moment. A haunting serenade droned +across the stage, a Spanish melody sung by soft tremolo voices, with +tapping of tambourines. It reminded her of Mexico: everything reminded her +of that time now. She compared herself with Ave Maria. Oh, she would have +liked to tell the whole world how she was treated, just the plain +truth!--in her own little way. But no one cared, not even that rotten +josser of a journalist, with his article published in _The Piccadilly +Magazine_. It made her out a spoiled child, who had learned to ride in the +country-lanes, with her French governess, and who had surprised her father +and mother by coming home one day with her head on the saddle of her +bicycle and her feet in the air, thereby causing an unparalleled scandal +in that old Yorkshire family. Since then, they had been obliged to yield +to her fancies and allow her to go on the stage with her little troupe of +friends. Her salary? Ten pounds a night. Her recreation? The banjo.... + +"Rotten josser of a journalist!" thought Lily. + +Nevertheless, she was flattered at heart because of the ten pounds a night +and the governess. + +But things happened to distract her thoughts: the Three Graces entered in +their turn, followed by Nunkie; they stood talking for a few moments, +while the apprentices went and dressed; and Lily soon followed them, after +a last glance at a little woman and her "partner," who were getting things +ready for their performance---some little hoops, two cardboard bottles, +gilt balls--and then waited humbly in the shadow. + +Lily recognized Para, who used to exhibit a troupe of parrots; somebody +had put her "in his show," no doubt, the Para-Paras, a new turn. + +"How poor she looks!" Lily could not help whispering to Ma. + +"You'll be worse off yourself, some day," said Ma, "if you go on as you're +doing! Don't laugh at other people." + +Lily had dressed quickly and had come down to the stage with the Three +Graces and they had ten minutes of joking behind the scenes, while Ma was +still up-stairs, busy with the girls. Thea walked on tip-toe to restore +the circulation to her legs; Kala practised back-bendings: Lily applauded +with the tip of her thumbnail, flung back her head and laughed and, from +time to time, looked round over her shoulder to see if Ma was coming +down. + +She amused herself also by feeling Thea's arms, all those little muscles +which stood out, man's arms: she would have liked to nestle in them, to +feel herself squeezed till she cried out. And everything around them +savored of love: there were lots of Roofers; little intrigues were +embarked upon; there were stifled fits of laughter and cries of "Hands +off!" and "Stop!" Amorous speeches and stories of romantic adventures were +exchanged in whispers; the flight of the Gilson girl, the other day, at +Liverpool, was told in full detail; a Roofer, it seemed, giving a high +kick the day before, had sent her slipper flying into the audience; it was +returned to her filled with chocolate creams; and to-day there was a +boquet with a letter in it. + +Ting! The curtain, the light; and, on the stage, the Roofers were +glittering with gold and silver and their boyish voices came in gusts, +punctuated by the jerky flights of their short skirts. + +"Your old sweetheart, eh, Lily?" said Thea, pointing to the boy-violinist, +who had just arrived. + +Lily had only a careless glance for the boy-violinist, who was wiping his +eye-glasses and pulling at his cuffs, while a call-boy was adjusting the +false seat into which two bulldogs would presently dig their teeth. All +the fascination was gone for Lily: it was no longer the child prodigy; a +grotesque Orpheus, in a laurel and parsley crown, he now introduced his +music-hating dogs, who interrupted his performance with plaintive and +angry howls and ended by leaping at the seat of his trousers in a mad rush +across the stage. + +Lily, who had "gone through the mill," looked upon him as a mere josser, +had for him the instinctive contempt entertained by the real artiste for +those fiddlers, those singers, those dancers and other drones brought up +with blows of the hat. + +"Pooh! I have some one better than that," exclaimed Lily, excited by the +proximity of the Roofers. + +"If you have any one better than that and he loves you," said Thea, in a +dreamy voice, "love him, Lily, keep him; as for me, I no longer risk +having to do with men." + +"I do!" Lily whispered, with a frightened glance around her. "As much as I +can! I love talking to men! Why, Thea, and don't you like love letters and +p.-c.'s?" + +Ting! Ting! Orpheus left the stage, with his bulldogs hanging to him. + +Ting! It was dark again; ropes, plated rings were let down from the flies; +the Three Graces, like quivering marble statues, took one another by the +hand to make their entrance. + +Ting! From their perches on either side, two electricians sent the +lime-light beating down on an involved group of ropes, bars and hardened +limbs. + +Ting! A crescendo in the orchestra and, bowing to the audience across the +footlights, the Three Graces made their exit, their smiles suddenly +hollowed out into tired wrinkles, but cheerful nevertheless. And Nunkie +wiped their foreheads with his checked handkerchief, helped them on with +their big cloaks; and the three goddesses were now just a wrapped-up +group, limping off to the staircase, like gouty patients at a spa. + +Ting! A forest scene is let down, the wings are shifted. A click of +chains, a flash of steel. The bikes in the shadow, the apprentices +mounted, Lily leading. + +"And try to do your best, my Lily." + +"Yes, Pa." + +"And try to behave." + +"Yes, Ma." + +Ting! + +Lily gave a nervous smile. She always felt a little thrill before going +on. Then, quick, in Indian file, two and two, three and three, the New +Zealanders whirled round in the light, to the roar of a triumphal air. + +Pa ground his teeth and clenched his fists the moment he heard his music: +at the mere sight of his Lily, his seven stone of flesh and bones adapted +to the machine, unerring and exact, an immense intoxication exalted his +pride, gladness dilated his heart. At last! He was there now: German +discipline! English gracefulness! Everything! He, too, would have his +London home, with a lawn behind the house and a plot of rose-trees. He +would learn the meaning of family joys, as Nunkie understood them, with +texts along the staircase: "Welcome!" and "God bless our home!" And, more +and more excited, he built up his dream; his imagination gave itself scope +amid the unreal scenery, the forest depths, the green and gold sky and his +Lily, his faultless Lily, haloed in light! Every hope was permissible when +he looked at his Lily, his joy, his handiwork! His New Zealander on +Wheels! That india-rubber suppleness, those little nerves of iron, his +Lily, his glory, his star, his own star! He romanced about her, dreamed of +an imperial tour, a steamer of his own, a floating Barnum's show, with +Roofers, elephants, rhinoceroses, Ave Marias, dogs, monkeys, the whole +boiling; and Lily starring on her bike, stopping in every port, from +Liverpool to Suez, from Suez to Yokohama: down to the desert, damn it, to +show the whole world what an artiste he, Clifton, he, the father, had made +of his Lily! And he looked at her with loving eyes, applauded her with a +smile, restored her self-possession with a twitch of the eyebrow and +counted her twirls on the back-wheel--O pride unspeakable!--a dozen! + +[Illustration: SHE NEVER LOST SIGHT OF LILY] + +Ma, standing by him, interested herself less in the show and, neglecting +the artiste, watched the daughter and the faces she made at the gentlemen: +the brazen flapper, whose sole attraction lay in the wickedness in her +blood! She never lost sight of Lily and watched her closely, for Ma seemed +always to catch her throwing an appealing glance to the seducers in the +front boxes, to some St. George in full dress who would dart across the +footlights to carry off her daughter. + +Thus caught between Pa and Ma, Lily's situation was hard indeed. As for +the audience, she never troubled about it, from custom, like a true +professional, who gives her performance mechanically, without minding +about the rest. The audience, to Lily, was, behind a streak of flame, in +the semi-darkness, a confused mass of black and gray. All this had no +existence for Lily or the apprentices. The audience didn't pay them! The +audience wouldn't give her a whacking if the show went badly! Pa, in the +wings, frightened her much more than all the audiences in the world; and +Ma was worse still, when a gentleman smiled at her from a box. Then Lily +would stare at her Ma with the terrified eye of a parrot contemplating +Para's whip. She even exaggerated, pinched her lips, like a school-girl +applying herself to her book for fear of the ferule. Ma did not ask so +much as that. Sometimes, when Lily, after a successful trick, threw out +her chest to draw breath more easily and rode round the stage with a +pretty smile on her lips, Ma saw no harm in it, even rejoiced within +herself at her daughter's beauty. Ma knew how to be just and not to be +angry for nothing. But what she could not forgive, what exasperated her +was, just that very evening, with her own eyes, to see Lily smile at some +person unknown and shoot fiery glances at the front boxes, the little +devil, who would bring them to the grave with shame! + +For Lily, it must be confessed, flung prudence to the winds that night. +Her head was turned with all those love stories. They sang in her ears, +they distended her nostrils. Oppressed on every side, she escaped in +imagination toward that spacious house, toward the confused mass in which +her lover sat hidden. And, in spite of Pa and in spite of Ma, who stood +watching her in the wings, Lily searched the audience with her eyes. Was +it really Trampy? Had he come back? She had not met him for some time. She +wanted to know and he would surely reveal himself. Ma might say what she +pleased. Even in the final pyramid, she looked, while, with one apprentice +on her shoulders, another forked before her, another standing behind, two +others on either side, she twice went round the stage, with flags waving, +to the hurricane of the orchestra. And then ting! And darkness anew, the +stage suddenly invaded by scene-shifters dragging heavy sets along; and +Lily, passing out, was seized by her Ma, who said: + +"Who were you laughing at?" + +"I wasn't laughing, Ma!" + +"I'll teach you to make eyes at gentlemen, you baggage you! I saw you this +time! I saw you!" grumbled Ma, who had the engagement ring still upon her +mind. "You shall pay for this, Lily; we'll see if I can drive the devil +out of you or not!" + +And Ma squeezed Lily's arm as if she meant to break it, but all this +noiselessly, in the shadow, behind the scenery, for fear of the stage +manager. Besides, it was nobody's business what a mother thought fit to +say to her daughter, and Lily, when people passed, pluckily tried to +smile, so as to put them off, not to let them know that she was being +beaten, a big girl like her; but, as soon as they were gone, she resumed +her rebellious face. + +"I wasn't laughing, I wasn't laughing, Ma!" + +"That's to teach you to lie!" said Ma, catching her a blow in the back of +the neck. + +The door of the staircase had swung to behind them; and, in the empty +passage, the thumps continued all the way to the dressing-room, which the +apprentices had not yet reached. Then, once inside, Ma pushed the bolt and +made a rush at Lily. And Lily raised her elbow in vain: accompanied by a +furious series of grunts--"Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!"--Ma's diligent fist "signed a +contract on her back": + +"And don't you dare to cry out, or I'll give it you twice as hard!" + +Lily, bruised all over, felt inclined to scratch her mother, like a +wildcat; but the apprentices were coming. So she cooled her head in a +basin of cold water and dressed with all speed, assisted by Ma, who +perhaps regretted having been so hasty; but you had to be, with devils +like that! And Ma's anger returned when, on reaching the stage again, she +was herself, in accordance with Jimmy's orders, handed a bouquet intended +for Miss Lily. What, another! Lily, following her down the stairs with the +New Zealanders, saw Ma take the bouquet and toss it through the open +door. + +"Come along," said Ma. "Give me your arm, Lily." + +And the New Zealanders walked away from the brightly lit-up music-hall, +plunged through the drifting crowd, crossed the eddy of cabs, motors, +'buses and, on the pavements, through the windows, had visions of elegant +couples at sumptuous tables. Then they all went through the dark streets; +and Lily, escorted by Pa and Ma, followed the herd of girls. Her face was +hard and, from an angry brow, she shot glances askance at flight. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +Now Trampy--even if he had to marry her for it, by Jove!--had set his mind +on having Lily, at any cost; and that not only because of her prettiness, +but also that he might play Clifton a damned good trick and teach him that +he must smart for treating a gentleman as he had treated him in Mexico. It +would be paying him out with interest to take his Lily from him. Besides, +think of the credit it would give Trampy in the profession to have for his +wife the prettiest, the cleverest girl on the boards, each of whose shows, +when she performed alone, would be worth at least three pounds, as much as +a whole troupe! He suspected in her the ripe fruit that was bound to drop; +and he shook the tree to hasten the fall. He considered his reputation at +stake: he, the man with the thirty-six girls, as he was called at the +music-hall. He got caught in his own toils and wanted Lily madly, out of +revenge and pride ... and jealousy too, for he suspected that Jimmy was +courting her; and the idea that he had a rival inflamed his ardor. + +In the evening, pen in hand, in his dressing-room, or else at a table in a +café, after a second and a third glass of old port, he prepared his +batteries: letters, post-cards, he excelled in everything, was careful +about his phrases, with the vanity of an author whose writings are widely +quoted. Lily was "fascinating" and "bewildering;" he compared her to +"those strange Indian poppies whose scent intoxicates a man and sometimes +gives him death." Gee, but that set Lily dreaming! Fancy having all that +in her! Who on earth would have thought it? Never mind, it was very nice. + +And the way in which she received her correspondence amused her as much as +the rest. Trampy, it goes without saying, did not write direct: a few +pence to Tom, who hated Clifton, and Lily received the cards in secret, +devoured them when she was alone and then quickly tore them into little +pieces and sent them flying through the window. + +Her trouble was how to answer. She really did not know what to say: + + "Pa was so angry with the girls yesterday. I got a kick of the pedal + on my shin. Otherwise I am quite well. Excuse more for the present. I + must now conclude. + + "Lily." + +By return of post, she received "a thousand kisses on her rosy cheeks, on +her fair tresses, everywhere," kisses without end. + +"He's mad," thought Lily. + +But she was greatly flattered by Trampy's attentions. He treated her as a +woman, not as a child, as Pa and Ma went out of their way to do. Her life, +after all, would be more agreeable if she was Trampy's wife; and he was +delivering the attack in person, since his return from Lancashire, where +he had traveled about with his property red-hot stove. He overwhelmed her +with bouquets, even as a general bombards a bastion before the final +assault, and he managed to meet her now. He dazzled Lily with his big gold +watch-chain and the diamond in his tie. When he was able to whisper a word +to her, it was always the same thing--"Motor-cars! Paris gowns! Jewels! +Flowers!"--until Lily thought she saw all the shop-windows in Regent +Street poured out at her feet. + +Jimmy made but a sorry lover, compared with Trampy. He never promised +anything, silk dresses, diamonds or jewels. "The husband at work, the wife +at home." Gee, there were no ostrich-feathers in that! But he adored her +all the same, as Lily was well able to see; and she had many occasions to +talk to both of them. Not that Lily was less closely watched. She never +went out alone, but it was not always Ma who was at her heels: it was +sometimes Glass-Eye. With faithful Glass-Eye, things took their own course +and the interviews with Trampy became easy. As for Jimmy, he saw her every +day at practice and he took that opportunity to tell her of his ideas, his +plans for the future. + +"I shall succeed, you will see, Lily," he said. "I shall do something some +day. I'm a bit of a mechanic, a bit of an electrician, that is to say, a +bit of a wizard. Others have started lower down and climbed very high." + +"Yes," replied Lily, "I know. It's like Pa. He wasn't much before he got +me into shape; and look at him now!" + +This was said with an artless candor that enraptured Jimmy. + +"What a dear little girlie you are!" he said. "What an adorable kid!" + +"That's right," retorted Lily. "Why not a baby, while you're about it, a +school-girl in the biking-class and so on? Some people treat me as a +woman, Jimmy, and propose to marry me!" + +"What's that?" + +"What I say, Jimmy." + +"And this man making up to you is worthy of you, I suppose? And do you +love him?" asked Jimmy, greatly upset. + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "I'm not quite sure." + +"But you wouldn't marry him unless you loved him?" + +"I should marry him to change my life." + +"A change, Lily," said Jimmy, with feeling, "is not always a change for +the better! And your life is a little pleasanter now, you told me so +yourself. Your mother is sorry. You're getting pocket-money; ten shillings +a week, eh? Why, Lily, that's splendid!" + +"Well; and I earn it, I suppose," said Lily. "And Ma isn't a bit sorry. Pa +said he wouldn't have it, that's all. They were afraid of my running away +if it went on. I am no longer a child!" + +"No," said Jimmy, taking her hands, "an adorable girl; that's what you +are. Oh, a man whom you would love should do great things! He would love +you with all his heart! And your life would be different then! No, you +would not be a performing dog, as you call it; you would be a darling +little wife. It's all very well to rove about the world, from theater to +theater, riding round and round on your bike...." + +"I adore the stage, for all that!" interrupted Lily. + +"But that can't go on for ever," continued Jimmy. "You're entitled to have +a nicer life: a home of your own, Lily; you have the making of a lady in +you, if you were taught. In a year or two, Lily, you would be the equal of +any lady in the land." + +"Learning, more learning, always learning! I've had enough of it in my +life!" muttered Lily, affected, nevertheless, by Jimmy's intense +excitement, and lowering her eyes under his glance. + +"Why, yes, Lily, always learning, that's life!" said Jimmy. "But the other +chap, of course, promises you the earth! Some millionaire, I suppose: an +admirer in the front boxes?" + +"He's an artiste," said Lily. + +"Why," said Jimmy, stepping back, without letting go of her. "But, no, +it's impossible; you're not thinking of Trampy!" + +"Why not?" said Lily angrily, trying to release herself from Jimmy's +passionate grasp. + +"Why, because ... because he's a drunkard ... a ... The other day I saw +him at the bar of the Crown, as I was passing. He was blind-drunk." + +"What's the good of talking?" said Lily. "He's miserable. He worships me. +He drinks to forget. He told me so himself!" + +"But they say he's married," said Jimmy. "Why ..." + +"It's mean and jealous of you to say that," said Lily, suddenly +withdrawing her hands. "You deserve a smacking! How can he be married, +when he wants to marry me?" + +And with that she left him and went up to the dressing-room. + +Jimmy was heartbroken. + +"It's a joke of Lily's ... as in my shop, some months ago, when she +pretended to have a sweetheart, though she hadn't!" + +But, argue as he would, Jimmy thought with terror of Trampy's habits of +conquest, of his reputation in the profession as a Don Juan. He bitterly +regretted waiting so long to speak to Lily. He had thought that he was +pleasing her by keeping in the background, for fear of causing her +annoyance at home: was his sole offense now that of coming too late? + +Oh, if he had only had evidence to hand! But Trampy's marriage was one of +those vague rumors. One could say nothing for certain. However, the +danger, no doubt, was not yet imminent. And Jimmy had a friend who was +doing America in the theaters of the Eastern and Western Trust: he +resolved to write to him; the friend would receive his letter at the +Majestic, Houston, Texas, or at the Denver Orpheum. The thing had happened +over there; they would probably remember it in the theaters he passed +through; he could make inquiries, perhaps even obtain proofs. That +exquisite Lily, that masterpiece of grace: what a darling wife she would +make! And all for Trampy! Jimmy was determined to do everything to prevent +it. + +He did not despair of supplying Lily, before long, with the proof that +Trampy was married; he would give the name, the date; he would compel +Trampy to admit it. But he was not sure enough yet to accuse him openly: +Lily would have seen nothing in it but a ridiculous jealousy and would +never have forgiven him. + +Then Jimmy was worried: people came to him for this, for that, for the +thousand details of the stage. + +Lily, on her side, left the theater. That day, she was accompanied by +Maud, who fixed her with her glass eye, while the other was engaged in +watching the flies. Of course, Trampy was prowling round the theater to +see her part of the way home; for he, too, had decided to carry things +with a high hand. And he set to work at a quicker pace than ever. + +He had none of Jimmy's scruples; he was not afraid of exaggerating: far +from it. Lily always left him under the impression of a glimpse of +paradise. This time, however, she failed to smile when Trampy vowed that +she was "the sweetest little thing that one could lay eyes on, by Jove!" +For a long time, but especially since that morning, she had been burning +to put a question to him. Possibly she had no intention of marrying him, +but she wouldn't allow him to make a fool of her; and she interrupted him +in his compliments to ask if what they said was true. + +"Who says so? It's a lie!" Trampy hastened to answer. + +"I mean your marriage," replied Lily. + +"I thought as much," said Trampy. + +"Tell me the truth," persisted Lily innocently, looking him straight in +the eyes. + +"If I was married, Lily, would I want to marry you?" + +"Of course not," said Lily, already shaken. + +"Who's been talking to you about that?" asked Trampy. "Your Pa, eh? And +Jimmy: I'll bet that Jimmy ...?" + +"Jimmy too." + +"If I don't box that fellow's ears!" shouted Trampy. "Can't you see that +he's jealous? Why? He didn't even give you my bouquets! He handed them to +your Ma! And so I've been married, eh? Whereabouts? In America, I'll +wager?" + +"Yes, somewhere on the Western Tour." + +"Of course," said Trampy. "That's what I've heard myself. Still, it seems +to me that, if I had a wife, I ought to be the first to know it; don't you +think so, Lily?" + +This was proof positive. Lily could find nothing to answer. + +"Come and have a drink, Lily?" + +"They're waiting for me at home," said Lily. + +Trampy went into the bar alone, in a desperate state of love which made +him call for a port and another, by Jove! Then he sat down at a table in a +corner, lit a cigar and examined his glass, as though truth lay at the +bottom. For he could not tell for certain. Was he married or was he not? +That's what he himself would like to know! According to him, upon his soul +and conscience, he was not a married man; he did himself that justice. +Opportunities, certainly, had not been wanting ... with all the girls he +had known ... enough to fill a dozen beauty-shows. Sometimes even he had +had a narrow escape, as in that damned town in the West, in one of those +states where you can't so much as take a girl to supper without finding +yourself married to her in the morning, all for entering yourself in the +hotel book as "Mr. and Mrs. Trampy," in other words, as man and wife. And +yet he couldn't ask the girl who adored him to sleep on the mat! Yes, a +poor girl who had found glowing words in which to tell him her love, one +night in Mexico, words which had set Trampy quivering with longing +compassion: was he to be reproached with that? He had made her happy, +after all; and, on the whole, this lark was one of his pleasantest +memories; it hadn't lasted too long: a matter of a few weeks at most. He +had left Mexico, taking the girl with him, and played Trampy Wheel-Pad in +the Western States, with any amount of success, by Jove! Encores, packets +of tobacco, a new suit of clothes! And, by way of _entr'acte_, the +girl--"Tramp Wheel-Pad's Jumping Flea," as she was called--turned +somersaults and flip-flaps. But she would have killed him, this dark girl +with great dark eyes,--this girl with a boy's figure, all muscle and +sinew, keeping him awake all night and talking of nothing but smackings, +as though she had never learned anything else. And so much in love that +she would bite and scratch: a very tigress. Any one but himself would have +wearied of it. And then, one fine morning, for coupling their names in the +visitors' book, they found themselves married, in the name of the law! And +that was what people called a marriage! So little married were they, +according to him, that he had given her the slip then and there, leaving +her all the money he possessed, however: he was not the man to look at +fifteen dollars, when honor demanded it. Trampy had had more stories of +this kind in his life; they left as much impression on his mind as the +recollection of a "schooner" swallowed at a bar on a summer night. + +It was dishonest, he considered, to pretend that he was married. Not that +he was perfect: far from it! He did not set up as a model. He had had +scandals in his life: he admitted it humbly; and, if some jealous person, +some Jimmy, for instance, wanted to do him harm, all he had to do was to +dig in the heap, instead of hawking round that story of an imaginary +marriage. + +His differences with Poland, the Parisienne, for instance: a regular Mrs. +Potiphar, that one. He had found it a hard job to get away from her. And +ever and ever so many others! He couldn't remember. People were always +talking ill of him. There was more than that, however: he, too, was +capable of manly ambition; he, too, had taken a breakneck risk. He had +perfected and patented at Washington an invention of which he had seen a +drawing, by accident, in a scientific journal--_Engineering_, or +another--a purely theoretical invention. The inventor himself, a young +London electrician, declared it to be unrealizable. Well, he, +Trampy--Poland had helped him with her purse; she was very nice about +it--he, Trampy, had had the thing made. He had deposited the models at the +Patent Office; and the apparatus itself was now in a London storage. He +would get it out, some day, and show them all what he was capable of. + +Now he was wrong, perhaps, in abandoning Poland, after accepting her +services; but, after all, those were matters which concerned nobody but +himself. It was not fair play to tell Lily about them: she, he felt, would +always be the girl of his heart, the thirty-seventh and last, and it would +take a better man than Jimmy to snatch her from him! + +Already, it was much to have pacified Lily on that incident of the +marriage: Lily believed him. One thing, however, disquieted Trampy: +bigamy, all the same, meant doing time. Now, if some jealous person +produced the proof of that marriage, contracted under the Western law ... +suppose it were valid ... really valid? H'm! Was he going to lose Lily for +that? And his liberty into the bargain? That Lily who was worth her weight +in gold, love and fortune in one! + +Trampy resolved to broach this delicate subject: + +"Suppose I was married," he hinted, one day, "that wouldn't matter. +Couldn't we ... live together ... eh?" + +"I like your style!" said Lily, feeling slightly indignant at such a +proposal. "What do you take me for?" + +"I was only joking," Trampy hastened to say. "If you want to be married, +I'm quite agreeable." + +"I insist upon it!" + +"So then you prefer to take strangers into our confidence?" + +"What strangers?" asked Lily, in surprise. + +"Why, the quill-drivers at Somerset House and those damned fire-escapes." + +Lily had enough religion to know that the fire-escape was the clergyman: + +"As for that," she said, "we shall see later; but I want the registrar's +office. If I'm to be your little wife, I want to be so for good and all: +marriage or nothing!" + +"I shall be delighted, Lily!" + +"And I'm determined!" + +Lily was the more bent upon it, because marriage made her free: that was +the essential point. If she were not married, her parents could make her +come back, she thought ... keep her with them ... gee! It gave her cold +shivers down the back! Once married, she was protected by law; Pa and Ma +had nothing to say; and so she was very keen upon marriage. + +"What a dear little wife she'll make!" thought Trampy. "And how she loves +me!" + +That, however, did not advance matters. It was all very well for him to +put his arm round her waist, to talk softly to her, to whisper those words +which had already won him so many conquests:--one day, even, he had kissed +her on the lips,--Lily thought that very nice; it was all very well for +him to cut a dash at the bar, to stand her a claret and a biscuit; it was +all very well for him to sing his love-litany: all this did not help him; +at the rate at which he was going, he wouldn't get anywhere in six +months. + +Lily, between those two jossers, amused herself immensely. How lucky she +was! Two men, at her age! They irritated her, sometimes; when they went +too far--Trampy, especially, who got excited at the game--anyhow, it was a +homage paid to her beauty. Between that and going away with him there was +all the difference in the world! To leave home was quite another matter. +Why, goodness, if things went on as they were, she could do without +marriage at all! + + + + +CHAPTER VII + + +"Lily, come down!" Pa's voice thundered from below. + +Lily was out of bed in a bound. She could hardly tie her skirt-strings for +trembling. Why was Pa in such a rage? + +The moment Lily entered her parents' room, she realized what it was. Pa +was holding a letter in his hand and scowling at her. + +"These are nice stories I hear!" he cried. "You let men kiss you? You've +got a love affair? Come, Lily, is this true?" + +"It's Jimmy's doing," thought Lily. "The mean cur! He's given me away!" + +Pa went on hotly: + +"And you're going to marry, are you? To marry Trampy? Here, read that!" + +Lily felt hopeless. She took the letter, but did not attempt to read it. +White with fear, could she have sprung through the window and fled, she +would have done so. + +"Well," Pa went on apace, growing more and more excited, "is all this +true? All that they tell me: about your receiving letters, post-cards, +jewelry ... and that ring! I've seen it! You're going to marry Trampy, are +you? Oh, the man who writes to me knows all about it, saw you with him at +the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street. Is that true, miss? What +did you have to tell him, pray? Speak out!" + +Lily, terror-stricken, could only droop her head. + +"It's true then that you want to get married, you baggage!" + +"Pa!" cried Lily. + +But he, with an "Ah!" of rage, sprang upon her, clutched her mass of hair, +banged her head against the wall: + +"On your knees! Say, 'I--beg--your--par--don--'" + +And, Bang! Bang! Bang! The phrase was punctuated with thumps. + +"Oh, Clifton," implored Ma, "stop! Not so hard!" + +"Beg--par--don! Beg--par--don!" continued Pa, without relenting. + +Lily was half-stunned, the world throbbed before her eyes, and, delirious +with wrath, she hissed: + +"Never!" + +"But I say, I say you shall not marry him! I'll kill you first!" + +"Yes, I will marry him, yes, yes, I will marry him! kill me, if you like! +God is my witness that I had not thought of getting married, but, as you +say so, I will!" + +His fist closed her mouth. She clasped her arms about her head, to protect +herself as best she could, but soon sank to the floor, fainting.... + +For three days she was in bed, broken, dazed--then, no sooner on her feet, +than off to the theater, guarded by Pa and Ma. If they could, they would +have padlocked a chain to her ankle and a collar about her neck. Ma +chilled Lily with her scornful pity, or racked her with repeated insults: + +"A disgrace to the family! You'll be the death of us!" + +She would shower cuffs upon Lily, throw books at her head, or whatever +came readiest to hand. Lily hid the books, the umbrellas, shrank into +corners, longing to cry; but the tears refused to come. She was too angry. +And, with head down, but eyes alert, she crouched like a dog rebelling +under blows, with lips drawn back above her teeth, ready to bite. + +"I'm going out, or I'll kill her!" growled Pa, slamming the door behind +him. + +Pa was thoroughly upset: for Lily to leave him! Just when Hauptmann was +starting a fifth troupe; when Pawnee was drawing full houses with his +three stars; when competition was increasing and threatening: it meant +disaster, certain ruin, the disbanding of his troupe, his contracts +canceled. He seethed with indignation; or else, in despair, felt like +taking Lily in his arms, seating her on his knee, begging her to tell him +that it was all a nightmare, that she would never marry, never marry that +Trampy: his good little Lily ... whom her Pa would cover with diamonds! +She should have all she wished, and everything, if only she would assure +him that it was not true that Trampy, that ungrateful cur, whom he, Pa, +had picked out of the gutter, was going to steal his Lily! That damned Jim +Crow! Pa, in his fury, bought a revolver to scatter the footy rotter's +brains with, but Trampy received the tip from Tom and vanished, hey, +presto, leaving no trace, allowing no sign of himself to crop up anywhere. +Pa's rage was vented on his daughter. + +Happily for her, Lily now was a model of conduct. She felt thoroughly +calm. Peace seemed to reign in the house. Lily was such a gentle little +thing! One day--the very day on which Tom passed her a note from Trampy +and she made a package of her new dress and of her photographs, and +souvenirs--that evening, as she kissed her father and mother, tears came +to her eyes. Then, instead of going to the kitchen, she fetched her +bundle, stealthily opened the street-door and ran to the corner, where +Trampy was waiting in a hansom, and hi, off for the holidays, the +champagne, the long-dreamed-of Paradise! + + + + +PLAYING 'EM IN + +I + + +They were seated on the basket trunk marked, "Trampy Wheel-Pad," in big +black letters. The steamer had left Harwich and was making for Holland. +The English coast was disappearing in the mist. On the deck, a heap of +luggage and parcels made a sort of nest for them. Trampy, with his dear +little wife by his side, was thinking of the future ... so many things +which he had flashed before Lily's eyes and which he could not give her +... not directly, at least ... but, pooh, she'd get used to it by degrees. +The great thing, to Trampy, was that he had his Lily! He was going to +stuff himself to the throat with love and, first of all, to seek a shelter +for his sweet wife and himself. England was no place for them. Pa was +prowling round and Jimmy, too. Once their anger was over and they found +themselves face to face with the irreparable, everything would calm down; +meantime, the wisest thing for Trampy and Lily was to be prudent and run +away as fast as they could. Trampy had his plan, he had seen the agents: +Holland and Belgium first; then a performance at Ludwig's Concert House, +in Hamburg, and a brilliant first appearance before a hall filled with +managers. Already he saw himself in the famous little room of the Café +Grüber, where so many contracts were signed during the few days that the +hearing-season lasted, and then he would have the whole continent, from +St. Petersburg to Lisbon, make heaps of money, treat Lily like the little +peach she was and cover her with diamonds, by Jove! Trampy, meanwhile, was +none too easy in his mind: funds were low; the two pounds paid at the +registrar's office had lightened his purse still more. Fortunately, the +fire-escape had not had his seven-and-six-pence: that was so much saved. + +"A poor consolation," thought Trampy. "The price of a dog-license." + +But he was gay, nevertheless, in his wife's company. He forgot his +thirty-six girls. He told Lily stories, made her squirm with laughter, +played with her, dazzled her with the champagne suppers ... which they +would have later on. Or else, like the consummate mummer that he was, he +put on the gloomy countenance of a man about to reveal the secret of his +heart: + +"I'm a wretch," he muttered, while Lily, in her innocence--Lily, who had +been living on tenter-hooks since her flight from home a few days +before--turned her frightened eyes upon him. "A miserable wretch ... +married. Yes, it's true; I'm married, Lily." + +"It's true what they said? You're married?" + +"Yes, I am." + +"Oh, I knew it!" said Lily, in despair. "But then ... if you are ... I'm +not!" + +"You silly little thing!" said Trampy, kissing her and taking her on his +knee. "Yes, I'm married; yes; and no one shall separate us. Haven't I the +prettiest little wife--here, on my knee--my little Lily?" + +"Oh, how you frightened me!" said Lily, nestling against him. "Oh, don't +ever let us part!" + +With a wife like that, said Trampy to himself, a little discomfort more or +less made no difference. As long as she had her dear husband, she would be +happy. She would have eyes for nothing but him and would not care a fig +for all the rest. + +Now she loved him: there was no doubt about that. She had left everything +for him! He could even have had her without marriage, by Jove, and saved +two pounds, if he had insisted! So he thought, at least, and he put a +conquering arm round Lily's waist, while she, with her head on his +shoulder, dreamed and dreamed, her eyes fixed upon the horizon. She was +married! She had dared! She would be, at last, the little lady she had +always been by instinct! And Lily went on building her castles in Spain +until, after the smooth crossing, arriving at the Hook of Holland, she +would not have been surprised to find her own motor-car and servants +waiting for her on the quay. But no, she had to carry her bag herself, +under the fine drizzle, upon the slippery pavement, to the train ... and +third-class to Rotterdam. It was all very well for Trampy to adopt a +triumphant air, but Lily was greatly vexed at the idea of going with her +husband to a little hotel frequented by artistes, bill-toppers though they +were. She would have liked something different. + +Trampy observed that, with her Pa.... + +"With Pa," said Lily, "it was not the same thing ... and I'm not with Pa +now." + +Trampy showed himself accommodating. That evening, Lily had the proud +satisfaction of walking into a smart hotel, with waiters in the hall, as +at the Horse Shoe. She carried her head high, conscious of being looked +at. She would have liked always to shine like that--to sit down to meals +amid the rustling of silk dresses ... but she felt uneasy in her modest +attire. Trampy would be only too pleased to give her a new outfit, later +on, yes; but as he explained to Lily, he had had so many expenses +recently, wouldn't it be better to take rooms somewhere, in a sort of +place like Lisle Street, or St. Pauli, at Hamburg? Lily yielded to these +arguments, she had to; but it was a bitter grief for her to leave that +fine hotel, where everybody saw her as a lady ... perhaps because of her +big hat, on which a bird, flat-spread, opened wide its wings and held in +its beak a diamond the size of an egg. + +And, thenceforth, the mean life returned: Lily relapsed among the potatoes +and the wash-hand-basin salads. There were occasional revolts, tart words, +sudden disputes, which, at times, wrinkled her forehead with anger.... + +Nevertheless, she had her good moments: she enjoyed the sensation of being +a lady who does no work, of wearing gloves and a big hat and of looking at +the time on her fine gold watch while her husband is on the stage. It +seemed pleasant to her no longer to appear before the audience doing her +performing-dog tricks, with Pa scrutinizing her from the wings. It was her +turn now to make one of the small nation: pas, mas, profs, bosses, +brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, all watching their bread-winners on +the boards. She mingled with them, or else sat down prettily in a corner, +talked to the artistes: other Martellos, other Nunkies; new faces every +week, according to the theaters they were at: owners of troupes; sketch +comedians, serio-comics; dancers of the Roofer class; laced-up, glittering +"Mdlles.;" or else, from time to time, some josser, a friend of the +manager's or an agent, prowling around among the flesh-colored tights. +Lily had seen all this a hundred times, a thousand times before, when she +was with her parents; and the mere thought of Ma made her talk nicely, +from bravado, to all of them, though she was married now. Lily bore Pa no +malice, in spite of the buckled belt. Pa was a man, with hair on his chest +and harsh like all of them ... no, not all ... and not so bad, perhaps ... +not always ... no; however, a man.... But her Ma, a lady, ought to have +stood up for her! If Ma could see her now, gee! Lily felt a lump in her +throat at the notion. And it was their fault that she had run away! It +served them right! She was much happier, now, when she was a lady in her +turn. Her talent and her beauty received the homage due to them. Lily +Clifton, the New Zealander, what ho! A famous name in the profession! She +was one of those whom the stage people point out to one another: + +"Gee!" she sometimes heard a voice say behind her. "Fancy owning a girl +like that and not having the sense to keep her!" + +Lily was flattered to the core at hearing her parents blamed; she felt +inclined to rise and say, "'K you," with the great stage bow: her right +hand on her heart, the other raising her dress, her body bent forward in a +sweeping curtsey. + +She took part in the conversations: she knew a little Spanish, which she +had learned in Mexico, and a little German, which she had picked up in +America from the Three Graces; and besides they all jabbered English, they +were all "families," "misses," "the's," with impossible accents, +suggesting some of those cosmopolitan towns beyond the "Rockies." In this +medley, she was at her ease; but she did not at all like being called +Lily, now that she was a lady: + +"Call me Mrs. Trampy," she said. + +After the show, she would sit in the restaurant with Trampy. There, amid +clouds of tobacco-smoke, they all supped in a crowd. There were separate +tables, at which silent little parties gobbled down their cutlets and +compote in ten minutes and then slipped away quietly. Sometimes, a whole +band of girls would swoop down at once, like a flight of thrushes, or +exchange funny remarks over other people's heads and blow volleys of +kisses in every direction. + +Trampy, always full of good stuff, amused the company. He lorded it in the +select corner, the corner of the stage-manager and the pretty girls. After +supper, he cocked a cigar between his teeth and told thick stories in the +midst of an admiring throng. Lily followed with her lips, so as not to +lose a word, but, when the final point was at hand, she blushed in +advance, turned away her head, as though tired of listening without +understanding, and talked to her neighbor, like a lady who respects +herself. Or, sometimes, it was more than she could help and Lily would +laugh and laugh: + +"Oh, dear! Oh, my!" + +Then they would "talk shop" among pros, they passed one another the +papers: _Der Artist, The Era, Das Program_, they discussed engagements, +quoted personal anecdotes: the Ma who made her star go down to the +kitchen, lest the landlady, when peeling the potatoes, should slip one +into her pocket. Yes, her own daughter, a star who brought her in a +hundred marks a day! + +"That's just like it!" thought Lily. + +They made fun of that prof who pinched his apprentices till the blood +came, while pretending to smile, or clawed them like a monkey. And the +company laughed and laughed, especially when Trampy put out his hand to +Lily to show her how the monkeys ... Lily would jump back and the crowd +roared with laughter. And the glasses of beer and Moselwein accumulated on +the table; and round backs were bent over interminable games of cards.... + +And then, gradually, the room emptied; the girls went away and Lily, +waiting for her husband, sank into her chair and yawned as though her jaws +would drop. As they left, she reproached Trampy for his coarseness: those +horrid stories which made her blush before everybody's eyes. Her Pa would +never have permitted himself ... She was not accustomed ... + +"That didn't keep you from splitting your sides with laughter," said +Trampy. + +"What an idea!" replied Lily, in a vexed tone. "Do you think I'm going to +play the goody goody 'lalerperlooser'? One has to do as others do and not +make one's self conspicuous." + +"Quite right!" said Trampy. + +But she turned crimson with rage when Trampy, some other night, forgot +himself so far as to monkey-claw the girls. There were short violent +scenes when they returned home, chairs upset, angry words. Trampy could +not understand this jealousy. When he was confronted with these outbursts, +he was greatly surprised, sought for a reason, muttered Jimmy's name--that +was his sensitive point: he thought of it in spite of himself--ironically +inquired of Lily if it was Jimmy who had put all that nonsense into her +head. Lily was sorry to see the conversation take this turn. She flung her +arms round her husband's neck, loved him, kissed him prettily, the great +silly: he knew better; he knew she never thought of Jimmy: + +"Kiss me, darling! I wish you would make me happy," said Lily, moved to +pity for herself. "I want to be a good little wife!" + +Thereupon they made it up. Lily did not feel, with her husband, that +thrill which she had often noticed in other women: but she wanted to love +him, stubbornly pursued the idea, fagged away at her love like a little +school-girl only too anxious to learn. Trampy, on his side, could be +amiable when he liked. He became the old Trampy again at times and treated +Lily like a little playfellow. They would both run about in the +_Biergarten_, in the morning, at practice-time, larking like children, +hiding behind the tables, and their laughter enlivened the empty place, +still soiled with the remnants of last night's meal and littered with +programs and cigar-stumps. + +And time passed like this for weeks ... it was months now ... an existence +like another, with good in it and bad ... and monotonous and common.... + +"I should have been better off, perhaps, at home," she thought. "If this +is marriage, it's not much." + +For, she saw it quite clearly, _that_ wasn't love; Trampy didn't +understand her. A "girl" and a wife were all the same to Trampy: a mere +pastime, both of them. He spoke of it lightly, through the smoke of his +cigar. She learned to know him, heard him boast of his prowess, caught +passing words: + +"Girls, girls, my!" + +She would have laughed, she would even have felt flattered at being chosen +among so many, if he had put an end to his conquests. But he continued to +prowl round the stage-girls, as he used to do before he was married. If +even he had shone upon the stage, she would have understood that he had +got "swelled head," that he was yielding to temptation; but his success +was only middling. He had not made a hit at Hamburg. The manager of +Ludwig's had told him flatly that he would do well to practise and +practise a great deal. Trampy posed as a victim of jealousy, spoke of +showing them--all of them, if once he put his back to it!--a new turn, a +discovery that would show what he was made of! Meanwhile he had a new +idea, as a sketch comedian, with a make-up of his own invention, the face +painted white on one side and red on the other, with wrinkles cunningly +drawn--a laughing Johnny and a crying Johnny, two men in one. He pestered +Lily with his plans, made her cut out dresses for him, came back from the +old-clothes shop laden with uniforms in rags, into which Lily had to put +patches. And shoes, in particular, ran in his head; shoes of which the +soles and the uppers yawned like lips; talking shoes, which said, "Papa!" +and "Mamma!" This last suggestion made Lily laugh. + +Trampy haunted the bazaars, bought children's toys, took the stomachs out +of the cardboard dogs and rabbits to make his quackers, sought about for +his right note, pursued inspiration to the bottom of the glasses. + +Lily was sometimes driven to exasperation. This tramp-cyclist, this +sketch-comedian was making her, Lily Clifton, patch up his dresses! And +her husband rewarded her for it by making love to the girls, poor idiot! +Oh, if Pa and Ma had not been so harsh with her! Lily always harked back +to that, stiffened herself with the thought, remembered the Marjutti girl, +in whom love of art produced wonders and whose Pa and Ma were so gentle +and kind. + +"They should have treated me like that," she concluded, "and I should have +been at home still!" + +She regretted her marriage. And there were some who pitied her for +belonging to Trampy: they looked upon him as not worthy of her, blamed him +for openly carrying on with girls. Others asked, as though it did not +matter, was she really married or were they just "living together?" + +"What? Am I married? Is that what they think about me?" she said, a little +annoyed. "Of course I am! At the Kennington registry-office!" + +And yet a doubt entered her mind too. Was she really married, after all? +Lily did not know much about it. Had the banns been published? And those +two witnesses picked up in the street ... a ceremony that took just five +minutes ... like a conjuring trick. If it was true that they were "living +together" without her knowing it, she would not stay with him. She would +go back home at once. Marriage, certainly, was never intended for her. +This she realized now. When she thought of the Gilson girl, mad on her +man, and of others whom she sometimes caught in the dressing-rooms and +passages eating each other up with kisses, she was at a loss to +understand. How could they make so much fuss about it? + +Poor little wife, with so little love for her husband and no admiration at +all! As an artiste she thought him lamentable. Trampy, who had seemed so +great to her in Mexico ... why, she had shot miles ahead of him since! She +felt that he was getting second-rate. He himself was well aware of it, for +that matter; blamed everybody: suspected a hoodoo somewhere: some son of a +gun bringing him ill-luck. And he was always casting about for an easy +means of success ... another new plan ... always something new ... a +high-sounding title: "Rusty Bike," an old jigger which, at each turn of +the wheel, would grate like a cart, "Crrrra! Crrrra!" and bring the house +down with laughter, while Lily, in the wings, was to sound an +accompaniment on a grating rattle: + +"Crrrra! Crrrra!" + +"All that set-out for nothing!" said Lily to herself. "It would be much +simpler to have a little talent." + +She felt herself overcome with contempt for her husband: what a sorry +bread-winner he made! Why take a wife, when you had only that to keep her +on? Lily did not know whether to laugh or to cry when she saw Trampy come +down from his dressing-room, proud as a peacock, his chest swelling at the +sight of so many girls at a time, a treat of which he never wearied. He +was magnificent, was Trampy, against that background of shoulders, thighs +and calves: in his element as a fish in water. Nor did he make any bones +about smiling to them or monkey-clawing them as they came off the stage. +The presence of his wife did not hinder him. He was sure of her love: he +knew she must adore him, as all the others did. And, leaving Lily in a +corner, in the shade of a pillar, with his eyes he devoured all that +powdered flesh, all those coarse wigs. + +Lily hated him at such times. She could have boxed his ears. She had +enough of it, at last. One evening, she caught hold of his arm to take him +away, furious that a gentleman could find a pleasure in making his wife +look so ridiculous! And Trampy, more or less flattered at what he +considered a fond wife's jealousy, was turning to go, when a lady with +plumes on her head and a woolly dog under her arm greeted him with: + +"Hullo, old boy! Glad to see you, Trampy!" + +Lily--it was a distant memory, but no matter--recognized Poland, the +Parisienne, with the painted face and the violent scent. Trampy took a +step backward. He expected a scene, though he owed her nothing, after all; +but she did not seem angry, no. On the contrary, she looked at him with a +roguish eye. She knew of Trampy's marriage, no doubt, as she knew of his +conquests, having been his victim herself. + +"Hullo, old boy!" repeated Poland, sizing up Lily with an appraising +glance and then fixing her eyes upon Trampy. "Still having your successes, +old boy? Is this your number thirty? Thirty-six? Thirty-eight, eh?" + +"What!" Lily broke in, astounded at these manners. "What number +thirty-six, thirty-eight?" + +"Ugh! A number in a lottery," said Trampy, looking quite vain between +those two women in love with him. "Yes, a number ... with which I drew a +prize!... Why, by Jove," he continued, addressing Poland, "this is my +wife!... Lily Clifton! ... the New Zealander on Wheels." + +"Oh, yes," said Poland to Lily. "I did hear that you ran away: tired of +this, eh?" + +And, tapping the back of her left hand with the palm of her right, she +made the professional gesture that denotes a whipping. + +"Yes, I was a bit," said Lily, feeling rather proud than otherwise. "I've +been through the mill, I have!" + +"You've had your fair share, eh?" insisted Poland. "You're not the first +that has left her family to escape being whipped. You did quite right," +she concluded. + +Trampy was dumfounded and utterly floored by the revelation. What! He! He! +Lily had married him because of that! Because ... And people said it! And +talked about it! + +"Come along, Lily," said Trampy. "Let's go home." + +And, giving no further heed to Poland, who followed him with a mocking +smile, he took Lily by the arm and went out with her. + +Lily felt her arm shake. Trampy was furious, evidently. She saw her +mistake, too late. There would be a stormy scene when they got in. Well, +who cared? She was resolved, under that obstinate forehead of hers, to +face the facts. She had had enough of this husband. And she meant to know, +that very moment, if she was married or not ... because with him one never +knew. When she admitted that she had married him because of "that," +Trampy, in his humiliation would put her out of doors at once; if the +marriage wasn't valid, he would get rid of her. There was no doubt about +it. + +And she did not have to wait, for Trampy, even before they were out of the +theater, in the passage, among the trunks and properties, Trampy, unable +to restrain himself any longer, seized her by the wrists and looked her +straight in the face: + +"Is it true?" he asked, in a voice trembling with rage. + +Lily, without replying, lowered her eyes as though to say yes, like a good +little wife, oh, _so_ sorry to offend her husband! + +"And," said Trampy, choking with shame, "you married me for 'that:' me, +Trampy!" + +"Yes," said Lily confusedly. + +"Damn you!" cried Trampy. "Oh, if we weren't married for good, wouldn't I +just make you sleep out to-night!" + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +Poor Lily! She was Trampy's little wife, his little wife for ever! And +life, monotonous and common, followed its usual course: a week here, a +week there; and the theater every night at the fixed time, according +to the scene-plot which they went and consulted on reaching the stage: +"X, Corridor, 9.5; Z, Wood, 10.17; Y, Palace, 11.10," and so on. And +for Trampy it was an everlasting grumbling at his ill-luck, a dull anger +at "playing 'em in," so sure was he of seeing his name first, +always--"Garden, 8.30, Trampy Wheel-Pad"--he who had had such a success +in England with his red-hot stove. It was no use his saying to himself +that it wouldn't last, that it would be better next week. It was just as +though done on purpose. He played 'em in, always, from Bremen to +Brunswick, from Leipzig to Madgeburg: + +"I wish I knew the son of a gun who has his knife into me!" growled +Trampy, persuaded that he was the victim of an agent's jealousy, or else +the stage-managers didn't understand their business. + +"If you had more talent," thought Lily to herself, "that sort of thing +wouldn't happen. I'd like to see you with Pa: _he'd_ show you, _he'd_ make +you stir your stumps, you rusty biker!" + +However, she was careful not to say so to him, for fear of blows; and Lily +knew that, if ever she received them once, twice, without returning them, +it was all up with her, she would lapse under the yoke again, it would +become a habit: there would be nothing for it but to leave her husband, if +she wished to avoid slaps, just as she had left her family, to avoid +whippings. + +That would have been too grotesque. She did not want to give Pa and Ma the +satisfaction of seeing her unhappily married. Lily armed herself with +patience; and she needed it! Trampy was in a frightful temper, said that +he would have been the ideal husband, if she had been the little wife he +had dreamed of: but to think that she had married him for "that!" + +Now it was the constant allusion to "that" which made him die with shame. +Everywhere, on the stages of the different music-halls, people had for +Lily that sort of sympathetic pity which they feel for a performing dog: +they approved of her running away; everybody seemed to know about it. +Poland, it must be said, scored a fine revenge against Trampy, without +counting the artistes who had seen Lily practising and who knew what harsh +treatment meant, the Munich Roofers, among others, real ones, with their +blows of the hat, gee! + +Among them, it became the fashion, when they saw Lily, to tap the back of +their hands, and then to applaud with the tip of the nail, as though to +approve her flight. Lily at first was annoyed at the reputation for +cruelty which they were giving her Pa. He was right to hit her, she +thought, sometimes. She was also annoyed on her own account. She was an +artiste, damn it! It was not only a question of smackings! Why, if she +hadn't had it in her...! It was a gift! But, on the other hand, to excuse +the folly of her marriage, she let them talk, without protesting, like a +poor little thing who would still be with her Pa and Ma if she had been +treated "fair." + +And there were always angry disputes between her and Trampy. They were +seen to disappear through the stage-entrance, Lily with an arrogant air, +Trampy drooping his head, his lips distorted with stinging replies. Lily, +though she was not performing at the theater, sometimes received a letter +there. When there was one for her in the heap of envelopes, bearing the +stamps of all countries, which had been round the world prior to "waiting +arrival" in the doorkeeper's pigeonholes, Trampy looked at her furiously, +wanted to know. Lily refused. Forthwith, in the passages, or on the stage, +endless disputes went on between them ... oh, not in the least tragic in +appearance and interlarded with "Hullo, boys!" and "Hullo, girls!" to left +and right, whenever they passed any acquaintances. And in a low voice, +abruptly: + +"Show it to me, you wench!" + +"Shut up, you footy rotter!" + +Trampy could not forgive Lily for marrying him on that account. He, who +had only to choose among the crowd that walks the boards or flutters about +in muslin skirts, suffered from Lily's scorn, looked upon himself as a +sultan dethroned before the eyes of his harem. In order to infuriate Lily, +though he did not feel in the least like laughing, he exaggerated his +conquering ways. It ended by affecting his work. Only the night before, he +had got drunk with two "sisters" out of ten: the fourth and seventh from +the right. Result: he was still in bed when the matinée began. And his +performance went so badly that they had to drop the curtain on him. That +would pass for once: an illness was allowable; but it couldn't go on at +that rate. He was becoming worse than the head-balancer who tumbled off +his perch, without having his excuse of sorrow, the loss of a beloved +wife, seeing that he, Trampy, had a dear little wife and very much alive, +this one! + +Lily, in her calmer moments, foresaw that they would soon have to face +hard times, flat poverty. She felt her contempt for Trampy increase. Those +sketch-comedians, those tramp cyclists, pooh, they were less than nothing, +bluff, that's all, as old Martello said! + +She saw her dreams flung to the ground. At first, it had been charming for +her, so full of novelty, but, after all, she had only changed masters. She +ended by considering herself more unhappy than she had been with Pa and +Ma. To begin with, Pa always had money. She brought them in a lot. She +lived much less comfortably with Trampy. She used to think that being a +married woman would change everything, whereas--not a bit of it!--there +was no change at all: potatoes, coal, all sorts of dirty, messy things; +and no Maud to help her. And it was always as in the old days: damp +sheets, dirty glasses, rickety tables, beds with worn-out mattresses; and +the nights were dull as ditch-water. Trampy had hoped for something +different, expected to find a whole harem in Lily, his thirty-six girls in +one, including Ave Maria, with her body like a wildcat's. Alas, it was far +from that! + +Lily loathed those nights. Love, yes, but not that, not that! Sacred love, +not profane love (Lily had seen paintings of it in museums and remembered +the title). Love, that is to say, to lie ever so nicely on the breast of +the dear one, yes, as with Glass-Eye, and dream of hats and diamonds. No +doubt, it was ambitious to want so much. She, who had seen everything, had +never come across that; but it was what she wanted, what she had been +promised, damn it! Things were going from bad to worse. Memories of her +childhood moved her almost to tears, when she thought of it: those happy +times in Africa, on the straw beside the horses, the stars seen through +the tent and the smell of the elephants. When she was there, perhaps that +had seemed less sweet to her: the hard ground, the noise of the chains; +but everything was made more poetic by remembrance: it was the past, what! +Nights sweet as milk, far from a man reeking of tobacco. And not only her +early childhood, but her life of yesterday returned to her: touring with +the troupe, the oatmeal porridge and the cakes she made--bricks!--but Pa +laughed at them, took them good-humoredly, whereas Trampy lost his temper. +In those days, it is true, she wasn't a lady, she used to work; but they +had good fun, all the same, in the dressing-rooms; they had tea at the +theater, romps in the passages, or else did crochet-work, to pass the +time; and all those practical jokes, intensified by distance: hustling +Glass-Eye into the hamper; coaxing the black cat into the dressing-room, +for luck; or making the pantomime lady speak her tag; or going in to the +Roofers, on some pretext, and giving a whistle which made them all rush +out, dressed or undressed or half-dressed, never mind, and spin round +three times to ward off the ill omen: all those memories touched her till +she felt inclined to cry. Oh, if she had been with her Pa now, she would +have sat down on his knee and begged his pardon! + +At such times, if Trampy became affectionate and tried to kiss his little +wife, Lily would simply turn her back on him. Poor Trampy! And he could +not play the master! For, call on the agents as he might and write as many +fine letters as he pleased--an art in which he excelled--work was becoming +scarce. He no longer had any money. One pay-day, Trampy was obliged to +confess that he had had his salary in advance and spent it; a money-lender +held his contract and kept back three-quarters of his pay. Trampy, +tormented by urgent needs, had let himself in with a Brixton "financier," +a specialist in "loans from five pounds upward, music-hall artistes +treated with the strictest confidence," who pocketed nearly the whole. Now +Lily just happened to want a new dress, a new petticoat and a tiny +mother-of-pearl lucky charm. Trampy had to own that he couldn't afford +these fancies and Lily had a fit of temper! But then why promise so many +things to a poor little wife who deserved better than that? + +"A poor little wife," said Trampy, "should marry her husband for love and +not to escape whippings! There are ups and downs in the profession. It was +your own lookout; you shouldn't have married a star!" + +"A star!" cried Lily, with a nervous laugh. "You a star! A damned +comedian! A nice sort of star, indeed! A music-hall could have twenty +black cats in it and you'd turn them into a white elephant!" + +In other words, Trampy, according to her, was a Jonah, good only for +playing the people in, if that! + +"A wife has no right to speak to her husband as you do!" exclaimed Trampy, +leaping up under the insult. "You deserve a good thrashing!" + +"None of that!" said Lily angrily, ready to fly at his throat. + +"A wife," resumed Trampy, with great dignity, "helps her husband, instead +of insulting him." + +"We're in for it, I suppose!" said Lily. + +"Certainly, we're in for it! I have no engagement now, but that's no +reason why you shouldn't find one. Look for one and work!" + +Lily was in for it, knee-deep, as she said. She was not excessively +astonished: it was the inevitable end! Not that she disliked to work: her +idleness, on the contrary, was beginning to pall upon her; but it was the +humiliation of going back to it after putting on so much side and posing +as the lady. She had worked for Pa; now she would work for Trampy; it was +natural and proper. There were exceptions--the wife at home, as Jimmy +said, that josser!--but they were rare. + +"Take up your bike again," said Trampy, after a pause. "Be a good little +wife, help me out of this. I have something in my mind, a scheme which +will make us rich; you'll see later on." + +"But," said Lily, "I haven't a stage bike, and yours is really too ugly." + +"I know of one for sale." + +"Very well, I'll work," said Lily. "I'll make them give me this tour which +they promised you and didn't sign for; and to-morrow you shall see!" + +At heart, Lily was not sorry to show her husband how people got out of a +scrape, when they had talent; and, the next day, she went to an agent, +accompanied by Trampy, looking very dignified. Her cheeky feather was made +to dance attendance for a moment; and then she was shown into the office. +Lily Clifton? The New Zealander on Wheels? Straight away a contract, +signed in duplicate! A week in each town; later on, perhaps, a month in +Berlin, at the Kolossal. Lily displayed wonderful tact, did not triumph +too openly over Trampy. She acted to perfection the part of the little +lady who takes up the bike again just for fun--as in the time of her +"French governess"--or rather of a dear little thing wholly wrapped up now +in her wifely duty: her poor husband ill, she herself needing exercise, +just for fun, you know. + +On leaving the agent's, she bought some material, then ran home, cut out +stage dresses. In the evening, Lily was still hemming and stitching, +indefatigably, seized once more with professional pride after her +excursions into private life. And, all night, under the lamp, she +contrived, cut out and sewed. Then came practice, without Pa. In an hour, +in spite of the new machine, which put her out, she had picked up her +"times" again. She felt as if she had been spinning round the night +before, under Pa's eye, so absolutely at her ease was she, with her head +on the saddle or twirling on the back-wheel. + +And, on the following Monday, her first appearance, her name on the walls: +"Miss Lily" in big letters, right at the top of the posters, "Miss Lily," +not "Mrs." or "Madame." Had she had ten children, two husbands and three +divorces, she would still have been "Miss," everywhere and always, as a +further attraction for the swells in the front boxes and as a certificate +of youth. Mighty few husbands, on the continent especially; not more men +of any kind than could be helped, on the stage, except a few noted +"profs," standing by the perches of velvet and steel or under the +trapezes, displaying, beside the pink-silk tights, against the "palace" +back-drop, the faultless correctness of their full-dress suits. But, for +the rest, people preferred to ignore husbands, brothers and "friends;" +Lily had known some who never showed themselves at all, who remained +squatting at home, so as not to stand in their wives' way. + +Trampy, for that matter, knew better than to parade himself with Lily. And +he preferred it so. He could have wished one thing to the exclusion of all +others: that people should not know of his marriage, that they should +cease to speak of it. Unfortunately, this was not to be. The story of the +whippings was enlivening Lisle Street, exaggerated, as usual. The Bill and +Boom tour, the Harrasford tour were beginning to spread it on every stage +in England; before six months were over, it would have made the round of +the world from the Klondike to Calcutta. What a disgrace for Trampy! Yet +no sooner had he put his New Zealander on her wheels again than Trampy +blossomed out once more. After all, who cared if people were seen to smack +the back of their hands? He wasn't to be put out by a little thing like +that: + +"Just so," he seemed to say. "We are married, whippings or no whippings, +and I am the master; I have set her to work again; and there you are!" + +Trampy's reputation, so far from suffering, increased; all his compeers +now envied him from the bottom of their hearts; the bosses, the profs, the +managers, the Pas, the Mas treated him, in their own minds, as a lucky +dog, all the more inasmuch as Trampy was not uppish and gladly stood +drinks, while his wife, "Miss Lily," made money for him with her breakneck +tricks. It was much smarter than doing it for one's self: the great thing +was to have a "girl" like that! Trampy was having his revenge: he had been +laughed at; he now had the laugh on them! and Trampy knew glorious times, +in the _Biergarten_, or lounging at street-corners, near the stage-door, +chaffing the girls, hat cocked back, hands deep in his pockets, a cigar +stuck between his teeth. He told the story of his life, not without pride; +said that he must write it one day, sell it to _The New York Standard_ for +a thousand dollars. The girls _he'd_ had: whew! His love adventures: all +over the world, by Jove! And his marriage with Lily Clifton, the New +Zealander on Wheels, a dear little wife, so gentle, so obedient. No, he +had no reason to complain of his life. He would write it, mark his words! +To say nothing of a scheme he had in mind: + +"Just you wait and see! It's a trick to make a millionaire of you or break +your neck." + +"Will you make Miss Lily do it?" + +"I'll see, I'll think it over," said Trampy, in a lordly tone. + +The directors, the stage-managers took no notice of him; but, among the +artistes, Trampy Wheel-Pad was some one, he enjoyed his leisure, recovered +his self-assurance: if, in addition, he could have destroyed the legend of +the whippings, he would have been perfectly happy. He would turn the +conversation on the subject of smackings in the music-hall generally, in +the hope of hearing them contradicted or made little of; but it was no +use; every one believed in them: all, boys and girls, even the most +spoiled, quoted facts: blows which they had received! my! blows hard +enough to split the front of a music-hall from top to bottom! The nation +with the painted faces, the blue-chins seemed to vie with one another as +to who had been most through the mill. + +"You're exaggerating," said Trampy. "It may be true, to a certain extent, +in your case. But, Miss Lily, for instance: do you mean to say you believe +all she tells?" + +"Oh, quite!" said two Roofer girls who were there. + +They had seen Lily practising. And they knew what it meant. They had had +their share, too: old Roofer, gee! And Lily had done quite right to run +away from her whippings. + +"There you go again!" said Trampy. "Can't you see she's humbugging you?" + +[Illustration: TRAMPY ENJOYED HIS LEISURE] + +But he pulled himself up suddenly, if Lily arrived, for, in spite of his +big airs, he was all submission in her presence. + +"Oh, really! Glass-Eye caught it instead of me, I suppose," said Lily, +drawing back her shoulder as though threatening to smack him, "when Pa +went for me with his leather belt. And I have witnesses. I've been through +the mill, if anybody has: that much I _can_ say!" + +Lily, after this burst of pride, would lower her head, a trifle +embarrassed, like a dear little thing, all wrapped up in her duties as a +wife, a wife whom her husband would cause to break her back one of these +days, perhaps. + +This created a circle of admirers around her: all, besides, agreed in +saying that you had to have the business "rubbed into your skin" to be as +clever as she was. + +"'K you!" said Lily, with a stage bow. + +It was certain that she made a hit. They wanted her everywhere. She was +asked to appear in tights. The engagements grew better and better. "Miss +Lily" was more and more talked about. It was no longer a Trampy Wheel-Pad +on a rusty bike: it was grace, youth ... and stage-smiles fit to turn the +heads in the front boxes. When Lily appeared on the stage, she transfixed +every white shirt-front, every opera-glass. She took a real delight in it +all. Her beauty captivated the audience. In her pink tights, Lily turned +and turned and turned, to the hum of the orchestra, against the "wood" +back-drop of purple and gold. Then she returned to the wings, all excited +by her show, received bouquets, chatted freely with the comrades. She met +old friends: the green-eyed female-impersonator, for instance, pressed her +closely. He, too, was touring Germany: a week here, a week there. Chance +brought them together again. He was enraptured by Lily: how lovely she had +grown! He would have liked to adopt her.... Lily threw her head back, +laughed and repelled him with a thump in the ribs when he tried to kiss +her. + +Another time, she saw the Bambinis, who were playing, by a lucky accident, +at matinées only and by special permission, because of their age. She +larked with them like a child. Elsewhere, it was Nunkie Fuchs, on his way +to Vienna, where he was going to see to the building of his pigeon-house, +leaving the Three Graces for a few weeks on the Harrasford tour. He had +seen Lily's name on the posters and had come to say, "How do you do?" to +her. + +And, amid the thunder of the band or the lull of the _entr'actes_, Lily +received tidings of her Pa and Ma and details of what happened after her +flight, as reported by Glass-Eye Maud. After Lily's departure, they had +hunted everywhere. Then Ma thought of looking in the trunk: the pretty +dress was gone. Then they had rushed to the theater: no Lily. Then they +had guessed: Lily had run away. Ma fell on her knees and cried and cried. +Pa seized his revolver and spoke of going to shoot the man who had robbed +him of his child! His little Lily gone! And the contracts had to be +canceled and Pa did not go out for a week and the house remained still and +silent for a month. Pa, thoroughly upset, cried whenever Lily's name was +mentioned and was near dying of shame when he felt himself blamed, even by +those who used to congratulate him on his way of turning out an artiste. +And Nunkie himself maintained that one must know how to handle young +girls: gentleness above all. + +Lily bit her lips when she heard that. Her little nose tingled. She +hardened her features, wrinkled her obstinate forehead, lest she also +should cry: + +"If I had to do it again, I would!" she said quickly, just like that, +without reflecting, in the way one says a thing to one's self which one +knows to be untrue. + +They also told her things that made her laugh. Glass-Eye Maud no longer +left her hole, cried like a tap, so much so that one day, Ma, noticing an +insipid taste in the porridge, threatened her with the sack if that sort +of thing went on. + +As for business, people did not know exactly. Pa, they said, had written +to a Hauptmann's "fat freak" to take Lily's place. The reply ran: + +"No, thanks, I'm all right where I am. + + "Fat Freak." + +The signature was underlined, for people had ended by knowing about Pa's +disrespectful remarks. Lily laughed when she heard this: my! + +"I will come ... when you take to wearing braces!" another had answered. + +This was an allusion to the blows with the belt; and Lily, with head +thrown back, full-throated, her hand on her heart, laughed ... laughed ... +laughed: + +"Bravo, girls!" she said, applauding with her thumbnail. + +And Tom? Tom had had the boot, with a bang on the nose, for carrying +letters to Lily. For Pa ended by learning all: some one had told him. + +"Jimmy, that son of a gun!" said Lily. + +And Jimmy himself, what had become of that josser? Jimmy was no longer +stage-manager. He had left everything after Lily's flight. He, too, had +flown into a terrible rage when he heard about it ... spoke of Trampy as a +thief in the night ... would have killed him, if he had met him ... and he +was going to star in his turn. + +"Singing?" asked Lily. + +"No, something to do with the bike." + +"What a fool!" thought Lily. "Fancies himself an artiste because he used +to mend my bike for me!" + +Jimmy, it seemed, had hired a huge shed and there, all alone, fitted up +some apparatus of a complicated kind. He never went out by day. He worked +and worked. A trick to break your neck at, it appeared, or make your +fortune. + +"Those jossers!" exclaimed Lily scornfully. + +And what was he going to do on his bike? Nobody knew. There was something +published in the papers, they said. It was something on the back-wheel. + +"What rot!" + +Lily laughed open-mouthed, laughed with all her muscles, twisting her +hips, splitting her sides, smacking her thighs. What! Jimmy on the +back-wheel! He! He! He cutting twirls, that josser! + +"And the troupe?" + +The troupe nobody knew about: dispersed, most likely; the troupe, after +all, was Lily. When she went, everything was bound to fall to pieces. Pa +didn't care either; told any one who would listen to him that he was going +to retire to Kennington, that he was well off now ... thousands of pounds +in the bank ... made his fortune ... meant to live on his dividends. + +"I knew it," said Lily; "I knew I had made his fortune! Thousands of +pounds, damn it!" + +"Lily, don't swear like that!" said Nunkie Fuchs. "It's not right!" + +Lily lowered her head, taken aback; excused herself, like a lady who knows +her manners: + +"And yet," she said to herself, "if he had had my troubles, that old +rogue, perhaps he would have sworn, too!" + +For Trampy was becoming terrible: life was impossible with him. All the +money which Lily earned went on champagne ... and on girls, probably; and +the more she earned the greedier he grew. He wanted money, heaps of money; +Lily had nothing left for herself. Trampy sought out new tricks, invented +balancing-feats, made her practise them, in the morning, on the stage, +with his sleeves turned back and his trousers turned up, absolutely like a +Pa. Lily, accustomed to yield obedience, relapsed under the yoke. Bike in +the morning, bike at the matinée, bike in the evening; and, with that, the +cooking, the washing-up ... and not a farthing in her pocket, though she +had made a fortune for her Pa, damn it! Pa living on his income at +Kennington, while she continued her life of slavery! Wasn't it enough to +make her send everybody to the devil, and Nunkie, that old rogue, with the +rest? A pack of nigger drivers, that's what they were, every one of them! +And what an idiot she was, to keep on barking her shins for other people! +Would she go on doing it until she was fifty? And if she didn't begin now +to put money by, who would do it for her later? Not that worthless +husband, surely! He, who, that very morning, had dared, the loafer, to +tell her of a scheme--a sort of a risky trick which she was to perform, a +thing calculated to break your head or make a millionaire of you--for him, +of course, just as for Pa! It had come to this, that her turn wasn't good +enough, that it had to be more sensational; and she was expected to make +it so for a man she didn't love! Oh, she had put him nicely in his place! +Rather! Thank you for nothing: none of that for her! In the evening Lily +was still trembling, with her two elbows on the table, as she sat facing +her glass in her dressing-room; angrily she crushed the grease-paint on to +her cheeks, which were pale with rage. + +Ting! Straight on to the stage, turning round and round, fifty rounds from +habit, mechanically, without any "go" in them: an indolent performance, +which would have earned her a good smacking in Pa's time. + +"You were shockingly bad!" said Trampy, who was waiting for her in the +bar, after watching her from the front. "What's the matter with you? Are +you ill?" + +Lily did not even answer. + +"I'm speaking to you," said Trampy crossly. "You did nothing right +to-night." + +"Yes, I know; that'll do," said Lily. + +"It's not a question of 'Yes, I know,' but of doing better next time," +said Trampy. + +"I'm not taking any orders to-night," said Lily. + +"No, darling, but there was an agent in the house. He must have thought +you bad." + +"That's none of your business!" + +"And, if you don't get engagements, what's to become of us?" + +"I don't care a hang," said Lily. "_I_ can always manage." + +"You ... you ... and what about me? We're married, aren't we?" + +"But the money I earn's mine," said Lily. "I mean to buy dresses and +whatever I want to, with _my_ money. You'll be wanting to come on the +stage next, in evening-dress, to stand over me while I do my turn, and +getting out your belt. Do you take me for your daughter, tell me?" + +"What I'm saying," said Trampy, aghast, "is for your good, from the point +of view of the business, the salary." + +"_My_ business, _my_ salary, damn it!" cried Lily. "_Mine, mine_, do you +understand? And it concerns nobody but myself!" + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +It came as a smack in the jaw to Trampy. + +"_My_ pay, _my_ work, _mine_!" + +It meant no more pocket-money with which to lord it at the bar. It meant a +cheap cigarette instead of his glorious cigar. It was the end of a +beautiful dream; and the awakening was a hard one. At first, he hoped to +make Lily jealous by going about openly with the stage-girls; but she no +longer paid any attention, seemed to suggest that he had better amuse +himself on his side and she on hers: + +"What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander," she said. + +Lily would no longer take his orders; and, because he felt his wife escape +him, it was he, Trampy, who now became jealous. When, from a distance, +among the tables, he saw Lily ride round the stage and all those heads +raised toward her, those opera-glasses pointed at her, he followed her +with an anxious eye. "Miss Lily!" "Miss Lily" was his wife, after all! +Those rounded arms, that lissom figure, those twinkling legs were all his, +every bit of them! He was the husband, by Jove! It was not a marriage for +fun, as with Ave Maria: it was a marriage for good and all, which had cost +him two pounds--"Yes, siree!"--at the Kennington registry-office. And it +wasn't only her flightiness, her smiles at the front boxes, but "_my_ +work, _my_ salary, _mine_" into the bargain! She was acting like a bad +wife, forgetting her most sacred duties! + +Lily stood on no ceremony with him, took her title of "Miss" seriously: +very flattering for him, very flattering, he must say! He no longer knew +himself: he who, in the old days, used to answer: "My lord, rely on me!" +when a half-tipsy swell invited him to come and drink champagne with some +stage-girls, now became furious if men in the audience, not knowing who he +was, sized up "Miss Lily" before him--her shoulders, arms and the +rest--with reflections such as "I could do with a bit of that!" or, "A +nice little supper ..." He felt inclined to shout in their faces that she +was no "miss," but his wife, by Jove! + +He became more and more jealous. The thought of Jimmy, especially, kept +running in his head. He felt a twinge whenever he heard him mentioned. And +Jimmy was often mentioned just at present, for he was said to be preparing +a new turn, a turn which would make him famous, unless it killed him. + +"If only it would!" Trampy hoped. + +Jimmy was Trampy's bugbear. He had flattered himself that he had snatched +Lily from Jimmy by sheer prowess; and not a bit of it! The recollection of +that drove him mad, the sense of his powerlessness exasperated him, he had +but one idea left: to show Lily ... and Jimmy ... the sort of man he was; +to take his revenge. That great scheme of his, that discovery that would +show what he was made of, the invention which he had patented in America +with Poland's money--oh, she had revenged herself finely, had that +Parisienne!--well, the time to apply himself to that trick had come. Lily +had refused to do it. All right, he would do it himself! + +But, if he was to succeed, it was necessary that Lily should supply him +with money, more money, lots of money. The apparatus was incomplete and +had probably got damaged in the London warehouse; it would need repairs, +improvements. Now Lily seemed intractable. She was vexed at having to earn +money for two, pretended to have none too much for herself; it was her +costumes now: six sets of tights, one for each evening, pink, green, red, +blue, gray, white and assorted ornaments, silk ribbons.... + +She didn't want to kill herself with work for nothing, as she had been +doing up to now: + +"A lady isn't a performing dog!" she said. + +Trampy swallowed his bitterness when he heard that. Lily was escaping him +altogether. Sometimes, he would go on the stage, sit down in a corner and, +from there, see Lily, a shawl over her shoulders, her throat wrapped in a +scarf, walk up and down, behind the back-drop, like a passenger on the +deck of a ship, at one time with a monkey-faced, red-whiskered +sketch-comedian; at others, according to the chances of the week, with the +female-impersonator, the boy with the green eyes. There was no harm in +that: they were at home, among themselves, Lily was no damned +lalerperlooser, he wouldn't have had her so. And Trampy did not dare say +anything, for fear of being made a laughing stock and also lest he should +offend "Miss Lily." But he was tormented with jealousy nevertheless, +merely at seeing her talk pleasantly with her acquaintances. And yet it +was innocent enough, a mere "Hullo, Lily!" "Hullo, old boy!" by way of +keeping herself in touch with the news, for Lily hardly ever looked into +_The Era_ or _Das Program_; all those names, all that competition +frightened her! + +[Illustration: THE BOY WITH THE GREEN EYES] + +She had learned nothing new about Pa, except that the troupe still +existed, but in quite a small way, of course. Her Pa was in favor of soft +treatment, now, so they said; he had changed his manner. "Too late!" +murmured Lily thoughtfully; but she was much amused when she heard that +Tom, in addition to keeping up his trade as a shoeblack, was learning +boxing, with bulldog obstinacy, in order to give Pa back his blow on the +nose and beat him in a square fight. And didn't some one say that Tom was +stage-struck, too? Tom, that dwarf, with his short arms, on the stage! +Crazy! every one of them! + +And then they were always talking of Jimmy: Jimmy here, Jimmy there. It +was becoming serious, Lily couldn't get over it. She wondered what old +Martello would say if he heard that: Jimmy an artiste! Pooh! Nonsense! And +it was true, mind you! It was repeated from mouth to mouth, his fame was +spreading, his fame, that is to say, in the bars, in the wings, among +pros; you heard his name mentioned together with a hundred others; but +that already was a great deal, that one could say, Butt Snyders, Laurence, +Jimmy, Marjutti, all mixed up, as though he were their equal, he who had +done nothing! But he would "do," it was in the air: some stroke of luck, +who could tell? And Lily knew him to be ambitious. Lady or no lady, she +was an artiste first and foremost and hated competition. She had been +whipped for her rivals, Lillian, Edith and Polly, had caught it for +Laurence and for the fat freaks, too, and she depended on her work for her +bread. When she saw a new troupe come to the front it made her anxious: +even children "that high," who played bike in between the pillars of the +stage, she felt inclined to stamp upon; and if people ever asked her +advice, she did not hesitate to tell them wrong. Men especially were +disastrous competitors, even the ignorant ones. You never knew where you +were with them, they dared do anything! She could not help getting mad +when she thought of it. One more to take the bread out of her mouth! For +it was all very well to treat him as a simpleton, to talk of his +crotchets--he had views concerning a stage-apprentices' fund, a home of +rest for superannuated artistes and so on--Lily considered him dangerous. +He was not a silly Glass-Eye or a stage-struck Tom; he was an ambitious +Jimmy. But all the same, how absurd! A hypocrite like that was fit to +write to Pa and get a poor girl in trouble, but was not the man to risk +his skin! She laughed, not a stage smile, no, a real laugh, head thrown +back, full-throated. An artiste, O Lord! Yes, like a heap of bluffers who +were to do this and that, all sorts of wonderful things! and who ended by +making a laughing stock of themselves, the whole business was so childish, +faked up with ropes and weights, nursery-toys, Punch-and-Judy rubbish. It +would be just like that with Jimmy, sure: lots of noise and then ... +nothing! And he would have lost his place as manager and he would starve, +the josser: that would teach him to be spiteful! And where was Jimmy? He +might be very clever, in his shed in London, swinging from his rope, like +a monkey on a string, but to do that before an audience was different. +There would be no Jimmy left! + +She liked to talk to herself like that. Miss Lily avoided thinking of a +possible stroke of luck, she who had taken such pains to attain so little, +just to become Mrs. Trampy, to have the honor of working for Trampy and +feeding Trampy. Oh, she was tired of it, did all she could to find him +work, to spur him on! She even wanted him to practise. And she mentioned +Tom and Jimmy to him, all those beginners, all the others who were coming +on. + +"She thinks more of him than of me," he said to himself. + +And time passed and passed. It was now eight months that they had been +traveling through Germany: and then, at last, came Berlin, the center of +the agencies, like the plunge into Chicago, after the Western Tour, or New +York, after the Eastern, or Paris, or London. Lily asked herself for what +part of the world she would sign contracts. She would have liked +Australia, South Africa, the States, so as to leave her husband in Europe, +sitting up on his hind-quarters, like a trained dog, waiting for his +"missis" to come back: + +"If I could have the Kolossal in the meantime," Lily thought. "A month +there would do me nicely! I'd like to beat the fat freaks in their own +country and show Pa that I don't need his old troupe to star with!" + +And Lily had some hope: an agent had given her to understand that she +would be engaged, without a doubt, at that famous music-hall. But no! She +learned that the Kolossal was not wanting cyclists, it had an attraction +for next month, something sensational, it was said. And, in fact, +suddenly, in the space of a night, the walls of the capital were covered +with huge posters--"Bridging the Abyss!"--at the Kolossal! + +"What's that?" Lily asked herself. + +And she was thunderstruck when she learned that this was Jimmy's new +trick! She had no doubt left when, looking into a bookseller's window, she +saw Jimmy's portrait in _Die Illustrirte Zeitung_, the popular illustrated +paper in Berlin. + +Her arms fell to her sides! What, she thought, already? All this +advertisement for that Jimmy? She had lost the Kolossal because of him. +Already Jimmy was taking the bread out of her mouth! She could have wrung +his neck! + +Never had the New Zealanders, or the Hauptmanns, or the Pawnees, or any +one, or anybody known such advertising as that, except the great breakneck +performers, Laurence, the Loopers, the Motor Girl; and even then the girl +was packed up in her machine like a sausage. But "Bridging the Abyss," the +papers said, required art: everything depended on the exact impetus, the +faultless balance. The press was filled with clever puffs, biographies, +descriptions of the apparatus, the cool daring which it needed to try that +without a rope, to risk the performer's life six times in six seconds. +London and Paris were both said to have wanted the attraction; and Berlin +was to have it first; and _hoch_ for the Kolossal! + +Trampy also was flabbergasted, when he read about this: + +"But ... but ... but it's my apparatus and nothing else! Why, I patented +it in America! Do you understand now," he asked, without, however, +entering into technical explanations, "do you understand now, when I +wanted you to help me? It wasn't a question of the rusty bike! You've made +me miss fame and fortune! And to think that I have an apparatus rotting +away in London, in a warehouse, and that, if you'd listened to me, I +should have been at the Kolossal now ... and covering you with diamonds!" + +"I like your style!" said Lily. "You'd have made me break my back in your +stead! I know you!" + +"Oh, but I shan't swallow that," said Trampy, in his exasperation. "We +shall see! I have my rights. I shall enforce them!" + +"Don't make a fool of yourself," said Lily. "When a thing has to be done, +it gets done without all that talk: look at Jimmy!" + +"Hang your Jimmy!" + +"It's not a question of _my_ Jimmy," retorted Lily, "but of _my_ money. I +should simply have flung it away! You, do a thing like that! You risk your +skin! Rot!" + +Trampy, in his rage, would have boxed Lily's ears, had it not been for her +nails, which she held ready to scratch his face, and he went out fuming. +He ran off to the agents, but there was nothing for him. And yet Trampy +knew or, at least, supposed that they must want an opposition show to +"Bridging the Abyss." They must, surely! Why, everywhere, in all the great +centers, every music-hall had its rival opposite or beside it: everywhere, +each establishment strove to inflict empty houses upon its rival by +offering more sensational or more breakneck tricks. At the Kaiserin, the +rival of the Kolossal, they were, without a doubt, looking for something +to set against "Bridging the Abyss" and they had nothing, or else Trampy +would have known it: among pros such matters were always known long +beforehand. Oh, Trampy was prepared to do anything to escape his wife's +sarcasm! + +And, one evening, behold Trampy returning in triumph to the café where +Lily awaited him: + +"I knew it!" he cried. "I knew it wouldn't go like that!" + +"Well, what?" asked Lily. "Have you got a number thirty-seven? +Thirty-eight? A fresh conquest? Something quite out of the common?" + +"Laugh away, Lily! That son of a gun shall hear me talked about yet, by +Jove! And everybody else will, too. You must be prepared for anything, +Lily, when you marry an artiste!" + +"Why, what's happened?" asked Lily, much surprised. + +This had happened: the two music-halls had fought. Jimmy, who was unable, +it seemed, to get London or Paris, had offered his "Bridging the Abyss" to +the Kaiserin, but his price was considered too high. From there he went to +the Kolossal and made the same proposal. Now, times were hard for the +music-halls, sucked dry by the enormous salaries that had to be paid. The +managers were standing shoulder to shoulder, in the presence of the common +enemy, the artiste and, more particularly, the originator of sensations, +who is indispensable and who makes you an offer with a pistol at your +head, like a highwayman demanding your money or your life. + +But a turn like that meant an assured success; and the Kolossal offered +Jimmy five hundred marks a night, so as to spike the Kaiserin's guns by +getting hold of a unique turn and one not easy to replace; a piece of +underhand work involving two months' empty houses at the Kaiserin, which, +as it was, had only a second-rate troupe by way of "sisters," while at the +Kolossal they had Roofers engaged by the year, real ones, the complete +dozen, words and music guaranteed. And now the Kolossal would make huge +money with "Bridging the Abyss" and sink its rival; it was a +master-stroke. But they knew everything at the Kaiserin. The Kaiserin also +wanted a "Bridging the Abyss." It would have one, a better one, with a +finer title: "Arching the Gulf!" And they would get it for three hundred +marks! And they must be ready, quick, quick, before the Kolossal, and it +was just possible: they had twenty days yet; the apparatus would be made; +they knew the plans, the dimensions; the house would be fixed up +accordingly; they must succeed at all costs and not let themselves be +strangled without defense! It was a struggle to the death! They would +fight with corpses, if need be! Other people had broken their backs for +them before now; there would be no difficulty in finding one more to risk +his life six times in six seconds for three hundred marks a night. + +And it was at that moment that Trampy offered himself. They had heard his +name: + +"Trampy Wheel-Pad, the tramp cyclist with the red-hot stove?" + +"That's me," said Trampy. + +And, full of self-assurance, he explained the object of his visit: + +"I was the first to construct it; I patented it myself at Washington; I +will produce the documents!" + +It will be understood why Trampy wore his air of conquest when he returned +home that day. He had his engagement in his pocket! He displayed it +victoriously to Lily, passed it over her face, reveled in his revenge. At +last he was going to show Lily whether he was able to keep a wife or not; +and champagne suppers every evening, by Jove, with girls--no damned +lalerperloosers--just to show her! + +That same evening, he left for London, with an advance from the +management, and came back to Berlin with the apparatus, the whole set up +and repaired in a week, a gang of men working night and day. Followed +practice with the rope, on a movable pulley, from early dawn, like a man +determined to accomplish his breakneck feat, alive or dead; for Trampy +would have done, no matter what, for Lily to cease being "Miss" Lily, to +admit herself married and married for love and not to escape whippings, to +cease being ashamed of him, to show herself proud of him, on the contrary, +especially before Jimmy! + +Trampy, in his less enthusiastic moments, felt a certain uneasiness: +Jimmy's proximity, his own patents far away, in America. But he assumed a +bold face, declared himself the inventor, practised unrelentingly, with +hatred of his rival in his heart. This hatred seemed to increase his +powers of work. He practised, practised. He had a lively intelligence, if +his heart was a trifle flabby. And he was very skilful, besides, when he +condescended to take the trouble. He was a quick worker: in less than +twenty days everything was ready, and "Arching the Gulf" sprawled over the +hoardings of Berlin, side by side with "Bridging the Abyss." One saw +nothing else; and the Kaiserin opened its doors forty-eight hours before +Jimmy. It was a huge success. Trampy received an ovation when, after the +release of the terrible springs which flung the bike from one pedestal to +another, in five seconds he fell on the mattresses outspread to receive +him, behind a cloth. + +It goes without saying that Jimmy was present at the show. He was smashed +before he had even begun! There, before his eyes, was his own invention +worked by another! He had expected competition, of course; it was +impossible, he knew, to discover anything that wasn't copied at once; +snatchers of ideas, who prowl around artistes, plagiarists, pirates, +swarmed as thick as any other sort of thieves. And, as ill luck would have +it, though his turn was difficult to perform, the apparatus, at least, was +simple to construct: four powerful springs, screwed down with a jack, +which the weight of the leaping cyclist, as he fell upon each pedestal, +released one after the other, causing him to take enormous jumps forward. +It was an ideal breakneck machine, easy to carry about; only the +calculations had been difficult. They had cost him a lot of trouble to +establish; and now another was profiting by them! Perhaps some one had +patented the invention before him! For he, too, before showing it in +public, had patented it in England and Germany; and his anger knew no +bounds, his energy was increased fourfold when he learned the name of the +plagiarist: Trampy again! Trampy, who had stolen his love, who had stolen +his Lily ... and who was now stealing his idea ... robbing him of the +fruit of his labor! Jimmy, in spite of his fury, resolved to keep calm: +the law first. He was protected by the law, unless--and that was +impossible--unless Trampy had had the same idea as himself before him and +taken out his patents before the publication in _Engineering_. Jimmy +showed a prompt decision, a feverish activity. First of all, he must put +the law in motion, bring an action against Trampy, telegraph to the patent +office at Washington to ascertain the date. Meanwhile, he made his first +appearance on the day fixed for it. His success was even greater than +Trampy's; his leaps were twice as wide, more in accordance with his +courage. The way in which he "bridged the abyss," in the huge hall where +he gave his show, was enough to prove that he was the inventor, the +creator, the great, typical, daring performer, who, disclaiming death, +marches to glory and fortune even as heroes, flag in hand, rush to the +assault under fire. + +It was a bolt from the blue for the Kaiserin when the little paper +arrived, the injunction against "Arching the Gulf." A steamer caught in a +cyclone would undergo much the same disablement, under a sea sweeping her +from stem to stern, swamping the saloons, drowning the very rats in the +hold. Jimmy's active inquiries had not taken long: telegram followed upon +telegram; the British consul woke up. The law at Washington was formal and +precise: nothing could be patented that had been known, or used, or +published before the patent was applied for. Now the article in +_Engineering_, of course, appeared prior to the step taken by Trampy. And +in Germany, also, Jimmy won his case; the court found in favor of the +absolute novelty of the invention. The Kaiserin could not give its +performance short of paying five hundred marks a night to its rival, the +Kolossal. This meant the wreck of "Arching the Gulf;" and Trampy came down +with it. For a few days, he led a terrible life, a desperate struggle, +made efforts in every direction; but, at last, worried, hustled, driven to +bay, Trampy disappeared into the darkness, while Jimmy, freed from this +enervating opposition and feeling sure of himself henceforward, gained +fresh courage, added another arch to "Bridging the Abyss." + +It was done, he had made his start, he had a name, he was the man who +draws crowds; he received brilliant proposals from all sides, from the +Western Trust, among others. He felt himself somebody; and money also was +coming in. He could at last realize what he had in his head ... in the +absence of love there would be fame ... oh, something a thousand times +more sensational than "Bridging the Abyss," more modern, more scientific, +something which he confided to nobody, which he kept locked up in his +brain, in his heart, like a love passion, a thing which would be his +alone, this time, which no one could take from him! For it would not be a +question of a spring and a click, only. The thing moved in his breast, +lived in his brain. When he thought of it, his cheeks became hollow with +ambition, his eyes lit up. He seemed to tower over immense perspectives; +and, from that height, Trampy appeared to him so small, so small, so +really small that he felt his anger decrease. And then there was Lily! To +send Trampy to his wife with a black eye or a bloody nose, to turn the +husband into an object of ridicule to his wife, that was impossible for +him; it would have shown lack of respect for Lily, poor darling; he would +not humiliate her in her man! She loved him, perhaps, in the illusion of +her seventeen years! Hurt _her_? Never! Jimmy wiped the episode from the +slate; hard as it was, he forgave that highway robber, in the name of his +dead love. + +Ah, if he could have seen Lily when Trampy was driven to confess his +discomfiture to her! He would have been revenged offhand! Lily seethed +with rage against her husband, that footy rotter! What! Was that his great +scheme? Did he call that an idea? How often had not Jimmy spoken to her +about it! It was pinned on the wall, it lay about in the Gresse Street +workshop for months. She remembered seeing the plans, the diagrams, the +drawings in the papers. Jimmy had explained everything to her at the time +when he was still a josser. And Trampy had stolen it from him, stolen it, +stolen it! Oh, he would make her die of shame! + +It was a terrible dispute, a real "playing humanity," with threats, +clenched fists, broken crockery strewing the floor. + +"To humiliate me like that before Jimmy!" said Lily, furious. + +"Drop that about Jimmy!" snarled Trampy, green with jealousy. "I won't +have you mention him!" + +"I shall mention him if I like! Jimmy is a son of a gun! Very well! But +he's a man! He's worth two of you." + +Trampy strode up to her with his fist raised. + +"If you touch me," cried Lily, seizing the lamp, "if you touch me, I'll +smash it over your head!" + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +When Trampy received the visit of the _Gerichtsdiener_, with the bill of +costs to pay--for the Kolossal sued the Kaiserin for damages and the +Kaiserin came down upon Trampy--when Trampy learned that, he became a limp +rag. Already he saw himself dragged before the courts, his whole past laid +bare: two wives on his hands, for all he knew; Lily crushing him with her +scorn; Jimmy triumphant. + +Trampy had a moment of real despair. Lily preferred him like that, humbled +at her feet. She seemed to understand her husband, a man spoiled by easy +conquests, a boozer, a rake, who had taken too much upon himself when he +wedded a wife. Trampy was certainly not made for marriage: having a wife +was a different thing from having thirty-six girls. His heart, weakened +with premature enjoyment, was no longer made for real love. All this he +too now perceived; and, in spite of himself, realizing his unworthiness, +he felt overcome by an ever-increasing jealousy. + +Those were melancholy weeks in the small room. He sat for hours brooding +over his disgrace. Lily silently turned this time of rest to account and +mended her costumes, sewed spangles on her bodices, beside the earthenware +stove, on which the stew was bubbling; and then came the meal, on the +table hastily cleared of the mass of ribbons, thread and needles, to make +room for the plates. Trampy choked as he swallowed that dinner which he +had not earned, sighed sadly for the good cheer of his dreams, the +champagne suppers with girls. He gulped down his meagre fare in silence, +he who had known the gay junketings, the noisy laughter and the "Roman +nights!" To go from there and drown his sorrows in the bar next door was +but a step. And Trampy had sorrows outside his recent defeat: sorrows +which were even more bitter. He felt that, this time, he was losing Lily. + +Lily was surrounded with sympathy. When she went the round of the +agencies, the pros courted her. They looked upon Lily in the light of a +wife tired of her husband. They prowled round that possible prey. A Lily +was worth the having, meant an assured income for whoever succeeded in +winning her affections and managing her properly: not with brutality, no, +rather not; home joys, like Mr. Fuchs! Who was destined one day to own +those full-blown seventeen years, those twinkling legs, that lissom body, +trained to spin round and round, unerring and exact? What lucky dog would +have her for himself, would succeed in making her love him? They pitied +Lily openly, to disgust her with her husband and hasten on the +catastrophe. Trampy? He was no husband for her! They, ah, yes, now that +was a different matter! And they talked of the dangers attendant upon +Trampy's mode of life; the impersonator told her of the terrible diseases +brought on by constant tippling; they exaggerated it all on purpose, +amused themselves by frightening her; until Lily, sometimes, would look +upon herself as a pretty little gazelle chained to a mangy bear. + +Trampy suspected all this, having himself, in the old days, in the time of +his glory, been one of those who hovered round wives ready for divorce, +helping them, if need be. He could have smashed the face of that +green-eyed impersonator. There was also that architect, that +theater-builder, Harrasford's friend: he was passing through Berlin and +Lily had taken his fancy the other evening, at the café; he had patted her +cheek gaily: + +"I knew you when you were 'that high.' You used to sit on my knee. How +beautiful you've grown!" + +There appeared to be an infinity of people who had known Lily when she was +"that high." They paid her more and more attention ... and then they +believed her to be looked after by Jimmy. That again was a friendship +dating back to her childhood, they said: Jimmy, the bill-topper. He, too, +had known her when she was "that high." + +The greater part of this talk reached Trampy's ears. Oh, he could have +killed that Jimmy! But he was obliged to hold his tongue. Jimmy had him +under his heel, with that crushing lawsuit. + +They did not even dare speak of it, so painful was the subject. The little +table by the earthenware stove separated them like a wall; and there was +one thing always between them: Jimmy. Trampy never mentioned his name now. +He would have had too much to say.... And there were continual summonses, +always; and lawyers, always; and costs, always. Money melted away, like +butter in the sun. Lily was tired of it; and an agony overcame her at the +thought of leading a life like that for the rest of her days: + +"Oh," she said, "he's taking the very bread from our mouths, with his +lawsuit! And I haven't a decent hat to wear." + +"He'll drive us to the workhouse," grumbled Trampy, staring before him, +with folded arms. + +"It's your fault!" Lily began, but soon stopped: the subject led to a +surfeit of quarreling. + +But, in her own mind: + +"That son of a gun of a Jimmy!" she thought. "All the same, who would ever +have believed it of him? Can he guess that all of this falls upon me?" + +"Suppose you were to go and see him," said Trampy, at his wits' end, one +day when he had exhausted himself in stormy explanations with the manager +of the Kaiserin. + +"I go and see Jimmy?" exclaimed Lily. "What for?" + +"To try and arrange things," replied Trampy, dropping his head. "No one +but you could ..." + +"I'll think about it, I'll see," said Lily. + +But she had to get used by degrees to the idea of going and seeing that +Jimmy who was now ruining her. A strange curiosity, nevertheless, drove +her toward that conqueror, once a bike-cleaning workman, who was now +topping the bill at Berlin and making as much money by himself as a whole +program put together. He would receive her kindly, she was sure of that. +Oh and then she wanted to tell him that she had had nothing to do with +that business of the patents ... that she did not approve of Trampy's +conduct ...! And then he could give her news of Pa and Ma, as he had come +from London, where he must have seen them! And she was dying to know! The +idea was increasing with her that life with Trampy had become impossible. +And, in case she should leave him, she dreaded finding herself alone. +Already there were all those offers being made to her, a married woman, +driving her mad! She, Lily Clifton, was treated like a "Parisienne": she +hated that sort! To walk about the stage, two by two, might pass; but it +was possible to go too far, like the conductor of the orchestra, who, the +other day, tried to kiss her in her dressing-room, married woman though +she was! Then what would it be when she traveled alone! On the continent, +too! Oh, she would have liked to be a good little wife! But, as that could +not be, better go back to her Pa and Ma and have a home, a real one, with +a servant in it. She was yearning for a home. But how would she be +received in that case? Would they put the blame on her? Had they forgiven +her? Had she a Pa and Ma still? That was what she wanted to know. + +Lily would have liked to look handsome and elegant on the day when she +went to Jimmy, so as to show him that he was not the only one who made a +lot of money; but she felt very small and terribly excited. The hotel +itself, the great clock, the waiters, everything made an impression on +her, so different from her boarding-house in the Akerstrasse. She felt +like running away after knocking at his door; and Jimmy opened it with the +preoccupied air of a man who is disturbed at an inconvenient moment. But +suddenly he put out his hand in hearty greeting: + +"Hullo, Lily! Come in." + +Lily entered a bright sitting-room, neatly furnished with a sofa and +comfortable chairs; no bed; a room which served only for that. She at once +felt more at her ease. Jimmy motioned her to a seat near a table covered +with papers, full of marks and signs which she did not understand, and +books, rulers and compasses. She tried to be simple and dignified; +apologized for interrupting him: + +"Brain-work, I see," she said, pointing to the papers. "That's hard, too, +I suppose," she added, to say something, for a start, like talking about +the weather. + +"A matter of habit, like the bike," said Jimmy, in a tone of conviction. +"Sit down, Lily, there in that big arm-chair; you're not disturbing me." + +"'K you," said Lily, sitting down, feeling reassured by his cordial +welcome and thinking that, at least, he was polite. + +"I am glad to see you again, Lily," Jimmy went on, taking a chair himself. +"Always glad to see you. And how are you? Keeping well?" + +"'K you," said Lily. + +"I'm very glad to hear it," said Jimmy, scrutinizing Lily with great +kindness and trying not to see her preoccupied expression. "I know what +brings you here, Lily. You're a dear little thing, a kid, eh? A real kid +at heart, aren't you? I bet you I guess. I've come from London. You want +to hear the latest news of your Pa and Ma, eh? You're not angry with them, +I hope? Oh, it would be wrong of you to be angry with them still! They're +very fond of you, you know. They cried when you went away, Lily. Your ... +going away," Jimmy insisted, with a quaver in his voice, "was ... a great +blow ... to them ... too." + +"How do they get on without me?" asked Lily eagerly, not wishing to break +down and cry before Jimmy. "Poor Pa! Yes, he was fond of me. He never let +me fall on purpose. He did not force me to work when I was ill." + +"Your Pa!" Jimmy broke in, glad of the chance to give a fresh turn to the +conversation. "Why, there's no harm in him! Your Pa's an artiste in love +with his art, that's all! I shouldn't be surprised if the troupe made a +hit yet. It's had a success of a sort already--in the small halls--at +Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells. Your Pa just does without you as well as he +can. He runs after his pupils all day long, damn it!" said Jimmy, with a +laugh. "Your cousin stars." + +[Illustration: COUSIN DAISY] + +"_Who_ stars?" asked Lily. + +"Your cousin Daisy. She came as soon as you ... as you went away and +offered to take your place. Pa Clifton sent her to the right-about, +treated her like a ... like an I don't know what, but she returned to the +charge. She's doing very well now. She tries to be like you." + +"No! Impossible!" exclaimed Lily. "What, that fat freak?" + +"And your Pa will succeed," Jimmy hastened to add. "You'll see. You ought +to be proud of having a Pa like that." + +"Yes, in a sense," said Lily, who felt a certain satisfaction at being the +daughter of her Pa. + +He was a bit harsh at times; but a man like her Pa, or like Jimmy, was +much better than her loafer of a tramp cyclist! + +"And ... Ma?" asked Lily. + +"Your Ma," said Jimmy, in a lower voice, "cried ... oh, how she cried when +she found that you had gone! No doubt, she exaggerated any wrong she had +done you. It seems she fell upon her knees and prayed and asked for +forgiveness." + +"Forgiveness? What for? Of whom?" Lily inquired. + +"Why," said Jimmy, in a serious tone, "of whom do you think people ask +forgiveness, when they are alone, on their knees?" + +"Oh," said Lily, greatly touched, "I understand! So they didn't put the +blame on me?" + +"What blame?" + +"For my marriage," said Lily, lowering her eyes. + +"No ... if you had gone off to live with him ... oh, not you, not you, I +know!" protested Jimmy, seeing a gesture of Lily's. "But marriage is +different, I suppose. You had the right, you were old enough to go away +with the man you loved." + +Jimmy turned pale as he said this; but Lily, hanging her head and red with +shame, did not notice it. + +"What!" said Jimmy. "You're blushing! Do you regret it?" + +Lily did not reply. + +"Then," continued Jimmy slowly, "what they said--I wouldn't believe it, +but you know they say a lot of things--is it true?" + +She nodded yes and raised her eyes to him with a sad, weary smile. + +"He doesn't love you? And ... and ... you, Lily," asked Jimmy, taking her +hand in his, "don't you love him?" + +"Certainly not!" said Lily, with such an accent of conviction and such a +look of disgust that Jimmy was, at one and the same time, delighted to the +bottom of his heart and pained to the verge of tears. + +Poor Lily! He now noticed her pallor, the dark rims round her eyes, that +exquisite face refined by inmost grief. Lily, upon whom, since her visit +to the shop in Gresse Street, he had built his hopes of happiness! It +seemed to him like yesterday and already it was the distant past. Was that +what her rebellion, her bid for freedom had ended in? Was that the +crowning point of her hard life? Lily, fashioned to be the companion of a +loving heart, was the prey of a footy rotter! Oh, if Jimmy had not +controlled himself, if he had not clenched his teeth, for fear of talking! +If he had listened to his anger, let loose the storm that raged within +him, shouted out what he felt! But what would be the good of telling her +his love? Why add to Lily's sorrows by letting her know what might have +been and thus cause trouble in her household, when he wished for one thing +only, Lily's happiness? Suppose she did not love her husband: Trampy, +alas, unworthy though he was, remained her husband, nevertheless! And +there was no hope of breaking the chain. The letters from Denver and +Houston were anything but encouraging. No proofs, no recollections of +Trampy's marriage over there. So there seemed no way out. + +Nor did he wish to incense Trampy's jealousy. Lily would have had to bear +the brunt of it ... as in the old days, with Ma's temper. Oh, there was no +doubt about it: Jimmy, to hold his tongue now, needed more courage than +when risking his life six times in six seconds! But what was the use of +fighting against fate? Better submit, when there was no remedy, and strive +for peace! + +"Everything gets straight sooner or later," Jimmy went on. "Many lives +that once seemed spoiled have become quite endurable. Time is the great +healer. Trampy, no doubt, will get over his faults. He will learn to +appreciate you. Have patience. Don't exaggerate your bothers, Lily. There +are others unhappier than yourself. You have a claim to happiness. You +will know it yet. Just think. You're so young, you have all your life +before you." + +"The simpleton!" thought Lily. "It's easy for him to talk. But then ... +why was he so jealous? Why did he tell Pa about me? But for him, I should +be at home now!" + +It was certain that, notwithstanding his kindly reception, Jimmy now +seemed to be taking Trampy's part, as formerly he had sided with Pa and +Ma. And he was lalerperlooser enough to ask Lily if her husband knew that +she had come to see him: + +"I hope he knows, Lily. We must have no secrets: did you tell him?" + +"He sent me," she said, resolving to tell everything frankly, since that +was what she had come for and not, after all, to talk about love ... +money, only, and business ... it was a question of bread and butter to +her. + +"Ah! He did!" said Jimmy, a little surprised. + +"Yes," said Lily, "it's about that lawsuit." + +"Speak quite frankly, Lily. Tell me everything," said Jimmy, very calm. + +"Well," said Lily, yielding before his air of candor, "Trampy is at the +end of his tether; he has no money"--she colored up to the eyes--"no +money, no work; the law-costs ..." + +"And whose fault is that?" interrupted Jimmy, rising and picking up a +cigarette, so as to have something to fumble at with his fingers. "Whose +fault is it, Lily, if not that ... well, if not Trampy's? Isn't it fair +that he should pay for it? It would really become too easy, else, to steal +other people's ideas! You know quite well, Lily--you saw it at my place, +on the wall--is it my invention or is it not? And here comes Trampy," he +continued, crunching up his cigarette with a nervous gesture, "and patents +it ... as if it were his own. It's a bit too much, you know!" + +"Jimmy," cried Lily, starting up from her chair, "I swear to you that I +had nothing to do with it! If I had known, Jimmy, I would have stopped it! +I call it stealing, as you do." + +"Oh, I'm quite sure of that, Lily! I never thought it was you! Calm +yourself; sit down, do," said Jimmy, relieved at the sight of Lily's +indignation, as she stood before him with blazing eyes and her face +crimson with shame. + +"Important tricks like that!" went on Lily, sitting down again. "No, those +have no right to be copied. It's brain-work. You designed it yourself." + +"Yes, but about the present," said Jimmy, with a serious air. "I can't +give in to Trampy. I'm bound to defend myself. You came to see me about my +action, Lily. I can't say anything on the subject. It's ... Trampy's +business, I suppose! Why, what would you do in my place, Lily?" + +"I should do as you're doing, Jimmy, you're perfectly right," said Lily, +very low, without raising her head. "But couldn't one come to terms ... +avoid a lawsuit ... and not waste all that money on jossers? What do you +gain by it yourself? We can't pay up, Jimmy: those costs are breaking +us." + +"What do you mean by 'us'?" + +"Trampy isn't working," continued Lily. "He hasn't done anything for a +long time." + +"But then," asked Jimmy, stopping in front of her, "how does he live?" + +"I ... I'm earning money," explained Lily, blushing, ashamed to own her +distress. + +Oh, it was hard for her, Lily Clifton, to have no money and to confess it +to Jimmy, that josser, who was making his five hundred marks a day! Jimmy +saw her before him, huddled in her chair ... her faded hat, her mean gown. +He took in everything at a glance. Poor Lily, who used to dream of +dresses, to be reduced to that! Then he understood. Pity moved him at the +sight of that poor Lily. It was all very well for him to say, just now, +"Business is business," and to ask, "What would you do in my place?" He +knew what he would do. A lawsuit was not a question of sentiment, +everybody knew that; but still, it was no longer between men.... + +"Listen, Lily," he said, putting his hand kindly on her shoulder, "if all +this is to fall upon you, we must see how we can arrange matters. Sorry +you didn't come sooner; I don't want to add to your burdens, Lily, heaven +knows I don't! I never thought of that. I ought to have suspected, +perhaps. However, I will withdraw the case. I'll manage. And the costs ... +well, I'll pay them myself, if necessary, for you, Lily, for you; because +I knew you when you were 'that high' ... no, not quite so small; how old +were you? Thirteen ... and such a little thing, such a dear little wee +thing. Do you remember when I made night and day in your cabin, by just +touching my levers? And then it seems to me that I always knew you: in +Mexico, in India, in South Africa, at the time of the elephants and the +tiny birds. And then later, that other Lily, the London one: the one of +only a few months ago. The one for whom ..." continued Jimmy, in a voice +smothered with emotion. "The Lily of Rathbone Place. The Lily of Gresse +Street. That little toque, which suited you so well and which you +complained of ... you poor little Lily!... You poor silly little thing! +There, go home now and make your mind easy, as far as I'm concerned, Lily. +None of your troubles shall come from me. Besides, as they say, a bad +settlement is better than the best lawsuit. I'm doing it for your sake. +Well, is that all right?" + +"Oh, how kind you are!" she said, raising her eyes to him, with a tear in +them. "Why, Jimmy, you're not so bad, after all!" + +"Pooh!" said Jimmy, lighting a cigarette. "I'm no better than most, Lily, +and no worse. Flesh and blood, like the rest. And, besides, for you, Lily +... If ever you need me, Lily, if I can be of any use to you ..." + + * * * * * + +"For me," thought Lily, as she returned home, "for me. Ah, if I had known! +Ah, when I think that he, too, wanted to marry me, what a fool I was!" she +said, with a sigh. + +She still felt in her own palm the gentle, manly pressure of Jimmy's hand. +She still heard the kind words with which he had comforted her on the +threshold. Goodness, how happy she would have been with a man like him! +Her ill-will disappeared. He was no longer a cur, that josser, but a +gentleman, rather, a brother, a friend.... And she was proud, also, that +Jimmy, who was so busy and making such a lot of money, had promised to +come and applaud her, one of these evenings, at her theater, at Kleim's +Garden, before his own turn at the Kolossal. Oh, wouldn't she work hard +that night! She would do all her tricks! She was bent on pleasing him. And +how vulgar and common Trampy appeared in comparison. However, there was no +help for it now; and Lily hastened home to bring him the good news.... In +any case, Trampy would be grateful to her for what she had done for him. +As a matter of fact, it had cost her an effort to go and pay this visit. + +She happened to run up against Trampy coming out of the bar, where, +according to his custom, he had been drowning his cares. He had a moment +of delight on learning the result of the visit, but, mad with jealousy, at +once adopted a lofty tone, so as not to have to thank her: + +"I knew he would knuckle under!" he said, without looking at Lily. "The +braggart! He prefers a settlement, eh? And quite right too! He knows he's +in the wrong. He's retreating, he's afraid." + +"Afraid of what?" asked Lily, bewildered. + +"Afraid of me. He knows it won't pay to try my patience too far!" + +"Afraid? Jimmy?" said Lily, indignant at all that foolery. "Do you think +he's done that because he's afraid?" + +"And for what other reason would he have given in so soon?" + +"He did it to please me, he did it for _me_, damn it, for _me_!" said +Lily. "You're rid of your lawsuit: you ought to talk differently and thank +me!" + +"And why should he do it to please you? What is there between you?" asked +Trampy, looking her in the face. + +"You're drunk!" said Lily furiously, with her hand ready to scratch. + +"No scenes in the street!" said Trampy. "We'll go into this at home ..." + +"Then I shan't come in!" said Lily, abruptly turning her back on him. "I'm +going to the theater!" + +She had nothing to do on the stage; only the idea of being alone in the +room with Trampy seemed intolerable to her. At the least discussion, Lily +felt it, she would have thrown the lamp at his head, so great was her +indignation at his insolence! + +She was boiling over with anger when she reached the theater. There were +people practising; it was the time for it. Lily went up to her +dressing-room, shifted things in her trunk, anyhow, for something to do. +The idea that her husband thought her capable of anything wrong made her +angry. Oh, to get a divorce, to part from him! As this could not go on for +ever, it might as well be done at once; but it would be better if there +were no fault on her part. A divorce, yes; but with the honors on her +side; a divorce in her favor! Patience, the opportunity would come! It +ought to be quite easy, with the girls whom Trampy beguiled, the love +letters which he received, to catch him in the act, cover him with +ridicule, get the best of him. Oh, if she only could! To be a poor little +victim, how touching! A dear little outraged wife! + +"You fool, if I catch you!" she said. + +Then another idea passed through her brain. Oh, if it were true! She would +have danced for joy! Trampy's marriage in America. + +"Is it true? Is it true? God above, grant that it be true!" + +It was possible. Already, a few days before, the Jim Crows who hovered +round her had talked about it, in covert words, in the hope of making +things worse. There must be some truth in it. There was so much news going +from mouth to mouth: Lillian, Edith and Polly were the rage in Chicago.... +That poor boy-violinist: at Budapest, the stuffed seat to his trousers had +slipped from its place and allowed the dog's teeth to reach the living +flesh; he had had to spend a week in bed with poultices.... Harrasford was +contemplating a theatrical trust on the Continent, planning a model +music-hall in Paris.... There were Jimmy's successes, his ambitions.... +Amid all this news, to which Lily listened, sometimes absent-mindedly, +sometimes with interest, among these adventures dating from +everywhere--names which she greeted like old acquaintances, with a little +nod: "Denver? Yes, I know; a big flat stage. Mexico? I remember!"--among +all those tales, Lily pricked her ears when she heard the name of Ave +Maria coupled with Trampy's. She had a vague recollection of Ave Maria's +flight, after her departure from Mexico; was it with Trampy? Were they +really married then? Oh, if it were only true! God above, grant that it +were true! + +Lily, haunted by this idea of a divorce which would set her free, had +rummaged in Trampy's trunk, among his programs and posters. It was full of +letters, photographs of girls in outrageous hats, in tucked-up skirts, in +tights, with inscriptions. All this dated back to before the marriage, a +collection of treasures which he had not had the courage to destroy. She +had hoped to find some proof, some clue; but no, there was nothing serious +in it. Lily did not give up, for all that; on the contrary. After the +visit to Jimmy, which made Trampy so meanly jealous, she lost no +opportunity of inquiring. But Martello himself, the father, never had news +of his daughter. He hadn't heard for ever so long; and it was to no avail +that Lily asked about Ave Maria, the one who ran away with a man, a great +artiste; she always received the same reply: + +"Ave Maria? Don't know the name. Ave Maria? Haven't seen her since ..." + +But Jimmy, always; Jimmy here, Jimmy there; they talked about him all the +time: his ideas; something new he had invented; something no one had ever +seen: much cleverer than "Bridging the Abyss," it seemed; but nobody knew +what. + +"I know!" said Lily, with a well-informed air and very proud of knowing +Jimmy and of letting people think ... + +"Do you know Jimmy?" + +"Ever since I was that high," answered Lily. "He used to hold me on his +knees." + +"And what is his new trick?" + +"I'm not allowed to tell. He asked me not to say." + +Everybody praised her for her discretion. The sympathy with which she was +surrounded increased. + +"Jimmy," they hinted. "Now there's a fellow you ought to have married, +instead of your ..." + +"Not a word against my husband," she said, like a good and devoted little +wife. "I won't have him insulted." + +That did not prevent her from laughing with her friends. She felt a need +of forgetting, or she would have died of boredom, with a husband like +that. She was heavy at heart, sometimes. She was a woman, not an icicle. +She felt herself made for love. She was flesh and blood, like Jimmy. She +would have liked some one to console her, to talk softly to her, as +Glass-Eye Maud used to do. There were plenty willing to play the part of +Glass-Eye Maud, no doubt: the female-impersonator, for instance, with the +green eyes. Oh, she would have liked to be hugged, kissed full on the +mouth, or else stroked and petted gently! No home, no happiness; marriage +without love; that was her life henceforth. These stage friendships were a +relief. + +The Bambinis romped with her. She loved their gaiety, liked to touch their +sturdy little limbs. That evening, Lily, who was ready for her performance +early, was having fun with them. Dressed in her pink tights, she looked +like a blithe nymph playing with rollicking cupids. + +"What a charming group!" said a voice behind her. "If I were a painter, +Lily, I would do you like that!" + +It was Jimmy, who had come to see her on the stage, as he had promised. + +"Am I spoiling your game?" he asked. "It's so pretty! It makes me want to +kiss the lot of you!" + +"Well, booby!" said Lily, all excited and laughing. "Why don't you? You +daren't!" + +"I daren't! I'll show you whether I dare ... and ... I'm stronger than I +look!" + +And thereupon he caught hold of Lily and lifted her like a feather--Lily, +all taken aback, had not time to say "Oof!" so great was her surprise--and +Jimmy crossed the whole stage with Lily in his arms, shouting to the +manager: + +"Look what a dear little baby I've found! Isn't she sweet, eh?" + +And then, in the wings, he gave her a good big kiss on the cheek before +putting her down. + +The people around them laughed, applauded that stage joke: + +"Jimmy, her old friend," they said, "knew her when she was that high." + +Lily was very proud of it. And, a few minutes after, when he had left her +to take a seat in front, Lily jumped into the saddle and rode round and +round, without a hitch, smiling to the audience, smiling to Jimmy in a +front box, Jimmy to whom she was grateful for coming to see her: a famous +bill-topper putting himself out for her ... before everybody! She was +faultless that evening, did a dozen twirls on the back-wheel, made a +record, was grand. + +Trampy, meanwhile, was waiting for Lily outside, in the passage leading to +the stage-door. He had not seen Jimmy kiss Lily, but he saw him carry her +across the stage, just as he was coming on himself, so he had turned and +hurried out to avoid scandal ... giving way to his wife, who worked while +he did not. He had gone out at once, time to run to the bar and drown two +or three sorrows, and he was waiting for her now, without paying any +attention to the girls passing. As soon as he saw Lily, he seized her by +the arm: + +"I've had enough of this," he said. "I saw you, you and your Jimmy! You +can't deny it this time!" + +"Oh, Trampy, don't insult me like that!" protested Lily. "Why do you +always say 'my' Jimmy? One can have a laugh and a joke on the stage +without meaning wrong, you know one can. Besides, if you didn't like to +see him carry me in his arms, you ought to have smashed his face, without +so much talk." + +"I didn't want to make a fuss." + +"You were afraid to. You're afraid of him, that's what you are!" + +"Stop jeering at me!" said Trampy, shaking her violently. "You're dragging +me in the mud; it's like those whippings of yours! I'm tired of the +affronts you put upon me! You ought to have married your Jimmy and left me +in peace." + +"I can't say," sneered Lily, "that I remember running after you!" + +"That Jimmy!" repeated Trampy. "I'll kill that fellow like a dog! If I +don't do it now, I will later, in a year, in a hundred years, if +necessary. I'll kill him like a dog!" + +Lily gave a little laugh as she went out, followed by Trampy. She did not +wish, in that lobby, before the people passing, to look like a woman +insulted by her husband. She laughed bravely, as she used to, on the +stage, with Ma, in the days of the great smackings. To see her laugh, one +would have thought that Trampy was telling her a story; and he repeated: + +"I'll kill him like a dog, like a dog!" + +"Pooh!" said Lily, who knew Trampy. "You talk too much to act." + +"We shall see. Where's your Jimmy hiding?" + +"You'd be nicely caught, if you met him," said Lily, who had just noticed +Jimmy leaving the music-hall to go to the Kolossal: "there he is, behind +you."... + +"What's that? Don't you try to get at me!" said Trampy. + +"I tell you, he's behind you, damn it! Turn round and you'll see ... if +you have eyes to see with." + +Trampy turned round, half-reluctantly: he didn't like those jokes, but he +didn't wish to seem afraid. + +"Where? Where do you see Jimmy?" he grumbled. + +"There, in front of you," insisted Lily, pointing with her finger and +pushing him by the shoulder. "Off you go!" + +There was no drawing back. He marched straight up to Jimmy, who did not +even recognize him and who stopped politely. But Trampy had time for +reflection, no doubt: a clearer perception of professional brotherhood. +Better, after all, to remain friends ... among artistes. And, when he +stood before him: + +"H'm, h'm. Have you got a light about you, Jimmy? Give us a match," said +Trampy, taking a cigar from his pocket. + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +It stifled Lily, for the moment. She would rather have received twenty +"contracts" with the steel buckle than see that cowardice in her husband. +She had her Pa's blood in her, damn it! + +"What!" she thought. "He believes me to misconduct myself with Jimmy, and +he is too much of a coward to object!" + +But there was nothing to be done. Trampy was as incapable of anger as of +love. All those years of a low life had degraded him to that point. And +Trampy had even lost the right to bear Jimmy a grudge, made as though he +had forgotten everything, said that, after all, it was much better to be +friends. And all this under Lily's critical eye! + +Jimmy! To be obliged to look pleasant at Jimmy! It gave him a lump in his +throat. Fortunately, he had the others, the crowd of assiduous pros who +thronged round his wife. Against those he gave free scope to his jealousy, +and showed himself as strict with the rest as he had been accommodating +with Jimmy. He meant to keep an eye on his wife: + +"A married woman, on the stage, alone! I won't have any more of that!" + +He hit upon a contrivance to be always with her: he would be her "comic." +It was a new system which had come into fashion: the most plastic +performances spoiled by the juxtaposition of their caricatures; acrobats, +Olympian gods, parodied by a merry-andrew in a ridiculous coat: just as +though Nunkie Fuchs, for instance, had taken it into his head to appear +with his Three Graces and mimic their tricks, kicking about at the end of +a wire with his fat, fatherly paunch and his round, silly face. + +And Trampy, riding behind Lily, would simply give a parody of her tricks; +it meant little work to him and was as good a way as another of going on +the stage with her and establishing his title to _her_ work and _her_ +salary.... + +And off they went again, with the basket trunk, and the bikes; and on the +stage, every night, Lily, looking like a goddess, and Trampy, dressed in +rags, went through their tricks and smiled ... applause for her, always; +none for him, ever. Lily wore a very sad look in consequence, when they +returned to the wings: a poor little wife, so sorry for her husband; but +she triumphed at the bottom of her heart, while Trampy turned green with +spite. He was furious with Lily: tried to make her fall, pushed her in +turning; but Lily was too clever and sat as firmly on her bike as Ave +Maria walked her slack-wire, when the brother used to shake it on purpose, +whip in hand and snarling as if to bite. + +Oh, if Lily had not made efforts to be a good little wife! Trampy was +becoming unbearable. She posed as the poor little thing, despised, +deceived and betrayed by her husband; she loved to hear people tell her +so, called them to witness and continued, but without result, to make +inquiries about Ave Maria. + +And there were everlasting scenes at home. Lily had enough of it, more +than enough of it! She had even decided to go away, to return to London; +but, worn out with worry, she had to take to her bed, with a high fever. +It was the finishing stroke: no work,--all the savings gone.... + +Trampy, fortunately, found an engagement: + +"It's all right, the neighbors will look after you," he said, as he took +his leave. "A man's duty is to see that his wife doesn't starve, eh, +darling? I'm going to make money, too, and I'll bring you heaps when I +come back; and I'll send you some. That's the sort of man I am. I don't +talk of '_my_ money!'" + + * * * * * + +Lily was left alone in Berlin. + +Generally, she hated the hotels frequented by artistes, but she was very +glad to be in one this time. She, poor little broken-down thing, was not +left to the care of a common servant; she had nice, kind nurses.... And +she had no lack of friends who took interest in her, very sincerely, for +that matter, for she was a favorite with all of them, that pretty Miss +Lily, who would soon be free.... + +Lily let herself be coddled. Pending the arrival of the money which Trampy +was to send, she wanted for nothing, especially in the way of luxuries: +chocolates, sweets, flowers, they brought her everything. Her friends +passing through Berlin, the impersonator, the Paras, many others, hearing +that she was ill, came to see her, treated her as a lady, cried out how +well she was looking, how pretty she was and how it suited her to be ill +in bed. + +Lily thought that very nice, put on a languid air, like a poor little +jaded thing that had got out of gear: + +"I shall die of overdoing it, I know I shall," she said. "I've been at the +bike ever since I was that high"--raising her hand twelve inches above the +bed--"and my heart's worn out by the hard work. My knees, too. Sit down +there on the basket trunk. You at the foot of the bed. Have a chocolate." + +Then she turned over in her sheets, which molded her firm, plump shape, +took a bag of sweets from the chair beside her and offered it round. Poor +little martyr, she had been forbidden them by the doctor, because of a +cough.... But she took them all the same, merely for the sake of taking +them, with a graceful movement, her bare arm outstretched, her wrist +making a supple curve, like a swan's neck, as she dipped her pretty hand +into the bag. + + * * * * * + +In addition to her regular friends, such as the impersonator or the Paras, +others, the people staying in the hotel, would tap discreetly at the glass +door between her room and the passage, come in on tip-toe, speak in a +whisper. + +"What nonsense!" Lily would say. "I'm not dead yet, you know!" + +And she laughed, and "Ugh! Ugh!" a cough or so, a matter of lifting her +embroidered handkerchief to her mouth, a favorite gesture. And there were +stories from all parts, the cackle of the profession. The Paras were +living together now, as they explained to her. The parrots? No go; given +them up; one had its neck wrung by a monkey in Chicago; another died of +consumption at Stockholm; the rest of the troupe sold to the +stage-doorkeepers of the different variety-theaters. His sight was +beginning to fail. She wanted smartness; wasn't--how should he put it? The +husband looked for a word--wasn't "Tottie" enough. However, they managed +somehow, as "eccentric duetists." Lily thought that very nice, those two +talents combined, very original; but could they give her any news of Ave +Maria ... a great artiste ... on the wire?... + +If ever Lily might have hoped to receive news of Ave Maria, it was during +this illness, from the artistes who visited her, on their way from +anywhere to God knows where. Lily had news of everybody: of Mirzah, the +white elephant, who had to be pole-axed for killing his keeper; of Captain +North's seals; of the Three Graces, who were doing triumphantly in +England; of Poland, the Parisienne, now starring at Bill and Boom's. Tom +was talked about: biceps like thighs, now: a hornpipe danced on the hands. +She had news of the Pawnees, of the Hauptmanns. Roofer was sending out +four new troupes, to Canada, Australia, India, Cape Colony: the +Greater-England Girls. She had news of the New Zealanders and of her +cousin Daisy, who seemed to find the star business jolly hard work: + +"The wind-bag!" said Lily. + +They talked of Jimmy, of dogs, cats and monkeys and of Tom Grave and Butt +Snyders, those great breakneck acrobats: they talked of one and all, but +not a word of Ave Maria. They knew her by reputation, as one who had been +through the mill, more than Lily had, as Lily modestly admitted. + +"Darling," said the impersonator affectionately, "don't bother about that +Ave Maria of yours. I'm jealous. Be mine, darling! How well we two should +get on together, eh, Lily?" + +"Hands off!" said Lily. "Be good ... there ... like that ... down by your +sides ... or you'll get a smacking!" + +Concerts were got up for Lily's amusement. Sketch-comedians pulled their +faces: a musician twanged his banjo. At other times, by closing her eyes, +Lily could have imagined herself in an aviary: the Whistling Wonder +imitated the nightingale, the thrush, the lark. Another, an equilibrist, +showed her how, when he was obliged to stay in bed with a broken leg and +had nobody to wait on him, he used to wait on himself by going round the +room on his hands ... like that. Lily was given, for nothing, a +performance which was worth a whole music-hall program. To put everybody +at their ease, Lily told them to smoke, took a puff or two at a cigarette +herself--"Ugh! Ugh!"--almost choked.... + +They amused themselves, among themselves, free from any constraint due to +the presence of jossers. Lily joked with them as she used to do with the +apprentices in the mornings, when they showed one another their bruises of +the day before. She made them look at her pigeon's egg, on the side of her +foot, the little ball-shaped muscle special to her profession, like the +triceps of the pugilist or the dancing-girls' calves. She was vain enough +to put on a silk stocking, poked out her foot from under the bedclothes, +let them feel "her egg," made it jump under their fingers by a sudden +contraction. + +"Is that all you've got to show us, darling?" asked the impersonator. + +"You don't want much, I _don't_ think!" said Lily, pulling back her foot +under the quilt. + +The incident was interrupted by new-comers who had also known Lily when +she was that high. They brought fresh news from Lisle Street. They had had +a drink with P. T. Clifton himself, had had a drink with an author who was +writing a book on the business. + +"Another josser who's sure to talk a lot of nonsense!" cried Lily. "If +only they told the truth and described us as we are, a sight better than +the society ladies, who come and wait for pros outside the stage-door!" + +And they went on. The healths they had drunk with this girl and that girl; +and new turns: competitors who were cropping up ... names ... names ... +Ave Maria? Dead, they said: somewhere in Ecuador or Peru. + +Then Lily stretched herself to her full length in the sheets, feeling +weary, weary, crushed under all that talk. + +And Trampy just didn't write, sent no money at all. She blushed for him +... in spite of her wish to catch him tripping, before witnesses. She was +ashamed to be his wife, his only wife, his little wife for ever. + +On that day, as it happened, Jimmy came to pay her a visit. His engagement +at the Kolossal was ending. He was to perform at the London Hippodrome, +before going to the States. A certain air of respect surrounded him from +the moment he entered the room, that Jimmy who already stood higher than +any of them among the famous bill-toppers! And they gradually retired, as +though Lily would prefer that. It was no use her saying, "Do stay!" They +went all the same; and Lily was left alone with him, a little embarrassed +and yet flattered at being thought on such good terms with Jimmy. As for +him, he had just heard about Lily's illness, Trampy's absence, and hurried +to see her, bringing her the good news that the lawsuit was over. Trampy +would have nothing more to pay.... + +From that day, Jimmy was sometimes seen at Lily's. He spoke little, sat +down on the basket trunk, listened, thought of things. He was known to +have his mind full of an invention superior to "Bridging the Abyss," one +could expect anything from him: a wonderful chap Jimmy, a bit cracked, +though, with ideas of his own which went the round of the profession and +were variously appreciated. A fund for stage-children; a reserve upon +their earnings, to be banked and kept untouched till they came of age; a +home of rest for the old and the sick; a weekly matinée for the benefit of +the fund.... + +Jimmy described the piteous lot of those who grow old in a profession +intended for youth: but a few shillings a month paid into the fund, a +benefit performance or two ... and our home is established and endowed and +we should see no more stars flung aside, to die in hopeless poverty, after +amusing crowds of people for years and years. + +"I'm with you," said Lily, laughing. "Put me down for a pension for my old +age ... if ever I reach old age ... ugh, ugh!" + +And she coughed, with the embroidered handkerchief at her lips. + +But Lily's joke was left unechoed: everybody talked professional shop, +quoted figures; the habit of signing contracts, of avoiding the traps laid +by the agents had given them all a keen sense of business. And the +frequent traveling, in the absence of education, had made them sharp at +understanding, quick in the uptake. Their clean-shaven faces fell into +wise folds, like lawyers'. + +Jimmy also explained his idea about the apprentices, the compulsory so +much per cent., the inalienable deposit paid in by the Pas and Mas ... +and, much more still, by the profs and managers.... + +"Good!" said Lily. "I'm with you!" + +There was a general laugh. The Whistling Wonder interrupted the +conversation by quacking like a duck at Jimmy and cooing like a pigeon at +Lily. Jimmy got up and said good-by, pleased to see Lily making daily +progress. + +"Ah, Lily," they said again, when he had gone, "that's the one you ought +to have married, not the other!" + +And thereupon they began to pursue their favorite theme and amuse +themselves by describing the awful troubles which she would get into one +day with "the other," that drunkard;--the man with the thirty-six girls! +And they laughed and they laughed, my! Lily herself held her sides with +laughing. + +All this was stage effect, professional exaggeration. Lily dared not +indulge in it before Jimmy. She was more sincere, always a little +embarrassed, in the presence of that man toward whom everybody was driving +her, as though they all saw farther into her life than she herself could. +She was no longer ill, only tired, with an accumulation of past +wearinesses that made her love to lie down flat. But she would get up +to-morrow, instead of remaining in bed to see her friends; no humbug +before Jimmy. + +The next day when he came, Lily was alone. So much the better, he had +something to say to her. He had made up his mind that day. His own present +prosperity formed too great a contrast with the poverty of Lily ... that +poor kiddie who had run away from home in pursuit of happiness and whom he +now found here, in this squalid room.... It was all very well to theorize +about children who have earned fortunes and who haven't a farthing; but +that was mere talk! Suppose he helped Lily a little in the meantime. He +had prepared all sorts of good reasons; he had found a smart excuse, the +great excuse of the music-hall, that he had been betting on horses and +losing. He would ask Lily to keep his money for him, as a kindness, +otherwise he simply couldn't help it, his money burned a hole in his +pocket. Then, on second thought, why all that fuss? Hadn't he known her +since she was that high? And, the moment he came in, he just handed Lily a +thousand-mark note: + +"For the law-costs, Lily! And, anything over, for your expenses, till +Trampy's money comes. Only too pleased to be of any use. You can pay it +back when it suits you. And good-by, Lily, ta-ta!" + +And he hurried out, leaving Lily with the thousand marks in her hand. + +Lily was stupefied and confused. She asked herself why? why? a real piece +of brain-work, which made her head ache. Anyhow she would give back the +money to-morrow! She wouldn't keep it! Trampy would be sure to bring some; +it was impossible that he should bring nothing; but, come what may, she +would give back the money to-morrow! She took the great oath of the stage +upon it: three fingers of her right hand uplifted; her left hand on the +lucky charm. And then she went and shut the door, turned the key in the +lock and lay down.... + + * * * * * + +A noise woke her: some one was knocking outside; but, before she could get +out of bed, one of the glass panes of the door broke into fragments. +Somebody had smashed it with his elbow. A hand came through the opening, +turned back the key. The door opened and Trampy entered, raging, +growling: + +"There's a man here!" + +"You won't find him; you can kill me if you do!" cried Lily. + +She expected a terrible scene. Trampy, drunk, had the look which he wore +on his bad days. He peered into the corners, turned a cunning eye on +Lily. + +Trampy had spent the evening at the café and there heard of the visits +which Lily received during his absence. The neighbors he didn't mind +about, but Jimmy. Jimmy again! The damned dog! Why should he poke his nose +in? And, perhaps, at heart, Trampy was not sorry to have a scene with +Lily, for he wasn't bringing home a pfennig, having spent all his money on +champagne with girls. He felt himself at fault. He would get out of it +with violence. + +"There's a man here!" repeated Trampy, walking up to Lily like a madman. + +She was humiliated to the core when she saw Trampy, dazed with tobacco, +heavy with beer, stoop and look under the bed. And, suddenly, seeing the +banknote which Lily had laid on the table, Trampy shouted: + +"You can't deny it this time. Tell me where the money comes from!" + +"It's from Jimmy," said Lily, beside herself. "He thinks of me, Jimmy +does, while you leave me here to starve. It's ... it's for the +law-costs." + +"Oh, that's another thing!" said Trampy, putting the note in his pocket. + +"Let the money be!" cried Lily, leaping out of bed. "Don't you touch it!" + +"Everything here belongs to me, I should think," said Trampy, a little +more calmly, already overcome with drunken drowsiness. "Everything, even a +dear little wifie," he continued, putting his snout under Lily's disgusted +nose. + +But she gave a movement of revulsion so spontaneous that Trampy turned +pale under the insult: + +"W-what! N-no love?" he stammered. "I'm not used to that. I can get +l-l-love for the asking ... at the ca-ca-café ... or the th-theater ... or +anywhere." + +And Trampy, making a false step, caught hold of the curtain and drew it +back. + +In the pitiless light of the morning, he appeared to Lily like a drowned +man, with a puffed-out face, swollen eyes and wan cheeks. To think that +she belonged to that! Lily spat at him in contempt. Oh, rather sleep with +lizards and guinea-pigs than that; rather with a woolly dog, like Poland, +that Parisienne! Oh, to get rid of him and be free again, thought Lily, +never again to have Trampy before her eyes! And, suddenly, her mind was +made up. She dressed herself hurriedly. + +"Where are you going?" asked Trampy. + +"I'm off!" said Lily. "I've had enough of this!" + +"What's that?" said Trampy, dull-mouthed, flinging his body across the +bed. "What's that? Say it again!" + +"I say I hate the sight of you! I'm going back to my Pa and Ma!" + +"You, you're going back to ... well, good-by, darling, goo-good ... +goo-good-by," stammered Trampy, sprawling on the bed, among the disordered +clothes.... + +Lily moved freely round the room, without even troubling about him, like +one who has made up her mind once and for all. She packed up her things in +the basket trunk. She put her bike outside the door; and, just as she was +going to look for a neighbor to help her down with her trunk, an idea +entered her head. She stopped on the threshold, came back to Trampy, +slipped her hand into his pocket and gingerly took out the banknote: + +"An insult like that!" she muttered. "I'd rather starve than not give +Jimmy back the money!" + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +"Lily!" + +She thought she heard herself called, in her dream, just because she was +back in her room again, in London, among familiar objects. She felt as if +her life was going on exactly as in the old days, as if nothing had +happened in between. Her marriage? A nightmare. And her home-coming +yesterday had been very nice: no questions asked, no whys and hows. Her +parents knew, of course. They knew all about her troubles with Trampy. But +no reproaches, nothing: kisses, everybody very happy, including herself. +She snuggled under the bedclothes, in the hollow left by Glass-Eye, who +had gone down-stairs. Lily felt sorry that she had left her trunk at the +hotel, when she thought of the cordial welcome she had received at the +hands of Pa and Ma. + +It was quite three weeks since she left her husband. She went over it all +again in her head. Her departure from Berlin! She meant to go straight to +Jimmy, first, and give him back that money; only, those Vienna hats, +displayed in the shop-windows, those dresses, those boots, when she saw +all that, Lily understood that she could not return to London, to her +parents, with dingy-looking clothes, after her successes on the continent! +Pa and Ma would have laughed in her face. + +Lily felt bound to say that she had been most reasonable: three hundred +marks for that Vienna dress, which suited her so well; why, Jimmy himself +would have approved. + +"Let's see!" + +She reckoned on her fingers: forty marks the hat, three hundred the dress; +and the underthings, chemises, stays, a silk petticoat, boots ... that +came to ... came to ... a week at a hotel in Berlin ... time lost at +Hamburg ... the journey from Hamburg to Rotterdam, Harwich and London ... +the hotel on arriving, so as to be able to dress before going home: it +left her just fifty shillings to play the lady with and buy presents for +Pa and Ma. And Jimmy ... Jimmy, who was in London also, due to open at the +Hippodrome! And she had sworn that she would give him back that money at +once! To quiet her conscience, Lily, under her blankets, took the +"counter-oath" of the stage, with her left hand behind her back, the +fingers closed over the thumb, that she would repay him the money, most +certainly, as soon as she began to earn any. + +"Lily! Can I come in, Lily?" + +It was Ma, bringing her breakfast and a paper, _The Era_. Lily gave a +quick glance round the room: her skirt was hanging on the peg; the bodice +lay, without a crease, over the back of a chair, the hat on top of it, the +linen neatly folded: good! She did not look a scarecrow, at any rate! And, +sitting up against the pillows, with a napkin on her knees, Lily +breakfasted daintily, with her finger-tips: + +"Pa, Where's Pa?" asked Lily. "Tell him to come up." + +"Your Pa has gone out with the apprentices," said Ma. "He wouldn't wake +you, you looked so tired last night. Here, Lily, some more coffee? Another +slice of bread and butter?" continued Ma, spreading it for her. + +"'K you!" + +Lily accepted this as her due, like a lady accustomed to the manners of +good society, to having her breakfast brought to her in bed by the maid. + +"Oh, Ma," said Lily, as she sugared her coffee, "they do understand things +on the continent! They know how to appreciate artistes there. I've had +such successes!" + +"And you were angry with us for teaching you your profession," said Ma. +"You see now that it was for your good." + +"But it depends on how it's done," said Lily. "If I had always been +treated like this, I should never have left you." + +"Well, you don't bear your Pa and me a grudge, I suppose," said Ma, "or +you wouldn't have come back. We knew you'd come back. This has always been +your address; your Pa never took your name out of _The Era_." + +"You didn't treat me fair," said Lily, "but I've forgotten most of it. Oh, +don't let's talk about it any more! Let's talk of something else; let's +talk of you." + +Lily knew all about their struggles, their successes; had heard of it on +the stage, in the cafés. But here, in her room, as described by Ma, she +put her finger on it, so to speak, and realized more fully what a blank +her flight had made, what a catastrophe it had been for them. + +And Ma gave details, tried to interest Lily in the fate of the troupe; +told her that, for months, the troupe had been refused everywhere, because +she wasn't in it, and her Pa had to change apprentices. + +"I was the troupe!" said Lily. + +"Oh, the trouble your Pa took running after his own fat freaks! I thought +he would get heart-disease! And months of it, without earning a thing. Oh, +if your Pa hadn't had some money ...!" + +"But he had plenty!" said Lily. + +"Oh, not much, not so much as you think!" Ma hastened to say, thinking she +saw a spiteful allusion in Lily's remark. + +"Yes, all right, I know," said Lily. "Never mind about that. It's my turn +to make money now, for myself." + +"Still that independent spirit! We haven't got her yet!" thought Ma. + +And she went on talking of the troupe, of the cousin who played the star. + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "A nice sort of star!" + +"It's not every one who can star in Berlin by herself, like you," said Ma. +"Do you know, Lily, you ought to stay with us: we should get on so well +together. You would manage the troupe; and, one day--who knows?--you might +make a nice marriage." + +"But I am married, Ma! I didn't live with him! Do you mean to say you +think ...? Not I!" + +"I know you're married, but you can get a divorce. Jimmy used to make love +to you; now there's a man who ..." + +"And you used to say he was a drunkard, Ma!" + +"Never!" said Ma, rising to leave. + +Lily was flattered, at heart, to be received like that. She also felt +proud that her Pa had not been ashamed of her and that he had kept her +name in _The Era_. Well, they treated her as a lady, saw her value, gave +her her due. And she lay for a while enjoying her triumph, while she +turned the pages of _The Era_ in an absent-minded way: Miss This, Miss +That, Cape Town, Calcutta ... actors, singers ... + +"Those aren't artistes, any of them!" + +Programs, plays, songs: "_Why I Love Women_!" + +"I know, you footy rotter!" + +"_Is Marriage a Failure_?" + +"I should think so!" thought Lily. + +And articles, biographies ... + +"Pack of lies!" thought Lily. + +And pages of "Wanted ... Wanted ..." + +Lily ran her eye down the columns: artistes' boarding-houses, +_costumiers_, scene-painters, dancing-schools, every town, every theater. +Hullo!--she had turned the page--Tom, the dancer--Hullo! At Milan! + +"Bravo, Tom!" + +Jimmy at the Hippodrome next week; private address, Whitcomb Mansions. + +"Pooh, he's well off! What's fifty pounds to him?" + +Hullo! Miss Lily--Berlin--Permanent address, Rathbone Place, London, W. + +"Well done, Pa! Serve him right, the tramp cyclist!" said Lily, throwing +down the paper and jumping out of bed. + +Quite a business, her toilet. She was two hours titivating herself. She +wanted Pa and Ma to be proud of her, of her successes on the continent. +And, when the apprentices came in from practice, you should have seen her +walk into the dining-room. A little air of simplicity, her forehead put +out for her delighted Pa to kiss, hands all round--"Hullo, girls! Hullo, +Daisy!" And she sat down like a lady accustomed to smart restaurants, who +does not despise dinner at home, however, with a boiled leg of mutton to +recruit her inside after those champagne suppers, those truffled +pheasants, that damned continental cooking! She accepted everything, and +thought it all very nice, simple life, simple joys, the only ones! + +She set a good example to the new apprentices, who eyed her stealthily, +instead of eating, for Miss Lily's presence turned their heads entirely. +My! A star like that, a real one! Lily Clifton, the New Zealander on +Wheels! And dressed ... dressed like a lady in the front boxes! Cousin +Daisy was green with jealousy. Lily talked of her travels, her successes +and the crossing, gee! Waves "miles high," the boat standing on end! Glass +Eye Maud devoured her with her one eye, screwed up her fat red cheeks in a +fixed and motionless laugh, scared before Lily, who came from over the +sea, from countries where savages live. Glass-Eye, in her perturbation, +served Lily first. Pa made no objection, asked Lily's permission to light +his pipe: was she sure she didn't mind smoke? Lord, you never knew, with +those ladies! He swelled with pride. If it had been Christmas-time, he +would have ordered a pudding, my, a real wedding-cake three feet across! +His ideas of grandeur returned, his triumphal tour round the world, the +definite extermination of the fat freaks ... if Lily remained with him +... + +After dinner, the apprentices retired, to finish sewing some bloomers. +Lily approved: + +"Bloomers? Very nice ... for a troupe!" + +Presently, in the afternoon, the three of them went for a walk: Pa freshly +shaven; Ma decked out in her jewelry: Lily did not wear any, "only in the +evening when she went into society." Tottenham Court Road, the Palace, the +Hippodrome.... Pa would have liked to write up on his hat: + +"Lily has come back!" + +He looked to right and left, had the satisfaction of distributing nods and +bows to some artistes, with Lily on his arm, as though to say: + +"You see it was wrong, all that people were saying, about those smackings! +And the proof is, here she is,--on my arm, damn it!" + +As for Lily, she thought only of showing herself: + +"If Trampy could see me now!" she reflected. "And Jimmy, if he could see +me, in my fine dress, while it's still new!" + +Regent Street reminded Lily of Pa's generosity. She would not be +behindhand. Pa had to accept a red tie, a pair of gloves, a match-box, as +a present; Ma, an embroidered handkerchief, a lucky charm. Lily had the +satisfaction of paying with gold and receiving change. + +She was tired, in the evening, put on a languid air: gee, her mother would +have shaken her for less in the old days! Lily put it on still more, to +show them all that times were changed. But she did the troupe the honor of +going to see their performance at the Castle. It was a great success for +her. + +"Made a bit, eh?" asked the manager, seeing her fine dress. "Coming back +for good, to star with the New Zealanders?" + +"I don't know; I shall see." + +Lily was quite ready to come back, in her own mind, but she wanted to +return in triumph. It all depended on the price offered: to think that she +had worked for them at ten shillings a week, when she was worth quite two +pounds a night! She would see; she would make her own conditions: for +instance, herself in tights, the others in bloomers ... a special tune for +her entrance ... no star beside herself! + +Lily watched the New Zealanders' performance with the air of an expert: + +"Not so bad; quite good ..." + +And she had various ideas: herself as a fine lady, undressing on the +stage. Or rather, no, as a statue, on a pedestal in a park ... with Cousin +Daisy at her feet, throwing flowers to her. Then she would come to life, +as though waking from sleep, and step down prettily to a special tune. +Hullo, what's this? A bike! And then, gee, a blast of the trombone and she +would show them what a star was, a real one! Yes ... she would see ... if +Pa and Ma insisted ... perhaps ... + +But her real triumph was next day, at practice. Her Pa, excited by her +presence, ran and ran, notwithstanding his palpitations of the heart. It +was no use his trying to restrain himself: his enthusiasm mastered him as +soon as he saw them all in the saddle, his little Woolly-legs! + +And no more Tom: he was all by himself now; and, when he sat down to take +breath, he still ordered his little Woolly-legs about, shouted his cutting +remarks at them. + +Lily raised her head proudly. She seemed to take the apprentices to +witness. She had gone through that, much worse than that, for years! She +was a gentle little lady, all the same. Besides, she was all for +gentleness: + +"Leave her to me, Pa; you're making poor Cousin Daisy quite nervous. She +doesn't know; I'll show her!" + +And, under her great waving feather, Lily, without even taking off her +gloves: + +"There, put your foot there ... like that ... and like that ... firmly. +No, not like that!" + +And, suddenly, stimulated with professional zeal: + +"Wait, I'll show you how it's done!" + +And, in an instant, to show them all how you're got up when you're a star +and when you come back from the continent, Lily took off her bodice, +pinned up her skirt amid the rustling of the silk and, bare-armed, in a +lace-trimmed chemisette: + +"Now then, I'll show you!" + +And Lily, with all her little muscles alive, took a bike, jumped on it as +she would on a stool and then--yoop!--the bike on its back-wheel, spinning +round like a top. + +"Twirls are as easy as anything: you only have to know how to do them. +Come on! Have a try!" + +And the other, encouraged by a friendly slap, tried in her turn +and--yoop!--succeeded ... very nearly. + +Pa was enraptured at the mere sight of Lily's little curled nostrils and +her earnest look: + +"What a professor she would make!" he thought. "If ever she takes the +belt, she'll be simply grand. I can just fold my arms!" + +But he made her dress very quickly. That exhibition of dainty underwear, +which flattered his pride as a father, would have driven girls used to +sewing their own calico shifts quite crazy: there would have been no +holding them; and, besides, artistes might come in at any moment. It would +not do for Lily to be seen half-dressed like that; and she realized this +herself, like a sensible little lady, who hates scandal. + +"Stay with us, Lily," said her Pa, at home, after dinner, when the +apprentices had gone out. "Stay with us." + +"It's your duty," said Ma. + +"If you stay," continued Pa, "I'll make you a present of a brand-new +banjo!" + +"Thank you, no more banjo for me," said Lily, laughing. "I've had my +share." + +"All right, no more banjo," agreed Pa, "provided you stay with us: that's +all I ask. I shall be afraid of nobody then; I'll show them what an +artiste is!" + +And, warming to his subject, Pa built up his plans: the great English +tours; and Eastern and Western America, Australia, South Africa: + +"Eh, Lily? Wouldn't you like to see it all again? Or else, for once, I'll +get up a troupe and take it round the world myself, with you in it!" + +"But, Pa," said Lily, very coldly, "I have business arrangements of my +own, more engagements than I want." + +"It's a business arrangement I'm proposing to you," said Pa. + +"And shall I come on in tights?" + +"In tights, if you like." + +"And no other star but me!" continued Lily, explaining her idea: +undressing on the stage, or else the statue, her own scenery ... + +"Capital idea!" cried Pa. + +"And then there's the money side of the question," said Lily. "I make a +lot of money now. I want to work for myself." + +"And what you make with us, won't it be yours, one day?" suggested Ma. + +"Stay with us," said Pa, "and Trampy will burst with spite and you'll be +much happier here, with your Pa and Ma, instead of with that +good-for-nothing!" + +"Or instead of remaining alone, which is even worse," Ma insisted. "You +want us still, Lily ..." + +"And you me! Let us talk business," interrupted Lily, who would have liked +a pencil and paper, to make her calculations with. + +Ma, in her heart of hearts, did not think it at all nice of a daughter to +consider only her own interests; but Pa hurried up, thought Lily was quite +right ... although he was greatly embarrassed in reality and asked himself +how much he could well offer her, so as to make a profit for himself. + +Fortunately, he was relieved of his predicament by Glass-Eye, who came in +with a telegram for Miss Lily. + +"Give it here!" said Lily, who noticed, as she opened the envelope, that a +chair had creaked and that the palm of her left hand was itching: a sign +of money. "I'll bet it's about an engagement. I have offers from every +side; you have no idea ... Well, I never!" she said. "A telegram from +Jimmy, at the Horse Shoe! I thought he was at Whitcomb Mansions. What can +he want with me? He asks me to call on him! Funny way of treating a lady. +Why can't he come himself?" + +But Pa and Ma thought differently: Jimmy was "somebody," a man to be +considered, right at the top of the profession; she'd have done better to +marry him and not her Trampy Wheel-Pad!... + +"You must go," insisted Ma. "Don't you like going alone? Shall I come with +you?" + +"Yes, that's different," said Lily, who had a certain pride and who felt +sure that Jimmy would never mention that thousand marks before a witness. + +Her heart beat a little, as she went up the staircase of the Horse Shoe to +the third floor, on the left, door 32. At first, she was surprised that he +should be there, having read in _The Era_ ... but he might have moved. On +the whole, she was not sorry to show herself to Jimmy in her pretty frock, +he having seen her last in her room in Berlin, looking ill, unkempt and +frightfully ugly. She was not sorry, either, that Ma was with her: + +"He's in love, I suppose," said Lily. "Everybody makes love to me: why do +they, Ma? I'm not a bit pretty, off the stage." + +And she took a mischievous pleasure in enlarging upon her successes and +her flirtations, there, on the staircase of the Horse Shoe, with Ma beside +her, and no smackings, gee, nor any fear of smackings in the future! What +a change since her marriage! + +"Yes," Lily went on, as she read the numbers on the doors--29--"Ma, you +ought to see the flowers I get, the chocolates, the sweets"--31--"but all +that does not prevent a lady from keeping straight"--32-- + +Then she gave a stifled cry, her voice stuck in her throat: Trampy, Trampy +himself stood in the doorway, his hands in his pockets, a cigar in his +mouth, his hat cocked over one ear; and he looked at her with a bantering +air: + +"Sorry to disappoint you, Miss Lily. You hoped to find some one else, +eh?" + +Ma, utterly flabbergasted, had dropped on to a bench in the passage, in +the shadow. Trampy did not even see her. Lily was crimson with shame at +being caught tripping by Trampy: she could not deny it. She wanted to run +away, but, stupefied with surprise, remained where she stood, with dilated +pupils, open-mouthed. + +"You can look at me till to-morrow morning and it won't help you," said +Trampy quietly, with the air of a man who has prepared his speech. "I've +got you this time! I sent the telegram; I knew you'd come, wherever he +thought fit to meet you; you'd have come for less than Jimmy; you'd have +come for the impersonator or any one else, never mind whom; any one in the +rotten lot, any gentleman in the front boxes, eh? It's 'Whistle and I'll +come to you, my lad!' with you! But I thought Jimmy would do best, Jimmy +your lover, whom you followed to London. Now my luck has brought me here, +too ... for my work ... not like you! And, by the way, Miss Lily, have you +brought me that thousand marks which you got from Jimmy and which I was +going to give back to him, when you stole it out of my pocket? Or did you +spend it on the way here? You hadn't a rag to your back, when you left me, +and I find you dressed up like a Tottie. My compliments, Miss Lily." + +"O God, strike him dead!" prayed Lily. "Strike him, kill him, kill him!" + +Lily felt like fainting. She could not breathe, her ribs seemed to be +crushing her lungs. At last she drew a long, slow breath: + +"Well," she stammered, overcome with shame, "well, we can be divorced ... +if you like." + +"I'll see," said Trampy, hardening his voice and throwing away his cigar. +"Go back to your Jimmy in the meantime. You may be sure I have no use for +a traitress like you, an idler who refuses to work, a woman who lets every +man make love to her!" And, suddenly, pointing to the stairs, "You can be +sure that I've no further use for you! Get out of this, damn you! And +you're not going, mind you: I'm kicking you out!" + +And therewith Trampy went back into his room and slammed the door in her +face. + +Mrs. Clifton and Lily remained glued where they were. At last, Ma, +trembling all over, rose from the bench and led away her daughter, who +shook her fist at the door, crying: + +"Liar!" + +"Why didn't you speak just now, my poor Lily?" said Ma. "You ought to have +answered back! So it's true, all that? A nice thing! You, who +pretended...." + +"Oh, let go, you're crushing my sleeve!" retorted Lily angrily, pulling +her arm away from the hand that clasped it. + +She went down the stairs, followed by Ma, without knowing what she was +doing. She would have liked to find a train on the pavement, a motor, to +jump into it, to make off and never see anybody again, after the +humiliation which she had undergone before Ma. + +She flung herself into the first cab that came along, yelled a direction +to the driver: Hyde Park, anywhere! Ma found herself by Lily's side, +without being asked to step in, and she repeated: + +"Lily, you ought to have ... Why did you let him treat you like that? Is +it true?" + +"First of all," said Lily, suddenly turning and facing her Ma; "first of +all, it's your fault ... yours ... all that's happened, damn it! If you +had been less hard on me, I shouldn't have gone off with that footy +rotter!" + +"I've often been sorry since," said Ma. "I've been sorry for it. Calm +yourself, Lily. And then ... were we so very wrong? Look how your husband +has just treated you before me, before your mother!" + +"He's a liar! I swear it!" + +"And Jimmy's thousand marks? What was that money for? Why didn't you give +it back?" + +"It's a lie! It's a lie!" + +"You, who pretended you were making such a lot of money!" continued Ma. +"There's not a word of truth in what you said. You haven't a penny. I can +see it. Oh, you're the same as ever, my poor Lily--extravagant habits, +dresses--and here you are, penniless, left to yourself with your expensive +tastes. You'll die in poverty one day, without a Pa or Ma. Come back to +us, Lily." + +"To make nothing? No, thank you!" + +"Who says so?" + +"Oh, I know! Ten shillings a week, eh? Family life, as that old beast of a +Fuchs says!" + +"Lily," said Ma severely, "don't insult decent people! Have some respect, +at any rate." + +But Lily had no respect left for anybody. Pas, Mas, Trampies, Nunkies, one +and all, were so many slave-drivers! + +"And yet it's quite true, I'm penniless," thought Lily to herself. "I, who +have earned a fortune for you!" she grumbled under her breath, stifling a +sob. + +"You're mad, my poor Lily! All that we have will be yours some day. You +never think of the future; you spend your last penny." + +"I earn and I spend!" + +"And suppose you fell ill, my poor Lily?" + +"Hospitals aren't made for dogs! Besides, I have friends. And then, at +least, I shall have had some fun for my money, while you, if you died +to-morrow, Pa would marry another woman, who would spend all your savings, +all the money I have earned for you." + +"Lily," cried Mrs. Clifton, "you're insulting your father!" + +"I'm telling you things as they are; and I won't come back to you, because +I can make more elsewhere! Every one for himself!" + +"But you don't make a penny!" said Ma, gradually getting angry. "You heard +Trampy, just now. He called you an idler. Your Pa, at least, used to make +you work. You're trying to bluff us with those stories of your successes. +I dare say you'll be glad, one day, of a crust of bread with us." + +"Ma!" + +"Your contracts," said Ma, "you're always talking of your contracts. I +should like to see them and your programs too." + +"Certainly," said Lily. "I'll show them to you: Munich, Berlin, Hamburg. +I've had successes everywhere, engagements everywhere! I make more by +myself than all Pa's troupe put together!" + +"Yes, but how do you get your engagements?" said Ma, pale with anger, +seeing that Lily was escaping them and, this time, for good. "Tell me how +you get them?" + +"Why, through my talent, I suppose." + +"Your talent! Pooh! You've none left! You get them through your friends: +through your Jimmy, your gentlemen friends...." + +"That's a lie!" + +"You get them ... by looking pretty and getting round the men ... you ... +you ... you...." + +"Mother!" + +Lily drew back her shoulder, her arm stiff, ready to strike; but a sense +of respect withheld her. + +"Stop!" she cried to the cabman, in a hoarse voice. + +And, without even waiting for the cab to pull up beside the curb, Lily +jumped out in the roadway, into the mud. + +"Mother," she said to Mrs. Clifton, "mother, I shall never forget this!" + +And, mechanically, in her haste to get away, she handed the man what money +she had left, made a sign to him to go on and, without saying good-by, +Lily saw the cab drive off. It was evening, in a quiet street: where was +she? Lily did not know; her head was in a whirl. She recognized Old +Compton Street: had they gone no farther? It seemed to her that she had +been riding for an hour ... but no, barely a few minutes.... + +Alone in London, without money, in the mud, in the dark, oh! she wished +she could be swallowed up in the sewer. She felt like killing herself. + +"If I walk toward the Thames," she muttered, "I am done for!" + +And she took a street on the left, leading in the direction of the +embankment. The movement restored her to her self-consciousness. + +An idea came to her, a distant hope, a glimmer, very faint at first, which +suddenly grew in dimensions within her and lit her up in every particle. +Jimmy! He appeared to her, all at once, like a giant eight feet high, as +on his posters. Ah, people seemed to associate her life with his, to +presume all sorts of things ... though he had never even kissed her! Yes, +he had ... on the stage ... in Berlin, but that was before everybody! And +everything drove her toward him, she always found herself on his path: +Jimmy was everywhere, always. And Jimmy was powerful and he was +good-looking and he loved her! He loved her! To keep straight was no use. +Why, all of them, all of them, including her husband, that footy rotter, +who was jealous of Jimmy without reason: she'd give him cause for jealousy +soon, if it killed him with rage, him and all the rotten lot. And she'd do +it that very moment! At two minutes' walk from where she stood, in +Whitcomb Mansions! She was not one of those women whom you can drive to +despair with impunity: she had her vengeance ready.... + + * * * * * + +Jimmy was alone in his room; his table was covered with books and papers. +He was still at his great plan. + +Jimmy sat plunged in work, without the least thought of what was happening +near him: in fact, he did not even know that Lily was in London. His +installation of "Bridging the Abyss" at the Hippodrome had taken him the +whole day. There was a scenic effect to contrive with the manager: a +"hydrodrama" ... bridging the abyss over a torrent ... with a waterfall +behind ... and the whole thing set and framed in a pantomine, which was +ready for production, because Jimmy had been expected for a month; in +short, it would go of itself. + +And under the peaceful light he resumed his compasses, or else flung +himself back in his chair, lit a cigarette, followed the smoke with his +eyes.... + +Poor Lily, what was she doing, over there, in Berlin, thought Jimmy. She +deserved something better than Trampy, that adorable Lily, to whom he, +Jimmy, would gladly have devoted his life ... and whom he felt as it were +swelling up inside him ... in his heart ... in his brain ... in spite of +himself! That poor Lily! To think that he could do nothing for her, that +he almost regretted having done her a service, after the short scene which +he had had the day after with Trampy, blinded with jealousy, because he, +Jimmy, had visited Lily during his absence; the reproaches which that +simple action had earned for him: + +"Look here, you righter of wrongs, you who preach to others and go making +love to their wives!" + +To have put himself in a position that he could be spoken to like that, in +a position to have Lily suspected! What a shame! Oh, the worries it would +cause her! Yes, he had been imprudent, perhaps: it was all his fault; +another man's wife.... + +[Illustration: "Oh, you mean cur!" roared Lily.] + +A tap at the door. It was opened behind him, before he had time to say, +"Come in," and Lily walked up to Jimmy, who sat dumb with surprise: a +strange Lily, feverish, distraught with passion. At any other time, she +would have felt constrained, because of the thousand marks, or proud to +show off her dress. Perhaps also she had prepared things to say. But all +that was forgotten, gone, blown away, like a straw in the storm, for +nothing came from her but this, in an anxious voice: + +"Tell me, Jimmy, is it true that you love me?" + +"Why," said Jimmy, perceiving Lily's agitation, without guessing the +reason: oh, but for Lily to do a thing like that! How she would regret it +later; it was terrible this time really. He saw all that at a glance; a +great pity invaded him; and yet he was a man of flesh and blood and felt +stirred to the marrow. "Why," he began, in a voice which he strove to make +friendly, no more, "why, Lily, who told you that? Why really ... I...." + +"Jimmy," she cried, fixing her eyes, like two flaming swords upon him, +"answer me! Do you love me or not?" + +Jimmy, turning as pale as a corpse, looked at her without flinching and +shook his head in sign of no. + +"Oh, you mean cur!" roared Lily. + +And she struck him on the face with her clenched fist. + + * * * * * + +Then she went out without a word, ran down the stairs, out into the blaze +of Leicester Square, made for the dark streets and plunged into the +night.... + + + + +INTERMEZZO + +I + + +The artistes' special left Euston at noon that Sunday. The Three Graces +were the first to arrive; then the waiting-rooms, until lately deserted, +began to fill with silent groups of five or six persons at a time, who +had, no doubt, arranged the night before, at the theater, to travel +together and avail themselves of the reduction allowed to members of the +M. H. A. R. A.: a reduction of at least a third, provided there were five +in the party. They now swarmed into the station from every side: pale +faces, under huge feathers; wrists hooped round with bangles; breasts +bristling with gollywogs and lucky charms. There were little girls with +bows over their ears, dressed in plush and velvet and following their Pas +and Mas. There were troupes of carpet acrobats, with low foreheads, broad +shoulders and bow legs; and profs, bosses and managers, recognizable by +the richness of their watch-chains, looked after the luggage. Theater-vans +discharged immense basket trunks, marked with letters a foot +high--"Brothers This ... Sisters That ... So-and-so Trio ... Miss +Such-and-such"--and bearing on the handles, on the yellow labels of the M. +H. A. R. A., addresses of Empires and Palaces and of Grand Opera-Houses +and Grand Theaters, too, for there were not only "artistes," but singers, +actresses, "chicken-necks," "woolly-legs," who rubbed shoulders with the +muscular acrobats. All of them crowded round the booking-office; they +handed in professional cards, helped one another, among pros; those who +were traveling alone borrowed tickets to enable them to get their +over-weight luggage labeled: complicated pieces of apparatus, +nickel-plated rods wrapped up in sacking, equilibrists' perches; the +coaches, which were carried by assault, were encumbered with hand-luggage, +bags, parcels, picture-frames containing photographs for the doors of the +theaters, heaped up in the racks, under the seats, in the corridor; and +there was a constant fire of "Hullo, girls! Hullo, boys!" + +The Three Graces, standing before the carriage-door, now that their things +were settled, watched this tumult sadly, especially Thea. What was it? +Nunkie's absence? No, but poor Lily had been kicked out by her husband, so +they heard, and turned out by her mother as well: was it possible? Lily +was dead or vanished, they didn't know which; they were told about it at +the theater; a stagehand had met her near St. Martin's Lane, in a small +street, with her hair undone and her hat on the back of her head, crying, +biting her handkerchief, drunk, apparently, and running in the direction +of the Thames. And, since then, they had had no news of her. + +"Poor Lily, what can she have done, what can have happened?" sighed Thea. +"Poor Lily, she was always so nice!" + +Thea could have cried for sadness. + +The start caused a diversion. The collector punched the tickets: + +"Blackpool? Glasgow?" + +The Three Graces stepped in, the engine whistled. But a porter rushed +past, pushing before him, with a rumbling like thunder, a huge trunk on a +barrow. Thea turned her head and a name in scarlet letters caught her +eyes: "Miss Lily!" And, running after the trunk, magnificently bedecked, +in a hat all feathers and gold tassels, who? What? Lily! Lily herself, red +and out of breath, leading her bike with one hand, carrying an umbrella in +the other, and Glass-Eye, her arms stretched wide with parcels, following +in her train! Just time to throw her bike to the porter in the luggage-van +and quick, quick, Lily came scudding back, hustled along by the +train-master! She would have missed the start, were it not for Thea, who +opened the door and, with her arms of steel, gripped her as she passed: + +"Hullo, Lily! That's a good girl! Quick!" + +Lily leaped into the carriage with a bound. Glass-Eye, entangled in her +parcels, had, amid general laughter, to be dragged by main force, through +the narrow doorway, like a piece of luggage. Oof, just in time ... Off +they were! + +In the railway-carriage was nothing but gaiety and handshaking and +ingenuous questions: + +"Traveling by yourself? Where's Trampy? And your Pa and Ma? So you're not +dead, eh?" + +"Certainly not," said Lily. "If they had come to annoy me at the station, +I'd have shown them if I was alive or dead! I was ready for them!" + +And she brandished her umbrella. + +Then she had to make herself comfortable, to find room for all her +belongings as best she could. Lily pushed Glass-Eye about, like a fine +lady used to being waited on: + +"Here, take my hat, Glass-Eye; hang it up. Take my wrist-bag. Wait, give +me my handkerchief first!" + +To look at Lily, all fresh and rosy, one would never have suspected the +trials she had passed through, but a few days ago. Still quite flustered +with that hurried departure, she smiled as she watched the Three Graces, +who, on their side, were carefully folding up their cloaks. And the train +rushed on, rushed on through deep cuttings, dashed through deserted +stations ... and then, suddenly, entered a tunnel. Lily, but for the noise +of the wheels, would have seen herself as she had been that night. Oh, she +would never forget it! It clutched at her heart. She clenched her fists +with anger. Turned out by Trampy! Insulted by her Ma! Flouted by Jimmy, +that mean cur! Oh, when she left his place, a few days ago, she felt like +a madwoman! Her first idea was to disappear, to take a header into the +black water! But, ugh, the mud, the cold! And then the hospital, with +those people who cut you up! She must also show Pa and Ma whether it was +through her gentlemen friends that she meant to earn more by herself alone +than they and all their rotten troupe put together. Perhaps Pa and Ma +would come to her, one day, to beg their bread! But Ma must first ask +Lily's pardon on her knees. On her knees, damn it! And, in despair, +inwardly raging, her chest aching with grief and spite, Lily, penniless, +but brave for all that and ready for the fray, returned to her hotel, +where, to her great surprise, she found some one waiting for her, with a +parcel in her hand. + +Lily recognized Glass-Eye. + +It was, indeed, poor Glass-Eye. When she heard what had happened and that +Lily would starve in London and a jolly good thing too, that she could +sleep in Leicester Square for all they cared: when she heard this behind +the door, Glass-Eye almost fainted. Without a word to a soul, she had +packed up her parcel and gone to join Lily; and Lily, in her misery, cried +for joy when she saw the decent girl, who offered her her savings, twelve +shillings in all, saying: + +"Take me with you, Miss Lily; I'll wait on you for nothing. Take me, take +me!" + +Oh, not to feel alone, to have some one beside you who loves you: that had +consoled Lily.... + +The next day, accompanied by Glass-Eye, she called on the agents, in the +Leicester Square quarter, at the risk of meeting Pa, or Trampy, or Jimmy; +but who cared? With her umbrella in her hand, she feared nobody and did +not give a fig for any of them. + +Nothing for her at Harrasford's, where the Warwicks were starring. Very +well, she'd come back again some other time! And straight on to Bill and +Boom's in Whitcomb Mansions, below Jimmy. As she climbed the stairs, Lily +screwed up her eyes, like a short-sighted person, for fear of meeting +Jimmy, prepared a haughty attitude; but she saw no one. She was not kept +waiting, was shown in at once to Boom's office. Lily Clifton? the New +Zealander on Wheels? Straight away a contract! And Lily left with twenty +music-halls in her pocket! Liverpool, Birmingham, Sheffield and so on: a +week in each town, beginning on Monday next. And that was how she got +engagements through her gentlemen friends! + +The next day, she borrowed some money on her contracts from the Brixton +financier: "loans from five pounds upward, in the strictest confidence." +Then, proposed and seconded by two artistes, she joined the Variety +Artistes' Federation and, in return for ten shillings, received the red +card of membership. She paid another ten shillings and the same for +Glass-Eye, her maid, to the M. H. A. R. A. and obtained the right, for one +year, to travel at reduced fares, including an insurance against +accidents: five hundred pounds to her heirs in case of death--her +heirs!--and two hundred and fifty pounds if she lost a hand or foot in a +railway accident; and one hundred and fifty for a serious injury. Then she +bought a big gollywog, for her dressing-room, and a little lucky charm for +her watch-chain--a closed black hand, with the thumb between the fingers, +as a preservative against falls--and with that and her bike she would have +set out for India and Australia as calmly as she might have taken the +omnibus to Earl's Court. + +Oh yes, she had done a deal in those few days and, above all, she had got +out of her difficulties, thanks, to a certain extent, to Glass-Eye, who +had comforted her. And besides, hang it, that was all over now! The +worries were forgotten, and, as the train emerged from the tunnel, Lily, +with her arm round Glass-Eye's waist, was patting that decent girl and +Glass-Eye lifted her one good eye to Lily, while the other, the glass one, +gazing fixedly at the door, reflected the thinly scattered houses and the +beginning of the country. + +Lily, when she had recovered a little from her mad rush, lay down at full +length among her bags, parcels and bandboxes. She laughed with the Three +Graces; and there was no one there to interfere with them; there they +were, by themselves, among themselves, alone in the compartment, a +regular, rollicking school-girls' picnic. Lily made them scream by telling +them about her life since they had last seen her. She felt a need for a +reaction of gaiety, after her sadness of the days just past. The Graces +fixed their round eyes upon her, upon that Lily who was so thoroughly up +in all sorts of things which they knew only by hearsay: men, love. A life +fit to kill a horse; and a very nice girl, for all that: a kind of +forbidden fruit, pink and fair-haired, soft to the touch; and no jealousy +between them, friendship rather, a rare thing, in the "Profession".... + +Lily grew excited in talking, told of her successes, the receptions, the +teas she used to give in her drawing-room, in Berlin, when she was ill. +Jossers, according to her, would have paid any price to have been there! +It would form a subject of conversation over there for many a long day to +come. And then her journeys, her impressions of the continent--"Jam with +your meat, my dear!"--and such clean dressing-rooms in Germany; very +severe managers, though: gee, harder than Pas. But very good to her, all +the same. The Battenberg at Leipzig: nothing but leading turns; and she +had topped the bill at Leipzig! And to see all those people eating, during +the show, when you were hungry yourself, had a very funny effect upon you. +By the way, she didn't like that system of being lodged and boarded by the +management; it was all very well for those people; but none of that for +her: give her a nice flat in town or a smart hotel! Once she was started, +Lily never stopped, called Glass-Eye to witness, went on telling of her +life in Berlin; how Jimmy had fallen in love with her when he saw her on +the stage, and he had the cheek to want her to run away with him; but who +got a box on the ear that day, eh? She perhaps: yes, rather, over the +left! And Jimmy and Trampy had fought for her! So had all the pros, worse +than dogs in September! + +"What a rotten lot!" concluded Lily. + +"My, how you've changed!" said Thea. "You used to be so fond of men." + +"I give it them where they deserve," said Lily, slapping her firm, round +hips. + +And they laughed noisily at Lily's anger when, with her shoulder drawn +back and her arm ready to strike, she spoke of breaking the jaws of those +two scoundrels. + +"Go it! Hit me!" said Thea, putting forward her deltoid muscle. "Hit away! +You'll only smash your wrist!" + +And then those Spartans calmed down, asked one another for news of absent +friends, talked about different people they had known, all over the place, +on the stage: their conversation always came round to the profession. +Lily, with greater refinement, sometimes tried to discuss dress: tulle +ruches were to be worn this year, she heard; feather boas. The Graces knew +nothing about that, stuck to their "Did you ever know...? Do you +remember...?" And every part of the world was mixed up in their talk: +India, Tasmania, Mexico, South Wales, New South Wales, York, New York, +Hampshire, New Hampshire. + +"Did you know Ave Maria?" asked Lily. + +"No." + +But they mentioned other friends, like school-girls living in the same +quarter; only, for them, the school, the quarter was San Francisco, +Chicago, Berlin, and the schoolmates were the girl in a knot, who had sold +her skeleton in advance to the Medical College: Marjutti, the +double-knotted girl, to whom the South Kensington Museum offered five +hundred pounds for a cast of her figure; the Pawnees, who had just won a +treble beauty prize; and the Laurence girl, whose cruelly daring +performance was forbidden by the Manchester police; and heaps of others +whom they had known and who, at that moment, were asleep at the antipodes, +right under your feet, or waking up in the Far West, or going to bed in +the Far East, or pitching on the ocean, or rolling in express trains +toward the five corners of the earth. And their own traveling adventures, +the Graces' and Lily's: broken railway-bridges! ships on fire at sea! +towns blazing up in the night! ropes breaking, falls head-first, my! One +would have thought that these girls of seventeen to twenty were South Sea +pirates, talking of hangings and tortures, or, rather, children playing at +frightening one another. Lily, for instance, in India: two eyes glaring at +her in the dark, gee! And, in New York, a fall into a mirror; all over +blood; half dead. She grew excited, in her desire to outdo Laurence and +Crack-o'-Whip: the steel-buckled belt, the kicks in the ribs! Stories of +brutal treatment picked up on every side--from the Gilson girl, from Ave +Maria, from all the boys and all the girls and all the monkeys who had +been through the mill--she made every one of them her own, served them up +hot and hot to the astounded Graces, talked of whole days spent in +practising on rough, uneven boards--"And given no food, was I, +Glass-Eye?"--so much so that she would sometimes get up in the night and +go and pick up the crusts under the table, gee! Lily reveled in the +pitying expressions of the Three Graces and her heart swelled with pride +when Thea, greatly touched, remarked that, in such cases, it would have +been better not to be born. + +"You're quite right," said Lily, with a drooping air; but she burst into a +peal of fresh, young laughter when she saw Glass-Eye overcome with +emotion. "What's that?" asked Lily, giving her a thump in the ribs. +"Crying? You silly cuckoo!" + +If it hadn't been for her Ma's insults and Jimmy's and Trampy's--when it +all came back to her, it was like a needle stuck in her heart!--Lily would +have been in the seventh heaven! No more Pa, no more Ma, no more anybody; +no boss, no prof, no husband, nothing, all alone ... with her maid! +Certainly, there would be the worry of business, looking for her "digs," +seeing the agents, writing letters and so on; but she would know how to +put herself forward, how to make the most of her work; and she smiled as +she reflected how little all those worries meant, compared with her past +life: and she would be free, free, free at last. She was going to earn +money, to enjoy life. + +And the train rushed on, rushed on through the fields. Glass-Eye, with her +nose glued to the window, was astonished to find everything so large +outside of London: red villages decked the green country-side; and then +came empty railway stations. Sometimes the train slowed down:--a large +silent town lay spread in the valley, white smoke rose from the endless +roofs; homes, more homes; the air of rest, the empty streets and the +indistinct chimes of the church-bells proclaimed to the pale heavens the +majesty of prayer. Lily listened with a dreamy air; it all reminded her of +things: + +"It's like the American engines," she said to the Three Graces, "that used +to ring their bells when they passed through Syracuse." + +But the train rushed on, rushed on.... And they again began to talk shop, +as always: with, here and there, an excursion into the cost of food. The +Graces, just then, were unpacking their lunch; and Lily fetched her +traveling provisions from her bag in the corridor. There was a sound of +clattering plates from end to end of the train, in a mist of +tobacco-smoke. Lily rejoined the party very quickly, to avoid coming in +contact with the pros, and, waited on by Glass-Eye, attacked her meal and +broke her bread so heartily that the crusts flew to the ceiling. They +drank out of the same cup, took their meat in their hands, Lily saying +that fingers were made before forks. They chattered noisily, with the +time-honored jokes about apples and bananas. They made Glass-Eye talk a +lot of nonsense. Lily, flinging back her head, laughed full-throated, held +her sides. + +"My!" said the Graces. "What a pity that we are separating! It would have +been so nice to travel together; one's never bored with you. What a +tomboy!" + +"'K you!" said Lily, greatly flattered, with a stage curtsey. + +Unfortunately, they would have to part at Warrington. The Graces were +going on to Glasgow, Lily was changing for Liverpool; a few moments more +and it was good-by, until chance.... + +At Lily's request, the Graces gave her a few last words of advice, +explained the system of the pass-book of the Artistes' Federation: the +sixpenny stamp to be stuck in the little square every week; the extra +stamp at each death of a member, for the benefit of the heirs. They talked +to her of the Friday meetings at Manchester, at which every artiste can +speak and see himself printed afterward in the London _Performer_. + +"Good!" thought Lily. "I may have things to say. There will be news for +somebody!" + +The Graces had a "three years' book," the professional _agenda_, with +nothing but Mondays marked on it for the weekly engagement: 8 January, 15 +January and so on. + +"Yes, I know," said Lily. "Mine's full for months ahead!" + +They showed her, on theirs, the last pages containing portrait +advertisements of famous artistes: the Pawnees, Marjutti, Laurence. + +"Oh, if I could get there one day!" thought Lily. "I'd post it to Pa; it +would be the death of him!" + +And then followed the thousand and one details of the wandering life: your +name on the red list, the list handed in at the station; the journeys at +reduced fares; the music for twelve instruments, forty executants, sent on +to the theater a fortnight in advance. + +"And matinées are paid for now. And you know, Lily, in the Federation you +can get a solicitor free." + +"That's a good thing to know," thought Lily, "for my divorce from that +rusty biker!" + +Oh, how she hated pros, now! The sight of them in the corridor, looking at +her with glistening eyes, made her want to put out her tongue at them! But +she preferred not to see: + +"I don't like to seem stuck-up with them, it's not polite," she observed. + +Nevertheless, she shrugged her shoulders when one of them who, no doubt, +had known her when she was "that high," blew kisses to her from the tips +of his fingers, with a gesture straight at her heart, through the window. + +And the train rushed on, rushed on. They were nearing Warrington. The +slopes, on either side, bristled with chimneys and houses, houses, endless +roofs ... a Lancashire rid of its black smoke, like an extinct and silent +crater ... Warrington! + +A few minutes' wait. There was a general hustle, pros stretching their +legs, running to the refreshment-room for a drink, some seeking seats in +the train, others saying good-by: + +"Write to me, eh? Cathedral Hotel, Melbourne." + +And a shake of the hand; so long; perhaps for ever. More basket trunks +were being trundled down the platform. A wife was leaving her husband: six +months, twelve months, without meeting; who could tell? Or else, perhaps, +between two trains, as the luck of the tours would have it; and they +seemed very fond of each other, too; Lily thought it very pretty. But she +had other things to do than sentimentalize. She handed out her parcels to +Glass-Eye and then, standing on the platform, said good-by to the Three +Graces: + +"Hope you'll have a good journey! _Au revoir_! Send me some post-cards," +said Lily. "Address them to the theater, I love that! Good-by! Ta-ta!" + +The train started. Lily waved her handkerchief to the Three Graces. + +One more separation; one more little rent: Lily had had so many in her +life. As far back as she could remember there had been heads at the +carriage-window, like that; ships standing out to sea; trains rushing into +the night. But, this time, she was alone, with her maid. And she drew +herself up proudly, like a lady who had a sense of her responsibilities. A +new life was opening before Lily, as before a girl just coming out. Poor +Lily, a girl still, in her way, yes, with, for her portion, a feather in +her hat, a gollywog in her trunk, a pair of supple legs and nerves of +steel, unerring and exact, trained to turn round and round.... + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +"Liverpool! Come along, Glass-Eye!" said Lily, jogging her maid in the +ribs. + +Glass-Eye, half asleep, clumsily gathered up her parcels, while Lily +looked round for the baggage-man. On the platform was an avalanche of +bags, boxes, picture-frames, as at the departure from Euston; the basket +trunks were being piled up in the theater-vans. Lily pointed out her +hamper and her bike to the boy from the theater, who had come to meet the +"program" at the station. + +"Are you the bicyclist?" + +"I am," replied Lily modestly. + +She gave her address: not the pros' boarding-house, but private "digs" +which had been recommended to her in London, with a note of introduction. +Then she walked out of the station, followed by Glass-Eye. + +Lily knew Liverpool, vaguely, as she knew all the towns of the United +Kingdom and those of America, too, and Australia and India and Germany and +Holland and elsewhere. They were all muddled up in her memory, she had +seen so many, and made as it were one great city, but for occasional +salient points, as in the towns which you came to in a boat, or those in +which you had a circus parade, or others still, here and there: Glasgow, +where she had fallen and broken a tooth; Blackpool with its ball-rooms, +its tower and a "contract!" Sheffield, with its smoking chimneys; +Washington, with a dome at the end; New York, with its sky-scrapers. The +towns of her early childhood, leaning against mountains, buried under +trees, were more remote, more like a dream. Elephants, monkeys, harnessed +buffaloes; and then Mexico and Ave Maria, London and those footy rotters! + +Liverpool was Lime Street: Lily remembered a sort of round church; when +you got to that, you turned to the left. She soon found the house and +received from a huge, full-blown lady the friendly welcome which Lily's +artless air and fair curls always insured her. No gentleman with them? All +alone by themselves? A room with a big double bed, a little parlor with a +bow-window; sixteen shillings a week, including the use of the kitchen. +Just then, the baggage-man arrived, took the trunk up to the room and went +on with the bike to the pros' boarding-house and the theater. Lily, +assisted by Glass-Eye, fixed herself up for the week: her dresses on the +pegs, her linen safe under lock and key in the hamper. Then she made a +special parcel of things for the stage: paper flowers, ostrich feathers, +white laced boots. + +"There, wrap that up in my petticoat," said Lily. "And the music and the +gollywog: you can bring all that to my dressing-room to-morrow morning." + +Next, Lily made herself look smart, freshened up her two bows, threw her +green muslin scarf over her shoulders and went down to the parlor to pick +out her favorite tune--_The Bluebells of Scotland_--with one finger on the +piano. Meanwhile, the landlady spread the cloth: bread, marmalade, +watercress, two eggs. Then, according to instructions received, Glass-Eye +announced to Miss Lily that tea was ready. Lily affably invited Glass-Eye +to sit down to table with her; and the two ate away like friends. Lily +took the opportunity to settle her expenses; for instance--and this she +insisted upon--if she, Lily, took a maid, she wouldn't have her for +nothing; she intended to pay her some small monthly wage. + +"And a good many little perquisites besides, you understand, Glass-Eye; my +old frocks, my hats." + +Glass-Eye did not ask that, would have given her other eye to serve Miss +Lily. + +Lily was still asleep, at twelve o'clock the next morning, when Glass-Eye +entered the room. She had lost her way, had walked miles, had been to the +landing-stage of the music-hall.... + +"At what time's rehearsal?" asked Lily. + +"At one o'clock, Miss Lily." + +"And you let me sleep till twelve, when I have so much to do!" said Lily. +"Go and get breakfast ready ... or you'd better mind yourself!" + +And Lily put out her hand to lay hold of a boot; but Glass-Eye was gone. + +[Illustration: GLASS-EYE MAUD] + +Lily, while dressing, reflected upon her new responsibilities, upon the +way in which servants should be treated. No familiarity; not too severe, +either; and no smackings ... that is to say ... however ... + +"I must dress her simply," thought Lily. "My hats, but without the +feathers; coarse thread gloves; and she must always carry a parcel." + +Lily was eager to go to rehearsal, accompanied by her maid. There is no +rehearsing at "rehearsal:" the "times," the scenic effects are settled +with the conductor of the band; there are no bare arms or bloomers +practising on their carpets: a few dark groups, in ordinary walking dress; +others, in their shirt sleeves, are opening boxes, and no mystery, no +shifting lights: the stage and the house one wan hole, except the red and +gold note of the curtain and the black mass of the musicians, with the +gleaming brasses. + +The artistes went up to the conductor, one after the other, and explained +their "turns:" + +"When I come on, this tune, soft, six times, to begin with; then, once, +loud. When I go off ... a roll of drums." + +The band, each time, played two or three bars, mechanically, at sight; +then it was understood and ... next, please. + +Lily had seen this before, but not under these conditions; not dressed as +at present; not accompanied by a maid. She listened as hard as she could +when she walked on to the stage, caught the remarks, enjoyed the +impression which she produced. They seemed to ask: + +"Who is it? A singer? A dancer?" + +"No, Lily; Miss Lily, you know." + +She guessed all that. Then: + +"My score, Maud!" + +And, leaning toward the orchestra, she explained, in her turn: pizzicati, +mazurka, frog, swan, back-wheel, the waltz for the twirls, the march for +the exit. And Lily withdrew with a half-curtsey and a pretty smile. Next, +she put out her things in her dressing-room, on the table, before the +looking-glass: brushes, pencils, grease-paints, strings of pearls for her +hair. She hung a cord from the door to the window, to dry her tights on, +when she washed a pair in the basin. She got out her little work-box, in +case of anything tearing, threaded a needle, freshened up the knots of her +ribbons, pinned photographs and p.-c.'s on the wall. And, over all, she +hung her gollywog, a hairy doll, white-collared, red-waistcoated, with, in +its black face, under the bristling hair, two shining tacks by way of +eyes. It was the protecting idol. Not that Lily, ever faithful to the +Church of England, believed much in gollywogs; but, like most music-hall +people, she felt safer when she knew it was there. And her dressing-room, +with the spangled skirts and the tights hanging down like flayed skins, +suggested some strange, exotic chapel in which a fetish sat enthroned. + +After that, Lily had nothing left to do. She went out with Glass-Eye and +walked round to the front to look at her lithos. She saw to her annoyance +that a serio was topping the bill--and a comic singer middling it and a +cinematograph bottoming it. But no matter, she had a good place, just +under the bill-topper. + +Next came shopping, through the windows. She bought a pair of thread +gloves for Glass-Eye at Lewis's and then went in and lay on her bed, +feeling ever so tired from getting up late that morning. She dreamed and +dreamed, while Glass-Eye went marketing. As soon as Lily was alone, the +thought pricked her like a pin: looking pretty, indeed! Her gentlemen +friends! Jimmy, that traitor, and Trampy! Trampy would be sure to play her +some dirty trick. Oh, if she could get a divorce from him, in spite of +all! She had made inquiries in London. She would want a solicitor. She +must have one, to set inquiries on foot.... She could have as many +witnesses as she pleased: all those girls ... and the stage hands ... and +two artistes, on the day when Trampy, in his fury, had flung his bike at +her on the stairs; the pedal had grazed her temple, yes, at Dresden. That +wasn't the way to treat a lady. Everything that had happened was his +fault; and they'd see who won the day, he or she. Her forehead wrinkled up +with anger when she thought of it. She bit her lips and clenched her fists +and then ... and then ... enough of that! She'd see to-morrow. And other +cares came to bother her: the indispensable things which she would have to +buy at the end of the week out of her salary; open-work stockings, an +aigrette for the theater, a little black bog-oak pig to wear at her wrist. +And Jimmy's thousand marks ... + +"Damn it, let him wait!" And, with her hand on her lucky charm, Lily fell +asleep. + +In the evening, at the theater, she forgot everything. She felt a longing, +a fevered desire to appear. When her turn came, after the xylophones, who +seemed, behind their tables laden with bottles, to be keeping a bar of +musical sounds; when the light shining on the great back-drop threw up +into dazzling relief the blue sea, the blue sky and the white colonnade +and terraces; when, amid the flash of the lime-light and the thunder of +the orchestra, she made her entrance on the stage, Lily had a smile of +triumph. Life was beginning for her at last! She could have cried out for +happiness to that human mass which, behind the flaming streak of the +footlights, spread itself, bare-necked and bedizened, in the warm shadow +of the front boxes. And she directed a scarlet smile, set off with a glint +of gold, to the audience. + +"I believe I was grand to-night," said Lily, as she went off, out of +breath. "Oh, if there had been an agent in the house! But no such luck: +they're never there when they're wanted! And those two fellows," she +thought to herself. "If they had been there, they'd have died of +jealousy." + +Everybody spoiled her. She needed a strong head to resist the flatteries +with which she was overwhelmed, both as artiste and woman. For instance, +when a row of Roofers were puffing away on the stage, some manager, who +had known her when she was "that high," was sure to observe that her +talent, her firm, round hips--"Eh, Lily, you've got plenty of that now!" +... Lily blushed under the compliment--would make more impression than a +whole herd of Roofers: + +"Eh, Lily? I say, what are you doing to-night? Come and have some ..." + +"Glass-Eye, my handkerchief," Lily broke in, suspecting an invitation to +supper. + +Glass-Eye, in obedience to a gesture of Lily's, opened the wrist-bag, gave +Lily the lace handkerchief and Lily hid her mocking smile in a scented +gesture. Then: + +"Good-by. Ta-ta!" + +And they shook hands, like good friends, nothing more. + +Glass-Eye frightened off the admirers with her fixed stare. And Lily had +no lack of them. She loved flirting. She wanted adulation, wanted to be +made much of. She had a revenge to take, arrears to make up; she and +sympathy had, till then, been strangers. She now took her fill of it, got +carried away, saw nothing but lovers around her, three or four at a time, +as when the comic quartet, the Out-of-Tunes, used to grin kisses to her in +the street. It was for her that they were there, every one of them, down +to the acting managers, who did not disdain to come round from the front +and take a turn on the stage. It might be a question of steam-pipes or +electric wires; no matter, Lily took it all to herself, made herself +amiable toward their dress-coats and white shirt-fronts, and said "'K +you!" with the great stage bow, the body bent in a sweeping curtsey, when +they complimented her on her firm, round hips. She stabbed them with +smiles, to make sure of complimentary phrases in their weekly reports to +the central boards. All of them; the electrician, the conductor of the +band, she had them all at her feet. It became a need for Lily to see +people all around her dying for love. It gave her a feeling of mingled +pride and remorse. + +"Can I help it, Glass-Eye?" she would ask, to quiet her conscience. +"They're mad. They would leave their wives and children for me!" + +She had an autograph album filled with "thoughts" and declarations: + +"I love you! _Je vous aime! Ich liebe dich_!" + +[Illustration: In the pros' smoking-room.] + +Lily, now that the audience was good for invitations to supper, bouquets +and sweets, occupied herself with that somber mass which, formerly, did +not cause her so much uneasiness as the presence of her Pa. Lily, like a +real stage-girl, who had beheld waves miles high between Harwich and the +Hook of Holland, saw in a few flowers a bouquet large enough to fill a cab +and the least little love letter grew, in her eyes, into an offer to +present her with motor-cars and to abandon wife and child. If a gentleman, +for once in a way, stood on the pavement waiting for her, she dreamed of +an elopement. And there were pros, too, who prowled around her, in the +half light of the wings, and came up to her with outstretched hand: + +"Hullo, Mrs. Trampy!" + +"Call me Miss Lily," she said, in a vexed voice. "That's the name I'm +known by." + +And many of them did know her, in fact, from having talked about her in +Fourteenth Street in New York, or in State Street at Sidney, or in the +theaters in South Africa, for that story of the whippings had traveled all +around the world, under the folds of the Union Jack. Some proposed to take +her with them in their show, or to go with her to clean her bike, instead +of Glass-Eye: + +"Is it a bargain?" + +"Yes, I _don't_ think!" said Lily. + +Another, just off for Melbourne, told her that, in Australia, you could +find fire-escapes to marry you for half-a-crown. They joked without +constraint, in the pros' smoking-room, a small and dark corner between the +house and the stage.... All of them, all the pros, she had them all at her +feet; but she didn't care for that sort and she sent them all to eat +coke. + +The months all passed alike. She had finished the Bill and Boom tour. She +continued in the private music-halls, from north to south, from east to +west of England. In spite of Glass-Eye's impossible cooking and the +everlasting ham sandwiches and pork-pies of the railway station +refreshment rooms, Lily grew plumper and plumper, her nervous leanness +filled out, with pigeon's eggs and ostrich's eggs everywhere, in front and +behind. She did not kill herself with work. Once, in Glasgow, at a +music-hall where, a few weeks earlier, Laurence had had a terrible fall, +lying unconscious for two whole hours, the frightened manager said: + +"No dangerous tricks, mind! They only get us into trouble!" + +Another time, she was given only seven minutes, watch in hand, on the +stage. + +"Couldn't you cut that little trick? You know the one I mean," said the +manager. + +He called a little trick a performance which it had cost her eighteen +months' hard practice and no end of bruises to learn. Lily did not wait to +be asked twice. She cut as desired and thought it a jolly lot easier to +trot round quietly, as though out for a ride, with pretty smiles to the +audience. She ended by paying more attention to her dresses than to her +work: + +"It's not so much what one does," she said, "as the way one does it." + +The sympathy with which she was surrounded unmanned the Spartan in her. +She strove to please, no longer gave her performance for herself, like a +machine, unerring and exact. Already in a few months, she was spoiled. She +looked for adventitious successes. She said, "The audience is very cold at +Birmingham," because she was not asked out to supper, and, "They do like +artistes at Sheffield, gee!" because a gentleman had sent her champagne +and flowers in her dressing-room. + +In the towns where she played three times a day--a matinée and two night +turns--she gave half of her performance, cut whatever was dangerous or +tiring. She never practised now; just went down in the morning to fetch +her letters at the theater, where she loved receiving them, post-cards +especially, which any one could read. She said to the jossers: + +"Send me lots; talk about motor-cars and champagne suppers: that drives +the pros wild." + +She left them lying on the table, or else walked about on the stage, with +her letters in her hand, like a lady overwhelmed with offers, with +invitations. If, by any chance, she went to the practice at the end of the +week, it was to display her hat, her new boots; and she laughed to herself +when she saw the artistes, each on his carpet, fagging away like mad. She +felt like a fine lady visiting a boarding-school, among those little girls +practising their flip-flaps or gluing themselves to the wall to try their +back-bendings. The pride of a Marjutti, who, they said, tortured her +spinal column to achieve a double knot; the inordinate ambition of a +Laurence, risking her life for the pleasure of risking it, were things +which she did not understand. And then, all those accidents! Dolly Pawnee, +the other day, had broken her arm at the New York Hippodrome; the Gilson +girl had fallen on her head at Budapest. They were mad, thought Lily, to +do all that without being obliged to! No, no; no more of that for her! The +last thing she wanted was to spoil her face, seeing that she had nothing +but her smile to keep her. And Lily grew timid, looked upon herself more +and more as a very precious little thing. She gave herself terrible airs +on rehearsal day; thought the stage too slippery, or too small. Lily +wanted a stage thirty feet wide, no less; she who, in the old days, at a +gesture from Pa, would have performed her whole turn, including the +head-on-the-saddle, on the top of a cab or on the Stoke Newington +pavement. Formerly, she used to think everything good, did not know what +fatigue meant; now, in the middle of her turn, she would say to herself, +sometimes with a feeling of discouragement: + +"I've only done half. I've still got this and that to do." + +And the audience itself seemed to act as her confederate. When she missed +one of her tricks, Lily would lay her bike on the stage, step down to the +footlights, bow with a confused air, beg pardon with a smile and receive a +reassuring round of applause. Lily loved these refined audiences: _her_ +audiences, as she said; not the matinée audiences, with seats at reduced +prices: to see your grocer or your butcher in the front boxes was rotten; +and those people gave themselves such airs. A cheap way of doing the +grand! + +And the landladies spoiled her, too; those worthy souls who treated her as +their own daughter. + +"And a jolly sight better!" thought Lily. + +Others pitied her for the profession she followed, feared she would break +something, one fine day. Lily thought that very sweet of them, would have +liked to stay with them for ever; but there was the constant rent at +parting, a bit of herself which Lily left behind her every week. And the +bothers that Maud caused her! Her stupidity drove Lily mad: tickets lost, +bags mislaid, disputes with the tradesmen, battles with the bike, +scratches on the shins, on the hands, everywhere. Lily lost patience, +threatened her with the leather belt, damn it! + +Sometimes, Lily became incensed with herself and everybody. Her divorce +kept running in her head. And her three years' book, with its last pages +unsoiled by engagements, also gave her cause for uneasiness; and yet the +acting managers must have sung her praises, in their weekly reports,--the +ones who came and made love to her on the stage! + +After different music-halls, she had done the Harrasford tour, but without +any great success. People who had known her with the troupe thought that +she had gone off. Lily was furious: if, on those evenings, she missed a +trick, she would knock Glass-Eye about when she returned to the wings, +storm at the stage--"Slippery as ice, damn it!"--fling her bike, which was +not to blame, against the wall. Lily, in her pink tights, under the +pendants of false pearls on her forehead, looked like an angry savage, +ready to fly at your throat. + +That was her life. No adventures, really; theaters in which she caught on, +theaters in which she didn't go down so well; more or less prolonged +applause; an encore or two; and, here and there, a bouquet large enough to +fill a cab: those were the great events. And it was always the same show, +on the same stage, from one end of England to the other; theaters and +theaters; so many theaters that, in her memory, they ended, like the +towns, by making only one. It was always herds of Roofers, swaying in +unison, with flaxen wigs, scarlet legs, boyish voices; and "families," +"sisters," "brothers," all different, but all alike, going up the +staircase to their dressing-rooms in wraps, like gouty people at a spa, +and serios, serios, with choruses emphasized by dances. Sometimes, a new +attraction, a Venus without tights, or a bare-breasted Salome, would draw +whole groups, boys and girls mixed, to the wings, with their necks +stretched toward the stage. And there were exotic features, too: conjurers +from Malabar; boomerang-throwing bush-men; the Light of Asia, a Chinese +girl without arms, an artificial product, like those beggar-monsters whom +they cultivate in pots in the mountains of Navarre. She saw the +boy-violinist again. Since that bite in the seat of his trousers, at +Budapest, he had abandoned all hope of fame and was looking for an +engagement in the orchestra. She saw the female-impersonator with the +green eyes. She saw numbers and numbers. She ended by seeing them all +again, in the various greenrooms. She heard names mentioned. People were +coming on all round: Tom, singing-girls, dancing-girls. She would have to +do something, too, after all, to get herself talked about! She had +received a shock on opening _The Era_: they had not taken out her name! +There was still a Miss Lily at Rathbone Place: her cousin Daisy, it +appeared, a stranger, was there in her stead, under her name! And they +were stealing her idea! The New Zealanders were now called the New +Trickers; no doubt the turn which she had described to Pa. Something new, +something new was essential. She must manage to hit upon something! She +turned it all over in her head. There were too many Lilies, Lilians, +Lillians; you saw nothing but Lillians on the posters. But what about a +Lilia Godiva, quite naked on her bike, like the other on her horse? She +would mimic the scene, love and despair, and she would think of something +to raise a laugh! Peeping Tom, for instance, stretching out his neck and +stealing a kiss as she passed. Oh, she would find a way--trust her!--of +showing them what she had in her! And Jimmy and Trampy pursued her +incessantly with their hateful memory. Trampy, she was told, was still the +darling of the fair. + +Lily was greatly astonished that he had not tried to obtain a divorce, on +his side: + +"He's afraid," she said to herself. + +More than ever, she busied herself with collecting her witnesses; she +would soon be rid of her tramp cyclist. + +People also talked about Jimmy, whose reputation was still increasing. +After a triumphant season at the Hippodrome, he had left for America. +Jimmy was becoming a national champion. An article in _The Era_ spoke of +"our Jimmy." + +"He's a friend of yours, Lily," people said. "You ought to know all about +him." + +Lily tossed her head, like one who could say a great deal if she +would.... + +Oh, how she longed for revenge when she thought of that! Oh, if she could +only have served them out somehow! If she could get _The Performer Annual_ +to send her those questions to answer: "Q. Your favorite town? Your +favorite audience? Your idea of marriage? Your pet aversion?" wouldn't she +give it them hot, just! She thought of having her biography written, the +real one. She herself sometimes jotted down things she remembered, on bits +of paper, on the backs of envelopes, in her dressing-room; arranged her +picture post-cards in order; called that writing her memoirs. She would +crush them with her successes, give names and dates: that lord who wanted +to travel with her, the fifty-pound diamond brooch he had given her. And +bouquets, chocolates, sweets ... by the cart-load! That stage-manager who +cried when she went away! All, all in love with her: yes, those and ever +so many more! + +She had so much to say that she did not know where to begin. She knocked +up against too many people, men and women, without counting monkeys, +parrots, dogs, cats, ponies, elephants; it all ended by getting mixed up +in her head, like the theaters and the towns. She grew quite bewildered, +among so many different things. She had seen everything and done +everything. Once, during a week when she was "resting," she had helped her +landlady, who kept a public-house, to draw the beer and had waited on the +customers, with her fifty-pound diamond brooch at her throat. + +At a benefit performance, one night, when they were drinking champagne on +the stage, actors, singers, artistes, all together, her pink tights had +excited the dress-coats. Lily had been "pressed in company," that is to +say, surrounded till she did not know which way to turn, while her time +was pretty well taken up with saying, "Paws off!" before, behind, on every +side. She had triumphed at galas, above a tumult of heads and parasols: at +Roundhay Park, among other places, beneath the motto, "Let Leeds +flourish!" Feeling anxious about her future, she had consulted a "Zanzig" +at Earl's Court. Each week brought its surprises, its fresh knowledge. +Lily learned something every day: "If you see a lamb in the fields with +its head turned toward you, that's lucky; if you see its tail first, it's +a sign of bad luck," and the way of holding your hands, of placing your +fingers, of whispering certain words in certain circumstances. + +She collected halfpennies with holes in them. In Ireland, she had kissed +the Blarney stone and picked shamrock in the ruins. She had lost her +little mother-of-pearl hunchback in the labyrinth of underground passages +at the Blackpool Tower Circus. The loss of this lucky charm had damped her +spirits for a week. And her profits were small and her "exes" constantly +increasing: tips to the call-boy, who cleaned her bike; tips to the +stage-manager; half-crowns and five shillings in every direction. As soon +as she had put a trifle by, a week without an engagement made her hard-up +again. Though she traveled at reduced fares and contented herself with a +ham sandwich or a slice of pork-pie on the road, she would never, never be +able to repay Jimmy that money: she had not even paid Glass-Eye yet! Her +dresses for on and off the stage swallowed up everything. And yet she +couldn't go about naked, like Lady Godiva! + +And time passed and passed. Lily was growing _old_: she was eighteen! +There were girls of her age who were already beyond work, used up, like +that girl contortionist who had just been cut open for a tumor; and Lily +had as yet achieved nothing! Oh, she ought to have signed for America or +Australia, or else for Russia, of which she had heard wonders--Poland, the +Parisienne, had just returned from there covered with diamonds--theaters +that played all night and did not close till dawn, to the clicking of +champagne-glasses. Lily dreamed of it, ecstatically: England was no good +to her now. The New Trickers, with their own cheap Lily, were working her +idea on the Bill and Boom Tour! If only she could have the continent! They +were talking of a new music-hall which Harrasford was to open in Paris. He +meant to make a palace of it, they said, and he was also stretching out +his arm toward Antwerp, Cologne, Lyons, Marseilles, a continental +trust.... + +"That's what I ought to have," thought Lily. + +Her present life seemed empty, notwithstanding its excitement: it was like +the sound of a band; nothing remained of it. Departures, constant +departures from one town to another, always leaving, never staying. But +for Glass-Eye's company she would have cried, sometimes, for sheer +melancholy, as at the sight of those really loving couples in the +boarding-houses, on the stage itself; those babies in the arms of their +Mas; it made her heart ache; the thought of it pursued her like the call +of distant bells, while the train rushed into the darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER III + + + "May joy and pleasure be your lot + As through this world you trot, trot, trot. + + "X." + + "In the golden chain of friendship, regard me as a link. + + "Loving Pal (Palace, Sheffield)." + +There were pages and pages like this in Lily's autograph book. The last +entry was that of a couple of friends, the dark one and the fair one: + + "May success always follow you, and eventually a good + fellow collar you, is the sincere wish of the + + "Sisters Arriett and Nancy--The ideal pair (of legs!)" + +Since Miss Lily's arrival in Paris, her collection had been increased by +the addition of a fervent declaration from her friend, the architect. This +had been her welcome in Paris, the good fellow, no doubt, prophesied by +the ideal pair of legs; yes, she had hardly reached Paris and already +there were people dying of love around her, already a man at her feet. + +Lily was delighted to meet this sincere friend again, a friend of her +childhood, who, she said, had known her when she was "that high": one poor +devil the more ready to leave wife and children for her sake. The evening +before, in her dressing-room, at the Bijou Theater, she had told him the +story of her life since leaving her parents. It made her forget to ask +about Harrasford and the new theater which he was to open: was it ready? +The architect ought to know better than anybody. She would ask him +to-night. And Lily lay turning this over, in the morning, in bed, +notwithstanding her other cares, for she must get clear somehow, must see +the agents that afternoon. She had plenty to do beside her turn. She had +to busy herself with those thousand and one details.... She would never +have believed that it was so hard to fill her three years' book. Lily felt +half-dead with fatigue before she started: + +"Let me sleep!" said Lily, stretching herself in the big double bed which +Glass-Eye had just left; "clear out! Let me sleep!" + +But Glass-Eye made a rush at Lily, tickled her in the neck, stifled her +laughter under the pillow: it was a necessity for them in the morning, +those few minutes of horse-play, of thumps and smacks, which rang out on +every side. Lily, at last, full-throated, with fluttering nostrils, cried +out for mercy. The maid went off, Lily, now quite awake, remained alone, +and her worries returned: no more love, no more music, as at the theater, +no more purple rays, nothing but gloomy hours, a long day stretching out +before her like a gray corridor. It was real life now: letters to write, +costumes to mend, last night's tights to wash in the basin.... Lily, +sitting on the edge of her bed, took her purse from where she had hidden +it under the bolster--a habit she had acquired in marriage, because of +Trampy's nightly ferretings--and emptied it on the sheets: one blue +banknote; one, two, three gold coins. How much did that make in pounds, +shillings and pence? Hardly seven pounds. It was all in vain for her to +economize, like that Ma of a star, who counted the potatoes. It was all in +vain for her to stint in every way, to keep back Glass-Eye's wages for +over a year, saying that she would pay her in a lump: she would have +almost nothing left after the purchases which she had to make. It was true +that, to-morrow, she would receive her fortnight's pay; and she hoped for +a renewal. She felt sure of it, if only because of the way in which the +manager had taken her by the chin. Then a fortnight at the Brussels +Alhambra--1 November, Flora, Amsterdam--10 January, Copenhagen--and, for +the rest, her three years' book was empty and each empty page represented +months without work--all her profits would be swallowed up by her enforced +idleness. She would never clear herself, never be able to pay Jimmy. Oh, +she was furious with him because she could not discharge her debt to him +once and for all, fling his money in his face, show him if people remained +penniless long when they had her talent! That idea comforted Lily. And it +was important that she should look nice to-day, to go the round of the +agents. Lily dressed quickly, cunningly puffed out her bows, a trick she +had learned as a child, and then, before putting on her dress, cooked the +food with Glass-Eye, who had just come in with her parcels. + +Then a dash of scent on the handkerchief, a touch of rouge on the lips +and, leaving the room all untidy, she went out, followed by Glass-Eye, +rigged out in a pair of thread mittens and carrying the sunshade and the +wrist-bag. Quick, quick! For Lily knew by experience that it is well to be +the first at the agent's or else there's nothing for you. + +She did not dislike those walks through the Paris streets: + +"Let's have some fun," she said to Glass-Eye. + +By this, Lily meant laughing at those "tiny Frenchies"; and, if they +ventured to accost her, crushing them with a "_Vous hettes oun cochon_!" +Although, among the people she mixed with, agents, artistes, stage-hands, +everybody spoke English, Lily had not come to Paris without learning a few +words, "_Oui_ ... _Non_ ... _Vous_ _hettes oun cochon_!" and so on, which +were indispensable, she thought, to a girl who wanted to make herself +respected on the continent, a girl alone, especially. And she loved to +snub those damned _parley-voos_ who dared to accost ladies. It seemed to +lighten those days of visits to the agents, the very prospect of which +gave her a headache in advance, because one had to think of everything, +lithos, photographs, programs; and, if the agent wasn't in, ruin one's +self in correspondence; and puff one's self in every way, rub it into them +that one was the cleverest person on earth.... + +"If you're too modest," said Lily, "they'll take you at your word!" + +And the pay would drop, in consequence. + +"Never tell your salary!" was another of Lily's favorite maxims. + +She gave out that she made heaps, that a little star like her, the Marie +Loyd of the bike, was only to be obtained for untold gold. But, at the +agent's, she had to cut her prices: there was no hiding anything from +them; it was like going to the doctor. + +"And, when you're in work, everybody wants you; and, when you're out of +work, they have nothing for you: it's help yourself as best you may!" she +said. + +She had to help herself now; and it was delicate business dealing with +people who have only one idea in their heads, to swindle you, in order to +curry favor with the managers by getting them cheap turns. They would have +skinned you alive: + +"Two pounds a week. Do you accept?" + +"Go to Halifax!" Lily would reply in such cases, looking them straight in +the face. It took courage to do that: the agent might grow bigger, become +an enemy. She didn't care! She wasn't going to lower her price for +anybody! And the commission she had to pay them was a torment to Lily; +calculating the percentage made her head split--not to speak of the +complicated nature of the contracts, worse than insurance policies. The +poor artiste was bound down on every side, at the mercy of the manager; +everything was foreseen, down to the prohibition of black tights, which +concealed one's poverty. And it was bad enough in England; but in the Dago +countries, on the continent, it was worse. + +"Can you understand a word of it, Glass-Eye?" asked Lily, explaining to +her maid the tricks which the artiste had to fight against. "I don't know +how the small turns manage," she concluded, in the tone of a woman who +towers above all that. + +Lily's prettiness made the people in the street turn round to look at her. +They would gaze at her cheeky feather, whisper, "You pretty, pretty +darling!" in her ear. Lily, secretly delighted, held herself ready to +crush the saucy rascal with a "How dare you?" like a lady who knows how to +appreciate a compliment, without permitting the least familiarity. And +when she approached the agency, she insisted on Glass-Eye's keeping by her +side, asked for things: her wrist-bag, her embroidered handkerchief. And +her way of walking in! Lily pretended to be short-sighted, so as to see no +one in the rotten lot. She sent in her card, sat down in the waiting-room. +It reminded her of the dentist's, with those pale people sitting on +benches; those serio-comics, all over-fat; loud-voiced topical singers, +who took the place of the real artistes, just like the bioscopes and +cinematographs! There were also little families--small turns that had +struggled hard to learn a few tricks--nobody wanted them, because they had +no "chic" costumes, sometimes, or no lithos.... + +Those were received like dogs: a wretched couple was just coming out, a +man and a woman, sad with a humility accustomed to rebuffs; and the agent +drove them toward the door, with his voice: + +"Eccentric mashers? No opening for you. Call again." + +Lily got a good reception, in the agent's room; but there was nothing for +her. And the agent saw her to the door, with a satisfied air and a knowing +wink, as though to make the others believe ... Lily didn't like that +kind--her short-sightedness did not prevent her noticing it and blushing +at it--but she was very pleased, all the same, to be seen to the door, +before those small turns who were received like dogs.... + +On the pavement outside, the wretched couple came up to her shyly: + +"Don't you know us, Miss Lily? The Para-Paras." + +She had to listen to a pitiful tale. She heard nothing but that, when she +went on her rounds of visits to the agents. Oh, the distress which she +beheld there! It made Lily feel quite ill at night. A little more and she +would have said her prayers, before getting into bed, to thank God that +she hadn't come to that. Poor Paras! Starving, no doubt, remaining for +weeks in their garret, pretending that they had been performing in the +provinces ... abroad.... Lily pictured them passing the stage-doorkeepers +to whom they had sold their parrots and being greeted with a "What's for +breakfast, Polly?" + +"Miss Lily," they confessed, in a whisper, "you know such a lot of people: +if ever you hear of anything for us, never mind where ..." + +"Poor beggars!" thought Lily. + +And her Ma had prophesied to her that, one day, she would be worse off +than they! No, she would never be half so badly off! Why, she could have +had anything she wanted, motor-cars, Paris gowns, for the asking. + +[Illustration: THE PARA-PARAS] + +"Glass-Eye, my bag!" And, handing a small gold coin to the wretched +couple, "There ... between artistes, you know ... give it back when you +can; good-by. Did you notice, Glass-Eye," asked Lily, as she walked away, +"how flattered they were when I said, 'Between artistes?' They looked +quite touched." + +But there was no time to waste in nonsense, on a day when she was calling +on the agents. The thing was to get there first; and Lily consulted her +addresses.... + +She was exasperated at being obliged, with her talent, to climb all those +stairs, to hang about in the waiting-room, she, Lily Clifton! And it +reeked of vice, stunk with the trashy scent of the "not-up-to-muches:" +merely to look at them suggested faces seen in Piccadilly at night or in +the Burlington Arcade. + +Lily sent in her card, threw a short-sighted glance around her and +remained standing, like a lady who is never kept waiting and who is sure +to be received at once. And, with her head bent down and her chin in her +gold-spotted tie, she turned over the pages of _Le Courrier des Cafés +Concerts_ on the table ... names which she didn't know ... the small +"numbers" of the continent ... so much the better ... all the more chance +for her. But the engagement which she dreamed of did not offer this time +either. What the agent did propose to her, almost without lowering his +voice, with the door open, before everybody, was the grated private boxes +of South America ... the private rooms of Russia ... accompanied, at a +startled movement on Lily's part, by this concession: + +"You needn't sleep there, you know!" + +To talk like that to a lady! Lily felt stifled. Was that what she had +learned the bike for? To exhibit herself after the show, at the customers' +disposal? Lily could have fainted on the stairs, as she went down. + +"One of those!" she said. "Not I!" + +And she continued her weary pilgrimage of stairs, from agent to agent. + +"I must have six months filled up in my book before to-night!" she said, +determined to visit them all, small and large, rather than go back +empty-handed. + +There were some who suggested to her that ten per cent. was really very +little.... + +"I like their style!" thought Lily. "They want an extra sop thrown to +them: one might as well work for nothing!" + +She thanked them, nevertheless, so as not to make enemies of them--one +never knows--and the agent doesn't matter so much; but the assistant, who +happens to have known you when you were "that high" ... better give him a +tip, lest he should round on you. + +She also saw a former artiste, a friend of Pa's, who had become an agent. + +"Miss Lily? Lily Clifton? What are you doing now? Won't you see my +secretary? Leave your address with him." + +"Fellows whom Pa helped!" she grumbled angrily, as she went down the +stairs. "They're the worst of all! They make you pay for the humiliation +of their own failure on the stage!" + +Presently, she came to an agent who practised almost in the street, in an +arcade somewhat like the Burlington, an agent for everything ... circus, +music-hall, theater ... artistes formed in a week ... white flesh at +famine salaries. There were all sorts of people there, a moving heap of +frayed velvet and shabby plush. Lily passed by with great dignity. Next, +she came to the big agent, with offices in Berlin and London ... the +ting-ting of telephones, the tick-tack of typewriters all day ... business +pure and simple, an exchange for supple loins, swelling biceps, muslin +skirts, pigeon's eggs ... a sheaf of stars who, from there, radiated over +Australia, America, England, the Eastern and Western Trusts, Bill and +Boom, Harrasford, the continent. Lily felt a little ill at ease as she +entered--she had a pain in the pit of her stomach, as when she used to +expect a smacking--and again in the private office crammed with papers and +registers, when alone with the agent, who looked at her card, he seated, +she standing. Then, suddenly: + +"Lily? Miss Lily? Your price is two hundred francs a week, I believe." + +"What!" said Lily. "With a bike and a maid?" + +"It's what you had at Maidstone, so I was told." + +"What a lie!" said Lily. "Three hundred francs is the lowest I've ever +had. I'll show you my contracts." + +"Don't trouble," said the agent. "I thought ... we can get plenty at that +price, you know ... in your style...." + +"In my style, perhaps ... but not me." + +"Pooh, the audience doesn't know the difference." And he started looking +through a register, turning over the pages and repeating mechanically, +like a refrain or a lullaby, "The audience doesn't care a hang; it's all +the same to the audience." And, suddenly, with his hand flat on the open +book and the other ready to take up the pen, with a piercing eye fixed +upon Lily, "I can give you a month at a thousand francs ... they want a +girl in tights ... at Lisbon." + +"Lisbon?" said Lily. "That's at the Colosseo. A thousand francs to go to +the Colosseo, with one's luggage and a maid?" + +"Well?" broke in the agent. "And what do you want a maid for, you +extravagant little beast? Why not your maid's family while you're about +it? A thousand francs: will you take it? I've got some one who will, if +you don't." + +Lily had to say yes or no quickly. Her forehead was wrinkled with the +effort of turning the francs into shillings, the shillings into pounds. +She consulted her book, like an artiste who doesn't know, who may not be +free, for a whole month. She lowered her chin in her tie, but without +smiling ... had a cramp in her stomach, rather ... at a pinch, by leaving +Glass-Eye in Paris.... After Lisbon, one generally had Madrid and +Barcelona and returned by Marseilles and Lyons. Friends of hers had done +well like that. But to accept a lower salary once meant accepting it +always, in establishments of the same class; it meant reducing her price, +for always, by two pounds a week, at least. + +"A thousand francs: will you have it?" + +And Lily: + +"No, it's impossible! I can't take less than twelve pounds a week." And +she began to sum up her proofs: "Look here, at the Hippodrome, Glasgow ... +at the Palace, Leeds...." + +But the agent wouldn't listen, shut up the register, was sorry: + +"Can't do it ... bad season ... cyclists to be had for the asking. +Good-by." + +"Good-by." + +And Lily went out, went down the stairs, feeling half-inclined to go back +and accept; but no! Lower her prices? Never! Oh, those cheap artistes, +those black-legs deserved to be hanged! Great lazybones who learn a few +baby tricks on the bike or the tight-rope, back-shop acrobats, slop-shop +Lilies, who practise at a safe distance, by watching you on the stage, +through an opera-glass. They cut your prices by half; they would work for +a handful of rice, like a monkey. They deserved to have the iron curtain +come down on them, and flatten them out like black-beetles, the +wind-bags! + +"I say, Glass-Eye, perhaps it's they who fell into the orchestra, was it, +when I got my thighs full of lamp-glass from the footlights, eh? They copy +you, think themselves artistes.... What! Yes? You say they are, Glass-Eye? +Damn it, I'll have your eye out!" + +And Lily had a fit of laughing when she saw Glass-Eye, who hadn't said a +word, raise her elbow in affright to ward off the blow. + +Lily held the banister with one hand, leaned on Maud's shoulder with the +other and laughed and laughed, only to see her maid's terrified face, a +regular fat freak shrinking before the belt. My! She would have fallen +with laughing, if Glass-Eye had not held her up; she plugged her lips with +her scented handkerchief, slapped her thighs. She had never laughed so +much in her life. She already felt consoled for all her bothers: + +"Watch me, Glass-Eye! This is the way to go down-stairs!" + +And, nimbly as a bird, Lily hopped on the banister, with her back to the +wall, and--w-w-w-w-whew!--slid down to the bottom, keeping her balance +faultlessly, sprang to her feet on the last stair and, with a wave of the +hand, as after a successful trick: + +"There! What do you think of that?" + +Lily was not given to long spells of sadness. Reaction always followed +immediately upon her worries, made the thousand and one vexations of a day +like this easier for her to bear. The compliments which caught her ear in +the street comforted her too: + +"You pretty, pretty ..." + +But she had no time to listen. Six months in her book before night! As +time passed, Lily would have been content with less. And trot, trot, trot: +while she was at it; then she would end by seeing whether they would get +her for a handful of rice. + +This idea amused her. Lily had confidence in her talent and continued her +visits. She saw them all: other agents, former bosses or profs, who had +sucked apprentices dry to the marrow and who continued their evil +practices in their offices; this sort sized you up with the eye of a +slave-dealer. There was also the lucky agent, who had started a +sensational attraction, a Laurence or a Light of Asia. This agent had a +touch of pride about him, with his eternal, "I gave her her first start!" +as though to say: + +"They'll never find another like her, never! They don't turn them out like +that now!" + +And all this was a pretext for offering you ridiculous terms, because you +were neither Light of Asia nor Laurence. It was no use Lily's boasting of +having declined Bill and Boom and Harrasford, pretending to be an artiste +for whom the managers were competing against one another with sheaves of +banknotes. There was nothing for her at this one's ... nothing for her at +the others', either ... only a scrap of news of her family, through an +artiste. The New Trickers were all the rage in Scotland, it seemed; an +engagement in London, at the Palace, was waiting for them. When Lily heard +that, she turned pale with envy: so it was on their account that she had +been refused that tour in England, so that they might have it! Patience! +Her + +[Illustration: LILY] + +day would come ... when she returned from the continent and, instead of +Miss, called herself Mlle., like Adeline Genée and lots of others! +Meanwhile, she had found nothing. Still, Lily knew that one sometimes had +whole months of enforced idleness, without knowing the reason, and then, +suddenly, one's luck returned. One only has to wait a bit, thought Lily, +making herself very short-sighted as she passed before the arcade, the +haunt of the out-at-elbow pros and of the piffling little agents, the +jackals of the profession, on the lookout for a bone to gnaw. And it was +not a little vexing to hear her name pass from mouth to mouth--"Mrs. +Trampy, Mrs. Trampy"--and who could be drawing attention to her in that +rotten lot? Was Trampy there, by any chance, pointing his finger at her? +She felt inclined to go back to them, to tell them in two words what she +thought of them. Mrs. Trampy, indeed! It was not for long, in any case. +Her divorce was not far off! + +In the evening, at the theater, she forgot her bothers, as usual. The day, +for that matter, was quite an ordinary one: it was the typical day, the +trot, trot, trot, of the star alone, in search of engagements. And, +thoroughly tired, in her dressing-room, she related in her own way the +adventures which she had had since the morning, the compliments on her +beauty; and at the agents', my! If she had liked, she could have filled up +her three years' book! The architect came in her dressing-room for a +moment: so interesting a Lily! so amusing, he thought, as funny, in her +way, as Light of Asia, the Chinese girl without arms. Sitting on the big +trunk, he admired by turns Lily and the disorderly dressing-table, its +cracked looking-glass, scribbled over with names, and, under the glaring +light, the grease-paints--red, white, black--the powder-puffs and hare's +feet, the biscuits in the tray among the hair-pins, a bottle and glasses +beside the powder-box. From nails on the whitewashed walls, scratched all +over with inscriptions, covered with penciled dates, hung rainbow skirts, +bodices with metallic flowers. The bike shone in a corner, half-buried +under Lily's outdoor clothes. Tights hung beside it, like pink skins, gold +spangles strewed the uncarpeted floor and scent hovered over +everything.... Half-open doors admitted gusts of music from the orchestra; +and Lily, opposite the glass, fumbled among her pots with the tip of her +finger, stained her lips blood-red, fixed the rebellious curl to her +forehead with a touch of gum. Outside, in the passage, was the row of +doors, with spy-holes and visiting cards, half-sheets of paper, stuck down +with wafers and bearing the names of the various occupants: + +"Prof. X. The Famous X. Family. Absolutely the best." + +There were others "absolutely the best." + +On Lily's door, her card--"Miss Lily"--and, under that, modestly: + +"And maid." + +Lily revived amid these surroundings; here she forgot her fatigue, +blossomed out to her heart's delight. With her rainbow dress, her feathers +and her pearl pendants, combined with her elaborate gestures as she made +up her face in front of the gollywog, she resembled the officiating +priestess of a strange religion, pacifying some angry-eyed idol to the +sound of distant choirs. + +While finishing her make-up, Lily continued her stories, talked of her +successes in England and here and there and everywhere ... and the lord +who wanted to marry her and rained down presents upon her: fifty-pound +brooches, diamonds.... Everybody in love with her: to listen to her you +could have followed her traces like the passage of a cyclone ... men gone +mad ... others blinded through weeping ... millionaires ruined in +chocolates and sweets ... and flowers, my! + +"You could fill the Colosseum with them, couldn't you, Glass-Eye? I've +been spoiled everywhere," continued Lily, "and I'm known everywhere! Even +in Paris, to-day, there were a lot of ladies and gentlemen under an arcade +and you heard nothing but 'Miss Lily, Miss Lily,' didn't you, Glass-Eye?" + +"Yes, Miss Lily." + +But these social successes did not make Lily forget her business affairs. +Harrasford's new music-hall worried her: if she could only play there, +only snatch it from the New Trickers! For they would certainly try to get +there; and the architect, of course, knew ... + +But Lily was interrupted by the call-boy: time for her to go down to the +stage! + +A hurricane came up from the orchestra, muffled, with beats of the big +drum, like distant cannon. The curtain would go up soon; it was the time +when Lily stretched her legs, before giving her performance, and took a +breath of air in the painted forest. A click of the padlock and: + +"Come along, Glass-Eye, the bike!" + +Lily, in spite of her brilliant successes in England, was dead tired of +tipping the boys; it ran away with all her money. As she allowed herself +the luxury of a maid, by Gollywog, she might as well make use of her; she +wasn't going to feed her to do nothing! And poor Glass-Eye attended to the +bike, at the risk of putting out her other eye. Every day the struggle +between Glass-Eye and the bike formed the joy and the delight of the +passage. There were incredible swervings, scratchings of the wall, +barkings of Glass-Eye's shins. Lily followed behind, bursting with +laughter, warning Glass-Eye to take care or she would put the bike out of +gear by knocking it about with her legs: + +"Oh, where's my belt?" she cried, patting the back of her hand. + +The artistes, attracted by the noise, half-opened the doors; laughing eyes +gleamed at the spy-holes; voices cried: + +"Go it! Never say die!" + +Glass-Eye perspired like anything, pursed her eyebrows above her fat, red +cheeks, grumbled, in her Whitechapel slang: + +"Kim up, you lousy moke! Igher up, Jerusalem, you pig-headed bag of +tricks!" + +Lily lost patience, snatched the machine from her, ran it down the stairs, +pushed the door of the "meat-tray," and found herself behind the scenes, +the drops rising and falling, the nightly spectacle since she had been +"that high," the land of the unreal lights. And the sudden glare from the +reflectors set clusters of shoulders blazing with a silvery glow, brought +up out of the shade the pale flesh of the dancing-girls, heaped up behind +the pillars. It swarmed from every side, right and left--"Hi, there! Meat, +meat!"--under the rush of the stage-hands shifting the wings. There were +fleecy foams of fair wigs, smiles from kiss-me-quick lips, blinkings of +made-up eyelids, a swarm of arms, thighs and necks, preparatory to a +ballet, _Heures d'amour_, in which Poland, the Parisienne, triumphed with +her costumes _Déshabillé gallant, Dessous diaphanes, Le tub, Volupté, +Dodo_, eight pantomimic scenes in a sumptuous setting, with girls to +impersonate the Hours, from pale-pink flirtation to scarlet desire. + +Lily watched this familiar sight with a wandering eye; and suddenly she +turned pale: what was that? Who was that? In the midst of it all, smiling +to her from a distance, as though laughing at her, stood Trampy! My! + +"Here, hold my bike, Glass-Eye!" + +It was close on her turn, but, before going on, she had a word to say to +the stage-manager and, walking up to him: + +"Do you see that josser looking at me?" said Lily, pointing to Trampy. "If +he stays here, I ... to begin with, I shan't go on. I won't be humbugged +by any one!" + +"Who is it?" + +"My husband!" + +"All right, darling," said the stage-manager and, suddenly, between the +scene which was being hoisted up and the other let down on the silent, +empty stage: "You there! Get out!" + +Trampy could not believe that the words were meant for him. He waited +until the order had been twice repeated. He, an artiste, before those +girls! He made a gesture as though to ask: + +"Do you mean me?" + +"Yes, you! No jossers here," said the stage-manager. "Sling your hook!" + +"Gee!" thought Lily, when he had gone. "This time you've been paid back in +your own coin! So you kicked me out at the Horse Shoe, did you? It's my +turn now, you damned tramp!" + +She exulted with delight, as she went through her performance. It was her +first revenge! the other's turn would come next. + +"I don't forgive and I don't forget," she muttered to herself. "Every dog +has his day." + +Oh, how happy she was! She was magnificent on the stage, under the +flashing lights, and the dull sounds in the orchestra were to her as the +throbbing of a riotous heart. + +"Well, Trampy, you got soaked to-night, to-night," thought Lily, as she +might have said, "One, two!" to mark her times. "To-night, to-night. And, +if you don't like it--one, two--you've only got to lump it! Divorce was +made for men and women, not for dogs!" + +Lily was triumphant, laughed, winked her eye, as she rode past, at the +stage-manager, who threw her a kiss and grinned. Immediately after her +turn, she ran to her dressing-room, poured water on her steaming skin, +while the make-up trickled in pink streaks down her face, and devoted an +hour to the dainty care of her person, like a cat licking itself. And then +Lily, without paint or powder--awfully ugly, not in the least pretty off +the stage, as she said, smiling in her muslin tie with the gold +spots--Lily went out by the front, to avoid the pros' corridor. + +The moment she was in the lobby, she assumed the air of a lady accompanied +by her maid. She cast an indifferent eye at the string of carriages, like +one who changes her mind and prefers to walk, a smile to the gentlemen at +the _contrôle_, a nod to the Roofers going out, two by two, always, a dark +one and a fair one. Lily stopped for a second, to look round.... + +Then: "Let's go home, Glass-Eye!" + +She took a few steps along the street, but a jolly voice behind her +cried: + +"Gee, what a spanking walk!" + +She turned round; it was Trampy again! + +"Ah, this time," thought Lily, "I shall have witnesses!" + +She expected blows! She would have given anything to be struck: her +divorce, at last, would be hastened on! Cruelty, public insults! But no: + +"How's my dear little wife?" asked Trampy, with outstretched hand. + +Lily was so greatly surprised that it took her some seconds to recover her +presence of mind; and then, without turning her head: + +"Come away, Glass-Eye," she said. "There are drunkards about." + +"Don't let us quarrel, little wifie. Aren't you my dear little wifie? +Well, then...." + +And Trampy took her by the arm. + +"Let me go, or I'll break your jaw," muttered Lily, under her breath. + +Trampy seemed in a jovial mood, with his cigar in his mouth, his cheeks +flushed with insolence, his eyes moist with libations. + +"Let's make peace," said Trampy. "Peace in the home: that's my motto!" + +"Divorce!" cried Lily. + +"Peace in the home for me!" rejoined Trampy, who grew the more radiant as +Lily grew more and more incensed. + +"Let me tell you," he continued, puffing luxuriously at his cigar, "that +divorce--why, how can you think of it?--means a public scandal, my name +dragged in the mud...." + +"Footy rotter!" roared Lily. + +"Dragged in the mud; and my dear little wife left to her own resources, +marrying again, as she feels inclined, marrying some one unworthy of her, +perhaps. I won't have it! I'm responsible for you! I'm your natural +protector! You're not Miss Lily, you're Mrs. Trampy. You've been in the +wrong, certainly; you had me turned off the stage, me, your husband; but I +forgive you." + +"And I ... take that!" Lily broke in, spitting in his face. "That's how +_I_ forgive _you_! Take that! And that!" + +Trampy reveled with delight: + +"You _are_ my dear little wifie, aren't you? And you'll remain so ... and +you'll never belong to any one else, do you hear? I am a faithful husband. +You're trying for a divorce, I know, but you won't get it. The wrong is on +your side and I'm not going to law, and you're Mrs. Trampy and Mrs. Trampy +you'll remain! Will you come and have a drink, Mrs. Trampy?" he continued, +lighting a fresh cigar. "Won't you? Very well. Good night, wifie!" + +And Trampy, turning his back to her, disappeared in a cloud of smoke. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Lily came home and went straight to bed, without even waiting for supper, +so great was her hurry to forget. It seemed to her that things had +happened, things without end; that this day had been as long as a year. +She simply could not understand Trampy. She could have imagined anything, +except that! She racked her brain to conjecture how, why; and sleep +quieted her till the next morning; and she woke up with teeth clenched and +eyebrows set and ... why? Why? And again why? Did he still want to keep +her?--after realizing in a hundred different ways that she did not love +him, that she loathed him, that she had married him only to escape her +whippings and that she had but one idea in her head: to divorce him! + +Now--only Lily could not know this--it was because of that very reason +that Trampy clung to her, like a faithful husband: Jimmy, Jimmy was his +bugbear. He believed Jimmy to be in love with his wife. Once Lily was +divorced, Jimmy could marry her; and Trampy would see him further first! +The greater Jimmy became, the more jealous Trampy grew. He knew the steps +Lily had taken to obtain a divorce, the witnesses she had tried to secure. +She was very keen on a divorce, was she? All the more reason for not +gratifying her; and she wasn't going to get it. The witnesses, Trampy had +just heard, declined to give evidence. They had seen nothing, heard +nothing. A bike at her head? Maybe. They didn't know. A bit of a fuss +between artistes, such as you see every day, and none of their damned +business. Outside that, Lily had nothing to go upon; on the contrary. She +had abandoned the conjugal home; all the wrong, apparently, was on her +side. He, Trampy, alone was entitled to file a petition; but that never! +He considered that Jimmy and Lily had trifled with him sufficiently. He +could not swallow the idea that they were only waiting for the divorce to +get married; the idea that Lily would be Mrs. Jimmy, of her own free +choice, after marrying him, Trampy, to escape her whippings; no, he +couldn't swallow that! Now it rested entirely with him to prevent that +marriage. He had only to keep his dear little wife for himself. In that +case, Jimmy, if he wanted her, would be obliged to do without her or else +to "live with her" and set a bad example, lavish bestower of good advice +that he was, the dirty hypocrite, preaching morality to others! That was +what Trampy had determined to do. As for Lily, Trampy, who was incapable, +at bottom, of either hatred or love, didn't care one way or the other. He +was always sure to want for nothing, so long as there were girls on the +boards and whisky in the bars. + +There was another reason still that urged him to let matters rest, without +going further. To embark on a divorce-case, to have his name in the papers +and his story hawked round the four quarters of the globe--"Trampy, you +know. You knew Trampy, didn't you? The husband of Lily?" and so on--was +what he didn't want at any price, for a reason known to himself. He had +made inquiries, quite privately, at the beginning, when he thought of +petitioning for a divorce; and what he had learned had made him prudent: +his marriage in America was valid beyond a doubt. He was well and duly +married, whether he liked it or not. By the common law, two wives meant +bigamy; and bigamy meant prison, which was the last thing he wanted, as he +himself said. But, so long as there was no scandal, he ran no great risk. +He had lived on tenter-hooks at first, in Germany. Chance might have +brought him face to face with Ave Maria, on the stage of a music-hall. +This danger was not to be feared now, so far as he knew. Ave Maria and her +brother Martello were no longer fit stars for Europe, nor for North +America. He was too well known to the agencies; his brutality had produced +too many complaints, too many denunciations to the police; it discredited +any theater employing him. He might have come to Europe--who knew?--to try +to get hold of the Bambinis, now that the old man had not much longer to +live. But that was not very likely, either. An artiste, come across by +accident, had seen the pair at Iquique, in a wretched circus that was +doing the coast of Chili. He gave Trampy details: poor Ave Maria had grown +very ugly; a body all skin and bone and nerves; no hips, no chest; nothing +of the woman about her; in the last stages of consumption; and finished, +as an artiste, done for; no spring left in her overworked thighs, no +suppleness in her loins: even her brother, that brute, could get nothing +out of her now. And Trampy, who knew Chili, followed them, in his mind, on +their tour along the coast, from Iquique to Copiapó, to Valdivia: a trying +climate, biting winds which would kill her on the spot, unless she went +and perished in the fever-stricken plains of the Argentine.... When people +had fallen so low as that, they did not rise again: there was nothing to +fear from that side. But her presence was not necessary; the danger still +existed. There were documents, in black and white. Their names were +bracketed on a register somewhere or other: he knew where. It was better, +therefore, in every way, not to call attention to himself. Meanwhile, he +was playing a nice trick on Lily and her Jimmy. And Lily was Mrs. Trampy +and Mrs. Trampy she would remain; and that was all there was about it. + +But it was no use for Lily to give herself a headache trying to make out +why and how. She did not guess Trampy's secret thoughts, any more than he +suspected the actual nature of her relations with Jimmy. For her, too, one +thing was certain: Mrs. Trampy she was and Mrs. Trampy she would remain! +She would never be free; she would always be chained to that tramp +cyclist! And, if a match should happen to turn up for her among her +admirers, the architect, for instance--you can never tell: plenty of +others had already proposed for her hand in marriage, in England--she +would be obliged to refuse! And, if some gentleman were to pay her his +addresses, treat her like a lady, take her to choose a hat or a silk +petticoat in a smart shop, there was somebody who would have the right to +say to her, as she passed: + +"How's my little wife getting on?" + +Oh, those two Jim Crows round her, spoiling her future! Jimmy and Trampy! +They would end by being the death of her. Oh, if she had had Thea's arm, +what a blow in the jaw for one or both of them! And Lily, when she thought +of it, wore the face which was hers on her bad days, teeth clenched, +stubborn forehead. Glass-Eye shook in her boots when she saw it, for +sometimes Lily vented her anger upon the poor girl with a smack, +considering herself quits if she begged pardon after! + +"If it's one of those footy rotters," growled Lily, hearing a knock at the +door, "smash a bottle over his head!" + +But no, it was simply her letters, sent on from the theater. Nothing of +importance this morning; prospectuses, mostly: a wig-maker, special +theatrical department; a manufacturer of traveling-hampers, for South +Africa, Australia.... + +"No use for them," thought Lily, with a sigh. + +[Illustration: A ROOFER GIRL] + +And, on opening _The Era_, she received that discouraging sensation: +always so many names, and so many tricks, and all "the best;" new ideas +and troupes, troupes, troupes; another new troupe of fat freaks, a very +flood of them; and Roofers, Roofers; "Greater-Greater England Girls," +words and music guaranteed, with scarlet legs and muslin skirts, complete; +page upon page of pink tights; and national troupes and colonial troupes; +and one had to earn a livelihood and shine among all that! Lily was half +crushed; and everybody she knew was triumphing: the Pawnees,--one hundred +and thirty music-halls, the whole of the Eastern and Western Trusts, the +great two-years' tour! The Three Graces also were continuing their +triumphs. Lily, who felt herself the equal of any of them, held her breath +as she read the news. Laurence had won her terrible bet that she would +ride straight across Manchester and Salford on her bike, hands tied +together, feet fastened to the pedals. At the Art Institute in Chicago, +Marjutti had given a lecture on the art of contortion. + +"Some josser of a journalist wrote it for her," thought Lily. + +And _The Performer Annual_ had sent Marjutti its set of questions to +answer, she had been published in print! And Lily was still waiting! And +Tom? Tom was in England now, in the De Frece circuit; had had a triumph at +the Portsmouth Hippodrome, as "Topsy Turvy Tommy," dancing a sailor's +hornpipe on his hands. All, all were successful, including others even who +were not so good as she was: one who obtained engagements because she had +a nigger in her show; another because of a monkey. + +"And I've done nothing yet!" grumbled Lily. + +Oh, to be talked about in her turn, to achieve something, to become "our +Lily!" + +"It's twelve o'clock and I'm still in bed!" she cried. "I ought to be +practising!" + +It was just a flash of pride, mixed with remorse. She knew it well enough; +often and often, she had reproached herself for her idleness, for her +habit of sleeping till the middle of the day, of taking her meals before +the performance; but she would make up for it to-morrow! It is the usual +refrain of stars who have become detached from their troupes, far removed +from regimental discipline, so to speak: without a Pa, without a boss, you +can do nothing. You must have some one to force you. + +"A month on the three years' book before to-night!" prayed Lily, touching +her lucky charm. + +And she studied the omens with an expert air, gave an ear to passing +sounds, tried to catch the meaning of them, for she had visits to pay, +letters to write, business, damn it! + +That was what Pa used to say before her. And it was not so easy to turn a +letter prettily: that was Trampy's forte. She knew something about it. +Lily, in her night-dress, with her elbows on the table, bit her pen, +reflected, in a mental effort that gave her a headache. And that +note-paper wasn't nice, either, without a heading; true, it only rested +with herself; every day she was approached with offers of artistic +photographs, even of tricks which she did not do: standing with one foot +on the saddle, the other in the air and her arms stretched out before her, +like a flying genius; or as Cupid, with his dart in his hand: impossible +things which neither the Pawnees nor Laurence would have dared to attempt! +But it would look well, with her name in red letters: "Miss Lily," or "La +Belle Lily." Or else a photograph showing her strolling in a great park, +with a palace in the background, taken from nature, followed by her maid, +or by a footman, hired by the hour, for the occasion. + +"I think I shall select the governess," said Lily to herself, "because of +my biography; it will be nicer, truer. Or I might be taken riding on the +back-wheel, like a lady just leaving the house and doing that to amuse +herself?" + +Lily, still undecided, took up the pen again: one foot on the saddle; six +pairs of tights; three dresses; the theaters at which she had +appeared.... + +What a pack of jossers! She couldn't forgive the agents for her present +want of success. She was exasperated. She felt inclined to go and see the +managers themselves, those who had made love to her on the stage, and to +send in her card to them--"Miss Lily"--just to teach those jossers of +agents! Her independent ways had already made enemies for her: she knew +that; but how could she help being angry? The tricks they played you, down +to making you miss a marriage, as had happened in London, the other day, +to the Three Graces, to one of them, who had been courted, during Mr. +Fuchs' absence, by the boy-violinist. Their agent had launched into +slanders and even insults to prevent the marriage, which would have split +up the troupe and broken the contract.... + +"What a pack of nigger-drivers!" thought Lily. "As long as they get their +ten per cent., the rest can go hang, for all they care!" + +There was no doubt that Lily had got out of bed on the wrong side, at the +thought of having to climb all those staircases again and to dance +attendance with the rotten lot in the waiting-rooms. But, by Jove, she +could have boxed the ears of the first agent she visited that afternoon! +He had the impudence to offer her a magnificent engagement in the Indian +show at Earl's Court, she to stain her skin brown, dye her hair black, +with rings in her nose, at the wrists, at her ankles; a costume like Miss +Ruth's, all in gauze; the nautch-girl on the bicycle; six times a day, in +the open air, to the sound of tomtoms. Play the negress; that's what he +offered her! She could not help laughing, in spite of her anger. But she +became quite intractable and snubbed another agent who suggested a one +day's billet in a tiny music-hall at a ridiculous price. + +"I don't give my performance under five pounds, or on a stage of less than +thirty feet!" cried Lily. + +At last, luck seemed to turn; she settled for Spain and Portugal, and that +same evening, at the Bijou Theater, she was offered another engagement, +for three months hence. This contract would procure her others, after her +spell of ill luck. Lily at once took courage again: + +"Oh, if I had the Astrarium!" she thought. + +Everywhere, at the theater, at the agents, people were talking of the new +music-hall. It even became a current joke. They said, "So-and-So's +performing at the Astrarium," as though to say, "He's not performing! He's +living in a castle in the air!" Every one was talking of the great +music-hall which was to open in a few months and which was not to be seen +building anywhere. Some said that it was serious; they quoted engagements: +Tom; the Three Graces; the impersonator; nothing but turns quite unknown +to Paris; novelties, nothing but novelties: Marjutti; Laurence, perhaps; +or the New Trickers. Lily shivered when she heard that!... She opened wide +eyes, like Alice in Wonderland. Oh, to appear there! But she had performed +in Paris. Then she would change her name; bike mixed with dancing; and her +whole trick done backward, as Pa had once advised Trampy to do in Mexico! +Oh, if she could have that! Lily Godiva, undressed on the bike! She'd show +them she was a lady, not a performing dog! The Astrarium, that was +certain, would open in Paris in a few months. Harrasford had said so +himself. There was no doubt about it. They even told the name of the +stage-manager, Joe Brooks, the cleverest of all. Lily felt herself carried +away with ambition. Oh! to open there! Oh, if it were true! God grant that +it might come true! Oh, if Daisy, their star, could only break a leg! The +few days which Lily was still to remain in Paris, before leaving for +Spain, she employed in obtaining further information. She learned the most +exact particulars. Incredible though it seemed, the Astrarium was to open +quite shortly! The blue-chins discussed the thing, amid clouds of tobacco +smoke, in the bars, after the show. To allude to it now was not like +talking of castles in the air; on the contrary. To tease a pal, one said: + +"You're opening at the Astrarium, aren't you? I _don't_ think!" + +Which was another way of saying: + +"The Astrarium's no place for you! They're taking nothing but bill-toppers +there!" + +The new music-hall, even before it came into existence, was beginning to +spread, like the story of the whippings; it would be talked about, all +round the world, as something stunning, a more complete show than the +Tivoli at Sidney or the New York Hippodrome. Harrasford was credited with +designs for a palace in onyx and marble. He had bought or was going to buy +a theater with the object of transforming it; names and prices were given. +Everybody was interested in it. Just now, especially, when the bioscopes +and the gramophones and the singers were taking the bread out of the +"artistes'" mouths, it meant twenty turns more to receive princely +salaries there; and, every month, that galaxy of stars, which Harrasford +would send shooting to Paris, was to disperse toward Brussels, Antwerp, +Marseilles, Hamburg: the European Trust, the Moss and Stoll tour of the +continent, managed by Harrasford, the great English manager. + +To open at the Astrarium meant having work insured and your three years' +book filled for ever so long; meant appearing in public, later, wearing on +your chest the medal which they meant to distribute in memory of the +opening. Gee, Lily had a pain in her side at the thought of it! The Three +Graces, it was said, were on the program. Lily would have consulted +them--there was no jealousy about the Graces--but they were not yet in +Paris. Oh, Lily was longing and dying to be settled! Who was Harrasford's +agent? If she had to go to London to see him, she would go. + +Why, damn it, she would go to Heaven itself to get the Astrarium! +Anything, anything to open there! That dream of greatness made her endure +her present vexations. Mrs. Trampy ... Mrs. Trampy ... She was addressed +as Mrs. Trampy everywhere. Trampy must be telling the story, taking his +revenge for the whippings, making little of her in his turn. One night +even, the night before her departure for Spain, when the architect was to +wait for her at the door of the theater, Lily, who had dressed herself in +her best, once more had the humiliation of being accosted by Trampy in +front of everybody. + +"Hullo, wifie! How are you, darling? All right?" + +Lily bristled with rage as she left Paris. Even when she was far away, she +still felt that she was dragging a chain which lengthened out endlessly +without breaking. Never, oh, nothing could ever get her out of that! Yes, +a brilliant triumph. Then, at least, she could crush him from the height +of her success, that footy rotter with his red-hot stove! Oh, what a +grudge she bore him! Jimmy was different: that was a wound of her own and +nobody would ever know; but Trampy, who laughed at her everywhere and +called himself her husband! He would make her lose all her friends. To say +nothing of the fact that those tales perhaps counted for much in her +failure: they were repeated from mouth to mouth. Oh, her profession +disgusted her at times! And to think that she, an English girl, was going +to earn her bread among the Dagoes, instead of starring in England! + +Her wandering life continued; her journeys from town to town, in the +Spanish provinces, her arrival in the chill of the morning, her anxiety +about her salary, the hustle and bustle of departure and--trot, trot, +trot!--lugged about in the railway-carriage, like a performing dog in his +box. + +And what theaters! It was worse than Germany or even Paris. In England, on +the Harrasford tour or the Bill and Boom, they had nice dressing-rooms, +with a carpet, water hot and cold, quick attendance, stairs swept every +day. Here, old plaster and those idiots who looked as if they understood +nothing--it took three of them to shift a scene--Dagoes who asked her +straight out, in Pidgin-English, if she was alone: + +"No man viz you?" + +It touched her on the raw. Lily lost all her cheerfulness: to begin with, +that engagement was not a particularly brilliant one; it was not at all +calculated to prompt her to do better, to introduce novelties into her +turn. Besides, on stages not yet overrun with Roofers or fat freaks, an +artiste performing by herself made an impression. Her old tricks sufficed; +sometimes she topped the bill: + +"Theaters are the same everywhere; artistes the same everywhere, from New +York to Bilbao. Topping the bill in one means topping the bill in the +others ... doesn't it, Glass-Eye?" + +But she knew quite well that it didn't; and, besides, that satisfaction of +her vanity put no money in her pocket. The amount she owed, my! She +thought of the past, of what she had earned for "them" since Mexico. If +she had only had half of it, a quarter, a quarter of a quarter, damn it! + +Meantime, she had to make herself respected. In those countries, where +people used gestures when they spoke to you, a lady could not be too +careful. Why, the men treated an English girl just as they treated their +own women. She could have flung her bike at their heads! And they kept it +up all night, as in Russia, all except the jewels; you had to stay till +morning and were expected to accept invitations for supper, so as to keep +the customer there and push business! A little more and she would have had +to sleep there! She had threatened to tear up her contract, to complain to +the consul. And what annoyed her also was being in the same dressing-room +with singers who undressed without shame, while receiving their friends, +and made eyes at Lily worse than the impersonator. + +And she had to have her food at the theater, no dessert, nothing but a +biscuit or an apple; and, if she asked for a pear, it caused a terrible +to-do. Rather than stand that, Lily went to the hotel, which put her to +double expense, for the board at the theater was compulsory. She had to +pay in any case; so that she went away without a farthing, thinking +herself very lucky if the manager did not try to kiss her in his office. +Oh, the things she saw, the things she rubbed shoulders with, the vice, +the promiscuity, the rushes of girls in the passages before the onslaughts +of footy rotters, direct propositions, with eyes looking straight into +eyes, brief wooings on the stairs, behind the properties, between people +just about to take the train, one east, the other west, and in a hurry to +have done with it; a silent embrace in the dressing-room, a neigh, a kiss; +and _au revoir_, ta-ta! + +And the conversations between the stage-girls, who were always surrounded +by legends of the white slave-trade; stories of disappearances; of +"engagements for Caracas" and finding one's self over there without +resources, stranded in a bad house: like that poor girl, a Roofer, who had +received a letter and some sweets in her slipper, which she had sent +flying into the audience with a high kick--Lily remembered--well, she had +disappeared in South America, somewhere; one or two despairing letters and +then silence. And that other one, at Alexandria, who had called out for +help, behind her green blinds; and ever and ever so many others, whom she +had known slightly. Lily shivered: brrrrrr! + +She was sick to death of it. She had had enough of it, was fed up with it. +She aspired to better things. Lily had hoped that her engagement in Spain +would have marked the end of her bad luck; but no, nothing offered. She +was sour, bitter, fierce; a wild bull, a stallion, as Ma used to say. And +she became especially terrible now, when her energy was spent in neither +work nor love, so much so that there was a cross against her name in the +agents' books. + +Oh, she had often felt inclined to send them all to the devil: the made-up +eyes, the kiss-me-quick lips, the tow wigs, the low jokes, the +monkey-claws! There were some who had merit, no doubt, like that boy who +was all over scratches, from head to foot, through training cats; but the +rest, almost all of them, were a pack of good-for-nothings who copied +their betters: amateurs, jossers all; and they had more work than she, who +had taken such pains and who had made a fortune for her Pa. Oh, if that +wasn't enough to make her chuck everything and see life, in her turn. She +had only to choose ... + +These reflections came to her more particularly when she returned to +Paris, after Brussels and Copenhagen, and was again performing at the +Bijou Theater, where she had already appeared. + +"To make all that money," thought Lily, when she saw Poland again, "and +never to have been through the mill!" + +She admired Poland for that, envied her good manners, her grace, the way +she slipped on her dressing-wrap in the living picture, _The Bath_. She +turned green with jealousy at the sight of Poland's motor-car, her +thousand-pound ear-rings, her sable furs. It was not that Lily lacked +admirers or sympathizers. She even had a little triumph at the Bijou +Theater, one day when she passed round the hat for old Martello, who was +ill in bed and penniless. Lily topped the bill in her own fashion, by +putting her name at the head of the list, and the collection was a +success, everybody contributed ... including the architect, who was still +prowling round her, in the passages, on the stage, everywhere. Lily was +decidedly courted: the rich bookmaker who ran the theater as his private +harem, he, too, patted her cheek in a funny way, complimented her on her +firm, round hips before the group of dancing-girls packed like poultry, in +the shadow of the pillars. Gee, it only rested with herself to have as +much of that as Poland! And everything reeked with love, amid the +cannonade of the big drums and the clash of the cymbals, while the sudden +flashes of the reflectors, moonlight-blue on one side, bright-red on the +other, lit up all around her the herd of the languid Hours. But her heart +swelled and puffed with pride. No, no, not that! She would succeed by her +talent, damn it, not by getting round men! She, an English girl; she, Pa's +daughter; she, who had gone through the mill, to sell herself like cat's +meat! Never! And her Ma should beg her pardon on her knees, on her knees, +damn it! The thought infuriated her. + +She was quite sincere with herself. It was all her fault. She ought to +have worked and practised, practised every day, improved and improved her +turn; but she would do so now, to-morrow. It was her last chance. She had +hardly any money left; her three years' book was virgin once again, +unsoiled by contracts; but she had a stage to practise on and she was +going to practise to-morrow even if she had to pay somebody to run after +her, with the belt, if need be! Lily had nothing but that in her head now: +to get out of her present life, to get out of the mud, to reach the summit +at a bound. Was it possible? She consulted the Zanzigs; she spent a +fortune in penny-in-the-slot machines to learn the future, but always +received the same reply: + +"You will marry the man who loves you. You will be very happy." + +She smiled with pity when she read that nonsense; to prophesy her +marriage: how silly! She was only too much married! That was not what she +wanted to know; but the Astrarium! the Astrarium! Would she be there or +would she not? The New Trickers were plotting to get there, with a turn +which she had given them, goose that she was; and Cousin Daisy, that +farthing dip, would triumph and not she, a star, a real one! Lily was +rather in the position of Pa, when he arrived in London from New York ... +with this difference, that Pa had money and Lily had none. But there was +the same display of energy, once her pride was aroused. Lily also had run +round Paris like a mad thing: not to the agents!--with them it was: "Lily? +Lily Clifton? nothing your way to-day!"--but to her friends and +acquaintances, to find out about the Astrarium. Lily grew crazy at the +idea that she might perform there, be there at the opening, ride over all +of them, treat the New Trickers like so many fat freaks! + +"Oh, God, if it were true!" she cried, with her hand on her lucky charm. +"God above grant that it may come true!" + +She was at the end of her tether. Nothing short of the Astrarium could set +her on her legs again. She had no choice; it was either that or an +absolute come-down: the nautch-girl on the bike, at Earl's Court, or else +nights of dissipation, champagne and diamonds, like Poland; and Lily, like +her Pa in the old days, clenched her fists and gnawed her lip as she went +off to the Three Graces, who had their engagement and who would be able to +give her some hints. + +Lily knew their hotel by reputation. Nothing but pros; a rallying-point of +troupes, an hotel where nobody's skin was free from bruises and where, +from morning until night, you heard the clatter of the clog-dancers' +heels. It reeked of potatoes, of sleepers three in a bed; chests, +strange-shaped packing-cases, ticketed with distant labels, made the yard +look like the stage-entrance of a music-hall. Lily did not care for that +sort of place: no matter; besides, the Bambinis were there and their mad +rushes, their yells of mirth filled the gloomy house with gaiety. And Lily +did not mind walking in with her gold-tasseled hat on. All those heads at +the windows: it was just like a fine lady visiting the poor. And yet she +was not proud now. Formerly, she would have laughed on learning the kind +of life led by the Three Graces, those three girls who remained good so as +not to break up the troupe and annoy Nunkie and who were said to spend +their spare time in sewing and cooking and doing Sandow exercises and +measuring one another round the biceps and the chest: simple joys, the +only true ones. + +"They may be right, after all," thought Lily, who envied them from the +bottom of her heart for having the Astrarium. "If I had only practised +too! Practising is certainly better than attaching all that importance to +dresses or sending those puff photographs to the agents!" + +A surprise awaited Lily when she entered the hotel; pros were talking with +a mysterious air. There was muttering in the corners, a piece of news was +going round: the Bijou Theater had closed, that very day; the treasury was +empty, bankrupt; everything sealed up; just on the eve of pay-day too! + +[Illustration: THE BAMBINIS] + +"My! Is it possible?" thought Lily, distracted and forgetting the +Astrarium and the Three Graces. "And what am I to do for food to-morrow? +Come, quick, Glass-Eye!" she whispered, catching her a thump in the ribs. +"To the theater, quick!" + +For Lily knew by experience that it was a good thing to be first. Her Pa +had saved his salary once, in a similar case, at Perth, in Australia; but +one must arrive in time. + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +There was a crowd in front of the Bijou when she arrived. They were +commenting on a notice pasted on the door: + +"_Fermé_." + +What could that mean? Lily had not provided for this in her vocabulary of +the French language; but the theater was closed until new arrangements +could be made. It meant complete ruin, enforced idleness.... + +"The rotten lot!" growled Lily. "Money, damn it, money! Pay up, you pack +of thieves!" + +But Lily soon recovered herself, when she saw that there was nothing to be +done. She had been through worse than that, when the iron curtain all but +smashed her to a jelly, at Milwaukee, and when she tumbled into the +orchestra, at Glasgow! Notwithstanding the anguish that wrung her inside +and heralded the coming hunger, Lily put a good face on the matter before +all those people, like a lady who is above that sort of thing: a +disappointment, that was all. + +"But how will those small artistes manage?" she seemed to say. "Those +families with babies?" + +Lily declared that it was very sad, called Glass-Eye to witness, as usual; +but poor Glass-Eye remained dumb, reflected that she would never, never be +paid, if this went on. Lily owed her eighteen months' wages now! True, she +got enough to eat, or nearly; she traveled with Lily; and she wore her old +hats. + +Meanwhile, the door opened; the artistes were allowed to take away the +implements of their work, before the final closing. The move began: they +fetched out basket trunks, hoisted packing-cases on to cabs. It was a +heartrending sight, all those things, made for the glitter of the +footlights, now displayed in the street. And everybody made such haste as +he could, under the eyes of the inquisitive passers-by, for fear of a +general execution, with every door sealed up and days to wait before one +could recover one's property. Fellow-artistes from other theaters came to +look on. Some were indignant that the Artistes' Federation could not take +up the matter and hurl the experience of its lawyers at the heads of the +proprietor or syndicate responsible, to say nothing of the moral weight of +its five thousand members, who had already made the English music-halls +come to terms by means of a wholesale strike. Others observed that it was +a private theater, one of those theaters run, for the fun of it, by some +prosperous gambler or lucky bookmaker; a sort of harem theater, with +almost empty houses, but with swells on the stage, among the swarm of +half-naked women; and no one responsible, the old boy ruined, the treasury +empty, bankruptcy; couldn't be helped; take in your belt a peg, that's +all! + +"What do you think of this, eh, Lily?" asked a voice. "Only yesterday we +were passing the hat for others!" + +Lily still had the list; and the money was locked up in one of the +dressing-rooms. Then it passed from mouth to mouth, like a watchword: they +would give back the collection; but not in the street, not before +everybody, for the honor of the profession. Lily, quite excited, entered +the passage and there, in the dim light, assisted by two one-legged +artistes, who called out the amounts and ticked off the names, she handed +back the collection of the previous day. Some received their share with an +air of furious determination; others looked shy and blushed; others, +again, refused, Lily among them; and it was decided to go to the "Pros' +Corner," or artistes' bar, near the stage entrance, to drink up what +remained: the ups and downs of life, damn it! Your turn to-day, mine +to-morrow; jolly lucky not to break a leg, after all! And their gaiety +returned, amid the smoke and the glasses, through a need of reaction; and, +after the first drink or two, came jokes, after-dinner stories, impromptus +which had traveled ten times round the world and brought tears of laughter +to the eyes of the audiences in thousands of music-halls, not to speak of +the second-class cabins of every ship of every line and the +smoking-carriages of every train, from the G. I. P. R. of Bombay to the S. +F. of Buenos Ayres. + + "Owen Moore went West one day, + Owing more than he could pay. + Owen Moore came back to-day-- + Owing more!" + +And they joined in the chorus and they sang, "We all came into this world +with nothing!" and the one-legged artistes beat time with their crutches, +my! the pink Hour and the scarlet Hour, who were there, got a stitch in +their sides. Lily, with her head flung back, full-throated, laughed +nervously. Besides, as she said, artistes did as they pleased and didn't +care a hang for anybody! All made plans for the morrow, all had been +through that sort of thing before and much worse, too: six stories cleared +at a bound, to escape from a theater in flames! Falls of seventy feet on +one's head! And wrecks! And waves miles high! Already they began to talk +of going away, of traveling; traced the route with their finger on the +table: Cape Town, Australia, the States. To listen to them, those +everlasting wanderers seemed to have pretty nearly the whole world under +their hands. They spoke of taking a rest at their permanent addresses: +good old London; good old Manchester; there was nothing like good old +England, after all, eh? They'd had enough of the Dago countries! + +But enthusiasm broke out when the great news arrived, brought by some one +straight from the agencies: Harrasford--"Guess, boys!"--Harrasford had +bought the Bijou Theater! It was all signed and sealed. He was carrying +out his program: and he wanted to open at once. For three months, it +appeared, there had been a silent struggle between him and the unlucky +bookmaker, who did not want to sell; and Harrasford had got it almost for +nothing; he had practically won it, yesterday, at the races,--with Dare +Devil, his wonderful horse. Dare Devil had beaten Cataplasm, his rival's +colt, and the smash had followed at once: the Bijou closed; a forced sale; +Harrasford had bagged it; and that was one, with more to come! + +The artistes were carried away by this daring stroke! Harrasford, a son of +a gun, who could put them all in his pocket! The one-legged artistes +fought a mock duel between France and England, the victor to marry Lily: +what did they think of that? Hurrah! + +"Say, boys, which is the quickest way of dropping money?" + +"Fast women!" + +"No, slow horses!" + +It was grand. They drank to everybody's health. They drank to Harrasford; +they drank to the Astrarium! They counted the money on the bar-counter; +the amount of the collection had been greatly exceeded and somebody +suggested that it was a nice thing, upon my word, yes, a very nice thing, +what they were doing: having a good time, while the Bambinis, perhaps, +were going to bed without any supper! The whiskies and sodas had warmed +their hearts: my turn to-day, yours to-morrow, damn it! It might happen to +any of them, to hop the twig and leave Bambinis behind him. + +"Lily, the hat!" + +And Lily handed round the hat again and collected more than on the day +before, even among those who had had their money back. + +"Take that to the Bambinis," they said. "We've been behaving like Dagoes, +damn it! Artistes ought not to act as such!" + +"'K you! 'K you!" + +And Lily Clifton walked off, very proudly, with her maid, to hand the +money to Nunkie, who was acting as treasurer. + +"And, meantime, one's got to live," said Lily to herself, when she was +outside. + +After the spurious gaiety of the moment, she seemed to be returning to her +distress, with no work, no money, the Bijou closed, Harrasford taking +possession of the theater. She revolved all this in her head, without +succeeding in connecting the whole: rags of ideas hung in her brain, like +the strips of scenery at the back of the stage. She had not even the +courage to go and take her bike ... to-morrow ... to-morrow. The Hours, +the pink one and the scarlet one, who came out of the bar also, resigned +themselves gaily. Their salary mattered so little. As they explained to +Lily, you're always well paid, when you have rich friends, and, if you +haven't, all you have to do is to look out for them: + +"Like Poland, what! A fat lot she cares the old boy's ruined! All she will +do is to find another, change her owner!" + +Lily had knocked up against everything, seen everything, heard everything, +in her adventurous life; but this way of getting out of a difficulty +always made her blush to her eyes. No, a triumph at the Astrarium: that +was the only solution for her, Lily Clifton! She was eager also to hand +the money to Nunkie. The Bambinis' money was a different matter from +Jimmy's: they were hungry children. Nunkie must be at the theater now, +with his Three Graces, quite close, and they were going to perform at the +Astrarium. So it was not essential never to have appeared in Paris! That +meant one more chance for her! + +"Come along, Glass-Eye!" + +They now passed into the noisy quarters. The Olympia opened its furnace of +light before them. The Three Graces stood displayed in life-size on +posters, with others beside them, names which Lily knew vaguely, as she +knew them all, from seeing them somewhere,--as she knew the stage-entrance +of the Olympia, by instinct, in the dark street, at the side: the mouth by +which the monster nightly swallowed and rejected its fill of meat. A +courtyard ... three steps up ... turn to the right ... Lily was at home +again, amid rainbow lights. + +"Hullo, Lily!" + +It was Nunkie greeting her on the stage, while his dear girls were +dressing in their room. He took the money for the Bambinis, congratulated +Lily on the result of her collection, thanked her. + +"And what about the Astrarium?" asked Lily. "Do you know...?" + +Of course, Nunkie knew. His dear girls were engaged to perform there. And +he had seen some one on his way to the theater: the opening would take +place in a month ... in six weeks at the latest.... + +The architect--"You know, Lily?" said Nunkie--the architect who used to +hang about on the stage, in the passages, on some pretext or other--to +make love to girls, apparently--was minding everything for Harrasford! He +was taking measurements, drawing out plans: + +[Illustration: THE ARCHITECT] + +"Everything is ready in advance, everything's ordered; they've only got to +put things in their places; the workmen will start to-morrow." + +"So that's what he came for!" thought Lily angrily. "The damned +_parley-voo_!" + +"And your Pa, you know," continued Nunkie, "will be there too, with his +New Trickers: it would have been easy for you to get there first," he +added, with a meaning smile. + +"The New Trickers! Daisy Woolly-legs!" stammered Lily, turning pale. "Who +told you so?" + +"I'm sure of it, I had it from Jimmy himself," replied Nunkie. + +"Jimmy told you? And what has Jimmy to do with it?" asked Lily, +anguish-stricken. + +"What has he to do with it? Why, he's simply going to top the bill," said +Nunkie. "And, besides, Harrasford has left it to him to make out the +program. Why, didn't you know?... Your friend Jimmy...?" + +She was in the street once more, feeling weak-kneed and light-headed. She +leaned on Glass-Eye's arm; she had a pain in her side from the emotion. +She felt inclined to enter a café, to get drunk on champagne, to forget. + +The next day an awful headache made her keep her room. + +"To-morrow," she said to Glass-Eye, "to-morrow I will fetch my bike." + +She dared not go out; she felt as if it was written on her forehead: + +"The New Trickers at the Astrarium! Daisy Woolly-legs at the Astrarium and +not you!" + +And, "to-morrow," again she spent the day stretched on her bed. And the +next day, well, as she had to ... as her bike was her bread-winner, after +all ... her only bread-winner, whatever happened!... + +"Come on, Glass-Eye! Let's go for the bike! I don't care if I do play the +darky at Earl's Court!" + +But, on reaching the Bijou, she could not restrain a cry. Nunkie had +spoken the truth; they were at work everywhere, unloading joists, running +up scaffoldings, attacking the theater from every side. Her friend, the +architect, passed, looking very busy, greeted her with a "Hullo, Lily!" +But Lily did not even see him. + +"I hope our things are still in the dressing-room. Hurry up, Glass-Eye!" + +And Lily ran along the passage, where already sacks of plaster had taken +the place of the velvet and nickel properties. She crossed the stage, +which was still untouched, took the dressing-room corridor and there, +almost before her door, met Jimmy! She felt like turning her back on him, +after spitting on the floor, as a mark of contempt; but, after all, no! +The coward! They'd see which of them should lower eyes first! And she +planted hers straight in his face, like a blow of the fist! + +Jimmy, who was coming toward her, had a moment of hesitation ... but it +did not last. He soon recovered himself. It would have been obvious to any +one seeing that masterful face that here was a man cured of his love, a +strong man and sure of himself, a man whom a kid like Lily--Lily had +always remained a kid to him, and not Mrs. Trampy, not the wife of Trampy, +that thief in the night!--a man whom a kid like Lily could not have at her +beck and call. And he held out his hand, like a good friend, simply, among +artistes: + +"How do you do, Lily? Delighted to see you." + +"Glass-Eye," said Lily, opening the door of her dressing-room, "Glass-Eye, +my bag ... the key of my trunk ... get out the bike first. One can't turn +in this rotten hole," she added, as she entered. + +And, as Glass-Eye seemed all day releasing the bike from the hooked-up +skirts and tights hanging from the wall, to say nothing of the kicks which +she received from the pedals, Lily, grumbling, snatched it out of her +hands, and ordered her maid to go and wait for her in the street, great +good-for-nothing that she was! + +"So you refuse to speak to me?" asked Jimmy. + +Lily lowered her head, took no more notice of him than if he had not been +there, collected her clothes, pulled the gollywog from the wall without +the slightest regard, heaped up everything promiscuously in the trunk, +thumping it down with her fists, as though eager to have done with it. + +"Come, Lily, are you still angry with me?" asked Jimmy, quite at a loss. +"When you took me by surprise that day, at Whitcomb Mansions ..." + +"A lot I care for your love!" growled Lily contemptuously. + +"But my friendship, Lily ..." + +"Your friendship," said Lily, "your friendship ... a rag! I'll show you +how I value your friendship!" she said, flinging a dirty towel on the +floor and stamping on it in her rage. + +"And that Daisy Woolly-legs!" resumed Lily, with an unspeakable expression +of scorn on her face. + +"What do you mean?" asked Jimmy, who did not understand. + +"Giving that shop to the New Trickers!" she continued violently. "You who +always used to talk of my talent! Giving a shop like that to those New +Trickers, who haven't as much talent among the six of them as I have in my +little finger!... You! To treat me like that!... When I think," cried +Lily, beside herself, "when I think that Pa and Ma will be here ... with +tricks stolen from me! footy rotter that you are!" + +Jimmy understood that the engagement of the New Trickers exasperated Lily: +a question of outraged pride, of professional jealousy. He tried to +explain: she had already performed in Paris and Harrasford insisted on +that. He, Jimmy, wasn't altogether the master. The New Trickers were very +clever, very original, very new ... + +"And I'm only fit to throw to the dogs, eh?" cried Lily furiously. "And +that rot about having performed in Paris. The Graces have performed in +Paris and they're to be at the Astrarium and why not I? Because you're my +friend, perhaps. Such a friend! When it would have been so easy for you to +give me that pleasure. But no one will ever do anything to please me! Yes, +strangers, gentlemen in the front boxes; but not friends like you! You +always bore me a grudge for marrying Trampy.... And who knows what people +say of me behind my back!... that I cut my turn ... that I do less than I +might. You know what I can do, damn it! But it's work I want, do you hear, +work! I'm not what you think!... One of those ... not I! I'd rather chew +glass than take any of that!" + +And Lily spoke with nervous movements of the shoulder and fiery glances +and she forced Jimmy to lower his eyes and she told him what she thought +of him straight out, told him all her heaped-up, rankling spite, told him +all she had at heart, in words round and solid enough to build a tower of +Babel on! + +"And I would have given my life, yes, given my life to perform here! +However, it's done now, isn't it? And it can't be undone," said Lily, more +calmly, and two tears sprang to her eyelids.... Then, while Jimmy, plunged +in his own thoughts, watched her without speaking and listened to her like +a judge, "You've nothing to say to me, eh?" she continued, closing her +trunk with a thump of the fist. "Nor I either. Then help me to carry down +my hamper: you haven't helped me to get into the Astrarium; at least you +can help me to get out of it. No? You refuse? And you so generous!" she +said, with a scornful laugh. "Well, then, help me take it on my shoulders. +No? Not even that? Then I must try by myself ... and never mind if I do +get crushed! _That's_ all I care for my life now!" added Lily, snapping +her fingers. + +"But, Lily," said Jimmy, taking up the hamper. "You're going out of your +sense; you know that ..." + +Jimmy could find nothing to say. He was pained to the bottom of his heart +... for the grief which he was causing her. The tone of feverish banter +which Lily was adopting upset him more than her anger had done. He felt +himself filled with pity for that poor little creature standing at bay. + +With a turn of the hip, Jimmy jerked to his shoulder the great basket +trunk which contained all Lily's fortune. It was not very heavy: tights, +spangled skirts, faded flowers. And, in the passage down-stairs, the +astounded stage-doorkeeper saw the famous bill-topper submissively +carrying the trunk of the bicyclist, who walked in front of him, wheeling +her machine beside her. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +The fortnight that followed upon this meeting was such a strenuous one for +Jimmy, with eighteen hours out of the twenty-four spent at the Astrarium, +among the day and night gangs; his life was such a slavery that he had +hardly time to think of Lily. But he did think of her, for all that. He +seemed to hear her still. Yes, he confessed to himself, he had, perhaps, +believed ... he had, in fact, been told that Lily was Lily no longer ... +But he had just been admiring her magnificent anger. He had seen her eaten +up with ambition, quivering from head to foot, and that brave face lifted +up to his. Twenty times over he was on the point of saying something to +her; but he must see first ... Would she herself be willing? Even though +she had seemed resolved to do anything? + +"Meanwhile," thought Jimmy, as on the former occasion, when she was ill, +in Berlin, "how are we to help her out of this ... how?" + +And he was caught in the whirlwind again: it was Jimmy here, Jimmy there. +He had to be in ten places at once. Not that he was manager or +stage-manager: his was a special case. Since his return from America, +Jimmy possessed an even more thorough knowledge of all the machinery of +the theater. He had his memorandum-books filled with notes, his head +crammed with new ideas. He had a smattering of everything, a vast amount +of experience picked up in rushing about the world. After his triumphs +with "Bridging the Abyss," the managers, knowing that he had prepared +something different, something strange and terrible, without knowing +exactly what, the managers had bombarded him with offers: Chicago, Berlin, +London. A conversation with Harrasford, whom the Astrarium held body and +soul, had determined the matter otherwise: he would open the Astrarium +with Jimmy and remodel the theater from top to bottom in view of the new +trick, the most sensational that had ever been seen. And Jimmy should make +the necessary alterations, he should have a free hand. + +Jimmy accepted. To open in a theater made for himself seemed preferable to +Jimmy to launching his new invention in a closed hall, such as the London +Hippodrome, for instance, which did not provide the aperture in the roof, +the door opening on to the stars, which he required to obtain his effect +upon the crowd. And that was why, in the work at the Astrarium, everything +turned upon Jimmy. He was responsible to both Harrasford and himself. For +that matter, he was fully equal to the interests at stake. Harrasford, a +great judge of men, intrusted everything to Jimmy, the sensational +bill-topper, removed above all jealousy; and he left it to his experience +to construct the program. Harrasford himself, the chief and master, rarely +left London; he managed all his theaters from his office, with the 'phone +at his ear, or else flew like the wind in every direction, buying a +theater here, picking up a star there, on the wing. It was not until the +third week that he came to see for himself how the work was doing and to +discuss the accounts. His broad back was seen, followed by Jimmy, to +plunge down the plastery corridors, to pass under the + +scaffoldings. He looked like a conqueror, tracing with his finger the plan +of the palace that was to rise upon the ruins of the destroyed city; or +else he would point out things with a jerk of the chin: + +"The proscenium pushed forward to here, eh, Jimmy? A cluster of electric +lights here. Another there. And what about your trick, Jimmy?" + +"You must imagine the house in darkness," said Jimmy, "and blue and green +rays falling on the stage from above. Through the blue, we send a great +dazzling beam, from over there, lighting up every inch of the house, a +terrific light, the light of the Last Judgment...." + +"Good!" said Harrasford. "We want two or three fits of hysterics at the +opening, real ones, not hired at two bob a night," he added, with a wink. +"They're working, up there," he continued, a piece of old plastering +falling on his shoulder, as they crossed the floor of the house, denuded +of its seats. + +"It's the opening in the roof," said Jimmy. "I should have liked to show +you ... the staircase is blocked with scaffoldings ..." + +But Harrasford, at the risk of breaking his neck, had already grasped the +rungs of a provisional ladder, made of spokes stuck through one of the +four beams which rose from the floor to the ceiling and supported it, +while the whole of the space between them was being opened. The architect +was there when Harrasford came out on the roof. He showed him four piers +of strong masonry which were being built against the outer walls, +explained that two T irons of considerable strength would rest with their +ends on the piers and run across the roofing from wall to wall. Two other +irons, also parallel, but running lengthwise, would be bolted to the first +two. This arrangement would make a horizontal frame of twenty by thirty +feet. They would then remove the beams which supported the roof during the +operations. When the plastering was finished and the gilding applied, this +would form, as seen from below, a handsome frame to the sky. The architect +also explained how the truncated roof would be secured to the frame, +forming a whole as firm as a rock, and how a light iron sash, completely +glazed, could be drawn along the two transverse T irons, thus opening or +closing the hall as desired. + +"The whole thing's worked from below by electricity," said Jimmy. + +"How long will it take?" asked Harrasford. + +"It's all ready. It's only got to be fixed up," said the architect. + +"And how much? Give me the detailed account to-night, at the station. I'll +study it on my way to Berlin." And, turning to the workmen, "_Faites vite! +Dépêchez_!" + +They were the only words of French he knew, a vocabulary no more extensive +than Lily's, but of a different kind. + +"And the lights?" asked Harrasford, before he went down again. + +"Here, there," said Jimmy, "on steel rods, connected by electric wires." + +"That'll dish the Berlin Winter Garden, with its stars set in black +velvet," said Harrasford. + +And he followed Jimmy toward the stage wall, which stood out above the +roof of the auditorium. Here some other workmen were cutting a doorway. + +"Let's go and see the floor now." + +And Harrasford plunged through the door, followed by Jimmy. They crossed +the fly-galleries and + +made for the blocked staircases. Before they went down, Jimmy called his +attention to a pulley which was being fixed to the ceiling and which was +to carry a rope with a stirrup for the performer's foot, to enable him to +reach the stage in a few seconds, after doing the trick. + +"Very good," said Harrasford. + +In half an hour, he had visited everything: the roof, the flies, the +cellar, the auditorium, the front entrance. Workmen were hurrying +everywhere. Harrasford encouraged them with a slap on the shoulder: + +"_Dépêchez! Faites vite_!" + +They were working at everything at once, from the new installation of +electric light and the steam-heating apparatus, in the basement, to the +emergency exits and the main lobby. Upholsterers were taking measurements +in the front boxes. The sound of the hammer rang out from top to bottom, +amid a cloud of dust; men climbed the scaffoldings, hoisted up things; and +the sight of all this activity gave the impression of a plan thought out +in advance, executed with great certainty, but incomprehensible to any one +not in the secret. There could be no doubt but that the spectacle which +was being prepared would be of a sensational character: even the back-wall +of the stage, which was empty at that moment, had been altered. By +clearing away a few dressing-rooms, they had raised the floor and ceiling +of the huge property-entrance. It had been closed up at the back and +fitted with a sliding door in front. + +"The bird's cage," said Jimmy, with a smile. + +"And how does he get out?" asked Harrasford. + +"Windlasses here ... a rope up above ... hooks," said Jimmy. + +"And when will it be fixed?" + +"Finished next week, everything's ready, the trials have been made. It +will only need a little practice, here, on the spot, calculating the +effort, getting used to the distance." + +"House packed for six months!" said the manager. "Here's a cigar to your +success, Jimmy! Come and let's have a drink at the bar; we'll settle the +program over there." + +A moment later, the two entered the bar where, a fortnight earlier, Lily +had handed round the hat a second time for old Martello and his Bambinis +and where the artistes, who had already dispersed toward the four corners +of Europe, had raised their glasses to the success of the Astrarium. And +there, in the little back room, which was deserted by the artistes, now +that the theater was closed, but which would soon again be the +intersecting point of so many vagabond existences ... where the nigger +cake-walker from Chicago would play poker with the equilibrist from Japan +... where the profs and the bosses would exchange complaints about the +strictness of the regulations concerning the work of apprentices ... where +little girls, worth their weight in gold, would come, coyly, encompassed +by Pas and Mas, but with glances askance at flight; in that corner where +funny men would swallow mixed drinks and talk through their noses; there, +under the frames containing row upon row of signed photographs of +artistes: human pyramids, girls in a knot, foaming muslins, Apollos and +Venuses all muscles; there, in Pros' Corner, Harrasford, the man for whom +all those people toiled and moiled, head down or feet in the air, the man +from whom one thousand persons drew salaries night after night, Harrasford +lit his cigar and sat down at a table with Jimmy, over a + +bottle of beer, and, forthwith, pencil and note-book in hand: + +"Let's see the program." + +Jimmy, on his side, took a written list from his pocket and laid it on the +table. + +It goes without saying that the select turns which they were about to +discuss had long been engaged for Harrasford's different music-halls, some +of them two or three years ahead, as often happens in the case of the +great bill-toppers, and the question was to choose among the best, so as +to insure the triumph of the opening night. For Harrasford, who had as yet +appointed no one as manager or stage-manager, the thing was to settle a +program which would discourage any attempt at competition, to have none +appearing except stars, without counting those whom he held in reserve for +the following month, before distributing them over his variety-theaters in +England, or, later, to any part of Europe, in the "Great Powers Tour" +which he proposed to create and of which the Astrarium would be a sort of +"commodore" music-hall, or headquarters. Jimmy only gave his opinion, +after which Harrasford would decide. + +Harrasford's dream was a model music-hall, something, in its own way, like +the Grand Opéra in Paris: a palatial edifice, in a new style of +architecture, with friezes displaying bodies in contortion, caryatids, +cast from life, supporting the springers of the arches, mixed groups of +loins and chests with swelling muscles, under the electric lights, and, in +the lobbies, a lavish display of African onyx, Scotch granite and Russian +porphyry. The crowd would pass in between Venus and Apollo, holding +flowers and lights; and there would be music everywhere; gaiety, noise, +red and gold everywhere; all cares would be laid aside and forgotten on +entering; it would be a hall containing every modern convenience, like the +Iroquois at Buffalo or a 'Frisco sky-scraper: newspapers, café, bars, +smoking-room, barbers' saloon, telegraph-office, telephone-office, +messenger-boys, ticket-office, private rooms in which phonographs would +shout out the latest news illustrated with telesteriography, from eight +o'clock till midnight. The idea was to create, thirty years ahead of its +time, the great popular music-hall, with its ball-rooms, as at Blackpool, +its side-shows, a palm-garden, a roof-garden; to draw to the theater those +who, on getting up from dinner, go to the café and stay there; to give +them an atmosphere of mirth and jollity, of comforting lights, a sort of +night forum, of People's Palace, with, in the middle, in the sumptuous +hall, facing the furnace that was the stage, a long thrill of three hours' +duration. + +And he would realize it next year, but he was in a hurry to open now, to +plant his flag of victory: + +"_Faites vite! Dépêchez_!" + +Dare Devil had won the place for him and Jimmy was bringing him the +sensational attraction, the inspired godsend which would pack the +Astrarium for six months and fill its till and spread its name far and +wide over Europe. + +Harrasford thought of this with a puff at his cigar, after glancing at the +photographs on the wall, and then, suddenly: + +"Let's see the program." + +"Nothing but bill-toppers," said Jimmy. "Picked turns from the first to +the last ..." + +"Which will be you," Harrasford broke in. + +"Yes ... I ... or somebody else ..." + +"What do you mean, somebody else?" + +"Perhaps," said Jimmy, "to heighten the effect of my turn ... for reasons +which I'll explain to you ... perhaps it would be better to have a woman +... better for the success of the attraction!" he hastened to add, at an +astonished gesture of Harrasford's. + +"And ... are you sure?" asked the other. + +"I think so," said Jimmy. + +"The program first," said Harrasford, returning to his notes. + +"We open with a gallery in marble and gold, something showy and quaint, in +the Potsdam style, with a negress inside." + +"I know. Light of Asia, eh? The armless Chinese girl whom I discovered at +Poplar.... Music of cymbals and triangles, eh?" + +"No," said Jimmy. "I have something better ... more æsthetic, less cruel +... a Soudanese woman from Chicago. She walks on to the stage in a +low-necked dress ... a magnificent woman ... a creamy complexion, with a +touch of pink ... and golden hair ..." + +"You said a negress," interrupted Harrasford. + +"Wait ... a splendid voice ... classical music ... then a wild African +melody.... She feels a flutter of homesickness; the perspiration streams +down her face; she presses the sponge soaked in water, hidden beneath her +wig,--and the enamel, the white of the shoulders, the pink cheeks all +trickle away and, finally she appears black as ebony, and, to the growl of +the kettle-drums, does a disheveled dance, kicking up her legs like a +puppet on a string ... Patti-Patty ... talent and absurdity mixed ... a +crazy toy ... movement and noise, while the hall fills." + +"Next?" asked Harrasford. + +"Next, without any interval," continued Jimmy, "directly after that +performance by the court fool before his majesty the audience, the curtain +rises upon a park ... and the New Trickers chasing one another among the +trees." + +"The New Trickers!" said Harrasford. "Bicyclists: that's very stale. And, +besides, what about you?" + +"Has one ever," asked Jimmy, "seen a music-hall give two similar special +turns, two bicycle turns, for instance, in the same show?" + +"Absurd!" said Harrasford. "Explain yourself." + +"It's to differentiate between my invention and trick-riding from the very +first," replied Jimmy, "to show, once and for all, that mine has nothing +in common with the ordinary turns you see on the stage: 'Bridging the +Abyss' or 'Looping the Loop.'" + +"You may be right," said Harrasford, "it will prevent confusion; yours is +purely scientific. And the New Trickers: tights? Bloomers?" + +"Skirts, all in white, Warwick style," said Jimmy. "A school-girls' spree: +see-saw on the bike ... somersaults over the benches ... waltzes, lively +tunes: an impression of gaiety and happiness. The star is a statue on a +pedestal in the park. The others throw flowers to her. She wakes; steps +down: 'Hullo, a bike!' And then a special tune for the star and a waltz on +the back-wheel, amid the admiring circle of school-girls." + +"All right," said Harrasford. "And what's the price of the New Trickers?" + +"So much." + +And he jotted it down in his note-book, near the prices of Dare Devil and +Cataplasm. + +Jimmy also took notes, mentioned the names of the great serio, the great +comic singer, with their figures: + +"So much." + +"They earn their money pretty easily, those two!" grunted Harrasford. "But +I've got to submit to it, I suppose. Next?" + +Jimmy only described the spectacular turns. Harrasford listened, saw it in +his head: a corner of untamed nature, a valley in the mountains, blue +distances, sunshine in the foreground. The Three Graces arrive all out of +breath. + +"You understand," said Jimmy, "they are supposed to have been chasing the +deer or hunting butterflies. As a matter of fact, Mr. Fuchs will have made +them do their Sandow, before going on, to bring the blood to their cheeks; +he's full of ideas, is Mr. Fuchs. On arriving, a moment's rest, an +adorable group in all the splendor of the nude ... sweet, solemn music ... +and then a glorious performance, a sort of human cluster hanging from the +trapezes, something healthy and robust." + +"All right," said Harrasford, putting a cross in his note-book opposite +the Three Graces. "And next?" + +With Harrasford it was always "And next?" like a man who never has more +than just so many minutes to spare, because his train's waiting. + +It was a curious sight to see the two talking together in low voices, with +an occasional glance at the door when some indiscreet person looked in. +They might have been taken for a pair of conspirators plotting a move; no +one would ever have suspected that they were composing a performance, +unique of its sort, which would be famous to-morrow. Everything was +provided for: scenery, music, the color of the dresses, effects of light, +the alternate doses of laughter or grace or terror to be served up to the +audience; everything was discussed then and there, in all its details, +down to those two sketch-comedians, with faces streaked red and white, +against a back-drop representing an old English street, two drunken +sports, with hats mashed in, coats turned inside out, ten minutes of mad +tricks and inhuman cries; for the audience must have its pittance of the +grotesque as well. + +There was a herd of comic elephants, five enormous animals in a Hindoo +setting; and no master on the stage, no boss, no prof: they all obeyed a +whistle blown in the wings. And, conducting the orchestra with an air of +unspeakable gravity, a monkey, Mozart II., a caricature of an infant +prodigy, made the huge brutes perform their evolutions, to the Soldiers' +Chorus from _Faust_. Then, in his enthusiasm, Mozart sent his desk flying +into the air, followed by his coat, his shoes, his conductor's baton, and +ended by seizing his tail in his hand and beating time with that. + +"That dishes Orpheus and Mad-darewski," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +The _entr'acte_ came next, with portraits and biographies of the artistes +distributed among the audience. + +"Yes, yes," said Harrasford, laughing. "Old English families ... +clergymen's daughters...." + +"Learned all that with their governesses, as a surprise for their Pa and +Ma!" continued Jimmy. "Mozart II., a favorite of the king of Lahore; +Patti-Patty, a descendant of the Queen of Sheba: we've got to do it. +There's no getting away from it." + +"We must hide the bruises," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +"Next, I hope to have the Bambinis: ten minutes of rosy mirth; real +biographical babies, born with that in their blood, brother and sister, +two marvels. I shall obtain permission for them to appear, though they're +under the age; the old father is dying, the famous Martello." + +"We must engage them for my tour," said Harrasford. + +"If the old man doesn't die first; in that case, there's a brother who +will come and claim them, it seems. They're a fortune, the two Bambinis, +to whomever secures them." + +"One dress-coat more on the stage," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +"Topsy Turvy Tom." + +"Oh, yes, I know!" said Harrasford, laughing. "The fellow who used to wear +leaden armlets to harden his muscles and smash Clifton's jaw." + +"That's the one," said Jimmy, laughing in his turn. "A threat of +Clifton's, who said that he would 'make him dance the hornpipe on his +hands, damn it!' suggested the idea of a turn to him, so they say. He set +to work with superhuman energy--and now he is a bill-topper...." + +"Well done!" cried Harrasford, banging his fist on the table. "There's no +country but old England can turn out bulldogs like that, lads who jump +from the gutter to the top of the bill! That's what I call a man! And +what's his turn like?" + +"A scene of his own: the front of a palace. A pink marble figure, naked +down to the waist, supports a huge cornice. A thunder of big drums, a +flash of lime-light and the palace splits from top to bottom. The figure +staggers, falls on its hands and gives a stupendous acrobatic performance: +somersaults on the hands; waltzing; treading the ball: the 'hornpipe, damn +it!' And then Tom stands on his feet, all in shadow. A powerful ray of +light is thrown upon him, and you see the muscles of the abdomen slowly +moving, the pectoral muscles quivering, the deltoids leaping and starting, +the biceps swelling; and, when he turns round, the rhomboids hollowing +out, the muscles of the back rolling: the triumph of the human machine ... +and of Tom." + +"And of will," said Harrasford. "How much?" + +"So much." + +"It's worth it. And next?" + +"Roofers, high-kickers: the Merry Wives. We begin with dancing and end +with dancing. The puppets make their bow to the public before being put +away in their boxes ... the curtain falls ... and good night!" + +"And then you come!" + +"Then I come," said Jimmy. "Or she." + +"Your invention," said Harrasford seriously, "is not a music-hall +entertainment. It is, undoubtedly, the greatest of all scientific toys, a +marvel of modern ingenuity. Do you really want a pair of tights on the top +of that? And, first of all, where will you find the woman who will dare?" + +"That's the question, obviously," admitted Jimmy. + +Not that Jimmy must have been in love with Lily, to think of her! It had +first just passed through his head, no more. But, on reflecting, it had +appeared to him that, in the theater, the beauty of a Lily would add +greatly to the success of his attraction. To work his invention in public +was different from experimenting with it in his shed in London. It was +leaving the laboratory to take its place in life; and it would be a +triumph to see the daring trick succeed, every day, at the fixed hour, +within a restricted compass; to see it go through the opening above; to +see that machine worked by a young girl in whom one would have suspected +neither the strength nor the nerve: it would make the public infer the +excellence of the engine. Now Jimmy was possessed, above all, of +scientific enthusiasm. His machine before everything; not his personal +triumph, his machine. He dreamed of giving that added grace to his +diagrams; and he considered that there was no disadvantage in allowing +science to be introduced by youth and beauty. Moreover, Jimmy was a little +heavy for an apparatus in which he had even suppressed the motor, in order +to make it more easily manageable ... a lighter body would perhaps be +better ... Lily, Lily was the ideal operator; but was she capable of it? +Jimmy had confidence in her. Jimmy, certainly, did not allow sentiment to +mix in his affairs; there was the weight of his responsibility to +consider. But then there was also his meeting with Lily in the +dressing-room passage. And he had understood her mental agony. He had seen +the gleam in her eyes and so great a display of energy in her face that +Jimmy had resolved to try her; and he would judge her much better by the +way in which she should face death. + +That is what Jimmy explained to the manager, leaving a good deal untold, +of course, and Harrasford retired behind the smoke of his cigar, listened, +approved. + +"It's your affair, when all is said and done. All you want is success, I +suppose? And will you arrange with her ... with your ... what did you say +her name was?" + +"Lily." + +"There are so many Lilies; and, if somebody has to break his or her back, +I had rather it was a Lily, one out of the bunch, than you." + +Lily, meanwhile, was loitering outside. Harrasford and Jimmy had no notion +that the girl about whom they were talking was quite close to them, +thinking of them. Lily had heard an artiste say that Harrasford was +visiting the Astrarium. She had come in all haste, impelled by some vague +hope. Chance would have it that she was still in Paris. Everything, +besides, seemed to be keeping her there: an agent, the day after her +interview with Jimmy, had advised her to stay a few days longer; there +might be something important for her. Lily could not understand in what +way; however, she had stayed, though she was almost without means of +support. She began by trying to sell her jewels, the fifty-pound diamond, +among others, which that lord had given her in England: the jeweler handed +it back to her, saying that it might be worth eight francs! That meant +destitution. And yet hope always returned to her in one way or another. +She had even received three blue banknotes, three hundred francs, in an +envelope! Her fortnight at the Bijou! No doubt about it, they were paying +the artistes' salaries; perhaps the Federation had taken the matter up? +Three hundred francs; not enough to pay Glass-Eye or to give to Jimmy, but +just sufficient to settle her small debts, buy some new dresses and go to +London to play the darky at Earl's Court. Oh, what a ridiculous come-down! +And so, when she learned that Harrasford was at the Astrarium, she took +her courage in both hands: she would see Harrasford. She would try the +fascination of her smile upon him. She would be settled at once and for +ever.... When she thought of the New Trickers, her blood seemed to stand +still in her veins: the New Trickers at the Astrarium! And Jimmy, the mean +cur, not to have got her that shop, when she had such a splendid idea: +Lady Godiva on a bike! And a scene of her own: the front of Peeping Tom's +club, with all the boys at the windows! + +Just then, Harrasford came out of the bar. She hurried up to him and +introduced herself: + +"Miss Lily." + +"Which one?" said Harrasford. "Excuse me; no time now. See Jimmy, will +you?" + +And he plunged into a cab and shouted an address to his driver. + +Lily stood stupefied, as she watched the cab disappear. This time it was +finished, quite finished.... She gave a last glance at the Astrarium and +sighed.... + +"Lily!" It was Jimmy coming out and crossing the street. "Hullo, Lily!" + +She did not reply. + +"Listen, Lily," said Jimmy, gently and gravely. "You wanted to get there +the other day, didn't you? You told me you would do anything for that." + +"To take the place of the New Trickers, yes!" exclaimed Lily. "I'd have +risked my life!" + +"The New Trickers are there," said Jimmy, "and are going to remain. Listen +to me, what I have to propose to you is very serious: it's something +else." + +"What else? You know that's all I'm good for ... to go round and round ... +you know it quite well!" cried Lily, her face drawn with impotent anger. +"I know what you can do. Look here: would you like to be above the New +Trickers? Would you like to top the bill? Are you ready to do everything +for that?" + +"May God forgive you for mocking at me!" + +"Will you top the bill?" asked Jimmy again, in an accent that sent a +thrill down her back. "Answer me: yes or no?" + +"Yes," cried Lily. "My life, everything, damn it!" + + + + +AMONG THE STARS + +I + + +Jimmy was greatly excited when Lily had given him her answer and he led +her to the Astrarium. To understand his feelings fully, one would have to +know his life since the evening when, at Whitcomb Mansions, he had looked +Lily in the face and told her no. He realized then, from the emotion which +he experienced, how great a place Lily had filled in his heart, the little +passenger from New York to Liverpool; the girl who came to see him in his +shop in Gresse Street; the Lily whom he dreamed of "helping out of that" +when he saw her on the stage, from up in the fly-galleries; the one whom +he had tried to take away from Trampy; the poor sick girl in Berlin; those +Lilies whom he felt moving inside him, around him, like a breath of April; +all those Lilies, he had broken with them all! Oh, it was hard! Lily +should never, never know what courage he had needed to keep silent, he, +the man she thought so cold, nor what a tempest ... oh, if she could only +have seen into him! And then ... he had not met her again.... + +He, after his engagement at the Hippodrome, went off to America; Lily +traveled on her part. Also, he was a prey to his fixed idea, his great +project, always: his ambition increased, the same longing for success +which, formerly, in Gresse Street, had made him spend nights in study +after days of toil, at the time when, under Lily's influence, his roaming +thoughts built castles in the air, when he felt awakening within himself +his racial instinct as an heroic seeker after profitable adventures. + +And his ambition took great strides forward, was not limited, as in +Clifton's case, to upsetting the fat freaks or training New Zealanders to +spin round and round. He dreamed of a useful life, based upon his own +efforts. He wished to found his future upon a discovery of his own, which +had long haunted him and which had ripened in Berlin, between his flights +in "Bridging the Abyss," a thing at which he worked incessantly in +Whitcomb Mansions; and, this time, the stage prowlers, should not steal +his idea. To begin with, apart from a few pieces of technical advice which +he received from a friend of his, an engineer, nobody knew about it; and +Jimmy felt sure that, even when the apparatus was at work, he would not +fall a victim to the confraternity who, ever on the watch for new tricks, +study them, judge of the weak points, copy whatever suits them, including +scenery and music, and, sometimes, succeed in earning more money than the +inventor himself; he would have nothing to fear from the Trampies, the +pirates, the plagiarists, those plagues of the profession. Certainly, +there were great bill-toppers, creators of sensations who discovered new +things--terrifying feats of gyroscopic balancing, or flights through +space, based upon principles of ballistics, assisted by the spiral +spring--daring risk-alls, nerve-shakers, purveyors of thrills, turning to +intelligent account the seductive power which dangerous feats exercise +upon the public. Jimmy knew all about that. He was not the only one; but, +this time, it was a question of a scientific application which would, +beyond a doubt, place him at the head of that pick of the music-hall. It +would be pure science and patient calculation: an algebraical hippogriff, +with pluck in the saddle. + +Jimmy's plans resulted from intuition rather than real knowledge; but +learning has nothing to do with the creative spirit. Now Jimmy, although +he was unaware of it, possessed the genius that invents; and his +comparative ignorance did him no great harm: his imagination, unhampered +by theories, was all the freer for it. Jimmy had the higher instinct of +the born machinist, who is content to use a bit of string where a +school-bred engineer will cram every manner of gear, chains, pulleys and +windlasses. It is true that he was assisted in his research by many +experiments already tried elsewhere; but he dreamed of something different +and, in the calm of Whitcomb Mansions, had studied without respite. + +"Pooh!" he reflected. "All those sails, all that weight! Boxes heaped one +on the top of the other--cubes to catch the air--a man sitting inert in a +basket, with his hand on a lever and a crank: it's as though one tried to +make a stuffed bird fly! And what becomes of the man in all that: the back +push, the daring stroke? The man has got to be the backbone of the +machine, with his quick balancings, his bendings, which are worth more +than any wheelwork." + +And, always, his inventive imagination built on without respite, pulled +down, built up again. + +His daily success at the Hippodrome did not divert him from the end he had +in view. "Bridging the Abyss," for him, was but a means of making money, +to enable him to climb higher. He thought of nothing but that: getting on, +climbing higher; and this obsession of the future made him scorn or rather +overlook the temptations of the stage. He would only have had to choose +among the lot. All, down to the great Parisienne, would have jumped at a +champagne supper with Jimmy, the famous bill-topper, the man who looked +like the swells in the front boxes and who made such a "pile." But Jimmy +knew all about that: he left the theater in the quietest way, took a glass +of ale with the boys or girls at the Crown, had a light supper and went +home. And sometimes a frenzy for work made him rush to his table, as +though the band of the Hippodrome were shaking his nerves: + +"Get to work," he would growl, "get to work, cheesy brain!" + +"But, Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little siree!" he insisted, with a flickering +smile. + +And he read treatises, made diagrams; took up his compasses again ... or +else stayed as he was, with his chin in his hand, plunged in his thoughts, +his mind soaring above London.... He seemed to fly over the huge city, +whose distant rumbling rose up to him, similar to the roar of the sea.... +Oh, he would succeed, he knew he would! And he felt within himself an +increasing will of so tenacious a character that he could have swung it, +so it seemed to him, like a battering-ram against the obstacle to be +overcome and then: + +"Damn it!" he would growl, banging his fist on the table. "That thief in +the night! What a sweet wife he got hold of! Poor Lily, to fall into such +hands! Ah, yes, she would have done better to stay at home!" + +And Jimmy got to work again, to forget Lily; and he kept on thinking of +her: + +"Damn that girl!" + +What on earth did he think of her for ... when he didn't love her, after +all? + +Even during his triumphal tour of the Eastern and Western Trust, that +Lily, whom he did not love, haunted his memory. At first, he hoped to +forget her in his life of excessive activity. And he saw so many theaters, +as many as Lily did in England: so many artistes, on so many stages ... +faces whom he had already met in England: fair wigs, scarlet legs, boyish +voices; "Roofers," "brothers" and "sisters," returning from London, +Manchester, or Glasgow. He would have ended by seeing them all again in +time. There were other Lilies shooting up, Lilies "that high," elbowed by +every vice, petted by every hand, kissed by every pair of lips. His +sympathy went out to them all; and Lily had lived amid all that; it was +just her life. He found something to remind him of her at every turn, on +those stages on which she had performed. He seemed to see her near him, +with her light walk, in her little black dress, looking so nice in her +"performing-dog" toque: the poor little silly thing, running away with +that thief in the night and left alone now, quite alone, it appeared, +among the "rotten lot." The thought drove him mad: + +"Damn that girl!" he said to himself. "I don't love her. Then why am I +always thinking about her?" + +And he rushed into work, into danger, when he thought of that; risked +terrible leaps in "Bridging the Abyss." He sometimes felt as though he +were rushing toward oblivion, into the jaws of death! And his great +project also nearly outweighed Lily's influence: + +"What are the leaps in 'Bridging the Abyss,'" he thought, "if not a +fractional flight? If I had two flat surfaces, one on either side, and a +motor behind me, it seems to me that I should continue to go upward; and +the best rudder would be the man riding it, with his flexible body, his +springy back: a live weight is less heavy than a dead weight. How many +hundred volts does pluck stand for ... or skill ... or hatred ... or +love?" + +By dint of composing his machine in his head and studying it on paper, +Jimmy grew calmer. He thought less about Lily, or, at least, thought about +her only in her interest, not his. For instance, in that little town in +the West which was not on his tour, but in which Trampy had appeared, +Jimmy tried to obtain information. He went out of his way in order to make +inquiries. A marriage with Trampy Wheel-Pad? It was impossible to discover +anything; and he would not be able to make Lily the magnificent present +which he had dreamed of: her divorce from Trampy! + +And "Miss Lily," Miss Lily, always; he was not satisfied with thinking of +her, he heard her name mentioned. Boys and girls who had seen Lily in +England and whom the chances of travel brought across his path in America +told him with many amplifications, of her outrageous adventures, her +passion for flirting. She no longer did all her turn. She paid more +attention to her dresses than to her performance. She was extravagant, +traveled with her maid, put up at the big hotels. She received bouquets, +my, as big as cabs, and invitations to supper and post-cards covered with +x x x x! She had an autograph-book full of declarations of love. +Motor-cars, furnished houses: she was offered everything. The son of a +lord had ruined himself in jewelry for her, the impersonator was nearly +off his head for love of her, gee, she did have a good time! She spent her +life receiving chocolates and sweets and distributing her photograph as +Lady Godiva, with her signature. Lily, according to them, laid waste every +heart; men had left wife and children for her sake; her love affairs were +going the round of the world, like her whippings. Lily was the thing; and +game and mustard for Jim Crow. + +These tales left Jimmy very sad. He made allowances for professional +exaggeration in matters of love as of smackings, but, nevertheless, there +must be some truth in what they said, for it reached him from various +sides. Oh, he pitied that dear little Lily from the bottom of his heart! +The harm was done, the theater had spoiled the woman. This time, he felt +that it was finished, between her and him.... He, no doubt--who could +tell?--would continue his forward progress, and, one day, he would have a +wife of his own, a woman without a past, and he would take his stand +firmly on the earth, with a home and love; and Lily, soon, would be little +more than a dead memory.... + +Meanwhile, his brain, redoubling in vigor amid those stormy squalls, took +in everything, seized everything in a wide sense, became steeped in life, +rejected bitterness and retained enthusiasm. He heaped up personal +observations which he noted every evening, enough to build the ideal +music-hall one day. Harrasford, he knew, was cherishing that plan. Perhaps +they would realize it together? And the retreat for the aged and the home +of rest for the sick, and, in each capital or large town, a local +artistes' home--like the Sailors' Home--a little corner of England, +providing comfort for the man and protection for the girl. And his scheme, +his scheme was ripe now, the bold stroke which would enable him to realize +all the rest later. He felt the strength within him, if not to succeed, at +least to dare everything: "Brass Heart," as he had been christened at +'Frisco. He had served an apprenticeship to will-power: he had bruised his +ribs with a vengeance in a fall at the Columbia Theater at Cincinnati; he +had nearly split his skull at the Milwaukee Majestic; he had shed his +blood at the Washington Orpheum; and he was going to risk more with his +new invention. No matter, he had now but one idea, to return to England, +in spite of magnificent offers from Australia. + +The moment he reached London, he set to work. And he fixed up the whole +apparatus at his leisure, in the shed which he had kept, notwithstanding +the expense: a sort of large hall in which he had already rehearsed his +"Bridging the Abyss." Here, with a couple of confidential assistants who +had traveled with him in America, he worked from morning till night, +correcting, revising, improving, in the midst of stretched cords and nets. +And then came his interview with Harrasford, his engagement at the +Astrarium, his meeting with Lily, in the dressing-room passage.... + +And it was untrue! What they had said about her was a lie! Lily had not +fallen! Jimmy, merely at that moment's sight of her, would have sworn it +in the face of the whole world: the tales about Lily, due probably to +professional boasting on her own part,--were false! He knew it, because he +had seen her magnificent anger and the flash from her chaste eyes. And he +would give Lily that joy--he owed at least as much as that to his dead +love--and he would see that it was all right. It would not be a question +of: + +"Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +She would have to dare of her own accord, with a will of adamant, and Lily +would do it, Jimmy was sure of that. He had found the partner wanted for +his success and he rejoiced to the bottom of his heart as he led Lily to +the stage of the Astrarium. + +Lily, on the other hand, felt an anxiety which made her sides ache and her +heart beat: + +"What on earth can it be?" she asked herself. + +But, whatever it was, she would do it if it cost her her skin! And Lily +did not even take the stage oath, so sincere and spontaneous was her +resolve. + +"I'll show you, Lily," said Jimmy, seeing her look at the hall and the +opening in the ceiling as she passed. "It's a new trick." + +"Yes," said Lily, "new: it'll be like the last, they'll take it from you +as soon as it's out. It's like me, the tricks which Pa invented and which +the fat freaks cribbed from me. Tricks are always copied, you know they +are," continued Lily, who trembled at the thought of seeing others beside +herself topping the bill with that. + +"You needn't be afraid," said Jimmy, "they won't take this one from me; +and yet I hope, in a few years' time, to see it all over the place." + +"You hope to have it taken from you in a few years only, eh? But why?" + +"For all the world to profit by it." + +"All the world on the back-wheel!" protested Lily, who was always thinking +bikes. "Then what will become of the artistes?" + +"In a few years, Lily, people won't go about on wheels," said Jimmy +jokingly. + +"What will they do then?" + +"They'll fly!" + +Lily would have burst out laughing, in other circumstances; but they had +now reached the stage. The iron curtain was down. She looked round with +scared eyes for something out of the common. Jimmy, after making sure that +they were quite alone, walked up to the monster's cage, slid back the door +... + +The aerobike, with wings wide open, seemed to loom out of the darkness. + +"My!" cried Lily. "It's a bird! So that was your brain-work in Berlin and +in ... What is it?" + +It was, in any case, a strange creature, with two inclined planes, one on +either side, that looked like wings; and, at the back, it showed a +screw-propeller sticking up in the air, like a tail. The whole thing +rested on two wheels. + +"And it's a bike, too! I knew it!" cried Lily, clapping her hands. "Well +done, Jimmy! And do you want me to get up on it? Come along! Just wait +till I take my hat off," she went on, drawing out the hat-pins from under +her big feathers. + +"Not so fast!" said Jimmy, laughing. "Keep calm! We'll start next week. +There are a good many little things to make sure of first; and then I must +put up a cable in case of a fall." + +"I don't care a hang for a fall," cried Lily, immensely excited. "You'll +soon see if I'm afraid!" + +"Be serious, Lily. Listen to me," replied Jimmy. "Yes, you will have to +stand on the back-wheel, but not to ride round the stage. You will have to +start up at full speed and then go up and up, straight up, into space and +then shoot out through a hole which they are making in the roof." + +"Yes," said Lily, "I saw. . . . My, that makes a good distance! And, when +I'm through the hole, what do I do up there? Go on...!" + +"I'll explain all that to you," said Jimmy. + +"Dive into the street, eh?" asked Lily, in her Spartan voice. "Well, I +don't care! Anything! I'll do anything! And I'll show them," she added, to +herself, "if you can do _that_ through your gentlemen friends!" + +But she calmed herself: after all, she was going to top the bill; have her +name in all the papers, with her portrait; see the walls covered with her +posters. What a revenge for her! That was enough, for the moment. She did +not want to appear surprised before Jimmy. The right thing was to take it +as something very natural, like a lady who is used to the best. + +Jimmy, meanwhile, was explaining his trick: + +"We shan't fly at once," he said. "We shall practise on the stand to learn +how the handles work. Oh, you'll have to think of everything during the +few seconds that the flight lasts! The machine isn't perfect, it's a first +attempt, it can only be ridden by a professional and a very clever one. +Look here," he continued, "it's the principle of the back-wheel; you'll +have to keep your side-balance and front and back, but you'll do it, I'm +sure. _I've_ done it." + +"What you can do, a man," Lily interrupted, "I can do too. One can do +anything on the bike!" + +The machine which Jimmy explained to Lily in detail was a bike just like +another, with a few differences in its general construction, bearing upon +the services which it was expected to perform. The saddle, for instance, +was made to slide backward and forward, so that the center of equilibrium +could be shifted with a push of the rider's back. The stability of the +apparatus did not depend upon that alone. The ascensional rudder or +screw-propeller, which was able to impart a speed of thirty miles an hour +to the machine, was in the extension of the horizontal bar of the frame. +It was fitted to a long piece of bent steel, pinned below the saddle, +which, running beside the frame, ended by forming a pedal, so that, with a +pressure of the foot, the rider could move it downward, at will, within an +arc of some ten degrees. This propeller, which was small in dimensions, +but endowed with enormous speed, was, in its normal position, +perpendicular to the frame. The pressure of the foot raised it to its +highest point. In this position, the propeller turned at full speed and +therefore tended to descend and, consequently, to point the front of the +aerobike upward. When brought still lower, its ascensional force increased +and the front of the aerobike pitched downward. These two extremes would +obviously serve only in sudden movements. In reality, the rider's skill +would consist in moving the propeller only very slightly, in order to +maintain a horizontal flight. As for the machine itself, Jimmy had +rejected the cumbersome system of cells, which he compared to boxes: + +"The shape of a fish for the ship, the shape of a bird for the +flying-machine," he said. + +He stuck to that principle and therefore he had added two enormous wings, +one on each side. He had first experimented with reduced models, shaped +like a bird, sending them up anyhow, to see, and he had ended by +constructing one which preserved its stability when gliding over the +atmospheric layers. He had thus been led to construct wings with a +slightly rounded surface whose coefficient of yield was nearly double that +of wings with flat surfaces. The width of these wings was about five feet +and their length about sixteen. They tapered a little, were drawn out in +front and widened at the opposite end, so as to get a more powerful hold +of the air. They were made of double-milled canvas, stretched on curved +ash and fastened to the sections by aluminum stays riveted with copper and +clenched. They were as light as they were stiff. These two wings pointed +slightly upward in front, parallel to the machine, and were fastened to it +in the middle by means of an axis below the saddle-pillar, which brought +their axis to the center of gravity. Other ingenious and quite individual +arrangements made the apparatus very manageable. The resistance of the +air, combined with the propelling power of the screw, exercised all its +force in vain: the wings remained stationary. Their lines were carefully +studied to facilitate the flow of the air, on the principle of Langley's +kite: and the two of them presented a carrying surface of forty-nine +square feet. + +"It's not much," Jimmy explained to Lily, who listened attentively. "If I +carried my motor," he said, "I should have a bigger surface. The machine +ought then, theoretically speaking, to rise when it is going at a rate of +thirty miles an hour; with a good back push the front-wheel would leave +the ground and continue its course upward. But, on the stage, we have no +room to acquire speed: we shall get it from an inclined plane, as at the +start of 'Looping the Loop.' As for the side steering, the front wheel has +spokes fitted with canvas and offers resistance to the air: it will steer +the aerobike to left or right at a touch of the handle-bar, as in ordinary +riding, and there you are, Lily." + +"My!" said Lily, bewildered by all this complicated apparatus. "Did you +work it all out on paper? It's enough to drive one mad!" + +"When you're on it, Lily," said Jimmy, smiling, "you'll have to work also, +_I_ promise you. But, with your talent, ... you'll manage better than I +should. And to-morrow," he added, "I will give you something on account of +your salary." + +"No, I have money," said Lily, very proudly and fearing lest she should +wear out her luck by adding that to it, by being paid for doing +nothing.... + +Lily spent the whole week in a fever of expectation; she did not know +where she was for joy. But she stifled that within herself. And it was +owing to her talent, all owing to her talent! When people wanted a +difficult trick done, they did not go to Daisy or the fat freaks, no, they +came to little Lily! And it was settled, she wanted no more familiarity, +now that she was going to top the bill at the Astrarium! A lady should be +more reserved in her friendships: she would make herself very +short-sighted, so short-sighted as to be almost blind, when she met the +rotten lot! Resolved, that she would give up saying, "Damn it!" give up +talking of smackings and using vulgar expressions: + +"Do you hear, Glass-Eye?" she said, calling her maid to witness. "You're +to box my ears if you catch me at it again!" + +The thought of having to handle that delicate machine increased Lily's +importance in her own eyes. She had noticed that Poland, apart from an +inordinate love of champagne suppers, had very nice manners: Lily would +profit by her example and become more refined; she would show Pa and Ma +the kind of Lily they had lost and she would crush them with the amount of +her salary! She would earn more by herself than the whole troupe. She +would let them know it, even if she had to do the trick for nothing, for +glory, to see her Ma beg her pardon on her knees! She had recovered all +the pride of her eighteen years, all her freshness, in a day: the touch of +bitterness about her lips had changed into a smile. It would have taken +very little more to make her dance for joy. But she restrained herself, +dared not believe in her happiness; and she was quite decided not to +accept anything from Jimmy before earning it. It was bad enough to owe him +that thousand marks. She made herself a nice practising dress and spent +the morning in bed reading a novel of fashionable life, of which the +heroine was called Lily, like herself! And she, too, would become a +society-girl, just to show them, damn it! But, suddenly, catching herself +at fault, she laughed and asked Glass-Eye for a box on the ear; and a +desperate pillow-fight ensued, in which they indulged whole-heartedly, +like two regular tom-boys who loved to wrestle and punch each other. And +it put her in a good humor for the rest of the day. She went shopping +through the windows, only bought herself a spray of roses to fasten to her +bodice. She went to the Astrarium, walked in as though the place belonged +to her, followed by her maid. She examined the works with the eye of an +expert. Three days, three days more and she would begin to rehearse! Her +legs were itching to commence! + +The alterations to the stage especially interested her. The door of the +cage remained closed and Lily looked at the auditorium: + +"Is it possible, after all?" she thought. + +And she measured the distance with her eye. It seemed enormous to her, but +never mind, she'd do it! And she grew wildly enthusiastic in the midst of +all that activity, of a theater which was being rearranged for her: "For +me, Glass-Eye! All of it for me! From here," she said, stamping her foot +on the stage, "from here to right up there!" And she pointed to the hole +in the sky. "All that on the bike! A somersault miles high!" + +[Illustration: OLD MARTELLO] + +Glass-Eye opened two terrified eyes, wondered if Lily was going mad.... + +Glass-Eye had become dulled through constant obedience, had lost her +memory, mixed up her yeses and noes, like those actors who forget their +parts through playing them too frequently; her recent life had excited her +too much, and never a sou in her pocket, only barely enough to eat ... it +was ten times worse than in Rathbone Place.... And then that new crotchet +of Lily's. + +"Can I fly, Glass-Eye, or can't I? Am I a bird or am I not?" It was enough +to make Glass-Eye lose her head.... + +Glass-Eye was obliged to answer yes ... and that very quickly. But she +kept on trotting behind Lily, who, realizing that she would soon be taken +up with her rehearsals, took advantage of her last days of liberty to pay +visits and show herself a little, accompanied by her maid, like the fine +lady that she was. She went and took the Bambinis some candies. Poor kids! +Their games and laughter no longer filled the hotel with mirth and gaiety: +old Martello was getting worse and worse and was now not able to leave his +room at all. Lily found a kind word for everybody and was grieved at not +having any money, which would have allowed her to be generous. That would +come later. She worked out a scheme for occupying herself with the +children when the old man was gone, for having them always with her, like +two dear little lucky charms. It was impossible, of course: never mind, it +was the idea of a lady, which she would not have had in the old days, and +Lily was pleased with herself for having entertained it. + +"I will speak about you to Jimmy," she said to the Bambinis. "I'll get you +engaged at the Astrarium, eh?" + +And the old man trembled with delight, stammered out his thanks, tried to +accompany her to the door, like a princess; and the little boy, to thank +her, promised to teach her a way of standing on your head which he had +learned all by himself! + +"Poor darlings!" thought Lily, as she left them. "If ever they fall into +their brother's hands! They would be better dead! Luckily for them, he has +disappeared for good; and his Ave Maria with him, unluckily for me!" + +For Lily understood how badly her position as a lady went with that name +of Mrs. Trampy. It was like dragging a tin kettle at her skirts, to make +the people in the street turn round and look at her. + +And, more than ever before, Trampy posed as a faithful husband. Nothing +sufficed to take down his arrogance. Always the same old Trampy: great, by +Jove! And, with his red lips, his glittering eye and the cigar stuck in +the corner of his mouth, he made love to second-rate "sisters," inferior +Roofers in red calico skirts. His glamorous title as the bill-topper's +husband still won him a few conquests. And Trampy, especially since +Jimmy's return, plumed himself more and more on the fact that he was the +husband of his dear little wife! + +Lily knew all this and it made her fume with rage at heart; but she showed +nothing, pretended, on the contrary, to treat it as a little matter of no +account. For instance, after her visit to the Bambinis, as she passed an +artistes' bar, quite close, there stood Trampy, lording it on the +pavement, among a lot of unemployed pros. Lily made herself short-sighted +to the point of absolute blindness. Trampy caught her, as she passed, with +a: + +"Hullo, Lily! Hullo, my dear little wife!" + +But Lily behaved like a real fine lady who knows how to put people in +their place without calling them names: + +"Hullo, Mr. Trampy!" she replied, in a sarcastic tone. "Still got your +red-hot stove, Mr. Trampy? Still a success with the girls? Kind regards, +Mr. Trampy!" + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +But Lily was grandest of all at the rehearsals. She was now no longer a +lady: she once more became the Spartan, bare-necked, her hair undone, her +body streaming with perspiration, and to work, to work, to make up for +lost time! In the mornings, alone on the deserted stage, she practised and +practised.... + +"Come on!" said Jimmy. "And mind you do your work properly," he added, +with a laugh, "or else, you know ..." + +And he patted the back of his hand. + +"I don't care!" said Lily. + +"You may break your head, you know," continued Jimmy, to try her. + +"It's none of your damned business if I do! Show me your tricks. To +work!" + +And Jimmy showed her a movement to execute on her bike, which she had +brought with her: balancings, as in "Bridging the Abyss," an excellent +training for the aerobike. And Lily went about it clear-eyed, +hard-cheeked, with all the little muscles contracted on her stubborn +forehead, ready to butt at the obstacle. A few falls to begin with, but +she jumped up again nimbly: + +"That's all right!" she said. "It's part of the game!" + +"But stop, stop," insisted Jimmy. "Be careful!" + +They were sometimes on the stage for hours at a time, but to Lily, all +wrapped in her work, it seemed so many minutes. She understood the jerk +which she was to give at the moment when, after rolling along the inclined +plane, she should shoot out into space for the soaring flight of fifty +yards: + +"The start, that's the great thing with the back-wheel," she observed. +"The rest goes of itself." + +"Don't cry till you're out of the wood!" said Jimmy. "It'll be different +when you're riding the aerobike." + +Lily was longing to begin that famous practice! And, a few days later, she +at last had that delight, took that further step toward triumph. Jimmy +removed the bird from the cage, fixed it on a stand. When Lily sat in the +saddle, she was crimson with pleasure, prouder than a princess sitting on +a throne for the first time: + +"There," she said. "Here I am! And what next?" + +Jimmy explained the complicated touches--"Press your left foot, there, +like that, to make it point upward"--and showed how, explained why; then +he passed to the working of the handle-bar--"There, like that, to turn it, +there"--and how and why the saddle slipped backward and forward. + +"And then?" + +"That's all." + +"That's all?" repeated Lily. "That won't want any smackings! Let's see, +like this, eh? Then that. Suppose I'm coming down at full speed. I throw +myself backward, a back push, there, like that. A kick, gently, there, +that's it. I'll do it as soon as you like! This minute, if necessary!" + +But Jimmy, without replying to these sallies, proceeded methodically. He +made her practise again, standing still, with the motor going at +half-speed. This was a different impulse: the displacement of the air +raised a stormy wind, the dust flew, the scenery hanging from the flies +waved to and fro and Lily shook in her saddle under the vibration of the +propeller. + +"Well, Lily?" said Jimmy. "That shakes you up, eh? That complicates +matters?" + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "And what about the boards? There are some of them that +are pretty rough, too! At Pittsburg, you know, it's like riding over +cobblestones. I prefer that to a stage that's too smooth: it's less +treacherous." + +A few days later, Jimmy ran up a steel cable from the stage to the opening +in the ceiling, which was now finished and covered with a tarpaulin; and +Lily was to try the flying. At the time for practice, there was no one in +the theater, from which the scaffoldings had been removed. There were no +seats on the floor or in the boxes: everything was being made outside, and +would be put in place in a day or two. In the afternoon, when there was no +practice, the house was filled with workmen, painters, upholsterers, +carpenters, whose places were taken by others at night, working by +electric light. Ten days more and they would have the triumphal opening; +already Paris was covered with picture placards: you saw Tom, as a +caryatid, supporting the weight of a palace; the Three Graces entwined in +their radiant nudity; the impersonator standing, like a Don Juan, +surrounded by a bevy of women: the ballet-girl, the shop-girl, the fine +lady; then, besides those, the New Trickers--"My idea!" thought Lily, but +she didn't care a jot now--the New Trickers fluttered round Daisy. You saw +the elephants; the monkey; Patti-Patty, the white negress; all, all, down +to the Bambinis, whom Lily had "got" engaged. The whole program was +reverberated on the walls and hoardings, like a thousand-voiced echo. An +even larger poster than the others, all blue, strewn with stars, displayed +the aerobike in full flight in the sky; and a human figure, seated upon +it, lifted a hand filled with rays. + +The mere sight of the posters was enough to stimulate Lily to the maddest +feats of daring. She felt herself firmer than steel, when she thought of +the New Trickers and of Pa and Ma, who were coming with Daisy, their +farthing dip! + +When everything was ready, Jimmy hung the aerobike to the steel cable by +two ropes, ten feet long, ending in pulleys which ran along the cable. +Each of these two ropes was looped up and the loop secured with thin +twine: this was an infallible way of ascertaining if the aerobike weighed +down upon them or if it was supporting itself in the air; the two cords +acted as a spring balance registering the tension in the rope. Should the +twine break, because the aerobike rested on the ropes, then the ropes +would unloop and the machine remain hanging without any danger for Lily. +This was the way in which Jimmy had worked when learning "his trade as a +bird," as he called it; and Lily, he had no doubt, would succeed even +better than he did, being more supple, lighter and quite as plucky. + +Oh, the rapture with which Lily bestrode the aerobike for the first +flight! + +Jimmy and two confidential assistants hauled up the machine to the top of +the inclined plane that gave it its impetus. Jimmy spent an endless time +in verifying and testing everything. The electric wire that set the +propeller in motion also caused him uneasiness. It had to unroll behind +and follow the aerobike without weighing upon it, without retarding its +flight; for the machine, which was necessarily a small one, to be able to +move within a confined space, did not carry the additional load of a +motor, but only a wire, as wireless transmission of power was not yet +available. At last, when everything was provided for, Jimmy allowed Lily +to make her trial. He trembled; not that she ran any danger, for a fall +was impossible: the machine was stopped, up above, automatically, by a +cable stretched crosswise and fastened to a strong spring, which slowed +and stayed the flight within the space of a few yards. But if the two +pieces of twine broke suddenly and if this happened several times in +succession, the shocks might come to frighten Lily, for all her +self-control. + +And Jimmy went on explaining. + +"I know," said Lily. "I quite understand. It's like this, like this, yes, +I know. It's only a matter of trying! It's a trick I've got to do and +that's all about it! Daisy would kill herself on it and so would the fat +freaks, but I shan't! I shall succeed." + +"Well, then, steady!" cried Jimmy, and his voice rang through the empty +theater. "Go!" + +The machine ran down with a swoop, the propeller whirred, Lily gave a +magnificent back push, when she reached the bottom of the inclined plane; +then she went straight up and the two pieces of twine snapped in two. Lily +found herself hanging fifty feet in the air, the two pulleys glided slowly +backward toward the stage. Jimmy stopped the machine. + +"That's wrong!" cried Lily. "Let's try again. I see what it was: I forgot +to push down my foot to point the machine up. It was a slip." + +However, at the next attempt, it went better. The twine broke each time, +but Lily rectified her movements: + +"It's my back push! It's the propeller! It's the front-wheel!" + +And, in fact, that was what it was. Jimmy and his assistants, who followed +her with their eyes, had noted the fault and Lily, too, had observed it, +in spite of the giddy flight. She was extraordinarily plucky and cool, her +eight stone of flesh and bone, unerring and exact, seemed made for the +aerobike. + +"Bravo, Lily! Hurrah!" cried Jimmy. + +She could have screamed for joy in the street, as she went out. + +Her unparalleled stroke of luck in being chosen tickled her heart. She +felt her sense of responsibility increase and also her wish to do well; no +sooner had she left off practising than she was seized with but one idea, +to begin again: + +"Eight days more!" she thought. + +At night, she dreamed of backward jerks, of turning the handle-bar, +pushing the pedal. Poor Glass-Eye, cowering in a corner of the bed, had +terrible nightmares, and, in the morning, after Lily's kicks, she rose +with her ribs smarting and her shins all black and blue. That was all her +profit, for Lily had hardly any money left and was not yet drawing a +salary. + +Lily submitted to all sorts of privation with a proud dignity. She would +be beholden to nobody. Soon her whole fortune would consist of her box of +lucky halfpence and a franc which she had won by turning a cartwheel, for +a bet, among artistes, in the country, to stagger the jossers. And so +their little evening meal was a scanty one. A sausage, a little fruit, a +cup of tea ... and then to bed. That was better than listening to the +owner of the Hours and all those men who propose things to you. Never, +never! Her work, her work! Lord, after what she had seen of Poland and the +Hours, it was much simpler to work, to be self-reliant. At night, +sometimes, Lily would lie awake and think ... where did that three hundred +francs of the Bijou come from? Not from the Bijou: Cataplasm's defeat had +swallowed up everything and the theater had long been without a penny; +they used to fill the house with paper distributed among the staff, with +orders to get rid of it anyhow. They were not far short of inviting +soldiers from the barracks. There had never been more than two hundred +seats paid for of an evening; it meant flat bankruptcy. And she was the +only one who had received anything: why? How? Then it must have been some +admirer, but who? Not the architect, surely, that josser! Who then? And +why had Jimmy engaged the Bambinis, when she asked him to? He did +everything to please her. He was letting her top the bill: why? She made a +heap of guesses, without getting at the exact truth ... Jimmy ... Jimmy +... that man, with his coldness, interested her. While so many others were +prowling around her, he alone seemed indifferent. She would have liked to +see him in love with her ... to make him suffer a little in his turn! All +the beauty-shows which Lily had seen, all the exhibitions of painted Hours +had not spoiled her good taste: Jimmy pleased her, with that strong face +of his. What an endless pity that she had married Trampy! She gave a +scornful pout when she thought of it: she married to Trampy! Married to +that soaker: she, a woman made for a man, a creature of flesh and blood, +who admired fine muscles, rough sport and virile smackings! Gee, if she +had been a man, it seemed to her that she would have enjoyed spoiling a +little Lily: outside working hours, of course! And, if a little Lily had +asked her, "Do you love me, yes or no?" she would never have answered no. +To-day, she would have bitten off her own tongue rather than put that +question to Jimmy! And yet Jimmy had a dignity about him that pleased her. +She could see into the game of the others. The architect, for instance, +would give her just a smile in passing, a pleasant word, as one performs a +social duty, between two pieces of business. A little amusement, no more: +that was all she was to him ... and to all of them. Jimmy seemed +different. But, still, if he loved her, why hadn't he the courage to tell +her so? And, besides, when all was said, she was sick and tired of men! +Some of them ran after you like dogs; others, damn it, were icicles! A +girl could have Marjutti's figure, Thea's arms, Nancy's legs, Lillian's or +Laurence's face ... and still they would not be satisfied! And thereupon +Lily pursed her brows, asked herself how and why and went to sleep like a +baby. + +And the rehearsals continued every day, without respite. Lily became +terrible the nearer she drew to success: her indomitable spirit mounted to +her heart. Jimmy had difficulty in holding her in. She made twenty +flights, thirty flights ... and the twine no longer broke. From that +moment, she was sure of succeeding, always. When you have once succeeded, +even if it be but once, you have no right ever to fail again. She had been +brought up in those principles, had had them rubbed into her skin. She +could not fail now, it was impossible! Even in her flight to the opening +up above! She had learned her "times," she knew how to aim exactly at the +right spot. Jimmy hastened to have the roof arranged for the final exit, +when the aerobike would disappear before the eyes of the audience, in the +star-strewn sky. All that remained was to get everything ready for the +final rehearsal: the complete show, with all lights lit, as for a gala +night. Lily seemed to see it all beforehand. On the day when she realized +that no accident was possible, that it was a trick of which she was +certain, she stifled a cry of triumph in her throat. She was afraid to +believe in it herself, so greatly did it surpass her dreams. She would +have stayed for days on the aerobike to experience the delight of the leap +into space. It seemed to her as though she were becoming a bird and about +to hover in mid-air and leave them all behind her, in the crowd below ... +all, all ... and be a little Lily, flying away on the back-wheel before +their noses. + +"You'll make yourself ill," said Jimmy. "Take a rest; there's no need to +tire yourself; you do it as well as I." + +For Jimmy, of course, had done the thing too, if only to show Lily; +besides, it was easy for him, who had had so much practice in London and +who knew his machine from end to end. And he appreciated the difficulty +all the more. He admired Lily's incredible pluck, her all-devouring +ambition and that splendid determination to get out of her scrape, to be a +little Lily earning her bread as she knew how, by her work, even if she +had to break her neck in the doing of it! And proud to her finger-tips, in +spite of the dog's life she had led. + +"If I had not procured her this delight," thought Jimmy, "I should never +have forgiven myself to the end of my days." + +And, from working with her for hours and hours, from holding her by the +waist at the first trials, from feeling that little body quiver under his +hand, from seeing Lily rush at danger, Jimmy became madly in love with her +again ... if he had ever ceased to be so! Ah, if Trampy...! But Lily was +married ... the divorce depended on the husband ... and the husband +wouldn't have it ... at any price: not for a million, he said, by Jove, +would he be separated from a little wife whom he adored! + +"Poor Lily!" thought Jimmy sadly. "Will she always be doomed to drag that +dead weight about with her?" + +During the intervals for rest, while Lily wiped the perspiration from her +forehead, Jimmy talked to her ... at first, of insignificant things ... +the name "Astrarium," for instance ... a place devoted to planets, to +stars: as a palmarium is to palms. Stars ... that was to say, +bill-toppers: the Three Graces; the Laurences; the Lillians; the +Marjuttis; the Lilies ... yes, the Lilies! Then he pitied her for +belonging to Trampy; and what a good little Lily she would have been if +she had remained with her family! + +"But I _am_ a good little Lily!" she said, with a display of childish +vehemence. "What more do you want? We artistes do what we jolly well +please, and we don't care a damn for the rest!" And she had half a mind to +tell him that it was all his fault! "I had to do a silly thing and I did +it," she continued, with an expression of regret on her face. "I married +without love, but lovers, my! I've had, I may say, as many as I wanted ... +from the son of a lord down." + +And Lily, to excite him, told him the long array of her love affairs, as +it was told everywhere, on the Bill and Boom Tour, on the Harrasford, on +the Eastern and Western Tours, like the whippings and the rest. + +"Yes, I know," replied Jimmy, very coldly. + +"What, you don't believe me!" exclaimed Lily. "There were men who would +have left wife and child for me! ... heaps of lovers, tons of them!" + +"My poor Lily, having so many is the same as having none at all," added +Jimmy dreamily. + +But still he did not declare his love: besides, he had constantly to leave +her, to go and give orders, or climb up on the roof, or look at the +heating-apparatus, below. + +Lily watched him go, followed him with a sphinx-like glance, while a vague +smile flickered about her lips.... + +But she hardly had time to think of all this: the assistants replaced the +bird in its cage, locked the door, opened that leading to the +dressing-room passage and the artistes arrived and took up their places on +their carpets. + +Lily had seen it a hundred times, a thousand times, "millions of times!" +She never wearied of it. She spent the day there, among the groups of +bloomers: the Three Graces, bare-armed, went to work, practised the human +cluster; Nunkie kept an eye on his dear nieces and rehearsed the Bambinis, +now that old Martello was keeping his room for good. Lily, who was almost +reduced to eating dry bread, but who remained the fine lady nevertheless, +brought them bags of sweets. Calmed by her work, she sat down in a corner, +laughed, her head thrown back, full-throated, applauded the others with +her thumbnail, shook hands with new-comers, made herself liked by all. And +it was: + +"Hullo, girls! Hullo, boys! Dear old Blackpool! What's the news at the +Palace? Who's topping the bill at the Hippodrome?" + +Lily, on her rickety chair, made as it were a little center at which the +news was exchanged; to think that, instead of being there, at the top of +the profession, she might have been at Glasgow, some twopenny theater, +where ladies are admitted without shoes or stockings, or playing the darky +at Earl's Court! Yes, but for Jimmy, that's where she would have been! Or +else the Parisienne, in Russia! She, an English girl, my! And Lily +fervently touched her lucky charm: oh, work, work, thank goodness for it! +And Lily rendered homage to work and sprang from her chair to shake hands +with Tom, who had come to see his palace unpacked: + +"Good morning, Tom! Welcome!" + +This Tom, who now topped the bill everywhere and had a permanent address +and his own scenery: wasn't it wonderful? He was no longer her Pa's old +servant: genius removes all distances; a man is what he makes himself! And +they shook hands warmly, like equals. + +Lily, as a sensational bill-topper and a friend of Jimmy's, was always in +great request. She talked nicely, without pose of any kind, like a woman +who is sure of herself and knows things. The Astrarium ... the Astrarium +... what did that mean? They asked Lily: + +"It's like ... a palmarium," she explained, "with sunflowers in it, all +sorts of things ... girls ... stars ..." + +She described her journeys, storms, gee! Weren't there, Glass-Eye? People +who had never been outside Europe and the States had no idea! Lily talked +of India, Africa, Australia; talked of lions, which stand on their +hind-legs when they're angry, and tigers, which lie down flat; mentioned +stage friendships between elephants and camels and herself in the midst of +it all: "That high!" lowering her hand to six inches from the floor; +talked of animal-training: dogs, cats, sea-lions and that "great, big, +wicked Australian rabbit" which boxed like a man. She was a well-informed +person, was Lily. And a providence for her family also, to listen to her. +When any one brought news of her Pa and the New Trickers, with Daisy as a +statue on her pedestal, one of the successes of the year: + +"Yes," Lily replied, in a patronizing tone, "I know. It was my idea. I +gave it to them!" + +They thought it very nice of her. She listened with great dignity to what +they said about the New Trickers. They would not be at the Astrarium on +the opening night. They were finishing an engagement on the Bill and Boom +that same evening. They would be in Paris the next day. Mr. Clifton was +reckoning on this appearance for the final triumph of his troupe ... and +he deserved it. What a man, Mr. Clifton, what a man! "Not easy to please, +eh, Lily?" And the inevitable gesture followed. But Lily would have none +of that now, she would not hear her Pa spoken of as a brute! Did they take +her for a performing dog? One was born with the gift or else one remained +all one's life a Daisy or a fat freak! She was proud to have a Pa like +hers. She wasn't a mountebank picked up on the road! Lily had a Pa and a +Ma: a Ma of her own, a Ma whom she was certain about. She bore a +well-known name. She belonged to the "father and son" aristocracy of the +music-hall. She had never needed "that" to make her practice, she an +artiste, brought up like a lady: + +"Wasn't I, Glass-Eye? Tom, wasn't I?" + +And the jewelry and the sweets her Pa bought her, my! Tons of it! Of +course, he would stand no nonsense about behavior; and Lily made them all +laugh till the tears came about that footy rotter who made love to her in +London, before the time when drink made him look so disgusting, and, when +she loitered in the street with him, Pa, the moment she reached the door, +caught her such a blow that she took all the steps to the basement at one +jump; and there found her Ma waiting for her ... gee! + +"And they were quite right, too! And ... do they know that I'm going to +top the bill at the Astrarium?" she asked. + +"No, they think you're in Spain or somewhere." + +"Somewhere!" said Lily to herself, with a thrill at her heart. "I'll show +them!" + +She choked with joy at the idea of the startled look on the faces of Pa +and Ma when they saw her on the aerobike. An exuberant gladness filled her +heart. And that feverish work, those laborers everywhere, the opening in +the roof, the terrace up above, those posters all over Paris and there, +behind the iron door, in the dark, the bird! It was all for her: a theater +for herself! And she felt a need to leap, to laugh, to spread gaiety all +around her; and she rushed about madly with the Bambinis, romped with them +behind the pillars, rolled with them on the floor of her dressing-room, +became once again the Lily who had played truant all around the world, +inventing practical jokes in India and climbing apple-trees in Honolulu. +She crossed the combs and tooth-brushes on the Roofer girls' tables, +rushed into their room when they were undressed, drove the trembling herd +of them distracted, talked of the thousand dangers that awaited them if +they didn't mend their ways, made them fly to their lucky charms to ward +off ill-luck, when she offered them a yellow flower, with great pomp, or +some broken glass in a jewel-box. Then she talked to the Three Graces, +those big girls who always astonished her with their cloistered +existence--Nunkie before everything--and who amused themselves by +measuring one another round the biceps, round the chest, or else, with +their elbows on the table, played at who should first bend back the +other's wrist. Lily sat down for a moment with them, then stopped, +breathless with larking and talking, and went back to her dressing-room: + +"I shall have months to spend in here!" she thought. + +[Illustration: LILY'S GOLLYWOG] + +And, assisted by Glass-Eye, she pinned up bits of stuff, tied a silk bow +to the back of the chair, put up nails for her costumes, laid out on her +table long rows of post-cards, photographs of friends, all dispersed to +the four quarters of the globe, some dead, others done for, all the poor +witnesses of her life. Then she took her black gollywog from her trunk and +kissed it passionately--"Darling! Darling! Darling!"--before hanging it up +on the wall. And along the dressing-room passage and through the window +came the sound of voices ... snatches of homesick tunes: _From Rangoon to +Mandalay_ or _Way down upon the Suwanee River_ ... and "Hullo, Lily! +Hullo, old boy!"... The female-impersonator walked into her room as though +it were his own, sat down on the basket trunk, plunging his green eyes +into hers. + +And sometimes Jimmy passed, always at a run: something had gone wrong +somewhere, the heating apparatus, the electric light.... + +"Hullo, Lily!" And he stopped for a moment, frowned at the sight of the +impersonator. "Always busy?" he asked, seeing Lily, bare-armed, washing +something in her basin. + +"Have to be," said Lily. "I always wash my little blouses; we do +everything ourselves, don't we, Glass-Eye? And, when I'm performing, I +have two pairs of tights to wash a day!" + +"Two pairs of tights!" + +"Why, of course, matinée and night! You have no idea, Jimmy ... the nickel +... when I sit on the handle-bar, it makes a great mark ... just here, +look!" + +And she laughed at Jimmy over her shoulder while she pointed to the place +... and then blushed, like a frolicsome child that has been found out and +is, oh, so sorry! + +"Every one's got to keep to his own dressing-room!" said Jimmy, feeling +very uncomfortable, to the man with the green eyes. "You can't stay here; +it's against the rules!" + +"We're doing no harm, please, Mr. Jimmy," retorted Lily, sitting down +beside the impersonator and slipping her arm round his waist. + +"Poor Jimmy!" said the impersonator, when the other had left the room in a +rage. "He's jealous, isn't he, darling?" + +"He jealous? Then why doesn't he say so? One can't guess a thing like +that! When you're a man, you speak out!" + +And the architect appeared in his turn, he, too, running from one end of +the theater to the other. He wore a bandage over one eye: + +"Knocked up against a beam ... a little accident. Have you seen Jimmy?" + +"He's over there, I think," replied Lily, without troubling to look at +him. + +There was no jealousy about the architect. He stayed for a moment, sniffed +at the scent-bottle, smiled at the photographs on the wall. A green-eyed +impersonator, a blue-eyed impersonator: the room could have been full of +impersonators, for all he cared. Dark girls, yellow girls, fair girls, so +many playthings to distract him from his rules and compasses. He was bored +at once; turned to another at once; and it was all so amusing! He was the +typical lover of the woman of the stage, with his little surface passions. +And very amiable withal, knowing them all, and friendly with them, a great +purveyor of anecdotes: + +"The Para-Paras, you know, Lily, committed suicide in their room ... awful +poverty. The wife wasn't ... Tottie enough ... and the husband was +teaching the English accent to continental clowns! Poland? A magnificent +engagement in Russia. Old Martello hasn't three days to live. Oh ... and +Nunkie! There's news among the Three Graces! The troupe's done for this +time!" + +And he told how, last night, poor Thea, while mending her uncle's +overcoat, found in the lining an old letter from America ... from some +swain she had had over there ... a letter glowing with love and regret. +Yes, Nunkie knew how to hold his nieces, the architect explained, laughing +... watched them like a Spanish duenna, confiscated the letters that came +for them, if necessary, the old rogue, and calmed their ardors with a few +drops of bromide in a glass of water, every evening, on the pretense of +keeping them from catching cold in the drafts. Oh, the old rogue! And Thea +had almost fainted with grief in her dressing-room when she read the +letter. + +"Quite a business, Lily! A scandal in their little home! Very funny, eh?" +he added, as he ogled Lily's pigeon's eggs and rolled a cigarette. + +Lily, who had seen poor Thea cry before and who knew to what extent her +lover's treachery had humiliated her, was secretly furious to hear that +josser talk carelessly of things like that: did he imagine, the idiot, +that they weren't built like other people, in the profession, that they +had no feelings? What need had the public to know about their lives? It +was among themselves, quite among themselves, all that! + +"Get out of my sight, you damned josser!" said Lily. "Go and eat coke!" + +But the other, greatly amused, described his latest discovery, a pearl, in +an out-of-the-way neighborhood ... at Vaugirard fair ... an extraordinary +girl, showing off on a couple of trestles in front of a canvas booth, in +which her man lifted weights to the light of the Argand burners: + +"Picture this girl, Lily," said the enthusiastic josser, "picture this +girl on her trestles, doing weights, balancings, all sorts of things. A +body like a boy's, all muscle, and thin: whew! Not _that_ much fat on her, +no hips, arms and shoulders, like Michael Angelo's flayed model. And I +talked to her afterward! And her man gave me a queer look you know ... I +got a blow...." + +"Well done!" cried Lily, clapping her hands. "The beam, eh? That'll teach +you to meddle in other people's business! Oh, you don't know those +tenters! One of these days you'll be picked up with your face smashed in, +or shot through the chest with a revolver." + +"I say, though," the architect interrupted, "that girl ... I don't know +how we came to speak of you ... she knows you, Lily!" + +"That's right! Now I have mountebanks among my acquaintances!" said Lily, +with an air of disgust. "Get out of this, I say!... You wanted Jimmy; +there he is, look!" + +And Lily, furious, jerked her head toward the passage. + +When Lily went home again she did not even think of what she had just +heard. The death of the Paras; the Graces ... Nunkie, that old rogue!... +She forgot all about it.... She saw only that: the theater, the aerobike, +the theater! Ah! she had it in her blood, in spite of those ugly stories! +Even outside, when, upon Jimmy's advice, she went to take the air in the +parks, under the great blue sky, she regretted the dark stage, the canvas +landscapes of the back-drops; the open-air scenery appeared paltry to her, +beside it. Between her and nature there was always the aerobike! In a few +days ... was it possible? She clenched her little hands over an imaginary +handle-bar, hardened her pigeon's eggs, made pedaling movements, in spite +of herself, on the floor of the tram-car which she very soon took to get +back to the theater again! It was her life, her joy, her suffering, her +good and evil ... it was her field, her very own field, the field which +she had sown with sweat that she might reap fame and glory. + +And, when she returned, she reveled in that smell of hot glue and tar and +scent; oh, it was much nicer than the country! And more interesting, too: +all the little drama that was being enacted among the Graces, for +instance; Nunkie had lost his wonderful reputation, he was surrounded with +less reverence; the story of the confiscated letters was beginning its +round of the world. It was all very well for him to spoil his dear girls, +to double his attentions, to treble the doses of bromide; there was no +doubt about it, the troupe's days were numbered. The boy-violinist and +others were making love to the Three Graces, fresh troupes were being +formed, three more, any number! And they all talked freely, turned their +backs without hesitation upon Nunkie, who was prowling round: + +"Well?" he asked. "What's the mystery?" + +"We were discussing marriage, Nunkie," the Graces answered. + +"That's right, my children," he replied, with a sigh. + +Lily, in all these plots and counter-plots, knew how to remain neuter and +to be very nice to everybody; she had been trained from childhood to keep +her opinions to herself; none of her damned business, all that; something +that might have been foreseen and expected ... like the death of old +Martello, which Jimmy told her of.... Yes, the old man had flickered out +in his bed just like that.... + +But she needed all her composure, indeed, when Jimmy told her that those +dear little Bambinis ... ah, there was bad news for them, the poor loves! + +"What? What?" asked Lily. + +"Well, we are going to lose them; they've been claimed by their brother, +it seems." + +"What!" cried Lily. "Their brother? The ... the Mexican one?" + +"Yes, I think so," said Jimmy. "He's come back from South America. He is +in Paris now ... somewhere in a penny show, in the suburbs ... I don't +know where ... with a girl." + +"With a girl!" thought Lily. + +Everything returned to her in a flash! The girl with the bruised skin ... +that boy's body all muscle ... Ave Maria! Ave Maria! Not dead! She felt +inclined to run up to Trampy, to fly at his throat, to bellow in his face +that Ave Maria was here, just to see the effect! But she restrained +herself. Suppose it were not true? Oh, she would soon know! That footy +rotter, if it were true! O God, grant that it might be true! + +All this passed through her brain in less than a second. + +"Why!" said Jimmy, seeing her turn pale. "Does that affect you so much ... +the loss of your little friends, the Bambinis? For you're going to lose +them...." + +"No, Jimmy!" she replied indignantly. "You shall not give up the Bambinis +to their brother, a cruel, cowardly brute like that, right at the bottom +of the profession. I know ... I've seen.... You shan't do it, Jimmy, and, +look here, I forbid you!" + +"Well, Lily, Lily, I'll do what I can, to please you, you know; I'll try; +I'll see the police; you must give your evidence, if you have anything to +say. Do you know, Lily, you are as good as gold. You're a good little +Lily: hard upon herself and kind to others." + +But he was interrupted ... Jimmy here, Jimmy there ... he was wanted ... +for the flies, for the roof.... Jimmy flew to the stage, bothered on every +side, worried by the Astrarium ... and Lily. Lily! He could not escape her +now, do what he might! He had her in his heart, in his brain, everywhere. +She lived and existed in his breast, shot up there like a flame! Whatever +he had been told about her he no longer knew, did not want to know. And, +besides, even if it had been true, oh, he would have forgiven everything! +He would have passed over everything! He would have plunged into the abyss +to get Lily out of it, whatever she had done; yes! In spite of everything! +in spite of everybody! In spite of Trampy, husband or not! + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +To-morrow was to be the great day, the opening of the Astrarium, the first +night; and Jimmy, more bustled than ever, forgot Lily ... almost ... on +that evening, especially, the evening of the dress-rehearsal: not an +ordinary rehearsal, with the band-parts handed to the conductor across the +footlights--"A march here, please, a waltz there. 'K you"--no, the whole +show, with orchestra and all complete; the stage flooded with light; each +turn in its own setting: corridor, wood, room, palace. Jimmy multiplied +himself in the final fever. The theater, arranged according to his ideas, +was still encumbered with ladders and scaffoldings; but gangs of laborers +were hard at work on every side. The obstructions all disappeared like +magic, were juggled away. Jimmy had made sure that the roof was ready; he +had run from the landing-point, out of sight of the audience, through the +door contrived in the wall of the stage, crossed the fly-galleries, come +down by the pulley-rope; the whole thing, from roof to stage, had taken +him, watch in hand, thirty seconds. And Lily had done it also. It formed +part of the turn, a sensational addition to the aerobike. All would be +ready, all would go well, provided that Lily was not nervous that evening +... and to-morrow especially! Those confounded crazy little girls! Crazy +every one of them: Laurence herself, the bravest of the lot, had just had +an awful fall, at Boston, in her excitement at losing her lucky charm. It +was the event in the profession, the accident of the day. Lily might be +frightened by it. Now it was essential that she should succeed and succeed +at the first attempt. His fortune and hers, his future, the success of the +Astrarium depended on it. And Jimmy, obsessed by his labors, had hardly +time to think of Trampy, in the formidable effort of the eleventh hour. +And yet, sometimes, he felt a pain at his heart. That adorable Lily! Would +he succeed in making her love him? And now there was that impersonator! +Oh, to work, to work! And he went at it, hammer and tongs, to make sure of +the aerobike's success. To make them talk of him ... to achieve fame ... +which was as sweet as love! And he was wanted from one end of the theater +to the other. Oh, he might well look upon the Astrarium as his creation! +Already, a few days before, rumors of a strike were current. The managers +were boycotted by the artistes, in England.... Jimmy feared lest the +Astrarium should feel the consequences, under the pressure of the +Performers' Association, but he had arranged everything, seen each artiste +separately, explained his plans: gala matinées, creation of an asylum, a +home of rest ... a glory to help in such a task ... who could tell but +that they were working for themselves by adding their stone to the +edifice? He quoted the Para-Paras and their wretched end; old Martello, +dead without leaving a penny; the Bambinis, homeless; Ave Maria, +unprotected. The men listened, with serious faces. As for the girls, his +words came straight from the heart. Those decent girls, who earned their +living as they knew how and the living of others besides, they understood +him at once; and Lily no longer laughed; on the contrary: + +"Me? Whatever you like! For nothing, if you like; rely on me, Jimmy!" + +And now the hour had come; they were to appear under the critical eye of +Harrasford. The acting-manager had arrived from England that same day with +the stage-manager, who was "behind." It made a strange impression, that +huge red-and-gold house, glittering with light and sounding curiously +empty to the thunder of the band. Everybody was at his post: the tall +flunkeys stood motionless at the entrance-doors, in the promenades, as if +the audience had been there, whereas there was practically nobody except +Harrasford and the manager. And on the stage, which had been cleared of +every superfluous piece of property, splendid order reigned: the +scene-shifters, up above, had their hands on the windlasses; the two +electricians, on their perches, turned the lime-light where it was to +fall; the drops rose and fell without a hitch; the scenes slipped into +their places, shifted, in the English fashion, by one man. For each turn +on the stage, the next was ready to come on, no more; all the rest were in +the dressing-rooms. But there, behind the iron curtain, one could picture +staircases crowded with people running up and down, passages full of +light, a flurried ant-hill, and feel that a ring of bells would be enough +to bring tumbling on to the stage a whole glittering, grotesque or radiant +world of people, from the monkey-faced comedian to Lily, in her pink +tights, an image of Venus. There was electricity in the air of that empty +house, in which all felt the presence of the powerful master, harder to +please than a crowd! And rays of light ran along the stage, the back-drop +seemed a cloud ready to split in the crash of the thunder, under the storm +of the raging brasses. On the stage, the turns defiled in their order, +under the shimmering lights: the Bambinis, brother and sister, supple +grace and strength combined, filled the huge space with the free play of +their rosy bodies and the brightness of their genuine gaiety. The Three +Graces formed the human cluster, a hanging group of faces, figures, +shoulders and glorious lines. The program poured out laughter, harmony, +beauty, till, against the blue forest, came the scarlet step-dances of the +Roofers. And then silence: the feature of the evening, the aerobike! There +was a moment's anxiety. A net was stretched above the stalls, from the +footlights to the opening in the roof. For the audience, at any rate, all +danger was removed, even in case of a fall. Then the glass dome above +opened, and the curtain rose on the Elysian glimmer of a scene studded +with stars; and everything was empty, stage and auditorium. The distance +seemed immense: "miles and miles!" The machine was to start out suddenly, +rush through space, disappear up above, like a meteor that shoots out from +infinity and returns to it. + +A few seconds passed, during which Jimmy gave Lily her last instructions: + +"You're not afraid, Lily? Would you like me to do it?" + +Afraid! She turned her calm face to him. Oh, she could have accomplished +impossible and cruel things, braved torture, walked on burning coals! She +felt herself made of supple steel, unerring and exact: + +"Up, quick, quick! Ready, Jimmy?" + +"Ready!" + +"Then ... GO!" + +The aerobike flashed like an arrow from the bow, raised itself with a +magnificent jerk; the propeller hummed like a thunder-bolt, the wings +rustled in flight, pointed toward the opening, went up ... up ... up ... +disappeared in the star-strewn sky.... It was done! The band struck up the +triumphal march, Harrasford, the manager, the few who were present all +burst into cheers; and, suddenly, over the house plunged in darkness, from +the back of the stage, came a burst of light. Lily, after running over the +roof and sliding down the pulley, was descending against the blue +back-drop, bringing with her the star! First, one saw the light breaking, +then swelling and increasing in brilliancy, and Lily appeared, a starry +Eve, holding, in her upraised hand, a dazzling luminary, a crystal globe, +which an invisible wire from behind filled with an intensity of light. And +powerful rays shot to every side, end-of-the-world coruscations, above the +crater of the orchestra. + +"Splendid!" cried Harrasford. "That dishes the waterspouts at the +Hippodrome, the avalanches, everything!" And, as Jimmy came up, "Good boy, +Jimmy!" he said, catching him a great smack on the shoulder by way of a +compliment. "And your girl ... your ... Maggy ... your ... what's her +name? Lily ... glorious! Very good indeed! Couldn't be better! Capital +idea!" + +He gave a quick glance at his watch, a few words to Jimmy, to the manager, +over his shoulder, on the wing: + +"All the boxes booked three weeks ahead? All the stalls? That's right! +Good-by, good luck!" + +Already his broad back was disappearing through the door; had to catch the +midnight train for Cologne; presence indispensable. + +"Telephone to-morrow; let me know how things go. Ta-ta!" + +And Harrasford was far away. + +And Lily? Lily was in her dressing-room, stupefied with delight. How soon +it was done! How simple it was! Jimmy, after all, with his scrawls and his +scribbles, with his brain-work: what a discovery he had made! She would +have liked it to last for ever, the flight on the aerobike; she still +seemed to be rushing up to the stars, to feel the coolness of the night on +her face. How funny it was, going up, up, up and out through that hole. +She was still laughing at it, with little convulsive movements of the +shoulders, and stammering out things. + +When she was dressed, she received Jimmy's congratulations and +everybody's. They gave her a bouquet: + +"To our little favorite!" + +She answered, without knowing what she said; went home. Everything seemed +to be turning round and round. She ate a few mouthfuls, washed down with a +glass of milk; and then, suddenly, made a rush for Glass-Eye! A pillow +fight followed: + +"Here, take that! Take that! And that! And that!" + +Ten minutes of an epic struggle, on the bed thrown into confusion and +disorder, as after a murder; huge slaps on the firm, rounded forms; virile +smackings; and Glass-Eye, breathlessly, had to own herself beaten, to beg +for mercy. + +"That'll teach them!" cried Lily, falling on the bed, panting, drunk with +joy, drunk with joy! Trampy, Mexico, Ma's insults, the jealousies, the +grudges, Daisy, the fat freaks: pooh, none of that existed for her! +Nothing remained but herself, drunk with an immense joy! She was almost +delirious, in the excess of her great happiness: + +"I'll smash up their damned troupes, do you hear, Glass-Eye? There! Like +that!" And she tried to renew the fight, but her strength failed her. +"Dished and done for, their damned troupes!" + +And she laughed, she burst with laughing, when she thought of their +eighteen feet of stage: + +"Stages as big as my hand, Glass-Eye, is what they've got to turn in!" + +Whereas, she went straight up in the air, up to the stars, miles high, up +above everything! Bang! A smack for Glass-Eye, who was just taking off her +skirt! + +"And I say, Glass-Eye! Ma, who said that I ... you know what she said! But +wait till they see me in my grand dresses! I'll order them to-morrow; and +my hats too. And I'll invite Pa and Ma to the hotel! And we'll drink +champagne and I'll have fifty francs' worth of flowers on the table, just +to show them! 'Our Lily,' that's what I'm going to be, 'our own Lily,' +damn it!" + +Lily, when she was in bed, turned things over and over in her brain. Yes, +her Pa was quite right. It was for her good, for her own good! Big +salaries, which would all belong to her! And no more performing-dog +toques, but big hats and feathers and motor-cars and furs, but no goggles! +No, she must find something that wouldn't hide her face, so that people +would recognize her and say: + +"That's Lily!" + +And the road behind her motor would be strewn with the bodies of pros who +had died of jealousy! + +And she would consult Pa and Ma on the color of her liveries, on her +crest: a wheel, with wings to it! And Lily dropped off into a sleep +interrupted by awful nightmares, in which Ma was dead--poor Ma!--before +witnessing her triumph--and in which elephants trumpeted in her honor and +sea-lions applauded her with their finny fore-paws, all along a queer sort +of Tottenham Court Road, paved with fat freaks, at the end of which a +Horse Shoe, as big as the Marble Arch, opened out upon the stars. + +Poor Glass-Eye, on her side, had the most outlandish dreams. Her brain was +turned from living in the midst of all that. She dreamed that she was +flying, too; that she was Lily in her turn; that she was soaring over +Whitechapel; but, from time to time, a nervous kick from Lily recalled her +to the realities of life. + + * * * * * + +"Glass-Eye! There's a knock at the door, I think. Or else I'm dreaming. +What's the time? Ten o'clock. Get up, Glass-Eye! If it's the landlady, +tell her I'll pay her next week!" + +But Glass-Eye, who had gone to the door, shut it suddenly and came back to +Lily, looking quite startled: + +"Miss Lily, there's some one, all in black, on the stairs; a ghost!" + +"If you're trying to frighten me," cried Lily, jumping out of bed, "I'll +knock your other eye out! Take care!" + +She was choking with excitement. Lily was afraid of nothing. But those +confounded ghosts: poor Ma, perhaps! And she quickly separated two fingers +wide behind her back, so as to be on the safe side and ward off ill-luck: + +"Come with me, Glass-Eye; you go first!" + +And Lily, in her night-dress, half-opened the door, looked out. + +A thin woman, all in black, stood motionless. It was not Ma. Lily breathed +more freely: + +"What do you want?" she asked. + +"I want to speak to Miss Lily," said the woman in black. "I went to the +theater and they gave me your address. I came.... I suppose you don't +remember me, it's so long ago. Ave Maria, on the wire in Mexico?" + +"Ave Maria! Come in," said Lily. + +Ave Maria, whom she had sought for so long. She would know at last! Oh, if +it were true! God grant that it might be true! Lily, hardly recovered from +her fright, quivered at the thought. And she devoured Ave Maria with her +eyes. She recognized her, now that she knew: it was she indeed, but grown +old before her time, looking wretched, thin, hollow-eyed, a face all skin +and bone. And the two stood contemplating each other in silence. + +"How pretty you've grown!" whispered Ave Maria timidly. "No one would take +you for a professional." + +But a sudden fit of coughing brought scarlet patches to her pale cheeks. + +"It catches me here," she said, pressing her hand to her chest. "It's +damp, sometimes, in the tent. And then half-naked on those trestles. The +work warms one, it's true. The other night I saw some one who knew you, a +gentleman. I should have liked to ask him more, but my brother struck him +in the face. I got my turn after. However, I wanted to see you. I went to +the Astrarium. I asked them." + +"Go on," said Lily, who was burning to know, but did not want to show it. +"Glass-Eye, give me my dressing-gown. Go on, please!" + +"I don't know that I dare," said Ave Maria, "now that I have seen you. You +are so much better-looking than I am. Are you still living with him?" she +asked, in a low voice, fixing two fiery eyes on Lily. + +"No," said Lily, "I am living with nobody!" + +"But they told me. I heard at Buenos Ayres ... the story of the whippings, +your running away with him...." + +"What whippings? And I'm living with nobody!" retorted Lily, very +haughtily. + +"But you have lived with him ... in Germany ... Trampy, you know." + +"No," said Lily, "I was married, wasn't I, Glass-Eye?" + +"But _I'm_ married to him!" Ave Maria broke in, more aggressively than +before. + +"Oh, if it were true!" thought Lily. "Oh, if it were true!" + +She dared not believe it, it would have been too beautiful, beautiful +beyond dreams. And, with her nerves stretching to breaking-point: + +"Prove it!" she said coldly, to Ave Maria. + +"Yes, I have my proofs," replied Ave Maria, shaken with a furious cough. +"And I'll show them! Trampy belongs to me, not to you! He's in Paris, they +tell me.... And I mean to have him, do you hear? I've suffered enough and +to spare. I've done everything since he left me. Look here, at Caracas +people used to offer me twopence to let them black my eye, sometimes, when +my brother was locked up at the police-station. And there were the +one-horse circuses where we slept in a heap on the straw, in Chili or some +such country. And, sometimes, I lost my balance on the wire, because of my +cough. And my brother: you know him! And the cattle-men, when they're +drunk! One of them stabbed me here, with a knife, there, here, in the +breast; they had to cut it off--the breast--later, at Montevideo, because +of the gangrene. Yes, he stabbed me with a knife, because I wouldn't say, +'I love you,' to him! Fancy my saying, 'I love you,' to any one but +Trampy! Never! I would have let them jump on my chest with their hobnailed +boots first! And, now that Trampy's here, I want him! He belongs to me and +I mean to have him." + +"Well, take him, if he belongs to you!" said Lily. "I don't care a hang +for your Trampy; I've turned him out long ago!" + +"So ... it's true? If he's no longer with you, I can have him again. I +shall have him! I'll have my brother locked up, if necessary, to be free! +I have only to say a word, not because of the story of that nose which he +bit off at Rio: no, the other day, at Vaugirard, he used the knife. I'll +tell everything, to have my Trampy back." + +And her rough voice became gentle now, in her Anglo-Italian jargon, with a +dash of Spanish in it; everything became clear, everything yielded before +the violence of that fierce love. Lily was astounded to hear it: + +"That's what I call love!" she thought. "I had no idea, my! And all for +Trampy! It's worse than in the novels." + +And she was touched, in spite of herself, and, when Ave Maria cried, "Oh, +how happy you must be, if he loves you!" Lily dared not protest that she +didn't care a hang for that soaker, for fear of hurting the poor martyr. +She replied, on the contrary, that Trampy was very nice, but that he was +hers no longer, that he belonged to Ave Maria, since Ave Maria had the +proofs ... _if_ she had the proofs. + +"I have them here, Miss Lily, my marriage-lines. I was able to get them, +after he went. I had the certificate witnessed. My brother, when he came +to fetch me, never knew about it. I sewed it into the lining of a +portmanteau; no chance of losing it: here it is." + +And she produced a yellow document from her bodice and laid it on the +table. + +Lily seized upon it ... read it at a glance ... it was quite regular! Oh, +the footy rotter! Two wives! To say nothing of his thirty-six girls! And +what a fine trick she would play him! At last, she was about to get rid of +her festering sore! She could not breathe for happiness. And, as Ave Maria +was watching her movements, lest she should keep the paper, Lily handed it +back to her, certain that it was in good hands, that it would not be +lost. + +Then and there an idea came to her. Trampy would be at the theater that +afternoon with Tom, who, knowing little about all these stories, +interested only in the condition of those biceps of his, had taken Trampy +as his assistant and had told Lily so. And Lily had said nothing, +reserving to herself the right to have him turned off the stage by Jimmy, +with a smack in the eye, before everybody: the footy rotter, coming there +to defy her! Well, there would be no smack in the eye; she would simply +hand him over to Ave Maria, as one flings a lump of carrion to a tigress! + +"Wait a bit, you faithful husband!" she growled. "You'll see, presently!" + +And, first of all, when Ave Maria rose to go, Lily forbade her to do +anything of the kind, for fear that the brother, who must be out looking +for her, might drag her back to the booth at the fair and then take the +first train to some other place, after getting hold of the Bambinis. And +Lily meant none of all this to take place; she would rather go to the +police and have the brute arrested! + +"Stay here, Ave Maria," she said. "I'll give you back your Trampy this +afternoon." + +Oh, if she had been alone, how she would have flown at Glass-Eye, to work +off her superabundant joy! It would have been a merciless fight, with +slaps in the Mexican style! But a lady receiving her friends must set a +good example. She contented herself with hustling Glass-Eye by word and +gesture: + +"My new dress! My big hat!" + +Ave Maria, quite taken up with the excitement of seeing Trampy again, of +having him back again, left herself in Lily's hands. She felt as if she +were looking at a princess, when Lily made Glass-Eye spin round the room. +She could not even help smiling when she saw Glass-Eye catch her foot in +the dresses spread out on the floor, so much so that Lily asked her +angrily if she meant to go on hopping about like that for ever, if she +really wanted to have a candle lit in her glass eye to make her see that +bodice, there, right in front of her nose, damn it! And Glass-Eye's +fright, when she heard that ... though Glass-Eye was never surprised at +anything that Lily said or did! + +Going to the Astrarium, Lily, followed by Glass-Eye, walked along the +street with her cheeky feather waving like a flag in battle. Ave Maria, by +her side, kept close to the wall, with frightened glances to right and +left; Lily did not call her attention to the Astrarium posters for fear of +humiliating her: she would have had to explain that she was topping the +bill and poor Ave Maria, who was starring at the fair, would never have +understood. A professional abyss separated the two of them. Lily saw this +and had too kind a heart to let the other feel it. What a difference +between them! Merely in the way in which Lily entered the theater and +smiled to the stage-doorkeeper! Ave Maria followed very timidly, like a +beggar-woman stealing into a palace. She felt out of her element in those +big theaters, where she had not appeared for ever so long, having come +down to the level of one-horse circuses, patched canvas tents, acrobatic +performances in the open air, on the slack-wire stretched from tree to +tree. Lily looked a princess beside her, really. Ave Maria was even +surprised to see her address a gentleman who was there: it was the +architect, with a bandage over his eye. Ave Maria recognized him; and he, +rendered prudent by the blow which he had received from "her man," stepped +back instinctively at the sight of her. But Lily caught him by the lapel +of his coat: + +"You've been fooling me ... with your measurements," she said, "and there +are certain things that jossers oughtn't to meddle with; and it serves you +right, that black eye of yours; but I forgive you, because of the immense +service you're doing me ... without knowing it ... you lover of +second-rate goods!" she muttered, as she watched him slink off, taking her +forgiveness with him. + +The stage was almost empty. Tom had come, not Trampy; so much the better, +there would be all the more there presently, for the great scene! + +"Wait for me a minute," she said to Ave Maria. "Sit down over there, in +the corner." + +And Lily went up to her dressing-room; she wanted to look her best, to +bedizen herself ... a little red on her lips, a little blue on her eyelids +... to make Trampy regret the more what he was going to lose. And, when +she was ready, Jimmy passed and, icicle though he was, could not help +paying her a compliment on her good looks. He appeared quite +disconcerted: + +"Just imagine, Lily. What do you think happened to me, in the +impersonator's dressing-room? I had something to say to him ... I walk in +... see the impersonator half undressed ... and it's a woman, Lily, a +magnificent woman! You never told me, you kiddie!" + +"Hush!" said Lily. "Don't give her away; it's a secret, it's her living, +Jimmy." + +"Don't be afraid, Lily, I won't prevent any one from earning her living, +as long as she does all right on the stage. But I don't know where I am +now. That woman who came in with you, for instance," continued Jimmy +jestingly, "she looks just like a man; there's no knowing; nothing would +surprise me after that!" + +"She's a woman, Jimmy, a married woman! You'll see presently. We'll have a +good laugh; mind you're there! I want everybody to be there! It's a +surprise, Jimmy!" + +What a kiddie she was, thought Jimmy, as he went down the stairs. The +architect, the impersonator: the two scandals of her life. That +impersonator whom she kissed in front of him, a story that had gone round +the world, Lily's love affairs, one more ready to leave wife and children +for her sake: the exaggeration of the stage, always; professional +boasting. Like the story of the whippings, like those girls whom she had +described to him, and herself, with all over her skin--"Here, here, damn +it!"--wounds that you could put your finger into. Or like those who were +said to be done for, or burned alive, or drowned in shipwrecks, with waves +miles high, all for the honor of the profession; when, perhaps, it was +simply as good a way as another of retiring from the stage, to get +married, with a flourish of trumpets! It wasn't true, all that, or their +parade of vice either, all humbug, from end to end, their amorous +conquests, their orgies, their escapades, like their ostrich-feathers, +that long, or their sham diamonds, that big, and bouquets large enough to +fill a cab. But they were decent-hearted girls, all the same: that Lily, +what a kiddie, thought Jimmy, feeling quite comforted, quite glad on her +account. + +And just then, as luck would have it, he met Tom, to whom Glass-Eye had +brought Miss Lily's album, with a request for his autograph. Tom, whose +formidable muscles were hardly capable of wielding a pen, especially to +write "thoughts," was holding the album with a sheepish look, turning it +round and round: + +"I say," he said, as Jimmy passed, "write something; for me!" + +"All right!" said Jimmy. + +And he lightly turned the pages of the album, the famous album, said to be +crammed with passionate declarations. Not a bit of it! Nothing but foolery +and childish nonsense: + + "May joy and pleasure be your lot + . . . trot, trot, trot!" + + "... Regard me as a link. + Loving Pal." + +"_Un afetuoso saludo y un augurio de feliz viaje le desea Pedro y +Paolo_." + + "Hoping we shall meet again, if not here, there. + + "Joe Brooks." + +"_Puedo decir que nunca he visto yoo ... tan cuida y bella_...." + +There was page upon page, in this style, with, here and there, a rough +sketch: a heart pierced by an arrow, signed, "Castaigne;" a dried +shamrock: "Blarney Castle;" a bit of seaweed: "Dundee." Jimmy smiled to +himself and especially at what he heard beside him, where Glass-Eye, while +gazing wide-eyed at Tom's immense arms, was telling him all her troubles: +quite mad, Miss Lily, ought to be locked up! And _she_ ought to know: +never left her side since she began traveling by herself, day or night. + +"You're a lucky one, you are!" Tom broke in. + +"I should like to see you try it, just!" Glass-Eye retorted. "And meantime +I get more smacks than halfpence. Oh, I know she'll pay me all in a lump, +when she gets it! She's very generous, really. And her Pa and Ma ... yes +... do you know what she means to do? She's not angry with them any +longer. She's going to stuff them with turkey and pudding at the hotel and +stand them fifty francs' worth of flowers. She's forgiven them!" + +"That's more than I have!" replied Tom. "Her Pa will know what I am made +of to-morrow, the brute! He'll have one on the mug, for boxing my ears and +kicking me out ... you know ... because of the letters from Trampy." + +"If you do that, Tom, you'll have Miss Lily to reckon with! What! You're +laughing!" cried Glass-Eye angrily. "You don't know how it hurts ... on +one's bones! And those pillow-fights: I've had my nose smashed in one of +them before now! Nothing surprises me that Miss Lily says or does. Why, +this very morning, she wanted to put a lighted candle in my glass eye!" + +"Eh, what? A light in your eye?" exclaimed Tom suddenly. "I wonder if one +really could ... I say, Jimmy, could one?" + +"Yes," said Jimmy, greatly amused, "with an invisible wire under the +dress...." + +"Hurrah!" cried Tom. "Would you like two shillings a day, Glass-Eye? And +your food and clothes? You shall travel with me; you shall appear on the +stage. Come along to the café, we'll sign the engagement!" + +"But what will Miss Lily say?" objected Glass-Eye, trembling at the idea +of announcing her departure to her terrible mistress. + +"Well," said Tom, "I'll be nice to her Pa, if she's nice to you. Come +along!" + +"But I don't know how to sign my name." + +"You can make your mark, before two witnesses. Come along!" + +Glass-Eye, dazzled and beglamored, followed Tom. She, an artiste! On the +stage! At last! Going round the world with Tom ... living with him ... +married ... almost! + +"That's come in the nick of time!" said Jimmy, as he watched her go off +the stage. "Lily, perhaps ... in her new position ... will want a real +maid, not a Glass-Eye! Lily ... why, she's perfection! To think of the +abysses she has walked along without falling! There's more merit than one +thinks in that kind of life. And how I should like to get hold of the +people who talk ill of her. And that ... that ... oh, that one!" + +And Jimmy clenched his fists, at the thought of Trampy, and his heart +burst forth: all his patient, brave, manly heart, now well nigh +exhausted. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Poor Ave Maria, indifferent to what was going on before her, was still +waiting on the stage. For that matter, it was but a few minutes since Lily +brought her there. Ave Maria felt inclined to go and meet Trampy on the +pavement, to throw her arms round his neck as soon as he appeared. But +Lily had earnestly recommended her not to move, whatever happened. So she +remained in her corner and, under the pale light, with her back to the +forest scene, in the shadow, Ave Maria looked like a lurking she-wolf, +ready to leap out at any moment. + +[Illustration: AVE MARIA] + +As for Lily, she tripped down the stairs to the stage, for a few seconds +contemplated all those bill-toppers at her feet, so to speak; but she took +the last stairs at a bound: Trampy had just entered! Ave Maria, in her +corner, behind the pillars and the confused heap of scenery, could not see +him. Lily preferred that. She would manage everything her own way and get +rid of him once and for all ... get rid of that footy rotter who had come +there to jeer at her. He stepped along, with his hat on one side and a +dead cigar between his teeth. Trampy, broken, diseased, done for, was +jubilant for all that; turned his broad smile from girl to girl, winked +his eye gaily at the Roofers, who drew back in disgust, and, with +outstretched hand: + +"How d'you do, Lily? How's my dear little wife?" + +He enjoyed the humiliation which he was inflicting upon her, would have +liked his clothes to be still shabbier, his shoes more down at heel, so +that he might thoroughly disgrace his dear little wife--that great +bill-topper, who was leaving the pink of husbands in such a state of +destitution. And he threw out his chest, increased his familiarities, and +even pretended to kiss her, pushed his blotched and pimpled mug close to +that charming face. Jimmy gave a bound: Trampy! On the stage! Lily's +tormentor! Jimmy, pale with fury, walked up to him, stiff-armed, ready to +break the jaw of that thief in the night and chuck him into the street, +without more words! But Lily stopped him with a quick gesture: + +"Why, Jimmy," she said, "would you keep a man from earning his living? Do +you find fault with a husband for loving his little wife? I am your little +wife, am I not?" she continued, tantalizing Trampy with her peach-like +cheek, tickling his nose with her fair curls. "Don't you deserve a dear +little wife?" + +"Why, of course I do!" Trampy agreed, surprised, all the same, at this +loving reception from his dear little wife. + +"There!" cried Lily, unable to restrain herself any longer and giving him +a box on the ears. "That'll teach you to call me your little wife, you +damned tramp cyclist! I've never been your little wife. I'll show you your +little wife, the real one. Come along, Ave Maria! Here's Trampy!" + +"Eh, what?" said Trampy, turning color. "Ave Maria? I don't know any Ave +Maria." + +But already Ave Maria was upon him, pressing him in her arms: her Trampy! +And her cough brought pink-red patches to her hectic cheeks. + +"What's this mean? I don't know you," he stammered, gazing horror-stricken +at this old, lean woman, who was taking possession of him before +everybody, taking possession of him who cared only for plump little +things, sultan that he was. "I don't know her, I don't know her!" + +"Here!" cried Lily, snatching the paper from Ave Maria's bodice. "Do you +know that? Can you read? Now will you deny that she's your wife ... your +wife ... your wife?" she repeated, rejoicing in being able to hurl the +word to Trampy, who turned pale with fright. + +"We'll try and arrange it," whispered Jimmy, still hardly recovered from +his surprise. "A divorce in Lily's favor first! She'll dictate your answer +for you; you've only got to say yes to everything. And then you can be off +somewhere; to West Australia. I'll pay your expenses. And don't you ever +dare to show your face again! Never! Do you understand?" + +"And that'll teach you to make little of people!" cried Lily. "Let's drink +to the health of Trampy, the faithful husband! I'll stand champagne all +round to the health of good old Trampy and his dear little wife!" + +But, without waiting for the champagne, already Ave Maria was dragging +Trampy to the door and the Roofer girls gave him a triumphal exit. They +sent him to Halifax, they sent him to Coventry. They flourished things at +his head, amid an uproar of jolly hootings, and took aim at him--"Ping! +Ping!"--and pinched him, as the Merry Wives did Falstaff in Windsor +Forest. And they slipped off their shoes in honor of his wedding, by Jove! +And Trampy fled under a shower of boots and slippers, fled like mad, as +though the devil were after him. + +Jimmy did not know if he was on his head or his heels for joy: + +"I'll stand the champagne!" he said. "To Miss Lily's health!" + +So much had happened in those few minutes: Lily free again ... and no +scandal ... the divorce assured ... Trampy admitting his misdeeds, +inventing them, if necessary, confessing anything they asked him to, as +long as they did not mention bigamy.... Jimmy, had it been possible, would +have offered a general picnic to the whole company. He, usually so calm, +felt inclined to sing, to laugh. Never would he have dared to hope.... And +it had all come so simply, like the things that are bound to happen. Lily +was free! + +"Bring the bottles up here," he said to the call-boy, "and biscuits and +cakes. We'll drink it here! We'll christen the stage, as if we were +launching a ship ... in champagne, here, by ourselves! among ourselves! +Here's to the stage-manager! Here's to all of us!" + +Lily, happy as happy could be, shook everybody by the hand, distributed a +"'K you" here and a "'K you" there. She would have liked to have Glass-Eye +by her side, to keep her in countenance, open her bag, give her her +handkerchief ... liked to be a little lady who can't do without her maid +... but, damn it, where was Glass-Eye? And Lily clenched her fist when she +saw her return with cakes in her hands, escorted by Tom, who helped to +carry the champagne. + +"Where have you been, Glass-Eye?" asked Lily severely. "What have you been +doing with Tom? Give me my handkerchief, Glass-Eye." + +"Here's your bag, Miss Lily," said Glass-Eye excitedly. "I'm going to +leave you, Miss Lily." + +"What for?" said Lily, feeling vexed. "Because I owe you a few little +things?" + +"Oh, no, not that! I'm going to be a star, too; on my hands: Demon Maud, +the lady with the flaming eye; a candle in my glass eye ... before two +witnesses ... I made my mark at the bottom." + +"She's drunk!" cried Lily, utterly dumfounded. "Or else she's going mad. +Jimmy! Tom! Glass-Eye's going mad!" + +But, when Tom had explained, Lily approved. Glass-Eye wasn't stupid, +really; very intelligent, though you'd never think it. Glad to see her +engaged.... And she shook her by the hand, like an old friend and comrade, +glad to hear of the success of others ... among artistes.... + +And, suddenly, with head thrown back, full-throated, her feather nodding +hysterically on her head, Lily laughed ... laughed ... laughed! + +Maud an artiste! On her hands! A candle in her eye! One fat freak the more +on the stage! Gee, they must drink to Glass-Eye's health: Glass-Eye, the +bill-topper! + +They were all laughing now, filling their glasses at a table in the middle +of the stage, eating cakes, amusing themselves with the corks, which went +pop, like toy guns, and applauding with their thumb-nails. To the +Astrarium! And long live jollity! That night, they would one and all risk +their skins. They were like soldiers drinking to their sweethearts, in the +trenches, before the battle. And everything promised well; already a +legend was forming among the painted faces: the booking office besieged; +ladies and gentlemen in motors; motors in a row, miles and miles of +motors; the street bursting with people who had come to book seats! And +champagne on the stage, cakes, my, for the asking! An orgy which would +start its trip around the world to-morrow, with those few bottles +transformed into a Niagara of champagne, enough to flood every greenroom +from the Klondike to Calcutta! + +They all enjoyed themselves and let themselves go. And the Roofers, who +worshiped Lily, in spite of her abominable tricks, raised their glasses to +her health, crowded round her, smiled merrily at her with their white +teeth, congratulated her for sending that footy rotter packing: + +"Here's to Miss Lily! And a round on the thumbnail in honor of Miss +Lily!" + +This christening of the Astrarium was turning into a triumph for her; and +there was the evening to come ... the evening! It made her forget Trampy, +Jimmy, Glass-Eye, everybody. And ... the next day ... her Pa, her Ma, the +New Trickers would be at her feet! Oh, she would give ten years of her +life if to-morrow could be there now! + +And the evening came. Lily did not leave the theater. She walked nervously +from her dressing-room to the stage, inspected the final operations, +interested herself in everything, stopped the boy-violinist, who was +crossing the stage with the other members of the band, congratulated him +on his approaching marriage with one of the Graces. She talked to the +artistes going up to their dressing-rooms, bestowed a smile upon Jimmy, +another on the stage-manager, joked with the limelight-men working their +apparatus on either side of the stage. The footlights lit up with a row of +flames, the storm approached. There was a ringing of electric +bells--"Ting! Ting! Ting!"--as in the machine-room of a ship before the +tempest; the orchestra roared; and, as though at a thunder-clap, the +velvet curtain split asunder: Patti-Patty was revealed on the stage, while +the band played as if possessed. Lily, in the shadow of the wings, put her +hand to her heart; her veins were ablaze. And that audience, at which she +peeped through a crack in the scenery; that audience was hers, with its +rustling silks, its bare shoulders, its diamonds, its flowers! She would +have liked to step forward, to say: + +"Here I am!" + +She felt herself excited by a curious feeling; an aggressive mood, which, +no doubt, came from all the healths she had drunk: to the Astrarium, to +this one, to that one, to all of us! Gee, what fun it had been: champagne, +cakes, my, tons of cakes! And Lily, who had long been unused to any such +excess, felt her head splitting. A fever seemed also to reign all over the +dressing-rooms and passages. They talked of front boxes reserved at a +thousand francs by the Aero Club; stalls at fifty francs; every seat in +the house filled; and the best people, nothing but the best! Lily, in her +exalted condition, took it that they had all come for her; and she had to +dazzle them all! And soar above them all! To a hurricane of applause from +"her favorite audience," the Astrarium audience, on a first night! + +And she felt so gay that she was not angry when Glass-Eye asked her, now +that _she_ was an artiste, too, to teach her her stage-smile. + +"Why, of course, Glass-Eye! I owe you that, to say nothing of the rest! +But you won't lose by waiting! Take my word for it: among friends, you +know!..." + +And she kissed her maid, felt inclined to cry, became quite sentimental at +her going.... + +She was less amiable to Nunkie, who was prowling around near her. Oh, how +angry she felt with that old rogue! Because of Thea, first of all; and +then it was he who gave her away, not Jimmy! Tom had told her. Nunkie +mumbled something to her: his dear girls; ungrateful creatures who were +leaving him! His poor life shattered! His pigeons, he had his pigeons +left; yes, and his home; but what was that compared with loving hearts? +And, as she was on such good terms with Jimmy and everybody, couldn't she +use her influence? Oh, if he could have the Bambinis, be appointed their +guardian! "He would bring together such a nice little family troupe: all +the joys of home! + +"You old wretch!" cried Lily, in a threatening voice. "Just go and look, +at the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street, if you can see me! You +old snaky! You old bromide merchant! Hiding letters, too, you +nigger-driving humbug! Oh, you're sure to get the Bambinis, I _don't_ +think!" + +"_Ver-r-rdammt_!" + +Nunkie turned on his heel, shaking the passage with tremendous oaths. + +"I thought," Lily shot at him from behind sarcastically, "I thought one +ought never to swear! It's wicked to swear, Mr. Fuchs!" + +In her dressing-room, she went on laughing at Nunkie and his +"_Donner-r-r-wetter-r-r_!" and his "_S-s-satan_! _S-s-satan_!" It made her +comb her hair all awry and apply the grease-paint to her cheeks with a +trembling hand. She felt a buzzing in her head: that confounded music +which seemed to come from everywhere and hissed in her ears! But, when her +turn came, she'd show them! Never had she felt so light. She was sure of +herself, strangely sure. It seemed to her that, if need be, she'd have +shot up to the stars, damn it! + +As soon as she was ready, she went down to the stage. She didn't know why. +It was her wish to be everywhere, her craving for movement. The aerobike +had been taken from its cage, behind the back-drop; the stage-manager, +Jimmy and Jimmy's assistants were standing round it. Jimmy was testing +everything, for the last time, making sure that there would be no hitch: + +"Hullo, Lily!" he said, when he saw her. "Are you ready?" + +"Ready?" said Lily. "Look!" + +And she flung back her wrap with her two bare arms and stood, a figure all +charm and grace, with youth, joy and courage sparkling in her eyes. In the +mysterious half-light, amid the endless sounds from the band, Lily seemed +to shed rays. Jimmy, dazzled, looked at that dainty form, that delicate +breast, those rounded shoulders, that splendid body fashioned by years of +Spartan life, each muscle of which was quivering with enthusiasm. And she +laughed ... laughed ... head thrown back, full-throated; told the story of +Nunkie, with furious gestures, as though she were strangling the old +beast. And then came sudden displays of feeling, for the Three Graces and +the Bambinis. + +Jimmy had never seen her like that. The stage-manager also thought her +queer, for he looked at Jimmy as though to ask what on earth was the +matter with her. And, going up to him, he said: + +"Look how she's trembling! One would think she had a fever." + +"It's quite true," said Jimmy. + +And the two stared at each other in consternation when Lily, stooping to +pick up her cloak, was nearly losing her balance and coming to the ground. +They exchanged a few words in a whisper. Then the stage-manager said: + +"Go up to your dressing-room, Miss Lily. You mustn't stay here, you know. +We'll send for you when the time comes. Go and put your hair straight." + +It was only a pretext; but the same thought had passed through both their +minds: it was the champagne! Lily, who was accustomed to drink nothing but +water, was ... if not exactly drunk ... well ... + +Thereupon, in an instant, Jimmy made up his mind: it was finished and +settled, irrevocably, as though he had spent hours in reflecting. The +newspapers had expressed doubts; there had been suggestions of trickery. +An immediate, brilliant success was essential, to carry the thing off: a +hitch and all was lost and the luck of the Astrarium and his own fame +vanished in smoke! Lily was out of the question that night: she was +bubbling over at every pore with unnatural excitement ... she was not +Lily,--was not herself ... it meant certain death to her, the aerobike +smashed to pieces, the end of all things! Lily would do it to-morrow, the +next night; but not to-night. + +He had just time to go to his dressing-room and put on his white sweater, +black breeches, black stockings: an athletic costume which he always kept +at the theater in case of need. And quick, in the saddle: the moment had +come! He must succeed, now or never! And Jimmy, calm and sure of himself, +took his seat on the aerobike. A great silence followed.... + +Lily, at that very minute, anxious at not being sent for in her +dressing-room, was going back to the stage, but she was stopped at the top +of the stairs by the stage-manager, who said that he had received an order +by telephone from Cologne, from Harrasford: Lily not to perform that +night.... + +"Let me pass," cried Lily, laughing in spite of everything. "That's enough +of a joke. It's time for me to go on, I say! Are you mad? I tell you, it's +my turn!" + +But she ceased, as though struck by thunder. The aerobike, with wings wide +open, was taking flight toward the stars, in a tempestuous wind. + +It was done! The thing had shot past her very nose! She thought that she +would fall, so great was the pain at her heart. + +"No! No!" she gasped, with dilated eyes. + +And, suddenly, she understood and uttered a cry of rage! + +But she could have shouted, "Murder!" and it would have sounded as the +buzzing of a bee amid that explosion of cheers. And the orchestra grew +like a flame and the light appeared, increased and shone all over the +house. + +Lily flung herself back, closed her eyes so as not to see, fled to her +dressing-room with a shriek like a wounded beast's.... + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +She dropped into her chair, stopped up her ears; but the cheers never +ceased, kept on increasing, filled the theater with a roar as of thunder! +Oh, it seemed to her that her chest was on fire, that they were pounding +her heart; that some one was taking her by the hair and banging her head +against the walls! And that storm of applause kept on and kept on ... but +it wasn't for her! It was for Jimmy all the time: they had tried it with +her, that was all! To see if it worked! And she, she, she who, only just +now, was giving herself airs with the others: a poor rag, yes, that was +all she was, less than anybody; less than Tom, her old servant, less than +Glass-Eye, that idiot, less than Ave Maria, less than a performing dog, +less than anything, worse than anything, perhaps! Mad with rage she jumped +at her gollywog, pulled down the white-eyed idol--the traitor!--spat on +it, crushed it on the floor with her heel, furious, beside herself; and +then dropped into her chair again, with her two arms flat on the table, +her head between her arms, among the grease-paints, the powder, the +overturned box of spangles, which rolled about everywhere and strewed the +floor. She felt inclined to bite into her flesh to relieve herself, she +clenched her fists and dug her nails into her skin. Oh, she would have +liked to die, to die! It was so fierce a longing, so desperate a cry that +the force of her prayer ought to have struck her dead where she sat. And +suddenly the tears began to flow and she cried and cried, all convulsed +with sobs, floored, shipwrecked, done for. She cried and cried, as though +stupefied, saw nothing save through a thick veil of water, like a person +drowning, sinking. It seemed to her as if the tears would groove her face, +for always. Oh, what would she give to be at home, in bed! Never, never +again would she have the strength to do a thing. She was done for, buried +alive. And that coward of a Jimmy, to obey Harrasford's order! Oh, the +harm he had done her! She would rather have died smashed to a jelly on the +stage: she would have suffered less! Oh, to behave like that: to flash so +much before her eyes; and then to fling her to the ground! Oh, when she +had thought that he loved her and that she loved him also, perhaps! And +Lily cried and cried.... + + * * * * * + +Meanwhile, in front, the aerobike was receiving endless applause. The +disappearance through the opening, the plunge into space, the star +snatched from up above, that piece of theatrical symbolism filled the +audience with enthusiasm. The aerobike brought down the house, its success +surpassed all expectation, and the Astrarium was opening with a victorious +clamor. + +"Yes, but at what a cost!" said Jimmy to himself, in spite of the cheers. + +And, as soon as he was able to escape, putting off for a few minutes his +replies to the cards that poured in--the chairman of the Aero Club, +journalists begging for interviews--Jimmy had but one idea, to console +Lily for her disappointment of that evening: poor Lily! + +His heart was beating very loudly as he went to her dressing-room. Jimmy +was no longer the fellow who knew no fear. To fly away on the aerobike, to +risk his skin was easy, for him at least; but to face Lily ... to explain +to her ... with all those things seething within him ... and, oh, the pain +he was causing her! How could he approach her after that? And could he +ever get her to love him? Ah, perhaps it would have been better if he had +gone and broken his neck in the street, on the pavement! Jimmy was +trembling like a child; in his perturbation, he even forgot to knock at +the door ... turned the knob ... entered.... + +Lily heard nothing, seemed crushed into her chair, with her face buried in +her right arm folded on the table, while the left hung lifeless by her +side. Her whole attitude expressed abject misery, profound despair; she +seemed extinguished in a terrifying calmness. + +Jimmy, to attract her attention, closed the door noisily. Lily stirred no +more than a wax figure: one might have thought her dead. + +He shivered; and, stepping forward, leaning over to her, anxiously, he +placed his hand on her shoulder. + +It was like a spring that is suddenly released! Lily threw up her +sorrow-stricken face, down which the tears, mingling with the red paint, +flowed like blood, looked at him for a few seconds with a wandering air +and then leaped at him, as though she meant to bite him in the face; but +her lips shriveled up in silence, nothing came from them; and she crushed +Jimmy with an unspeakable look of terror and contempt. + +Jimmy did not flinch: + +"You must not be angry with me," he said gently. "I was bound to do it, +Lily; I had to save the theater." + +"And get rid of me!" cried Lily, wild-haired, hard-eyed, hoarse-throated, +with the tears drying on her red-hot cheeks. + +Jimmy was pale as death. Ah, all his dreams, too, were fading away! + +"Lily," he said, in a voice which he strove to make firm, but which +trembled with emotion. "I have done my duty to everybody, yourself +included! But for me, you would be lying dead at this minute and the +Astrarium would be ruined. You were not in a state to appear in public ... +this evening ... believe me, Lily. The stage-manager himself...." + +Lily lowered her head under his calm gaze.... + +"But you'll do it to-morrow," continued Jimmy, very quickly, "before Pa +and Ma! To-morrow and the following days ... and always! Your name will be +right at the top of the bill! Do you hear? To-morrow ... and always!" + +"But what...? Why...?" asked Lily, as though stupefied. + +"Poor Lily," he replied, gently raising that face all distorted with +grief. "Poor little Lily! I have caused you a heap of pain." + +Lily, for her sole answer, gave a convulsive sob; a tear leaped to her +eyelids. + +"Don't cry," whispered Jimmy, "don't cry any more. It will be your turn +to-morrow, before the New Trickers. To-morrow! Every night!" + +"Every night?" asked Lily, still incredulous and yet transfigured with +hope. "You're saying that, Jimmy; but...." + +"Do you doubt my word, Lily?" he replied, pressing her gently to him. +"What, I, your best friend, your only friend ... I who ... haven't I +always loved you, Lily? Do you think I've changed?... I love you more than +ever I did! I will explain everything later. And you doubt me ... who +would give my life for you; yes, life without you means nothing to me," +continued Jimmy, in a stifled voice and clasping Lily in his arms. + +Lily quivered in his embrace, hid her blushing features on his breast, +where she heard great dull throbs. She trembled from head to foot. Her +quickened senses seemed to perceive everything now; the passing +indisposition from which she had suffered, without knowing it, the light +fumes of the champagne: all that had suddenly gone, was far away; she had +never felt more lucid; she saw, she understood and was overcome with +delight, overcome with a delight beside which her enthusiasm of the +previous day seemed dark and dreary. The ardor of her eighteen years +swelled her breast. Success, in any case! To-morrow! And that man was +hers, that heart was hers! It was a dream, an enchantment! Her head rolled +back, a smile drew up her lips, her eyes, through her tangled curls, +seemed all ablaze. Jimmy bent his glowing face over her. Lily, on the +point of swooning, raised her lips to his. + +Vanished around them the low ceiling, the scratched walls, the shabby +rags. Standing on the wretched spangles that strewed the dusty floor, +Lily, drunk with joy ... Jimmy, distraught with pride ... seemed like +youth and love, in mid-sky, among the stars! + +CURTAIN + +[Illustration: Lily quivered in his embrace.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Popular Copyright Books +AT MODERATE PRICES + +Any of the following titles can be bought of your +bookseller at the price you paid for this volume + + +Marcaria. By Augusta J. Evans. +Mam' Linda. By Will N. Harben. +Maids of Paradise, The. By Robert W. Chambers. +Man in the Corner, The. By Baroness Orczy. +Marriage A La Mode. By Mrs. Humphry Ward. +Master Mummer, The. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. +Much Ado About Peter. By Jean Webster. +Old, Old Story, The. By Rosa N. Carey. +Pardners. By Rex Beach. +Patience of John Moreland, The. By Mary Dillon. +Paul Anthony, Christian. By Hiram W. Hays. +Prince of Sinners, A. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. +Prodigious Hickey, The. By Owen Johnson. +Red Mouse, The. By William Hamilton Osborne. +Refugees, The. By A. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bill-Toppers + +Author: Andre Castaigne + +Release Date: August 9, 2008 [EBook #26242] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BILL-TOPPERS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 413px; height: 582px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 413px;'> +Poland, the Parisienne. Page 123. <i>Frontispiece.</i><br /> +</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:2em; margin-top:1em;'>THE</p> +<p style=' font-size:2em; margin-bottom:1em;'>BILL-TOPPERS</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em; margin-bottom:1em;'><i>By</i> ANDRÉ CASTAIGNE</p> +</div> + +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-emb.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 65px; height: 65px;' /><br /> +</div> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:0.8em;'><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>With Illustrations</span></p> +<p style=' margin-bottom:3em;'>BY THE AUTHOR</p> +<p>A. L. BURT COMPANY</p> +<p><span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Publishers New York</span></p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce' style=' font-size:0.8em;'> +<p>Copyright, 1909</p> +<p style=' margin-bottom:1em;'>The Bobbs-Merrill Company</p> +<p>August</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p>TO MY LITTLE FRIENDS</p> +<p>THE STARS!</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p>THE BILL-TOPPERS</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.4em;'>THE BILL-TOPPERS</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_1' name='page_1'></a>1</span></div> +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.2em;'>OVERTURE</p> +</div> + +<p>All around stretched the great blue sky and the blue +sea of the Gulf of Bengal.</p> +<p>Mrs. Clifton lay dozing at full length on a pillowed +bench and her husband sat near her and followed his +Lily, his daughter, with his eyes: his Lily, eight years old, +“that high,” waving among the passengers the white coral +necklace which Pa had bought her on leaving Australia; +his Lily, his star, his New Zealander on Wheels! His +Lily who had had such successes at Melbourne, at Sidney: +bouquets, tons and cart-loads of bouquets! And +the past would be nothing compared with the future, with +the astounding tricks which he was inventing for his +Lily. The mere sight of her raised his enthusiasm to boiling-point. +And he was going to show them, in Calcutta +and elsewhere, if they knew how to make stars in New +Zealand or if they were only fit for raising mutton.</p> +<p>Clifton was an artist, an “artiste,” a born artiste: starting +as a mere clerk in an office, he had become an amateur +cyclist and then a professional on the track. He married +an Englishwoman at Wellington and, at Lily’s birth, decided +upon a career: the stage, with Lily for a star later +on! And he set to work, with vim and vigor, learned a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_2' name='page_2'></a>2</span> +few tricks on his bike, taught his wife the business in less +than no time; and Lily’s first memories as a four-year-old +were:</p> +<p>“I was sitting on Ma’s shoulders, Ma on Pa’s and Pa +on the bike.”</p> +<p>And Lily zigzagged through New Zealand, from east +to west and north to south, and Australia after, where +she received plenty of applause for her tricks, childish in +themselves, but well presented. Her triumphant path +wound among tinseled bottles containing paper flowers, +with a faultless standstill for the climax, one hand on +the handle-bar, the other blowing kisses to the audience. +This procured Pa an engagement for India. He ordered +a beautiful colored poster, “The Clifton Family, Trick +Cyclists,” with a portrait in the corner of his own strong +face and bristling mustache—“P. T. Clifton, Manager”—one +more rung in the ladder of life mounted, +thanks to his Lily.</p> +<p>And Pa smiled to his daughter and, as she ran past him, +lifted her on his knee and stroked her fair curls; and the +child cuddled up to her Pa, opened her lips to ask questions, +but was silent, with her eyes lost in space, puckering +her little forehead, in which were heaped so many mingled +memories of the stage and the great world outside: +the Boxing Kangaroo; tall cliffs; green islands; the +bike; Batavia among the trees; Singapore, with its noise +and dust. And Lily, wearily, dreamed and murmured +things, while the steamer sped on, thud, thud, thud, flat +as a stage in its blue “set.”</p> +<p>Lily’s impressions of India were months of jolting and +bumping, stops in the dead of night while the tent was +pitched, rains, strong smells, oppressive heats—months +and months of it, Ma on Pa, Pa on the wheel and she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_3' name='page_3'></a>3</span> +on top, waving flags. Yellow faces on the benches, +red flowers and, somewhere, on a river-bank, two eyes +glittering in the dark: a tiger, somebody said! And +every night the artistes, carrying lanterns, walked in file +between the circus and the hotel, with the ladies in the +center and Lily clinging to Ma’s skirt.</p> +<p>She did more now, in addition to the bike: a song-and-dance +turn. In a piping falsetto, she quavered:</p> +<p>“Star light! Star bright!”</p> +<p>She was spoiled by the ladies, the wives of the officers +stationed in those out-of-the-way holes. She played with +smart children, was taken for drives, had her social successes! +Chocolates, sweets, kisses. And a lady gave her +such a pretty dress: his Lily! Pa burst with delighted +pride to see her treated like that; and Ma scolded her a +bit, for the little flirt that she was, while fondly tying the +two satin bows over her ears.</p> +<p>Lily was a regular tomboy, with pranks invented by +herself, from ideas which she picked up in traveling: for +instance, she would choose her moment and chuck a piece +of bacon among the Mohammedans sitting under her window; +and she would revel in her own fright at those +furious faces suddenly glaring up at her from below! +And she would stand with drooping head, one finger in +her mouth:</p> +<p>“Oh, <i>so</i> sorry!”</p> +<p>What fun! And as an artiste she was spoiled and petted +everywhere. Goa, Bangalore, Tanjore and then Colombo, +and a ship with elephants, tigers, camels, children, men, +women, wagons, one great mix-up, a circus and menagerie +in one, steaming toward South Africa; and Miss Lily +of the Clifton Troupe paraded her well-brushed, neatly-parted +curls in the midst of it all, gazed open-mouthed at +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_4' name='page_4'></a>4</span> +the blue expanse of water until, her eyes drunk and dazed +with light, she went and lay in her cabin.... +And more and more blue water. And thud, thud, +thud. And Cape Town in the mountains. Africa behind +it: a country all yellow, where the trains wound in and +out of the rocks; villages, up, up, up, or else right low +down, on the yellow veldt; and, at night, on the benches, +crowds and crowds. Immediately after the show came +sleep, troubled by the jolting of the train; and the circus +was always there next day, on the right or on the left, +with its Chinamen and its niggers driving stakes or tugging +at ropes. A bell for dinner, a whistle for the show; +and, as soon as the show was over, to bed,—and off again.</p> +<p>Pa made her practice harder now, wanted to make a +great artiste of her. And there was a class, too, kept by +a “marm” who traveled with the circus and taught spelling +and arithmetic and the art of letter-writing, from +“Yours to hand with thanks” down to “Believe me to be.” +Lily would have been bored to death but for the accidents +of travel: sometimes the engine broke down, bringing the +train to a dead stop amid the great African silence, near +a field of Indian corn, in which the children played hide-and-seek. +Or else there were locusts, locusts “that thick,” +right inside the carriages. Lily would tie them by the leg +and:</p> +<p>“Flip! Flap! Lively now! Jump!”</p> +<p>But funniest of all was the caravan—she couldn’t remember +where, in Natal or thereabouts—wagons with ten +yoke of oxen. They climbed up endless winding roads. +The men shot at birds and prospected for diamonds along +the wayside; and at night they took the hay from the +mattresses to give to the cattle. Lolling indolence was in +the air and plenty in the larder: big fruits, strange game, +which they cooked in a makeshift oven consisting of a +few stones. Then they rolled themselves up in a blanket, +near the elephants tugging at their chains, and slept under +the tent in the cool, bright, starry night.</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_5' name='page_5'></a>5</span> +<img src='images/illus-pg005.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 350px; height: 557px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 350px;'> +LILY IN INDIA<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_6' name='page_6'></a>6</span></div> +<p>Months and months passed. Lily was becoming very +clever: the New Zealander on Wheels! She was cleverer +than Pa, who no longer performed, nor Ma either. On +their return to Australia, Lily appeared by herself in the +music-halls, and P. T. Clifton, Manager, watched her +from the wings, in growing admiration: his Lily was a +star now, too good for a circus! And Australia, pooh! +Sidney, Melbourne, pooh! What Lily wanted was New +York, London, the Hippodromes, the Palaces! He’d +show them a star that was a star! And Clifton clenched +his fists and pretended not to see when Lily made a blunder +on the stage: his Lily missing a trick! Disgracing her +Pa like that! He blushed to the eyes at the thought of it! +And, when she returned to the wings, he twitted her +proudly:</p> +<p>“What next, Lily! An artiste like you!”</p> +<p>And Ma adopted a sarcastic air and congratulated +“mademoiselle” as she threw the white wrapper over +“mademoiselle’s” shoulders.</p> +<p>Ma detested the stage. She did not think it a nice place +for herself; but for a brat like Lily, Lord, it was quite +different! And she ought to have tried to please her +Pa and Ma. Mrs. Clifton, though she never voiced the +wish, had visions of a trip to London, to stagger some relations, +a sister-in-law she had there, and sneer at the old +country, in the usual colonial fashion, and show them +what the new countries can do, countries where you make +a fortune in less than no time! And, little by little, smitten +with Mr. Clifton’s enthusiasm, she came to believe +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_7' name='page_7'></a>7</span> +that, in Lily, they really possessed the infant prodigy, the +treasure-child upon whom their fortune depended. And +Ma, too, was vexed when Lily missed a trick on the stage.</p> +<p>Lily laughed at their anger. Ma had never raised a hand +to her; and, as for Pa, when he scolded, Lily had such +a way of looking at him, with lowered head—“Oh, <i>so</i> +sorry!”—that Pa simmered down again at once. Lily, a +regular “tenter,” shot up freely, grew up a real tomboy, +went a bit too far, in fact, Ma said: at Honolulu, for instance, +on the road to ’Frisco and New York, where Pa +had resolved to go, at all costs, come what might—it was +one step nearer London!—at Honolulu—ten days there +and such a success!—the child played truant in the gardens +teeming with birds and fruit, climbed apple-trees, +was caught one day and scampered off at full speed, +pursued by Ma, who threatened to give her a sound +smacking this time, the little thief! But Pa thought it +ridiculous, for the sake of an apple....</p> +<p>“And suppose Lily had broken her leg with her nonsense?” +asked Ma indignantly. “Where would your New +York be?”</p> +<p>Pa felt himself a conquering hero when they steamed +through the Golden Gate: the States at last! And no +sooner was his foot on the wharf at ’Frisco than off to the +agents at once, with his photographs, his contracts, his +posters! But it was her birth-certificate they asked to see. +And no babes and sucklings allowed on the stage here. It +was all right down yonder, but the law prevented it here.</p> +<p>“Damn your laws!” snapped Pa furiously. “Do you +think we make stars to hide them under bushels?”</p> +<p>And whoosh! Off for Mexico, where children are allowed +to perform.</p> +<p>Now, in Arizona, near Phœnix, where the train stopped +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_8' name='page_8'></a>8</span> +for some hours, owing to an accident to the Rio Gila +bridge, Pa happened upon a merrymaking which reminded +him of West Australia. Cow-boys, galloping +horses, a pretense at fighting, lassoing, revolvers, a track +for amateur cyclists and—yes, there, in the desert!—on +a platform, right in the middle, what should Pa see +but an amazing artiste, riding on the back-wheel, with the +other in the air! And such twirls! And the boys shouted +to him:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Trampy! Have a drink, Trampy!”</p> +<p>And Trampy accepted:</p> +<p>“With you, my lord! As soon as I’ve done, my lord!”</p> +<p>And off he wheeled, head on the saddle, feet in the air, +whistling <i>Yankee Doodle</i>!</p> +<p>It was impossible! Pa rubbed his eyes: what! Was +this what they did in the States in the desert? And he +who had hoped, with Lily ... why, damn it, Lily +knew nothing! He himself, her manager, knew less than +nothing! He, who thought he had formed a star! Pa +was red with shame. And, suddenly, he had a happy +thought: he, too, offered Trampy a drink, something to +propose to him....</p> +<p>“All right.”</p> +<p>They shook hands, went to the bar, lit a cigar, like men, +by Jove! Clifton loved to talk business, to pull out notebooks, +quick, and jot things down with a knowing air. +Trampy, a mere boy, easy-going, genial, without a red +cent for the time being, didn’t care a hang about business +and was soon telling Clifton the story of his life: drummer, +reporter, racer; his descent,—“Two whiskies, boy!”—what +was he saying? Oh, yes, his descent of a staircase +on the bike, yes, siree, with a red-hot stove under his arm—a +stove painted to look red-hot—pursued by a policeman, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9' name='page_9'></a>9</span> +leaping over obstacles on the bike; great success at Duluth +and Denver as a tramp cyclist: hence his name of +Trampy Wheel-Pad. But those girls, by Jove! Well, he +who fights and runs away lives to fight another day. Still, +a rolling stone doesn’t climb hills. Here he was, stranded. +Go to Mexico? So much a week? Such and such a turn? +Teach the child? Cert!</p> +<p>Lily never alluded to Mexico afterward without shaking +with anger. My, to listen to her, how badly they +treated her in Mexico! Worse than a Dago! To tell the +truth, it was hot; and Lily, already tired by those long +journeys in varying climates, Lily would have preferred +to do nothing and to continue to lead her careless life as +a playful filly. But no, poor Lily was caught by the hind-leg +in Mexico! Ambition had seized upon Pa, body and +soul, and life became a more serious matter for the child.</p> +<p>“Look here!” said Pa, pointing to Trampy. “What he, +a man, does, you can do! I’ll see to that!”</p> +<p>Pa arranged for a place in which to practise at their +ease. In the evening, on the stage, he watched and +studied Trampy’s tricks and, in the morning, quick, out +of bed, look alive, the bike! Pa no longer had his open-mouthed +admiration for Lily, as in South Africa and +Asia: his Lily knew nothing at all! But in three months, +six months, if necessary, if it cost him every penny he +possessed. And it was:</p> +<p>“Come along, Lily ... to work! Show what +you can do!”</p> +<p>Trampy, in this country of <i>mañolas</i>—“Grand, by +Jove!”—came round about eleven; and Pa, all out of +breath, passed Lily on to him:</p> +<p>“You have a go at her, Trampy! I give up, she won’t +do what I say!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10' name='page_10'></a>10</span></p> +<p>And Trampy put down his cigar, took off his collar and +cuffs and it was, “Come along, Lily!” till lunch-time. The +child, her eyes blinking with fatigue, fell fast asleep before +the end of the meal.</p> +<p>Pa was delighted.</p> +<p>And he confided her to Trampy more and more, with +orders not to spare smackings in case of need:</p> +<p>“Eh, Lily? Eh?”</p> +<p>As for him, he had business to do, letters to write, +great schemes in his head! for instance, he must try to +get permission for Lily to appear in the States.</p> +<p>“Time for a cigar, I guess,” said Trampy, as soon as +Clifton was gone.</p> +<p>Work stopped abruptly; a tumbler’s carpet rolled up +in a corner formed an inviting lounge; and Lily, panting +from her practice, would stretch herself beside him and +enjoy a few happy moments, the only really happy moments +of the day; for there were matinées in the afternoon +and the evening performance at night, till she was +ready to drop with weariness. Trampy treated Lily +nicely, like a grown-up person, called her by the name of +a fruit, or a flower, or a bird, jollied her, called her “little +wifie:” it was all one to her. He made her laugh with +his funny stories, his fairy tales about himself, his terrible +struggle with a snake in the streets of ’Frisco, after +a champagne supper: girls, by Jove! He toned down his +anecdotes and dished them up for Lily’s entertainment; +told her absurd yarns enlivened with mimicry, in which +he excelled, like the real mummer that he was, and Lily +shrieked with laughter, head thrown back, full-throated.</p> +<p>And there was a spice of fear in it all: was that Pa +coming back? No, a carpenter or scene-shifter, perhaps, +or else the Martellos, brother and sister, going to practise +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11' name='page_11'></a>11</span> +slack-wire, head and hand balancing. Their father, old +Martello, a famous name, lived in London, it appeared, +alone with his Bambinis, mere babes still. His other +children and his apprentices had all run away, to escape +his horsewhip, and the brother in Mexico was continuing +the tradition. His brutality, in fact, got him into +trouble wherever he went, so much so that the big music-halls +were closed to him, for fear of scandal. And he +terrorized his sister, Ave Maria, a girl of sixteen, a dark +girl with great dark eyes. Ave Maria never spoke to +anybody; when she passed through the room where Lily +was having fun with Trampy, she fixed a fiery glance upon +them, even ventured on a smile, for Trampy in particular, +whose lively stories reached her through the partition +behind which she dressed. Oh, how she envied Lily! +But she passed very quickly, because of her brother.</p> +<p>And this time it was Pa! Lily jumped on to the saddle +like mad, played her part to perfection, puffed and panted, +as if the last drop of strength were oozing out of +her, and Trampy joined in the little comedy of fibbing +and dissembling:</p> +<p>“There, like that, Lily, or I’ll smack you!”</p> +<p>“That’s right,” said Pa. “Make her work!”</p> +<p>And, just to show Lily what work meant and that her +Pa was not so unkind after all—“It’s for your good, Lily! +You’ll thank me one of these days!”—he took her to the +stage, where Ave Maria was practising. Now, of course, +in the circuses, Lily, occasionally, had seen children +knocked and cut about with blows and trained to say, +“It was the cat,” when any one asked them about the +marks. They were ordinary children; she had rolled +about in the sawdust with them, played hide-and-seek +with them in the fields of Indian corn; they were children +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12' name='page_12'></a>12</span> +who romped and ran about and laughed. Ave +Maria was different. The brother, a savage, scowling +brute, was always after her, harrying her with muttered +threats. She was in a constant, visible tremble of fear; +and, if she slipped on her wire, the fellow snarled as if +to bite her in the foot, pinched her black and blue, restored +her balance with a blow of the belt, shook the supports +to make her fall just to see!...</p> +<p>“Oh, Pa, he’ll kill her!” whispered Lily, when she saw +Ave Maria practising.</p> +<p>“It’s none of our damned business,” replied Pa curtly.</p> +<p>Martello’s evil example ended by catching hold of Pa: +that’s how artistes were formed, damn it! And, at the +thought of the time wasted, he clenched his fists. To +have a Lily of his own, all his own, and to have made +nothing out of her yet! Still, it was not Lily’s fault. +Yes, though, it was her fault, she was so stubborn, so +wilful! When he told her to do a thing, why not do it? +Instead of bleating:</p> +<p>“Pa, I can’t! Pa, I can’t!”</p> +<p>A brief struggle, in a way, followed between Lily and +her Pa. Lily was not built for passive obedience, wasn’t +used to it. She no longer knew her Pa. When he came +at her with his hand lifted to strike, when he spoke of +unbuckling his belt—“Damn those blasted brats!”—Lily +eyed him with a look of anguish:</p> +<p>“But Pa, I’m not Ave Maria!” she said. “I’m not a +Dago.”</p> +<p>And she raised her little rebellious face to him. He +humbled her with a smack on the cheek:</p> +<p>“On the saddle! Up! Quick!”</p> +<p>The child, mastered by her Pa’s strength and energy, +ceased to be the spoiled child, became an artiste.... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13' name='page_13'></a>13</span> +Head on the saddle, back-wheel: just like Trampy! +Pooh, Trampy, after a few months of this life, was nowhere, +Clifton admired him less and less, Lily was doing +all that he did, more than he did; and without a fault, +without a hitch, unerring and exact! Pa swelled with +pride at the mere sight of his Lily, his four stone ten of +flesh and bones fitted to the machine, his Lily, the Lily of +his dreams!</p> +<p>“I’ll dress you in velvet and satin!” he said, in his enthusiasm. +“I’ll cover you with diamonds.”</p> +<p>Pa, thanks to his indomitable energy, had made something +of his Lily, a real artiste, at last! And business +was moving, too! He had a contract in his pocket for +the States, where Lily would no doubt get permission to +do her “childish tricks,” seeing that she was traveling +with her Pa and Ma. As for Trampy, Pa had no use for +Trampy, made no bones about sacking him on some pretext +or other:</p> +<p>“Run away and play with your girls, by Jove! Or +whatever you please! Good-by! Ta-ta!”</p> +<p>And off for Denver, whence they were to continue the +journey up to Chicago.</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>It was the dive for good and all into the stuffy atmosphere +behind the scenes, which Lily was never again to +leave, brick walls, where she waited her turn on the elaborate +program of the “continuous performances,” amid +the thunder of the orchestra and the lightning of the reflectors. +No time to go out, meals consumed in your +dressing-room on the top of the basket trunk. In the +mornings, new tricks to practise on the stage, in the +midst of a herd of girls whom gentlemen in their shirtsleeves +were training to sing in chorus and to keep step +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14' name='page_14'></a>14</span> +to the strum of the piano. And ever and ever so many +new faces, a tumult of tongues which Lily heard on the +stage, in the dressing-room, and even in her room at the +hotel, through the thin partition walls: a lingo made up +of coarse remarks and thick stories, punctuated with +spitting and oaths strong enough to carry a tower of +Babel. Lily opened her eyes and ears, heaping it all up, +storing it all away behind her stubborn forehead....</p> +<p>And new people, new people: “families,” “brothers,” +“sisters,” troupes, troupes, troupes! Or else stars by +themselves, “bests,” “uniques:” a female-impersonator, +a green-eyed boy who wagged his hips like the very devil +and took off the girls; Poland, a Warsaw Jewess, a redheaded, +overscented beauty, who did the “Parisienne,” +and ever and ever so many others. And Lily, so slender +and frail, was the pet of them all. They called her their +pretty baby, their <i>petit chéri</i>, and, with their painted +mugs, kissed her full on the lips.</p> +<p>Pa detested this “rotten lot” and Pa was not always +in a good temper. Lily “under age,”—again! Why, +there were even managers who informed the police, so as +to be on the safe side; “traveling with her parents; childish +tricks; nothing difficult.”... Ma’s indignation +knew no bounds: what nonsense to prevent a great big +girl of fifteen from earning her living! For she aged +Lily as much as she could, to obtain the permission, +when no papers were asked for; and she had trained +Lily to reply to the indiscreet questions of the officials: +was her trick hard? Was she forced into doing it? Lily +answered mechanically that she liked the bike very much. +And then they allowed her to perform.</p> +<p>As for practising, permission or none, that was nobody’s +damned business. And if some old sheep took to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15' name='page_15'></a>15</span> +bleating—“Poor child, you’ll be the death of her!”—Pa +sent the old sheep to eat coke; and it was:</p> +<p>“Up, Lily! Get on your bike! Look alive!”</p> +<p>And the bloomers that Lily wore out! Ma was kept +busy in the dressing-room mending the rents at the knees +and patching the seats:</p> +<p>“What a tomboy!” Ma cried.</p> +<p>And this went on for months and months. And +then came Chicago; a visit of Pa’s to the agents; and a +contract with the New York Olympians, a variety-show +coming from the West and returning to New York by +Columbus and Pittsburg. And new people, new people; +stars of every kind: the Para woman, a rheumatic juggler, +who was obliged to change her turn and become an +exhibitor of performing parrots, a ragged, molting +troupe, picked up cheap at second-hand; an infant +prodigy who topped the bill, a boy-violinist, leading an +orchestra, too, at fourteen, a pretentious little humbug +trained to make a few movements, while others did the +work. Lily thought him so good-looking she simply +couldn’t take her eyes off him. And then she had some +big girl-friends who had had love affairs! They were +the Three Graces, gymnasts endowed with bodies like so +many Apollos, honest German faces and a bewildering +amount of strength, pluck and precision....</p> +<p>“What smackings that must have taken!” thought Pa.</p> +<p>But no, their uncle and manager, Mr. Fuchs—a name +as famous in its way as Martello’s—was known for his +gentleness and adored and coddled and pampered by the +Three Graces, who, at a sign from “Nunkie,” as they +called him, joyously rushed to practice, taking a pride in +pleasing their dear Nunkie.</p> +<p>“The old rogue!” said Pa enviously. “He has an +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16' name='page_16'></a>16</span> +easy time of it; whereas I, with my skinny kitten, damn +it ...!”</p> +<p>Well, well, he mustn’t complain, as he himself admitted: +one more rung which he had mounted, thanks +to his Lily, that engagement with the best variety-show in +the States; nothing but big theaters: Orpheums! Dominions! +And New York next! And then London! +Things were moving, moving! And Pa looked lovingly +at his Lily, as she played at being grown up with the +Three Graces, in the train on Sunday, traveling from +town to town, while Ma was knitting things for her +tomboy. He talked to Mr. Fuchs as between equals, as +between man and man, as between the manager of a star +and the owner of a troupe; and the train rushed on, rushed +on, with an indistinct sound of the engine-bell, now and +again, when they crossed a street. Mr. Fuchs, heavy-jawed, +slow of speech, said that he had had enough of +traveling, at his age, if it were not for his dear nieces. +He would like to retire to the country, to his little home, +and grow his roses, as soon as he had married off his +dear nieces, which would not be long, no doubt. As it +was, one of them, Thea, the one who did five pullings-up +with her left hand, had his permission to receive letters +from her sweetheart, a young man at St. Louis, quite +well-off. The idyl made good Mr. Fuchs blossom into a +genial smile: family life! Simple joys! The only true +ones! Worth more than the stage! And Nunkie talked +and talked: the Parisienne, a perpetual scandal! And +wait a bit: what was that he heard at an agent’s the other +day? Yes, the daughter of his old friend Martello, Ave +Maria her name was, had left her brother, and run away +from Mexico with a man! Tut, tut, the things one saw +nowadays! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17' name='page_17'></a>17</span></p> +<p>Pa hardly listened to the old crock, preferred to dream +of New York and the success his Lily would achieve +there! And Lily, sitting close by, listened with all her +ears, puckered her little forehead: love, love.... +And Ave Maria, who had run away with a man.... +Why with a man? And she squeezed up against Thea, +the Grace who was in love ... put question after +question.... She talked of her boy-violinist, of +Trampy. And they all laughed boisterously, with heads +thrown back, full-throated, and Nunkie, very paternally, +congratulated Mr. Clifton on his daughter’s niceness.</p> +<p>“For goodness’ sake, don’t go putting it into her head +that she’s pretty, the little devil!” protested Ma. “That +would be the last straw!”</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>The arrival in New York was a disappointment to Pa. +The authorities insisted on seeing the papers this time. +Lily was under age; just as at ’Frisco. What! Why? +Because of former scandals, it appeared: Martello and +Ave Maria. What had he, a British subject, to do with +those Dagoes who spoil the profession? growled Pa. He +ended by rebelling against the injustice of it, thought of +the Three Graces hard at work rehearsing under Nunkie’s +eye, while he, Clifton, had not even the right to set foot +on a stage and let Lily practise there. To work, to work, +damn it! And he locked her up all day in her room doing +her balancings, the boomerang on the front wheel, the +standstill on the back-wheel, or the bike upside down, +with Lily standing on the pedals, like a convict on the +tread-mill. The pack of fools! Because a Dago had +whipped his sister, wasn’t a Pa to have the right to bring +his own daughter up? To work, to work! And he kept +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18' name='page_18'></a>18</span> +her at it for hours and hours, watched and knit his brows, +like a sage pondering for hours over the solution of a +problem.</p> +<p>Lily, breathless, would turn a look of entreaty upon +her Ma, but Mrs. Clifton, with her nose bent over her +work, pretended not to see, obstinately went on cutting +out, patching, sewing her tomboy’s bloomers. Lily longed +for Trampy....</p> +<p>At night, Pa ran from theater to theater: from Fourteenth +Street, where they lodged, to Twenty-third Street; +took the elevated to Fifty-eighth Street, to Hundred +and-twenty-fifth Street! All theaters at which Lily +would have triumphed but for those dirty Dagoes! +And the things that were served up to the public, pooh! +Clifton laughed with scorn. Troupes of English dancing-girls—the +famous Roofers—with movements like stuffed +dolls; and cyclists, pooh! Hauptmanns, fat freaks turned +out in Berlin: if that was the best they could do, pooh! +Oh, if he had only had the right to send his New Zealander +on Wheels scooting in among their legs, just to +show the public what a star really was! And all the +morning he ran about the town talking of “childish tricks—a +big girl” to the police and “wonderful tricks—the +only girl of her age who can do them” to the agents in +the St. James’ Building. Oh, if he could have London! +He longed to measure his strength against all those famous +names—Marjutti, Laurence, the Pawnees—just to +show them his Lily!</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>And now it was the last stage. All around stretched +the dark sea; and the liner sped—thud, thud, thud—through +a gloomy set. Three days more and then Liverpool; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19' name='page_19'></a>19</span> +and London at last! Pa was about to realize +his dream. He had signed, at last, for the Castle, in London! +It was all right, it was all right! Prospects fine! +And Harrasford was on board; it seemed a sign of good +luck! He was traveling with his architect. Harrasford, +the great English manager—Pa knew them all by name—Harrasford, +the man for whom a whole nation of “artistes” +toiled and moiled nightly. Pa had caught a glimpse +of him.... He would have liked to introduce his +Lily to him; no matter, he would know her one day, when +she was starring in his halls! And on the Bill and Boom +Tour! And elsewhere! She would soon be famous.</p> +<p>Ma, who remained lying in her bunk sucking lemons, +would have liked to have her Lily by her, within call, to +keep her mother company, that great big girl spoiled by +her Pa, even when she was not performing, as in New +York; ... a new cloak and boots and gewgaws ... a +couple of fools together, that’s what Ma +called them! And she needed watching, that tomboy, +who would break her leg one of these days, tumbling up +and down the companion-way. But Lily preferred to +enjoy herself and expended on running about the energies +which she no longer had to devote to her practising. +Her accumulated weariness disappeared under the influence +of the sleep and the good meals, which she had not +the boredom of having to get ready, as in Fourteenth +Street, where Lily, big girl that she was, had to help +her Ma.</p> +<p>She flitted all over the deck, munching candies, +showed everybody her new boots and her red cloak, held +her head high, was very proud of being looked at. Lily +dreamed of the Three Graces; of the boy-violinist; of +Trampy. She made conquest upon conquest, down to the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20' name='page_20'></a>20</span> +electrician of the ship, quite a young lad, who looked as +cold as ice.</p> +<p>She sometimes stopped at his door, watched him handling +levers, pressing buttons. It was like the switchboard +of a theater. She pointed to this and to that. The +lad smiled, told the New Zealander on Wheels all about +his little world....</p> +<p>As for Lily, she was going to star in London, where +her Pa would cover her with diamonds! And she went +on to tell him stories, like a little school-girl who has +read a book or two: India, two eyes glittering in the +dark, gee! And elephants she had known, little birds +which she had kept in a cage in Natal, and kangaroos. +The lion, who stands up on his hind legs when he’s angry; +and the tiger, who lies down flat. And parrots. And +starry nights in Africa: stars “that big.” And storms: +waves “miles high!” And successes at Gangpur; and in +Chicago, where she shared a dressing-room with three +girls who, when they were undressed, were all over +muscles, just like men. She liked the bike well enough, +but those falls: oh, damn it!</p> +<p>“That little monkey has seen everything in her time,” +thought Jimmy, the electrician.</p> +<p>And he mused upon the numberless things which she +had seen, the countries, the cities, and all that she would +yet see, in her life as a wandering star, while he would +remain walled up in his cabin, with his nose to the switchboard.</p> +<p>And the steamer sped—thud, thud, thud—over the +dark sea, where the noise of the waves sounded like the +roar of multitudes of men. Huge clouds in the east were +tinged with red, as though London were about to loom +above the horizon in all its glory, filling the vast expanse +with its rumors and its lights....</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21' name='page_21'></a>21</span> +<h2>CURTAIN RISES</h2> +<h3>I</h3> +</div> + +<p>“Lily ... who’s Lily? A New Zealander: really? +Ah well, we will look into the matter; it will be settled +later on ...”</p> +<p>Clifton, when he returned home that evening, gnawed +his mustache and clenched his fists with rage. Ah, he +would not soon forget his arrival in London! To get +there and be chucked! Was that what he had come from +New York for? To see Lily’s place at the Castle filled +by another troupe of the Hauptmanns—the Hauptmanns +again, those fat freaks!—and nothing to be said or done?</p> +<p>“Engagement not valid. Ought at least to have waited +for the London agency’s signed contract before leaving!”</p> +<p>Intent upon his vexations of the moment, he described +his day to Mrs. Clifton. What had staggered him, done +for him, was his visit to the agent, where they hadn’t +seemed to know Lily!</p> +<p>He had rushed at once to others, just to show them who +Miss Lily was! But he got the same reply wherever he +went:</p> +<p>“Lily? Who’s Lily? A Maori? Let’s see the photograph.”</p> +<p>And would Mrs. Clifton ever believe, asked the indignant +Pa, what they said when they handed him back the +photograph? Yes, to him, the father, to his face, they +said:</p> +<p>“She’s too thin, that Lily of yours!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22' name='page_22'></a>22</span> +“If that’s the way they welcome British subjects returning +to the mother-country, it’s jolly encouraging, on +my word it is!” concluded Clifton.</p> +<p>Ma, among the open boxes, listened and said nothing; +she was exasperated. Their entry into the metropolis +struck her, too, as anything but triumphal. For all her +dislike of those breakneck trades, for all her contempt +for the bike, she displayed even more anxiety than Pa. +With those fat freaks at the Castle and if engagements +continued scarce, how would they manage, later on, lost +in that huge London, with no money, and a child to feed? +Her vanity was wounded as well. She had dreamed of +dazzling her sister-in-law, making them all burst with +jealousy over the splendid engagement at the Castle; and +now everything was slipping from their hands, on the +very day of their arrival, and there was nothing for them +but to sit at home and keep quiet.</p> +<p>But Pa, the next day, tore through London like one +possessed, grinding his teeth and clenching his fists, railing +at everybody, himself included. He thought of Lily, +who had lost a week on the voyage and who was now +messing about in the house, instead of practising her bike. +This idea pursued him, clung to him; but his perseverance +was indomitable, his courage ready to face anything or +anybody. Lily should perform at the Castle! She had +come to perform there and perform there she should! +There were more visits to the agents, to this one and +that one, to one and all, indefatigable visits. Clifton +insisted on his Lily’s merits, pulled out his pocket-book, +bursting with press-cuttings, offered to prove his statements. +The agent, on his side, had made inquiries. +Lily was very clever for her age: a little thin, it was true, +but very graceful; and the New Zealander on Wheels +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23' name='page_23'></a>23</span> +ought to get on. Clifton would work up her turn, no +doubt. And, at last, Pa obtained a promise in writing—and +signed—of an engagement in eight months’ time ... at the Castle, damn it!</p> +<p>An engagement in eight months was better than nothing; +but what to do in the meanwhile? It wasn’t the +money question that bothered him; Pa had money; but +Lily worried him: he wanted work for Lily, bike all the +time and hard at it. Now, London was closed to him; +he couldn’t let her perform in London before appearing +at the Castle; that was in the contract; and there was +nothing for the provinces.</p> +<p>His tenacity continued to do him good service. He got +a few offers, in the London suburbs; that could do him +no harm, he knew, though his Lily did appear at Dulwich, +Deptford or West Ham: who would think of going +there to discover that shrimp?... damn their impudence! +And meantime the shrimp would work and her +day would come, you pack of fat freaks, you!</p> +<p>Pa, on the whole, was satisfied. To show Lily, that +was all he asked for! He was quieter, now that she could +practise. And Lily, also, was delighted and relieved. +At first it was jolly, doing nothing; but to be always at +home with Ma had its drawbacks; only the other day, +because she had asked for a tam-o’-shanter with a feather +in it, like those she saw the little girls wear in the street, +she had nearly had a box on the ear, the extravagant little +beast, who would bring them all to the workhouse!</p> +<p>Better biking with Pa, from morning till night, and +only coming home after the show. Besides, away from +the work, Pa was nice to her: a packet of sweets here, a +bunch of violets there; and then there were the train journeys +out of London and back, over the roofs: all those +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24' name='page_24'></a>24</span> +little yellow houses, with white curtains, and those little +back yards, no bigger than that—real dolls’ houses, all +alike—and such lots of little chimneys, such lots and lots +of little chimneys; and those gorgeous posters: Hippodrome, +Olympia, Bovril, mustard, elephants, the Hauptmanns. +Pa wouldn’t look at them, those fat freaks; but, +oh, if he had them here—and a whip—just for five minutes ... and the chance of saying a word or two! +To think that they were working at the Castle, while he +was puffing out to the suburbs! And he racked his brain, +as he traveled over the town—that town which he had to +conquer and which was veiled from him between-whiles +by the curtain of posters in the railway-stations, on the +hoardings, everywhere—again, again; and imperial +troupes and royal troupes, endless troupes, arrays of +pink tights, lines of legs uplifted amid a flight of scarlet +skirts, alternating with Sunlight and Van Houten and +national and colonial troupes, loud as a trumpet-blare +and with nothing behind them, he dared say....</p> +<p>Those “troupes,” those “families”—he turned it all +over in his mind—yes, they judged talent by weight; the +public wanted a lot for its money: well, why shouldn’t +he have a troupe? Why not? Lily—he had noticed it +in the few shows she had given—Lily didn’t cut much of +a figure in London: five stone of flesh and bones, a mite, +a minnow, a nothing. Well, if Lily wasn’t enough by herself, +he’d give them more: a whole troupe, if need be! +Why, he’d set about it at once!</p> +<p>With his customary determination, yielding to a fixed +idea, he devoted himself to it. And, in the halls, at the +agents’, in the bars, at the Internationale Artisten-Klause +in Lisle Street, that universal meeting-place, Pa, ever on +the watch, strove to make people talk, listened with all his +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25' name='page_25'></a>25</span> +ears, took notes. It was very difficult to get at the real +facts; one had to ferret them out; the owners of the +troupes jealously concealed their methods, endeavored to +put you off, talked of apprentices at five or six shillings a +day, plus food and expenses. Pa saw through these tricks +and, to arrive at the truth, discounted the six shillings +down to sixpence. Lily, her Pa’s own daughter, easily +obtained information from the apprentices themselves +which she afterward repeated to him. He studied +<i>The Era</i>, the paper of the Profession, got the names +by heart: the managers, the “Pas”, the “bosses”, the +“profs.” He got acquainted with some of them personally. +Old Martello, for instance, the father of Ave Maria and +the “Bambinis.” Martello could have given Pa hints; but +he no longer interested himself in anything except his +Bambinis, whom the poor man, grown calm with age and +overwork, was now spoiling. The rest left him indifferent; +he hardly listened, spoke in short sentences, like a +man too old to care:</p> +<p>“Train apprentices? What’s the good? Run a troupe? +Pooh, madness!”</p> +<p>Pa thought this exclusive admiration very touching, +but it wasn’t what he wanted and, madness or not, damn +it, he was resolved to carry out his idea to the end!</p> +<p>There were imperial and royal troupes, “Risleys,” carpet +acrobats, pyramids of tumblers, some of them undergoing +an apprenticeship of cuffs and thumps. Pa was not +interested in these methods, did not approve of them; he +had never knocked Lily about, never let her fall on purpose—“Have +I, Lily?”—whereas in the imperial and +royal they sent the apprentice sprawling on his back, just +to teach him, when he started wrong.</p> +<p>Still, all these were boys; and it was the little girls that +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26' name='page_26'></a>26</span> +interested him, for he meant to have only girls among +his apprentices. The rest wasn’t his damned business; +but the different troupes of Roofer girls, for instance, +affected him directly: where did old Roofer fish those +girls out? That’s what Pa wanted to know. He had +even, in order to visit the school, pretended to bring Lily +as a pupil. He had seen the place in Broad Street, where +they turned out “sisters” by the gross; had watched the +squads in knickerbockers, scattered over the immense +room, like recruits drilling in a barrack-yard: groups engaged +in club-swinging, juggling, clog-dancing, all together, +a tangle of different movements timed “one, two, +three!” Roofer chose among the heap, sorted out the +sizes, called this lot the Merry Wives, that lot the Crazy +Things, christened them after an insect or a flower, +packed them up in lots of ten or twelve girls, with snub-noses +or Greek profiles, as preferred, despatched them, +carriage-paid, C. O. D., with words, music and muslin +skirts complete, and received every day a detailed account +of his Honeysuckles and Bees, scattered all over the +world, from the Klondike to Calcutta.</p> +<p>This superlative organization produced upon Pa the +effect of a state affair; it was something beyond him, +above him; it interested him especially from the recruiting +point of view; and what stimulated him above all was +the troupes of trick cyclists. He had seen plenty of them +in America, but then, wholly occupied as he was with +his Lily, they did not interest him, whereas now he was +seeking to fathom their lives, so that he might know. +Some of them, who went cheap, slept three in a bed, +niggers and whites all mixed; others, who were well +paid, lived easily and comfortably and put themselves +forward with less work and for more money than Lily, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27' name='page_27'></a>27</span> +Lily who possessed artistic talent, and who had toiled +harder than all the rest of them put together! Patience, +his turn would come ... when she was a bit less +thin. And he would have the troupe of troupes, he’d +show them, jolly soon!</p> +<p>Mrs. Clifton was terrified at her husband’s boldness, +but dared not protest; however, she observed that it was +a big undertaking.</p> +<p>“We shall have five apprentices,” interrupted Clifton, +“six including Lily. We must find lodgings.”</p> +<p>“But, dear...!”</p> +<p>“Don’t you think...?”</p> +<p>“Yes, dear.”</p> +<p>As for the apprentices, he would see to that to-morrow. +Ma suggested that her sister-in-law’s daughter might +do, but Pa wouldn’t have relatives at any price—blubbering +for a smacking bestowed upon their daughters—he +knew all about them, thank you. Let such sheep bleat +elsewhere. No, give him strangers. He could be freer +with them and get as many as he wished. An advertisement +in <i>The Daily Mail</i>—“Wanted, young girls for trick +cycling,” followed by the address—fetched them the same +day. The pavement before the house was blocked with +white aprons, sailor-hats and tam-o’-shanters. There +were consumptive-looking girls, long hanks of girls, +chunky girls, all crowding outside the door, until the +landlady drove them away with her broom and threatened +to do as much for Pa and Ma if all the street-arabs of +London were to go on soiling her nice white steps.</p> +<p>Pa, for that matter, found nothing in the bunch, not +one in twenty that was any good; or else they made exhorbitant +demands—two shillings a day those guttersnipes +expected—as though shillings were to be had for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28' name='page_28'></a>28</span> +the asking! But why look so far? There were girls, +sometimes, at the back entrances of the theaters: stage-struck +kids who devoured Lily with their eyes and looked +at Pa as though to say, “Take me, take me!” That’s +what he wanted, damn it, girls who had the business in +their blood and +who wouldn’t +go whining over +a professional +slap or two, +which he dared +say he’d have +to distribute to +make up for lost +time.</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg028.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 247px; height: 357px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 247px;'> +“TAKE ME, TAKE ME!”<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>The first girl +whom he engaged +he had already +seen gazing +ecstatically +at Lily, as they +left the theater, +far away down +the Mile End +Road, and he +saw her again, +one morning, in +front of his +house in the very heart of London! He could not believe +his eyes. She must have followed his scent, slept on the +threshold like a lost dog. Her Pa? Gone away. Her +Ma? Dead. Her name? Maud. Her age? Didn’t +know. Born somewhere in the immensity of Whitechapel, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29' name='page_29'></a>29</span> +towheaded, round-faced. Nothing to eat for two +days. She’d do! He would go to the police-court, get +the license later; meantime, he netted her and that was +one!</p> +<p>As regards the others, he had to make a selection. He +chose them by preference in families which were overstocked +with brats, so that one more or less, in the heap, +made no difference. He got one this way; that made +two! Next, a “local girl,” seized with ambition, came +and offered herself. Three! He found two others: a +little Beak Street shop-girl and a Shoreditch Jewess. +That made five. It did not take him long to judge the +girls. He gave them a few days’ trial before signing a +contract; and what an anxiety for them, Mr. Clifton’s +final decision! If one trembled too much, was caught +holding Pa’s shoulder for no reason, for fear of falling, +or blubbered because of a scratch on the skin, her fate +was settled.</p> +<p>“Pack up, my lady,” Pa would say quite calmly.</p> +<p>There was no getting out of it: off she had to go, before +dinner, and home she went, through the gloomy +streets, after a brief glimpse of paradise.</p> +<p>He had to replace some of them: they were slack; or +else, independent at times, they looked at him for the +least push, as if they would fly at his throat. He asked +himself whether he wouldn’t be compelled to get some +over from Germany or else to pick up on the highroads, +in the Gipsies’ caravans, children with skins tanned like +donkeys’, a troupe of blackamoors on wheels, who, +perched up on the handle-bars of the bikes, would +have looked like cockroaches mounted as brooches, +damn it!</p> +<p>However, by dint of selection, he ended by having +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30' name='page_30'></a>30</span> +only good ones left; and then he made a contract in due +form with the parents for three years, or even five, such +was his faith in the future. A few pence a week to the +family, a few pence to the baggage herself: he to dress, +lodge and board her and engage to make an artiste of her. +Everything was provided for: during the training, just +the board and the rest; when she began to work, a shilling +a day in addition. Over and above, she would be looked +after by a lady, Mrs. Clifton. Was that all right? Both +parties signed; the girl was an artiste, became a New +Zealander.</p> +<p>They brought their little wardrobe: one spare chemise, +on the average, one pair of stockings; their only protection +against the weather was the dress they had on, a +factory-girl’s ulster and a tam-o’-shanter. Later on, +when performing, they would be entitled to a celluloid +collar, satinette knickers and pumps.</p> +<p>Pa, though at first he took one extra room and then +two in the same house and though he also made his apprentices +sleep three in a bed, Pa soon found himself +cramped. It would have been nice to have a little house +somewhere in good air, next door to the country. But +there was one thing which made Pa decide to remain in +the West Central district. Jimmy, the young electrician +with whom Lily used to chat on shipboard, had given up +traveling. Harrasford and his architect had noticed him +on board and the great man had engaged him to manage +the electric installation of his theaters. Jimmy had taken +possession of a lodging in Gresse Street, Tottenham Court +Road. He slept over the shop, which, for the rest, served +him rather as a place in which to keep the tools for his +outside work. Pa often ran upon him in the neighborhood +and had a nodding acquaintance with him which +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31' name='page_31'></a>31</span> +turned out to be useful, as Jimmy, being in Harrasford’s +employment, was more or less at home in the variety-theaters +and nothing was easier than for him to obtain +leave for Clifton to practise on the stage. This it was +that persuaded Clifton to settle in the west end. In any +case, it would be cheaper +than dragging the six +girls and himself daily +from one end of London +to the other. The house +in which he took up his +quarters, in Rathbone +Place, quite close to +Jimmy, was small and +dark, but not dear. The +upper story was occupied +by people who were +out all day and the basement +served as a lumber +room. They would feel +quite at home here ... with +no old sheep to +listen at the keyholes.</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg031.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 254px; height: 324px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 254px;'> +TOM, THE SHOEBLACK<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>And then he would +have slept in the parks, +if necessary, anywhere, rather than waste more precious +time! His Lily, his troupe, before everything. What he +had to do was to get a move on. He went so far as +to engage a boy, a shoeblack at the corner of Oxford +Street and Tottenham Court Road for the rest of the +time, to attend to the bikes and the girls at practice.</p> +<p>Pa gave his mind to the gear, the expenses, the general +business. Ma saw to good order, to domestic discipline. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32' name='page_32'></a>32</span> +It was no longer the quiet life of a Pa and Ma trotting +round the world in the company of their one and only +bread-winning star. As for Lily, the daughter of the +boss and manager, she owed a good example to one and +all. In the morning, with Maud, she went down to the +kitchen, lit the stove, made the coffee. Next, she carried +up the breakfast to Pa and Ma in bed, then distributed +their rations to the famished girls. And off they went, +all six of them, with Pa following at their heels.</p> +<p>The stage-door gave the apprentices a thrill the first +day they entered. The passage, gently sloping, tall and +wide, because of the scenery, smelt of elephants and +cheap scent. It was blocked with properties, with queer-shaped +cases, flat as a slab or round as a ball. There +were long, narrow boxes, for the horizontal bars; sometimes +a row of wicker coffins, with a ventriloquist’s figures +inside. And labels from everywhere—Melbourne, Chicago, +Berlin, Lisbon—and “Rlys.” and “S. S.” that made +you feel in the hold of a liner, off to foreign ports.</p> +<p>At the end, beyond an iron door, was the stage, very +dark, pricked here and there with electric lamps. There +were things that glittered with spangles. To the girls +it seemed like the Kingdom of Puss-in-Boots or Blue-Beard; +but to Lily it was an old story. She was a little +like the school-girl in the good days long past, for whom +the master was always waiting, cane in hand. The rest +she didn’t care about.</p> +<p>Nevertheless, huge as the stage was, there was not +always room to practise: ponies or elephants would +monopolize it for hours at a time. Or else, when Roofer +was supplying a ballet, he took up the whole stage, all +day long: Lily, secretly delighted, sat down modestly in +a corner, so as to be in no one’s way. Roofer made his +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33' name='page_33'></a>33</span> +collection of calves and ankles flutter about, followed +the new dances with an expert eye, throwing his hat +back on his head, mopping his forehead, grumbling, finding +fault:</p> +<p>“Don’t eat chocolates while you’re dancing, you, Eva! +Hi, you, Gwendolen!”</p> +<p>And, to emphasize his remarks, he threw his felt hat at +them.</p> +<p>“Silly old ass!” thought Pa, with a grin. “To think +you can train artistes like that. You’ll use up fifty hats, +you old fool, while my belt remains as good as new!”</p> +<p>For that was now Pa’s system, the strap—“à la +Mexico!”—not that he used it often nor very hard; but +he terrorized Lily with it and the other girls were afraid +of it, too, though they never got more than the threat, +seeing that they were apprentices, who might have run +away if he had struck out.</p> +<p>All this did not prevent them from working with a +will—trot, trot, trot—when there was no Roofer on the +stage and no elephants or ponies: yoop, on to the bikes +and the fun began! The sight of Pa training his star +made the apprentices shake in their knickers. Lily was +to do everything and to do it very well: Pa ran after her, +in a never-ending circle, and, from the corner of his eye, +watched Tom, who held the girls and made them work, +upon his instructions; and when they got off their bikes +to wipe their foreheads:</p> +<p>“Bravo, Miss Woolly-legs!” said Pa sarcastically. +“Tired, eh? Dead, eh? Suppose you tried to get up +again ... and be quick about it! And as for you, +Tom, don’t let them fall, or I’ll catch you one on the side +of the head!”</p> +<p>For Pa already knew by experience that their little +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34' name='page_34'></a>34</span> +ladyships shirked work; that they shook with fright; that +they lost confidence after a bad fall; and that then it was +finished, nothing to be done with them: they’d let themselves +be killed sooner.</p> +<p>Maud, for instance, that Jonah, ever after one day she +had seen her blood flow, trembled before her bike like a +sheep that scents the slaughter-house. It was no use +Pa’s threatening her with his belt: she wouldn’t let herself +go, on the contrary, held on to everything, no matter +what, for fear of falling. He ought to have sent her +away long ago; he would pack her off that very night ... and made no bones about telling her so, that +Jonah!</p> +<p>Then Pa, giving Lily a rest, occupied himself with the +girls: taught them the principle of the standstill, of side-riding, +of the “swan,” of the “frog.” And,—quickly!—the +indefatigable Pa went back to Lily, made her begin +a trick ten times, twenty times over, so great was his +rage at the lost time, the elephants, the Hauptmanns, +Roofer. He pulled faces, clenched his fists:</p> +<p>“Why don’t you do as I say when I tell you, damn it!”</p> +<p>“But, Pa, I can’t!” protested Lily.</p> +<p>“You can, if you like,” said Pa, exasperated this time +and unbuckling his belt.</p> +<p>Crash! A heap behind him, a medley of limbs and steel +fittings! Maud, who was still trying, on her bike, startled +by Pa’s threatening movement, had fallen flat down.</p> +<p>“Maud again! That damned Jonah!” cried Pa, going +up to her. “Well, Miss Woolly-legs, do you mean to +stay there all night?”</p> +<p>But she did not move; and, when they had disentangled +her from the bike, Pa saw an eye that was quite red +and a little stream of blood trickling down her cheek. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35' name='page_35'></a>35</span></p> +<p>“Let’s look!” said Pa anxiously.</p> +<p>A spoke sprung from the felly had scratched her eye.</p> +<p>It was a serious accident. Sprained wrists, barked +shins didn’t count; but a spoke in the eye.... Luckily, +Maud had no relations; there was no claim to be +feared: not a vestige of old sheep on the mother’s side. +Pa said all this to himself as he ran to the chemist, and +Lily consoled poor Maud as best she could, said that, +after all, it was part of the game: she’d know better another +time, eh? She’d be a great star yet, eh, Maud?</p> +<p>The poor maimed thing lifted her face to Lily, stammered +through her tears that it was nothing ... all +right again now ... Pa’s fault, with his belt.</p> +<p>“For a little thing like that!” said Lily, laughing. +“Fancy falling from your bike for that! Why, I’d rather +have twenty ‘contracts on the back’ than lose an eye.”</p> +<p>For that was what it amounted to. Pa realized it, after +he had dressed the wound. Clifton’s mind was not at +ease: a glass eye was not a very difficult matter ... but, +who knows, some callous person might inform Harrasford, +who stood no nonsense on that subject. Fortunately +the artistes present had not paid much attention ... had hardly noticed anything, in the dim light of +the stage....</p> +<p>And soon after the New Zealanders were walking back +to Rathbone place with Maud in their midst, her head a +roll of bandages, leaning on Lily’s arm.</p> +<p>It was a pathetic home-coming. Ma had told them +what would happen! That would teach them to take in +vagabonds from the streets. Mrs. Clifton thought that, +in a respectable house....</p> +<p>“That’ll do,” said Pa, dropping into the easy-chair in +the dining-room. “I’m worn out. If you’d been like me, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36' name='page_36'></a>36</span> +Mrs. Clifton, running after those Woolly-legs all the +morning”—and he pointed to the apprentices standing +round the table—“gee, you wouldn’t talk so much! I’ll +take Maud to the hospital this afternoon; it’s only a +trifle. Is dinner ready?”</p> +<p>“Yes, dear.”</p> +<p>“Come along, then, all of you Woolly-legs,” said Pa +jovially.</p> +<p>Pa was sorry for poor Maud, as a rule, but he felt a +need to shed a little gaiety, to extenuate the accident as far +as possible, to turn it into a joke, so as to prevent his girls +from being panic-stricken. He talked of heads smashed +to a jelly, of legs in smithereens, of a bicyclist who had +had not one, but both eyes caught in the chain. As +for himself, when he was a small boy—that was in the +time when they brought up artistes, real ones, mind +you; not, as nowadays, on sugar and sweets; no, real +ones, on the whip and the stick, damn it!—why, the accidents +which he’d seen! Yes, he himself, to go no farther, +he could have shown them, here, there, there, here, damn +it, all over his body, scars deep enough to put your finger +in!</p> +<p>“Eh? Frightens you, does it? Never fear,” added Pa, +in a good-humored voice, “that sort of thing won’t happen +to any of you Woolley-legs; a good Irish stew is better +than a kick of the pedal, eh?”</p> +<p>And Pa, after a last cup of strong tea, dismissed the +girls, lit his pipe, threw himself into the easy-chair, with +his legs long out in front of him; but soon:</p> +<p>“Well, Maud, what is it? What are you crying for +now? I tell you, I’ll buy you a glass one,” said Pa, at +the sight of Maud, who blubbered silently and sat glued +to her chair instead of getting up to go.</p> +<p>Poor lost dog! Clifton, at the theater, had threatened +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37' name='page_37'></a>37</span> +to send her away. She knew what that meant: leaving +Miss Lily, losing those good meals....</p> +<p>Maud faltered something about packing up; pain in her +eye; not her fault.</p> +<p>“So what you want is to stay with us?” asked Pa.</p> +<p>“Oh!” gasped Maud.</p> +<p>“Well, then, stay! But no more bike; you shall be +Lily’s lady’s maid,” said Pa, puffing at his pipe.</p> +<p>It went down so well, as an effort of dry humor, that +Ma could not help laughing. But Mr. Clifton was talking +seriously. Then Ma, amazed, protested: what, a servant +in her house! A lady’s maid for Lily! He would +end by giving her the moon! And what would Lily do +all day? She’d sit twiddling her thumbs! Had Mr. +Clifton thought of that?</p> +<p>Yes, Mr. Clifton had thought of it. He was too tired +to explain his reasons; but take it from him, it was best +like that. Pa, in fact, feared lest that smashed eye might +prove a worry to him: the papers weren’t in order. He +had made no declaration to the police; there was the +Workmen’s Compensation Act.... Much better +keep Maud safe in the house, for a while ...</p> +<p>“Lily won’t sit twiddling her thumbs for all that, will +you, Lily?” continued Pa, smiling to his star.</p> +<p>A touch of the brush and comb, a stroll through the +streets with the girls, by leave of Pa, who wished Lily +to take the air, then home again, more housework.... +The apprentices, who did not yet perform in +public, were sent to bed early, while Lily, escorted by Pa, +went off to East, West, South or North London. An +hour to get there; then undress, dress, appear on the +stage under Pa’s eye, undress and dress again; another +hour to get back; a morsel of cold Irish stew, a cup of +tea; and drowsily up to her room and bed....</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38' name='page_38'></a>38</span> +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>“Lily!”</p> +<p>Ma’s voice woke her with a start in the morning. Lily +dressed quickly and quickly ran down-stairs to the kitchen, +where Maud had gone before her; and it was the same +thing every day, except on tour, when discipline was less +strict. It had gone on for months and months, for two +years, ever since they came to London. Pa, with his iron +will, had overcome everything. He felt at home in the old +country, at last. After his engagements in the London +suburbs, he had obtained a triumph at the Castle, a Bill +and Boom tour of forty weeks, a season at Blackpool, +the Harrasford tour now, successes everywhere. Before +his boyish little girls, before his own particular troupe, +the fat freaks trembled in their knickers! For Clifton, +the new-comer, but yesterday unknown, it was an unhoped-for +success and fame and fortune.</p> +<p>Ma nearly always remained in London with Maud. +Lily was not big enough yet to need the supervision of +a Ma. Therefore, on tour,—when she was not practising +with her Pa,—Lily did the catering, saw to the porridge +and the Irish stew; Pa was not hard to please. Provided +Lily was “great” on the stage, he asked for nothing more. +Dishes burned for want of butter, salad mixed in the +wash-hand basin: he swallowed everything with an appetite, +ate standing, with his plate on the trunk, or else +seated with the girls round a little table hardly large +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39' name='page_39'></a>39</span> +enough for three. This Bohemian life pleased him. He +loved youth, gaiety and good fellowship. He was fond +of a laugh, took Lily on his knee after dinner, played +with her, praised her home-made cakes, her tough chops, +and then began talking bike to Lily ... who hated +bikes, and who got something different from a hat flung +at her, when she missed a trick.</p> +<p>No matter, hard as it was, she preferred touring to +staying in London. The work was the same, but, at +least, it was a change. She was spoiled by every one, +down to that landlady who cried when she left.... +After all there were many worse off than she, everlastingly +set about by “profs,” confined to their rooms all +day to practise their balancing; she had had a taste of it +in New York; no, thank you! She preferred having +good times with the girls, practical jokes, boxing-matches +even, scrimmages, pillow-fights. In the boarding-houses, +they flirted with the boys; they kept pet +pigeons, white mice, a lizard; they exchanged secrets, +stories of every country, professionals all! Sometimes, +they consoled one another; promised to send +kisses—x x x—on post-cards. And then there were new +faces, always; a week in each town, no longer; a real +life of adventure from one end of England to the +other. Now it wasn’t like that in London; she felt less +free there. Ma was particular and hard to please; there +were no pillow-fights, no romps; Ma hated those ways. +The stage, yes, she put up with that because it was Lily’s +profession; but one came in contact with all sorts there; +and that little devil of a Lily was wicked enough already! +It took all the home influence to thwart the bad examples +which she received outside; and it was Ma’s business to +see to it. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40' name='page_40'></a>40</span></p> +<p>The house in Rathbone Place had been smartened up. +There was a dining-room which was used only for meals +and which never had a bed put into it at night. There +were things on what-nots: little photograph-frames, loose +photographs, lucky charms, china cups; all shining and +bright, thanks to the adjunction of a lady’s maid, as Pa +called Maud, in his funny way. At first, after the accident, +it was terrible. Her natural awkwardness was made worse +by a glass eye; she could not tell one side from the other, +spilt the tea on the cloth, broke the crockery. Maud did +the heavy work, washed and scrubbed all day long. +When the girls were in London, she went with them to +the theater, as dresser. Maud stood in the wings and +admired the New Zealanders whirling about in the light. +She stretched out her face in ecstasy toward Lily: that +Lily who had traveled everywhere, who was born so far +away, in a land full of monkeys and parrots. She followed +Lily to her dressing-room, trotted after her like a +dog, worshiped her open-mouthed.</p> +<p>Lily had ripened out, was becoming more beautiful, +more of a woman daily, despite the fact that her Pa still +treated her like a kid. She no longer looked at things +from the point of view of the child-girl who had been +delighted with a satin hair-ribbon in India; now her +pride was not appeased with such trifles. Ma, according +to Lily, seemed ashamed of her, dressed her badly: an +odd skirt here, an odd frock there, of a cheap make. +That was not what Lily wanted. She was an artiste: she +wanted a hat with big feathers and a gown with gold +braid to it; but, when she showed Ma a dress which she +liked in the shop windows, Ma would exclaim:</p> +<p>“What do you want with that? My poor Lily, you +must be mad! That’s for rich little girls, girls who have +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41' name='page_41'></a>41</span> +time to be pretty; it wouldn’t suit you at all. Why, if we +listened to you, we’d soon be in the workhouse!”</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg041.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 228px; height: 385px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 228px;'> +P.T. CLIFTON, MANAGER<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>Ma always said no, pretending that she had no money; +whereas Lily knew to the contrary. She knew that the +troupe earned a great deal and that the troupe was herself. +The other day, at the +theater, she had heard her +aunt, who felt bitter that +Mr. Clifton had not accepted +her daughter Daisy—who +could have learned +the business and later on +have starred by herself!—she +had heard that “old +sheep” say, speaking of +her:</p> +<p>“What a shame to dress +her like that! A girl who +brings them in capital to +invest!”</p> +<p>So Pa was investing +capital. She didn’t exactly +know what investing capital +meant; no doubt it +meant making a lot of +money. She asked for +none of it! Children belong +to their parents! But +she would have liked to be +treated with more consideration, to be spoiled; to get +presents, nice things. She had plenty from her Pa, true +enough: presents, my! But they were cheap gifts, for +all that.... She was always having promises made +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42' name='page_42'></a>42</span> +her of more important things; and the promises were +never kept: that big gold watch, for instance. She had +a thirsting for luxury. It seemed to her that she was +being treated like a performing dog, not a bit better. +Ma, without exactly knowing, but with an infallible instinct, +saw all this budding under that obstinate brow. +Mr. Clifton might see nothing in it; but it was not so +easy to take in a mother! Was there a love affair beneath +it all, Ma asked herself. No, not yet; it might +come later on, as with that apprentice who had run away, +or that other one whom she had had to send packing for +being too free with men. But Lily would not leave them +like that.</p> +<p>She did not let her go out. “Glass-eye Maud” ran the +errands and Lily stayed at home, like a good little girl +of whom her mother wished to make a lady. When she +did happen to go out, she must not be long, or else it +was, “Where have you been? Tell me at once!” At the +theater, when Pa lost his temper, she could reckon on a +mighty fillip, and then it was over: Pa was sorry, rather +than otherwise. Ma, on the contrary, would nag for +hours; muttered inarticulate phrases about “devil,” +“wild bull,” and “taming her;” there was no end to it. +Lily champed the bit! A star, indeed! Was that being +a star? She thought differently! She had seen others +drive up to the theater in their motors, accompanied +by gentlemen carrying flowers, like that famous “M’dlle” +at the Palace. Yes, those were stars: they dined at the +Horse Shoe and did not spend their time in useless +housework. Oh, she was quite sick and tired of that life! +She’d had enough of it. Meanwhile, the days passed +and the weeks and it was always the same thing: housework +and stage-work; work, work, work.... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43' name='page_43'></a>43</span></p> +<p>It was late that morning; they were not practising. +Pa had run down on the previous day to see a troupe of +cyclists, the famous Pawnees, who were back from the +Continent, on their way to New York, and performing +that week at the Brighton Hippodrome. Lily was in her +room later than usual, as Ma was not awake. Maud +had gone down to the kitchen. The apprentices were +getting up, joking with one another, like tom-boys used +to sharing the same bed at home, the same room at the +theater, to dressing, undressing, splashing about naked +in the same bath-tub.</p> +<p>“Get up, Lily,” said one of them, laughing and raising +her sturdy little hand. “Get up, or....”</p> +<p>“No,” said Lily, “let me alone, I’m dead.”</p> +<p>As it happened, on the day before there had been a +general tumble, six in a row, on the back-wheel; one of +them, losing her balance, had dragged the others with +her and the lot had fallen flat in a tangle of steel and +flesh. Bucking Horse, Old Jigger, Street Donkey—the +nicknames they gave their bikes—had kicked them to the +raw. They showed one another the bruises on their +limbs: “Oh, don’t it hurt, just!” “What about mine?” +“Look here!” like young recruits bragging of their +wounds after the skirmish.</p> +<p>“Lily!”</p> +<p>“Yes, Ma!”</p> +<p>And Lily washed quickly, put on her frock and ran +down-stairs to prepare the coffee, but her Ma stopped +her on her way.</p> +<p>“Lily, you light the fire.”</p> +<p>“What about Maud?” said Lily. “Why can’t Maud +do it?”</p> +<p>“You young impudence,” ... said Ma; “Maud +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44' name='page_44'></a>44</span> +has gone to Jimmy’s to take the bike which Tom couldn’t +get to him yesterday; he was shut. It’s the bike you +spoiled, you little bedlamite!”</p> +<p>Lily had to laugh at the thought of Maud struggling +with Old Jigger: Maud, who couldn’t lead the machine +by the handle-bar, or even walk beside it, without barking +her shins.</p> +<p>“Why!” cried Lily. “She’ll explain everything wrong +to Jimmy, and the bike will be no use!”</p> +<p>“Well, then, go yourself,” said Ma, after a pause. +“And mind you, come back quickly; don’t go loitering in +the street; and don’t stay long with that drunkard.”</p> +<p>“Yes, Ma.”</p> +<p>Gresse Street, where Jimmy lived, was quite as dreary +as Rathbone Place: here and there, a few posters on the +walls; some low-fronted shops, displaying sweets and +candies, or else a dazzling case of oranges on the muddy +pavement; alleys, stables, cab-yards....</p> +<p>It was here that Jimmy had his workshop, or rather +his tool-store, for he did not do much work there. The +time which his occupation at the theater left him he devoted +to improving himself. Electricity and its manifold +uses held his interest. There was no doubt that, had +he given all his time to it, he would have become very +clever, for he had an inventor’s brain and, moreover, +possessed an astonishing manual skill for altering and +perfecting things. He worked in copper and steel, was +glad to make and repair bikes for a few customers, the +New Zealanders, among others. While working, he +brewed all manner of plans in his brain. They all revealed +a practical intelligence. Saddle-supports which +reduced the shaking on a bike, improved carriage-springs +and so on; and, on the stage, inventions to dispense with +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45' name='page_45'></a>45</span> +men in the flies and wings; to work everything—scenery, +curtain, lime-light—by means of the switchboard; +and ever so many other things....</p> +<p>Since joining the theater, Jimmy had naturally undergone +the influence of the stage. It had affected his ideas, +with all its new-fangled “turns,” which owed their success +to a maximum of daring—or bluff—coupled with a +minimum of scientific knowledge: illusionists basing their +effects upon the reflections of invisible mirrors and the +cunning use of combined lights; “looping the loop,” “circles +of death,” in which sheer weight did the cyclist’s +work for him, his arrival at a given point depending +upon his accelerated and calculated speed. From seeing +so many of this sort scouring the world—erstwhile acrobats, +former laboratory-students, who now, venturing all +and risking all, topped the bills at the music-halls—Jimmy, +greatly interested in this scientific side, had himself made +researches in that direction. <i>Engineering</i> and other +journals had printed some of his schemes, including +that of an apparatus based upon the notion of exterior +ballistics: the resistance of the air proportional +to the square of the velocity and, according to this velocity, +the exact proportion of the angle of incidence to +the angle of projection. Theoretically, it was perfect; in +reality there might be some unexpected hitch. It was +a question for the venturesome performer, who allowed +himself to be projected by a series of powerful springs, +to fall accurately from pedestal to pedestal, preserving a +faultless balance; in a word, to risk his life six times in +as many seconds. The daring of a Laurence and the +agility of a Lily combined would not have been enough +for the task; and so Jimmy had prudently contented himself +with pinning his diagrams on the walls of the workshop +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46' name='page_46'></a>46</span> +and dismissing the idea from his mind. Not that +he was afraid, rather not; but simply because it appeared +impossible to him.</p> +<p>Other plans had interested him, besides; flying machines, +for instance, etc. He was a real enthusiast about +flying machines! One day, perhaps, when he knew more +... to say nothing of the theater, which did not +leave him much leisure; yet he managed, somehow, for +he took but little sleep and the rest of the time he devoted +to study.</p> +<p>This was the Jimmy of whom Ma made a bugbear to +Lily—in Lily’s interest—for he was one of the few men +whom she saw often; and you can never tell ... +with those devils of the stage....</p> +<p>Meanwhile, Lily, as soon as she had turned the corner +of the street, drew herself up and, with a light step, went +down Percy Street and Tottenham Court Road, instead +of keeping straight on. It took her only five minutes +longer and it suggested luxury, fine shops, handsome +furniture, patent-leather shoes. She adored shopping, +even if it was only with the eyes, through the plate-glass +windows.</p> +<p>She loved to pass in front of the Horse Shoe, where +stars lived, real ones, not performing dogs. And +then, round a piece of waste land, there was a hoarding +covered with advertisements that interested her: the +Hippodrome, the Kingdom, the Castle were displayed between +extract of beef and mustard; and there were always +new programs; always new names; and elephants, horses, +lions; and tights....</p> +<p>Lily looked at this for a few seconds. And, suddenly, +she felt a thrill; on a scarlet poster, dazzling as the sun, +she read: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47' name='page_47'></a>47</span></p> +<p>“Great success! Trampy Wheel-Pad!! At the Kingdom!!!” Trampy +in London!</p> +<p>Not that Lily was astonished: it seemed to her quite +simple that he should be there, as simple as for her to +be in Chicago, Bombay or Capetown; people do sometimes +meet on tour, it all depends: you can be separated +for years and then perform at the same theater for months. +No, she was not in the least astonished: a little excited, +that was all, without exactly knowing why....</p> +<p>“But, if I should meet him,” she thought, “what shall I +say to him? What will he say to me? Will he think +me grown prettier or uglier?”</p> +<p>Lily came to herself again and continued on her errand; +crossed Tottenham Court Road, plunged into a +labyrinth of blocked alleys, of dark courts, and, suddenly, +was at Jimmy’s.</p> +<p>Lily did not like him much; she considered him good-looking, +for a man, but too shy. He never paid her a +compliment. He seemed to think her ugly, whereas many +others admired her and made no bones about telling her +so, especially since the last few months; but he was +ashamed of himself, no doubt: a drunkard, as Ma said.</p> +<p>Poor Lily had no luck. She would have been so happy +to be courted, to relieve her boredom. But nothing +disgusted her so much as drink. And yet it didn’t show +in Jimmy. He always walked straight, never fell, like +that head-balancer who, the other night, had come tumbling +down from his perch. Besides, that one had an +excuse; he drank because he was crossed in love; to forget, +they said. Lily forgave everything the moment there +was love in it; but an icicle like Jimmy, who loved nobody +and who drank for the sake of drinking ... ugh!</p> +<p>Jimmy was at work when Lily entered. The small, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48' name='page_48'></a>48</span> +dark shop, crammed with things in steel, with loose +wheels, queer-shaped objects, reminded Lily of a property +store, only it was dirtier. There were tools everywhere; +designs for machinery pinned on the walls; it +was all very ugly.</p> +<p>And Jimmy’s greeting was none too engaging either. +A curt smile—“Glad to see you, Miss Lily”—and, as for +the bike, he hadn’t understood a word of what the one-eyed +creature who had just left had tried to say.</p> +<p>“I thought as much,” said Lily, laughing. “That’s why +I came.”</p> +<p>And, in a few words, she explained what she wanted. +First, repair the twisted frame; next, a slight alteration +for a new trick; a step here, another there.</p> +<p>“Always fresh tricks, Lily?”</p> +<p>“Always, Jimmy. No end of bruises, I tell you!”</p> +<p>“It’s part of the game,” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>“I should like to see you try it,” retorted Lily contemptuously, +“squeezing through the frame while it’s +going, with that pedal barking your back,” and she rubbed +herself as she spoke. “Only yesterday I got a kick; gee! +It’s like those new tricks in which I don’t feel safe: riding +with one foot on the saddle and the other on the bar +and playing a banjo; it makes me shiver as I go past the +footlights; and Pa watching me, you know; and, if I lose +my balance, I get black and blue somewhere.”</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Jimmy. “One can’t expect a white skin +at the game.”</p> +<p>Lily didn’t care for this. If she couldn’t be courted, at +least she liked to be pitied: that flattered her pride.... +It was all very well for Pa to say, “It’s part of the game, +my little lady.” But that josser of a Jimmy, talking like +that at his ease! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49' name='page_49'></a>49</span></p> +<p>“I’m glad I’m not your daughter!” she said. “My! +You’d be harder than Pa.”</p> +<p>“Your Pa is hard, sometimes; but he’s very fond of +you, for all that.”</p> +<p>“Of course,” said Lily, “he wouldn’t like me to break +my neck; I bring him in too much for that, eh?”</p> +<p>“Come,” interrupted Jimmy, “don’t talk nonsense. It’s +not right to speak as you’re doing. You’ll be sorry for it, +I’m sure. Tell me, rather: you were saying you wanted +a step here, another there; do you mean like this?”</p> +<p>And he rummaged among his tools, looked for loose +pieces, showed them to Lily, while thinking of other +things:</p> +<p>“Look here,” he went on, “do you think you’re the +only one that’s got to work? Suppose you were shut up +all day in a factory? Have you ever been to a factory? +Do you know the life of a metal-buffer girl at Sheffield, +standing in front of her wheel, from morning till night, +and work, work, work?”</p> +<p>“But I’m not a work-girl, you great silly! You know +I’m an artiste! And, now, shall I tell you what I think of +you, Jimmy?” said Lily, pouting. “You’re a bad man, +that’s what you are!”</p> +<p>And thereupon she put out her tongue, turned her back +on him and began to look at the walls, the diagrams, the +drawings, an illustration out of <i>Engineering</i>.</p> +<p>There was a pause.</p> +<p>Jimmy, while handling the bike, gazed at Lily. There +was no sentimentality about Jimmy, but his lively +imagination made him see things through and through; +and, whatever he might be, Jimmy was not bad. That +little Lily: to think that, among all the girls of her own +age, she was the only one to do that trick! He pitied +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50' name='page_50'></a>50</span> +her and all child prodigies. To his mind, there was +something unsportsmanlike about it; something like a +race won by a one-year-old, with jockey, whip and spurs. +He did not believe all he heard, of course. He knew, he +lived with them, he was one of them. He knew the peculiar +mania of the music-hall, the instinctive lie, uttered +as if to discourage competition by giving it a fright at +the start. To listen to them, it meant the horsewhip, the +belt, all day long; going “through the mill,” all the time. +Among the people with the painted faces, it was a shot +at martyrdom, a chance for professional boasting. The +most commonplace, the most coddled lives were made +more interesting by means of imaginary wounds and +scars, like those explorers, in the books, who cross Africa +without food or drink, barefooted, with a crocodile snapping +at their heels.</p> +<p>He took good care not to exaggerate. Life in the halls +was no worse than anywhere else, thank God! It had +its good side and its bad side and its professional risks. +The “pros,” taking them all round, were as good as the +“jossers.” He wanted to be just. He had seen many +who were very happy; one could get anything done by +firm kindness. He could also understand, in the terrible +struggle for bread, that a man went on toiling hard +in the trade in which he was born. A pro could not make +a blue-stocking of his daughter; some were born duchesses, +on satin; others artistes on the boards. One trade +was as good as another; but dangerous practicings, +bruised flesh, seamed skins: no, he didn’t approve of that. +He had seen the Laurences, mad with ambition, beginning +all over again, in spite of falls calculated to stave in +the stage; had seen girls who “do knots” lying in the +dressing-rooms, gasping, exhausted. Even when professional +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51' name='page_51'></a>51</span> +vanity alone prompted such excesses, Jimmy +protested within himself; and then there were so many +abuses.... Besides, the stage so often spoiled a woman: every +branch of the stage, from the highest to the +lowest. All that coaxing familiarity! What he said was, +if Lily had been his daughter, she should not be on the +stage; but there she was and he couldn’t help it; and, as +it was her natural place to be there, he would not be +guilty of the meanness of disgusting a poor girl with the +profession which she had been at pains to learn. He +preferred to let her call him “a bad man.” And that required +a certain courage; for it was no longer a child +talking to him, but an exquisitely pretty girl. Jimmy +could not believe his eyes. What a change! Was it +possible? Having been away from London, on Harrasford’s +service, he had not seen her for many months, +except the day before, just in time to shake hands behind +the scenes, in the dusk; but here, in his shop, he hardly +recognized her, he could not exactly say why. One thing +was certain: he had left her a child and he now found her +a beautiful girl.</p> +<p>“Tush!” he said to himself. “She’s a child for all +that. Only, if she keeps on like this, what a handsome +woman she will be!”</p> +<p>That familiarity on the stage: he reproached himself +for thinking of it; it seemed to him an insult to Lily. +And he began to talk to her of different things, kindly +and pleasantly, changing from subject to subject. He +explained his drawings on the wall, his ideas: exterior +ballistics; the resistance of the air; risking his life six +times in as many seconds....</p> +<p>“He’s drunk,” thought Lily.</p> +<p>And, to stop this flow of words, as though talking +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52' name='page_52'></a>52</span> +to herself, Lily said she did not complain; no, she would +quite like the bike, if she hadn’t got to practise so hard; +she only complained that they didn’t treat her “fair” at +home:</p> +<p>“And look how I’m dressed! I’ve had the same toque +two years. And what do you think of this frock? The +material cost four-three a yard. I look like a tenter in it.”</p> +<p>Jimmy did not share Lily’s indignation. He thought +her neatly and nicely dressed, in spite of her performing-dog’s +toque, as she said. It all suited her so well. But, +on examining that clear-cut little face, lifted toward +him with a rebellious air, he felt that the fatigue, even +the blows didn’t count; that the hardest thing, for Lily, +was to be “badly dressed;” that she would never swallow +that.</p> +<p>“But, look here,” said Jimmy, “all this isn’t worth +making a fuss for; you get cross about nothing at all; +when you came, you were all smiles; and now ...”</p> +<p>“That’s because,” Lily began, with a sly laugh—oh, +she was exasperated with Jimmy’s coldness! She’d show +him, the icicle, and have a bit of fun with him—“on my +way here, Jimmy, I met ... now you won’t give +me away, Jimmy? ... I met my ... sweetheart.”</p> +<p>“A sweetheart? You? Lily?”</p> +<p>“Yes, yes, yes,” said Lily, nodding her head and looking +at him archly, for she could see, by Jimmy’s expression, +that he was caught.</p> +<p>“And your father and mother know nothing about it?” +insisted Jimmy, nonplussed.</p> +<p>“No, no; it doesn’t concern them: at my age, a girl +earns a living for her Pa and Ma; I have as much right +to a sweetheart as any one else, I suppose.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53' name='page_53'></a>53</span></p> +<p>And, greatly amused, she fixed Jimmy with her mocking +eyes.</p> +<p>Jimmy stared at her in amazement.</p> +<p>Then she understood that it was not a thing to joke +about and that what she had just said was terrible. And, +suddenly:</p> +<p>“No, it’s not true, Jimmy! I was only laughing! Oh, +Jimmy, you’re going to give me away!” cried Lily, +squeezing Jimmy’s arm with a convulsive little hand. +“Oh, Jimmy, don’t tell Ma, please, please, Jimmy!”</p> +<p>And there was something so sincere in her voice that +Jimmy saw that she was speaking the truth, that it was +only the jest of a flapper used to the manners of the +stage.</p> +<p>“No,” he said briskly, “I shan’t tell; don’t be afraid, +Lily; only ...”</p> +<p>“Ah, that’s nice of you,” said Lily, much relieved. +“Marriage! If you only knew! And what would become +of the troupe? I shall never marry. I think....”</p> +<p>“Still, some day, it’s bound to come,” said Jimmy, +interrupting her. “You won’t spend all your life on a +bike. You are sure to marry some day....”</p> +<p>“Don’t talk to me about marriage! No, not that. +Gee!”</p> +<p>“But—”</p> +<p>“Love stories! With men! I! And you believed it,” +said Lily, drawing back her shoulder and raising her +hand. “I could smack you, you great silly!” And, all +of a sudden, “I must go,” she cried, “I’ve stayed too +long; Ma will be waiting for me with her broom!”</p> +<p>And Lily rushed outside, without giving Jimmy time +to answer. He could just see her turn the corner of +the street. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54' name='page_54'></a>54</span></p> +<p>Jimmy went back to his work, silently, wrapped up in +his thoughts. That nice little Lily! She could be easy in +her mind. No, he would never be a cause of worry to +her....</p> +<p>Meanwhile, Lily ran home as fast as she could and, on +entering, saw that it was no use; her Ma was waiting for +her, furious.</p> +<p>“Where have you been?”</p> +<p>“Why, I’ve come straight from Jimmy’s, Ma.”</p> +<p>“That’s a lie! The butcher’s boy, who has just left, +saw you outside the Horse Shoe. Who were you waiting +for?”</p> +<p>“I wasn’t waiting for any one!” cried Lily, her eyes +blazing with anger.</p> +<p>“You devil!” said Ma, looking round for a stick, an +umbrella....</p> +<p>And, when she saw nothing within reach, her anger +increased. Then she stiffened her arm and made for +Lily, who sprang behind the table....</p> +<p>But Ma, tripping on the carpet, fell at full length, +dragging down with her the table-cloth and two cups that +were on it.</p> +<p>“My two china cups! You viper!” she yelled.</p> +<p>At that moment, the door opened; Clifton entered. +He seemed preoccupied; looked at his watch:</p> +<p>“Nine o’clock. We ought to be at the theater! Where +are the girls? And what ... what’s all this?” he +asked, on seeing the disorder, Mrs. Clifton scrambling +up from the floor, Lily scowling in a corner.</p> +<p>Ma grunted an explanation. Two cups broken, Lily a +gadabout who would bring them to the grave with shame!</p> +<p>“But, Pa, I was only looking at the posters.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55' name='page_55'></a>55</span></p> +<p>“Posters?” repeated Clifton. “Which posters? What’s +all this nonsense?”</p> +<p>And, when Ma had told him, interrupted by despairing +“But, Pas,” and “No, Pas,” from Lily, he very calmly +asked, was he going to have peace in his own house, +or was he not? All this fuss about two broken cups; +beating Lily for nothing!</p> +<p>Never, in any circumstances, would Clifton have +snubbed Mrs. Clifton like this before Lily. He would +have waited until she had gone. But to come upon all this +rot when there were so many serious things to discuss! +The sisters Pawnee whom he had seen last night: Polly, +Edith, Lillian. Yes, that Lillian, damn it, a winged rose! +And the things they did on their bike without seeming +to touch it!</p> +<p>“My poor Lily,” Pa went on, going up to his daughter +and stroking her hair. “I’m not saying it to vex you; +but you’re not in it with the Pawnees! Come on! Beg +your Ma’s pardon; and let’s be off to the theater. I’m +in form this morning. We shall have a great practice.”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56' name='page_56'></a>56</span> +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>A few minutes later, Pa was hustling his herd before +him:</p> +<p>“Quicker, my Woolly-legs! No time to lose!”</p> +<p>He thought of the tricks which he had jotted down +the evening before in his note-book. Lily would learn +them quick enough: she was as clever as the Pawnees, +when all was said, only less graceful. She had the balancing +power all right; but grace, grace, damn it, to do +a thing like that as though it were child’s play: that’s +what she hadn’t got! You saw the effort. And the +apprentices had no precision in their groupings. Now +the fat freaks had. To combine German discipline with +English gracefulness, that was the question; to have the +troupe of troupes; to have a Lily who would be worth +more by herself than Polly, Edith and Lillian put together. +But that meant work and going through the +mill! This last made Pa think of the old sheep and their +bleatings. He gave a nervous little laugh and his hand +had a convulsive movement, as though to strangle those +pests.</p> +<p>Pa had recovered his good humor and was grinning +by the time they reached the theater. Merely by his way +of taking the key of his dressing-room from the stage-doorkeeper +one recognized the owner of a troupe, the +man with a “permanent address,” the manager, the boss, +the prof, the Pa. On entering the lobby, he, with his six +girls, took possession of the theater. He nodded to the +staff; growled a “Lazybones!” as the Roofers passed out +two by two, always two by two: a fair one with made-up +eyes, a dark one with kiss-me-quick lips; sniffed their +cheap perfumes amid the tarry smell of the packages +marked Sidney, New York, Paris....</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57' name='page_57'></a>57</span> +<img src='images/illus-pg057.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 406px; height: 599px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 406px;'> +“QUICKER, MY WOOLLY-LEGS!”<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58' name='page_58'></a>58</span></div> +<p>On reaching the stage, Pa first gave a glance to make +sure that there were no elephants, or ponies, or Merry +Wives, that they could practise at their ease, without +having to burrow in a corner, like rats. The stage was +almost empty. After the live street, it was a pallid light, +in which ghosts moved. The New Zealanders, it need +not be said, no longer fancied themselves in the cavern +of Bluebeard or Puss-in-Boots; they had seen too many +stages during the past two years. The slant of the floor, +the roughness or smoothness of the boards was what interested +them, for fear of falls and barked shins. Pa hurried +them to their dressing-room to get into their knickers, +while he took off his jacket and turned up his +trousers, so as to run better. No more time to lose, +with his Lily! He was still in a fever from seeing +those Pawnees last night. As for the stage and the +boards, a lot he cared, slanting or straight, rough or +smooth! To work! to work! And he got ready the +bikes, which Tom had brought down, without a glance +around him.</p> +<p>To a poet, to a painter, that glance would have been +worth the taking. The iron curtain was raised, the house +loomed vaguely; the balconies, covered with cloth, stood +out like cliffs; the pit, with its seats under a gray drugget, +because of the dust, lifted toward the stage its rows of +motionless waves. The stage itself was strange: a sort +of huge cave, with strips of scenery hanging like stalactites; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59' name='page_59'></a>59</span> +near the wall, a metal pedestal, with a red velvet +platform, looked like a blood-stained scaffold; one suspected +the presence of properties: wheels, iron implements, +tangled ropes, like so many instruments of torture. +At the New Zealanders’ feet, half-naked bodies, suggesting +the souls of the damned, were tumbling, practising +falls; a woman in a white wrap hovered round; and, near +the proscenium, a pack of trained seals, lying in their +moist boxes, raised their frightened heads, as who should +say corpses cast up on the shores of hell by the silent +waves of the pit.</p> +<p>But three slender forms, spinning on their trapeze +almost above Pa’s head, sprang lightly to the stage, near +an old fellow in spectacles.</p> +<p>“Why, Mr. Fuchs and the Three Graces! Here’s a +surprise!” said Pa, who had not seen them since the +New York Olympians. “When did you get here? Yesterday?”</p> +<p>There was a general shaking of hands. Fuchs congratulated +Pa on his success, said he had followed his +progress in the papers. Pa owned a troupe now and had +a name.</p> +<p>“So this is your Lily,” said Fuchs, tapping her on the +cheek as she joined the group. “A real lady! And good, +eh?”</p> +<p>The Three Graces also congratulated Pa ... +kissed Lily:</p> +<p>“How sweet you’ve grown! Why, Lily, how pretty +you are!”</p> +<p>Lily was so surprised, so pleased; and her Pa was very +proud. He thanked Mr. Fuchs, complimented the Three +Graces in his turn, to their delight:</p> +<p>“What arms! What muscles!” Then, “Excuse us, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60' name='page_60'></a>60</span> +eh? Lily must get ready. We shall meet again presently, +after practice.”</p> +<p>The Graces had gone back to it already. Pa tested the +bikes; took a hurried turn at the pumps; and, when the +apprentices and Lily returned:</p> +<p>“Yoop, up with you!”</p> +<p>The round began. Tom looked to the girls, constantly; +ran after them; kept an eye on their falls. Pa, constantly, +hung on to Lily. Nothing else existed when he +was handling his star. His wish to do well, his love of +art for art’s sake worked him up, stimulated him, made +him hit out but not in anger: it was the spark of enthusiasm, +of which the apprentices caught the reflection.</p> +<p>“Hi, you there, Mary! I’ll pull your ear! Birdie, if I +take my belt to you!”</p> +<p>But his Lily above all; his Lily! his seven stone of +flesh and bones! Pa was an artiste; he had thought +of a thousand things since his trip to Brighton. New +and astounding tricks; and easy at that ... if +Lily only would! Oh, he’d soon make her graceful! +But, for that, she would have to obey, to let go the +handle-bar at a sign, instead of endlessly seeking her +balance. For instance, Pa held her rein to prevent falls—there +was nothing spiteful about Pa, he never let you +fall on purpose—and Lily—“One! Two!—Count together, +Lily!”—put one foot on the saddle, the other +on the handle-bar: “Three!” That’s where she had to +let go her hands, smartly, and stand erect as she rode. +The machine slipped under her. Lily, shaking with fear, +stooped to seize the handle-bar.</p> +<p>“Stand up, Lily! Show pluck, Lily!” said Pa.</p> +<p>Lily, accustomed to obeying blindly, drew herself up +again. But, sometimes, crash! The whole came tumbling +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61' name='page_61'></a>61</span> +down. Notwithstanding the rein, Lily fell to the +ground; and the bike, in addition, caught her a kick in +passing.</p> +<p>“Nothing broken? A tiny scratch; it’s nothing. Tom, +the white stuff!”</p> +<p>Tom left his Woolley-legs, brought a bottle of embrocation; +a few drops of that on the skin, a bit of +sticking-plaster; there, that was all right.</p> +<p>“You see, Lily, you’re not dead yet! Nothing to be +frightened about. Come, try again!”</p> +<p>The great thing was to hustle. Pa displayed so much +enthusiasm—“Those Pawnees, damn it!”—that Lily, for +all her fears, was smitten in her turn, ended by becoming +exasperated against those Pawnees, felt a longing to +wring their necks!</p> +<p>She obeyed her Pa like an automaton, in her anxiety +to do well.</p> +<p>“More graceful! That’s it! Not so stiff!” said Pa.</p> +<p>“But, Pa, I can’t!” protested Lily, soaked in perspiration.</p> +<p>“But you’ve got to, my little lady!”</p> +<p>They passed from one practice to another, almost without +resting. Lily was worn out, Pa seemed indefatigable.</p> +<p>Sometimes, practising was marked by interruptions. +Maud’s gouged eye remained the typical accident. Another +time, a girl lay fainting for ten minutes after +falling on her head; or else the stage was invaded by a +ballet. There was no end to it. On this particular day, +they had a visit from Harrasford himself, Harrasford +the chief and master, who came along with Jimmy; a +visit which was the more sensational for being quite rare. +Pa, now that he was the owner of a troupe and sure of +his position, would not have been sorry to be noticed by +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62' name='page_62'></a>62</span> +Harrasford, just to impress Mr. Fuchs and show him +what they thought of Lily in London.</p> +<p>“Do your best, my Lily,” said Pa. “He’s watching +us.”</p> +<p>But bill-toppers, New Zealanders though they might +be, were nobodies to “him;” Lily—one of a thousand, +among all those of both sexes who performed in his theaters. +There might have been ten cycling rhinoceroses +on the boards; he might have seen Lily swallow her bike, +and change into a butterfly: he would have paid no attention. +Those were details that concerned the stage-manager. +He hurried across the stage to the fly-ladder, +made Jimmy explain things, took notes as he went, +wanted to see for himself, pointed to the first batten, to +the electric switches.</p> +<p>“How much for so many lamps? And that? What +does that come to, roughly?”</p> +<p>And he stopped for a second in his course, his ear +stretched toward Jimmy to catch his answer flying; then +both of them went on again, quickly.</p> +<p>Jimmy was now following Harrasford along the +bridges, with the whole stage below him, in the ruddy +semi-darkness; at one side, the half-naked bodies fell +with a heavy thud after their somersaults; or else it was +the sharp sound of a bike skidding; and distant voices +rose up to him:</p> +<p>“But, Pa, I can’t!”</p> +<p>“But you’ve got to, my little lady!”</p> +<p>“Poor little thing!” thought Jimmy, disappearing in +the flies, toward the side-rails, at Harrasford’s heels. +And Lily went on riding and Pa running after her, +round and round and round. She seemed to be fleeing +madly, pursued by a devil. Suddenly, Pa stopped, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63' name='page_63'></a>63</span> +having exhausted his strength, and Lily fell rather than +sat upon a hamper by the wall.</p> +<p>“Here, Lily, put this over your shoulders,” said Pa, +giving her his jacket. “You’ll catch cold, darling. Oof, +let’s take breath a bit!”</p> +<p>But a glad voice burst through the silence: it came +from the Three Graces, who always worked on stubbornly, +even during the absence of Nunkie, who had been +out for a smoke. Thea greeted his return with a cry of +triumph:</p> +<p>“Ten pullings-up with one arm, Nunkie! Ten without +stopping!”</p> +<p>“Well done! I’m very pleased with you,” said Mr. +Fuchs; and he crowned their excitement by declaring +that, as a reward, he would that very day buy Thea the +sleeve-links which he had promised her ever since last +year.</p> +<p>“Dear Nunkie!”</p> +<p>A spasm of vanity made them rush back to their work; +and soon the three of them formed, in mid-air, an involved +group of ropes, bars and hardened limbs.</p> +<p>Lily, in spite of her fatigue, was amused at those mad +girls. To take all that trouble for the sake of a pair of +sleeve-links! Her shoulders shook with nervous laughter, +in spite of Pa’s presence. He quieted her with a gesture, +scolded her under his breath, kindly:</p> +<p>“Shut up, Lily!... Aren’t you ashamed of yourself, +Lily?”</p> +<p>And he looked at Nunkie with an air of saying:</p> +<p>“You old rogue!”</p> +<p>As for the Three Graces, it was a pleasure to watch +them: their pluck was infectious.</p> +<p>“To work!” said Pa. “Let’s have a somersault, eh?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64' name='page_64'></a>64</span></p> +<p>And, at a sign from him, two of the apprentices, assisted +by Tom, fixed a little steel-legged table in the middle +of the stage, bore down upon it with all their weight. +The bike, set at full speed, stopped short as it struck the +table; and Lily, carried on by the impulse, continued her +whirl, full on her back, and, carrying the machine with +her, came to the ground on the other side of the table and +went on riding. But that shook her, in her stomach, her +heart, everywhere. Each time, she was nearly succeeding, +but it wasn’t quite right.</p> +<p>“I can see,” said Pa, “you want to make me lose my +temper!”</p> +<p>“But, Pa, it hurts!”</p> +<p>“Oh, those blasted little brats!” shouted Pa angrily. +“Rickety machines, every one of them: no more energy +than a sparrow and lazy into the bargain!”</p> +<p>Then, suddenly, Lily succeeded magnificently.</p> +<p>“You see you can do it when you like, you obstinate +little wretch!” said Pa. “Now try not to miss it again, +next time! That will do for to-day,” he added, seeing +Lily out of breath. “Go and get dressed, my Lily.”</p> +<p>The Three Graces were finishing also. Good old +Nunkie wiped the perspiration from their foreheads +with his big checked handkerchief, invited Clifton to +come with Lily and choose the sleeve-links and suggested +that they could have a chat at the restaurant.</p> +<p>“Would you like to, Lily?” asked Pa.</p> +<p>“Yes, Pa.”</p> +<p>“Very well, then.”</p> +<p>The girls would go back alone. Tom, having carried +up the bikes, was told to run home and fetch Miss Lily’s +new dress and boots, Mrs. Clifton’s brooch and big hat. +And, half an hour later, Lily, who had crawled up to her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65' name='page_65'></a>65</span> +dressing-room stiff-legged, exhausted, feeling sixty, came +tripping down the stairs all freshly dressed, wearing the +great hat of her mother, and a pair of creaking boots. +She soon recovered when she was dressed out. She +drew up her dainty figure, so as to be level with the imposing +group of Pa, Nunkie and the Three Graces.</p> +<p>Lily, very proud of herself, spun out the pleasure of +drawing on her gloves to go shopping with those big +girls, who had had love stories. Then they discussed +what restaurant.... Nunkie, long ago—“Zæo’s +year at the Aquarium:—that doesn’t make me any younger, +eh?”—had discovered a little German place....</p> +<p>Lily would have liked to propose the Horse Shoe, to +walk in there with her big hat and creaking boots as +though the place belonged to her. But they decided upon +a “Lyons” in Wardour Street. At the table, it was touching +to watch the attentions which the Three Graces lavished +upon their Nunkie, the respect they showed him. +Pa was not sorry that Lily should see that, but Lily took +no notice at all: she just removed her gloves, held her +knife and fork with the tips of her fingers, let Pa help +her, thanked him with a pretty “’K you.” From the corner +of her eye, she watched other groups, to pick up good +manners. She seemed to have frequented smart restaurants +all her life: beside her, Nunkie and the Three Graces, +who cut their bread with their knives and made a noise +when eating, looked like a family of small farmers on a +visit to London town. Pa was greatly amused, enjoyed +his daughter’s aristocratic ways, admired her refined air. +When they went out, in obedience to a look from Lily, +he bought her a bunch of violets, which he pinned to her +bodice himself:</p> +<p>“Well, Lily, are you happy? Do you love your Pa? +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66' name='page_66'></a>66</span> +Tell me you love your Pa,” and he looked at her gently +as if in regret at having been so harsh at practice.</p> +<p>“It’s for your good, my Lily, you’ll thank me one of +these days. I’ll give you lovely dresses, I’ll cover you +with diamonds!”</p> +<p>“Why not to-day?” asked Lily, with a comic pout.</p> +<p>Then both of them laughed and Lily forgot everything, +even the blow with the fist, at being treated so like +a lady.</p> +<p>“If I was married,” she said to the Three Graces, “I +should like to go shopping all day long and have fine +dresses, a gold watch and no bike!”</p> +<p>The Three Graces, with their heroic strength, had no +thought of such luxuries. Thea told Lily of her successes +in America:</p> +<p>“Five pullings-up with one arm at Boston. Six at +’Frisco. Eight when we got back to New York! Eight, +Lily! And to-day....”</p> +<p>“And your lover in America, tell me about your lover +...” interrupted Lily, pressing Thea’s arm.</p> +<p>“Talk low,” said Thea, looking back at Nunkie, who +was walking behind with Pa. “Nunkie is furious with +him. If he ever meets him! He says it’s disgraceful, +not writing to me, after asking leave to. It’s an insult +that ought to disgust me with men for good and all, +Nunkie says.”</p> +<p>She told Lily everything, her unhappiness at first, for +she loved him. Lily, with her little nose in the air, +sniffed those love stories, gulped them down, so to speak, +with an instinctive movement of the lips.</p> +<p>“And did you write to him?”</p> +<p>“I wrote to him, but he never answered. Oh, if Nunkie +knew! He forbids us to write, because writing, you +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67' name='page_67'></a>67</span> +know, Lily, puts out the muscles of the arms, interferes +with the pullings-up, Nunkie says....”</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg031.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 254px; height: 324px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 254px;'> +NUNKIE<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>But they turned into Regent Street: to Lily it +was the entrance to the paradise of shops. The huge +curve displayed its window fronts; and ladies and gentlemen +and little girls: not +dressed in their Ma’s leavings, +these last, but a superior +branch of mankind, similar to +that in the front boxes.</p> +<p>Nunkie blinked his eyes behind +his spectacles: all this +luxury terrified him; he had +almost forgotten the sleeve-links, +talking with Clifton of +people they had known:</p> +<p>“The boy-violinist? Not up +to much. Ave Maria? A disgrace: +married, deserted, I +don’t know what. Poland, the +Parisienne? A scandal!” As +for him, he had but one wish, +after getting his girls married: +to retire to his home, +grow his roses, look after his +pigeons; simple joys, the only +ones....</p> +<p>“Look, Thea!” Lily broke +in, pointing through the plate-glass +to a heap of imitation +jewelry, lying, among watches, +on red and black velvet.</p> +<p>“Come on!” said Mr. Fuchs. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68' name='page_68'></a>68</span></p> +<p>But, when Thea saw the prices—ten shillings, twelve +shilling’s—she refused to go in, saying she could have it +just as pretty in Wardour Street and ever so much +cheaper.</p> +<p>“Just as you please, my darling. I’ll do whatever you +like. I don’t know anything about it!”</p> +<p>Clifton felt something rise in revolt within him, he was +unable to resist it; a case of showing that old curmudgeon +what a Pa was and that his little girl, too, did pullings-up +in her way and that he knew how to treat her as a Pa +should:</p> +<p>“Your watch, Lily,” he said, opening the door and +pushing her in. “Now’s the chance to get it. Come, +choose for yourself!”</p> +<p>“Oh, Pa! Do you really mean it, Pa?” she said incredulously.</p> +<p>“Now look here, I’ll smack you, Lily! When your Pa +tells you a thing!”</p> +<p>Lily seemed a princess, with her way of saying, +“’K you,” of touching the ornaments, the watches, like a +little creature thirsting for luxury and yielding to her inclination +at the first opportunity. There was so great a +look of happiness in her eyes; and Clifton was so proud +of his Lily, that he offered her a chain as well, to go with +the watch. Lily refused at first, for form’s sake, and +then took courage—like a poor little martyr who did not +like to disoblige her Pa—and chose a very pretty watch-chain, +to the great wonderment of the Three Graces and +of Nunkie, who thought, as they left the shop, that the +children of to-day ... upon his word ... the +parents of to-day ... it was all very different in +his time....</p> +<p>Clifton laughed to himself at that old curmudgeon as +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69' name='page_69'></a>69</span> +he left him to go home, with his star. Lily hung heavily +on her father’s arm, passed the draper’s shops with a +serious air.</p> +<p>“No, another time!” said Pa, who felt what she was +after.</p> +<p>And he hurried his daughter off, for he might have +yielded, she was so nice.</p> +<p>Lily set her watch in Piccadilly, as they passed; then at +the Café de l’Europe, by the big clock at the back; and +again, twenty steps farther, at the bar of the Crown. Lily +looked at the time and Pa showed his Lily off. He was +proud to be seen with her in the neighborhood of Lisle +Street, where everybody knew him. True, he seemed to +have the name of being hard with Lily. But, come, was +he hard? Did she look like a martyr? It was preposterous, +all those stories. And he redoubled his attentions +to his daughter, who talked a heap of nonsense, asked +funny questions:</p> +<p>“Why should writing a letter interfere with the trapeze, +when a girl has arms harder than a horse’s hocks?”</p> +<p>“What? What?” asked Pa, taken aback, and when +he understood, he would have held his sides for laughing, +if he had been at home:</p> +<p>“Oh, the old rogue!” he said admiringly. “He loves +his dear girls, does Nunkie!”</p> +<p>He was still laughing when they reached Tottenham +Court Road; and, as they passed the Horse Shoe, a voice, +which Lily seemed to remember, called to them from +behind:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Clifton!”</p> +<p>Pa turned his head in surprise:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Trampy!”</p> +<p>For he recognized him at once, though he was much +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70' name='page_70'></a>70</span> +changed. Besides, he knew him to be in London. But it +was a prosperous and gorgeous Trampy, quite unlike the +old days; and forthwith Trampy explained: a champagne +supper last night, just come from the bar; glass of Vichy +water, you know. Huge success in London. Girls, by +Jove! And then, pretending not to know Lily:</p> +<p>“I congratulate you, Clifton; what a dear little wife!”</p> +<p>Pa, greatly amused, protested: not his wife, no, his +Lily! Then Trampy went into ecstasies: how pretty she +had grown, one of the handsomest girls in London, sure! +And in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland! And +in all the British dominions beyond the seas, +by Jove! And what a change since Mexico! She was a +woman now, a peach, a regular peach!</p> +<p>Lily seemed fascinated by Trampy, examined him, his +shiny hat, his gold rings, his patent-leather shoes. A +swell, Trampy, a toff, a gentleman like those in the front +boxes.</p> +<p>“Yes, Lily,” said Trampy, guessing her thoughts, +“yes, that’s the way it is; one’s not always hard up. +I’ve struck oil since leaving America. Heaps of +money! Eh, what!” he continued, offering Clifton an expensive +cigar. “You wouldn’t have thought it, would you, +when you left me stranded in Mexico? That was a nice +dirty trick you played me! Come and have a drain, old +man, to drink Miss Lily’s health and show there’s no ill +feeling!”</p> +<p>“No, another time,” said Clifton, vexed at this recollection +of Mexico, now that he was the established owner of +a troupe, a man whose word was as good as gold. “I’m +in a hurry to get home: a very nice home, Trampy, a real +good one. Come and see us some day. <i>Au revoir</i>.”</p> +<p>But Trampy was so pleased at meeting them, he never +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71' name='page_71'></a>71</span> +stopped shaking them by the hand. Lily had to accept a +bag of cakes to share with the troupe when they had their +tea. Then, at last:</p> +<p>“<i>Au revoir</i>, old man; <i>au revoir</i>, my love, my little +peach!”</p> +<p>Lily’s head was quite turned by this jolly day: it made +her forget six months of worries. To think that, for +some people, every day was like that! However, she +mustn’t complain: a watch, a chain as well, the somersault +pulled off, compliments from Trampy....</p> +<p>Ma’s reception of them, when they got home, was icy. +Pa looked a little like a school-boy caught at fault; and +Lily, none too easy in her mind, put the cakes on the sideboard, +and hastened to take off her mother’s big hat. Ma +grumbled, under her breath: it was nothing but going +out, now. Old Cinderella could stay at home, bareheaded, +while my lady went shopping! A fine thing, my +word, for a great sensible girl to abuse her Pa’s weakness! +There was nothing to do at home, of course! +Well, if it pleased Mr. Clifton, she had no more to say!... +And, while she grumbled, Ma prepared the tea +and shot glances at Lily, a Lily with red cheeks and +bright eyes and looking so pretty that Ma, full of mixed +pride and anxiety, felt sudden longings to eat her up with +kisses, “ugly” that she was!</p> +<p>Pa did his best to calm Mrs. Clifton, tried to amuse her +with the story of the sleeve-links, of the horse’s hocks, +and Pa laughed, my!</p> +<p>“He laughs best who laughs last,” growled Ma.</p> +<p>“Just think, Ma,” said Lily, taking courage from Pa’s +merriment. “That old rogue forbids his daughter to write, +he pretends that....”</p> +<p>“And quite right too!” said Ma. “What do girls want +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72' name='page_72'></a>72</span> +with writing? And who do you mean? What old rogue? +You don’t mean Mr. Fuchs, I suppose?”</p> +<p>“Why, yes, Ma, old Fuchs.”</p> +<p>“Old Fuchs! You chit, to talk like that of respectable +people! Go to your room, impudence! Dry bread for +you!”</p> +<p>“But, Ma...!” said Lily rebelliously.</p> +<p>“That’s what comes of it,” said Mrs. Clifton, addressing +her husband, “when a mother no longer has the right to +correct her daughter.”</p> +<p>And she pointed to Lily, who persisted in remaining, +who was even beginning an explanation:</p> +<p>“But, Pa ... but....”</p> +<p>“Obey your mother first,” said Clifton.</p> +<p>“Yes, Pa.”</p> +<p>And Lily went out, very anxious at the turn which +things had taken.</p> +<p>Clifton realized that he had perhaps been wrong that +morning to blame Mrs. Clifton in Lily’s presence. He +was wrong also to laugh at old Fuchs before Lily. But, +all the same, that old rogue ... and they had believed +it, those Graces! That wouldn’t go down with +Lily!</p> +<p>“It’s an example you ought to follow, instead of laughing +at it, Mr. Clifton!”</p> +<p>“Upon my word, I’m very proud of my Lily; she works +well, she really does,” said Pa, stretching himself in the +easy-chair. “I’m pleased with her; you know as well as I +do, a girl is not a boy. She can do with a little spoiling. +And only just now I made Lily a present of a gold watch +and chain.”</p> +<p>“Then I give up!” said Ma, in a voice of exasperation. +“Then I give up! Why should I take all this +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73' name='page_73'></a>73</span> +trouble bringing up your daughter? A little spendthrift +who will bring us all to the workhouse! And a good thing +when she does!”</p> +<p>But Pa wanted peace in his own house. That was +enough of it! Peace was what he wanted, damn it, and +not a monkey-and-parrot life!</p> +<p>And, jumping up from his chair, he opened the door +and shouted up the staircase:</p> +<p>“Come down, my Lily! Your Ma says you may! The +cakes are on the table.”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74' name='page_74'></a>74</span> +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>Pa would have covered his Lily with diamonds, if he +had the money ... and if Ma had allowed it! But, +on this special point, she ventured to oppose him. She +had been Lily’s age herself, had Ma, and she enlarged +upon the necessity of keeping a tight rein on Lily.</p> +<p>Ma enumerated the fugitives: Ave Maria, and this +one, and that one, and ever so many others who had +bolted; and troupes ruined by the flight,—or the marriage,—of +the star....</p> +<p>“Lily has changed a good deal lately, dear, are you +sure she hasn’t a man in her mind?”</p> +<p>“There we are again!” said Pa. “Always the same old +story! But just tell me, who does she see? Who does +she know? Jimmy? You don’t mean him, I suppose? +Very well! Trampy, then? A married man, divorced, +married again, goodness knows what! and then ... +and then ... Oh, well, let’s have peace at home, at +any rate! Damn it, Lily may be a bit of a flirt: why +shouldn’t she be, a pretty girl like that? Beauty, in the +profession, is half the battle.”</p> +<p>And Pa entered into details, comforted Ma with good +news: a fresh contract signed with Bill and Boom, after +that, the Harrasford tour: big salaries now....</p> +<p>“No, dear, this isn’t the time to worry Lily about +trifles. And I don’t want her to be bothered with useless +work, either.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75' name='page_75'></a>75</span></p> +<p>“Call home work useless! A woman’s greatest charm!” +exclaimed Ma.</p> +<p>Lily was a subject of friendly discussion to them. Both +adored her equally: both were proud of her at heart. +For Lily was growing very beautiful; everybody said so +at the theater: the stage-manager; the acting manager, +down to Jimmy, who stammered things. It was an endless +series of compliments; Harrasford’s friend, the +architect, who had not seen her for a long time, fell into +raptures when he met her on the stage:</p> +<p>“Magneeficent!” he exclaimed, in his Franco-Belgian +accent. “How old is she: sixteen? seventeen?”</p> +<p>“Fourteen,” said Ma, with a mincing air, for to that +damned “parley-voo” she was as anxious to make Lily +out a child now, in order to keep a firmer hold of her, as +she had been to increase her age in America, so as to +make her work.</p> +<p>“What, fourteen, Ma!” protested Lily.</p> +<p>“Yes, fourteen, of course; do you think you know better +than your mother, you little fool? Can’t you see +everybody’s laughing at you?”</p> +<p>Ma dreaded those irresponsible jossers, who filled Lily’s +head with a pack of false notions, and kept a good watch, +in her growing anxiety.</p> +<p>Ma, in the early days of their arrival in London, had +been terribly obsessed by the dread of being left without +means in the huge city. Lily had got them out +of that difficulty. And now she was earning such a lot +of money: one day, who knows, they would have made +enough to assure their independence for good and all! +When she thought of this possibility, Ma’s eyes lit up +with yellow gleams; she felt like catching hold of Lily +and locking her up in a safe. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76' name='page_76'></a>76</span></p> +<p>Pa was less eager for gain, less ant-like in his economies; +he was an artiste, above all; he knew how to make +allowances; there was a time for work and a time for +play. He often treated himself to the pleasure of taking +Lily out; and, each time, as usual, she got a nice little +present—he liked to pass for a Pa who spoiled his +daughter, loved to hear himself so described, and took a +wicked delight in repeating it all to Mrs. Clifton.</p> +<p>Lily was the gainer by the difference in opinion; she +felt herself a little freer. When she went out in the +morning, she considered herself at liberty to walk less +fast, and no longer trembled on returning. She loved +to loiter in the Tottenham Court Road; her little person +assumed an air of importance; if, after practice, some +artiste passed her in the street and gave her a smile, she +believed that he was waiting for her; a “comic quartet,” +the Out-of-Tune Musicals, happening to come out of a +bar and blow a kiss to her, were there on her account, +she thought—four lovers at a swoop!</p> +<p>It was almost impossible that she should not meet +Trampy, who was always prowling about from bar to +bar, between Oxford Street and Leicester Square. She +did meet him, in fact. Trampy, that day, wore a felt hat, +a blue suit, a red tie, with a sixpenny Murias cocked in the +corner of his mouth, and he greeted her with a triumphant +“Hullo, peach!” as she passed. Lily was quite excited, +stopped just long enough to refuse a drink and +then left him very quickly. She was afraid it showed +on her face, when she got home, and his words still rang +in her ears, that she was awfully pretty, the prettiest +girl on the stage, a peach, a duck, a pearl, a daisy, a bird.</p> +<p>All that she had seen and heard in her jostled existence, +now came back to her, grew and sprouted in her ... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77' name='page_77'></a>77</span> +now that Lily was being made love to by gentlemen, not +the monkey-faces or the blue-chins, but men like Trampy, +her craving for admiration oozed out of her at every +pore....</p> +<p>Trampy! Lily did not care for Trampy; but she +thought him amiable, polite with the girls.... She +was grateful to him for being there to say pretty things +to her when she passed. She preferred that type to +men like Jimmy, for instance, savages who always seemed +on the point of speaking and never opened their mouths; +with them, she thought, a wife would be bored to death. +Besides, Jimmy, pooh, a common workman, a josser! +While Trampy was an artiste, a bill-topper and rich, no +doubt. You had only to listen to Trampy to see that he +was very well off! Chocolates, sweets, jewelry, ostrich-feathers, +patent-leather boots, everything! He would +have loaded her with presents, if she had let him, but she +had never accepted anything except a little gold ring, +which she hid in her pocket when she came in, for, if Ma +had caught sight of it, gee, what a smacking!</p> +<p>Trampy often met her; he seemed almost to do so on +purpose; he found pretty speeches, compliments which +he had already uttered a score of times to ever so many +girls, on ever so many stages, like a real Don Juan who +had been all over the world and everywhere picked +up love-speeches and jokes to “fetch” the ladies with. He +tickled her vanity, told her that a dear little girl like her +was cut out for dress, that a big hat with ostrich feathers +would go well with her fair hair and that men, by Jove, +ought to go on their knees whenever they spoke to her!</p> +<p>All this hummed and buzzed in her head. At night, +when she fell asleep in Maud’s arms, she dreamed of big +hats and fine dresses and referred to it during the day. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78' name='page_78'></a>78</span> +Pa hardly knew what to think; if she did as well as last +night—three encores—Lily could have half a sovereign, +to buy a new hat in the Tottenham Court Road with, said +Pa.</p> +<p>“Oh, Pa, I shall do all right, you’ll see. Will you be +very nice? Then get me that one at two guineas, you +know, in Regent Street.”</p> +<p>“But you’re mad, Lily!” said Pa, without attaching too +much importance to it, for he had other cares: agents to +see, letters to write, business, damn it!</p> +<p>That took down Lily’s cheek a bit; but her luxurious +ideas returned, nevertheless. For instance, from admiring +the Three Graces or the Gilson girl, who looked like +Venuses in their silk tights and whose entrance on the +stage caused every opera-glass to glint upon them, +the wish to appear in tights began to grow on Lily. +Oh, not the plain tights of living statues; no, but with +flowers and leaves embroidered here and there and jet +braid laced about the right arm. She was tired of +bloomers and told Pa so, straight out, when the apprentices +had left the room and Pa, stretched in his easy-chair, +seemed in a good temper. Pa thought this notion +about tights, silly:</p> +<p>“They’re very nice, those bloomers; those little shirts. +Ask your mother.”</p> +<p>“Oh, yes,” said Ma sarcastically, “but bloomers are +made at home, in the afternoon; you have to stitch them +yourself, dear. Tights, which you buy ready-made and +which cost just ten times as much and last only half as +long, are much more convenient, aren’t they, Lily? To +say nothing of the absurdity of an ugly girl like you showing +yourself in tights!”</p> +<p>“And the troupe,” said Pa. “What would the troupe +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79' name='page_79'></a>79</span> +look like? Might as well not have a troupe; there’d be +no one but you!”</p> +<p>“Well, what harm would that do? I <i>am</i> the troupe!” +said Lily, tossing her obstinate forehead. “And all the +money you give them you could give me!”</p> +<p>“Lily,” said Pa, alarmed, “you deserve to be smacked +for that!”</p> +<p>“Oh, Pa, what an idea!” said Lily, who was just arranging +her fringe before the glass. “A Pa to beat his +Lily for a little thing like that, away from work!” And, +darting a bright smile at Pa, “You never would, Pa, +would you?” she ventured.</p> +<p>Clifton, taken aback, looked at his Lily, as if to say +that she was right, damn it! But Ma, in her fury, cried:</p> +<p>“Wait a bit! You shall see if <i>I</i> would!”</p> +<p>Bang! A box on the ears, followed by an order to +go to her room, on dry bread and water, impudence! +And practise her banjo till the evening!</p> +<p>The blow itself was nothing, but what an humiliation +for Lily, who, only yesterday, had been told that she +had the sweetest nose in the world, cheeks to cover with +kisses, eyes, lovely eyes: there wasn’t a girl in a hundred +with eyes like that, by Jove! And those lovely eyes +were only fit to cry with! And those pretty cheeks Ma +had covered with smacks! When she thought of it, she felt +inclined to kick over the traces. Did they think her such +a kid, then, her Pa and Ma? She’d show Ma if she was +fourteen! She’d be off like the others. Lily, at this idea, +felt her heart come into her mouth: no, no; she would +never dare; she never would. She swore it to herself; +took the great oath of the stage: three fingers of her right +hand uplifted, the left hand on her lucky charm. And yet, +one day, she would marry. She didn’t lack chances, if +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80' name='page_80'></a>80</span> +she wanted them. And a gentleman, too! And her Pa +and Ma, to disgust her, of course, pretended that he was +married! They must take her for an idiot: how could +Trampy be married, considering that he had suggested +... suggested different things to her?...</p> +<p>Lily brooded like this, reviewing the tiny events of +which her life was made up. Then a gleam of sunshine +came to change her thoughts. She amused herself +by breathing on the window-pane, making a circle ... +wrote a name with her finger and quickly licked it out +with her tongue ... and Lily brooded ... +brooded....</p> +<p>But Ma’s voice made her jump:</p> +<p>“What are you doing there, you good-for-nothing? +I told you to take your banjo!”</p> +<p>“Yes, Ma,” Lily replied mechanically, with her nose +glued to the window.</p> +<p>“Do you hear, Mr. Clifton?” said Ma furiously. “That’s +the way she obeys!”</p> +<p>Mrs. Clifton had no doubt whatever that there was a +man at the bottom of it ... a flirtation ... +something or other. It was useless for Ma to provide +for everything, to do her best to oppose Mr. +Clifton’s weakness. There was Lily now, taking up an +independent attitude. She thought herself pretty, no +doubt; some booby must have been stuffing her up, +making love to her, to laugh at her later on! If she, +Mrs. Clifton, had been a man, she would certainly never +look at that ill-mannered baggage; but the London jossers +liked that brazen type! And to think that time was +passing ... passing!... Oh, Ma would have +liked to get hold of the man who invented the law +about girls coming of age ... and love ... and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81' name='page_81'></a>81</span> +marriage! A fierce jealousy seized upon her at the +thought. Lily would have bouquets, champagne suppers; +Lily would be loved by gentlemen! Tell Lily that she +was pretty and, in less than six months the little hussy +would think herself a fine lady! And, on that day, Mrs. +Clifton would wash her hands of her!</p> +<p>These continued attacks ended by shaking Pa. He +didn’t quite know what to say; there was a certain amount +of truth in it:</p> +<p>“But,” he persisted, “why should she go? She has +everything she wants here?”</p> +<p>But he was more and more annoyed; yes, he admitted, +he was wrong to laugh at Mr. Fuchs: you must never set +children a bad example. And, from that moment, once +his attention had been called to the matter, he daily discovered +fresh causes for uneasiness: where the devil did +she get that love of dress from? And who sent her that +bouquet behind the scenes the other night? Why, Lily +wanted to have it handed to her across the footlights, like +a singer!</p> +<p>And Pa and Ma watched Lily like a bag of money on +which one keeps one’s hand, for fear of pickpockets. Ma +doubled her precautions.</p> +<p>The gentlemen in the front boxes, especially, alarmed +her, even more than the Jim Crows: creatures apart, devilish +creatures, the gentlemen in the front boxes! She +fancied she saw a reflection of hell in the eye-glass of +every one of them. If ever Lily dared to smile to them, +she knew what awaited her! Ma would get angry for +nothing at all; she even scolded Lily for allowing herself +to be approached on the stage by a contributor to <i>The +Piccadilly Magazine</i>, which was publishing articles on +<i>The Little Favorites of the Public</i>. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82' name='page_82'></a>82</span></p> +<p>“I am sure you only told him a lot of nonsense,” said +Ma. “A girl should call her mother in a case like that. +What have you to do with the public? Aren’t you +ashamed?”</p> +<p>No, Lily was not ashamed. She was exasperated +rather. And she had not told the journalist any lies: +just the plain truth, in her own little way. Sweat and +blood! Broken legs! Broken arms! And here, there, +there, all over her body, scars deep enough to put +your finger in! That would revenge her a bit for the +way in which she was treated. She knew that, when the +article appeared, she would catch it at Pa’s hands; but +never mind! She had told everything, everything, in revenge; +just as she might have flung her bike at their +heads in a fit of anger!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83' name='page_83'></a>83</span> +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>There had been a terrible scene at home that day. Ma +had searched Lily’s trunk and had not, it is true, discovered +the love letters which she believed to be hidden +there, but she had found a ring! It was Trampy’s ring, +which Lily, who usually concealed it about her person, +had left by accident in the trunk among her things. Ma’s +face was a sight, when she came down to the dining-room. +She was so upset that Pa asked her:</p> +<p>“Are you ill, dear?”</p> +<p>Ma, without answering the question, pushed the ring +under his nose and screamed that she had told him so:</p> +<p>“An engagement ring, dear; an engagement ring! +Perhaps you’ll believe me now!”</p> +<p>Pa and Ma, when they had recovered from their surprise, +had time to lay their heads together and replace the +ring, pretending to know nothing, to be watching more +closely than ever ... and then Pa had gone out; +for, if Lily, who was walking with the apprentices, had +come home just then, he could not have resisted the +temptation to smack her face. It was better to go out +and postpone the explanation until later. He had, indeed, +resolved never to beat his daughter again ... +but still! And he clenched his fists and ground his teeth +when he reached the theater.</p> +<p>On the stage, he looked round for Tom, who should +have been there to mend a tire. He saw nothing at first: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84' name='page_84'></a>84</span> +only a few electric lamps studding the darkness; a faint +glimmer lighting up a number of properties; farther on, +the dull gleam of stacked-up bikes; and, lastly, Tom, with +his cap cocked back and trousers turned up, trying—brrr!—to +do a clog-dance!</p> +<p>“Bravo, Tom!” shouted Clifton, the moment he saw +him. “Just you wait a bit. I’ll teach you to dance: with +the clogs on your hands and your head downwards, damn +it! Here, take this to go on with!” continued Pa, fetching +him a clout on the shoulder. “And get to the bikes +and hurry up, or I’ll smash your jaw in!”</p> +<p>Meanwhile, Jimmy had also come, unseen by Pa. And +the great batten lit up: the stage came to life again. +Right up above, in the galleries from which the ropes +were worked, mysterious forms moved to and fro. The +iron curtain rose ... there was a clash of orchestra +... Jimmy, with his back against the drop-scene +and his face to the stage, gave sharp orders....</p> +<p>Pa watched the scene vaguely from the wings. He +gnawed his mustache: the apprentices would be there +soon, with his Lily. And he had something to say to +the stage-manager; something of a delicate character.</p> +<p>But Clifton was surprised to see Jimmy instead of the +usual stage-manager:</p> +<p>“Hullo! So it’s you now,” he couldn’t help saying.</p> +<p>“Why, yes, Mr. Clifton; since this morning. The other +chap’s ill, you know. Harrasford asked me to take his +place ... for a few days, I suppose ... or +perhaps longer. Do you want to speak to me, Mr. Clifton?” +added Jimmy, observing Pa’s look of embarrassment. +“Just a minute and I am yours.”</p> +<p>Two tall footmen, caparisoned in velvet and gold, disappeared +behind the curtain with the number of the next +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85' name='page_85'></a>85</span> +turn. They came back in a few seconds. Jimmy pressed +a button. The stage filled with light and noise, the turn +marked on the program entered and, suddenly, under the +dazzling light, it was a series of somersaults, of flights +from shoulder to shoulder, and the muffled fall of feet on +the thick carpet.</p> +<p>“There will be eight minutes of this,” said Jimmy, taking +out his watch. “What have you to say to me, Mr. +Clifton?”</p> +<p>Oh, what he had to say was very simple; he wouldn’t +have mentioned it himself, but Mrs. Clifton had asked +him to. To cut a long story short, wasn’t it a shame that +gentlemen should throw bouquets on the stage when Lily +was giving her show? Like last night, for instance: why, +it was making game of a child, putting ideas into her +head! Lily, of course, paid no attention to it. However, +was it or was it not allowed to throw or send bouquets +on the stage?</p> +<p>“Why, you know it is!” said Jimmy. “How would you +have me prevent it?”</p> +<p>If he could have prevented it, he would. To begin +with, Jimmy realized the bothers which it brought down +upon Lily. Moreover, Jimmy, who was vaguely uneasy +himself, wondered who that ardent admirer could be. +Some of Roofer’s girls thought they had recognized +Trampy, from the stage, in the front seats. What Jimmy +had heard of Trampy did not inspire him with confidence. +And Trampy, it appeared, was making love to +Lily. Mr. Fuchs had met them at the corner of Oxford +Street and Newman Street. The story was quite definite.</p> +<p>Jimmy was astonished at the audacity of a Trampy: +what could he say to her? he asked himself, what could +he propose to her? Marriage? He was married, they +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86' name='page_86'></a>86</span> +said, in America. To run away with him? His scandalous +life, his habit of easy conquest made this very likely. +Jimmy had seen plenty of others, big ones who topped +the bill and who did not despise a girl’s companionship—on +the contrary—and six months later, a year, +two years later, left the girl in a hole, stranded, undone; +mustard and game for Jim Crow. And he grew more +and more anxious on Lily’s behalf: not that Lily would +come to that! Yet he had seen plenty of them, since he +had frequented the stage, plenty of Lilies who had taken +to flight for injuries often less serious than hers. He +could have mentioned names: his head was full of those +who let their anger, or their folly, get the better of them +and escaped at random, and who went back to every-day +life—through the door of scandal—sometimes to meet +with worse: martyrdom of the heart, base exploitation in +the name of love. Oh, he pitied them from the bottom +of his soul! No, Lily shouldn’t run away: it was impossible! +But what a pity, all the same, that he could think +of it! And what chance, what meeting would settle her +fate and make her—who could say?—the companion of a +loving heart, or a prey to some footy rotter? Oh, how he +would have liked to go for Trampy, to break his jaw for +him, to teach him to mind his business and leave Lily +alone! And what Jimmy wanted to do he was never far +from doing! And, then, oh, if he could procure a good +position for Clifton, as an equivalent for his star and +make Lily love him, marry him: that would be better +still!</p> +<p>This idea, perhaps, without his knowing it, dominated +his present life, doubled his power of work: to invent +something! To get himself talked about! To make +money, plenty of money, become somebody! Others before +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87' name='page_87'></a>87</span> +him had risen from nothing. Harrasford, to go +no farther ... a chap who had climbed every rung +of the ladder: a small music-hall first; then two; then a +big one; then two; then ten. And a whole army now +toiling and moiling for him every night, for him the chief +and master.</p> +<p>“Oh!” thought Jimmy. “If I could only climb the ladder +too!”</p> +<p>First of all, he must choose his line, for his efforts to +tell. And, since chance had given him a start at the theater, +why not go on? Here his scientific luggage would +be of use to him. It was only a question of adding +pluck to it. He was the man to do so and now more +than ever. Things which used to seem impossible to +him, such as his invention published in <i>Engineering</i>, appeared +quite feasible, now that he had watched Lily +do her wonderful feats of balancing on the stage. It was +only a question of courage and hard practice. Another +line suggested itself: to find capital and start a theater. +As regards the stage itself, by this time he understood +the management of it from grid to cellar. He seemed +to take in at a glance that huge entirety, from the +flies with their windlasses, their bridges, the labyrinth +of stairs, the maze of passages, down to the dressing-rooms +and the painted faces that filled them: here, a +Lily; there, a buck nigger; farther on, a living-picture +girl. He felt all this rustle round him, carried it all in +his head: he knew it all, from the porter’s box at the +stage-door to the glittering front of the house, with its +palm-trees and its liveried chuckers-out. Jimmy knew +what to think of the enchantments of the stage, those +luminous visions which the audience admired to the tune +of the orchestra: jealousies, vanities, hatreds to knock up +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88' name='page_88'></a>88</span> +against and calm down; recruits to put through their +paces; and the whole day of it—and the whole night, +too—for a few pounds a week, including the tips received +from the artistes, twenty-five to forty shillings a month.</p> +<p>But Jimmy had his idea: he was determined to obtain +a thorough grasp of the business; he had already taken +possession of the stage-manager’s room and of his desk +with the many compartments: photographs, programs, +contracts, electric light, staff, scenery. A whole small +people depended upon him, and asked his advice, bragged +of its successes or told him of its misfortunes. And here +again was Clifton continuing his jeremiads: they would +drive his daughter silly by making game of her, pretending +to be in love with her, at her age! Jimmy listened +attentively, with one eye on the stage and the other on his +watch:</p> +<p>“Tut!” he said, trying to arrange things. “There’s no +great harm in receiving bouquets on the stage. However, +as you object, if any more of them come, they shall be +handed to you, to dispose of as you please. That’s all that +I can do.”</p> +<p>It was gradually filling up behind Clifton and Jimmy; +the iron door was constantly slamming upon the passage; +knowing-looking Roofer girls passed, two by two, always +two by two, joked for a moment with the scene shifters, +shook hands here and there, disappeared up the dressing-room +staircase. There was life, swarming life, everywhere, +in the corners, behind the back-cloth. The New +Zealanders arrived, with Lily and her Ma, for Ma never +left her now, for fear of the gentlemen who prowled +around like famished hyenas: villains who did not hesitate +to throw bouquets on the stage to make ugly girls +think they were pretty! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89' name='page_89'></a>89</span></p> +<p>Lily seemed sad. She stopped for a moment. A +haunting serenade droned across the stage, a Spanish +melody sung by soft tremolo voices, with tapping of +tambourines. It reminded her of Mexico: everything +reminded her of that time now. She compared herself +with Ave Maria. Oh, she would have liked to tell the +whole world how she was treated, just the plain truth!—in +her own little way. But no one cared, not even that +rotten josser of a journalist, with his article published +in <i>The Piccadilly Magazine</i>. It made her out a spoiled +child, who had learned to ride in the country-lanes, with +her French governess, and who had surprised her father +and mother by coming home one day with her head on +the saddle of her bicycle and her feet in the air, thereby +causing an unparalleled scandal in that old Yorkshire +family. Since then, they had been obliged to yield +to her fancies and allow her to go on the stage with +her little troupe of friends. Her salary? Ten pounds +a night. Her recreation? The banjo....</p> +<p>“Rotten josser of a journalist!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>Nevertheless, she was flattered at heart because of the +ten pounds a night and the governess.</p> +<p>But things happened to distract her thoughts: the +Three Graces entered in their turn, followed by Nunkie; +they stood talking for a few moments, while the apprentices +went and dressed; and Lily soon followed them, +after a last glance at a little woman and her “partner,” +who were getting things ready for their performance—-some +little hoops, two cardboard bottles, gilt balls—and +then waited humbly in the shadow.</p> +<p>Lily recognized Para, who used to exhibit a troupe of +parrots; somebody had put her “in his show,” no doubt, +the Para-Paras, a new turn. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90' name='page_90'></a>90</span></p> +<p>“How poor she looks!” Lily could not help whispering +to Ma.</p> +<p>“You’ll be worse off yourself, some day,” said Ma, “if +you go on as you’re doing! Don’t laugh at other people.”</p> +<p>Lily had dressed quickly and had come down to the +stage with the Three Graces and they had ten minutes of +joking behind the scenes, while Ma was still up-stairs, +busy with the girls. Thea walked on tip-toe to restore +the circulation to her legs; Kala practised back-bendings: +Lily applauded with the tip of her thumbnail, flung back +her head and laughed and, from time to time, looked +round over her shoulder to see if Ma was coming down.</p> +<p>She amused herself also by feeling Thea’s arms, all +those little muscles which stood out, man’s arms: she +would have liked to nestle in them, to feel herself squeezed +till she cried out. And everything around them savored +of love: there were lots of Roofers; little intrigues were +embarked upon; there were stifled fits of laughter and +cries of “Hands off!” and “Stop!” Amorous speeches and +stories of romantic adventures were exchanged in whispers; +the flight of the Gilson girl, the other day, at Liverpool, +was told in full detail; a Roofer, it seemed, giving +a high kick the day before, had sent her slipper flying +into the audience; it was returned to her filled with chocolate +creams; and to-day there was a boquet with a letter +in it.</p> +<p>Ting! The curtain, the light; and, on the stage, the +Roofers were glittering with gold and silver and their +boyish voices came in gusts, punctuated by the jerky +flights of their short skirts.</p> +<p>“Your old sweetheart, eh, Lily?” said Thea, pointing to +the boy-violinist, who had just arrived.</p> +<p>Lily had only a careless glance for the boy-violinist, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91' name='page_91'></a>91</span> +who was wiping his eye-glasses and pulling at his cuffs, +while a call-boy was adjusting the false seat into which +two bulldogs would presently dig their teeth. All the +fascination was gone for Lily: it was no longer the child +prodigy; a grotesque Orpheus, in a laurel and parsley +crown, he now introduced his music-hating dogs, who interrupted +his performance with plaintive and angry howls +and ended by leaping at the seat of his trousers in a mad +rush across the stage.</p> +<p>Lily, who had “gone through the mill,” looked upon +him as a mere josser, had for him the instinctive contempt +entertained by the real artiste for those fiddlers, +those singers, those dancers and other drones brought +up with blows of the hat.</p> +<p>“Pooh! I have some one better than that,” exclaimed +Lily, excited by the proximity of the Roofers.</p> +<p>“If you have any one better than that and he loves +you,” said Thea, in a dreamy voice, “love him, Lily, keep +him; as for me, I no longer risk having to do with men.”</p> +<p>“I do!” Lily whispered, with a frightened glance +around her. “As much as I can! I love talking to men! +Why, Thea, and don’t you like love letters and p.-c.’s?”</p> +<p>Ting! Ting! Orpheus left the stage, with his bulldogs +hanging to him.</p> +<p>Ting! It was dark again; ropes, plated rings were let +down from the flies; the Three Graces, like quivering +marble statues, took one another by the hand to make +their entrance.</p> +<p>Ting! From their perches on either side, two electricians +sent the lime-light beating down on an involved +group of ropes, bars and hardened limbs.</p> +<p>Ting! A crescendo in the orchestra and, bowing to the +audience across the footlights, the Three Graces made +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92' name='page_92'></a>92</span> +their exit, their smiles suddenly hollowed out into tired +wrinkles, but cheerful nevertheless. And Nunkie wiped +their foreheads with his checked handkerchief, helped +them on with their big cloaks; and the three goddesses +were now just a wrapped-up group, limping off to the +staircase, like gouty patients at a spa.</p> +<p>Ting! A forest scene is let down, the wings are shifted. +A click of chains, a flash of steel. The bikes in the shadow, +the apprentices mounted, Lily leading.</p> +<p>“And try to do your best, my Lily.”</p> +<p>“Yes, Pa.”</p> +<p>“And try to behave.”</p> +<p>“Yes, Ma.”</p> +<p>Ting!</p> +<p>Lily gave a nervous smile. She always felt a little +thrill before going on. Then, quick, in Indian file, two +and two, three and three, the New Zealanders whirled +round in the light, to the roar of a triumphal air.</p> +<p>Pa ground his teeth and clenched his fists the moment +he heard his music: at the mere sight of his Lily, his +seven stone of flesh and bones adapted to the machine, +unerring and exact, an immense intoxication exalted his +pride, gladness dilated his heart. At last! He was there +now: German discipline! English gracefulness! Everything! +He, too, would have his London home, with a +lawn behind the house and a plot of rose-trees. He would +learn the meaning of family joys, as Nunkie understood +them, with texts along the staircase: “Welcome!” and +“God bless our home!” And, more and more excited, he +built up his dream; his imagination gave itself scope amid +the unreal scenery, the forest depths, the green and gold +sky and his Lily, his faultless Lily, haloed in light! +Every hope was permissible when he looked at his Lily, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93' name='page_93'></a>93</span> +his joy, his handiwork! His New Zealander on Wheels! +That india-rubber suppleness, those little nerves of iron, +his Lily, his glory, his star, his own star! He romanced +about her, dreamed of an imperial tour, a steamer +of his own, a floating +Barnum’s show, with +Roofers, elephants, rhinoceroses, +Ave Marias, +dogs, monkeys, the whole +boiling; and Lily starring +on her bike, stopping in +every port, from Liverpool +to Suez, from Suez +to Yokohama: down to +the desert, damn it, to +show the whole world +what an artiste he, Clifton, +he, the father, had +made of his Lily! And +he looked at her with loving +eyes, applauded her +with a smile, restored her +self-possession with a +twitch of the eyebrow +and counted her twirls on the back-wheel—O pride unspeakable!—a +dozen!</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg093.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 177px; height: 301px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 177px;'> +SHE NEVER LOST SIGHT OF LILY<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>Ma, standing by him, interested herself less in the show +and, neglecting the artiste, watched the daughter and +the faces she made at the gentlemen: the brazen flapper, +whose sole attraction lay in the wickedness in her blood! +She never lost sight of Lily and watched her closely, for +Ma seemed always to catch her throwing an appealing +glance to the seducers in the front boxes, to some St. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94' name='page_94'></a>94</span> +George in full dress who would dart across the footlights +to carry off her daughter.</p> +<p>Thus caught between Pa and Ma, Lily’s situation was +hard indeed. As for the audience, she never troubled +about it, from custom, like a true professional, who +gives her performance mechanically, without minding +about the rest. The audience, to Lily, was, behind a +streak of flame, in the semi-darkness, a confused mass +of black and gray. All this had no existence for Lily or +the apprentices. The audience didn’t pay them! The +audience wouldn’t give her a whacking if the show went +badly! Pa, in the wings, frightened her much more than +all the audiences in the world; and Ma was worse still, +when a gentleman smiled at her from a box. Then Lily +would stare at her Ma with the terrified eye of a parrot +contemplating Para’s whip. She even exaggerated, +pinched her lips, like a school-girl applying herself to +her book for fear of the ferule. Ma did not ask so much +as that. Sometimes, when Lily, after a successful trick, +threw out her chest to draw breath more easily and rode +round the stage with a pretty smile on her lips, Ma saw +no harm in it, even rejoiced within herself at her daughter’s +beauty. Ma knew how to be just and not to be angry +for nothing. But what she could not forgive, what exasperated +her was, just that very evening, with her own +eyes, to see Lily smile at some person unknown and shoot +fiery glances at the front boxes, the little devil, who +would bring them to the grave with shame!</p> +<p>For Lily, it must be confessed, flung prudence to the +winds that night. Her head was turned with all those +love stories. They sang in her ears, they distended her +nostrils. Oppressed on every side, she escaped in imagination +toward that spacious house, toward the confused +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95' name='page_95'></a>95</span> +mass in which her lover sat hidden. And, in spite of Pa +and in spite of Ma, who stood watching her in the wings, +Lily searched the audience with her eyes. Was it really +Trampy? Had he come back? She had not met him for +some time. She wanted to know and he would surely +reveal himself. Ma might say what she pleased. Even +in the final pyramid, she looked, while, with one apprentice +on her shoulders, another forked before her, another +standing behind, two others on either side, she twice +went round the stage, with flags waving, to the hurricane +of the orchestra. And then ting! And darkness anew, the +stage suddenly invaded by scene-shifters dragging heavy +sets along; and Lily, passing out, was seized by her Ma, +who said:</p> +<p>“Who were you laughing at?”</p> +<p>“I wasn’t laughing, Ma!”</p> +<p>“I’ll teach you to make eyes at gentlemen, you baggage +you! I saw you this time! I saw you!” grumbled +Ma, who had the engagement ring still upon her mind. +“You shall pay for this, Lily; we’ll see if I can drive the +devil out of you or not!”</p> +<p>And Ma squeezed Lily’s arm as if she meant to break +it, but all this noiselessly, in the shadow, behind the scenery, +for fear of the stage manager. Besides, it was nobody’s +business what a mother thought fit to say +to her daughter, and Lily, when people passed, pluckily +tried to smile, so as to put them off, not to let them know +that she was being beaten, a big girl like her; but, as +soon as they were gone, she resumed her rebellious face.</p> +<p>“I wasn’t laughing, I wasn’t laughing, Ma!”</p> +<p>“That’s to teach you to lie!” said Ma, catching her a +blow in the back of the neck.</p> +<p>The door of the staircase had swung to behind them; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96' name='page_96'></a>96</span> +and, in the empty passage, the thumps continued all the +way to the dressing-room, which the apprentices had not +yet reached. Then, once inside, Ma pushed the bolt and +made a rush at Lily. And Lily raised her elbow in vain: +accompanied by a furious series of grunts—“Ugh! Ugh! +Ugh!”—Ma’s diligent fist “signed a contract on her +back”:</p> +<p>“And don’t you dare to cry out, or I’ll give it you +twice as hard!”</p> +<p>Lily, bruised all over, felt inclined to scratch her +mother, like a wildcat; but the apprentices were coming. +So she cooled her head in a basin of cold water and +dressed with all speed, assisted by Ma, who perhaps regretted +having been so hasty; but you had to be, with +devils like that! And Ma’s anger returned when, on +reaching the stage again, she was herself, in accordance +with Jimmy’s orders, handed a bouquet intended for +Miss Lily. What, another! Lily, following her down the +stairs with the New Zealanders, saw Ma take the bouquet +and toss it through the open door.</p> +<p>“Come along,” said Ma. “Give me your arm, Lily.”</p> +<p>And the New Zealanders walked away from the +brightly lit-up music-hall, plunged through the drifting +crowd, crossed the eddy of cabs, motors, ’buses and, on +the pavements, through the windows, had visions of elegant +couples at sumptuous tables. Then they all went +through the dark streets; and Lily, escorted by Pa and +Ma, followed the herd of girls. Her face was hard and, +from an angry brow, she shot glances askance at flight.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97' name='page_97'></a>97</span> +<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>Now Trampy—even if he had to marry her for it, by +Jove!—had set his mind on having Lily, at any cost; and +that not only because of her prettiness, but also that he +might play Clifton a damned good trick and teach him +that he must smart for treating a gentleman as he had +treated him in Mexico. It would be paying him out with +interest to take his Lily from him. Besides, think of the +credit it would give Trampy in the profession to have for +his wife the prettiest, the cleverest girl on the boards, each +of whose shows, when she performed alone, would be +worth at least three pounds, as much as a whole troupe! +He suspected in her the ripe fruit that was bound to drop; +and he shook the tree to hasten the fall. He considered +his reputation at stake: he, the man with the thirty-six +girls, as he was called at the music-hall. He got caught +in his own toils and wanted Lily madly, out of revenge +and pride ... and jealousy too, for he suspected +that Jimmy was courting her; and the idea that he had +a rival inflamed his ardor.</p> +<p>In the evening, pen in hand, in his dressing-room, or +else at a table in a café, after a second and a third glass +of old port, he prepared his batteries: letters, post-cards, +he excelled in everything, was careful about his phrases, +with the vanity of an author whose writings are widely +quoted. Lily was “fascinating” and “bewildering;” he +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98' name='page_98'></a>98</span> +compared her to “those strange Indian poppies whose +scent intoxicates a man and sometimes gives him death.” +Gee, but that set Lily dreaming! Fancy having all that +in her! Who on earth would have thought it? Never +mind, it was very nice.</p> +<p>And the way in which she received her correspondence +amused her as much as the rest. Trampy, it goes without +saying, did not write direct: a few pence to Tom, who +hated Clifton, and Lily received the cards in secret, devoured +them when she was alone and then quickly tore +them into little pieces and sent them flying through the +window.</p> +<p>Her trouble was how to answer. She really did not +know what to say:</p> +<div class='blockquot'> +<p>“Pa was so angry with the girls yesterday. I got a +kick of the pedal on my shin. Otherwise I am quite +well. Excuse more for the present. I must now conclude.</p> +<div class='ra'> +<p>“<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Lily</span>.”</p> +</div> + +</div> +<p>By return of post, she received “a thousand kisses on +her rosy cheeks, on her fair tresses, everywhere,” kisses +without end.</p> +<p>“He’s mad,” thought Lily.</p> +<p>But she was greatly flattered by Trampy’s attentions. +He treated her as a woman, not as a child, as Pa and Ma +went out of their way to do. Her life, after all, would +be more agreeable if she was Trampy’s wife; and he +was delivering the attack in person, since his return from +Lancashire, where he had traveled about with his property +red-hot stove. He overwhelmed her with bouquets, +even as a general bombards a bastion before the final assault, +and he managed to meet her now. He dazzled Lily +with his big gold watch-chain and the diamond in his tie. +When he was able to whisper a word to her, it was always +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99' name='page_99'></a>99</span> +the same thing—“Motor-cars! Paris gowns! Jewels! +Flowers!”—until Lily thought she saw all the shop-windows +in Regent Street poured out at her feet.</p> +<p>Jimmy made but a sorry lover, compared with Trampy. +He never promised anything, silk dresses, diamonds or +jewels. “The husband at work, the wife at home.” Gee, +there were no ostrich-feathers in that! But he adored +her all the same, as Lily was well able to see; and she had +many occasions to talk to both of them. Not that Lily +was less closely watched. She never went out alone, but it +was not always Ma who was at her heels: it was sometimes +Glass-Eye. With faithful Glass-Eye, things took +their own course and the interviews with Trampy became +easy. As for Jimmy, he saw her every day at practice +and he took that opportunity to tell her of his ideas, his +plans for the future.</p> +<p>“I shall succeed, you will see, Lily,” he said. “I shall +do something some day. I’m a bit of a mechanic, a bit +of an electrician, that is to say, a bit of a wizard. Others +have started lower down and climbed very high.”</p> +<p>“Yes,” replied Lily, “I know. It’s like Pa. He wasn’t +much before he got me into shape; and look at him now!”</p> +<p>This was said with an artless candor that enraptured +Jimmy.</p> +<p>“What a dear little girlie you are!” he said. “What +an adorable kid!”</p> +<p>“That’s right,” retorted Lily. “Why not a baby, while +you’re about it, a school-girl in the biking-class and so +on? Some people treat me as a woman, Jimmy, and propose +to marry me!”</p> +<p>“What’s that?”</p> +<p>“What I say, Jimmy.”</p> +<p>“And this man making up to you is worthy of you, I +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100' name='page_100'></a>100</span> +suppose? And do you love him?” asked Jimmy, greatly +upset.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Lily. “I’m not quite sure.”</p> +<p>“But you wouldn’t marry him unless you loved him?”</p> +<p>“I should marry him to change my life.”</p> +<p>“A change, Lily,” said Jimmy, with feeling, “is not +always a change for the better! And your life is a little +pleasanter now, you told me so yourself. Your mother +is sorry. You’re getting pocket-money; ten shillings a +week, eh? Why, Lily, that’s splendid!”</p> +<p>“Well; and I earn it, I suppose,” said Lily. “And Ma +isn’t a bit sorry. Pa said he wouldn’t have it, that’s all. +They were afraid of my running away if it went on. I +am no longer a child!”</p> +<p>“No,” said Jimmy, taking her hands, “an adorable girl; +that’s what you are. Oh, a man whom you would love +should do great things! He would love you with all his +heart! And your life would be different then! No, you +would not be a performing dog, as you call it; you would +be a darling little wife. It’s all very well to rove about +the world, from theater to theater, riding round and +round on your bike....”</p> +<p>“I adore the stage, for all that!” interrupted Lily.</p> +<p>“But that can’t go on for ever,” continued Jimmy. +“You’re entitled to have a nicer life: a home of your own, +Lily; you have the making of a lady in you, if you were +taught. In a year or two, Lily, you would be the equal of +any lady in the land.”</p> +<p>“Learning, more learning, always learning! I’ve had +enough of it in my life!” muttered Lily, affected, nevertheless, +by Jimmy’s intense excitement, and lowering her +eyes under his glance.</p> +<p>“Why, yes, Lily, always learning, that’s life!” said +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101' name='page_101'></a>101</span> +Jimmy. “But the other chap, of course, promises you +the earth! Some millionaire, I suppose: an admirer in +the front boxes?”</p> +<p>“He’s an artiste,” said Lily.</p> +<p>“Why,” said Jimmy, stepping back, without letting go +of her. “But, no, it’s impossible; you’re not thinking of +Trampy!”</p> +<p>“Why not?” said Lily angrily, trying to release herself +from Jimmy’s passionate grasp.</p> +<p>“Why, because ... because he’s a drunkard +... a ... The other day I saw him at the bar +of the Crown, as I was passing. He was blind-drunk.”</p> +<p>“What’s the good of talking?” said Lily. “He’s miserable. +He worships me. He drinks to forget. He told +me so himself!”</p> +<p>“But they say he’s married,” said Jimmy. “Why ...”</p> +<p>“It’s mean and jealous of you to say that,” said Lily, +suddenly withdrawing her hands. “You deserve a smacking! +How can he be married, when he wants to marry +me?”</p> +<p>And with that she left him and went up to the dressing-room.</p> +<p>Jimmy was heartbroken.</p> +<p>“It’s a joke of Lily’s ... as in my shop, some +months ago, when she pretended to have a sweetheart, +though she hadn’t!”</p> +<p>But, argue as he would, Jimmy thought with terror of +Trampy’s habits of conquest, of his reputation in the profession +as a Don Juan. He bitterly regretted waiting so +long to speak to Lily. He had thought that he was pleasing +her by keeping in the background, for fear of causing +her annoyance at home: was his sole offense now that of +coming too late? +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102' name='page_102'></a>102</span></p> +<p>Oh, if he had only had evidence to hand! But +Trampy’s marriage was one of those vague rumors. One +could say nothing for certain. However, the danger, no +doubt, was not yet imminent. And Jimmy had a friend +who was doing America in the theaters of the Eastern +and Western Trust: he resolved to write to him; the +friend would receive his letter at the Majestic, Houston, +Texas, or at the Denver Orpheum. The thing had +happened over there; they would probably remember it +in the theaters he passed through; he could make inquiries, +perhaps even obtain proofs. That exquisite Lily, +that masterpiece of grace: what a darling wife she would +make! And all for Trampy! Jimmy was determined to +do everything to prevent it.</p> +<p>He did not despair of supplying Lily, before long, with +the proof that Trampy was married; he would give the +name, the date; he would compel Trampy to admit it. +But he was not sure enough yet to accuse him openly: +Lily would have seen nothing in it but a ridiculous jealousy +and would never have forgiven him.</p> +<p>Then Jimmy was worried: people came to him for this, +for that, for the thousand details of the stage.</p> +<p>Lily, on her side, left the theater. That day, she was +accompanied by Maud, who fixed her with her glass eye, +while the other was engaged in watching the flies. Of +course, Trampy was prowling round the theater to see her +part of the way home; for he, too, had decided to carry +things with a high hand. And he set to work at a quicker +pace than ever.</p> +<p>He had none of Jimmy’s scruples; he was not afraid of +exaggerating: far from it. Lily always left him under +the impression of a glimpse of paradise. This time, however, +she failed to smile when Trampy vowed that she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103' name='page_103'></a>103</span> +was “the sweetest little thing that one could lay eyes on, +by Jove!” For a long time, but especially since that +morning, she had been burning to put a question to him. +Possibly she had no intention of marrying him, but she +wouldn’t allow him to make a fool of her; and she interrupted +him in his compliments to ask if what they said +was true.</p> +<p>“Who says so? It’s a lie!” Trampy hastened to answer.</p> +<p>“I mean your marriage,” replied Lily.</p> +<p>“I thought as much,” said Trampy.</p> +<p>“Tell me the truth,” persisted Lily innocently, looking +him straight in the eyes.</p> +<p>“If I was married, Lily, would I want to marry you?”</p> +<p>“Of course not,” said Lily, already shaken.</p> +<p>“Who’s been talking to you about that?” asked Trampy. +“Your Pa, eh? And Jimmy: I’ll bet that Jimmy ...?”</p> +<p>“Jimmy too.”</p> +<p>“If I don’t box that fellow’s ears!” shouted Trampy. +“Can’t you see that he’s jealous? Why? He didn’t even +give you my bouquets! He handed them to your Ma! +And so I’ve been married, eh? Whereabouts? In America, +I’ll wager?”</p> +<p>“Yes, somewhere on the Western Tour.”</p> +<p>“Of course,” said Trampy. “That’s what I’ve heard +myself. Still, it seems to me that, if I had a wife, I +ought to be the first to know it; don’t you think so, Lily?”</p> +<p>This was proof positive. Lily could find nothing to +answer.</p> +<p>“Come and have a drink, Lily?”</p> +<p>“They’re waiting for me at home,” said Lily.</p> +<p>Trampy went into the bar alone, in a desperate state of +love which made him call for a port and another, by +Jove! Then he sat down at a table in a corner, lit a cigar +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104' name='page_104'></a>104</span> +and examined his glass, as though truth lay at the bottom. +For he could not tell for certain. Was he married or was +he not? That’s what he himself would like to know! +According to him, upon his soul and conscience, he was +not a married man; he did himself that justice. Opportunities, +certainly, had not been wanting ... with +all the girls he had known ... enough to fill a +dozen beauty-shows. Sometimes even he had had a narrow +escape, as in that damned town in the West, in one +of those states where you can’t so much as take a girl to +supper without finding yourself married to her in the +morning, all for entering yourself in the hotel book as +“Mr. and Mrs. Trampy,” in other words, as man and +wife. And yet he couldn’t ask the girl who adored him +to sleep on the mat! Yes, a poor girl who had found +glowing words in which to tell him her love, one night +in Mexico, words which had set Trampy quivering with +longing compassion: was he to be reproached with that? +He had made her happy, after all; and, on the whole, +this lark was one of his pleasantest memories; it hadn’t +lasted too long: a matter of a few weeks at most. He +had left Mexico, taking the girl with him, and played +Trampy Wheel-Pad in the Western States, with any +amount of success, by Jove! Encores, packets of tobacco, +a new suit of clothes! And, by way of <i>entr’acte</i>, the girl—“Tramp +Wheel-Pad’s Jumping Flea,” as she was called—turned +somersaults and flip-flaps. But she would have +killed him, this dark girl with great dark eyes,—this +girl with a boy’s figure, all muscle and sinew, keeping +him awake all night and talking of nothing but smackings, +as though she had never learned anything else. +And so much in love that she would bite and scratch: +a very tigress. Any one but himself would have wearied +of it. And then, one fine morning, for coupling their +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105' name='page_105'></a>105</span> +names in the visitors’ book, they found themselves married, +in the name of the law! And that was what people +called a marriage! So little married were they, according +to him, that he had given her the slip then and +there, leaving her all the money he possessed, however: +he was not the man to look at fifteen dollars, when honor +demanded it. Trampy had had more stories of this kind +in his life; they left as much impression on his mind as +the recollection of a “schooner” swallowed at a bar on a +summer night.</p> +<p>It was dishonest, he considered, to pretend that he was +married. Not that he was perfect: far from it! He did +not set up as a model. He had had scandals in his life: +he admitted it humbly; and, if some jealous person, +some Jimmy, for instance, wanted to do him harm, all he +had to do was to dig in the heap, instead of hawking +round that story of an imaginary marriage.</p> +<p>His differences with Poland, the Parisienne, for instance: +a regular Mrs. Potiphar, that one. He had found +it a hard job to get away from her. And ever and ever +so many others! He couldn’t remember. People were always +talking ill of him. There was more than that, however: +he, too, was capable of manly ambition; he, too, had +taken a breakneck risk. He had perfected and patented +at Washington an invention of which he had seen a +drawing, by accident, in a scientific journal—<i>Engineering</i>, +or another—a purely theoretical invention. The inventor +himself, a young London electrician, declared it +to be unrealizable. Well, he, Trampy—Poland had +helped him with her purse; she was very nice about it—he, +Trampy, had had the thing made. He had deposited +the models at the Patent Office; and the apparatus itself +was now in a London storage. He would get it out, some +day, and show them all what he was capable of. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106' name='page_106'></a>106</span></p> +<p>Now he was wrong, perhaps, in abandoning Poland, +after accepting her services; but, after all, those were +matters which concerned nobody but himself. It was not +fair play to tell Lily about them: she, he felt, would always +be the girl of his heart, the thirty-seventh and last, +and it would take a better man than Jimmy to snatch her +from him!</p> +<p>Already, it was much to have pacified Lily on that incident +of the marriage: Lily believed him. One thing, +however, disquieted Trampy: bigamy, all the same, meant +doing time. Now, if some jealous person produced the +proof of that marriage, contracted under the Western +law ... suppose it were valid ... really valid? +H’m! Was he going to lose Lily for that? And his liberty +into the bargain? That Lily who was worth her weight in +gold, love and fortune in one!</p> +<p>Trampy resolved to broach this delicate subject:</p> +<p>“Suppose I was married,” he hinted, one day, “that +wouldn’t matter. Couldn’t we ... live together ... +eh?”</p> +<p>“I like your style!” said Lily, feeling slightly indignant +at such a proposal. “What do you take me for?”</p> +<p>“I was only joking,” Trampy hastened to say. “If +you want to be married, I’m quite agreeable.”</p> +<p>“I insist upon it!”</p> +<p>“So then you prefer to take strangers into our confidence?”</p> +<p>“What strangers?” asked Lily, in surprise.</p> +<p>“Why, the quill-drivers at Somerset House and those +damned fire-escapes.”</p> +<p>Lily had enough religion to know that the fire-escape +was the clergyman:</p> +<p>“As for that,” she said, “we shall see later; but I want +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107' name='page_107'></a>107</span> +the registrar’s office. If I’m to be your little wife, I want +to be so for good and all: marriage or nothing!”</p> +<p>“I shall be delighted, Lily!”</p> +<p>“And I’m determined!”</p> +<p>Lily was the more bent upon it, because marriage made +her free: that was the essential point. If she were not +married, her parents could make her come back, she +thought ... keep her with them ... gee! It gave +her cold shivers down the back! Once married, she was +protected by law; Pa and Ma had nothing to say; and so +she was very keen upon marriage.</p> +<p>“What a dear little wife she’ll make!” thought Trampy. +“And how she loves me!”</p> +<p>That, however, did not advance matters. It was all +very well for him to put his arm round her waist, to talk +softly to her, to whisper those words which had already +won him so many conquests:—one day, even, he had kissed +her on the lips,—Lily thought that very nice; it was all +very well for him to cut a dash at the bar, to stand her a +claret and a biscuit; it was all very well for him to sing +his love-litany: all this did not help him; at the rate at +which he was going, he wouldn’t get anywhere in six +months.</p> +<p>Lily, between those two jossers, amused herself immensely. +How lucky she was! Two men, at her age! +They irritated her, sometimes; when they went too far—Trampy, +especially, who got excited at the game—anyhow, +it was a homage paid to her beauty. Between +that and going away with him there was all the difference +in the world! To leave home was quite another +matter. Why, goodness, if things went on as they were, +she could do without marriage at all!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108' name='page_108'></a>108</span> +<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>“Lily, come down!” Pa’s voice thundered from below.</p> +<p>Lily was out of bed in a bound. She could hardly tie +her skirt-strings for trembling. Why was Pa in such a +rage?</p> +<p>The moment Lily entered her parents’ room, she realized +what it was. Pa was holding a letter in his hand and +scowling at her.</p> +<p>“These are nice stories I hear!” he cried. “You let men +kiss you? You’ve got a love affair? Come, Lily, is this +true?”</p> +<p>“It’s Jimmy’s doing,” thought Lily. “The mean cur! +He’s given me away!”</p> +<p>Pa went on hotly:</p> +<p>“And you’re going to marry, are you? To marry +Trampy? Here, read that!”</p> +<p>Lily felt hopeless. She took the letter, but did not attempt +to read it. White with fear, could she have sprung +through the window and fled, she would have done so.</p> +<p>“Well,” Pa went on apace, growing more and more excited, +“is all this true? All that they tell me: about your +receiving letters, post-cards, jewelry ... and that +ring! I’ve seen it! You’re going to marry Trampy, are +you? Oh, the man who writes to me knows all about it, +saw you with him at the corner of Oxford Street and +Newman Street. Is that true, miss? What did you have +to tell him, pray? Speak out!”</p> +<p>Lily, terror-stricken, could only droop her head. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109' name='page_109'></a>109</span></p> +<p>“It’s true then that you want to get married, you baggage!”</p> +<p>“Pa!” cried Lily.</p> +<p>But he, with an “Ah!” of rage, sprang upon her, +clutched her mass of hair, banged her head against the +wall:</p> +<p>“On your knees! Say, ‘I—beg—your—par—don—’”</p> +<p>And, Bang! Bang! Bang! The phrase was punctuated +with thumps.</p> +<p>“Oh, Clifton,” implored Ma, “stop! Not so hard!”</p> +<p>“Beg—par—don! Beg—par—don!” continued Pa, +without relenting.</p> +<p>Lily was half-stunned, the world throbbed before her +eyes, and, delirious with wrath, she hissed:</p> +<p>“Never!”</p> +<p>“But I say, I say you shall not marry him! I’ll kill you +first!”</p> +<p>“Yes, I will marry him, yes, yes, I will marry him! +kill me, if you like! God is my witness that I had not +thought of getting married, but, as you say so, I will!”</p> +<p>His fist closed her mouth. She clasped her arms about +her head, to protect herself as best she could, but soon +sank to the floor, fainting....</p> +<p>For three days she was in bed, broken, dazed—then, +no sooner on her feet, than off to the theater, guarded +by Pa and Ma. If they could, they would have padlocked +a chain to her ankle and a collar about her neck. +Ma chilled Lily with her scornful pity, or racked her with +repeated insults:</p> +<p>“A disgrace to the family! You’ll be the death of us!”</p> +<p>She would shower cuffs upon Lily, throw books at +her head, or whatever came readiest to hand. Lily hid +the books, the umbrellas, shrank into corners, longing to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110' name='page_110'></a>110</span> +cry; but the tears refused to come. She was too angry. +And, with head down, but eyes alert, she crouched like a +dog rebelling under blows, with lips drawn back above +her teeth, ready to bite.</p> +<p>“I’m going out, or I’ll kill her!” growled Pa, slamming +the door behind him.</p> +<p>Pa was thoroughly upset: for Lily to leave him! Just +when Hauptmann was starting a fifth troupe; when Pawnee +was drawing full houses with his three stars; when +competition was increasing and threatening: it meant disaster, +certain ruin, the disbanding of his troupe, his contracts +canceled. He seethed with indignation; or else, in +despair, felt like taking Lily in his arms, seating her on +his knee, begging her to tell him that it was all a nightmare, +that she would never marry, never marry that +Trampy: his good little Lily ... whom her Pa +would cover with diamonds! She should have all she +wished, and everything, if only she would assure him that +it was not true that Trampy, that ungrateful cur, whom +he, Pa, had picked out of the gutter, was going to steal +his Lily! That damned Jim Crow! Pa, in his fury, +bought a revolver to scatter the footy rotter’s brains with, +but Trampy received the tip from Tom and vanished, +hey, presto, leaving no trace, allowing no sign of himself +to crop up anywhere. Pa’s rage was vented on his +daughter.</p> +<p>Happily for her, Lily now was a model of conduct. +She felt thoroughly calm. Peace seemed to reign in the +house. Lily was such a gentle little thing! One day—the +very day on which Tom passed her a note from Trampy +and she made a package of her new dress and of her +photographs, and souvenirs—that evening, as she kissed +her father and mother, tears came to her eyes. Then, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111' name='page_111'></a>111</span> +instead of going to the kitchen, she fetched her bundle, +stealthily opened the street-door and ran to the corner, +where Trampy was waiting in a hansom, and hi, off for +the holidays, the champagne, the long-dreamed-of Paradise!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112' name='page_112'></a>112</span> +<h2>PLAYING ’EM IN</h2> +<h3>I</h3> +</div> + +<p>They were seated on the basket trunk marked, “Trampy +Wheel-Pad,” in big black letters. The steamer had left +Harwich and was making for Holland. The English +coast was disappearing in the mist. On the deck, a heap +of luggage and parcels made a sort of nest for them. +Trampy, with his dear little wife by his side, was thinking +of the future ... so many things which he had +flashed before Lily’s eyes and which he could not give +her ... not directly, at least ... but, pooh, +she’d get used to it by degrees. The great thing, to +Trampy, was that he had his Lily! He was going to +stuff himself to the throat with love and, first of all, to +seek a shelter for his sweet wife and himself. England +was no place for them. Pa was prowling round and +Jimmy, too. Once their anger was over and they found +themselves face to face with the irreparable, everything +would calm down; meantime, the wisest thing for Trampy +and Lily was to be prudent and run away as fast as they +could. Trampy had his plan, he had seen the agents: +Holland and Belgium first; then a performance at Ludwig’s +Concert House, in Hamburg, and a brilliant first +appearance before a hall filled with managers. Already +he saw himself in the famous little room of the Café +Grüber, where so many contracts were signed during +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113' name='page_113'></a>113</span> +the few days that the hearing-season lasted, and then he +would have the whole continent, from St. Petersburg to +Lisbon, make heaps of money, treat Lily like the little +peach she was and cover her with diamonds, by Jove! +Trampy, meanwhile, was none too easy in his mind: +funds were low; the two pounds paid at the registrar’s +office had lightened his purse still more. Fortunately, +the fire-escape had not had his seven-and-six-pence: that +was so much saved.</p> +<p>“A poor consolation,” thought Trampy. “The price of +a dog-license.”</p> +<p>But he was gay, nevertheless, in his wife’s company. +He forgot his thirty-six girls. He told Lily stories, +made her squirm with laughter, played with her, dazzled +her with the champagne suppers ... which they +would have later on. Or else, like the consummate mummer +that he was, he put on the gloomy countenance of a +man about to reveal the secret of his heart:</p> +<p>“I’m a wretch,” he muttered, while Lily, in her innocence—Lily, +who had been living on tenter-hooks since +her flight from home a few days before—turned her +frightened eyes upon him. “A miserable wretch ... +married. Yes, it’s true; I’m married, Lily.”</p> +<p>“It’s true what they said? You’re married?”</p> +<p>“Yes, I am.”</p> +<p>“Oh, I knew it!” said Lily, in despair. “But then +... if you are ... I’m not!”</p> +<p>“You silly little thing!” said Trampy, kissing her and +taking her on his knee. “Yes, I’m married; yes; and no +one shall separate us. Haven’t I the prettiest little wife—here, +on my knee—my little Lily?”</p> +<p>“Oh, how you frightened me!” said Lily, nestling +against him. “Oh, don’t ever let us part!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114' name='page_114'></a>114</span></p> +<p>With a wife like that, said Trampy to himself, a little +discomfort more or less made no difference. As long as +she had her dear husband, she would be happy. She +would have eyes for nothing but him and would not care +a fig for all the rest.</p> +<p>Now she loved him: there was no doubt about that. +She had left everything for him! He could even have +had her without marriage, by Jove, and saved two +pounds, if he had insisted! So he thought, at least, and +he put a conquering arm round Lily’s waist, while she, +with her head on his shoulder, dreamed and dreamed, her +eyes fixed upon the horizon. She was married! She had +dared! She would be, at last, the little lady she had +always been by instinct! And Lily went on building her +castles in Spain until, after the smooth crossing, arriving +at the Hook of Holland, she would not have been surprised +to find her own motor-car and servants waiting +for her on the quay. But no, she had to carry her bag +herself, under the fine drizzle, upon the slippery pavement, +to the train ... and third-class to Rotterdam. +It was all very well for Trampy to adopt a triumphant +air, but Lily was greatly vexed at the idea of going with +her husband to a little hotel frequented by artistes, bill-toppers +though they were. She would have liked something +different.</p> +<p>Trampy observed that, with her Pa....</p> +<p>“With Pa,” said Lily, “it was not the same thing ... +and I’m not with Pa now.”</p> +<p>Trampy showed himself accommodating. That evening, +Lily had the proud satisfaction of walking into a +smart hotel, with waiters in the hall, as at the Horse +Shoe. She carried her head high, conscious of being +looked at. She would have liked always to shine like that—to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115' name='page_115'></a>115</span> +sit down to meals amid the rustling of silk dresses +... but she felt uneasy in her modest attire. Trampy +would be only too pleased to give her a new outfit, +later on, yes; but as he explained to Lily, he had had +so many expenses recently, wouldn’t it be better to take +rooms somewhere, in a sort of place like Lisle Street, or +St. Pauli, at Hamburg? Lily yielded to these arguments, +she had to; but it was a bitter grief for her to leave that +fine hotel, where everybody saw her as a lady ... +perhaps because of her big hat, on which a bird, flat-spread, +opened wide its wings and held in its beak a +diamond the size of an egg.</p> +<p>And, thenceforth, the mean life returned: Lily relapsed +among the potatoes and the wash-hand-basin salads. +There were occasional revolts, tart words, sudden +disputes, which, at times, wrinkled her forehead with +anger....</p> +<p>Nevertheless, she had her good moments: she enjoyed +the sensation of being a lady who does no work, of wearing +gloves and a big hat and of looking at the time on her +fine gold watch while her husband is on the stage. It +seemed pleasant to her no longer to appear before the audience +doing her performing-dog tricks, with Pa scrutinizing +her from the wings. It was her turn now to make +one of the small nation: pas, mas, profs, bosses, brothers, +sisters, sons, daughters, all watching their bread-winners +on the boards. She mingled with them, or else sat down +prettily in a corner, talked to the artistes: other Martellos, +other Nunkies; new faces every week, according to the +theaters they were at: owners of troupes; sketch comedians, +serio-comics; dancers of the Roofer class; laced-up, +glittering “Mdlles.;” or else, from time to time, some +josser, a friend of the manager’s or an agent, prowling +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116' name='page_116'></a>116</span> +around among the flesh-colored tights. Lily had seen all +this a hundred times, a thousand times before, when she +was with her parents; and the mere thought of Ma +made her talk nicely, from bravado, to all of them, though +she was married now. Lily bore Pa no malice, in spite +of the buckled belt. Pa was a man, with hair on his +chest and harsh like all of them ... no, not all +... and not so bad, perhaps ... not always +... no; however, a man.... But her Ma, a +lady, ought to have stood up for her! If Ma could see +her now, gee! Lily felt a lump in her throat at the notion. +And it was their fault that she had run away! It served +them right! She was much happier, now, when she was +a lady in her turn. Her talent and her beauty received +the homage due to them. Lily Clifton, the New Zealander, +what ho! A famous name in the profession! +She was one of those whom the stage people point out to +one another:</p> +<p>“Gee!” she sometimes heard a voice say behind her. +“Fancy owning a girl like that and not having the sense +to keep her!”</p> +<p>Lily was flattered to the core at hearing her parents +blamed; she felt inclined to rise and say, “’K you,” with +the great stage bow: her right hand on her heart, the +other raising her dress, her body bent forward in a sweeping +curtsey.</p> +<p>She took part in the conversations: she knew a little +Spanish, which she had learned in Mexico, and a little German, +which she had picked up in America from the Three +Graces; and besides they all jabbered English, they were +all “families,” “misses,” “the’s,” with impossible accents, +suggesting some of those cosmopolitan towns beyond the +“Rockies.” In this medley, she was at her ease; but she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117' name='page_117'></a>117</span> +did not at all like being called Lily, now that she was a +lady:</p> +<p>“Call me Mrs. Trampy,” she said.</p> +<p>After the show, she would sit in the restaurant with +Trampy. There, amid clouds of tobacco-smoke, they all +supped in a crowd. There were separate tables, at which +silent little parties gobbled down their cutlets and compote +in ten minutes and then slipped away quietly. Sometimes, +a whole band of girls would swoop down at once, +like a flight of thrushes, or exchange funny remarks +over other people’s heads and blow volleys of kisses in +every direction.</p> +<p>Trampy, always full of good stuff, amused the company. +He lorded it in the select corner, the corner of +the stage-manager and the pretty girls. After supper, he +cocked a cigar between his teeth and told thick stories +in the midst of an admiring throng. Lily followed with +her lips, so as not to lose a word, but, when the final +point was at hand, she blushed in advance, turned away +her head, as though tired of listening without understanding, +and talked to her neighbor, like a lady who +respects herself. Or, sometimes, it was more than she +could help and Lily would laugh and laugh:</p> +<p>“Oh, dear! Oh, my!”</p> +<p>Then they would “talk shop” among pros, they passed +one another the papers: <i>Der Artist, The Era, Das Program</i>, +they discussed engagements, quoted personal anecdotes: +the Ma who made her star go down to the kitchen, +lest the landlady, when peeling the potatoes, should slip +one into her pocket. Yes, her own daughter, a star who +brought her in a hundred marks a day!</p> +<p>“That’s just like it!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>They made fun of that prof who pinched his apprentices +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118' name='page_118'></a>118</span> +till the blood came, while pretending to smile, or +clawed them like a monkey. And the company laughed +and laughed, especially when Trampy put out his hand +to Lily to show her how the monkeys ... Lily +would jump back and the crowd roared with laughter. +And the glasses of beer and Moselwein accumulated on +the table; and round backs were bent over interminable +games of cards....</p> +<p>And then, gradually, the room emptied; the girls went +away and Lily, waiting for her husband, sank into her +chair and yawned as though her jaws would drop. As +they left, she reproached Trampy for his coarseness: +those horrid stories which made her blush before everybody’s +eyes. Her Pa would never have permitted himself +... She was not accustomed ...</p> +<p>“That didn’t keep you from splitting your sides with +laughter,” said Trampy.</p> +<p>“What an idea!” replied Lily, in a vexed tone. “Do +you think I’m going to play the goody goody ‘lalerperlooser’? +One has to do as others do and not make one’s +self conspicuous.”</p> +<p>“Quite right!” said Trampy.</p> +<p>But she turned crimson with rage when Trampy, some +other night, forgot himself so far as to monkey-claw the +girls. There were short violent scenes when they returned +home, chairs upset, angry words. Trampy could +not understand this jealousy. When he was confronted +with these outbursts, he was greatly surprised, sought for +a reason, muttered Jimmy’s name—that was his sensitive +point: he thought of it in spite of himself—ironically +inquired of Lily if it was Jimmy who had put all that +nonsense into her head. Lily was sorry to see the conversation +take this turn. She flung her arms round her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119' name='page_119'></a>119</span> +husband’s neck, loved him, kissed him prettily, the great +silly: he knew better; he knew she never thought of +Jimmy:</p> +<p>“Kiss me, darling! I wish you would make me happy,” +said Lily, moved to pity for herself. “I want to be a +good little wife!”</p> +<p>Thereupon they made it up. Lily did not feel, with her +husband, that thrill which she had often noticed in other +women: but she wanted to love him, stubbornly pursued +the idea, fagged away at her love like a little school-girl +only too anxious to learn. Trampy, on his side, could be +amiable when he liked. He became the old Trampy again +at times and treated Lily like a little playfellow. They +would both run about in the <i>Biergarten</i>, in the morning, +at practice-time, larking like children, hiding behind the +tables, and their laughter enlivened the empty place, still +soiled with the remnants of last night’s meal and littered +with programs and cigar-stumps.</p> +<p>And time passed like this for weeks ... it was +months now ... an existence like another, with +good in it and bad ... and monotonous and common....</p> +<p>“I should have been better off, perhaps, at home,” she +thought. “If this is marriage, it’s not much.”</p> +<p>For, she saw it quite clearly, <i>that</i> wasn’t love; Trampy +didn’t understand her. A “girl” and a wife were all the +same to Trampy: a mere pastime, both of them. He spoke +of it lightly, through the smoke of his cigar. She learned +to know him, heard him boast of his prowess, caught +passing words:</p> +<p>“Girls, girls, my!”</p> +<p>She would have laughed, she would even have felt +flattered at being chosen among so many, if he had put +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120' name='page_120'></a>120</span> +an end to his conquests. But he continued to prowl +round the stage-girls, as he used to do before he was +married. If even he had shone upon the stage, she would +have understood that he had got “swelled head,” that he +was yielding to temptation; but his success was only +middling. He had not made a hit at Hamburg. The +manager of Ludwig’s had told him flatly that he would +do well to practise and practise a great deal. Trampy +posed as a victim of jealousy, spoke of showing them—all +of them, if once he put his back to it!—a new turn, +a discovery that would show what he was made of! +Meanwhile he had a new idea, as a sketch comedian, with +a make-up of his own invention, the face painted white +on one side and red on the other, with wrinkles cunningly +drawn—a laughing Johnny and a crying Johnny, two +men in one. He pestered Lily with his plans, made her +cut out dresses for him, came back from the old-clothes +shop laden with uniforms in rags, into which Lily had +to put patches. And shoes, in particular, ran in his head; +shoes of which the soles and the uppers yawned like lips; +talking shoes, which said, “Papa!” and “Mamma!” This +last suggestion made Lily laugh.</p> +<p>Trampy haunted the bazaars, bought children’s toys, +took the stomachs out of the cardboard dogs and rabbits +to make his quackers, sought about for his right note, +pursued inspiration to the bottom of the glasses.</p> +<p>Lily was sometimes driven to exasperation. This +tramp-cyclist, this sketch-comedian was making her, Lily +Clifton, patch up his dresses! And her husband rewarded +her for it by making love to the girls, poor idiot! +Oh, if Pa and Ma had not been so harsh with her! Lily +always harked back to that, stiffened herself with the +thought, remembered the Marjutti girl, in whom love of +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121' name='page_121'></a>121</span> +art produced wonders and whose Pa and Ma were so +gentle and kind.</p> +<p>“They should have treated me like that,” she concluded, +“and I should have been at home still!”</p> +<p>She regretted her marriage. And there were some who +pitied her for belonging to Trampy: they looked upon him +as not worthy of her, blamed him for openly carrying on +with girls. Others asked, as though it did not matter, +was she really married or were they just “living together?”</p> +<p>“What? Am I married? Is that what they think +about me?” she said, a little annoyed. “Of course I am! +At the Kennington registry-office!”</p> +<p>And yet a doubt entered her mind too. Was she really +married, after all? Lily did not know much about it. +Had the banns been published? And those two witnesses +picked up in the street ... a ceremony that took +just five minutes ... like a conjuring trick. If it +was true that they were “living together” without her +knowing it, she would not stay with him. She would +go back home at once. Marriage, certainly, was never +intended for her. This she realized now. When she +thought of the Gilson girl, mad on her man, and of others +whom she sometimes caught in the dressing-rooms and +passages eating each other up with kisses, she was at a +loss to understand. How could they make so much fuss +about it?</p> +<p>Poor little wife, with so little love for her husband and +no admiration at all! As an artiste she thought him +lamentable. Trampy, who had seemed so great to her +in Mexico ... why, she had shot miles ahead of +him since! She felt that he was getting second-rate. He +himself was well aware of it, for that matter; blamed +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122' name='page_122'></a>122</span> +everybody: suspected a hoodoo somewhere: some son of +a gun bringing him ill-luck. And he was always casting +about for an easy means of success ... another +new plan ... always something new ... a +high-sounding title: “Rusty Bike,” an old jigger which, +at each turn of the wheel, would grate like a cart, +“Crrrra! Crrrra!” and bring the house down with laughter, +while Lily, in the wings, was to sound an accompaniment +on a grating rattle:</p> +<p>“Crrrra! Crrrra!”</p> +<p>“All that set-out for nothing!” said Lily to herself. +“It would be much simpler to have a little talent.”</p> +<p>She felt herself overcome with contempt for her husband: +what a sorry bread-winner he made! Why take a +wife, when you had only that to keep her on? Lily did not +know whether to laugh or to cry when she saw Trampy +come down from his dressing-room, proud as a peacock, +his chest swelling at the sight of so many girls at a time, +a treat of which he never wearied. He was magnificent, +was Trampy, against that background of shoulders, thighs +and calves: in his element as a fish in water. Nor did +he make any bones about smiling to them or monkey-clawing +them as they came off the stage. The presence +of his wife did not hinder him. He was sure of her +love: he knew she must adore him, as all the others +did. And, leaving Lily in a corner, in the shade of a pillar, +with his eyes he devoured all that powdered flesh, all +those coarse wigs.</p> +<p>Lily hated him at such times. She could have boxed +his ears. She had enough of it, at last. One evening, she +caught hold of his arm to take him away, furious that a +gentleman could find a pleasure in making his wife look +so ridiculous! And Trampy, more or less flattered at +what he considered a fond wife’s jealousy, was turning to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123' name='page_123'></a>123</span> +go, when a lady with plumes on her head and a woolly +dog under her arm greeted him with:</p> +<p>“Hullo, old boy! Glad to see you, Trampy!”</p> +<p>Lily—it was a distant memory, but no matter—recognized +Poland, the Parisienne, with the painted face and +the violent scent. Trampy took a step backward. He +expected a scene, though he owed her nothing, after all; +but she did not seem angry, no. On the contrary, she +looked at him with a roguish eye. She knew of Trampy’s +marriage, no doubt, as she knew of his conquests, having +been his victim herself.</p> +<p>“Hullo, old boy!” repeated Poland, sizing up Lily with +an appraising glance and then fixing her eyes upon +Trampy. “Still having your successes, old boy? Is this +your number thirty? Thirty-six? Thirty-eight, eh?”</p> +<p>“What!” Lily broke in, astounded at these manners. +“What number thirty-six, thirty-eight?”</p> +<p>“Ugh! A number in a lottery,” said Trampy, looking +quite vain between those two women in love with him. +“Yes, a number ... with which I drew a prize!... +Why, by Jove,” he continued, addressing Poland, +“this is my wife!... Lily Clifton! ... the +New Zealander on Wheels.”</p> +<p>“Oh, yes,” said Poland to Lily. “I did hear that you +ran away: tired of this, eh?”</p> +<p>And, tapping the back of her left hand with the palm +of her right, she made the professional gesture that denotes +a whipping.</p> +<p>“Yes, I was a bit,” said Lily, feeling rather proud than +otherwise. “I’ve been through the mill, I have!”</p> +<p>“You’ve had your fair share, eh?” insisted Poland. +“You’re not the first that has left her family to escape +being whipped. You did quite right,” she concluded.</p> +<p>Trampy was dumfounded and utterly floored by the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124' name='page_124'></a>124</span> +revelation. What! He! He! Lily had married him +because of that! Because ... And people said it! +And talked about it!</p> +<p>“Come along, Lily,” said Trampy. “Let’s go home.”</p> +<p>And, giving no further heed to Poland, who followed +him with a mocking smile, he took Lily by the arm and +went out with her.</p> +<p>Lily felt her arm shake. Trampy was furious, evidently. +She saw her mistake, too late. There would be +a stormy scene when they got in. Well, who cared? +She was resolved, under that obstinate forehead of hers, +to face the facts. She had had enough of this husband. +And she meant to know, that very moment, if she was +married or not ... because with him one never +knew. When she admitted that she had married him +because of “that,” Trampy, in his humiliation would put +her out of doors at once; if the marriage wasn’t valid, +he would get rid of her. There was no doubt about it.</p> +<p>And she did not have to wait, for Trampy, even before +they were out of the theater, in the passage, among the +trunks and properties, Trampy, unable to restrain himself +any longer, seized her by the wrists and looked her +straight in the face:</p> +<p>“Is it true?” he asked, in a voice trembling with rage.</p> +<p>Lily, without replying, lowered her eyes as though to +say yes, like a good little wife, oh, <i>so</i> sorry to offend +her husband!</p> +<p>“And,” said Trampy, choking with shame, “you married +me for ‘that:’ me, Trampy!”</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Lily confusedly.</p> +<p>“Damn you!” cried Trampy. “Oh, if we weren’t married +for good, wouldn’t I just make you sleep out to-night!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125' name='page_125'></a>125</span> +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>Poor Lily! She was Trampy’s little wife, his little +wife for ever! And life, monotonous and common, followed +its usual course: a week here, a week there; and +the theater every night at the fixed time, according to the +scene-plot which they went and consulted on reaching the +stage: “X, Corridor, 9.5; Z, Wood, 10.17; Y, Palace, +11.10,” and so on. And for Trampy it was an everlasting +grumbling at his ill-luck, a dull anger at “playing +’em in,” so sure was he of seeing his name first, always—“Garden, +8.30, Trampy Wheel-Pad”—he who had had +such a success in England with his red-hot stove. It +was no use his saying to himself that it wouldn’t last, +that it would be better next week. It was just as though +done on purpose. He played ’em in, always, from Bremen +to Brunswick, from Leipzig to Madgeburg:</p> +<p>“I wish I knew the son of a gun who has his knife into +me!” growled Trampy, persuaded that he was the victim +of an agent’s jealousy, or else the stage-managers didn’t +understand their business.</p> +<p>“If you had more talent,” thought Lily to herself, “that +sort of thing wouldn’t happen. I’d like to see you with +Pa: <i>he’d</i> show you, <i>he’d</i> make you stir your stumps, you +rusty biker!”</p> +<p>However, she was careful not to say so to him, for fear +of blows; and Lily knew that, if ever she received them +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126' name='page_126'></a>126</span> +once, twice, without returning them, it was all up with +her, she would lapse under the yoke again, it would become +a habit: there would be nothing for it but to leave +her husband, if she wished to avoid slaps, just as she had +left her family, to avoid whippings.</p> +<p>That would have been too grotesque. She did not want +to give Pa and Ma the satisfaction of seeing her unhappily +married. Lily armed herself with patience; and she +needed it! Trampy was in a frightful temper, said that +he would have been the ideal husband, if she had been +the little wife he had dreamed of: but to think that she +had married him for “that!”</p> +<p>Now it was the constant allusion to “that” which made +him die with shame. Everywhere, on the stages of the +different music-halls, people had for Lily that sort of +sympathetic pity which they feel for a performing dog: +they approved of her running away; everybody seemed +to know about it. Poland, it must be said, scored a fine +revenge against Trampy, without counting the artistes +who had seen Lily practising and who knew what harsh +treatment meant, the Munich Roofers, among others, real +ones, with their blows of the hat, gee!</p> +<p>Among them, it became the fashion, when they saw +Lily, to tap the back of their hands, and then to applaud +with the tip of the nail, as though to approve her flight. +Lily at first was annoyed at the reputation for cruelty +which they were giving her Pa. He was right to hit her, +she thought, sometimes. She was also annoyed on her +own account. She was an artiste, damn it! It was not +only a question of smackings! Why, if she hadn’t had +it in her...! It was a gift! But, on the other +hand, to excuse the folly of her marriage, she let them +talk, without protesting, like a poor little thing who would +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127' name='page_127'></a>127</span> +still be with her Pa and Ma if she had been treated +“fair.”</p> +<p>And there were always angry disputes between her and +Trampy. They were seen to disappear through the stage-entrance, +Lily with an arrogant air, Trampy drooping +his head, his lips distorted with stinging replies. Lily, +though she was not performing at the theater, sometimes +received a letter there. When there was one for her in +the heap of envelopes, bearing the stamps of all countries, +which had been round the world prior to “waiting arrival” +in the doorkeeper’s pigeonholes, Trampy looked +at her furiously, wanted to know. Lily refused. Forthwith, +in the passages, or on the stage, endless disputes +went on between them ... oh, not in the least tragic +in appearance and interlarded with “Hullo, boys!” and +“Hullo, girls!” to left and right, whenever they passed +any acquaintances. And in a low voice, abruptly:</p> +<p>“Show it to me, you wench!”</p> +<p>“Shut up, you footy rotter!”</p> +<p>Trampy could not forgive Lily for marrying him on +that account. He, who had only to choose among the +crowd that walks the boards or flutters about in muslin +skirts, suffered from Lily’s scorn, looked upon himself +as a sultan dethroned before the eyes of his harem. In +order to infuriate Lily, though he did not feel in the +least like laughing, he exaggerated his conquering ways. +It ended by affecting his work. Only the night before, +he had got drunk with two “sisters” out of ten: the +fourth and seventh from the right. Result: he was still +in bed when the matinée began. And his performance +went so badly that they had to drop the curtain on him. +That would pass for once: an illness was allowable; but it +couldn’t go on at that rate. He was becoming worse +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128' name='page_128'></a>128</span> +than the head-balancer who tumbled off his perch, without +having his excuse of sorrow, the loss of a beloved +wife, seeing that he, Trampy, had a dear little wife and +very much alive, this one!</p> +<p>Lily, in her calmer moments, foresaw that they would +soon have to face hard times, flat poverty. She felt her +contempt for Trampy increase. Those sketch-comedians, +those tramp cyclists, pooh, they were less than +nothing, bluff, that’s all, as old Martello said!</p> +<p>She saw her dreams flung to the ground. At first, it +had been charming for her, so full of novelty, but, after +all, she had only changed masters. She ended by considering +herself more unhappy than she had been with Pa and +Ma. To begin with, Pa always had money. She brought +them in a lot. She lived much less comfortably with +Trampy. She used to think that being a married woman +would change everything, whereas—not a bit of it!—there +was no change at all: potatoes, coal, all sorts of +dirty, messy things; and no Maud to help her. And it +was always as in the old days: damp sheets, dirty glasses, +rickety tables, beds with worn-out mattresses; and the +nights were dull as ditch-water. Trampy had hoped for +something different, expected to find a whole harem in +Lily, his thirty-six girls in one, including Ave Maria, +with her body like a wildcat’s. Alas, it was far from +that!</p> +<p>Lily loathed those nights. Love, yes, but not that, not +that! Sacred love, not profane love (Lily had seen paintings +of it in museums and remembered the title). Love, +that is to say, to lie ever so nicely on the breast of the dear +one, yes, as with Glass-Eye, and dream of hats and diamonds. +No doubt, it was ambitious to want so much. She, +who had seen everything, had never come across that; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129' name='page_129'></a>129</span> +but it was what she wanted, what she had been promised, +damn it! Things were going from bad to worse. Memories +of her childhood moved her almost to tears, when +she thought of it: those happy times in Africa, on the +straw beside the horses, the stars seen through the tent +and the smell of the elephants. When she was there, perhaps +that had seemed less sweet to her: the hard ground, +the noise of the chains; but everything was made more +poetic by remembrance: it was the past, what! Nights +sweet as milk, far from a man reeking of tobacco. And +not only her early childhood, but her life of yesterday returned +to her: touring with the troupe, the oatmeal porridge +and the cakes she made—bricks!—but Pa laughed +at them, took them good-humoredly, whereas Trampy +lost his temper. In those days, it is true, she wasn’t a +lady, she used to work; but they had good fun, all the +same, in the dressing-rooms; they had tea at the theater, +romps in the passages, or else did crochet-work, to pass +the time; and all those practical jokes, intensified by distance: +hustling Glass-Eye into the hamper; coaxing the +black cat into the dressing-room, for luck; or making +the pantomime lady speak her tag; or going in to the +Roofers, on some pretext, and giving a whistle which +made them all rush out, dressed or undressed or half-dressed, +never mind, and spin round three times to ward +off the ill omen: all those memories touched her till she +felt inclined to cry. Oh, if she had been with her Pa +now, she would have sat down on his knee and begged +his pardon!</p> +<p>At such times, if Trampy became affectionate and tried +to kiss his little wife, Lily would simply turn her back +on him. Poor Trampy! And he could not play the master! +For, call on the agents as he might and write as many fine +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130' name='page_130'></a>130</span> +letters as he pleased—an art in which he excelled—work +was becoming scarce. He no longer had any money. One +pay-day, Trampy was obliged to confess that he had had +his salary in advance and spent it; a money-lender held +his contract and kept back three-quarters of his pay. +Trampy, tormented by urgent needs, had let himself in +with a Brixton “financier,” a specialist in “loans from five +pounds upward, music-hall artistes treated with the +strictest confidence,” who pocketed nearly the whole. +Now Lily just happened to want a new dress, a new petticoat +and a tiny mother-of-pearl lucky charm. Trampy +had to own that he couldn’t afford these fancies and Lily +had a fit of temper! But then why promise so many +things to a poor little wife who deserved better than that?</p> +<p>“A poor little wife,” said Trampy, “should marry her +husband for love and not to escape whippings! There are +ups and downs in the profession. It was your own lookout; +you shouldn’t have married a star!”</p> +<p>“A star!” cried Lily, with a nervous laugh. “You a +star! A damned comedian! A nice sort of star, indeed! +A music-hall could have twenty black cats in it and you’d +turn them into a white elephant!”</p> +<p>In other words, Trampy, according to her, was a Jonah, +good only for playing the people in, if that!</p> +<p>“A wife has no right to speak to her husband as you +do!” exclaimed Trampy, leaping up under the insult. +“You deserve a good thrashing!”</p> +<p>“None of that!” said Lily angrily, ready to fly at his +throat.</p> +<p>“A wife,” resumed Trampy, with great dignity, “helps +her husband, instead of insulting him.”</p> +<p>“We’re in for it, I suppose!” said Lily.</p> +<p>“Certainly, we’re in for it! I have no engagement now, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131' name='page_131'></a>131</span> +but that’s no reason why you shouldn’t find one. Look +for one and work!”</p> +<p>Lily was in for it, knee-deep, as she said. She was not +excessively astonished: it was the inevitable end! Not +that she disliked to work: her idleness, on the contrary, +was beginning to pall upon her; but it was the humiliation +of going back to it after putting on so much side and +posing as the lady. She had worked for Pa; now she +would work for Trampy; it was natural and proper. +There were exceptions—the wife at home, as Jimmy said, +that josser!—but they were rare.</p> +<p>“Take up your bike again,” said Trampy, after a pause. +“Be a good little wife, help me out of this. I have something +in my mind, a scheme which will make us rich; +you’ll see later on.”</p> +<p>“But,” said Lily, “I haven’t a stage bike, and yours is +really too ugly.”</p> +<p>“I know of one for sale.”</p> +<p>“Very well, I’ll work,” said Lily. “I’ll make them give +me this tour which they promised you and didn’t sign for; +and to-morrow you shall see!”</p> +<p>At heart, Lily was not sorry to show her husband how +people got out of a scrape, when they had talent; and, the +next day, she went to an agent, accompanied by Trampy, +looking very dignified. Her cheeky feather was made +to dance attendance for a moment; and then she was +shown into the office. Lily Clifton? The New Zealander +on Wheels? Straight away a contract, signed in duplicate! +A week in each town; later on, perhaps, a month +in Berlin, at the Kolossal. Lily displayed wonderful tact, +did not triumph too openly over Trampy. She acted to +perfection the part of the little lady who takes up the +bike again just for fun—as in the time of her “French +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132' name='page_132'></a>132</span> +governess”—or rather of a dear little thing wholly +wrapped up now in her wifely duty: her poor husband +ill, she herself needing exercise, just for fun, you know.</p> +<p>On leaving the agent’s, she bought some material, +then ran home, cut out stage dresses. In the evening, +Lily was still hemming and stitching, indefatigably, +seized once more with professional pride after her excursions +into private life. And, all night, under the +lamp, she contrived, cut out and sewed. Then came practice, +without Pa. In an hour, in spite of the new machine, +which put her out, she had picked up her “times” +again. She felt as if she had been spinning round the +night before, under Pa’s eye, so absolutely at her ease +was she, with her head on the saddle or twirling on the +back-wheel.</p> +<p>And, on the following Monday, her first appearance, her +name on the walls: “Miss Lily” in big letters, right at the +top of the posters, “Miss Lily,” not “Mrs.” or “Madame.” +Had she had ten children, two husbands and three divorces, +she would still have been “Miss,” everywhere and +always, as a further attraction for the swells in the front +boxes and as a certificate of youth. Mighty few husbands, +on the continent especially; not more men of any +kind than could be helped, on the stage, except a few +noted “profs,” standing by the perches of velvet and steel +or under the trapezes, displaying, beside the pink-silk +tights, against the “palace” back-drop, the faultless correctness +of their full-dress suits. But, for the rest, people +preferred to ignore husbands, brothers and “friends;” +Lily had known some who never showed themselves at +all, who remained squatting at home, so as not to stand +in their wives’ way.</p> +<p>Trampy, for that matter, knew better than to parade +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133' name='page_133'></a>133</span> +himself with Lily. And he preferred it so. He could +have wished one thing to the exclusion of all others: that +people should not know of his marriage, that they should +cease to speak of it. Unfortunately, this was not to be. +The story of the whippings was enlivening Lisle Street, +exaggerated, as usual. The Bill and Boom tour, the Harrasford +tour were beginning to spread it on every stage in +England; before six months were over, it would have +made the round of the world from the Klondike to Calcutta. +What a disgrace for Trampy! Yet no sooner had +he put his New Zealander on her wheels again than +Trampy blossomed out once more. After all, who cared +if people were seen to smack the back of their hands? +He wasn’t to be put out by a little thing like that:</p> +<p>“Just so,” he seemed to say. “We are married, whippings +or no whippings, and I am the master; I have set +her to work again; and there you are!”</p> +<p>Trampy’s reputation, so far from suffering, increased; +all his compeers now envied him from the bottom of their +hearts; the bosses, the profs, the managers, the Pas, the +Mas treated him, in their own minds, as a lucky dog, all +the more inasmuch as Trampy was not uppish and gladly +stood drinks, while his wife, “Miss Lily,” made money +for him with her breakneck tricks. It was much smarter +than doing it for one’s self: the great thing was to have +a “girl” like that! Trampy was having his revenge: he +had been laughed at; he now had the laugh on them! and +Trampy knew glorious times, in the <i>Biergarten</i>, or lounging +at street-corners, near the stage-door, chaffing the +girls, hat cocked back, hands deep in his pockets, a cigar +stuck between his teeth. He told the story of his life, not +without pride; said that he must write it one day, sell it to +<i>The New York Standard</i> for a thousand dollars. The +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134' name='page_134'></a>134</span> +girls <i>he’d</i> had: whew! His love adventures: all over the +world, by Jove! And his marriage with Lily Clifton, the +New Zealander on Wheels, a dear little wife, so gentle, +so obedient. No, he had no reason to complain of his +life. He would write it, mark his words! To say nothing +of a scheme he had in mind:</p> +<p>“Just you wait and see! It’s a trick to make a millionaire +of you or break your neck.”</p> +<p>“Will you make Miss Lily do it?”</p> +<p>“I’ll see, I’ll think it over,” said Trampy, in a lordly +tone.</p> +<p>The directors, the stage-managers took no notice of +him; but, among the artistes, Trampy Wheel-Pad was +some one, he enjoyed his leisure, recovered his self-assurance: +if, in addition, he could have destroyed the legend +of the whippings, he would have been perfectly happy. +He would turn the conversation on the subject of smackings +in the music-hall generally, in the hope of hearing +them contradicted or made little of; but it was no use; +every one believed in them: all, boys and girls, even the +most spoiled, quoted facts: blows which they had received! +my! blows hard enough to split the front of a +music-hall from top to bottom! The nation with the +painted faces, the blue-chins seemed to vie with one another +as to who had been most through the mill.</p> +<p>“You’re exaggerating,” said Trampy. “It may be true, +to a certain extent, in your case. But, Miss Lily, for instance: +do you mean to say you believe all she tells?”</p> +<p>“Oh, quite!” said two Roofer girls who were there.</p> +<p>They had seen Lily practising. And they knew what it +meant. They had had their share, too: old Roofer, gee! +And Lily had done quite right to run away from her +whippings. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135' name='page_135'></a>135</span></p> +<p>“There you go again!” said Trampy. “Can’t you see +she’s humbugging you?”</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg135.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 204px; height: 521px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 204px;'> +TRAMPY ENJOYED HIS LEISURE<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>But he pulled himself up suddenly, +if Lily arrived, for, in +spite of his big airs, he was all +submission in her presence.</p> +<p>“Oh, really! Glass-Eye caught +it instead of me, I suppose,” said +Lily, drawing back her shoulder +as though threatening to smack +him, “when Pa went for me with +his leather belt. And I have witnesses. +I’ve been through the +mill, if anybody has: that much +I <i>can</i> say!”</p> +<p>Lily, after this burst of pride, +would lower her head, a trifle +embarrassed, like a dear little +thing, all wrapped up in her duties +as a wife, a wife whom her +husband would cause to break +her back one of these days, perhaps.</p> +<p>This created a circle of admirers +around her: all, besides, +agreed in saying that you had to +have the business “rubbed into +your skin” to be as clever as she +was.</p> +<p>“’K you!” said Lily, with a +stage bow.</p> +<p>It was certain that she made +a hit. They wanted her everywhere. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136' name='page_136'></a>136</span> +She was asked to appear in tights. The engagements +grew better and better. “Miss Lily” was more +and more talked about. It was no longer a Trampy +Wheel-Pad on a rusty bike: it was grace, youth ... +and stage-smiles fit to turn the heads in the front boxes. +When Lily appeared on the stage, she transfixed every +white shirt-front, every opera-glass. She took a real delight +in it all. Her beauty captivated the audience. In +her pink tights, Lily turned and turned and turned, to +the hum of the orchestra, against the “wood” back-drop +of purple and gold. Then she returned to the wings, all +excited by her show, received bouquets, chatted freely +with the comrades. She met old friends: the green-eyed +female-impersonator, for instance, pressed her +closely. He, too, was touring Germany: a week here, a +week there. Chance brought them together again. He +was enraptured by Lily: how lovely she had grown! He +would have liked to adopt her.... Lily threw her +head back, laughed and repelled him with a thump in the +ribs when he tried to kiss her.</p> +<p>Another time, she saw the Bambinis, who were playing, +by a lucky accident, at matinées only and by special +permission, because of their age. She larked with them +like a child. Elsewhere, it was Nunkie Fuchs, on his way +to Vienna, where he was going to see to the building of +his pigeon-house, leaving the Three Graces for a few +weeks on the Harrasford tour. He had seen Lily’s name +on the posters and had come to say, “How do you do?” +to her.</p> +<p>And, amid the thunder of the band or the lull of the +<i>entr’actes</i>, Lily received tidings of her Pa and Ma and +details of what happened after her flight, as reported by +Glass-Eye Maud. After Lily’s departure, they had hunted +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137' name='page_137'></a>137</span> +everywhere. Then Ma thought of looking in the trunk: +the pretty dress was gone. Then they had rushed to the +theater: no Lily. Then they had guessed: Lily had run +away. Ma fell on her knees and cried and cried. Pa +seized his revolver and spoke of going to shoot the man +who had robbed him of his child! His little Lily gone! +And the contracts had to be canceled and Pa did not go +out for a week and the house remained still and silent +for a month. Pa, thoroughly upset, cried whenever +Lily’s name was mentioned and was near dying of shame +when he felt himself blamed, even by those who used to +congratulate him on his way of turning out an artiste. +And Nunkie himself maintained that one must know how +to handle young girls: gentleness above all.</p> +<p>Lily bit her lips when she heard that. Her little nose +tingled. She hardened her features, wrinkled her obstinate +forehead, lest she also should cry:</p> +<p>“If I had to do it again, I would!” she said quickly, +just like that, without reflecting, in the way one says a +thing to one’s self which one knows to be untrue.</p> +<p>They also told her things that made her laugh. Glass-Eye +Maud no longer left her hole, cried like a tap, so +much so that one day, Ma, noticing an insipid taste in +the porridge, threatened her with the sack if that sort of +thing went on.</p> +<p>As for business, people did not know exactly. Pa, they +said, had written to a Hauptmann’s “fat freak” to take +Lily’s place. The reply ran:</p> +<p>“No, thanks, I’m all right where I am.</p> +<div class='ra'> +<p>“<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Fat Freak</span>.”</p> +</div> + +<p>The signature was underlined, for people had ended by +knowing about Pa’s disrespectful remarks. Lily laughed +when she heard this: my! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138' name='page_138'></a>138</span></p> +<p>“I will come ... when you take to wearing +braces!” another had answered.</p> +<p>This was an allusion to the blows with the belt; and +Lily, with head thrown back, full-throated, her hand on +her heart, laughed ... laughed ... laughed:</p> +<p>“Bravo, girls!” she said, applauding with her thumbnail.</p> +<p>And Tom? Tom had had the boot, with a bang on the +nose, for carrying letters to Lily. For Pa ended by learning +all: some one had told him.</p> +<p>“Jimmy, that son of a gun!” said Lily.</p> +<p>And Jimmy himself, what had become of that josser? +Jimmy was no longer stage-manager. He had left everything +after Lily’s flight. He, too, had flown into a terrible +rage when he heard about it ... spoke of +Trampy as a thief in the night ... would have +killed him, if he had met him ... and he was going +to star in his turn.</p> +<p>“Singing?” asked Lily.</p> +<p>“No, something to do with the bike.”</p> +<p>“What a fool!” thought Lily. “Fancies himself an +artiste because he used to mend my bike for me!”</p> +<p>Jimmy, it seemed, had hired a huge shed and there, all +alone, fitted up some apparatus of a complicated kind. +He never went out by day. He worked and worked. A +trick to break your neck at, it appeared, or make your +fortune.</p> +<p>“Those jossers!” exclaimed Lily scornfully.</p> +<p>And what was he going to do on his bike? Nobody +knew. There was something published in the papers, they +said. It was something on the back-wheel.</p> +<p>“What rot!”</p> +<p>Lily laughed open-mouthed, laughed with all her muscles, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139' name='page_139'></a>139</span> +twisting her hips, splitting her sides, smacking her +thighs. What! Jimmy on the back-wheel! He! He! +He cutting twirls, that josser!</p> +<p>“And the troupe?”</p> +<p>The troupe nobody knew about: dispersed, most likely; +the troupe, after all, was Lily. When she went, everything +was bound to fall to pieces. Pa didn’t care either; +told any one who would listen to him that he was going +to retire to Kennington, that he was well off now ... +thousands of pounds in the bank ... made his fortune +... meant to live on his dividends.</p> +<p>“I knew it,” said Lily; “I knew I had made his fortune! +Thousands of pounds, damn it!”</p> +<p>“Lily, don’t swear like that!” said Nunkie Fuchs. “It’s +not right!”</p> +<p>Lily lowered her head, taken aback; excused herself, +like a lady who knows her manners:</p> +<p>“And yet,” she said to herself, “if he had had my troubles, +that old rogue, perhaps he would have sworn, too!”</p> +<p>For Trampy was becoming terrible: life was impossible +with him. All the money which Lily earned went on +champagne ... and on girls, probably; and the +more she earned the greedier he grew. He wanted money, +heaps of money; Lily had nothing left for herself. Trampy +sought out new tricks, invented balancing-feats, made her +practise them, in the morning, on the stage, with his +sleeves turned back and his trousers turned up, absolutely +like a Pa. Lily, accustomed to yield obedience, relapsed +under the yoke. Bike in the morning, bike at the matinée, +bike in the evening; and, with that, the cooking, the +washing-up ... and not a farthing in her pocket, +though she had made a fortune for her Pa, damn it! Pa +living on his income at Kennington, while she continued +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140' name='page_140'></a>140</span> +her life of slavery! Wasn’t it enough to make her send +everybody to the devil, and Nunkie, that old rogue, with +the rest? A pack of nigger drivers, that’s what they +were, every one of them! And what an idiot she was, +to keep on barking her shins for other people! Would +she go on doing it until she was fifty? And if she didn’t +begin now to put money by, who would do it for her +later? Not that worthless husband, surely! He, who, +that very morning, had dared, the loafer, to tell her of a +scheme—a sort of a risky trick which she was to perform, +a thing calculated to break your head or make a +millionaire of you—for him, of course, just as for Pa! +It had come to this, that her turn wasn’t good enough, +that it had to be more sensational; and she was expected +to make it so for a man she didn’t love! Oh, she had +put him nicely in his place! Rather! Thank you for +nothing: none of that for her! In the evening Lily was +still trembling, with her two elbows on the table, as she +sat facing her glass in her dressing-room; angrily she +crushed the grease-paint on to her cheeks, which were +pale with rage.</p> +<p>Ting! Straight on to the stage, turning round and +round, fifty rounds from habit, mechanically, without any +“go” in them: an indolent performance, which would have +earned her a good smacking in Pa’s time.</p> +<p>“You were shockingly bad!” said Trampy, who was +waiting for her in the bar, after watching her from the +front. “What’s the matter with you? Are you ill?”</p> +<p>Lily did not even answer.</p> +<p>“I’m speaking to you,” said Trampy crossly. “You +did nothing right to-night.”</p> +<p>“Yes, I know; that’ll do,” said Lily. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141' name='page_141'></a>141</span></p> +<p>“It’s not a question of ‘Yes, I know,’ but of doing better +next time,” said Trampy.</p> +<p>“I’m not taking any orders to-night,” said Lily.</p> +<p>“No, darling, but there was an agent in the house. He +must have thought you bad.”</p> +<p>“That’s none of your business!”</p> +<p>“And, if you don’t get engagements, what’s to become +of us?”</p> +<p>“I don’t care a hang,” said Lily. “<i>I</i> can always manage.”</p> +<p>“You ... you ... and what about me? We’re +married, aren’t we?”</p> +<p>“But the money I earn’s mine,” said Lily. “I mean to +buy dresses and whatever I want to, with <i>my</i> money. +You’ll be wanting to come on the stage next, in evening-dress, +to stand over me while I do my turn, and getting +out your belt. Do you take me for your daughter, tell +me?”</p> +<p>“What I’m saying,” said Trampy, aghast, “is for your +good, from the point of view of the business, the salary.”</p> +<p>“<i>My</i> business, <i>my</i> salary, damn it!” cried Lily. “<i>Mine, +mine</i>, do you understand? And it concerns nobody but +myself!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142' name='page_142'></a>142</span> +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> +</div> + +<p>It came as a smack in the jaw to Trampy.</p> +<p>“<i>My</i> pay, <i>my</i> work, <i>mine</i>!”</p> +<p>It meant no more pocket-money with which to lord it at +the bar. It meant a cheap cigarette instead of his glorious +cigar. It was the end of a beautiful dream; and the +awakening was a hard one. At first, he hoped to make +Lily jealous by going about openly with the stage-girls; +but she no longer paid any attention, seemed to suggest +that he had better amuse himself on his side and she on +hers:</p> +<p>“What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander,” +she said.</p> +<p>Lily would no longer take his orders; and, because he +felt his wife escape him, it was he, Trampy, who now +became jealous. When, from a distance, among the tables, +he saw Lily ride round the stage and all those heads +raised toward her, those opera-glasses pointed at her, +he followed her with an anxious eye. “Miss Lily!” +“Miss Lily” was his wife, after all! Those rounded arms, +that lissom figure, those twinkling legs were all his, every +bit of them! He was the husband, by Jove! It was not +a marriage for fun, as with Ave Maria: it was a marriage +for good and all, which had cost him two pounds—“Yes, +siree!”—at the Kennington registry-office. And it +wasn’t only her flightiness, her smiles at the front boxes, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143' name='page_143'></a>143</span> +but “<i>my</i> work, <i>my</i> salary, <i>mine</i>” into the bargain! She +was acting like a bad wife, forgetting her most sacred +duties!</p> +<p>Lily stood on no ceremony with him, took her title of +“Miss” seriously: very flattering for him, very flattering, +he must say! He no longer knew himself: he who, in the +old days, used to answer: “My lord, rely on me!” when +a half-tipsy swell invited him to come and drink champagne +with some stage-girls, now became furious if men +in the audience, not knowing who he was, sized up “Miss +Lily” before him—her shoulders, arms and the rest—with +reflections such as “I could do with a bit of that!” +or, “A nice little supper ...” He felt inclined to +shout in their faces that she was no “miss,” but his wife, +by Jove!</p> +<p>He became more and more jealous. The thought of +Jimmy, especially, kept running in his head. He felt a +twinge whenever he heard him mentioned. And Jimmy +was often mentioned just at present, for he was said to be +preparing a new turn, a turn which would make him famous, +unless it killed him.</p> +<p>“If only it would!” Trampy hoped.</p> +<p>Jimmy was Trampy’s bugbear. He had flattered himself +that he had snatched Lily from Jimmy by sheer prowess; +and not a bit of it! The recollection of that drove +him mad, the sense of his powerlessness exasperated him, +he had but one idea left: to show Lily ... and +Jimmy ... the sort of man he was; to take his revenge. +That great scheme of his, that discovery that +would show what he was made of, the invention which +he had patented in America with Poland’s money—oh, +she had revenged herself finely, had that Parisienne!—well, +the time to apply himself to that trick had come. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144' name='page_144'></a>144</span> +Lily had refused to do it. All right, he would do it himself!</p> +<p>But, if he was to succeed, it was necessary that Lily +should supply him with money, more money, lots of +money. The apparatus was incomplete and had probably +got damaged in the London warehouse; it would need repairs, +improvements. Now Lily seemed intractable. She +was vexed at having to earn money for two, pretended to +have none too much for herself; it was her costumes +now: six sets of tights, one for each evening, pink, green, +red, blue, gray, white and assorted ornaments, silk ribbons....</p> +<p>She didn’t want to kill herself with work for nothing, +as she had been doing up to now:</p> +<p>“A lady isn’t a performing dog!” she said.</p> +<p>Trampy swallowed his bitterness when he heard that. +Lily was escaping him altogether. Sometimes, he would +go on the stage, sit down in a corner and, from there, see +Lily, a shawl over her shoulders, her throat wrapped in a +scarf, walk up and down, behind the back-drop, like a +passenger on the deck of a ship, at one time with a +monkey-faced, red-whiskered sketch-comedian; at others, +according to the chances of the week, with the female-impersonator, +the boy with the green eyes. There was no +harm in that: they were at home, among themselves, Lily +was no damned lalerperlooser, he wouldn’t have had her +so. And Trampy did not dare say anything, for fear of +being made a laughing stock and also lest he should offend +“Miss Lily.” But he was tormented with jealousy +nevertheless, merely at seeing her talk pleasantly with +her acquaintances. And yet it was innocent enough, a +mere “Hullo, Lily!” “Hullo, old boy!” by way of keeping +herself in touch with the news, for Lily hardly ever +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145' name='page_145'></a>145</span> +looked into <i>The Era</i> or <i>Das Program</i>; all those names, +all that competition frightened her!</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg145.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 283px; height: 355px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 283px;'> +THE BOY WITH THE GREEN EYES<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>She had learned nothing new about Pa, except that the +troupe still existed, but in quite a small way, of course. +Her Pa was in favor of soft treatment, now, so they said; +he had changed his manner. “Too late!” murmured Lily +thoughtfully; but she was much amused when she heard +that Tom, in addition to keeping up his trade as a shoeblack, +was learning boxing, with bulldog obstinacy, in +order to give Pa back his blow on the nose and beat him +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146' name='page_146'></a>146</span> +in a square fight. And didn’t some one say that Tom +was stage-struck, too? Tom, that dwarf, with his short +arms, on the stage! Crazy! every one of them!</p> +<p>And then they were always talking of Jimmy: Jimmy +here, Jimmy there. It was becoming serious, Lily +couldn’t get over it. She wondered what old Martello +would say if he heard that: Jimmy an artiste! Pooh! +Nonsense! And it was true, mind you! It was repeated +from mouth to mouth, his fame was spreading, his fame, +that is to say, in the bars, in the wings, among pros; you +heard his name mentioned together with a hundred +others; but that already was a great deal, that one could +say, Butt Snyders, Laurence, Jimmy, Marjutti, all mixed +up, as though he were their equal, he who had done nothing! +But he would “do,” it was in the air: some stroke +of luck, who could tell? And Lily knew him to be ambitious. +Lady or no lady, she was an artiste first and +foremost and hated competition. She had been whipped +for her rivals, Lillian, Edith and Polly, had caught it for +Laurence and for the fat freaks, too, and she depended on +her work for her bread. When she saw a new troupe +come to the front it made her anxious: even children +“that high,” who played bike in between the pillars of +the stage, she felt inclined to stamp upon; and if people +ever asked her advice, she did not hesitate to tell them +wrong. Men especially were disastrous competitors, even +the ignorant ones. You never knew where you were +with them, they dared do anything! She could not help +getting mad when she thought of it. One more to take +the bread out of her mouth! For it was all very well to +treat him as a simpleton, to talk of his crotchets—he had +views concerning a stage-apprentices’ fund, a home of +rest for superannuated artistes and so on—Lily considered +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147' name='page_147'></a>147</span> +him dangerous. He was not a silly Glass-Eye or a stage-struck +Tom; he was an ambitious Jimmy. But all the +same, how absurd! A hypocrite like that was fit to write +to Pa and get a poor girl in trouble, but was not the man +to risk his skin! She laughed, not a stage smile, no, a +real laugh, head thrown back, full-throated. An artiste, +O Lord! Yes, like a heap of bluffers who were to do this +and that, all sorts of wonderful things! and who ended +by making a laughing stock of themselves, the whole +business was so childish, faked up with ropes and weights, +nursery-toys, Punch-and-Judy rubbish. It would be just +like that with Jimmy, sure: lots of noise and then ... +nothing! And he would have lost his place as manager +and he would starve, the josser: that would teach him +to be spiteful! And where was Jimmy? He might +be very clever, in his shed in London, swinging from his +rope, like a monkey on a string, but to do that before an +audience was different. There would be no Jimmy left!</p> +<p>She liked to talk to herself like that. Miss Lily avoided +thinking of a possible stroke of luck, she who had +taken such pains to attain so little, just to become Mrs. +Trampy, to have the honor of working for Trampy and +feeding Trampy. Oh, she was tired of it, did all she could +to find him work, to spur him on! She even wanted him +to practise. And she mentioned Tom and Jimmy to him, +all those beginners, all the others who were coming on.</p> +<p>“She thinks more of him than of me,” he said to himself.</p> +<p>And time passed and passed. It was now eight months +that they had been traveling through Germany: and then, +at last, came Berlin, the center of the agencies, like the +plunge into Chicago, after the Western Tour, or New +York, after the Eastern, or Paris, or London. Lily +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148' name='page_148'></a>148</span> +asked herself for what part of the world she would sign +contracts. She would have liked Australia, South Africa, +the States, so as to leave her husband in Europe, +sitting up on his hind-quarters, like a trained dog, waiting +for his “missis” to come back:</p> +<p>“If I could have the Kolossal in the meantime,” Lily +thought. “A month there would do me nicely! I’d like to +beat the fat freaks in their own country and show Pa that +I don’t need his old troupe to star with!”</p> +<p>And Lily had some hope: an agent had given her to understand +that she would be engaged, without a doubt, at +that famous music-hall. But no! She learned that the +Kolossal was not wanting cyclists, it had an attraction for +next month, something sensational, it was said. And, in +fact, suddenly, in the space of a night, the walls of the +capital were covered with huge posters—“Bridging the +Abyss!”—at the Kolossal!</p> +<p>“What’s that?” Lily asked herself.</p> +<p>And she was thunderstruck when she learned that this +was Jimmy’s new trick! She had no doubt left when, +looking into a bookseller’s window, she saw Jimmy’s portrait +in <i>Die Illustrirte Zeitung</i>, the popular illustrated +paper in Berlin.</p> +<p>Her arms fell to her sides! What, she thought, already? +All this advertisement for that Jimmy? She had lost +the Kolossal because of him. Already Jimmy was taking +the bread out of her mouth! She could have wrung his +neck!</p> +<p>Never had the New Zealanders, or the Hauptmanns, +or the Pawnees, or any one, or anybody known such advertising +as that, except the great breakneck performers, +Laurence, the Loopers, the Motor Girl; and even then the +girl was packed up in her machine like a sausage. But +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149' name='page_149'></a>149</span> +“Bridging the Abyss,” the papers said, required art: +everything depended on the exact impetus, the faultless +balance. The press was filled with clever puffs, biographies, +descriptions of the apparatus, the cool daring which +it needed to try that without a rope, to risk the performer’s +life six times in six seconds. London and Paris were +both said to have wanted the attraction; and Berlin was +to have it first; and <i>hoch</i> for the Kolossal!</p> +<p>Trampy also was flabbergasted, when he read about +this:</p> +<p>“But ... but ... but it’s my apparatus and +nothing else! Why, I patented it in America! Do you +understand now,” he asked, without, however, entering +into technical explanations, “do you understand now, +when I wanted you to help me? It wasn’t a question of +the rusty bike! You’ve made me miss fame and fortune! +And to think that I have an apparatus rotting away in +London, in a warehouse, and that, if you’d listened to me, +I should have been at the Kolossal now ... and +covering you with diamonds!”</p> +<p>“I like your style!” said Lily. “You’d have made me +break my back in your stead! I know you!”</p> +<p>“Oh, but I shan’t swallow that,” said Trampy, in his +exasperation. “We shall see! I have my rights. I shall +enforce them!”</p> +<p>“Don’t make a fool of yourself,” said Lily. “When a +thing has to be done, it gets done without all that talk: +look at Jimmy!”</p> +<p>“Hang your Jimmy!”</p> +<p>“It’s not a question of <i>my</i> Jimmy,” retorted Lily, “but +of <i>my</i> money. I should simply have flung it away! You, +do a thing like that! You risk your skin! Rot!”</p> +<p>Trampy, in his rage, would have boxed Lily’s ears, had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150' name='page_150'></a>150</span> +it not been for her nails, which she held ready to scratch +his face, and he went out fuming. He ran off to the +agents, but there was nothing for him. And yet Trampy +knew or, at least, supposed that they must want an opposition +show to “Bridging the Abyss.” They must, surely! +Why, everywhere, in all the great centers, every music-hall +had its rival opposite or beside it: everywhere, each +establishment strove to inflict empty houses upon its rival +by offering more sensational or more breakneck tricks. +At the Kaiserin, the rival of the Kolossal, they were, +without a doubt, looking for something to set against +“Bridging the Abyss” and they had nothing, or else +Trampy would have known it: among pros such matters +were always known long beforehand. Oh, Trampy was +prepared to do anything to escape his wife’s sarcasm!</p> +<p>And, one evening, behold Trampy returning in triumph +to the café where Lily awaited him:</p> +<p>“I knew it!” he cried. “I knew it wouldn’t go like +that!”</p> +<p>“Well, what?” asked Lily. “Have you got a number +thirty-seven? Thirty-eight? A fresh conquest? Something +quite out of the common?”</p> +<p>“Laugh away, Lily! That son of a gun shall hear me +talked about yet, by Jove! And everybody else will, too. +You must be prepared for anything, Lily, when you marry +an artiste!”</p> +<p>“Why, what’s happened?” asked Lily, much surprised.</p> +<p>This had happened: the two music-halls had fought. +Jimmy, who was unable, it seemed, to get London or +Paris, had offered his “Bridging the Abyss” to the Kaiserin, +but his price was considered too high. From there +he went to the Kolossal and made the same proposal. +Now, times were hard for the music-halls, sucked dry by +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151' name='page_151'></a>151</span> +the enormous salaries that had to be paid. The managers +were standing shoulder to shoulder, in the presence of +the common enemy, the artiste and, more particularly, the +originator of sensations, who is indispensable and who +makes you an offer with a pistol at your head, like a +highwayman demanding your money or your life.</p> +<p>But a turn like that meant an assured success; and the +Kolossal offered Jimmy five hundred marks a night, so as +to spike the Kaiserin’s guns by getting hold of a unique +turn and one not easy to replace; a piece of underhand +work involving two months’ empty houses at the Kaiserin, +which, as it was, had only a second-rate troupe by +way of “sisters,” while at the Kolossal they had Roofers +engaged by the year, real ones, the complete dozen, +words and music guaranteed. And now the Kolossal +would make huge money with “Bridging the Abyss” and +sink its rival; it was a master-stroke. But they knew +everything at the Kaiserin. The Kaiserin also wanted +a “Bridging the Abyss.” It would have one, a better +one, with a finer title: “Arching the Gulf!” And they +would get it for three hundred marks! And they must +be ready, quick, quick, before the Kolossal, and it was +just possible: they had twenty days yet; the apparatus +would be made; they knew the plans, the dimensions; +the house would be fixed up accordingly; they must succeed +at all costs and not let themselves be strangled without +defense! It was a struggle to the death! They +would fight with corpses, if need be! Other people had +broken their backs for them before now; there would +be no difficulty in finding one more to risk his life six +times in six seconds for three hundred marks a night.</p> +<p>And it was at that moment that Trampy offered himself. +They had heard his name: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152' name='page_152'></a>152</span></p> +<p>“Trampy Wheel-Pad, the tramp cyclist with the red-hot +stove?”</p> +<p>“That’s me,” said Trampy.</p> +<p>And, full of self-assurance, he explained the object of +his visit:</p> +<p>“I was the first to construct it; I patented it myself at +Washington; I will produce the documents!”</p> +<p>It will be understood why Trampy wore his air of conquest +when he returned home that day. He had his engagement +in his pocket! He displayed it victoriously to +Lily, passed it over her face, reveled in his revenge. At +last he was going to show Lily whether he was able to +keep a wife or not; and champagne suppers every evening, +by Jove, with girls—no damned lalerperloosers—just +to show her!</p> +<p>That same evening, he left for London, with an advance +from the management, and came back to Berlin +with the apparatus, the whole set up and repaired in a +week, a gang of men working night and day. Followed +practice with the rope, on a movable pulley, from early +dawn, like a man determined to accomplish his breakneck +feat, alive or dead; for Trampy would have done, +no matter what, for Lily to cease being “Miss” Lily, to +admit herself married and married for love and not to +escape whippings, to cease being ashamed of him, to +show herself proud of him, on the contrary, especially before +Jimmy!</p> +<p>Trampy, in his less enthusiastic moments, felt a certain +uneasiness: Jimmy’s proximity, his own patents far +away, in America. But he assumed a bold face, declared +himself the inventor, practised unrelentingly, with hatred +of his rival in his heart. This hatred seemed to increase +his powers of work. He practised, practised. He had a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153' name='page_153'></a>153</span> +lively intelligence, if his heart was a trifle flabby. And he +was very skilful, besides, when he condescended to take +the trouble. He was a quick worker: in less than twenty +days everything was ready, and “Arching the Gulf” +sprawled over the hoardings of Berlin, side by side with +“Bridging the Abyss.” One saw nothing else; and the +Kaiserin opened its doors forty-eight hours before Jimmy. +It was a huge success. Trampy received an ovation +when, after the release of the terrible springs which +flung the bike from one pedestal to another, in five seconds +he fell on the mattresses outspread to receive him, +behind a cloth.</p> +<p>It goes without saying that Jimmy was present at the +show. He was smashed before he had even begun! +There, before his eyes, was his own invention worked by +another! He had expected competition, of course; it was +impossible, he knew, to discover anything that wasn’t +copied at once; snatchers of ideas, who prowl around +artistes, plagiarists, pirates, swarmed as thick as any +other sort of thieves. And, as ill luck would have it, +though his turn was difficult to perform, the apparatus, +at least, was simple to construct: four powerful springs, +screwed down with a jack, which the weight of the leaping +cyclist, as he fell upon each pedestal, released one +after the other, causing him to take enormous jumps +forward. It was an ideal breakneck machine, easy to carry +about; only the calculations had been difficult. They had +cost him a lot of trouble to establish; and now another +was profiting by them! Perhaps some one had patented +the invention before him! For he, too, before showing it +in public, had patented it in England and Germany; and +his anger knew no bounds, his energy was increased fourfold +when he learned the name of the plagiarist: Trampy +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154' name='page_154'></a>154</span> +again! Trampy, who had stolen his love, who had stolen +his Lily ... and who was now stealing his idea ... +robbing him of the fruit of his labor! Jimmy, in spite of +his fury, resolved to keep calm: the law first. He was +protected by the law, unless—and that was impossible—unless +Trampy had had the same idea as himself before +him and taken out his patents before the publication in +<i>Engineering</i>. Jimmy showed a prompt decision, a feverish +activity. First of all, he must put the law in motion, +bring an action against Trampy, telegraph to the patent +office at Washington to ascertain the date. Meanwhile, he +made his first appearance on the day fixed for it. His success +was even greater than Trampy’s; his leaps were +twice as wide, more in accordance with his courage. +The way in which he “bridged the abyss,” in the huge +hall where he gave his show, was enough to prove that +he was the inventor, the creator, the great, typical, daring +performer, who, disclaiming death, marches to glory and +fortune even as heroes, flag in hand, rush to the assault +under fire.</p> +<p>It was a bolt from the blue for the Kaiserin when the +little paper arrived, the injunction against “Arching the +Gulf.” A steamer caught in a cyclone would undergo +much the same disablement, under a sea sweeping her +from stem to stern, swamping the saloons, drowning the +very rats in the hold. Jimmy’s active inquiries had not +taken long: telegram followed upon telegram; the British +consul woke up. The law at Washington was formal +and precise: nothing could be patented that had been +known, or used, or published before the patent was +applied for. Now the article in <i>Engineering</i>, of course, +appeared prior to the step taken by Trampy. And in Germany, +also, Jimmy won his case; the court found in favor +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155' name='page_155'></a>155</span> +of the absolute novelty of the invention. The Kaiserin +could not give its performance short of paying five hundred +marks a night to its rival, the Kolossal. This meant +the wreck of “Arching the Gulf;” and Trampy came +down with it. For a few days, he led a terrible life, a +desperate struggle, made efforts in every direction; but, +at last, worried, hustled, driven to bay, Trampy disappeared +into the darkness, while Jimmy, freed from this +enervating opposition and feeling sure of himself henceforward, +gained fresh courage, added another arch to +“Bridging the Abyss.”</p> +<p>It was done, he had made his start, he had a name, he +was the man who draws crowds; he received brilliant +proposals from all sides, from the Western Trust, among +others. He felt himself somebody; and money also was +coming in. He could at last realize what he had in his +head ... in the absence of love there would be fame +... oh, something a thousand times more sensational +than “Bridging the Abyss,” more modern, more scientific, +something which he confided to nobody, which he kept +locked up in his brain, in his heart, like a love passion, +a thing which would be his alone, this time, which no one +could take from him! For it would not be a question of a +spring and a click, only. The thing moved in his breast, +lived in his brain. When he thought of it, his cheeks became +hollow with ambition, his eyes lit up. He seemed +to tower over immense perspectives; and, from that +height, Trampy appeared to him so small, so small, so +really small that he felt his anger decrease. And then +there was Lily! To send Trampy to his wife with a black +eye or a bloody nose, to turn the husband into an object +of ridicule to his wife, that was impossible for him; it +would have shown lack of respect for Lily, poor darling; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156' name='page_156'></a>156</span> +he would not humiliate her in her man! She loved him, +perhaps, in the illusion of her seventeen years! Hurt +<i>her</i>? Never! Jimmy wiped the episode from the slate; +hard as it was, he forgave that highway robber, in the +name of his dead love.</p> +<p>Ah, if he could have seen Lily when Trampy was +driven to confess his discomfiture to her! He would +have been revenged offhand! Lily seethed with rage +against her husband, that footy rotter! What! Was that +his great scheme? Did he call that an idea? How often +had not Jimmy spoken to her about it! It was pinned +on the wall, it lay about in the Gresse Street workshop +for months. She remembered seeing the plans, the diagrams, +the drawings in the papers. Jimmy had explained +everything to her at the time when he was still a josser. +And Trampy had stolen it from him, stolen it, stolen it! +Oh, he would make her die of shame!</p> +<p>It was a terrible dispute, a real “playing humanity,” +with threats, clenched fists, broken crockery strewing the +floor.</p> +<p>“To humiliate me like that before Jimmy!” said Lily, +furious.</p> +<p>“Drop that about Jimmy!” snarled Trampy, green with +jealousy. “I won’t have you mention him!”</p> +<p>“I shall mention him if I like! Jimmy is a son of a +gun! Very well! But he’s a man! He’s worth two of +you.”</p> +<p>Trampy strode up to her with his fist raised.</p> +<p>“If you touch me,” cried Lily, seizing the lamp, “if +you touch me, I’ll smash it over your head!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157' name='page_157'></a>157</span> +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>When Trampy received the visit of the <i>Gerichtsdiener</i>, +with the bill of costs to pay—for the Kolossal sued the +Kaiserin for damages and the Kaiserin came down upon +Trampy—when Trampy learned that, he became a +limp rag. Already he saw himself dragged before the +courts, his whole past laid bare: two wives on his hands, +for all he knew; Lily crushing him with her scorn; Jimmy +triumphant.</p> +<p>Trampy had a moment of real despair. Lily preferred +him like that, humbled at her feet. She seemed to understand +her husband, a man spoiled by easy conquests, +a boozer, a rake, who had taken too much upon himself +when he wedded a wife. Trampy was certainly not made +for marriage: having a wife was a different thing from +having thirty-six girls. His heart, weakened with premature +enjoyment, was no longer made for real love. +All this he too now perceived; and, in spite of himself, +realizing his unworthiness, he felt overcome by an ever-increasing +jealousy.</p> +<p>Those were melancholy weeks in the small room. He +sat for hours brooding over his disgrace. Lily silently +turned this time of rest to account and mended her costumes, +sewed spangles on her bodices, beside the earthenware +stove, on which the stew was bubbling; and then +came the meal, on the table hastily cleared of the mass +of ribbons, thread and needles, to make room for the +plates. Trampy choked as he swallowed that dinner +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158' name='page_158'></a>158</span> +which he had not earned, sighed sadly for the good cheer +of his dreams, the champagne suppers with girls. He +gulped down his meagre fare in silence, he who had +known the gay junketings, the noisy laughter and the +“Roman nights!” To go from there and drown his sorrows +in the bar next door was but a step. And Trampy +had sorrows outside his recent defeat: sorrows which +were even more bitter. He felt that, this time, he was +losing Lily.</p> +<p>Lily was surrounded with sympathy. When she went +the round of the agencies, the pros courted her. They +looked upon Lily in the light of a wife tired of her husband. +They prowled round that possible prey. A Lily +was worth the having, meant an assured income for +whoever succeeded in winning her affections and managing +her properly: not with brutality, no, rather not; +home joys, like Mr. Fuchs! Who was destined one day +to own those full-blown seventeen years, those twinkling +legs, that lissom body, trained to spin round and round, +unerring and exact? What lucky dog would have her +for himself, would succeed in making her love him? +They pitied Lily openly, to disgust her with her husband +and hasten on the catastrophe. Trampy? He was no +husband for her! They, ah, yes, now that was a different +matter! And they talked of the dangers attendant upon +Trampy’s mode of life; the impersonator told her of the +terrible diseases brought on by constant tippling; they +exaggerated it all on purpose, amused themselves by +frightening her; until Lily, sometimes, would look upon +herself as a pretty little gazelle chained to a mangy bear.</p> +<p>Trampy suspected all this, having himself, in the old +days, in the time of his glory, been one of those who +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159' name='page_159'></a>159</span> +hovered round wives ready for divorce, helping them, if +need be. He could have smashed the face of that green-eyed +impersonator. There was also that architect, that +theater-builder, Harrasford’s friend: he was passing +through Berlin and Lily had taken his fancy the other +evening, at the café; he had patted her cheek gaily:</p> +<p>“I knew you when you were ‘that high.’ You used +to sit on my knee. How beautiful you’ve grown!”</p> +<p>There appeared to be an infinity of people who had +known Lily when she was “that high.” They paid her +more and more attention ... and then they believed +her to be looked after by Jimmy. That again was a +friendship dating back to her childhood, they said: Jimmy, +the bill-topper. He, too, had known her when she was +“that high.”</p> +<p>The greater part of this talk reached Trampy’s ears. +Oh, he could have killed that Jimmy! But he was obliged +to hold his tongue. Jimmy had him under his heel, with +that crushing lawsuit.</p> +<p>They did not even dare speak of it, so painful was the +subject. The little table by the earthenware stove separated +them like a wall; and there was one thing always +between them: Jimmy. Trampy never mentioned his +name now. He would have had too much to say.... +And there were continual summonses, always; and lawyers, +always; and costs, always. Money melted away, +like butter in the sun. Lily was tired of it; and an agony +overcame her at the thought of leading a life like that +for the rest of her days:</p> +<p>“Oh,” she said, “he’s taking the very bread from our +mouths, with his lawsuit! And I haven’t a decent hat +to wear.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160' name='page_160'></a>160</span></p> +<p>“He’ll drive us to the workhouse,” grumbled Trampy, +staring before him, with folded arms.</p> +<p>“It’s your fault!” Lily began, but soon stopped: the +subject led to a surfeit of quarreling.</p> +<p>But, in her own mind:</p> +<p>“That son of a gun of a Jimmy!” she thought. “All +the same, who would ever have believed it of him? Can +he guess that all of this falls upon me?”</p> +<p>“Suppose you were to go and see him,” said Trampy, +at his wits’ end, one day when he had exhausted himself +in stormy explanations with the manager of the Kaiserin.</p> +<p>“I go and see Jimmy?” exclaimed Lily. “What for?”</p> +<p>“To try and arrange things,” replied Trampy, dropping +his head. “No one but you could ...”</p> +<p>“I’ll think about it, I’ll see,” said Lily.</p> +<p>But she had to get used by degrees to the idea of going +and seeing that Jimmy who was now ruining her. A +strange curiosity, nevertheless, drove her toward that +conqueror, once a bike-cleaning workman, who was now +topping the bill at Berlin and making as much money by +himself as a whole program put together. He would receive +her kindly, she was sure of that. Oh and then she +wanted to tell him that she had had nothing to do with +that business of the patents ... that she did not +approve of Trampy’s conduct ...! And then he +could give her news of Pa and Ma, as he had come from +London, where he must have seen them! And she was +dying to know! The idea was increasing with her that +life with Trampy had become impossible. And, in case +she should leave him, she dreaded finding herself alone. +Already there were all those offers being made to her, +a married woman, driving her mad! She, Lily Clifton, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161' name='page_161'></a>161</span> +was treated like a “Parisienne”: she hated that sort! +To walk about the stage, two by two, might pass; but +it was possible to go too far, like the conductor of the +orchestra, who, the other day, tried to kiss her in her +dressing-room, married woman though she was! Then +what would it be when she traveled alone! On the continent, +too! Oh, she would have liked to be a good little +wife! But, as that could not be, better go back to her Pa +and Ma and have a home, a real one, with a servant in it. +She was yearning for a home. But how would she be received +in that case? Would they put the blame on her? +Had they forgiven her? Had she a Pa and Ma still? +That was what she wanted to know.</p> +<p>Lily would have liked to look handsome and elegant +on the day when she went to Jimmy, so as to show him +that he was not the only one who made a lot of money; +but she felt very small and terribly excited. The hotel +itself, the great clock, the waiters, everything made an +impression on her, so different from her boarding-house +in the Akerstrasse. She felt like running away after +knocking at his door; and Jimmy opened it with the preoccupied +air of a man who is disturbed at an inconvenient +moment. But suddenly he put out his hand in hearty +greeting:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily! Come in.”</p> +<p>Lily entered a bright sitting-room, neatly furnished +with a sofa and comfortable chairs; no bed; a room which +served only for that. She at once felt more at her ease. +Jimmy motioned her to a seat near a table covered with +papers, full of marks and signs which she did not understand, +and books, rulers and compasses. She tried to be +simple and dignified; apologized for interrupting him: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162' name='page_162'></a>162</span></p> +<p>“Brain-work, I see,” she said, pointing to the papers. +“That’s hard, too, I suppose,” she added, to say something, +for a start, like talking about the weather.</p> +<p>“A matter of habit, like the bike,” said Jimmy, in a +tone of conviction. “Sit down, Lily, there in that big +arm-chair; you’re not disturbing me.”</p> +<p>“’K you,” said Lily, sitting down, feeling reassured +by his cordial welcome and thinking that, at least, he was +polite.</p> +<p>“I am glad to see you again, Lily,” Jimmy went on, +taking a chair himself. “Always glad to see you. And +how are you? Keeping well?”</p> +<p>“’K you,” said Lily.</p> +<p>“I’m very glad to hear it,” said Jimmy, scrutinizing Lily +with great kindness and trying not to see her preoccupied +expression. “I know what brings you here, Lily. You’re +a dear little thing, a kid, eh? A real kid at heart, aren’t +you? I bet you I guess. I’ve come from London. You +want to hear the latest news of your Pa and Ma, eh? +You’re not angry with them, I hope? Oh, it would be +wrong of you to be angry with them still! They’re very +fond of you, you know. They cried when you went away, +Lily. Your ... going away,” Jimmy insisted, with +a quaver in his voice, “was ... a great blow ... +to them ... too.”</p> +<p>“How do they get on without me?” asked Lily eagerly, +not wishing to break down and cry before Jimmy. “Poor +Pa! Yes, he was fond of me. He never let me fall on +purpose. He did not force me to work when I was ill.”</p> +<p>“Your Pa!” Jimmy broke in, glad of the chance to +give a fresh turn to the conversation. “Why, there’s no +harm in him! Your Pa’s an artiste in love with his +art, that’s all! I shouldn’t be surprised if the troupe +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163' name='page_163'></a>163</span> +made a hit yet. It’s had a success of a sort already—in +the small halls—at Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells. +Your Pa just does without you as well as he can. He +runs after his pupils all day long, damn it!” said Jimmy, +with a laugh. “Your cousin stars.”</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg163.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 271px; height: 365px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 271px;'> +COUSIN DAISY<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>“<i>Who</i> stars?” asked Lily.</p> +<p>“Your cousin Daisy. She came as soon as you ... +as you went away and offered to take your place. Pa +Clifton sent her to the right-about, treated her like a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164' name='page_164'></a>164</span> +... like an I don’t know what, but she returned to +the charge. She’s doing very well now. She tries to be +like you.”</p> +<p>“No! Impossible!” exclaimed Lily. “What, that fat +freak?”</p> +<p>“And your Pa will succeed,” Jimmy hastened to add. +“You’ll see. You ought to be proud of having a Pa like +that.”</p> +<p>“Yes, in a sense,” said Lily, who felt a certain satisfaction +at being the daughter of her Pa.</p> +<p>He was a bit harsh at times; but a man like her Pa, or +like Jimmy, was much better than her loafer of a tramp +cyclist!</p> +<p>“And ... Ma?” asked Lily.</p> +<p>“Your Ma,” said Jimmy, in a lower voice, “cried ... +oh, how she cried when she found that you had gone! No +doubt, she exaggerated any wrong she had done you. It +seems she fell upon her knees and prayed and asked for +forgiveness.”</p> +<p>“Forgiveness? What for? Of whom?” Lily inquired.</p> +<p>“Why,” said Jimmy, in a serious tone, “of whom do +you think people ask forgiveness, when they are alone, +on their knees?”</p> +<p>“Oh,” said Lily, greatly touched, “I understand! So +they didn’t put the blame on me?”</p> +<p>“What blame?”</p> +<p>“For my marriage,” said Lily, lowering her eyes.</p> +<p>“No ... if you had gone off to live with him +... oh, not you, not you, I know!” protested Jimmy, +seeing a gesture of Lily’s. “But marriage is different, I +suppose. You had the right, you were old enough to go +away with the man you loved.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165' name='page_165'></a>165</span></p> +<p>Jimmy turned pale as he said this; but Lily, hanging +her head and red with shame, did not notice it.</p> +<p>“What!” said Jimmy. “You’re blushing! Do you regret +it?”</p> +<p>Lily did not reply.</p> +<p>“Then,” continued Jimmy slowly, “what they said—I +wouldn’t believe it, but you know they say a lot of +things—is it true?”</p> +<p>She nodded yes and raised her eyes to him with a sad, +weary smile.</p> +<p>“He doesn’t love you? And ... and ... +you, Lily,” asked Jimmy, taking her hand in his, “don’t +you love him?”</p> +<p>“Certainly not!” said Lily, with such an accent of conviction +and such a look of disgust that Jimmy was, at one +and the same time, delighted to the bottom of his heart +and pained to the verge of tears.</p> +<p>Poor Lily! He now noticed her pallor, the dark rims +round her eyes, that exquisite face refined by inmost +grief. Lily, upon whom, since her visit to the shop in +Gresse Street, he had built his hopes of happiness! It +seemed to him like yesterday and already it was the distant +past. Was that what her rebellion, her bid for freedom +had ended in? Was that the crowning point of her +hard life? Lily, fashioned to be the companion of a loving +heart, was the prey of a footy rotter! Oh, if Jimmy +had not controlled himself, if he had not clenched his +teeth, for fear of talking! If he had listened to his anger, +let loose the storm that raged within him, shouted out +what he felt! But what would be the good of telling her +his love? Why add to Lily’s sorrows by letting her know +what might have been and thus cause trouble in her +household, when he wished for one thing only, Lily’s happiness? +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166' name='page_166'></a>166</span> +Suppose she did not love her husband: Trampy, +alas, unworthy though he was, remained her husband, +nevertheless! And there was no hope of breaking the +chain. The letters from Denver and Houston were anything +but encouraging. No proofs, no recollections of +Trampy’s marriage over there. So there seemed no way +out.</p> +<p>Nor did he wish to incense Trampy’s jealousy. Lily +would have had to bear the brunt of it ... as in the +old days, with Ma’s temper. Oh, there was no doubt +about it: Jimmy, to hold his tongue now, needed more +courage than when risking his life six times in six seconds! +But what was the use of fighting against fate? +Better submit, when there was no remedy, and strive for +peace!</p> +<p>“Everything gets straight sooner or later,” Jimmy went +on. “Many lives that once seemed spoiled have become +quite endurable. Time is the great healer. Trampy, no +doubt, will get over his faults. He will learn to appreciate +you. Have patience. Don’t exaggerate your bothers, +Lily. There are others unhappier than yourself. +You have a claim to happiness. You will know it yet. +Just think. You’re so young, you have all your life before +you.”</p> +<p>“The simpleton!” thought Lily. “It’s easy for him to +talk. But then ... why was he so jealous? Why +did he tell Pa about me? But for him, I should be at +home now!”</p> +<p>It was certain that, notwithstanding his kindly reception, +Jimmy now seemed to be taking Trampy’s part, +as formerly he had sided with Pa and Ma. And he was +lalerperlooser enough to ask Lily if her husband knew +that she had come to see him: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167' name='page_167'></a>167</span></p> +<p>“I hope he knows, Lily. We must have no secrets: +did you tell him?”</p> +<p>“He sent me,” she said, resolving to tell everything +frankly, since that was what she had come for and not, +after all, to talk about love ... money, only, and +business ... it was a question of bread and butter +to her.</p> +<p>“Ah! He did!” said Jimmy, a little surprised.</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Lily, “it’s about that lawsuit.”</p> +<p>“Speak quite frankly, Lily. Tell me everything,” said +Jimmy, very calm.</p> +<p>“Well,” said Lily, yielding before his air of candor, +“Trampy is at the end of his tether; he has no money”—she +colored up to the eyes—“no money, no work; the +law-costs ...”</p> +<p>“And whose fault is that?” interrupted Jimmy, rising +and picking up a cigarette, so as to have something to +fumble at with his fingers. “Whose fault is it, Lily, if +not that ... well, if not Trampy’s? Isn’t it fair +that he should pay for it? It would really become too +easy, else, to steal other people’s ideas! You know quite +well, Lily—you saw it at my place, on the wall—is it my +invention or is it not? And here comes Trampy,” he continued, +crunching up his cigarette with a nervous gesture, +“and patents it ... as if it were his own. It’s a bit +too much, you know!”</p> +<p>“Jimmy,” cried Lily, starting up from her chair, “I +swear to you that I had nothing to do with it! If I had +known, Jimmy, I would have stopped it! I call it stealing, +as you do.”</p> +<p>“Oh, I’m quite sure of that, Lily! I never thought it +was you! Calm yourself; sit down, do,” said Jimmy, +relieved at the sight of Lily’s indignation, as she stood +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168' name='page_168'></a>168</span> +before him with blazing eyes and her face crimson with +shame.</p> +<p>“Important tricks like that!” went on Lily, sitting +down again. “No, those have no right to be copied. It’s +brain-work. You designed it yourself.”</p> +<p>“Yes, but about the present,” said Jimmy, with a serious +air. “I can’t give in to Trampy. I’m bound to defend +myself. You came to see me about my action, +Lily. I can’t say anything on the subject. It’s ... +Trampy’s business, I suppose! Why, what would you do +in my place, Lily?”</p> +<p>“I should do as you’re doing, Jimmy, you’re perfectly +right,” said Lily, very low, without raising her head. +“But couldn’t one come to terms ... avoid a lawsuit +... and not waste all that money on jossers? +What do you gain by it yourself? We can’t pay up, +Jimmy: those costs are breaking us.”</p> +<p>“What do you mean by ‘us’?”</p> +<p>“Trampy isn’t working,” continued Lily. “He hasn’t +done anything for a long time.”</p> +<p>“But then,” asked Jimmy, stopping in front of her, +“how does he live?”</p> +<p>“I ... I’m earning money,” explained Lily, +blushing, ashamed to own her distress.</p> +<p>Oh, it was hard for her, Lily Clifton, to have no money +and to confess it to Jimmy, that josser, who was making +his five hundred marks a day! Jimmy saw her before +him, huddled in her chair ... her faded hat, her +mean gown. He took in everything at a glance. Poor +Lily, who used to dream of dresses, to be reduced to that! +Then he understood. Pity moved him at the sight of that +poor Lily. It was all very well for him to say, just now, +“Business is business,” and to ask, “What would you do +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169' name='page_169'></a>169</span> +in my place?” He knew what he would do. A lawsuit +was not a question of sentiment, everybody knew that; +but still, it was no longer between men....</p> +<p>“Listen, Lily,” he said, putting his hand kindly on her +shoulder, “if all this is to fall upon you, we must see how +we can arrange matters. Sorry you didn’t come sooner; +I don’t want to add to your burdens, Lily, heaven knows +I don’t! I never thought of that. I ought to have suspected, +perhaps. However, I will withdraw the case. +I’ll manage. And the costs ... well, I’ll pay them +myself, if necessary, for you, Lily, for you; because I +knew you when you were ‘that high’ ... no, not +quite so small; how old were you? Thirteen ... +and such a little thing, such a dear little wee thing. Do +you remember when I made night and day in your cabin, +by just touching my levers? And then it seems to me that +I always knew you: in Mexico, in India, in South Africa, +at the time of the elephants and the tiny birds. And then +later, that other Lily, the London one: the one of only a +few months ago. The one for whom ...” continued +Jimmy, in a voice smothered with emotion. “The Lily of +Rathbone Place. The Lily of Gresse Street. That little +toque, which suited you so well and which you complained +of ... you poor little Lily!... You poor +silly little thing! There, go home now and make your +mind easy, as far as I’m concerned, Lily. None of your +troubles shall come from me. Besides, as they say, a bad +settlement is better than the best lawsuit. I’m doing it +for your sake. Well, is that all right?”</p> +<p>“Oh, how kind you are!” she said, raising her eyes to +him, with a tear in them. “Why, Jimmy, you’re not so +bad, after all!”</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Jimmy, lighting a cigarette. “I’m no better +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170' name='page_170'></a>170</span> +than most, Lily, and no worse. Flesh and blood, like +the rest. And, besides, for you, Lily ... If ever you +need me, Lily, if I can be of any use to you ...”</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>“For me,” thought Lily, as she returned home, “for +me. Ah, if I had known! Ah, when I think that he, +too, wanted to marry me, what a fool I was!” she said, +with a sigh.</p> +<p>She still felt in her own palm the gentle, manly pressure +of Jimmy’s hand. She still heard the kind words +with which he had comforted her on the threshold. Goodness, +how happy she would have been with a man like +him! Her ill-will disappeared. He was no longer a +cur, that josser, but a gentleman, rather, a brother, a +friend.... And she was proud, also, that Jimmy, +who was so busy and making such a lot of money, had +promised to come and applaud her, one of these evenings, +at her theater, at Kleim’s Garden, before his own +turn at the Kolossal. Oh, wouldn’t she work hard that +night! She would do all her tricks! She was bent on +pleasing him. And how vulgar and common Trampy +appeared in comparison. However, there was no help +for it now; and Lily hastened home to bring him the +good news.... In any case, Trampy would be +grateful to her for what she had done for him. As a +matter of fact, it had cost her an effort to go and pay +this visit.</p> +<p>She happened to run up against Trampy coming out of +the bar, where, according to his custom, he had been +drowning his cares. He had a moment of delight on +learning the result of the visit, but, mad with jealousy, +at once adopted a lofty tone, so as not to have to thank +her: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171' name='page_171'></a>171</span></p> +<p>“I knew he would knuckle under!” he said, without +looking at Lily. “The braggart! He prefers a settlement, +eh? And quite right too! He knows he’s in the wrong. +He’s retreating, he’s afraid.”</p> +<p>“Afraid of what?” asked Lily, bewildered.</p> +<p>“Afraid of me. He knows it won’t pay to try my +patience too far!”</p> +<p>“Afraid? Jimmy?” said Lily, indignant at all that +foolery. “Do you think he’s done that because he’s +afraid?”</p> +<p>“And for what other reason would he have given in so +soon?”</p> +<p>“He did it to please me, he did it for <i>me</i>, damn it, for +<i>me</i>!” said Lily. “You’re rid of your lawsuit: you ought +to talk differently and thank me!”</p> +<p>“And why should he do it to please you? What is +there between you?” asked Trampy, looking her in the +face.</p> +<p>“You’re drunk!” said Lily furiously, with her hand +ready to scratch.</p> +<p>“No scenes in the street!” said Trampy. “We’ll go +into this at home ...”</p> +<p>“Then I shan’t come in!” said Lily, abruptly turning +her back on him. “I’m going to the theater!”</p> +<p>She had nothing to do on the stage; only the idea of +being alone in the room with Trampy seemed intolerable +to her. At the least discussion, Lily felt it, she would +have thrown the lamp at his head, so great was her indignation +at his insolence!</p> +<p>She was boiling over with anger when she reached the +theater. There were people practising; it was the time +for it. Lily went up to her dressing-room, shifted things +in her trunk, anyhow, for something to do. The idea that +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172' name='page_172'></a>172</span> +her husband thought her capable of anything wrong made +her angry. Oh, to get a divorce, to part from him! As +this could not go on for ever, it might as well be done at +once; but it would be better if there were no fault on her +part. A divorce, yes; but with the honors on her side; a +divorce in her favor! Patience, the opportunity would +come! It ought to be quite easy, with the girls whom +Trampy beguiled, the love letters which he received, to +catch him in the act, cover him with ridicule, get the best +of him. Oh, if she only could! To be a poor little victim, +how touching! A dear little outraged wife!</p> +<p>“You fool, if I catch you!” she said.</p> +<p>Then another idea passed through her brain. Oh, if +it were true! She would have danced for joy! Trampy’s +marriage in America.</p> +<p>“Is it true? Is it true? God above, grant that it be +true!”</p> +<p>It was possible. Already, a few days before, the Jim +Crows who hovered round her had talked about it, in +covert words, in the hope of making things worse. There +must be some truth in it. There was so much news going +from mouth to mouth: Lillian, Edith and Polly were +the rage in Chicago.... That poor boy-violinist: +at Budapest, the stuffed seat to his trousers had slipped +from its place and allowed the dog’s teeth to reach the +living flesh; he had had to spend a week in bed with poultices.... +Harrasford was contemplating a theatrical +trust on the Continent, planning a model music-hall +in Paris.... There were Jimmy’s successes, his +ambitions.... Amid all this news, to which Lily +listened, sometimes absent-mindedly, sometimes with interest, +among these adventures dating from everywhere—names +which she greeted like old acquaintances, with a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173' name='page_173'></a>173</span> +little nod: “Denver? Yes, I know; a big flat stage. +Mexico? I remember!”—among all those tales, Lily +pricked her ears when she heard the name of Ave Maria +coupled with Trampy’s. She had a vague recollection of +Ave Maria’s flight, after her departure from Mexico; +was it with Trampy? Were they really married then? +Oh, if it were only true! God above, grant that it were +true!</p> +<p>Lily, haunted by this idea of a divorce which would set +her free, had rummaged in Trampy’s trunk, among his +programs and posters. It was full of letters, photographs +of girls in outrageous hats, in tucked-up skirts, in tights, +with inscriptions. All this dated back to before the marriage, +a collection of treasures which he had not had the +courage to destroy. She had hoped to find some proof, +some clue; but no, there was nothing serious in it. Lily +did not give up, for all that; on the contrary. After the +visit to Jimmy, which made Trampy so meanly jealous, +she lost no opportunity of inquiring. But Martello himself, +the father, never had news of his daughter. He +hadn’t heard for ever so long; and it was to no avail that +Lily asked about Ave Maria, the one who ran away with +a man, a great artiste; she always received the same reply:</p> +<p>“Ave Maria? Don’t know the name. Ave Maria? +Haven’t seen her since ...”</p> +<p>But Jimmy, always; Jimmy here, Jimmy there; they +talked about him all the time: his ideas; something new +he had invented; something no one had ever seen: much +cleverer than “Bridging the Abyss,” it seemed; but nobody +knew what.</p> +<p>“I know!” said Lily, with a well-informed air and +very proud of knowing Jimmy and of letting people +think ... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174' name='page_174'></a>174</span></p> +<p>“Do you know Jimmy?”</p> +<p>“Ever since I was that high,” answered Lily. “He +used to hold me on his knees.”</p> +<p>“And what is his new trick?”</p> +<p>“I’m not allowed to tell. He asked me not to say.”</p> +<p>Everybody praised her for her discretion. The sympathy +with which she was surrounded increased.</p> +<p>“Jimmy,” they hinted. “Now there’s a fellow you +ought to have married, instead of your ...”</p> +<p>“Not a word against my husband,” she said, like a good +and devoted little wife. “I won’t have him insulted.”</p> +<p>That did not prevent her from laughing with her +friends. She felt a need of forgetting, or she would have +died of boredom, with a husband like that. She was +heavy at heart, sometimes. She was a woman, not an +icicle. She felt herself made for love. She was flesh +and blood, like Jimmy. She would have liked some one +to console her, to talk softly to her, as Glass-Eye Maud +used to do. There were plenty willing to play the part +of Glass-Eye Maud, no doubt: the female-impersonator, +for instance, with the green eyes. Oh, she would have +liked to be hugged, kissed full on the mouth, or else +stroked and petted gently! No home, no happiness; marriage +without love; that was her life henceforth. These +stage friendships were a relief.</p> +<p>The Bambinis romped with her. She loved their +gaiety, liked to touch their sturdy little limbs. That +evening, Lily, who was ready for her performance early, +was having fun with them. Dressed in her pink tights, +she looked like a blithe nymph playing with rollicking +cupids.</p> +<p>“What a charming group!” said a voice behind her. +“If I were a painter, Lily, I would do you like that!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175' name='page_175'></a>175</span></p> +<p>It was Jimmy, who had come to see her on the stage, as +he had promised.</p> +<p>“Am I spoiling your game?” he asked. “It’s so pretty! +It makes me want to kiss the lot of you!”</p> +<p>“Well, booby!” said Lily, all excited and laughing. +“Why don’t you? You daren’t!”</p> +<p>“I daren’t! I’ll show you whether I dare ... +and ... I’m stronger than I look!”</p> +<p>And thereupon he caught hold of Lily and lifted her +like a feather—Lily, all taken aback, had not time to say +“Oof!” so great was her surprise—and Jimmy crossed +the whole stage with Lily in his arms, shouting to the +manager:</p> +<p>“Look what a dear little baby I’ve found! Isn’t she +sweet, eh?”</p> +<p>And then, in the wings, he gave her a good big kiss +on the cheek before putting her down.</p> +<p>The people around them laughed, applauded that stage +joke:</p> +<p>“Jimmy, her old friend,” they said, “knew her when +she was that high.”</p> +<p>Lily was very proud of it. And, a few minutes after, +when he had left her to take a seat in front, Lily jumped +into the saddle and rode round and round, without a hitch, +smiling to the audience, smiling to Jimmy in a front box, +Jimmy to whom she was grateful for coming to see her: +a famous bill-topper putting himself out for her ... +before everybody! She was faultless that evening, did a +dozen twirls on the back-wheel, made a record, was grand.</p> +<p>Trampy, meanwhile, was waiting for Lily outside, in +the passage leading to the stage-door. He had not seen +Jimmy kiss Lily, but he saw him carry her across the +stage, just as he was coming on himself, so he had turned +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176' name='page_176'></a>176</span> +and hurried out to avoid scandal ... giving +way to his wife, who worked while he did not. He +had gone out at once, time to run to the bar and drown +two or three sorrows, and he was waiting for her now, +without paying any attention to the girls passing. As +soon as he saw Lily, he seized her by the arm:</p> +<p>“I’ve had enough of this,” he said. “I saw you, you +and your Jimmy! You can’t deny it this time!”</p> +<p>“Oh, Trampy, don’t insult me like that!” protested +Lily. “Why do you always say ‘my’ Jimmy? One can +have a laugh and a joke on the stage without meaning +wrong, you know one can. Besides, if you didn’t like to +see him carry me in his arms, you ought to have smashed +his face, without so much talk.”</p> +<p>“I didn’t want to make a fuss.”</p> +<p>“You were afraid to. You’re afraid of him, that’s +what you are!”</p> +<p>“Stop jeering at me!” said Trampy, shaking her violently. +“You’re dragging me in the mud; it’s like those +whippings of yours! I’m tired of the affronts you put +upon me! You ought to have married your Jimmy and +left me in peace.”</p> +<p>“I can’t say,” sneered Lily, “that I remember running +after you!”</p> +<p>“That Jimmy!” repeated Trampy. “I’ll kill that fellow +like a dog! If I don’t do it now, I will later, in a year, in +a hundred years, if necessary. I’ll kill him like a dog!”</p> +<p>Lily gave a little laugh as she went out, followed by +Trampy. She did not wish, in that lobby, before the +people passing, to look like a woman insulted by her husband. +She laughed bravely, as she used to, on the stage, +with Ma, in the days of the great smackings. To see her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177' name='page_177'></a>177</span> +laugh, one would have thought that Trampy was telling +her a story; and he repeated:</p> +<p>“I’ll kill him like a dog, like a dog!”</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Lily, who knew Trampy. “You talk too +much to act.”</p> +<p>“We shall see. Where’s your Jimmy hiding?”</p> +<p>“You’d be nicely caught, if you met him,” said Lily, +who had just noticed Jimmy leaving the music-hall to go +to the Kolossal: “there he is, behind you.”...</p> +<p>“What’s that? Don’t you try to get at me!” said +Trampy.</p> +<p>“I tell you, he’s behind you, damn it! Turn round and +you’ll see ... if you have eyes to see with.”</p> +<p>Trampy turned round, half-reluctantly: he didn’t like +those jokes, but he didn’t wish to seem afraid.</p> +<p>“Where? Where do you see Jimmy?” he grumbled.</p> +<p>“There, in front of you,” insisted Lily, pointing with +her finger and pushing him by the shoulder. “Off you +go!”</p> +<p>There was no drawing back. He marched straight up +to Jimmy, who did not even recognize him and who +stopped politely. But Trampy had time for reflection, no +doubt: a clearer perception of professional brotherhood. +Better, after all, to remain friends ... among artistes. +And, when he stood before him:</p> +<p>“H’m, h’m. Have you got a light about you, Jimmy? +Give us a match,” said Trampy, taking a cigar from his +pocket.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178' name='page_178'></a>178</span> +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>It stifled Lily, for the moment. She would rather have +received twenty “contracts” with the steel buckle than +see that cowardice in her husband. She had her Pa’s +blood in her, damn it!</p> +<p>“What!” she thought. “He believes me to misconduct +myself with Jimmy, and he is too much of a coward to +object!”</p> +<p>But there was nothing to be done. Trampy was as +incapable of anger as of love. All those years of a low +life had degraded him to that point. And Trampy had +even lost the right to bear Jimmy a grudge, made as +though he had forgotten everything, said that, after all, +it was much better to be friends. And all this under Lily’s +critical eye!</p> +<p>Jimmy! To be obliged to look pleasant at Jimmy! +It gave him a lump in his throat. Fortunately, he had +the others, the crowd of assiduous pros who thronged +round his wife. Against those he gave free scope to his +jealousy, and showed himself as strict with the rest as +he had been accommodating with Jimmy. He meant to +keep an eye on his wife:</p> +<p>“A married woman, on the stage, alone! I won’t have +any more of that!”</p> +<p>He hit upon a contrivance to be always with her: he +would be her “comic.” It was a new system which had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179' name='page_179'></a>179</span> +come into fashion: the most plastic performances spoiled +by the juxtaposition of their caricatures; acrobats, Olympian +gods, parodied by a merry-andrew in a ridiculous +coat: just as though Nunkie Fuchs, for instance, had +taken it into his head to appear with his Three Graces and +mimic their tricks, kicking about at the end of a wire with +his fat, fatherly paunch and his round, silly face.</p> +<p>And Trampy, riding behind Lily, would simply give a +parody of her tricks; it meant little work to him and was +as good a way as another of going on the stage with +her and establishing his title to <i>her</i> work and <i>her</i> salary....</p> +<p>And off they went again, with the basket trunk, and the +bikes; and on the stage, every night, Lily, looking like a +goddess, and Trampy, dressed in rags, went through their +tricks and smiled ... applause for her, always; none +for him, ever. Lily wore a very sad look in consequence, +when they returned to the wings: a poor little wife, so +sorry for her husband; but she triumphed at the bottom +of her heart, while Trampy turned green with spite. He +was furious with Lily: tried to make her fall, pushed her +in turning; but Lily was too clever and sat as firmly on +her bike as Ave Maria walked her slack-wire, when the +brother used to shake it on purpose, whip in hand and +snarling as if to bite.</p> +<p>Oh, if Lily had not made efforts to be a good little wife! +Trampy was becoming unbearable. She posed as the poor +little thing, despised, deceived and betrayed by her husband; +she loved to hear people tell her so, called them to +witness and continued, but without result, to make inquiries +about Ave Maria.</p> +<p>And there were everlasting scenes at home. Lily had +enough of it, more than enough of it! She had even decided +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180' name='page_180'></a>180</span> +to go away, to return to London; but, worn out +with worry, she had to take to her bed, with a high fever. +It was the finishing stroke: no work,—all the savings +gone....</p> +<p>Trampy, fortunately, found an engagement:</p> +<p>“It’s all right, the neighbors will look after you,” he +said, as he took his leave. “A man’s duty is to see that +his wife doesn’t starve, eh, darling? I’m going to make +money, too, and I’ll bring you heaps when I come back; +and I’ll send you some. That’s the sort of man I am. +I don’t talk of ‘<i>my</i> money!’”</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>Lily was left alone in Berlin.</p> +<p>Generally, she hated the hotels frequented by artistes, +but she was very glad to be in one this time. She, poor +little broken-down thing, was not left to the care of a +common servant; she had nice, kind nurses.... And +she had no lack of friends who took interest in her, +very sincerely, for that matter, for she was a favorite +with all of them, that pretty Miss Lily, who would soon +be free....</p> +<p>Lily let herself be coddled. Pending the arrival of +the money which Trampy was to send, she wanted for +nothing, especially in the way of luxuries: chocolates, +sweets, flowers, they brought her everything. Her +friends passing through Berlin, the impersonator, the +Paras, many others, hearing that she was ill, came to see +her, treated her as a lady, cried out how well she was +looking, how pretty she was and how it suited her to be +ill in bed.</p> +<p>Lily thought that very nice, put on a languid air, like a +poor little jaded thing that had got out of gear:</p> +<p>“I shall die of overdoing it, I know I shall,” she said. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181' name='page_181'></a>181</span> +“I’ve been at the bike ever since I was that high”—raising +her hand twelve inches above the bed—“and my heart’s +worn out by the hard work. My knees, too. Sit down +there on the basket trunk. You at the foot of the bed. +Have a chocolate.”</p> +<p>Then she turned over in her sheets, which molded her +firm, plump shape, took a bag of sweets from the chair +beside her and offered it round. Poor little martyr, she +had been forbidden them by the doctor, because of a +cough.... But she took them all the same, merely +for the sake of taking them, with a graceful movement, +her bare arm outstretched, her wrist making a supple +curve, like a swan’s neck, as she dipped her pretty hand +into the bag.</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>In addition to her regular friends, such as the impersonator +or the Paras, others, the people staying in the +hotel, would tap discreetly at the glass door between her +room and the passage, come in on tip-toe, speak in a +whisper.</p> +<p>“What nonsense!” Lily would say. “I’m not dead yet, +you know!”</p> +<p>And she laughed, and “Ugh! Ugh!” a cough or so, +a matter of lifting her embroidered handkerchief to her +mouth, a favorite gesture. And there were stories from +all parts, the cackle of the profession. The Paras were +living together now, as they explained to her. The parrots? +No go; given them up; one had its neck wrung by +a monkey in Chicago; another died of consumption at +Stockholm; the rest of the troupe sold to the stage-doorkeepers +of the different variety-theaters. His sight was +beginning to fail. She wanted smartness; wasn’t—how +should he put it? The husband looked for a word—wasn’t +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182' name='page_182'></a>182</span> +“Tottie” enough. However, they managed somehow, +as “eccentric duetists.” Lily thought that very nice, +those two talents combined, very original; but could they +give her any news of Ave Maria ... a great artiste ... on +the wire?...</p> +<p>If ever Lily might have hoped to receive news of Ave +Maria, it was during this illness, from the artistes who +visited her, on their way from anywhere to God knows +where. Lily had news of everybody: of Mirzah, the white +elephant, who had to be pole-axed for killing his keeper; +of Captain North’s seals; of the Three Graces, who were +doing triumphantly in England; of Poland, the Parisienne, +now starring at Bill and Boom’s. Tom was talked +about: biceps like thighs, now: a hornpipe danced on +the hands. She had news of the Pawnees, of the +Hauptmanns. Roofer was sending out four new troupes, +to Canada, Australia, India, Cape Colony: the Greater-England +Girls. She had news of the New Zealanders +and of her cousin Daisy, who seemed to find the star +business jolly hard work:</p> +<p>“The wind-bag!” said Lily.</p> +<p>They talked of Jimmy, of dogs, cats and monkeys and +of Tom Grave and Butt Snyders, those great breakneck +acrobats: they talked of one and all, but not a word of +Ave Maria. They knew her by reputation, as one who +had been through the mill, more than Lily had, as Lily +modestly admitted.</p> +<p>“Darling,” said the impersonator affectionately, “don’t +bother about that Ave Maria of yours. I’m jealous. Be +mine, darling! How well we two should get on together, +eh, Lily?”</p> +<p>“Hands off!” said Lily. “Be good ... there +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183' name='page_183'></a>183</span> +... like that ... down by your sides ... +or you’ll get a smacking!”</p> +<p>Concerts were got up for Lily’s amusement. Sketch-comedians +pulled their faces: a musician twanged +his banjo. At other times, by closing her eyes, Lily +could have imagined herself in an aviary: the Whistling +Wonder imitated the nightingale, the thrush, the +lark. Another, an equilibrist, showed her how, when +he was obliged to stay in bed with a broken leg and had +nobody to wait on him, he used to wait on himself by +going round the room on his hands ... like that. +Lily was given, for nothing, a performance which was +worth a whole music-hall program. To put everybody at +their ease, Lily told them to smoke, took a puff or two at +a cigarette herself—“Ugh! Ugh!”—almost choked....</p> +<p>They amused themselves, among themselves, free from +any constraint due to the presence of jossers. Lily joked +with them as she used to do with the apprentices in the +mornings, when they showed one another their bruises of +the day before. She made them look at her pigeon’s egg, +on the side of her foot, the little ball-shaped muscle special +to her profession, like the triceps of the pugilist or +the dancing-girls’ calves. She was vain enough to put on +a silk stocking, poked out her foot from under the bedclothes, +let them feel “her egg,” made it jump under their +fingers by a sudden contraction.</p> +<p>“Is that all you’ve got to show us, darling?” asked the +impersonator.</p> +<p>“You don’t want much, I <i>don’t</i> think!” said Lily, pulling +back her foot under the quilt.</p> +<p>The incident was interrupted by new-comers who had +also known Lily when she was that high. They brought +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184' name='page_184'></a>184</span> +fresh news from Lisle Street. They had had a drink with +P. T. Clifton himself, had had a drink with an author who +was writing a book on the business.</p> +<p>“Another josser who’s sure to talk a lot of nonsense!” +cried Lily. “If only they told the truth and described +us as we are, a sight better than the society ladies, who +come and wait for pros outside the stage-door!”</p> +<p>And they went on. The healths they had drunk with +this girl and that girl; and new turns: competitors who +were cropping up ... names ... names ... +Ave Maria? Dead, they said: somewhere in Ecuador or +Peru.</p> +<p>Then Lily stretched herself to her full length in the +sheets, feeling weary, weary, crushed under all that talk.</p> +<p>And Trampy just didn’t write, sent no money at all. +She blushed for him ... in spite of her wish to +catch him tripping, before witnesses. She was ashamed +to be his wife, his only wife, his little wife for ever.</p> +<p>On that day, as it happened, Jimmy came to pay her +a visit. His engagement at the Kolossal was ending. +He was to perform at the London Hippodrome, before +going to the States. A certain air of respect surrounded +him from the moment he entered the room, that Jimmy +who already stood higher than any of them among +the famous bill-toppers! And they gradually retired, +as though Lily would prefer that. It was no use her +saying, “Do stay!” They went all the same; and Lily +was left alone with him, a little embarrassed and yet +flattered at being thought on such good terms with +Jimmy. As for him, he had just heard about Lily’s illness, +Trampy’s absence, and hurried to see her, bringing +her the good news that the lawsuit was over. Trampy +would have nothing more to pay.... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185' name='page_185'></a>185</span></p> +<p>From that day, Jimmy was sometimes seen at Lily’s. +He spoke little, sat down on the basket trunk, listened, +thought of things. He was known to have his mind +full of an invention superior to “Bridging the Abyss,” +one could expect anything from him: a wonderful chap +Jimmy, a bit cracked, though, with ideas of his own +which went the round of the profession and were +variously appreciated. A fund for stage-children; a +reserve upon their earnings, to be banked and kept untouched +till they came of age; a home of rest for the old +and the sick; a weekly matinée for the benefit of the +fund....</p> +<p>Jimmy described the piteous lot of those who grow old +in a profession intended for youth: but a few shillings a +month paid into the fund, a benefit performance or two +... and our home is established and endowed and +we should see no more stars flung aside, to die in hopeless +poverty, after amusing crowds of people for years +and years.</p> +<p>“I’m with you,” said Lily, laughing. “Put me down +for a pension for my old age ... if ever I reach old +age ... ugh, ugh!”</p> +<p>And she coughed, with the embroidered handkerchief +at her lips.</p> +<p>But Lily’s joke was left unechoed: everybody talked +professional shop, quoted figures; the habit of signing contracts, +of avoiding the traps laid by the agents had given +them all a keen sense of business. And the frequent traveling, +in the absence of education, had made them sharp +at understanding, quick in the uptake. Their clean-shaven +faces fell into wise folds, like lawyers’.</p> +<p>Jimmy also explained his idea about the apprentices, +the compulsory so much per cent., the inalienable deposit +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186' name='page_186'></a>186</span> +paid in by the Pas and Mas ... and, much more +still, by the profs and managers....</p> +<p>“Good!” said Lily. “I’m with you!”</p> +<p>There was a general laugh. The Whistling Wonder +interrupted the conversation by quacking like a duck at +Jimmy and cooing like a pigeon at Lily. Jimmy got up +and said good-by, pleased to see Lily making daily +progress.</p> +<p>“Ah, Lily,” they said again, when he had gone, “that’s +the one you ought to have married, not the other!”</p> +<p>And thereupon they began to pursue their favorite +theme and amuse themselves by describing the awful +troubles which she would get into one day with “the +other,” that drunkard;—the man with the thirty-six +girls! And they laughed and they laughed, my! Lily +herself held her sides with laughing.</p> +<p>All this was stage effect, professional exaggeration. +Lily dared not indulge in it before Jimmy. She was +more sincere, always a little embarrassed, in the presence +of that man toward whom everybody was driving her, +as though they all saw farther into her life than she herself +could. She was no longer ill, only tired, with an accumulation +of past wearinesses that made her love to lie +down flat. But she would get up to-morrow, instead of +remaining in bed to see her friends; no humbug before +Jimmy.</p> +<p>The next day when he came, Lily was alone. So much +the better, he had something to say to her. He had +made up his mind that day. His own present prosperity +formed too great a contrast with the poverty of Lily +... that poor kiddie who had run away from home +in pursuit of happiness and whom he now found here, in +this squalid room.... It was all very well to theorize +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187' name='page_187'></a>187</span> +about children who have earned fortunes and who +haven’t a farthing; but that was mere talk! Suppose he +helped Lily a little in the meantime. He had prepared +all sorts of good reasons; he had found a smart excuse, +the great excuse of the music-hall, that he had been betting +on horses and losing. He would ask Lily to keep +his money for him, as a kindness, otherwise he simply +couldn’t help it, his money burned a hole in his pocket. +Then, on second thought, why all that fuss? Hadn’t he +known her since she was that high? And, the moment +he came in, he just handed Lily a thousand-mark note:</p> +<p>“For the law-costs, Lily! And, anything over, for +your expenses, till Trampy’s money comes. Only too +pleased to be of any use. You can pay it back when it +suits you. And good-by, Lily, ta-ta!”</p> +<p>And he hurried out, leaving Lily with the thousand +marks in her hand.</p> +<p>Lily was stupefied and confused. She asked herself +why? why? a real piece of brain-work, which made her +head ache. Anyhow she would give back the money +to-morrow! She wouldn’t keep it! Trampy would +be sure to bring some; it was impossible that he should +bring nothing; but, come what may, she would give +back the money to-morrow! She took the great oath +of the stage upon it: three fingers of her right hand uplifted; +her left hand on the lucky charm. And then she +went and shut the door, turned the key in the lock and +lay down....</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>A noise woke her: some one was knocking outside; +but, before she could get out of bed, one of the glass +panes of the door broke into fragments. Somebody had +smashed it with his elbow. A hand came through the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188' name='page_188'></a>188</span> +opening, turned back the key. The door opened and +Trampy entered, raging, growling:</p> +<p>“There’s a man here!”</p> +<p>“You won’t find him; you can kill me if you do!” cried +Lily.</p> +<p>She expected a terrible scene. Trampy, drunk, had the +look which he wore on his bad days. He peered into the +corners, turned a cunning eye on Lily.</p> +<p>Trampy had spent the evening at the café and there +heard of the visits which Lily received during his absence. +The neighbors he didn’t mind about, but Jimmy. +Jimmy again! The damned dog! Why should he poke +his nose in? And, perhaps, at heart, Trampy was not +sorry to have a scene with Lily, for he wasn’t bringing +home a pfennig, having spent all his money on champagne +with girls. He felt himself at fault. He would get +out of it with violence.</p> +<p>“There’s a man here!” repeated Trampy, walking up +to Lily like a madman.</p> +<p>She was humiliated to the core when she saw Trampy, +dazed with tobacco, heavy with beer, stoop and look under +the bed. And, suddenly, seeing the banknote which +Lily had laid on the table, Trampy shouted:</p> +<p>“You can’t deny it this time. Tell me where the money +comes from!”</p> +<p>“It’s from Jimmy,” said Lily, beside herself. “He +thinks of me, Jimmy does, while you leave me here to +starve. It’s ... it’s for the law-costs.”</p> +<p>“Oh, that’s another thing!” said Trampy, putting the +note in his pocket.</p> +<p>“Let the money be!” cried Lily, leaping out of bed. +“Don’t you touch it!”</p> +<p>“Everything here belongs to me, I should think,” said +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189' name='page_189'></a>189</span> +Trampy, a little more calmly, already overcome with +drunken drowsiness. “Everything, even a dear little +wifie,” he continued, putting his snout under Lily’s disgusted +nose.</p> +<p>But she gave a movement of revulsion so spontaneous +that Trampy turned pale under the insult:</p> +<p>“W-what! N-no love?” he stammered. “I’m not used +to that. I can get l-l-love for the asking ... at the +ca-ca-café ... or the th-theater ... or anywhere.”</p> +<p>And Trampy, making a false step, caught hold of the +curtain and drew it back.</p> +<p>In the pitiless light of the morning, he appeared to Lily +like a drowned man, with a puffed-out face, swollen eyes +and wan cheeks. To think that she belonged to that! Lily +spat at him in contempt. Oh, rather sleep with lizards +and guinea-pigs than that; rather with a woolly dog, like +Poland, that Parisienne! Oh, to get rid of him and be +free again, thought Lily, never again to have Trampy +before her eyes! And, suddenly, her mind was made up. +She dressed herself hurriedly.</p> +<p>“Where are you going?” asked Trampy.</p> +<p>“I’m off!” said Lily. “I’ve had enough of this!”</p> +<p>“What’s that?” said Trampy, dull-mouthed, flinging +his body across the bed. “What’s that? Say it again!”</p> +<p>“I say I hate the sight of you! I’m going back to my +Pa and Ma!”</p> +<p>“You, you’re going back to ... well, good-by, +darling, goo-good ... goo-good-by,” stammered +Trampy, sprawling on the bed, among the disordered +clothes....</p> +<p>Lily moved freely round the room, without even troubling +about him, like one who has made up her mind +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190' name='page_190'></a>190</span> +once and for all. She packed up her things in the basket +trunk. She put her bike outside the door; and, just as +she was going to look for a neighbor to help her down +with her trunk, an idea entered her head. She stopped +on the threshold, came back to Trampy, slipped her hand +into his pocket and gingerly took out the banknote:</p> +<p>“An insult like that!” she muttered. “I’d rather starve +than not give Jimmy back the money!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191' name='page_191'></a>191</span> +<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>“Lily!”</p> +<p>She thought she heard herself called, in her dream, +just because she was back in her room again, in London, +among familiar objects. She felt as if her life was going +on exactly as in the old days, as if nothing had happened +in between. Her marriage? A nightmare. And her +home-coming yesterday had been very nice: no questions +asked, no whys and hows. Her parents knew, of course. +They knew all about her troubles with Trampy. But no +reproaches, nothing: kisses, everybody very happy, including +herself. She snuggled under the bedclothes, in +the hollow left by Glass-Eye, who had gone down-stairs. +Lily felt sorry that she had left her trunk at the hotel, +when she thought of the cordial welcome she had received +at the hands of Pa and Ma.</p> +<p>It was quite three weeks since she left her husband. +She went over it all again in her head. Her departure +from Berlin! She meant to go straight to Jimmy, first, +and give him back that money; only, those Vienna hats, +displayed in the shop-windows, those dresses, those boots, +when she saw all that, Lily understood that she could not +return to London, to her parents, with dingy-looking +clothes, after her successes on the continent! Pa and Ma +would have laughed in her face.</p> +<p>Lily felt bound to say that she had been most reasonable: +three hundred marks for that Vienna dress, which +suited her so well; why, Jimmy himself would have approved. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192' name='page_192'></a>192</span></p> +<p>“Let’s see!”</p> +<p>She reckoned on her fingers: forty marks the hat, +three hundred the dress; and the underthings, chemises, +stays, a silk petticoat, boots ... that came to +... came to ... a week at a hotel in Berlin +... time lost at Hamburg ... the journey +from Hamburg to Rotterdam, Harwich and London +... the hotel on arriving, so as to be able to dress +before going home: it left her just fifty shillings to +play the lady with and buy presents for Pa and Ma. +And Jimmy ... Jimmy, who was in London also, +due to open at the Hippodrome! And she had sworn +that she would give him back that money at once! To +quiet her conscience, Lily, under her blankets, took the +“counter-oath” of the stage, with her left hand behind her +back, the fingers closed over the thumb, that she would +repay him the money, most certainly, as soon as she began +to earn any.</p> +<p>“Lily! Can I come in, Lily?”</p> +<p>It was Ma, bringing her breakfast and a paper, <i>The +Era</i>. Lily gave a quick glance round the room: her skirt +was hanging on the peg; the bodice lay, without a crease, +over the back of a chair, the hat on top of it, the linen +neatly folded: good! She did not look a scarecrow, at +any rate! And, sitting up against the pillows, with a +napkin on her knees, Lily breakfasted daintily, with her +finger-tips:</p> +<p>“Pa, Where’s Pa?” asked Lily. “Tell him to come up.”</p> +<p>“Your Pa has gone out with the apprentices,” said Ma. +“He wouldn’t wake you, you looked so tired last night. +Here, Lily, some more coffee? Another slice of bread +and butter?” continued Ma, spreading it for her.</p> +<p>“’K you!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193' name='page_193'></a>193</span></p> +<p>Lily accepted this as her due, like a lady accustomed +to the manners of good society, to having her breakfast +brought to her in bed by the maid.</p> +<p>“Oh, Ma,” said Lily, as she sugared her coffee, “they +do understand things on the continent! They know how +to appreciate artistes there. I’ve had such successes!”</p> +<p>“And you were angry with us for teaching you your +profession,” said Ma. “You see now that it was for your +good.”</p> +<p>“But it depends on how it’s done,” said Lily. “If I +had always been treated like this, I should never have left +you.”</p> +<p>“Well, you don’t bear your Pa and me a grudge, I +suppose,” said Ma, “or you wouldn’t have come back. +We knew you’d come back. This has always been your +address; your Pa never took your name out of <i>The Era</i>.”</p> +<p>“You didn’t treat me fair,” said Lily, “but I’ve forgotten +most of it. Oh, don’t let’s talk about it any more! +Let’s talk of something else; let’s talk of you.”</p> +<p>Lily knew all about their struggles, their successes; +had heard of it on the stage, in the cafés. But here, in +her room, as described by Ma, she put her finger on it, so +to speak, and realized more fully what a blank her flight +had made, what a catastrophe it had been for them.</p> +<p>And Ma gave details, tried to interest Lily in the fate +of the troupe; told her that, for months, the troupe had +been refused everywhere, because she wasn’t in it, and +her Pa had to change apprentices.</p> +<p>“I was the troupe!” said Lily.</p> +<p>“Oh, the trouble your Pa took running after his own +fat freaks! I thought he would get heart-disease! And +months of it, without earning a thing. Oh, if your Pa +hadn’t had some money ...!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194' name='page_194'></a>194</span></p> +<p>“But he had plenty!” said Lily.</p> +<p>“Oh, not much, not so much as you think!” Ma hastened +to say, thinking she saw a spiteful allusion in Lily’s +remark.</p> +<p>“Yes, all right, I know,” said Lily. “Never mind about +that. It’s my turn to make money now, for myself.”</p> +<p>“Still that independent spirit! We haven’t got her +yet!” thought Ma.</p> +<p>And she went on talking of the troupe, of the cousin +who played the star.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Lily. “A nice sort of star!”</p> +<p>“It’s not every one who can star in Berlin by herself, +like you,” said Ma. “Do you know, Lily, you ought to stay +with us: we should get on so well together. You would +manage the troupe; and, one day—who knows?—you +might make a nice marriage.”</p> +<p>“But I am married, Ma! I didn’t live with him! Do +you mean to say you think ...? Not I!”</p> +<p>“I know you’re married, but you can get a divorce. +Jimmy used to make love to you; now there’s a man +who ...”</p> +<p>“And you used to say he was a drunkard, Ma!”</p> +<p>“Never!” said Ma, rising to leave.</p> +<p>Lily was flattered, at heart, to be received like that. +She also felt proud that her Pa had not been ashamed of +her and that he had kept her name in <i>The Era</i>. Well, +they treated her as a lady, saw her value, gave her her +due. And she lay for a while enjoying her triumph, while +she turned the pages of <i>The Era</i> in an absent-minded +way: Miss This, Miss That, Cape Town, Calcutta ... +actors, singers ...</p> +<p>“Those aren’t artistes, any of them!”</p> +<p>Programs, plays, songs: “<i>Why I Love Women</i>!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195' name='page_195'></a>195</span></p> +<p>“I know, you footy rotter!”</p> +<p>“<i>Is Marriage a Failure</i>?”</p> +<p>“I should think so!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>And articles, biographies ...</p> +<p>“Pack of lies!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>And pages of “Wanted ... Wanted ...”</p> +<p>Lily ran her eye down the columns: artistes’ boarding-houses, +<i>costumiers</i>, scene-painters, dancing-schools, every +town, every theater. Hullo!—she had turned the page—Tom, +the dancer—Hullo! At Milan!</p> +<p>“Bravo, Tom!”</p> +<p>Jimmy at the Hippodrome next week; private address, +Whitcomb Mansions.</p> +<p>“Pooh, he’s well off! What’s fifty pounds to him?”</p> +<p>Hullo! Miss Lily—Berlin—Permanent address, +Rathbone Place, London, W.</p> +<p>“Well done, Pa! Serve him right, the tramp cyclist!” +said Lily, throwing down the paper and jumping out of +bed.</p> +<p>Quite a business, her toilet. She was two hours titivating +herself. She wanted Pa and Ma to be proud of +her, of her successes on the continent. And, when the +apprentices came in from practice, you should have seen +her walk into the dining-room. A little air of simplicity, +her forehead put out for her delighted Pa to kiss, hands +all round—“Hullo, girls! Hullo, Daisy!” And she sat +down like a lady accustomed to smart restaurants, who +does not despise dinner at home, however, with a boiled +leg of mutton to recruit her inside after those champagne +suppers, those truffled pheasants, that damned continental +cooking! She accepted everything, and thought +it all very nice, simple life, simple joys, the only ones!</p> +<p>She set a good example to the new apprentices, who +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196' name='page_196'></a>196</span> +eyed her stealthily, instead of eating, for Miss Lily’s presence +turned their heads entirely. My! A star like that, a +real one! Lily Clifton, the New Zealander on Wheels! +And dressed ... dressed like a lady in the front +boxes! Cousin Daisy was green with jealousy. Lily talked +of her travels, her successes and the crossing, gee! Waves +“miles high,” the boat standing on end! Glass Eye +Maud devoured her with her one eye, screwed up her +fat red cheeks in a fixed and motionless laugh, scared +before Lily, who came from over the sea, from countries +where savages live. Glass-Eye, in her perturbation, +served Lily first. Pa made no objection, asked Lily’s permission +to light his pipe: was she sure she didn’t mind +smoke? Lord, you never knew, with those ladies! He +swelled with pride. If it had been Christmas-time, he +would have ordered a pudding, my, a real wedding-cake +three feet across! His ideas of grandeur returned, his +triumphal tour round the world, the definite extermination +of the fat freaks ... if Lily remained +with him ...</p> +<p>After dinner, the apprentices retired, to finish sewing +some bloomers. Lily approved:</p> +<p>“Bloomers? Very nice ... for a troupe!”</p> +<p>Presently, in the afternoon, the three of them went for +a walk: Pa freshly shaven; Ma decked out in her jewelry: +Lily did not wear any, “only in the evening when +she went into society.” Tottenham Court Road, the Palace, +the Hippodrome.... Pa would have liked to +write up on his hat:</p> +<p>“Lily has come back!”</p> +<p>He looked to right and left, had the satisfaction of distributing +nods and bows to some artistes, with Lily on his +arm, as though to say: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197' name='page_197'></a>197</span></p> +<p>“You see it was wrong, all that people were saying, +about those smackings! And the proof is, here she is,—on +my arm, damn it!”</p> +<p>As for Lily, she thought only of showing herself:</p> +<p>“If Trampy could see me now!” she reflected. “And +Jimmy, if he could see me, in my fine dress, while it’s still +new!”</p> +<p>Regent Street reminded Lily of Pa’s generosity. She +would not be behindhand. Pa had to accept a red tie, a +pair of gloves, a match-box, as a present; Ma, an embroidered +handkerchief, a lucky charm. Lily had the satisfaction +of paying with gold and receiving change.</p> +<p>She was tired, in the evening, put on a languid air: +gee, her mother would have shaken her for less in the old +days! Lily put it on still more, to show them all that +times were changed. But she did the troupe the honor +of going to see their performance at the Castle. It was a +great success for her.</p> +<p>“Made a bit, eh?” asked the manager, seeing her fine +dress. “Coming back for good, to star with the New +Zealanders?”</p> +<p>“I don’t know; I shall see.”</p> +<p>Lily was quite ready to come back, in her own mind, +but she wanted to return in triumph. It all depended on +the price offered: to think that she had worked for them +at ten shillings a week, when she was worth quite two +pounds a night! She would see; she would make her own +conditions: for instance, herself in tights, the others in +bloomers ... a special tune for her entrance ... +no star beside herself!</p> +<p>Lily watched the New Zealanders’ performance with +the air of an expert:</p> +<p>“Not so bad; quite good ...” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198' name='page_198'></a>198</span></p> +<p>And she had various ideas: herself as a fine lady, undressing +on the stage. Or rather, no, as a statue, on a +pedestal in a park ... with Cousin Daisy at her feet, +throwing flowers to her. Then she would come to life, as +though waking from sleep, and step down prettily to a +special tune. Hullo, what’s this? A bike! And then, gee, +a blast of the trombone and she would show them what a +star was, a real one! Yes ... she would see ... if +Pa and Ma insisted ... perhaps ...</p> +<p>But her real triumph was next day, at practice. +Her Pa, excited by her presence, ran and ran, notwithstanding +his palpitations of the heart. It was no use his +trying to restrain himself: his enthusiasm mastered him as +soon as he saw them all in the saddle, his little Woolly-legs!</p> +<p>And no more Tom: he was all by himself now; and, +when he sat down to take breath, he still ordered his little +Woolly-legs about, shouted his cutting remarks at them.</p> +<p>Lily raised her head proudly. She seemed to take the +apprentices to witness. She had gone through that, much +worse than that, for years! She was a gentle little lady, +all the same. Besides, she was all for gentleness:</p> +<p>“Leave her to me, Pa; you’re making poor Cousin +Daisy quite nervous. She doesn’t know; I’ll show her!”</p> +<p>And, under her great waving feather, Lily, without +even taking off her gloves:</p> +<p>“There, put your foot there ... like that ... +and like that ... firmly. No, not like that!”</p> +<p>And, suddenly, stimulated with professional zeal:</p> +<p>“Wait, I’ll show you how it’s done!”</p> +<p>And, in an instant, to show them all how you’re got up +when you’re a star and when you come back from the +continent, Lily took off her bodice, pinned up her skirt +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199' name='page_199'></a>199</span> +amid the rustling of the silk and, bare-armed, in a lace-trimmed +chemisette:</p> +<p>“Now then, I’ll show you!”</p> +<p>And Lily, with all her little muscles alive, took a bike, +jumped on it as she would on a stool and then—yoop!—the +bike on its back-wheel, spinning round like a top.</p> +<p>“Twirls are as easy as anything: you only have to +know how to do them. Come on! Have a try!”</p> +<p>And the other, encouraged by a friendly slap, tried in +her turn and—yoop!—succeeded ... very nearly.</p> +<p>Pa was enraptured at the mere sight of Lily’s little +curled nostrils and her earnest look:</p> +<p>“What a professor she would make!” he thought. “If +ever she takes the belt, she’ll be simply grand. I can just +fold my arms!”</p> +<p>But he made her dress very quickly. That exhibition +of dainty underwear, which flattered his pride as a father, +would have driven girls used to sewing their own calico +shifts quite crazy: there would have been no holding +them; and, besides, artistes might come in at any moment. +It would not do for Lily to be seen half-dressed like that; +and she realized this herself, like a sensible little lady, +who hates scandal.</p> +<p>“Stay with us, Lily,” said her Pa, at home, after dinner, +when the apprentices had gone out. “Stay with us.”</p> +<p>“It’s your duty,” said Ma.</p> +<p>“If you stay,” continued Pa, “I’ll make you a present +of a brand-new banjo!”</p> +<p>“Thank you, no more banjo for me,” said Lily, laughing. +“I’ve had my share.”</p> +<p>“All right, no more banjo,” agreed Pa, “provided you +stay with us: that’s all I ask. I shall be afraid of nobody +then; I’ll show them what an artiste is!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200' name='page_200'></a>200</span></p> +<p>And, warming to his subject, Pa built up his plans: +the great English tours; and Eastern and Western +America, Australia, South Africa:</p> +<p>“Eh, Lily? Wouldn’t you like to see it all again? Or +else, for once, I’ll get up a troupe and take it round the +world myself, with you in it!”</p> +<p>“But, Pa,” said Lily, very coldly, “I have business arrangements +of my own, more engagements than I want.”</p> +<p>“It’s a business arrangement I’m proposing to you,” +said Pa.</p> +<p>“And shall I come on in tights?”</p> +<p>“In tights, if you like.”</p> +<p>“And no other star but me!” continued Lily, explaining +her idea: undressing on the stage, or else the statue, +her own scenery ...</p> +<p>“Capital idea!” cried Pa.</p> +<p>“And then there’s the money side of the question,” said +Lily. “I make a lot of money now. I want to work for +myself.”</p> +<p>“And what you make with us, won’t it be yours, one +day?” suggested Ma.</p> +<p>“Stay with us,” said Pa, “and Trampy will burst with +spite and you’ll be much happier here, with your Pa and +Ma, instead of with that good-for-nothing!”</p> +<p>“Or instead of remaining alone, which is even worse,” +Ma insisted. “You want us still, Lily ...”</p> +<p>“And you me! Let us talk business,” interrupted Lily, +who would have liked a pencil and paper, to make her calculations +with.</p> +<p>Ma, in her heart of hearts, did not think it at all nice of +a daughter to consider only her own interests; but Pa +hurried up, thought Lily was quite right ... although +he was greatly embarrassed in reality and asked himself +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201' name='page_201'></a>201</span> +how much he could well offer her, so as to make a profit +for himself.</p> +<p>Fortunately, he was relieved of his predicament by +Glass-Eye, who came in with a telegram for Miss Lily.</p> +<p>“Give it here!” said Lily, who noticed, as she opened +the envelope, that a chair had creaked and that the palm +of her left hand was itching: a sign of money. “I’ll bet +it’s about an engagement. I have offers from every side; +you have no idea ... Well, I never!” she said. “A +telegram from Jimmy, at the Horse Shoe! I thought he +was at Whitcomb Mansions. What can he want with +me? He asks me to call on him! Funny way of treating a +lady. Why can’t he come himself?”</p> +<p>But Pa and Ma thought differently: Jimmy was “somebody,” +a man to be considered, right at the top of the +profession; she’d have done better to marry him and not +her Trampy Wheel-Pad!...</p> +<p>“You must go,” insisted Ma. “Don’t you like going +alone? Shall I come with you?”</p> +<p>“Yes, that’s different,” said Lily, who had a certain +pride and who felt sure that Jimmy would never mention +that thousand marks before a witness.</p> +<p>Her heart beat a little, as she went up the staircase of +the Horse Shoe to the third floor, on the left, door 32. +At first, she was surprised that he should be there, having +read in <i>The Era</i> ... but he might have moved. On +the whole, she was not sorry to show herself to Jimmy in +her pretty frock, he having seen her last in her room in +Berlin, looking ill, unkempt and frightfully ugly. She +was not sorry, either, that Ma was with her:</p> +<p>“He’s in love, I suppose,” said Lily. “Everybody makes +love to me: why do they, Ma? I’m not a bit pretty, off +the stage.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202' name='page_202'></a>202</span></p> +<p>And she took a mischievous pleasure in enlarging +upon her successes and her flirtations, there, on the staircase +of the Horse Shoe, with Ma beside her, and no +smackings, gee, nor any fear of smackings in the future! +What a change since her marriage!</p> +<p>“Yes,” Lily went on, as she read the numbers on the +doors—29—“Ma, you ought to see the flowers I get, the +chocolates, the sweets”—31—“but all that does not prevent +a lady from keeping straight”—32—</p> +<p>Then she gave a stifled cry, her voice stuck in her +throat: Trampy, Trampy himself stood in the doorway, +his hands in his pockets, a cigar in his mouth, his hat +cocked over one ear; and he looked at her with a bantering +air:</p> +<p>“Sorry to disappoint you, Miss Lily. You hoped to +find some one else, eh?”</p> +<p>Ma, utterly flabbergasted, had dropped on to a bench +in the passage, in the shadow. Trampy did not even see +her. Lily was crimson with shame at being caught tripping +by Trampy: she could not deny it. She wanted to +run away, but, stupefied with surprise, remained where +she stood, with dilated pupils, open-mouthed.</p> +<p>“You can look at me till to-morrow morning and it +won’t help you,” said Trampy quietly, with the air of a +man who has prepared his speech. “I’ve got you this +time! I sent the telegram; I knew you’d come, wherever +he thought fit to meet you; you’d have come for less than +Jimmy; you’d have come for the impersonator or any +one else, never mind whom; any one in the rotten lot, any +gentleman in the front boxes, eh? It’s ‘Whistle and I’ll +come to you, my lad!’ with you! But I thought Jimmy +would do best, Jimmy your lover, whom you followed +to London. Now my luck has brought me here, too ... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203' name='page_203'></a>203</span> +for my work ... not like you! And, by the way, Miss +Lily, have you brought me that thousand marks which you +got from Jimmy and which I was going to give back to +him, when you stole it out of my pocket? Or did you +spend it on the way here? You hadn’t a rag to your back, +when you left me, and I find you dressed up like a Tottie. +My compliments, Miss Lily.”</p> +<p>“O God, strike him dead!” prayed Lily. “Strike him, +kill him, kill him!”</p> +<p>Lily felt like fainting. She could not breathe, her ribs +seemed to be crushing her lungs. At last she drew a long, +slow breath:</p> +<p>“Well,” she stammered, overcome with shame, “well, +we can be divorced ... if you like.”</p> +<p>“I’ll see,” said Trampy, hardening his voice and throwing +away his cigar. “Go back to your Jimmy in the meantime. +You may be sure I have no use for a traitress like +you, an idler who refuses to work, a woman who lets +every man make love to her!” And, suddenly, pointing +to the stairs, “You can be sure that I’ve no further use for +you! Get out of this, damn you! And you’re not going, +mind you: I’m kicking you out!”</p> +<p>And therewith Trampy went back into his room and +slammed the door in her face.</p> +<p>Mrs. Clifton and Lily remained glued where they were. +At last, Ma, trembling all over, rose from the bench and +led away her daughter, who shook her fist at the door, +crying:</p> +<p>“Liar!”</p> +<p>“Why didn’t you speak just now, my poor Lily?” said +Ma. “You ought to have answered back! So it’s true, +all that? A nice thing! You, who pretended....”</p> +<p>“Oh, let go, you’re crushing my sleeve!” retorted Lily +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204' name='page_204'></a>204</span> +angrily, pulling her arm away from the hand that +clasped it.</p> +<p>She went down the stairs, followed by Ma, without +knowing what she was doing. She would have liked to +find a train on the pavement, a motor, to jump into it, to +make off and never see anybody again, after the humiliation +which she had undergone before Ma.</p> +<p>She flung herself into the first cab that came along, +yelled a direction to the driver: Hyde Park, anywhere! +Ma found herself by Lily’s side, without being asked to +step in, and she repeated:</p> +<p>“Lily, you ought to have ... Why did you let +him treat you like that? Is it true?”</p> +<p>“First of all,” said Lily, suddenly turning and facing +her Ma; “first of all, it’s your fault ... yours +... all that’s happened, damn it! If you had been +less hard on me, I shouldn’t have gone off with that +footy rotter!”</p> +<p>“I’ve often been sorry since,” said Ma. “I’ve been sorry +for it. Calm yourself, Lily. And then ... were we +so very wrong? Look how your husband has just treated +you before me, before your mother!”</p> +<p>“He’s a liar! I swear it!”</p> +<p>“And Jimmy’s thousand marks? What was that money +for? Why didn’t you give it back?”</p> +<p>“It’s a lie! It’s a lie!”</p> +<p>“You, who pretended you were making such a lot of +money!” continued Ma. “There’s not a word of truth in +what you said. You haven’t a penny. I can see it. Oh, +you’re the same as ever, my poor Lily—extravagant +habits, dresses—and here you are, penniless, left to yourself +with your expensive tastes. You’ll die in poverty +one day, without a Pa or Ma. Come back to us, Lily.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205' name='page_205'></a>205</span></p> +<p>“To make nothing? No, thank you!”</p> +<p>“Who says so?”</p> +<p>“Oh, I know! Ten shillings a week, eh? Family life, +as that old beast of a Fuchs says!”</p> +<p>“Lily,” said Ma severely, “don’t insult decent people! +Have some respect, at any rate.”</p> +<p>But Lily had no respect left for anybody. Pas, Mas, +Trampies, Nunkies, one and all, were so many slave-drivers!</p> +<p>“And yet it’s quite true, I’m penniless,” thought Lily +to herself. “I, who have earned a fortune for you!” she +grumbled under her breath, stifling a sob.</p> +<p>“You’re mad, my poor Lily! All that we have will be +yours some day. You never think of the future; you +spend your last penny.”</p> +<p>“I earn and I spend!”</p> +<p>“And suppose you fell ill, my poor Lily?”</p> +<p>“Hospitals aren’t made for dogs! Besides, I have +friends. And then, at least, I shall have had some fun +for my money, while you, if you died to-morrow, Pa +would marry another woman, who would spend all your +savings, all the money I have earned for you.”</p> +<p>“Lily,” cried Mrs. Clifton, “you’re insulting your father!”</p> +<p>“I’m telling you things as they are; and I won’t come +back to you, because I can make more elsewhere! Every +one for himself!”</p> +<p>“But you don’t make a penny!” said Ma, gradually +getting angry. “You heard Trampy, just now. He called +you an idler. Your Pa, at least, used to make you work. +You’re trying to bluff us with those stories of your successes. +I dare say you’ll be glad, one day, of a crust of +bread with us.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206' name='page_206'></a>206</span></p> +<p>“Ma!”</p> +<p>“Your contracts,” said Ma, “you’re always talking of +your contracts. I should like to see them and your programs +too.”</p> +<p>“Certainly,” said Lily. “I’ll show them to you: Munich, +Berlin, Hamburg. I’ve had successes everywhere, +engagements everywhere! I make more by myself than +all Pa’s troupe put together!”</p> +<p>“Yes, but how do you get your engagements?” said +Ma, pale with anger, seeing that Lily was escaping them +and, this time, for good. “Tell me how you get them?”</p> +<p>“Why, through my talent, I suppose.”</p> +<p>“Your talent! Pooh! You’ve none left! You get +them through your friends: through your Jimmy, your +gentlemen friends....”</p> +<p>“That’s a lie!”</p> +<p>“You get them ... by looking pretty and getting +round the men ... you ... you ... you....”</p> +<p>“Mother!”</p> +<p>Lily drew back her shoulder, her arm stiff, ready to +strike; but a sense of respect withheld her.</p> +<p>“Stop!” she cried to the cabman, in a hoarse voice.</p> +<p>And, without even waiting for the cab to pull up beside +the curb, Lily jumped out in the roadway, into the mud.</p> +<p>“Mother,” she said to Mrs. Clifton, “mother, I shall +never forget this!”</p> +<p>And, mechanically, in her haste to get away, she +handed the man what money she had left, made a sign to +him to go on and, without saying good-by, Lily +saw the cab drive off. It was evening, in a quiet +street: where was she? Lily did not know; her head +was in a whirl. She recognized Old Compton Street: +had they gone no farther? It seemed to her that she had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207' name='page_207'></a>207</span> +been riding for an hour ... but no, barely a few +minutes....</p> +<p>Alone in London, without money, in the mud, in the +dark, oh! she wished she could be swallowed up in the +sewer. She felt like killing herself.</p> +<p>“If I walk toward the Thames,” she muttered, “I am +done for!”</p> +<p>And she took a street on the left, leading in the direction +of the embankment. The movement restored her to +her self-consciousness.</p> +<p>An idea came to her, a distant hope, a glimmer, very +faint at first, which suddenly grew in dimensions within +her and lit her up in every particle. Jimmy! He appeared +to her, all at once, like a giant eight feet high, as +on his posters. Ah, people seemed to associate her life +with his, to presume all sorts of things ... though he +had never even kissed her! Yes, he had ... on the +stage ... in Berlin, but that was before everybody! +And everything drove her toward him, she always found +herself on his path: Jimmy was everywhere, always. And +Jimmy was powerful and he was good-looking and he +loved her! He loved her! To keep straight was no use. +Why, all of them, all of them, including her husband, that +footy rotter, who was jealous of Jimmy without reason: +she’d give him cause for jealousy soon, if it killed him +with rage, him and all the rotten lot. And she’d do it +that very moment! At two minutes’ walk from where +she stood, in Whitcomb Mansions! She was not one of +those women whom you can drive to despair with impunity: +she had her vengeance ready....</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>Jimmy was alone in his room; his table was covered +with books and papers. He was still at his great plan. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208' name='page_208'></a>208</span></p> +<p>Jimmy sat plunged in work, without the least thought +of what was happening near him: in fact, he did not even +know that Lily was in London. His installation of “Bridging +the Abyss” at the Hippodrome had taken him the +whole day. There was a scenic effect to contrive with the +manager: a “hydrodrama” ... bridging the abyss +over a torrent ... with a waterfall behind ... +and the whole thing set and framed in a pantomine, which +was ready for production, because Jimmy had been expected +for a month; in short, it would go of itself.</p> +<p>And under the peaceful light he resumed his compasses, +or else flung himself back in his chair, lit a cigarette, +followed the smoke with his eyes....</p> +<p>Poor Lily, what was she doing, over there, in Berlin, +thought Jimmy. She deserved something better than +Trampy, that adorable Lily, to whom he, Jimmy, would +gladly have devoted his life ... and whom he felt as +it were swelling up inside him ... in his heart ... +in his brain ... in spite of himself! That poor Lily! +To think that he could do nothing for her, that he almost +regretted having done her a service, after the short scene +which he had had the day after with Trampy, blinded with +jealousy, because he, Jimmy, had visited Lily during his +absence; the reproaches which that simple action had +earned for him:</p> +<p>“Look here, you righter of wrongs, you who preach +to others and go making love to their wives!”</p> +<p>To have put himself in a position that he could be +spoken to like that, in a position to have Lily suspected! +What a shame! Oh, the worries it would cause her! Yes, +he had been imprudent, perhaps: it was all his fault; another +man’s wife....</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209' name='page_209'></a>209</span> +<img src='images/illus-pg209.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 410px; height: 623px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 410px;'> +“Oh, you mean cur!” roared Lily.<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211' name='page_211'></a>211</span></div> +<p>A tap at the door. It was opened behind him, before he +had time to say, “Come in,” and Lily walked up to Jimmy, +who sat dumb with surprise: a strange Lily, feverish, distraught +with passion. At any other time, she would have +felt constrained, because of the thousand marks, or proud +to show off her dress. Perhaps also she had prepared +things to say. But all that was forgotten, gone, blown +away, like a straw in the storm, for nothing came from +her but this, in an anxious voice:</p> +<p>“Tell me, Jimmy, is it true that you love me?”</p> +<p>“Why,” said Jimmy, perceiving Lily’s agitation, without +guessing the reason: oh, but for Lily to do a thing +like that! How she would regret it later; it was terrible +this time really. He saw all that at a glance; a great pity +invaded him; and yet he was a man of flesh and blood and +felt stirred to the marrow. “Why,” he began, in a voice +which he strove to make friendly, no more, “why, Lily, +who told you that? Why really ... I....”</p> +<p>“Jimmy,” she cried, fixing her eyes, like two flaming +swords upon him, “answer me! Do you love me or not?”</p> +<p>Jimmy, turning as pale as a corpse, looked at her without +flinching and shook his head in sign of no.</p> +<p>“Oh, you mean cur!” roared Lily.</p> +<p>And she struck him on the face with her clenched fist.</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>Then she went out without a word, ran down the +stairs, out into the blaze of Leicester Square, made for the +dark streets and plunged into the night....</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212' name='page_212'></a>212</span> +<h2>INTERMEZZO</h2> +<h3>I</h3> +</div> + +<p>The artistes’ special left Euston at noon that Sunday. +The Three Graces were the first to arrive; then the waiting-rooms, +until lately deserted, began to fill with silent +groups of five or six persons at a time, who had, no doubt, +arranged the night before, at the theater, to travel together +and avail themselves of the reduction allowed to +members of the M. H. A. R. A.: a reduction of at least +a third, provided there were five in the party. They now +swarmed into the station from every side: pale faces, under +huge feathers; wrists hooped round with bangles; +breasts bristling with gollywogs and lucky charms. There +were little girls with bows over their ears, dressed in +plush and velvet and following their Pas and Mas. +There were troupes of carpet acrobats, with low foreheads, +broad shoulders and bow legs; and profs, bosses +and managers, recognizable by the richness of their +watch-chains, looked after the luggage. Theater-vans +discharged immense basket trunks, marked with letters a +foot high—“Brothers This ... Sisters That ... +So-and-so Trio ... Miss Such-and-such”—and bearing +on the handles, on the yellow labels of the M. H. +A. R. A., addresses of Empires and Palaces and of +Grand Opera-Houses and Grand Theaters, too, for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213' name='page_213'></a>213</span> +there were not only “artistes,” but singers, actresses, +“chicken-necks,” “woolly-legs,” who rubbed shoulders +with the muscular acrobats. All of them crowded round +the booking-office; they handed in professional cards, +helped one another, among pros; those who were traveling +alone borrowed tickets to enable them to get their +over-weight luggage labeled: complicated pieces of apparatus, +nickel-plated rods wrapped up in sacking, equilibrists’ +perches; the coaches, which were carried by assault, +were encumbered with hand-luggage, bags, parcels, +picture-frames containing photographs for the doors of +the theaters, heaped up in the racks, under the seats, in +the corridor; and there was a constant fire of “Hullo, +girls! Hullo, boys!”</p> +<p>The Three Graces, standing before the carriage-door, +now that their things were settled, watched this tumult +sadly, especially Thea. What was it? Nunkie’s absence? +No, but poor Lily had been kicked out by her husband, so +they heard, and turned out by her mother as well: was it +possible? Lily was dead or vanished, they didn’t know +which; they were told about it at the theater; a stagehand +had met her near St. Martin’s Lane, in a small +street, with her hair undone and her hat on the back of +her head, crying, biting her handkerchief, drunk, apparently, +and running in the direction of the Thames. And, +since then, they had had no news of her.</p> +<p>“Poor Lily, what can she have done, what can have +happened?” sighed Thea. “Poor Lily, she was always so +nice!”</p> +<p>Thea could have cried for sadness.</p> +<p>The start caused a diversion. The collector punched +the tickets:</p> +<p>“Blackpool? Glasgow?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214' name='page_214'></a>214</span></p> +<p>The Three Graces stepped in, the engine whistled. But +a porter rushed past, pushing before him, with a rumbling +like thunder, a huge trunk on a barrow. Thea +turned her head and a name in scarlet letters caught her +eyes: “Miss Lily!” And, running after the trunk, magnificently +bedecked, in a hat all feathers and gold tassels, +who? What? Lily! Lily herself, red and out of breath, +leading her bike with one hand, carrying an umbrella in +the other, and Glass-Eye, her arms stretched wide with +parcels, following in her train! Just time to throw her +bike to the porter in the luggage-van and quick, quick, +Lily came scudding back, hustled along by the train-master! +She would have missed the start, were it not for +Thea, who opened the door and, with her arms of steel, +gripped her as she passed:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily! That’s a good girl! Quick!”</p> +<p>Lily leaped into the carriage with a bound. Glass-Eye, +entangled in her parcels, had, amid general laughter, to +be dragged by main force, through the narrow doorway, +like a piece of luggage. Oof, just in time ... Off +they were!</p> +<p>In the railway-carriage was nothing but gaiety and +handshaking and ingenuous questions:</p> +<p>“Traveling by yourself? Where’s Trampy? And +your Pa and Ma? So you’re not dead, eh?”</p> +<p>“Certainly not,” said Lily. “If they had come to annoy +me at the station, I’d have shown them if I was alive or +dead! I was ready for them!”</p> +<p>And she brandished her umbrella.</p> +<p>Then she had to make herself comfortable, to find +room for all her belongings as best she could. Lily +pushed Glass-Eye about, like a fine lady used to being +waited on: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215' name='page_215'></a>215</span></p> +<p>“Here, take my hat, Glass-Eye; hang it up. Take my +wrist-bag. Wait, give me my handkerchief first!”</p> +<p>To look at Lily, all fresh and rosy, one would never +have suspected the trials she had passed through, but a +few days ago. Still quite flustered with that hurried departure, +she smiled as she watched the Three Graces, who, +on their side, were carefully folding up their cloaks. And +the train rushed on, rushed on through deep cuttings, +dashed through deserted stations ... and then, suddenly, +entered a tunnel. Lily, but for the noise of the +wheels, would have seen herself as she had been that night. +Oh, she would never forget it! It clutched at her heart. +She clenched her fists with anger. Turned out by +Trampy! Insulted by her Ma! Flouted by Jimmy, that +mean cur! Oh, when she left his place, a few days ago, +she felt like a madwoman! Her first idea was to disappear, +to take a header into the black water! But, ugh, the mud, +the cold! And then the hospital, with those people who +cut you up! She must also show Pa and Ma whether it +was through her gentlemen friends that she meant to earn +more by herself alone than they and all their rotten troupe +put together. Perhaps Pa and Ma would come to her, one +day, to beg their bread! But Ma must first ask Lily’s pardon +on her knees. On her knees, damn it! And, in despair, +inwardly raging, her chest aching with grief and spite, +Lily, penniless, but brave for all that and ready for the +fray, returned to her hotel, where, to her great surprise, +she found some one waiting for her, with a parcel in her +hand.</p> +<p>Lily recognized Glass-Eye.</p> +<p>It was, indeed, poor Glass-Eye. When she heard what +had happened and that Lily would starve in London and a +jolly good thing too, that she could sleep in Leicester +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216' name='page_216'></a>216</span> +Square for all they cared: when she heard this behind +the door, Glass-Eye almost fainted. Without a word +to a soul, she had packed up her parcel and gone to join +Lily; and Lily, in her misery, cried for joy when she saw +the decent girl, who offered her her savings, twelve shillings +in all, saying:</p> +<p>“Take me with you, Miss Lily; I’ll wait on you for +nothing. Take me, take me!”</p> +<p>Oh, not to feel alone, to have some one beside you who +loves you: that had consoled Lily....</p> +<p>The next day, accompanied by Glass-Eye, she called +on the agents, in the Leicester Square quarter, at the +risk of meeting Pa, or Trampy, or Jimmy; but who +cared? With her umbrella in her hand, she feared nobody +and did not give a fig for any of them.</p> +<p>Nothing for her at Harrasford’s, where the Warwicks +were starring. Very well, she’d come back again some +other time! And straight on to Bill and Boom’s in Whitcomb +Mansions, below Jimmy. As she climbed the +stairs, Lily screwed up her eyes, like a short-sighted person, +for fear of meeting Jimmy, prepared a haughty attitude; +but she saw no one. She was not kept waiting, +was shown in at once to Boom’s office. Lily Clifton? +the New Zealander on Wheels? Straight away a +contract! And Lily left with twenty music-halls +in her pocket! Liverpool, Birmingham, Sheffield and +so on: a week in each town, beginning on Monday next. +And that was how she got engagements through her gentlemen +friends!</p> +<p>The next day, she borrowed some money on her contracts +from the Brixton financier: “loans from five +pounds upward, in the strictest confidence.” Then, proposed +and seconded by two artistes, she joined the Variety +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217' name='page_217'></a>217</span> +Artistes’ Federation and, in return for ten shillings, received +the red card of membership. She paid another ten +shillings and the same for Glass-Eye, her maid, to the M. +H. A. R. A. and obtained the right, for one year, to travel +at reduced fares, including an insurance against accidents: +five hundred pounds to her heirs in case of death—her +heirs!—and two hundred and fifty pounds if she lost a +hand or foot in a railway accident; and one hundred and +fifty for a serious injury. Then she bought a big gollywog, +for her dressing-room, and a little lucky charm +for her watch-chain—a closed black hand, with the +thumb between the fingers, as a preservative against falls—and +with that and her bike she would have set out for +India and Australia as calmly as she might have taken the +omnibus to Earl’s Court.</p> +<p>Oh yes, she had done a deal in those few days and, +above all, she had got out of her difficulties, thanks, to +a certain extent, to Glass-Eye, who had comforted her. +And besides, hang it, that was all over now! The worries +were forgotten, and, as the train emerged from the +tunnel, Lily, with her arm round Glass-Eye’s waist, was +patting that decent girl and Glass-Eye lifted her one good +eye to Lily, while the other, the glass one, gazing fixedly +at the door, reflected the thinly scattered houses and the +beginning of the country.</p> +<p>Lily, when she had recovered a little from her mad +rush, lay down at full length among her bags, parcels +and bandboxes. She laughed with the Three Graces; +and there was no one there to interfere with them; +there they were, by themselves, among themselves, alone +in the compartment, a regular, rollicking school-girls’ +picnic. Lily made them scream by telling them about +her life since they had last seen her. She felt a need for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218' name='page_218'></a>218</span> +a reaction of gaiety, after her sadness of the days just +past. The Graces fixed their round eyes upon her, upon +that Lily who was so thoroughly up in all sorts of things +which they knew only by hearsay: men, love. A life fit +to kill a horse; and a very nice girl, for all that: a kind of +forbidden fruit, pink and fair-haired, soft to the touch; +and no jealousy between them, friendship rather, a rare +thing, in the “Profession”....</p> +<p>Lily grew excited in talking, told of her successes, the +receptions, the teas she used to give in her drawing-room, +in Berlin, when she was ill. Jossers, according to her, +would have paid any price to have been there! It would +form a subject of conversation over there for many a +long day to come. And then her journeys, her impressions +of the continent—“Jam with your meat, my dear!”—and +such clean dressing-rooms in Germany; very severe +managers, though: gee, harder than Pas. But very +good to her, all the same. The Battenberg at Leipzig: +nothing but leading turns; and she had topped the bill at +Leipzig! And to see all those people eating, during the +show, when you were hungry yourself, had a very funny +effect upon you. By the way, she didn’t like that system of +being lodged and boarded by the management; it was +all very well for those people; but none of that for her: +give her a nice flat in town or a smart hotel! Once she +was started, Lily never stopped, called Glass-Eye to witness, +went on telling of her life in Berlin; how Jimmy +had fallen in love with her when he saw her on the stage, +and he had the cheek to want her to run away with him; +but who got a box on the ear that day, eh? She perhaps: +yes, rather, over the left! And Jimmy and Trampy had +fought for her! So had all the pros, worse than dogs in +September! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219' name='page_219'></a>219</span></p> +<p>“What a rotten lot!” concluded Lily.</p> +<p>“My, how you’ve changed!” said Thea. “You used to +be so fond of men.”</p> +<p>“I give it them where they deserve,” said Lily, slapping +her firm, round hips.</p> +<p>And they laughed noisily at Lily’s anger when, with +her shoulder drawn back and her arm ready to strike, she +spoke of breaking the jaws of those two scoundrels.</p> +<p>“Go it! Hit me!” said Thea, putting forward her +deltoid muscle. “Hit away! You’ll only smash your +wrist!”</p> +<p>And then those Spartans calmed down, asked one another +for news of absent friends, talked about different +people they had known, all over the place, on the stage: +their conversation always came round to the profession. +Lily, with greater refinement, sometimes tried to discuss +dress: tulle ruches were to be worn this year, she heard; +feather boas. The Graces knew nothing about that, stuck +to their “Did you ever know...? Do you remember...?” +And every part of the world was mixed +up in their talk: India, Tasmania, Mexico, South Wales, +New South Wales, York, New York, Hampshire, New +Hampshire.</p> +<p>“Did you know Ave Maria?” asked Lily.</p> +<p>“No.”</p> +<p>But they mentioned other friends, like school-girls living +in the same quarter; only, for them, the school, the quarter +was San Francisco, Chicago, Berlin, and the schoolmates +were the girl in a knot, who had sold her skeleton +in advance to the Medical College: Marjutti, the double-knotted +girl, to whom the South Kensington Museum +offered five hundred pounds for a cast of her figure; +the Pawnees, who had just won a treble beauty prize; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220' name='page_220'></a>220</span> +and the Laurence girl, whose cruelly daring performance +was forbidden by the Manchester police; and heaps of +others whom they had known and who, at that moment, +were asleep at the antipodes, right under your feet, or +waking up in the Far West, or going to bed in the Far +East, or pitching on the ocean, or rolling in express trains +toward the five corners of the earth. And their own traveling +adventures, the Graces’ and Lily’s: broken railway-bridges! +ships on fire at sea! towns blazing up in the +night! ropes breaking, falls head-first, my! One would +have thought that these girls of seventeen to twenty were +South Sea pirates, talking of hangings and tortures, or, +rather, children playing at frightening one another. Lily, +for instance, in India: two eyes glaring at her in the dark, +gee! And, in New York, a fall into a mirror; all over +blood; half dead. She grew excited, in her desire to outdo +Laurence and Crack-o’-Whip: the steel-buckled belt, the +kicks in the ribs! Stories of brutal treatment picked up on +every side—from the Gilson girl, from Ave Maria, from +all the boys and all the girls and all the monkeys who had +been through the mill—she made every one of them her +own, served them up hot and hot to the astounded Graces, +talked of whole days spent in practising on rough, uneven +boards—“And given no food, was I, Glass-Eye?”—so +much so that she would sometimes get up in the night +and go and pick up the crusts under the table, gee! Lily +reveled in the pitying expressions of the Three Graces +and her heart swelled with pride when Thea, greatly +touched, remarked that, in such cases, it would have been +better not to be born.</p> +<p>“You’re quite right,” said Lily, with a drooping air; +but she burst into a peal of fresh, young laughter when +she saw Glass-Eye overcome with emotion. “What’s +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221' name='page_221'></a>221</span> +that?” asked Lily, giving her a thump in the ribs. “Crying? +You silly cuckoo!”</p> +<p>If it hadn’t been for her Ma’s insults and Jimmy’s and +Trampy’s—when it all came back to her, it was like a +needle stuck in her heart!—Lily would have been in the +seventh heaven! No more Pa, no more Ma, no more anybody; +no boss, no prof, no husband, nothing, all alone +... with her maid! Certainly, there would be the +worry of business, looking for her “digs,” seeing the +agents, writing letters and so on; but she would know +how to put herself forward, how to make the most of her +work; and she smiled as she reflected how little all those +worries meant, compared with her past life: and she +would be free, free, free at last. She was going to earn +money, to enjoy life.</p> +<p>And the train rushed on, rushed on through the fields. +Glass-Eye, with her nose glued to the window, was astonished +to find everything so large outside of London: red +villages decked the green country-side; and then came +empty railway stations. Sometimes the train slowed down:—a +large silent town lay spread in the valley, white smoke +rose from the endless roofs; homes, more homes; the air +of rest, the empty streets and the indistinct chimes of +the church-bells proclaimed to the pale heavens the +majesty of prayer. Lily listened with a dreamy air; it all +reminded her of things:</p> +<p>“It’s like the American engines,” she said to the Three +Graces, “that used to ring their bells when they passed +through Syracuse.”</p> +<p>But the train rushed on, rushed on.... And +they again began to talk shop, as always: with, here +and there, an excursion into the cost of food. The +Graces, just then, were unpacking their lunch; and Lily +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222' name='page_222'></a>222</span> +fetched her traveling provisions from her bag in the corridor. +There was a sound of clattering plates from end +to end of the train, in a mist of tobacco-smoke. Lily +rejoined the party very quickly, to avoid coming in contact +with the pros, and, waited on by Glass-Eye, attacked +her meal and broke her bread so heartily that the +crusts flew to the ceiling. They drank out of the same +cup, took their meat in their hands, Lily saying that fingers +were made before forks. They chattered noisily, +with the time-honored jokes about apples and bananas. +They made Glass-Eye talk a lot of nonsense. Lily, flinging +back her head, laughed full-throated, held her sides.</p> +<p>“My!” said the Graces. “What a pity that we are +separating! It would have been so nice to travel together; +one’s never bored with you. What a tomboy!”</p> +<p>“’K you!” said Lily, greatly flattered, with a stage +curtsey.</p> +<p>Unfortunately, they would have to part at Warrington. +The Graces were going on to Glasgow, Lily was +changing for Liverpool; a few moments more and it was +good-by, until chance....</p> +<p>At Lily’s request, the Graces gave her a few last words +of advice, explained the system of the pass-book of the +Artistes’ Federation: the sixpenny stamp to be stuck in +the little square every week; the extra stamp at each +death of a member, for the benefit of the heirs. They +talked to her of the Friday meetings at Manchester, at +which every artiste can speak and see himself printed +afterward in the London <i>Performer</i>.</p> +<p>“Good!” thought Lily. “I may have things to say. +There will be news for somebody!”</p> +<p>The Graces had a “three years’ book,” the professional +<i>agenda</i>, with nothing but Mondays marked on +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223' name='page_223'></a>223</span> +it for the weekly engagement: 8 January, 15 January +and so on.</p> +<p>“Yes, I know,” said Lily. “Mine’s full for months +ahead!”</p> +<p>They showed her, on theirs, the last pages containing +portrait advertisements of famous artistes: the Pawnees, +Marjutti, Laurence.</p> +<p>“Oh, if I could get there one day!” thought Lily. “I’d +post it to Pa; it would be the death of him!”</p> +<p>And then followed the thousand and one details of the +wandering life: your name on the red list, the list handed +in at the station; the journeys at reduced fares; the music +for twelve instruments, forty executants, sent on to the +theater a fortnight in advance.</p> +<p>“And matinées are paid for now. And you know, Lily, +in the Federation you can get a solicitor free.”</p> +<p>“That’s a good thing to know,” thought Lily, “for my +divorce from that rusty biker!”</p> +<p>Oh, how she hated pros, now! The sight of them in +the corridor, looking at her with glistening eyes, made +her want to put out her tongue at them! But she preferred +not to see:</p> +<p>“I don’t like to seem stuck-up with them, it’s not +polite,” she observed.</p> +<p>Nevertheless, she shrugged her shoulders when one of +them who, no doubt, had known her when she was “that +high,” blew kisses to her from the tips of his fingers, with +a gesture straight at her heart, through the window.</p> +<p>And the train rushed on, rushed on. They were nearing +Warrington. The slopes, on either side, bristled with +chimneys and houses, houses, endless roofs ... a +Lancashire rid of its black smoke, like an extinct and +silent crater ... Warrington! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224' name='page_224'></a>224</span></p> +<p>A few minutes’ wait. There was a general hustle, pros +stretching their legs, running to the refreshment-room +for a drink, some seeking seats in the train, others saying +good-by:</p> +<p>“Write to me, eh? Cathedral Hotel, Melbourne.”</p> +<p>And a shake of the hand; so long; perhaps for ever. +More basket trunks were being trundled down the platform. +A wife was leaving her husband: six months, +twelve months, without meeting; who could tell? Or else, +perhaps, between two trains, as the luck of the tours +would have it; and they seemed very fond of each other, +too; Lily thought it very pretty. But she had other +things to do than sentimentalize. She handed out her +parcels to Glass-Eye and then, standing on the platform, +said good-by to the Three Graces:</p> +<p>“Hope you’ll have a good journey! <i>Au revoir</i>! Send +me some post-cards,” said Lily. “Address them to the +theater, I love that! Good-by! Ta-ta!”</p> +<p>The train started. Lily waved her handkerchief to the +Three Graces.</p> +<p>One more separation; one more little rent: Lily had +had so many in her life. As far back as she could remember +there had been heads at the carriage-window, +like that; ships standing out to sea; trains rushing into +the night. But, this time, she was alone, with her maid. +And she drew herself up proudly, like a lady who had a +sense of her responsibilities. A new life was opening before +Lily, as before a girl just coming out. Poor Lily, +a girl still, in her way, yes, with, for her portion, a feather +in her hat, a gollywog in her trunk, a pair of supple legs +and nerves of steel, unerring and exact, trained to turn +round and round....</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225' name='page_225'></a>225</span> +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>“Liverpool! Come along, Glass-Eye!” said Lily, jogging +her maid in the ribs.</p> +<p>Glass-Eye, half asleep, clumsily gathered up her parcels, +while Lily looked round for the baggage-man. On +the platform was an avalanche of bags, boxes, picture-frames, +as at the departure from Euston; the basket +trunks were being piled up in the theater-vans. Lily +pointed out her hamper and her bike to the boy from the +theater, who had come to meet the “program” at the station.</p> +<p>“Are you the bicyclist?”</p> +<p>“I am,” replied Lily modestly.</p> +<p>She gave her address: not the pros’ boarding-house, +but private “digs” which had been recommended to her +in London, with a note of introduction. Then she walked +out of the station, followed by Glass-Eye.</p> +<p>Lily knew Liverpool, vaguely, as she knew all the +towns of the United Kingdom and those of America, too, +and Australia and India and Germany and Holland and +elsewhere. They were all muddled up in her memory, she +had seen so many, and made as it were one great city, +but for occasional salient points, as in the towns which +you came to in a boat, or those in which you had a circus +parade, or others still, here and there: Glasgow, where +she had fallen and broken a tooth; Blackpool with its +ball-rooms, its tower and a “contract!” Sheffield, with +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226' name='page_226'></a>226</span> +its smoking chimneys; Washington, with a dome at the +end; New York, with its sky-scrapers. The towns of her +early childhood, leaning against mountains, buried under +trees, were more remote, more like a dream. Elephants, +monkeys, harnessed buffaloes; and then Mexico and Ave +Maria, London and those footy rotters!</p> +<p>Liverpool was Lime Street: Lily remembered a sort of +round church; when you got to that, you turned to the +left. She soon found the house and received from a huge, +full-blown lady the friendly welcome which Lily’s artless +air and fair curls always insured her. No gentleman +with them? All alone by themselves? A room with a +big double bed, a little parlor with a bow-window; sixteen +shillings a week, including the use of the kitchen. +Just then, the baggage-man arrived, took the trunk up +to the room and went on with the bike to the pros’ boarding-house +and the theater. Lily, assisted by Glass-Eye, +fixed herself up for the week: her dresses on the pegs, +her linen safe under lock and key in the hamper. Then +she made a special parcel of things for the stage: paper +flowers, ostrich feathers, white laced boots.</p> +<p>“There, wrap that up in my petticoat,” said Lily. “And +the music and the gollywog: you can bring all that to my +dressing-room to-morrow morning.”</p> +<p>Next, Lily made herself look smart, freshened up her +two bows, threw her green muslin scarf over her shoulders +and went down to the parlor to pick out her favorite +tune—<i>The Bluebells of Scotland</i>—with one finger on the +piano. Meanwhile, the landlady spread the cloth: bread, +marmalade, watercress, two eggs. Then, according to instructions +received, Glass-Eye announced to Miss Lily +that tea was ready. Lily affably invited Glass-Eye to sit +down to table with her; and the two ate away like +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227' name='page_227'></a>227</span> +friends. Lily took the opportunity to settle her expenses; +for instance—and this she insisted upon—if she, Lily, +took a maid, she wouldn’t +have her for nothing; she +intended to pay her some +small monthly wage.</p> +<p>“And a good many little +perquisites besides, you +understand, Glass-Eye; my +old frocks, my hats.”</p> +<p>Glass-Eye did not ask +that, would have given her +other eye to serve Miss Lily.</p> +<p>Lily was still asleep, at +twelve o’clock the next +morning, when Glass-Eye +entered the room. She had +lost her way, had walked +miles, had been to the landing-stage +of the music-hall....</p> +<p>“At what time’s rehearsal?” +asked Lily.</p> +<p>“At one o’clock, Miss +Lily.”</p> +<p>“And you let me sleep +till twelve, when I have so +much to do!” said Lily. +“Go and get breakfast +ready ... or you’d +better mind yourself!”</p> +<p>And Lily put out her +hand to lay hold of a boot; +but Glass-Eye was gone.</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg225.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 259px; height: 540px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 259px;'> +GLASS-EYE MAUD<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228' name='page_228'></a>228</span></div> +<p>Lily, while dressing, reflected upon her new responsibilities, +upon the way in which servants should be treated. +No familiarity; not too severe, either; and no smackings +... that is to say ... however ...</p> +<p>“I must dress her simply,” thought Lily. “My hats, +but without the feathers; coarse thread gloves; and she +must always carry a parcel.”</p> +<p>Lily was eager to go to rehearsal, accompanied by her +maid. There is no rehearsing at “rehearsal:” the “times,” +the scenic effects are settled with the conductor of the +band; there are no bare arms or bloomers practising +on their carpets: a few dark groups, in ordinary walking +dress; others, in their shirt sleeves, are opening boxes, +and no mystery, no shifting lights: the stage and the +house one wan hole, except the red and gold note of the +curtain and the black mass of the musicians, with the +gleaming brasses.</p> +<p>The artistes went up to the conductor, one after the +other, and explained their “turns:”</p> +<p>“When I come on, this tune, soft, six times, to begin +with; then, once, loud. When I go off ... a roll +of drums.”</p> +<p>The band, each time, played two or three bars, mechanically, +at sight; then it was understood and ... +next, please.</p> +<p>Lily had seen this before, but not under these conditions; +not dressed as at present; not accompanied by a +maid. She listened as hard as she could when she walked +on to the stage, caught the remarks, enjoyed the impression +which she produced. They seemed to ask:</p> +<p>“Who is it? A singer? A dancer?”</p> +<p>“No, Lily; Miss Lily, you know.”</p> +<p>She guessed all that. Then: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229' name='page_229'></a>229</span></p> +<p>“My score, Maud!”</p> +<p>And, leaning toward the orchestra, she explained, in +her turn: pizzicati, mazurka, frog, swan, back-wheel, the +waltz for the twirls, the march for the exit. And +Lily withdrew with a half-curtsey and a pretty smile. +Next, she put out her things in her dressing-room, on +the table, before the looking-glass: brushes, pencils, +grease-paints, strings of pearls for her hair. She +hung a cord from the door to the window, to dry her +tights on, when she washed a pair in the basin. She got +out her little work-box, in case of anything tearing, +threaded a needle, freshened up the knots of her ribbons, +pinned photographs and p.-c.’s on the wall. And, over +all, she hung her gollywog, a hairy doll, white-collared, +red-waistcoated, with, in its black face, under the +bristling hair, two shining tacks by way of eyes. It +was the protecting idol. Not that Lily, ever faithful to the +Church of England, believed much in gollywogs; but, like +most music-hall people, she felt safer when she knew it +was there. And her dressing-room, with the spangled +skirts and the tights hanging down like flayed skins, suggested +some strange, exotic chapel in which a fetish sat +enthroned.</p> +<p>After that, Lily had nothing left to do. She went out +with Glass-Eye and walked round to the front to look at +her lithos. She saw to her annoyance that a serio was +topping the bill—and a comic singer middling it and +a cinematograph bottoming it. But no matter, she had +a good place, just under the bill-topper.</p> +<p>Next came shopping, through the windows. She +bought a pair of thread gloves for Glass-Eye at Lewis’s +and then went in and lay on her bed, feeling ever +so tired from getting up late that morning. She +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230' name='page_230'></a>230</span> +dreamed and dreamed, while Glass-Eye went marketing. +As soon as Lily was alone, the thought pricked her +like a pin: looking pretty, indeed! Her gentlemen friends! +Jimmy, that traitor, and Trampy! Trampy would be +sure to play her some dirty trick. Oh, if she could +get a divorce from him, in spite of all! She had made +inquiries in London. She would want a solicitor. She +must have one, to set inquiries on foot.... She could +have as many witnesses as she pleased: all those girls +... and the stage hands ... and two artistes, +on the day when Trampy, in his fury, had flung his bike +at her on the stairs; the pedal had grazed her temple, yes, +at Dresden. That wasn’t the way to treat a lady. Everything +that had happened was his fault; and they’d see +who won the day, he or she. Her forehead wrinkled +up with anger when she thought of it. She bit her +lips and clenched her fists and then ... and then +... enough of that! She’d see to-morrow. And other +cares came to bother her: the indispensable things which +she would have to buy at the end of the week out of her +salary; open-work stockings, an aigrette for the theater, a +little black bog-oak pig to wear at her wrist. And Jimmy’s +thousand marks ...</p> +<p>“Damn it, let him wait!” And, with her hand on her +lucky charm, Lily fell asleep.</p> +<p>In the evening, at the theater, she forgot everything. +She felt a longing, a fevered desire to appear. When her +turn came, after the xylophones, who seemed, behind their +tables laden with bottles, to be keeping a bar of musical +sounds; when the light shining on the great back-drop +threw up into dazzling relief the blue sea, the blue sky and +the white colonnade and terraces; when, amid the flash of +the lime-light and the thunder of the orchestra, she made +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231' name='page_231'></a>231</span> +her entrance on the stage, Lily had a smile of triumph. +Life was beginning for her at last! She could have cried +out for happiness to that human mass which, behind the +flaming streak of the footlights, spread itself, bare-necked +and bedizened, in the warm shadow of the front +boxes. And she directed a scarlet smile, set off with a +glint of gold, to the audience.</p> +<p>“I believe I was grand to-night,” said Lily, as she went +off, out of breath. “Oh, if there had been an agent in the +house! But no such luck: they’re never there when they’re +wanted! And those two fellows,” she thought to herself. +“If they had been there, they’d have died of jealousy.”</p> +<p>Everybody spoiled her. She needed a strong head +to resist the flatteries with which she was overwhelmed, +both as artiste and woman. For instance, when a row +of Roofers were puffing away on the stage, some manager, +who had known her when she was “that high,” was +sure to observe that her talent, her firm, round hips—“Eh, +Lily, you’ve got plenty of that now!” ... Lily +blushed under the compliment—would make more impression +than a whole herd of Roofers:</p> +<p>“Eh, Lily? I say, what are you doing to-night? Come +and have some ...”</p> +<p>“Glass-Eye, my handkerchief,” Lily broke in, suspecting +an invitation to supper.</p> +<p>Glass-Eye, in obedience to a gesture of Lily’s, opened +the wrist-bag, gave Lily the lace handkerchief and Lily +hid her mocking smile in a scented gesture. Then:</p> +<p>“Good-by. Ta-ta!”</p> +<p>And they shook hands, like good friends, nothing +more.</p> +<p>Glass-Eye frightened off the admirers with her fixed +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232' name='page_232'></a>232</span> +stare. And Lily had no lack of them. She loved flirting. +She wanted adulation, wanted to be made much +of. She had a revenge to take, arrears to make up; she +and sympathy had, till then, been strangers. She now +took her fill of it, got carried away, saw nothing but lovers +around her, three or four at a time, as when the comic +quartet, the Out-of-Tunes, used to grin kisses to her in +the street. It was for her that they were there, every +one of them, down to the acting managers, who did not +disdain to come round from the front and take a turn on +the stage. It might be a question of steam-pipes or electric +wires; no matter, Lily took it all to herself, made +herself amiable toward their dress-coats and white shirt-fronts, +and said “’K you!” with the great stage bow, the +body bent in a sweeping curtsey, when they complimented +her on her firm, round hips. She stabbed them with +smiles, to make sure of complimentary phrases in their +weekly reports to the central boards. All of them; +the electrician, the conductor of the band, she had them +all at her feet. It became a need for Lily to see people +all around her dying for love. It gave her a feeling of +mingled pride and remorse.</p> +<p>“Can I help it, Glass-Eye?” she would ask, to quiet +her conscience. “They’re mad. They would leave their +wives and children for me!”</p> +<p>She had an autograph album filled with “thoughts” +and declarations:</p> +<p>“I love you! <i>Je vous aime! Ich liebe dich</i>!”</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233' name='page_233'></a>233</span> +<img src='images/illus-pg231.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 416px; height: 594px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 416px;'> +In the pros’ smoking-room.<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235' name='page_235'></a>235</span></div> +<p>Lily, now that the audience was good for invitations +to supper, bouquets and sweets, occupied herself +with that somber mass which, formerly, did not cause +her so much uneasiness as the presence of her Pa. Lily, +like a real stage-girl, who had beheld waves miles high +between Harwich and the Hook of Holland, saw in a +few flowers a bouquet large enough to fill a cab and the +least little love letter grew, in her eyes, into an offer to +present her with motor-cars and to abandon wife and +child. If a gentleman, for once in a way, stood on the +pavement waiting for her, she dreamed of an elopement. +And there were pros, too, who prowled around her, in +the half light of the wings, and came up to her with +outstretched hand:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Mrs. Trampy!”</p> +<p>“Call me Miss Lily,” she said, in a vexed voice. +“That’s the name I’m known by.”</p> +<p>And many of them did know her, in fact, from having +talked about her in Fourteenth Street in New York, or +in State Street at Sidney, or in the theaters in South +Africa, for that story of the whippings had traveled all +around the world, under the folds of the Union Jack. +Some proposed to take her with them in their show, or to +go with her to clean her bike, instead of Glass-Eye:</p> +<p>“Is it a bargain?”</p> +<p>“Yes, I <i>don’t</i> think!” said Lily.</p> +<p>Another, just off for Melbourne, told her that, in +Australia, you could find fire-escapes to marry you for +half-a-crown. They joked without constraint, in the +pros’ smoking-room, a small and dark corner between +the house and the stage.... All of them, all the pros, +she had them all at her feet; but she didn’t care for that +sort and she sent them all to eat coke.</p> +<p>The months all passed alike. She had finished the +Bill and Boom tour. She continued in the private +music-halls, from north to south, from east to west of +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236' name='page_236'></a>236</span> +England. In spite of Glass-Eye’s impossible cooking and +the everlasting ham sandwiches and pork-pies of the railway +station refreshment rooms, Lily grew plumper and +plumper, her nervous leanness filled out, with pigeon’s +eggs and ostrich’s eggs everywhere, in front and behind. +She did not kill herself with work. Once, in Glasgow, at +a music-hall where, a few weeks earlier, Laurence had +had a terrible fall, lying unconscious for two whole hours, +the frightened manager said:</p> +<p>“No dangerous tricks, mind! They only get us into +trouble!”</p> +<p>Another time, she was given only seven minutes, +watch in hand, on the stage.</p> +<p>“Couldn’t you cut that little trick? You know the one +I mean,” said the manager.</p> +<p>He called a little trick a performance which it had +cost her eighteen months’ hard practice and no end of +bruises to learn. Lily did not wait to be asked twice. +She cut as desired and thought it a jolly lot easier to trot +round quietly, as though out for a ride, with pretty smiles +to the audience. She ended by paying more attention to +her dresses than to her work:</p> +<p>“It’s not so much what one does,” she said, “as the way +one does it.”</p> +<p>The sympathy with which she was surrounded unmanned +the Spartan in her. She strove to please, no +longer gave her performance for herself, like a machine, +unerring and exact. Already in a few months, she was +spoiled. She looked for adventitious successes. She said, +“The audience is very cold at Birmingham,” because she +was not asked out to supper, and, “They do like artistes +at Sheffield, gee!” because a gentleman had sent her +champagne and flowers in her dressing-room. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237' name='page_237'></a>237</span></p> +<p>In the towns where she played three times a day—a +matinée and two night turns—she gave half of her performance, +cut whatever was dangerous or tiring. She +never practised now; just went down in the morning to +fetch her letters at the theater, where she loved receiving +them, post-cards especially, which any one could +read. She said to the jossers:</p> +<p>“Send me lots; talk about motor-cars and champagne +suppers: that drives the pros wild.”</p> +<p>She left them lying on the table, or else walked about +on the stage, with her letters in her hand, like a lady +overwhelmed with offers, with invitations. If, by any +chance, she went to the practice at the end of the week, +it was to display her hat, her new boots; and she +laughed to herself when she saw the artistes, each on +his carpet, fagging away like mad. She felt like a +fine lady visiting a boarding-school, among those little +girls practising their flip-flaps or gluing themselves +to the wall to try their back-bendings. The pride of a +Marjutti, who, they said, tortured her spinal column to +achieve a double knot; the inordinate ambition of a +Laurence, risking her life for the pleasure of risking it, +were things which she did not understand. And then, +all those accidents! Dolly Pawnee, the other day, had +broken her arm at the New York Hippodrome; the Gilson +girl had fallen on her head at Budapest. They +were mad, thought Lily, to do all that without being +obliged to! No, no; no more of that for her! The last +thing she wanted was to spoil her face, seeing that she +had nothing but her smile to keep her. And Lily grew +timid, looked upon herself more and more as a very +precious little thing. She gave herself terrible airs on rehearsal +day; thought the stage too slippery, or too small. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238' name='page_238'></a>238</span> +Lily wanted a stage thirty feet wide, no less; she who, +in the old days, at a gesture from Pa, would have performed +her whole turn, including the head-on-the-saddle, +on the top of a cab or on the Stoke Newington pavement. +Formerly, she used to think everything good, did not +know what fatigue meant; now, in the middle of her turn, +she would say to herself, sometimes with a feeling of discouragement:</p> +<p>“I’ve only done half. I’ve still got this and that to do.”</p> +<p>And the audience itself seemed to act as her confederate. +When she missed one of her tricks, Lily would lay +her bike on the stage, step down to the footlights, bow +with a confused air, beg pardon with a smile and receive +a reassuring round of applause. Lily loved these refined +audiences: <i>her</i> audiences, as she said; not the matinée +audiences, with seats at reduced prices: to see your grocer +or your butcher in the front boxes was rotten; and those +people gave themselves such airs. A cheap way of doing +the grand!</p> +<p>And the landladies spoiled her, too; those worthy souls +who treated her as their own daughter.</p> +<p>“And a jolly sight better!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>Others pitied her for the profession she followed, +feared she would break something, one fine day. Lily +thought that very sweet of them, would have liked to stay +with them for ever; but there was the constant rent at +parting, a bit of herself which Lily left behind her every +week. And the bothers that Maud caused her! Her +stupidity drove Lily mad: tickets lost, bags mislaid, +disputes with the tradesmen, battles with the bike, +scratches on the shins, on the hands, everywhere. Lily +lost patience, threatened her with the leather belt, +damn it! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239' name='page_239'></a>239</span></p> +<p>Sometimes, Lily became incensed with herself and +everybody. Her divorce kept running in her head. And +her three years’ book, with its last pages unsoiled by +engagements, also gave her cause for uneasiness; and +yet the acting managers must have sung her praises, in +their weekly reports,—the ones who came and made +love to her on the stage!</p> +<p>After different music-halls, she had done the Harrasford +tour, but without any great success. People who +had known her with the troupe thought that she had gone +off. Lily was furious: if, on those evenings, she missed +a trick, she would knock Glass-Eye about when she returned +to the wings, storm at the stage—“Slippery as +ice, damn it!”—fling her bike, which was not to blame, +against the wall. Lily, in her pink tights, under the pendants +of false pearls on her forehead, looked like an +angry savage, ready to fly at your throat.</p> +<p>That was her life. No adventures, really; theaters in +which she caught on, theaters in which she didn’t go +down so well; more or less prolonged applause; an encore +or two; and, here and there, a bouquet large enough +to fill a cab: those were the great events. And it was +always the same show, on the same stage, from one end +of England to the other; theaters and theaters; so many +theaters that, in her memory, they ended, like the towns, +by making only one. It was always herds of Roofers, +swaying in unison, with flaxen wigs, scarlet legs, boyish +voices; and “families,” “sisters,” “brothers,” all different, +but all alike, going up the staircase to their dressing-rooms +in wraps, like gouty people at a spa, and serios, +serios, with choruses emphasized by dances. Sometimes, +a new attraction, a Venus without tights, or a bare-breasted +Salome, would draw whole groups, boys and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240' name='page_240'></a>240</span> +girls mixed, to the wings, with their necks stretched +toward the stage. And there were exotic features, too: +conjurers from Malabar; boomerang-throwing bush-men; +the Light of Asia, a Chinese girl without arms, +an artificial product, like those beggar-monsters whom +they cultivate in pots in the mountains of Navarre. She +saw the boy-violinist again. Since that bite in the seat +of his trousers, at Budapest, he had abandoned all hope +of fame and was looking for an engagement in the +orchestra. She saw the female-impersonator with the +green eyes. She saw numbers and numbers. She ended +by seeing them all again, in the various greenrooms. +She heard names mentioned. People were coming on +all round: Tom, singing-girls, dancing-girls. She would +have to do something, too, after all, to get herself +talked about! She had received a shock on opening +<i>The Era</i>: they had not taken out her name! There +was still a Miss Lily at Rathbone Place: her cousin +Daisy, it appeared, a stranger, was there in her stead, +under her name! And they were stealing her idea! +The New Zealanders were now called the New Trickers; +no doubt the turn which she had described to Pa. +Something new, something new was essential. She must +manage to hit upon something! She turned it all over +in her head. There were too many Lilies, Lilians, Lillians; +you saw nothing but Lillians on the posters. But +what about a Lilia Godiva, quite naked on her bike, +like the other on her horse? She would mimic the +scene, love and despair, and she would think of something +to raise a laugh! Peeping Tom, for instance, +stretching out his neck and stealing a kiss as she passed. +Oh, she would find a way—trust her!—of showing +them what she had in her! And Jimmy and Trampy +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241' name='page_241'></a>241</span> +pursued her incessantly with their hateful memory. +Trampy, she was told, was still the darling of the fair.</p> +<p>Lily was greatly astonished that he had not tried to +obtain a divorce, on his side:</p> +<p>“He’s afraid,” she said to herself.</p> +<p>More than ever, she busied herself with collecting her +witnesses; she would soon be rid of her tramp cyclist.</p> +<p>People also talked about Jimmy, whose reputation was +still increasing. After a triumphant season at the Hippodrome, +he had left for America. Jimmy was becoming +a national champion. An article in <i>The Era</i> spoke +of “our Jimmy.”</p> +<p>“He’s a friend of yours, Lily,” people said. “You +ought to know all about him.”</p> +<p>Lily tossed her head, like one who could say a great +deal if she would....</p> +<p>Oh, how she longed for revenge when she thought +of that! Oh, if she could only have served them out +somehow! If she could get <i>The Performer Annual</i> +to send her those questions to answer: “Q. Your +favorite town? Your favorite audience? Your idea of +marriage? Your pet aversion?” wouldn’t she give it +them hot, just! She thought of having her biography +written, the real one. She herself sometimes jotted down +things she remembered, on bits of paper, on the backs of +envelopes, in her dressing-room; arranged her picture +post-cards in order; called that writing her memoirs. She +would crush them with her successes, give names and +dates: that lord who wanted to travel with her, the fifty-pound +diamond brooch he had given her. And bouquets, +chocolates, sweets ... by the cart-load! That stage-manager +who cried when she went away! All, all in love +with her: yes, those and ever so many more! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242' name='page_242'></a>242</span></p> +<p>She had so much to say that she did not know where +to begin. She knocked up against too many people, men +and women, without counting monkeys, parrots, dogs, +cats, ponies, elephants; it all ended by getting mixed up +in her head, like the theaters and the towns. She grew +quite bewildered, among so many different things. She +had seen everything and done everything. Once, during +a week when she was “resting,” she had helped her landlady, +who kept a public-house, to draw the beer and had +waited on the customers, with her fifty-pound diamond +brooch at her throat.</p> +<p>At a benefit performance, one night, when they were +drinking champagne on the stage, actors, singers, artistes, +all together, her pink tights had excited the dress-coats. +Lily had been “pressed in company,” that is to say, surrounded +till she did not know which way to turn, while +her time was pretty well taken up with saying, “Paws +off!” before, behind, on every side. She had triumphed +at galas, above a tumult of heads and parasols: at Roundhay +Park, among other places, beneath the motto, “Let +Leeds flourish!” Feeling anxious about her future, she +had consulted a “Zanzig” at Earl’s Court. Each week +brought its surprises, its fresh knowledge. Lily learned +something every day: “If you see a lamb in the fields +with its head turned toward you, that’s lucky; if you see +its tail first, it’s a sign of bad luck,” and the way of +holding your hands, of placing your fingers, of whispering +certain words in certain circumstances.</p> +<p>She collected halfpennies with holes in them. In +Ireland, she had kissed the Blarney stone and picked +shamrock in the ruins. She had lost her little mother-of-pearl +hunchback in the labyrinth of underground passages +at the Blackpool Tower Circus. The loss of this +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243' name='page_243'></a>243</span> +lucky charm had damped her spirits for a week. And +her profits were small and her “exes” constantly increasing: +tips to the call-boy, who cleaned her bike; tips to the +stage-manager; half-crowns and five shillings in every +direction. As soon as she had put a trifle by, a week without +an engagement made her hard-up again. Though she +traveled at reduced fares and contented herself with a +ham sandwich or a slice of pork-pie on the road, she +would never, never be able to repay Jimmy that money: +she had not even paid Glass-Eye yet! Her dresses for on +and off the stage swallowed up everything. And yet she +couldn’t go about naked, like Lady Godiva!</p> +<p>And time passed and passed. Lily was growing <i>old</i>: +she was eighteen! There were girls of her age who were +already beyond work, used up, like that girl contortionist +who had just been cut open for a tumor; and +Lily had as yet achieved nothing! Oh, she ought to have +signed for America or Australia, or else for Russia, of +which she had heard wonders—Poland, the Parisienne, +had just returned from there covered with diamonds—theaters +that played all night and did not close till dawn, +to the clicking of champagne-glasses. Lily dreamed of +it, ecstatically: England was no good to her now. The +New Trickers, with their own cheap Lily, were working +her idea on the Bill and Boom Tour! If only she could +have the continent! They were talking of a new music-hall +which Harrasford was to open in Paris. He meant +to make a palace of it, they said, and he was also stretching +out his arm toward Antwerp, Cologne, Lyons, Marseilles, +a continental trust....</p> +<p>“That’s what I ought to have,” thought Lily.</p> +<p>Her present life seemed empty, notwithstanding its +excitement: it was like the sound of a band; nothing remained +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244' name='page_244'></a>244</span> +of it. Departures, constant departures from one +town to another, always leaving, never staying. But for +Glass-Eye’s company she would have cried, sometimes, +for sheer melancholy, as at the sight of those really loving +couples in the boarding-houses, on the stage itself; those +babies in the arms of their Mas; it made her heart ache; +the thought of it pursued her like the call of distant bells, +while the train rushed into the darkness.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245' name='page_245'></a>245</span> +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“May joy and pleasure be your lot</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>As through this world you trot, trot, trot.</p> +<br /> +<p style='text-align: right;'>“X.”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“In the golden chain of friendship, regard me as a link.</p> +<br /> +<p style='text-align: right;'>“<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Loving Pal</span> (Palace, Sheffield).”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>There were pages and pages like this in Lily’s autograph +book. The last entry was that of a couple of +friends, the dark one and the fair one:</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“May success always follow you, and eventually a good</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>fellow collar you, is the sincere wish of the</p> +<br /> +<p style='text-align: right;'>“Sisters Arriett and Nancy—The ideal pair (of legs!)”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>Since Miss Lily’s arrival in Paris, her collection had +been increased by the addition of a fervent declaration +from her friend, the architect. This had been her welcome +in Paris, the good fellow, no doubt, prophesied by +the ideal pair of legs; yes, she had hardly reached Paris +and already there were people dying of love around her, +already a man at her feet.</p> +<p>Lily was delighted to meet this sincere friend again, a +friend of her childhood, who, she said, had known her +when she was “that high”: one poor devil the more +ready to leave wife and children for her sake. The +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246' name='page_246'></a>246</span> +evening before, in her dressing-room, at the Bijou Theater, +she had told him the story of her life since leaving her +parents. It made her forget to ask about Harrasford +and the new theater which he was to open: was it +ready? The architect ought to know better than anybody. +She would ask him to-night. And Lily lay turning +this over, in the morning, in bed, notwithstanding +her other cares, for she must get clear somehow, must +see the agents that afternoon. She had plenty to do +beside her turn. She had to busy herself with those thousand +and one details.... She would never have +believed that it was so hard to fill her three years’ book. +Lily felt half-dead with fatigue before she started:</p> +<p>“Let me sleep!” said Lily, stretching herself in the big +double bed which Glass-Eye had just left; “clear out! +Let me sleep!”</p> +<p>But Glass-Eye made a rush at Lily, tickled her in the +neck, stifled her laughter under the pillow: it was a necessity +for them in the morning, those few minutes of +horse-play, of thumps and smacks, which rang out on +every side. Lily, at last, full-throated, with fluttering +nostrils, cried out for mercy. The maid went off, Lily, +now quite awake, remained alone, and her worries returned: +no more love, no more music, as at the theater, +no more purple rays, nothing but gloomy hours, a long +day stretching out before her like a gray corridor. It +was real life now: letters to write, costumes to mend, last +night’s tights to wash in the basin.... Lily, sitting +on the edge of her bed, took her purse from where +she had hidden it under the bolster—a habit she had +acquired in marriage, because of Trampy’s nightly ferretings—and +emptied it on the sheets: one blue banknote; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247' name='page_247'></a>247</span> +one, two, three gold coins. How much did that +make in pounds, shillings and pence? Hardly seven +pounds. It was all in vain for her to economize, like that +Ma of a star, who counted the potatoes. It was all in +vain for her to stint in every way, to keep back Glass-Eye’s +wages for over a year, saying that she would +pay her in a lump: she would have almost nothing left +after the purchases which she had to make. It was true +that, to-morrow, she would receive her fortnight’s pay; +and she hoped for a renewal. She felt sure of it, if only +because of the way in which the manager had taken her +by the chin. Then a fortnight at the Brussels Alhambra—1 +November, Flora, Amsterdam—10 January, Copenhagen—and, +for the rest, her three years’ book was empty +and each empty page represented months without work—all +her profits would be swallowed up by her enforced +idleness. She would never clear herself, never be able +to pay Jimmy. Oh, she was furious with him because +she could not discharge her debt to him once and for +all, fling his money in his face, show him if people remained +penniless long when they had her talent! That +idea comforted Lily. And it was important that she +should look nice to-day, to go the round of the agents. +Lily dressed quickly, cunningly puffed out her bows, a +trick she had learned as a child, and then, before putting +on her dress, cooked the food with Glass-Eye, who had +just come in with her parcels.</p> +<p>Then a dash of scent on the handkerchief, a touch of +rouge on the lips and, leaving the room all untidy, she +went out, followed by Glass-Eye, rigged out in a pair +of thread mittens and carrying the sunshade and the +wrist-bag. Quick, quick! For Lily knew by experience +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248' name='page_248'></a>248</span> +that it is well to be the first at the agent’s or else there’s +nothing for you.</p> +<p>She did not dislike those walks through the Paris +streets:</p> +<p>“Let’s have some fun,” she said to Glass-Eye.</p> +<p>By this, Lily meant laughing at those “tiny Frenchies”; +and, if they ventured to accost her, crushing them with +a “<i>Vous hettes oun cochon</i>!” Although, among the people +she mixed with, agents, artistes, stage-hands, everybody +spoke English, Lily had not come to Paris without +learning a few words, “<i>Oui</i> ... <i>Non</i> ... <i>Vous</i> +<i>hettes oun cochon</i>!” and so on, which were indispensable, +she thought, to a girl who wanted to make herself respected +on the continent, a girl alone, especially. And +she loved to snub those damned <i>parley-voos</i> who dared +to accost ladies. It seemed to lighten those days of visits +to the agents, the very prospect of which gave her a +headache in advance, because one had to think of everything, +lithos, photographs, programs; and, if the agent +wasn’t in, ruin one’s self in correspondence; and puff +one’s self in every way, rub it into them that one was the +cleverest person on earth....</p> +<p>“If you’re too modest,” said Lily, “they’ll take you at +your word!”</p> +<p>And the pay would drop, in consequence.</p> +<p>“Never tell your salary!” was another of Lily’s favorite +maxims.</p> +<p>She gave out that she made heaps, that a little star like +her, the Marie Loyd of the bike, was only to be obtained +for untold gold. But, at the agent’s, she had to cut her +prices: there was no hiding anything from them; it was +like going to the doctor.</p> +<p>“And, when you’re in work, everybody wants you; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249' name='page_249'></a>249</span> +and, when you’re out of work, they have nothing for +you: it’s help yourself as best you may!” she said.</p> +<p>She had to help herself now; and it was delicate business +dealing with people who have only one idea in their +heads, to swindle you, in order to curry favor with the +managers by getting them cheap turns. They would +have skinned you alive:</p> +<p>“Two pounds a week. Do you accept?”</p> +<p>“Go to Halifax!” Lily would reply in such cases, looking +them straight in the face. It took courage to do that: +the agent might grow bigger, become an enemy. She +didn’t care! She wasn’t going to lower her price for anybody! +And the commission she had to pay them was a +torment to Lily; calculating the percentage made her head +split—not to speak of the complicated nature of the +contracts, worse than insurance policies. The poor artiste +was bound down on every side, at the mercy of the +manager; everything was foreseen, down to the prohibition +of black tights, which concealed one’s poverty. And +it was bad enough in England; but in the Dago countries, +on the continent, it was worse.</p> +<p>“Can you understand a word of it, Glass-Eye?” asked +Lily, explaining to her maid the tricks which the artiste +had to fight against. “I don’t know how the small turns +manage,” she concluded, in the tone of a woman who +towers above all that.</p> +<p>Lily’s prettiness made the people in the street turn +round to look at her. They would gaze at her cheeky +feather, whisper, “You pretty, pretty darling!” in her +ear. Lily, secretly delighted, held herself ready to crush +the saucy rascal with a “How dare you?” like a lady +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_250' name='page_250'></a>250</span> +who knows how to appreciate a compliment, without permitting +the least familiarity. And when she approached +the agency, she insisted on Glass-Eye’s keeping by her +side, asked for things: her wrist-bag, her embroidered +handkerchief. And her way of walking in! Lily pretended +to be short-sighted, so as to see no one in the +rotten lot. She sent in her card, sat down in the waiting-room. +It reminded her of the dentist’s, with those +pale people sitting on benches; those serio-comics, all +over-fat; loud-voiced topical singers, who took the place +of the real artistes, just like the bioscopes and cinematographs! +There were also little families—small turns that +had struggled hard to learn a few tricks—nobody wanted +them, because they had no “chic” costumes, sometimes, +or no lithos....</p> +<p>Those were received like dogs: a wretched couple was +just coming out, a man and a woman, sad with a humility +accustomed to rebuffs; and the agent drove them toward +the door, with his voice:</p> +<p>“Eccentric mashers? No opening for you. Call again.”</p> +<p>Lily got a good reception, in the agent’s room; but +there was nothing for her. And the agent saw her to +the door, with a satisfied air and a knowing wink, as +though to make the others believe ... Lily didn’t +like that kind—her short-sightedness did not prevent her +noticing it and blushing at it—but she was very pleased, +all the same, to be seen to the door, before those small +turns who were received like dogs....</p> +<p>On the pavement outside, the wretched couple came up +to her shyly:</p> +<p>“Don’t you know us, Miss Lily? The Para-Paras.”</p> +<p>She had to listen to a pitiful tale. She heard nothing +but that, when she went on her rounds of visits to the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_251' name='page_251'></a>251</span> +agents. Oh, the distress which she beheld there! It +made Lily feel quite ill at night. A little more and she +would have said her prayers, before +getting into bed, to thank +God that she hadn’t come to +that. Poor Paras! Starving, +no doubt, remaining for weeks +in their garret, pretending that +they had been performing in the +provinces ... abroad.... +Lily pictured them passing the +stage-doorkeepers to whom they +had sold their parrots and being +greeted with a “What’s for +breakfast, Polly?”</p> +<p>“Miss Lily,” they confessed, +in a whisper, “you know such a +lot of people: if ever you hear +of anything for us, never mind +where ...”</p> +<p>“Poor beggars!” thought +Lily.</p> +<p>And her Ma had prophesied +to her that, one day, she +would be worse off +than they! No, she +would never be half +so badly off! Why, +she could have had +anything she wanted, +motor-cars, Paris +gowns, for the asking.</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg247.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 196px; height: 557px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 196px;'> +THE PARA-PARAS<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>“Glass-Eye, my +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_252' name='page_252'></a>252</span> +bag!” And, handing a small gold coin to the wretched +couple, “There ... between artistes, you know +... give it back when you can; good-by. Did you +notice, Glass-Eye,” asked Lily, as she walked away, “how +flattered they were when I said, ‘Between artistes?’ They +looked quite touched.”</p> +<p>But there was no time to waste in nonsense, on a day +when she was calling on the agents. The thing was to +get there first; and Lily consulted her addresses....</p> +<p>She was exasperated at being obliged, with her talent, +to climb all those stairs, to hang about in the waiting-room, +she, Lily Clifton! And it reeked of vice, stunk +with the trashy scent of the “not-up-to-muches:” merely +to look at them suggested faces seen in Piccadilly at +night or in the Burlington Arcade.</p> +<p>Lily sent in her card, threw a short-sighted glance +around her and remained standing, like a lady who is +never kept waiting and who is sure to be received at once. +And, with her head bent down and her chin in her gold-spotted +tie, she turned over the pages of <i>Le Courrier des +Cafés Concerts</i> on the table ... names which she +didn’t know ... the small “numbers” of the continent +... so much the better ... all the more +chance for her. But the engagement which she dreamed +of did not offer this time either. What the agent did +propose to her, almost without lowering his voice, with +the door open, before everybody, was the grated private +boxes of South America ... the private rooms of +Russia ... accompanied, at a startled movement on +Lily’s part, by this concession:</p> +<p>“You needn’t sleep there, you know!”</p> +<p>To talk like that to a lady! Lily felt stifled. Was +that what she had learned the bike for? To exhibit +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253' name='page_253'></a>253</span> +herself after the show, at the customers’ disposal? Lily +could have fainted on the stairs, as she went down.</p> +<p>“One of those!” she said. “Not I!”</p> +<p>And she continued her weary pilgrimage of stairs, +from agent to agent.</p> +<p>“I must have six months filled up in my book before to-night!” +she said, determined to visit them all, small and +large, rather than go back empty-handed.</p> +<p>There were some who suggested to her that ten per +cent. was really very little....</p> +<p>“I like their style!” thought Lily. “They want an +extra sop thrown to them: one might as well work for +nothing!”</p> +<p>She thanked them, nevertheless, so as not to make +enemies of them—one never knows—and the agent +doesn’t matter so much; but the assistant, who happens +to have known you when you were “that high” ... +better give him a tip, lest he should round on you.</p> +<p>She also saw a former artiste, a friend of Pa’s, who +had become an agent.</p> +<p>“Miss Lily? Lily Clifton? What are you doing now? +Won’t you see my secretary? Leave your address with +him.”</p> +<p>“Fellows whom Pa helped!” she grumbled angrily, as +she went down the stairs. “They’re the worst of all! +They make you pay for the humiliation of their own failure +on the stage!”</p> +<p>Presently, she came to an agent who practised almost +in the street, in an arcade somewhat like the Burlington, +an agent for everything ... circus, music-hall, theater +... artistes formed in a week ... white +flesh at famine salaries. There were all sorts of people +there, a moving heap of frayed velvet and shabby plush. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254' name='page_254'></a>254</span> +Lily passed by with great dignity. Next, she came to +the big agent, with offices in Berlin and London ... +the ting-ting of telephones, the tick-tack of typewriters +all day ... business pure and simple, an exchange +for supple loins, swelling biceps, muslin skirts, pigeon’s +eggs ... a sheaf of stars who, from there, radiated +over Australia, America, England, the Eastern and +Western Trusts, Bill and Boom, Harrasford, the continent. +Lily felt a little ill at ease as she entered—she +had a pain in the pit of her stomach, as when she used +to expect a smacking—and again in the private office +crammed with papers and registers, when alone with the +agent, who looked at her card, he seated, she standing. +Then, suddenly:</p> +<p>“Lily? Miss Lily? Your price is two hundred francs +a week, I believe.”</p> +<p>“What!” said Lily. “With a bike and a maid?”</p> +<p>“It’s what you had at Maidstone, so I was told.”</p> +<p>“What a lie!” said Lily. “Three hundred francs is the +lowest I’ve ever had. I’ll show you my contracts.”</p> +<p>“Don’t trouble,” said the agent. “I thought ... +we can get plenty at that price, you know ... in +your style....”</p> +<p>“In my style, perhaps ... but not me.”</p> +<p>“Pooh, the audience doesn’t know the difference.” And +he started looking through a register, turning over the +pages and repeating mechanically, like a refrain or a +lullaby, “The audience doesn’t care a hang; it’s all the +same to the audience.” And, suddenly, with his hand +flat on the open book and the other ready to take up the +pen, with a piercing eye fixed upon Lily, “I can give you +a month at a thousand francs ... they want a girl +in tights ... at Lisbon.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255' name='page_255'></a>255</span></p> +<p>“Lisbon?” said Lily. “That’s at the Colosseo. A +thousand francs to go to the Colosseo, with one’s luggage +and a maid?”</p> +<p>“Well?” broke in the agent. “And what do you want +a maid for, you extravagant little beast? Why not your +maid’s family while you’re about it? A thousand francs: +will you take it? I’ve got some one who will, if you +don’t.”</p> +<p>Lily had to say yes or no quickly. Her forehead was +wrinkled with the effort of turning the francs into shillings, +the shillings into pounds. She consulted her book, +like an artiste who doesn’t know, who may not be free, +for a whole month. She lowered her chin in her tie, but +without smiling ... had a cramp in her stomach, +rather ... at a pinch, by leaving Glass-Eye in +Paris.... After Lisbon, one generally had Madrid +and Barcelona and returned by Marseilles and Lyons. +Friends of hers had done well like that. But to accept +a lower salary once meant accepting it always, in establishments +of the same class; it meant reducing her price, +for always, by two pounds a week, at least.</p> +<p>“A thousand francs: will you have it?”</p> +<p>And Lily:</p> +<p>“No, it’s impossible! I can’t take less than twelve +pounds a week.” And she began to sum up her proofs: +“Look here, at the Hippodrome, Glasgow ... at the +Palace, Leeds....”</p> +<p>But the agent wouldn’t listen, shut up the register, was +sorry:</p> +<p>“Can’t do it ... bad season ... cyclists to +be had for the asking. Good-by.”</p> +<p>“Good-by.”</p> +<p>And Lily went out, went down the stairs, feeling half-inclined +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256' name='page_256'></a>256</span> +to go back and accept; but no! Lower her +prices? Never! Oh, those cheap artistes, those black-legs +deserved to be hanged! Great lazybones who learn +a few baby tricks on the bike or the tight-rope, back-shop +acrobats, slop-shop Lilies, who practise at a safe +distance, by watching you on the stage, through an +opera-glass. They cut your prices by half; they would +work for a handful of rice, like a monkey. They deserved +to have the iron curtain come down on them, and +flatten them out like black-beetles, the wind-bags!</p> +<p>“I say, Glass-Eye, perhaps it’s they who fell into the +orchestra, was it, when I got my thighs full of lamp-glass +from the footlights, eh? They copy you, think +themselves artistes.... What! Yes? You say +they are, Glass-Eye? Damn it, I’ll have your eye out!”</p> +<p>And Lily had a fit of laughing when she saw Glass-Eye, +who hadn’t said a word, raise her elbow in affright +to ward off the blow.</p> +<p>Lily held the banister with one hand, leaned on Maud’s +shoulder with the other and laughed and laughed, only +to see her maid’s terrified face, a regular fat freak shrinking +before the belt. My! She would have fallen with +laughing, if Glass-Eye had not held her up; she plugged +her lips with her scented handkerchief, slapped her thighs. +She had never laughed so much in her life. She already +felt consoled for all her bothers:</p> +<p>“Watch me, Glass-Eye! This is the way to go down-stairs!”</p> +<p>And, nimbly as a bird, Lily hopped on the banister, +with her back to the wall, and—w-w-w-w-whew!—slid +down to the bottom, keeping her balance faultlessly, +sprang to her feet on the last stair and, with a wave of the +hand, as after a successful trick: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257' name='page_257'></a>257</span></p> +<p>“There! What do you think of that?”</p> +<p>Lily was not given to long spells of sadness. Reaction +always followed immediately upon her worries, made the +thousand and one vexations of a day like this easier for +her to bear. The compliments which caught her ear in +the street comforted her too:</p> +<p>“You pretty, pretty ...”</p> +<p>But she had no time to listen. Six months in her book +before night! As time passed, Lily would have been +content with less. And trot, trot, trot: while she was at +it; then she would end by seeing whether they would +get her for a handful of rice.</p> +<p>This idea amused her. Lily had confidence in her talent +and continued her visits. She saw them all: other +agents, former bosses or profs, who had sucked apprentices +dry to the marrow and who continued their evil +practices in their offices; this sort sized you up with +the eye of a slave-dealer. There was also the lucky agent, +who had started a sensational attraction, a Laurence or a +Light of Asia. This agent had a touch of pride about him, +with his eternal, “I gave her her first start!” as though +to say:</p> +<p>“They’ll never find another like her, never! They don’t +turn them out like that now!”</p> +<p>And all this was a pretext for offering you ridiculous +terms, because you were neither Light of Asia nor +Laurence. It was no use Lily’s boasting of having declined +Bill and Boom and Harrasford, pretending to be +an artiste for whom the managers were competing +against one another with sheaves of banknotes. There +was nothing for her at this one’s ... nothing for +her at the others’, either ... only a scrap of news +of her family, through an artiste. The New Trickers +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258' name='page_258'></a>258</span> +were all the rage in Scotland, it seemed; an engagement +in London, at the Palace, was waiting for them. When +Lily heard that, she turned pale with envy: so it was +on their account that she had been refused that tour in +England, so that they might have it! Patience! Her</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg254.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 274px; height: 347px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 274px;'> +LILY<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>day would come ... when she returned from the +continent and, instead of Miss, called herself Mlle., like +Adeline Genée and lots of others! Meanwhile, she had +found nothing. Still, Lily knew that one sometimes +had whole months of enforced idleness, without knowing +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259' name='page_259'></a>259</span> +the reason, and then, suddenly, one’s luck returned. +One only has to wait a bit, thought Lily, making herself +very short-sighted as she passed before the arcade, +the haunt of the out-at-elbow pros and of the piffling +little agents, the jackals of the profession, on the lookout +for a bone to gnaw. And it was not a little vexing +to hear her name pass from mouth to mouth—“Mrs. +Trampy, Mrs. Trampy”—and who could be drawing attention +to her in that rotten lot? Was Trampy there, by +any chance, pointing his finger at her? She felt inclined +to go back to them, to tell them in two words what she +thought of them. Mrs. Trampy, indeed! It was not for +long, in any case. Her divorce was not far off!</p> +<p>In the evening, at the theater, she forgot her bothers, +as usual. The day, for that matter, was quite an ordinary +one: it was the typical day, the trot, trot, trot, of +the star alone, in search of engagements. And, thoroughly +tired, in her dressing-room, she related in her +own way the adventures which she had had since the +morning, the compliments on her beauty; and at the +agents’, my! If she had liked, she could have filled up +her three years’ book! The architect came in her dressing-room +for a moment: so interesting a Lily! so amusing, +he thought, as funny, in her way, as Light of Asia, +the Chinese girl without arms. Sitting on the big trunk, +he admired by turns Lily and the disorderly dressing-table, +its cracked looking-glass, scribbled over with +names, and, under the glaring light, the grease-paints—red, +white, black—the powder-puffs and hare’s feet, +the biscuits in the tray among the hair-pins, a bottle +and glasses beside the powder-box. From nails on the +whitewashed walls, scratched all over with inscriptions, +covered with penciled dates, hung rainbow skirts, bodices +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260' name='page_260'></a>260</span> +with metallic flowers. The bike shone in a corner, half-buried +under Lily’s outdoor clothes. Tights hung beside +it, like pink skins, gold spangles strewed the uncarpeted +floor and scent hovered over everything.... Half-open +doors admitted gusts of music from the orchestra; +and Lily, opposite the glass, fumbled among her pots with +the tip of her finger, stained her lips blood-red, fixed the +rebellious curl to her forehead with a touch of gum. Outside, +in the passage, was the row of doors, with spy-holes +and visiting cards, half-sheets of paper, stuck down +with wafers and bearing the names of the various occupants:</p> +<p>“Prof. X. The Famous X. Family. Absolutely the +best.”</p> +<p>There were others “absolutely the best.”</p> +<p>On Lily’s door, her card—“Miss Lily”—and, under +that, modestly:</p> +<p>“And maid.”</p> +<p>Lily revived amid these surroundings; here she forgot +her fatigue, blossomed out to her heart’s delight. With +her rainbow dress, her feathers and her pearl pendants, +combined with her elaborate gestures as she made up +her face in front of the gollywog, she resembled the officiating +priestess of a strange religion, pacifying some +angry-eyed idol to the sound of distant choirs.</p> +<p>While finishing her make-up, Lily continued her stories, +talked of her successes in England and here and there +and everywhere ... and the lord who wanted to +marry her and rained down presents upon her: fifty-pound +brooches, diamonds.... Everybody in love +with her: to listen to her you could have followed her +traces like the passage of a cyclone ... men gone +mad ... others blinded through weeping ... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261' name='page_261'></a>261</span> +millionaires ruined in chocolates and sweets ... and +flowers, my!</p> +<p>“You could fill the Colosseum with them, couldn’t you, +Glass-Eye? I’ve been spoiled everywhere,” continued +Lily, “and I’m known everywhere! Even in Paris, to-day, +there were a lot of ladies and gentlemen under an +arcade and you heard nothing but ‘Miss Lily, Miss Lily,’ +didn’t you, Glass-Eye?”</p> +<p>“Yes, Miss Lily.”</p> +<p>But these social successes did not make Lily forget her +business affairs. Harrasford’s new music-hall worried +her: if she could only play there, only snatch it from the +New Trickers! For they would certainly try to get there; +and the architect, of course, knew ...</p> +<p>But Lily was interrupted by the call-boy: time for her +to go down to the stage!</p> +<p>A hurricane came up from the orchestra, muffled, with +beats of the big drum, like distant cannon. The curtain +would go up soon; it was the time when Lily stretched her +legs, before giving her performance, and took a breath of +air in the painted forest. A click of the padlock and:</p> +<p>“Come along, Glass-Eye, the bike!”</p> +<p>Lily, in spite of her brilliant successes in England, was +dead tired of tipping the boys; it ran away with all her +money. As she allowed herself the luxury of a maid, by +Gollywog, she might as well make use of her; she wasn’t +going to feed her to do nothing! And poor Glass-Eye +attended to the bike, at the risk of putting out her other +eye. Every day the struggle between Glass-Eye and the +bike formed the joy and the delight of the passage. +There were incredible swervings, scratchings of the wall, +barkings of Glass-Eye’s shins. Lily followed behind, +bursting with laughter, warning Glass-Eye to take care +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262' name='page_262'></a>262</span> +or she would put the bike out of gear by knocking it +about with her legs:</p> +<p>“Oh, where’s my belt?” she cried, patting the back of +her hand.</p> +<p>The artistes, attracted by the noise, half-opened the +doors; laughing eyes gleamed at the spy-holes; voices +cried:</p> +<p>“Go it! Never say die!”</p> +<p>Glass-Eye perspired like anything, pursed her eyebrows +above her fat, red cheeks, grumbled, in her Whitechapel +slang:</p> +<p>“Kim up, you lousy moke! Igher up, Jerusalem, you +pig-headed bag of tricks!”</p> +<p>Lily lost patience, snatched the machine from her, ran +it down the stairs, pushed the door of the “meat-tray,” +and found herself behind the scenes, the drops rising and +falling, the nightly spectacle since she had been “that +high,” the land of the unreal lights. And the sudden glare +from the reflectors set clusters of shoulders blazing with a +silvery glow, brought up out of the shade the pale flesh +of the dancing-girls, heaped up behind the pillars. It +swarmed from every side, right and left—“Hi, there! +Meat, meat!”—under the rush of the stage-hands shifting +the wings. There were fleecy foams of fair wigs, +smiles from kiss-me-quick lips, blinkings of made-up +eyelids, a swarm of arms, thighs and necks, preparatory +to a ballet, <i>Heures d’amour</i>, in which Poland, the Parisienne, +triumphed with her costumes <i>Déshabillé gallant, +Dessous diaphanes, Le tub, Volupté, Dodo</i>, eight pantomimic +scenes in a sumptuous setting, with girls to impersonate +the Hours, from pale-pink flirtation to scarlet +desire.</p> +<p>Lily watched this familiar sight with a wandering eye; +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263' name='page_263'></a>263</span> +and suddenly she turned pale: what was that? Who was +that? In the midst of it all, smiling to her from a distance, +as though laughing at her, stood Trampy! My!</p> +<p>“Here, hold my bike, Glass-Eye!”</p> +<p>It was close on her turn, but, before going on, she had +a word to say to the stage-manager and, walking up to +him:</p> +<p>“Do you see that josser looking at me?” said Lily, +pointing to Trampy. “If he stays here, I ... to +begin with, I shan’t go on. I won’t be humbugged by any +one!”</p> +<p>“Who is it?”</p> +<p>“My husband!”</p> +<p>“All right, darling,” said the stage-manager and, suddenly, +between the scene which was being hoisted up and +the other let down on the silent, empty stage: “You +there! Get out!”</p> +<p>Trampy could not believe that the words were meant +for him. He waited until the order had been twice repeated. +He, an artiste, before those girls! He made a +gesture as though to ask:</p> +<p>“Do you mean me?”</p> +<p>“Yes, you! No jossers here,” said the stage-manager. +“Sling your hook!”</p> +<p>“Gee!” thought Lily, when he had gone. “This time +you’ve been paid back in your own coin! So you kicked +me out at the Horse Shoe, did you? It’s my turn now, +you damned tramp!”</p> +<p>She exulted with delight, as she went through her performance. +It was her first revenge! the other’s turn +would come next.</p> +<p>“I don’t forgive and I don’t forget,” she muttered to +herself. “Every dog has his day.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264' name='page_264'></a>264</span></p> +<p>Oh, how happy she was! She was magnificent on the +stage, under the flashing lights, and the dull sounds in +the orchestra were to her as the throbbing of a riotous +heart.</p> +<p>“Well, Trampy, you got soaked to-night, to-night,” +thought Lily, as she might have said, “One, two!” to +mark her times. “To-night, to-night. And, if you don’t +like it—one, two—you’ve only got to lump it! Divorce +was made for men and women, not for dogs!”</p> +<p>Lily was triumphant, laughed, winked her eye, as she +rode past, at the stage-manager, who threw her a kiss +and grinned. Immediately after her turn, she ran to +her dressing-room, poured water on her steaming skin, +while the make-up trickled in pink streaks down her face, +and devoted an hour to the dainty care of her person, +like a cat licking itself. And then Lily, without paint +or powder—awfully ugly, not in the least pretty off the +stage, as she said, smiling in her muslin tie with the gold +spots—Lily went out by the front, to avoid the pros’ corridor.</p> +<p>The moment she was in the lobby, she assumed the air +of a lady accompanied by her maid. She cast an indifferent +eye at the string of carriages, like one who changes +her mind and prefers to walk, a smile to the gentlemen +at the <i>contrôle</i>, a nod to the Roofers going out, two by +two, always, a dark one and a fair one. Lily stopped for +a second, to look round....</p> +<p>Then: “Let’s go home, Glass-Eye!”</p> +<p>She took a few steps along the street, but a jolly voice +behind her cried:</p> +<p>“Gee, what a spanking walk!”</p> +<p>She turned round; it was Trampy again!</p> +<p>“Ah, this time,” thought Lily, “I shall have witnesses!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265' name='page_265'></a>265</span></p> +<p>She expected blows! She would have given anything +to be struck: her divorce, at last, would be hastened on! +Cruelty, public insults! But no:</p> +<p>“How’s my dear little wife?” asked Trampy, with outstretched +hand.</p> +<p>Lily was so greatly surprised that it took her some +seconds to recover her presence of mind; and then, without +turning her head:</p> +<p>“Come away, Glass-Eye,” she said. “There are drunkards +about.”</p> +<p>“Don’t let us quarrel, little wifie. Aren’t you my dear +little wifie? Well, then....”</p> +<p>And Trampy took her by the arm.</p> +<p>“Let me go, or I’ll break your jaw,” muttered Lily, +under her breath.</p> +<p>Trampy seemed in a jovial mood, with his cigar in his +mouth, his cheeks flushed with insolence, his eyes moist +with libations.</p> +<p>“Let’s make peace,” said Trampy. “Peace in the home: +that’s my motto!”</p> +<p>“Divorce!” cried Lily.</p> +<p>“Peace in the home for me!” rejoined Trampy, who +grew the more radiant as Lily grew more and more incensed.</p> +<p>“Let me tell you,” he continued, puffing luxuriously +at his cigar, “that divorce—why, how can you think of +it?—means a public scandal, my name dragged in the +mud....”</p> +<p>“Footy rotter!” roared Lily.</p> +<p>“Dragged in the mud; and my dear little wife left to +her own resources, marrying again, as she feels inclined, +marrying some one unworthy of her, perhaps. I won’t +have it! I’m responsible for you! I’m your natural +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266' name='page_266'></a>266</span> +protector! You’re not Miss Lily, you’re Mrs. Trampy. +You’ve been in the wrong, certainly; you had me turned +off the stage, me, your husband; but I forgive you.”</p> +<p>“And I ... take that!” Lily broke in, spitting in +his face. “That’s how <i>I</i> forgive <i>you</i>! Take that! And +that!”</p> +<p>Trampy reveled with delight:</p> +<p>“You <i>are</i> my dear little wifie, aren’t you? And you’ll +remain so ... and you’ll never belong to any one +else, do you hear? I am a faithful husband. You’re trying +for a divorce, I know, but you won’t get it. The +wrong is on your side and I’m not going to law, and +you’re Mrs. Trampy and Mrs. Trampy you’ll remain! +Will you come and have a drink, Mrs. Trampy?” he continued, +lighting a fresh cigar. “Won’t you? Very well. +Good night, wifie!”</p> +<p>And Trampy, turning his back to her, disappeared in a +cloud of smoke.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267' name='page_267'></a>267</span> +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>Lily came home and went straight to bed, without +even waiting for supper, so great was her hurry to forget. +It seemed to her that things had happened, things +without end; that this day had been as long as a year. +She simply could not understand Trampy. She could +have imagined anything, except that! She racked her +brain to conjecture how, why; and sleep quieted her till +the next morning; and she woke up with teeth clenched +and eyebrows set and ... why? Why? And again +why? Did he still want to keep her?—after realizing in +a hundred different ways that she did not love him, that +she loathed him, that she had married him only to escape +her whippings and that she had but one idea in her head: +to divorce him!</p> +<p>Now—only Lily could not know this—it was because +of that very reason that Trampy clung to her, like a +faithful husband: Jimmy, Jimmy was his bugbear. He +believed Jimmy to be in love with his wife. Once Lily +was divorced, Jimmy could marry her; and Trampy +would see him further first! The greater Jimmy became, +the more jealous Trampy grew. He knew the +steps Lily had taken to obtain a divorce, the witnesses +she had tried to secure. She was very keen on a divorce, +was she? All the more reason for not gratifying +her; and she wasn’t going to get it. The witnesses, +Trampy had just heard, declined to give evidence. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268' name='page_268'></a>268</span> +They had seen nothing, heard nothing. A bike at her +head? Maybe. They didn’t know. A bit of a fuss between +artistes, such as you see every day, and none of +their damned business. Outside that, Lily had nothing +to go upon; on the contrary. She had abandoned the +conjugal home; all the wrong, apparently, was on her +side. He, Trampy, alone was entitled to file a petition; +but that never! He considered that Jimmy and Lily had +trifled with him sufficiently. He could not swallow the +idea that they were only waiting for the divorce to get +married; the idea that Lily would be Mrs. Jimmy, of her +own free choice, after marrying him, Trampy, to escape +her whippings; no, he couldn’t swallow that! Now it +rested entirely with him to prevent that marriage. He +had only to keep his dear little wife for himself. In that +case, Jimmy, if he wanted her, would be obliged to do +without her or else to “live with her” and set a bad example, +lavish bestower of good advice that he was, the +dirty hypocrite, preaching morality to others! That was +what Trampy had determined to do. As for Lily, +Trampy, who was incapable, at bottom, of either hatred +or love, didn’t care one way or the other. He was always +sure to want for nothing, so long as there were girls on +the boards and whisky in the bars.</p> +<p>There was another reason still that urged him to let +matters rest, without going further. To embark on a +divorce-case, to have his name in the papers and his story +hawked round the four quarters of the globe—“Trampy, +you know. You knew Trampy, didn’t you? The husband +of Lily?” and so on—was what he didn’t want at any +price, for a reason known to himself. He had made inquiries, +quite privately, at the beginning, when he thought +of petitioning for a divorce; and what he had learned +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269' name='page_269'></a>269</span> +had made him prudent: his marriage in America was +valid beyond a doubt. He was well and duly married, +whether he liked it or not. By the common law, two +wives meant bigamy; and bigamy meant prison, which +was the last thing he wanted, as he himself said. But, +so long as there was no scandal, he ran no great risk. +He had lived on tenter-hooks at first, in Germany. +Chance might have brought him face to face with Ave +Maria, on the stage of a music-hall. This danger was +not to be feared now, so far as he knew. Ave Maria +and her brother Martello were no longer fit stars for +Europe, nor for North America. He was too well known +to the agencies; his brutality had produced too many +complaints, too many denunciations to the police; it discredited +any theater employing him. He might have +come to Europe—who knew?—to try to get hold of the +Bambinis, now that the old man had not much longer to +live. But that was not very likely, either. An artiste, +come across by accident, had seen the pair at Iquique, in +a wretched circus that was doing the coast of Chili. He +gave Trampy details: poor Ave Maria had grown very +ugly; a body all skin and bone and nerves; no hips, no +chest; nothing of the woman about her; in the last stages +of consumption; and finished, as an artiste, done for; +no spring left in her overworked thighs, no suppleness +in her loins: even her brother, that brute, could get +nothing out of her now. And Trampy, who knew Chili, +followed them, in his mind, on their tour along the coast, +from Iquique to Copiapó, to Valdivia: a trying climate, +biting winds which would kill her on the spot, unless +she went and perished in the fever-stricken plains of the +Argentine.... When people had fallen so low as that, +they did not rise again: there was nothing to fear from +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270' name='page_270'></a>270</span> +that side. But her presence was not necessary; the +danger still existed. There were documents, in black +and white. Their names were bracketed on a register +somewhere or other: he knew where. It was better, +therefore, in every way, not to call attention to himself. +Meanwhile, he was playing a nice trick on Lily and her +Jimmy. And Lily was Mrs. Trampy and Mrs. Trampy +she would remain; and that was all there was about it.</p> +<p>But it was no use for Lily to give herself a headache +trying to make out why and how. She did not guess +Trampy’s secret thoughts, any more than he suspected +the actual nature of her relations with Jimmy. For her, +too, one thing was certain: Mrs. Trampy she was and +Mrs. Trampy she would remain! She would never be +free; she would always be chained to that tramp cyclist! +And, if a match should happen to turn up for her among +her admirers, the architect, for instance—you can never +tell: plenty of others had already proposed for her hand in +marriage, in England—she would be obliged to refuse! +And, if some gentleman were to pay her his addresses, +treat her like a lady, take her to choose a hat or a silk +petticoat in a smart shop, there was somebody who would +have the right to say to her, as she passed:</p> +<p>“How’s my little wife getting on?”</p> +<p>Oh, those two Jim Crows round her, spoiling her +future! Jimmy and Trampy! They would end by being +the death of her. Oh, if she had had Thea’s arm, what a +blow in the jaw for one or both of them! And Lily, when +she thought of it, wore the face which was hers on her +bad days, teeth clenched, stubborn forehead. Glass-Eye +shook in her boots when she saw it, for sometimes Lily +vented her anger upon the poor girl with a smack, considering +herself quits if she begged pardon after! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271' name='page_271'></a>271</span></p> +<p>“If it’s one of those footy rotters,” growled Lily, hearing +a knock at the door, “smash a bottle over his head!”</p> +<p>But no, it was simply her letters, sent on from the +theater. Nothing of importance this morning; prospectuses, +mostly: a wig-maker, special theatrical department; +a manufacturer of traveling-hampers, for South +Africa, Australia....</p> +<p>“No use for them,” thought Lily, with a sigh.</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg267.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 250px; height: 330px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 250px;'> +A ROOFER GIRL<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>And, on opening <i>The Era</i>, she received that discouraging +sensation: always so many names, and so many tricks, +and all “the best;” new ideas and troupes, troupes, +troupes; another new troupe of fat freaks, a very flood of +them; and Roofers, Roofers; “Greater-Greater England +Girls,” words and music guaranteed, with scarlet legs and +muslin skirts, complete; page upon page of pink tights; +and national troupes and colonial troupes; and one had to +earn a livelihood and shine among all that! Lily was half +crushed; and everybody she +knew was triumphing: the +Pawnees,—one hundred +and thirty music-halls, the +whole of the Eastern and +Western Trusts, the great +two-years’ tour! The Three +Graces also were continuing +their triumphs. Lily, +who felt herself the equal +of any of them, held her +breath as she read the +news. Laurence had won +her terrible bet that she +would ride straight across +Manchester and Salford on +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272' name='page_272'></a>272</span> +her bike, hands tied together, feet fastened to the pedals. +At the Art Institute in Chicago, Marjutti had given a +lecture on the art of contortion.</p> +<p>“Some josser of a journalist wrote it for her,” thought +Lily.</p> +<p>And <i>The Performer Annual</i> had sent Marjutti its set +of questions to answer, she had been published in print! +And Lily was still waiting! And Tom? Tom was in +England now, in the De Frece circuit; had had a triumph +at the Portsmouth Hippodrome, as “Topsy Turvy Tommy,” +dancing a sailor’s hornpipe on his hands. All, all +were successful, including others even who were not so +good as she was: one who obtained engagements because +she had a nigger in her show; another because of a +monkey.</p> +<p>“And I’ve done nothing yet!” grumbled Lily.</p> +<p>Oh, to be talked about in her turn, to achieve something, +to become “our Lily!”</p> +<p>“It’s twelve o’clock and I’m still in bed!” she cried. +“I ought to be practising!”</p> +<p>It was just a flash of pride, mixed with remorse. +She knew it well enough; often and often, she had reproached +herself for her idleness, for her habit of sleeping +till the middle of the day, of taking her meals before +the performance; but she would make up for it to-morrow! +It is the usual refrain of stars who have become +detached from their troupes, far removed from regimental +discipline, so to speak: without a Pa, without a +boss, you can do nothing. You must have some one to +force you.</p> +<p>“A month on the three years’ book before to-night!” +prayed Lily, touching her lucky charm.</p> +<p>And she studied the omens with an expert air, gave +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273' name='page_273'></a>273</span> +an ear to passing sounds, tried to catch the meaning of +them, for she had visits to pay, letters to write, business, +damn it!</p> +<p>That was what Pa used to say before her. And it +was not so easy to turn a letter prettily: that was Trampy’s +forte. She knew something about it. Lily, in her +night-dress, with her elbows on the table, bit her pen, +reflected, in a mental effort that gave her a headache. +And that note-paper wasn’t nice, either, without a heading; +true, it only rested with herself; every day she was +approached with offers of artistic photographs, even of +tricks which she did not do: standing with one foot on +the saddle, the other in the air and her arms stretched +out before her, like a flying genius; or as Cupid, with +his dart in his hand: impossible things which neither the +Pawnees nor Laurence would have dared to attempt! +But it would look well, with her name in red letters: +“Miss Lily,” or “La Belle Lily.” Or else a photograph +showing her strolling in a great park, with a palace in the +background, taken from nature, followed by her maid, +or by a footman, hired by the hour, for the occasion.</p> +<p>“I think I shall select the governess,” said Lily to +herself, “because of my biography; it will be nicer, truer. +Or I might be taken riding on the back-wheel, like a lady +just leaving the house and doing that to amuse herself?”</p> +<p>Lily, still undecided, took up the pen again: one foot +on the saddle; six pairs of tights; three dresses; the +theaters at which she had appeared....</p> +<p>What a pack of jossers! She couldn’t forgive the +agents for her present want of success. She was exasperated. +She felt inclined to go and see the managers +themselves, those who had made love to her on the stage, +and to send in her card to them—“Miss Lily”—just to +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274' name='page_274'></a>274</span> +teach those jossers of agents! Her independent ways +had already made enemies for her: she knew that; but +how could she help being angry? The tricks they played +you, down to making you miss a marriage, as had happened +in London, the other day, to the Three Graces, to +one of them, who had been courted, during Mr. Fuchs’ +absence, by the boy-violinist. Their agent had launched +into slanders and even insults to prevent the marriage, +which would have split up the troupe and broken the +contract....</p> +<p>“What a pack of nigger-drivers!” thought Lily. “As +long as they get their ten per cent., the rest can go hang, +for all they care!”</p> +<p>There was no doubt that Lily had got out of bed on +the wrong side, at the thought of having to climb all +those staircases again and to dance attendance with the +rotten lot in the waiting-rooms. But, by Jove, she could +have boxed the ears of the first agent she visited that +afternoon! He had the impudence to offer her a magnificent +engagement in the Indian show at Earl’s Court, +she to stain her skin brown, dye her hair black, with +rings in her nose, at the wrists, at her ankles; a costume +like Miss Ruth’s, all in gauze; the nautch-girl on the +bicycle; six times a day, in the open air, to the sound of +tomtoms. Play the negress; that’s what he offered her! +She could not help laughing, in spite of her anger. But +she became quite intractable and snubbed another agent +who suggested a one day’s billet in a tiny music-hall at a +ridiculous price.</p> +<p>“I don’t give my performance under five pounds, or +on a stage of less than thirty feet!” cried Lily.</p> +<p>At last, luck seemed to turn; she settled for Spain and +Portugal, and that same evening, at the Bijou Theater, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275' name='page_275'></a>275</span> +she was offered another engagement, for three months +hence. This contract would procure her others, after +her spell of ill luck. Lily at once took courage again:</p> +<p>“Oh, if I had the Astrarium!” she thought.</p> +<p>Everywhere, at the theater, at the agents, people were +talking of the new music-hall. It even became a current +joke. They said, “So-and-So’s performing at the Astrarium,” +as though to say, “He’s not performing! He’s +living in a castle in the air!” Every one was talking of +the great music-hall which was to open in a few months +and which was not to be seen building anywhere. Some +said that it was serious; they quoted engagements: Tom; +the Three Graces; the impersonator; nothing but turns +quite unknown to Paris; novelties, nothing but novelties: +Marjutti; Laurence, perhaps; or the New Trickers. Lily +shivered when she heard that!... She opened wide +eyes, like Alice in Wonderland. Oh, to appear there! +But she had performed in Paris. Then she would change +her name; bike mixed with dancing; and her whole trick +done backward, as Pa had once advised Trampy to do in +Mexico! Oh, if she could have that! Lily Godiva, undressed +on the bike! She’d show them she was a lady, +not a performing dog! The Astrarium, that was certain, +would open in Paris in a few months. Harrasford had +said so himself. There was no doubt about it. They +even told the name of the stage-manager, Joe Brooks, the +cleverest of all. Lily felt herself carried away with ambition. +Oh! to open there! Oh, if it were true! God +grant that it might come true! Oh, if Daisy, their star, +could only break a leg! The few days which Lily was +still to remain in Paris, before leaving for Spain, she +employed in obtaining further information. She learned +the most exact particulars. Incredible though it seemed, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276' name='page_276'></a>276</span> +the Astrarium was to open quite shortly! The blue-chins +discussed the thing, amid clouds of tobacco smoke, in the +bars, after the show. To allude to it now was not like +talking of castles in the air; on the contrary. To tease a +pal, one said:</p> +<p>“You’re opening at the Astrarium, aren’t you? I <i>don’t</i> +think!”</p> +<p>Which was another way of saying:</p> +<p>“The Astrarium’s no place for you! They’re taking +nothing but bill-toppers there!”</p> +<p>The new music-hall, even before it came into existence, +was beginning to spread, like the story of the whippings; +it would be talked about, all round the world, as something +stunning, a more complete show than the Tivoli at Sidney +or the New York Hippodrome. Harrasford was credited +with designs for a palace in onyx and marble. He +had bought or was going to buy a theater with the object +of transforming it; names and prices were given. Everybody +was interested in it. Just now, especially, when +the bioscopes and the gramophones and the singers were +taking the bread out of the “artistes’” mouths, it meant +twenty turns more to receive princely salaries there; +and, every month, that galaxy of stars, which Harrasford +would send shooting to Paris, was to disperse +toward Brussels, Antwerp, Marseilles, Hamburg: the +European Trust, the Moss and Stoll tour of the continent, +managed by Harrasford, the great English manager.</p> +<p>To open at the Astrarium meant having work insured +and your three years’ book filled for ever so long; meant +appearing in public, later, wearing on your chest the +medal which they meant to distribute in memory of the +opening. Gee, Lily had a pain in her side at the thought +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277' name='page_277'></a>277</span> +of it! The Three Graces, it was said, were on the program. +Lily would have consulted them—there was no +jealousy about the Graces—but they were not yet in Paris. +Oh, Lily was longing and dying to be settled! Who was +Harrasford’s agent? If she had to go to London to see +him, she would go.</p> +<p>Why, damn it, she would go to Heaven itself to get +the Astrarium! Anything, anything to open there! That +dream of greatness made her endure her present vexations. +Mrs. Trampy ... Mrs. Trampy ... She +was addressed as Mrs. Trampy everywhere. Trampy +must be telling the story, taking his revenge for the whippings, +making little of her in his turn. One night even, +the night before her departure for Spain, when the architect +was to wait for her at the door of the theater, Lily, +who had dressed herself in her best, once more had the +humiliation of being accosted by Trampy in front of +everybody.</p> +<p>“Hullo, wifie! How are you, darling? All right?”</p> +<p>Lily bristled with rage as she left Paris. Even when +she was far away, she still felt that she was dragging +a chain which lengthened out endlessly without breaking. +Never, oh, nothing could ever get her out of that! Yes, +a brilliant triumph. Then, at least, she could crush him +from the height of her success, that footy rotter with his +red-hot stove! Oh, what a grudge she bore him! Jimmy +was different: that was a wound of her own and nobody +would ever know; but Trampy, who laughed at her everywhere +and called himself her husband! He would make +her lose all her friends. To say nothing of the fact that +those tales perhaps counted for much in her failure: they +were repeated from mouth to mouth. Oh, her profession +disgusted her at times! And to think that she, an English +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278' name='page_278'></a>278</span> +girl, was going to earn her bread among the Dagoes, +instead of starring in England!</p> +<p>Her wandering life continued; her journeys from town +to town, in the Spanish provinces, her arrival in the chill +of the morning, her anxiety about her salary, the hustle +and bustle of departure and—trot, trot, trot!—lugged +about in the railway-carriage, like a performing dog in +his box.</p> +<p>And what theaters! It was worse than Germany or +even Paris. In England, on the Harrasford tour or the +Bill and Boom, they had nice dressing-rooms, with a carpet, +water hot and cold, quick attendance, stairs swept +every day. Here, old plaster and those idiots who looked +as if they understood nothing—it took three of them to +shift a scene—Dagoes who asked her straight out, in +Pidgin-English, if she was alone:</p> +<p>“No man viz you?”</p> +<p>It touched her on the raw. Lily lost all her cheerfulness: +to begin with, that engagement was not a particularly +brilliant one; it was not at all calculated to prompt +her to do better, to introduce novelties into her turn. +Besides, on stages not yet overrun with Roofers or fat +freaks, an artiste performing by herself made an impression. +Her old tricks sufficed; sometimes she topped the +bill:</p> +<p>“Theaters are the same everywhere; artistes the same +everywhere, from New York to Bilbao. Topping the +bill in one means topping the bill in the others ... +doesn’t it, Glass-Eye?”</p> +<p>But she knew quite well that it didn’t; and, besides, +that satisfaction of her vanity put no money in her pocket. +The amount she owed, my! She thought of the past, of +what she had earned for “them” since Mexico. If she +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279' name='page_279'></a>279</span> +had only had half of it, a quarter, a quarter of a quarter, +damn it!</p> +<p>Meantime, she had to make herself respected. In those +countries, where people used gestures when they spoke to +you, a lady could not be too careful. Why, the men +treated an English girl just as they treated their own +women. She could have flung her bike at their heads! +And they kept it up all night, as in Russia, all except the +jewels; you had to stay till morning and were expected to +accept invitations for supper, so as to keep the customer +there and push business! A little more and she would +have had to sleep there! She had threatened to tear up +her contract, to complain to the consul. And what annoyed +her also was being in the same dressing-room with +singers who undressed without shame, while receiving +their friends, and made eyes at Lily worse than the impersonator.</p> +<p>And she had to have her food at the theater, no dessert, +nothing but a biscuit or an apple; and, if she asked +for a pear, it caused a terrible to-do. Rather than stand +that, Lily went to the hotel, which put her to double expense, +for the board at the theater was compulsory. She +had to pay in any case; so that she went away without a +farthing, thinking herself very lucky if the manager did +not try to kiss her in his office. Oh, the things she saw, +the things she rubbed shoulders with, the vice, the promiscuity, +the rushes of girls in the passages before the +onslaughts of footy rotters, direct propositions, with eyes +looking straight into eyes, brief wooings on the stairs, +behind the properties, between people just about to take +the train, one east, the other west, and in a hurry to have +done with it; a silent embrace in the dressing-room, a +neigh, a kiss; and <i>au revoir</i>, ta-ta! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280' name='page_280'></a>280</span></p> +<p>And the conversations between the stage-girls, who +were always surrounded by legends of the white slave-trade; +stories of disappearances; of “engagements for +Caracas” and finding one’s self over there without resources, +stranded in a bad house: like that poor girl, a +Roofer, who had received a letter and some sweets in her +slipper, which she had sent flying into the audience with a +high kick—Lily remembered—well, she had disappeared +in South America, somewhere; one or two despairing letters +and then silence. And that other one, at Alexandria, +who had called out for help, behind her green blinds; +and ever and ever so many others, whom she had known +slightly. Lily shivered: brrrrrr!</p> +<p>She was sick to death of it. She had had enough of it, +was fed up with it. She aspired to better things. Lily +had hoped that her engagement in Spain would have +marked the end of her bad luck; but no, nothing offered. +She was sour, bitter, fierce; a wild bull, a stallion, as Ma +used to say. And she became especially terrible now, when +her energy was spent in neither work nor love, so much +so that there was a cross against her name in the agents’ +books.</p> +<p>Oh, she had often felt inclined to send them all to the +devil: the made-up eyes, the kiss-me-quick lips, the tow +wigs, the low jokes, the monkey-claws! There were some +who had merit, no doubt, like that boy who was all over +scratches, from head to foot, through training cats; but +the rest, almost all of them, were a pack of good-for-nothings +who copied their betters: amateurs, jossers all; +and they had more work than she, who had taken such +pains and who had made a fortune for her Pa. Oh, if +that wasn’t enough to make her chuck everything and see +life, in her turn. She had only to choose ... +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281' name='page_281'></a>281</span></p> +<p>These reflections came to her more particularly when +she returned to Paris, after Brussels and Copenhagen, and +was again performing at the Bijou Theater, where she +had already appeared.</p> +<p>“To make all that money,” thought Lily, when she saw +Poland again, “and never to have been through the mill!”</p> +<p>She admired Poland for that, envied her good manners, +her grace, the way she slipped on her dressing-wrap +in the living picture, <i>The Bath</i>. She turned green +with jealousy at the sight of Poland’s motor-car, her thousand-pound +ear-rings, her sable furs. It was not that Lily +lacked admirers or sympathizers. She even had a little +triumph at the Bijou Theater, one day when she passed +round the hat for old Martello, who was ill in bed and +penniless. Lily topped the bill in her own fashion, by +putting her name at the head of the list, and the collection +was a success, everybody contributed ... including +the architect, who was still prowling round her, in +the passages, on the stage, everywhere. Lily was decidedly +courted: the rich bookmaker who ran the theater +as his private harem, he, too, patted her cheek in a funny +way, complimented her on her firm, round hips before +the group of dancing-girls packed like poultry, in the +shadow of the pillars. Gee, it only rested with herself +to have as much of that as Poland! And everything +reeked with love, amid the cannonade of the big drums +and the clash of the cymbals, while the sudden flashes +of the reflectors, moonlight-blue on one side, bright-red +on the other, lit up all around her the herd of the languid +Hours. But her heart swelled and puffed with pride. +No, no, not that! She would succeed by her talent, +damn it, not by getting round men! She, an English +girl; she, Pa’s daughter; she, who had gone through the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282' name='page_282'></a>282</span> +mill, to sell herself like cat’s meat! Never! And her +Ma should beg her pardon on her knees, on her knees, +damn it! The thought infuriated her.</p> +<p>She was quite sincere with herself. It was all her fault. +She ought to have worked and practised, practised every +day, improved and improved her turn; but she would do +so now, to-morrow. It was her last chance. She had +hardly any money left; her three years’ book was virgin +once again, unsoiled by contracts; but she had a stage to +practise on and she was going to practise to-morrow even +if she had to pay somebody to run after her, with the belt, +if need be! Lily had nothing but that in her head now: +to get out of her present life, to get out of the mud, to +reach the summit at a bound. Was it possible? She +consulted the Zanzigs; she spent a fortune in penny-in-the-slot +machines to learn the future, but always received +the same reply:</p> +<p>“You will marry the man who loves you. You will be +very happy.”</p> +<p>She smiled with pity when she read that nonsense; to +prophesy her marriage: how silly! She was only too much +married! That was not what she wanted to know; but +the Astrarium! the Astrarium! Would she be there or +would she not? The New Trickers were plotting to +get there, with a turn which she had given them, goose +that she was; and Cousin Daisy, that farthing dip, would +triumph and not she, a star, a real one! Lily was rather +in the position of Pa, when he arrived in London from +New York ... with this difference, that Pa had +money and Lily had none. But there was the same display +of energy, once her pride was aroused. Lily also had run +round Paris like a mad thing: not to the agents!—with +them it was: “Lily? Lily Clifton? nothing your way +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283' name='page_283'></a>283</span> +to-day!”—but to her friends and acquaintances, to find +out about the Astrarium. Lily grew crazy at the idea +that she might perform there, be there at the opening, +ride over all of them, treat the New Trickers like so +many fat freaks!</p> +<p>“Oh, God, if it were true!” she cried, with her hand +on her lucky charm. “God above grant that it may come +true!”</p> +<p>She was at the end of her tether. Nothing short of the +Astrarium could set her on her legs again. She had no +choice; it was either that or an absolute come-down: the +nautch-girl on the bike, at Earl’s Court, or else nights of +dissipation, champagne and diamonds, like Poland; and +Lily, like her Pa in the old days, clenched her fists and +gnawed her lip as she went off to the Three Graces, who +had their engagement and who would be able to give her +some hints.</p> +<p>Lily knew their hotel by reputation. Nothing but pros; +a rallying-point of troupes, an hotel where nobody’s skin +was free from bruises and where, from morning until +night, you heard the clatter of the clog-dancers’ heels. +It reeked of potatoes, of sleepers three in a bed; chests, +strange-shaped packing-cases, ticketed with distant +labels, made the yard look like the stage-entrance of a +music-hall. Lily did not care for that sort of place: no +matter; besides, the Bambinis were there and their mad +rushes, their yells of mirth filled the gloomy house with +gaiety. And Lily did not mind walking in with her gold-tasseled +hat on. All those heads at the windows: it was +just like a fine lady visiting the poor. And yet she was +not proud now. Formerly, she would have laughed on +learning the kind of life led by the Three Graces, those +three girls who remained good so as not to break up the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284' name='page_284'></a>284</span> +troupe and annoy Nunkie and who were said to spend +their spare time in sewing and cooking and doing Sandow +exercises and measuring one another round the +biceps and the chest: simple joys, the only true ones.</p> +<p>“They may be right, after all,” thought Lily, who envied +them from the bottom of her heart for having the +Astrarium. “If I had only practised too! Practising is +certainly better +than attaching +all that importance +to dresses +or sending those +puff photographs +to the agents!”</p> +<p>A surprise +awaited Lily +when she entered +the hotel; pros +were talking with +a mysterious air. +There was muttering +in the corners, +a piece of +news was going +round: the Bijou +Theater had +closed, that very +day; the treasury +was empty, bankrupt; everything sealed up; just on the +eve of pay-day too!</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg280.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 239px; height: 308px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 239px;'> +THE BAMBINIS<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>“My! Is it possible?” thought Lily, distracted and +forgetting the Astrarium and the Three Graces. “And +what am I to do for food to-morrow? Come, quick, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285' name='page_285'></a>285</span> +Glass-Eye!” she whispered, catching her a thump in the +ribs. “To the theater, quick!”</p> +<p>For Lily knew by experience that it was a good thing +to be first. Her Pa had saved his salary once, in a similar +case, at Perth, in Australia; but one must arrive in time.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286' name='page_286'></a>286</span> +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>There was a crowd in front of the Bijou when she arrived. +They were commenting on a notice pasted on the +door:</p> +<p>“<i>Fermé</i>.”</p> +<p>What could that mean? Lily had not provided for this +in her vocabulary of the French language; but the theater +was closed until new arrangements could be made. +It meant complete ruin, enforced idleness....</p> +<p>“The rotten lot!” growled Lily. “Money, damn it, +money! Pay up, you pack of thieves!”</p> +<p>But Lily soon recovered herself, when she saw that +there was nothing to be done. She had been through +worse than that, when the iron curtain all but smashed her +to a jelly, at Milwaukee, and when she tumbled into the +orchestra, at Glasgow! Notwithstanding the anguish that +wrung her inside and heralded the coming hunger, Lily +put a good face on the matter before all those people, +like a lady who is above that sort of thing: a disappointment, +that was all.</p> +<p>“But how will those small artistes manage?” she +seemed to say. “Those families with babies?”</p> +<p>Lily declared that it was very sad, called Glass-Eye to +witness, as usual; but poor Glass-Eye remained dumb, +reflected that she would never, never be paid, if this went +on. Lily owed her eighteen months’ wages now! True, +she got enough to eat, or nearly; she traveled with Lily; +and she wore her old hats. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287' name='page_287'></a>287</span></p> +<p>Meanwhile, the door opened; the artistes were allowed +to take away the implements of their work, before the +final closing. The move began: they fetched out basket +trunks, hoisted packing-cases on to cabs. It was a heartrending +sight, all those things, made for the glitter of the +footlights, now displayed in the street. And everybody +made such haste as he could, under the eyes of the inquisitive +passers-by, for fear of a general execution, with +every door sealed up and days to wait before one could +recover one’s property. Fellow-artistes from other theaters +came to look on. Some were indignant that the +Artistes’ Federation could not take up the matter and +hurl the experience of its lawyers at the heads of the +proprietor or syndicate responsible, to say nothing of +the moral weight of its five thousand members, who had +already made the English music-halls come to terms by +means of a wholesale strike. Others observed that it +was a private theater, one of those theaters run, for the +fun of it, by some prosperous gambler or lucky bookmaker; +a sort of harem theater, with almost empty +houses, but with swells on the stage, among the swarm +of half-naked women; and no one responsible, the old boy +ruined, the treasury empty, bankruptcy; couldn’t be +helped; take in your belt a peg, that’s all!</p> +<p>“What do you think of this, eh, Lily?” asked a voice. +“Only yesterday we were passing the hat for others!”</p> +<p>Lily still had the list; and the money was locked up in +one of the dressing-rooms. Then it passed from mouth +to mouth, like a watchword: they would give back the +collection; but not in the street, not before everybody, +for the honor of the profession. Lily, quite excited, entered +the passage and there, in the dim light, assisted by +two one-legged artistes, who called out the amounts and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288' name='page_288'></a>288</span> +ticked off the names, she handed back the collection of +the previous day. Some received their share with an air +of furious determination; others looked shy and blushed; +others, again, refused, Lily among them; and it was decided +to go to the “Pros’ Corner,” or artistes’ bar, near +the stage entrance, to drink up what remained: the ups +and downs of life, damn it! Your turn to-day, mine to-morrow; +jolly lucky not to break a leg, after all! And +their gaiety returned, amid the smoke and the glasses, +through a need of reaction; and, after the first drink or +two, came jokes, after-dinner stories, impromptus which +had traveled ten times round the world and brought tears +of laughter to the eyes of the audiences in thousands of +music-halls, not to speak of the second-class cabins of +every ship of every line and the smoking-carriages of +every train, from the G. I. P. R. of Bombay to the S. F. +of Buenos Ayres.</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“Owen Moore went West one day,</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>Owing more than he could pay.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>Owen Moore came back to-day—</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>Owing more!”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>And they joined in the chorus and they sang, “We all +came into this world with nothing!” and the one-legged +artistes beat time with their crutches, my! the pink Hour +and the scarlet Hour, who were there, got a stitch in +their sides. Lily, with her head flung back, full-throated, +laughed nervously. Besides, as she said, artistes did as +they pleased and didn’t care a hang for anybody! All +made plans for the morrow, all had been through that +sort of thing before and much worse, too: six stories +cleared at a bound, to escape from a theater in flames! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289' name='page_289'></a>289</span> +Falls of seventy feet on one’s head! And wrecks! And +waves miles high! Already they began to talk of going +away, of traveling; traced the route with their finger +on the table: Cape Town, Australia, the States. To +listen to them, those everlasting wanderers seemed to +have pretty nearly the whole world under their hands. +They spoke of taking a rest at their permanent addresses: +good old London; good old Manchester; there was nothing +like good old England, after all, eh? They’d had +enough of the Dago countries!</p> +<p>But enthusiasm broke out when the great news arrived, +brought by some one straight from the agencies: Harrasford—“Guess, +boys!”—Harrasford had bought the +Bijou Theater! It was all signed and sealed. He was +carrying out his program: and he wanted to open at once. +For three months, it appeared, there had been a silent +struggle between him and the unlucky bookmaker, who +did not want to sell; and Harrasford had got it almost +for nothing; he had practically won it, yesterday, at the +races,—with Dare Devil, his wonderful horse. Dare +Devil had beaten Cataplasm, his rival’s colt, and the +smash had followed at once: the Bijou closed; a forced +sale; Harrasford had bagged it; and that was one, with +more to come!</p> +<p>The artistes were carried away by this daring stroke! +Harrasford, a son of a gun, who could put them all in +his pocket! The one-legged artistes fought a mock duel +between France and England, the victor to marry Lily: +what did they think of that? Hurrah!</p> +<p>“Say, boys, which is the quickest way of dropping +money?”</p> +<p>“Fast women!”</p> +<p>“No, slow horses!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290' name='page_290'></a>290</span></p> +<p>It was grand. They drank to everybody’s health. They +drank to Harrasford; they drank to the Astrarium! They +counted the money on the bar-counter; the amount of +the collection had been greatly exceeded and somebody +suggested that it was a nice thing, upon my word, yes, +a very nice thing, what they were doing: having a good +time, while the Bambinis, perhaps, were going to bed +without any supper! The whiskies and sodas had warmed +their hearts: my turn to-day, yours to-morrow, damn it! +It might happen to any of them, to hop the twig and +leave Bambinis behind him.</p> +<p>“Lily, the hat!”</p> +<p>And Lily handed round the hat again and collected +more than on the day before, even among those who had +had their money back.</p> +<p>“Take that to the Bambinis,” they said. “We’ve been +behaving like Dagoes, damn it! Artistes ought not to act +as such!”</p> +<p>“’K you! ’K you!”</p> +<p>And Lily Clifton walked off, very proudly, with her +maid, to hand the money to Nunkie, who was acting as +treasurer.</p> +<p>“And, meantime, one’s got to live,” said Lily to herself, +when she was outside.</p> +<p>After the spurious gaiety of the moment, she seemed to +be returning to her distress, with no work, no money, the +Bijou closed, Harrasford taking possession of the theater. +She revolved all this in her head, without succeeding in +connecting the whole: rags of ideas hung in her brain, +like the strips of scenery at the back of the stage. +She had not even the courage to go and take her bike +... to-morrow ... to-morrow. The Hours, the +pink one and the scarlet one, who came out of the bar +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291' name='page_291'></a>291</span> +also, resigned themselves gaily. Their salary mattered so +little. As they explained to Lily, you’re always well paid, +when you have rich friends, and, if you haven’t, all you +have to do is to look out for them:</p> +<p>“Like Poland, what! A fat lot she cares the old boy’s +ruined! All she will do is to find another, change her +owner!”</p> +<p>Lily had knocked up against everything, seen everything, +heard everything, in her adventurous life; but this +way of getting out of a difficulty always made her blush +to her eyes. No, a triumph at the Astrarium: that was the +only solution for her, Lily Clifton! She was eager also +to hand the money to Nunkie. The Bambinis’ money was +a different matter from Jimmy’s: they were hungry children. +Nunkie must be at the theater now, with his Three +Graces, quite close, and they were going to perform at the +Astrarium. So it was not essential never to have appeared +in Paris! That meant one more chance for her!</p> +<p>“Come along, Glass-Eye!”</p> +<p>They now passed into the noisy quarters. The Olympia +opened its furnace of light before them. The Three +Graces stood displayed in life-size on posters, with others +beside them, names which Lily knew vaguely, as she +knew them all, from seeing them somewhere,—as she +knew the stage-entrance of the Olympia, by instinct, in +the dark street, at the side: the mouth by which the monster +nightly swallowed and rejected its fill of meat. A +courtyard ... three steps up ... turn to the +right ... Lily was at home again, amid rainbow +lights.</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily!”</p> +<p>It was Nunkie greeting her on the stage, while his dear +girls were dressing in their room. He took the money for +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292' name='page_292'></a>292</span> +the Bambinis, congratulated Lily on the result of her collection, +thanked her.</p> +<p>“And what about the Astrarium?” asked Lily. “Do +you know...?”</p> +<p>Of course, Nunkie +knew. His dear +girls were engaged +to perform there. +And he had seen +some one on his way +to the theater: the +opening would take +place in a month +... in six weeks +at the latest....</p> +<p>The architect—“You +know, Lily?” +said Nunkie—the architect +who used to +hang about on the +stage, in the passages, +on some pretext or +other—to make love +to girls, apparently—was +minding everything +for Harrasford! +He was taking +measurements, drawing out plans:</p> +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/illus-pg288.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 267px; height: 368px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 267px;'> +THE ARCHITECT<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>“Everything is ready in advance, everything’s ordered; +they’ve only got to put things in their places; the workmen +will start to-morrow.”</p> +<p>“So that’s what he came for!” thought Lily angrily. +“The damned <i>parley-voo</i>!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293' name='page_293'></a>293</span></p> +<p>“And your Pa, you know,” continued Nunkie, “will be +there too, with his New Trickers: it would have been +easy for you to get there first,” he added, with a meaning +smile.</p> +<p>“The New Trickers! Daisy Woolly-legs!” stammered +Lily, turning pale. “Who told you so?”</p> +<p>“I’m sure of it, I had it from Jimmy himself,” replied +Nunkie.</p> +<p>“Jimmy told you? And what has Jimmy to do with +it?” asked Lily, anguish-stricken.</p> +<p>“What has he to do with it? Why, he’s simply going +to top the bill,” said Nunkie. “And, besides, Harrasford +has left it to him to make out the program. Why, didn’t +you know?... Your friend Jimmy...?”</p> +<p>She was in the street once more, feeling weak-kneed +and light-headed. She leaned on Glass-Eye’s arm; she +had a pain in her side from the emotion. She felt inclined +to enter a café, to get drunk on champagne, to forget.</p> +<p>The next day an awful headache made her keep her +room.</p> +<p>“To-morrow,” she said to Glass-Eye, “to-morrow I +will fetch my bike.”</p> +<p>She dared not go out; she felt as if it was written on +her forehead:</p> +<p>“The New Trickers at the Astrarium! Daisy Woolly-legs +at the Astrarium and not you!”</p> +<p>And, “to-morrow,” again she spent the day stretched +on her bed. And the next day, well, as she had to ... +as her bike was her bread-winner, after all ... her +only bread-winner, whatever happened!...</p> +<p>“Come on, Glass-Eye! Let’s go for the bike! I don’t +care if I do play the darky at Earl’s Court!”</p> +<p>But, on reaching the Bijou, she could not restrain a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294' name='page_294'></a>294</span> +cry. Nunkie had spoken the truth; they were at work +everywhere, unloading joists, running up scaffoldings, attacking +the theater from every side. Her friend, the +architect, passed, looking very busy, greeted her with a +“Hullo, Lily!” But Lily did not even see him.</p> +<p>“I hope our things are still in the dressing-room. +Hurry up, Glass-Eye!”</p> +<p>And Lily ran along the passage, where already sacks +of plaster had taken the place of the velvet and nickel +properties. She crossed the stage, which was still untouched, +took the dressing-room corridor and there, almost +before her door, met Jimmy! She felt like turning +her back on him, after spitting on the floor, as a mark +of contempt; but, after all, no! The coward! They’d +see which of them should lower eyes first! And she +planted hers straight in his face, like a blow of the fist!</p> +<p>Jimmy, who was coming toward her, had a moment of +hesitation ... but it did not last. He soon recovered +himself. It would have been obvious to any one seeing that +masterful face that here was a man cured of his love, a +strong man and sure of himself, a man whom a kid like +Lily—Lily had always remained a kid to him, and not +Mrs. Trampy, not the wife of Trampy, that thief in the +night!—a man whom a kid like Lily could not have at +her beck and call. And he held out his hand, like a good +friend, simply, among artistes:</p> +<p>“How do you do, Lily? Delighted to see you.”</p> +<p>“Glass-Eye,” said Lily, opening the door of her dressing-room, +“Glass-Eye, my bag ... the key of my +trunk ... get out the bike first. One can’t turn in +this rotten hole,” she added, as she entered.</p> +<p>And, as Glass-Eye seemed all day releasing the bike +from the hooked-up skirts and tights hanging from the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span> +wall, to say nothing of the kicks which she received from +the pedals, Lily, grumbling, snatched it out of her hands, +and ordered her maid to go and wait for her in the street, +great good-for-nothing that she was!</p> +<p>“So you refuse to speak to me?” asked Jimmy.</p> +<p>Lily lowered her head, took no more notice of him than +if he had not been there, collected her clothes, pulled the +gollywog from the wall without the slightest regard, +heaped up everything promiscuously in the trunk, thumping +it down with her fists, as though eager to have done +with it.</p> +<p>“Come, Lily, are you still angry with me?” asked +Jimmy, quite at a loss. “When you took me by surprise +that day, at Whitcomb Mansions ...”</p> +<p>“A lot I care for your love!” growled Lily contemptuously.</p> +<p>“But my friendship, Lily ...”</p> +<p>“Your friendship,” said Lily, “your friendship ... +a rag! I’ll show you how I value your friendship!” she +said, flinging a dirty towel on the floor and stamping on it +in her rage.</p> +<p>“And that Daisy Woolly-legs!” resumed Lily, with an +unspeakable expression of scorn on her face.</p> +<p>“What do you mean?” asked Jimmy, who did not understand.</p> +<p>“Giving that shop to the New Trickers!” she continued +violently. “You who always used to talk of my talent! +Giving a shop like that to those New Trickers, who +haven’t as much talent among the six of them as I have +in my little finger!... You! To treat me like that!... +When I think,” cried Lily, beside herself, “when +I think that Pa and Ma will be here ... with tricks +stolen from me! footy rotter that you are!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span></p> +<p>Jimmy understood that the engagement of the New +Trickers exasperated Lily: a question of outraged pride, +of professional jealousy. He tried to explain: she had +already performed in Paris and Harrasford insisted on +that. He, Jimmy, wasn’t altogether the master. The New +Trickers were very clever, very original, very new ...</p> +<p>“And I’m only fit to throw to the dogs, eh?” cried Lily +furiously. “And that rot about having performed in +Paris. The Graces have performed in Paris and they’re +to be at the Astrarium and why not I? Because you’re +my friend, perhaps. Such a friend! When it would +have been so easy for you to give me that pleasure. But +no one will ever do anything to please me! Yes, strangers, +gentlemen in the front boxes; but not friends like +you! You always bore me a grudge for marrying +Trampy.... And who knows what people say of +me behind my back!... that I cut my turn ... +that I do less than I might. You know what I can do, +damn it! But it’s work I want, do you hear, work! I’m +not what you think!... One of those ... not +I! I’d rather chew glass than take any of that!”</p> +<p>And Lily spoke with nervous movements of the shoulder +and fiery glances and she forced Jimmy to lower his +eyes and she told him what she thought of him straight +out, told him all her heaped-up, rankling spite, told him +all she had at heart, in words round and solid enough to +build a tower of Babel on!</p> +<p>“And I would have given my life, yes, given my life +to perform here! However, it’s done now, isn’t it? And +it can’t be undone,” said Lily, more calmly, and two +tears sprang to her eyelids.... Then, while Jimmy, +plunged in his own thoughts, watched her without speaking +and listened to her like a judge, “You’ve nothing +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span> +to say to me, eh?” she continued, closing her trunk with +a thump of the fist. “Nor I either. Then help me to +carry down my hamper: you haven’t helped me to get +into the Astrarium; at least you can help me to get out +of it. No? You refuse? And you so generous!” she +said, with a scornful laugh. “Well, then, help me take +it on my shoulders. No? Not even that? Then I must +try by myself ... and never mind if I do get crushed! +<i>That’s</i> all I care for my life now!” added Lily, snapping +her fingers.</p> +<p>“But, Lily,” said Jimmy, taking up the hamper. +“You’re going out of your sense; you know that ...”</p> +<p>Jimmy could find nothing to say. He was pained to the +bottom of his heart ... for the grief which he was +causing her. The tone of feverish banter which Lily was +adopting upset him more than her anger had done. He +felt himself filled with pity for that poor little creature +standing at bay.</p> +<p>With a turn of the hip, Jimmy jerked to his shoulder +the great basket trunk which contained all Lily’s fortune. +It was not very heavy: tights, spangled skirts, faded +flowers. And, in the passage down-stairs, the astounded +stage-doorkeeper saw the famous bill-topper submissively +carrying the trunk of the bicyclist, who walked in +front of him, wheeling her machine beside her.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span> +<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>The fortnight that followed upon this meeting was +such a strenuous one for Jimmy, with eighteen hours out +of the twenty-four spent at the Astrarium, among the +day and night gangs; his life was such a slavery that he +had hardly time to think of Lily. But he did think of her, +for all that. He seemed to hear her still. Yes, he confessed +to himself, he had, perhaps, believed ... he +had, in fact, been told that Lily was Lily no longer ... +But he had just been admiring her magnificent anger. +He had seen her eaten up with ambition, quivering from +head to foot, and that brave face lifted up to his. Twenty +times over he was on the point of saying something to +her; but he must see first ... Would she herself be +willing? Even though she had seemed resolved to do anything?</p> +<p>“Meanwhile,” thought Jimmy, as on the former occasion, +when she was ill, in Berlin, “how are we to help +her out of this ... how?”</p> +<p>And he was caught in the whirlwind again: it was +Jimmy here, Jimmy there. He had to be in ten places at +once. Not that he was manager or stage-manager: his +was a special case. Since his return from America, Jimmy +possessed an even more thorough knowledge of all the +machinery of the theater. He had his memorandum-books +filled with notes, his head crammed with new ideas. He +had a smattering of everything, a vast amount of experience +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span> +picked up in rushing about the world. After +his triumphs with “Bridging the Abyss,” the managers, +knowing that he had prepared something different, something +strange and terrible, without knowing exactly what, +the managers had bombarded him with offers: Chicago, +Berlin, London. A conversation with Harrasford, whom +the Astrarium held body and soul, had determined the +matter otherwise: he would open the Astrarium with +Jimmy and remodel the theater from top to bottom in +view of the new trick, the most sensational that had ever +been seen. And Jimmy should make the necessary alterations, +he should have a free hand.</p> +<p>Jimmy accepted. To open in a theater made for himself +seemed preferable to Jimmy to launching his new +invention in a closed hall, such as the London Hippodrome, +for instance, which did not provide the aperture +in the roof, the door opening on to the stars, which he +required to obtain his effect upon the crowd. And that +was why, in the work at the Astrarium, everything +turned upon Jimmy. He was responsible to both Harrasford +and himself. For that matter, he was fully equal +to the interests at stake. Harrasford, a great judge of +men, intrusted everything to Jimmy, the sensational bill-topper, +removed above all jealousy; and he left it to his +experience to construct the program. Harrasford himself, +the chief and master, rarely left London; he managed +all his theaters from his office, with the ’phone at +his ear, or else flew like the wind in every direction, buying +a theater here, picking up a star there, on the wing. +It was not until the third week that he came to see for +himself how the work was doing and to discuss the +accounts. His broad back was seen, followed by Jimmy, +to plunge down the plastery corridors, to pass under the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span></p> +<p>scaffoldings. He looked like a conqueror, tracing with +his finger the plan of the palace that was to rise upon the +ruins of the destroyed city; or else he would point out +things with a jerk of the chin:</p> +<p>“The proscenium pushed forward to here, eh, Jimmy? +A cluster of electric lights here. Another there. And +what about your trick, Jimmy?”</p> +<p>“You must imagine the house in darkness,” said +Jimmy, “and blue and green rays falling on the stage +from above. Through the blue, we send a great dazzling +beam, from over there, lighting up every inch of the +house, a terrific light, the light of the Last Judgment....”</p> +<p>“Good!” said Harrasford. “We want two or three fits +of hysterics at the opening, real ones, not hired at two +bob a night,” he added, with a wink. “They’re working, +up there,” he continued, a piece of old plastering falling +on his shoulder, as they crossed the floor of the house, +denuded of its seats.</p> +<p>“It’s the opening in the roof,” said Jimmy. “I should +have liked to show you ... the staircase is blocked +with scaffoldings ...”</p> +<p>But Harrasford, at the risk of breaking his neck, had +already grasped the rungs of a provisional ladder, made +of spokes stuck through one of the four beams which +rose from the floor to the ceiling and supported it, while +the whole of the space between them was being opened. +The architect was there when Harrasford came out on +the roof. He showed him four piers of strong masonry +which were being built against the outer walls, explained +that two T irons of considerable strength would rest with +their ends on the piers and run across the roofing from +wall to wall. Two other irons, also parallel, but running +lengthwise, would be bolted to the first two. This arrangement +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301' name='page_301'></a>301</span> +would make a horizontal frame of twenty by +thirty feet. They would then remove the beams which +supported the roof during the operations. When the +plastering was finished and the gilding applied, this +would form, as seen from below, a handsome frame to +the sky. The architect also explained how the truncated +roof would be secured to the frame, forming a whole +as firm as a rock, and how a light iron sash, completely +glazed, could be drawn along the two transverse T irons, +thus opening or closing the hall as desired.</p> +<p>“The whole thing’s worked from below by electricity,” +said Jimmy.</p> +<p>“How long will it take?” asked Harrasford.</p> +<p>“It’s all ready. It’s only got to be fixed up,” said the +architect.</p> +<p>“And how much? Give me the detailed account to-night, +at the station. I’ll study it on my way to Berlin.” +And, turning to the workmen, “<i>Faites vite! Dépêchez</i>!”</p> +<p>They were the only words of French he knew, a vocabulary +no more extensive than Lily’s, but of a different +kind.</p> +<p>“And the lights?” asked Harrasford, before he went +down again.</p> +<p>“Here, there,” said Jimmy, “on steel rods, connected +by electric wires.”</p> +<p>“That’ll dish the Berlin Winter Garden, with its stars +set in black velvet,” said Harrasford.</p> +<p>And he followed Jimmy toward the stage wall, which +stood out above the roof of the auditorium. Here some +other workmen were cutting a doorway.</p> +<p>“Let’s go and see the floor now.”</p> +<p>And Harrasford plunged through the door, followed +by Jimmy. They crossed the fly-galleries and +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302' name='page_302'></a>302</span></p> +<p>made for the blocked staircases. Before they went down, +Jimmy called his attention to a pulley which was being +fixed to the ceiling and which was to carry a rope with a +stirrup for the performer’s foot, to enable him to reach +the stage in a few seconds, after doing the trick.</p> +<p>“Very good,” said Harrasford.</p> +<p>In half an hour, he had visited everything: the roof, +the flies, the cellar, the auditorium, the front entrance. +Workmen were hurrying everywhere. Harrasford encouraged +them with a slap on the shoulder:</p> +<p>“<i>Dépêchez! Faites vite</i>!”</p> +<p>They were working at everything at once, from the +new installation of electric light and the steam-heating +apparatus, in the basement, to the emergency exits and +the main lobby. Upholsterers were taking measurements +in the front boxes. The sound of the hammer rang +out from top to bottom, amid a cloud of dust; men +climbed the scaffoldings, hoisted up things; and the sight +of all this activity gave the impression of a plan thought +out in advance, executed with great certainty, but incomprehensible +to any one not in the secret. There could be +no doubt but that the spectacle which was being prepared +would be of a sensational character: even the back-wall +of the stage, which was empty at that moment, had been +altered. By clearing away a few dressing-rooms, they +had raised the floor and ceiling of the huge property-entrance. +It had been closed up at the back and fitted with +a sliding door in front.</p> +<p>“The bird’s cage,” said Jimmy, with a smile.</p> +<p>“And how does he get out?” asked Harrasford.</p> +<p>“Windlasses here ... a rope up above ... +hooks,” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>“And when will it be fixed?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span></p> +<p>“Finished next week, everything’s ready, the trials +have been made. It will only need a little practice, here, +on the spot, calculating the effort, getting used to the +distance.”</p> +<p>“House packed for six months!” said the manager. +“Here’s a cigar to your success, Jimmy! Come and let’s +have a drink at the bar; we’ll settle the program over +there.”</p> +<p>A moment later, the two entered the bar where, a fortnight +earlier, Lily had handed round the hat a second +time for old Martello and his Bambinis and where the +artistes, who had already dispersed toward the four corners +of Europe, had raised their glasses to the success of +the Astrarium. And there, in the little back room, which +was deserted by the artistes, now that the theater was +closed, but which would soon again be the intersecting +point of so many vagabond existences ... where +the nigger cake-walker from Chicago would play poker +with the equilibrist from Japan ... where the profs +and the bosses would exchange complaints about the +strictness of the regulations concerning the work of apprentices +... where little girls, worth their weight +in gold, would come, coyly, encompassed by Pas and Mas, +but with glances askance at flight; in that corner where +funny men would swallow mixed drinks and talk through +their noses; there, under the frames containing row upon +row of signed photographs of artistes: human pyramids, +girls in a knot, foaming muslins, Apollos and Venuses +all muscles; there, in Pros’ Corner, Harrasford, the man +for whom all those people toiled and moiled, head down +or feet in the air, the man from whom one thousand persons +drew salaries night after night, Harrasford lit +his cigar and sat down at a table with Jimmy, over a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span></p> +<p>bottle of beer, and, forthwith, pencil and note-book in +hand:</p> +<p>“Let’s see the program.”</p> +<p>Jimmy, on his side, took a written list from his pocket +and laid it on the table.</p> +<p>It goes without saying that the select turns which they +were about to discuss had long been engaged for Harrasford’s +different music-halls, some of them two or three +years ahead, as often happens in the case of the great +bill-toppers, and the question was to choose among the +best, so as to insure the triumph of the opening night. +For Harrasford, who had as yet appointed no one as +manager or stage-manager, the thing was to settle a program +which would discourage any attempt at competition, +to have none appearing except stars, without counting +those whom he held in reserve for the following +month, before distributing them over his variety-theaters +in England, or, later, to any part of Europe, in the “Great +Powers Tour” which he proposed to create and of which +the Astrarium would be a sort of “commodore” music-hall, +or headquarters. Jimmy only gave his opinion, after +which Harrasford would decide.</p> +<p>Harrasford’s dream was a model music-hall, something, +in its own way, like the Grand Opéra in Paris: a palatial +edifice, in a new style of architecture, with friezes displaying +bodies in contortion, caryatids, cast from life, +supporting the springers of the arches, mixed groups +of loins and chests with swelling muscles, under the +electric lights, and, in the lobbies, a lavish display of +African onyx, Scotch granite and Russian porphyry. The +crowd would pass in between Venus and Apollo, holding +flowers and lights; and there would be music everywhere; +gaiety, noise, red and gold everywhere; all cares would +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span> +be laid aside and forgotten on entering; it would be a +hall containing every modern convenience, like the Iroquois +at Buffalo or a ’Frisco sky-scraper: newspapers, +café, bars, smoking-room, barbers’ saloon, telegraph-office, +telephone-office, messenger-boys, ticket-office, private +rooms in which phonographs would shout out the latest +news illustrated with telesteriography, from eight o’clock +till midnight. The idea was to create, thirty years ahead +of its time, the great popular music-hall, with its ball-rooms, +as at Blackpool, its side-shows, a palm-garden, +a roof-garden; to draw to the theater those who, on +getting up from dinner, go to the café and stay there; to +give them an atmosphere of mirth and jollity, of comforting +lights, a sort of night forum, of People’s Palace, with, +in the middle, in the sumptuous hall, facing the furnace +that was the stage, a long thrill of three hours’ duration.</p> +<p>And he would realize it next year, but he was in a +hurry to open now, to plant his flag of victory:</p> +<p>“<i>Faites vite! Dépêchez</i>!”</p> +<p>Dare Devil had won the place for him and Jimmy was +bringing him the sensational attraction, the inspired godsend +which would pack the Astrarium for six months +and fill its till and spread its name far and wide over +Europe.</p> +<p>Harrasford thought of this with a puff at his cigar, +after glancing at the photographs on the wall, and then, +suddenly:</p> +<p>“Let’s see the program.”</p> +<p>“Nothing but bill-toppers,” said Jimmy. “Picked +turns from the first to the last ...”</p> +<p>“Which will be you,” Harrasford broke in.</p> +<p>“Yes ... I ... or somebody else ...”</p> +<p>“What do you mean, somebody else?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span></p> +<p>“Perhaps,” said Jimmy, “to heighten the effect of my +turn ... for reasons which I’ll explain to you ... +perhaps it would be better to have a woman ... better +for the success of the attraction!” he hastened to add, +at an astonished gesture of Harrasford’s.</p> +<p>“And ... are you sure?” asked the other.</p> +<p>“I think so,” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>“The program first,” said Harrasford, returning to his +notes.</p> +<p>“We open with a gallery in marble and gold, something +showy and quaint, in the Potsdam style, with a +negress inside.”</p> +<p>“I know. Light of Asia, eh? The armless Chinese +girl whom I discovered at Poplar.... Music of +cymbals and triangles, eh?”</p> +<p>“No,” said Jimmy. “I have something better ... +more æsthetic, less cruel ... a Soudanese woman +from Chicago. She walks on to the stage in a low-necked +dress ... a magnificent woman ... a creamy +complexion, with a touch of pink ... and golden +hair ...”</p> +<p>“You said a negress,” interrupted Harrasford.</p> +<p>“Wait ... a splendid voice ... classical +music ... then a wild African melody.... +She feels a flutter of homesickness; the perspiration +streams down her face; she presses the sponge soaked +in water, hidden beneath her wig,—and the enamel, the +white of the shoulders, the pink cheeks all trickle away +and, finally she appears black as ebony, and, to the growl +of the kettle-drums, does a disheveled dance, kicking up +her legs like a puppet on a string ... Patti-Patty +... talent and absurdity mixed ... a crazy +toy ... movement and noise, while the hall fills.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span></p> +<p>“Next?” asked Harrasford.</p> +<p>“Next, without any interval,” continued Jimmy, “directly +after that performance by the court fool before his +majesty the audience, the curtain rises upon a park ... +and the New Trickers chasing one another among the +trees.”</p> +<p>“The New Trickers!” said Harrasford. “Bicyclists: +that’s very stale. And, besides, what about you?”</p> +<p>“Has one ever,” asked Jimmy, “seen a music-hall give +two similar special turns, two bicycle turns, for instance, +in the same show?”</p> +<p>“Absurd!” said Harrasford. “Explain yourself.”</p> +<p>“It’s to differentiate between my invention and trick-riding +from the very first,” replied Jimmy, “to show, once +and for all, that mine has nothing in common with the +ordinary turns you see on the stage: ‘Bridging the Abyss’ +or ‘Looping the Loop.’”</p> +<p>“You may be right,” said Harrasford, “it will prevent +confusion; yours is purely scientific. And the New +Trickers: tights? Bloomers?”</p> +<p>“Skirts, all in white, Warwick style,” said Jimmy. “A +school-girls’ spree: see-saw on the bike ... somersaults +over the benches ... waltzes, lively tunes: an +impression of gaiety and happiness. The star is a statue on +a pedestal in the park. The others throw flowers to her. +She wakes; steps down: ‘Hullo, a bike!’ And then a special +tune for the star and a waltz on the back-wheel, amid +the admiring circle of school-girls.”</p> +<p>“All right,” said Harrasford. “And what’s the price +of the New Trickers?”</p> +<p>“So much.”</p> +<p>And he jotted it down in his note-book, near the prices +of Dare Devil and Cataplasm. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></p> +<p>Jimmy also took notes, mentioned the names of the +great serio, the great comic singer, with their figures:</p> +<p>“So much.”</p> +<p>“They earn their money pretty easily, those two!” +grunted Harrasford. “But I’ve got to submit to it, I +suppose. Next?”</p> +<p>Jimmy only described the spectacular turns. Harrasford +listened, saw it in his head: a corner of untamed nature, +a valley in the mountains, blue distances, sunshine +in the foreground. The Three Graces arrive all out of +breath.</p> +<p>“You understand,” said Jimmy, “they are supposed to +have been chasing the deer or hunting butterflies. As a +matter of fact, Mr. Fuchs will have made them do their +Sandow, before going on, to bring the blood to their +cheeks; he’s full of ideas, is Mr. Fuchs. On arriving, +a moment’s rest, an adorable group in all the splendor +of the nude ... sweet, solemn music ... and +then a glorious performance, a sort of human cluster +hanging from the trapezes, something healthy and robust.”</p> +<p>“All right,” said Harrasford, putting a cross in his +note-book opposite the Three Graces. “And next?”</p> +<p>With Harrasford it was always “And next?” like a +man who never has more than just so many minutes to +spare, because his train’s waiting.</p> +<p>It was a curious sight to see the two talking together +in low voices, with an occasional glance at the door +when some indiscreet person looked in. They might have +been taken for a pair of conspirators plotting a move; +no one would ever have suspected that they were composing +a performance, unique of its sort, which would be +famous to-morrow. Everything was provided for: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309' name='page_309'></a>309</span> +scenery, music, the color of the dresses, effects of light, +the alternate doses of laughter or grace or terror to be +served up to the audience; everything was discussed then +and there, in all its details, down to those two sketch-comedians, +with faces streaked red and white, against a +back-drop representing an old English street, two drunken +sports, with hats mashed in, coats turned inside out, ten +minutes of mad tricks and inhuman cries; for the audience +must have its pittance of the grotesque as well.</p> +<p>There was a herd of comic elephants, five enormous +animals in a Hindoo setting; and no master on the stage, +no boss, no prof: they all obeyed a whistle blown in the +wings. And, conducting the orchestra with an air of unspeakable +gravity, a monkey, Mozart II., a caricature of +an infant prodigy, made the huge brutes perform their +evolutions, to the Soldiers’ Chorus from <i>Faust</i>. Then, +in his enthusiasm, Mozart sent his desk flying into the +air, followed by his coat, his shoes, his conductor’s baton, +and ended by seizing his tail in his hand and beating +time with that.</p> +<p>“That dishes Orpheus and Mad-darewski,” said Harrasford. +“And next?”</p> +<p>The <i>entr’acte</i> came next, with portraits and biographies +of the artistes distributed among the audience.</p> +<p>“Yes, yes,” said Harrasford, laughing. “Old English +families ... clergymen’s daughters....”</p> +<p>“Learned all that with their governesses, as a surprise +for their Pa and Ma!” continued Jimmy. “Mozart II., a +favorite of the king of Lahore; Patti-Patty, a descendant +of the Queen of Sheba: we’ve got to do it. There’s no +getting away from it.”</p> +<p>“We must hide the bruises,” said Harrasford. “And +next?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310' name='page_310'></a>310</span></p> +<p>“Next, I hope to have the Bambinis: ten minutes of +rosy mirth; real biographical babies, born with that in +their blood, brother and sister, two marvels. I shall obtain +permission for them to appear, though they’re under +the age; the old father is dying, the famous Martello.”</p> +<p>“We must engage them for my tour,” said Harrasford.</p> +<p>“If the old man doesn’t die first; in that case, there’s +a brother who will come and claim them, it seems. +They’re a fortune, the two Bambinis, to whomever secures +them.”</p> +<p>“One dress-coat more on the stage,” said Harrasford. +“And next?”</p> +<p>“Topsy Turvy Tom.”</p> +<p>“Oh, yes, I know!” said Harrasford, laughing. “The +fellow who used to wear leaden armlets to harden his +muscles and smash Clifton’s jaw.”</p> +<p>“That’s the one,” said Jimmy, laughing in his turn. “A +threat of Clifton’s, who said that he would ‘make him +dance the hornpipe on his hands, damn it!’ suggested the +idea of a turn to him, so they say. He set to work with +superhuman energy—and now he is a bill-topper....”</p> +<p>“Well done!” cried Harrasford, banging his fist on +the table. “There’s no country but old England can turn +out bulldogs like that, lads who jump from the gutter +to the top of the bill! That’s what I call a man! And +what’s his turn like?”</p> +<p>“A scene of his own: the front of a palace. A pink +marble figure, naked down to the waist, supports a huge +cornice. A thunder of big drums, a flash of lime-light +and the palace splits from top to bottom. The figure +staggers, falls on its hands and gives a stupendous acrobatic +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311' name='page_311'></a>311</span> +performance: somersaults on the hands; waltzing; +treading the ball: the ‘hornpipe, damn it!’ And then +Tom stands on his feet, all in shadow. A powerful ray +of light is thrown upon him, and you see the muscles of +the abdomen slowly moving, the pectoral muscles quivering, +the deltoids leaping and starting, the biceps swelling; +and, when he turns round, the rhomboids hollowing out, +the muscles of the back rolling: the triumph of the human +machine ... and of Tom.”</p> +<p>“And of will,” said Harrasford. “How much?”</p> +<p>“So much.”</p> +<p>“It’s worth it. And next?”</p> +<p>“Roofers, high-kickers: the Merry Wives. We begin +with dancing and end with dancing. The puppets make +their bow to the public before being put away in their +boxes ... the curtain falls ... and good night!”</p> +<p>“And then you come!”</p> +<p>“Then I come,” said Jimmy. “Or she.”</p> +<p>“Your invention,” said Harrasford seriously, “is not a +music-hall entertainment. It is, undoubtedly, the greatest +of all scientific toys, a marvel of modern ingenuity. Do +you really want a pair of tights on the top of that? And, +first of all, where will you find the woman who will dare?”</p> +<p>“That’s the question, obviously,” admitted Jimmy.</p> +<p>Not that Jimmy must have been in love with Lily, to +think of her! It had first just passed through his head, +no more. But, on reflecting, it had appeared to him that, +in the theater, the beauty of a Lily would add greatly to +the success of his attraction. To work his invention in +public was different from experimenting with it in his +shed in London. It was leaving the laboratory to take +its place in life; and it would be a triumph to see the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312' name='page_312'></a>312</span> +daring trick succeed, every day, at the fixed hour, within +a restricted compass; to see it go through the opening +above; to see that machine worked by a young girl in +whom one would have suspected neither the strength +nor the nerve: it would make the public infer the excellence +of the engine. Now Jimmy was possessed, above +all, of scientific enthusiasm. His machine before everything; +not his personal triumph, his machine. He +dreamed of giving that added grace to his diagrams; +and he considered that there was no disadvantage in +allowing science to be introduced by youth and beauty. +Moreover, Jimmy was a little heavy for an apparatus in +which he had even suppressed the motor, in order to +make it more easily manageable ... a lighter body +would perhaps be better ... Lily, Lily was the +ideal operator; but was she capable of it? Jimmy had +confidence in her. Jimmy, certainly, did not allow sentiment +to mix in his affairs; there was the weight of his +responsibility to consider. But then there was also his +meeting with Lily in the dressing-room passage. And he +had understood her mental agony. He had seen the +gleam in her eyes and so great a display of energy in her +face that Jimmy had resolved to try her; and he would +judge her much better by the way in which she should +face death.</p> +<p>That is what Jimmy explained to the manager, leaving +a good deal untold, of course, and Harrasford retired behind +the smoke of his cigar, listened, approved.</p> +<p>“It’s your affair, when all is said and done. All you +want is success, I suppose? And will you arrange with +her ... with your ... what did you say her +name was?” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313' name='page_313'></a>313</span></p> +<p>“Lily.”</p> +<p>“There are so many Lilies; and, if somebody has to +break his or her back, I had rather it was a Lily, one out +of the bunch, than you.”</p> +<p>Lily, meanwhile, was loitering outside. Harrasford +and Jimmy had no notion that the girl about whom they +were talking was quite close to them, thinking of them. +Lily had heard an artiste say that Harrasford was visiting +the Astrarium. She had come in all haste, impelled +by some vague hope. Chance would have it that +she was still in Paris. Everything, besides, seemed to +be keeping her there: an agent, the day after her interview +with Jimmy, had advised her to stay a few days +longer; there might be something important for her. +Lily could not understand in what way; however, she +had stayed, though she was almost without means of +support. She began by trying to sell her jewels, the +fifty-pound diamond, among others, which that lord had +given her in England: the jeweler handed it back to her, +saying that it might be worth eight francs! That meant +destitution. And yet hope always returned to her in one +way or another. She had even received three blue banknotes, +three hundred francs, in an envelope! Her fortnight +at the Bijou! No doubt about it, they were paying the +artistes’ salaries; perhaps the Federation had taken the +matter up? Three hundred francs; not enough to pay +Glass-Eye or to give to Jimmy, but just sufficient to settle +her small debts, buy some new dresses and go to London +to play the darky at Earl’s Court. Oh, what a ridiculous +come-down! And so, when she learned that Harrasford +was at the Astrarium, she took her courage in both hands: +she would see Harrasford. She would try the fascination +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314' name='page_314'></a>314</span> +of her smile upon him. She would be settled at +once and for ever.... When she thought of the +New Trickers, her blood seemed to stand still in her +veins: the New Trickers at the Astrarium! And Jimmy, +the mean cur, not to have got her that shop, when she +had such a splendid idea: Lady Godiva on a bike! And +a scene of her own: the front of Peeping Tom’s club, +with all the boys at the windows!</p> +<p>Just then, Harrasford came out of the bar. She hurried +up to him and introduced herself:</p> +<p>“Miss Lily.”</p> +<p>“Which one?” said Harrasford. “Excuse me; no time +now. See Jimmy, will you?”</p> +<p>And he plunged into a cab and shouted an address to +his driver.</p> +<p>Lily stood stupefied, as she watched the cab disappear. +This time it was finished, quite finished.... She +gave a last glance at the Astrarium and sighed....</p> +<p>“Lily!” It was Jimmy coming out and crossing the +street. “Hullo, Lily!”</p> +<p>She did not reply.</p> +<p>“Listen, Lily,” said Jimmy, gently and gravely. “You +wanted to get there the other day, didn’t you? You told +me you would do anything for that.”</p> +<p>“To take the place of the New Trickers, yes!” exclaimed +Lily. “I’d have risked my life!”</p> +<p>“The New Trickers are there,” said Jimmy, “and are +going to remain. Listen to me, what I have to propose +to you is very serious: it’s something else.”</p> +<p>“What else? You know that’s all I’m good for ... +to go round and round ... you know it quite well!” +cried Lily, her face drawn with impotent anger. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315' name='page_315'></a>315</span> +“I know what you can do. Look here: would you like +to be above the New Trickers? Would you like to top +the bill? Are you ready to do everything for that?”</p> +<p>“May God forgive you for mocking at me!”</p> +<p>“Will you top the bill?” asked Jimmy again, in an accent +that sent a thrill down her back. “Answer me: yes +or no?”</p> +<p>“Yes,” cried Lily. “My life, everything, damn it!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316' name='page_316'></a>316</span></p> +<div class='ce' style=' font-size:1.2em;'> +<p>AMONG THE STARS</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p>I</p> +</div> + +<p>Jimmy was greatly excited when Lily had given him +her answer and he led her to the Astrarium. To understand +his feelings fully, one would have to know his life +since the evening when, at Whitcomb Mansions, he had +looked Lily in the face and told her no. He realized +then, from the emotion which he experienced, how great +a place Lily had filled in his heart, the little passenger +from New York to Liverpool; the girl who came to see +him in his shop in Gresse Street; the Lily whom he +dreamed of “helping out of that” when he saw her +on the stage, from up in the fly-galleries; the one whom +he had tried to take away from Trampy; the poor sick +girl in Berlin; those Lilies whom he felt moving inside +him, around him, like a breath of April; all those +Lilies, he had broken with them all! Oh, it was hard! +Lily should never, never know what courage he had +needed to keep silent, he, the man she thought so cold, +nor what a tempest ... oh, if she could only have +seen into him! And then ... he had not met her +again....</p> +<p>He, after his engagement at the Hippodrome, went off +to America; Lily traveled on her part. Also, he was a +prey to his fixed idea, his great project, always: his ambition +increased, the same longing for success which, formerly, +in Gresse Street, had made him spend nights in +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317' name='page_317'></a>317</span> +study after days of toil, at the time when, under Lily’s influence, +his roaming thoughts built castles in the air, when +he felt awakening within himself his racial instinct as an +heroic seeker after profitable adventures.</p> +<p>And his ambition took great strides forward, was not +limited, as in Clifton’s case, to upsetting the fat freaks +or training New Zealanders to spin round and round. +He dreamed of a useful life, based upon his own efforts. +He wished to found his future upon a discovery of his +own, which had long haunted him and which had +ripened in Berlin, between his flights in “Bridging the +Abyss,” a thing at which he worked incessantly in Whitcomb +Mansions; and, this time, the stage prowlers, +should not steal his idea. To begin with, apart from +a few pieces of technical advice which he received from +a friend of his, an engineer, nobody knew about it; +and Jimmy felt sure that, even when the apparatus was +at work, he would not fall a victim to the confraternity +who, ever on the watch for new tricks, study them, +judge of the weak points, copy whatever suits them, +including scenery and music, and, sometimes, succeed +in earning more money than the inventor himself; he +would have nothing to fear from the Trampies, the pirates, +the plagiarists, those plagues of the profession. +Certainly, there were great bill-toppers, creators of sensations +who discovered new things—terrifying feats of +gyroscopic balancing, or flights through space, based +upon principles of ballistics, assisted by the spiral spring—daring +risk-alls, nerve-shakers, purveyors of thrills, +turning to intelligent account the seductive power which +dangerous feats exercise upon the public. Jimmy knew +all about that. He was not the only one; but, this time, +it was a question of a scientific application which would, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318' name='page_318'></a>318</span> +beyond a doubt, place him at the head of that pick of the +music-hall. It would be pure science and patient calculation: +an algebraical hippogriff, with pluck in the saddle.</p> +<p>Jimmy’s plans resulted from intuition rather than real +knowledge; but learning has nothing to do with the creative +spirit. Now Jimmy, although he was unaware of +it, possessed the genius that invents; and his comparative +ignorance did him no great harm: his imagination, +unhampered by theories, was all the freer for it. Jimmy +had the higher instinct of the born machinist, who is content +to use a bit of string where a school-bred engineer +will cram every manner of gear, chains, pulleys and windlasses. +It is true that he was assisted in his research by +many experiments already tried elsewhere; but he +dreamed of something different and, in the calm of Whitcomb +Mansions, had studied without respite.</p> +<p>“Pooh!” he reflected. “All those sails, all that weight! +Boxes heaped one on the top of the other—cubes to catch +the air—a man sitting inert in a basket, with his hand +on a lever and a crank: it’s as though one tried to make +a stuffed bird fly! And what becomes of the man in all +that: the back push, the daring stroke? The man has got +to be the backbone of the machine, with his quick balancings, +his bendings, which are worth more than any +wheelwork.”</p> +<p>And, always, his inventive imagination built on without +respite, pulled down, built up again.</p> +<p>His daily success at the Hippodrome did not divert +him from the end he had in view. “Bridging the Abyss,” +for him, was but a means of making money, to enable +him to climb higher. He thought of nothing but that: +getting on, climbing higher; and this obsession of the +future made him scorn or rather overlook the temptations +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319' name='page_319'></a>319</span> +of the stage. He would only have had to choose among +the lot. All, down to the great Parisienne, would have +jumped at a champagne supper with Jimmy, the famous +bill-topper, the man who looked like the swells in the +front boxes and who made such a “pile.” But Jimmy +knew all about that: he left the theater in the quietest +way, took a glass of ale with the boys or girls at the +Crown, had a light supper and went home. And sometimes +a frenzy for work made him rush to his table, as +though the band of the Hippodrome were shaking his +nerves:</p> +<p>“Get to work,” he would growl, “get to work, cheesy +brain!”</p> +<p>“But, Pa, I can’t!”</p> +<p>“But you’ve got to, my little siree!” he insisted, with +a flickering smile.</p> +<p>And he read treatises, made diagrams; took up his compasses +again ... or else stayed as he was, with his +chin in his hand, plunged in his thoughts, his mind soaring +above London.... He seemed to fly over the +huge city, whose distant rumbling rose up to him, similar +to the roar of the sea.... Oh, he would succeed, +he knew he would! And he felt within himself an +increasing will of so tenacious a character that he could +have swung it, so it seemed to him, like a battering-ram +against the obstacle to be overcome and then:</p> +<p>“Damn it!” he would growl, banging his fist on the +table. “That thief in the night! What a sweet wife he +got hold of! Poor Lily, to fall into such hands! Ah, yes, +she would have done better to stay at home!”</p> +<p>And Jimmy got to work again, to forget Lily; and he +kept on thinking of her:</p> +<p>“Damn that girl!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320' name='page_320'></a>320</span></p> +<p>What on earth did he think of her for ... when he +didn’t love her, after all?</p> +<p>Even during his triumphal tour of the Eastern and +Western Trust, that Lily, whom he did not love, haunted +his memory. At first, he hoped to forget her in his life +of excessive activity. And he saw so many theaters, as +many as Lily did in England: so many artistes, on so +many stages ... faces whom he had already met in +England: fair wigs, scarlet legs, boyish voices; “Roofers,” +“brothers” and “sisters,” returning from London, Manchester, +or Glasgow. He would have ended by seeing +them all again in time. There were other Lilies shooting +up, Lilies “that high,” elbowed by every vice, petted by +every hand, kissed by every pair of lips. His sympathy +went out to them all; and Lily had lived amid all +that; it was just her life. He found something to remind +him of her at every turn, on those stages on which +she had performed. He seemed to see her near him, with +her light walk, in her little black dress, looking so nice +in her “performing-dog” toque: the poor little silly thing, +running away with that thief in the night and left alone +now, quite alone, it appeared, among the “rotten lot.” +The thought drove him mad:</p> +<p>“Damn that girl!” he said to himself. “I don’t love +her. Then why am I always thinking about her?”</p> +<p>And he rushed into work, into danger, when he +thought of that; risked terrible leaps in “Bridging the +Abyss.” He sometimes felt as though he were rushing +toward oblivion, into the jaws of death! And his great +project also nearly outweighed Lily’s influence:</p> +<p>“What are the leaps in ‘Bridging the Abyss,’” he +thought, “if not a fractional flight? If I had two flat +surfaces, one on either side, and a motor behind me, it +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_321' name='page_321'></a>321</span> +seems to me that I should continue to go upward; and +the best rudder would be the man riding it, with his +flexible body, his springy back: a live weight is less +heavy than a dead weight. How many hundred volts +does pluck stand for ... or skill ... or hatred +... or love?”</p> +<p>By dint of composing his machine in his head and +studying it on paper, Jimmy grew calmer. He thought +less about Lily, or, at least, thought about her only in her +interest, not his. For instance, in that little town in the +West which was not on his tour, but in which Trampy +had appeared, Jimmy tried to obtain information. He +went out of his way in order to make inquiries. A marriage +with Trampy Wheel-Pad? It was impossible to +discover anything; and he would not be able to make Lily +the magnificent present which he had dreamed of: her +divorce from Trampy!</p> +<p>And “Miss Lily,” Miss Lily, always; he was not satisfied +with thinking of her, he heard her name mentioned. +Boys and girls who had seen Lily in England and whom +the chances of travel brought across his path in America +told him with many amplifications, of her outrageous +adventures, her passion for flirting. She no longer did +all her turn. She paid more attention to her dresses +than to her performance. She was extravagant, traveled +with her maid, put up at the big hotels. She received +bouquets, my, as big as cabs, and invitations to supper +and post-cards covered with x x x x! She had an autograph-book +full of declarations of love. Motor-cars, furnished +houses: she was offered everything. The son of a +lord had ruined himself in jewelry for her, the impersonator +was nearly off his head for love of her, gee, she +did have a good time! She spent her life receiving chocolates +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322' name='page_322'></a>322</span> +and sweets and distributing her photograph as Lady +Godiva, with her signature. Lily, according to them, laid +waste every heart; men had left wife and children for her +sake; her love affairs were going the round of the world, +like her whippings. Lily was the thing; and game and +mustard for Jim Crow.</p> +<p>These tales left Jimmy very sad. He made allowances +for professional exaggeration in matters of love as of +smackings, but, nevertheless, there must be some truth +in what they said, for it reached him from various sides. +Oh, he pitied that dear little Lily from the bottom of his +heart! The harm was done, the theater had spoiled the +woman. This time, he felt that it was finished, between +her and him.... He, no doubt—who could tell?—would +continue his forward progress, and, one day, he +would have a wife of his own, a woman without a past, +and he would take his stand firmly on the earth, with a +home and love; and Lily, soon, would be little more than a +dead memory....</p> +<p>Meanwhile, his brain, redoubling in vigor amid those +stormy squalls, took in everything, seized everything in +a wide sense, became steeped in life, rejected bitterness +and retained enthusiasm. He heaped up personal observations +which he noted every evening, enough to +build the ideal music-hall one day. Harrasford, he +knew, was cherishing that plan. Perhaps they would +realize it together? And the retreat for the aged and +the home of rest for the sick, and, in each capital or +large town, a local artistes’ home—like the Sailors’ +Home—a little corner of England, providing comfort +for the man and protection for the girl. And his scheme, +his scheme was ripe now, the bold stroke which would +enable him to realize all the rest later. He felt the +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323' name='page_323'></a>323</span> +strength within him, if not to succeed, at least to +dare everything: “Brass Heart,” as he had been christened +at ’Frisco. He had served an apprenticeship to +will-power: he had bruised his ribs with a vengeance in +a fall at the Columbia Theater at Cincinnati; he had +nearly split his skull at the Milwaukee Majestic; he had +shed his blood at the Washington Orpheum; and he was +going to risk more with his new invention. No matter, +he had now but one idea, to return to England, in spite +of magnificent offers from Australia.</p> +<p>The moment he reached London, he set to work. And +he fixed up the whole apparatus at his leisure, in the +shed which he had kept, notwithstanding the expense: +a sort of large hall in which he had already rehearsed +his “Bridging the Abyss.” Here, with a couple +of confidential assistants who had traveled with him in +America, he worked from morning till night, correcting, +revising, improving, in the midst of stretched cords and +nets. And then came his interview with Harrasford, his +engagement at the Astrarium, his meeting with Lily, in +the dressing-room passage....</p> +<p>And it was untrue! What they had said about her was +a lie! Lily had not fallen! Jimmy, merely at that moment’s +sight of her, would have sworn it in the face of +the whole world: the tales about Lily, due probably to +professional boasting on her own part,—were false! He +knew it, because he had seen her magnificent anger and +the flash from her chaste eyes. And he would give Lily +that joy—he owed at least as much as that to his dead +love—and he would see that it was all right. It would +not be a question of:</p> +<p>“Pa, I can’t!”</p> +<p>“But you’ve got to, my little lady!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_324' name='page_324'></a>324</span></p> +<p>She would have to dare of her own accord, with a will +of adamant, and Lily would do it, Jimmy was sure of +that. He had found the partner wanted for his success +and he rejoiced to the bottom of his heart as he led Lily +to the stage of the Astrarium.</p> +<p>Lily, on the other hand, felt an anxiety which made her +sides ache and her heart beat:</p> +<p>“What on earth can it be?” she asked herself.</p> +<p>But, whatever it was, she would do it if it cost her her +skin! And Lily did not even take the stage oath, so sincere +and spontaneous was her resolve.</p> +<p>“I’ll show you, Lily,” said Jimmy, seeing her look at +the hall and the opening in the ceiling as she passed. “It’s +a new trick.”</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Lily, “new: it’ll be like the last, they’ll take +it from you as soon as it’s out. It’s like me, the tricks +which Pa invented and which the fat freaks cribbed from +me. Tricks are always copied, you know they are,” continued +Lily, who trembled at the thought of seeing others +beside herself topping the bill with that.</p> +<p>“You needn’t be afraid,” said Jimmy, “they won’t take +this one from me; and yet I hope, in a few years’ time, +to see it all over the place.”</p> +<p>“You hope to have it taken from you in a few years +only, eh? But why?”</p> +<p>“For all the world to profit by it.”</p> +<p>“All the world on the back-wheel!” protested Lily, who +was always thinking bikes. “Then what will become of +the artistes?”</p> +<p>“In a few years, Lily, people won’t go about on wheels,” +said Jimmy jokingly.</p> +<p>“What will they do then?”</p> +<p>“They’ll fly!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325' name='page_325'></a>325</span></p> +<p>Lily would have burst out laughing, in other circumstances; +but they had now reached the stage. The iron +curtain was down. She looked round with scared eyes +for something out of the common. Jimmy, after making +sure that they were quite alone, walked up to the monster’s +cage, slid back the door ...</p> +<p>The aerobike, with wings wide open, seemed to loom +out of the darkness.</p> +<p>“My!” cried Lily. “It’s a bird! So that was your brain-work +in Berlin and in ... What is it?”</p> +<p>It was, in any case, a strange creature, with two inclined +planes, one on either side, that looked like wings; +and, at the back, it showed a screw-propeller sticking up +in the air, like a tail. The whole thing rested on two +wheels.</p> +<p>“And it’s a bike, too! I knew it!” cried Lily, clapping +her hands. “Well done, Jimmy! And do you want me +to get up on it? Come along! Just wait till I take my +hat off,” she went on, drawing out the hat-pins from +under her big feathers.</p> +<p>“Not so fast!” said Jimmy, laughing. “Keep calm! +We’ll start next week. There are a good many little +things to make sure of first; and then I must put up a +cable in case of a fall.”</p> +<p>“I don’t care a hang for a fall,” cried Lily, immensely +excited. “You’ll soon see if I’m afraid!”</p> +<p>“Be serious, Lily. Listen to me,” replied Jimmy. “Yes, +you will have to stand on the back-wheel, but not to ride +round the stage. You will have to start up at full speed +and then go up and up, straight up, into space and then +shoot out through a hole which they are making in the +roof.”</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Lily, “I saw. . . . My, that makes a +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326' name='page_326'></a>326</span> +good distance! And, when I’m through the hole, what do +I do up there? Go on...!”</p> +<p>“I’ll explain all that to you,” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>“Dive into the street, eh?” asked Lily, in her Spartan +voice. “Well, I don’t care! Anything! I’ll do anything! +And I’ll show them,” she added, to herself, “if you can +do <i>that</i> through your gentlemen friends!”</p> +<p>But she calmed herself: after all, she was going to top +the bill; have her name in all the papers, with her portrait; +see the walls covered with her posters. What a revenge +for her! That was enough, for the moment. She +did not want to appear surprised before Jimmy. The +right thing was to take it as something very natural, like +a lady who is used to the best.</p> +<p>Jimmy, meanwhile, was explaining his trick:</p> +<p>“We shan’t fly at once,” he said. “We shall practise +on the stand to learn how the handles work. Oh, you’ll +have to think of everything during the few seconds that +the flight lasts! The machine isn’t perfect, it’s a first attempt, +it can only be ridden by a professional and a very +clever one. Look here,” he continued, “it’s the principle of +the back-wheel; you’ll have to keep your side-balance and +front and back, but you’ll do it, I’m sure. <i>I’ve</i> done it.”</p> +<p>“What you can do, a man,” Lily interrupted, “I can do +too. One can do anything on the bike!”</p> +<p>The machine which Jimmy explained to Lily in detail +was a bike just like another, with a few differences in its +general construction, bearing upon the services which it +was expected to perform. The saddle, for instance, was +made to slide backward and forward, so that the center +of equilibrium could be shifted with a push of the rider’s +back. The stability of the apparatus did not depend upon +that alone. The ascensional rudder or screw-propeller, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327' name='page_327'></a>327</span> +which was able to impart a speed of thirty miles an hour +to the machine, was in the extension of the horizontal +bar of the frame. It was fitted to a long piece of +bent steel, pinned below the saddle, which, running beside +the frame, ended by forming a pedal, so that, with +a pressure of the foot, the rider could move it downward, +at will, within an arc of some ten degrees. This +propeller, which was small in dimensions, but endowed +with enormous speed, was, in its normal position, perpendicular +to the frame. The pressure of the foot raised +it to its highest point. In this position, the propeller +turned at full speed and therefore tended to descend and, +consequently, to point the front of the aerobike upward. +When brought still lower, its ascensional force increased +and the front of the aerobike pitched downward. These +two extremes would obviously serve only in sudden movements. +In reality, the rider’s skill would consist in moving +the propeller only very slightly, in order to maintain +a horizontal flight. As for the machine itself, Jimmy had +rejected the cumbersome system of cells, which he compared +to boxes:</p> +<p>“The shape of a fish for the ship, the shape of a bird +for the flying-machine,” he said.</p> +<p>He stuck to that principle and therefore he had added +two enormous wings, one on each side. He had first experimented +with reduced models, shaped like a bird, +sending them up anyhow, to see, and he had ended by constructing +one which preserved its stability when gliding +over the atmospheric layers. He had thus been led to construct +wings with a slightly rounded surface whose coefficient +of yield was nearly double that of wings with flat +surfaces. The width of these wings was about five feet +and their length about sixteen. They tapered a little, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_328' name='page_328'></a>328</span> +were drawn out in front and widened at the opposite end, +so as to get a more powerful hold of the air. They were +made of double-milled canvas, stretched on curved ash +and fastened to the sections by aluminum stays riveted +with copper and clenched. They were as light as they +were stiff. These two wings pointed slightly upward in +front, parallel to the machine, and were fastened to it in +the middle by means of an axis below the saddle-pillar, +which brought their axis to the center of gravity. Other +ingenious and quite individual arrangements made the +apparatus very manageable. The resistance of the air, +combined with the propelling power of the screw, exercised +all its force in vain: the wings remained stationary. +Their lines were carefully studied to facilitate the flow +of the air, on the principle of Langley’s kite: and the two +of them presented a carrying surface of forty-nine square +feet.</p> +<p>“It’s not much,” Jimmy explained to Lily, who listened +attentively. “If I carried my motor,” he said, “I should +have a bigger surface. The machine ought then, theoretically +speaking, to rise when it is going at a rate +of thirty miles an hour; with a good back push the +front-wheel would leave the ground and continue its +course upward. But, on the stage, we have no room to +acquire speed: we shall get it from an inclined plane, as +at the start of ‘Looping the Loop.’ As for the side steering, +the front wheel has spokes fitted with canvas and +offers resistance to the air: it will steer the aerobike to +left or right at a touch of the handle-bar, as in ordinary +riding, and there you are, Lily.”</p> +<p>“My!” said Lily, bewildered by all this complicated apparatus. +“Did you work it all out on paper? It’s enough +to drive one mad!” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_329' name='page_329'></a>329</span></p> +<p>“When you’re on it, Lily,” said Jimmy, smiling, “you’ll +have to work also, <i>I</i> promise you. But, with your talent, +... you’ll manage better than I should. And to-morrow,” +he added, “I will give you something on +account of your salary.”</p> +<p>“No, I have money,” said Lily, very proudly and fearing +lest she should wear out her luck by adding that to +it, by being paid for doing nothing....</p> +<p>Lily spent the whole week in a fever of expectation; +she did not know where she was for joy. But she stifled +that within herself. And it was owing to her talent, all +owing to her talent! When people wanted a difficult trick +done, they did not go to Daisy or the fat freaks, no, they +came to little Lily! And it was settled, she wanted no +more familiarity, now that she was going to top the +bill at the Astrarium! A lady should be more reserved +in her friendships: she would make herself very short-sighted, +so short-sighted as to be almost blind, when she +met the rotten lot! Resolved, that she would give up saying, +“Damn it!” give up talking of smackings and using +vulgar expressions:</p> +<p>“Do you hear, Glass-Eye?” she said, calling her maid +to witness. “You’re to box my ears if you catch me at it +again!”</p> +<p>The thought of having to handle that delicate machine +increased Lily’s importance in her own eyes. She had +noticed that Poland, apart from an inordinate love of +champagne suppers, had very nice manners: Lily would +profit by her example and become more refined; she would +show Pa and Ma the kind of Lily they had lost and she +would crush them with the amount of her salary! She +would earn more by herself than the whole troupe. She +would let them know it, even if she had to do the trick +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_330' name='page_330'></a>330</span> +for nothing, for glory, to see her Ma beg her pardon on +her knees! She had recovered all the pride of her eighteen +years, all her freshness, in a day: the touch of bitterness +about her lips had changed into a smile. It would have +taken very little more to make her dance for joy. But she +restrained herself, dared not believe in her happiness; +and she was quite decided not to accept anything from +Jimmy before earning it. It was bad enough to owe him +that thousand marks. She made herself a nice practising +dress and spent the morning in bed reading a novel of +fashionable life, of which the heroine was called Lily, like +herself! And she, too, would become a society-girl, just +to show them, damn it! But, suddenly, catching herself +at fault, she laughed and asked Glass-Eye for a box on +the ear; and a desperate pillow-fight ensued, in which +they indulged whole-heartedly, like two regular tom-boys +who loved to wrestle and punch each other. And it put +her in a good humor for the rest of the day. She went +shopping through the windows, only bought herself a +spray of roses to fasten to her bodice. She went to the +Astrarium, walked in as though the place belonged to +her, followed by her maid. She examined the works +with the eye of an expert. Three days, three days more +and she would begin to rehearse! Her legs were itching +to commence!</p> +<p>The alterations to the stage especially interested her. +The door of the cage remained closed and Lily looked at +the auditorium:</p> +<p>“Is it possible, after all?” she thought.</p> +<p>And she measured the distance with her eye. It seemed +enormous to her, but never mind, she’d do it! And she +grew wildly enthusiastic in the midst of all that activity, +of a theater which was being rearranged for her: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_331' name='page_331'></a>331</span> +“For me, Glass-Eye! All of it for me! From here,” +she said, stamping her foot on the stage, “from here to +right up there!” And she pointed to the hole in the sky. +“All that on the bike! A somersault miles high!”</p> +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg327.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 258px; height: 332px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 258px;'> +OLD MARTELLO<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>Glass-Eye opened two terrified eyes, wondered if Lily +was going mad....</p> +<p>Glass-Eye had become dulled through constant obedience, +had lost her memory, mixed up her yeses and noes, +like those actors who forget their parts through playing +them too frequently; her recent life had excited her too +much, and never a sou in her pocket, only barely enough +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332' name='page_332'></a>332</span> +to eat ... it was ten times worse than in Rathbone +Place.... And then that new crotchet of Lily’s.</p> +<p>“Can I fly, Glass-Eye, or can’t I? Am I a bird or am +I not?” It was enough to make Glass-Eye lose her +head....</p> +<p>Glass-Eye was obliged to answer yes ... and that +very quickly. But she kept on trotting behind Lily, who, +realizing that she would soon be taken up with her rehearsals, +took advantage of her last days of liberty to pay +visits and show herself a little, accompanied by her maid, +like the fine lady that she was. She went and took the +Bambinis some candies. Poor kids! Their games and +laughter no longer filled the hotel with mirth and gaiety: +old Martello was getting worse and worse and was now +not able to leave his room at all. Lily found a kind word +for everybody and was grieved at not having any money, +which would have allowed her to be generous. That +would come later. She worked out a scheme for occupying +herself with the children when the old man was gone, +for having them always with her, like two dear little lucky +charms. It was impossible, of course: never mind, it was +the idea of a lady, which she would not have had in the +old days, and Lily was pleased with herself for having +entertained it.</p> +<p>“I will speak about you to Jimmy,” she said to the +Bambinis. “I’ll get you engaged at the Astrarium, eh?”</p> +<p>And the old man trembled with delight, stammered out +his thanks, tried to accompany her to the door, like a +princess; and the little boy, to thank her, promised to +teach her a way of standing on your head which he had +learned all by himself!</p> +<p>“Poor darlings!” thought Lily, as she left them. “If +ever they fall into their brother’s hands! They would be +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_333' name='page_333'></a>333</span> +better dead! Luckily for them, he has disappeared for +good; and his Ave Maria with him, unluckily for me!”</p> +<p>For Lily understood how badly her position as a lady +went with that name of Mrs. Trampy. It was like dragging +a tin kettle at her skirts, to make the people in the +street turn round and look at her.</p> +<p>And, more than ever before, Trampy posed as a faithful +husband. Nothing sufficed to take down his arrogance. +Always the same old Trampy: great, by Jove! +And, with his red lips, his glittering eye and the cigar +stuck in the corner of his mouth, he made love to second-rate +“sisters,” inferior Roofers in red calico skirts. His +glamorous title as the bill-topper’s husband still won him +a few conquests. And Trampy, especially since Jimmy’s +return, plumed himself more and more on the fact that +he was the husband of his dear little wife!</p> +<p>Lily knew all this and it made her fume with rage at +heart; but she showed nothing, pretended, on the contrary, +to treat it as a little matter of no account. For +instance, after her visit to the Bambinis, as she passed an +artistes’ bar, quite close, there stood Trampy, lording it +on the pavement, among a lot of unemployed pros. Lily +made herself short-sighted to the point of absolute blindness. +Trampy caught her, as she passed, with a:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily! Hullo, my dear little wife!”</p> +<p>But Lily behaved like a real fine lady who knows how +to put people in their place without calling them names:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Mr. Trampy!” she replied, in a sarcastic tone. +“Still got your red-hot stove, Mr. Trampy? Still a success +with the girls? Kind regards, Mr. Trampy!”</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_334' name='page_334'></a>334</span> +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>But Lily was grandest of all at the rehearsals. She was +now no longer a lady: she once more became the Spartan, +bare-necked, her hair undone, her body streaming with +perspiration, and to work, to work, to make up for lost +time! In the mornings, alone on the deserted stage, she +practised and practised....</p> +<p>“Come on!” said Jimmy. “And mind you do your +work properly,” he added, with a laugh, “or else, you +know ...”</p> +<p>And he patted the back of his hand.</p> +<p>“I don’t care!” said Lily.</p> +<p>“You may break your head, you know,” continued +Jimmy, to try her.</p> +<p>“It’s none of your damned business if I do! Show me +your tricks. To work!”</p> +<p>And Jimmy showed her a movement to execute on her +bike, which she had brought with her: balancings, as in +“Bridging the Abyss,” an excellent training for the aerobike. +And Lily went about it clear-eyed, hard-cheeked, +with all the little muscles contracted on her stubborn forehead, +ready to butt at the obstacle. A few falls to begin +with, but she jumped up again nimbly:</p> +<p>“That’s all right!” she said. “It’s part of the game!”</p> +<p>“But stop, stop,” insisted Jimmy. “Be careful!”</p> +<p>They were sometimes on the stage for hours at a time, +but to Lily, all wrapped in her work, it seemed so many +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335' name='page_335'></a>335</span> +minutes. She understood the jerk which she was to give +at the moment when, after rolling along the inclined +plane, she should shoot out into space for the soaring +flight of fifty yards:</p> +<p>“The start, that’s the great thing with the back-wheel,” +she observed. “The rest goes of itself.”</p> +<p>“Don’t cry till you’re out of the wood!” said Jimmy. +“It’ll be different when you’re riding the aerobike.”</p> +<p>Lily was longing to begin that famous practice! And, +a few days later, she at last had that delight, took that +further step toward triumph. Jimmy removed the bird +from the cage, fixed it on a stand. When Lily sat in the +saddle, she was crimson with pleasure, prouder than a +princess sitting on a throne for the first time:</p> +<p>“There,” she said. “Here I am! And what next?”</p> +<p>Jimmy explained the complicated touches—“Press +your left foot, there, like that, to make it point upward”—and +showed how, explained why; then he passed to the +working of the handle-bar—“There, like that, to turn it, +there”—and how and why the saddle slipped backward +and forward.</p> +<p>“And then?”</p> +<p>“That’s all.”</p> +<p>“That’s all?” repeated Lily. “That won’t want any +smackings! Let’s see, like this, eh? Then that. Suppose +I’m coming down at full speed. I throw myself +backward, a back push, there, like that. A kick, gently, +there, that’s it. I’ll do it as soon as you like! This minute, +if necessary!”</p> +<p>But Jimmy, without replying to these sallies, proceeded +methodically. He made her practise again, standing still, +with the motor going at half-speed. This was a different +impulse: the displacement of the air raised a stormy wind, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_336' name='page_336'></a>336</span> +the dust flew, the scenery hanging from the flies waved +to and fro and Lily shook in her saddle under the vibration +of the propeller.</p> +<p>“Well, Lily?” said Jimmy. “That shakes you up, eh? +That complicates matters?”</p> +<p>“Pooh!” said Lily. “And what about the boards? +There are some of them that are pretty rough, too! At +Pittsburg, you know, it’s like riding over cobblestones. +I prefer that to a stage that’s too smooth: it’s less treacherous.”</p> +<p>A few days later, Jimmy ran up a steel cable from the +stage to the opening in the ceiling, which was now finished +and covered with a tarpaulin; and Lily was to try +the flying. At the time for practice, there was no one in +the theater, from which the scaffoldings had been removed. +There were no seats on the floor or in the boxes: +everything was being made outside, and would be put in +place in a day or two. In the afternoon, when there was +no practice, the house was filled with workmen, painters, +upholsterers, carpenters, whose places were taken by others +at night, working by electric light. Ten days more +and they would have the triumphal opening; already Paris +was covered with picture placards: you saw Tom, as a +caryatid, supporting the weight of a palace; the Three +Graces entwined in their radiant nudity; the impersonator +standing, like a Don Juan, surrounded by a bevy of +women: the ballet-girl, the shop-girl, the fine lady; then, +besides those, the New Trickers—“My idea!” thought +Lily, but she didn’t care a jot now—the New Trickers +fluttered round Daisy. You saw the elephants; the monkey; +Patti-Patty, the white negress; all, all, down to the +Bambinis, whom Lily had “got” engaged. The whole +program was reverberated on the walls and hoardings, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_337' name='page_337'></a>337</span> +like a thousand-voiced echo. An even larger poster than +the others, all blue, strewn with stars, displayed the aerobike +in full flight in the sky; and a human figure, seated +upon it, lifted a hand filled with rays.</p> +<p>The mere sight of the posters was enough to stimulate +Lily to the maddest feats of daring. She felt herself +firmer than steel, when she thought of the New Trickers +and of Pa and Ma, who were coming with Daisy, their +farthing dip!</p> +<p>When everything was ready, Jimmy hung the aerobike +to the steel cable by two ropes, ten feet long, ending in +pulleys which ran along the cable. Each of these two +ropes was looped up and the loop secured with thin twine: +this was an infallible way of ascertaining if the aerobike +weighed down upon them or if it was supporting itself +in the air; the two cords acted as a spring balance registering +the tension in the rope. Should the twine break, +because the aerobike rested on the ropes, then the ropes +would unloop and the machine remain hanging without +any danger for Lily. This was the way in which Jimmy +had worked when learning “his trade as a bird,” as he +called it; and Lily, he had no doubt, would succeed even +better than he did, being more supple, lighter and quite +as plucky.</p> +<p>Oh, the rapture with which Lily bestrode the aerobike +for the first flight!</p> +<p>Jimmy and two confidential assistants hauled up the +machine to the top of the inclined plane that gave it its +impetus. Jimmy spent an endless time in verifying +and testing everything. The electric wire that set the +propeller in motion also caused him uneasiness. It had +to unroll behind and follow the aerobike without weighing +upon it, without retarding its flight; for the machine, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_338' name='page_338'></a>338</span> +which was necessarily a small one, to be able to move +within a confined space, did not carry the additional +load of a motor, but only a wire, as wireless transmission +of power was not yet available. At last, when everything +was provided for, Jimmy allowed Lily to make her +trial. He trembled; not that she ran any danger, for +a fall was impossible: the machine was stopped, up above, +automatically, by a cable stretched crosswise and fastened +to a strong spring, which slowed and stayed the flight +within the space of a few yards. But if the two pieces of +twine broke suddenly and if this happened several times +in succession, the shocks might come to frighten Lily, +for all her self-control.</p> +<p>And Jimmy went on explaining.</p> +<p>“I know,” said Lily. “I quite understand. It’s like +this, like this, yes, I know. It’s only a matter of trying! +It’s a trick I’ve got to do and that’s all about it! Daisy +would kill herself on it and so would the fat freaks, but +I shan’t! I shall succeed.”</p> +<p>“Well, then, steady!” cried Jimmy, and his voice rang +through the empty theater. “Go!”</p> +<p>The machine ran down with a swoop, the propeller +whirred, Lily gave a magnificent back push, when she +reached the bottom of the inclined plane; then she went +straight up and the two pieces of twine snapped in two. +Lily found herself hanging fifty feet in the air, the two +pulleys glided slowly backward toward the stage. Jimmy +stopped the machine.</p> +<p>“That’s wrong!” cried Lily. “Let’s try again. I see +what it was: I forgot to push down my foot to point the +machine up. It was a slip.”</p> +<p>However, at the next attempt, it went better. The +twine broke each time, but Lily rectified her movements: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_339' name='page_339'></a>339</span></p> +<p>“It’s my back push! It’s the propeller! It’s the front-wheel!”</p> +<p>And, in fact, that was what it was. Jimmy and his assistants, +who followed her with their eyes, had noted the +fault and Lily, too, had observed it, in spite of the giddy +flight. She was extraordinarily plucky and cool, her +eight stone of flesh and bone, unerring and exact, seemed +made for the aerobike.</p> +<p>“Bravo, Lily! Hurrah!” cried Jimmy.</p> +<p>She could have screamed for joy in the street, as she +went out.</p> +<p>Her unparalleled stroke of luck in being chosen tickled +her heart. She felt her sense of responsibility increase and +also her wish to do well; no sooner had she left off practising +than she was seized with but one idea, to begin +again:</p> +<p>“Eight days more!” she thought.</p> +<p>At night, she dreamed of backward jerks, of turning +the handle-bar, pushing the pedal. Poor Glass-Eye, cowering +in a corner of the bed, had terrible nightmares, and, +in the morning, after Lily’s kicks, she rose with her ribs +smarting and her shins all black and blue. That was all +her profit, for Lily had hardly any money left and was not +yet drawing a salary.</p> +<p>Lily submitted to all sorts of privation with a proud +dignity. She would be beholden to nobody. Soon her +whole fortune would consist of her box of lucky halfpence +and a franc which she had won by turning a cartwheel, +for a bet, among artistes, in the country, to +stagger the jossers. And so their little evening meal +was a scanty one. A sausage, a little fruit, a cup of tea +... and then to bed. That was better than listening +to the owner of the Hours and all those men who propose +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_340' name='page_340'></a>340</span> +things to you. Never, never! Her work, her work! Lord, +after what she had seen of Poland and the Hours, it was +much simpler to work, to be self-reliant. At night, sometimes, +Lily would lie awake and think ... where did +that three hundred francs of the Bijou come from? Not +from the Bijou: Cataplasm’s defeat had swallowed up everything +and the theater had long been without a penny; +they used to fill the house with paper distributed among +the staff, with orders to get rid of it anyhow. They were +not far short of inviting soldiers from the barracks. +There had never been more than two hundred seats paid +for of an evening; it meant flat bankruptcy. And she was +the only one who had received anything: why? How? +Then it must have been some admirer, but who? Not the +architect, surely, that josser! Who then? And why +had Jimmy engaged the Bambinis, when she asked him +to? He did everything to please her. He was letting her +top the bill: why? She made a heap of guesses, without +getting at the exact truth ... Jimmy ... +Jimmy ... that man, with his coldness, interested +her. While so many others were prowling around her, +he alone seemed indifferent. She would have liked to see +him in love with her ... to make him suffer a little +in his turn! All the beauty-shows which Lily had +seen, all the exhibitions of painted Hours had not spoiled +her good taste: Jimmy pleased her, with that strong face +of his. What an endless pity that she had married +Trampy! She gave a scornful pout when she thought of +it: she married to Trampy! Married to that soaker: +she, a woman made for a man, a creature of flesh +and blood, who admired fine muscles, rough sport and +virile smackings! Gee, if she had been a man, it seemed +to her that she would have enjoyed spoiling a little Lily: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_341' name='page_341'></a>341</span> +outside working hours, of course! And, if a little Lily +had asked her, “Do you love me, yes or no?” she would +never have answered no. To-day, she would have bitten +off her own tongue rather than put that question to +Jimmy! And yet Jimmy had a dignity about him that +pleased her. She could see into the game of the others. +The architect, for instance, would give her just a smile in +passing, a pleasant word, as one performs a social duty, +between two pieces of business. A little amusement, no +more: that was all she was to him ... and to all of +them. Jimmy seemed different. But, still, if he loved +her, why hadn’t he the courage to tell her so? And, +besides, when all was said, she was sick and tired of men! +Some of them ran after you like dogs; others, damn it, +were icicles! A girl could have Marjutti’s figure, Thea’s +arms, Nancy’s legs, Lillian’s or Laurence’s face ... +and still they would not be satisfied! And thereupon +Lily pursed her brows, asked herself how and why and +went to sleep like a baby.</p> +<p>And the rehearsals continued every day, without respite. +Lily became terrible the nearer she drew to success: +her indomitable spirit mounted to her heart. Jimmy had +difficulty in holding her in. She made twenty flights, +thirty flights ... and the twine no longer broke. +From that moment, she was sure of succeeding, always. +When you have once succeeded, even if it be but once, +you have no right ever to fail again. She had been +brought up in those principles, had had them rubbed into +her skin. She could not fail now, it was impossible! +Even in her flight to the opening up above! She had +learned her “times,” she knew how to aim exactly at the +right spot. Jimmy hastened to have the roof arranged +for the final exit, when the aerobike would disappear before +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_342' name='page_342'></a>342</span> +the eyes of the audience, in the star-strewn sky. All +that remained was to get everything ready for the final +rehearsal: the complete show, with all lights lit, as for +a gala night. Lily seemed to see it all beforehand. On +the day when she realized that no accident was possible, +that it was a trick of which she was certain, she stifled +a cry of triumph in her throat. She was afraid to believe +in it herself, so greatly did it surpass her dreams. She +would have stayed for days on the aerobike to experience +the delight of the leap into space. It seemed to +her as though she were becoming a bird and about to +hover in mid-air and leave them all behind her, in the +crowd below ... all, all ... and be a little +Lily, flying away on the back-wheel before their noses.</p> +<p>“You’ll make yourself ill,” said Jimmy. “Take a rest; +there’s no need to tire yourself; you do it as well as I.”</p> +<p>For Jimmy, of course, had done the thing too, if only +to show Lily; besides, it was easy for him, who had +had so much practice in London and who knew his +machine from end to end. And he appreciated the difficulty +all the more. He admired Lily’s incredible pluck, +her all-devouring ambition and that splendid determination +to get out of her scrape, to be a little Lily earning +her bread as she knew how, by her work, even if she had +to break her neck in the doing of it! And proud to her +finger-tips, in spite of the dog’s life she had led.</p> +<p>“If I had not procured her this delight,” thought Jimmy, +“I should never have forgiven myself to the end of +my days.”</p> +<p>And, from working with her for hours and hours, from +holding her by the waist at the first trials, from feeling +that little body quiver under his hand, from seeing Lily +rush at danger, Jimmy became madly in love with her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_343' name='page_343'></a>343</span> +again ... if he had ever ceased to be so! Ah, if +Trampy...! But Lily was married ... the +divorce depended on the husband ... and the husband +wouldn’t have it ... at any price: not for a +million, he said, by Jove, would he be separated from a +little wife whom he adored!</p> +<p>“Poor Lily!” thought Jimmy sadly. “Will she always +be doomed to drag that dead weight about with her?”</p> +<p>During the intervals for rest, while Lily wiped the perspiration +from her forehead, Jimmy talked to her ... +at first, of insignificant things ... the name “Astrarium,” +for instance ... a place devoted to planets, +to stars: as a palmarium is to palms. Stars ... +that was to say, bill-toppers: the Three Graces; the +Laurences; the Lillians; the Marjuttis; the Lilies ... +yes, the Lilies! Then he pitied her for belonging to +Trampy; and what a good little Lily she would have been +if she had remained with her family!</p> +<p>“But I <i>am</i> a good little Lily!” she said, with a display +of childish vehemence. “What more do you want? We +artistes do what we jolly well please, and we don’t care a +damn for the rest!” And she had half a mind to tell him +that it was all his fault! “I had to do a silly thing and I +did it,” she continued, with an expression of regret on her +face. “I married without love, but lovers, my! I’ve had, +I may say, as many as I wanted ... from the son of +a lord down.”</p> +<p>And Lily, to excite him, told him the long array of her +love affairs, as it was told everywhere, on the Bill and +Boom Tour, on the Harrasford, on the Eastern and Western +Tours, like the whippings and the rest.</p> +<p>“Yes, I know,” replied Jimmy, very coldly.</p> +<p>“What, you don’t believe me!” exclaimed Lily. “There +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_344' name='page_344'></a>344</span> +were men who would have left wife and child for me! +... heaps of lovers, tons of them!”</p> +<p>“My poor Lily, having so many is the same as having +none at all,” added Jimmy dreamily.</p> +<p>But still he did not declare his love: besides, he had +constantly to leave her, to go and give orders, or climb up +on the roof, or look at the heating-apparatus, below.</p> +<p>Lily watched him go, followed him with a sphinx-like +glance, while a vague smile flickered about her lips....</p> +<p>But she hardly had time to think of all this: the assistants +replaced the bird in its cage, locked the door, opened +that leading to the dressing-room passage and the artistes +arrived and took up their places on their carpets.</p> +<p>Lily had seen it a hundred times, a thousand times, +“millions of times!” She never wearied of it. She spent +the day there, among the groups of bloomers: the Three +Graces, bare-armed, went to work, practised the human +cluster; Nunkie kept an eye on his dear nieces and rehearsed +the Bambinis, now that old Martello was keeping +his room for good. Lily, who was almost reduced to eating +dry bread, but who remained the fine lady nevertheless, +brought them bags of sweets. Calmed by her work, +she sat down in a corner, laughed, her head thrown back, +full-throated, applauded the others with her thumbnail, +shook hands with new-comers, made herself liked by all. +And it was:</p> +<p>“Hullo, girls! Hullo, boys! Dear old Blackpool! +What’s the news at the Palace? Who’s topping the bill +at the Hippodrome?”</p> +<p>Lily, on her rickety chair, made as it were a little center +at which the news was exchanged; to think that, instead +of being there, at the top of the profession, she might +have been at Glasgow, some twopenny theater, where +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_345' name='page_345'></a>345</span> +ladies are admitted without shoes or stockings, or playing +the darky at Earl’s Court! Yes, but for Jimmy, that’s +where she would have been! Or else the Parisienne, in +Russia! She, an English girl, my! And Lily fervently +touched her lucky charm: oh, work, work, thank goodness +for it! And Lily rendered homage to work and +sprang from her chair to shake hands with Tom, who +had come to see his palace unpacked:</p> +<p>“Good morning, Tom! Welcome!”</p> +<p>This Tom, who now topped the bill everywhere and +had a permanent address and his own scenery: wasn’t it +wonderful? He was no longer her Pa’s old servant: +genius removes all distances; a man is what he makes +himself! And they shook hands warmly, like equals.</p> +<p>Lily, as a sensational bill-topper and a friend of Jimmy’s, +was always in great request. She talked nicely, +without pose of any kind, like a woman who is sure of +herself and knows things. The Astrarium ... the +Astrarium ... what did that mean? They asked +Lily:</p> +<p>“It’s like ... a palmarium,” she explained, “with +sunflowers in it, all sorts of things ... girls ... +stars ...”</p> +<p>She described her journeys, storms, gee! Weren’t there, +Glass-Eye? People who had never been outside Europe +and the States had no idea! Lily talked of India, Africa, +Australia; talked of lions, which stand on their hind-legs +when they’re angry, and tigers, which lie down flat; mentioned +stage friendships between elephants and camels +and herself in the midst of it all: “That high!” lowering +her hand to six inches from the floor; talked of animal-training: +dogs, cats, sea-lions and that “great, big, +wicked Australian rabbit” which boxed like a man. She +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_346' name='page_346'></a>346</span> +was a well-informed person, was Lily. And a providence +for her family also, to listen to her. When any one +brought news of her Pa and the New Trickers, with +Daisy as a statue on her pedestal, one of the successes of +the year:</p> +<p>“Yes,” Lily replied, in a patronizing tone, “I know. +It was my idea. I gave it to them!”</p> +<p>They thought it very nice of her. She listened with +great dignity to what they said about the New Trickers. +They would not be at the Astrarium on the opening night. +They were finishing an engagement on the Bill and Boom +that same evening. They would be in Paris the next day. +Mr. Clifton was reckoning on this appearance for the final +triumph of his troupe ... and he deserved it. What +a man, Mr. Clifton, what a man! “Not easy to please, eh, +Lily?” And the inevitable gesture followed. But Lily +would have none of that now, she would not hear her Pa +spoken of as a brute! Did they take her for a performing +dog? One was born with the gift or else one remained +all one’s life a Daisy or a fat freak! She was proud to +have a Pa like hers. She wasn’t a mountebank picked +up on the road! Lily had a Pa and a Ma: a Ma of her +own, a Ma whom she was certain about. She bore a well-known +name. She belonged to the “father and son” +aristocracy of the music-hall. She had never needed +“that” to make her practice, she an artiste, brought up +like a lady:</p> +<p>“Wasn’t I, Glass-Eye? Tom, wasn’t I?”</p> +<p>And the jewelry and the sweets her Pa bought her, +my! Tons of it! Of course, he would stand no nonsense +about behavior; and Lily made them all laugh till +the tears came about that footy rotter who made love to +her in London, before the time when drink made him +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_347' name='page_347'></a>347</span> +look so disgusting, and, when she loitered in the street +with him, Pa, the moment she reached the door, caught +her such a blow that she took all the steps to the basement +at one jump; and there found her Ma waiting for +her ... gee!</p> +<p>“And they were quite right, too! And ... do +they know that I’m going to top the bill at the Astrarium?” +she asked.</p> +<p>“No, they think you’re in Spain or somewhere.”</p> +<p>“Somewhere!” said Lily to herself, with a thrill at her +heart. “I’ll show them!”</p> +<p>She choked with joy at the idea of the startled look +on the faces of Pa and Ma when they saw her on the +aerobike. An exuberant gladness filled her heart. And +that feverish work, those laborers everywhere, the opening +in the roof, the terrace up above, those posters all +over Paris and there, behind the iron door, in the dark, +the bird! It was all for her: a theater for herself! And +she felt a need to leap, to laugh, to spread gaiety all +around her; and she rushed about madly with the Bambinis, +romped with them behind the pillars, rolled with +them on the floor of her dressing-room, became once again +the Lily who had played truant all around the world, inventing +practical jokes in India and climbing apple-trees +in Honolulu. She crossed the combs and tooth-brushes +on the Roofer girls’ tables, rushed into their room when +they were undressed, drove the trembling herd of them +distracted, talked of the thousand dangers that awaited +them if they didn’t mend their ways, made them fly to +their lucky charms to ward off ill-luck, when she offered +them a yellow flower, with great pomp, or some broken +glass in a jewel-box. Then she talked to the Three +Graces, those big girls who always astonished her with +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_348' name='page_348'></a>348</span> +their cloistered existence—Nunkie before everything—and +who amused themselves by measuring one another +round the biceps, round the chest, or else, with their +elbows on the table, played at who should first bend back +the other’s wrist. Lily sat down for a moment with +them, then stopped, +breathless with larking +and talking, and +went back to her +dressing-room:</p> +<p>“I shall have +months to spend in +here!” she thought.</p> +<div class='figleft'> +<img src='images/illus-pg344.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 203px; height: 274px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 203px;'> +LILY’S GOLLYWOG<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>And, assisted by +Glass-Eye, she pinned +up bits of stuff, tied a +silk bow to the back of +the chair, put up nails +for her costumes, laid +out on her table long +rows of post-cards, +photographs of +friends, all dispersed +to the four quarters of the globe, some dead, others done +for, all the poor witnesses of her life. Then she took her +black gollywog from her trunk and kissed it passionately—“Darling! +Darling! Darling!”—before hanging it up +on the wall. And along the dressing-room passage and +through the window came the sound of voices ... +snatches of homesick tunes: <i>From Rangoon to Mandalay</i> +or <i>Way down upon the Suwanee River</i> ... +and “Hullo, Lily! Hullo, old boy!”... The female-impersonator +walked into her room as though it +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_349' name='page_349'></a>349</span> +were his own, sat down on the basket trunk, plunging his +green eyes into hers.</p> +<p>And sometimes Jimmy passed, always at a run: something +had gone wrong somewhere, the heating apparatus, +the electric light....</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily!” And he stopped for a moment, frowned +at the sight of the impersonator. “Always busy?” he +asked, seeing Lily, bare-armed, washing something in +her basin.</p> +<p>“Have to be,” said Lily. “I always wash my little +blouses; we do everything ourselves, don’t we, Glass-Eye? +And, when I’m performing, I have two pairs of +tights to wash a day!”</p> +<p>“Two pairs of tights!”</p> +<p>“Why, of course, matinée and night! You have no +idea, Jimmy ... the nickel ... when I sit on +the handle-bar, it makes a great mark ... just here, +look!”</p> +<p>And she laughed at Jimmy over her shoulder while +she pointed to the place ... and then blushed, like +a frolicsome child that has been found out and is, oh, so +sorry!</p> +<p>“Every one’s got to keep to his own dressing-room!” +said Jimmy, feeling very uncomfortable, to the man with +the green eyes. “You can’t stay here; it’s against the +rules!”</p> +<p>“We’re doing no harm, please, Mr. Jimmy,” retorted +Lily, sitting down beside the impersonator and slipping +her arm round his waist.</p> +<p>“Poor Jimmy!” said the impersonator, when the other +had left the room in a rage. “He’s jealous, isn’t he, +darling?”</p> +<p>“He jealous? Then why doesn’t he say so? One +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_350' name='page_350'></a>350</span> +can’t guess a thing like that! When you’re a man, +you speak out!”</p> +<p>And the architect appeared in his turn, he, too, running +from one end of the theater to the other. He wore +a bandage over one eye:</p> +<p>“Knocked up against a beam ... a little accident. +Have you seen Jimmy?”</p> +<p>“He’s over there, I think,” replied Lily, without troubling +to look at him.</p> +<p>There was no jealousy about the architect. He stayed +for a moment, sniffed at the scent-bottle, smiled at the +photographs on the wall. A green-eyed impersonator, a +blue-eyed impersonator: the room could have been full of +impersonators, for all he cared. Dark girls, yellow girls, +fair girls, so many playthings to distract him from his +rules and compasses. He was bored at once; turned to +another at once; and it was all so amusing! He was the +typical lover of the woman of the stage, with his little +surface passions. And very amiable withal, knowing +them all, and friendly with them, a great purveyor of +anecdotes:</p> +<p>“The Para-Paras, you know, Lily, committed suicide +in their room ... awful poverty. The wife wasn’t +... Tottie enough ... and the husband was +teaching the English accent to continental clowns! Poland? +A magnificent engagement in Russia. Old Martello +hasn’t three days to live. Oh ... and +Nunkie! There’s news among the Three Graces! The +troupe’s done for this time!”</p> +<p>And he told how, last night, poor Thea, while mending +her uncle’s overcoat, found in the lining an old letter +from America ... from some swain she had had +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_351' name='page_351'></a>351</span> +over there ... a letter glowing with love and regret. +Yes, Nunkie knew how to hold his nieces, the architect +explained, laughing ... watched them like a Spanish +duenna, confiscated the letters that came for them, if +necessary, the old rogue, and calmed their ardors with a +few drops of bromide in a glass of water, every evening, +on the pretense of keeping them from catching cold in the +drafts. Oh, the old rogue! And Thea had almost fainted +with grief in her dressing-room when she read the letter.</p> +<p>“Quite a business, Lily! A scandal in their little home! +Very funny, eh?” he added, as he ogled Lily’s pigeon’s +eggs and rolled a cigarette.</p> +<p>Lily, who had seen poor Thea cry before and who +knew to what extent her lover’s treachery had humiliated +her, was secretly furious to hear that josser talk carelessly +of things like that: did he imagine, the idiot, that they +weren’t built like other people, in the profession, that they +had no feelings? What need had the public to know +about their lives? It was among themselves, quite among +themselves, all that!</p> +<p>“Get out of my sight, you damned josser!” said Lily. +“Go and eat coke!”</p> +<p>But the other, greatly amused, described his latest +discovery, a pearl, in an out-of-the-way neighborhood +... at Vaugirard fair ... an extraordinary girl, +showing off on a couple of trestles in front of a canvas +booth, in which her man lifted weights to the light of the +Argand burners:</p> +<p>“Picture this girl, Lily,” said the enthusiastic josser, +“picture this girl on her trestles, doing weights, balancings, +all sorts of things. A body like a boy’s, all muscle, +and thin: whew! Not <i>that</i> much fat on her, no hips, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_352' name='page_352'></a>352</span> +arms and shoulders, like Michael Angelo’s flayed model. +And I talked to her afterward! And her man gave me +a queer look you know ... I got a blow....”</p> +<p>“Well done!” cried Lily, clapping her hands. “The +beam, eh? That’ll teach you to meddle in other people’s +business! Oh, you don’t know those tenters! One of +these days you’ll be picked up with your face smashed in, +or shot through the chest with a revolver.”</p> +<p>“I say, though,” the architect interrupted, “that girl +... I don’t know how we came to speak of you +... she knows you, Lily!”</p> +<p>“That’s right! Now I have mountebanks among my +acquaintances!” said Lily, with an air of disgust. “Get +out of this, I say!... You wanted Jimmy; there +he is, look!”</p> +<p>And Lily, furious, jerked her head toward the passage.</p> +<p>When Lily went home again she did not even think of +what she had just heard. The death of the Paras; the +Graces ... Nunkie, that old rogue!... She +forgot all about it.... She saw only that: the +theater, the aerobike, the theater! Ah! she had it in +her blood, in spite of those ugly stories! Even outside, +when, upon Jimmy’s advice, she went to take the air in +the parks, under the great blue sky, she regretted the dark +stage, the canvas landscapes of the back-drops; the open-air +scenery appeared paltry to her, beside it. Between +her and nature there was always the aerobike! In a few +days ... was it possible? She clenched her little +hands over an imaginary handle-bar, hardened her pigeon’s +eggs, made pedaling movements, in spite of herself, +on the floor of the tram-car which she very soon took to +get back to the theater again! It was her life, her joy, +her suffering, her good and evil ... it was her field, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_353' name='page_353'></a>353</span> +her very own field, the field which she had sown with +sweat that she might reap fame and glory.</p> +<p>And, when she returned, she reveled in that smell of +hot glue and tar and scent; oh, it was much nicer than +the country! And more interesting, too: all the little +drama that was being enacted among the Graces, for instance; +Nunkie had lost his wonderful reputation, he was +surrounded with less reverence; the story of the confiscated +letters was beginning its round of the world. It +was all very well for him to spoil his dear girls, to double +his attentions, to treble the doses of bromide; there was +no doubt about it, the troupe’s days were numbered. The +boy-violinist and others were making love to the Three +Graces, fresh troupes were being formed, three more, +any number! And they all talked freely, turned their +backs without hesitation upon Nunkie, who was prowling +round:</p> +<p>“Well?” he asked. “What’s the mystery?”</p> +<p>“We were discussing marriage, Nunkie,” the Graces +answered.</p> +<p>“That’s right, my children,” he replied, with a sigh.</p> +<p>Lily, in all these plots and counter-plots, knew how to +remain neuter and to be very nice to everybody; she had +been trained from childhood to keep her opinions to herself; +none of her damned business, all that; something +that might have been foreseen and expected ... like +the death of old Martello, which Jimmy told her of.... +Yes, the old man had flickered out in his bed just +like that....</p> +<p>But she needed all her composure, indeed, when Jimmy +told her that those dear little Bambinis ... ah, there +was bad news for them, the poor loves!</p> +<p>“What? What?” asked Lily. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_354' name='page_354'></a>354</span></p> +<p>“Well, we are going to lose them; they’ve been claimed +by their brother, it seems.”</p> +<p>“What!” cried Lily. “Their brother? The ... +the Mexican one?”</p> +<p>“Yes, I think so,” said Jimmy. “He’s come back from +South America. He is in Paris now ... somewhere +in a penny show, in the suburbs ... I don’t know +where ... with a girl.”</p> +<p>“With a girl!” thought Lily.</p> +<p>Everything returned to her in a flash! The girl with +the bruised skin ... that boy’s body all muscle +... Ave Maria! Ave Maria! Not dead! She felt +inclined to run up to Trampy, to fly at his throat, to bellow +in his face that Ave Maria was here, just to see the +effect! But she restrained herself. Suppose it were +not true? Oh, she would soon know! That footy rotter, +if it were true! O God, grant that it might be true!</p> +<p>All this passed through her brain in less than a second.</p> +<p>“Why!” said Jimmy, seeing her turn pale. “Does that +affect you so much ... the loss of your little +friends, the Bambinis? For you’re going to lose +them....”</p> +<p>“No, Jimmy!” she replied indignantly. “You shall not +give up the Bambinis to their brother, a cruel, cowardly +brute like that, right at the bottom of the profession. I +know ... I’ve seen.... You shan’t do it, +Jimmy, and, look here, I forbid you!”</p> +<p>“Well, Lily, Lily, I’ll do what I can, to please you, you +know; I’ll try; I’ll see the police; you must give your +evidence, if you have anything to say. Do you know, +Lily, you are as good as gold. You’re a good little Lily: +hard upon herself and kind to others.”</p> +<p>But he was interrupted ... Jimmy here, Jimmy +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_355' name='page_355'></a>355</span> +there ... he was wanted ... for the flies, for +the roof.... Jimmy flew to the stage, bothered on +every side, worried by the Astrarium ... and Lily. +Lily! He could not escape her now, do what he might! +He had her in his heart, in his brain, everywhere. She +lived and existed in his breast, shot up there like a flame! +Whatever he had been told about her he no longer knew, +did not want to know. And, besides, even if it had been +true, oh, he would have forgiven everything! He would +have passed over everything! He would have plunged +into the abyss to get Lily out of it, whatever she had +done; yes! In spite of everything! in spite of everybody! +In spite of Trampy, husband or not!</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_356' name='page_356'></a>356</span> +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>To-morrow was to be the great day, the opening of the +Astrarium, the first night; and Jimmy, more bustled than +ever, forgot Lily ... almost ... on that evening, +especially, the evening of the dress-rehearsal: not an +ordinary rehearsal, with the band-parts handed to the +conductor across the footlights—“A march here, please, +a waltz there. ’K you”—no, the whole show, with +orchestra and all complete; the stage flooded with light; +each turn in its own setting: corridor, wood, room, +palace. Jimmy multiplied himself in the final fever. +The theater, arranged according to his ideas, was still encumbered +with ladders and scaffoldings; but gangs of +laborers were hard at work on every side. The obstructions +all disappeared like magic, were juggled away. +Jimmy had made sure that the roof was ready; he had run +from the landing-point, out of sight of the audience, +through the door contrived in the wall of the stage, +crossed the fly-galleries, come down by the pulley-rope; +the whole thing, from roof to stage, had taken him, watch +in hand, thirty seconds. And Lily had done it also. It +formed part of the turn, a sensational addition to the aerobike. +All would be ready, all would go well, provided +that Lily was not nervous that evening ... and to-morrow +especially! Those confounded crazy little girls! +Crazy every one of them: Laurence herself, the bravest of +the lot, had just had an awful fall, at Boston, in her excitement +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_357' name='page_357'></a>357</span> +at losing her lucky charm. It was the event in +the profession, the accident of the day. Lily might be +frightened by it. Now it was essential that she should +succeed and succeed at the first attempt. His fortune and +hers, his future, the success of the Astrarium depended +on it. And Jimmy, obsessed by his labors, had hardly +time to think of Trampy, in the formidable effort of the +eleventh hour. And yet, sometimes, he felt a pain at his +heart. That adorable Lily! Would he succeed in making +her love him? And now there was that impersonator! +Oh, to work, to work! And he went at it, hammer and +tongs, to make sure of the aerobike’s success. To make +them talk of him ... to achieve fame ... +which was as sweet as love! And he was wanted from +one end of the theater to the other. Oh, he might well +look upon the Astrarium as his creation! Already, a few +days before, rumors of a strike were current. The managers +were boycotted by the artistes, in England.... +Jimmy feared lest the Astrarium should feel the consequences, +under the pressure of the Performers’ Association, +but he had arranged everything, seen each artiste separately, +explained his plans: gala matinées, creation of an +asylum, a home of rest ... a glory to help in such a +task ... who could tell but that they were working for +themselves by adding their stone to the edifice? He +quoted the Para-Paras and their wretched end; old Martello, +dead without leaving a penny; the Bambinis, homeless; +Ave Maria, unprotected. The men listened, with +serious faces. As for the girls, his words came straight +from the heart. Those decent girls, who earned their +living as they knew how and the living of others besides, +they understood him at once; and Lily no longer laughed; +on the contrary: +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_358' name='page_358'></a>358</span></p> +<p>“Me? Whatever you like! For nothing, if you like; +rely on me, Jimmy!”</p> +<p>And now the hour had come; they were to appear under +the critical eye of Harrasford. The acting-manager +had arrived from England that same day with the stage-manager, +who was “behind.” It made a strange impression, +that huge red-and-gold house, glittering with +light and sounding curiously empty to the thunder of +the band. Everybody was at his post: the tall flunkeys +stood motionless at the entrance-doors, in the promenades, +as if the audience had been there, whereas there was +practically nobody except Harrasford and the manager. +And on the stage, which had been cleared of every superfluous +piece of property, splendid order reigned: the +scene-shifters, up above, had their hands on the windlasses; +the two electricians, on their perches, turned the +lime-light where it was to fall; the drops rose and fell +without a hitch; the scenes slipped into their places, +shifted, in the English fashion, by one man. For each +turn on the stage, the next was ready to come on, no +more; all the rest were in the dressing-rooms. But there, +behind the iron curtain, one could picture staircases +crowded with people running up and down, passages +full of light, a flurried ant-hill, and feel that a ring of +bells would be enough to bring tumbling on to the stage +a whole glittering, grotesque or radiant world of people, +from the monkey-faced comedian to Lily, in her pink +tights, an image of Venus. There was electricity in the +air of that empty house, in which all felt the presence +of the powerful master, harder to please than a crowd! +And rays of light ran along the stage, the back-drop +seemed a cloud ready to split in the crash of the thunder, +under the storm of the raging brasses. On the stage, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_359' name='page_359'></a>359</span> +the turns defiled in their order, under the shimmering +lights: the Bambinis, brother and sister, supple grace +and strength combined, filled the huge space with the +free play of their rosy bodies and the brightness of their +genuine gaiety. The Three Graces formed the human +cluster, a hanging group of faces, figures, shoulders and +glorious lines. The program poured out laughter, harmony, +beauty, till, against the blue forest, came the scarlet +step-dances of the Roofers. And then silence: the +feature of the evening, the aerobike! There was a moment’s +anxiety. A net was stretched above the stalls, +from the footlights to the opening in the roof. For the +audience, at any rate, all danger was removed, even in +case of a fall. Then the glass dome above opened, and +the curtain rose on the Elysian glimmer of a scene +studded with stars; and everything was empty, stage and +auditorium. The distance seemed immense: “miles and +miles!” The machine was to start out suddenly, rush +through space, disappear up above, like a meteor that +shoots out from infinity and returns to it.</p> +<p>A few seconds passed, during which Jimmy gave Lily +her last instructions:</p> +<p>“You’re not afraid, Lily? Would you like me to do it?”</p> +<p>Afraid! She turned her calm face to him. Oh, she +could have accomplished impossible and cruel things, +braved torture, walked on burning coals! She felt herself +made of supple steel, unerring and exact:</p> +<p>“Up, quick, quick! Ready, Jimmy?”</p> +<p>“Ready!”</p> +<p>“Then ... GO!”</p> +<p>The aerobike flashed like an arrow from the bow, +raised itself with a magnificent jerk; the propeller +hummed like a thunder-bolt, the wings rustled in flight, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_360' name='page_360'></a>360</span> +pointed toward the opening, went up ... up ... +up ... disappeared in the star-strewn sky.... +It was done! The band struck up the triumphal march, +Harrasford, the manager, the few who were present all +burst into cheers; and, suddenly, over the house plunged +in darkness, from the back of the stage, came a burst of +light. Lily, after running over the roof and sliding +down the pulley, was descending against the blue back-drop, +bringing with her the star! First, one saw the +light breaking, then swelling and increasing in brilliancy, +and Lily appeared, a starry Eve, holding, in her upraised +hand, a dazzling luminary, a crystal globe, which an invisible +wire from behind filled with an intensity of light. +And powerful rays shot to every side, end-of-the-world +coruscations, above the crater of the orchestra.</p> +<p>“Splendid!” cried Harrasford. “That dishes the waterspouts +at the Hippodrome, the avalanches, everything!” +And, as Jimmy came up, “Good boy, Jimmy!” he said, +catching him a great smack on the shoulder by way of a +compliment. “And your girl ... your ... +Maggy ... your ... what’s her name? Lily +... glorious! Very good indeed! Couldn’t be better! +Capital idea!”</p> +<p>He gave a quick glance at his watch, a few words to +Jimmy, to the manager, over his shoulder, on the wing:</p> +<p>“All the boxes booked three weeks ahead? All the +stalls? That’s right! Good-by, good luck!”</p> +<p>Already his broad back was disappearing through the +door; had to catch the midnight train for Cologne; presence +indispensable.</p> +<p>“Telephone to-morrow; let me know how things go. +Ta-ta!”</p> +<p>And Harrasford was far away. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_361' name='page_361'></a>361</span></p> +<p>And Lily? Lily was in her dressing-room, stupefied +with delight. How soon it was done! How simple it +was! Jimmy, after all, with his scrawls and his scribbles, +with his brain-work: what a discovery he had made! +She would have liked it to last for ever, the flight on the +aerobike; she still seemed to be rushing up to the stars, +to feel the coolness of the night on her face. How funny +it was, going up, up, up and out through that hole. She +was still laughing at it, with little convulsive movements +of the shoulders, and stammering out things.</p> +<p>When she was dressed, she received Jimmy’s congratulations +and everybody’s. They gave her a bouquet:</p> +<p>“To our little favorite!”</p> +<p>She answered, without knowing what she said; went +home. Everything seemed to be turning round and +round. She ate a few mouthfuls, washed down with a +glass of milk; and then, suddenly, made a rush for Glass-Eye! +A pillow fight followed:</p> +<p>“Here, take that! Take that! And that! And that!”</p> +<p>Ten minutes of an epic struggle, on the bed thrown +into confusion and disorder, as after a murder; huge +slaps on the firm, rounded forms; virile smackings; and +Glass-Eye, breathlessly, had to own herself beaten, to beg +for mercy.</p> +<p>“That’ll teach them!” cried Lily, falling on the bed, +panting, drunk with joy, drunk with joy! Trampy, +Mexico, Ma’s insults, the jealousies, the grudges, Daisy, +the fat freaks: pooh, none of that existed for her! Nothing +remained but herself, drunk with an immense joy! +She was almost delirious, in the excess of her great happiness:</p> +<p>“I’ll smash up their damned troupes, do you hear, +Glass-Eye? There! Like that!” And she tried to renew +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_362' name='page_362'></a>362</span> +the fight, but her strength failed her. “Dished and +done for, their damned troupes!”</p> +<p>And she laughed, she burst with laughing, when she +thought of their eighteen feet of stage:</p> +<p>“Stages as big as my hand, Glass-Eye, is what they’ve +got to turn in!”</p> +<p>Whereas, she went straight up in the air, up to the +stars, miles high, up above everything! Bang! A smack +for Glass-Eye, who was just taking off her skirt!</p> +<p>“And I say, Glass-Eye! Ma, who said that I ... +you know what she said! But wait till they see me in my +grand dresses! I’ll order them to-morrow; and my hats +too. And I’ll invite Pa and Ma to the hotel! And we’ll +drink champagne and I’ll have fifty francs’ worth of +flowers on the table, just to show them! ‘Our Lily,’ that’s +what I’m going to be, ‘our own Lily,’ damn it!”</p> +<p>Lily, when she was in bed, turned things over and +over in her brain. Yes, her Pa was quite right. It was +for her good, for her own good! Big salaries, which +would all belong to her! And no more performing-dog +toques, but big hats and feathers and motor-cars +and furs, but no goggles! No, she must find something +that wouldn’t hide her face, so that people would recognize +her and say:</p> +<p>“That’s Lily!”</p> +<p>And the road behind her motor would be strewn with +the bodies of pros who had died of jealousy!</p> +<p>And she would consult Pa and Ma on the color of her +liveries, on her crest: a wheel, with wings to it! And +Lily dropped off into a sleep interrupted by awful nightmares, +in which Ma was dead—poor Ma!—before witnessing +her triumph—and in which elephants trumpeted +in her honor and sea-lions applauded her with their finny +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_363' name='page_363'></a>363</span> +fore-paws, all along a queer sort of Tottenham Court +Road, paved with fat freaks, at the end of which a Horse +Shoe, as big as the Marble Arch, opened out upon the +stars.</p> +<p>Poor Glass-Eye, on her side, had the most outlandish +dreams. Her brain was turned from living in the midst +of all that. She dreamed that she was flying, too; that +she was Lily in her turn; that she was soaring over +Whitechapel; but, from time to time, a nervous kick from +Lily recalled her to the realities of life.</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>“Glass-Eye! There’s a knock at the door, I think. Or +else I’m dreaming. What’s the time? Ten o’clock. Get +up, Glass-Eye! If it’s the landlady, tell her I’ll pay her +next week!”</p> +<p>But Glass-Eye, who had gone to the door, shut it suddenly +and came back to Lily, looking quite startled:</p> +<p>“Miss Lily, there’s some one, all in black, on the stairs; +a ghost!”</p> +<p>“If you’re trying to frighten me,” cried Lily, jumping +out of bed, “I’ll knock your other eye out! Take care!”</p> +<p>She was choking with excitement. Lily was afraid of +nothing. But those confounded ghosts: poor Ma, perhaps! +And she quickly separated two fingers wide behind +her back, so as to be on the safe side and ward off +ill-luck:</p> +<p>“Come with me, Glass-Eye; you go first!”</p> +<p>And Lily, in her night-dress, half-opened the door, +looked out.</p> +<p>A thin woman, all in black, stood motionless. It was +not Ma. Lily breathed more freely:</p> +<p>“What do you want?” she asked.</p> +<p>“I want to speak to Miss Lily,” said the woman in +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_364' name='page_364'></a>364</span> +black. “I went to the theater and they gave me your +address. I came.... I suppose you don’t remember +me, it’s so long ago. Ave Maria, on the wire in +Mexico?”</p> +<p>“Ave Maria! Come in,” said Lily.</p> +<p>Ave Maria, whom she had sought for so long. She +would know at last! Oh, if it were true! God grant +that it might be true! Lily, hardly recovered from her +fright, quivered at the thought. And she devoured Ave +Maria with her eyes. She recognized her, now that she +knew: it was she indeed, but grown old before her time, +looking wretched, thin, hollow-eyed, a face all skin and +bone. And the two stood contemplating each other in +silence.</p> +<p>“How pretty you’ve grown!” whispered Ave Maria +timidly. “No one would take you for a professional.”</p> +<p>But a sudden fit of coughing brought scarlet patches +to her pale cheeks.</p> +<p>“It catches me here,” she said, pressing her hand to +her chest. “It’s damp, sometimes, in the tent. And then +half-naked on those trestles. The work warms one, it’s +true. The other night I saw some one who knew you, +a gentleman. I should have liked to ask him more, but +my brother struck him in the face. I got my turn after. +However, I wanted to see you. I went to the Astrarium. +I asked them.”</p> +<p>“Go on,” said Lily, who was burning to know, but did +not want to show it. “Glass-Eye, give me my dressing-gown. +Go on, please!”</p> +<p>“I don’t know that I dare,” said Ave Maria, “now that +I have seen you. You are so much better-looking than +I am. Are you still living with him?” she asked, in a +low voice, fixing two fiery eyes on Lily. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_365' name='page_365'></a>365</span></p> +<p>“No,” said Lily, “I am living with nobody!”</p> +<p>“But they told me. I heard at Buenos Ayres ... +the story of the whippings, your running away with +him....”</p> +<p>“What whippings? And I’m living with nobody!” retorted +Lily, very haughtily.</p> +<p>“But you have lived with him ... in Germany +... Trampy, you know.”</p> +<p>“No,” said Lily, “I was married, wasn’t I, Glass-Eye?”</p> +<p>“But <i>I’m</i> married to him!” Ave Maria broke in, more +aggressively than before.</p> +<p>“Oh, if it were true!” thought Lily. “Oh, if it were +true!”</p> +<p>She dared not believe it, it would have been too beautiful, +beautiful beyond dreams. And, with her nerves +stretching to breaking-point:</p> +<p>“Prove it!” she said coldly, to Ave Maria.</p> +<p>“Yes, I have my proofs,” replied Ave Maria, shaken +with a furious cough. “And I’ll show them! Trampy +belongs to me, not to you! He’s in Paris, they tell +me.... And I mean to have him, do you hear? +I’ve suffered enough and to spare. I’ve done everything +since he left me. Look here, at Caracas people +used to offer me twopence to let them black my eye, +sometimes, when my brother was locked up at the police-station. +And there were the one-horse circuses where we +slept in a heap on the straw, in Chili or some such country. +And, sometimes, I lost my balance on the wire, because +of my cough. And my brother: you know him! +And the cattle-men, when they’re drunk! One of them +stabbed me here, with a knife, there, here, in the breast; +they had to cut it off—the breast—later, at Montevideo, +because of the gangrene. Yes, he stabbed me with a knife, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_366' name='page_366'></a>366</span> +because I wouldn’t say, ‘I love you,’ to him! Fancy my +saying, ‘I love you,’ to any one but Trampy! Never! I +would have let them jump on my chest with their hobnailed +boots first! And, now that Trampy’s here, I want +him! He belongs to me and I mean to have him.”</p> +<p>“Well, take him, if he belongs to you!” said Lily. “I +don’t care a hang for your Trampy; I’ve turned him out +long ago!”</p> +<p>“So ... it’s true? If he’s no longer with you, I +can have him again. I shall have him! I’ll have my +brother locked up, if necessary, to be free! I have only +to say a word, not because of the story of that nose which +he bit off at Rio: no, the other day, at Vaugirard, he +used the knife. I’ll tell everything, to have my Trampy +back.”</p> +<p>And her rough voice became gentle now, in her Anglo-Italian +jargon, with a dash of Spanish in it; everything +became clear, everything yielded before the violence of +that fierce love. Lily was astounded to hear it:</p> +<p>“That’s what I call love!” she thought. “I had no +idea, my! And all for Trampy! It’s worse than in the +novels.”</p> +<p>And she was touched, in spite of herself, and, when +Ave Maria cried, “Oh, how happy you must be, if he +loves you!” Lily dared not protest that she didn’t care +a hang for that soaker, for fear of hurting the poor +martyr. She replied, on the contrary, that Trampy was +very nice, but that he was hers no longer, that he belonged +to Ave Maria, since Ave Maria had the proofs +... <i>if</i> she had the proofs.</p> +<p>“I have them here, Miss Lily, my marriage-lines. I +was able to get them, after he went. I had the certificate +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_367' name='page_367'></a>367</span> +witnessed. My brother, when he came to fetch me, never +knew about it. I sewed it into the lining of a portmanteau; +no chance of losing it: here it is.”</p> +<p>And she produced a yellow document from her bodice +and laid it on the table.</p> +<p>Lily seized upon it ... read it at a glance ... it +was quite regular! Oh, the footy rotter! Two wives! +To say nothing of his thirty-six girls! And what a fine +trick she would play him! At last, she was about to +get rid of her festering sore! She could not breathe for +happiness. And, as Ave Maria was watching her movements, +lest she should keep the paper, Lily handed it back +to her, certain that it was in good hands, that it would not +be lost.</p> +<p>Then and there an idea came to her. Trampy would +be at the theater that afternoon with Tom, who, knowing +little about all these stories, interested only in the condition +of those biceps of his, had taken Trampy as his assistant +and had told Lily so. And Lily had said nothing, +reserving to herself the right to have him turned off the +stage by Jimmy, with a smack in the eye, before everybody: +the footy rotter, coming there to defy her! Well, +there would be no smack in the eye; she would simply +hand him over to Ave Maria, as one flings a lump of +carrion to a tigress!</p> +<p>“Wait a bit, you faithful husband!” she growled. +“You’ll see, presently!”</p> +<p>And, first of all, when Ave Maria rose to go, Lily forbade +her to do anything of the kind, for fear that the +brother, who must be out looking for her, might drag her +back to the booth at the fair and then take the first train +to some other place, after getting hold of the Bambinis. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_368' name='page_368'></a>368</span> +And Lily meant none of all this to take place; she would +rather go to the police and have the brute arrested!</p> +<p>“Stay here, Ave Maria,” she said. “I’ll give you back +your Trampy this afternoon.”</p> +<p>Oh, if she had been alone, how she would have flown +at Glass-Eye, to work off her superabundant joy! It +would have been a merciless fight, with slaps in the +Mexican style! But a lady receiving her friends must +set a good example. She contented herself with hustling +Glass-Eye by word and gesture:</p> +<p>“My new dress! My big hat!”</p> +<p>Ave Maria, quite taken up with the excitement of seeing +Trampy again, of having him back again, left herself +in Lily’s hands. She felt as if she were looking at +a princess, when Lily made Glass-Eye spin round the +room. She could not even help smiling when she saw +Glass-Eye catch her foot in the dresses spread out on +the floor, so much so that Lily asked her angrily if she +meant to go on hopping about like that for ever, if she +really wanted to have a candle lit in her glass eye to make +her see that bodice, there, right in front of her nose, +damn it! And Glass-Eye’s fright, when she heard that +... though Glass-Eye was never surprised at anything +that Lily said or did!</p> +<p>Going to the Astrarium, Lily, followed by Glass-Eye, +walked along the street with her cheeky feather waving +like a flag in battle. Ave Maria, by her side, kept close +to the wall, with frightened glances to right and left; Lily +did not call her attention to the Astrarium posters for fear +of humiliating her: she would have had to explain that +she was topping the bill and poor Ave Maria, who +was starring at the fair, would never have understood. +A professional abyss separated the two of them. Lily +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_369' name='page_369'></a>369</span> +saw this and had too kind a heart to let the other feel it. +What a difference between them! Merely in the way in +which Lily entered the theater and smiled to the stage-doorkeeper! +Ave Maria followed very timidly, like a +beggar-woman stealing into a palace. She felt out of her +element in those big theaters, where she had not appeared +for ever so long, having come down to the level of one-horse +circuses, patched canvas tents, acrobatic performances +in the open air, on the slack-wire stretched from +tree to tree. Lily looked a princess beside her, really. Ave +Maria was even surprised to see her address a gentleman +who was there: it was the architect, with a bandage +over his eye. Ave Maria recognized him; and he, rendered +prudent by the blow which he had received from +“her man,” stepped back instinctively at the sight of her. +But Lily caught him by the lapel of his coat:</p> +<p>“You’ve been fooling me ... with your measurements,” +she said, “and there are certain things that jossers +oughtn’t to meddle with; and it serves you right, that +black eye of yours; but I forgive you, because of the immense +service you’re doing me ... without knowing +it ... you lover of second-rate goods!” she +muttered, as she watched him slink off, taking her forgiveness +with him.</p> +<p>The stage was almost empty. Tom had come, not +Trampy; so much the better, there would be all the more +there presently, for the great scene!</p> +<p>“Wait for me a minute,” she said to Ave Maria. “Sit +down over there, in the corner.”</p> +<p>And Lily went up to her dressing-room; she wanted +to look her best, to bedizen herself ... a little red +on her lips, a little blue on her eyelids ... to make +Trampy regret the more what he was going to lose. And, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_370' name='page_370'></a>370</span> +when she was ready, Jimmy passed and, icicle though he +was, could not help paying her a compliment on her good +looks. He appeared quite disconcerted:</p> +<p>“Just imagine, Lily. What do you think happened to +me, in the impersonator’s dressing-room? I had something +to say to him ... I walk in ... see the +impersonator half undressed ... and it’s a woman, +Lily, a magnificent woman! You never told me, you +kiddie!”</p> +<p>“Hush!” said Lily. “Don’t give her away; it’s a secret, +it’s her living, Jimmy.”</p> +<p>“Don’t be afraid, Lily, I won’t prevent any one from +earning her living, as long as she does all right on the +stage. But I don’t know where I am now. That woman +who came in with you, for instance,” continued Jimmy +jestingly, “she looks just like a man; there’s no knowing; +nothing would surprise me after that!”</p> +<p>“She’s a woman, Jimmy, a married woman! You’ll +see presently. We’ll have a good laugh; mind you’re +there! I want everybody to be there! It’s a surprise, +Jimmy!”</p> +<p>What a kiddie she was, thought Jimmy, as he went +down the stairs. The architect, the impersonator: the +two scandals of her life. That impersonator whom she +kissed in front of him, a story that had gone round the +world, Lily’s love affairs, one more ready to leave wife +and children for her sake: the exaggeration of the stage, +always; professional boasting. Like the story of the +whippings, like those girls whom she had described to +him, and herself, with all over her skin—“Here, here, +damn it!”—wounds that you could put your finger into. +Or like those who were said to be done for, or burned +alive, or drowned in shipwrecks, with waves miles high, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_371' name='page_371'></a>371</span> +all for the honor of the profession; when, perhaps, it +was simply as good a way as another of retiring from +the stage, to get married, with a flourish of trumpets! +It wasn’t true, all that, or their parade of vice either, all +humbug, from end to end, their amorous conquests, their +orgies, their escapades, like their ostrich-feathers, that +long, or their sham diamonds, that big, and bouquets +large enough to fill a cab. But they were decent-hearted +girls, all the same: that Lily, what a kiddie, thought +Jimmy, feeling quite comforted, quite glad on her account.</p> +<p>And just then, as luck would have it, he met Tom, to +whom Glass-Eye had brought Miss Lily’s album, with a +request for his autograph. Tom, whose formidable +muscles were hardly capable of wielding a pen, especially +to write “thoughts,” was holding the album with a sheepish +look, turning it round and round:</p> +<p>“I say,” he said, as Jimmy passed, “write something; +for me!”</p> +<p>“All right!” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>And he lightly turned the pages of the album, the famous +album, said to be crammed with passionate declarations. +Not a bit of it! Nothing but foolery and childish +nonsense:</p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“May joy and pleasure be your lot</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>. . . trot, trot, trot!”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“... Regard me as a link.</p> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'> <span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Loving Pal</span>.”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>“<i>Un afetuoso saludo y un augurio de feliz viaje le +desea Pedro y Paolo</i>.” +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_372' name='page_372'></a>372</span></p> +<table summary='poetry' style='margin:0 auto'><tr><td> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'>“Hoping we shall meet again, if not here, there.</p> +<br /> +<p style='margin: 0 0 0 0em;'> “<span style='font-variant: small-caps'>Joe Brooks</span>.”</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<p>“<i>Puedo decir que nunca he visto yoo ... tan cuida y +bella</i>....”</p> +<p>There was page upon page, in this style, with, here and +there, a rough sketch: a heart pierced by an arrow, signed, +“Castaigne;” a dried shamrock: “Blarney Castle;” a bit +of seaweed: “Dundee.” Jimmy smiled to himself and +especially at what he heard beside him, where Glass-Eye, +while gazing wide-eyed at Tom’s immense arms, was telling +him all her troubles: quite mad, Miss Lily, ought to +be locked up! And <i>she</i> ought to know: never left her +side since she began traveling by herself, day or night.</p> +<p>“You’re a lucky one, you are!” Tom broke in.</p> +<p>“I should like to see you try it, just!” Glass-Eye retorted. +“And meantime I get more smacks than halfpence. +Oh, I know she’ll pay me all in a lump, when she gets it! +She’s very generous, really. And her Pa and Ma ... +yes ... do you know what she means to do? She’s +not angry with them any longer. She’s going to stuff +them with turkey and pudding at the hotel and stand +them fifty francs’ worth of flowers. She’s forgiven +them!”</p> +<p>“That’s more than I have!” replied Tom. “Her Pa +will know what I am made of to-morrow, the brute! +He’ll have one on the mug, for boxing my ears and kicking +me out ... you know ... because of the +letters from Trampy.”</p> +<p>“If you do that, Tom, you’ll have Miss Lily to reckon +with! What! You’re laughing!” cried Glass-Eye angrily. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_373' name='page_373'></a>373</span> +“You don’t know how it hurts ... on one’s +bones! And those pillow-fights: I’ve had my nose +smashed in one of them before now! Nothing surprises +me that Miss Lily says or does. Why, this very morning, +she wanted to put a lighted candle in my glass eye!”</p> +<p>“Eh, what? A light in your eye?” exclaimed Tom +suddenly. “I wonder if one really could ... I say, +Jimmy, could one?”</p> +<p>“Yes,” said Jimmy, greatly amused, “with an invisible +wire under the dress....”</p> +<p>“Hurrah!” cried Tom. “Would you like two shillings +a day, Glass-Eye? And your food and clothes? You +shall travel with me; you shall appear on the stage. Come +along to the café, we’ll sign the engagement!”</p> +<p>“But what will Miss Lily say?” objected Glass-Eye, +trembling at the idea of announcing her departure to her +terrible mistress.</p> +<p>“Well,” said Tom, “I’ll be nice to her Pa, if she’s nice +to you. Come along!”</p> +<p>“But I don’t know how to sign my name.”</p> +<p>“You can make your mark, before two witnesses. +Come along!”</p> +<p>Glass-Eye, dazzled and beglamored, followed Tom. +She, an artiste! On the stage! At last! Going round +the world with Tom ... living with him ... +married ... almost!</p> +<p>“That’s come in the nick of time!” said Jimmy, as he +watched her go off the stage. “Lily, perhaps ... in +her new position ... will want a real maid, not a +Glass-Eye! Lily ... why, she’s perfection! To +think of the abysses she has walked along without falling! +There’s more merit than one thinks in that kind of life. +And how I should like to get hold of the people who +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_374' name='page_374'></a>374</span> +talk ill of her. And that ... that ... oh, +that one!”</p> +<p>And Jimmy clenched his fists, at the thought of +Trampy, and his heart burst forth: all his patient, brave, +manly heart, now well nigh exhausted.</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_375' name='page_375'></a>375</span> +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>Poor Ave Maria, indifferent to what was going on before +her, was still waiting on the stage. For that matter, +it was but a few minutes since Lily brought her there. +Ave Maria felt inclined to go +and meet Trampy on the +pavement, to throw her arms +round his neck as soon as he +appeared. But Lily had earnestly +recommended her not +to move, whatever happened. +So she remained in her corner +and, under the pale light, +with her back to the forest +scene, in the shadow, Ave +Maria looked like a lurking +she-wolf, ready to leap out at +any moment.</p> +<div class='figright'> +<img src='images/illus-pg371.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 195px; height: 279px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 195px;'> +AVE MARIA<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<p>As for Lily, she tripped +down the stairs to the stage, +for a few seconds contemplated +all those bill-toppers at +her feet, so to speak; but she took the last stairs at a +bound: Trampy had just entered! Ave Maria, in her corner, +behind the pillars and the confused heap of scenery, +could not see him. Lily preferred that. She would +manage everything her own way and get rid of him +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_376' name='page_376'></a>376</span> +once and for all ... get rid of that footy rotter +who had come there to jeer at her. He stepped along, +with his hat on one side and a dead cigar between his +teeth. Trampy, broken, diseased, done for, was jubilant +for all that; turned his broad smile from girl to girl, +winked his eye gaily at the Roofers, who drew back in +disgust, and, with outstretched hand:</p> +<p>“How d’you do, Lily? How’s my dear little wife?”</p> +<p>He enjoyed the humiliation which he was inflicting +upon her, would have liked his clothes to be still shabbier, +his shoes more down at heel, so that he might thoroughly +disgrace his dear little wife—that great bill-topper, +who was leaving the pink of husbands in such a state +of destitution. And he threw out his chest, increased his +familiarities, and even pretended to kiss her, pushed his +blotched and pimpled mug close to that charming face. +Jimmy gave a bound: Trampy! On the stage! Lily’s +tormentor! Jimmy, pale with fury, walked up to him, +stiff-armed, ready to break the jaw of that thief in the +night and chuck him into the street, without more words! +But Lily stopped him with a quick gesture:</p> +<p>“Why, Jimmy,” she said, “would you keep a man from +earning his living? Do you find fault with a husband +for loving his little wife? I am your little wife, am I +not?” she continued, tantalizing Trampy with her peach-like +cheek, tickling his nose with her fair curls. “Don’t +you deserve a dear little wife?”</p> +<p>“Why, of course I do!” Trampy agreed, surprised, +all the same, at this loving reception from his dear little +wife.</p> +<p>“There!” cried Lily, unable to restrain herself any +longer and giving him a box on the ears. “That’ll teach +you to call me your little wife, you damned tramp cyclist! +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_377' name='page_377'></a>377</span> +I’ve never been your little wife. I’ll show you your little +wife, the real one. Come along, Ave Maria! Here’s +Trampy!”</p> +<p>“Eh, what?” said Trampy, turning color. “Ave Maria? +I don’t know any Ave Maria.”</p> +<p>But already Ave Maria was upon him, pressing him in +her arms: her Trampy! And her cough brought pink-red +patches to her hectic cheeks.</p> +<p>“What’s this mean? I don’t know you,” he stammered, +gazing horror-stricken at this old, lean woman, +who was taking possession of him before everybody, taking +possession of him who cared only for plump little +things, sultan that he was. “I don’t know her, I don’t +know her!”</p> +<p>“Here!” cried Lily, snatching the paper from Ave +Maria’s bodice. “Do you know that? Can you read? +Now will you deny that she’s your wife ... your +wife ... your wife?” she repeated, rejoicing in being +able to hurl the word to Trampy, who turned pale +with fright.</p> +<p>“We’ll try and arrange it,” whispered Jimmy, still +hardly recovered from his surprise. “A divorce in Lily’s +favor first! She’ll dictate your answer for you; you’ve +only got to say yes to everything. And then you can be +off somewhere; to West Australia. I’ll pay your expenses. +And don’t you ever dare to show your face +again! Never! Do you understand?”</p> +<p>“And that’ll teach you to make little of people!” cried +Lily. “Let’s drink to the health of Trampy, the faithful +husband! I’ll stand champagne all round to the health +of good old Trampy and his dear little wife!”</p> +<p>But, without waiting for the champagne, already Ave +Maria was dragging Trampy to the door and the Roofer +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_378' name='page_378'></a>378</span> +girls gave him a triumphal exit. They sent him to Halifax, +they sent him to Coventry. They flourished things at +his head, amid an uproar of jolly hootings, and took aim +at him—“Ping! Ping!”—and pinched him, as the Merry +Wives did Falstaff in Windsor Forest. And they slipped +off their shoes in honor of his wedding, by Jove! And +Trampy fled under a shower of boots and slippers, fled +like mad, as though the devil were after him.</p> +<p>Jimmy did not know if he was on his head or his heels +for joy:</p> +<p>“I’ll stand the champagne!” he said. “To Miss Lily’s +health!”</p> +<p>So much had happened in those few minutes: Lily +free again ... and no scandal ... the divorce +assured ... Trampy admitting his misdeeds, inventing +them, if necessary, confessing anything they +asked him to, as long as they did not mention bigamy.... +Jimmy, had it been possible, would have offered +a general picnic to the whole company. He, usually so +calm, felt inclined to sing, to laugh. Never would he +have dared to hope.... And it had all come so +simply, like the things that are bound to happen. Lily +was free!</p> +<p>“Bring the bottles up here,” he said to the call-boy, +“and biscuits and cakes. We’ll drink it here! We’ll +christen the stage, as if we were launching a ship ... +in champagne, here, by ourselves! among ourselves! +Here’s to the stage-manager! Here’s to all of us!”</p> +<p>Lily, happy as happy could be, shook everybody by +the hand, distributed a “’K you” here and a “’K you” +there. She would have liked to have Glass-Eye by her +side, to keep her in countenance, open her bag, give her +her handkerchief ... liked to be a little lady who +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_379' name='page_379'></a>379</span> +can’t do without her maid ... but, damn it, where +was Glass-Eye? And Lily clenched her fist when she saw +her return with cakes in her hands, escorted by Tom, who +helped to carry the champagne.</p> +<p>“Where have you been, Glass-Eye?” asked Lily severely. +“What have you been doing with Tom? Give +me my handkerchief, Glass-Eye.”</p> +<p>“Here’s your bag, Miss Lily,” said Glass-Eye excitedly. +“I’m going to leave you, Miss Lily.”</p> +<p>“What for?” said Lily, feeling vexed. “Because I +owe you a few little things?”</p> +<p>“Oh, no, not that! I’m going to be a star, too; on my +hands: Demon Maud, the lady with the flaming eye; a +candle in my glass eye ... before two witnesses +... I made my mark at the bottom.”</p> +<p>“She’s drunk!” cried Lily, utterly dumfounded. “Or +else she’s going mad. Jimmy! Tom! Glass-Eye’s going +mad!”</p> +<p>But, when Tom had explained, Lily approved. Glass-Eye +wasn’t stupid, really; very intelligent, though you’d +never think it. Glad to see her engaged.... And +she shook her by the hand, like an old friend and comrade, +glad to hear of the success of others ... among artistes....</p> +<p>And, suddenly, with head thrown back, full-throated, +her feather nodding hysterically on her head, Lily +laughed ... laughed ... laughed!</p> +<p>Maud an artiste! On her hands! A candle in her +eye! One fat freak the more on the stage! Gee, they +must drink to Glass-Eye’s health: Glass-Eye, the bill-topper!</p> +<p>They were all laughing now, filling their glasses at a +table in the middle of the stage, eating cakes, amusing +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_380' name='page_380'></a>380</span> +themselves with the corks, which went pop, like toy +guns, and applauding with their thumb-nails. To the +Astrarium! And long live jollity! That night, they +would one and all risk their skins. They were like soldiers +drinking to their sweethearts, in the trenches, before +the battle. And everything promised well; already +a legend was forming among the painted faces: the booking +office besieged; ladies and gentlemen in motors; +motors in a row, miles and miles of motors; the street +bursting with people who had come to book seats! And +champagne on the stage, cakes, my, for the asking! An +orgy which would start its trip around the world to-morrow, +with those few bottles transformed into a Niagara of +champagne, enough to flood every greenroom from the +Klondike to Calcutta!</p> +<p>They all enjoyed themselves and let themselves go. +And the Roofers, who worshiped Lily, in spite of +her abominable tricks, raised their glasses to her +health, crowded round her, smiled merrily at her with +their white teeth, congratulated her for sending that footy +rotter packing:</p> +<p>“Here’s to Miss Lily! And a round on the thumbnail +in honor of Miss Lily!”</p> +<p>This christening of the Astrarium was turning into a +triumph for her; and there was the evening to come +... the evening! It made her forget Trampy, +Jimmy, Glass-Eye, everybody. And ... the next +day ... her Pa, her Ma, the New Trickers would +be at her feet! Oh, she would give ten years of her life +if to-morrow could be there now!</p> +<p>And the evening came. Lily did not leave the theater. +She walked nervously from her dressing-room to the +stage, inspected the final operations, interested herself in +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_381' name='page_381'></a>381</span> +everything, stopped the boy-violinist, who was crossing +the stage with the other members of the band, congratulated +him on his approaching marriage with one of the +Graces. She talked to the artistes going up to their +dressing-rooms, bestowed a smile upon Jimmy, another +on the stage-manager, joked with the limelight-men +working their apparatus on either side of the stage. The +footlights lit up with a row of flames, the storm approached. +There was a ringing of electric bells—“Ting! +Ting! Ting!”—as in the machine-room of a ship before +the tempest; the orchestra roared; and, as though at a +thunder-clap, the velvet curtain split asunder: Patti-Patty +was revealed on the stage, while the band played +as if possessed. Lily, in the shadow of the wings, put +her hand to her heart; her veins were ablaze. And that +audience, at which she peeped through a crack in the +scenery; that audience was hers, with its rustling silks, +its bare shoulders, its diamonds, its flowers! She would +have liked to step forward, to say:</p> +<p>“Here I am!”</p> +<p>She felt herself excited by a curious feeling; an aggressive +mood, which, no doubt, came from all the healths +she had drunk: to the Astrarium, to this one, to that one, +to all of us! Gee, what fun it had been: champagne, cakes, +my, tons of cakes! And Lily, who had long been unused +to any such excess, felt her head splitting. A fever +seemed also to reign all over the dressing-rooms and +passages. They talked of front boxes reserved at a thousand +francs by the Aero Club; stalls at fifty francs; every +seat in the house filled; and the best people, nothing but +the best! Lily, in her exalted condition, took it that they +had all come for her; and she had to dazzle them all! +And soar above them all! To a hurricane of applause +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_382' name='page_382'></a>382</span> +from “her favorite audience,” the Astrarium audience, +on a first night!</p> +<p>And she felt so gay that she was not angry when Glass-Eye +asked her, now that <i>she</i> was an artiste, too, to teach +her her stage-smile.</p> +<p>“Why, of course, Glass-Eye! I owe you that, to say +nothing of the rest! But you won’t lose by waiting! +Take my word for it: among friends, you know!...”</p> +<p>And she kissed her maid, felt inclined to cry, became +quite sentimental at her going....</p> +<p>She was less amiable to Nunkie, who was prowling +around near her. Oh, how angry she felt with that old +rogue! Because of Thea, first of all; and then it was he +who gave her away, not Jimmy! Tom had told her. +Nunkie mumbled something to her: his dear girls; ungrateful +creatures who were leaving him! His poor +life shattered! His pigeons, he had his pigeons left; yes, +and his home; but what was that compared with loving +hearts? And, as she was on such good terms with Jimmy +and everybody, couldn’t she use her influence? Oh, if he +could have the Bambinis, be appointed their guardian! +“He would bring together such a nice little family troupe: +all the joys of home!</p> +<p>“You old wretch!” cried Lily, in a threatening voice. +“Just go and look, at the corner of Oxford Street and +Newman Street, if you can see me! You old snaky! +You old bromide merchant! Hiding letters, too, you +nigger-driving humbug! Oh, you’re sure to get the Bambinis, +I <i>don’t</i> think!”</p> +<p>“<i>Ver-r-rdammt</i>!”</p> +<p>Nunkie turned on his heel, shaking the passage with +tremendous oaths.</p> +<p>“I thought,” Lily shot at him from behind sarcastically, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_383' name='page_383'></a>383</span> +“I thought one ought never to swear! It’s wicked +to swear, Mr. Fuchs!”</p> +<p>In her dressing-room, she went on laughing at Nunkie +and his “<i>Donner-r-r-wetter-r-r</i>!” and his “<i>S-s-satan</i>! +<i>S-s-satan</i>!” It made her comb her hair all awry and +apply the grease-paint to her cheeks with a trembling +hand. She felt a buzzing in her head: that confounded +music which seemed to come from everywhere and hissed +in her ears! But, when her turn came, she’d show them! +Never had she felt so light. She was sure of herself, +strangely sure. It seemed to her that, if need be, she’d +have shot up to the stars, damn it!</p> +<p>As soon as she was ready, she went down to the stage. +She didn’t know why. It was her wish to be everywhere, +her craving for movement. The aerobike had been taken +from its cage, behind the back-drop; the stage-manager, +Jimmy and Jimmy’s assistants were standing round it. +Jimmy was testing everything, for the last time, making +sure that there would be no hitch:</p> +<p>“Hullo, Lily!” he said, when he saw her. “Are you +ready?”</p> +<p>“Ready?” said Lily. “Look!”</p> +<p>And she flung back her wrap with her two bare arms +and stood, a figure all charm and grace, with youth, joy +and courage sparkling in her eyes. In the mysterious +half-light, amid the endless sounds from the band, Lily +seemed to shed rays. Jimmy, dazzled, looked at that +dainty form, that delicate breast, those rounded shoulders, +that splendid body fashioned by years of Spartan life, +each muscle of which was quivering with enthusiasm. +And she laughed ... laughed ... head thrown +back, full-throated; told the story of Nunkie, with furious +gestures, as though she were strangling the old beast. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_384' name='page_384'></a>384</span> +And then came sudden displays of feeling, for the Three +Graces and the Bambinis.</p> +<p>Jimmy had never seen her like that. The stage-manager +also thought her queer, for he looked at Jimmy as +though to ask what on earth was the matter with her. +And, going up to him, he said:</p> +<p>“Look how she’s trembling! One would think she had +a fever.”</p> +<p>“It’s quite true,” said Jimmy.</p> +<p>And the two stared at each other in consternation +when Lily, stooping to pick up her cloak, was nearly +losing her balance and coming to the ground. They exchanged +a few words in a whisper. Then the stage-manager +said:</p> +<p>“Go up to your dressing-room, Miss Lily. You mustn’t +stay here, you know. We’ll send for you when the time +comes. Go and put your hair straight.”</p> +<p>It was only a pretext; but the same thought had passed +through both their minds: it was the champagne! Lily, +who was accustomed to drink nothing but water, was +... if not exactly drunk ... well ...</p> +<p>Thereupon, in an instant, Jimmy made up his mind: it +was finished and settled, irrevocably, as though he had +spent hours in reflecting. The newspapers had expressed +doubts; there had been suggestions of trickery. +An immediate, brilliant success was essential, to carry the +thing off: a hitch and all was lost and the luck of the +Astrarium and his own fame vanished in smoke! Lily +was out of the question that night: she was bubbling +over at every pore with unnatural excitement ... +she was not Lily,—was not herself ... it meant +certain death to her, the aerobike smashed to pieces, the +end of all things! Lily would do it to-morrow, the next +night; but not to-night. +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_385' name='page_385'></a>385</span></p> +<p>He had just time to go to his dressing-room and put +on his white sweater, black breeches, black stockings: +an athletic costume which he always kept at the theater +in case of need. And quick, in the saddle: the moment +had come! He must succeed, now or never! And +Jimmy, calm and sure of himself, took his seat on the +aerobike. A great silence followed....</p> +<p>Lily, at that very minute, anxious at not being sent for +in her dressing-room, was going back to the stage, but +she was stopped at the top of the stairs by the stage-manager, +who said that he had received an order by telephone +from Cologne, from Harrasford: Lily not to perform +that night....</p> +<p>“Let me pass,” cried Lily, laughing in spite of everything. +“That’s enough of a joke. It’s time for me to go +on, I say! Are you mad? I tell you, it’s my turn!”</p> +<p>But she ceased, as though struck by thunder. The +aerobike, with wings wide open, was taking flight toward +the stars, in a tempestuous wind.</p> +<p>It was done! The thing had shot past her very nose! +She thought that she would fall, so great was the pain at +her heart.</p> +<p>“No! No!” she gasped, with dilated eyes.</p> +<p>And, suddenly, she understood and uttered a cry of +rage!</p> +<p>But she could have shouted, “Murder!” and it would +have sounded as the buzzing of a bee amid that explosion +of cheers. And the orchestra grew like a flame and the +light appeared, increased and shone all over the house.</p> +<p>Lily flung herself back, closed her eyes so as not to +see, fled to her dressing-room with a shriek like a +wounded beast’s....</p> +<hr class='major' /> +<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'> +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_386' name='page_386'></a>386</span> +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> +<h3></h3> +</div> + +<p>She dropped into her chair, stopped up her ears; but +the cheers never ceased, kept on increasing, filled the +theater with a roar as of thunder! Oh, it seemed to +her that her chest was on fire, that they were pounding +her heart; that some one was taking her by the hair and +banging her head against the walls! And that storm of +applause kept on and kept on ... but it wasn’t +for her! It was for Jimmy all the time: they had tried +it with her, that was all! To see if it worked! And she, +she, she who, only just now, was giving herself airs with +the others: a poor rag, yes, that was all she was, less than +anybody; less than Tom, her old servant, less than Glass-Eye, +that idiot, less than Ave Maria, less than a performing +dog, less than anything, worse than anything, perhaps! +Mad with rage she jumped at her gollywog, +pulled down the white-eyed idol—the traitor!—spat on +it, crushed it on the floor with her heel, furious, beside +herself; and then dropped into her chair again, with her +two arms flat on the table, her head between her arms, +among the grease-paints, the powder, the overturned box +of spangles, which rolled about everywhere and strewed +the floor. She felt inclined to bite into her flesh to relieve +herself, she clenched her fists and dug her nails into her +skin. Oh, she would have liked to die, to die! It was so +fierce a longing, so desperate a cry that the force of her +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_387' name='page_387'></a>387</span> +prayer ought to have struck her dead where she sat. And +suddenly the tears began to flow and she cried and cried, +all convulsed with sobs, floored, shipwrecked, done for. +She cried and cried, as though stupefied, saw nothing save +through a thick veil of water, like a person drowning, +sinking. It seemed to her as if the tears would groove +her face, for always. Oh, what would she give to be at +home, in bed! Never, never again would she have the +strength to do a thing. She was done for, buried alive. +And that coward of a Jimmy, to obey Harrasford’s order! +Oh, the harm he had done her! She would rather have +died smashed to a jelly on the stage: she would have +suffered less! Oh, to behave like that: to flash so much +before her eyes; and then to fling her to the ground! Oh, +when she had thought that he loved her and that she loved +him also, perhaps! And Lily cried and cried....</p> +<hr class='tb' /> + +<p>Meanwhile, in front, the aerobike was receiving endless +applause. The disappearance through the opening, the +plunge into space, the star snatched from up above, that +piece of theatrical symbolism filled the audience with enthusiasm. +The aerobike brought down the house, its success +surpassed all expectation, and the Astrarium was +opening with a victorious clamor.</p> +<p>“Yes, but at what a cost!” said Jimmy to himself, in +spite of the cheers.</p> +<p>And, as soon as he was able to escape, putting off for +a few minutes his replies to the cards that poured in—the +chairman of the Aero Club, journalists begging for interviews—Jimmy +had but one idea, to console Lily for her +disappointment of that evening: poor Lily!</p> +<p>His heart was beating very loudly as he went to her +dressing-room. Jimmy was no longer the fellow who +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_388' name='page_388'></a>388</span> +knew no fear. To fly away on the aerobike, to risk his +skin was easy, for him at least; but to face Lily ... +to explain to her ... with all those things seething +within him ... and, oh, the pain he was causing +her! How could he approach her after that? And could +he ever get her to love him? Ah, perhaps it would have +been better if he had gone and broken his neck in the +street, on the pavement! Jimmy was trembling like a +child; in his perturbation, he even forgot to knock at the +door ... turned the knob ... entered....</p> +<p>Lily heard nothing, seemed crushed into her chair, +with her face buried in her right arm folded on the table, +while the left hung lifeless by her side. Her whole attitude +expressed abject misery, profound despair; she +seemed extinguished in a terrifying calmness.</p> +<p>Jimmy, to attract her attention, closed the door noisily. +Lily stirred no more than a wax figure: one might have +thought her dead.</p> +<p>He shivered; and, stepping forward, leaning over to +her, anxiously, he placed his hand on her shoulder.</p> +<p>It was like a spring that is suddenly released! Lily +threw up her sorrow-stricken face, down which the tears, +mingling with the red paint, flowed like blood, looked at +him for a few seconds with a wandering air and then +leaped at him, as though she meant to bite him in the face; +but her lips shriveled up in silence, nothing came from +them; and she crushed Jimmy with an unspeakable look +of terror and contempt.</p> +<p>Jimmy did not flinch:</p> +<p>“You must not be angry with me,” he said gently. “I +was bound to do it, Lily; I had to save the theater.”</p> +<p>“And get rid of me!” cried Lily, wild-haired, hard-eyed, +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_389' name='page_389'></a>389</span> +hoarse-throated, with the tears drying on her red-hot +cheeks.</p> +<p>Jimmy was pale as death. Ah, all his dreams, too, +were fading away!</p> +<p>“Lily,” he said, in a voice which he strove to make firm, +but which trembled with emotion. “I have done my duty +to everybody, yourself included! But for me, you would +be lying dead at this minute and the Astrarium would be +ruined. You were not in a state to appear in public +... this evening ... believe me, Lily. The +stage-manager himself....”</p> +<p>Lily lowered her head under his calm gaze....</p> +<p>“But you’ll do it to-morrow,” continued Jimmy, very +quickly, “before Pa and Ma! To-morrow and the following +days ... and always! Your name will be right +at the top of the bill! Do you hear? To-morrow ... +and always!”</p> +<p>“But what...? Why...?” asked Lily, as +though stupefied.</p> +<p>“Poor Lily,” he replied, gently raising that face all +distorted with grief. “Poor little Lily! I have caused +you a heap of pain.”</p> +<p>Lily, for her sole answer, gave a convulsive sob; a tear +leaped to her eyelids.</p> +<p>“Don’t cry,” whispered Jimmy, “don’t cry any more. +It will be your turn to-morrow, before the New Trickers. +To-morrow! Every night!”</p> +<p>“Every night?” asked Lily, still incredulous and yet +transfigured with hope. “You’re saying that, Jimmy; +but....”</p> +<p>“Do you doubt my word, Lily?” he replied, pressing +her gently to him. “What, I, your best friend, your only +<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_390' name='page_390'></a>390</span> +friend ... I who ... haven’t I always loved +you, Lily? Do you think I’ve changed?... I love +you more than ever I did! I will explain everything later. +And you doubt me ... who would give my life +for you; yes, life without you means nothing to me,” +continued Jimmy, in a stifled voice and clasping Lily in +his arms.</p> +<p>Lily quivered in his embrace, hid her blushing features +on his breast, where she heard great dull throbs. She +trembled from head to foot. Her quickened senses +seemed to perceive everything now; the passing indisposition +from which she had suffered, without knowing it, +the light fumes of the champagne: all that had suddenly +gone, was far away; she had never felt more lucid; she +saw, she understood and was overcome with delight, +overcome with a delight beside which her enthusiasm of +the previous day seemed dark and dreary. The ardor of +her eighteen years swelled her breast. Success, in any +case! To-morrow! And that man was hers, that heart +was hers! It was a dream, an enchantment! Her head +rolled back, a smile drew up her lips, her eyes, through +her tangled curls, seemed all ablaze. Jimmy bent his +glowing face over her. Lily, on the point of swooning, +raised her lips to his.</p> +<p>Vanished around them the low ceiling, the scratched +walls, the shabby rags. Standing on the wretched spangles +that strewed the dusty floor, Lily, drunk with joy +... Jimmy, distraught with pride ... seemed +like youth and love, in mid-sky, among the stars!</p> +<div class='ce'> +<p>CURTAIN</p> +</div> + +<div class='figcenter'> +<img src='images/illus-pg386.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 415px; height: 640px;' /><br /> +<p class='captionc' style='margin: 0 auto; text-align:center;width: 415px;'> +Lily quivered in his embrace.<br /> +</p> +</div> + +<hr class='full' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.3em;'>Popular Copyright Books</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.1em;'>AT MODERATE PRICES</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p>Any of the following titles can be bought of your</p> +<p>bookseller at the price you paid for this volume</p> +</div> + +<div class='la'> +<p><b>Marcaria</b>. By Augusta J. Evans.</p> +<p><b>Mam’ Linda</b>. By Will N. Harben.</p> +<p><b>Maids of Paradise</b>, The. By Robert W. Chambers.</p> +<p><b>Man in the Corner, The</b>. By Baroness Orczy.</p> +<p><b>Marriage A La Mode</b>. By Mrs. Humphry Ward.</p> +<p><b>Master Mummer, The</b>. By E. Phillips Oppenheim.</p> +<p><b>Much Ado About Peter</b>. By Jean Webster.</p> +<p><b>Old, Old Story, The</b>. By Rosa N. Carey.</p> +<p><b>Pardners</b>. By Rex Beach.</p> +<p><b>Patience of John Moreland, The</b>. By Mary Dillon.</p> +<p><b>Paul Anthony, Christian</b>. By Hiram W. Hays.</p> +<p><b>Prince of Sinners, A</b>. By E. Phillips Oppenheim.</p> +<p><b>Prodigious Hickey, The</b>. By Owen Johnson.</p> +<p><b>Red Mouse, The</b>. By William Hamilton Osborne.</p> +<p><b>Refugees, The</b>. By A. Conan Doyle.</p> +<p><b>Round the Corner in Gay Street</b>. Grace S. Richmond.</p> +<p><b>Rue: With a Difference</b>. By Rosa N. Carey.</p> +<p><b>Set in Silver</b>. By C. N. and A. M. Williamson.</p> +<p><b>St. Elmo</b>. By Augusta J. Evans.</p> +<p><b>Silver Blade, The</b>. By Charles E. Walk.</p> +<p><b>Spirit in Prison, A</b>. By Robert Hichens.</p> +<p><b>Strawberry Handkerchief, The</b>. By Amelia E. 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By Katherine Cecil Thurston</p> +<p style=' margin-left:2em;'>(author of “The Masquerader,” “The Gambler”).</p> +<p><b>Colonial Free Lance, A</b>. By Chauncey C. Hotchkiss.</p> +<p><b>Conquest of Canaan, The</b>. By Booth Tarkington.</p> +<p><b>Courier of Fortune, A</b>. By Arthur W. Marchmont.</p> +<p><b>Darrow Enigma, The</b>. By Melvin Severy.</p> +<p><b>Deliverance, The</b>. By Ellen Glasgow.</p> +<p><b>Divine Fire, The</b>. By May Sinclair.</p> +<p><b>Empire Builders</b>. By Francis Lynde.</p> +<p><b>Exploits of Brigadier Gerard</b>. By A. Conan Doyle.</p> +<p><b>Fighting Chance, The</b>. By Robert W. Chambers.</p> +<p><b>For a Maiden Brave</b>. By Chauncey C. Hotchkiss.</p> +<p><b>Fugitive Blacksmith, The</b>. By Chas. D. Stewart.</p> +<p><b>God’s Good Man</b>. By Marie Corelli.</p> +<p><b>Heart’s Highway, The</b>. By Mary E. Wilkins.</p> +<p><b>Holladay Case, The</b>. By Burton Egbert Stevenson.</p> +<p><b>Hurricane Island</b>. By H. B. Marriott Watson.</p> +<p><b>In Defiance of the King</b>. By Chauncey C. Hotchkiss.</p> +<p><b>Indifference of Juliet, The</b>. By Grace S. Richmond.</p> +<p><b>Infelice</b>. By Augusta Evans Wilson.</p> +<p><b>Lady Betty Across the Water</b>. By C. N. and A. M. Williamson.</p> +<p><b>Lady of the Mount, The</b>. By Frederic S. Isham.</p> +<p><b>Lane That Had No Turning, The</b>. By Gilbert Parker.</p> +<p><b>Langford of the Three Bars</b>. By Kate and Virgil D. Boyles.</p> +<p><b>Last Trail, The</b>. By Zane Grey.</p> +<p><b>Leavenworth Case, The</b>. By Anna Katharine Green.</p> +<p><b>Lilac Sunbonnet, The</b>. By S. R. Crockett.</p> +<p><b>Lin McLean</b>. By Owen Wister.</p> +<p><b>Long Night, The</b>. By Stanley J. Weyman.</p> +<p><b>Maid at Arms, The</b>. By Robert W. Chambers.</p> +</div> + +<hr class='silver' /> + +<div class='ce'> +<p style=' font-size:1.3em;'>Popular Copyright Books</p> +<p style=' font-size:1.1em;'>AT MODERATE PRICES</p> +<div style='margin-top:1em'></div> +<p>Any of the following titles can be bought of your</p> +<p>bookseller at the price you paid for this volume</p> +</div> + +<div class='la'> +<p><b>Man from Red Keg, The</b>. By Eugene Thwing.</p> +<p><b>Marthon Mystery, The</b>. By Burton Egbert Stevenson.</p> +<p><b>Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes</b>. By A. Conan Doyle.</p> +<p><b>Millionaire Baby, The</b>. By Anna Katharine Green.</p> +<p><b>Missourian, The</b>. By Eugene P. Lyle, Jr.</p> +<p><b>Mr. Barnes, American</b>. By A. C. Gunter.</p> +<p><b>Mr. Pratt</b>. By Joseph C. Lincoln.</p> +<p><b>My Friend the Chauffeur</b>. By C. N. and A. M. Williamson.</p> +<p><b>My Lady of the North</b>. By Randall Parrish.</p> +<p><b>Mystery of June 13th</b>. By Melvin L. Severy.</p> +<p><b>Mystery Tales</b>. 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diff --git a/26242-page-images/p400.png b/26242-page-images/p400.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6980753 --- /dev/null +++ b/26242-page-images/p400.png diff --git a/26242.txt b/26242.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6223619 --- /dev/null +++ b/26242.txt @@ -0,0 +1,12270 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Bill-Toppers, by Andre Castaigne + +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 online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Bill-Toppers + +Author: Andre Castaigne + +Release Date: August 9, 2008 [EBook #26242] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BILL-TOPPERS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: Poland, the Parisienne. Page 123. Frontispiece.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +By +ANDRE CASTAIGNE + +With Illustrations +BY THE AUTHOR + +A. L. BURT COMPANY +Publishers--New York + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Copyright, 1909 +The Bobbs-Merrill Company + +August + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +TO MY LITTLE FRIENDS +THE STARS! + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE BILL-TOPPERS + +OVERTURE + +All around stretched the great blue sky and the blue sea of the Gulf of +Bengal. + +Mrs. Clifton lay dozing at full length on a pillowed bench and her husband +sat near her and followed his Lily, his daughter, with his eyes: his Lily, +eight years old, "that high," waving among the passengers the white coral +necklace which Pa had bought her on leaving Australia; his Lily, his star, +his New Zealander on Wheels! His Lily who had had such successes at +Melbourne, at Sidney: bouquets, tons and cart-loads of bouquets! And the +past would be nothing compared with the future, with the astounding tricks +which he was inventing for his Lily. The mere sight of her raised his +enthusiasm to boiling-point. And he was going to show them, in Calcutta +and elsewhere, if they knew how to make stars in New Zealand or if they +were only fit for raising mutton. + +Clifton was an artist, an "artiste," a born artiste: starting as a mere +clerk in an office, he had become an amateur cyclist and then a +professional on the track. He married an Englishwoman at Wellington and, +at Lily's birth, decided upon a career: the stage, with Lily for a star +later on! And he set to work, with vim and vigor, learned a few tricks on +his bike, taught his wife the business in less than no time; and Lily's +first memories as a four-year-old were: + +"I was sitting on Ma's shoulders, Ma on Pa's and Pa on the bike." + +And Lily zigzagged through New Zealand, from east to west and north to +south, and Australia after, where she received plenty of applause for her +tricks, childish in themselves, but well presented. Her triumphant path +wound among tinseled bottles containing paper flowers, with a faultless +standstill for the climax, one hand on the handle-bar, the other blowing +kisses to the audience. This procured Pa an engagement for India. He +ordered a beautiful colored poster, "The Clifton Family, Trick Cyclists," +with a portrait in the corner of his own strong face and bristling +mustache--"P. T. Clifton, Manager"--one more rung in the ladder of life +mounted, thanks to his Lily. + +And Pa smiled to his daughter and, as she ran past him, lifted her on his +knee and stroked her fair curls; and the child cuddled up to her Pa, +opened her lips to ask questions, but was silent, with her eyes lost in +space, puckering her little forehead, in which were heaped so many mingled +memories of the stage and the great world outside: the Boxing Kangaroo; +tall cliffs; green islands; the bike; Batavia among the trees; Singapore, +with its noise and dust. And Lily, wearily, dreamed and murmured things, +while the steamer sped on, thud, thud, thud, flat as a stage in its blue +"set." + +Lily's impressions of India were months of jolting and bumping, stops in +the dead of night while the tent was pitched, rains, strong smells, +oppressive heats--months and months of it, Ma on Pa, Pa on the wheel and +she on top, waving flags. Yellow faces on the benches, red flowers and, +somewhere, on a river-bank, two eyes glittering in the dark: a tiger, +somebody said! And every night the artistes, carrying lanterns, walked in +file between the circus and the hotel, with the ladies in the center and +Lily clinging to Ma's skirt. + +She did more now, in addition to the bike: a song-and-dance turn. In a +piping falsetto, she quavered: + +"Star light! Star bright!" + +She was spoiled by the ladies, the wives of the officers stationed in +those out-of-the-way holes. She played with smart children, was taken for +drives, had her social successes! Chocolates, sweets, kisses. And a lady +gave her such a pretty dress: his Lily! Pa burst with delighted pride to +see her treated like that; and Ma scolded her a bit, for the little flirt +that she was, while fondly tying the two satin bows over her ears. + +Lily was a regular tomboy, with pranks invented by herself, from ideas +which she picked up in traveling: for instance, she would choose her +moment and chuck a piece of bacon among the Mohammedans sitting under her +window; and she would revel in her own fright at those furious faces +suddenly glaring up at her from below! And she would stand with drooping +head, one finger in her mouth: + +"Oh, _so_ sorry!" + +What fun! And as an artiste she was spoiled and petted everywhere. Goa, +Bangalore, Tanjore and then Colombo, and a ship with elephants, tigers, +camels, children, men, women, wagons, one great mix-up, a circus and +menagerie in one, steaming toward South Africa; and Miss Lily of the +Clifton Troupe paraded her well-brushed, neatly-parted curls in the midst +of it all, gazed open-mouthed at the blue expanse of water until, her eyes +drunk and dazed with light, she went and lay in her cabin.... And more and +more blue water. And thud, thud, thud. And Cape Town in the mountains. +Africa behind it: a country all yellow, where the trains wound in and out +of the rocks; villages, up, up, up, or else right low down, on the yellow +veldt; and, at night, on the benches, crowds and crowds. Immediately after +the show came sleep, troubled by the jolting of the train; and the circus +was always there next day, on the right or on the left, with its Chinamen +and its niggers driving stakes or tugging at ropes. A bell for dinner, a +whistle for the show; and, as soon as the show was over, to bed,--and off +again. + +Pa made her practice harder now, wanted to make a great artiste of her. +And there was a class, too, kept by a "marm" who traveled with the circus +and taught spelling and arithmetic and the art of letter-writing, from +"Yours to hand with thanks" down to "Believe me to be." Lily would have +been bored to death but for the accidents of travel: sometimes the engine +broke down, bringing the train to a dead stop amid the great African +silence, near a field of Indian corn, in which the children played +hide-and-seek. Or else there were locusts, locusts "that thick," right +inside the carriages. Lily would tie them by the leg and: + +"Flip! Flap! Lively now! Jump!" + +But funniest of all was the caravan--she couldn't remember where, in Natal +or thereabouts--wagons with ten yoke of oxen. They climbed up endless +winding roads. The men shot at birds and prospected for diamonds along the +wayside; and at night they took the hay from the mattresses to give to the +cattle. Lolling indolence was in the air and plenty in the larder: big +fruits, strange game, which they cooked in a makeshift oven consisting of +a few stones. Then they rolled themselves up in a blanket, near the +elephants tugging at their chains, and slept under the tent in the cool, +bright, starry night. + +[Illustration: LILY IN INDIA] + +Months and months passed. Lily was becoming very clever: the New Zealander +on Wheels! She was cleverer than Pa, who no longer performed, nor Ma +either. On their return to Australia, Lily appeared by herself in the +music-halls, and P. T. Clifton, Manager, watched her from the wings, in +growing admiration: his Lily was a star now, too good for a circus! And +Australia, pooh! Sidney, Melbourne, pooh! What Lily wanted was New York, +London, the Hippodromes, the Palaces! He'd show them a star that was a +star! And Clifton clenched his fists and pretended not to see when Lily +made a blunder on the stage: his Lily missing a trick! Disgracing her Pa +like that! He blushed to the eyes at the thought of it! And, when she +returned to the wings, he twitted her proudly: + +"What next, Lily! An artiste like you!" + +And Ma adopted a sarcastic air and congratulated "mademoiselle" as she +threw the white wrapper over "mademoiselle's" shoulders. + +Ma detested the stage. She did not think it a nice place for herself; but +for a brat like Lily, Lord, it was quite different! And she ought to have +tried to please her Pa and Ma. Mrs. Clifton, though she never voiced the +wish, had visions of a trip to London, to stagger some relations, a +sister-in-law she had there, and sneer at the old country, in the usual +colonial fashion, and show them what the new countries can do, countries +where you make a fortune in less than no time! And, little by little, +smitten with Mr. Clifton's enthusiasm, she came to believe that, in Lily, +they really possessed the infant prodigy, the treasure-child upon whom +their fortune depended. And Ma, too, was vexed when Lily missed a trick on +the stage. + +Lily laughed at their anger. Ma had never raised a hand to her; and, as +for Pa, when he scolded, Lily had such a way of looking at him, with +lowered head--"Oh, _so_ sorry!"--that Pa simmered down again at once. +Lily, a regular "tenter," shot up freely, grew up a real tomboy, went a +bit too far, in fact, Ma said: at Honolulu, for instance, on the road to +'Frisco and New York, where Pa had resolved to go, at all costs, come what +might--it was one step nearer London!--at Honolulu--ten days there and +such a success!--the child played truant in the gardens teeming with birds +and fruit, climbed apple-trees, was caught one day and scampered off at +full speed, pursued by Ma, who threatened to give her a sound smacking +this time, the little thief! But Pa thought it ridiculous, for the sake of +an apple.... + +"And suppose Lily had broken her leg with her nonsense?" asked Ma +indignantly. "Where would your New York be?" + +Pa felt himself a conquering hero when they steamed through the Golden +Gate: the States at last! And no sooner was his foot on the wharf at +'Frisco than off to the agents at once, with his photographs, his +contracts, his posters! But it was her birth-certificate they asked to +see. And no babes and sucklings allowed on the stage here. It was all +right down yonder, but the law prevented it here. + +"Damn your laws!" snapped Pa furiously. "Do you think we make stars to +hide them under bushels?" + +And whoosh! Off for Mexico, where children are allowed to perform. + +Now, in Arizona, near Phoenix, where the train stopped for some hours, +owing to an accident to the Rio Gila bridge, Pa happened upon a +merrymaking which reminded him of West Australia. Cow-boys, galloping +horses, a pretense at fighting, lassoing, revolvers, a track for amateur +cyclists and--yes, there, in the desert!--on a platform, right in the +middle, what should Pa see but an amazing artiste, riding on the +back-wheel, with the other in the air! And such twirls! And the boys +shouted to him: + +"Hullo, Trampy! Have a drink, Trampy!" + +And Trampy accepted: + +"With you, my lord! As soon as I've done, my lord!" + +And off he wheeled, head on the saddle, feet in the air, whistling _Yankee +Doodle_! + +It was impossible! Pa rubbed his eyes: what! Was this what they did in the +States in the desert? And he who had hoped, with Lily ... why, damn it, +Lily knew nothing! He himself, her manager, knew less than nothing! He, +who thought he had formed a star! Pa was red with shame. And, suddenly, he +had a happy thought: he, too, offered Trampy a drink, something to propose +to him.... + +"All right." + +They shook hands, went to the bar, lit a cigar, like men, by Jove! Clifton +loved to talk business, to pull out notebooks, quick, and jot things down +with a knowing air. Trampy, a mere boy, easy-going, genial, without a red +cent for the time being, didn't care a hang about business and was soon +telling Clifton the story of his life: drummer, reporter, racer; his +descent,--"Two whiskies, boy!"--what was he saying? Oh, yes, his descent +of a staircase on the bike, yes, siree, with a red-hot stove under his +arm--a stove painted to look red-hot--pursued by a policeman, leaping over +obstacles on the bike; great success at Duluth and Denver as a tramp +cyclist: hence his name of Trampy Wheel-Pad. But those girls, by Jove! +Well, he who fights and runs away lives to fight another day. Still, a +rolling stone doesn't climb hills. Here he was, stranded. Go to Mexico? So +much a week? Such and such a turn? Teach the child? Cert! + +Lily never alluded to Mexico afterward without shaking with anger. My, to +listen to her, how badly they treated her in Mexico! Worse than a Dago! To +tell the truth, it was hot; and Lily, already tired by those long journeys +in varying climates, Lily would have preferred to do nothing and to +continue to lead her careless life as a playful filly. But no, poor Lily +was caught by the hind-leg in Mexico! Ambition had seized upon Pa, body +and soul, and life became a more serious matter for the child. + +"Look here!" said Pa, pointing to Trampy. "What he, a man, does, you can +do! I'll see to that!" + +Pa arranged for a place in which to practise at their ease. In the +evening, on the stage, he watched and studied Trampy's tricks and, in the +morning, quick, out of bed, look alive, the bike! Pa no longer had his +open-mouthed admiration for Lily, as in South Africa and Asia: his Lily +knew nothing at all! But in three months, six months, if necessary, if it +cost him every penny he possessed. And it was: + +"Come along, Lily ... to work! Show what you can do!" + +Trampy, in this country of _manolas_--"Grand, by Jove!"--came round about +eleven; and Pa, all out of breath, passed Lily on to him: + +"You have a go at her, Trampy! I give up, she won't do what I say!" + +And Trampy put down his cigar, took off his collar and cuffs and it was, +"Come along, Lily!" till lunch-time. The child, her eyes blinking with +fatigue, fell fast asleep before the end of the meal. + +Pa was delighted. + +And he confided her to Trampy more and more, with orders not to spare +smackings in case of need: + +"Eh, Lily? Eh?" + +As for him, he had business to do, letters to write, great schemes in his +head! for instance, he must try to get permission for Lily to appear in +the States. + +"Time for a cigar, I guess," said Trampy, as soon as Clifton was gone. + +Work stopped abruptly; a tumbler's carpet rolled up in a corner formed an +inviting lounge; and Lily, panting from her practice, would stretch +herself beside him and enjoy a few happy moments, the only really happy +moments of the day; for there were matinees in the afternoon and the +evening performance at night, till she was ready to drop with weariness. +Trampy treated Lily nicely, like a grown-up person, called her by the name +of a fruit, or a flower, or a bird, jollied her, called her "little +wifie:" it was all one to her. He made her laugh with his funny stories, +his fairy tales about himself, his terrible struggle with a snake in the +streets of 'Frisco, after a champagne supper: girls, by Jove! He toned +down his anecdotes and dished them up for Lily's entertainment; told her +absurd yarns enlivened with mimicry, in which he excelled, like the real +mummer that he was, and Lily shrieked with laughter, head thrown back, +full-throated. + +And there was a spice of fear in it all: was that Pa coming back? No, a +carpenter or scene-shifter, perhaps, or else the Martellos, brother and +sister, going to practise slack-wire, head and hand balancing. Their +father, old Martello, a famous name, lived in London, it appeared, alone +with his Bambinis, mere babes still. His other children and his +apprentices had all run away, to escape his horsewhip, and the brother in +Mexico was continuing the tradition. His brutality, in fact, got him into +trouble wherever he went, so much so that the big music-halls were closed +to him, for fear of scandal. And he terrorized his sister, Ave Maria, a +girl of sixteen, a dark girl with great dark eyes. Ave Maria never spoke +to anybody; when she passed through the room where Lily was having fun +with Trampy, she fixed a fiery glance upon them, even ventured on a smile, +for Trampy in particular, whose lively stories reached her through the +partition behind which she dressed. Oh, how she envied Lily! But she +passed very quickly, because of her brother. + +And this time it was Pa! Lily jumped on to the saddle like mad, played her +part to perfection, puffed and panted, as if the last drop of strength +were oozing out of her, and Trampy joined in the little comedy of fibbing +and dissembling: + +"There, like that, Lily, or I'll smack you!" + +"That's right," said Pa. "Make her work!" + +And, just to show Lily what work meant and that her Pa was not so unkind +after all--"It's for your good, Lily! You'll thank me one of these +days!"--he took her to the stage, where Ave Maria was practising. Now, of +course, in the circuses, Lily, occasionally, had seen children knocked and +cut about with blows and trained to say, "It was the cat," when any one +asked them about the marks. They were ordinary children; she had rolled +about in the sawdust with them, played hide-and-seek with them in the +fields of Indian corn; they were children who romped and ran about and +laughed. Ave Maria was different. The brother, a savage, scowling brute, +was always after her, harrying her with muttered threats. She was in a +constant, visible tremble of fear; and, if she slipped on her wire, the +fellow snarled as if to bite her in the foot, pinched her black and blue, +restored her balance with a blow of the belt, shook the supports to make +her fall just to see!... + +"Oh, Pa, he'll kill her!" whispered Lily, when she saw Ave Maria +practising. + +"It's none of our damned business," replied Pa curtly. + +Martello's evil example ended by catching hold of Pa: that's how artistes +were formed, damn it! And, at the thought of the time wasted, he clenched +his fists. To have a Lily of his own, all his own, and to have made +nothing out of her yet! Still, it was not Lily's fault. Yes, though, it +was her fault, she was so stubborn, so wilful! When he told her to do a +thing, why not do it? Instead of bleating: + +"Pa, I can't! Pa, I can't!" + +A brief struggle, in a way, followed between Lily and her Pa. Lily was not +built for passive obedience, wasn't used to it. She no longer knew her Pa. +When he came at her with his hand lifted to strike, when he spoke of +unbuckling his belt--"Damn those blasted brats!"--Lily eyed him with a +look of anguish: + +"But Pa, I'm not Ave Maria!" she said. "I'm not a Dago." + +And she raised her little rebellious face to him. He humbled her with a +smack on the cheek: + +"On the saddle! Up! Quick!" + +The child, mastered by her Pa's strength and energy, ceased to be the +spoiled child, became an artiste.... Head on the saddle, back-wheel: just +like Trampy! Pooh, Trampy, after a few months of this life, was nowhere, +Clifton admired him less and less, Lily was doing all that he did, more +than he did; and without a fault, without a hitch, unerring and exact! Pa +swelled with pride at the mere sight of his Lily, his four stone ten of +flesh and bones fitted to the machine, his Lily, the Lily of his dreams! + +"I'll dress you in velvet and satin!" he said, in his enthusiasm. "I'll +cover you with diamonds." + +Pa, thanks to his indomitable energy, had made something of his Lily, a +real artiste, at last! And business was moving, too! He had a contract in +his pocket for the States, where Lily would no doubt get permission to do +her "childish tricks," seeing that she was traveling with her Pa and Ma. +As for Trampy, Pa had no use for Trampy, made no bones about sacking him +on some pretext or other: + +"Run away and play with your girls, by Jove! Or whatever you please! +Good-by! Ta-ta!" + +And off for Denver, whence they were to continue the journey up to +Chicago. + + * * * * * + +It was the dive for good and all into the stuffy atmosphere behind the +scenes, which Lily was never again to leave, brick walls, where she waited +her turn on the elaborate program of the "continuous performances," amid +the thunder of the orchestra and the lightning of the reflectors. No time +to go out, meals consumed in your dressing-room on the top of the basket +trunk. In the mornings, new tricks to practise on the stage, in the midst +of a herd of girls whom gentlemen in their shirtsleeves were training to +sing in chorus and to keep step to the strum of the piano. And ever and +ever so many new faces, a tumult of tongues which Lily heard on the stage, +in the dressing-room, and even in her room at the hotel, through the thin +partition walls: a lingo made up of coarse remarks and thick stories, +punctuated with spitting and oaths strong enough to carry a tower of +Babel. Lily opened her eyes and ears, heaping it all up, storing it all +away behind her stubborn forehead.... + +And new people, new people: "families," "brothers," "sisters," troupes, +troupes, troupes! Or else stars by themselves, "bests," "uniques:" a +female-impersonator, a green-eyed boy who wagged his hips like the very +devil and took off the girls; Poland, a Warsaw Jewess, a redheaded, +overscented beauty, who did the "Parisienne," and ever and ever so many +others. And Lily, so slender and frail, was the pet of them all. They +called her their pretty baby, their _petit cheri_, and, with their painted +mugs, kissed her full on the lips. + +Pa detested this "rotten lot" and Pa was not always in a good temper. Lily +"under age,"--again! Why, there were even managers who informed the +police, so as to be on the safe side; "traveling with her parents; +childish tricks; nothing difficult."... Ma's indignation knew no bounds: +what nonsense to prevent a great big girl of fifteen from earning her +living! For she aged Lily as much as she could, to obtain the permission, +when no papers were asked for; and she had trained Lily to reply to the +indiscreet questions of the officials: was her trick hard? Was she forced +into doing it? Lily answered mechanically that she liked the bike very +much. And then they allowed her to perform. + +As for practising, permission or none, that was nobody's damned business. +And if some old sheep took to bleating--"Poor child, you'll be the death +of her!"--Pa sent the old sheep to eat coke; and it was: + +"Up, Lily! Get on your bike! Look alive!" + +And the bloomers that Lily wore out! Ma was kept busy in the dressing-room +mending the rents at the knees and patching the seats: + +"What a tomboy!" Ma cried. + +And this went on for months and months. And then came Chicago; a visit of +Pa's to the agents; and a contract with the New York Olympians, a +variety-show coming from the West and returning to New York by Columbus +and Pittsburg. And new people, new people; stars of every kind: the Para +woman, a rheumatic juggler, who was obliged to change her turn and become +an exhibitor of performing parrots, a ragged, molting troupe, picked up +cheap at second-hand; an infant prodigy who topped the bill, a +boy-violinist, leading an orchestra, too, at fourteen, a pretentious +little humbug trained to make a few movements, while others did the work. +Lily thought him so good-looking she simply couldn't take her eyes off +him. And then she had some big girl-friends who had had love affairs! They +were the Three Graces, gymnasts endowed with bodies like so many Apollos, +honest German faces and a bewildering amount of strength, pluck and +precision.... + +"What smackings that must have taken!" thought Pa. + +But no, their uncle and manager, Mr. Fuchs--a name as famous in its way as +Martello's--was known for his gentleness and adored and coddled and +pampered by the Three Graces, who, at a sign from "Nunkie," as they called +him, joyously rushed to practice, taking a pride in pleasing their dear +Nunkie. + +"The old rogue!" said Pa enviously. "He has an easy time of it; whereas I, +with my skinny kitten, damn it ...!" + +Well, well, he mustn't complain, as he himself admitted: one more rung +which he had mounted, thanks to his Lily, that engagement with the best +variety-show in the States; nothing but big theaters: Orpheums! Dominions! +And New York next! And then London! Things were moving, moving! And Pa +looked lovingly at his Lily, as she played at being grown up with the +Three Graces, in the train on Sunday, traveling from town to town, while +Ma was knitting things for her tomboy. He talked to Mr. Fuchs as between +equals, as between man and man, as between the manager of a star and the +owner of a troupe; and the train rushed on, rushed on, with an indistinct +sound of the engine-bell, now and again, when they crossed a street. Mr. +Fuchs, heavy-jawed, slow of speech, said that he had had enough of +traveling, at his age, if it were not for his dear nieces. He would like +to retire to the country, to his little home, and grow his roses, as soon +as he had married off his dear nieces, which would not be long, no doubt. +As it was, one of them, Thea, the one who did five pullings-up with her +left hand, had his permission to receive letters from her sweetheart, a +young man at St. Louis, quite well-off. The idyl made good Mr. Fuchs +blossom into a genial smile: family life! Simple joys! The only true ones! +Worth more than the stage! And Nunkie talked and talked: the Parisienne, a +perpetual scandal! And wait a bit: what was that he heard at an agent's +the other day? Yes, the daughter of his old friend Martello, Ave Maria her +name was, had left her brother, and run away from Mexico with a man! Tut, +tut, the things one saw nowadays! + +Pa hardly listened to the old crock, preferred to dream of New York and +the success his Lily would achieve there! And Lily, sitting close by, +listened with all her ears, puckered her little forehead: love, love.... +And Ave Maria, who had run away with a man.... Why with a man? And she +squeezed up against Thea, the Grace who was in love ... put question after +question.... She talked of her boy-violinist, of Trampy. And they all +laughed boisterously, with heads thrown back, full-throated, and Nunkie, +very paternally, congratulated Mr. Clifton on his daughter's niceness. + +"For goodness' sake, don't go putting it into her head that she's pretty, +the little devil!" protested Ma. "That would be the last straw!" + + * * * * * + +The arrival in New York was a disappointment to Pa. The authorities +insisted on seeing the papers this time. Lily was under age; just as at +'Frisco. What! Why? Because of former scandals, it appeared: Martello and +Ave Maria. What had he, a British subject, to do with those Dagoes who +spoil the profession? growled Pa. He ended by rebelling against the +injustice of it, thought of the Three Graces hard at work rehearsing under +Nunkie's eye, while he, Clifton, had not even the right to set foot on a +stage and let Lily practise there. To work, to work, damn it! And he +locked her up all day in her room doing her balancings, the boomerang on +the front wheel, the standstill on the back-wheel, or the bike upside +down, with Lily standing on the pedals, like a convict on the tread-mill. +The pack of fools! Because a Dago had whipped his sister, wasn't a Pa to +have the right to bring his own daughter up? To work, to work! And he kept +her at it for hours and hours, watched and knit his brows, like a sage +pondering for hours over the solution of a problem. + +Lily, breathless, would turn a look of entreaty upon her Ma, but Mrs. +Clifton, with her nose bent over her work, pretended not to see, +obstinately went on cutting out, patching, sewing her tomboy's bloomers. +Lily longed for Trampy.... + +At night, Pa ran from theater to theater: from Fourteenth Street, where +they lodged, to Twenty-third Street; took the elevated to Fifty-eighth +Street, to Hundred and-twenty-fifth Street! All theaters at which Lily +would have triumphed but for those dirty Dagoes! And the things that were +served up to the public, pooh! Clifton laughed with scorn. Troupes of +English dancing-girls--the famous Roofers--with movements like stuffed +dolls; and cyclists, pooh! Hauptmanns, fat freaks turned out in Berlin: if +that was the best they could do, pooh! Oh, if he had only had the right to +send his New Zealander on Wheels scooting in among their legs, just to +show the public what a star really was! And all the morning he ran about +the town talking of "childish tricks--a big girl" to the police and +"wonderful tricks--the only girl of her age who can do them" to the agents +in the St. James' Building. Oh, if he could have London! He longed to +measure his strength against all those famous names--Marjutti, Laurence, +the Pawnees--just to show them his Lily! + + * * * * * + +And now it was the last stage. All around stretched the dark sea; and the +liner sped--thud, thud, thud--through a gloomy set. Three days more and +then Liverpool; and London at last! Pa was about to realize his dream. He +had signed, at last, for the Castle, in London! It was all right, it was +all right! Prospects fine! And Harrasford was on board; it seemed a sign +of good luck! He was traveling with his architect. Harrasford, the great +English manager--Pa knew them all by name--Harrasford, the man for whom a +whole nation of "artistes" toiled and moiled nightly. Pa had caught a +glimpse of him.... He would have liked to introduce his Lily to him; no +matter, he would know her one day, when she was starring in his halls! And +on the Bill and Boom Tour! And elsewhere! She would soon be famous. + +Ma, who remained lying in her bunk sucking lemons, would have liked to +have her Lily by her, within call, to keep her mother company, that great +big girl spoiled by her Pa, even when she was not performing, as in New +York; ... a new cloak and boots and gewgaws ... a couple of fools +together, that's what Ma called them! And she needed watching, that +tomboy, who would break her leg one of these days, tumbling up and down +the companion-way. But Lily preferred to enjoy herself and expended on +running about the energies which she no longer had to devote to her +practising. Her accumulated weariness disappeared under the influence of +the sleep and the good meals, which she had not the boredom of having to +get ready, as in Fourteenth Street, where Lily, big girl that she was, had +to help her Ma. + +She flitted all over the deck, munching candies, showed everybody her new +boots and her red cloak, held her head high, was very proud of being +looked at. Lily dreamed of the Three Graces; of the boy-violinist; of +Trampy. She made conquest upon conquest, down to the electrician of the +ship, quite a young lad, who looked as cold as ice. + +She sometimes stopped at his door, watched him handling levers, pressing +buttons. It was like the switchboard of a theater. She pointed to this and +to that. The lad smiled, told the New Zealander on Wheels all about his +little world.... + +As for Lily, she was going to star in London, where her Pa would cover her +with diamonds! And she went on to tell him stories, like a little +school-girl who has read a book or two: India, two eyes glittering in the +dark, gee! And elephants she had known, little birds which she had kept in +a cage in Natal, and kangaroos. The lion, who stands up on his hind legs +when he's angry; and the tiger, who lies down flat. And parrots. And +starry nights in Africa: stars "that big." And storms: waves "miles high!" +And successes at Gangpur; and in Chicago, where she shared a dressing-room +with three girls who, when they were undressed, were all over muscles, +just like men. She liked the bike well enough, but those falls: oh, damn +it! + +"That little monkey has seen everything in her time," thought Jimmy, the +electrician. + +And he mused upon the numberless things which she had seen, the countries, +the cities, and all that she would yet see, in her life as a wandering +star, while he would remain walled up in his cabin, with his nose to the +switchboard. + +And the steamer sped--thud, thud, thud--over the dark sea, where the noise +of the waves sounded like the roar of multitudes of men. Huge clouds in +the east were tinged with red, as though London were about to loom above +the horizon in all its glory, filling the vast expanse with its rumors and +its lights.... + + + + +CURTAIN RISES + +I + + +"Lily ... who's Lily? A New Zealander: really? Ah well, we will look into +the matter; it will be settled later on ..." + +Clifton, when he returned home that evening, gnawed his mustache and +clenched his fists with rage. Ah, he would not soon forget his arrival in +London! To get there and be chucked! Was that what he had come from New +York for? To see Lily's place at the Castle filled by another troupe of +the Hauptmanns--the Hauptmanns again, those fat freaks!--and nothing to be +said or done? + +"Engagement not valid. Ought at least to have waited for the London +agency's signed contract before leaving!" + +Intent upon his vexations of the moment, he described his day to Mrs. +Clifton. What had staggered him, done for him, was his visit to the agent, +where they hadn't seemed to know Lily! + +He had rushed at once to others, just to show them who Miss Lily was! But +he got the same reply wherever he went: + +"Lily? Who's Lily? A Maori? Let's see the photograph." + +And would Mrs. Clifton ever believe, asked the indignant Pa, what they +said when they handed him back the photograph? Yes, to him, the father, to +his face, they said: + +"She's too thin, that Lily of yours!" "If that's the way they welcome +British subjects returning to the mother-country, it's jolly encouraging, +on my word it is!" concluded Clifton. + +Ma, among the open boxes, listened and said nothing; she was exasperated. +Their entry into the metropolis struck her, too, as anything but +triumphal. For all her dislike of those breakneck trades, for all her +contempt for the bike, she displayed even more anxiety than Pa. With those +fat freaks at the Castle and if engagements continued scarce, how would +they manage, later on, lost in that huge London, with no money, and a +child to feed? Her vanity was wounded as well. She had dreamed of dazzling +her sister-in-law, making them all burst with jealousy over the splendid +engagement at the Castle; and now everything was slipping from their +hands, on the very day of their arrival, and there was nothing for them +but to sit at home and keep quiet. + +But Pa, the next day, tore through London like one possessed, grinding his +teeth and clenching his fists, railing at everybody, himself included. He +thought of Lily, who had lost a week on the voyage and who was now messing +about in the house, instead of practising her bike. This idea pursued him, +clung to him; but his perseverance was indomitable, his courage ready to +face anything or anybody. Lily should perform at the Castle! She had come +to perform there and perform there she should! There were more visits to +the agents, to this one and that one, to one and all, indefatigable +visits. Clifton insisted on his Lily's merits, pulled out his pocket-book, +bursting with press-cuttings, offered to prove his statements. The agent, +on his side, had made inquiries. Lily was very clever for her age: a +little thin, it was true, but very graceful; and the New Zealander on +Wheels ought to get on. Clifton would work up her turn, no doubt. And, at +last, Pa obtained a promise in writing--and signed--of an engagement in +eight months' time ... at the Castle, damn it! + +An engagement in eight months was better than nothing; but what to do in +the meanwhile? It wasn't the money question that bothered him; Pa had +money; but Lily worried him: he wanted work for Lily, bike all the time +and hard at it. Now, London was closed to him; he couldn't let her perform +in London before appearing at the Castle; that was in the contract; and +there was nothing for the provinces. + +His tenacity continued to do him good service. He got a few offers, in the +London suburbs; that could do him no harm, he knew, though his Lily did +appear at Dulwich, Deptford or West Ham: who would think of going there to +discover that shrimp?... damn their impudence! And meantime the shrimp +would work and her day would come, you pack of fat freaks, you! + +Pa, on the whole, was satisfied. To show Lily, that was all he asked for! +He was quieter, now that she could practise. And Lily, also, was delighted +and relieved. At first it was jolly, doing nothing; but to be always at +home with Ma had its drawbacks; only the other day, because she had asked +for a tam-o'-shanter with a feather in it, like those she saw the little +girls wear in the street, she had nearly had a box on the ear, the +extravagant little beast, who would bring them all to the workhouse! + +Better biking with Pa, from morning till night, and only coming home after +the show. Besides, away from the work, Pa was nice to her: a packet of +sweets here, a bunch of violets there; and then there were the train +journeys out of London and back, over the roofs: all those little yellow +houses, with white curtains, and those little back yards, no bigger than +that--real dolls' houses, all alike--and such lots of little chimneys, +such lots and lots of little chimneys; and those gorgeous posters: +Hippodrome, Olympia, Bovril, mustard, elephants, the Hauptmanns. Pa +wouldn't look at them, those fat freaks; but, oh, if he had them here--and +a whip--just for five minutes ... and the chance of saying a word or two! +To think that they were working at the Castle, while he was puffing out to +the suburbs! And he racked his brain, as he traveled over the town--that +town which he had to conquer and which was veiled from him between-whiles +by the curtain of posters in the railway-stations, on the hoardings, +everywhere--again, again; and imperial troupes and royal troupes, endless +troupes, arrays of pink tights, lines of legs uplifted amid a flight of +scarlet skirts, alternating with Sunlight and Van Houten and national and +colonial troupes, loud as a trumpet-blare and with nothing behind them, he +dared say.... + +Those "troupes," those "families"--he turned it all over in his mind--yes, +they judged talent by weight; the public wanted a lot for its money: well, +why shouldn't he have a troupe? Why not? Lily--he had noticed it in the +few shows she had given--Lily didn't cut much of a figure in London: five +stone of flesh and bones, a mite, a minnow, a nothing. Well, if Lily +wasn't enough by herself, he'd give them more: a whole troupe, if need be! +Why, he'd set about it at once! + +With his customary determination, yielding to a fixed idea, he devoted +himself to it. And, in the halls, at the agents', in the bars, at the +Internationale Artisten-Klause in Lisle Street, that universal +meeting-place, Pa, ever on the watch, strove to make people talk, listened +with all his ears, took notes. It was very difficult to get at the real +facts; one had to ferret them out; the owners of the troupes jealously +concealed their methods, endeavored to put you off, talked of apprentices +at five or six shillings a day, plus food and expenses. Pa saw through +these tricks and, to arrive at the truth, discounted the six shillings +down to sixpence. Lily, her Pa's own daughter, easily obtained information +from the apprentices themselves which she afterward repeated to him. He +studied _The Era_, the paper of the Profession, got the names by heart: +the managers, the "Pas", the "bosses", the "profs." He got acquainted with +some of them personally. Old Martello, for instance, the father of Ave +Maria and the "Bambinis." Martello could have given Pa hints; but he no +longer interested himself in anything except his Bambinis, whom the poor +man, grown calm with age and overwork, was now spoiling. The rest left him +indifferent; he hardly listened, spoke in short sentences, like a man too +old to care: + +"Train apprentices? What's the good? Run a troupe? Pooh, madness!" + +Pa thought this exclusive admiration very touching, but it wasn't what he +wanted and, madness or not, damn it, he was resolved to carry out his idea +to the end! + +There were imperial and royal troupes, "Risleys," carpet acrobats, +pyramids of tumblers, some of them undergoing an apprenticeship of cuffs +and thumps. Pa was not interested in these methods, did not approve of +them; he had never knocked Lily about, never let her fall on +purpose--"Have I, Lily?"--whereas in the imperial and royal they sent the +apprentice sprawling on his back, just to teach him, when he started +wrong. + +Still, all these were boys; and it was the little girls that interested +him, for he meant to have only girls among his apprentices. The rest +wasn't his damned business; but the different troupes of Roofer girls, for +instance, affected him directly: where did old Roofer fish those girls +out? That's what Pa wanted to know. He had even, in order to visit the +school, pretended to bring Lily as a pupil. He had seen the place in Broad +Street, where they turned out "sisters" by the gross; had watched the +squads in knickerbockers, scattered over the immense room, like recruits +drilling in a barrack-yard: groups engaged in club-swinging, juggling, +clog-dancing, all together, a tangle of different movements timed "one, +two, three!" Roofer chose among the heap, sorted out the sizes, called +this lot the Merry Wives, that lot the Crazy Things, christened them after +an insect or a flower, packed them up in lots of ten or twelve girls, with +snub-noses or Greek profiles, as preferred, despatched them, +carriage-paid, C. O. D., with words, music and muslin skirts complete, and +received every day a detailed account of his Honeysuckles and Bees, +scattered all over the world, from the Klondike to Calcutta. + +This superlative organization produced upon Pa the effect of a state +affair; it was something beyond him, above him; it interested him +especially from the recruiting point of view; and what stimulated him +above all was the troupes of trick cyclists. He had seen plenty of them in +America, but then, wholly occupied as he was with his Lily, they did not +interest him, whereas now he was seeking to fathom their lives, so that he +might know. Some of them, who went cheap, slept three in a bed, niggers +and whites all mixed; others, who were well paid, lived easily and +comfortably and put themselves forward with less work and for more money +than Lily, Lily who possessed artistic talent, and who had toiled harder +than all the rest of them put together! Patience, his turn would come ... +when she was a bit less thin. And he would have the troupe of troupes, +he'd show them, jolly soon! + +Mrs. Clifton was terrified at her husband's boldness, but dared not +protest; however, she observed that it was a big undertaking. + +"We shall have five apprentices," interrupted Clifton, "six including +Lily. We must find lodgings." + +"But, dear...!" + +"Don't you think...?" + +"Yes, dear." + +As for the apprentices, he would see to that to-morrow. Ma suggested that +her sister-in-law's daughter might do, but Pa wouldn't have relatives at +any price--blubbering for a smacking bestowed upon their daughters--he +knew all about them, thank you. Let such sheep bleat elsewhere. No, give +him strangers. He could be freer with them and get as many as he wished. +An advertisement in _The Daily Mail_--"Wanted, young girls for trick +cycling," followed by the address--fetched them the same day. The pavement +before the house was blocked with white aprons, sailor-hats and +tam-o'-shanters. There were consumptive-looking girls, long hanks of +girls, chunky girls, all crowding outside the door, until the landlady +drove them away with her broom and threatened to do as much for Pa and Ma +if all the street-arabs of London were to go on soiling her nice white +steps. + +Pa, for that matter, found nothing in the bunch, not one in twenty that +was any good; or else they made exhorbitant demands--two shillings a day +those guttersnipes expected--as though shillings were to be had for the +asking! But why look so far? There were girls, sometimes, at the back +entrances of the theaters: stage-struck kids who devoured Lily with their +eyes and looked at Pa as though to say, "Take me, take me!" That's what he +wanted, damn it, girls who had the business in their blood and who +wouldn't go whining over a professional slap or two, which he dared say +he'd have to distribute to make up for lost time. + +[Illustration: "TAKE ME, TAKE ME!"] + +The first girl whom he engaged he had already seen gazing ecstatically at +Lily, as they left the theater, far away down the Mile End Road, and he +saw her again, one morning, in front of his house in the very heart of +London! He could not believe his eyes. She must have followed his scent, +slept on the threshold like a lost dog. Her Pa? Gone away. Her Ma? Dead. +Her name? Maud. Her age? Didn't know. Born somewhere in the immensity of +Whitechapel, towheaded, round-faced. Nothing to eat for two days. She'd +do! He would go to the police-court, get the license later; meantime, he +netted her and that was one! + +As regards the others, he had to make a selection. He chose them by +preference in families which were overstocked with brats, so that one more +or less, in the heap, made no difference. He got one this way; that made +two! Next, a "local girl," seized with ambition, came and offered herself. +Three! He found two others: a little Beak Street shop-girl and a +Shoreditch Jewess. That made five. It did not take him long to judge the +girls. He gave them a few days' trial before signing a contract; and what +an anxiety for them, Mr. Clifton's final decision! If one trembled too +much, was caught holding Pa's shoulder for no reason, for fear of falling, +or blubbered because of a scratch on the skin, her fate was settled. + +"Pack up, my lady," Pa would say quite calmly. + +There was no getting out of it: off she had to go, before dinner, and home +she went, through the gloomy streets, after a brief glimpse of paradise. + +He had to replace some of them: they were slack; or else, independent at +times, they looked at him for the least push, as if they would fly at his +throat. He asked himself whether he wouldn't be compelled to get some over +from Germany or else to pick up on the highroads, in the Gipsies' +caravans, children with skins tanned like donkeys', a troupe of +blackamoors on wheels, who, perched up on the handle-bars of the bikes, +would have looked like cockroaches mounted as brooches, damn it! + +However, by dint of selection, he ended by having only good ones left; and +then he made a contract in due form with the parents for three years, or +even five, such was his faith in the future. A few pence a week to the +family, a few pence to the baggage herself: he to dress, lodge and board +her and engage to make an artiste of her. Everything was provided for: +during the training, just the board and the rest; when she began to work, +a shilling a day in addition. Over and above, she would be looked after by +a lady, Mrs. Clifton. Was that all right? Both parties signed; the girl +was an artiste, became a New Zealander. + +They brought their little wardrobe: one spare chemise, on the average, one +pair of stockings; their only protection against the weather was the dress +they had on, a factory-girl's ulster and a tam-o'-shanter. Later on, when +performing, they would be entitled to a celluloid collar, satinette +knickers and pumps. + +Pa, though at first he took one extra room and then two in the same house +and though he also made his apprentices sleep three in a bed, Pa soon +found himself cramped. It would have been nice to have a little house +somewhere in good air, next door to the country. But there was one thing +which made Pa decide to remain in the West Central district. Jimmy, the +young electrician with whom Lily used to chat on shipboard, had given up +traveling. Harrasford and his architect had noticed him on board and the +great man had engaged him to manage the electric installation of his +theaters. Jimmy had taken possession of a lodging in Gresse Street, +Tottenham Court Road. He slept over the shop, which, for the rest, served +him rather as a place in which to keep the tools for his outside work. Pa +often ran upon him in the neighborhood and had a nodding acquaintance with +him which turned out to be useful, as Jimmy, being in Harrasford's +employment, was more or less at home in the variety-theaters and nothing +was easier than for him to obtain leave for Clifton to practise on the +stage. This it was that persuaded Clifton to settle in the west end. In +any case, it would be cheaper than dragging the six girls and himself +daily from one end of London to the other. The house in which he took up +his quarters, in Rathbone Place, quite close to Jimmy, was small and dark, +but not dear. The upper story was occupied by people who were out all day +and the basement served as a lumber room. They would feel quite at home +here ... with no old sheep to listen at the keyholes. + +[Illustration: TOM, THE SHOEBLACK] + +And then he would have slept in the parks, if necessary, anywhere, rather +than waste more precious time! His Lily, his troupe, before everything. +What he had to do was to get a move on. He went so far as to engage a boy, +a shoeblack at the corner of Oxford Street and Tottenham Court Road for +the rest of the time, to attend to the bikes and the girls at practice. + +Pa gave his mind to the gear, the expenses, the general business. Ma saw +to good order, to domestic discipline. It was no longer the quiet life of +a Pa and Ma trotting round the world in the company of their one and only +bread-winning star. As for Lily, the daughter of the boss and manager, she +owed a good example to one and all. In the morning, with Maud, she went +down to the kitchen, lit the stove, made the coffee. Next, she carried up +the breakfast to Pa and Ma in bed, then distributed their rations to the +famished girls. And off they went, all six of them, with Pa following at +their heels. + +The stage-door gave the apprentices a thrill the first day they entered. +The passage, gently sloping, tall and wide, because of the scenery, +smelt of elephants and cheap scent. It was blocked with properties, with +queer-shaped cases, flat as a slab or round as a ball. There were long, +narrow boxes, for the horizontal bars; sometimes a row of wicker +coffins, with a ventriloquist's figures inside. And labels from +everywhere--Melbourne, Chicago, Berlin, Lisbon--and "Rlys." and "S. S." +that made you feel in the hold of a liner, off to foreign ports. + +At the end, beyond an iron door, was the stage, very dark, pricked here +and there with electric lamps. There were things that glittered with +spangles. To the girls it seemed like the Kingdom of Puss-in-Boots or +Blue-Beard; but to Lily it was an old story. She was a little like the +school-girl in the good days long past, for whom the master was always +waiting, cane in hand. The rest she didn't care about. + +Nevertheless, huge as the stage was, there was not always room to +practise: ponies or elephants would monopolize it for hours at a time. Or +else, when Roofer was supplying a ballet, he took up the whole stage, all +day long: Lily, secretly delighted, sat down modestly in a corner, so as +to be in no one's way. Roofer made his collection of calves and ankles +flutter about, followed the new dances with an expert eye, throwing his +hat back on his head, mopping his forehead, grumbling, finding fault: + +"Don't eat chocolates while you're dancing, you, Eva! Hi, you, +Gwendolen!" + +And, to emphasize his remarks, he threw his felt hat at them. + +"Silly old ass!" thought Pa, with a grin. "To think you can train artistes +like that. You'll use up fifty hats, you old fool, while my belt remains +as good as new!" + +For that was now Pa's system, the strap--"a la Mexico!"--not that he used +it often nor very hard; but he terrorized Lily with it and the other girls +were afraid of it, too, though they never got more than the threat, seeing +that they were apprentices, who might have run away if he had struck out. + +All this did not prevent them from working with a will--trot, trot, +trot--when there was no Roofer on the stage and no elephants or ponies: +yoop, on to the bikes and the fun began! The sight of Pa training his star +made the apprentices shake in their knickers. Lily was to do everything +and to do it very well: Pa ran after her, in a never-ending circle, and, +from the corner of his eye, watched Tom, who held the girls and made them +work, upon his instructions; and when they got off their bikes to wipe +their foreheads: + +"Bravo, Miss Woolly-legs!" said Pa sarcastically. "Tired, eh? Dead, eh? +Suppose you tried to get up again ... and be quick about it! And as for +you, Tom, don't let them fall, or I'll catch you one on the side of the +head!" + +For Pa already knew by experience that their little ladyships shirked +work; that they shook with fright; that they lost confidence after a bad +fall; and that then it was finished, nothing to be done with them: they'd +let themselves be killed sooner. + +Maud, for instance, that Jonah, ever after one day she had seen her blood +flow, trembled before her bike like a sheep that scents the +slaughter-house. It was no use Pa's threatening her with his belt: she +wouldn't let herself go, on the contrary, held on to everything, no matter +what, for fear of falling. He ought to have sent her away long ago; he +would pack her off that very night ... and made no bones about telling her +so, that Jonah! + +Then Pa, giving Lily a rest, occupied himself with the girls: taught them +the principle of the standstill, of side-riding, of the "swan," of the +"frog." And,--quickly!--the indefatigable Pa went back to Lily, made her +begin a trick ten times, twenty times over, so great was his rage at the +lost time, the elephants, the Hauptmanns, Roofer. He pulled faces, +clenched his fists: + +"Why don't you do as I say when I tell you, damn it!" + +"But, Pa, I can't!" protested Lily. + +"You can, if you like," said Pa, exasperated this time and unbuckling his +belt. + +Crash! A heap behind him, a medley of limbs and steel fittings! Maud, who +was still trying, on her bike, startled by Pa's threatening movement, had +fallen flat down. + +"Maud again! That damned Jonah!" cried Pa, going up to her. "Well, Miss +Woolly-legs, do you mean to stay there all night?" + +But she did not move; and, when they had disentangled her from the bike, +Pa saw an eye that was quite red and a little stream of blood trickling +down her cheek. + +"Let's look!" said Pa anxiously. + +A spoke sprung from the felly had scratched her eye. + +It was a serious accident. Sprained wrists, barked shins didn't count; but +a spoke in the eye.... Luckily, Maud had no relations; there was no claim +to be feared: not a vestige of old sheep on the mother's side. Pa said all +this to himself as he ran to the chemist, and Lily consoled poor Maud as +best she could, said that, after all, it was part of the game: she'd know +better another time, eh? She'd be a great star yet, eh, Maud? + +The poor maimed thing lifted her face to Lily, stammered through her tears +that it was nothing ... all right again now ... Pa's fault, with his +belt. + +"For a little thing like that!" said Lily, laughing. "Fancy falling from +your bike for that! Why, I'd rather have twenty 'contracts on the back' +than lose an eye." + +For that was what it amounted to. Pa realized it, after he had dressed the +wound. Clifton's mind was not at ease: a glass eye was not a very +difficult matter ... but, who knows, some callous person might inform +Harrasford, who stood no nonsense on that subject. Fortunately the +artistes present had not paid much attention ... had hardly noticed +anything, in the dim light of the stage.... + +And soon after the New Zealanders were walking back to Rathbone place with +Maud in their midst, her head a roll of bandages, leaning on Lily's arm. + +It was a pathetic home-coming. Ma had told them what would happen! That +would teach them to take in vagabonds from the streets. Mrs. Clifton +thought that, in a respectable house.... + +"That'll do," said Pa, dropping into the easy-chair in the dining-room. +"I'm worn out. If you'd been like me, Mrs. Clifton, running after those +Woolly-legs all the morning"--and he pointed to the apprentices standing +round the table--"gee, you wouldn't talk so much! I'll take Maud to the +hospital this afternoon; it's only a trifle. Is dinner ready?" + +"Yes, dear." + +"Come along, then, all of you Woolly-legs," said Pa jovially. + +Pa was sorry for poor Maud, as a rule, but he felt a need to shed a little +gaiety, to extenuate the accident as far as possible, to turn it into a +joke, so as to prevent his girls from being panic-stricken. He talked of +heads smashed to a jelly, of legs in smithereens, of a bicyclist who had +had not one, but both eyes caught in the chain. As for himself, when he +was a small boy--that was in the time when they brought up artistes, real +ones, mind you; not, as nowadays, on sugar and sweets; no, real ones, on +the whip and the stick, damn it!--why, the accidents which he'd seen! Yes, +he himself, to go no farther, he could have shown them, here, there, +there, here, damn it, all over his body, scars deep enough to put your +finger in! + +"Eh? Frightens you, does it? Never fear," added Pa, in a good-humored +voice, "that sort of thing won't happen to any of you Woolley-legs; a good +Irish stew is better than a kick of the pedal, eh?" + +And Pa, after a last cup of strong tea, dismissed the girls, lit his pipe, +threw himself into the easy-chair, with his legs long out in front of him; +but soon: + +"Well, Maud, what is it? What are you crying for now? I tell you, I'll buy +you a glass one," said Pa, at the sight of Maud, who blubbered silently +and sat glued to her chair instead of getting up to go. + +Poor lost dog! Clifton, at the theater, had threatened to send her away. +She knew what that meant: leaving Miss Lily, losing those good meals.... + +Maud faltered something about packing up; pain in her eye; not her fault. + +"So what you want is to stay with us?" asked Pa. + +"Oh!" gasped Maud. + +"Well, then, stay! But no more bike; you shall be Lily's lady's maid," +said Pa, puffing at his pipe. + +It went down so well, as an effort of dry humor, that Ma could not help +laughing. But Mr. Clifton was talking seriously. Then Ma, amazed, +protested: what, a servant in her house! A lady's maid for Lily! He would +end by giving her the moon! And what would Lily do all day? She'd sit +twiddling her thumbs! Had Mr. Clifton thought of that? + +Yes, Mr. Clifton had thought of it. He was too tired to explain his +reasons; but take it from him, it was best like that. Pa, in fact, feared +lest that smashed eye might prove a worry to him: the papers weren't in +order. He had made no declaration to the police; there was the Workmen's +Compensation Act.... Much better keep Maud safe in the house, for a while +... + +"Lily won't sit twiddling her thumbs for all that, will you, Lily?" +continued Pa, smiling to his star. + +A touch of the brush and comb, a stroll through the streets with the +girls, by leave of Pa, who wished Lily to take the air, then home again, +more housework.... The apprentices, who did not yet perform in public, +were sent to bed early, while Lily, escorted by Pa, went off to East, +West, South or North London. An hour to get there; then undress, dress, +appear on the stage under Pa's eye, undress and dress again; another hour +to get back; a morsel of cold Irish stew, a cup of tea; and drowsily up to +her room and bed.... + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +"Lily!" + +Ma's voice woke her with a start in the morning. Lily dressed quickly and +quickly ran down-stairs to the kitchen, where Maud had gone before her; +and it was the same thing every day, except on tour, when discipline was +less strict. It had gone on for months and months, for two years, ever +since they came to London. Pa, with his iron will, had overcome +everything. He felt at home in the old country, at last. After his +engagements in the London suburbs, he had obtained a triumph at the +Castle, a Bill and Boom tour of forty weeks, a season at Blackpool, the +Harrasford tour now, successes everywhere. Before his boyish little girls, +before his own particular troupe, the fat freaks trembled in their +knickers! For Clifton, the new-comer, but yesterday unknown, it was an +unhoped-for success and fame and fortune. + +Ma nearly always remained in London with Maud. Lily was not big enough yet +to need the supervision of a Ma. Therefore, on tour,--when she was not +practising with her Pa,--Lily did the catering, saw to the porridge and +the Irish stew; Pa was not hard to please. Provided Lily was "great" on +the stage, he asked for nothing more. Dishes burned for want of butter, +salad mixed in the wash-hand basin: he swallowed everything with an +appetite, ate standing, with his plate on the trunk, or else seated with +the girls round a little table hardly large enough for three. This +Bohemian life pleased him. He loved youth, gaiety and good fellowship. He +was fond of a laugh, took Lily on his knee after dinner, played with her, +praised her home-made cakes, her tough chops, and then began talking bike +to Lily ... who hated bikes, and who got something different from a hat +flung at her, when she missed a trick. + +No matter, hard as it was, she preferred touring to staying in London. The +work was the same, but, at least, it was a change. She was spoiled by +every one, down to that landlady who cried when she left.... After all +there were many worse off than she, everlastingly set about by "profs," +confined to their rooms all day to practise their balancing; she had had a +taste of it in New York; no, thank you! She preferred having good times +with the girls, practical jokes, boxing-matches even, scrimmages, +pillow-fights. In the boarding-houses, they flirted with the boys; they +kept pet pigeons, white mice, a lizard; they exchanged secrets, stories of +every country, professionals all! Sometimes, they consoled one another; +promised to send kisses--x x x--on post-cards. And then there were new +faces, always; a week in each town, no longer; a real life of adventure +from one end of England to the other. Now it wasn't like that in London; +she felt less free there. Ma was particular and hard to please; there were +no pillow-fights, no romps; Ma hated those ways. The stage, yes, she put +up with that because it was Lily's profession; but one came in contact +with all sorts there; and that little devil of a Lily was wicked enough +already! It took all the home influence to thwart the bad examples which +she received outside; and it was Ma's business to see to it. + +The house in Rathbone Place had been smartened up. There was a dining-room +which was used only for meals and which never had a bed put into it at +night. There were things on what-nots: little photograph-frames, loose +photographs, lucky charms, china cups; all shining and bright, thanks to +the adjunction of a lady's maid, as Pa called Maud, in his funny way. At +first, after the accident, it was terrible. Her natural awkwardness was +made worse by a glass eye; she could not tell one side from the other, +spilt the tea on the cloth, broke the crockery. Maud did the heavy work, +washed and scrubbed all day long. When the girls were in London, she went +with them to the theater, as dresser. Maud stood in the wings and admired +the New Zealanders whirling about in the light. She stretched out her face +in ecstasy toward Lily: that Lily who had traveled everywhere, who was +born so far away, in a land full of monkeys and parrots. She followed Lily +to her dressing-room, trotted after her like a dog, worshiped her +open-mouthed. + +Lily had ripened out, was becoming more beautiful, more of a woman daily, +despite the fact that her Pa still treated her like a kid. She no longer +looked at things from the point of view of the child-girl who had been +delighted with a satin hair-ribbon in India; now her pride was not +appeased with such trifles. Ma, according to Lily, seemed ashamed of her, +dressed her badly: an odd skirt here, an odd frock there, of a cheap make. +That was not what Lily wanted. She was an artiste: she wanted a hat with +big feathers and a gown with gold braid to it; but, when she showed Ma a +dress which she liked in the shop windows, Ma would exclaim: + +"What do you want with that? My poor Lily, you must be mad! That's for +rich little girls, girls who have time to be pretty; it wouldn't suit you +at all. Why, if we listened to you, we'd soon be in the workhouse!" + +[Illustration: P.T. CLIFTON, MANAGER] + +Ma always said no, pretending that she had no money; whereas Lily knew to +the contrary. She knew that the troupe earned a great deal and that the +troupe was herself. The other day, at the theater, she had heard her aunt, +who felt bitter that Mr. Clifton had not accepted her daughter Daisy--who +could have learned the business and later on have starred by herself!--she +had heard that "old sheep" say, speaking of her: + +"What a shame to dress her like that! A girl who brings them in capital to +invest!" + +So Pa was investing capital. She didn't exactly know what investing +capital meant; no doubt it meant making a lot of money. She asked for none +of it! Children belong to their parents! But she would have liked to be +treated with more consideration, to be spoiled; to get presents, nice +things. She had plenty from her Pa, true enough: presents, my! But they +were cheap gifts, for all that.... She was always having promises made her +of more important things; and the promises were never kept: that big gold +watch, for instance. She had a thirsting for luxury. It seemed to her that +she was being treated like a performing dog, not a bit better. Ma, without +exactly knowing, but with an infallible instinct, saw all this budding +under that obstinate brow. Mr. Clifton might see nothing in it; but it was +not so easy to take in a mother! Was there a love affair beneath it all, +Ma asked herself. No, not yet; it might come later on, as with that +apprentice who had run away, or that other one whom she had had to send +packing for being too free with men. But Lily would not leave them like +that. + +She did not let her go out. "Glass-eye Maud" ran the errands and Lily +stayed at home, like a good little girl of whom her mother wished to make +a lady. When she did happen to go out, she must not be long, or else it +was, "Where have you been? Tell me at once!" At the theater, when Pa lost +his temper, she could reckon on a mighty fillip, and then it was over: Pa +was sorry, rather than otherwise. Ma, on the contrary, would nag for +hours; muttered inarticulate phrases about "devil," "wild bull," and +"taming her;" there was no end to it. Lily champed the bit! A star, +indeed! Was that being a star? She thought differently! She had seen +others drive up to the theater in their motors, accompanied by gentlemen +carrying flowers, like that famous "M'dlle" at the Palace. Yes, those were +stars: they dined at the Horse Shoe and did not spend their time in +useless housework. Oh, she was quite sick and tired of that life! She'd +had enough of it. Meanwhile, the days passed and the weeks and it was +always the same thing: housework and stage-work; work, work, work.... + +It was late that morning; they were not practising. Pa had run down on the +previous day to see a troupe of cyclists, the famous Pawnees, who were +back from the Continent, on their way to New York, and performing that +week at the Brighton Hippodrome. Lily was in her room later than usual, as +Ma was not awake. Maud had gone down to the kitchen. The apprentices were +getting up, joking with one another, like tom-boys used to sharing the +same bed at home, the same room at the theater, to dressing, undressing, +splashing about naked in the same bath-tub. + +"Get up, Lily," said one of them, laughing and raising her sturdy little +hand. "Get up, or...." + +"No," said Lily, "let me alone, I'm dead." + +As it happened, on the day before there had been a general tumble, six in +a row, on the back-wheel; one of them, losing her balance, had dragged the +others with her and the lot had fallen flat in a tangle of steel and +flesh. Bucking Horse, Old Jigger, Street Donkey--the nicknames they gave +their bikes--had kicked them to the raw. They showed one another the +bruises on their limbs: "Oh, don't it hurt, just!" "What about mine?" +"Look here!" like young recruits bragging of their wounds after the +skirmish. + +"Lily!" + +"Yes, Ma!" + +And Lily washed quickly, put on her frock and ran down-stairs to prepare +the coffee, but her Ma stopped her on her way. + +"Lily, you light the fire." + +"What about Maud?" said Lily. "Why can't Maud do it?" + +"You young impudence," ... said Ma; "Maud has gone to Jimmy's to take the +bike which Tom couldn't get to him yesterday; he was shut. It's the bike +you spoiled, you little bedlamite!" + +Lily had to laugh at the thought of Maud struggling with Old Jigger: Maud, +who couldn't lead the machine by the handle-bar, or even walk beside it, +without barking her shins. + +"Why!" cried Lily. "She'll explain everything wrong to Jimmy, and the bike +will be no use!" + +"Well, then, go yourself," said Ma, after a pause. "And mind you, come +back quickly; don't go loitering in the street; and don't stay long with +that drunkard." + +"Yes, Ma." + +Gresse Street, where Jimmy lived, was quite as dreary as Rathbone Place: +here and there, a few posters on the walls; some low-fronted shops, +displaying sweets and candies, or else a dazzling case of oranges on the +muddy pavement; alleys, stables, cab-yards.... + +It was here that Jimmy had his workshop, or rather his tool-store, for he +did not do much work there. The time which his occupation at the theater +left him he devoted to improving himself. Electricity and its manifold +uses held his interest. There was no doubt that, had he given all his time +to it, he would have become very clever, for he had an inventor's brain +and, moreover, possessed an astonishing manual skill for altering and +perfecting things. He worked in copper and steel, was glad to make and +repair bikes for a few customers, the New Zealanders, among others. While +working, he brewed all manner of plans in his brain. They all revealed a +practical intelligence. Saddle-supports which reduced the shaking on a +bike, improved carriage-springs and so on; and, on the stage, inventions +to dispense with men in the flies and wings; to work everything--scenery, +curtain, lime-light--by means of the switchboard; and ever so many other +things.... + +Since joining the theater, Jimmy had naturally undergone the influence of +the stage. It had affected his ideas, with all its new-fangled "turns," +which owed their success to a maximum of daring--or bluff--coupled with a +minimum of scientific knowledge: illusionists basing their effects upon +the reflections of invisible mirrors and the cunning use of combined +lights; "looping the loop," "circles of death," in which sheer weight did +the cyclist's work for him, his arrival at a given point depending upon +his accelerated and calculated speed. From seeing so many of this sort +scouring the world--erstwhile acrobats, former laboratory-students, who +now, venturing all and risking all, topped the bills at the +music-halls--Jimmy, greatly interested in this scientific side, had +himself made researches in that direction. _Engineering_ and other +journals had printed some of his schemes, including that of an apparatus +based upon the notion of exterior ballistics: the resistance of the air +proportional to the square of the velocity and, according to this +velocity, the exact proportion of the angle of incidence to the angle of +projection. Theoretically, it was perfect; in reality there might be some +unexpected hitch. It was a question for the venturesome performer, who +allowed himself to be projected by a series of powerful springs, to fall +accurately from pedestal to pedestal, preserving a faultless balance; in a +word, to risk his life six times in as many seconds. The daring of a +Laurence and the agility of a Lily combined would not have been enough for +the task; and so Jimmy had prudently contented himself with pinning his +diagrams on the walls of the workshop and dismissing the idea from his +mind. Not that he was afraid, rather not; but simply because it appeared +impossible to him. + +Other plans had interested him, besides; flying machines, for instance, +etc. He was a real enthusiast about flying machines! One day, perhaps, +when he knew more ... to say nothing of the theater, which did not leave +him much leisure; yet he managed, somehow, for he took but little sleep +and the rest of the time he devoted to study. + +This was the Jimmy of whom Ma made a bugbear to Lily--in Lily's +interest--for he was one of the few men whom she saw often; and you can +never tell ... with those devils of the stage.... + +Meanwhile, Lily, as soon as she had turned the corner of the street, drew +herself up and, with a light step, went down Percy Street and Tottenham +Court Road, instead of keeping straight on. It took her only five minutes +longer and it suggested luxury, fine shops, handsome furniture, +patent-leather shoes. She adored shopping, even if it was only with the +eyes, through the plate-glass windows. + +She loved to pass in front of the Horse Shoe, where stars lived, real +ones, not performing dogs. And then, round a piece of waste land, there +was a hoarding covered with advertisements that interested her: the +Hippodrome, the Kingdom, the Castle were displayed between extract of beef +and mustard; and there were always new programs; always new names; and +elephants, horses, lions; and tights.... + +Lily looked at this for a few seconds. And, suddenly, she felt a thrill; +on a scarlet poster, dazzling as the sun, she read: + +"Great success! Trampy Wheel-Pad!! At the Kingdom!!!" Trampy in London! + +Not that Lily was astonished: it seemed to her quite simple that he should +be there, as simple as for her to be in Chicago, Bombay or Capetown; +people do sometimes meet on tour, it all depends: you can be separated for +years and then perform at the same theater for months. No, she was not in +the least astonished: a little excited, that was all, without exactly +knowing why.... + +"But, if I should meet him," she thought, "what shall I say to him? What +will he say to me? Will he think me grown prettier or uglier?" + +Lily came to herself again and continued on her errand; crossed Tottenham +Court Road, plunged into a labyrinth of blocked alleys, of dark courts, +and, suddenly, was at Jimmy's. + +Lily did not like him much; she considered him good-looking, for a man, +but too shy. He never paid her a compliment. He seemed to think her ugly, +whereas many others admired her and made no bones about telling her so, +especially since the last few months; but he was ashamed of himself, no +doubt: a drunkard, as Ma said. + +Poor Lily had no luck. She would have been so happy to be courted, to +relieve her boredom. But nothing disgusted her so much as drink. And yet +it didn't show in Jimmy. He always walked straight, never fell, like that +head-balancer who, the other night, had come tumbling down from his perch. +Besides, that one had an excuse; he drank because he was crossed in love; +to forget, they said. Lily forgave everything the moment there was love in +it; but an icicle like Jimmy, who loved nobody and who drank for the sake +of drinking ... ugh! + +Jimmy was at work when Lily entered. The small, dark shop, crammed with +things in steel, with loose wheels, queer-shaped objects, reminded Lily of +a property store, only it was dirtier. There were tools everywhere; +designs for machinery pinned on the walls; it was all very ugly. + +And Jimmy's greeting was none too engaging either. A curt smile--"Glad to +see you, Miss Lily"--and, as for the bike, he hadn't understood a word of +what the one-eyed creature who had just left had tried to say. + +"I thought as much," said Lily, laughing. "That's why I came." + +And, in a few words, she explained what she wanted. First, repair the +twisted frame; next, a slight alteration for a new trick; a step here, +another there. + +"Always fresh tricks, Lily?" + +"Always, Jimmy. No end of bruises, I tell you!" + +"It's part of the game," said Jimmy. + +"I should like to see you try it," retorted Lily contemptuously, +"squeezing through the frame while it's going, with that pedal barking +your back," and she rubbed herself as she spoke. "Only yesterday I got a +kick; gee! It's like those new tricks in which I don't feel safe: riding +with one foot on the saddle and the other on the bar and playing a banjo; +it makes me shiver as I go past the footlights; and Pa watching me, you +know; and, if I lose my balance, I get black and blue somewhere." + +"Pooh!" said Jimmy. "One can't expect a white skin at the game." + +Lily didn't care for this. If she couldn't be courted, at least she liked +to be pitied: that flattered her pride.... It was all very well for Pa to +say, "It's part of the game, my little lady." But that josser of a Jimmy, +talking like that at his ease! + +"I'm glad I'm not your daughter!" she said. "My! You'd be harder than +Pa." + +"Your Pa is hard, sometimes; but he's very fond of you, for all that." + +"Of course," said Lily, "he wouldn't like me to break my neck; I bring him +in too much for that, eh?" + +"Come," interrupted Jimmy, "don't talk nonsense. It's not right to speak +as you're doing. You'll be sorry for it, I'm sure. Tell me, rather: you +were saying you wanted a step here, another there; do you mean like +this?" + +And he rummaged among his tools, looked for loose pieces, showed them to +Lily, while thinking of other things: + +"Look here," he went on, "do you think you're the only one that's got to +work? Suppose you were shut up all day in a factory? Have you ever been to +a factory? Do you know the life of a metal-buffer girl at Sheffield, +standing in front of her wheel, from morning till night, and work, work, +work?" + +"But I'm not a work-girl, you great silly! You know I'm an artiste! And, +now, shall I tell you what I think of you, Jimmy?" said Lily, pouting. +"You're a bad man, that's what you are!" + +And thereupon she put out her tongue, turned her back on him and began to +look at the walls, the diagrams, the drawings, an illustration out of +_Engineering_. + +There was a pause. + +Jimmy, while handling the bike, gazed at Lily. There was no sentimentality +about Jimmy, but his lively imagination made him see things through and +through; and, whatever he might be, Jimmy was not bad. That little Lily: +to think that, among all the girls of her own age, she was the only one to +do that trick! He pitied her and all child prodigies. To his mind, there +was something unsportsmanlike about it; something like a race won by a +one-year-old, with jockey, whip and spurs. He did not believe all he +heard, of course. He knew, he lived with them, he was one of them. He knew +the peculiar mania of the music-hall, the instinctive lie, uttered as if +to discourage competition by giving it a fright at the start. To listen to +them, it meant the horsewhip, the belt, all day long; going "through the +mill," all the time. Among the people with the painted faces, it was a +shot at martyrdom, a chance for professional boasting. The most +commonplace, the most coddled lives were made more interesting by means of +imaginary wounds and scars, like those explorers, in the books, who cross +Africa without food or drink, barefooted, with a crocodile snapping at +their heels. + +He took good care not to exaggerate. Life in the halls was no worse than +anywhere else, thank God! It had its good side and its bad side and its +professional risks. The "pros," taking them all round, were as good as the +"jossers." He wanted to be just. He had seen many who were very happy; one +could get anything done by firm kindness. He could also understand, in the +terrible struggle for bread, that a man went on toiling hard in the trade +in which he was born. A pro could not make a blue-stocking of his +daughter; some were born duchesses, on satin; others artistes on the +boards. One trade was as good as another; but dangerous practicings, +bruised flesh, seamed skins: no, he didn't approve of that. He had seen +the Laurences, mad with ambition, beginning all over again, in spite of +falls calculated to stave in the stage; had seen girls who "do knots" +lying in the dressing-rooms, gasping, exhausted. Even when professional +vanity alone prompted such excesses, Jimmy protested within himself; and +then there were so many abuses.... Besides, the stage so often spoiled a +woman: every branch of the stage, from the highest to the lowest. All that +coaxing familiarity! What he said was, if Lily had been his daughter, she +should not be on the stage; but there she was and he couldn't help it; +and, as it was her natural place to be there, he would not be guilty of +the meanness of disgusting a poor girl with the profession which she had +been at pains to learn. He preferred to let her call him "a bad man." And +that required a certain courage; for it was no longer a child talking to +him, but an exquisitely pretty girl. Jimmy could not believe his eyes. +What a change! Was it possible? Having been away from London, on +Harrasford's service, he had not seen her for many months, except the day +before, just in time to shake hands behind the scenes, in the dusk; but +here, in his shop, he hardly recognized her, he could not exactly say why. +One thing was certain: he had left her a child and he now found her a +beautiful girl. + +"Tush!" he said to himself. "She's a child for all that. Only, if she +keeps on like this, what a handsome woman she will be!" + +That familiarity on the stage: he reproached himself for thinking of it; +it seemed to him an insult to Lily. And he began to talk to her of +different things, kindly and pleasantly, changing from subject to subject. +He explained his drawings on the wall, his ideas: exterior ballistics; the +resistance of the air; risking his life six times in as many seconds.... + +"He's drunk," thought Lily. + +And, to stop this flow of words, as though talking to herself, Lily said +she did not complain; no, she would quite like the bike, if she hadn't got +to practise so hard; she only complained that they didn't treat her "fair" +at home: + +"And look how I'm dressed! I've had the same toque two years. And what do +you think of this frock? The material cost four-three a yard. I look like +a tenter in it." + +Jimmy did not share Lily's indignation. He thought her neatly and nicely +dressed, in spite of her performing-dog's toque, as she said. It all +suited her so well. But, on examining that clear-cut little face, lifted +toward him with a rebellious air, he felt that the fatigue, even the blows +didn't count; that the hardest thing, for Lily, was to be "badly dressed;" +that she would never swallow that. + +"But, look here," said Jimmy, "all this isn't worth making a fuss for; you +get cross about nothing at all; when you came, you were all smiles; and +now ..." + +"That's because," Lily began, with a sly laugh--oh, she was exasperated +with Jimmy's coldness! She'd show him, the icicle, and have a bit of fun +with him--"on my way here, Jimmy, I met ... now you won't give me away, +Jimmy? ... I met my ... sweetheart." + +"A sweetheart? You? Lily?" + +"Yes, yes, yes," said Lily, nodding her head and looking at him archly, +for she could see, by Jimmy's expression, that he was caught. + +"And your father and mother know nothing about it?" insisted Jimmy, +nonplussed. + +"No, no; it doesn't concern them: at my age, a girl earns a living for her +Pa and Ma; I have as much right to a sweetheart as any one else, I +suppose." + +And, greatly amused, she fixed Jimmy with her mocking eyes. + +Jimmy stared at her in amazement. + +Then she understood that it was not a thing to joke about and that what +she had just said was terrible. And, suddenly: + +"No, it's not true, Jimmy! I was only laughing! Oh, Jimmy, you're going to +give me away!" cried Lily, squeezing Jimmy's arm with a convulsive little +hand. "Oh, Jimmy, don't tell Ma, please, please, Jimmy!" + +And there was something so sincere in her voice that Jimmy saw that she +was speaking the truth, that it was only the jest of a flapper used to the +manners of the stage. + +"No," he said briskly, "I shan't tell; don't be afraid, Lily; only ..." + +"Ah, that's nice of you," said Lily, much relieved. "Marriage! If you only +knew! And what would become of the troupe? I shall never marry. I +think...." + +"Still, some day, it's bound to come," said Jimmy, interrupting her. "You +won't spend all your life on a bike. You are sure to marry some day...." + +"Don't talk to me about marriage! No, not that. Gee!" + +"But--" + +"Love stories! With men! I! And you believed it," said Lily, drawing back +her shoulder and raising her hand. "I could smack you, you great silly!" +And, all of a sudden, "I must go," she cried, "I've stayed too long; Ma +will be waiting for me with her broom!" + +And Lily rushed outside, without giving Jimmy time to answer. He could +just see her turn the corner of the street. + +Jimmy went back to his work, silently, wrapped up in his thoughts. That +nice little Lily! She could be easy in her mind. No, he would never be a +cause of worry to her.... + +Meanwhile, Lily ran home as fast as she could and, on entering, saw that +it was no use; her Ma was waiting for her, furious. + +"Where have you been?" + +"Why, I've come straight from Jimmy's, Ma." + +"That's a lie! The butcher's boy, who has just left, saw you outside the +Horse Shoe. Who were you waiting for?" + +"I wasn't waiting for any one!" cried Lily, her eyes blazing with anger. + +"You devil!" said Ma, looking round for a stick, an umbrella.... + +And, when she saw nothing within reach, her anger increased. Then she +stiffened her arm and made for Lily, who sprang behind the table.... + +But Ma, tripping on the carpet, fell at full length, dragging down with +her the table-cloth and two cups that were on it. + +"My two china cups! You viper!" she yelled. + +At that moment, the door opened; Clifton entered. He seemed preoccupied; +looked at his watch: + +"Nine o'clock. We ought to be at the theater! Where are the girls? And +what ... what's all this?" he asked, on seeing the disorder, Mrs. Clifton +scrambling up from the floor, Lily scowling in a corner. + +Ma grunted an explanation. Two cups broken, Lily a gadabout who would +bring them to the grave with shame! + +"But, Pa, I was only looking at the posters." + +"Posters?" repeated Clifton. "Which posters? What's all this nonsense?" + +And, when Ma had told him, interrupted by despairing "But, Pas," and "No, +Pas," from Lily, he very calmly asked, was he going to have peace in his +own house, or was he not? All this fuss about two broken cups; beating +Lily for nothing! + +Never, in any circumstances, would Clifton have snubbed Mrs. Clifton like +this before Lily. He would have waited until she had gone. But to come +upon all this rot when there were so many serious things to discuss! The +sisters Pawnee whom he had seen last night: Polly, Edith, Lillian. Yes, +that Lillian, damn it, a winged rose! And the things they did on their +bike without seeming to touch it! + +"My poor Lily," Pa went on, going up to his daughter and stroking her +hair. "I'm not saying it to vex you; but you're not in it with the +Pawnees! Come on! Beg your Ma's pardon; and let's be off to the theater. +I'm in form this morning. We shall have a great practice." + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +A few minutes later, Pa was hustling his herd before him: + +"Quicker, my Woolly-legs! No time to lose!" + +He thought of the tricks which he had jotted down the evening before in +his note-book. Lily would learn them quick enough: she was as clever as +the Pawnees, when all was said, only less graceful. She had the balancing +power all right; but grace, grace, damn it, to do a thing like that as +though it were child's play: that's what she hadn't got! You saw the +effort. And the apprentices had no precision in their groupings. Now the +fat freaks had. To combine German discipline with English gracefulness, +that was the question; to have the troupe of troupes; to have a Lily who +would be worth more by herself than Polly, Edith and Lillian put together. +But that meant work and going through the mill! This last made Pa think of +the old sheep and their bleatings. He gave a nervous little laugh and his +hand had a convulsive movement, as though to strangle those pests. + +Pa had recovered his good humor and was grinning by the time they reached +the theater. Merely by his way of taking the key of his dressing-room from +the stage-doorkeeper one recognized the owner of a troupe, the man with a +"permanent address," the manager, the boss, the prof, the Pa. On entering +the lobby, he, with his six girls, took possession of the theater. He +nodded to the staff; growled a "Lazybones!" as the Roofers passed out two +by two, always two by two: a fair one with made-up eyes, a dark one with +kiss-me-quick lips; sniffed their cheap perfumes amid the tarry smell of +the packages marked Sidney, New York, Paris.... + +[Illustration: "QUICKER, MY WOOLLY-LEGS!"] + +On reaching the stage, Pa first gave a glance to make sure that there were +no elephants, or ponies, or Merry Wives, that they could practise at their +ease, without having to burrow in a corner, like rats. The stage was +almost empty. After the live street, it was a pallid light, in which +ghosts moved. The New Zealanders, it need not be said, no longer fancied +themselves in the cavern of Bluebeard or Puss-in-Boots; they had seen too +many stages during the past two years. The slant of the floor, the +roughness or smoothness of the boards was what interested them, for fear +of falls and barked shins. Pa hurried them to their dressing-room to get +into their knickers, while he took off his jacket and turned up his +trousers, so as to run better. No more time to lose, with his Lily! He was +still in a fever from seeing those Pawnees last night. As for the stage +and the boards, a lot he cared, slanting or straight, rough or smooth! To +work! to work! And he got ready the bikes, which Tom had brought down, +without a glance around him. + +To a poet, to a painter, that glance would have been worth the taking. The +iron curtain was raised, the house loomed vaguely; the balconies, covered +with cloth, stood out like cliffs; the pit, with its seats under a gray +drugget, because of the dust, lifted toward the stage its rows of +motionless waves. The stage itself was strange: a sort of huge cave, with +strips of scenery hanging like stalactites; near the wall, a metal +pedestal, with a red velvet platform, looked like a blood-stained +scaffold; one suspected the presence of properties: wheels, iron +implements, tangled ropes, like so many instruments of torture. At the New +Zealanders' feet, half-naked bodies, suggesting the souls of the damned, +were tumbling, practising falls; a woman in a white wrap hovered round; +and, near the proscenium, a pack of trained seals, lying in their moist +boxes, raised their frightened heads, as who should say corpses cast up on +the shores of hell by the silent waves of the pit. + +But three slender forms, spinning on their trapeze almost above Pa's head, +sprang lightly to the stage, near an old fellow in spectacles. + +"Why, Mr. Fuchs and the Three Graces! Here's a surprise!" said Pa, who had +not seen them since the New York Olympians. "When did you get here? +Yesterday?" + +There was a general shaking of hands. Fuchs congratulated Pa on his +success, said he had followed his progress in the papers. Pa owned a +troupe now and had a name. + +"So this is your Lily," said Fuchs, tapping her on the cheek as she joined +the group. "A real lady! And good, eh?" + +The Three Graces also congratulated Pa ... kissed Lily: + +"How sweet you've grown! Why, Lily, how pretty you are!" + +Lily was so surprised, so pleased; and her Pa was very proud. He thanked +Mr. Fuchs, complimented the Three Graces in his turn, to their delight: + +"What arms! What muscles!" Then, "Excuse us, eh? Lily must get ready. We +shall meet again presently, after practice." + +The Graces had gone back to it already. Pa tested the bikes; took a +hurried turn at the pumps; and, when the apprentices and Lily returned: + +"Yoop, up with you!" + +The round began. Tom looked to the girls, constantly; ran after them; kept +an eye on their falls. Pa, constantly, hung on to Lily. Nothing else +existed when he was handling his star. His wish to do well, his love of +art for art's sake worked him up, stimulated him, made him hit out but not +in anger: it was the spark of enthusiasm, of which the apprentices caught +the reflection. + +"Hi, you there, Mary! I'll pull your ear! Birdie, if I take my belt to +you!" + +But his Lily above all; his Lily! his seven stone of flesh and bones! Pa +was an artiste; he had thought of a thousand things since his trip to +Brighton. New and astounding tricks; and easy at that ... if Lily only +would! Oh, he'd soon make her graceful! But, for that, she would have to +obey, to let go the handle-bar at a sign, instead of endlessly seeking her +balance. For instance, Pa held her rein to prevent falls--there was +nothing spiteful about Pa, he never let you fall on purpose--and +Lily--"One! Two!--Count together, Lily!"--put one foot on the saddle, the +other on the handle-bar: "Three!" That's where she had to let go her +hands, smartly, and stand erect as she rode. The machine slipped under +her. Lily, shaking with fear, stooped to seize the handle-bar. + +"Stand up, Lily! Show pluck, Lily!" said Pa. + +Lily, accustomed to obeying blindly, drew herself up again. But, +sometimes, crash! The whole came tumbling down. Notwithstanding the rein, +Lily fell to the ground; and the bike, in addition, caught her a kick in +passing. + +"Nothing broken? A tiny scratch; it's nothing. Tom, the white stuff!" + +Tom left his Woolley-legs, brought a bottle of embrocation; a few drops of +that on the skin, a bit of sticking-plaster; there, that was all right. + +"You see, Lily, you're not dead yet! Nothing to be frightened about. Come, +try again!" + +The great thing was to hustle. Pa displayed so much enthusiasm--"Those +Pawnees, damn it!"--that Lily, for all her fears, was smitten in her turn, +ended by becoming exasperated against those Pawnees, felt a longing to +wring their necks! + +She obeyed her Pa like an automaton, in her anxiety to do well. + +"More graceful! That's it! Not so stiff!" said Pa. + +"But, Pa, I can't!" protested Lily, soaked in perspiration. + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +They passed from one practice to another, almost without resting. Lily was +worn out, Pa seemed indefatigable. + +Sometimes, practising was marked by interruptions. Maud's gouged eye +remained the typical accident. Another time, a girl lay fainting for ten +minutes after falling on her head; or else the stage was invaded by a +ballet. There was no end to it. On this particular day, they had a visit +from Harrasford himself, Harrasford the chief and master, who came along +with Jimmy; a visit which was the more sensational for being quite rare. +Pa, now that he was the owner of a troupe and sure of his position, would +not have been sorry to be noticed by Harrasford, just to impress Mr. Fuchs +and show him what they thought of Lily in London. + +"Do your best, my Lily," said Pa. "He's watching us." + +But bill-toppers, New Zealanders though they might be, were nobodies to +"him;" Lily--one of a thousand, among all those of both sexes who +performed in his theaters. There might have been ten cycling rhinoceroses +on the boards; he might have seen Lily swallow her bike, and change into a +butterfly: he would have paid no attention. Those were details that +concerned the stage-manager. He hurried across the stage to the +fly-ladder, made Jimmy explain things, took notes as he went, wanted to +see for himself, pointed to the first batten, to the electric switches. + +"How much for so many lamps? And that? What does that come to, roughly?" + +And he stopped for a second in his course, his ear stretched toward Jimmy +to catch his answer flying; then both of them went on again, quickly. + +Jimmy was now following Harrasford along the bridges, with the whole stage +below him, in the ruddy semi-darkness; at one side, the half-naked bodies +fell with a heavy thud after their somersaults; or else it was the sharp +sound of a bike skidding; and distant voices rose up to him: + +"But, Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +"Poor little thing!" thought Jimmy, disappearing in the flies, toward the +side-rails, at Harrasford's heels. And Lily went on riding and Pa running +after her, round and round and round. She seemed to be fleeing madly, +pursued by a devil. Suddenly, Pa stopped, having exhausted his strength, +and Lily fell rather than sat upon a hamper by the wall. + +"Here, Lily, put this over your shoulders," said Pa, giving her his +jacket. "You'll catch cold, darling. Oof, let's take breath a bit!" + +But a glad voice burst through the silence: it came from the Three Graces, +who always worked on stubbornly, even during the absence of Nunkie, who +had been out for a smoke. Thea greeted his return with a cry of triumph: + +"Ten pullings-up with one arm, Nunkie! Ten without stopping!" + +"Well done! I'm very pleased with you," said Mr. Fuchs; and he crowned +their excitement by declaring that, as a reward, he would that very day +buy Thea the sleeve-links which he had promised her ever since last year. + +"Dear Nunkie!" + +A spasm of vanity made them rush back to their work; and soon the three of +them formed, in mid-air, an involved group of ropes, bars and hardened +limbs. + +Lily, in spite of her fatigue, was amused at those mad girls. To take all +that trouble for the sake of a pair of sleeve-links! Her shoulders shook +with nervous laughter, in spite of Pa's presence. He quieted her with a +gesture, scolded her under his breath, kindly: + +"Shut up, Lily!... Aren't you ashamed of yourself, Lily?" + +And he looked at Nunkie with an air of saying: + +"You old rogue!" + +As for the Three Graces, it was a pleasure to watch them: their pluck was +infectious. + +"To work!" said Pa. "Let's have a somersault, eh?" + +And, at a sign from him, two of the apprentices, assisted by Tom, fixed a +little steel-legged table in the middle of the stage, bore down upon it +with all their weight. The bike, set at full speed, stopped short as it +struck the table; and Lily, carried on by the impulse, continued her +whirl, full on her back, and, carrying the machine with her, came to the +ground on the other side of the table and went on riding. But that shook +her, in her stomach, her heart, everywhere. Each time, she was nearly +succeeding, but it wasn't quite right. + +"I can see," said Pa, "you want to make me lose my temper!" + +"But, Pa, it hurts!" + +"Oh, those blasted little brats!" shouted Pa angrily. "Rickety machines, +every one of them: no more energy than a sparrow and lazy into the +bargain!" + +Then, suddenly, Lily succeeded magnificently. + +"You see you can do it when you like, you obstinate little wretch!" said +Pa. "Now try not to miss it again, next time! That will do for to-day," he +added, seeing Lily out of breath. "Go and get dressed, my Lily." + +The Three Graces were finishing also. Good old Nunkie wiped the +perspiration from their foreheads with his big checked handkerchief, +invited Clifton to come with Lily and choose the sleeve-links and +suggested that they could have a chat at the restaurant. + +"Would you like to, Lily?" asked Pa. + +"Yes, Pa." + +"Very well, then." + +The girls would go back alone. Tom, having carried up the bikes, was told +to run home and fetch Miss Lily's new dress and boots, Mrs. Clifton's +brooch and big hat. And, half an hour later, Lily, who had crawled up to +her dressing-room stiff-legged, exhausted, feeling sixty, came tripping +down the stairs all freshly dressed, wearing the great hat of her mother, +and a pair of creaking boots. She soon recovered when she was dressed out. +She drew up her dainty figure, so as to be level with the imposing group +of Pa, Nunkie and the Three Graces. + +Lily, very proud of herself, spun out the pleasure of drawing on her +gloves to go shopping with those big girls, who had had love stories. Then +they discussed what restaurant.... Nunkie, long ago--"Zaeo's year at the +Aquarium:--that doesn't make me any younger, eh?"--had discovered a little +German place.... + +Lily would have liked to propose the Horse Shoe, to walk in there with her +big hat and creaking boots as though the place belonged to her. But they +decided upon a "Lyons" in Wardour Street. At the table, it was touching to +watch the attentions which the Three Graces lavished upon their Nunkie, +the respect they showed him. Pa was not sorry that Lily should see that, +but Lily took no notice at all: she just removed her gloves, held her +knife and fork with the tips of her fingers, let Pa help her, thanked him +with a pretty "'K you." From the corner of her eye, she watched other +groups, to pick up good manners. She seemed to have frequented smart +restaurants all her life: beside her, Nunkie and the Three Graces, who cut +their bread with their knives and made a noise when eating, looked like a +family of small farmers on a visit to London town. Pa was greatly amused, +enjoyed his daughter's aristocratic ways, admired her refined air. When +they went out, in obedience to a look from Lily, he bought her a bunch of +violets, which he pinned to her bodice himself: + +"Well, Lily, are you happy? Do you love your Pa? Tell me you love your +Pa," and he looked at her gently as if in regret at having been so harsh +at practice. + +"It's for your good, my Lily, you'll thank me one of these days. I'll give +you lovely dresses, I'll cover you with diamonds!" + +"Why not to-day?" asked Lily, with a comic pout. + +Then both of them laughed and Lily forgot everything, even the blow with +the fist, at being treated so like a lady. + +"If I was married," she said to the Three Graces, "I should like to go +shopping all day long and have fine dresses, a gold watch and no bike!" + +The Three Graces, with their heroic strength, had no thought of such +luxuries. Thea told Lily of her successes in America: + +"Five pullings-up with one arm at Boston. Six at 'Frisco. Eight when we +got back to New York! Eight, Lily! And to-day...." + +"And your lover in America, tell me about your lover ..." interrupted +Lily, pressing Thea's arm. + +"Talk low," said Thea, looking back at Nunkie, who was walking behind with +Pa. "Nunkie is furious with him. If he ever meets him! He says it's +disgraceful, not writing to me, after asking leave to. It's an insult that +ought to disgust me with men for good and all, Nunkie says." + +She told Lily everything, her unhappiness at first, for she loved him. +Lily, with her little nose in the air, sniffed those love stories, gulped +them down, so to speak, with an instinctive movement of the lips. + +"And did you write to him?" + +"I wrote to him, but he never answered. Oh, if Nunkie knew! He forbids us +to write, because writing, you know, Lily, puts out the muscles of the +arms, interferes with the pullings-up, Nunkie says...." + +[Illustration: NUNKIE] + +But they turned into Regent Street: to Lily it was the entrance to the +paradise of shops. The huge curve displayed its window fronts; and ladies +and gentlemen and little girls: not dressed in their Ma's leavings, these +last, but a superior branch of mankind, similar to that in the front +boxes. + +Nunkie blinked his eyes behind his spectacles: all this luxury terrified +him; he had almost forgotten the sleeve-links, talking with Clifton of +people they had known: + +"The boy-violinist? Not up to much. Ave Maria? A disgrace: married, +deserted, I don't know what. Poland, the Parisienne? A scandal!" As for +him, he had but one wish, after getting his girls married: to retire to +his home, grow his roses, look after his pigeons; simple joys, the only +ones.... + +"Look, Thea!" Lily broke in, pointing through the plate-glass to a heap of +imitation jewelry, lying, among watches, on red and black velvet. + +"Come on!" said Mr. Fuchs. + +But, when Thea saw the prices--ten shillings, twelve shilling's--she +refused to go in, saying she could have it just as pretty in Wardour +Street and ever so much cheaper. + +"Just as you please, my darling. I'll do whatever you like. I don't know +anything about it!" + +Clifton felt something rise in revolt within him, he was unable to resist +it; a case of showing that old curmudgeon what a Pa was and that his +little girl, too, did pullings-up in her way and that he knew how to treat +her as a Pa should: + +"Your watch, Lily," he said, opening the door and pushing her in. "Now's +the chance to get it. Come, choose for yourself!" + +"Oh, Pa! Do you really mean it, Pa?" she said incredulously. + +"Now look here, I'll smack you, Lily! When your Pa tells you a thing!" + +Lily seemed a princess, with her way of saying, "'K you," of touching the +ornaments, the watches, like a little creature thirsting for luxury and +yielding to her inclination at the first opportunity. There was so great a +look of happiness in her eyes; and Clifton was so proud of his Lily, that +he offered her a chain as well, to go with the watch. Lily refused at +first, for form's sake, and then took courage--like a poor little martyr +who did not like to disoblige her Pa--and chose a very pretty watch-chain, +to the great wonderment of the Three Graces and of Nunkie, who thought, as +they left the shop, that the children of to-day ... upon his word ... the +parents of to-day ... it was all very different in his time.... + +Clifton laughed to himself at that old curmudgeon as he left him to go +home, with his star. Lily hung heavily on her father's arm, passed the +draper's shops with a serious air. + +"No, another time!" said Pa, who felt what she was after. + +And he hurried his daughter off, for he might have yielded, she was so +nice. + +Lily set her watch in Piccadilly, as they passed; then at the Cafe de +l'Europe, by the big clock at the back; and again, twenty steps farther, +at the bar of the Crown. Lily looked at the time and Pa showed his Lily +off. He was proud to be seen with her in the neighborhood of Lisle Street, +where everybody knew him. True, he seemed to have the name of being hard +with Lily. But, come, was he hard? Did she look like a martyr? It was +preposterous, all those stories. And he redoubled his attentions to his +daughter, who talked a heap of nonsense, asked funny questions: + +"Why should writing a letter interfere with the trapeze, when a girl has +arms harder than a horse's hocks?" + +"What? What?" asked Pa, taken aback, and when he understood, he would have +held his sides for laughing, if he had been at home: + +"Oh, the old rogue!" he said admiringly. "He loves his dear girls, does +Nunkie!" + +He was still laughing when they reached Tottenham Court Road; and, as they +passed the Horse Shoe, a voice, which Lily seemed to remember, called to +them from behind: + +"Hullo, Clifton!" + +Pa turned his head in surprise: + +"Hullo, Trampy!" + +For he recognized him at once, though he was much changed. Besides, he +knew him to be in London. But it was a prosperous and gorgeous Trampy, +quite unlike the old days; and forthwith Trampy explained: a champagne +supper last night, just come from the bar; glass of Vichy water, you know. +Huge success in London. Girls, by Jove! And then, pretending not to know +Lily: + +"I congratulate you, Clifton; what a dear little wife!" + +Pa, greatly amused, protested: not his wife, no, his Lily! Then Trampy +went into ecstasies: how pretty she had grown, one of the handsomest girls +in London, sure! And in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland! +And in all the British dominions beyond the seas, by Jove! And what a +change since Mexico! She was a woman now, a peach, a regular peach! + +Lily seemed fascinated by Trampy, examined him, his shiny hat, his gold +rings, his patent-leather shoes. A swell, Trampy, a toff, a gentleman like +those in the front boxes. + +"Yes, Lily," said Trampy, guessing her thoughts, "yes, that's the way it +is; one's not always hard up. I've struck oil since leaving America. Heaps +of money! Eh, what!" he continued, offering Clifton an expensive cigar. +"You wouldn't have thought it, would you, when you left me stranded in +Mexico? That was a nice dirty trick you played me! Come and have a drain, +old man, to drink Miss Lily's health and show there's no ill feeling!" + +"No, another time," said Clifton, vexed at this recollection of Mexico, +now that he was the established owner of a troupe, a man whose word was as +good as gold. "I'm in a hurry to get home: a very nice home, Trampy, a +real good one. Come and see us some day. _Au revoir_." + +But Trampy was so pleased at meeting them, he never stopped shaking them +by the hand. Lily had to accept a bag of cakes to share with the troupe +when they had their tea. Then, at last: + +"_Au revoir_, old man; _au revoir_, my love, my little peach!" + +Lily's head was quite turned by this jolly day: it made her forget six +months of worries. To think that, for some people, every day was like +that! However, she mustn't complain: a watch, a chain as well, the +somersault pulled off, compliments from Trampy.... + +Ma's reception of them, when they got home, was icy. Pa looked a little +like a school-boy caught at fault; and Lily, none too easy in her mind, +put the cakes on the sideboard, and hastened to take off her mother's big +hat. Ma grumbled, under her breath: it was nothing but going out, now. Old +Cinderella could stay at home, bareheaded, while my lady went shopping! A +fine thing, my word, for a great sensible girl to abuse her Pa's weakness! +There was nothing to do at home, of course! Well, if it pleased Mr. +Clifton, she had no more to say!... And, while she grumbled, Ma prepared +the tea and shot glances at Lily, a Lily with red cheeks and bright eyes +and looking so pretty that Ma, full of mixed pride and anxiety, felt +sudden longings to eat her up with kisses, "ugly" that she was! + +Pa did his best to calm Mrs. Clifton, tried to amuse her with the story of +the sleeve-links, of the horse's hocks, and Pa laughed, my! + +"He laughs best who laughs last," growled Ma. + +"Just think, Ma," said Lily, taking courage from Pa's merriment. "That old +rogue forbids his daughter to write, he pretends that...." + +"And quite right too!" said Ma. "What do girls want with writing? And who +do you mean? What old rogue? You don't mean Mr. Fuchs, I suppose?" + +"Why, yes, Ma, old Fuchs." + +"Old Fuchs! You chit, to talk like that of respectable people! Go to your +room, impudence! Dry bread for you!" + +"But, Ma...!" said Lily rebelliously. + +"That's what comes of it," said Mrs. Clifton, addressing her husband, +"when a mother no longer has the right to correct her daughter." + +And she pointed to Lily, who persisted in remaining, who was even +beginning an explanation: + +"But, Pa ... but...." + +"Obey your mother first," said Clifton. + +"Yes, Pa." + +And Lily went out, very anxious at the turn which things had taken. + +Clifton realized that he had perhaps been wrong that morning to blame Mrs. +Clifton in Lily's presence. He was wrong also to laugh at old Fuchs before +Lily. But, all the same, that old rogue ... and they had believed it, +those Graces! That wouldn't go down with Lily! + +"It's an example you ought to follow, instead of laughing at it, Mr. +Clifton!" + +"Upon my word, I'm very proud of my Lily; she works well, she really +does," said Pa, stretching himself in the easy-chair. "I'm pleased with +her; you know as well as I do, a girl is not a boy. She can do with a +little spoiling. And only just now I made Lily a present of a gold watch +and chain." + +"Then I give up!" said Ma, in a voice of exasperation. "Then I give up! +Why should I take all this trouble bringing up your daughter? A little +spendthrift who will bring us all to the workhouse! And a good thing when +she does!" + +But Pa wanted peace in his own house. That was enough of it! Peace was +what he wanted, damn it, and not a monkey-and-parrot life! + +And, jumping up from his chair, he opened the door and shouted up the +staircase: + +"Come down, my Lily! Your Ma says you may! The cakes are on the table." + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Pa would have covered his Lily with diamonds, if he had the money ... and +if Ma had allowed it! But, on this special point, she ventured to oppose +him. She had been Lily's age herself, had Ma, and she enlarged upon the +necessity of keeping a tight rein on Lily. + +Ma enumerated the fugitives: Ave Maria, and this one, and that one, and +ever so many others who had bolted; and troupes ruined by the flight,--or +the marriage,--of the star.... + +"Lily has changed a good deal lately, dear, are you sure she hasn't a man +in her mind?" + +"There we are again!" said Pa. "Always the same old story! But just tell +me, who does she see? Who does she know? Jimmy? You don't mean him, I +suppose? Very well! Trampy, then? A married man, divorced, married again, +goodness knows what! and then ... and then ... Oh, well, let's have peace +at home, at any rate! Damn it, Lily may be a bit of a flirt: why shouldn't +she be, a pretty girl like that? Beauty, in the profession, is half the +battle." + +And Pa entered into details, comforted Ma with good news: a fresh contract +signed with Bill and Boom, after that, the Harrasford tour: big salaries +now.... + +"No, dear, this isn't the time to worry Lily about trifles. And I don't +want her to be bothered with useless work, either." + +"Call home work useless! A woman's greatest charm!" exclaimed Ma. + +Lily was a subject of friendly discussion to them. Both adored her +equally: both were proud of her at heart. For Lily was growing very +beautiful; everybody said so at the theater: the stage-manager; the acting +manager, down to Jimmy, who stammered things. It was an endless series of +compliments; Harrasford's friend, the architect, who had not seen her for +a long time, fell into raptures when he met her on the stage: + +"Magneeficent!" he exclaimed, in his Franco-Belgian accent. "How old is +she: sixteen? seventeen?" + +"Fourteen," said Ma, with a mincing air, for to that damned "parley-voo" +she was as anxious to make Lily out a child now, in order to keep a firmer +hold of her, as she had been to increase her age in America, so as to make +her work. + +"What, fourteen, Ma!" protested Lily. + +"Yes, fourteen, of course; do you think you know better than your mother, +you little fool? Can't you see everybody's laughing at you?" + +Ma dreaded those irresponsible jossers, who filled Lily's head with a pack +of false notions, and kept a good watch, in her growing anxiety. + +Ma, in the early days of their arrival in London, had been terribly +obsessed by the dread of being left without means in the huge city. Lily +had got them out of that difficulty. And now she was earning such a lot of +money: one day, who knows, they would have made enough to assure their +independence for good and all! When she thought of this possibility, Ma's +eyes lit up with yellow gleams; she felt like catching hold of Lily and +locking her up in a safe. + +Pa was less eager for gain, less ant-like in his economies; he was an +artiste, above all; he knew how to make allowances; there was a time for +work and a time for play. He often treated himself to the pleasure of +taking Lily out; and, each time, as usual, she got a nice little +present--he liked to pass for a Pa who spoiled his daughter, loved to hear +himself so described, and took a wicked delight in repeating it all to +Mrs. Clifton. + +Lily was the gainer by the difference in opinion; she felt herself a +little freer. When she went out in the morning, she considered herself at +liberty to walk less fast, and no longer trembled on returning. She loved +to loiter in the Tottenham Court Road; her little person assumed an air of +importance; if, after practice, some artiste passed her in the street and +gave her a smile, she believed that he was waiting for her; a "comic +quartet," the Out-of-Tune Musicals, happening to come out of a bar and +blow a kiss to her, were there on her account, she thought--four lovers at +a swoop! + +It was almost impossible that she should not meet Trampy, who was always +prowling about from bar to bar, between Oxford Street and Leicester +Square. She did meet him, in fact. Trampy, that day, wore a felt hat, a +blue suit, a red tie, with a sixpenny Murias cocked in the corner of his +mouth, and he greeted her with a triumphant "Hullo, peach!" as she passed. +Lily was quite excited, stopped just long enough to refuse a drink and +then left him very quickly. She was afraid it showed on her face, when she +got home, and his words still rang in her ears, that she was awfully +pretty, the prettiest girl on the stage, a peach, a duck, a pearl, a +daisy, a bird. + +All that she had seen and heard in her jostled existence, now came back to +her, grew and sprouted in her ... now that Lily was being made love to by +gentlemen, not the monkey-faces or the blue-chins, but men like Trampy, +her craving for admiration oozed out of her at every pore.... + +Trampy! Lily did not care for Trampy; but she thought him amiable, polite +with the girls.... She was grateful to him for being there to say pretty +things to her when she passed. She preferred that type to men like Jimmy, +for instance, savages who always seemed on the point of speaking and never +opened their mouths; with them, she thought, a wife would be bored to +death. Besides, Jimmy, pooh, a common workman, a josser! While Trampy was +an artiste, a bill-topper and rich, no doubt. You had only to listen to +Trampy to see that he was very well off! Chocolates, sweets, jewelry, +ostrich-feathers, patent-leather boots, everything! He would have loaded +her with presents, if she had let him, but she had never accepted anything +except a little gold ring, which she hid in her pocket when she came in, +for, if Ma had caught sight of it, gee, what a smacking! + +Trampy often met her; he seemed almost to do so on purpose; he found +pretty speeches, compliments which he had already uttered a score of times +to ever so many girls, on ever so many stages, like a real Don Juan who +had been all over the world and everywhere picked up love-speeches and +jokes to "fetch" the ladies with. He tickled her vanity, told her that a +dear little girl like her was cut out for dress, that a big hat with +ostrich feathers would go well with her fair hair and that men, by Jove, +ought to go on their knees whenever they spoke to her! + +All this hummed and buzzed in her head. At night, when she fell asleep in +Maud's arms, she dreamed of big hats and fine dresses and referred to it +during the day. Pa hardly knew what to think; if she did as well as last +night--three encores--Lily could have half a sovereign, to buy a new hat +in the Tottenham Court Road with, said Pa. + +"Oh, Pa, I shall do all right, you'll see. Will you be very nice? Then get +me that one at two guineas, you know, in Regent Street." + +"But you're mad, Lily!" said Pa, without attaching too much importance to +it, for he had other cares: agents to see, letters to write, business, +damn it! + +That took down Lily's cheek a bit; but her luxurious ideas returned, +nevertheless. For instance, from admiring the Three Graces or the Gilson +girl, who looked like Venuses in their silk tights and whose entrance on +the stage caused every opera-glass to glint upon them, the wish to appear +in tights began to grow on Lily. Oh, not the plain tights of living +statues; no, but with flowers and leaves embroidered here and there and +jet braid laced about the right arm. She was tired of bloomers and told Pa +so, straight out, when the apprentices had left the room and Pa, stretched +in his easy-chair, seemed in a good temper. Pa thought this notion about +tights, silly: + +"They're very nice, those bloomers; those little shirts. Ask your +mother." + +"Oh, yes," said Ma sarcastically, "but bloomers are made at home, in the +afternoon; you have to stitch them yourself, dear. Tights, which you buy +ready-made and which cost just ten times as much and last only half as +long, are much more convenient, aren't they, Lily? To say nothing of the +absurdity of an ugly girl like you showing yourself in tights!" + +"And the troupe," said Pa. "What would the troupe look like? Might as well +not have a troupe; there'd be no one but you!" + +"Well, what harm would that do? I _am_ the troupe!" said Lily, tossing her +obstinate forehead. "And all the money you give them you could give me!" + +"Lily," said Pa, alarmed, "you deserve to be smacked for that!" + +"Oh, Pa, what an idea!" said Lily, who was just arranging her fringe +before the glass. "A Pa to beat his Lily for a little thing like that, +away from work!" And, darting a bright smile at Pa, "You never would, Pa, +would you?" she ventured. + +Clifton, taken aback, looked at his Lily, as if to say that she was right, +damn it! But Ma, in her fury, cried: + +"Wait a bit! You shall see if _I_ would!" + +Bang! A box on the ears, followed by an order to go to her room, on dry +bread and water, impudence! And practise her banjo till the evening! + +The blow itself was nothing, but what an humiliation for Lily, who, only +yesterday, had been told that she had the sweetest nose in the world, +cheeks to cover with kisses, eyes, lovely eyes: there wasn't a girl in a +hundred with eyes like that, by Jove! And those lovely eyes were only fit +to cry with! And those pretty cheeks Ma had covered with smacks! When she +thought of it, she felt inclined to kick over the traces. Did they think +her such a kid, then, her Pa and Ma? She'd show Ma if she was fourteen! +She'd be off like the others. Lily, at this idea, felt her heart come into +her mouth: no, no; she would never dare; she never would. She swore it to +herself; took the great oath of the stage: three fingers of her right hand +uplifted, the left hand on her lucky charm. And yet, one day, she would +marry. She didn't lack chances, if she wanted them. And a gentleman, too! +And her Pa and Ma, to disgust her, of course, pretended that he was +married! They must take her for an idiot: how could Trampy be married, +considering that he had suggested ... suggested different things to +her?... + +Lily brooded like this, reviewing the tiny events of which her life was +made up. Then a gleam of sunshine came to change her thoughts. She amused +herself by breathing on the window-pane, making a circle ... wrote a name +with her finger and quickly licked it out with her tongue ... and Lily +brooded ... brooded.... + +But Ma's voice made her jump: + +"What are you doing there, you good-for-nothing? I told you to take your +banjo!" + +"Yes, Ma," Lily replied mechanically, with her nose glued to the window. + +"Do you hear, Mr. Clifton?" said Ma furiously. "That's the way she +obeys!" + +Mrs. Clifton had no doubt whatever that there was a man at the bottom of +it ... a flirtation ... something or other. It was useless for Ma to +provide for everything, to do her best to oppose Mr. Clifton's weakness. +There was Lily now, taking up an independent attitude. She thought herself +pretty, no doubt; some booby must have been stuffing her up, making love +to her, to laugh at her later on! If she, Mrs. Clifton, had been a man, +she would certainly never look at that ill-mannered baggage; but the +London jossers liked that brazen type! And to think that time was passing +... passing!... Oh, Ma would have liked to get hold of the man who +invented the law about girls coming of age ... and love ... and marriage! +A fierce jealousy seized upon her at the thought. Lily would have +bouquets, champagne suppers; Lily would be loved by gentlemen! Tell Lily +that she was pretty and, in less than six months the little hussy would +think herself a fine lady! And, on that day, Mrs. Clifton would wash her +hands of her! + +These continued attacks ended by shaking Pa. He didn't quite know what to +say; there was a certain amount of truth in it: + +"But," he persisted, "why should she go? She has everything she wants +here?" + +But he was more and more annoyed; yes, he admitted, he was wrong to laugh +at Mr. Fuchs: you must never set children a bad example. And, from that +moment, once his attention had been called to the matter, he daily +discovered fresh causes for uneasiness: where the devil did she get that +love of dress from? And who sent her that bouquet behind the scenes the +other night? Why, Lily wanted to have it handed to her across the +footlights, like a singer! + +And Pa and Ma watched Lily like a bag of money on which one keeps one's +hand, for fear of pickpockets. Ma doubled her precautions. + +The gentlemen in the front boxes, especially, alarmed her, even more than +the Jim Crows: creatures apart, devilish creatures, the gentlemen in the +front boxes! She fancied she saw a reflection of hell in the eye-glass of +every one of them. If ever Lily dared to smile to them, she knew what +awaited her! Ma would get angry for nothing at all; she even scolded Lily +for allowing herself to be approached on the stage by a contributor to +_The Piccadilly Magazine_, which was publishing articles on _The Little +Favorites of the Public_. + +"I am sure you only told him a lot of nonsense," said Ma. "A girl should +call her mother in a case like that. What have you to do with the public? +Aren't you ashamed?" + +No, Lily was not ashamed. She was exasperated rather. And she had not told +the journalist any lies: just the plain truth, in her own little way. +Sweat and blood! Broken legs! Broken arms! And here, there, there, all +over her body, scars deep enough to put your finger in! That would revenge +her a bit for the way in which she was treated. She knew that, when the +article appeared, she would catch it at Pa's hands; but never mind! She +had told everything, everything, in revenge; just as she might have flung +her bike at their heads in a fit of anger! + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +There had been a terrible scene at home that day. Ma had searched Lily's +trunk and had not, it is true, discovered the love letters which she +believed to be hidden there, but she had found a ring! It was Trampy's +ring, which Lily, who usually concealed it about her person, had left by +accident in the trunk among her things. Ma's face was a sight, when she +came down to the dining-room. She was so upset that Pa asked her: + +"Are you ill, dear?" + +Ma, without answering the question, pushed the ring under his nose and +screamed that she had told him so: + +"An engagement ring, dear; an engagement ring! Perhaps you'll believe me +now!" + +Pa and Ma, when they had recovered from their surprise, had time to lay +their heads together and replace the ring, pretending to know nothing, to +be watching more closely than ever ... and then Pa had gone out; for, if +Lily, who was walking with the apprentices, had come home just then, he +could not have resisted the temptation to smack her face. It was better to +go out and postpone the explanation until later. He had, indeed, resolved +never to beat his daughter again ... but still! And he clenched his fists +and ground his teeth when he reached the theater. + +On the stage, he looked round for Tom, who should have been there to mend +a tire. He saw nothing at first: only a few electric lamps studding the +darkness; a faint glimmer lighting up a number of properties; farther on, +the dull gleam of stacked-up bikes; and, lastly, Tom, with his cap cocked +back and trousers turned up, trying--brrr!--to do a clog-dance! + +"Bravo, Tom!" shouted Clifton, the moment he saw him. "Just you wait a +bit. I'll teach you to dance: with the clogs on your hands and your head +downwards, damn it! Here, take this to go on with!" continued Pa, fetching +him a clout on the shoulder. "And get to the bikes and hurry up, or I'll +smash your jaw in!" + +Meanwhile, Jimmy had also come, unseen by Pa. And the great batten lit up: +the stage came to life again. Right up above, in the galleries from which +the ropes were worked, mysterious forms moved to and fro. The iron curtain +rose ... there was a clash of orchestra ... Jimmy, with his back against +the drop-scene and his face to the stage, gave sharp orders.... + +Pa watched the scene vaguely from the wings. He gnawed his mustache: the +apprentices would be there soon, with his Lily. And he had something to +say to the stage-manager; something of a delicate character. + +But Clifton was surprised to see Jimmy instead of the usual +stage-manager: + +"Hullo! So it's you now," he couldn't help saying. + +"Why, yes, Mr. Clifton; since this morning. The other chap's ill, you +know. Harrasford asked me to take his place ... for a few days, I suppose +... or perhaps longer. Do you want to speak to me, Mr. Clifton?" added +Jimmy, observing Pa's look of embarrassment. "Just a minute and I am +yours." + +Two tall footmen, caparisoned in velvet and gold, disappeared behind the +curtain with the number of the next turn. They came back in a few seconds. +Jimmy pressed a button. The stage filled with light and noise, the turn +marked on the program entered and, suddenly, under the dazzling light, it +was a series of somersaults, of flights from shoulder to shoulder, and the +muffled fall of feet on the thick carpet. + +"There will be eight minutes of this," said Jimmy, taking out his watch. +"What have you to say to me, Mr. Clifton?" + +Oh, what he had to say was very simple; he wouldn't have mentioned it +himself, but Mrs. Clifton had asked him to. To cut a long story short, +wasn't it a shame that gentlemen should throw bouquets on the stage when +Lily was giving her show? Like last night, for instance: why, it was +making game of a child, putting ideas into her head! Lily, of course, paid +no attention to it. However, was it or was it not allowed to throw or send +bouquets on the stage? + +"Why, you know it is!" said Jimmy. "How would you have me prevent it?" + +If he could have prevented it, he would. To begin with, Jimmy realized the +bothers which it brought down upon Lily. Moreover, Jimmy, who was vaguely +uneasy himself, wondered who that ardent admirer could be. Some of +Roofer's girls thought they had recognized Trampy, from the stage, in the +front seats. What Jimmy had heard of Trampy did not inspire him with +confidence. And Trampy, it appeared, was making love to Lily. Mr. Fuchs +had met them at the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street. The story +was quite definite. + +Jimmy was astonished at the audacity of a Trampy: what could he say to +her? he asked himself, what could he propose to her? Marriage? He was +married, they said, in America. To run away with him? His scandalous life, +his habit of easy conquest made this very likely. Jimmy had seen plenty of +others, big ones who topped the bill and who did not despise a girl's +companionship--on the contrary--and six months later, a year, two years +later, left the girl in a hole, stranded, undone; mustard and game for Jim +Crow. And he grew more and more anxious on Lily's behalf: not that Lily +would come to that! Yet he had seen plenty of them, since he had +frequented the stage, plenty of Lilies who had taken to flight for +injuries often less serious than hers. He could have mentioned names: his +head was full of those who let their anger, or their folly, get the better +of them and escaped at random, and who went back to every-day +life--through the door of scandal--sometimes to meet with worse: martyrdom +of the heart, base exploitation in the name of love. Oh, he pitied them +from the bottom of his soul! No, Lily shouldn't run away: it was +impossible! But what a pity, all the same, that he could think of it! And +what chance, what meeting would settle her fate and make her--who could +say?--the companion of a loving heart, or a prey to some footy rotter? Oh, +how he would have liked to go for Trampy, to break his jaw for him, to +teach him to mind his business and leave Lily alone! And what Jimmy wanted +to do he was never far from doing! And, then, oh, if he could procure a +good position for Clifton, as an equivalent for his star and make Lily +love him, marry him: that would be better still! + +This idea, perhaps, without his knowing it, dominated his present life, +doubled his power of work: to invent something! To get himself talked +about! To make money, plenty of money, become somebody! Others before him +had risen from nothing. Harrasford, to go no farther ... a chap who had +climbed every rung of the ladder: a small music-hall first; then two; then +a big one; then two; then ten. And a whole army now toiling and moiling +for him every night, for him the chief and master. + +"Oh!" thought Jimmy. "If I could only climb the ladder too!" + +First of all, he must choose his line, for his efforts to tell. And, since +chance had given him a start at the theater, why not go on? Here his +scientific luggage would be of use to him. It was only a question of +adding pluck to it. He was the man to do so and now more than ever. Things +which used to seem impossible to him, such as his invention published in +_Engineering_, appeared quite feasible, now that he had watched Lily do +her wonderful feats of balancing on the stage. It was only a question of +courage and hard practice. Another line suggested itself: to find capital +and start a theater. As regards the stage itself, by this time he +understood the management of it from grid to cellar. He seemed to take in +at a glance that huge entirety, from the flies with their windlasses, +their bridges, the labyrinth of stairs, the maze of passages, down to the +dressing-rooms and the painted faces that filled them: here, a Lily; +there, a buck nigger; farther on, a living-picture girl. He felt all this +rustle round him, carried it all in his head: he knew it all, from the +porter's box at the stage-door to the glittering front of the house, with +its palm-trees and its liveried chuckers-out. Jimmy knew what to think of +the enchantments of the stage, those luminous visions which the audience +admired to the tune of the orchestra: jealousies, vanities, hatreds to +knock up against and calm down; recruits to put through their paces; and +the whole day of it--and the whole night, too--for a few pounds a week, +including the tips received from the artistes, twenty-five to forty +shillings a month. + +But Jimmy had his idea: he was determined to obtain a thorough grasp of +the business; he had already taken possession of the stage-manager's room +and of his desk with the many compartments: photographs, programs, +contracts, electric light, staff, scenery. A whole small people depended +upon him, and asked his advice, bragged of its successes or told him of +its misfortunes. And here again was Clifton continuing his jeremiads: they +would drive his daughter silly by making game of her, pretending to be in +love with her, at her age! Jimmy listened attentively, with one eye on the +stage and the other on his watch: + +"Tut!" he said, trying to arrange things. "There's no great harm in +receiving bouquets on the stage. However, as you object, if any more of +them come, they shall be handed to you, to dispose of as you please. +That's all that I can do." + +It was gradually filling up behind Clifton and Jimmy; the iron door was +constantly slamming upon the passage; knowing-looking Roofer girls passed, +two by two, always two by two, joked for a moment with the scene shifters, +shook hands here and there, disappeared up the dressing-room staircase. +There was life, swarming life, everywhere, in the corners, behind the +back-cloth. The New Zealanders arrived, with Lily and her Ma, for Ma never +left her now, for fear of the gentlemen who prowled around like famished +hyenas: villains who did not hesitate to throw bouquets on the stage to +make ugly girls think they were pretty! + +Lily seemed sad. She stopped for a moment. A haunting serenade droned +across the stage, a Spanish melody sung by soft tremolo voices, with +tapping of tambourines. It reminded her of Mexico: everything reminded her +of that time now. She compared herself with Ave Maria. Oh, she would have +liked to tell the whole world how she was treated, just the plain +truth!--in her own little way. But no one cared, not even that rotten +josser of a journalist, with his article published in _The Piccadilly +Magazine_. It made her out a spoiled child, who had learned to ride in the +country-lanes, with her French governess, and who had surprised her father +and mother by coming home one day with her head on the saddle of her +bicycle and her feet in the air, thereby causing an unparalleled scandal +in that old Yorkshire family. Since then, they had been obliged to yield +to her fancies and allow her to go on the stage with her little troupe of +friends. Her salary? Ten pounds a night. Her recreation? The banjo.... + +"Rotten josser of a journalist!" thought Lily. + +Nevertheless, she was flattered at heart because of the ten pounds a night +and the governess. + +But things happened to distract her thoughts: the Three Graces entered in +their turn, followed by Nunkie; they stood talking for a few moments, +while the apprentices went and dressed; and Lily soon followed them, after +a last glance at a little woman and her "partner," who were getting things +ready for their performance---some little hoops, two cardboard bottles, +gilt balls--and then waited humbly in the shadow. + +Lily recognized Para, who used to exhibit a troupe of parrots; somebody +had put her "in his show," no doubt, the Para-Paras, a new turn. + +"How poor she looks!" Lily could not help whispering to Ma. + +"You'll be worse off yourself, some day," said Ma, "if you go on as you're +doing! Don't laugh at other people." + +Lily had dressed quickly and had come down to the stage with the Three +Graces and they had ten minutes of joking behind the scenes, while Ma was +still up-stairs, busy with the girls. Thea walked on tip-toe to restore +the circulation to her legs; Kala practised back-bendings: Lily applauded +with the tip of her thumbnail, flung back her head and laughed and, from +time to time, looked round over her shoulder to see if Ma was coming +down. + +She amused herself also by feeling Thea's arms, all those little muscles +which stood out, man's arms: she would have liked to nestle in them, to +feel herself squeezed till she cried out. And everything around them +savored of love: there were lots of Roofers; little intrigues were +embarked upon; there were stifled fits of laughter and cries of "Hands +off!" and "Stop!" Amorous speeches and stories of romantic adventures were +exchanged in whispers; the flight of the Gilson girl, the other day, at +Liverpool, was told in full detail; a Roofer, it seemed, giving a high +kick the day before, had sent her slipper flying into the audience; it was +returned to her filled with chocolate creams; and to-day there was a +boquet with a letter in it. + +Ting! The curtain, the light; and, on the stage, the Roofers were +glittering with gold and silver and their boyish voices came in gusts, +punctuated by the jerky flights of their short skirts. + +"Your old sweetheart, eh, Lily?" said Thea, pointing to the boy-violinist, +who had just arrived. + +Lily had only a careless glance for the boy-violinist, who was wiping his +eye-glasses and pulling at his cuffs, while a call-boy was adjusting the +false seat into which two bulldogs would presently dig their teeth. All +the fascination was gone for Lily: it was no longer the child prodigy; a +grotesque Orpheus, in a laurel and parsley crown, he now introduced his +music-hating dogs, who interrupted his performance with plaintive and +angry howls and ended by leaping at the seat of his trousers in a mad rush +across the stage. + +Lily, who had "gone through the mill," looked upon him as a mere josser, +had for him the instinctive contempt entertained by the real artiste for +those fiddlers, those singers, those dancers and other drones brought up +with blows of the hat. + +"Pooh! I have some one better than that," exclaimed Lily, excited by the +proximity of the Roofers. + +"If you have any one better than that and he loves you," said Thea, in a +dreamy voice, "love him, Lily, keep him; as for me, I no longer risk +having to do with men." + +"I do!" Lily whispered, with a frightened glance around her. "As much as I +can! I love talking to men! Why, Thea, and don't you like love letters and +p.-c.'s?" + +Ting! Ting! Orpheus left the stage, with his bulldogs hanging to him. + +Ting! It was dark again; ropes, plated rings were let down from the flies; +the Three Graces, like quivering marble statues, took one another by the +hand to make their entrance. + +Ting! From their perches on either side, two electricians sent the +lime-light beating down on an involved group of ropes, bars and hardened +limbs. + +Ting! A crescendo in the orchestra and, bowing to the audience across the +footlights, the Three Graces made their exit, their smiles suddenly +hollowed out into tired wrinkles, but cheerful nevertheless. And Nunkie +wiped their foreheads with his checked handkerchief, helped them on with +their big cloaks; and the three goddesses were now just a wrapped-up +group, limping off to the staircase, like gouty patients at a spa. + +Ting! A forest scene is let down, the wings are shifted. A click of +chains, a flash of steel. The bikes in the shadow, the apprentices +mounted, Lily leading. + +"And try to do your best, my Lily." + +"Yes, Pa." + +"And try to behave." + +"Yes, Ma." + +Ting! + +Lily gave a nervous smile. She always felt a little thrill before going +on. Then, quick, in Indian file, two and two, three and three, the New +Zealanders whirled round in the light, to the roar of a triumphal air. + +Pa ground his teeth and clenched his fists the moment he heard his music: +at the mere sight of his Lily, his seven stone of flesh and bones adapted +to the machine, unerring and exact, an immense intoxication exalted his +pride, gladness dilated his heart. At last! He was there now: German +discipline! English gracefulness! Everything! He, too, would have his +London home, with a lawn behind the house and a plot of rose-trees. He +would learn the meaning of family joys, as Nunkie understood them, with +texts along the staircase: "Welcome!" and "God bless our home!" And, more +and more excited, he built up his dream; his imagination gave itself scope +amid the unreal scenery, the forest depths, the green and gold sky and his +Lily, his faultless Lily, haloed in light! Every hope was permissible when +he looked at his Lily, his joy, his handiwork! His New Zealander on +Wheels! That india-rubber suppleness, those little nerves of iron, his +Lily, his glory, his star, his own star! He romanced about her, dreamed of +an imperial tour, a steamer of his own, a floating Barnum's show, with +Roofers, elephants, rhinoceroses, Ave Marias, dogs, monkeys, the whole +boiling; and Lily starring on her bike, stopping in every port, from +Liverpool to Suez, from Suez to Yokohama: down to the desert, damn it, to +show the whole world what an artiste he, Clifton, he, the father, had made +of his Lily! And he looked at her with loving eyes, applauded her with a +smile, restored her self-possession with a twitch of the eyebrow and +counted her twirls on the back-wheel--O pride unspeakable!--a dozen! + +[Illustration: SHE NEVER LOST SIGHT OF LILY] + +Ma, standing by him, interested herself less in the show and, neglecting +the artiste, watched the daughter and the faces she made at the gentlemen: +the brazen flapper, whose sole attraction lay in the wickedness in her +blood! She never lost sight of Lily and watched her closely, for Ma seemed +always to catch her throwing an appealing glance to the seducers in the +front boxes, to some St. George in full dress who would dart across the +footlights to carry off her daughter. + +Thus caught between Pa and Ma, Lily's situation was hard indeed. As for +the audience, she never troubled about it, from custom, like a true +professional, who gives her performance mechanically, without minding +about the rest. The audience, to Lily, was, behind a streak of flame, in +the semi-darkness, a confused mass of black and gray. All this had no +existence for Lily or the apprentices. The audience didn't pay them! The +audience wouldn't give her a whacking if the show went badly! Pa, in the +wings, frightened her much more than all the audiences in the world; and +Ma was worse still, when a gentleman smiled at her from a box. Then Lily +would stare at her Ma with the terrified eye of a parrot contemplating +Para's whip. She even exaggerated, pinched her lips, like a school-girl +applying herself to her book for fear of the ferule. Ma did not ask so +much as that. Sometimes, when Lily, after a successful trick, threw out +her chest to draw breath more easily and rode round the stage with a +pretty smile on her lips, Ma saw no harm in it, even rejoiced within +herself at her daughter's beauty. Ma knew how to be just and not to be +angry for nothing. But what she could not forgive, what exasperated her +was, just that very evening, with her own eyes, to see Lily smile at some +person unknown and shoot fiery glances at the front boxes, the little +devil, who would bring them to the grave with shame! + +For Lily, it must be confessed, flung prudence to the winds that night. +Her head was turned with all those love stories. They sang in her ears, +they distended her nostrils. Oppressed on every side, she escaped in +imagination toward that spacious house, toward the confused mass in which +her lover sat hidden. And, in spite of Pa and in spite of Ma, who stood +watching her in the wings, Lily searched the audience with her eyes. Was +it really Trampy? Had he come back? She had not met him for some time. She +wanted to know and he would surely reveal himself. Ma might say what she +pleased. Even in the final pyramid, she looked, while, with one apprentice +on her shoulders, another forked before her, another standing behind, two +others on either side, she twice went round the stage, with flags waving, +to the hurricane of the orchestra. And then ting! And darkness anew, the +stage suddenly invaded by scene-shifters dragging heavy sets along; and +Lily, passing out, was seized by her Ma, who said: + +"Who were you laughing at?" + +"I wasn't laughing, Ma!" + +"I'll teach you to make eyes at gentlemen, you baggage you! I saw you this +time! I saw you!" grumbled Ma, who had the engagement ring still upon her +mind. "You shall pay for this, Lily; we'll see if I can drive the devil +out of you or not!" + +And Ma squeezed Lily's arm as if she meant to break it, but all this +noiselessly, in the shadow, behind the scenery, for fear of the stage +manager. Besides, it was nobody's business what a mother thought fit to +say to her daughter, and Lily, when people passed, pluckily tried to +smile, so as to put them off, not to let them know that she was being +beaten, a big girl like her; but, as soon as they were gone, she resumed +her rebellious face. + +"I wasn't laughing, I wasn't laughing, Ma!" + +"That's to teach you to lie!" said Ma, catching her a blow in the back of +the neck. + +The door of the staircase had swung to behind them; and, in the empty +passage, the thumps continued all the way to the dressing-room, which the +apprentices had not yet reached. Then, once inside, Ma pushed the bolt and +made a rush at Lily. And Lily raised her elbow in vain: accompanied by a +furious series of grunts--"Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!"--Ma's diligent fist "signed a +contract on her back": + +"And don't you dare to cry out, or I'll give it you twice as hard!" + +Lily, bruised all over, felt inclined to scratch her mother, like a +wildcat; but the apprentices were coming. So she cooled her head in a +basin of cold water and dressed with all speed, assisted by Ma, who +perhaps regretted having been so hasty; but you had to be, with devils +like that! And Ma's anger returned when, on reaching the stage again, she +was herself, in accordance with Jimmy's orders, handed a bouquet intended +for Miss Lily. What, another! Lily, following her down the stairs with the +New Zealanders, saw Ma take the bouquet and toss it through the open +door. + +"Come along," said Ma. "Give me your arm, Lily." + +And the New Zealanders walked away from the brightly lit-up music-hall, +plunged through the drifting crowd, crossed the eddy of cabs, motors, +'buses and, on the pavements, through the windows, had visions of elegant +couples at sumptuous tables. Then they all went through the dark streets; +and Lily, escorted by Pa and Ma, followed the herd of girls. Her face was +hard and, from an angry brow, she shot glances askance at flight. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +Now Trampy--even if he had to marry her for it, by Jove!--had set his mind +on having Lily, at any cost; and that not only because of her prettiness, +but also that he might play Clifton a damned good trick and teach him that +he must smart for treating a gentleman as he had treated him in Mexico. It +would be paying him out with interest to take his Lily from him. Besides, +think of the credit it would give Trampy in the profession to have for his +wife the prettiest, the cleverest girl on the boards, each of whose shows, +when she performed alone, would be worth at least three pounds, as much as +a whole troupe! He suspected in her the ripe fruit that was bound to drop; +and he shook the tree to hasten the fall. He considered his reputation at +stake: he, the man with the thirty-six girls, as he was called at the +music-hall. He got caught in his own toils and wanted Lily madly, out of +revenge and pride ... and jealousy too, for he suspected that Jimmy was +courting her; and the idea that he had a rival inflamed his ardor. + +In the evening, pen in hand, in his dressing-room, or else at a table in a +cafe, after a second and a third glass of old port, he prepared his +batteries: letters, post-cards, he excelled in everything, was careful +about his phrases, with the vanity of an author whose writings are widely +quoted. Lily was "fascinating" and "bewildering;" he compared her to +"those strange Indian poppies whose scent intoxicates a man and sometimes +gives him death." Gee, but that set Lily dreaming! Fancy having all that +in her! Who on earth would have thought it? Never mind, it was very nice. + +And the way in which she received her correspondence amused her as much as +the rest. Trampy, it goes without saying, did not write direct: a few +pence to Tom, who hated Clifton, and Lily received the cards in secret, +devoured them when she was alone and then quickly tore them into little +pieces and sent them flying through the window. + +Her trouble was how to answer. She really did not know what to say: + + "Pa was so angry with the girls yesterday. I got a kick of the pedal + on my shin. Otherwise I am quite well. Excuse more for the present. I + must now conclude. + + "Lily." + +By return of post, she received "a thousand kisses on her rosy cheeks, on +her fair tresses, everywhere," kisses without end. + +"He's mad," thought Lily. + +But she was greatly flattered by Trampy's attentions. He treated her as a +woman, not as a child, as Pa and Ma went out of their way to do. Her life, +after all, would be more agreeable if she was Trampy's wife; and he was +delivering the attack in person, since his return from Lancashire, where +he had traveled about with his property red-hot stove. He overwhelmed her +with bouquets, even as a general bombards a bastion before the final +assault, and he managed to meet her now. He dazzled Lily with his big gold +watch-chain and the diamond in his tie. When he was able to whisper a word +to her, it was always the same thing--"Motor-cars! Paris gowns! Jewels! +Flowers!"--until Lily thought she saw all the shop-windows in Regent +Street poured out at her feet. + +Jimmy made but a sorry lover, compared with Trampy. He never promised +anything, silk dresses, diamonds or jewels. "The husband at work, the wife +at home." Gee, there were no ostrich-feathers in that! But he adored her +all the same, as Lily was well able to see; and she had many occasions to +talk to both of them. Not that Lily was less closely watched. She never +went out alone, but it was not always Ma who was at her heels: it was +sometimes Glass-Eye. With faithful Glass-Eye, things took their own course +and the interviews with Trampy became easy. As for Jimmy, he saw her every +day at practice and he took that opportunity to tell her of his ideas, his +plans for the future. + +"I shall succeed, you will see, Lily," he said. "I shall do something some +day. I'm a bit of a mechanic, a bit of an electrician, that is to say, a +bit of a wizard. Others have started lower down and climbed very high." + +"Yes," replied Lily, "I know. It's like Pa. He wasn't much before he got +me into shape; and look at him now!" + +This was said with an artless candor that enraptured Jimmy. + +"What a dear little girlie you are!" he said. "What an adorable kid!" + +"That's right," retorted Lily. "Why not a baby, while you're about it, a +school-girl in the biking-class and so on? Some people treat me as a +woman, Jimmy, and propose to marry me!" + +"What's that?" + +"What I say, Jimmy." + +"And this man making up to you is worthy of you, I suppose? And do you +love him?" asked Jimmy, greatly upset. + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "I'm not quite sure." + +"But you wouldn't marry him unless you loved him?" + +"I should marry him to change my life." + +"A change, Lily," said Jimmy, with feeling, "is not always a change for +the better! And your life is a little pleasanter now, you told me so +yourself. Your mother is sorry. You're getting pocket-money; ten shillings +a week, eh? Why, Lily, that's splendid!" + +"Well; and I earn it, I suppose," said Lily. "And Ma isn't a bit sorry. Pa +said he wouldn't have it, that's all. They were afraid of my running away +if it went on. I am no longer a child!" + +"No," said Jimmy, taking her hands, "an adorable girl; that's what you +are. Oh, a man whom you would love should do great things! He would love +you with all his heart! And your life would be different then! No, you +would not be a performing dog, as you call it; you would be a darling +little wife. It's all very well to rove about the world, from theater to +theater, riding round and round on your bike...." + +"I adore the stage, for all that!" interrupted Lily. + +"But that can't go on for ever," continued Jimmy. "You're entitled to have +a nicer life: a home of your own, Lily; you have the making of a lady in +you, if you were taught. In a year or two, Lily, you would be the equal of +any lady in the land." + +"Learning, more learning, always learning! I've had enough of it in my +life!" muttered Lily, affected, nevertheless, by Jimmy's intense +excitement, and lowering her eyes under his glance. + +"Why, yes, Lily, always learning, that's life!" said Jimmy. "But the other +chap, of course, promises you the earth! Some millionaire, I suppose: an +admirer in the front boxes?" + +"He's an artiste," said Lily. + +"Why," said Jimmy, stepping back, without letting go of her. "But, no, +it's impossible; you're not thinking of Trampy!" + +"Why not?" said Lily angrily, trying to release herself from Jimmy's +passionate grasp. + +"Why, because ... because he's a drunkard ... a ... The other day I saw +him at the bar of the Crown, as I was passing. He was blind-drunk." + +"What's the good of talking?" said Lily. "He's miserable. He worships me. +He drinks to forget. He told me so himself!" + +"But they say he's married," said Jimmy. "Why ..." + +"It's mean and jealous of you to say that," said Lily, suddenly +withdrawing her hands. "You deserve a smacking! How can he be married, +when he wants to marry me?" + +And with that she left him and went up to the dressing-room. + +Jimmy was heartbroken. + +"It's a joke of Lily's ... as in my shop, some months ago, when she +pretended to have a sweetheart, though she hadn't!" + +But, argue as he would, Jimmy thought with terror of Trampy's habits of +conquest, of his reputation in the profession as a Don Juan. He bitterly +regretted waiting so long to speak to Lily. He had thought that he was +pleasing her by keeping in the background, for fear of causing her +annoyance at home: was his sole offense now that of coming too late? + +Oh, if he had only had evidence to hand! But Trampy's marriage was one of +those vague rumors. One could say nothing for certain. However, the +danger, no doubt, was not yet imminent. And Jimmy had a friend who was +doing America in the theaters of the Eastern and Western Trust: he +resolved to write to him; the friend would receive his letter at the +Majestic, Houston, Texas, or at the Denver Orpheum. The thing had happened +over there; they would probably remember it in the theaters he passed +through; he could make inquiries, perhaps even obtain proofs. That +exquisite Lily, that masterpiece of grace: what a darling wife she would +make! And all for Trampy! Jimmy was determined to do everything to prevent +it. + +He did not despair of supplying Lily, before long, with the proof that +Trampy was married; he would give the name, the date; he would compel +Trampy to admit it. But he was not sure enough yet to accuse him openly: +Lily would have seen nothing in it but a ridiculous jealousy and would +never have forgiven him. + +Then Jimmy was worried: people came to him for this, for that, for the +thousand details of the stage. + +Lily, on her side, left the theater. That day, she was accompanied by +Maud, who fixed her with her glass eye, while the other was engaged in +watching the flies. Of course, Trampy was prowling round the theater to +see her part of the way home; for he, too, had decided to carry things +with a high hand. And he set to work at a quicker pace than ever. + +He had none of Jimmy's scruples; he was not afraid of exaggerating: far +from it. Lily always left him under the impression of a glimpse of +paradise. This time, however, she failed to smile when Trampy vowed that +she was "the sweetest little thing that one could lay eyes on, by Jove!" +For a long time, but especially since that morning, she had been burning +to put a question to him. Possibly she had no intention of marrying him, +but she wouldn't allow him to make a fool of her; and she interrupted him +in his compliments to ask if what they said was true. + +"Who says so? It's a lie!" Trampy hastened to answer. + +"I mean your marriage," replied Lily. + +"I thought as much," said Trampy. + +"Tell me the truth," persisted Lily innocently, looking him straight in +the eyes. + +"If I was married, Lily, would I want to marry you?" + +"Of course not," said Lily, already shaken. + +"Who's been talking to you about that?" asked Trampy. "Your Pa, eh? And +Jimmy: I'll bet that Jimmy ...?" + +"Jimmy too." + +"If I don't box that fellow's ears!" shouted Trampy. "Can't you see that +he's jealous? Why? He didn't even give you my bouquets! He handed them to +your Ma! And so I've been married, eh? Whereabouts? In America, I'll +wager?" + +"Yes, somewhere on the Western Tour." + +"Of course," said Trampy. "That's what I've heard myself. Still, it seems +to me that, if I had a wife, I ought to be the first to know it; don't you +think so, Lily?" + +This was proof positive. Lily could find nothing to answer. + +"Come and have a drink, Lily?" + +"They're waiting for me at home," said Lily. + +Trampy went into the bar alone, in a desperate state of love which made +him call for a port and another, by Jove! Then he sat down at a table in a +corner, lit a cigar and examined his glass, as though truth lay at the +bottom. For he could not tell for certain. Was he married or was he not? +That's what he himself would like to know! According to him, upon his soul +and conscience, he was not a married man; he did himself that justice. +Opportunities, certainly, had not been wanting ... with all the girls he +had known ... enough to fill a dozen beauty-shows. Sometimes even he had +had a narrow escape, as in that damned town in the West, in one of those +states where you can't so much as take a girl to supper without finding +yourself married to her in the morning, all for entering yourself in the +hotel book as "Mr. and Mrs. Trampy," in other words, as man and wife. And +yet he couldn't ask the girl who adored him to sleep on the mat! Yes, a +poor girl who had found glowing words in which to tell him her love, one +night in Mexico, words which had set Trampy quivering with longing +compassion: was he to be reproached with that? He had made her happy, +after all; and, on the whole, this lark was one of his pleasantest +memories; it hadn't lasted too long: a matter of a few weeks at most. He +had left Mexico, taking the girl with him, and played Trampy Wheel-Pad in +the Western States, with any amount of success, by Jove! Encores, packets +of tobacco, a new suit of clothes! And, by way of _entr'acte_, the +girl--"Tramp Wheel-Pad's Jumping Flea," as she was called--turned +somersaults and flip-flaps. But she would have killed him, this dark girl +with great dark eyes,--this girl with a boy's figure, all muscle and +sinew, keeping him awake all night and talking of nothing but smackings, +as though she had never learned anything else. And so much in love that +she would bite and scratch: a very tigress. Any one but himself would have +wearied of it. And then, one fine morning, for coupling their names in the +visitors' book, they found themselves married, in the name of the law! And +that was what people called a marriage! So little married were they, +according to him, that he had given her the slip then and there, leaving +her all the money he possessed, however: he was not the man to look at +fifteen dollars, when honor demanded it. Trampy had had more stories of +this kind in his life; they left as much impression on his mind as the +recollection of a "schooner" swallowed at a bar on a summer night. + +It was dishonest, he considered, to pretend that he was married. Not that +he was perfect: far from it! He did not set up as a model. He had had +scandals in his life: he admitted it humbly; and, if some jealous person, +some Jimmy, for instance, wanted to do him harm, all he had to do was to +dig in the heap, instead of hawking round that story of an imaginary +marriage. + +His differences with Poland, the Parisienne, for instance: a regular Mrs. +Potiphar, that one. He had found it a hard job to get away from her. And +ever and ever so many others! He couldn't remember. People were always +talking ill of him. There was more than that, however: he, too, was +capable of manly ambition; he, too, had taken a breakneck risk. He had +perfected and patented at Washington an invention of which he had seen a +drawing, by accident, in a scientific journal--_Engineering_, or +another--a purely theoretical invention. The inventor himself, a young +London electrician, declared it to be unrealizable. Well, he, +Trampy--Poland had helped him with her purse; she was very nice about +it--he, Trampy, had had the thing made. He had deposited the models at the +Patent Office; and the apparatus itself was now in a London storage. He +would get it out, some day, and show them all what he was capable of. + +Now he was wrong, perhaps, in abandoning Poland, after accepting her +services; but, after all, those were matters which concerned nobody but +himself. It was not fair play to tell Lily about them: she, he felt, would +always be the girl of his heart, the thirty-seventh and last, and it would +take a better man than Jimmy to snatch her from him! + +Already, it was much to have pacified Lily on that incident of the +marriage: Lily believed him. One thing, however, disquieted Trampy: +bigamy, all the same, meant doing time. Now, if some jealous person +produced the proof of that marriage, contracted under the Western law ... +suppose it were valid ... really valid? H'm! Was he going to lose Lily for +that? And his liberty into the bargain? That Lily who was worth her weight +in gold, love and fortune in one! + +Trampy resolved to broach this delicate subject: + +"Suppose I was married," he hinted, one day, "that wouldn't matter. +Couldn't we ... live together ... eh?" + +"I like your style!" said Lily, feeling slightly indignant at such a +proposal. "What do you take me for?" + +"I was only joking," Trampy hastened to say. "If you want to be married, +I'm quite agreeable." + +"I insist upon it!" + +"So then you prefer to take strangers into our confidence?" + +"What strangers?" asked Lily, in surprise. + +"Why, the quill-drivers at Somerset House and those damned fire-escapes." + +Lily had enough religion to know that the fire-escape was the clergyman: + +"As for that," she said, "we shall see later; but I want the registrar's +office. If I'm to be your little wife, I want to be so for good and all: +marriage or nothing!" + +"I shall be delighted, Lily!" + +"And I'm determined!" + +Lily was the more bent upon it, because marriage made her free: that was +the essential point. If she were not married, her parents could make her +come back, she thought ... keep her with them ... gee! It gave her cold +shivers down the back! Once married, she was protected by law; Pa and Ma +had nothing to say; and so she was very keen upon marriage. + +"What a dear little wife she'll make!" thought Trampy. "And how she loves +me!" + +That, however, did not advance matters. It was all very well for him to +put his arm round her waist, to talk softly to her, to whisper those words +which had already won him so many conquests:--one day, even, he had kissed +her on the lips,--Lily thought that very nice; it was all very well for +him to cut a dash at the bar, to stand her a claret and a biscuit; it was +all very well for him to sing his love-litany: all this did not help him; +at the rate at which he was going, he wouldn't get anywhere in six +months. + +Lily, between those two jossers, amused herself immensely. How lucky she +was! Two men, at her age! They irritated her, sometimes; when they went +too far--Trampy, especially, who got excited at the game--anyhow, it was a +homage paid to her beauty. Between that and going away with him there was +all the difference in the world! To leave home was quite another matter. +Why, goodness, if things went on as they were, she could do without +marriage at all! + + + + +CHAPTER VII + + +"Lily, come down!" Pa's voice thundered from below. + +Lily was out of bed in a bound. She could hardly tie her skirt-strings for +trembling. Why was Pa in such a rage? + +The moment Lily entered her parents' room, she realized what it was. Pa +was holding a letter in his hand and scowling at her. + +"These are nice stories I hear!" he cried. "You let men kiss you? You've +got a love affair? Come, Lily, is this true?" + +"It's Jimmy's doing," thought Lily. "The mean cur! He's given me away!" + +Pa went on hotly: + +"And you're going to marry, are you? To marry Trampy? Here, read that!" + +Lily felt hopeless. She took the letter, but did not attempt to read it. +White with fear, could she have sprung through the window and fled, she +would have done so. + +"Well," Pa went on apace, growing more and more excited, "is all this +true? All that they tell me: about your receiving letters, post-cards, +jewelry ... and that ring! I've seen it! You're going to marry Trampy, are +you? Oh, the man who writes to me knows all about it, saw you with him at +the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street. Is that true, miss? What +did you have to tell him, pray? Speak out!" + +Lily, terror-stricken, could only droop her head. + +"It's true then that you want to get married, you baggage!" + +"Pa!" cried Lily. + +But he, with an "Ah!" of rage, sprang upon her, clutched her mass of hair, +banged her head against the wall: + +"On your knees! Say, 'I--beg--your--par--don--'" + +And, Bang! Bang! Bang! The phrase was punctuated with thumps. + +"Oh, Clifton," implored Ma, "stop! Not so hard!" + +"Beg--par--don! Beg--par--don!" continued Pa, without relenting. + +Lily was half-stunned, the world throbbed before her eyes, and, delirious +with wrath, she hissed: + +"Never!" + +"But I say, I say you shall not marry him! I'll kill you first!" + +"Yes, I will marry him, yes, yes, I will marry him! kill me, if you like! +God is my witness that I had not thought of getting married, but, as you +say so, I will!" + +His fist closed her mouth. She clasped her arms about her head, to protect +herself as best she could, but soon sank to the floor, fainting.... + +For three days she was in bed, broken, dazed--then, no sooner on her feet, +than off to the theater, guarded by Pa and Ma. If they could, they would +have padlocked a chain to her ankle and a collar about her neck. Ma +chilled Lily with her scornful pity, or racked her with repeated insults: + +"A disgrace to the family! You'll be the death of us!" + +She would shower cuffs upon Lily, throw books at her head, or whatever +came readiest to hand. Lily hid the books, the umbrellas, shrank into +corners, longing to cry; but the tears refused to come. She was too angry. +And, with head down, but eyes alert, she crouched like a dog rebelling +under blows, with lips drawn back above her teeth, ready to bite. + +"I'm going out, or I'll kill her!" growled Pa, slamming the door behind +him. + +Pa was thoroughly upset: for Lily to leave him! Just when Hauptmann was +starting a fifth troupe; when Pawnee was drawing full houses with his +three stars; when competition was increasing and threatening: it meant +disaster, certain ruin, the disbanding of his troupe, his contracts +canceled. He seethed with indignation; or else, in despair, felt like +taking Lily in his arms, seating her on his knee, begging her to tell him +that it was all a nightmare, that she would never marry, never marry that +Trampy: his good little Lily ... whom her Pa would cover with diamonds! +She should have all she wished, and everything, if only she would assure +him that it was not true that Trampy, that ungrateful cur, whom he, Pa, +had picked out of the gutter, was going to steal his Lily! That damned Jim +Crow! Pa, in his fury, bought a revolver to scatter the footy rotter's +brains with, but Trampy received the tip from Tom and vanished, hey, +presto, leaving no trace, allowing no sign of himself to crop up anywhere. +Pa's rage was vented on his daughter. + +Happily for her, Lily now was a model of conduct. She felt thoroughly +calm. Peace seemed to reign in the house. Lily was such a gentle little +thing! One day--the very day on which Tom passed her a note from Trampy +and she made a package of her new dress and of her photographs, and +souvenirs--that evening, as she kissed her father and mother, tears came +to her eyes. Then, instead of going to the kitchen, she fetched her +bundle, stealthily opened the street-door and ran to the corner, where +Trampy was waiting in a hansom, and hi, off for the holidays, the +champagne, the long-dreamed-of Paradise! + + + + +PLAYING 'EM IN + +I + + +They were seated on the basket trunk marked, "Trampy Wheel-Pad," in big +black letters. The steamer had left Harwich and was making for Holland. +The English coast was disappearing in the mist. On the deck, a heap of +luggage and parcels made a sort of nest for them. Trampy, with his dear +little wife by his side, was thinking of the future ... so many things +which he had flashed before Lily's eyes and which he could not give her +... not directly, at least ... but, pooh, she'd get used to it by degrees. +The great thing, to Trampy, was that he had his Lily! He was going to +stuff himself to the throat with love and, first of all, to seek a shelter +for his sweet wife and himself. England was no place for them. Pa was +prowling round and Jimmy, too. Once their anger was over and they found +themselves face to face with the irreparable, everything would calm down; +meantime, the wisest thing for Trampy and Lily was to be prudent and run +away as fast as they could. Trampy had his plan, he had seen the agents: +Holland and Belgium first; then a performance at Ludwig's Concert House, +in Hamburg, and a brilliant first appearance before a hall filled with +managers. Already he saw himself in the famous little room of the Cafe +Grueber, where so many contracts were signed during the few days that the +hearing-season lasted, and then he would have the whole continent, from +St. Petersburg to Lisbon, make heaps of money, treat Lily like the little +peach she was and cover her with diamonds, by Jove! Trampy, meanwhile, was +none too easy in his mind: funds were low; the two pounds paid at the +registrar's office had lightened his purse still more. Fortunately, the +fire-escape had not had his seven-and-six-pence: that was so much saved. + +"A poor consolation," thought Trampy. "The price of a dog-license." + +But he was gay, nevertheless, in his wife's company. He forgot his +thirty-six girls. He told Lily stories, made her squirm with laughter, +played with her, dazzled her with the champagne suppers ... which they +would have later on. Or else, like the consummate mummer that he was, he +put on the gloomy countenance of a man about to reveal the secret of his +heart: + +"I'm a wretch," he muttered, while Lily, in her innocence--Lily, who had +been living on tenter-hooks since her flight from home a few days +before--turned her frightened eyes upon him. "A miserable wretch ... +married. Yes, it's true; I'm married, Lily." + +"It's true what they said? You're married?" + +"Yes, I am." + +"Oh, I knew it!" said Lily, in despair. "But then ... if you are ... I'm +not!" + +"You silly little thing!" said Trampy, kissing her and taking her on his +knee. "Yes, I'm married; yes; and no one shall separate us. Haven't I the +prettiest little wife--here, on my knee--my little Lily?" + +"Oh, how you frightened me!" said Lily, nestling against him. "Oh, don't +ever let us part!" + +With a wife like that, said Trampy to himself, a little discomfort more or +less made no difference. As long as she had her dear husband, she would be +happy. She would have eyes for nothing but him and would not care a fig +for all the rest. + +Now she loved him: there was no doubt about that. She had left everything +for him! He could even have had her without marriage, by Jove, and saved +two pounds, if he had insisted! So he thought, at least, and he put a +conquering arm round Lily's waist, while she, with her head on his +shoulder, dreamed and dreamed, her eyes fixed upon the horizon. She was +married! She had dared! She would be, at last, the little lady she had +always been by instinct! And Lily went on building her castles in Spain +until, after the smooth crossing, arriving at the Hook of Holland, she +would not have been surprised to find her own motor-car and servants +waiting for her on the quay. But no, she had to carry her bag herself, +under the fine drizzle, upon the slippery pavement, to the train ... and +third-class to Rotterdam. It was all very well for Trampy to adopt a +triumphant air, but Lily was greatly vexed at the idea of going with her +husband to a little hotel frequented by artistes, bill-toppers though they +were. She would have liked something different. + +Trampy observed that, with her Pa.... + +"With Pa," said Lily, "it was not the same thing ... and I'm not with Pa +now." + +Trampy showed himself accommodating. That evening, Lily had the proud +satisfaction of walking into a smart hotel, with waiters in the hall, as +at the Horse Shoe. She carried her head high, conscious of being looked +at. She would have liked always to shine like that--to sit down to meals +amid the rustling of silk dresses ... but she felt uneasy in her modest +attire. Trampy would be only too pleased to give her a new outfit, later +on, yes; but as he explained to Lily, he had had so many expenses +recently, wouldn't it be better to take rooms somewhere, in a sort of +place like Lisle Street, or St. Pauli, at Hamburg? Lily yielded to these +arguments, she had to; but it was a bitter grief for her to leave that +fine hotel, where everybody saw her as a lady ... perhaps because of her +big hat, on which a bird, flat-spread, opened wide its wings and held in +its beak a diamond the size of an egg. + +And, thenceforth, the mean life returned: Lily relapsed among the potatoes +and the wash-hand-basin salads. There were occasional revolts, tart words, +sudden disputes, which, at times, wrinkled her forehead with anger.... + +Nevertheless, she had her good moments: she enjoyed the sensation of being +a lady who does no work, of wearing gloves and a big hat and of looking at +the time on her fine gold watch while her husband is on the stage. It +seemed pleasant to her no longer to appear before the audience doing her +performing-dog tricks, with Pa scrutinizing her from the wings. It was her +turn now to make one of the small nation: pas, mas, profs, bosses, +brothers, sisters, sons, daughters, all watching their bread-winners on +the boards. She mingled with them, or else sat down prettily in a corner, +talked to the artistes: other Martellos, other Nunkies; new faces every +week, according to the theaters they were at: owners of troupes; sketch +comedians, serio-comics; dancers of the Roofer class; laced-up, glittering +"Mdlles.;" or else, from time to time, some josser, a friend of the +manager's or an agent, prowling around among the flesh-colored tights. +Lily had seen all this a hundred times, a thousand times before, when she +was with her parents; and the mere thought of Ma made her talk nicely, +from bravado, to all of them, though she was married now. Lily bore Pa no +malice, in spite of the buckled belt. Pa was a man, with hair on his chest +and harsh like all of them ... no, not all ... and not so bad, perhaps ... +not always ... no; however, a man.... But her Ma, a lady, ought to have +stood up for her! If Ma could see her now, gee! Lily felt a lump in her +throat at the notion. And it was their fault that she had run away! It +served them right! She was much happier, now, when she was a lady in her +turn. Her talent and her beauty received the homage due to them. Lily +Clifton, the New Zealander, what ho! A famous name in the profession! She +was one of those whom the stage people point out to one another: + +"Gee!" she sometimes heard a voice say behind her. "Fancy owning a girl +like that and not having the sense to keep her!" + +Lily was flattered to the core at hearing her parents blamed; she felt +inclined to rise and say, "'K you," with the great stage bow: her right +hand on her heart, the other raising her dress, her body bent forward in a +sweeping curtsey. + +She took part in the conversations: she knew a little Spanish, which she +had learned in Mexico, and a little German, which she had picked up in +America from the Three Graces; and besides they all jabbered English, they +were all "families," "misses," "the's," with impossible accents, +suggesting some of those cosmopolitan towns beyond the "Rockies." In this +medley, she was at her ease; but she did not at all like being called +Lily, now that she was a lady: + +"Call me Mrs. Trampy," she said. + +After the show, she would sit in the restaurant with Trampy. There, amid +clouds of tobacco-smoke, they all supped in a crowd. There were separate +tables, at which silent little parties gobbled down their cutlets and +compote in ten minutes and then slipped away quietly. Sometimes, a whole +band of girls would swoop down at once, like a flight of thrushes, or +exchange funny remarks over other people's heads and blow volleys of +kisses in every direction. + +Trampy, always full of good stuff, amused the company. He lorded it in the +select corner, the corner of the stage-manager and the pretty girls. After +supper, he cocked a cigar between his teeth and told thick stories in the +midst of an admiring throng. Lily followed with her lips, so as not to +lose a word, but, when the final point was at hand, she blushed in +advance, turned away her head, as though tired of listening without +understanding, and talked to her neighbor, like a lady who respects +herself. Or, sometimes, it was more than she could help and Lily would +laugh and laugh: + +"Oh, dear! Oh, my!" + +Then they would "talk shop" among pros, they passed one another the +papers: _Der Artist, The Era, Das Program_, they discussed engagements, +quoted personal anecdotes: the Ma who made her star go down to the +kitchen, lest the landlady, when peeling the potatoes, should slip one +into her pocket. Yes, her own daughter, a star who brought her in a +hundred marks a day! + +"That's just like it!" thought Lily. + +They made fun of that prof who pinched his apprentices till the blood +came, while pretending to smile, or clawed them like a monkey. And the +company laughed and laughed, especially when Trampy put out his hand to +Lily to show her how the monkeys ... Lily would jump back and the crowd +roared with laughter. And the glasses of beer and Moselwein accumulated on +the table; and round backs were bent over interminable games of cards.... + +And then, gradually, the room emptied; the girls went away and Lily, +waiting for her husband, sank into her chair and yawned as though her jaws +would drop. As they left, she reproached Trampy for his coarseness: those +horrid stories which made her blush before everybody's eyes. Her Pa would +never have permitted himself ... She was not accustomed ... + +"That didn't keep you from splitting your sides with laughter," said +Trampy. + +"What an idea!" replied Lily, in a vexed tone. "Do you think I'm going to +play the goody goody 'lalerperlooser'? One has to do as others do and not +make one's self conspicuous." + +"Quite right!" said Trampy. + +But she turned crimson with rage when Trampy, some other night, forgot +himself so far as to monkey-claw the girls. There were short violent +scenes when they returned home, chairs upset, angry words. Trampy could +not understand this jealousy. When he was confronted with these outbursts, +he was greatly surprised, sought for a reason, muttered Jimmy's name--that +was his sensitive point: he thought of it in spite of himself--ironically +inquired of Lily if it was Jimmy who had put all that nonsense into her +head. Lily was sorry to see the conversation take this turn. She flung her +arms round her husband's neck, loved him, kissed him prettily, the great +silly: he knew better; he knew she never thought of Jimmy: + +"Kiss me, darling! I wish you would make me happy," said Lily, moved to +pity for herself. "I want to be a good little wife!" + +Thereupon they made it up. Lily did not feel, with her husband, that +thrill which she had often noticed in other women: but she wanted to love +him, stubbornly pursued the idea, fagged away at her love like a little +school-girl only too anxious to learn. Trampy, on his side, could be +amiable when he liked. He became the old Trampy again at times and treated +Lily like a little playfellow. They would both run about in the +_Biergarten_, in the morning, at practice-time, larking like children, +hiding behind the tables, and their laughter enlivened the empty place, +still soiled with the remnants of last night's meal and littered with +programs and cigar-stumps. + +And time passed like this for weeks ... it was months now ... an existence +like another, with good in it and bad ... and monotonous and common.... + +"I should have been better off, perhaps, at home," she thought. "If this +is marriage, it's not much." + +For, she saw it quite clearly, _that_ wasn't love; Trampy didn't +understand her. A "girl" and a wife were all the same to Trampy: a mere +pastime, both of them. He spoke of it lightly, through the smoke of his +cigar. She learned to know him, heard him boast of his prowess, caught +passing words: + +"Girls, girls, my!" + +She would have laughed, she would even have felt flattered at being chosen +among so many, if he had put an end to his conquests. But he continued to +prowl round the stage-girls, as he used to do before he was married. If +even he had shone upon the stage, she would have understood that he had +got "swelled head," that he was yielding to temptation; but his success +was only middling. He had not made a hit at Hamburg. The manager of +Ludwig's had told him flatly that he would do well to practise and +practise a great deal. Trampy posed as a victim of jealousy, spoke of +showing them--all of them, if once he put his back to it!--a new turn, a +discovery that would show what he was made of! Meanwhile he had a new +idea, as a sketch comedian, with a make-up of his own invention, the face +painted white on one side and red on the other, with wrinkles cunningly +drawn--a laughing Johnny and a crying Johnny, two men in one. He pestered +Lily with his plans, made her cut out dresses for him, came back from the +old-clothes shop laden with uniforms in rags, into which Lily had to put +patches. And shoes, in particular, ran in his head; shoes of which the +soles and the uppers yawned like lips; talking shoes, which said, "Papa!" +and "Mamma!" This last suggestion made Lily laugh. + +Trampy haunted the bazaars, bought children's toys, took the stomachs out +of the cardboard dogs and rabbits to make his quackers, sought about for +his right note, pursued inspiration to the bottom of the glasses. + +Lily was sometimes driven to exasperation. This tramp-cyclist, this +sketch-comedian was making her, Lily Clifton, patch up his dresses! And +her husband rewarded her for it by making love to the girls, poor idiot! +Oh, if Pa and Ma had not been so harsh with her! Lily always harked back +to that, stiffened herself with the thought, remembered the Marjutti girl, +in whom love of art produced wonders and whose Pa and Ma were so gentle +and kind. + +"They should have treated me like that," she concluded, "and I should have +been at home still!" + +She regretted her marriage. And there were some who pitied her for +belonging to Trampy: they looked upon him as not worthy of her, blamed him +for openly carrying on with girls. Others asked, as though it did not +matter, was she really married or were they just "living together?" + +"What? Am I married? Is that what they think about me?" she said, a little +annoyed. "Of course I am! At the Kennington registry-office!" + +And yet a doubt entered her mind too. Was she really married, after all? +Lily did not know much about it. Had the banns been published? And those +two witnesses picked up in the street ... a ceremony that took just five +minutes ... like a conjuring trick. If it was true that they were "living +together" without her knowing it, she would not stay with him. She would +go back home at once. Marriage, certainly, was never intended for her. +This she realized now. When she thought of the Gilson girl, mad on her +man, and of others whom she sometimes caught in the dressing-rooms and +passages eating each other up with kisses, she was at a loss to +understand. How could they make so much fuss about it? + +Poor little wife, with so little love for her husband and no admiration at +all! As an artiste she thought him lamentable. Trampy, who had seemed so +great to her in Mexico ... why, she had shot miles ahead of him since! She +felt that he was getting second-rate. He himself was well aware of it, for +that matter; blamed everybody: suspected a hoodoo somewhere: some son of a +gun bringing him ill-luck. And he was always casting about for an easy +means of success ... another new plan ... always something new ... a +high-sounding title: "Rusty Bike," an old jigger which, at each turn of +the wheel, would grate like a cart, "Crrrra! Crrrra!" and bring the house +down with laughter, while Lily, in the wings, was to sound an +accompaniment on a grating rattle: + +"Crrrra! Crrrra!" + +"All that set-out for nothing!" said Lily to herself. "It would be much +simpler to have a little talent." + +She felt herself overcome with contempt for her husband: what a sorry +bread-winner he made! Why take a wife, when you had only that to keep her +on? Lily did not know whether to laugh or to cry when she saw Trampy come +down from his dressing-room, proud as a peacock, his chest swelling at the +sight of so many girls at a time, a treat of which he never wearied. He +was magnificent, was Trampy, against that background of shoulders, thighs +and calves: in his element as a fish in water. Nor did he make any bones +about smiling to them or monkey-clawing them as they came off the stage. +The presence of his wife did not hinder him. He was sure of her love: he +knew she must adore him, as all the others did. And, leaving Lily in a +corner, in the shade of a pillar, with his eyes he devoured all that +powdered flesh, all those coarse wigs. + +Lily hated him at such times. She could have boxed his ears. She had +enough of it, at last. One evening, she caught hold of his arm to take him +away, furious that a gentleman could find a pleasure in making his wife +look so ridiculous! And Trampy, more or less flattered at what he +considered a fond wife's jealousy, was turning to go, when a lady with +plumes on her head and a woolly dog under her arm greeted him with: + +"Hullo, old boy! Glad to see you, Trampy!" + +Lily--it was a distant memory, but no matter--recognized Poland, the +Parisienne, with the painted face and the violent scent. Trampy took a +step backward. He expected a scene, though he owed her nothing, after all; +but she did not seem angry, no. On the contrary, she looked at him with a +roguish eye. She knew of Trampy's marriage, no doubt, as she knew of his +conquests, having been his victim herself. + +"Hullo, old boy!" repeated Poland, sizing up Lily with an appraising +glance and then fixing her eyes upon Trampy. "Still having your successes, +old boy? Is this your number thirty? Thirty-six? Thirty-eight, eh?" + +"What!" Lily broke in, astounded at these manners. "What number +thirty-six, thirty-eight?" + +"Ugh! A number in a lottery," said Trampy, looking quite vain between +those two women in love with him. "Yes, a number ... with which I drew a +prize!... Why, by Jove," he continued, addressing Poland, "this is my +wife!... Lily Clifton! ... the New Zealander on Wheels." + +"Oh, yes," said Poland to Lily. "I did hear that you ran away: tired of +this, eh?" + +And, tapping the back of her left hand with the palm of her right, she +made the professional gesture that denotes a whipping. + +"Yes, I was a bit," said Lily, feeling rather proud than otherwise. "I've +been through the mill, I have!" + +"You've had your fair share, eh?" insisted Poland. "You're not the first +that has left her family to escape being whipped. You did quite right," +she concluded. + +Trampy was dumfounded and utterly floored by the revelation. What! He! He! +Lily had married him because of that! Because ... And people said it! And +talked about it! + +"Come along, Lily," said Trampy. "Let's go home." + +And, giving no further heed to Poland, who followed him with a mocking +smile, he took Lily by the arm and went out with her. + +Lily felt her arm shake. Trampy was furious, evidently. She saw her +mistake, too late. There would be a stormy scene when they got in. Well, +who cared? She was resolved, under that obstinate forehead of hers, to +face the facts. She had had enough of this husband. And she meant to know, +that very moment, if she was married or not ... because with him one never +knew. When she admitted that she had married him because of "that," +Trampy, in his humiliation would put her out of doors at once; if the +marriage wasn't valid, he would get rid of her. There was no doubt about +it. + +And she did not have to wait, for Trampy, even before they were out of the +theater, in the passage, among the trunks and properties, Trampy, unable +to restrain himself any longer, seized her by the wrists and looked her +straight in the face: + +"Is it true?" he asked, in a voice trembling with rage. + +Lily, without replying, lowered her eyes as though to say yes, like a good +little wife, oh, _so_ sorry to offend her husband! + +"And," said Trampy, choking with shame, "you married me for 'that:' me, +Trampy!" + +"Yes," said Lily confusedly. + +"Damn you!" cried Trampy. "Oh, if we weren't married for good, wouldn't I +just make you sleep out to-night!" + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +Poor Lily! She was Trampy's little wife, his little wife for ever! And +life, monotonous and common, followed its usual course: a week here, a +week there; and the theater every night at the fixed time, according +to the scene-plot which they went and consulted on reaching the stage: +"X, Corridor, 9.5; Z, Wood, 10.17; Y, Palace, 11.10," and so on. And +for Trampy it was an everlasting grumbling at his ill-luck, a dull anger +at "playing 'em in," so sure was he of seeing his name first, +always--"Garden, 8.30, Trampy Wheel-Pad"--he who had had such a success +in England with his red-hot stove. It was no use his saying to himself +that it wouldn't last, that it would be better next week. It was just as +though done on purpose. He played 'em in, always, from Bremen to +Brunswick, from Leipzig to Madgeburg: + +"I wish I knew the son of a gun who has his knife into me!" growled +Trampy, persuaded that he was the victim of an agent's jealousy, or else +the stage-managers didn't understand their business. + +"If you had more talent," thought Lily to herself, "that sort of thing +wouldn't happen. I'd like to see you with Pa: _he'd_ show you, _he'd_ make +you stir your stumps, you rusty biker!" + +However, she was careful not to say so to him, for fear of blows; and Lily +knew that, if ever she received them once, twice, without returning them, +it was all up with her, she would lapse under the yoke again, it would +become a habit: there would be nothing for it but to leave her husband, if +she wished to avoid slaps, just as she had left her family, to avoid +whippings. + +That would have been too grotesque. She did not want to give Pa and Ma the +satisfaction of seeing her unhappily married. Lily armed herself with +patience; and she needed it! Trampy was in a frightful temper, said that +he would have been the ideal husband, if she had been the little wife he +had dreamed of: but to think that she had married him for "that!" + +Now it was the constant allusion to "that" which made him die with shame. +Everywhere, on the stages of the different music-halls, people had for +Lily that sort of sympathetic pity which they feel for a performing dog: +they approved of her running away; everybody seemed to know about it. +Poland, it must be said, scored a fine revenge against Trampy, without +counting the artistes who had seen Lily practising and who knew what harsh +treatment meant, the Munich Roofers, among others, real ones, with their +blows of the hat, gee! + +Among them, it became the fashion, when they saw Lily, to tap the back of +their hands, and then to applaud with the tip of the nail, as though to +approve her flight. Lily at first was annoyed at the reputation for +cruelty which they were giving her Pa. He was right to hit her, she +thought, sometimes. She was also annoyed on her own account. She was an +artiste, damn it! It was not only a question of smackings! Why, if she +hadn't had it in her...! It was a gift! But, on the other hand, to excuse +the folly of her marriage, she let them talk, without protesting, like a +poor little thing who would still be with her Pa and Ma if she had been +treated "fair." + +And there were always angry disputes between her and Trampy. They were +seen to disappear through the stage-entrance, Lily with an arrogant air, +Trampy drooping his head, his lips distorted with stinging replies. Lily, +though she was not performing at the theater, sometimes received a letter +there. When there was one for her in the heap of envelopes, bearing the +stamps of all countries, which had been round the world prior to "waiting +arrival" in the doorkeeper's pigeonholes, Trampy looked at her furiously, +wanted to know. Lily refused. Forthwith, in the passages, or on the stage, +endless disputes went on between them ... oh, not in the least tragic in +appearance and interlarded with "Hullo, boys!" and "Hullo, girls!" to left +and right, whenever they passed any acquaintances. And in a low voice, +abruptly: + +"Show it to me, you wench!" + +"Shut up, you footy rotter!" + +Trampy could not forgive Lily for marrying him on that account. He, who +had only to choose among the crowd that walks the boards or flutters about +in muslin skirts, suffered from Lily's scorn, looked upon himself as a +sultan dethroned before the eyes of his harem. In order to infuriate Lily, +though he did not feel in the least like laughing, he exaggerated his +conquering ways. It ended by affecting his work. Only the night before, he +had got drunk with two "sisters" out of ten: the fourth and seventh from +the right. Result: he was still in bed when the matinee began. And his +performance went so badly that they had to drop the curtain on him. That +would pass for once: an illness was allowable; but it couldn't go on at +that rate. He was becoming worse than the head-balancer who tumbled off +his perch, without having his excuse of sorrow, the loss of a beloved +wife, seeing that he, Trampy, had a dear little wife and very much alive, +this one! + +Lily, in her calmer moments, foresaw that they would soon have to face +hard times, flat poverty. She felt her contempt for Trampy increase. Those +sketch-comedians, those tramp cyclists, pooh, they were less than nothing, +bluff, that's all, as old Martello said! + +She saw her dreams flung to the ground. At first, it had been charming for +her, so full of novelty, but, after all, she had only changed masters. She +ended by considering herself more unhappy than she had been with Pa and +Ma. To begin with, Pa always had money. She brought them in a lot. She +lived much less comfortably with Trampy. She used to think that being a +married woman would change everything, whereas--not a bit of it!--there +was no change at all: potatoes, coal, all sorts of dirty, messy things; +and no Maud to help her. And it was always as in the old days: damp +sheets, dirty glasses, rickety tables, beds with worn-out mattresses; and +the nights were dull as ditch-water. Trampy had hoped for something +different, expected to find a whole harem in Lily, his thirty-six girls in +one, including Ave Maria, with her body like a wildcat's. Alas, it was far +from that! + +Lily loathed those nights. Love, yes, but not that, not that! Sacred love, +not profane love (Lily had seen paintings of it in museums and remembered +the title). Love, that is to say, to lie ever so nicely on the breast of +the dear one, yes, as with Glass-Eye, and dream of hats and diamonds. No +doubt, it was ambitious to want so much. She, who had seen everything, had +never come across that; but it was what she wanted, what she had been +promised, damn it! Things were going from bad to worse. Memories of her +childhood moved her almost to tears, when she thought of it: those happy +times in Africa, on the straw beside the horses, the stars seen through +the tent and the smell of the elephants. When she was there, perhaps that +had seemed less sweet to her: the hard ground, the noise of the chains; +but everything was made more poetic by remembrance: it was the past, what! +Nights sweet as milk, far from a man reeking of tobacco. And not only her +early childhood, but her life of yesterday returned to her: touring with +the troupe, the oatmeal porridge and the cakes she made--bricks!--but Pa +laughed at them, took them good-humoredly, whereas Trampy lost his temper. +In those days, it is true, she wasn't a lady, she used to work; but they +had good fun, all the same, in the dressing-rooms; they had tea at the +theater, romps in the passages, or else did crochet-work, to pass the +time; and all those practical jokes, intensified by distance: hustling +Glass-Eye into the hamper; coaxing the black cat into the dressing-room, +for luck; or making the pantomime lady speak her tag; or going in to the +Roofers, on some pretext, and giving a whistle which made them all rush +out, dressed or undressed or half-dressed, never mind, and spin round +three times to ward off the ill omen: all those memories touched her till +she felt inclined to cry. Oh, if she had been with her Pa now, she would +have sat down on his knee and begged his pardon! + +At such times, if Trampy became affectionate and tried to kiss his little +wife, Lily would simply turn her back on him. Poor Trampy! And he could +not play the master! For, call on the agents as he might and write as many +fine letters as he pleased--an art in which he excelled--work was becoming +scarce. He no longer had any money. One pay-day, Trampy was obliged to +confess that he had had his salary in advance and spent it; a money-lender +held his contract and kept back three-quarters of his pay. Trampy, +tormented by urgent needs, had let himself in with a Brixton "financier," +a specialist in "loans from five pounds upward, music-hall artistes +treated with the strictest confidence," who pocketed nearly the whole. Now +Lily just happened to want a new dress, a new petticoat and a tiny +mother-of-pearl lucky charm. Trampy had to own that he couldn't afford +these fancies and Lily had a fit of temper! But then why promise so many +things to a poor little wife who deserved better than that? + +"A poor little wife," said Trampy, "should marry her husband for love and +not to escape whippings! There are ups and downs in the profession. It was +your own lookout; you shouldn't have married a star!" + +"A star!" cried Lily, with a nervous laugh. "You a star! A damned +comedian! A nice sort of star, indeed! A music-hall could have twenty +black cats in it and you'd turn them into a white elephant!" + +In other words, Trampy, according to her, was a Jonah, good only for +playing the people in, if that! + +"A wife has no right to speak to her husband as you do!" exclaimed Trampy, +leaping up under the insult. "You deserve a good thrashing!" + +"None of that!" said Lily angrily, ready to fly at his throat. + +"A wife," resumed Trampy, with great dignity, "helps her husband, instead +of insulting him." + +"We're in for it, I suppose!" said Lily. + +"Certainly, we're in for it! I have no engagement now, but that's no +reason why you shouldn't find one. Look for one and work!" + +Lily was in for it, knee-deep, as she said. She was not excessively +astonished: it was the inevitable end! Not that she disliked to work: her +idleness, on the contrary, was beginning to pall upon her; but it was the +humiliation of going back to it after putting on so much side and posing +as the lady. She had worked for Pa; now she would work for Trampy; it was +natural and proper. There were exceptions--the wife at home, as Jimmy +said, that josser!--but they were rare. + +"Take up your bike again," said Trampy, after a pause. "Be a good little +wife, help me out of this. I have something in my mind, a scheme which +will make us rich; you'll see later on." + +"But," said Lily, "I haven't a stage bike, and yours is really too ugly." + +"I know of one for sale." + +"Very well, I'll work," said Lily. "I'll make them give me this tour which +they promised you and didn't sign for; and to-morrow you shall see!" + +At heart, Lily was not sorry to show her husband how people got out of a +scrape, when they had talent; and, the next day, she went to an agent, +accompanied by Trampy, looking very dignified. Her cheeky feather was made +to dance attendance for a moment; and then she was shown into the office. +Lily Clifton? The New Zealander on Wheels? Straight away a contract, +signed in duplicate! A week in each town; later on, perhaps, a month in +Berlin, at the Kolossal. Lily displayed wonderful tact, did not triumph +too openly over Trampy. She acted to perfection the part of the little +lady who takes up the bike again just for fun--as in the time of her +"French governess"--or rather of a dear little thing wholly wrapped up now +in her wifely duty: her poor husband ill, she herself needing exercise, +just for fun, you know. + +On leaving the agent's, she bought some material, then ran home, cut out +stage dresses. In the evening, Lily was still hemming and stitching, +indefatigably, seized once more with professional pride after her +excursions into private life. And, all night, under the lamp, she +contrived, cut out and sewed. Then came practice, without Pa. In an hour, +in spite of the new machine, which put her out, she had picked up her +"times" again. She felt as if she had been spinning round the night +before, under Pa's eye, so absolutely at her ease was she, with her head +on the saddle or twirling on the back-wheel. + +And, on the following Monday, her first appearance, her name on the walls: +"Miss Lily" in big letters, right at the top of the posters, "Miss Lily," +not "Mrs." or "Madame." Had she had ten children, two husbands and three +divorces, she would still have been "Miss," everywhere and always, as a +further attraction for the swells in the front boxes and as a certificate +of youth. Mighty few husbands, on the continent especially; not more men +of any kind than could be helped, on the stage, except a few noted +"profs," standing by the perches of velvet and steel or under the +trapezes, displaying, beside the pink-silk tights, against the "palace" +back-drop, the faultless correctness of their full-dress suits. But, for +the rest, people preferred to ignore husbands, brothers and "friends;" +Lily had known some who never showed themselves at all, who remained +squatting at home, so as not to stand in their wives' way. + +Trampy, for that matter, knew better than to parade himself with Lily. And +he preferred it so. He could have wished one thing to the exclusion of all +others: that people should not know of his marriage, that they should +cease to speak of it. Unfortunately, this was not to be. The story of the +whippings was enlivening Lisle Street, exaggerated, as usual. The Bill and +Boom tour, the Harrasford tour were beginning to spread it on every stage +in England; before six months were over, it would have made the round of +the world from the Klondike to Calcutta. What a disgrace for Trampy! Yet +no sooner had he put his New Zealander on her wheels again than Trampy +blossomed out once more. After all, who cared if people were seen to smack +the back of their hands? He wasn't to be put out by a little thing like +that: + +"Just so," he seemed to say. "We are married, whippings or no whippings, +and I am the master; I have set her to work again; and there you are!" + +Trampy's reputation, so far from suffering, increased; all his compeers +now envied him from the bottom of their hearts; the bosses, the profs, the +managers, the Pas, the Mas treated him, in their own minds, as a lucky +dog, all the more inasmuch as Trampy was not uppish and gladly stood +drinks, while his wife, "Miss Lily," made money for him with her breakneck +tricks. It was much smarter than doing it for one's self: the great thing +was to have a "girl" like that! Trampy was having his revenge: he had been +laughed at; he now had the laugh on them! and Trampy knew glorious times, +in the _Biergarten_, or lounging at street-corners, near the stage-door, +chaffing the girls, hat cocked back, hands deep in his pockets, a cigar +stuck between his teeth. He told the story of his life, not without pride; +said that he must write it one day, sell it to _The New York Standard_ for +a thousand dollars. The girls _he'd_ had: whew! His love adventures: all +over the world, by Jove! And his marriage with Lily Clifton, the New +Zealander on Wheels, a dear little wife, so gentle, so obedient. No, he +had no reason to complain of his life. He would write it, mark his words! +To say nothing of a scheme he had in mind: + +"Just you wait and see! It's a trick to make a millionaire of you or break +your neck." + +"Will you make Miss Lily do it?" + +"I'll see, I'll think it over," said Trampy, in a lordly tone. + +The directors, the stage-managers took no notice of him; but, among the +artistes, Trampy Wheel-Pad was some one, he enjoyed his leisure, recovered +his self-assurance: if, in addition, he could have destroyed the legend of +the whippings, he would have been perfectly happy. He would turn the +conversation on the subject of smackings in the music-hall generally, in +the hope of hearing them contradicted or made little of; but it was no +use; every one believed in them: all, boys and girls, even the most +spoiled, quoted facts: blows which they had received! my! blows hard +enough to split the front of a music-hall from top to bottom! The nation +with the painted faces, the blue-chins seemed to vie with one another as +to who had been most through the mill. + +"You're exaggerating," said Trampy. "It may be true, to a certain extent, +in your case. But, Miss Lily, for instance: do you mean to say you believe +all she tells?" + +"Oh, quite!" said two Roofer girls who were there. + +They had seen Lily practising. And they knew what it meant. They had had +their share, too: old Roofer, gee! And Lily had done quite right to run +away from her whippings. + +"There you go again!" said Trampy. "Can't you see she's humbugging you?" + +[Illustration: TRAMPY ENJOYED HIS LEISURE] + +But he pulled himself up suddenly, if Lily arrived, for, in spite of his +big airs, he was all submission in her presence. + +"Oh, really! Glass-Eye caught it instead of me, I suppose," said Lily, +drawing back her shoulder as though threatening to smack him, "when Pa +went for me with his leather belt. And I have witnesses. I've been through +the mill, if anybody has: that much I _can_ say!" + +Lily, after this burst of pride, would lower her head, a trifle +embarrassed, like a dear little thing, all wrapped up in her duties as a +wife, a wife whom her husband would cause to break her back one of these +days, perhaps. + +This created a circle of admirers around her: all, besides, agreed in +saying that you had to have the business "rubbed into your skin" to be as +clever as she was. + +"'K you!" said Lily, with a stage bow. + +It was certain that she made a hit. They wanted her everywhere. She was +asked to appear in tights. The engagements grew better and better. "Miss +Lily" was more and more talked about. It was no longer a Trampy Wheel-Pad +on a rusty bike: it was grace, youth ... and stage-smiles fit to turn the +heads in the front boxes. When Lily appeared on the stage, she transfixed +every white shirt-front, every opera-glass. She took a real delight in it +all. Her beauty captivated the audience. In her pink tights, Lily turned +and turned and turned, to the hum of the orchestra, against the "wood" +back-drop of purple and gold. Then she returned to the wings, all excited +by her show, received bouquets, chatted freely with the comrades. She met +old friends: the green-eyed female-impersonator, for instance, pressed her +closely. He, too, was touring Germany: a week here, a week there. Chance +brought them together again. He was enraptured by Lily: how lovely she had +grown! He would have liked to adopt her.... Lily threw her head back, +laughed and repelled him with a thump in the ribs when he tried to kiss +her. + +Another time, she saw the Bambinis, who were playing, by a lucky accident, +at matinees only and by special permission, because of their age. She +larked with them like a child. Elsewhere, it was Nunkie Fuchs, on his way +to Vienna, where he was going to see to the building of his pigeon-house, +leaving the Three Graces for a few weeks on the Harrasford tour. He had +seen Lily's name on the posters and had come to say, "How do you do?" to +her. + +And, amid the thunder of the band or the lull of the _entr'actes_, Lily +received tidings of her Pa and Ma and details of what happened after her +flight, as reported by Glass-Eye Maud. After Lily's departure, they had +hunted everywhere. Then Ma thought of looking in the trunk: the pretty +dress was gone. Then they had rushed to the theater: no Lily. Then they +had guessed: Lily had run away. Ma fell on her knees and cried and cried. +Pa seized his revolver and spoke of going to shoot the man who had robbed +him of his child! His little Lily gone! And the contracts had to be +canceled and Pa did not go out for a week and the house remained still and +silent for a month. Pa, thoroughly upset, cried whenever Lily's name was +mentioned and was near dying of shame when he felt himself blamed, even by +those who used to congratulate him on his way of turning out an artiste. +And Nunkie himself maintained that one must know how to handle young +girls: gentleness above all. + +Lily bit her lips when she heard that. Her little nose tingled. She +hardened her features, wrinkled her obstinate forehead, lest she also +should cry: + +"If I had to do it again, I would!" she said quickly, just like that, +without reflecting, in the way one says a thing to one's self which one +knows to be untrue. + +They also told her things that made her laugh. Glass-Eye Maud no longer +left her hole, cried like a tap, so much so that one day, Ma, noticing an +insipid taste in the porridge, threatened her with the sack if that sort +of thing went on. + +As for business, people did not know exactly. Pa, they said, had written +to a Hauptmann's "fat freak" to take Lily's place. The reply ran: + +"No, thanks, I'm all right where I am. + + "Fat Freak." + +The signature was underlined, for people had ended by knowing about Pa's +disrespectful remarks. Lily laughed when she heard this: my! + +"I will come ... when you take to wearing braces!" another had answered. + +This was an allusion to the blows with the belt; and Lily, with head +thrown back, full-throated, her hand on her heart, laughed ... laughed ... +laughed: + +"Bravo, girls!" she said, applauding with her thumbnail. + +And Tom? Tom had had the boot, with a bang on the nose, for carrying +letters to Lily. For Pa ended by learning all: some one had told him. + +"Jimmy, that son of a gun!" said Lily. + +And Jimmy himself, what had become of that josser? Jimmy was no longer +stage-manager. He had left everything after Lily's flight. He, too, had +flown into a terrible rage when he heard about it ... spoke of Trampy as a +thief in the night ... would have killed him, if he had met him ... and he +was going to star in his turn. + +"Singing?" asked Lily. + +"No, something to do with the bike." + +"What a fool!" thought Lily. "Fancies himself an artiste because he used +to mend my bike for me!" + +Jimmy, it seemed, had hired a huge shed and there, all alone, fitted up +some apparatus of a complicated kind. He never went out by day. He worked +and worked. A trick to break your neck at, it appeared, or make your +fortune. + +"Those jossers!" exclaimed Lily scornfully. + +And what was he going to do on his bike? Nobody knew. There was something +published in the papers, they said. It was something on the back-wheel. + +"What rot!" + +Lily laughed open-mouthed, laughed with all her muscles, twisting her +hips, splitting her sides, smacking her thighs. What! Jimmy on the +back-wheel! He! He! He cutting twirls, that josser! + +"And the troupe?" + +The troupe nobody knew about: dispersed, most likely; the troupe, after +all, was Lily. When she went, everything was bound to fall to pieces. Pa +didn't care either; told any one who would listen to him that he was going +to retire to Kennington, that he was well off now ... thousands of pounds +in the bank ... made his fortune ... meant to live on his dividends. + +"I knew it," said Lily; "I knew I had made his fortune! Thousands of +pounds, damn it!" + +"Lily, don't swear like that!" said Nunkie Fuchs. "It's not right!" + +Lily lowered her head, taken aback; excused herself, like a lady who knows +her manners: + +"And yet," she said to herself, "if he had had my troubles, that old +rogue, perhaps he would have sworn, too!" + +For Trampy was becoming terrible: life was impossible with him. All the +money which Lily earned went on champagne ... and on girls, probably; and +the more she earned the greedier he grew. He wanted money, heaps of money; +Lily had nothing left for herself. Trampy sought out new tricks, invented +balancing-feats, made her practise them, in the morning, on the stage, +with his sleeves turned back and his trousers turned up, absolutely like a +Pa. Lily, accustomed to yield obedience, relapsed under the yoke. Bike in +the morning, bike at the matinee, bike in the evening; and, with that, the +cooking, the washing-up ... and not a farthing in her pocket, though she +had made a fortune for her Pa, damn it! Pa living on his income at +Kennington, while she continued her life of slavery! Wasn't it enough to +make her send everybody to the devil, and Nunkie, that old rogue, with the +rest? A pack of nigger drivers, that's what they were, every one of them! +And what an idiot she was, to keep on barking her shins for other people! +Would she go on doing it until she was fifty? And if she didn't begin now +to put money by, who would do it for her later? Not that worthless +husband, surely! He, who, that very morning, had dared, the loafer, to +tell her of a scheme--a sort of a risky trick which she was to perform, a +thing calculated to break your head or make a millionaire of you--for him, +of course, just as for Pa! It had come to this, that her turn wasn't good +enough, that it had to be more sensational; and she was expected to make +it so for a man she didn't love! Oh, she had put him nicely in his place! +Rather! Thank you for nothing: none of that for her! In the evening Lily +was still trembling, with her two elbows on the table, as she sat facing +her glass in her dressing-room; angrily she crushed the grease-paint on to +her cheeks, which were pale with rage. + +Ting! Straight on to the stage, turning round and round, fifty rounds from +habit, mechanically, without any "go" in them: an indolent performance, +which would have earned her a good smacking in Pa's time. + +"You were shockingly bad!" said Trampy, who was waiting for her in the +bar, after watching her from the front. "What's the matter with you? Are +you ill?" + +Lily did not even answer. + +"I'm speaking to you," said Trampy crossly. "You did nothing right +to-night." + +"Yes, I know; that'll do," said Lily. + +"It's not a question of 'Yes, I know,' but of doing better next time," +said Trampy. + +"I'm not taking any orders to-night," said Lily. + +"No, darling, but there was an agent in the house. He must have thought +you bad." + +"That's none of your business!" + +"And, if you don't get engagements, what's to become of us?" + +"I don't care a hang," said Lily. "_I_ can always manage." + +"You ... you ... and what about me? We're married, aren't we?" + +"But the money I earn's mine," said Lily. "I mean to buy dresses and +whatever I want to, with _my_ money. You'll be wanting to come on the +stage next, in evening-dress, to stand over me while I do my turn, and +getting out your belt. Do you take me for your daughter, tell me?" + +"What I'm saying," said Trampy, aghast, "is for your good, from the point +of view of the business, the salary." + +"_My_ business, _my_ salary, damn it!" cried Lily. "_Mine, mine_, do you +understand? And it concerns nobody but myself!" + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +It came as a smack in the jaw to Trampy. + +"_My_ pay, _my_ work, _mine_!" + +It meant no more pocket-money with which to lord it at the bar. It meant a +cheap cigarette instead of his glorious cigar. It was the end of a +beautiful dream; and the awakening was a hard one. At first, he hoped to +make Lily jealous by going about openly with the stage-girls; but she no +longer paid any attention, seemed to suggest that he had better amuse +himself on his side and she on hers: + +"What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander," she said. + +Lily would no longer take his orders; and, because he felt his wife escape +him, it was he, Trampy, who now became jealous. When, from a distance, +among the tables, he saw Lily ride round the stage and all those heads +raised toward her, those opera-glasses pointed at her, he followed her +with an anxious eye. "Miss Lily!" "Miss Lily" was his wife, after all! +Those rounded arms, that lissom figure, those twinkling legs were all his, +every bit of them! He was the husband, by Jove! It was not a marriage for +fun, as with Ave Maria: it was a marriage for good and all, which had cost +him two pounds--"Yes, siree!"--at the Kennington registry-office. And it +wasn't only her flightiness, her smiles at the front boxes, but "_my_ +work, _my_ salary, _mine_" into the bargain! She was acting like a bad +wife, forgetting her most sacred duties! + +Lily stood on no ceremony with him, took her title of "Miss" seriously: +very flattering for him, very flattering, he must say! He no longer knew +himself: he who, in the old days, used to answer: "My lord, rely on me!" +when a half-tipsy swell invited him to come and drink champagne with some +stage-girls, now became furious if men in the audience, not knowing who he +was, sized up "Miss Lily" before him--her shoulders, arms and the +rest--with reflections such as "I could do with a bit of that!" or, "A +nice little supper ..." He felt inclined to shout in their faces that she +was no "miss," but his wife, by Jove! + +He became more and more jealous. The thought of Jimmy, especially, kept +running in his head. He felt a twinge whenever he heard him mentioned. And +Jimmy was often mentioned just at present, for he was said to be preparing +a new turn, a turn which would make him famous, unless it killed him. + +"If only it would!" Trampy hoped. + +Jimmy was Trampy's bugbear. He had flattered himself that he had snatched +Lily from Jimmy by sheer prowess; and not a bit of it! The recollection of +that drove him mad, the sense of his powerlessness exasperated him, he had +but one idea left: to show Lily ... and Jimmy ... the sort of man he was; +to take his revenge. That great scheme of his, that discovery that would +show what he was made of, the invention which he had patented in America +with Poland's money--oh, she had revenged herself finely, had that +Parisienne!--well, the time to apply himself to that trick had come. Lily +had refused to do it. All right, he would do it himself! + +But, if he was to succeed, it was necessary that Lily should supply him +with money, more money, lots of money. The apparatus was incomplete and +had probably got damaged in the London warehouse; it would need repairs, +improvements. Now Lily seemed intractable. She was vexed at having to earn +money for two, pretended to have none too much for herself; it was her +costumes now: six sets of tights, one for each evening, pink, green, red, +blue, gray, white and assorted ornaments, silk ribbons.... + +She didn't want to kill herself with work for nothing, as she had been +doing up to now: + +"A lady isn't a performing dog!" she said. + +Trampy swallowed his bitterness when he heard that. Lily was escaping him +altogether. Sometimes, he would go on the stage, sit down in a corner and, +from there, see Lily, a shawl over her shoulders, her throat wrapped in a +scarf, walk up and down, behind the back-drop, like a passenger on the +deck of a ship, at one time with a monkey-faced, red-whiskered +sketch-comedian; at others, according to the chances of the week, with the +female-impersonator, the boy with the green eyes. There was no harm in +that: they were at home, among themselves, Lily was no damned +lalerperlooser, he wouldn't have had her so. And Trampy did not dare say +anything, for fear of being made a laughing stock and also lest he should +offend "Miss Lily." But he was tormented with jealousy nevertheless, +merely at seeing her talk pleasantly with her acquaintances. And yet it +was innocent enough, a mere "Hullo, Lily!" "Hullo, old boy!" by way of +keeping herself in touch with the news, for Lily hardly ever looked into +_The Era_ or _Das Program_; all those names, all that competition +frightened her! + +[Illustration: THE BOY WITH THE GREEN EYES] + +She had learned nothing new about Pa, except that the troupe still +existed, but in quite a small way, of course. Her Pa was in favor of soft +treatment, now, so they said; he had changed his manner. "Too late!" +murmured Lily thoughtfully; but she was much amused when she heard that +Tom, in addition to keeping up his trade as a shoeblack, was learning +boxing, with bulldog obstinacy, in order to give Pa back his blow on the +nose and beat him in a square fight. And didn't some one say that Tom was +stage-struck, too? Tom, that dwarf, with his short arms, on the stage! +Crazy! every one of them! + +And then they were always talking of Jimmy: Jimmy here, Jimmy there. It +was becoming serious, Lily couldn't get over it. She wondered what old +Martello would say if he heard that: Jimmy an artiste! Pooh! Nonsense! And +it was true, mind you! It was repeated from mouth to mouth, his fame was +spreading, his fame, that is to say, in the bars, in the wings, among +pros; you heard his name mentioned together with a hundred others; but +that already was a great deal, that one could say, Butt Snyders, Laurence, +Jimmy, Marjutti, all mixed up, as though he were their equal, he who had +done nothing! But he would "do," it was in the air: some stroke of luck, +who could tell? And Lily knew him to be ambitious. Lady or no lady, she +was an artiste first and foremost and hated competition. She had been +whipped for her rivals, Lillian, Edith and Polly, had caught it for +Laurence and for the fat freaks, too, and she depended on her work for her +bread. When she saw a new troupe come to the front it made her anxious: +even children "that high," who played bike in between the pillars of the +stage, she felt inclined to stamp upon; and if people ever asked her +advice, she did not hesitate to tell them wrong. Men especially were +disastrous competitors, even the ignorant ones. You never knew where you +were with them, they dared do anything! She could not help getting mad +when she thought of it. One more to take the bread out of her mouth! For +it was all very well to treat him as a simpleton, to talk of his +crotchets--he had views concerning a stage-apprentices' fund, a home of +rest for superannuated artistes and so on--Lily considered him dangerous. +He was not a silly Glass-Eye or a stage-struck Tom; he was an ambitious +Jimmy. But all the same, how absurd! A hypocrite like that was fit to +write to Pa and get a poor girl in trouble, but was not the man to risk +his skin! She laughed, not a stage smile, no, a real laugh, head thrown +back, full-throated. An artiste, O Lord! Yes, like a heap of bluffers who +were to do this and that, all sorts of wonderful things! and who ended by +making a laughing stock of themselves, the whole business was so childish, +faked up with ropes and weights, nursery-toys, Punch-and-Judy rubbish. It +would be just like that with Jimmy, sure: lots of noise and then ... +nothing! And he would have lost his place as manager and he would starve, +the josser: that would teach him to be spiteful! And where was Jimmy? He +might be very clever, in his shed in London, swinging from his rope, like +a monkey on a string, but to do that before an audience was different. +There would be no Jimmy left! + +She liked to talk to herself like that. Miss Lily avoided thinking of a +possible stroke of luck, she who had taken such pains to attain so little, +just to become Mrs. Trampy, to have the honor of working for Trampy and +feeding Trampy. Oh, she was tired of it, did all she could to find him +work, to spur him on! She even wanted him to practise. And she mentioned +Tom and Jimmy to him, all those beginners, all the others who were coming +on. + +"She thinks more of him than of me," he said to himself. + +And time passed and passed. It was now eight months that they had been +traveling through Germany: and then, at last, came Berlin, the center of +the agencies, like the plunge into Chicago, after the Western Tour, or New +York, after the Eastern, or Paris, or London. Lily asked herself for what +part of the world she would sign contracts. She would have liked +Australia, South Africa, the States, so as to leave her husband in Europe, +sitting up on his hind-quarters, like a trained dog, waiting for his +"missis" to come back: + +"If I could have the Kolossal in the meantime," Lily thought. "A month +there would do me nicely! I'd like to beat the fat freaks in their own +country and show Pa that I don't need his old troupe to star with!" + +And Lily had some hope: an agent had given her to understand that she +would be engaged, without a doubt, at that famous music-hall. But no! She +learned that the Kolossal was not wanting cyclists, it had an attraction +for next month, something sensational, it was said. And, in fact, +suddenly, in the space of a night, the walls of the capital were covered +with huge posters--"Bridging the Abyss!"--at the Kolossal! + +"What's that?" Lily asked herself. + +And she was thunderstruck when she learned that this was Jimmy's new +trick! She had no doubt left when, looking into a bookseller's window, she +saw Jimmy's portrait in _Die Illustrirte Zeitung_, the popular illustrated +paper in Berlin. + +Her arms fell to her sides! What, she thought, already? All this +advertisement for that Jimmy? She had lost the Kolossal because of him. +Already Jimmy was taking the bread out of her mouth! She could have wrung +his neck! + +Never had the New Zealanders, or the Hauptmanns, or the Pawnees, or any +one, or anybody known such advertising as that, except the great breakneck +performers, Laurence, the Loopers, the Motor Girl; and even then the girl +was packed up in her machine like a sausage. But "Bridging the Abyss," the +papers said, required art: everything depended on the exact impetus, the +faultless balance. The press was filled with clever puffs, biographies, +descriptions of the apparatus, the cool daring which it needed to try that +without a rope, to risk the performer's life six times in six seconds. +London and Paris were both said to have wanted the attraction; and Berlin +was to have it first; and _hoch_ for the Kolossal! + +Trampy also was flabbergasted, when he read about this: + +"But ... but ... but it's my apparatus and nothing else! Why, I patented +it in America! Do you understand now," he asked, without, however, +entering into technical explanations, "do you understand now, when I +wanted you to help me? It wasn't a question of the rusty bike! You've made +me miss fame and fortune! And to think that I have an apparatus rotting +away in London, in a warehouse, and that, if you'd listened to me, I +should have been at the Kolossal now ... and covering you with diamonds!" + +"I like your style!" said Lily. "You'd have made me break my back in your +stead! I know you!" + +"Oh, but I shan't swallow that," said Trampy, in his exasperation. "We +shall see! I have my rights. I shall enforce them!" + +"Don't make a fool of yourself," said Lily. "When a thing has to be done, +it gets done without all that talk: look at Jimmy!" + +"Hang your Jimmy!" + +"It's not a question of _my_ Jimmy," retorted Lily, "but of _my_ money. I +should simply have flung it away! You, do a thing like that! You risk your +skin! Rot!" + +Trampy, in his rage, would have boxed Lily's ears, had it not been for her +nails, which she held ready to scratch his face, and he went out fuming. +He ran off to the agents, but there was nothing for him. And yet Trampy +knew or, at least, supposed that they must want an opposition show to +"Bridging the Abyss." They must, surely! Why, everywhere, in all the great +centers, every music-hall had its rival opposite or beside it: everywhere, +each establishment strove to inflict empty houses upon its rival by +offering more sensational or more breakneck tricks. At the Kaiserin, the +rival of the Kolossal, they were, without a doubt, looking for something +to set against "Bridging the Abyss" and they had nothing, or else Trampy +would have known it: among pros such matters were always known long +beforehand. Oh, Trampy was prepared to do anything to escape his wife's +sarcasm! + +And, one evening, behold Trampy returning in triumph to the cafe where +Lily awaited him: + +"I knew it!" he cried. "I knew it wouldn't go like that!" + +"Well, what?" asked Lily. "Have you got a number thirty-seven? +Thirty-eight? A fresh conquest? Something quite out of the common?" + +"Laugh away, Lily! That son of a gun shall hear me talked about yet, by +Jove! And everybody else will, too. You must be prepared for anything, +Lily, when you marry an artiste!" + +"Why, what's happened?" asked Lily, much surprised. + +This had happened: the two music-halls had fought. Jimmy, who was unable, +it seemed, to get London or Paris, had offered his "Bridging the Abyss" to +the Kaiserin, but his price was considered too high. From there he went to +the Kolossal and made the same proposal. Now, times were hard for the +music-halls, sucked dry by the enormous salaries that had to be paid. The +managers were standing shoulder to shoulder, in the presence of the common +enemy, the artiste and, more particularly, the originator of sensations, +who is indispensable and who makes you an offer with a pistol at your +head, like a highwayman demanding your money or your life. + +But a turn like that meant an assured success; and the Kolossal offered +Jimmy five hundred marks a night, so as to spike the Kaiserin's guns by +getting hold of a unique turn and one not easy to replace; a piece of +underhand work involving two months' empty houses at the Kaiserin, which, +as it was, had only a second-rate troupe by way of "sisters," while at the +Kolossal they had Roofers engaged by the year, real ones, the complete +dozen, words and music guaranteed. And now the Kolossal would make huge +money with "Bridging the Abyss" and sink its rival; it was a +master-stroke. But they knew everything at the Kaiserin. The Kaiserin also +wanted a "Bridging the Abyss." It would have one, a better one, with a +finer title: "Arching the Gulf!" And they would get it for three hundred +marks! And they must be ready, quick, quick, before the Kolossal, and it +was just possible: they had twenty days yet; the apparatus would be made; +they knew the plans, the dimensions; the house would be fixed up +accordingly; they must succeed at all costs and not let themselves be +strangled without defense! It was a struggle to the death! They would +fight with corpses, if need be! Other people had broken their backs for +them before now; there would be no difficulty in finding one more to risk +his life six times in six seconds for three hundred marks a night. + +And it was at that moment that Trampy offered himself. They had heard his +name: + +"Trampy Wheel-Pad, the tramp cyclist with the red-hot stove?" + +"That's me," said Trampy. + +And, full of self-assurance, he explained the object of his visit: + +"I was the first to construct it; I patented it myself at Washington; I +will produce the documents!" + +It will be understood why Trampy wore his air of conquest when he returned +home that day. He had his engagement in his pocket! He displayed it +victoriously to Lily, passed it over her face, reveled in his revenge. At +last he was going to show Lily whether he was able to keep a wife or not; +and champagne suppers every evening, by Jove, with girls--no damned +lalerperloosers--just to show her! + +That same evening, he left for London, with an advance from the +management, and came back to Berlin with the apparatus, the whole set up +and repaired in a week, a gang of men working night and day. Followed +practice with the rope, on a movable pulley, from early dawn, like a man +determined to accomplish his breakneck feat, alive or dead; for Trampy +would have done, no matter what, for Lily to cease being "Miss" Lily, to +admit herself married and married for love and not to escape whippings, to +cease being ashamed of him, to show herself proud of him, on the contrary, +especially before Jimmy! + +Trampy, in his less enthusiastic moments, felt a certain uneasiness: +Jimmy's proximity, his own patents far away, in America. But he assumed a +bold face, declared himself the inventor, practised unrelentingly, with +hatred of his rival in his heart. This hatred seemed to increase his +powers of work. He practised, practised. He had a lively intelligence, if +his heart was a trifle flabby. And he was very skilful, besides, when he +condescended to take the trouble. He was a quick worker: in less than +twenty days everything was ready, and "Arching the Gulf" sprawled over the +hoardings of Berlin, side by side with "Bridging the Abyss." One saw +nothing else; and the Kaiserin opened its doors forty-eight hours before +Jimmy. It was a huge success. Trampy received an ovation when, after the +release of the terrible springs which flung the bike from one pedestal to +another, in five seconds he fell on the mattresses outspread to receive +him, behind a cloth. + +It goes without saying that Jimmy was present at the show. He was smashed +before he had even begun! There, before his eyes, was his own invention +worked by another! He had expected competition, of course; it was +impossible, he knew, to discover anything that wasn't copied at once; +snatchers of ideas, who prowl around artistes, plagiarists, pirates, +swarmed as thick as any other sort of thieves. And, as ill luck would have +it, though his turn was difficult to perform, the apparatus, at least, was +simple to construct: four powerful springs, screwed down with a jack, +which the weight of the leaping cyclist, as he fell upon each pedestal, +released one after the other, causing him to take enormous jumps forward. +It was an ideal breakneck machine, easy to carry about; only the +calculations had been difficult. They had cost him a lot of trouble to +establish; and now another was profiting by them! Perhaps some one had +patented the invention before him! For he, too, before showing it in +public, had patented it in England and Germany; and his anger knew no +bounds, his energy was increased fourfold when he learned the name of the +plagiarist: Trampy again! Trampy, who had stolen his love, who had stolen +his Lily ... and who was now stealing his idea ... robbing him of the +fruit of his labor! Jimmy, in spite of his fury, resolved to keep calm: +the law first. He was protected by the law, unless--and that was +impossible--unless Trampy had had the same idea as himself before him and +taken out his patents before the publication in _Engineering_. Jimmy +showed a prompt decision, a feverish activity. First of all, he must put +the law in motion, bring an action against Trampy, telegraph to the patent +office at Washington to ascertain the date. Meanwhile, he made his first +appearance on the day fixed for it. His success was even greater than +Trampy's; his leaps were twice as wide, more in accordance with his +courage. The way in which he "bridged the abyss," in the huge hall where +he gave his show, was enough to prove that he was the inventor, the +creator, the great, typical, daring performer, who, disclaiming death, +marches to glory and fortune even as heroes, flag in hand, rush to the +assault under fire. + +It was a bolt from the blue for the Kaiserin when the little paper +arrived, the injunction against "Arching the Gulf." A steamer caught in a +cyclone would undergo much the same disablement, under a sea sweeping her +from stem to stern, swamping the saloons, drowning the very rats in the +hold. Jimmy's active inquiries had not taken long: telegram followed upon +telegram; the British consul woke up. The law at Washington was formal and +precise: nothing could be patented that had been known, or used, or +published before the patent was applied for. Now the article in +_Engineering_, of course, appeared prior to the step taken by Trampy. And +in Germany, also, Jimmy won his case; the court found in favor of the +absolute novelty of the invention. The Kaiserin could not give its +performance short of paying five hundred marks a night to its rival, the +Kolossal. This meant the wreck of "Arching the Gulf;" and Trampy came down +with it. For a few days, he led a terrible life, a desperate struggle, +made efforts in every direction; but, at last, worried, hustled, driven to +bay, Trampy disappeared into the darkness, while Jimmy, freed from this +enervating opposition and feeling sure of himself henceforward, gained +fresh courage, added another arch to "Bridging the Abyss." + +It was done, he had made his start, he had a name, he was the man who +draws crowds; he received brilliant proposals from all sides, from the +Western Trust, among others. He felt himself somebody; and money also was +coming in. He could at last realize what he had in his head ... in the +absence of love there would be fame ... oh, something a thousand times +more sensational than "Bridging the Abyss," more modern, more scientific, +something which he confided to nobody, which he kept locked up in his +brain, in his heart, like a love passion, a thing which would be his +alone, this time, which no one could take from him! For it would not be a +question of a spring and a click, only. The thing moved in his breast, +lived in his brain. When he thought of it, his cheeks became hollow with +ambition, his eyes lit up. He seemed to tower over immense perspectives; +and, from that height, Trampy appeared to him so small, so small, so +really small that he felt his anger decrease. And then there was Lily! To +send Trampy to his wife with a black eye or a bloody nose, to turn the +husband into an object of ridicule to his wife, that was impossible for +him; it would have shown lack of respect for Lily, poor darling; he would +not humiliate her in her man! She loved him, perhaps, in the illusion of +her seventeen years! Hurt _her_? Never! Jimmy wiped the episode from the +slate; hard as it was, he forgave that highway robber, in the name of his +dead love. + +Ah, if he could have seen Lily when Trampy was driven to confess his +discomfiture to her! He would have been revenged offhand! Lily seethed +with rage against her husband, that footy rotter! What! Was that his great +scheme? Did he call that an idea? How often had not Jimmy spoken to her +about it! It was pinned on the wall, it lay about in the Gresse Street +workshop for months. She remembered seeing the plans, the diagrams, the +drawings in the papers. Jimmy had explained everything to her at the time +when he was still a josser. And Trampy had stolen it from him, stolen it, +stolen it! Oh, he would make her die of shame! + +It was a terrible dispute, a real "playing humanity," with threats, +clenched fists, broken crockery strewing the floor. + +"To humiliate me like that before Jimmy!" said Lily, furious. + +"Drop that about Jimmy!" snarled Trampy, green with jealousy. "I won't +have you mention him!" + +"I shall mention him if I like! Jimmy is a son of a gun! Very well! But +he's a man! He's worth two of you." + +Trampy strode up to her with his fist raised. + +"If you touch me," cried Lily, seizing the lamp, "if you touch me, I'll +smash it over your head!" + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +When Trampy received the visit of the _Gerichtsdiener_, with the bill of +costs to pay--for the Kolossal sued the Kaiserin for damages and the +Kaiserin came down upon Trampy--when Trampy learned that, he became a limp +rag. Already he saw himself dragged before the courts, his whole past laid +bare: two wives on his hands, for all he knew; Lily crushing him with her +scorn; Jimmy triumphant. + +Trampy had a moment of real despair. Lily preferred him like that, humbled +at her feet. She seemed to understand her husband, a man spoiled by easy +conquests, a boozer, a rake, who had taken too much upon himself when he +wedded a wife. Trampy was certainly not made for marriage: having a wife +was a different thing from having thirty-six girls. His heart, weakened +with premature enjoyment, was no longer made for real love. All this he +too now perceived; and, in spite of himself, realizing his unworthiness, +he felt overcome by an ever-increasing jealousy. + +Those were melancholy weeks in the small room. He sat for hours brooding +over his disgrace. Lily silently turned this time of rest to account and +mended her costumes, sewed spangles on her bodices, beside the earthenware +stove, on which the stew was bubbling; and then came the meal, on the +table hastily cleared of the mass of ribbons, thread and needles, to make +room for the plates. Trampy choked as he swallowed that dinner which he +had not earned, sighed sadly for the good cheer of his dreams, the +champagne suppers with girls. He gulped down his meagre fare in silence, +he who had known the gay junketings, the noisy laughter and the "Roman +nights!" To go from there and drown his sorrows in the bar next door was +but a step. And Trampy had sorrows outside his recent defeat: sorrows +which were even more bitter. He felt that, this time, he was losing Lily. + +Lily was surrounded with sympathy. When she went the round of the +agencies, the pros courted her. They looked upon Lily in the light of a +wife tired of her husband. They prowled round that possible prey. A Lily +was worth the having, meant an assured income for whoever succeeded in +winning her affections and managing her properly: not with brutality, no, +rather not; home joys, like Mr. Fuchs! Who was destined one day to own +those full-blown seventeen years, those twinkling legs, that lissom body, +trained to spin round and round, unerring and exact? What lucky dog would +have her for himself, would succeed in making her love him? They pitied +Lily openly, to disgust her with her husband and hasten on the +catastrophe. Trampy? He was no husband for her! They, ah, yes, now that +was a different matter! And they talked of the dangers attendant upon +Trampy's mode of life; the impersonator told her of the terrible diseases +brought on by constant tippling; they exaggerated it all on purpose, +amused themselves by frightening her; until Lily, sometimes, would look +upon herself as a pretty little gazelle chained to a mangy bear. + +Trampy suspected all this, having himself, in the old days, in the time of +his glory, been one of those who hovered round wives ready for divorce, +helping them, if need be. He could have smashed the face of that +green-eyed impersonator. There was also that architect, that +theater-builder, Harrasford's friend: he was passing through Berlin and +Lily had taken his fancy the other evening, at the cafe; he had patted her +cheek gaily: + +"I knew you when you were 'that high.' You used to sit on my knee. How +beautiful you've grown!" + +There appeared to be an infinity of people who had known Lily when she was +"that high." They paid her more and more attention ... and then they +believed her to be looked after by Jimmy. That again was a friendship +dating back to her childhood, they said: Jimmy, the bill-topper. He, too, +had known her when she was "that high." + +The greater part of this talk reached Trampy's ears. Oh, he could have +killed that Jimmy! But he was obliged to hold his tongue. Jimmy had him +under his heel, with that crushing lawsuit. + +They did not even dare speak of it, so painful was the subject. The little +table by the earthenware stove separated them like a wall; and there was +one thing always between them: Jimmy. Trampy never mentioned his name now. +He would have had too much to say.... And there were continual summonses, +always; and lawyers, always; and costs, always. Money melted away, like +butter in the sun. Lily was tired of it; and an agony overcame her at the +thought of leading a life like that for the rest of her days: + +"Oh," she said, "he's taking the very bread from our mouths, with his +lawsuit! And I haven't a decent hat to wear." + +"He'll drive us to the workhouse," grumbled Trampy, staring before him, +with folded arms. + +"It's your fault!" Lily began, but soon stopped: the subject led to a +surfeit of quarreling. + +But, in her own mind: + +"That son of a gun of a Jimmy!" she thought. "All the same, who would ever +have believed it of him? Can he guess that all of this falls upon me?" + +"Suppose you were to go and see him," said Trampy, at his wits' end, one +day when he had exhausted himself in stormy explanations with the manager +of the Kaiserin. + +"I go and see Jimmy?" exclaimed Lily. "What for?" + +"To try and arrange things," replied Trampy, dropping his head. "No one +but you could ..." + +"I'll think about it, I'll see," said Lily. + +But she had to get used by degrees to the idea of going and seeing that +Jimmy who was now ruining her. A strange curiosity, nevertheless, drove +her toward that conqueror, once a bike-cleaning workman, who was now +topping the bill at Berlin and making as much money by himself as a whole +program put together. He would receive her kindly, she was sure of that. +Oh and then she wanted to tell him that she had had nothing to do with +that business of the patents ... that she did not approve of Trampy's +conduct ...! And then he could give her news of Pa and Ma, as he had come +from London, where he must have seen them! And she was dying to know! The +idea was increasing with her that life with Trampy had become impossible. +And, in case she should leave him, she dreaded finding herself alone. +Already there were all those offers being made to her, a married woman, +driving her mad! She, Lily Clifton, was treated like a "Parisienne": she +hated that sort! To walk about the stage, two by two, might pass; but it +was possible to go too far, like the conductor of the orchestra, who, the +other day, tried to kiss her in her dressing-room, married woman though +she was! Then what would it be when she traveled alone! On the continent, +too! Oh, she would have liked to be a good little wife! But, as that could +not be, better go back to her Pa and Ma and have a home, a real one, with +a servant in it. She was yearning for a home. But how would she be +received in that case? Would they put the blame on her? Had they forgiven +her? Had she a Pa and Ma still? That was what she wanted to know. + +Lily would have liked to look handsome and elegant on the day when she +went to Jimmy, so as to show him that he was not the only one who made a +lot of money; but she felt very small and terribly excited. The hotel +itself, the great clock, the waiters, everything made an impression on +her, so different from her boarding-house in the Akerstrasse. She felt +like running away after knocking at his door; and Jimmy opened it with the +preoccupied air of a man who is disturbed at an inconvenient moment. But +suddenly he put out his hand in hearty greeting: + +"Hullo, Lily! Come in." + +Lily entered a bright sitting-room, neatly furnished with a sofa and +comfortable chairs; no bed; a room which served only for that. She at once +felt more at her ease. Jimmy motioned her to a seat near a table covered +with papers, full of marks and signs which she did not understand, and +books, rulers and compasses. She tried to be simple and dignified; +apologized for interrupting him: + +"Brain-work, I see," she said, pointing to the papers. "That's hard, too, +I suppose," she added, to say something, for a start, like talking about +the weather. + +"A matter of habit, like the bike," said Jimmy, in a tone of conviction. +"Sit down, Lily, there in that big arm-chair; you're not disturbing me." + +"'K you," said Lily, sitting down, feeling reassured by his cordial +welcome and thinking that, at least, he was polite. + +"I am glad to see you again, Lily," Jimmy went on, taking a chair himself. +"Always glad to see you. And how are you? Keeping well?" + +"'K you," said Lily. + +"I'm very glad to hear it," said Jimmy, scrutinizing Lily with great +kindness and trying not to see her preoccupied expression. "I know what +brings you here, Lily. You're a dear little thing, a kid, eh? A real kid +at heart, aren't you? I bet you I guess. I've come from London. You want +to hear the latest news of your Pa and Ma, eh? You're not angry with them, +I hope? Oh, it would be wrong of you to be angry with them still! They're +very fond of you, you know. They cried when you went away, Lily. Your ... +going away," Jimmy insisted, with a quaver in his voice, "was ... a great +blow ... to them ... too." + +"How do they get on without me?" asked Lily eagerly, not wishing to break +down and cry before Jimmy. "Poor Pa! Yes, he was fond of me. He never let +me fall on purpose. He did not force me to work when I was ill." + +"Your Pa!" Jimmy broke in, glad of the chance to give a fresh turn to the +conversation. "Why, there's no harm in him! Your Pa's an artiste in love +with his art, that's all! I shouldn't be surprised if the troupe made a +hit yet. It's had a success of a sort already--in the small halls--at +Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells. Your Pa just does without you as well as he +can. He runs after his pupils all day long, damn it!" said Jimmy, with a +laugh. "Your cousin stars." + +[Illustration: COUSIN DAISY] + +"_Who_ stars?" asked Lily. + +"Your cousin Daisy. She came as soon as you ... as you went away and +offered to take your place. Pa Clifton sent her to the right-about, +treated her like a ... like an I don't know what, but she returned to the +charge. She's doing very well now. She tries to be like you." + +"No! Impossible!" exclaimed Lily. "What, that fat freak?" + +"And your Pa will succeed," Jimmy hastened to add. "You'll see. You ought +to be proud of having a Pa like that." + +"Yes, in a sense," said Lily, who felt a certain satisfaction at being the +daughter of her Pa. + +He was a bit harsh at times; but a man like her Pa, or like Jimmy, was +much better than her loafer of a tramp cyclist! + +"And ... Ma?" asked Lily. + +"Your Ma," said Jimmy, in a lower voice, "cried ... oh, how she cried when +she found that you had gone! No doubt, she exaggerated any wrong she had +done you. It seems she fell upon her knees and prayed and asked for +forgiveness." + +"Forgiveness? What for? Of whom?" Lily inquired. + +"Why," said Jimmy, in a serious tone, "of whom do you think people ask +forgiveness, when they are alone, on their knees?" + +"Oh," said Lily, greatly touched, "I understand! So they didn't put the +blame on me?" + +"What blame?" + +"For my marriage," said Lily, lowering her eyes. + +"No ... if you had gone off to live with him ... oh, not you, not you, I +know!" protested Jimmy, seeing a gesture of Lily's. "But marriage is +different, I suppose. You had the right, you were old enough to go away +with the man you loved." + +Jimmy turned pale as he said this; but Lily, hanging her head and red with +shame, did not notice it. + +"What!" said Jimmy. "You're blushing! Do you regret it?" + +Lily did not reply. + +"Then," continued Jimmy slowly, "what they said--I wouldn't believe it, +but you know they say a lot of things--is it true?" + +She nodded yes and raised her eyes to him with a sad, weary smile. + +"He doesn't love you? And ... and ... you, Lily," asked Jimmy, taking her +hand in his, "don't you love him?" + +"Certainly not!" said Lily, with such an accent of conviction and such a +look of disgust that Jimmy was, at one and the same time, delighted to the +bottom of his heart and pained to the verge of tears. + +Poor Lily! He now noticed her pallor, the dark rims round her eyes, that +exquisite face refined by inmost grief. Lily, upon whom, since her visit +to the shop in Gresse Street, he had built his hopes of happiness! It +seemed to him like yesterday and already it was the distant past. Was that +what her rebellion, her bid for freedom had ended in? Was that the +crowning point of her hard life? Lily, fashioned to be the companion of a +loving heart, was the prey of a footy rotter! Oh, if Jimmy had not +controlled himself, if he had not clenched his teeth, for fear of talking! +If he had listened to his anger, let loose the storm that raged within +him, shouted out what he felt! But what would be the good of telling her +his love? Why add to Lily's sorrows by letting her know what might have +been and thus cause trouble in her household, when he wished for one thing +only, Lily's happiness? Suppose she did not love her husband: Trampy, +alas, unworthy though he was, remained her husband, nevertheless! And +there was no hope of breaking the chain. The letters from Denver and +Houston were anything but encouraging. No proofs, no recollections of +Trampy's marriage over there. So there seemed no way out. + +Nor did he wish to incense Trampy's jealousy. Lily would have had to bear +the brunt of it ... as in the old days, with Ma's temper. Oh, there was no +doubt about it: Jimmy, to hold his tongue now, needed more courage than +when risking his life six times in six seconds! But what was the use of +fighting against fate? Better submit, when there was no remedy, and strive +for peace! + +"Everything gets straight sooner or later," Jimmy went on. "Many lives +that once seemed spoiled have become quite endurable. Time is the great +healer. Trampy, no doubt, will get over his faults. He will learn to +appreciate you. Have patience. Don't exaggerate your bothers, Lily. There +are others unhappier than yourself. You have a claim to happiness. You +will know it yet. Just think. You're so young, you have all your life +before you." + +"The simpleton!" thought Lily. "It's easy for him to talk. But then ... +why was he so jealous? Why did he tell Pa about me? But for him, I should +be at home now!" + +It was certain that, notwithstanding his kindly reception, Jimmy now +seemed to be taking Trampy's part, as formerly he had sided with Pa and +Ma. And he was lalerperlooser enough to ask Lily if her husband knew that +she had come to see him: + +"I hope he knows, Lily. We must have no secrets: did you tell him?" + +"He sent me," she said, resolving to tell everything frankly, since that +was what she had come for and not, after all, to talk about love ... +money, only, and business ... it was a question of bread and butter to +her. + +"Ah! He did!" said Jimmy, a little surprised. + +"Yes," said Lily, "it's about that lawsuit." + +"Speak quite frankly, Lily. Tell me everything," said Jimmy, very calm. + +"Well," said Lily, yielding before his air of candor, "Trampy is at the +end of his tether; he has no money"--she colored up to the eyes--"no +money, no work; the law-costs ..." + +"And whose fault is that?" interrupted Jimmy, rising and picking up a +cigarette, so as to have something to fumble at with his fingers. "Whose +fault is it, Lily, if not that ... well, if not Trampy's? Isn't it fair +that he should pay for it? It would really become too easy, else, to steal +other people's ideas! You know quite well, Lily--you saw it at my place, +on the wall--is it my invention or is it not? And here comes Trampy," he +continued, crunching up his cigarette with a nervous gesture, "and patents +it ... as if it were his own. It's a bit too much, you know!" + +"Jimmy," cried Lily, starting up from her chair, "I swear to you that I +had nothing to do with it! If I had known, Jimmy, I would have stopped it! +I call it stealing, as you do." + +"Oh, I'm quite sure of that, Lily! I never thought it was you! Calm +yourself; sit down, do," said Jimmy, relieved at the sight of Lily's +indignation, as she stood before him with blazing eyes and her face +crimson with shame. + +"Important tricks like that!" went on Lily, sitting down again. "No, those +have no right to be copied. It's brain-work. You designed it yourself." + +"Yes, but about the present," said Jimmy, with a serious air. "I can't +give in to Trampy. I'm bound to defend myself. You came to see me about my +action, Lily. I can't say anything on the subject. It's ... Trampy's +business, I suppose! Why, what would you do in my place, Lily?" + +"I should do as you're doing, Jimmy, you're perfectly right," said Lily, +very low, without raising her head. "But couldn't one come to terms ... +avoid a lawsuit ... and not waste all that money on jossers? What do you +gain by it yourself? We can't pay up, Jimmy: those costs are breaking +us." + +"What do you mean by 'us'?" + +"Trampy isn't working," continued Lily. "He hasn't done anything for a +long time." + +"But then," asked Jimmy, stopping in front of her, "how does he live?" + +"I ... I'm earning money," explained Lily, blushing, ashamed to own her +distress. + +Oh, it was hard for her, Lily Clifton, to have no money and to confess it +to Jimmy, that josser, who was making his five hundred marks a day! Jimmy +saw her before him, huddled in her chair ... her faded hat, her mean gown. +He took in everything at a glance. Poor Lily, who used to dream of +dresses, to be reduced to that! Then he understood. Pity moved him at the +sight of that poor Lily. It was all very well for him to say, just now, +"Business is business," and to ask, "What would you do in my place?" He +knew what he would do. A lawsuit was not a question of sentiment, +everybody knew that; but still, it was no longer between men.... + +"Listen, Lily," he said, putting his hand kindly on her shoulder, "if all +this is to fall upon you, we must see how we can arrange matters. Sorry +you didn't come sooner; I don't want to add to your burdens, Lily, heaven +knows I don't! I never thought of that. I ought to have suspected, +perhaps. However, I will withdraw the case. I'll manage. And the costs ... +well, I'll pay them myself, if necessary, for you, Lily, for you; because +I knew you when you were 'that high' ... no, not quite so small; how old +were you? Thirteen ... and such a little thing, such a dear little wee +thing. Do you remember when I made night and day in your cabin, by just +touching my levers? And then it seems to me that I always knew you: in +Mexico, in India, in South Africa, at the time of the elephants and the +tiny birds. And then later, that other Lily, the London one: the one of +only a few months ago. The one for whom ..." continued Jimmy, in a voice +smothered with emotion. "The Lily of Rathbone Place. The Lily of Gresse +Street. That little toque, which suited you so well and which you +complained of ... you poor little Lily!... You poor silly little thing! +There, go home now and make your mind easy, as far as I'm concerned, Lily. +None of your troubles shall come from me. Besides, as they say, a bad +settlement is better than the best lawsuit. I'm doing it for your sake. +Well, is that all right?" + +"Oh, how kind you are!" she said, raising her eyes to him, with a tear in +them. "Why, Jimmy, you're not so bad, after all!" + +"Pooh!" said Jimmy, lighting a cigarette. "I'm no better than most, Lily, +and no worse. Flesh and blood, like the rest. And, besides, for you, Lily +... If ever you need me, Lily, if I can be of any use to you ..." + + * * * * * + +"For me," thought Lily, as she returned home, "for me. Ah, if I had known! +Ah, when I think that he, too, wanted to marry me, what a fool I was!" she +said, with a sigh. + +She still felt in her own palm the gentle, manly pressure of Jimmy's hand. +She still heard the kind words with which he had comforted her on the +threshold. Goodness, how happy she would have been with a man like him! +Her ill-will disappeared. He was no longer a cur, that josser, but a +gentleman, rather, a brother, a friend.... And she was proud, also, that +Jimmy, who was so busy and making such a lot of money, had promised to +come and applaud her, one of these evenings, at her theater, at Kleim's +Garden, before his own turn at the Kolossal. Oh, wouldn't she work hard +that night! She would do all her tricks! She was bent on pleasing him. And +how vulgar and common Trampy appeared in comparison. However, there was no +help for it now; and Lily hastened home to bring him the good news.... In +any case, Trampy would be grateful to her for what she had done for him. +As a matter of fact, it had cost her an effort to go and pay this visit. + +She happened to run up against Trampy coming out of the bar, where, +according to his custom, he had been drowning his cares. He had a moment +of delight on learning the result of the visit, but, mad with jealousy, at +once adopted a lofty tone, so as not to have to thank her: + +"I knew he would knuckle under!" he said, without looking at Lily. "The +braggart! He prefers a settlement, eh? And quite right too! He knows he's +in the wrong. He's retreating, he's afraid." + +"Afraid of what?" asked Lily, bewildered. + +"Afraid of me. He knows it won't pay to try my patience too far!" + +"Afraid? Jimmy?" said Lily, indignant at all that foolery. "Do you think +he's done that because he's afraid?" + +"And for what other reason would he have given in so soon?" + +"He did it to please me, he did it for _me_, damn it, for _me_!" said +Lily. "You're rid of your lawsuit: you ought to talk differently and thank +me!" + +"And why should he do it to please you? What is there between you?" asked +Trampy, looking her in the face. + +"You're drunk!" said Lily furiously, with her hand ready to scratch. + +"No scenes in the street!" said Trampy. "We'll go into this at home ..." + +"Then I shan't come in!" said Lily, abruptly turning her back on him. "I'm +going to the theater!" + +She had nothing to do on the stage; only the idea of being alone in the +room with Trampy seemed intolerable to her. At the least discussion, Lily +felt it, she would have thrown the lamp at his head, so great was her +indignation at his insolence! + +She was boiling over with anger when she reached the theater. There were +people practising; it was the time for it. Lily went up to her +dressing-room, shifted things in her trunk, anyhow, for something to do. +The idea that her husband thought her capable of anything wrong made her +angry. Oh, to get a divorce, to part from him! As this could not go on for +ever, it might as well be done at once; but it would be better if there +were no fault on her part. A divorce, yes; but with the honors on her +side; a divorce in her favor! Patience, the opportunity would come! It +ought to be quite easy, with the girls whom Trampy beguiled, the love +letters which he received, to catch him in the act, cover him with +ridicule, get the best of him. Oh, if she only could! To be a poor little +victim, how touching! A dear little outraged wife! + +"You fool, if I catch you!" she said. + +Then another idea passed through her brain. Oh, if it were true! She would +have danced for joy! Trampy's marriage in America. + +"Is it true? Is it true? God above, grant that it be true!" + +It was possible. Already, a few days before, the Jim Crows who hovered +round her had talked about it, in covert words, in the hope of making +things worse. There must be some truth in it. There was so much news going +from mouth to mouth: Lillian, Edith and Polly were the rage in Chicago.... +That poor boy-violinist: at Budapest, the stuffed seat to his trousers had +slipped from its place and allowed the dog's teeth to reach the living +flesh; he had had to spend a week in bed with poultices.... Harrasford was +contemplating a theatrical trust on the Continent, planning a model +music-hall in Paris.... There were Jimmy's successes, his ambitions.... +Amid all this news, to which Lily listened, sometimes absent-mindedly, +sometimes with interest, among these adventures dating from +everywhere--names which she greeted like old acquaintances, with a little +nod: "Denver? Yes, I know; a big flat stage. Mexico? I remember!"--among +all those tales, Lily pricked her ears when she heard the name of Ave +Maria coupled with Trampy's. She had a vague recollection of Ave Maria's +flight, after her departure from Mexico; was it with Trampy? Were they +really married then? Oh, if it were only true! God above, grant that it +were true! + +Lily, haunted by this idea of a divorce which would set her free, had +rummaged in Trampy's trunk, among his programs and posters. It was full of +letters, photographs of girls in outrageous hats, in tucked-up skirts, in +tights, with inscriptions. All this dated back to before the marriage, a +collection of treasures which he had not had the courage to destroy. She +had hoped to find some proof, some clue; but no, there was nothing serious +in it. Lily did not give up, for all that; on the contrary. After the +visit to Jimmy, which made Trampy so meanly jealous, she lost no +opportunity of inquiring. But Martello himself, the father, never had news +of his daughter. He hadn't heard for ever so long; and it was to no avail +that Lily asked about Ave Maria, the one who ran away with a man, a great +artiste; she always received the same reply: + +"Ave Maria? Don't know the name. Ave Maria? Haven't seen her since ..." + +But Jimmy, always; Jimmy here, Jimmy there; they talked about him all the +time: his ideas; something new he had invented; something no one had ever +seen: much cleverer than "Bridging the Abyss," it seemed; but nobody knew +what. + +"I know!" said Lily, with a well-informed air and very proud of knowing +Jimmy and of letting people think ... + +"Do you know Jimmy?" + +"Ever since I was that high," answered Lily. "He used to hold me on his +knees." + +"And what is his new trick?" + +"I'm not allowed to tell. He asked me not to say." + +Everybody praised her for her discretion. The sympathy with which she was +surrounded increased. + +"Jimmy," they hinted. "Now there's a fellow you ought to have married, +instead of your ..." + +"Not a word against my husband," she said, like a good and devoted little +wife. "I won't have him insulted." + +That did not prevent her from laughing with her friends. She felt a need +of forgetting, or she would have died of boredom, with a husband like +that. She was heavy at heart, sometimes. She was a woman, not an icicle. +She felt herself made for love. She was flesh and blood, like Jimmy. She +would have liked some one to console her, to talk softly to her, as +Glass-Eye Maud used to do. There were plenty willing to play the part of +Glass-Eye Maud, no doubt: the female-impersonator, for instance, with the +green eyes. Oh, she would have liked to be hugged, kissed full on the +mouth, or else stroked and petted gently! No home, no happiness; marriage +without love; that was her life henceforth. These stage friendships were a +relief. + +The Bambinis romped with her. She loved their gaiety, liked to touch their +sturdy little limbs. That evening, Lily, who was ready for her performance +early, was having fun with them. Dressed in her pink tights, she looked +like a blithe nymph playing with rollicking cupids. + +"What a charming group!" said a voice behind her. "If I were a painter, +Lily, I would do you like that!" + +It was Jimmy, who had come to see her on the stage, as he had promised. + +"Am I spoiling your game?" he asked. "It's so pretty! It makes me want to +kiss the lot of you!" + +"Well, booby!" said Lily, all excited and laughing. "Why don't you? You +daren't!" + +"I daren't! I'll show you whether I dare ... and ... I'm stronger than I +look!" + +And thereupon he caught hold of Lily and lifted her like a feather--Lily, +all taken aback, had not time to say "Oof!" so great was her surprise--and +Jimmy crossed the whole stage with Lily in his arms, shouting to the +manager: + +"Look what a dear little baby I've found! Isn't she sweet, eh?" + +And then, in the wings, he gave her a good big kiss on the cheek before +putting her down. + +The people around them laughed, applauded that stage joke: + +"Jimmy, her old friend," they said, "knew her when she was that high." + +Lily was very proud of it. And, a few minutes after, when he had left her +to take a seat in front, Lily jumped into the saddle and rode round and +round, without a hitch, smiling to the audience, smiling to Jimmy in a +front box, Jimmy to whom she was grateful for coming to see her: a famous +bill-topper putting himself out for her ... before everybody! She was +faultless that evening, did a dozen twirls on the back-wheel, made a +record, was grand. + +Trampy, meanwhile, was waiting for Lily outside, in the passage leading to +the stage-door. He had not seen Jimmy kiss Lily, but he saw him carry her +across the stage, just as he was coming on himself, so he had turned and +hurried out to avoid scandal ... giving way to his wife, who worked while +he did not. He had gone out at once, time to run to the bar and drown two +or three sorrows, and he was waiting for her now, without paying any +attention to the girls passing. As soon as he saw Lily, he seized her by +the arm: + +"I've had enough of this," he said. "I saw you, you and your Jimmy! You +can't deny it this time!" + +"Oh, Trampy, don't insult me like that!" protested Lily. "Why do you +always say 'my' Jimmy? One can have a laugh and a joke on the stage +without meaning wrong, you know one can. Besides, if you didn't like to +see him carry me in his arms, you ought to have smashed his face, without +so much talk." + +"I didn't want to make a fuss." + +"You were afraid to. You're afraid of him, that's what you are!" + +"Stop jeering at me!" said Trampy, shaking her violently. "You're dragging +me in the mud; it's like those whippings of yours! I'm tired of the +affronts you put upon me! You ought to have married your Jimmy and left me +in peace." + +"I can't say," sneered Lily, "that I remember running after you!" + +"That Jimmy!" repeated Trampy. "I'll kill that fellow like a dog! If I +don't do it now, I will later, in a year, in a hundred years, if +necessary. I'll kill him like a dog!" + +Lily gave a little laugh as she went out, followed by Trampy. She did not +wish, in that lobby, before the people passing, to look like a woman +insulted by her husband. She laughed bravely, as she used to, on the +stage, with Ma, in the days of the great smackings. To see her laugh, one +would have thought that Trampy was telling her a story; and he repeated: + +"I'll kill him like a dog, like a dog!" + +"Pooh!" said Lily, who knew Trampy. "You talk too much to act." + +"We shall see. Where's your Jimmy hiding?" + +"You'd be nicely caught, if you met him," said Lily, who had just noticed +Jimmy leaving the music-hall to go to the Kolossal: "there he is, behind +you."... + +"What's that? Don't you try to get at me!" said Trampy. + +"I tell you, he's behind you, damn it! Turn round and you'll see ... if +you have eyes to see with." + +Trampy turned round, half-reluctantly: he didn't like those jokes, but he +didn't wish to seem afraid. + +"Where? Where do you see Jimmy?" he grumbled. + +"There, in front of you," insisted Lily, pointing with her finger and +pushing him by the shoulder. "Off you go!" + +There was no drawing back. He marched straight up to Jimmy, who did not +even recognize him and who stopped politely. But Trampy had time for +reflection, no doubt: a clearer perception of professional brotherhood. +Better, after all, to remain friends ... among artistes. And, when he +stood before him: + +"H'm, h'm. Have you got a light about you, Jimmy? Give us a match," said +Trampy, taking a cigar from his pocket. + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +It stifled Lily, for the moment. She would rather have received twenty +"contracts" with the steel buckle than see that cowardice in her husband. +She had her Pa's blood in her, damn it! + +"What!" she thought. "He believes me to misconduct myself with Jimmy, and +he is too much of a coward to object!" + +But there was nothing to be done. Trampy was as incapable of anger as of +love. All those years of a low life had degraded him to that point. And +Trampy had even lost the right to bear Jimmy a grudge, made as though he +had forgotten everything, said that, after all, it was much better to be +friends. And all this under Lily's critical eye! + +Jimmy! To be obliged to look pleasant at Jimmy! It gave him a lump in his +throat. Fortunately, he had the others, the crowd of assiduous pros who +thronged round his wife. Against those he gave free scope to his jealousy, +and showed himself as strict with the rest as he had been accommodating +with Jimmy. He meant to keep an eye on his wife: + +"A married woman, on the stage, alone! I won't have any more of that!" + +He hit upon a contrivance to be always with her: he would be her "comic." +It was a new system which had come into fashion: the most plastic +performances spoiled by the juxtaposition of their caricatures; acrobats, +Olympian gods, parodied by a merry-andrew in a ridiculous coat: just as +though Nunkie Fuchs, for instance, had taken it into his head to appear +with his Three Graces and mimic their tricks, kicking about at the end of +a wire with his fat, fatherly paunch and his round, silly face. + +And Trampy, riding behind Lily, would simply give a parody of her tricks; +it meant little work to him and was as good a way as another of going on +the stage with her and establishing his title to _her_ work and _her_ +salary.... + +And off they went again, with the basket trunk, and the bikes; and on the +stage, every night, Lily, looking like a goddess, and Trampy, dressed in +rags, went through their tricks and smiled ... applause for her, always; +none for him, ever. Lily wore a very sad look in consequence, when they +returned to the wings: a poor little wife, so sorry for her husband; but +she triumphed at the bottom of her heart, while Trampy turned green with +spite. He was furious with Lily: tried to make her fall, pushed her in +turning; but Lily was too clever and sat as firmly on her bike as Ave +Maria walked her slack-wire, when the brother used to shake it on purpose, +whip in hand and snarling as if to bite. + +Oh, if Lily had not made efforts to be a good little wife! Trampy was +becoming unbearable. She posed as the poor little thing, despised, +deceived and betrayed by her husband; she loved to hear people tell her +so, called them to witness and continued, but without result, to make +inquiries about Ave Maria. + +And there were everlasting scenes at home. Lily had enough of it, more +than enough of it! She had even decided to go away, to return to London; +but, worn out with worry, she had to take to her bed, with a high fever. +It was the finishing stroke: no work,--all the savings gone.... + +Trampy, fortunately, found an engagement: + +"It's all right, the neighbors will look after you," he said, as he took +his leave. "A man's duty is to see that his wife doesn't starve, eh, +darling? I'm going to make money, too, and I'll bring you heaps when I +come back; and I'll send you some. That's the sort of man I am. I don't +talk of '_my_ money!'" + + * * * * * + +Lily was left alone in Berlin. + +Generally, she hated the hotels frequented by artistes, but she was very +glad to be in one this time. She, poor little broken-down thing, was not +left to the care of a common servant; she had nice, kind nurses.... And +she had no lack of friends who took interest in her, very sincerely, for +that matter, for she was a favorite with all of them, that pretty Miss +Lily, who would soon be free.... + +Lily let herself be coddled. Pending the arrival of the money which Trampy +was to send, she wanted for nothing, especially in the way of luxuries: +chocolates, sweets, flowers, they brought her everything. Her friends +passing through Berlin, the impersonator, the Paras, many others, hearing +that she was ill, came to see her, treated her as a lady, cried out how +well she was looking, how pretty she was and how it suited her to be ill +in bed. + +Lily thought that very nice, put on a languid air, like a poor little +jaded thing that had got out of gear: + +"I shall die of overdoing it, I know I shall," she said. "I've been at the +bike ever since I was that high"--raising her hand twelve inches above the +bed--"and my heart's worn out by the hard work. My knees, too. Sit down +there on the basket trunk. You at the foot of the bed. Have a chocolate." + +Then she turned over in her sheets, which molded her firm, plump shape, +took a bag of sweets from the chair beside her and offered it round. Poor +little martyr, she had been forbidden them by the doctor, because of a +cough.... But she took them all the same, merely for the sake of taking +them, with a graceful movement, her bare arm outstretched, her wrist +making a supple curve, like a swan's neck, as she dipped her pretty hand +into the bag. + + * * * * * + +In addition to her regular friends, such as the impersonator or the Paras, +others, the people staying in the hotel, would tap discreetly at the glass +door between her room and the passage, come in on tip-toe, speak in a +whisper. + +"What nonsense!" Lily would say. "I'm not dead yet, you know!" + +And she laughed, and "Ugh! Ugh!" a cough or so, a matter of lifting her +embroidered handkerchief to her mouth, a favorite gesture. And there were +stories from all parts, the cackle of the profession. The Paras were +living together now, as they explained to her. The parrots? No go; given +them up; one had its neck wrung by a monkey in Chicago; another died of +consumption at Stockholm; the rest of the troupe sold to the +stage-doorkeepers of the different variety-theaters. His sight was +beginning to fail. She wanted smartness; wasn't--how should he put it? The +husband looked for a word--wasn't "Tottie" enough. However, they managed +somehow, as "eccentric duetists." Lily thought that very nice, those two +talents combined, very original; but could they give her any news of Ave +Maria ... a great artiste ... on the wire?... + +If ever Lily might have hoped to receive news of Ave Maria, it was during +this illness, from the artistes who visited her, on their way from +anywhere to God knows where. Lily had news of everybody: of Mirzah, the +white elephant, who had to be pole-axed for killing his keeper; of Captain +North's seals; of the Three Graces, who were doing triumphantly in +England; of Poland, the Parisienne, now starring at Bill and Boom's. Tom +was talked about: biceps like thighs, now: a hornpipe danced on the hands. +She had news of the Pawnees, of the Hauptmanns. Roofer was sending out +four new troupes, to Canada, Australia, India, Cape Colony: the +Greater-England Girls. She had news of the New Zealanders and of her +cousin Daisy, who seemed to find the star business jolly hard work: + +"The wind-bag!" said Lily. + +They talked of Jimmy, of dogs, cats and monkeys and of Tom Grave and Butt +Snyders, those great breakneck acrobats: they talked of one and all, but +not a word of Ave Maria. They knew her by reputation, as one who had been +through the mill, more than Lily had, as Lily modestly admitted. + +"Darling," said the impersonator affectionately, "don't bother about that +Ave Maria of yours. I'm jealous. Be mine, darling! How well we two should +get on together, eh, Lily?" + +"Hands off!" said Lily. "Be good ... there ... like that ... down by your +sides ... or you'll get a smacking!" + +Concerts were got up for Lily's amusement. Sketch-comedians pulled their +faces: a musician twanged his banjo. At other times, by closing her eyes, +Lily could have imagined herself in an aviary: the Whistling Wonder +imitated the nightingale, the thrush, the lark. Another, an equilibrist, +showed her how, when he was obliged to stay in bed with a broken leg and +had nobody to wait on him, he used to wait on himself by going round the +room on his hands ... like that. Lily was given, for nothing, a +performance which was worth a whole music-hall program. To put everybody +at their ease, Lily told them to smoke, took a puff or two at a cigarette +herself--"Ugh! Ugh!"--almost choked.... + +They amused themselves, among themselves, free from any constraint due to +the presence of jossers. Lily joked with them as she used to do with the +apprentices in the mornings, when they showed one another their bruises of +the day before. She made them look at her pigeon's egg, on the side of her +foot, the little ball-shaped muscle special to her profession, like the +triceps of the pugilist or the dancing-girls' calves. She was vain enough +to put on a silk stocking, poked out her foot from under the bedclothes, +let them feel "her egg," made it jump under their fingers by a sudden +contraction. + +"Is that all you've got to show us, darling?" asked the impersonator. + +"You don't want much, I _don't_ think!" said Lily, pulling back her foot +under the quilt. + +The incident was interrupted by new-comers who had also known Lily when +she was that high. They brought fresh news from Lisle Street. They had had +a drink with P. T. Clifton himself, had had a drink with an author who was +writing a book on the business. + +"Another josser who's sure to talk a lot of nonsense!" cried Lily. "If +only they told the truth and described us as we are, a sight better than +the society ladies, who come and wait for pros outside the stage-door!" + +And they went on. The healths they had drunk with this girl and that girl; +and new turns: competitors who were cropping up ... names ... names ... +Ave Maria? Dead, they said: somewhere in Ecuador or Peru. + +Then Lily stretched herself to her full length in the sheets, feeling +weary, weary, crushed under all that talk. + +And Trampy just didn't write, sent no money at all. She blushed for him +... in spite of her wish to catch him tripping, before witnesses. She was +ashamed to be his wife, his only wife, his little wife for ever. + +On that day, as it happened, Jimmy came to pay her a visit. His engagement +at the Kolossal was ending. He was to perform at the London Hippodrome, +before going to the States. A certain air of respect surrounded him from +the moment he entered the room, that Jimmy who already stood higher than +any of them among the famous bill-toppers! And they gradually retired, as +though Lily would prefer that. It was no use her saying, "Do stay!" They +went all the same; and Lily was left alone with him, a little embarrassed +and yet flattered at being thought on such good terms with Jimmy. As for +him, he had just heard about Lily's illness, Trampy's absence, and hurried +to see her, bringing her the good news that the lawsuit was over. Trampy +would have nothing more to pay.... + +From that day, Jimmy was sometimes seen at Lily's. He spoke little, sat +down on the basket trunk, listened, thought of things. He was known to +have his mind full of an invention superior to "Bridging the Abyss," one +could expect anything from him: a wonderful chap Jimmy, a bit cracked, +though, with ideas of his own which went the round of the profession and +were variously appreciated. A fund for stage-children; a reserve upon +their earnings, to be banked and kept untouched till they came of age; a +home of rest for the old and the sick; a weekly matinee for the benefit of +the fund.... + +Jimmy described the piteous lot of those who grow old in a profession +intended for youth: but a few shillings a month paid into the fund, a +benefit performance or two ... and our home is established and endowed and +we should see no more stars flung aside, to die in hopeless poverty, after +amusing crowds of people for years and years. + +"I'm with you," said Lily, laughing. "Put me down for a pension for my old +age ... if ever I reach old age ... ugh, ugh!" + +And she coughed, with the embroidered handkerchief at her lips. + +But Lily's joke was left unechoed: everybody talked professional shop, +quoted figures; the habit of signing contracts, of avoiding the traps laid +by the agents had given them all a keen sense of business. And the +frequent traveling, in the absence of education, had made them sharp at +understanding, quick in the uptake. Their clean-shaven faces fell into +wise folds, like lawyers'. + +Jimmy also explained his idea about the apprentices, the compulsory so +much per cent., the inalienable deposit paid in by the Pas and Mas ... +and, much more still, by the profs and managers.... + +"Good!" said Lily. "I'm with you!" + +There was a general laugh. The Whistling Wonder interrupted the +conversation by quacking like a duck at Jimmy and cooing like a pigeon at +Lily. Jimmy got up and said good-by, pleased to see Lily making daily +progress. + +"Ah, Lily," they said again, when he had gone, "that's the one you ought +to have married, not the other!" + +And thereupon they began to pursue their favorite theme and amuse +themselves by describing the awful troubles which she would get into one +day with "the other," that drunkard;--the man with the thirty-six girls! +And they laughed and they laughed, my! Lily herself held her sides with +laughing. + +All this was stage effect, professional exaggeration. Lily dared not +indulge in it before Jimmy. She was more sincere, always a little +embarrassed, in the presence of that man toward whom everybody was driving +her, as though they all saw farther into her life than she herself could. +She was no longer ill, only tired, with an accumulation of past +wearinesses that made her love to lie down flat. But she would get up +to-morrow, instead of remaining in bed to see her friends; no humbug +before Jimmy. + +The next day when he came, Lily was alone. So much the better, he had +something to say to her. He had made up his mind that day. His own present +prosperity formed too great a contrast with the poverty of Lily ... that +poor kiddie who had run away from home in pursuit of happiness and whom he +now found here, in this squalid room.... It was all very well to theorize +about children who have earned fortunes and who haven't a farthing; but +that was mere talk! Suppose he helped Lily a little in the meantime. He +had prepared all sorts of good reasons; he had found a smart excuse, the +great excuse of the music-hall, that he had been betting on horses and +losing. He would ask Lily to keep his money for him, as a kindness, +otherwise he simply couldn't help it, his money burned a hole in his +pocket. Then, on second thought, why all that fuss? Hadn't he known her +since she was that high? And, the moment he came in, he just handed Lily a +thousand-mark note: + +"For the law-costs, Lily! And, anything over, for your expenses, till +Trampy's money comes. Only too pleased to be of any use. You can pay it +back when it suits you. And good-by, Lily, ta-ta!" + +And he hurried out, leaving Lily with the thousand marks in her hand. + +Lily was stupefied and confused. She asked herself why? why? a real piece +of brain-work, which made her head ache. Anyhow she would give back the +money to-morrow! She wouldn't keep it! Trampy would be sure to bring some; +it was impossible that he should bring nothing; but, come what may, she +would give back the money to-morrow! She took the great oath of the stage +upon it: three fingers of her right hand uplifted; her left hand on the +lucky charm. And then she went and shut the door, turned the key in the +lock and lay down.... + + * * * * * + +A noise woke her: some one was knocking outside; but, before she could get +out of bed, one of the glass panes of the door broke into fragments. +Somebody had smashed it with his elbow. A hand came through the opening, +turned back the key. The door opened and Trampy entered, raging, +growling: + +"There's a man here!" + +"You won't find him; you can kill me if you do!" cried Lily. + +She expected a terrible scene. Trampy, drunk, had the look which he wore +on his bad days. He peered into the corners, turned a cunning eye on +Lily. + +Trampy had spent the evening at the cafe and there heard of the visits +which Lily received during his absence. The neighbors he didn't mind +about, but Jimmy. Jimmy again! The damned dog! Why should he poke his nose +in? And, perhaps, at heart, Trampy was not sorry to have a scene with +Lily, for he wasn't bringing home a pfennig, having spent all his money on +champagne with girls. He felt himself at fault. He would get out of it +with violence. + +"There's a man here!" repeated Trampy, walking up to Lily like a madman. + +She was humiliated to the core when she saw Trampy, dazed with tobacco, +heavy with beer, stoop and look under the bed. And, suddenly, seeing the +banknote which Lily had laid on the table, Trampy shouted: + +"You can't deny it this time. Tell me where the money comes from!" + +"It's from Jimmy," said Lily, beside herself. "He thinks of me, Jimmy +does, while you leave me here to starve. It's ... it's for the +law-costs." + +"Oh, that's another thing!" said Trampy, putting the note in his pocket. + +"Let the money be!" cried Lily, leaping out of bed. "Don't you touch it!" + +"Everything here belongs to me, I should think," said Trampy, a little +more calmly, already overcome with drunken drowsiness. "Everything, even a +dear little wifie," he continued, putting his snout under Lily's disgusted +nose. + +But she gave a movement of revulsion so spontaneous that Trampy turned +pale under the insult: + +"W-what! N-no love?" he stammered. "I'm not used to that. I can get +l-l-love for the asking ... at the ca-ca-cafe ... or the th-theater ... or +anywhere." + +And Trampy, making a false step, caught hold of the curtain and drew it +back. + +In the pitiless light of the morning, he appeared to Lily like a drowned +man, with a puffed-out face, swollen eyes and wan cheeks. To think that +she belonged to that! Lily spat at him in contempt. Oh, rather sleep with +lizards and guinea-pigs than that; rather with a woolly dog, like Poland, +that Parisienne! Oh, to get rid of him and be free again, thought Lily, +never again to have Trampy before her eyes! And, suddenly, her mind was +made up. She dressed herself hurriedly. + +"Where are you going?" asked Trampy. + +"I'm off!" said Lily. "I've had enough of this!" + +"What's that?" said Trampy, dull-mouthed, flinging his body across the +bed. "What's that? Say it again!" + +"I say I hate the sight of you! I'm going back to my Pa and Ma!" + +"You, you're going back to ... well, good-by, darling, goo-good ... +goo-good-by," stammered Trampy, sprawling on the bed, among the disordered +clothes.... + +Lily moved freely round the room, without even troubling about him, like +one who has made up her mind once and for all. She packed up her things in +the basket trunk. She put her bike outside the door; and, just as she was +going to look for a neighbor to help her down with her trunk, an idea +entered her head. She stopped on the threshold, came back to Trampy, +slipped her hand into his pocket and gingerly took out the banknote: + +"An insult like that!" she muttered. "I'd rather starve than not give +Jimmy back the money!" + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +"Lily!" + +She thought she heard herself called, in her dream, just because she was +back in her room again, in London, among familiar objects. She felt as if +her life was going on exactly as in the old days, as if nothing had +happened in between. Her marriage? A nightmare. And her home-coming +yesterday had been very nice: no questions asked, no whys and hows. Her +parents knew, of course. They knew all about her troubles with Trampy. But +no reproaches, nothing: kisses, everybody very happy, including herself. +She snuggled under the bedclothes, in the hollow left by Glass-Eye, who +had gone down-stairs. Lily felt sorry that she had left her trunk at the +hotel, when she thought of the cordial welcome she had received at the +hands of Pa and Ma. + +It was quite three weeks since she left her husband. She went over it all +again in her head. Her departure from Berlin! She meant to go straight to +Jimmy, first, and give him back that money; only, those Vienna hats, +displayed in the shop-windows, those dresses, those boots, when she saw +all that, Lily understood that she could not return to London, to her +parents, with dingy-looking clothes, after her successes on the continent! +Pa and Ma would have laughed in her face. + +Lily felt bound to say that she had been most reasonable: three hundred +marks for that Vienna dress, which suited her so well; why, Jimmy himself +would have approved. + +"Let's see!" + +She reckoned on her fingers: forty marks the hat, three hundred the dress; +and the underthings, chemises, stays, a silk petticoat, boots ... that +came to ... came to ... a week at a hotel in Berlin ... time lost at +Hamburg ... the journey from Hamburg to Rotterdam, Harwich and London ... +the hotel on arriving, so as to be able to dress before going home: it +left her just fifty shillings to play the lady with and buy presents for +Pa and Ma. And Jimmy ... Jimmy, who was in London also, due to open at the +Hippodrome! And she had sworn that she would give him back that money at +once! To quiet her conscience, Lily, under her blankets, took the +"counter-oath" of the stage, with her left hand behind her back, the +fingers closed over the thumb, that she would repay him the money, most +certainly, as soon as she began to earn any. + +"Lily! Can I come in, Lily?" + +It was Ma, bringing her breakfast and a paper, _The Era_. Lily gave a +quick glance round the room: her skirt was hanging on the peg; the bodice +lay, without a crease, over the back of a chair, the hat on top of it, the +linen neatly folded: good! She did not look a scarecrow, at any rate! And, +sitting up against the pillows, with a napkin on her knees, Lily +breakfasted daintily, with her finger-tips: + +"Pa, Where's Pa?" asked Lily. "Tell him to come up." + +"Your Pa has gone out with the apprentices," said Ma. "He wouldn't wake +you, you looked so tired last night. Here, Lily, some more coffee? Another +slice of bread and butter?" continued Ma, spreading it for her. + +"'K you!" + +Lily accepted this as her due, like a lady accustomed to the manners of +good society, to having her breakfast brought to her in bed by the maid. + +"Oh, Ma," said Lily, as she sugared her coffee, "they do understand things +on the continent! They know how to appreciate artistes there. I've had +such successes!" + +"And you were angry with us for teaching you your profession," said Ma. +"You see now that it was for your good." + +"But it depends on how it's done," said Lily. "If I had always been +treated like this, I should never have left you." + +"Well, you don't bear your Pa and me a grudge, I suppose," said Ma, "or +you wouldn't have come back. We knew you'd come back. This has always been +your address; your Pa never took your name out of _The Era_." + +"You didn't treat me fair," said Lily, "but I've forgotten most of it. Oh, +don't let's talk about it any more! Let's talk of something else; let's +talk of you." + +Lily knew all about their struggles, their successes; had heard of it on +the stage, in the cafes. But here, in her room, as described by Ma, she +put her finger on it, so to speak, and realized more fully what a blank +her flight had made, what a catastrophe it had been for them. + +And Ma gave details, tried to interest Lily in the fate of the troupe; +told her that, for months, the troupe had been refused everywhere, because +she wasn't in it, and her Pa had to change apprentices. + +"I was the troupe!" said Lily. + +"Oh, the trouble your Pa took running after his own fat freaks! I thought +he would get heart-disease! And months of it, without earning a thing. Oh, +if your Pa hadn't had some money ...!" + +"But he had plenty!" said Lily. + +"Oh, not much, not so much as you think!" Ma hastened to say, thinking she +saw a spiteful allusion in Lily's remark. + +"Yes, all right, I know," said Lily. "Never mind about that. It's my turn +to make money now, for myself." + +"Still that independent spirit! We haven't got her yet!" thought Ma. + +And she went on talking of the troupe, of the cousin who played the star. + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "A nice sort of star!" + +"It's not every one who can star in Berlin by herself, like you," said Ma. +"Do you know, Lily, you ought to stay with us: we should get on so well +together. You would manage the troupe; and, one day--who knows?--you might +make a nice marriage." + +"But I am married, Ma! I didn't live with him! Do you mean to say you +think ...? Not I!" + +"I know you're married, but you can get a divorce. Jimmy used to make love +to you; now there's a man who ..." + +"And you used to say he was a drunkard, Ma!" + +"Never!" said Ma, rising to leave. + +Lily was flattered, at heart, to be received like that. She also felt +proud that her Pa had not been ashamed of her and that he had kept her +name in _The Era_. Well, they treated her as a lady, saw her value, gave +her her due. And she lay for a while enjoying her triumph, while she +turned the pages of _The Era_ in an absent-minded way: Miss This, Miss +That, Cape Town, Calcutta ... actors, singers ... + +"Those aren't artistes, any of them!" + +Programs, plays, songs: "_Why I Love Women_!" + +"I know, you footy rotter!" + +"_Is Marriage a Failure_?" + +"I should think so!" thought Lily. + +And articles, biographies ... + +"Pack of lies!" thought Lily. + +And pages of "Wanted ... Wanted ..." + +Lily ran her eye down the columns: artistes' boarding-houses, +_costumiers_, scene-painters, dancing-schools, every town, every theater. +Hullo!--she had turned the page--Tom, the dancer--Hullo! At Milan! + +"Bravo, Tom!" + +Jimmy at the Hippodrome next week; private address, Whitcomb Mansions. + +"Pooh, he's well off! What's fifty pounds to him?" + +Hullo! Miss Lily--Berlin--Permanent address, Rathbone Place, London, W. + +"Well done, Pa! Serve him right, the tramp cyclist!" said Lily, throwing +down the paper and jumping out of bed. + +Quite a business, her toilet. She was two hours titivating herself. She +wanted Pa and Ma to be proud of her, of her successes on the continent. +And, when the apprentices came in from practice, you should have seen her +walk into the dining-room. A little air of simplicity, her forehead put +out for her delighted Pa to kiss, hands all round--"Hullo, girls! Hullo, +Daisy!" And she sat down like a lady accustomed to smart restaurants, who +does not despise dinner at home, however, with a boiled leg of mutton to +recruit her inside after those champagne suppers, those truffled +pheasants, that damned continental cooking! She accepted everything, and +thought it all very nice, simple life, simple joys, the only ones! + +She set a good example to the new apprentices, who eyed her stealthily, +instead of eating, for Miss Lily's presence turned their heads entirely. +My! A star like that, a real one! Lily Clifton, the New Zealander on +Wheels! And dressed ... dressed like a lady in the front boxes! Cousin +Daisy was green with jealousy. Lily talked of her travels, her successes +and the crossing, gee! Waves "miles high," the boat standing on end! Glass +Eye Maud devoured her with her one eye, screwed up her fat red cheeks in a +fixed and motionless laugh, scared before Lily, who came from over the +sea, from countries where savages live. Glass-Eye, in her perturbation, +served Lily first. Pa made no objection, asked Lily's permission to light +his pipe: was she sure she didn't mind smoke? Lord, you never knew, with +those ladies! He swelled with pride. If it had been Christmas-time, he +would have ordered a pudding, my, a real wedding-cake three feet across! +His ideas of grandeur returned, his triumphal tour round the world, the +definite extermination of the fat freaks ... if Lily remained with him +... + +After dinner, the apprentices retired, to finish sewing some bloomers. +Lily approved: + +"Bloomers? Very nice ... for a troupe!" + +Presently, in the afternoon, the three of them went for a walk: Pa freshly +shaven; Ma decked out in her jewelry: Lily did not wear any, "only in the +evening when she went into society." Tottenham Court Road, the Palace, the +Hippodrome.... Pa would have liked to write up on his hat: + +"Lily has come back!" + +He looked to right and left, had the satisfaction of distributing nods and +bows to some artistes, with Lily on his arm, as though to say: + +"You see it was wrong, all that people were saying, about those smackings! +And the proof is, here she is,--on my arm, damn it!" + +As for Lily, she thought only of showing herself: + +"If Trampy could see me now!" she reflected. "And Jimmy, if he could see +me, in my fine dress, while it's still new!" + +Regent Street reminded Lily of Pa's generosity. She would not be +behindhand. Pa had to accept a red tie, a pair of gloves, a match-box, as +a present; Ma, an embroidered handkerchief, a lucky charm. Lily had the +satisfaction of paying with gold and receiving change. + +She was tired, in the evening, put on a languid air: gee, her mother would +have shaken her for less in the old days! Lily put it on still more, to +show them all that times were changed. But she did the troupe the honor of +going to see their performance at the Castle. It was a great success for +her. + +"Made a bit, eh?" asked the manager, seeing her fine dress. "Coming back +for good, to star with the New Zealanders?" + +"I don't know; I shall see." + +Lily was quite ready to come back, in her own mind, but she wanted to +return in triumph. It all depended on the price offered: to think that she +had worked for them at ten shillings a week, when she was worth quite two +pounds a night! She would see; she would make her own conditions: for +instance, herself in tights, the others in bloomers ... a special tune for +her entrance ... no star beside herself! + +Lily watched the New Zealanders' performance with the air of an expert: + +"Not so bad; quite good ..." + +And she had various ideas: herself as a fine lady, undressing on the +stage. Or rather, no, as a statue, on a pedestal in a park ... with Cousin +Daisy at her feet, throwing flowers to her. Then she would come to life, +as though waking from sleep, and step down prettily to a special tune. +Hullo, what's this? A bike! And then, gee, a blast of the trombone and she +would show them what a star was, a real one! Yes ... she would see ... if +Pa and Ma insisted ... perhaps ... + +But her real triumph was next day, at practice. Her Pa, excited by her +presence, ran and ran, notwithstanding his palpitations of the heart. It +was no use his trying to restrain himself: his enthusiasm mastered him as +soon as he saw them all in the saddle, his little Woolly-legs! + +And no more Tom: he was all by himself now; and, when he sat down to take +breath, he still ordered his little Woolly-legs about, shouted his cutting +remarks at them. + +Lily raised her head proudly. She seemed to take the apprentices to +witness. She had gone through that, much worse than that, for years! She +was a gentle little lady, all the same. Besides, she was all for +gentleness: + +"Leave her to me, Pa; you're making poor Cousin Daisy quite nervous. She +doesn't know; I'll show her!" + +And, under her great waving feather, Lily, without even taking off her +gloves: + +"There, put your foot there ... like that ... and like that ... firmly. +No, not like that!" + +And, suddenly, stimulated with professional zeal: + +"Wait, I'll show you how it's done!" + +And, in an instant, to show them all how you're got up when you're a star +and when you come back from the continent, Lily took off her bodice, +pinned up her skirt amid the rustling of the silk and, bare-armed, in a +lace-trimmed chemisette: + +"Now then, I'll show you!" + +And Lily, with all her little muscles alive, took a bike, jumped on it as +she would on a stool and then--yoop!--the bike on its back-wheel, spinning +round like a top. + +"Twirls are as easy as anything: you only have to know how to do them. +Come on! Have a try!" + +And the other, encouraged by a friendly slap, tried in her turn +and--yoop!--succeeded ... very nearly. + +Pa was enraptured at the mere sight of Lily's little curled nostrils and +her earnest look: + +"What a professor she would make!" he thought. "If ever she takes the +belt, she'll be simply grand. I can just fold my arms!" + +But he made her dress very quickly. That exhibition of dainty underwear, +which flattered his pride as a father, would have driven girls used to +sewing their own calico shifts quite crazy: there would have been no +holding them; and, besides, artistes might come in at any moment. It would +not do for Lily to be seen half-dressed like that; and she realized this +herself, like a sensible little lady, who hates scandal. + +"Stay with us, Lily," said her Pa, at home, after dinner, when the +apprentices had gone out. "Stay with us." + +"It's your duty," said Ma. + +"If you stay," continued Pa, "I'll make you a present of a brand-new +banjo!" + +"Thank you, no more banjo for me," said Lily, laughing. "I've had my +share." + +"All right, no more banjo," agreed Pa, "provided you stay with us: that's +all I ask. I shall be afraid of nobody then; I'll show them what an +artiste is!" + +And, warming to his subject, Pa built up his plans: the great English +tours; and Eastern and Western America, Australia, South Africa: + +"Eh, Lily? Wouldn't you like to see it all again? Or else, for once, I'll +get up a troupe and take it round the world myself, with you in it!" + +"But, Pa," said Lily, very coldly, "I have business arrangements of my +own, more engagements than I want." + +"It's a business arrangement I'm proposing to you," said Pa. + +"And shall I come on in tights?" + +"In tights, if you like." + +"And no other star but me!" continued Lily, explaining her idea: +undressing on the stage, or else the statue, her own scenery ... + +"Capital idea!" cried Pa. + +"And then there's the money side of the question," said Lily. "I make a +lot of money now. I want to work for myself." + +"And what you make with us, won't it be yours, one day?" suggested Ma. + +"Stay with us," said Pa, "and Trampy will burst with spite and you'll be +much happier here, with your Pa and Ma, instead of with that +good-for-nothing!" + +"Or instead of remaining alone, which is even worse," Ma insisted. "You +want us still, Lily ..." + +"And you me! Let us talk business," interrupted Lily, who would have liked +a pencil and paper, to make her calculations with. + +Ma, in her heart of hearts, did not think it at all nice of a daughter to +consider only her own interests; but Pa hurried up, thought Lily was quite +right ... although he was greatly embarrassed in reality and asked himself +how much he could well offer her, so as to make a profit for himself. + +Fortunately, he was relieved of his predicament by Glass-Eye, who came in +with a telegram for Miss Lily. + +"Give it here!" said Lily, who noticed, as she opened the envelope, that a +chair had creaked and that the palm of her left hand was itching: a sign +of money. "I'll bet it's about an engagement. I have offers from every +side; you have no idea ... Well, I never!" she said. "A telegram from +Jimmy, at the Horse Shoe! I thought he was at Whitcomb Mansions. What can +he want with me? He asks me to call on him! Funny way of treating a lady. +Why can't he come himself?" + +But Pa and Ma thought differently: Jimmy was "somebody," a man to be +considered, right at the top of the profession; she'd have done better to +marry him and not her Trampy Wheel-Pad!... + +"You must go," insisted Ma. "Don't you like going alone? Shall I come with +you?" + +"Yes, that's different," said Lily, who had a certain pride and who felt +sure that Jimmy would never mention that thousand marks before a witness. + +Her heart beat a little, as she went up the staircase of the Horse Shoe to +the third floor, on the left, door 32. At first, she was surprised that he +should be there, having read in _The Era_ ... but he might have moved. On +the whole, she was not sorry to show herself to Jimmy in her pretty frock, +he having seen her last in her room in Berlin, looking ill, unkempt and +frightfully ugly. She was not sorry, either, that Ma was with her: + +"He's in love, I suppose," said Lily. "Everybody makes love to me: why do +they, Ma? I'm not a bit pretty, off the stage." + +And she took a mischievous pleasure in enlarging upon her successes and +her flirtations, there, on the staircase of the Horse Shoe, with Ma beside +her, and no smackings, gee, nor any fear of smackings in the future! What +a change since her marriage! + +"Yes," Lily went on, as she read the numbers on the doors--29--"Ma, you +ought to see the flowers I get, the chocolates, the sweets"--31--"but all +that does not prevent a lady from keeping straight"--32-- + +Then she gave a stifled cry, her voice stuck in her throat: Trampy, Trampy +himself stood in the doorway, his hands in his pockets, a cigar in his +mouth, his hat cocked over one ear; and he looked at her with a bantering +air: + +"Sorry to disappoint you, Miss Lily. You hoped to find some one else, +eh?" + +Ma, utterly flabbergasted, had dropped on to a bench in the passage, in +the shadow. Trampy did not even see her. Lily was crimson with shame at +being caught tripping by Trampy: she could not deny it. She wanted to run +away, but, stupefied with surprise, remained where she stood, with dilated +pupils, open-mouthed. + +"You can look at me till to-morrow morning and it won't help you," said +Trampy quietly, with the air of a man who has prepared his speech. "I've +got you this time! I sent the telegram; I knew you'd come, wherever he +thought fit to meet you; you'd have come for less than Jimmy; you'd have +come for the impersonator or any one else, never mind whom; any one in the +rotten lot, any gentleman in the front boxes, eh? It's 'Whistle and I'll +come to you, my lad!' with you! But I thought Jimmy would do best, Jimmy +your lover, whom you followed to London. Now my luck has brought me here, +too ... for my work ... not like you! And, by the way, Miss Lily, have you +brought me that thousand marks which you got from Jimmy and which I was +going to give back to him, when you stole it out of my pocket? Or did you +spend it on the way here? You hadn't a rag to your back, when you left me, +and I find you dressed up like a Tottie. My compliments, Miss Lily." + +"O God, strike him dead!" prayed Lily. "Strike him, kill him, kill him!" + +Lily felt like fainting. She could not breathe, her ribs seemed to be +crushing her lungs. At last she drew a long, slow breath: + +"Well," she stammered, overcome with shame, "well, we can be divorced ... +if you like." + +"I'll see," said Trampy, hardening his voice and throwing away his cigar. +"Go back to your Jimmy in the meantime. You may be sure I have no use for +a traitress like you, an idler who refuses to work, a woman who lets every +man make love to her!" And, suddenly, pointing to the stairs, "You can be +sure that I've no further use for you! Get out of this, damn you! And +you're not going, mind you: I'm kicking you out!" + +And therewith Trampy went back into his room and slammed the door in her +face. + +Mrs. Clifton and Lily remained glued where they were. At last, Ma, +trembling all over, rose from the bench and led away her daughter, who +shook her fist at the door, crying: + +"Liar!" + +"Why didn't you speak just now, my poor Lily?" said Ma. "You ought to have +answered back! So it's true, all that? A nice thing! You, who +pretended...." + +"Oh, let go, you're crushing my sleeve!" retorted Lily angrily, pulling +her arm away from the hand that clasped it. + +She went down the stairs, followed by Ma, without knowing what she was +doing. She would have liked to find a train on the pavement, a motor, to +jump into it, to make off and never see anybody again, after the +humiliation which she had undergone before Ma. + +She flung herself into the first cab that came along, yelled a direction +to the driver: Hyde Park, anywhere! Ma found herself by Lily's side, +without being asked to step in, and she repeated: + +"Lily, you ought to have ... Why did you let him treat you like that? Is +it true?" + +"First of all," said Lily, suddenly turning and facing her Ma; "first of +all, it's your fault ... yours ... all that's happened, damn it! If you +had been less hard on me, I shouldn't have gone off with that footy +rotter!" + +"I've often been sorry since," said Ma. "I've been sorry for it. Calm +yourself, Lily. And then ... were we so very wrong? Look how your husband +has just treated you before me, before your mother!" + +"He's a liar! I swear it!" + +"And Jimmy's thousand marks? What was that money for? Why didn't you give +it back?" + +"It's a lie! It's a lie!" + +"You, who pretended you were making such a lot of money!" continued Ma. +"There's not a word of truth in what you said. You haven't a penny. I can +see it. Oh, you're the same as ever, my poor Lily--extravagant habits, +dresses--and here you are, penniless, left to yourself with your expensive +tastes. You'll die in poverty one day, without a Pa or Ma. Come back to +us, Lily." + +"To make nothing? No, thank you!" + +"Who says so?" + +"Oh, I know! Ten shillings a week, eh? Family life, as that old beast of a +Fuchs says!" + +"Lily," said Ma severely, "don't insult decent people! Have some respect, +at any rate." + +But Lily had no respect left for anybody. Pas, Mas, Trampies, Nunkies, one +and all, were so many slave-drivers! + +"And yet it's quite true, I'm penniless," thought Lily to herself. "I, who +have earned a fortune for you!" she grumbled under her breath, stifling a +sob. + +"You're mad, my poor Lily! All that we have will be yours some day. You +never think of the future; you spend your last penny." + +"I earn and I spend!" + +"And suppose you fell ill, my poor Lily?" + +"Hospitals aren't made for dogs! Besides, I have friends. And then, at +least, I shall have had some fun for my money, while you, if you died +to-morrow, Pa would marry another woman, who would spend all your savings, +all the money I have earned for you." + +"Lily," cried Mrs. Clifton, "you're insulting your father!" + +"I'm telling you things as they are; and I won't come back to you, because +I can make more elsewhere! Every one for himself!" + +"But you don't make a penny!" said Ma, gradually getting angry. "You heard +Trampy, just now. He called you an idler. Your Pa, at least, used to make +you work. You're trying to bluff us with those stories of your successes. +I dare say you'll be glad, one day, of a crust of bread with us." + +"Ma!" + +"Your contracts," said Ma, "you're always talking of your contracts. I +should like to see them and your programs too." + +"Certainly," said Lily. "I'll show them to you: Munich, Berlin, Hamburg. +I've had successes everywhere, engagements everywhere! I make more by +myself than all Pa's troupe put together!" + +"Yes, but how do you get your engagements?" said Ma, pale with anger, +seeing that Lily was escaping them and, this time, for good. "Tell me how +you get them?" + +"Why, through my talent, I suppose." + +"Your talent! Pooh! You've none left! You get them through your friends: +through your Jimmy, your gentlemen friends...." + +"That's a lie!" + +"You get them ... by looking pretty and getting round the men ... you ... +you ... you...." + +"Mother!" + +Lily drew back her shoulder, her arm stiff, ready to strike; but a sense +of respect withheld her. + +"Stop!" she cried to the cabman, in a hoarse voice. + +And, without even waiting for the cab to pull up beside the curb, Lily +jumped out in the roadway, into the mud. + +"Mother," she said to Mrs. Clifton, "mother, I shall never forget this!" + +And, mechanically, in her haste to get away, she handed the man what money +she had left, made a sign to him to go on and, without saying good-by, +Lily saw the cab drive off. It was evening, in a quiet street: where was +she? Lily did not know; her head was in a whirl. She recognized Old +Compton Street: had they gone no farther? It seemed to her that she had +been riding for an hour ... but no, barely a few minutes.... + +Alone in London, without money, in the mud, in the dark, oh! she wished +she could be swallowed up in the sewer. She felt like killing herself. + +"If I walk toward the Thames," she muttered, "I am done for!" + +And she took a street on the left, leading in the direction of the +embankment. The movement restored her to her self-consciousness. + +An idea came to her, a distant hope, a glimmer, very faint at first, which +suddenly grew in dimensions within her and lit her up in every particle. +Jimmy! He appeared to her, all at once, like a giant eight feet high, as +on his posters. Ah, people seemed to associate her life with his, to +presume all sorts of things ... though he had never even kissed her! Yes, +he had ... on the stage ... in Berlin, but that was before everybody! And +everything drove her toward him, she always found herself on his path: +Jimmy was everywhere, always. And Jimmy was powerful and he was +good-looking and he loved her! He loved her! To keep straight was no use. +Why, all of them, all of them, including her husband, that footy rotter, +who was jealous of Jimmy without reason: she'd give him cause for jealousy +soon, if it killed him with rage, him and all the rotten lot. And she'd do +it that very moment! At two minutes' walk from where she stood, in +Whitcomb Mansions! She was not one of those women whom you can drive to +despair with impunity: she had her vengeance ready.... + + * * * * * + +Jimmy was alone in his room; his table was covered with books and papers. +He was still at his great plan. + +Jimmy sat plunged in work, without the least thought of what was happening +near him: in fact, he did not even know that Lily was in London. His +installation of "Bridging the Abyss" at the Hippodrome had taken him the +whole day. There was a scenic effect to contrive with the manager: a +"hydrodrama" ... bridging the abyss over a torrent ... with a waterfall +behind ... and the whole thing set and framed in a pantomine, which was +ready for production, because Jimmy had been expected for a month; in +short, it would go of itself. + +And under the peaceful light he resumed his compasses, or else flung +himself back in his chair, lit a cigarette, followed the smoke with his +eyes.... + +Poor Lily, what was she doing, over there, in Berlin, thought Jimmy. She +deserved something better than Trampy, that adorable Lily, to whom he, +Jimmy, would gladly have devoted his life ... and whom he felt as it were +swelling up inside him ... in his heart ... in his brain ... in spite of +himself! That poor Lily! To think that he could do nothing for her, that +he almost regretted having done her a service, after the short scene which +he had had the day after with Trampy, blinded with jealousy, because he, +Jimmy, had visited Lily during his absence; the reproaches which that +simple action had earned for him: + +"Look here, you righter of wrongs, you who preach to others and go making +love to their wives!" + +To have put himself in a position that he could be spoken to like that, in +a position to have Lily suspected! What a shame! Oh, the worries it would +cause her! Yes, he had been imprudent, perhaps: it was all his fault; +another man's wife.... + +[Illustration: "Oh, you mean cur!" roared Lily.] + +A tap at the door. It was opened behind him, before he had time to say, +"Come in," and Lily walked up to Jimmy, who sat dumb with surprise: a +strange Lily, feverish, distraught with passion. At any other time, she +would have felt constrained, because of the thousand marks, or proud to +show off her dress. Perhaps also she had prepared things to say. But all +that was forgotten, gone, blown away, like a straw in the storm, for +nothing came from her but this, in an anxious voice: + +"Tell me, Jimmy, is it true that you love me?" + +"Why," said Jimmy, perceiving Lily's agitation, without guessing the +reason: oh, but for Lily to do a thing like that! How she would regret it +later; it was terrible this time really. He saw all that at a glance; a +great pity invaded him; and yet he was a man of flesh and blood and felt +stirred to the marrow. "Why," he began, in a voice which he strove to make +friendly, no more, "why, Lily, who told you that? Why really ... I...." + +"Jimmy," she cried, fixing her eyes, like two flaming swords upon him, +"answer me! Do you love me or not?" + +Jimmy, turning as pale as a corpse, looked at her without flinching and +shook his head in sign of no. + +"Oh, you mean cur!" roared Lily. + +And she struck him on the face with her clenched fist. + + * * * * * + +Then she went out without a word, ran down the stairs, out into the blaze +of Leicester Square, made for the dark streets and plunged into the +night.... + + + + +INTERMEZZO + +I + + +The artistes' special left Euston at noon that Sunday. The Three Graces +were the first to arrive; then the waiting-rooms, until lately deserted, +began to fill with silent groups of five or six persons at a time, who +had, no doubt, arranged the night before, at the theater, to travel +together and avail themselves of the reduction allowed to members of the +M. H. A. R. A.: a reduction of at least a third, provided there were five +in the party. They now swarmed into the station from every side: pale +faces, under huge feathers; wrists hooped round with bangles; breasts +bristling with gollywogs and lucky charms. There were little girls with +bows over their ears, dressed in plush and velvet and following their Pas +and Mas. There were troupes of carpet acrobats, with low foreheads, broad +shoulders and bow legs; and profs, bosses and managers, recognizable by +the richness of their watch-chains, looked after the luggage. Theater-vans +discharged immense basket trunks, marked with letters a foot +high--"Brothers This ... Sisters That ... So-and-so Trio ... Miss +Such-and-such"--and bearing on the handles, on the yellow labels of the M. +H. A. R. A., addresses of Empires and Palaces and of Grand Opera-Houses +and Grand Theaters, too, for there were not only "artistes," but singers, +actresses, "chicken-necks," "woolly-legs," who rubbed shoulders with the +muscular acrobats. All of them crowded round the booking-office; they +handed in professional cards, helped one another, among pros; those who +were traveling alone borrowed tickets to enable them to get their +over-weight luggage labeled: complicated pieces of apparatus, +nickel-plated rods wrapped up in sacking, equilibrists' perches; the +coaches, which were carried by assault, were encumbered with hand-luggage, +bags, parcels, picture-frames containing photographs for the doors of the +theaters, heaped up in the racks, under the seats, in the corridor; and +there was a constant fire of "Hullo, girls! Hullo, boys!" + +The Three Graces, standing before the carriage-door, now that their things +were settled, watched this tumult sadly, especially Thea. What was it? +Nunkie's absence? No, but poor Lily had been kicked out by her husband, so +they heard, and turned out by her mother as well: was it possible? Lily +was dead or vanished, they didn't know which; they were told about it at +the theater; a stagehand had met her near St. Martin's Lane, in a small +street, with her hair undone and her hat on the back of her head, crying, +biting her handkerchief, drunk, apparently, and running in the direction +of the Thames. And, since then, they had had no news of her. + +"Poor Lily, what can she have done, what can have happened?" sighed Thea. +"Poor Lily, she was always so nice!" + +Thea could have cried for sadness. + +The start caused a diversion. The collector punched the tickets: + +"Blackpool? Glasgow?" + +The Three Graces stepped in, the engine whistled. But a porter rushed +past, pushing before him, with a rumbling like thunder, a huge trunk on a +barrow. Thea turned her head and a name in scarlet letters caught her +eyes: "Miss Lily!" And, running after the trunk, magnificently bedecked, +in a hat all feathers and gold tassels, who? What? Lily! Lily herself, red +and out of breath, leading her bike with one hand, carrying an umbrella in +the other, and Glass-Eye, her arms stretched wide with parcels, following +in her train! Just time to throw her bike to the porter in the luggage-van +and quick, quick, Lily came scudding back, hustled along by the +train-master! She would have missed the start, were it not for Thea, who +opened the door and, with her arms of steel, gripped her as she passed: + +"Hullo, Lily! That's a good girl! Quick!" + +Lily leaped into the carriage with a bound. Glass-Eye, entangled in her +parcels, had, amid general laughter, to be dragged by main force, through +the narrow doorway, like a piece of luggage. Oof, just in time ... Off +they were! + +In the railway-carriage was nothing but gaiety and handshaking and +ingenuous questions: + +"Traveling by yourself? Where's Trampy? And your Pa and Ma? So you're not +dead, eh?" + +"Certainly not," said Lily. "If they had come to annoy me at the station, +I'd have shown them if I was alive or dead! I was ready for them!" + +And she brandished her umbrella. + +Then she had to make herself comfortable, to find room for all her +belongings as best she could. Lily pushed Glass-Eye about, like a fine +lady used to being waited on: + +"Here, take my hat, Glass-Eye; hang it up. Take my wrist-bag. Wait, give +me my handkerchief first!" + +To look at Lily, all fresh and rosy, one would never have suspected the +trials she had passed through, but a few days ago. Still quite flustered +with that hurried departure, she smiled as she watched the Three Graces, +who, on their side, were carefully folding up their cloaks. And the train +rushed on, rushed on through deep cuttings, dashed through deserted +stations ... and then, suddenly, entered a tunnel. Lily, but for the noise +of the wheels, would have seen herself as she had been that night. Oh, she +would never forget it! It clutched at her heart. She clenched her fists +with anger. Turned out by Trampy! Insulted by her Ma! Flouted by Jimmy, +that mean cur! Oh, when she left his place, a few days ago, she felt like +a madwoman! Her first idea was to disappear, to take a header into the +black water! But, ugh, the mud, the cold! And then the hospital, with +those people who cut you up! She must also show Pa and Ma whether it was +through her gentlemen friends that she meant to earn more by herself alone +than they and all their rotten troupe put together. Perhaps Pa and Ma +would come to her, one day, to beg their bread! But Ma must first ask +Lily's pardon on her knees. On her knees, damn it! And, in despair, +inwardly raging, her chest aching with grief and spite, Lily, penniless, +but brave for all that and ready for the fray, returned to her hotel, +where, to her great surprise, she found some one waiting for her, with a +parcel in her hand. + +Lily recognized Glass-Eye. + +It was, indeed, poor Glass-Eye. When she heard what had happened and that +Lily would starve in London and a jolly good thing too, that she could +sleep in Leicester Square for all they cared: when she heard this behind +the door, Glass-Eye almost fainted. Without a word to a soul, she had +packed up her parcel and gone to join Lily; and Lily, in her misery, cried +for joy when she saw the decent girl, who offered her her savings, twelve +shillings in all, saying: + +"Take me with you, Miss Lily; I'll wait on you for nothing. Take me, take +me!" + +Oh, not to feel alone, to have some one beside you who loves you: that had +consoled Lily.... + +The next day, accompanied by Glass-Eye, she called on the agents, in the +Leicester Square quarter, at the risk of meeting Pa, or Trampy, or Jimmy; +but who cared? With her umbrella in her hand, she feared nobody and did +not give a fig for any of them. + +Nothing for her at Harrasford's, where the Warwicks were starring. Very +well, she'd come back again some other time! And straight on to Bill and +Boom's in Whitcomb Mansions, below Jimmy. As she climbed the stairs, Lily +screwed up her eyes, like a short-sighted person, for fear of meeting +Jimmy, prepared a haughty attitude; but she saw no one. She was not kept +waiting, was shown in at once to Boom's office. Lily Clifton? the New +Zealander on Wheels? Straight away a contract! And Lily left with twenty +music-halls in her pocket! Liverpool, Birmingham, Sheffield and so on: a +week in each town, beginning on Monday next. And that was how she got +engagements through her gentlemen friends! + +The next day, she borrowed some money on her contracts from the Brixton +financier: "loans from five pounds upward, in the strictest confidence." +Then, proposed and seconded by two artistes, she joined the Variety +Artistes' Federation and, in return for ten shillings, received the red +card of membership. She paid another ten shillings and the same for +Glass-Eye, her maid, to the M. H. A. R. A. and obtained the right, for one +year, to travel at reduced fares, including an insurance against +accidents: five hundred pounds to her heirs in case of death--her +heirs!--and two hundred and fifty pounds if she lost a hand or foot in a +railway accident; and one hundred and fifty for a serious injury. Then she +bought a big gollywog, for her dressing-room, and a little lucky charm for +her watch-chain--a closed black hand, with the thumb between the fingers, +as a preservative against falls--and with that and her bike she would have +set out for India and Australia as calmly as she might have taken the +omnibus to Earl's Court. + +Oh yes, she had done a deal in those few days and, above all, she had got +out of her difficulties, thanks, to a certain extent, to Glass-Eye, who +had comforted her. And besides, hang it, that was all over now! The +worries were forgotten, and, as the train emerged from the tunnel, Lily, +with her arm round Glass-Eye's waist, was patting that decent girl and +Glass-Eye lifted her one good eye to Lily, while the other, the glass one, +gazing fixedly at the door, reflected the thinly scattered houses and the +beginning of the country. + +Lily, when she had recovered a little from her mad rush, lay down at full +length among her bags, parcels and bandboxes. She laughed with the Three +Graces; and there was no one there to interfere with them; there they +were, by themselves, among themselves, alone in the compartment, a +regular, rollicking school-girls' picnic. Lily made them scream by telling +them about her life since they had last seen her. She felt a need for a +reaction of gaiety, after her sadness of the days just past. The Graces +fixed their round eyes upon her, upon that Lily who was so thoroughly up +in all sorts of things which they knew only by hearsay: men, love. A life +fit to kill a horse; and a very nice girl, for all that: a kind of +forbidden fruit, pink and fair-haired, soft to the touch; and no jealousy +between them, friendship rather, a rare thing, in the "Profession".... + +Lily grew excited in talking, told of her successes, the receptions, the +teas she used to give in her drawing-room, in Berlin, when she was ill. +Jossers, according to her, would have paid any price to have been there! +It would form a subject of conversation over there for many a long day to +come. And then her journeys, her impressions of the continent--"Jam with +your meat, my dear!"--and such clean dressing-rooms in Germany; very +severe managers, though: gee, harder than Pas. But very good to her, all +the same. The Battenberg at Leipzig: nothing but leading turns; and she +had topped the bill at Leipzig! And to see all those people eating, during +the show, when you were hungry yourself, had a very funny effect upon you. +By the way, she didn't like that system of being lodged and boarded by the +management; it was all very well for those people; but none of that for +her: give her a nice flat in town or a smart hotel! Once she was started, +Lily never stopped, called Glass-Eye to witness, went on telling of her +life in Berlin; how Jimmy had fallen in love with her when he saw her on +the stage, and he had the cheek to want her to run away with him; but who +got a box on the ear that day, eh? She perhaps: yes, rather, over the +left! And Jimmy and Trampy had fought for her! So had all the pros, worse +than dogs in September! + +"What a rotten lot!" concluded Lily. + +"My, how you've changed!" said Thea. "You used to be so fond of men." + +"I give it them where they deserve," said Lily, slapping her firm, round +hips. + +And they laughed noisily at Lily's anger when, with her shoulder drawn +back and her arm ready to strike, she spoke of breaking the jaws of those +two scoundrels. + +"Go it! Hit me!" said Thea, putting forward her deltoid muscle. "Hit away! +You'll only smash your wrist!" + +And then those Spartans calmed down, asked one another for news of absent +friends, talked about different people they had known, all over the place, +on the stage: their conversation always came round to the profession. +Lily, with greater refinement, sometimes tried to discuss dress: tulle +ruches were to be worn this year, she heard; feather boas. The Graces knew +nothing about that, stuck to their "Did you ever know...? Do you +remember...?" And every part of the world was mixed up in their talk: +India, Tasmania, Mexico, South Wales, New South Wales, York, New York, +Hampshire, New Hampshire. + +"Did you know Ave Maria?" asked Lily. + +"No." + +But they mentioned other friends, like school-girls living in the same +quarter; only, for them, the school, the quarter was San Francisco, +Chicago, Berlin, and the schoolmates were the girl in a knot, who had sold +her skeleton in advance to the Medical College: Marjutti, the +double-knotted girl, to whom the South Kensington Museum offered five +hundred pounds for a cast of her figure; the Pawnees, who had just won a +treble beauty prize; and the Laurence girl, whose cruelly daring +performance was forbidden by the Manchester police; and heaps of others +whom they had known and who, at that moment, were asleep at the antipodes, +right under your feet, or waking up in the Far West, or going to bed in +the Far East, or pitching on the ocean, or rolling in express trains +toward the five corners of the earth. And their own traveling adventures, +the Graces' and Lily's: broken railway-bridges! ships on fire at sea! +towns blazing up in the night! ropes breaking, falls head-first, my! One +would have thought that these girls of seventeen to twenty were South Sea +pirates, talking of hangings and tortures, or, rather, children playing at +frightening one another. Lily, for instance, in India: two eyes glaring at +her in the dark, gee! And, in New York, a fall into a mirror; all over +blood; half dead. She grew excited, in her desire to outdo Laurence and +Crack-o'-Whip: the steel-buckled belt, the kicks in the ribs! Stories of +brutal treatment picked up on every side--from the Gilson girl, from Ave +Maria, from all the boys and all the girls and all the monkeys who had +been through the mill--she made every one of them her own, served them up +hot and hot to the astounded Graces, talked of whole days spent in +practising on rough, uneven boards--"And given no food, was I, +Glass-Eye?"--so much so that she would sometimes get up in the night and +go and pick up the crusts under the table, gee! Lily reveled in the +pitying expressions of the Three Graces and her heart swelled with pride +when Thea, greatly touched, remarked that, in such cases, it would have +been better not to be born. + +"You're quite right," said Lily, with a drooping air; but she burst into a +peal of fresh, young laughter when she saw Glass-Eye overcome with +emotion. "What's that?" asked Lily, giving her a thump in the ribs. +"Crying? You silly cuckoo!" + +If it hadn't been for her Ma's insults and Jimmy's and Trampy's--when it +all came back to her, it was like a needle stuck in her heart!--Lily would +have been in the seventh heaven! No more Pa, no more Ma, no more anybody; +no boss, no prof, no husband, nothing, all alone ... with her maid! +Certainly, there would be the worry of business, looking for her "digs," +seeing the agents, writing letters and so on; but she would know how to +put herself forward, how to make the most of her work; and she smiled as +she reflected how little all those worries meant, compared with her past +life: and she would be free, free, free at last. She was going to earn +money, to enjoy life. + +And the train rushed on, rushed on through the fields. Glass-Eye, with her +nose glued to the window, was astonished to find everything so large +outside of London: red villages decked the green country-side; and then +came empty railway stations. Sometimes the train slowed down:--a large +silent town lay spread in the valley, white smoke rose from the endless +roofs; homes, more homes; the air of rest, the empty streets and the +indistinct chimes of the church-bells proclaimed to the pale heavens the +majesty of prayer. Lily listened with a dreamy air; it all reminded her of +things: + +"It's like the American engines," she said to the Three Graces, "that used +to ring their bells when they passed through Syracuse." + +But the train rushed on, rushed on.... And they again began to talk shop, +as always: with, here and there, an excursion into the cost of food. The +Graces, just then, were unpacking their lunch; and Lily fetched her +traveling provisions from her bag in the corridor. There was a sound of +clattering plates from end to end of the train, in a mist of +tobacco-smoke. Lily rejoined the party very quickly, to avoid coming in +contact with the pros, and, waited on by Glass-Eye, attacked her meal and +broke her bread so heartily that the crusts flew to the ceiling. They +drank out of the same cup, took their meat in their hands, Lily saying +that fingers were made before forks. They chattered noisily, with the +time-honored jokes about apples and bananas. They made Glass-Eye talk a +lot of nonsense. Lily, flinging back her head, laughed full-throated, held +her sides. + +"My!" said the Graces. "What a pity that we are separating! It would have +been so nice to travel together; one's never bored with you. What a +tomboy!" + +"'K you!" said Lily, greatly flattered, with a stage curtsey. + +Unfortunately, they would have to part at Warrington. The Graces were +going on to Glasgow, Lily was changing for Liverpool; a few moments more +and it was good-by, until chance.... + +At Lily's request, the Graces gave her a few last words of advice, +explained the system of the pass-book of the Artistes' Federation: the +sixpenny stamp to be stuck in the little square every week; the extra +stamp at each death of a member, for the benefit of the heirs. They talked +to her of the Friday meetings at Manchester, at which every artiste can +speak and see himself printed afterward in the London _Performer_. + +"Good!" thought Lily. "I may have things to say. There will be news for +somebody!" + +The Graces had a "three years' book," the professional _agenda_, with +nothing but Mondays marked on it for the weekly engagement: 8 January, 15 +January and so on. + +"Yes, I know," said Lily. "Mine's full for months ahead!" + +They showed her, on theirs, the last pages containing portrait +advertisements of famous artistes: the Pawnees, Marjutti, Laurence. + +"Oh, if I could get there one day!" thought Lily. "I'd post it to Pa; it +would be the death of him!" + +And then followed the thousand and one details of the wandering life: your +name on the red list, the list handed in at the station; the journeys at +reduced fares; the music for twelve instruments, forty executants, sent on +to the theater a fortnight in advance. + +"And matinees are paid for now. And you know, Lily, in the Federation you +can get a solicitor free." + +"That's a good thing to know," thought Lily, "for my divorce from that +rusty biker!" + +Oh, how she hated pros, now! The sight of them in the corridor, looking at +her with glistening eyes, made her want to put out her tongue at them! But +she preferred not to see: + +"I don't like to seem stuck-up with them, it's not polite," she observed. + +Nevertheless, she shrugged her shoulders when one of them who, no doubt, +had known her when she was "that high," blew kisses to her from the tips +of his fingers, with a gesture straight at her heart, through the window. + +And the train rushed on, rushed on. They were nearing Warrington. The +slopes, on either side, bristled with chimneys and houses, houses, endless +roofs ... a Lancashire rid of its black smoke, like an extinct and silent +crater ... Warrington! + +A few minutes' wait. There was a general hustle, pros stretching their +legs, running to the refreshment-room for a drink, some seeking seats in +the train, others saying good-by: + +"Write to me, eh? Cathedral Hotel, Melbourne." + +And a shake of the hand; so long; perhaps for ever. More basket trunks +were being trundled down the platform. A wife was leaving her husband: six +months, twelve months, without meeting; who could tell? Or else, perhaps, +between two trains, as the luck of the tours would have it; and they +seemed very fond of each other, too; Lily thought it very pretty. But she +had other things to do than sentimentalize. She handed out her parcels to +Glass-Eye and then, standing on the platform, said good-by to the Three +Graces: + +"Hope you'll have a good journey! _Au revoir_! Send me some post-cards," +said Lily. "Address them to the theater, I love that! Good-by! Ta-ta!" + +The train started. Lily waved her handkerchief to the Three Graces. + +One more separation; one more little rent: Lily had had so many in her +life. As far back as she could remember there had been heads at the +carriage-window, like that; ships standing out to sea; trains rushing into +the night. But, this time, she was alone, with her maid. And she drew +herself up proudly, like a lady who had a sense of her responsibilities. A +new life was opening before Lily, as before a girl just coming out. Poor +Lily, a girl still, in her way, yes, with, for her portion, a feather in +her hat, a gollywog in her trunk, a pair of supple legs and nerves of +steel, unerring and exact, trained to turn round and round.... + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +"Liverpool! Come along, Glass-Eye!" said Lily, jogging her maid in the +ribs. + +Glass-Eye, half asleep, clumsily gathered up her parcels, while Lily +looked round for the baggage-man. On the platform was an avalanche of +bags, boxes, picture-frames, as at the departure from Euston; the basket +trunks were being piled up in the theater-vans. Lily pointed out her +hamper and her bike to the boy from the theater, who had come to meet the +"program" at the station. + +"Are you the bicyclist?" + +"I am," replied Lily modestly. + +She gave her address: not the pros' boarding-house, but private "digs" +which had been recommended to her in London, with a note of introduction. +Then she walked out of the station, followed by Glass-Eye. + +Lily knew Liverpool, vaguely, as she knew all the towns of the United +Kingdom and those of America, too, and Australia and India and Germany and +Holland and elsewhere. They were all muddled up in her memory, she had +seen so many, and made as it were one great city, but for occasional +salient points, as in the towns which you came to in a boat, or those in +which you had a circus parade, or others still, here and there: Glasgow, +where she had fallen and broken a tooth; Blackpool with its ball-rooms, +its tower and a "contract!" Sheffield, with its smoking chimneys; +Washington, with a dome at the end; New York, with its sky-scrapers. The +towns of her early childhood, leaning against mountains, buried under +trees, were more remote, more like a dream. Elephants, monkeys, harnessed +buffaloes; and then Mexico and Ave Maria, London and those footy rotters! + +Liverpool was Lime Street: Lily remembered a sort of round church; when +you got to that, you turned to the left. She soon found the house and +received from a huge, full-blown lady the friendly welcome which Lily's +artless air and fair curls always insured her. No gentleman with them? All +alone by themselves? A room with a big double bed, a little parlor with a +bow-window; sixteen shillings a week, including the use of the kitchen. +Just then, the baggage-man arrived, took the trunk up to the room and went +on with the bike to the pros' boarding-house and the theater. Lily, +assisted by Glass-Eye, fixed herself up for the week: her dresses on the +pegs, her linen safe under lock and key in the hamper. Then she made a +special parcel of things for the stage: paper flowers, ostrich feathers, +white laced boots. + +"There, wrap that up in my petticoat," said Lily. "And the music and the +gollywog: you can bring all that to my dressing-room to-morrow morning." + +Next, Lily made herself look smart, freshened up her two bows, threw her +green muslin scarf over her shoulders and went down to the parlor to pick +out her favorite tune--_The Bluebells of Scotland_--with one finger on the +piano. Meanwhile, the landlady spread the cloth: bread, marmalade, +watercress, two eggs. Then, according to instructions received, Glass-Eye +announced to Miss Lily that tea was ready. Lily affably invited Glass-Eye +to sit down to table with her; and the two ate away like friends. Lily +took the opportunity to settle her expenses; for instance--and this she +insisted upon--if she, Lily, took a maid, she wouldn't have her for +nothing; she intended to pay her some small monthly wage. + +"And a good many little perquisites besides, you understand, Glass-Eye; my +old frocks, my hats." + +Glass-Eye did not ask that, would have given her other eye to serve Miss +Lily. + +Lily was still asleep, at twelve o'clock the next morning, when Glass-Eye +entered the room. She had lost her way, had walked miles, had been to the +landing-stage of the music-hall.... + +"At what time's rehearsal?" asked Lily. + +"At one o'clock, Miss Lily." + +"And you let me sleep till twelve, when I have so much to do!" said Lily. +"Go and get breakfast ready ... or you'd better mind yourself!" + +And Lily put out her hand to lay hold of a boot; but Glass-Eye was gone. + +[Illustration: GLASS-EYE MAUD] + +Lily, while dressing, reflected upon her new responsibilities, upon the +way in which servants should be treated. No familiarity; not too severe, +either; and no smackings ... that is to say ... however ... + +"I must dress her simply," thought Lily. "My hats, but without the +feathers; coarse thread gloves; and she must always carry a parcel." + +Lily was eager to go to rehearsal, accompanied by her maid. There is no +rehearsing at "rehearsal:" the "times," the scenic effects are settled +with the conductor of the band; there are no bare arms or bloomers +practising on their carpets: a few dark groups, in ordinary walking dress; +others, in their shirt sleeves, are opening boxes, and no mystery, no +shifting lights: the stage and the house one wan hole, except the red and +gold note of the curtain and the black mass of the musicians, with the +gleaming brasses. + +The artistes went up to the conductor, one after the other, and explained +their "turns:" + +"When I come on, this tune, soft, six times, to begin with; then, once, +loud. When I go off ... a roll of drums." + +The band, each time, played two or three bars, mechanically, at sight; +then it was understood and ... next, please. + +Lily had seen this before, but not under these conditions; not dressed as +at present; not accompanied by a maid. She listened as hard as she could +when she walked on to the stage, caught the remarks, enjoyed the +impression which she produced. They seemed to ask: + +"Who is it? A singer? A dancer?" + +"No, Lily; Miss Lily, you know." + +She guessed all that. Then: + +"My score, Maud!" + +And, leaning toward the orchestra, she explained, in her turn: pizzicati, +mazurka, frog, swan, back-wheel, the waltz for the twirls, the march for +the exit. And Lily withdrew with a half-curtsey and a pretty smile. Next, +she put out her things in her dressing-room, on the table, before the +looking-glass: brushes, pencils, grease-paints, strings of pearls for her +hair. She hung a cord from the door to the window, to dry her tights on, +when she washed a pair in the basin. She got out her little work-box, in +case of anything tearing, threaded a needle, freshened up the knots of her +ribbons, pinned photographs and p.-c.'s on the wall. And, over all, she +hung her gollywog, a hairy doll, white-collared, red-waistcoated, with, in +its black face, under the bristling hair, two shining tacks by way of +eyes. It was the protecting idol. Not that Lily, ever faithful to the +Church of England, believed much in gollywogs; but, like most music-hall +people, she felt safer when she knew it was there. And her dressing-room, +with the spangled skirts and the tights hanging down like flayed skins, +suggested some strange, exotic chapel in which a fetish sat enthroned. + +After that, Lily had nothing left to do. She went out with Glass-Eye and +walked round to the front to look at her lithos. She saw to her annoyance +that a serio was topping the bill--and a comic singer middling it and a +cinematograph bottoming it. But no matter, she had a good place, just +under the bill-topper. + +Next came shopping, through the windows. She bought a pair of thread +gloves for Glass-Eye at Lewis's and then went in and lay on her bed, +feeling ever so tired from getting up late that morning. She dreamed and +dreamed, while Glass-Eye went marketing. As soon as Lily was alone, the +thought pricked her like a pin: looking pretty, indeed! Her gentlemen +friends! Jimmy, that traitor, and Trampy! Trampy would be sure to play her +some dirty trick. Oh, if she could get a divorce from him, in spite of +all! She had made inquiries in London. She would want a solicitor. She +must have one, to set inquiries on foot.... She could have as many +witnesses as she pleased: all those girls ... and the stage hands ... and +two artistes, on the day when Trampy, in his fury, had flung his bike at +her on the stairs; the pedal had grazed her temple, yes, at Dresden. That +wasn't the way to treat a lady. Everything that had happened was his +fault; and they'd see who won the day, he or she. Her forehead wrinkled up +with anger when she thought of it. She bit her lips and clenched her fists +and then ... and then ... enough of that! She'd see to-morrow. And other +cares came to bother her: the indispensable things which she would have to +buy at the end of the week out of her salary; open-work stockings, an +aigrette for the theater, a little black bog-oak pig to wear at her wrist. +And Jimmy's thousand marks ... + +"Damn it, let him wait!" And, with her hand on her lucky charm, Lily fell +asleep. + +In the evening, at the theater, she forgot everything. She felt a longing, +a fevered desire to appear. When her turn came, after the xylophones, who +seemed, behind their tables laden with bottles, to be keeping a bar of +musical sounds; when the light shining on the great back-drop threw up +into dazzling relief the blue sea, the blue sky and the white colonnade +and terraces; when, amid the flash of the lime-light and the thunder of +the orchestra, she made her entrance on the stage, Lily had a smile of +triumph. Life was beginning for her at last! She could have cried out for +happiness to that human mass which, behind the flaming streak of the +footlights, spread itself, bare-necked and bedizened, in the warm shadow +of the front boxes. And she directed a scarlet smile, set off with a glint +of gold, to the audience. + +"I believe I was grand to-night," said Lily, as she went off, out of +breath. "Oh, if there had been an agent in the house! But no such luck: +they're never there when they're wanted! And those two fellows," she +thought to herself. "If they had been there, they'd have died of +jealousy." + +Everybody spoiled her. She needed a strong head to resist the flatteries +with which she was overwhelmed, both as artiste and woman. For instance, +when a row of Roofers were puffing away on the stage, some manager, who +had known her when she was "that high," was sure to observe that her +talent, her firm, round hips--"Eh, Lily, you've got plenty of that now!" +... Lily blushed under the compliment--would make more impression than a +whole herd of Roofers: + +"Eh, Lily? I say, what are you doing to-night? Come and have some ..." + +"Glass-Eye, my handkerchief," Lily broke in, suspecting an invitation to +supper. + +Glass-Eye, in obedience to a gesture of Lily's, opened the wrist-bag, gave +Lily the lace handkerchief and Lily hid her mocking smile in a scented +gesture. Then: + +"Good-by. Ta-ta!" + +And they shook hands, like good friends, nothing more. + +Glass-Eye frightened off the admirers with her fixed stare. And Lily had +no lack of them. She loved flirting. She wanted adulation, wanted to be +made much of. She had a revenge to take, arrears to make up; she and +sympathy had, till then, been strangers. She now took her fill of it, got +carried away, saw nothing but lovers around her, three or four at a time, +as when the comic quartet, the Out-of-Tunes, used to grin kisses to her in +the street. It was for her that they were there, every one of them, down +to the acting managers, who did not disdain to come round from the front +and take a turn on the stage. It might be a question of steam-pipes or +electric wires; no matter, Lily took it all to herself, made herself +amiable toward their dress-coats and white shirt-fronts, and said "'K +you!" with the great stage bow, the body bent in a sweeping curtsey, when +they complimented her on her firm, round hips. She stabbed them with +smiles, to make sure of complimentary phrases in their weekly reports to +the central boards. All of them; the electrician, the conductor of the +band, she had them all at her feet. It became a need for Lily to see +people all around her dying for love. It gave her a feeling of mingled +pride and remorse. + +"Can I help it, Glass-Eye?" she would ask, to quiet her conscience. +"They're mad. They would leave their wives and children for me!" + +She had an autograph album filled with "thoughts" and declarations: + +"I love you! _Je vous aime! Ich liebe dich_!" + +[Illustration: In the pros' smoking-room.] + +Lily, now that the audience was good for invitations to supper, bouquets +and sweets, occupied herself with that somber mass which, formerly, did +not cause her so much uneasiness as the presence of her Pa. Lily, like a +real stage-girl, who had beheld waves miles high between Harwich and the +Hook of Holland, saw in a few flowers a bouquet large enough to fill a cab +and the least little love letter grew, in her eyes, into an offer to +present her with motor-cars and to abandon wife and child. If a gentleman, +for once in a way, stood on the pavement waiting for her, she dreamed of +an elopement. And there were pros, too, who prowled around her, in the +half light of the wings, and came up to her with outstretched hand: + +"Hullo, Mrs. Trampy!" + +"Call me Miss Lily," she said, in a vexed voice. "That's the name I'm +known by." + +And many of them did know her, in fact, from having talked about her in +Fourteenth Street in New York, or in State Street at Sidney, or in the +theaters in South Africa, for that story of the whippings had traveled all +around the world, under the folds of the Union Jack. Some proposed to take +her with them in their show, or to go with her to clean her bike, instead +of Glass-Eye: + +"Is it a bargain?" + +"Yes, I _don't_ think!" said Lily. + +Another, just off for Melbourne, told her that, in Australia, you could +find fire-escapes to marry you for half-a-crown. They joked without +constraint, in the pros' smoking-room, a small and dark corner between the +house and the stage.... All of them, all the pros, she had them all at her +feet; but she didn't care for that sort and she sent them all to eat +coke. + +The months all passed alike. She had finished the Bill and Boom tour. She +continued in the private music-halls, from north to south, from east to +west of England. In spite of Glass-Eye's impossible cooking and the +everlasting ham sandwiches and pork-pies of the railway station +refreshment rooms, Lily grew plumper and plumper, her nervous leanness +filled out, with pigeon's eggs and ostrich's eggs everywhere, in front and +behind. She did not kill herself with work. Once, in Glasgow, at a +music-hall where, a few weeks earlier, Laurence had had a terrible fall, +lying unconscious for two whole hours, the frightened manager said: + +"No dangerous tricks, mind! They only get us into trouble!" + +Another time, she was given only seven minutes, watch in hand, on the +stage. + +"Couldn't you cut that little trick? You know the one I mean," said the +manager. + +He called a little trick a performance which it had cost her eighteen +months' hard practice and no end of bruises to learn. Lily did not wait to +be asked twice. She cut as desired and thought it a jolly lot easier to +trot round quietly, as though out for a ride, with pretty smiles to the +audience. She ended by paying more attention to her dresses than to her +work: + +"It's not so much what one does," she said, "as the way one does it." + +The sympathy with which she was surrounded unmanned the Spartan in her. +She strove to please, no longer gave her performance for herself, like a +machine, unerring and exact. Already in a few months, she was spoiled. She +looked for adventitious successes. She said, "The audience is very cold at +Birmingham," because she was not asked out to supper, and, "They do like +artistes at Sheffield, gee!" because a gentleman had sent her champagne +and flowers in her dressing-room. + +In the towns where she played three times a day--a matinee and two night +turns--she gave half of her performance, cut whatever was dangerous or +tiring. She never practised now; just went down in the morning to fetch +her letters at the theater, where she loved receiving them, post-cards +especially, which any one could read. She said to the jossers: + +"Send me lots; talk about motor-cars and champagne suppers: that drives +the pros wild." + +She left them lying on the table, or else walked about on the stage, with +her letters in her hand, like a lady overwhelmed with offers, with +invitations. If, by any chance, she went to the practice at the end of the +week, it was to display her hat, her new boots; and she laughed to herself +when she saw the artistes, each on his carpet, fagging away like mad. She +felt like a fine lady visiting a boarding-school, among those little girls +practising their flip-flaps or gluing themselves to the wall to try their +back-bendings. The pride of a Marjutti, who, they said, tortured her +spinal column to achieve a double knot; the inordinate ambition of a +Laurence, risking her life for the pleasure of risking it, were things +which she did not understand. And then, all those accidents! Dolly Pawnee, +the other day, had broken her arm at the New York Hippodrome; the Gilson +girl had fallen on her head at Budapest. They were mad, thought Lily, to +do all that without being obliged to! No, no; no more of that for her! The +last thing she wanted was to spoil her face, seeing that she had nothing +but her smile to keep her. And Lily grew timid, looked upon herself more +and more as a very precious little thing. She gave herself terrible airs +on rehearsal day; thought the stage too slippery, or too small. Lily +wanted a stage thirty feet wide, no less; she who, in the old days, at a +gesture from Pa, would have performed her whole turn, including the +head-on-the-saddle, on the top of a cab or on the Stoke Newington +pavement. Formerly, she used to think everything good, did not know what +fatigue meant; now, in the middle of her turn, she would say to herself, +sometimes with a feeling of discouragement: + +"I've only done half. I've still got this and that to do." + +And the audience itself seemed to act as her confederate. When she missed +one of her tricks, Lily would lay her bike on the stage, step down to the +footlights, bow with a confused air, beg pardon with a smile and receive a +reassuring round of applause. Lily loved these refined audiences: _her_ +audiences, as she said; not the matinee audiences, with seats at reduced +prices: to see your grocer or your butcher in the front boxes was rotten; +and those people gave themselves such airs. A cheap way of doing the +grand! + +And the landladies spoiled her, too; those worthy souls who treated her as +their own daughter. + +"And a jolly sight better!" thought Lily. + +Others pitied her for the profession she followed, feared she would break +something, one fine day. Lily thought that very sweet of them, would have +liked to stay with them for ever; but there was the constant rent at +parting, a bit of herself which Lily left behind her every week. And the +bothers that Maud caused her! Her stupidity drove Lily mad: tickets lost, +bags mislaid, disputes with the tradesmen, battles with the bike, +scratches on the shins, on the hands, everywhere. Lily lost patience, +threatened her with the leather belt, damn it! + +Sometimes, Lily became incensed with herself and everybody. Her divorce +kept running in her head. And her three years' book, with its last pages +unsoiled by engagements, also gave her cause for uneasiness; and yet the +acting managers must have sung her praises, in their weekly reports,--the +ones who came and made love to her on the stage! + +After different music-halls, she had done the Harrasford tour, but without +any great success. People who had known her with the troupe thought that +she had gone off. Lily was furious: if, on those evenings, she missed a +trick, she would knock Glass-Eye about when she returned to the wings, +storm at the stage--"Slippery as ice, damn it!"--fling her bike, which was +not to blame, against the wall. Lily, in her pink tights, under the +pendants of false pearls on her forehead, looked like an angry savage, +ready to fly at your throat. + +That was her life. No adventures, really; theaters in which she caught on, +theaters in which she didn't go down so well; more or less prolonged +applause; an encore or two; and, here and there, a bouquet large enough to +fill a cab: those were the great events. And it was always the same show, +on the same stage, from one end of England to the other; theaters and +theaters; so many theaters that, in her memory, they ended, like the +towns, by making only one. It was always herds of Roofers, swaying in +unison, with flaxen wigs, scarlet legs, boyish voices; and "families," +"sisters," "brothers," all different, but all alike, going up the +staircase to their dressing-rooms in wraps, like gouty people at a spa, +and serios, serios, with choruses emphasized by dances. Sometimes, a new +attraction, a Venus without tights, or a bare-breasted Salome, would draw +whole groups, boys and girls mixed, to the wings, with their necks +stretched toward the stage. And there were exotic features, too: conjurers +from Malabar; boomerang-throwing bush-men; the Light of Asia, a Chinese +girl without arms, an artificial product, like those beggar-monsters whom +they cultivate in pots in the mountains of Navarre. She saw the +boy-violinist again. Since that bite in the seat of his trousers, at +Budapest, he had abandoned all hope of fame and was looking for an +engagement in the orchestra. She saw the female-impersonator with the +green eyes. She saw numbers and numbers. She ended by seeing them all +again, in the various greenrooms. She heard names mentioned. People were +coming on all round: Tom, singing-girls, dancing-girls. She would have to +do something, too, after all, to get herself talked about! She had +received a shock on opening _The Era_: they had not taken out her name! +There was still a Miss Lily at Rathbone Place: her cousin Daisy, it +appeared, a stranger, was there in her stead, under her name! And they +were stealing her idea! The New Zealanders were now called the New +Trickers; no doubt the turn which she had described to Pa. Something new, +something new was essential. She must manage to hit upon something! She +turned it all over in her head. There were too many Lilies, Lilians, +Lillians; you saw nothing but Lillians on the posters. But what about a +Lilia Godiva, quite naked on her bike, like the other on her horse? She +would mimic the scene, love and despair, and she would think of something +to raise a laugh! Peeping Tom, for instance, stretching out his neck and +stealing a kiss as she passed. Oh, she would find a way--trust her!--of +showing them what she had in her! And Jimmy and Trampy pursued her +incessantly with their hateful memory. Trampy, she was told, was still the +darling of the fair. + +Lily was greatly astonished that he had not tried to obtain a divorce, on +his side: + +"He's afraid," she said to herself. + +More than ever, she busied herself with collecting her witnesses; she +would soon be rid of her tramp cyclist. + +People also talked about Jimmy, whose reputation was still increasing. +After a triumphant season at the Hippodrome, he had left for America. +Jimmy was becoming a national champion. An article in _The Era_ spoke of +"our Jimmy." + +"He's a friend of yours, Lily," people said. "You ought to know all about +him." + +Lily tossed her head, like one who could say a great deal if she +would.... + +Oh, how she longed for revenge when she thought of that! Oh, if she could +only have served them out somehow! If she could get _The Performer Annual_ +to send her those questions to answer: "Q. Your favorite town? Your +favorite audience? Your idea of marriage? Your pet aversion?" wouldn't she +give it them hot, just! She thought of having her biography written, the +real one. She herself sometimes jotted down things she remembered, on bits +of paper, on the backs of envelopes, in her dressing-room; arranged her +picture post-cards in order; called that writing her memoirs. She would +crush them with her successes, give names and dates: that lord who wanted +to travel with her, the fifty-pound diamond brooch he had given her. And +bouquets, chocolates, sweets ... by the cart-load! That stage-manager who +cried when she went away! All, all in love with her: yes, those and ever +so many more! + +She had so much to say that she did not know where to begin. She knocked +up against too many people, men and women, without counting monkeys, +parrots, dogs, cats, ponies, elephants; it all ended by getting mixed up +in her head, like the theaters and the towns. She grew quite bewildered, +among so many different things. She had seen everything and done +everything. Once, during a week when she was "resting," she had helped her +landlady, who kept a public-house, to draw the beer and had waited on the +customers, with her fifty-pound diamond brooch at her throat. + +At a benefit performance, one night, when they were drinking champagne on +the stage, actors, singers, artistes, all together, her pink tights had +excited the dress-coats. Lily had been "pressed in company," that is to +say, surrounded till she did not know which way to turn, while her time +was pretty well taken up with saying, "Paws off!" before, behind, on every +side. She had triumphed at galas, above a tumult of heads and parasols: at +Roundhay Park, among other places, beneath the motto, "Let Leeds +flourish!" Feeling anxious about her future, she had consulted a "Zanzig" +at Earl's Court. Each week brought its surprises, its fresh knowledge. +Lily learned something every day: "If you see a lamb in the fields with +its head turned toward you, that's lucky; if you see its tail first, it's +a sign of bad luck," and the way of holding your hands, of placing your +fingers, of whispering certain words in certain circumstances. + +She collected halfpennies with holes in them. In Ireland, she had kissed +the Blarney stone and picked shamrock in the ruins. She had lost her +little mother-of-pearl hunchback in the labyrinth of underground passages +at the Blackpool Tower Circus. The loss of this lucky charm had damped her +spirits for a week. And her profits were small and her "exes" constantly +increasing: tips to the call-boy, who cleaned her bike; tips to the +stage-manager; half-crowns and five shillings in every direction. As soon +as she had put a trifle by, a week without an engagement made her hard-up +again. Though she traveled at reduced fares and contented herself with a +ham sandwich or a slice of pork-pie on the road, she would never, never be +able to repay Jimmy that money: she had not even paid Glass-Eye yet! Her +dresses for on and off the stage swallowed up everything. And yet she +couldn't go about naked, like Lady Godiva! + +And time passed and passed. Lily was growing _old_: she was eighteen! +There were girls of her age who were already beyond work, used up, like +that girl contortionist who had just been cut open for a tumor; and Lily +had as yet achieved nothing! Oh, she ought to have signed for America or +Australia, or else for Russia, of which she had heard wonders--Poland, the +Parisienne, had just returned from there covered with diamonds--theaters +that played all night and did not close till dawn, to the clicking of +champagne-glasses. Lily dreamed of it, ecstatically: England was no good +to her now. The New Trickers, with their own cheap Lily, were working her +idea on the Bill and Boom Tour! If only she could have the continent! They +were talking of a new music-hall which Harrasford was to open in Paris. He +meant to make a palace of it, they said, and he was also stretching out +his arm toward Antwerp, Cologne, Lyons, Marseilles, a continental +trust.... + +"That's what I ought to have," thought Lily. + +Her present life seemed empty, notwithstanding its excitement: it was like +the sound of a band; nothing remained of it. Departures, constant +departures from one town to another, always leaving, never staying. But +for Glass-Eye's company she would have cried, sometimes, for sheer +melancholy, as at the sight of those really loving couples in the +boarding-houses, on the stage itself; those babies in the arms of their +Mas; it made her heart ache; the thought of it pursued her like the call +of distant bells, while the train rushed into the darkness. + + + + +CHAPTER III + + + "May joy and pleasure be your lot + As through this world you trot, trot, trot. + + "X." + + "In the golden chain of friendship, regard me as a link. + + "Loving Pal (Palace, Sheffield)." + +There were pages and pages like this in Lily's autograph book. The last +entry was that of a couple of friends, the dark one and the fair one: + + "May success always follow you, and eventually a good + fellow collar you, is the sincere wish of the + + "Sisters Arriett and Nancy--The ideal pair (of legs!)" + +Since Miss Lily's arrival in Paris, her collection had been increased by +the addition of a fervent declaration from her friend, the architect. This +had been her welcome in Paris, the good fellow, no doubt, prophesied by +the ideal pair of legs; yes, she had hardly reached Paris and already +there were people dying of love around her, already a man at her feet. + +Lily was delighted to meet this sincere friend again, a friend of her +childhood, who, she said, had known her when she was "that high": one poor +devil the more ready to leave wife and children for her sake. The evening +before, in her dressing-room, at the Bijou Theater, she had told him the +story of her life since leaving her parents. It made her forget to ask +about Harrasford and the new theater which he was to open: was it ready? +The architect ought to know better than anybody. She would ask him +to-night. And Lily lay turning this over, in the morning, in bed, +notwithstanding her other cares, for she must get clear somehow, must see +the agents that afternoon. She had plenty to do beside her turn. She had +to busy herself with those thousand and one details.... She would never +have believed that it was so hard to fill her three years' book. Lily felt +half-dead with fatigue before she started: + +"Let me sleep!" said Lily, stretching herself in the big double bed which +Glass-Eye had just left; "clear out! Let me sleep!" + +But Glass-Eye made a rush at Lily, tickled her in the neck, stifled her +laughter under the pillow: it was a necessity for them in the morning, +those few minutes of horse-play, of thumps and smacks, which rang out on +every side. Lily, at last, full-throated, with fluttering nostrils, cried +out for mercy. The maid went off, Lily, now quite awake, remained alone, +and her worries returned: no more love, no more music, as at the theater, +no more purple rays, nothing but gloomy hours, a long day stretching out +before her like a gray corridor. It was real life now: letters to write, +costumes to mend, last night's tights to wash in the basin.... Lily, +sitting on the edge of her bed, took her purse from where she had hidden +it under the bolster--a habit she had acquired in marriage, because of +Trampy's nightly ferretings--and emptied it on the sheets: one blue +banknote; one, two, three gold coins. How much did that make in pounds, +shillings and pence? Hardly seven pounds. It was all in vain for her to +economize, like that Ma of a star, who counted the potatoes. It was all in +vain for her to stint in every way, to keep back Glass-Eye's wages for +over a year, saying that she would pay her in a lump: she would have +almost nothing left after the purchases which she had to make. It was true +that, to-morrow, she would receive her fortnight's pay; and she hoped for +a renewal. She felt sure of it, if only because of the way in which the +manager had taken her by the chin. Then a fortnight at the Brussels +Alhambra--1 November, Flora, Amsterdam--10 January, Copenhagen--and, for +the rest, her three years' book was empty and each empty page represented +months without work--all her profits would be swallowed up by her enforced +idleness. She would never clear herself, never be able to pay Jimmy. Oh, +she was furious with him because she could not discharge her debt to him +once and for all, fling his money in his face, show him if people remained +penniless long when they had her talent! That idea comforted Lily. And it +was important that she should look nice to-day, to go the round of the +agents. Lily dressed quickly, cunningly puffed out her bows, a trick she +had learned as a child, and then, before putting on her dress, cooked the +food with Glass-Eye, who had just come in with her parcels. + +Then a dash of scent on the handkerchief, a touch of rouge on the lips +and, leaving the room all untidy, she went out, followed by Glass-Eye, +rigged out in a pair of thread mittens and carrying the sunshade and the +wrist-bag. Quick, quick! For Lily knew by experience that it is well to be +the first at the agent's or else there's nothing for you. + +She did not dislike those walks through the Paris streets: + +"Let's have some fun," she said to Glass-Eye. + +By this, Lily meant laughing at those "tiny Frenchies"; and, if they +ventured to accost her, crushing them with a "_Vous hettes oun cochon_!" +Although, among the people she mixed with, agents, artistes, stage-hands, +everybody spoke English, Lily had not come to Paris without learning a few +words, "_Oui_ ... _Non_ ... _Vous_ _hettes oun cochon_!" and so on, which +were indispensable, she thought, to a girl who wanted to make herself +respected on the continent, a girl alone, especially. And she loved to +snub those damned _parley-voos_ who dared to accost ladies. It seemed to +lighten those days of visits to the agents, the very prospect of which +gave her a headache in advance, because one had to think of everything, +lithos, photographs, programs; and, if the agent wasn't in, ruin one's +self in correspondence; and puff one's self in every way, rub it into them +that one was the cleverest person on earth.... + +"If you're too modest," said Lily, "they'll take you at your word!" + +And the pay would drop, in consequence. + +"Never tell your salary!" was another of Lily's favorite maxims. + +She gave out that she made heaps, that a little star like her, the Marie +Loyd of the bike, was only to be obtained for untold gold. But, at the +agent's, she had to cut her prices: there was no hiding anything from +them; it was like going to the doctor. + +"And, when you're in work, everybody wants you; and, when you're out of +work, they have nothing for you: it's help yourself as best you may!" she +said. + +She had to help herself now; and it was delicate business dealing with +people who have only one idea in their heads, to swindle you, in order to +curry favor with the managers by getting them cheap turns. They would have +skinned you alive: + +"Two pounds a week. Do you accept?" + +"Go to Halifax!" Lily would reply in such cases, looking them straight in +the face. It took courage to do that: the agent might grow bigger, become +an enemy. She didn't care! She wasn't going to lower her price for +anybody! And the commission she had to pay them was a torment to Lily; +calculating the percentage made her head split--not to speak of the +complicated nature of the contracts, worse than insurance policies. The +poor artiste was bound down on every side, at the mercy of the manager; +everything was foreseen, down to the prohibition of black tights, which +concealed one's poverty. And it was bad enough in England; but in the Dago +countries, on the continent, it was worse. + +"Can you understand a word of it, Glass-Eye?" asked Lily, explaining to +her maid the tricks which the artiste had to fight against. "I don't know +how the small turns manage," she concluded, in the tone of a woman who +towers above all that. + +Lily's prettiness made the people in the street turn round to look at her. +They would gaze at her cheeky feather, whisper, "You pretty, pretty +darling!" in her ear. Lily, secretly delighted, held herself ready to +crush the saucy rascal with a "How dare you?" like a lady who knows how to +appreciate a compliment, without permitting the least familiarity. And +when she approached the agency, she insisted on Glass-Eye's keeping by her +side, asked for things: her wrist-bag, her embroidered handkerchief. And +her way of walking in! Lily pretended to be short-sighted, so as to see no +one in the rotten lot. She sent in her card, sat down in the waiting-room. +It reminded her of the dentist's, with those pale people sitting on +benches; those serio-comics, all over-fat; loud-voiced topical singers, +who took the place of the real artistes, just like the bioscopes and +cinematographs! There were also little families--small turns that had +struggled hard to learn a few tricks--nobody wanted them, because they had +no "chic" costumes, sometimes, or no lithos.... + +Those were received like dogs: a wretched couple was just coming out, a +man and a woman, sad with a humility accustomed to rebuffs; and the agent +drove them toward the door, with his voice: + +"Eccentric mashers? No opening for you. Call again." + +Lily got a good reception, in the agent's room; but there was nothing for +her. And the agent saw her to the door, with a satisfied air and a knowing +wink, as though to make the others believe ... Lily didn't like that +kind--her short-sightedness did not prevent her noticing it and blushing +at it--but she was very pleased, all the same, to be seen to the door, +before those small turns who were received like dogs.... + +On the pavement outside, the wretched couple came up to her shyly: + +"Don't you know us, Miss Lily? The Para-Paras." + +She had to listen to a pitiful tale. She heard nothing but that, when she +went on her rounds of visits to the agents. Oh, the distress which she +beheld there! It made Lily feel quite ill at night. A little more and she +would have said her prayers, before getting into bed, to thank God that +she hadn't come to that. Poor Paras! Starving, no doubt, remaining for +weeks in their garret, pretending that they had been performing in the +provinces ... abroad.... Lily pictured them passing the stage-doorkeepers +to whom they had sold their parrots and being greeted with a "What's for +breakfast, Polly?" + +"Miss Lily," they confessed, in a whisper, "you know such a lot of people: +if ever you hear of anything for us, never mind where ..." + +"Poor beggars!" thought Lily. + +And her Ma had prophesied to her that, one day, she would be worse off +than they! No, she would never be half so badly off! Why, she could have +had anything she wanted, motor-cars, Paris gowns, for the asking. + +[Illustration: THE PARA-PARAS] + +"Glass-Eye, my bag!" And, handing a small gold coin to the wretched +couple, "There ... between artistes, you know ... give it back when you +can; good-by. Did you notice, Glass-Eye," asked Lily, as she walked away, +"how flattered they were when I said, 'Between artistes?' They looked +quite touched." + +But there was no time to waste in nonsense, on a day when she was calling +on the agents. The thing was to get there first; and Lily consulted her +addresses.... + +She was exasperated at being obliged, with her talent, to climb all those +stairs, to hang about in the waiting-room, she, Lily Clifton! And it +reeked of vice, stunk with the trashy scent of the "not-up-to-muches:" +merely to look at them suggested faces seen in Piccadilly at night or in +the Burlington Arcade. + +Lily sent in her card, threw a short-sighted glance around her and +remained standing, like a lady who is never kept waiting and who is sure +to be received at once. And, with her head bent down and her chin in her +gold-spotted tie, she turned over the pages of _Le Courrier des Cafes +Concerts_ on the table ... names which she didn't know ... the small +"numbers" of the continent ... so much the better ... all the more chance +for her. But the engagement which she dreamed of did not offer this time +either. What the agent did propose to her, almost without lowering his +voice, with the door open, before everybody, was the grated private boxes +of South America ... the private rooms of Russia ... accompanied, at a +startled movement on Lily's part, by this concession: + +"You needn't sleep there, you know!" + +To talk like that to a lady! Lily felt stifled. Was that what she had +learned the bike for? To exhibit herself after the show, at the customers' +disposal? Lily could have fainted on the stairs, as she went down. + +"One of those!" she said. "Not I!" + +And she continued her weary pilgrimage of stairs, from agent to agent. + +"I must have six months filled up in my book before to-night!" she said, +determined to visit them all, small and large, rather than go back +empty-handed. + +There were some who suggested to her that ten per cent. was really very +little.... + +"I like their style!" thought Lily. "They want an extra sop thrown to +them: one might as well work for nothing!" + +She thanked them, nevertheless, so as not to make enemies of them--one +never knows--and the agent doesn't matter so much; but the assistant, who +happens to have known you when you were "that high" ... better give him a +tip, lest he should round on you. + +She also saw a former artiste, a friend of Pa's, who had become an agent. + +"Miss Lily? Lily Clifton? What are you doing now? Won't you see my +secretary? Leave your address with him." + +"Fellows whom Pa helped!" she grumbled angrily, as she went down the +stairs. "They're the worst of all! They make you pay for the humiliation +of their own failure on the stage!" + +Presently, she came to an agent who practised almost in the street, in an +arcade somewhat like the Burlington, an agent for everything ... circus, +music-hall, theater ... artistes formed in a week ... white flesh at +famine salaries. There were all sorts of people there, a moving heap of +frayed velvet and shabby plush. Lily passed by with great dignity. Next, +she came to the big agent, with offices in Berlin and London ... the +ting-ting of telephones, the tick-tack of typewriters all day ... business +pure and simple, an exchange for supple loins, swelling biceps, muslin +skirts, pigeon's eggs ... a sheaf of stars who, from there, radiated over +Australia, America, England, the Eastern and Western Trusts, Bill and +Boom, Harrasford, the continent. Lily felt a little ill at ease as she +entered--she had a pain in the pit of her stomach, as when she used to +expect a smacking--and again in the private office crammed with papers and +registers, when alone with the agent, who looked at her card, he seated, +she standing. Then, suddenly: + +"Lily? Miss Lily? Your price is two hundred francs a week, I believe." + +"What!" said Lily. "With a bike and a maid?" + +"It's what you had at Maidstone, so I was told." + +"What a lie!" said Lily. "Three hundred francs is the lowest I've ever +had. I'll show you my contracts." + +"Don't trouble," said the agent. "I thought ... we can get plenty at that +price, you know ... in your style...." + +"In my style, perhaps ... but not me." + +"Pooh, the audience doesn't know the difference." And he started looking +through a register, turning over the pages and repeating mechanically, +like a refrain or a lullaby, "The audience doesn't care a hang; it's all +the same to the audience." And, suddenly, with his hand flat on the open +book and the other ready to take up the pen, with a piercing eye fixed +upon Lily, "I can give you a month at a thousand francs ... they want a +girl in tights ... at Lisbon." + +"Lisbon?" said Lily. "That's at the Colosseo. A thousand francs to go to +the Colosseo, with one's luggage and a maid?" + +"Well?" broke in the agent. "And what do you want a maid for, you +extravagant little beast? Why not your maid's family while you're about +it? A thousand francs: will you take it? I've got some one who will, if +you don't." + +Lily had to say yes or no quickly. Her forehead was wrinkled with the +effort of turning the francs into shillings, the shillings into pounds. +She consulted her book, like an artiste who doesn't know, who may not be +free, for a whole month. She lowered her chin in her tie, but without +smiling ... had a cramp in her stomach, rather ... at a pinch, by leaving +Glass-Eye in Paris.... After Lisbon, one generally had Madrid and +Barcelona and returned by Marseilles and Lyons. Friends of hers had done +well like that. But to accept a lower salary once meant accepting it +always, in establishments of the same class; it meant reducing her price, +for always, by two pounds a week, at least. + +"A thousand francs: will you have it?" + +And Lily: + +"No, it's impossible! I can't take less than twelve pounds a week." And +she began to sum up her proofs: "Look here, at the Hippodrome, Glasgow ... +at the Palace, Leeds...." + +But the agent wouldn't listen, shut up the register, was sorry: + +"Can't do it ... bad season ... cyclists to be had for the asking. +Good-by." + +"Good-by." + +And Lily went out, went down the stairs, feeling half-inclined to go back +and accept; but no! Lower her prices? Never! Oh, those cheap artistes, +those black-legs deserved to be hanged! Great lazybones who learn a few +baby tricks on the bike or the tight-rope, back-shop acrobats, slop-shop +Lilies, who practise at a safe distance, by watching you on the stage, +through an opera-glass. They cut your prices by half; they would work for +a handful of rice, like a monkey. They deserved to have the iron curtain +come down on them, and flatten them out like black-beetles, the +wind-bags! + +"I say, Glass-Eye, perhaps it's they who fell into the orchestra, was it, +when I got my thighs full of lamp-glass from the footlights, eh? They copy +you, think themselves artistes.... What! Yes? You say they are, Glass-Eye? +Damn it, I'll have your eye out!" + +And Lily had a fit of laughing when she saw Glass-Eye, who hadn't said a +word, raise her elbow in affright to ward off the blow. + +Lily held the banister with one hand, leaned on Maud's shoulder with the +other and laughed and laughed, only to see her maid's terrified face, a +regular fat freak shrinking before the belt. My! She would have fallen +with laughing, if Glass-Eye had not held her up; she plugged her lips with +her scented handkerchief, slapped her thighs. She had never laughed so +much in her life. She already felt consoled for all her bothers: + +"Watch me, Glass-Eye! This is the way to go down-stairs!" + +And, nimbly as a bird, Lily hopped on the banister, with her back to the +wall, and--w-w-w-w-whew!--slid down to the bottom, keeping her balance +faultlessly, sprang to her feet on the last stair and, with a wave of the +hand, as after a successful trick: + +"There! What do you think of that?" + +Lily was not given to long spells of sadness. Reaction always followed +immediately upon her worries, made the thousand and one vexations of a day +like this easier for her to bear. The compliments which caught her ear in +the street comforted her too: + +"You pretty, pretty ..." + +But she had no time to listen. Six months in her book before night! As +time passed, Lily would have been content with less. And trot, trot, trot: +while she was at it; then she would end by seeing whether they would get +her for a handful of rice. + +This idea amused her. Lily had confidence in her talent and continued her +visits. She saw them all: other agents, former bosses or profs, who had +sucked apprentices dry to the marrow and who continued their evil +practices in their offices; this sort sized you up with the eye of a +slave-dealer. There was also the lucky agent, who had started a +sensational attraction, a Laurence or a Light of Asia. This agent had a +touch of pride about him, with his eternal, "I gave her her first start!" +as though to say: + +"They'll never find another like her, never! They don't turn them out like +that now!" + +And all this was a pretext for offering you ridiculous terms, because you +were neither Light of Asia nor Laurence. It was no use Lily's boasting of +having declined Bill and Boom and Harrasford, pretending to be an artiste +for whom the managers were competing against one another with sheaves of +banknotes. There was nothing for her at this one's ... nothing for her at +the others', either ... only a scrap of news of her family, through an +artiste. The New Trickers were all the rage in Scotland, it seemed; an +engagement in London, at the Palace, was waiting for them. When Lily heard +that, she turned pale with envy: so it was on their account that she had +been refused that tour in England, so that they might have it! Patience! +Her + +[Illustration: LILY] + +day would come ... when she returned from the continent and, instead of +Miss, called herself Mlle., like Adeline Genee and lots of others! +Meanwhile, she had found nothing. Still, Lily knew that one sometimes had +whole months of enforced idleness, without knowing the reason, and then, +suddenly, one's luck returned. One only has to wait a bit, thought Lily, +making herself very short-sighted as she passed before the arcade, the +haunt of the out-at-elbow pros and of the piffling little agents, the +jackals of the profession, on the lookout for a bone to gnaw. And it was +not a little vexing to hear her name pass from mouth to mouth--"Mrs. +Trampy, Mrs. Trampy"--and who could be drawing attention to her in that +rotten lot? Was Trampy there, by any chance, pointing his finger at her? +She felt inclined to go back to them, to tell them in two words what she +thought of them. Mrs. Trampy, indeed! It was not for long, in any case. +Her divorce was not far off! + +In the evening, at the theater, she forgot her bothers, as usual. The day, +for that matter, was quite an ordinary one: it was the typical day, the +trot, trot, trot, of the star alone, in search of engagements. And, +thoroughly tired, in her dressing-room, she related in her own way the +adventures which she had had since the morning, the compliments on her +beauty; and at the agents', my! If she had liked, she could have filled up +her three years' book! The architect came in her dressing-room for a +moment: so interesting a Lily! so amusing, he thought, as funny, in her +way, as Light of Asia, the Chinese girl without arms. Sitting on the big +trunk, he admired by turns Lily and the disorderly dressing-table, its +cracked looking-glass, scribbled over with names, and, under the glaring +light, the grease-paints--red, white, black--the powder-puffs and hare's +feet, the biscuits in the tray among the hair-pins, a bottle and glasses +beside the powder-box. From nails on the whitewashed walls, scratched all +over with inscriptions, covered with penciled dates, hung rainbow skirts, +bodices with metallic flowers. The bike shone in a corner, half-buried +under Lily's outdoor clothes. Tights hung beside it, like pink skins, gold +spangles strewed the uncarpeted floor and scent hovered over +everything.... Half-open doors admitted gusts of music from the orchestra; +and Lily, opposite the glass, fumbled among her pots with the tip of her +finger, stained her lips blood-red, fixed the rebellious curl to her +forehead with a touch of gum. Outside, in the passage, was the row of +doors, with spy-holes and visiting cards, half-sheets of paper, stuck down +with wafers and bearing the names of the various occupants: + +"Prof. X. The Famous X. Family. Absolutely the best." + +There were others "absolutely the best." + +On Lily's door, her card--"Miss Lily"--and, under that, modestly: + +"And maid." + +Lily revived amid these surroundings; here she forgot her fatigue, +blossomed out to her heart's delight. With her rainbow dress, her feathers +and her pearl pendants, combined with her elaborate gestures as she made +up her face in front of the gollywog, she resembled the officiating +priestess of a strange religion, pacifying some angry-eyed idol to the +sound of distant choirs. + +While finishing her make-up, Lily continued her stories, talked of her +successes in England and here and there and everywhere ... and the lord +who wanted to marry her and rained down presents upon her: fifty-pound +brooches, diamonds.... Everybody in love with her: to listen to her you +could have followed her traces like the passage of a cyclone ... men gone +mad ... others blinded through weeping ... millionaires ruined in +chocolates and sweets ... and flowers, my! + +"You could fill the Colosseum with them, couldn't you, Glass-Eye? I've +been spoiled everywhere," continued Lily, "and I'm known everywhere! Even +in Paris, to-day, there were a lot of ladies and gentlemen under an arcade +and you heard nothing but 'Miss Lily, Miss Lily,' didn't you, Glass-Eye?" + +"Yes, Miss Lily." + +But these social successes did not make Lily forget her business affairs. +Harrasford's new music-hall worried her: if she could only play there, +only snatch it from the New Trickers! For they would certainly try to get +there; and the architect, of course, knew ... + +But Lily was interrupted by the call-boy: time for her to go down to the +stage! + +A hurricane came up from the orchestra, muffled, with beats of the big +drum, like distant cannon. The curtain would go up soon; it was the time +when Lily stretched her legs, before giving her performance, and took a +breath of air in the painted forest. A click of the padlock and: + +"Come along, Glass-Eye, the bike!" + +Lily, in spite of her brilliant successes in England, was dead tired of +tipping the boys; it ran away with all her money. As she allowed herself +the luxury of a maid, by Gollywog, she might as well make use of her; she +wasn't going to feed her to do nothing! And poor Glass-Eye attended to the +bike, at the risk of putting out her other eye. Every day the struggle +between Glass-Eye and the bike formed the joy and the delight of the +passage. There were incredible swervings, scratchings of the wall, +barkings of Glass-Eye's shins. Lily followed behind, bursting with +laughter, warning Glass-Eye to take care or she would put the bike out of +gear by knocking it about with her legs: + +"Oh, where's my belt?" she cried, patting the back of her hand. + +The artistes, attracted by the noise, half-opened the doors; laughing eyes +gleamed at the spy-holes; voices cried: + +"Go it! Never say die!" + +Glass-Eye perspired like anything, pursed her eyebrows above her fat, red +cheeks, grumbled, in her Whitechapel slang: + +"Kim up, you lousy moke! Igher up, Jerusalem, you pig-headed bag of +tricks!" + +Lily lost patience, snatched the machine from her, ran it down the stairs, +pushed the door of the "meat-tray," and found herself behind the scenes, +the drops rising and falling, the nightly spectacle since she had been +"that high," the land of the unreal lights. And the sudden glare from the +reflectors set clusters of shoulders blazing with a silvery glow, brought +up out of the shade the pale flesh of the dancing-girls, heaped up behind +the pillars. It swarmed from every side, right and left--"Hi, there! Meat, +meat!"--under the rush of the stage-hands shifting the wings. There were +fleecy foams of fair wigs, smiles from kiss-me-quick lips, blinkings of +made-up eyelids, a swarm of arms, thighs and necks, preparatory to a +ballet, _Heures d'amour_, in which Poland, the Parisienne, triumphed with +her costumes _Deshabille gallant, Dessous diaphanes, Le tub, Volupte, +Dodo_, eight pantomimic scenes in a sumptuous setting, with girls to +impersonate the Hours, from pale-pink flirtation to scarlet desire. + +Lily watched this familiar sight with a wandering eye; and suddenly she +turned pale: what was that? Who was that? In the midst of it all, smiling +to her from a distance, as though laughing at her, stood Trampy! My! + +"Here, hold my bike, Glass-Eye!" + +It was close on her turn, but, before going on, she had a word to say to +the stage-manager and, walking up to him: + +"Do you see that josser looking at me?" said Lily, pointing to Trampy. "If +he stays here, I ... to begin with, I shan't go on. I won't be humbugged +by any one!" + +"Who is it?" + +"My husband!" + +"All right, darling," said the stage-manager and, suddenly, between the +scene which was being hoisted up and the other let down on the silent, +empty stage: "You there! Get out!" + +Trampy could not believe that the words were meant for him. He waited +until the order had been twice repeated. He, an artiste, before those +girls! He made a gesture as though to ask: + +"Do you mean me?" + +"Yes, you! No jossers here," said the stage-manager. "Sling your hook!" + +"Gee!" thought Lily, when he had gone. "This time you've been paid back in +your own coin! So you kicked me out at the Horse Shoe, did you? It's my +turn now, you damned tramp!" + +She exulted with delight, as she went through her performance. It was her +first revenge! the other's turn would come next. + +"I don't forgive and I don't forget," she muttered to herself. "Every dog +has his day." + +Oh, how happy she was! She was magnificent on the stage, under the +flashing lights, and the dull sounds in the orchestra were to her as the +throbbing of a riotous heart. + +"Well, Trampy, you got soaked to-night, to-night," thought Lily, as she +might have said, "One, two!" to mark her times. "To-night, to-night. And, +if you don't like it--one, two--you've only got to lump it! Divorce was +made for men and women, not for dogs!" + +Lily was triumphant, laughed, winked her eye, as she rode past, at the +stage-manager, who threw her a kiss and grinned. Immediately after her +turn, she ran to her dressing-room, poured water on her steaming skin, +while the make-up trickled in pink streaks down her face, and devoted an +hour to the dainty care of her person, like a cat licking itself. And then +Lily, without paint or powder--awfully ugly, not in the least pretty off +the stage, as she said, smiling in her muslin tie with the gold +spots--Lily went out by the front, to avoid the pros' corridor. + +The moment she was in the lobby, she assumed the air of a lady accompanied +by her maid. She cast an indifferent eye at the string of carriages, like +one who changes her mind and prefers to walk, a smile to the gentlemen at +the _controle_, a nod to the Roofers going out, two by two, always, a dark +one and a fair one. Lily stopped for a second, to look round.... + +Then: "Let's go home, Glass-Eye!" + +She took a few steps along the street, but a jolly voice behind her +cried: + +"Gee, what a spanking walk!" + +She turned round; it was Trampy again! + +"Ah, this time," thought Lily, "I shall have witnesses!" + +She expected blows! She would have given anything to be struck: her +divorce, at last, would be hastened on! Cruelty, public insults! But no: + +"How's my dear little wife?" asked Trampy, with outstretched hand. + +Lily was so greatly surprised that it took her some seconds to recover her +presence of mind; and then, without turning her head: + +"Come away, Glass-Eye," she said. "There are drunkards about." + +"Don't let us quarrel, little wifie. Aren't you my dear little wifie? +Well, then...." + +And Trampy took her by the arm. + +"Let me go, or I'll break your jaw," muttered Lily, under her breath. + +Trampy seemed in a jovial mood, with his cigar in his mouth, his cheeks +flushed with insolence, his eyes moist with libations. + +"Let's make peace," said Trampy. "Peace in the home: that's my motto!" + +"Divorce!" cried Lily. + +"Peace in the home for me!" rejoined Trampy, who grew the more radiant as +Lily grew more and more incensed. + +"Let me tell you," he continued, puffing luxuriously at his cigar, "that +divorce--why, how can you think of it?--means a public scandal, my name +dragged in the mud...." + +"Footy rotter!" roared Lily. + +"Dragged in the mud; and my dear little wife left to her own resources, +marrying again, as she feels inclined, marrying some one unworthy of her, +perhaps. I won't have it! I'm responsible for you! I'm your natural +protector! You're not Miss Lily, you're Mrs. Trampy. You've been in the +wrong, certainly; you had me turned off the stage, me, your husband; but I +forgive you." + +"And I ... take that!" Lily broke in, spitting in his face. "That's how +_I_ forgive _you_! Take that! And that!" + +Trampy reveled with delight: + +"You _are_ my dear little wifie, aren't you? And you'll remain so ... and +you'll never belong to any one else, do you hear? I am a faithful husband. +You're trying for a divorce, I know, but you won't get it. The wrong is on +your side and I'm not going to law, and you're Mrs. Trampy and Mrs. Trampy +you'll remain! Will you come and have a drink, Mrs. Trampy?" he continued, +lighting a fresh cigar. "Won't you? Very well. Good night, wifie!" + +And Trampy, turning his back to her, disappeared in a cloud of smoke. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Lily came home and went straight to bed, without even waiting for supper, +so great was her hurry to forget. It seemed to her that things had +happened, things without end; that this day had been as long as a year. +She simply could not understand Trampy. She could have imagined anything, +except that! She racked her brain to conjecture how, why; and sleep +quieted her till the next morning; and she woke up with teeth clenched and +eyebrows set and ... why? Why? And again why? Did he still want to keep +her?--after realizing in a hundred different ways that she did not love +him, that she loathed him, that she had married him only to escape her +whippings and that she had but one idea in her head: to divorce him! + +Now--only Lily could not know this--it was because of that very reason +that Trampy clung to her, like a faithful husband: Jimmy, Jimmy was his +bugbear. He believed Jimmy to be in love with his wife. Once Lily was +divorced, Jimmy could marry her; and Trampy would see him further first! +The greater Jimmy became, the more jealous Trampy grew. He knew the steps +Lily had taken to obtain a divorce, the witnesses she had tried to secure. +She was very keen on a divorce, was she? All the more reason for not +gratifying her; and she wasn't going to get it. The witnesses, Trampy had +just heard, declined to give evidence. They had seen nothing, heard +nothing. A bike at her head? Maybe. They didn't know. A bit of a fuss +between artistes, such as you see every day, and none of their damned +business. Outside that, Lily had nothing to go upon; on the contrary. She +had abandoned the conjugal home; all the wrong, apparently, was on her +side. He, Trampy, alone was entitled to file a petition; but that never! +He considered that Jimmy and Lily had trifled with him sufficiently. He +could not swallow the idea that they were only waiting for the divorce to +get married; the idea that Lily would be Mrs. Jimmy, of her own free +choice, after marrying him, Trampy, to escape her whippings; no, he +couldn't swallow that! Now it rested entirely with him to prevent that +marriage. He had only to keep his dear little wife for himself. In that +case, Jimmy, if he wanted her, would be obliged to do without her or else +to "live with her" and set a bad example, lavish bestower of good advice +that he was, the dirty hypocrite, preaching morality to others! That was +what Trampy had determined to do. As for Lily, Trampy, who was incapable, +at bottom, of either hatred or love, didn't care one way or the other. He +was always sure to want for nothing, so long as there were girls on the +boards and whisky in the bars. + +There was another reason still that urged him to let matters rest, without +going further. To embark on a divorce-case, to have his name in the papers +and his story hawked round the four quarters of the globe--"Trampy, you +know. You knew Trampy, didn't you? The husband of Lily?" and so on--was +what he didn't want at any price, for a reason known to himself. He had +made inquiries, quite privately, at the beginning, when he thought of +petitioning for a divorce; and what he had learned had made him prudent: +his marriage in America was valid beyond a doubt. He was well and duly +married, whether he liked it or not. By the common law, two wives meant +bigamy; and bigamy meant prison, which was the last thing he wanted, as he +himself said. But, so long as there was no scandal, he ran no great risk. +He had lived on tenter-hooks at first, in Germany. Chance might have +brought him face to face with Ave Maria, on the stage of a music-hall. +This danger was not to be feared now, so far as he knew. Ave Maria and her +brother Martello were no longer fit stars for Europe, nor for North +America. He was too well known to the agencies; his brutality had produced +too many complaints, too many denunciations to the police; it discredited +any theater employing him. He might have come to Europe--who knew?--to try +to get hold of the Bambinis, now that the old man had not much longer to +live. But that was not very likely, either. An artiste, come across by +accident, had seen the pair at Iquique, in a wretched circus that was +doing the coast of Chili. He gave Trampy details: poor Ave Maria had grown +very ugly; a body all skin and bone and nerves; no hips, no chest; nothing +of the woman about her; in the last stages of consumption; and finished, +as an artiste, done for; no spring left in her overworked thighs, no +suppleness in her loins: even her brother, that brute, could get nothing +out of her now. And Trampy, who knew Chili, followed them, in his mind, on +their tour along the coast, from Iquique to Copiapo, to Valdivia: a trying +climate, biting winds which would kill her on the spot, unless she went +and perished in the fever-stricken plains of the Argentine.... When people +had fallen so low as that, they did not rise again: there was nothing to +fear from that side. But her presence was not necessary; the danger still +existed. There were documents, in black and white. Their names were +bracketed on a register somewhere or other: he knew where. It was better, +therefore, in every way, not to call attention to himself. Meanwhile, he +was playing a nice trick on Lily and her Jimmy. And Lily was Mrs. Trampy +and Mrs. Trampy she would remain; and that was all there was about it. + +But it was no use for Lily to give herself a headache trying to make out +why and how. She did not guess Trampy's secret thoughts, any more than he +suspected the actual nature of her relations with Jimmy. For her, too, one +thing was certain: Mrs. Trampy she was and Mrs. Trampy she would remain! +She would never be free; she would always be chained to that tramp +cyclist! And, if a match should happen to turn up for her among her +admirers, the architect, for instance--you can never tell: plenty of +others had already proposed for her hand in marriage, in England--she +would be obliged to refuse! And, if some gentleman were to pay her his +addresses, treat her like a lady, take her to choose a hat or a silk +petticoat in a smart shop, there was somebody who would have the right to +say to her, as she passed: + +"How's my little wife getting on?" + +Oh, those two Jim Crows round her, spoiling her future! Jimmy and Trampy! +They would end by being the death of her. Oh, if she had had Thea's arm, +what a blow in the jaw for one or both of them! And Lily, when she thought +of it, wore the face which was hers on her bad days, teeth clenched, +stubborn forehead. Glass-Eye shook in her boots when she saw it, for +sometimes Lily vented her anger upon the poor girl with a smack, +considering herself quits if she begged pardon after! + +"If it's one of those footy rotters," growled Lily, hearing a knock at the +door, "smash a bottle over his head!" + +But no, it was simply her letters, sent on from the theater. Nothing of +importance this morning; prospectuses, mostly: a wig-maker, special +theatrical department; a manufacturer of traveling-hampers, for South +Africa, Australia.... + +"No use for them," thought Lily, with a sigh. + +[Illustration: A ROOFER GIRL] + +And, on opening _The Era_, she received that discouraging sensation: +always so many names, and so many tricks, and all "the best;" new ideas +and troupes, troupes, troupes; another new troupe of fat freaks, a very +flood of them; and Roofers, Roofers; "Greater-Greater England Girls," +words and music guaranteed, with scarlet legs and muslin skirts, complete; +page upon page of pink tights; and national troupes and colonial troupes; +and one had to earn a livelihood and shine among all that! Lily was half +crushed; and everybody she knew was triumphing: the Pawnees,--one hundred +and thirty music-halls, the whole of the Eastern and Western Trusts, the +great two-years' tour! The Three Graces also were continuing their +triumphs. Lily, who felt herself the equal of any of them, held her breath +as she read the news. Laurence had won her terrible bet that she would +ride straight across Manchester and Salford on her bike, hands tied +together, feet fastened to the pedals. At the Art Institute in Chicago, +Marjutti had given a lecture on the art of contortion. + +"Some josser of a journalist wrote it for her," thought Lily. + +And _The Performer Annual_ had sent Marjutti its set of questions to +answer, she had been published in print! And Lily was still waiting! And +Tom? Tom was in England now, in the De Frece circuit; had had a triumph at +the Portsmouth Hippodrome, as "Topsy Turvy Tommy," dancing a sailor's +hornpipe on his hands. All, all were successful, including others even who +were not so good as she was: one who obtained engagements because she had +a nigger in her show; another because of a monkey. + +"And I've done nothing yet!" grumbled Lily. + +Oh, to be talked about in her turn, to achieve something, to become "our +Lily!" + +"It's twelve o'clock and I'm still in bed!" she cried. "I ought to be +practising!" + +It was just a flash of pride, mixed with remorse. She knew it well enough; +often and often, she had reproached herself for her idleness, for her +habit of sleeping till the middle of the day, of taking her meals before +the performance; but she would make up for it to-morrow! It is the usual +refrain of stars who have become detached from their troupes, far removed +from regimental discipline, so to speak: without a Pa, without a boss, you +can do nothing. You must have some one to force you. + +"A month on the three years' book before to-night!" prayed Lily, touching +her lucky charm. + +And she studied the omens with an expert air, gave an ear to passing +sounds, tried to catch the meaning of them, for she had visits to pay, +letters to write, business, damn it! + +That was what Pa used to say before her. And it was not so easy to turn a +letter prettily: that was Trampy's forte. She knew something about it. +Lily, in her night-dress, with her elbows on the table, bit her pen, +reflected, in a mental effort that gave her a headache. And that +note-paper wasn't nice, either, without a heading; true, it only rested +with herself; every day she was approached with offers of artistic +photographs, even of tricks which she did not do: standing with one foot +on the saddle, the other in the air and her arms stretched out before her, +like a flying genius; or as Cupid, with his dart in his hand: impossible +things which neither the Pawnees nor Laurence would have dared to attempt! +But it would look well, with her name in red letters: "Miss Lily," or "La +Belle Lily." Or else a photograph showing her strolling in a great park, +with a palace in the background, taken from nature, followed by her maid, +or by a footman, hired by the hour, for the occasion. + +"I think I shall select the governess," said Lily to herself, "because of +my biography; it will be nicer, truer. Or I might be taken riding on the +back-wheel, like a lady just leaving the house and doing that to amuse +herself?" + +Lily, still undecided, took up the pen again: one foot on the saddle; six +pairs of tights; three dresses; the theaters at which she had +appeared.... + +What a pack of jossers! She couldn't forgive the agents for her present +want of success. She was exasperated. She felt inclined to go and see the +managers themselves, those who had made love to her on the stage, and to +send in her card to them--"Miss Lily"--just to teach those jossers of +agents! Her independent ways had already made enemies for her: she knew +that; but how could she help being angry? The tricks they played you, down +to making you miss a marriage, as had happened in London, the other day, +to the Three Graces, to one of them, who had been courted, during Mr. +Fuchs' absence, by the boy-violinist. Their agent had launched into +slanders and even insults to prevent the marriage, which would have split +up the troupe and broken the contract.... + +"What a pack of nigger-drivers!" thought Lily. "As long as they get their +ten per cent., the rest can go hang, for all they care!" + +There was no doubt that Lily had got out of bed on the wrong side, at the +thought of having to climb all those staircases again and to dance +attendance with the rotten lot in the waiting-rooms. But, by Jove, she +could have boxed the ears of the first agent she visited that afternoon! +He had the impudence to offer her a magnificent engagement in the Indian +show at Earl's Court, she to stain her skin brown, dye her hair black, +with rings in her nose, at the wrists, at her ankles; a costume like Miss +Ruth's, all in gauze; the nautch-girl on the bicycle; six times a day, in +the open air, to the sound of tomtoms. Play the negress; that's what he +offered her! She could not help laughing, in spite of her anger. But she +became quite intractable and snubbed another agent who suggested a one +day's billet in a tiny music-hall at a ridiculous price. + +"I don't give my performance under five pounds, or on a stage of less than +thirty feet!" cried Lily. + +At last, luck seemed to turn; she settled for Spain and Portugal, and that +same evening, at the Bijou Theater, she was offered another engagement, +for three months hence. This contract would procure her others, after her +spell of ill luck. Lily at once took courage again: + +"Oh, if I had the Astrarium!" she thought. + +Everywhere, at the theater, at the agents, people were talking of the new +music-hall. It even became a current joke. They said, "So-and-So's +performing at the Astrarium," as though to say, "He's not performing! He's +living in a castle in the air!" Every one was talking of the great +music-hall which was to open in a few months and which was not to be seen +building anywhere. Some said that it was serious; they quoted engagements: +Tom; the Three Graces; the impersonator; nothing but turns quite unknown +to Paris; novelties, nothing but novelties: Marjutti; Laurence, perhaps; +or the New Trickers. Lily shivered when she heard that!... She opened wide +eyes, like Alice in Wonderland. Oh, to appear there! But she had performed +in Paris. Then she would change her name; bike mixed with dancing; and her +whole trick done backward, as Pa had once advised Trampy to do in Mexico! +Oh, if she could have that! Lily Godiva, undressed on the bike! She'd show +them she was a lady, not a performing dog! The Astrarium, that was +certain, would open in Paris in a few months. Harrasford had said so +himself. There was no doubt about it. They even told the name of the +stage-manager, Joe Brooks, the cleverest of all. Lily felt herself carried +away with ambition. Oh! to open there! Oh, if it were true! God grant that +it might come true! Oh, if Daisy, their star, could only break a leg! The +few days which Lily was still to remain in Paris, before leaving for +Spain, she employed in obtaining further information. She learned the most +exact particulars. Incredible though it seemed, the Astrarium was to open +quite shortly! The blue-chins discussed the thing, amid clouds of tobacco +smoke, in the bars, after the show. To allude to it now was not like +talking of castles in the air; on the contrary. To tease a pal, one said: + +"You're opening at the Astrarium, aren't you? I _don't_ think!" + +Which was another way of saying: + +"The Astrarium's no place for you! They're taking nothing but bill-toppers +there!" + +The new music-hall, even before it came into existence, was beginning to +spread, like the story of the whippings; it would be talked about, all +round the world, as something stunning, a more complete show than the +Tivoli at Sidney or the New York Hippodrome. Harrasford was credited with +designs for a palace in onyx and marble. He had bought or was going to buy +a theater with the object of transforming it; names and prices were given. +Everybody was interested in it. Just now, especially, when the bioscopes +and the gramophones and the singers were taking the bread out of the +"artistes'" mouths, it meant twenty turns more to receive princely +salaries there; and, every month, that galaxy of stars, which Harrasford +would send shooting to Paris, was to disperse toward Brussels, Antwerp, +Marseilles, Hamburg: the European Trust, the Moss and Stoll tour of the +continent, managed by Harrasford, the great English manager. + +To open at the Astrarium meant having work insured and your three years' +book filled for ever so long; meant appearing in public, later, wearing on +your chest the medal which they meant to distribute in memory of the +opening. Gee, Lily had a pain in her side at the thought of it! The Three +Graces, it was said, were on the program. Lily would have consulted +them--there was no jealousy about the Graces--but they were not yet in +Paris. Oh, Lily was longing and dying to be settled! Who was Harrasford's +agent? If she had to go to London to see him, she would go. + +Why, damn it, she would go to Heaven itself to get the Astrarium! +Anything, anything to open there! That dream of greatness made her endure +her present vexations. Mrs. Trampy ... Mrs. Trampy ... She was addressed +as Mrs. Trampy everywhere. Trampy must be telling the story, taking his +revenge for the whippings, making little of her in his turn. One night +even, the night before her departure for Spain, when the architect was to +wait for her at the door of the theater, Lily, who had dressed herself in +her best, once more had the humiliation of being accosted by Trampy in +front of everybody. + +"Hullo, wifie! How are you, darling? All right?" + +Lily bristled with rage as she left Paris. Even when she was far away, she +still felt that she was dragging a chain which lengthened out endlessly +without breaking. Never, oh, nothing could ever get her out of that! Yes, +a brilliant triumph. Then, at least, she could crush him from the height +of her success, that footy rotter with his red-hot stove! Oh, what a +grudge she bore him! Jimmy was different: that was a wound of her own and +nobody would ever know; but Trampy, who laughed at her everywhere and +called himself her husband! He would make her lose all her friends. To say +nothing of the fact that those tales perhaps counted for much in her +failure: they were repeated from mouth to mouth. Oh, her profession +disgusted her at times! And to think that she, an English girl, was going +to earn her bread among the Dagoes, instead of starring in England! + +Her wandering life continued; her journeys from town to town, in the +Spanish provinces, her arrival in the chill of the morning, her anxiety +about her salary, the hustle and bustle of departure and--trot, trot, +trot!--lugged about in the railway-carriage, like a performing dog in his +box. + +And what theaters! It was worse than Germany or even Paris. In England, on +the Harrasford tour or the Bill and Boom, they had nice dressing-rooms, +with a carpet, water hot and cold, quick attendance, stairs swept every +day. Here, old plaster and those idiots who looked as if they understood +nothing--it took three of them to shift a scene--Dagoes who asked her +straight out, in Pidgin-English, if she was alone: + +"No man viz you?" + +It touched her on the raw. Lily lost all her cheerfulness: to begin with, +that engagement was not a particularly brilliant one; it was not at all +calculated to prompt her to do better, to introduce novelties into her +turn. Besides, on stages not yet overrun with Roofers or fat freaks, an +artiste performing by herself made an impression. Her old tricks sufficed; +sometimes she topped the bill: + +"Theaters are the same everywhere; artistes the same everywhere, from New +York to Bilbao. Topping the bill in one means topping the bill in the +others ... doesn't it, Glass-Eye?" + +But she knew quite well that it didn't; and, besides, that satisfaction of +her vanity put no money in her pocket. The amount she owed, my! She +thought of the past, of what she had earned for "them" since Mexico. If +she had only had half of it, a quarter, a quarter of a quarter, damn it! + +Meantime, she had to make herself respected. In those countries, where +people used gestures when they spoke to you, a lady could not be too +careful. Why, the men treated an English girl just as they treated their +own women. She could have flung her bike at their heads! And they kept it +up all night, as in Russia, all except the jewels; you had to stay till +morning and were expected to accept invitations for supper, so as to keep +the customer there and push business! A little more and she would have had +to sleep there! She had threatened to tear up her contract, to complain to +the consul. And what annoyed her also was being in the same dressing-room +with singers who undressed without shame, while receiving their friends, +and made eyes at Lily worse than the impersonator. + +And she had to have her food at the theater, no dessert, nothing but a +biscuit or an apple; and, if she asked for a pear, it caused a terrible +to-do. Rather than stand that, Lily went to the hotel, which put her to +double expense, for the board at the theater was compulsory. She had to +pay in any case; so that she went away without a farthing, thinking +herself very lucky if the manager did not try to kiss her in his office. +Oh, the things she saw, the things she rubbed shoulders with, the vice, +the promiscuity, the rushes of girls in the passages before the onslaughts +of footy rotters, direct propositions, with eyes looking straight into +eyes, brief wooings on the stairs, behind the properties, between people +just about to take the train, one east, the other west, and in a hurry to +have done with it; a silent embrace in the dressing-room, a neigh, a kiss; +and _au revoir_, ta-ta! + +And the conversations between the stage-girls, who were always surrounded +by legends of the white slave-trade; stories of disappearances; of +"engagements for Caracas" and finding one's self over there without +resources, stranded in a bad house: like that poor girl, a Roofer, who had +received a letter and some sweets in her slipper, which she had sent +flying into the audience with a high kick--Lily remembered--well, she had +disappeared in South America, somewhere; one or two despairing letters and +then silence. And that other one, at Alexandria, who had called out for +help, behind her green blinds; and ever and ever so many others, whom she +had known slightly. Lily shivered: brrrrrr! + +She was sick to death of it. She had had enough of it, was fed up with it. +She aspired to better things. Lily had hoped that her engagement in Spain +would have marked the end of her bad luck; but no, nothing offered. She +was sour, bitter, fierce; a wild bull, a stallion, as Ma used to say. And +she became especially terrible now, when her energy was spent in neither +work nor love, so much so that there was a cross against her name in the +agents' books. + +Oh, she had often felt inclined to send them all to the devil: the made-up +eyes, the kiss-me-quick lips, the tow wigs, the low jokes, the +monkey-claws! There were some who had merit, no doubt, like that boy who +was all over scratches, from head to foot, through training cats; but the +rest, almost all of them, were a pack of good-for-nothings who copied +their betters: amateurs, jossers all; and they had more work than she, who +had taken such pains and who had made a fortune for her Pa. Oh, if that +wasn't enough to make her chuck everything and see life, in her turn. She +had only to choose ... + +These reflections came to her more particularly when she returned to +Paris, after Brussels and Copenhagen, and was again performing at the +Bijou Theater, where she had already appeared. + +"To make all that money," thought Lily, when she saw Poland again, "and +never to have been through the mill!" + +She admired Poland for that, envied her good manners, her grace, the way +she slipped on her dressing-wrap in the living picture, _The Bath_. She +turned green with jealousy at the sight of Poland's motor-car, her +thousand-pound ear-rings, her sable furs. It was not that Lily lacked +admirers or sympathizers. She even had a little triumph at the Bijou +Theater, one day when she passed round the hat for old Martello, who was +ill in bed and penniless. Lily topped the bill in her own fashion, by +putting her name at the head of the list, and the collection was a +success, everybody contributed ... including the architect, who was still +prowling round her, in the passages, on the stage, everywhere. Lily was +decidedly courted: the rich bookmaker who ran the theater as his private +harem, he, too, patted her cheek in a funny way, complimented her on her +firm, round hips before the group of dancing-girls packed like poultry, in +the shadow of the pillars. Gee, it only rested with herself to have as +much of that as Poland! And everything reeked with love, amid the +cannonade of the big drums and the clash of the cymbals, while the sudden +flashes of the reflectors, moonlight-blue on one side, bright-red on the +other, lit up all around her the herd of the languid Hours. But her heart +swelled and puffed with pride. No, no, not that! She would succeed by her +talent, damn it, not by getting round men! She, an English girl; she, Pa's +daughter; she, who had gone through the mill, to sell herself like cat's +meat! Never! And her Ma should beg her pardon on her knees, on her knees, +damn it! The thought infuriated her. + +She was quite sincere with herself. It was all her fault. She ought to +have worked and practised, practised every day, improved and improved her +turn; but she would do so now, to-morrow. It was her last chance. She had +hardly any money left; her three years' book was virgin once again, +unsoiled by contracts; but she had a stage to practise on and she was +going to practise to-morrow even if she had to pay somebody to run after +her, with the belt, if need be! Lily had nothing but that in her head now: +to get out of her present life, to get out of the mud, to reach the summit +at a bound. Was it possible? She consulted the Zanzigs; she spent a +fortune in penny-in-the-slot machines to learn the future, but always +received the same reply: + +"You will marry the man who loves you. You will be very happy." + +She smiled with pity when she read that nonsense; to prophesy her +marriage: how silly! She was only too much married! That was not what she +wanted to know; but the Astrarium! the Astrarium! Would she be there or +would she not? The New Trickers were plotting to get there, with a turn +which she had given them, goose that she was; and Cousin Daisy, that +farthing dip, would triumph and not she, a star, a real one! Lily was +rather in the position of Pa, when he arrived in London from New York ... +with this difference, that Pa had money and Lily had none. But there was +the same display of energy, once her pride was aroused. Lily also had run +round Paris like a mad thing: not to the agents!--with them it was: "Lily? +Lily Clifton? nothing your way to-day!"--but to her friends and +acquaintances, to find out about the Astrarium. Lily grew crazy at the +idea that she might perform there, be there at the opening, ride over all +of them, treat the New Trickers like so many fat freaks! + +"Oh, God, if it were true!" she cried, with her hand on her lucky charm. +"God above grant that it may come true!" + +She was at the end of her tether. Nothing short of the Astrarium could set +her on her legs again. She had no choice; it was either that or an +absolute come-down: the nautch-girl on the bike, at Earl's Court, or else +nights of dissipation, champagne and diamonds, like Poland; and Lily, like +her Pa in the old days, clenched her fists and gnawed her lip as she went +off to the Three Graces, who had their engagement and who would be able to +give her some hints. + +Lily knew their hotel by reputation. Nothing but pros; a rallying-point of +troupes, an hotel where nobody's skin was free from bruises and where, +from morning until night, you heard the clatter of the clog-dancers' +heels. It reeked of potatoes, of sleepers three in a bed; chests, +strange-shaped packing-cases, ticketed with distant labels, made the yard +look like the stage-entrance of a music-hall. Lily did not care for that +sort of place: no matter; besides, the Bambinis were there and their mad +rushes, their yells of mirth filled the gloomy house with gaiety. And Lily +did not mind walking in with her gold-tasseled hat on. All those heads at +the windows: it was just like a fine lady visiting the poor. And yet she +was not proud now. Formerly, she would have laughed on learning the kind +of life led by the Three Graces, those three girls who remained good so as +not to break up the troupe and annoy Nunkie and who were said to spend +their spare time in sewing and cooking and doing Sandow exercises and +measuring one another round the biceps and the chest: simple joys, the +only true ones. + +"They may be right, after all," thought Lily, who envied them from the +bottom of her heart for having the Astrarium. "If I had only practised +too! Practising is certainly better than attaching all that importance to +dresses or sending those puff photographs to the agents!" + +A surprise awaited Lily when she entered the hotel; pros were talking with +a mysterious air. There was muttering in the corners, a piece of news was +going round: the Bijou Theater had closed, that very day; the treasury was +empty, bankrupt; everything sealed up; just on the eve of pay-day too! + +[Illustration: THE BAMBINIS] + +"My! Is it possible?" thought Lily, distracted and forgetting the +Astrarium and the Three Graces. "And what am I to do for food to-morrow? +Come, quick, Glass-Eye!" she whispered, catching her a thump in the ribs. +"To the theater, quick!" + +For Lily knew by experience that it was a good thing to be first. Her Pa +had saved his salary once, in a similar case, at Perth, in Australia; but +one must arrive in time. + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +There was a crowd in front of the Bijou when she arrived. They were +commenting on a notice pasted on the door: + +"_Ferme_." + +What could that mean? Lily had not provided for this in her vocabulary of +the French language; but the theater was closed until new arrangements +could be made. It meant complete ruin, enforced idleness.... + +"The rotten lot!" growled Lily. "Money, damn it, money! Pay up, you pack +of thieves!" + +But Lily soon recovered herself, when she saw that there was nothing to be +done. She had been through worse than that, when the iron curtain all but +smashed her to a jelly, at Milwaukee, and when she tumbled into the +orchestra, at Glasgow! Notwithstanding the anguish that wrung her inside +and heralded the coming hunger, Lily put a good face on the matter before +all those people, like a lady who is above that sort of thing: a +disappointment, that was all. + +"But how will those small artistes manage?" she seemed to say. "Those +families with babies?" + +Lily declared that it was very sad, called Glass-Eye to witness, as usual; +but poor Glass-Eye remained dumb, reflected that she would never, never be +paid, if this went on. Lily owed her eighteen months' wages now! True, she +got enough to eat, or nearly; she traveled with Lily; and she wore her old +hats. + +Meanwhile, the door opened; the artistes were allowed to take away the +implements of their work, before the final closing. The move began: they +fetched out basket trunks, hoisted packing-cases on to cabs. It was a +heartrending sight, all those things, made for the glitter of the +footlights, now displayed in the street. And everybody made such haste as +he could, under the eyes of the inquisitive passers-by, for fear of a +general execution, with every door sealed up and days to wait before one +could recover one's property. Fellow-artistes from other theaters came to +look on. Some were indignant that the Artistes' Federation could not take +up the matter and hurl the experience of its lawyers at the heads of the +proprietor or syndicate responsible, to say nothing of the moral weight of +its five thousand members, who had already made the English music-halls +come to terms by means of a wholesale strike. Others observed that it was +a private theater, one of those theaters run, for the fun of it, by some +prosperous gambler or lucky bookmaker; a sort of harem theater, with +almost empty houses, but with swells on the stage, among the swarm of +half-naked women; and no one responsible, the old boy ruined, the treasury +empty, bankruptcy; couldn't be helped; take in your belt a peg, that's +all! + +"What do you think of this, eh, Lily?" asked a voice. "Only yesterday we +were passing the hat for others!" + +Lily still had the list; and the money was locked up in one of the +dressing-rooms. Then it passed from mouth to mouth, like a watchword: they +would give back the collection; but not in the street, not before +everybody, for the honor of the profession. Lily, quite excited, entered +the passage and there, in the dim light, assisted by two one-legged +artistes, who called out the amounts and ticked off the names, she handed +back the collection of the previous day. Some received their share with an +air of furious determination; others looked shy and blushed; others, +again, refused, Lily among them; and it was decided to go to the "Pros' +Corner," or artistes' bar, near the stage entrance, to drink up what +remained: the ups and downs of life, damn it! Your turn to-day, mine +to-morrow; jolly lucky not to break a leg, after all! And their gaiety +returned, amid the smoke and the glasses, through a need of reaction; and, +after the first drink or two, came jokes, after-dinner stories, impromptus +which had traveled ten times round the world and brought tears of laughter +to the eyes of the audiences in thousands of music-halls, not to speak of +the second-class cabins of every ship of every line and the +smoking-carriages of every train, from the G. I. P. R. of Bombay to the S. +F. of Buenos Ayres. + + "Owen Moore went West one day, + Owing more than he could pay. + Owen Moore came back to-day-- + Owing more!" + +And they joined in the chorus and they sang, "We all came into this world +with nothing!" and the one-legged artistes beat time with their crutches, +my! the pink Hour and the scarlet Hour, who were there, got a stitch in +their sides. Lily, with her head flung back, full-throated, laughed +nervously. Besides, as she said, artistes did as they pleased and didn't +care a hang for anybody! All made plans for the morrow, all had been +through that sort of thing before and much worse, too: six stories cleared +at a bound, to escape from a theater in flames! Falls of seventy feet on +one's head! And wrecks! And waves miles high! Already they began to talk +of going away, of traveling; traced the route with their finger on the +table: Cape Town, Australia, the States. To listen to them, those +everlasting wanderers seemed to have pretty nearly the whole world under +their hands. They spoke of taking a rest at their permanent addresses: +good old London; good old Manchester; there was nothing like good old +England, after all, eh? They'd had enough of the Dago countries! + +But enthusiasm broke out when the great news arrived, brought by some one +straight from the agencies: Harrasford--"Guess, boys!"--Harrasford had +bought the Bijou Theater! It was all signed and sealed. He was carrying +out his program: and he wanted to open at once. For three months, it +appeared, there had been a silent struggle between him and the unlucky +bookmaker, who did not want to sell; and Harrasford had got it almost for +nothing; he had practically won it, yesterday, at the races,--with Dare +Devil, his wonderful horse. Dare Devil had beaten Cataplasm, his rival's +colt, and the smash had followed at once: the Bijou closed; a forced sale; +Harrasford had bagged it; and that was one, with more to come! + +The artistes were carried away by this daring stroke! Harrasford, a son of +a gun, who could put them all in his pocket! The one-legged artistes +fought a mock duel between France and England, the victor to marry Lily: +what did they think of that? Hurrah! + +"Say, boys, which is the quickest way of dropping money?" + +"Fast women!" + +"No, slow horses!" + +It was grand. They drank to everybody's health. They drank to Harrasford; +they drank to the Astrarium! They counted the money on the bar-counter; +the amount of the collection had been greatly exceeded and somebody +suggested that it was a nice thing, upon my word, yes, a very nice thing, +what they were doing: having a good time, while the Bambinis, perhaps, +were going to bed without any supper! The whiskies and sodas had warmed +their hearts: my turn to-day, yours to-morrow, damn it! It might happen to +any of them, to hop the twig and leave Bambinis behind him. + +"Lily, the hat!" + +And Lily handed round the hat again and collected more than on the day +before, even among those who had had their money back. + +"Take that to the Bambinis," they said. "We've been behaving like Dagoes, +damn it! Artistes ought not to act as such!" + +"'K you! 'K you!" + +And Lily Clifton walked off, very proudly, with her maid, to hand the +money to Nunkie, who was acting as treasurer. + +"And, meantime, one's got to live," said Lily to herself, when she was +outside. + +After the spurious gaiety of the moment, she seemed to be returning to her +distress, with no work, no money, the Bijou closed, Harrasford taking +possession of the theater. She revolved all this in her head, without +succeeding in connecting the whole: rags of ideas hung in her brain, like +the strips of scenery at the back of the stage. She had not even the +courage to go and take her bike ... to-morrow ... to-morrow. The Hours, +the pink one and the scarlet one, who came out of the bar also, resigned +themselves gaily. Their salary mattered so little. As they explained to +Lily, you're always well paid, when you have rich friends, and, if you +haven't, all you have to do is to look out for them: + +"Like Poland, what! A fat lot she cares the old boy's ruined! All she will +do is to find another, change her owner!" + +Lily had knocked up against everything, seen everything, heard everything, +in her adventurous life; but this way of getting out of a difficulty +always made her blush to her eyes. No, a triumph at the Astrarium: that +was the only solution for her, Lily Clifton! She was eager also to hand +the money to Nunkie. The Bambinis' money was a different matter from +Jimmy's: they were hungry children. Nunkie must be at the theater now, +with his Three Graces, quite close, and they were going to perform at the +Astrarium. So it was not essential never to have appeared in Paris! That +meant one more chance for her! + +"Come along, Glass-Eye!" + +They now passed into the noisy quarters. The Olympia opened its furnace of +light before them. The Three Graces stood displayed in life-size on +posters, with others beside them, names which Lily knew vaguely, as she +knew them all, from seeing them somewhere,--as she knew the stage-entrance +of the Olympia, by instinct, in the dark street, at the side: the mouth by +which the monster nightly swallowed and rejected its fill of meat. A +courtyard ... three steps up ... turn to the right ... Lily was at home +again, amid rainbow lights. + +"Hullo, Lily!" + +It was Nunkie greeting her on the stage, while his dear girls were +dressing in their room. He took the money for the Bambinis, congratulated +Lily on the result of her collection, thanked her. + +"And what about the Astrarium?" asked Lily. "Do you know...?" + +Of course, Nunkie knew. His dear girls were engaged to perform there. And +he had seen some one on his way to the theater: the opening would take +place in a month ... in six weeks at the latest.... + +The architect--"You know, Lily?" said Nunkie--the architect who used to +hang about on the stage, in the passages, on some pretext or other--to +make love to girls, apparently--was minding everything for Harrasford! He +was taking measurements, drawing out plans: + +[Illustration: THE ARCHITECT] + +"Everything is ready in advance, everything's ordered; they've only got to +put things in their places; the workmen will start to-morrow." + +"So that's what he came for!" thought Lily angrily. "The damned +_parley-voo_!" + +"And your Pa, you know," continued Nunkie, "will be there too, with his +New Trickers: it would have been easy for you to get there first," he +added, with a meaning smile. + +"The New Trickers! Daisy Woolly-legs!" stammered Lily, turning pale. "Who +told you so?" + +"I'm sure of it, I had it from Jimmy himself," replied Nunkie. + +"Jimmy told you? And what has Jimmy to do with it?" asked Lily, +anguish-stricken. + +"What has he to do with it? Why, he's simply going to top the bill," said +Nunkie. "And, besides, Harrasford has left it to him to make out the +program. Why, didn't you know?... Your friend Jimmy...?" + +She was in the street once more, feeling weak-kneed and light-headed. She +leaned on Glass-Eye's arm; she had a pain in her side from the emotion. +She felt inclined to enter a cafe, to get drunk on champagne, to forget. + +The next day an awful headache made her keep her room. + +"To-morrow," she said to Glass-Eye, "to-morrow I will fetch my bike." + +She dared not go out; she felt as if it was written on her forehead: + +"The New Trickers at the Astrarium! Daisy Woolly-legs at the Astrarium and +not you!" + +And, "to-morrow," again she spent the day stretched on her bed. And the +next day, well, as she had to ... as her bike was her bread-winner, after +all ... her only bread-winner, whatever happened!... + +"Come on, Glass-Eye! Let's go for the bike! I don't care if I do play the +darky at Earl's Court!" + +But, on reaching the Bijou, she could not restrain a cry. Nunkie had +spoken the truth; they were at work everywhere, unloading joists, running +up scaffoldings, attacking the theater from every side. Her friend, the +architect, passed, looking very busy, greeted her with a "Hullo, Lily!" +But Lily did not even see him. + +"I hope our things are still in the dressing-room. Hurry up, Glass-Eye!" + +And Lily ran along the passage, where already sacks of plaster had taken +the place of the velvet and nickel properties. She crossed the stage, +which was still untouched, took the dressing-room corridor and there, +almost before her door, met Jimmy! She felt like turning her back on him, +after spitting on the floor, as a mark of contempt; but, after all, no! +The coward! They'd see which of them should lower eyes first! And she +planted hers straight in his face, like a blow of the fist! + +Jimmy, who was coming toward her, had a moment of hesitation ... but it +did not last. He soon recovered himself. It would have been obvious to any +one seeing that masterful face that here was a man cured of his love, a +strong man and sure of himself, a man whom a kid like Lily--Lily had +always remained a kid to him, and not Mrs. Trampy, not the wife of Trampy, +that thief in the night!--a man whom a kid like Lily could not have at her +beck and call. And he held out his hand, like a good friend, simply, among +artistes: + +"How do you do, Lily? Delighted to see you." + +"Glass-Eye," said Lily, opening the door of her dressing-room, "Glass-Eye, +my bag ... the key of my trunk ... get out the bike first. One can't turn +in this rotten hole," she added, as she entered. + +And, as Glass-Eye seemed all day releasing the bike from the hooked-up +skirts and tights hanging from the wall, to say nothing of the kicks which +she received from the pedals, Lily, grumbling, snatched it out of her +hands, and ordered her maid to go and wait for her in the street, great +good-for-nothing that she was! + +"So you refuse to speak to me?" asked Jimmy. + +Lily lowered her head, took no more notice of him than if he had not been +there, collected her clothes, pulled the gollywog from the wall without +the slightest regard, heaped up everything promiscuously in the trunk, +thumping it down with her fists, as though eager to have done with it. + +"Come, Lily, are you still angry with me?" asked Jimmy, quite at a loss. +"When you took me by surprise that day, at Whitcomb Mansions ..." + +"A lot I care for your love!" growled Lily contemptuously. + +"But my friendship, Lily ..." + +"Your friendship," said Lily, "your friendship ... a rag! I'll show you +how I value your friendship!" she said, flinging a dirty towel on the +floor and stamping on it in her rage. + +"And that Daisy Woolly-legs!" resumed Lily, with an unspeakable expression +of scorn on her face. + +"What do you mean?" asked Jimmy, who did not understand. + +"Giving that shop to the New Trickers!" she continued violently. "You who +always used to talk of my talent! Giving a shop like that to those New +Trickers, who haven't as much talent among the six of them as I have in my +little finger!... You! To treat me like that!... When I think," cried +Lily, beside herself, "when I think that Pa and Ma will be here ... with +tricks stolen from me! footy rotter that you are!" + +Jimmy understood that the engagement of the New Trickers exasperated Lily: +a question of outraged pride, of professional jealousy. He tried to +explain: she had already performed in Paris and Harrasford insisted on +that. He, Jimmy, wasn't altogether the master. The New Trickers were very +clever, very original, very new ... + +"And I'm only fit to throw to the dogs, eh?" cried Lily furiously. "And +that rot about having performed in Paris. The Graces have performed in +Paris and they're to be at the Astrarium and why not I? Because you're my +friend, perhaps. Such a friend! When it would have been so easy for you to +give me that pleasure. But no one will ever do anything to please me! Yes, +strangers, gentlemen in the front boxes; but not friends like you! You +always bore me a grudge for marrying Trampy.... And who knows what people +say of me behind my back!... that I cut my turn ... that I do less than I +might. You know what I can do, damn it! But it's work I want, do you hear, +work! I'm not what you think!... One of those ... not I! I'd rather chew +glass than take any of that!" + +And Lily spoke with nervous movements of the shoulder and fiery glances +and she forced Jimmy to lower his eyes and she told him what she thought +of him straight out, told him all her heaped-up, rankling spite, told him +all she had at heart, in words round and solid enough to build a tower of +Babel on! + +"And I would have given my life, yes, given my life to perform here! +However, it's done now, isn't it? And it can't be undone," said Lily, more +calmly, and two tears sprang to her eyelids.... Then, while Jimmy, plunged +in his own thoughts, watched her without speaking and listened to her like +a judge, "You've nothing to say to me, eh?" she continued, closing her +trunk with a thump of the fist. "Nor I either. Then help me to carry down +my hamper: you haven't helped me to get into the Astrarium; at least you +can help me to get out of it. No? You refuse? And you so generous!" she +said, with a scornful laugh. "Well, then, help me take it on my shoulders. +No? Not even that? Then I must try by myself ... and never mind if I do +get crushed! _That's_ all I care for my life now!" added Lily, snapping +her fingers. + +"But, Lily," said Jimmy, taking up the hamper. "You're going out of your +sense; you know that ..." + +Jimmy could find nothing to say. He was pained to the bottom of his heart +... for the grief which he was causing her. The tone of feverish banter +which Lily was adopting upset him more than her anger had done. He felt +himself filled with pity for that poor little creature standing at bay. + +With a turn of the hip, Jimmy jerked to his shoulder the great basket +trunk which contained all Lily's fortune. It was not very heavy: tights, +spangled skirts, faded flowers. And, in the passage down-stairs, the +astounded stage-doorkeeper saw the famous bill-topper submissively +carrying the trunk of the bicyclist, who walked in front of him, wheeling +her machine beside her. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + + +The fortnight that followed upon this meeting was such a strenuous one for +Jimmy, with eighteen hours out of the twenty-four spent at the Astrarium, +among the day and night gangs; his life was such a slavery that he had +hardly time to think of Lily. But he did think of her, for all that. He +seemed to hear her still. Yes, he confessed to himself, he had, perhaps, +believed ... he had, in fact, been told that Lily was Lily no longer ... +But he had just been admiring her magnificent anger. He had seen her eaten +up with ambition, quivering from head to foot, and that brave face lifted +up to his. Twenty times over he was on the point of saying something to +her; but he must see first ... Would she herself be willing? Even though +she had seemed resolved to do anything? + +"Meanwhile," thought Jimmy, as on the former occasion, when she was ill, +in Berlin, "how are we to help her out of this ... how?" + +And he was caught in the whirlwind again: it was Jimmy here, Jimmy there. +He had to be in ten places at once. Not that he was manager or +stage-manager: his was a special case. Since his return from America, +Jimmy possessed an even more thorough knowledge of all the machinery of +the theater. He had his memorandum-books filled with notes, his head +crammed with new ideas. He had a smattering of everything, a vast amount +of experience picked up in rushing about the world. After his triumphs +with "Bridging the Abyss," the managers, knowing that he had prepared +something different, something strange and terrible, without knowing +exactly what, the managers had bombarded him with offers: Chicago, Berlin, +London. A conversation with Harrasford, whom the Astrarium held body and +soul, had determined the matter otherwise: he would open the Astrarium +with Jimmy and remodel the theater from top to bottom in view of the new +trick, the most sensational that had ever been seen. And Jimmy should make +the necessary alterations, he should have a free hand. + +Jimmy accepted. To open in a theater made for himself seemed preferable to +Jimmy to launching his new invention in a closed hall, such as the London +Hippodrome, for instance, which did not provide the aperture in the roof, +the door opening on to the stars, which he required to obtain his effect +upon the crowd. And that was why, in the work at the Astrarium, everything +turned upon Jimmy. He was responsible to both Harrasford and himself. For +that matter, he was fully equal to the interests at stake. Harrasford, a +great judge of men, intrusted everything to Jimmy, the sensational +bill-topper, removed above all jealousy; and he left it to his experience +to construct the program. Harrasford himself, the chief and master, rarely +left London; he managed all his theaters from his office, with the 'phone +at his ear, or else flew like the wind in every direction, buying a +theater here, picking up a star there, on the wing. It was not until the +third week that he came to see for himself how the work was doing and to +discuss the accounts. His broad back was seen, followed by Jimmy, to +plunge down the plastery corridors, to pass under the + +scaffoldings. He looked like a conqueror, tracing with his finger the plan +of the palace that was to rise upon the ruins of the destroyed city; or +else he would point out things with a jerk of the chin: + +"The proscenium pushed forward to here, eh, Jimmy? A cluster of electric +lights here. Another there. And what about your trick, Jimmy?" + +"You must imagine the house in darkness," said Jimmy, "and blue and green +rays falling on the stage from above. Through the blue, we send a great +dazzling beam, from over there, lighting up every inch of the house, a +terrific light, the light of the Last Judgment...." + +"Good!" said Harrasford. "We want two or three fits of hysterics at the +opening, real ones, not hired at two bob a night," he added, with a wink. +"They're working, up there," he continued, a piece of old plastering +falling on his shoulder, as they crossed the floor of the house, denuded +of its seats. + +"It's the opening in the roof," said Jimmy. "I should have liked to show +you ... the staircase is blocked with scaffoldings ..." + +But Harrasford, at the risk of breaking his neck, had already grasped the +rungs of a provisional ladder, made of spokes stuck through one of the +four beams which rose from the floor to the ceiling and supported it, +while the whole of the space between them was being opened. The architect +was there when Harrasford came out on the roof. He showed him four piers +of strong masonry which were being built against the outer walls, +explained that two T irons of considerable strength would rest with their +ends on the piers and run across the roofing from wall to wall. Two other +irons, also parallel, but running lengthwise, would be bolted to the first +two. This arrangement would make a horizontal frame of twenty by thirty +feet. They would then remove the beams which supported the roof during the +operations. When the plastering was finished and the gilding applied, this +would form, as seen from below, a handsome frame to the sky. The architect +also explained how the truncated roof would be secured to the frame, +forming a whole as firm as a rock, and how a light iron sash, completely +glazed, could be drawn along the two transverse T irons, thus opening or +closing the hall as desired. + +"The whole thing's worked from below by electricity," said Jimmy. + +"How long will it take?" asked Harrasford. + +"It's all ready. It's only got to be fixed up," said the architect. + +"And how much? Give me the detailed account to-night, at the station. I'll +study it on my way to Berlin." And, turning to the workmen, "_Faites vite! +Depechez_!" + +They were the only words of French he knew, a vocabulary no more extensive +than Lily's, but of a different kind. + +"And the lights?" asked Harrasford, before he went down again. + +"Here, there," said Jimmy, "on steel rods, connected by electric wires." + +"That'll dish the Berlin Winter Garden, with its stars set in black +velvet," said Harrasford. + +And he followed Jimmy toward the stage wall, which stood out above the +roof of the auditorium. Here some other workmen were cutting a doorway. + +"Let's go and see the floor now." + +And Harrasford plunged through the door, followed by Jimmy. They crossed +the fly-galleries and + +made for the blocked staircases. Before they went down, Jimmy called his +attention to a pulley which was being fixed to the ceiling and which was +to carry a rope with a stirrup for the performer's foot, to enable him to +reach the stage in a few seconds, after doing the trick. + +"Very good," said Harrasford. + +In half an hour, he had visited everything: the roof, the flies, the +cellar, the auditorium, the front entrance. Workmen were hurrying +everywhere. Harrasford encouraged them with a slap on the shoulder: + +"_Depechez! Faites vite_!" + +They were working at everything at once, from the new installation of +electric light and the steam-heating apparatus, in the basement, to the +emergency exits and the main lobby. Upholsterers were taking measurements +in the front boxes. The sound of the hammer rang out from top to bottom, +amid a cloud of dust; men climbed the scaffoldings, hoisted up things; and +the sight of all this activity gave the impression of a plan thought out +in advance, executed with great certainty, but incomprehensible to any one +not in the secret. There could be no doubt but that the spectacle which +was being prepared would be of a sensational character: even the back-wall +of the stage, which was empty at that moment, had been altered. By +clearing away a few dressing-rooms, they had raised the floor and ceiling +of the huge property-entrance. It had been closed up at the back and +fitted with a sliding door in front. + +"The bird's cage," said Jimmy, with a smile. + +"And how does he get out?" asked Harrasford. + +"Windlasses here ... a rope up above ... hooks," said Jimmy. + +"And when will it be fixed?" + +"Finished next week, everything's ready, the trials have been made. It +will only need a little practice, here, on the spot, calculating the +effort, getting used to the distance." + +"House packed for six months!" said the manager. "Here's a cigar to your +success, Jimmy! Come and let's have a drink at the bar; we'll settle the +program over there." + +A moment later, the two entered the bar where, a fortnight earlier, Lily +had handed round the hat a second time for old Martello and his Bambinis +and where the artistes, who had already dispersed toward the four corners +of Europe, had raised their glasses to the success of the Astrarium. And +there, in the little back room, which was deserted by the artistes, now +that the theater was closed, but which would soon again be the +intersecting point of so many vagabond existences ... where the nigger +cake-walker from Chicago would play poker with the equilibrist from Japan +... where the profs and the bosses would exchange complaints about the +strictness of the regulations concerning the work of apprentices ... where +little girls, worth their weight in gold, would come, coyly, encompassed +by Pas and Mas, but with glances askance at flight; in that corner where +funny men would swallow mixed drinks and talk through their noses; there, +under the frames containing row upon row of signed photographs of +artistes: human pyramids, girls in a knot, foaming muslins, Apollos and +Venuses all muscles; there, in Pros' Corner, Harrasford, the man for whom +all those people toiled and moiled, head down or feet in the air, the man +from whom one thousand persons drew salaries night after night, Harrasford +lit his cigar and sat down at a table with Jimmy, over a + +bottle of beer, and, forthwith, pencil and note-book in hand: + +"Let's see the program." + +Jimmy, on his side, took a written list from his pocket and laid it on the +table. + +It goes without saying that the select turns which they were about to +discuss had long been engaged for Harrasford's different music-halls, some +of them two or three years ahead, as often happens in the case of the +great bill-toppers, and the question was to choose among the best, so as +to insure the triumph of the opening night. For Harrasford, who had as yet +appointed no one as manager or stage-manager, the thing was to settle a +program which would discourage any attempt at competition, to have none +appearing except stars, without counting those whom he held in reserve for +the following month, before distributing them over his variety-theaters in +England, or, later, to any part of Europe, in the "Great Powers Tour" +which he proposed to create and of which the Astrarium would be a sort of +"commodore" music-hall, or headquarters. Jimmy only gave his opinion, +after which Harrasford would decide. + +Harrasford's dream was a model music-hall, something, in its own way, like +the Grand Opera in Paris: a palatial edifice, in a new style of +architecture, with friezes displaying bodies in contortion, caryatids, +cast from life, supporting the springers of the arches, mixed groups of +loins and chests with swelling muscles, under the electric lights, and, in +the lobbies, a lavish display of African onyx, Scotch granite and Russian +porphyry. The crowd would pass in between Venus and Apollo, holding +flowers and lights; and there would be music everywhere; gaiety, noise, +red and gold everywhere; all cares would be laid aside and forgotten on +entering; it would be a hall containing every modern convenience, like the +Iroquois at Buffalo or a 'Frisco sky-scraper: newspapers, cafe, bars, +smoking-room, barbers' saloon, telegraph-office, telephone-office, +messenger-boys, ticket-office, private rooms in which phonographs would +shout out the latest news illustrated with telesteriography, from eight +o'clock till midnight. The idea was to create, thirty years ahead of its +time, the great popular music-hall, with its ball-rooms, as at Blackpool, +its side-shows, a palm-garden, a roof-garden; to draw to the theater those +who, on getting up from dinner, go to the cafe and stay there; to give +them an atmosphere of mirth and jollity, of comforting lights, a sort of +night forum, of People's Palace, with, in the middle, in the sumptuous +hall, facing the furnace that was the stage, a long thrill of three hours' +duration. + +And he would realize it next year, but he was in a hurry to open now, to +plant his flag of victory: + +"_Faites vite! Depechez_!" + +Dare Devil had won the place for him and Jimmy was bringing him the +sensational attraction, the inspired godsend which would pack the +Astrarium for six months and fill its till and spread its name far and +wide over Europe. + +Harrasford thought of this with a puff at his cigar, after glancing at the +photographs on the wall, and then, suddenly: + +"Let's see the program." + +"Nothing but bill-toppers," said Jimmy. "Picked turns from the first to +the last ..." + +"Which will be you," Harrasford broke in. + +"Yes ... I ... or somebody else ..." + +"What do you mean, somebody else?" + +"Perhaps," said Jimmy, "to heighten the effect of my turn ... for reasons +which I'll explain to you ... perhaps it would be better to have a woman +... better for the success of the attraction!" he hastened to add, at an +astonished gesture of Harrasford's. + +"And ... are you sure?" asked the other. + +"I think so," said Jimmy. + +"The program first," said Harrasford, returning to his notes. + +"We open with a gallery in marble and gold, something showy and quaint, in +the Potsdam style, with a negress inside." + +"I know. Light of Asia, eh? The armless Chinese girl whom I discovered at +Poplar.... Music of cymbals and triangles, eh?" + +"No," said Jimmy. "I have something better ... more aesthetic, less cruel +... a Soudanese woman from Chicago. She walks on to the stage in a +low-necked dress ... a magnificent woman ... a creamy complexion, with a +touch of pink ... and golden hair ..." + +"You said a negress," interrupted Harrasford. + +"Wait ... a splendid voice ... classical music ... then a wild African +melody.... She feels a flutter of homesickness; the perspiration streams +down her face; she presses the sponge soaked in water, hidden beneath her +wig,--and the enamel, the white of the shoulders, the pink cheeks all +trickle away and, finally she appears black as ebony, and, to the growl of +the kettle-drums, does a disheveled dance, kicking up her legs like a +puppet on a string ... Patti-Patty ... talent and absurdity mixed ... a +crazy toy ... movement and noise, while the hall fills." + +"Next?" asked Harrasford. + +"Next, without any interval," continued Jimmy, "directly after that +performance by the court fool before his majesty the audience, the curtain +rises upon a park ... and the New Trickers chasing one another among the +trees." + +"The New Trickers!" said Harrasford. "Bicyclists: that's very stale. And, +besides, what about you?" + +"Has one ever," asked Jimmy, "seen a music-hall give two similar special +turns, two bicycle turns, for instance, in the same show?" + +"Absurd!" said Harrasford. "Explain yourself." + +"It's to differentiate between my invention and trick-riding from the very +first," replied Jimmy, "to show, once and for all, that mine has nothing +in common with the ordinary turns you see on the stage: 'Bridging the +Abyss' or 'Looping the Loop.'" + +"You may be right," said Harrasford, "it will prevent confusion; yours is +purely scientific. And the New Trickers: tights? Bloomers?" + +"Skirts, all in white, Warwick style," said Jimmy. "A school-girls' spree: +see-saw on the bike ... somersaults over the benches ... waltzes, lively +tunes: an impression of gaiety and happiness. The star is a statue on a +pedestal in the park. The others throw flowers to her. She wakes; steps +down: 'Hullo, a bike!' And then a special tune for the star and a waltz on +the back-wheel, amid the admiring circle of school-girls." + +"All right," said Harrasford. "And what's the price of the New Trickers?" + +"So much." + +And he jotted it down in his note-book, near the prices of Dare Devil and +Cataplasm. + +Jimmy also took notes, mentioned the names of the great serio, the great +comic singer, with their figures: + +"So much." + +"They earn their money pretty easily, those two!" grunted Harrasford. "But +I've got to submit to it, I suppose. Next?" + +Jimmy only described the spectacular turns. Harrasford listened, saw it in +his head: a corner of untamed nature, a valley in the mountains, blue +distances, sunshine in the foreground. The Three Graces arrive all out of +breath. + +"You understand," said Jimmy, "they are supposed to have been chasing the +deer or hunting butterflies. As a matter of fact, Mr. Fuchs will have made +them do their Sandow, before going on, to bring the blood to their cheeks; +he's full of ideas, is Mr. Fuchs. On arriving, a moment's rest, an +adorable group in all the splendor of the nude ... sweet, solemn music ... +and then a glorious performance, a sort of human cluster hanging from the +trapezes, something healthy and robust." + +"All right," said Harrasford, putting a cross in his note-book opposite +the Three Graces. "And next?" + +With Harrasford it was always "And next?" like a man who never has more +than just so many minutes to spare, because his train's waiting. + +It was a curious sight to see the two talking together in low voices, with +an occasional glance at the door when some indiscreet person looked in. +They might have been taken for a pair of conspirators plotting a move; no +one would ever have suspected that they were composing a performance, +unique of its sort, which would be famous to-morrow. Everything was +provided for: scenery, music, the color of the dresses, effects of light, +the alternate doses of laughter or grace or terror to be served up to the +audience; everything was discussed then and there, in all its details, +down to those two sketch-comedians, with faces streaked red and white, +against a back-drop representing an old English street, two drunken +sports, with hats mashed in, coats turned inside out, ten minutes of mad +tricks and inhuman cries; for the audience must have its pittance of the +grotesque as well. + +There was a herd of comic elephants, five enormous animals in a Hindoo +setting; and no master on the stage, no boss, no prof: they all obeyed a +whistle blown in the wings. And, conducting the orchestra with an air of +unspeakable gravity, a monkey, Mozart II., a caricature of an infant +prodigy, made the huge brutes perform their evolutions, to the Soldiers' +Chorus from _Faust_. Then, in his enthusiasm, Mozart sent his desk flying +into the air, followed by his coat, his shoes, his conductor's baton, and +ended by seizing his tail in his hand and beating time with that. + +"That dishes Orpheus and Mad-darewski," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +The _entr'acte_ came next, with portraits and biographies of the artistes +distributed among the audience. + +"Yes, yes," said Harrasford, laughing. "Old English families ... +clergymen's daughters...." + +"Learned all that with their governesses, as a surprise for their Pa and +Ma!" continued Jimmy. "Mozart II., a favorite of the king of Lahore; +Patti-Patty, a descendant of the Queen of Sheba: we've got to do it. +There's no getting away from it." + +"We must hide the bruises," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +"Next, I hope to have the Bambinis: ten minutes of rosy mirth; real +biographical babies, born with that in their blood, brother and sister, +two marvels. I shall obtain permission for them to appear, though they're +under the age; the old father is dying, the famous Martello." + +"We must engage them for my tour," said Harrasford. + +"If the old man doesn't die first; in that case, there's a brother who +will come and claim them, it seems. They're a fortune, the two Bambinis, +to whomever secures them." + +"One dress-coat more on the stage," said Harrasford. "And next?" + +"Topsy Turvy Tom." + +"Oh, yes, I know!" said Harrasford, laughing. "The fellow who used to wear +leaden armlets to harden his muscles and smash Clifton's jaw." + +"That's the one," said Jimmy, laughing in his turn. "A threat of +Clifton's, who said that he would 'make him dance the hornpipe on his +hands, damn it!' suggested the idea of a turn to him, so they say. He set +to work with superhuman energy--and now he is a bill-topper...." + +"Well done!" cried Harrasford, banging his fist on the table. "There's no +country but old England can turn out bulldogs like that, lads who jump +from the gutter to the top of the bill! That's what I call a man! And +what's his turn like?" + +"A scene of his own: the front of a palace. A pink marble figure, naked +down to the waist, supports a huge cornice. A thunder of big drums, a +flash of lime-light and the palace splits from top to bottom. The figure +staggers, falls on its hands and gives a stupendous acrobatic performance: +somersaults on the hands; waltzing; treading the ball: the 'hornpipe, damn +it!' And then Tom stands on his feet, all in shadow. A powerful ray of +light is thrown upon him, and you see the muscles of the abdomen slowly +moving, the pectoral muscles quivering, the deltoids leaping and starting, +the biceps swelling; and, when he turns round, the rhomboids hollowing +out, the muscles of the back rolling: the triumph of the human machine ... +and of Tom." + +"And of will," said Harrasford. "How much?" + +"So much." + +"It's worth it. And next?" + +"Roofers, high-kickers: the Merry Wives. We begin with dancing and end +with dancing. The puppets make their bow to the public before being put +away in their boxes ... the curtain falls ... and good night!" + +"And then you come!" + +"Then I come," said Jimmy. "Or she." + +"Your invention," said Harrasford seriously, "is not a music-hall +entertainment. It is, undoubtedly, the greatest of all scientific toys, a +marvel of modern ingenuity. Do you really want a pair of tights on the top +of that? And, first of all, where will you find the woman who will dare?" + +"That's the question, obviously," admitted Jimmy. + +Not that Jimmy must have been in love with Lily, to think of her! It had +first just passed through his head, no more. But, on reflecting, it had +appeared to him that, in the theater, the beauty of a Lily would add +greatly to the success of his attraction. To work his invention in public +was different from experimenting with it in his shed in London. It was +leaving the laboratory to take its place in life; and it would be a +triumph to see the daring trick succeed, every day, at the fixed hour, +within a restricted compass; to see it go through the opening above; to +see that machine worked by a young girl in whom one would have suspected +neither the strength nor the nerve: it would make the public infer the +excellence of the engine. Now Jimmy was possessed, above all, of +scientific enthusiasm. His machine before everything; not his personal +triumph, his machine. He dreamed of giving that added grace to his +diagrams; and he considered that there was no disadvantage in allowing +science to be introduced by youth and beauty. Moreover, Jimmy was a little +heavy for an apparatus in which he had even suppressed the motor, in order +to make it more easily manageable ... a lighter body would perhaps be +better ... Lily, Lily was the ideal operator; but was she capable of it? +Jimmy had confidence in her. Jimmy, certainly, did not allow sentiment to +mix in his affairs; there was the weight of his responsibility to +consider. But then there was also his meeting with Lily in the +dressing-room passage. And he had understood her mental agony. He had seen +the gleam in her eyes and so great a display of energy in her face that +Jimmy had resolved to try her; and he would judge her much better by the +way in which she should face death. + +That is what Jimmy explained to the manager, leaving a good deal untold, +of course, and Harrasford retired behind the smoke of his cigar, listened, +approved. + +"It's your affair, when all is said and done. All you want is success, I +suppose? And will you arrange with her ... with your ... what did you say +her name was?" + +"Lily." + +"There are so many Lilies; and, if somebody has to break his or her back, +I had rather it was a Lily, one out of the bunch, than you." + +Lily, meanwhile, was loitering outside. Harrasford and Jimmy had no notion +that the girl about whom they were talking was quite close to them, +thinking of them. Lily had heard an artiste say that Harrasford was +visiting the Astrarium. She had come in all haste, impelled by some vague +hope. Chance would have it that she was still in Paris. Everything, +besides, seemed to be keeping her there: an agent, the day after her +interview with Jimmy, had advised her to stay a few days longer; there +might be something important for her. Lily could not understand in what +way; however, she had stayed, though she was almost without means of +support. She began by trying to sell her jewels, the fifty-pound diamond, +among others, which that lord had given her in England: the jeweler handed +it back to her, saying that it might be worth eight francs! That meant +destitution. And yet hope always returned to her in one way or another. +She had even received three blue banknotes, three hundred francs, in an +envelope! Her fortnight at the Bijou! No doubt about it, they were paying +the artistes' salaries; perhaps the Federation had taken the matter up? +Three hundred francs; not enough to pay Glass-Eye or to give to Jimmy, but +just sufficient to settle her small debts, buy some new dresses and go to +London to play the darky at Earl's Court. Oh, what a ridiculous come-down! +And so, when she learned that Harrasford was at the Astrarium, she took +her courage in both hands: she would see Harrasford. She would try the +fascination of her smile upon him. She would be settled at once and for +ever.... When she thought of the New Trickers, her blood seemed to stand +still in her veins: the New Trickers at the Astrarium! And Jimmy, the mean +cur, not to have got her that shop, when she had such a splendid idea: +Lady Godiva on a bike! And a scene of her own: the front of Peeping Tom's +club, with all the boys at the windows! + +Just then, Harrasford came out of the bar. She hurried up to him and +introduced herself: + +"Miss Lily." + +"Which one?" said Harrasford. "Excuse me; no time now. See Jimmy, will +you?" + +And he plunged into a cab and shouted an address to his driver. + +Lily stood stupefied, as she watched the cab disappear. This time it was +finished, quite finished.... She gave a last glance at the Astrarium and +sighed.... + +"Lily!" It was Jimmy coming out and crossing the street. "Hullo, Lily!" + +She did not reply. + +"Listen, Lily," said Jimmy, gently and gravely. "You wanted to get there +the other day, didn't you? You told me you would do anything for that." + +"To take the place of the New Trickers, yes!" exclaimed Lily. "I'd have +risked my life!" + +"The New Trickers are there," said Jimmy, "and are going to remain. Listen +to me, what I have to propose to you is very serious: it's something +else." + +"What else? You know that's all I'm good for ... to go round and round ... +you know it quite well!" cried Lily, her face drawn with impotent anger. +"I know what you can do. Look here: would you like to be above the New +Trickers? Would you like to top the bill? Are you ready to do everything +for that?" + +"May God forgive you for mocking at me!" + +"Will you top the bill?" asked Jimmy again, in an accent that sent a +thrill down her back. "Answer me: yes or no?" + +"Yes," cried Lily. "My life, everything, damn it!" + + + + +AMONG THE STARS + +I + + +Jimmy was greatly excited when Lily had given him her answer and he led +her to the Astrarium. To understand his feelings fully, one would have to +know his life since the evening when, at Whitcomb Mansions, he had looked +Lily in the face and told her no. He realized then, from the emotion which +he experienced, how great a place Lily had filled in his heart, the little +passenger from New York to Liverpool; the girl who came to see him in his +shop in Gresse Street; the Lily whom he dreamed of "helping out of that" +when he saw her on the stage, from up in the fly-galleries; the one whom +he had tried to take away from Trampy; the poor sick girl in Berlin; those +Lilies whom he felt moving inside him, around him, like a breath of April; +all those Lilies, he had broken with them all! Oh, it was hard! Lily +should never, never know what courage he had needed to keep silent, he, +the man she thought so cold, nor what a tempest ... oh, if she could only +have seen into him! And then ... he had not met her again.... + +He, after his engagement at the Hippodrome, went off to America; Lily +traveled on her part. Also, he was a prey to his fixed idea, his great +project, always: his ambition increased, the same longing for success +which, formerly, in Gresse Street, had made him spend nights in study +after days of toil, at the time when, under Lily's influence, his roaming +thoughts built castles in the air, when he felt awakening within himself +his racial instinct as an heroic seeker after profitable adventures. + +And his ambition took great strides forward, was not limited, as in +Clifton's case, to upsetting the fat freaks or training New Zealanders to +spin round and round. He dreamed of a useful life, based upon his own +efforts. He wished to found his future upon a discovery of his own, which +had long haunted him and which had ripened in Berlin, between his flights +in "Bridging the Abyss," a thing at which he worked incessantly in +Whitcomb Mansions; and, this time, the stage prowlers, should not steal +his idea. To begin with, apart from a few pieces of technical advice which +he received from a friend of his, an engineer, nobody knew about it; and +Jimmy felt sure that, even when the apparatus was at work, he would not +fall a victim to the confraternity who, ever on the watch for new tricks, +study them, judge of the weak points, copy whatever suits them, including +scenery and music, and, sometimes, succeed in earning more money than the +inventor himself; he would have nothing to fear from the Trampies, the +pirates, the plagiarists, those plagues of the profession. Certainly, +there were great bill-toppers, creators of sensations who discovered new +things--terrifying feats of gyroscopic balancing, or flights through +space, based upon principles of ballistics, assisted by the spiral +spring--daring risk-alls, nerve-shakers, purveyors of thrills, turning to +intelligent account the seductive power which dangerous feats exercise +upon the public. Jimmy knew all about that. He was not the only one; but, +this time, it was a question of a scientific application which would, +beyond a doubt, place him at the head of that pick of the music-hall. It +would be pure science and patient calculation: an algebraical hippogriff, +with pluck in the saddle. + +Jimmy's plans resulted from intuition rather than real knowledge; but +learning has nothing to do with the creative spirit. Now Jimmy, although +he was unaware of it, possessed the genius that invents; and his +comparative ignorance did him no great harm: his imagination, unhampered +by theories, was all the freer for it. Jimmy had the higher instinct of +the born machinist, who is content to use a bit of string where a +school-bred engineer will cram every manner of gear, chains, pulleys and +windlasses. It is true that he was assisted in his research by many +experiments already tried elsewhere; but he dreamed of something different +and, in the calm of Whitcomb Mansions, had studied without respite. + +"Pooh!" he reflected. "All those sails, all that weight! Boxes heaped one +on the top of the other--cubes to catch the air--a man sitting inert in a +basket, with his hand on a lever and a crank: it's as though one tried to +make a stuffed bird fly! And what becomes of the man in all that: the back +push, the daring stroke? The man has got to be the backbone of the +machine, with his quick balancings, his bendings, which are worth more +than any wheelwork." + +And, always, his inventive imagination built on without respite, pulled +down, built up again. + +His daily success at the Hippodrome did not divert him from the end he had +in view. "Bridging the Abyss," for him, was but a means of making money, +to enable him to climb higher. He thought of nothing but that: getting on, +climbing higher; and this obsession of the future made him scorn or rather +overlook the temptations of the stage. He would only have had to choose +among the lot. All, down to the great Parisienne, would have jumped at a +champagne supper with Jimmy, the famous bill-topper, the man who looked +like the swells in the front boxes and who made such a "pile." But Jimmy +knew all about that: he left the theater in the quietest way, took a glass +of ale with the boys or girls at the Crown, had a light supper and went +home. And sometimes a frenzy for work made him rush to his table, as +though the band of the Hippodrome were shaking his nerves: + +"Get to work," he would growl, "get to work, cheesy brain!" + +"But, Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little siree!" he insisted, with a flickering +smile. + +And he read treatises, made diagrams; took up his compasses again ... or +else stayed as he was, with his chin in his hand, plunged in his thoughts, +his mind soaring above London.... He seemed to fly over the huge city, +whose distant rumbling rose up to him, similar to the roar of the sea.... +Oh, he would succeed, he knew he would! And he felt within himself an +increasing will of so tenacious a character that he could have swung it, +so it seemed to him, like a battering-ram against the obstacle to be +overcome and then: + +"Damn it!" he would growl, banging his fist on the table. "That thief in +the night! What a sweet wife he got hold of! Poor Lily, to fall into such +hands! Ah, yes, she would have done better to stay at home!" + +And Jimmy got to work again, to forget Lily; and he kept on thinking of +her: + +"Damn that girl!" + +What on earth did he think of her for ... when he didn't love her, after +all? + +Even during his triumphal tour of the Eastern and Western Trust, that +Lily, whom he did not love, haunted his memory. At first, he hoped to +forget her in his life of excessive activity. And he saw so many theaters, +as many as Lily did in England: so many artistes, on so many stages ... +faces whom he had already met in England: fair wigs, scarlet legs, boyish +voices; "Roofers," "brothers" and "sisters," returning from London, +Manchester, or Glasgow. He would have ended by seeing them all again in +time. There were other Lilies shooting up, Lilies "that high," elbowed by +every vice, petted by every hand, kissed by every pair of lips. His +sympathy went out to them all; and Lily had lived amid all that; it was +just her life. He found something to remind him of her at every turn, on +those stages on which she had performed. He seemed to see her near him, +with her light walk, in her little black dress, looking so nice in her +"performing-dog" toque: the poor little silly thing, running away with +that thief in the night and left alone now, quite alone, it appeared, +among the "rotten lot." The thought drove him mad: + +"Damn that girl!" he said to himself. "I don't love her. Then why am I +always thinking about her?" + +And he rushed into work, into danger, when he thought of that; risked +terrible leaps in "Bridging the Abyss." He sometimes felt as though he +were rushing toward oblivion, into the jaws of death! And his great +project also nearly outweighed Lily's influence: + +"What are the leaps in 'Bridging the Abyss,'" he thought, "if not a +fractional flight? If I had two flat surfaces, one on either side, and a +motor behind me, it seems to me that I should continue to go upward; and +the best rudder would be the man riding it, with his flexible body, his +springy back: a live weight is less heavy than a dead weight. How many +hundred volts does pluck stand for ... or skill ... or hatred ... or +love?" + +By dint of composing his machine in his head and studying it on paper, +Jimmy grew calmer. He thought less about Lily, or, at least, thought about +her only in her interest, not his. For instance, in that little town in +the West which was not on his tour, but in which Trampy had appeared, +Jimmy tried to obtain information. He went out of his way in order to make +inquiries. A marriage with Trampy Wheel-Pad? It was impossible to discover +anything; and he would not be able to make Lily the magnificent present +which he had dreamed of: her divorce from Trampy! + +And "Miss Lily," Miss Lily, always; he was not satisfied with thinking of +her, he heard her name mentioned. Boys and girls who had seen Lily in +England and whom the chances of travel brought across his path in America +told him with many amplifications, of her outrageous adventures, her +passion for flirting. She no longer did all her turn. She paid more +attention to her dresses than to her performance. She was extravagant, +traveled with her maid, put up at the big hotels. She received bouquets, +my, as big as cabs, and invitations to supper and post-cards covered with +x x x x! She had an autograph-book full of declarations of love. +Motor-cars, furnished houses: she was offered everything. The son of a +lord had ruined himself in jewelry for her, the impersonator was nearly +off his head for love of her, gee, she did have a good time! She spent her +life receiving chocolates and sweets and distributing her photograph as +Lady Godiva, with her signature. Lily, according to them, laid waste every +heart; men had left wife and children for her sake; her love affairs were +going the round of the world, like her whippings. Lily was the thing; and +game and mustard for Jim Crow. + +These tales left Jimmy very sad. He made allowances for professional +exaggeration in matters of love as of smackings, but, nevertheless, there +must be some truth in what they said, for it reached him from various +sides. Oh, he pitied that dear little Lily from the bottom of his heart! +The harm was done, the theater had spoiled the woman. This time, he felt +that it was finished, between her and him.... He, no doubt--who could +tell?--would continue his forward progress, and, one day, he would have a +wife of his own, a woman without a past, and he would take his stand +firmly on the earth, with a home and love; and Lily, soon, would be little +more than a dead memory.... + +Meanwhile, his brain, redoubling in vigor amid those stormy squalls, took +in everything, seized everything in a wide sense, became steeped in life, +rejected bitterness and retained enthusiasm. He heaped up personal +observations which he noted every evening, enough to build the ideal +music-hall one day. Harrasford, he knew, was cherishing that plan. Perhaps +they would realize it together? And the retreat for the aged and the home +of rest for the sick, and, in each capital or large town, a local +artistes' home--like the Sailors' Home--a little corner of England, +providing comfort for the man and protection for the girl. And his scheme, +his scheme was ripe now, the bold stroke which would enable him to realize +all the rest later. He felt the strength within him, if not to succeed, at +least to dare everything: "Brass Heart," as he had been christened at +'Frisco. He had served an apprenticeship to will-power: he had bruised his +ribs with a vengeance in a fall at the Columbia Theater at Cincinnati; he +had nearly split his skull at the Milwaukee Majestic; he had shed his +blood at the Washington Orpheum; and he was going to risk more with his +new invention. No matter, he had now but one idea, to return to England, +in spite of magnificent offers from Australia. + +The moment he reached London, he set to work. And he fixed up the whole +apparatus at his leisure, in the shed which he had kept, notwithstanding +the expense: a sort of large hall in which he had already rehearsed his +"Bridging the Abyss." Here, with a couple of confidential assistants who +had traveled with him in America, he worked from morning till night, +correcting, revising, improving, in the midst of stretched cords and nets. +And then came his interview with Harrasford, his engagement at the +Astrarium, his meeting with Lily, in the dressing-room passage.... + +And it was untrue! What they had said about her was a lie! Lily had not +fallen! Jimmy, merely at that moment's sight of her, would have sworn it +in the face of the whole world: the tales about Lily, due probably to +professional boasting on her own part,--were false! He knew it, because he +had seen her magnificent anger and the flash from her chaste eyes. And he +would give Lily that joy--he owed at least as much as that to his dead +love--and he would see that it was all right. It would not be a question +of: + +"Pa, I can't!" + +"But you've got to, my little lady!" + +She would have to dare of her own accord, with a will of adamant, and Lily +would do it, Jimmy was sure of that. He had found the partner wanted for +his success and he rejoiced to the bottom of his heart as he led Lily to +the stage of the Astrarium. + +Lily, on the other hand, felt an anxiety which made her sides ache and her +heart beat: + +"What on earth can it be?" she asked herself. + +But, whatever it was, she would do it if it cost her her skin! And Lily +did not even take the stage oath, so sincere and spontaneous was her +resolve. + +"I'll show you, Lily," said Jimmy, seeing her look at the hall and the +opening in the ceiling as she passed. "It's a new trick." + +"Yes," said Lily, "new: it'll be like the last, they'll take it from you +as soon as it's out. It's like me, the tricks which Pa invented and which +the fat freaks cribbed from me. Tricks are always copied, you know they +are," continued Lily, who trembled at the thought of seeing others beside +herself topping the bill with that. + +"You needn't be afraid," said Jimmy, "they won't take this one from me; +and yet I hope, in a few years' time, to see it all over the place." + +"You hope to have it taken from you in a few years only, eh? But why?" + +"For all the world to profit by it." + +"All the world on the back-wheel!" protested Lily, who was always thinking +bikes. "Then what will become of the artistes?" + +"In a few years, Lily, people won't go about on wheels," said Jimmy +jokingly. + +"What will they do then?" + +"They'll fly!" + +Lily would have burst out laughing, in other circumstances; but they had +now reached the stage. The iron curtain was down. She looked round with +scared eyes for something out of the common. Jimmy, after making sure that +they were quite alone, walked up to the monster's cage, slid back the door +... + +The aerobike, with wings wide open, seemed to loom out of the darkness. + +"My!" cried Lily. "It's a bird! So that was your brain-work in Berlin and +in ... What is it?" + +It was, in any case, a strange creature, with two inclined planes, one on +either side, that looked like wings; and, at the back, it showed a +screw-propeller sticking up in the air, like a tail. The whole thing +rested on two wheels. + +"And it's a bike, too! I knew it!" cried Lily, clapping her hands. "Well +done, Jimmy! And do you want me to get up on it? Come along! Just wait +till I take my hat off," she went on, drawing out the hat-pins from under +her big feathers. + +"Not so fast!" said Jimmy, laughing. "Keep calm! We'll start next week. +There are a good many little things to make sure of first; and then I must +put up a cable in case of a fall." + +"I don't care a hang for a fall," cried Lily, immensely excited. "You'll +soon see if I'm afraid!" + +"Be serious, Lily. Listen to me," replied Jimmy. "Yes, you will have to +stand on the back-wheel, but not to ride round the stage. You will have to +start up at full speed and then go up and up, straight up, into space and +then shoot out through a hole which they are making in the roof." + +"Yes," said Lily, "I saw. . . . My, that makes a good distance! And, when +I'm through the hole, what do I do up there? Go on...!" + +"I'll explain all that to you," said Jimmy. + +"Dive into the street, eh?" asked Lily, in her Spartan voice. "Well, I +don't care! Anything! I'll do anything! And I'll show them," she added, to +herself, "if you can do _that_ through your gentlemen friends!" + +But she calmed herself: after all, she was going to top the bill; have her +name in all the papers, with her portrait; see the walls covered with her +posters. What a revenge for her! That was enough, for the moment. She did +not want to appear surprised before Jimmy. The right thing was to take it +as something very natural, like a lady who is used to the best. + +Jimmy, meanwhile, was explaining his trick: + +"We shan't fly at once," he said. "We shall practise on the stand to learn +how the handles work. Oh, you'll have to think of everything during the +few seconds that the flight lasts! The machine isn't perfect, it's a first +attempt, it can only be ridden by a professional and a very clever one. +Look here," he continued, "it's the principle of the back-wheel; you'll +have to keep your side-balance and front and back, but you'll do it, I'm +sure. _I've_ done it." + +"What you can do, a man," Lily interrupted, "I can do too. One can do +anything on the bike!" + +The machine which Jimmy explained to Lily in detail was a bike just like +another, with a few differences in its general construction, bearing upon +the services which it was expected to perform. The saddle, for instance, +was made to slide backward and forward, so that the center of equilibrium +could be shifted with a push of the rider's back. The stability of the +apparatus did not depend upon that alone. The ascensional rudder or +screw-propeller, which was able to impart a speed of thirty miles an hour +to the machine, was in the extension of the horizontal bar of the frame. +It was fitted to a long piece of bent steel, pinned below the saddle, +which, running beside the frame, ended by forming a pedal, so that, with a +pressure of the foot, the rider could move it downward, at will, within an +arc of some ten degrees. This propeller, which was small in dimensions, +but endowed with enormous speed, was, in its normal position, +perpendicular to the frame. The pressure of the foot raised it to its +highest point. In this position, the propeller turned at full speed and +therefore tended to descend and, consequently, to point the front of the +aerobike upward. When brought still lower, its ascensional force increased +and the front of the aerobike pitched downward. These two extremes would +obviously serve only in sudden movements. In reality, the rider's skill +would consist in moving the propeller only very slightly, in order to +maintain a horizontal flight. As for the machine itself, Jimmy had +rejected the cumbersome system of cells, which he compared to boxes: + +"The shape of a fish for the ship, the shape of a bird for the +flying-machine," he said. + +He stuck to that principle and therefore he had added two enormous wings, +one on each side. He had first experimented with reduced models, shaped +like a bird, sending them up anyhow, to see, and he had ended by +constructing one which preserved its stability when gliding over the +atmospheric layers. He had thus been led to construct wings with a +slightly rounded surface whose coefficient of yield was nearly double that +of wings with flat surfaces. The width of these wings was about five feet +and their length about sixteen. They tapered a little, were drawn out in +front and widened at the opposite end, so as to get a more powerful hold +of the air. They were made of double-milled canvas, stretched on curved +ash and fastened to the sections by aluminum stays riveted with copper and +clenched. They were as light as they were stiff. These two wings pointed +slightly upward in front, parallel to the machine, and were fastened to it +in the middle by means of an axis below the saddle-pillar, which brought +their axis to the center of gravity. Other ingenious and quite individual +arrangements made the apparatus very manageable. The resistance of the +air, combined with the propelling power of the screw, exercised all its +force in vain: the wings remained stationary. Their lines were carefully +studied to facilitate the flow of the air, on the principle of Langley's +kite: and the two of them presented a carrying surface of forty-nine +square feet. + +"It's not much," Jimmy explained to Lily, who listened attentively. "If I +carried my motor," he said, "I should have a bigger surface. The machine +ought then, theoretically speaking, to rise when it is going at a rate of +thirty miles an hour; with a good back push the front-wheel would leave +the ground and continue its course upward. But, on the stage, we have no +room to acquire speed: we shall get it from an inclined plane, as at the +start of 'Looping the Loop.' As for the side steering, the front wheel has +spokes fitted with canvas and offers resistance to the air: it will steer +the aerobike to left or right at a touch of the handle-bar, as in ordinary +riding, and there you are, Lily." + +"My!" said Lily, bewildered by all this complicated apparatus. "Did you +work it all out on paper? It's enough to drive one mad!" + +"When you're on it, Lily," said Jimmy, smiling, "you'll have to work also, +_I_ promise you. But, with your talent, ... you'll manage better than I +should. And to-morrow," he added, "I will give you something on account of +your salary." + +"No, I have money," said Lily, very proudly and fearing lest she should +wear out her luck by adding that to it, by being paid for doing +nothing.... + +Lily spent the whole week in a fever of expectation; she did not know +where she was for joy. But she stifled that within herself. And it was +owing to her talent, all owing to her talent! When people wanted a +difficult trick done, they did not go to Daisy or the fat freaks, no, they +came to little Lily! And it was settled, she wanted no more familiarity, +now that she was going to top the bill at the Astrarium! A lady should be +more reserved in her friendships: she would make herself very +short-sighted, so short-sighted as to be almost blind, when she met the +rotten lot! Resolved, that she would give up saying, "Damn it!" give up +talking of smackings and using vulgar expressions: + +"Do you hear, Glass-Eye?" she said, calling her maid to witness. "You're +to box my ears if you catch me at it again!" + +The thought of having to handle that delicate machine increased Lily's +importance in her own eyes. She had noticed that Poland, apart from an +inordinate love of champagne suppers, had very nice manners: Lily would +profit by her example and become more refined; she would show Pa and Ma +the kind of Lily they had lost and she would crush them with the amount of +her salary! She would earn more by herself than the whole troupe. She +would let them know it, even if she had to do the trick for nothing, for +glory, to see her Ma beg her pardon on her knees! She had recovered all +the pride of her eighteen years, all her freshness, in a day: the touch of +bitterness about her lips had changed into a smile. It would have taken +very little more to make her dance for joy. But she restrained herself, +dared not believe in her happiness; and she was quite decided not to +accept anything from Jimmy before earning it. It was bad enough to owe him +that thousand marks. She made herself a nice practising dress and spent +the morning in bed reading a novel of fashionable life, of which the +heroine was called Lily, like herself! And she, too, would become a +society-girl, just to show them, damn it! But, suddenly, catching herself +at fault, she laughed and asked Glass-Eye for a box on the ear; and a +desperate pillow-fight ensued, in which they indulged whole-heartedly, +like two regular tom-boys who loved to wrestle and punch each other. And +it put her in a good humor for the rest of the day. She went shopping +through the windows, only bought herself a spray of roses to fasten to her +bodice. She went to the Astrarium, walked in as though the place belonged +to her, followed by her maid. She examined the works with the eye of an +expert. Three days, three days more and she would begin to rehearse! Her +legs were itching to commence! + +The alterations to the stage especially interested her. The door of the +cage remained closed and Lily looked at the auditorium: + +"Is it possible, after all?" she thought. + +And she measured the distance with her eye. It seemed enormous to her, but +never mind, she'd do it! And she grew wildly enthusiastic in the midst of +all that activity, of a theater which was being rearranged for her: "For +me, Glass-Eye! All of it for me! From here," she said, stamping her foot +on the stage, "from here to right up there!" And she pointed to the hole +in the sky. "All that on the bike! A somersault miles high!" + +[Illustration: OLD MARTELLO] + +Glass-Eye opened two terrified eyes, wondered if Lily was going mad.... + +Glass-Eye had become dulled through constant obedience, had lost her +memory, mixed up her yeses and noes, like those actors who forget their +parts through playing them too frequently; her recent life had excited her +too much, and never a sou in her pocket, only barely enough to eat ... it +was ten times worse than in Rathbone Place.... And then that new crotchet +of Lily's. + +"Can I fly, Glass-Eye, or can't I? Am I a bird or am I not?" It was enough +to make Glass-Eye lose her head.... + +Glass-Eye was obliged to answer yes ... and that very quickly. But she +kept on trotting behind Lily, who, realizing that she would soon be taken +up with her rehearsals, took advantage of her last days of liberty to pay +visits and show herself a little, accompanied by her maid, like the fine +lady that she was. She went and took the Bambinis some candies. Poor kids! +Their games and laughter no longer filled the hotel with mirth and gaiety: +old Martello was getting worse and worse and was now not able to leave his +room at all. Lily found a kind word for everybody and was grieved at not +having any money, which would have allowed her to be generous. That would +come later. She worked out a scheme for occupying herself with the +children when the old man was gone, for having them always with her, like +two dear little lucky charms. It was impossible, of course: never mind, it +was the idea of a lady, which she would not have had in the old days, and +Lily was pleased with herself for having entertained it. + +"I will speak about you to Jimmy," she said to the Bambinis. "I'll get you +engaged at the Astrarium, eh?" + +And the old man trembled with delight, stammered out his thanks, tried to +accompany her to the door, like a princess; and the little boy, to thank +her, promised to teach her a way of standing on your head which he had +learned all by himself! + +"Poor darlings!" thought Lily, as she left them. "If ever they fall into +their brother's hands! They would be better dead! Luckily for them, he has +disappeared for good; and his Ave Maria with him, unluckily for me!" + +For Lily understood how badly her position as a lady went with that name +of Mrs. Trampy. It was like dragging a tin kettle at her skirts, to make +the people in the street turn round and look at her. + +And, more than ever before, Trampy posed as a faithful husband. Nothing +sufficed to take down his arrogance. Always the same old Trampy: great, by +Jove! And, with his red lips, his glittering eye and the cigar stuck in +the corner of his mouth, he made love to second-rate "sisters," inferior +Roofers in red calico skirts. His glamorous title as the bill-topper's +husband still won him a few conquests. And Trampy, especially since +Jimmy's return, plumed himself more and more on the fact that he was the +husband of his dear little wife! + +Lily knew all this and it made her fume with rage at heart; but she showed +nothing, pretended, on the contrary, to treat it as a little matter of no +account. For instance, after her visit to the Bambinis, as she passed an +artistes' bar, quite close, there stood Trampy, lording it on the +pavement, among a lot of unemployed pros. Lily made herself short-sighted +to the point of absolute blindness. Trampy caught her, as she passed, with +a: + +"Hullo, Lily! Hullo, my dear little wife!" + +But Lily behaved like a real fine lady who knows how to put people in +their place without calling them names: + +"Hullo, Mr. Trampy!" she replied, in a sarcastic tone. "Still got your +red-hot stove, Mr. Trampy? Still a success with the girls? Kind regards, +Mr. Trampy!" + + + + +CHAPTER II + + +But Lily was grandest of all at the rehearsals. She was now no longer a +lady: she once more became the Spartan, bare-necked, her hair undone, her +body streaming with perspiration, and to work, to work, to make up for +lost time! In the mornings, alone on the deserted stage, she practised and +practised.... + +"Come on!" said Jimmy. "And mind you do your work properly," he added, +with a laugh, "or else, you know ..." + +And he patted the back of his hand. + +"I don't care!" said Lily. + +"You may break your head, you know," continued Jimmy, to try her. + +"It's none of your damned business if I do! Show me your tricks. To +work!" + +And Jimmy showed her a movement to execute on her bike, which she had +brought with her: balancings, as in "Bridging the Abyss," an excellent +training for the aerobike. And Lily went about it clear-eyed, +hard-cheeked, with all the little muscles contracted on her stubborn +forehead, ready to butt at the obstacle. A few falls to begin with, but +she jumped up again nimbly: + +"That's all right!" she said. "It's part of the game!" + +"But stop, stop," insisted Jimmy. "Be careful!" + +They were sometimes on the stage for hours at a time, but to Lily, all +wrapped in her work, it seemed so many minutes. She understood the jerk +which she was to give at the moment when, after rolling along the inclined +plane, she should shoot out into space for the soaring flight of fifty +yards: + +"The start, that's the great thing with the back-wheel," she observed. +"The rest goes of itself." + +"Don't cry till you're out of the wood!" said Jimmy. "It'll be different +when you're riding the aerobike." + +Lily was longing to begin that famous practice! And, a few days later, she +at last had that delight, took that further step toward triumph. Jimmy +removed the bird from the cage, fixed it on a stand. When Lily sat in the +saddle, she was crimson with pleasure, prouder than a princess sitting on +a throne for the first time: + +"There," she said. "Here I am! And what next?" + +Jimmy explained the complicated touches--"Press your left foot, there, +like that, to make it point upward"--and showed how, explained why; then +he passed to the working of the handle-bar--"There, like that, to turn it, +there"--and how and why the saddle slipped backward and forward. + +"And then?" + +"That's all." + +"That's all?" repeated Lily. "That won't want any smackings! Let's see, +like this, eh? Then that. Suppose I'm coming down at full speed. I throw +myself backward, a back push, there, like that. A kick, gently, there, +that's it. I'll do it as soon as you like! This minute, if necessary!" + +But Jimmy, without replying to these sallies, proceeded methodically. He +made her practise again, standing still, with the motor going at +half-speed. This was a different impulse: the displacement of the air +raised a stormy wind, the dust flew, the scenery hanging from the flies +waved to and fro and Lily shook in her saddle under the vibration of the +propeller. + +"Well, Lily?" said Jimmy. "That shakes you up, eh? That complicates +matters?" + +"Pooh!" said Lily. "And what about the boards? There are some of them that +are pretty rough, too! At Pittsburg, you know, it's like riding over +cobblestones. I prefer that to a stage that's too smooth: it's less +treacherous." + +A few days later, Jimmy ran up a steel cable from the stage to the opening +in the ceiling, which was now finished and covered with a tarpaulin; and +Lily was to try the flying. At the time for practice, there was no one in +the theater, from which the scaffoldings had been removed. There were no +seats on the floor or in the boxes: everything was being made outside, and +would be put in place in a day or two. In the afternoon, when there was no +practice, the house was filled with workmen, painters, upholsterers, +carpenters, whose places were taken by others at night, working by +electric light. Ten days more and they would have the triumphal opening; +already Paris was covered with picture placards: you saw Tom, as a +caryatid, supporting the weight of a palace; the Three Graces entwined in +their radiant nudity; the impersonator standing, like a Don Juan, +surrounded by a bevy of women: the ballet-girl, the shop-girl, the fine +lady; then, besides those, the New Trickers--"My idea!" thought Lily, but +she didn't care a jot now--the New Trickers fluttered round Daisy. You saw +the elephants; the monkey; Patti-Patty, the white negress; all, all, down +to the Bambinis, whom Lily had "got" engaged. The whole program was +reverberated on the walls and hoardings, like a thousand-voiced echo. An +even larger poster than the others, all blue, strewn with stars, displayed +the aerobike in full flight in the sky; and a human figure, seated upon +it, lifted a hand filled with rays. + +The mere sight of the posters was enough to stimulate Lily to the maddest +feats of daring. She felt herself firmer than steel, when she thought of +the New Trickers and of Pa and Ma, who were coming with Daisy, their +farthing dip! + +When everything was ready, Jimmy hung the aerobike to the steel cable by +two ropes, ten feet long, ending in pulleys which ran along the cable. +Each of these two ropes was looped up and the loop secured with thin +twine: this was an infallible way of ascertaining if the aerobike weighed +down upon them or if it was supporting itself in the air; the two cords +acted as a spring balance registering the tension in the rope. Should the +twine break, because the aerobike rested on the ropes, then the ropes +would unloop and the machine remain hanging without any danger for Lily. +This was the way in which Jimmy had worked when learning "his trade as a +bird," as he called it; and Lily, he had no doubt, would succeed even +better than he did, being more supple, lighter and quite as plucky. + +Oh, the rapture with which Lily bestrode the aerobike for the first +flight! + +Jimmy and two confidential assistants hauled up the machine to the top of +the inclined plane that gave it its impetus. Jimmy spent an endless time +in verifying and testing everything. The electric wire that set the +propeller in motion also caused him uneasiness. It had to unroll behind +and follow the aerobike without weighing upon it, without retarding its +flight; for the machine, which was necessarily a small one, to be able to +move within a confined space, did not carry the additional load of a +motor, but only a wire, as wireless transmission of power was not yet +available. At last, when everything was provided for, Jimmy allowed Lily +to make her trial. He trembled; not that she ran any danger, for a fall +was impossible: the machine was stopped, up above, automatically, by a +cable stretched crosswise and fastened to a strong spring, which slowed +and stayed the flight within the space of a few yards. But if the two +pieces of twine broke suddenly and if this happened several times in +succession, the shocks might come to frighten Lily, for all her +self-control. + +And Jimmy went on explaining. + +"I know," said Lily. "I quite understand. It's like this, like this, yes, +I know. It's only a matter of trying! It's a trick I've got to do and +that's all about it! Daisy would kill herself on it and so would the fat +freaks, but I shan't! I shall succeed." + +"Well, then, steady!" cried Jimmy, and his voice rang through the empty +theater. "Go!" + +The machine ran down with a swoop, the propeller whirred, Lily gave a +magnificent back push, when she reached the bottom of the inclined plane; +then she went straight up and the two pieces of twine snapped in two. Lily +found herself hanging fifty feet in the air, the two pulleys glided slowly +backward toward the stage. Jimmy stopped the machine. + +"That's wrong!" cried Lily. "Let's try again. I see what it was: I forgot +to push down my foot to point the machine up. It was a slip." + +However, at the next attempt, it went better. The twine broke each time, +but Lily rectified her movements: + +"It's my back push! It's the propeller! It's the front-wheel!" + +And, in fact, that was what it was. Jimmy and his assistants, who followed +her with their eyes, had noted the fault and Lily, too, had observed it, +in spite of the giddy flight. She was extraordinarily plucky and cool, her +eight stone of flesh and bone, unerring and exact, seemed made for the +aerobike. + +"Bravo, Lily! Hurrah!" cried Jimmy. + +She could have screamed for joy in the street, as she went out. + +Her unparalleled stroke of luck in being chosen tickled her heart. She +felt her sense of responsibility increase and also her wish to do well; no +sooner had she left off practising than she was seized with but one idea, +to begin again: + +"Eight days more!" she thought. + +At night, she dreamed of backward jerks, of turning the handle-bar, +pushing the pedal. Poor Glass-Eye, cowering in a corner of the bed, had +terrible nightmares, and, in the morning, after Lily's kicks, she rose +with her ribs smarting and her shins all black and blue. That was all her +profit, for Lily had hardly any money left and was not yet drawing a +salary. + +Lily submitted to all sorts of privation with a proud dignity. She would +be beholden to nobody. Soon her whole fortune would consist of her box of +lucky halfpence and a franc which she had won by turning a cartwheel, for +a bet, among artistes, in the country, to stagger the jossers. And so +their little evening meal was a scanty one. A sausage, a little fruit, a +cup of tea ... and then to bed. That was better than listening to the +owner of the Hours and all those men who propose things to you. Never, +never! Her work, her work! Lord, after what she had seen of Poland and the +Hours, it was much simpler to work, to be self-reliant. At night, +sometimes, Lily would lie awake and think ... where did that three hundred +francs of the Bijou come from? Not from the Bijou: Cataplasm's defeat had +swallowed up everything and the theater had long been without a penny; +they used to fill the house with paper distributed among the staff, with +orders to get rid of it anyhow. They were not far short of inviting +soldiers from the barracks. There had never been more than two hundred +seats paid for of an evening; it meant flat bankruptcy. And she was the +only one who had received anything: why? How? Then it must have been some +admirer, but who? Not the architect, surely, that josser! Who then? And +why had Jimmy engaged the Bambinis, when she asked him to? He did +everything to please her. He was letting her top the bill: why? She made a +heap of guesses, without getting at the exact truth ... Jimmy ... Jimmy +... that man, with his coldness, interested her. While so many others were +prowling around her, he alone seemed indifferent. She would have liked to +see him in love with her ... to make him suffer a little in his turn! All +the beauty-shows which Lily had seen, all the exhibitions of painted Hours +had not spoiled her good taste: Jimmy pleased her, with that strong face +of his. What an endless pity that she had married Trampy! She gave a +scornful pout when she thought of it: she married to Trampy! Married to +that soaker: she, a woman made for a man, a creature of flesh and blood, +who admired fine muscles, rough sport and virile smackings! Gee, if she +had been a man, it seemed to her that she would have enjoyed spoiling a +little Lily: outside working hours, of course! And, if a little Lily had +asked her, "Do you love me, yes or no?" she would never have answered no. +To-day, she would have bitten off her own tongue rather than put that +question to Jimmy! And yet Jimmy had a dignity about him that pleased her. +She could see into the game of the others. The architect, for instance, +would give her just a smile in passing, a pleasant word, as one performs a +social duty, between two pieces of business. A little amusement, no more: +that was all she was to him ... and to all of them. Jimmy seemed +different. But, still, if he loved her, why hadn't he the courage to tell +her so? And, besides, when all was said, she was sick and tired of men! +Some of them ran after you like dogs; others, damn it, were icicles! A +girl could have Marjutti's figure, Thea's arms, Nancy's legs, Lillian's or +Laurence's face ... and still they would not be satisfied! And thereupon +Lily pursed her brows, asked herself how and why and went to sleep like a +baby. + +And the rehearsals continued every day, without respite. Lily became +terrible the nearer she drew to success: her indomitable spirit mounted to +her heart. Jimmy had difficulty in holding her in. She made twenty +flights, thirty flights ... and the twine no longer broke. From that +moment, she was sure of succeeding, always. When you have once succeeded, +even if it be but once, you have no right ever to fail again. She had been +brought up in those principles, had had them rubbed into her skin. She +could not fail now, it was impossible! Even in her flight to the opening +up above! She had learned her "times," she knew how to aim exactly at the +right spot. Jimmy hastened to have the roof arranged for the final exit, +when the aerobike would disappear before the eyes of the audience, in the +star-strewn sky. All that remained was to get everything ready for the +final rehearsal: the complete show, with all lights lit, as for a gala +night. Lily seemed to see it all beforehand. On the day when she realized +that no accident was possible, that it was a trick of which she was +certain, she stifled a cry of triumph in her throat. She was afraid to +believe in it herself, so greatly did it surpass her dreams. She would +have stayed for days on the aerobike to experience the delight of the leap +into space. It seemed to her as though she were becoming a bird and about +to hover in mid-air and leave them all behind her, in the crowd below ... +all, all ... and be a little Lily, flying away on the back-wheel before +their noses. + +"You'll make yourself ill," said Jimmy. "Take a rest; there's no need to +tire yourself; you do it as well as I." + +For Jimmy, of course, had done the thing too, if only to show Lily; +besides, it was easy for him, who had had so much practice in London and +who knew his machine from end to end. And he appreciated the difficulty +all the more. He admired Lily's incredible pluck, her all-devouring +ambition and that splendid determination to get out of her scrape, to be a +little Lily earning her bread as she knew how, by her work, even if she +had to break her neck in the doing of it! And proud to her finger-tips, in +spite of the dog's life she had led. + +"If I had not procured her this delight," thought Jimmy, "I should never +have forgiven myself to the end of my days." + +And, from working with her for hours and hours, from holding her by the +waist at the first trials, from feeling that little body quiver under his +hand, from seeing Lily rush at danger, Jimmy became madly in love with her +again ... if he had ever ceased to be so! Ah, if Trampy...! But Lily was +married ... the divorce depended on the husband ... and the husband +wouldn't have it ... at any price: not for a million, he said, by Jove, +would he be separated from a little wife whom he adored! + +"Poor Lily!" thought Jimmy sadly. "Will she always be doomed to drag that +dead weight about with her?" + +During the intervals for rest, while Lily wiped the perspiration from her +forehead, Jimmy talked to her ... at first, of insignificant things ... +the name "Astrarium," for instance ... a place devoted to planets, to +stars: as a palmarium is to palms. Stars ... that was to say, +bill-toppers: the Three Graces; the Laurences; the Lillians; the +Marjuttis; the Lilies ... yes, the Lilies! Then he pitied her for +belonging to Trampy; and what a good little Lily she would have been if +she had remained with her family! + +"But I _am_ a good little Lily!" she said, with a display of childish +vehemence. "What more do you want? We artistes do what we jolly well +please, and we don't care a damn for the rest!" And she had half a mind to +tell him that it was all his fault! "I had to do a silly thing and I did +it," she continued, with an expression of regret on her face. "I married +without love, but lovers, my! I've had, I may say, as many as I wanted ... +from the son of a lord down." + +And Lily, to excite him, told him the long array of her love affairs, as +it was told everywhere, on the Bill and Boom Tour, on the Harrasford, on +the Eastern and Western Tours, like the whippings and the rest. + +"Yes, I know," replied Jimmy, very coldly. + +"What, you don't believe me!" exclaimed Lily. "There were men who would +have left wife and child for me! ... heaps of lovers, tons of them!" + +"My poor Lily, having so many is the same as having none at all," added +Jimmy dreamily. + +But still he did not declare his love: besides, he had constantly to leave +her, to go and give orders, or climb up on the roof, or look at the +heating-apparatus, below. + +Lily watched him go, followed him with a sphinx-like glance, while a vague +smile flickered about her lips.... + +But she hardly had time to think of all this: the assistants replaced the +bird in its cage, locked the door, opened that leading to the +dressing-room passage and the artistes arrived and took up their places on +their carpets. + +Lily had seen it a hundred times, a thousand times, "millions of times!" +She never wearied of it. She spent the day there, among the groups of +bloomers: the Three Graces, bare-armed, went to work, practised the human +cluster; Nunkie kept an eye on his dear nieces and rehearsed the Bambinis, +now that old Martello was keeping his room for good. Lily, who was almost +reduced to eating dry bread, but who remained the fine lady nevertheless, +brought them bags of sweets. Calmed by her work, she sat down in a corner, +laughed, her head thrown back, full-throated, applauded the others with +her thumbnail, shook hands with new-comers, made herself liked by all. And +it was: + +"Hullo, girls! Hullo, boys! Dear old Blackpool! What's the news at the +Palace? Who's topping the bill at the Hippodrome?" + +Lily, on her rickety chair, made as it were a little center at which the +news was exchanged; to think that, instead of being there, at the top of +the profession, she might have been at Glasgow, some twopenny theater, +where ladies are admitted without shoes or stockings, or playing the darky +at Earl's Court! Yes, but for Jimmy, that's where she would have been! Or +else the Parisienne, in Russia! She, an English girl, my! And Lily +fervently touched her lucky charm: oh, work, work, thank goodness for it! +And Lily rendered homage to work and sprang from her chair to shake hands +with Tom, who had come to see his palace unpacked: + +"Good morning, Tom! Welcome!" + +This Tom, who now topped the bill everywhere and had a permanent address +and his own scenery: wasn't it wonderful? He was no longer her Pa's old +servant: genius removes all distances; a man is what he makes himself! And +they shook hands warmly, like equals. + +Lily, as a sensational bill-topper and a friend of Jimmy's, was always in +great request. She talked nicely, without pose of any kind, like a woman +who is sure of herself and knows things. The Astrarium ... the Astrarium +... what did that mean? They asked Lily: + +"It's like ... a palmarium," she explained, "with sunflowers in it, all +sorts of things ... girls ... stars ..." + +She described her journeys, storms, gee! Weren't there, Glass-Eye? People +who had never been outside Europe and the States had no idea! Lily talked +of India, Africa, Australia; talked of lions, which stand on their +hind-legs when they're angry, and tigers, which lie down flat; mentioned +stage friendships between elephants and camels and herself in the midst of +it all: "That high!" lowering her hand to six inches from the floor; +talked of animal-training: dogs, cats, sea-lions and that "great, big, +wicked Australian rabbit" which boxed like a man. She was a well-informed +person, was Lily. And a providence for her family also, to listen to her. +When any one brought news of her Pa and the New Trickers, with Daisy as a +statue on her pedestal, one of the successes of the year: + +"Yes," Lily replied, in a patronizing tone, "I know. It was my idea. I +gave it to them!" + +They thought it very nice of her. She listened with great dignity to what +they said about the New Trickers. They would not be at the Astrarium on +the opening night. They were finishing an engagement on the Bill and Boom +that same evening. They would be in Paris the next day. Mr. Clifton was +reckoning on this appearance for the final triumph of his troupe ... and +he deserved it. What a man, Mr. Clifton, what a man! "Not easy to please, +eh, Lily?" And the inevitable gesture followed. But Lily would have none +of that now, she would not hear her Pa spoken of as a brute! Did they take +her for a performing dog? One was born with the gift or else one remained +all one's life a Daisy or a fat freak! She was proud to have a Pa like +hers. She wasn't a mountebank picked up on the road! Lily had a Pa and a +Ma: a Ma of her own, a Ma whom she was certain about. She bore a +well-known name. She belonged to the "father and son" aristocracy of the +music-hall. She had never needed "that" to make her practice, she an +artiste, brought up like a lady: + +"Wasn't I, Glass-Eye? Tom, wasn't I?" + +And the jewelry and the sweets her Pa bought her, my! Tons of it! Of +course, he would stand no nonsense about behavior; and Lily made them all +laugh till the tears came about that footy rotter who made love to her in +London, before the time when drink made him look so disgusting, and, when +she loitered in the street with him, Pa, the moment she reached the door, +caught her such a blow that she took all the steps to the basement at one +jump; and there found her Ma waiting for her ... gee! + +"And they were quite right, too! And ... do they know that I'm going to +top the bill at the Astrarium?" she asked. + +"No, they think you're in Spain or somewhere." + +"Somewhere!" said Lily to herself, with a thrill at her heart. "I'll show +them!" + +She choked with joy at the idea of the startled look on the faces of Pa +and Ma when they saw her on the aerobike. An exuberant gladness filled her +heart. And that feverish work, those laborers everywhere, the opening in +the roof, the terrace up above, those posters all over Paris and there, +behind the iron door, in the dark, the bird! It was all for her: a theater +for herself! And she felt a need to leap, to laugh, to spread gaiety all +around her; and she rushed about madly with the Bambinis, romped with them +behind the pillars, rolled with them on the floor of her dressing-room, +became once again the Lily who had played truant all around the world, +inventing practical jokes in India and climbing apple-trees in Honolulu. +She crossed the combs and tooth-brushes on the Roofer girls' tables, +rushed into their room when they were undressed, drove the trembling herd +of them distracted, talked of the thousand dangers that awaited them if +they didn't mend their ways, made them fly to their lucky charms to ward +off ill-luck, when she offered them a yellow flower, with great pomp, or +some broken glass in a jewel-box. Then she talked to the Three Graces, +those big girls who always astonished her with their cloistered +existence--Nunkie before everything--and who amused themselves by +measuring one another round the biceps, round the chest, or else, with +their elbows on the table, played at who should first bend back the +other's wrist. Lily sat down for a moment with them, then stopped, +breathless with larking and talking, and went back to her dressing-room: + +"I shall have months to spend in here!" she thought. + +[Illustration: LILY'S GOLLYWOG] + +And, assisted by Glass-Eye, she pinned up bits of stuff, tied a silk bow +to the back of the chair, put up nails for her costumes, laid out on her +table long rows of post-cards, photographs of friends, all dispersed to +the four quarters of the globe, some dead, others done for, all the poor +witnesses of her life. Then she took her black gollywog from her trunk and +kissed it passionately--"Darling! Darling! Darling!"--before hanging it up +on the wall. And along the dressing-room passage and through the window +came the sound of voices ... snatches of homesick tunes: _From Rangoon to +Mandalay_ or _Way down upon the Suwanee River_ ... and "Hullo, Lily! +Hullo, old boy!"... The female-impersonator walked into her room as though +it were his own, sat down on the basket trunk, plunging his green eyes +into hers. + +And sometimes Jimmy passed, always at a run: something had gone wrong +somewhere, the heating apparatus, the electric light.... + +"Hullo, Lily!" And he stopped for a moment, frowned at the sight of the +impersonator. "Always busy?" he asked, seeing Lily, bare-armed, washing +something in her basin. + +"Have to be," said Lily. "I always wash my little blouses; we do +everything ourselves, don't we, Glass-Eye? And, when I'm performing, I +have two pairs of tights to wash a day!" + +"Two pairs of tights!" + +"Why, of course, matinee and night! You have no idea, Jimmy ... the nickel +... when I sit on the handle-bar, it makes a great mark ... just here, +look!" + +And she laughed at Jimmy over her shoulder while she pointed to the place +... and then blushed, like a frolicsome child that has been found out and +is, oh, so sorry! + +"Every one's got to keep to his own dressing-room!" said Jimmy, feeling +very uncomfortable, to the man with the green eyes. "You can't stay here; +it's against the rules!" + +"We're doing no harm, please, Mr. Jimmy," retorted Lily, sitting down +beside the impersonator and slipping her arm round his waist. + +"Poor Jimmy!" said the impersonator, when the other had left the room in a +rage. "He's jealous, isn't he, darling?" + +"He jealous? Then why doesn't he say so? One can't guess a thing like +that! When you're a man, you speak out!" + +And the architect appeared in his turn, he, too, running from one end of +the theater to the other. He wore a bandage over one eye: + +"Knocked up against a beam ... a little accident. Have you seen Jimmy?" + +"He's over there, I think," replied Lily, without troubling to look at +him. + +There was no jealousy about the architect. He stayed for a moment, sniffed +at the scent-bottle, smiled at the photographs on the wall. A green-eyed +impersonator, a blue-eyed impersonator: the room could have been full of +impersonators, for all he cared. Dark girls, yellow girls, fair girls, so +many playthings to distract him from his rules and compasses. He was bored +at once; turned to another at once; and it was all so amusing! He was the +typical lover of the woman of the stage, with his little surface passions. +And very amiable withal, knowing them all, and friendly with them, a great +purveyor of anecdotes: + +"The Para-Paras, you know, Lily, committed suicide in their room ... awful +poverty. The wife wasn't ... Tottie enough ... and the husband was +teaching the English accent to continental clowns! Poland? A magnificent +engagement in Russia. Old Martello hasn't three days to live. Oh ... and +Nunkie! There's news among the Three Graces! The troupe's done for this +time!" + +And he told how, last night, poor Thea, while mending her uncle's +overcoat, found in the lining an old letter from America ... from some +swain she had had over there ... a letter glowing with love and regret. +Yes, Nunkie knew how to hold his nieces, the architect explained, laughing +... watched them like a Spanish duenna, confiscated the letters that came +for them, if necessary, the old rogue, and calmed their ardors with a few +drops of bromide in a glass of water, every evening, on the pretense of +keeping them from catching cold in the drafts. Oh, the old rogue! And Thea +had almost fainted with grief in her dressing-room when she read the +letter. + +"Quite a business, Lily! A scandal in their little home! Very funny, eh?" +he added, as he ogled Lily's pigeon's eggs and rolled a cigarette. + +Lily, who had seen poor Thea cry before and who knew to what extent her +lover's treachery had humiliated her, was secretly furious to hear that +josser talk carelessly of things like that: did he imagine, the idiot, +that they weren't built like other people, in the profession, that they +had no feelings? What need had the public to know about their lives? It +was among themselves, quite among themselves, all that! + +"Get out of my sight, you damned josser!" said Lily. "Go and eat coke!" + +But the other, greatly amused, described his latest discovery, a pearl, in +an out-of-the-way neighborhood ... at Vaugirard fair ... an extraordinary +girl, showing off on a couple of trestles in front of a canvas booth, in +which her man lifted weights to the light of the Argand burners: + +"Picture this girl, Lily," said the enthusiastic josser, "picture this +girl on her trestles, doing weights, balancings, all sorts of things. A +body like a boy's, all muscle, and thin: whew! Not _that_ much fat on her, +no hips, arms and shoulders, like Michael Angelo's flayed model. And I +talked to her afterward! And her man gave me a queer look you know ... I +got a blow...." + +"Well done!" cried Lily, clapping her hands. "The beam, eh? That'll teach +you to meddle in other people's business! Oh, you don't know those +tenters! One of these days you'll be picked up with your face smashed in, +or shot through the chest with a revolver." + +"I say, though," the architect interrupted, "that girl ... I don't know +how we came to speak of you ... she knows you, Lily!" + +"That's right! Now I have mountebanks among my acquaintances!" said Lily, +with an air of disgust. "Get out of this, I say!... You wanted Jimmy; +there he is, look!" + +And Lily, furious, jerked her head toward the passage. + +When Lily went home again she did not even think of what she had just +heard. The death of the Paras; the Graces ... Nunkie, that old rogue!... +She forgot all about it.... She saw only that: the theater, the aerobike, +the theater! Ah! she had it in her blood, in spite of those ugly stories! +Even outside, when, upon Jimmy's advice, she went to take the air in the +parks, under the great blue sky, she regretted the dark stage, the canvas +landscapes of the back-drops; the open-air scenery appeared paltry to her, +beside it. Between her and nature there was always the aerobike! In a few +days ... was it possible? She clenched her little hands over an imaginary +handle-bar, hardened her pigeon's eggs, made pedaling movements, in spite +of herself, on the floor of the tram-car which she very soon took to get +back to the theater again! It was her life, her joy, her suffering, her +good and evil ... it was her field, her very own field, the field which +she had sown with sweat that she might reap fame and glory. + +And, when she returned, she reveled in that smell of hot glue and tar and +scent; oh, it was much nicer than the country! And more interesting, too: +all the little drama that was being enacted among the Graces, for +instance; Nunkie had lost his wonderful reputation, he was surrounded with +less reverence; the story of the confiscated letters was beginning its +round of the world. It was all very well for him to spoil his dear girls, +to double his attentions, to treble the doses of bromide; there was no +doubt about it, the troupe's days were numbered. The boy-violinist and +others were making love to the Three Graces, fresh troupes were being +formed, three more, any number! And they all talked freely, turned their +backs without hesitation upon Nunkie, who was prowling round: + +"Well?" he asked. "What's the mystery?" + +"We were discussing marriage, Nunkie," the Graces answered. + +"That's right, my children," he replied, with a sigh. + +Lily, in all these plots and counter-plots, knew how to remain neuter and +to be very nice to everybody; she had been trained from childhood to keep +her opinions to herself; none of her damned business, all that; something +that might have been foreseen and expected ... like the death of old +Martello, which Jimmy told her of.... Yes, the old man had flickered out +in his bed just like that.... + +But she needed all her composure, indeed, when Jimmy told her that those +dear little Bambinis ... ah, there was bad news for them, the poor loves! + +"What? What?" asked Lily. + +"Well, we are going to lose them; they've been claimed by their brother, +it seems." + +"What!" cried Lily. "Their brother? The ... the Mexican one?" + +"Yes, I think so," said Jimmy. "He's come back from South America. He is +in Paris now ... somewhere in a penny show, in the suburbs ... I don't +know where ... with a girl." + +"With a girl!" thought Lily. + +Everything returned to her in a flash! The girl with the bruised skin ... +that boy's body all muscle ... Ave Maria! Ave Maria! Not dead! She felt +inclined to run up to Trampy, to fly at his throat, to bellow in his face +that Ave Maria was here, just to see the effect! But she restrained +herself. Suppose it were not true? Oh, she would soon know! That footy +rotter, if it were true! O God, grant that it might be true! + +All this passed through her brain in less than a second. + +"Why!" said Jimmy, seeing her turn pale. "Does that affect you so much ... +the loss of your little friends, the Bambinis? For you're going to lose +them...." + +"No, Jimmy!" she replied indignantly. "You shall not give up the Bambinis +to their brother, a cruel, cowardly brute like that, right at the bottom +of the profession. I know ... I've seen.... You shan't do it, Jimmy, and, +look here, I forbid you!" + +"Well, Lily, Lily, I'll do what I can, to please you, you know; I'll try; +I'll see the police; you must give your evidence, if you have anything to +say. Do you know, Lily, you are as good as gold. You're a good little +Lily: hard upon herself and kind to others." + +But he was interrupted ... Jimmy here, Jimmy there ... he was wanted ... +for the flies, for the roof.... Jimmy flew to the stage, bothered on every +side, worried by the Astrarium ... and Lily. Lily! He could not escape her +now, do what he might! He had her in his heart, in his brain, everywhere. +She lived and existed in his breast, shot up there like a flame! Whatever +he had been told about her he no longer knew, did not want to know. And, +besides, even if it had been true, oh, he would have forgiven everything! +He would have passed over everything! He would have plunged into the abyss +to get Lily out of it, whatever she had done; yes! In spite of everything! +in spite of everybody! In spite of Trampy, husband or not! + + + + +CHAPTER III + + +To-morrow was to be the great day, the opening of the Astrarium, the first +night; and Jimmy, more bustled than ever, forgot Lily ... almost ... on +that evening, especially, the evening of the dress-rehearsal: not an +ordinary rehearsal, with the band-parts handed to the conductor across the +footlights--"A march here, please, a waltz there. 'K you"--no, the whole +show, with orchestra and all complete; the stage flooded with light; each +turn in its own setting: corridor, wood, room, palace. Jimmy multiplied +himself in the final fever. The theater, arranged according to his ideas, +was still encumbered with ladders and scaffoldings; but gangs of laborers +were hard at work on every side. The obstructions all disappeared like +magic, were juggled away. Jimmy had made sure that the roof was ready; he +had run from the landing-point, out of sight of the audience, through the +door contrived in the wall of the stage, crossed the fly-galleries, come +down by the pulley-rope; the whole thing, from roof to stage, had taken +him, watch in hand, thirty seconds. And Lily had done it also. It formed +part of the turn, a sensational addition to the aerobike. All would be +ready, all would go well, provided that Lily was not nervous that evening +... and to-morrow especially! Those confounded crazy little girls! Crazy +every one of them: Laurence herself, the bravest of the lot, had just had +an awful fall, at Boston, in her excitement at losing her lucky charm. It +was the event in the profession, the accident of the day. Lily might be +frightened by it. Now it was essential that she should succeed and succeed +at the first attempt. His fortune and hers, his future, the success of the +Astrarium depended on it. And Jimmy, obsessed by his labors, had hardly +time to think of Trampy, in the formidable effort of the eleventh hour. +And yet, sometimes, he felt a pain at his heart. That adorable Lily! Would +he succeed in making her love him? And now there was that impersonator! +Oh, to work, to work! And he went at it, hammer and tongs, to make sure of +the aerobike's success. To make them talk of him ... to achieve fame ... +which was as sweet as love! And he was wanted from one end of the theater +to the other. Oh, he might well look upon the Astrarium as his creation! +Already, a few days before, rumors of a strike were current. The managers +were boycotted by the artistes, in England.... Jimmy feared lest the +Astrarium should feel the consequences, under the pressure of the +Performers' Association, but he had arranged everything, seen each artiste +separately, explained his plans: gala matinees, creation of an asylum, a +home of rest ... a glory to help in such a task ... who could tell but +that they were working for themselves by adding their stone to the +edifice? He quoted the Para-Paras and their wretched end; old Martello, +dead without leaving a penny; the Bambinis, homeless; Ave Maria, +unprotected. The men listened, with serious faces. As for the girls, his +words came straight from the heart. Those decent girls, who earned their +living as they knew how and the living of others besides, they understood +him at once; and Lily no longer laughed; on the contrary: + +"Me? Whatever you like! For nothing, if you like; rely on me, Jimmy!" + +And now the hour had come; they were to appear under the critical eye of +Harrasford. The acting-manager had arrived from England that same day with +the stage-manager, who was "behind." It made a strange impression, that +huge red-and-gold house, glittering with light and sounding curiously +empty to the thunder of the band. Everybody was at his post: the tall +flunkeys stood motionless at the entrance-doors, in the promenades, as if +the audience had been there, whereas there was practically nobody except +Harrasford and the manager. And on the stage, which had been cleared of +every superfluous piece of property, splendid order reigned: the +scene-shifters, up above, had their hands on the windlasses; the two +electricians, on their perches, turned the lime-light where it was to +fall; the drops rose and fell without a hitch; the scenes slipped into +their places, shifted, in the English fashion, by one man. For each turn +on the stage, the next was ready to come on, no more; all the rest were in +the dressing-rooms. But there, behind the iron curtain, one could picture +staircases crowded with people running up and down, passages full of +light, a flurried ant-hill, and feel that a ring of bells would be enough +to bring tumbling on to the stage a whole glittering, grotesque or radiant +world of people, from the monkey-faced comedian to Lily, in her pink +tights, an image of Venus. There was electricity in the air of that empty +house, in which all felt the presence of the powerful master, harder to +please than a crowd! And rays of light ran along the stage, the back-drop +seemed a cloud ready to split in the crash of the thunder, under the storm +of the raging brasses. On the stage, the turns defiled in their order, +under the shimmering lights: the Bambinis, brother and sister, supple +grace and strength combined, filled the huge space with the free play of +their rosy bodies and the brightness of their genuine gaiety. The Three +Graces formed the human cluster, a hanging group of faces, figures, +shoulders and glorious lines. The program poured out laughter, harmony, +beauty, till, against the blue forest, came the scarlet step-dances of the +Roofers. And then silence: the feature of the evening, the aerobike! There +was a moment's anxiety. A net was stretched above the stalls, from the +footlights to the opening in the roof. For the audience, at any rate, all +danger was removed, even in case of a fall. Then the glass dome above +opened, and the curtain rose on the Elysian glimmer of a scene studded +with stars; and everything was empty, stage and auditorium. The distance +seemed immense: "miles and miles!" The machine was to start out suddenly, +rush through space, disappear up above, like a meteor that shoots out from +infinity and returns to it. + +A few seconds passed, during which Jimmy gave Lily her last instructions: + +"You're not afraid, Lily? Would you like me to do it?" + +Afraid! She turned her calm face to him. Oh, she could have accomplished +impossible and cruel things, braved torture, walked on burning coals! She +felt herself made of supple steel, unerring and exact: + +"Up, quick, quick! Ready, Jimmy?" + +"Ready!" + +"Then ... GO!" + +The aerobike flashed like an arrow from the bow, raised itself with a +magnificent jerk; the propeller hummed like a thunder-bolt, the wings +rustled in flight, pointed toward the opening, went up ... up ... up ... +disappeared in the star-strewn sky.... It was done! The band struck up the +triumphal march, Harrasford, the manager, the few who were present all +burst into cheers; and, suddenly, over the house plunged in darkness, from +the back of the stage, came a burst of light. Lily, after running over the +roof and sliding down the pulley, was descending against the blue +back-drop, bringing with her the star! First, one saw the light breaking, +then swelling and increasing in brilliancy, and Lily appeared, a starry +Eve, holding, in her upraised hand, a dazzling luminary, a crystal globe, +which an invisible wire from behind filled with an intensity of light. And +powerful rays shot to every side, end-of-the-world coruscations, above the +crater of the orchestra. + +"Splendid!" cried Harrasford. "That dishes the waterspouts at the +Hippodrome, the avalanches, everything!" And, as Jimmy came up, "Good boy, +Jimmy!" he said, catching him a great smack on the shoulder by way of a +compliment. "And your girl ... your ... Maggy ... your ... what's her +name? Lily ... glorious! Very good indeed! Couldn't be better! Capital +idea!" + +He gave a quick glance at his watch, a few words to Jimmy, to the manager, +over his shoulder, on the wing: + +"All the boxes booked three weeks ahead? All the stalls? That's right! +Good-by, good luck!" + +Already his broad back was disappearing through the door; had to catch the +midnight train for Cologne; presence indispensable. + +"Telephone to-morrow; let me know how things go. Ta-ta!" + +And Harrasford was far away. + +And Lily? Lily was in her dressing-room, stupefied with delight. How soon +it was done! How simple it was! Jimmy, after all, with his scrawls and his +scribbles, with his brain-work: what a discovery he had made! She would +have liked it to last for ever, the flight on the aerobike; she still +seemed to be rushing up to the stars, to feel the coolness of the night on +her face. How funny it was, going up, up, up and out through that hole. +She was still laughing at it, with little convulsive movements of the +shoulders, and stammering out things. + +When she was dressed, she received Jimmy's congratulations and +everybody's. They gave her a bouquet: + +"To our little favorite!" + +She answered, without knowing what she said; went home. Everything seemed +to be turning round and round. She ate a few mouthfuls, washed down with a +glass of milk; and then, suddenly, made a rush for Glass-Eye! A pillow +fight followed: + +"Here, take that! Take that! And that! And that!" + +Ten minutes of an epic struggle, on the bed thrown into confusion and +disorder, as after a murder; huge slaps on the firm, rounded forms; virile +smackings; and Glass-Eye, breathlessly, had to own herself beaten, to beg +for mercy. + +"That'll teach them!" cried Lily, falling on the bed, panting, drunk with +joy, drunk with joy! Trampy, Mexico, Ma's insults, the jealousies, the +grudges, Daisy, the fat freaks: pooh, none of that existed for her! +Nothing remained but herself, drunk with an immense joy! She was almost +delirious, in the excess of her great happiness: + +"I'll smash up their damned troupes, do you hear, Glass-Eye? There! Like +that!" And she tried to renew the fight, but her strength failed her. +"Dished and done for, their damned troupes!" + +And she laughed, she burst with laughing, when she thought of their +eighteen feet of stage: + +"Stages as big as my hand, Glass-Eye, is what they've got to turn in!" + +Whereas, she went straight up in the air, up to the stars, miles high, up +above everything! Bang! A smack for Glass-Eye, who was just taking off her +skirt! + +"And I say, Glass-Eye! Ma, who said that I ... you know what she said! But +wait till they see me in my grand dresses! I'll order them to-morrow; and +my hats too. And I'll invite Pa and Ma to the hotel! And we'll drink +champagne and I'll have fifty francs' worth of flowers on the table, just +to show them! 'Our Lily,' that's what I'm going to be, 'our own Lily,' +damn it!" + +Lily, when she was in bed, turned things over and over in her brain. Yes, +her Pa was quite right. It was for her good, for her own good! Big +salaries, which would all belong to her! And no more performing-dog +toques, but big hats and feathers and motor-cars and furs, but no goggles! +No, she must find something that wouldn't hide her face, so that people +would recognize her and say: + +"That's Lily!" + +And the road behind her motor would be strewn with the bodies of pros who +had died of jealousy! + +And she would consult Pa and Ma on the color of her liveries, on her +crest: a wheel, with wings to it! And Lily dropped off into a sleep +interrupted by awful nightmares, in which Ma was dead--poor Ma!--before +witnessing her triumph--and in which elephants trumpeted in her honor and +sea-lions applauded her with their finny fore-paws, all along a queer sort +of Tottenham Court Road, paved with fat freaks, at the end of which a +Horse Shoe, as big as the Marble Arch, opened out upon the stars. + +Poor Glass-Eye, on her side, had the most outlandish dreams. Her brain was +turned from living in the midst of all that. She dreamed that she was +flying, too; that she was Lily in her turn; that she was soaring over +Whitechapel; but, from time to time, a nervous kick from Lily recalled her +to the realities of life. + + * * * * * + +"Glass-Eye! There's a knock at the door, I think. Or else I'm dreaming. +What's the time? Ten o'clock. Get up, Glass-Eye! If it's the landlady, +tell her I'll pay her next week!" + +But Glass-Eye, who had gone to the door, shut it suddenly and came back to +Lily, looking quite startled: + +"Miss Lily, there's some one, all in black, on the stairs; a ghost!" + +"If you're trying to frighten me," cried Lily, jumping out of bed, "I'll +knock your other eye out! Take care!" + +She was choking with excitement. Lily was afraid of nothing. But those +confounded ghosts: poor Ma, perhaps! And she quickly separated two fingers +wide behind her back, so as to be on the safe side and ward off ill-luck: + +"Come with me, Glass-Eye; you go first!" + +And Lily, in her night-dress, half-opened the door, looked out. + +A thin woman, all in black, stood motionless. It was not Ma. Lily breathed +more freely: + +"What do you want?" she asked. + +"I want to speak to Miss Lily," said the woman in black. "I went to the +theater and they gave me your address. I came.... I suppose you don't +remember me, it's so long ago. Ave Maria, on the wire in Mexico?" + +"Ave Maria! Come in," said Lily. + +Ave Maria, whom she had sought for so long. She would know at last! Oh, if +it were true! God grant that it might be true! Lily, hardly recovered from +her fright, quivered at the thought. And she devoured Ave Maria with her +eyes. She recognized her, now that she knew: it was she indeed, but grown +old before her time, looking wretched, thin, hollow-eyed, a face all skin +and bone. And the two stood contemplating each other in silence. + +"How pretty you've grown!" whispered Ave Maria timidly. "No one would take +you for a professional." + +But a sudden fit of coughing brought scarlet patches to her pale cheeks. + +"It catches me here," she said, pressing her hand to her chest. "It's +damp, sometimes, in the tent. And then half-naked on those trestles. The +work warms one, it's true. The other night I saw some one who knew you, a +gentleman. I should have liked to ask him more, but my brother struck him +in the face. I got my turn after. However, I wanted to see you. I went to +the Astrarium. I asked them." + +"Go on," said Lily, who was burning to know, but did not want to show it. +"Glass-Eye, give me my dressing-gown. Go on, please!" + +"I don't know that I dare," said Ave Maria, "now that I have seen you. You +are so much better-looking than I am. Are you still living with him?" she +asked, in a low voice, fixing two fiery eyes on Lily. + +"No," said Lily, "I am living with nobody!" + +"But they told me. I heard at Buenos Ayres ... the story of the whippings, +your running away with him...." + +"What whippings? And I'm living with nobody!" retorted Lily, very +haughtily. + +"But you have lived with him ... in Germany ... Trampy, you know." + +"No," said Lily, "I was married, wasn't I, Glass-Eye?" + +"But _I'm_ married to him!" Ave Maria broke in, more aggressively than +before. + +"Oh, if it were true!" thought Lily. "Oh, if it were true!" + +She dared not believe it, it would have been too beautiful, beautiful +beyond dreams. And, with her nerves stretching to breaking-point: + +"Prove it!" she said coldly, to Ave Maria. + +"Yes, I have my proofs," replied Ave Maria, shaken with a furious cough. +"And I'll show them! Trampy belongs to me, not to you! He's in Paris, they +tell me.... And I mean to have him, do you hear? I've suffered enough and +to spare. I've done everything since he left me. Look here, at Caracas +people used to offer me twopence to let them black my eye, sometimes, when +my brother was locked up at the police-station. And there were the +one-horse circuses where we slept in a heap on the straw, in Chili or some +such country. And, sometimes, I lost my balance on the wire, because of my +cough. And my brother: you know him! And the cattle-men, when they're +drunk! One of them stabbed me here, with a knife, there, here, in the +breast; they had to cut it off--the breast--later, at Montevideo, because +of the gangrene. Yes, he stabbed me with a knife, because I wouldn't say, +'I love you,' to him! Fancy my saying, 'I love you,' to any one but +Trampy! Never! I would have let them jump on my chest with their hobnailed +boots first! And, now that Trampy's here, I want him! He belongs to me and +I mean to have him." + +"Well, take him, if he belongs to you!" said Lily. "I don't care a hang +for your Trampy; I've turned him out long ago!" + +"So ... it's true? If he's no longer with you, I can have him again. I +shall have him! I'll have my brother locked up, if necessary, to be free! +I have only to say a word, not because of the story of that nose which he +bit off at Rio: no, the other day, at Vaugirard, he used the knife. I'll +tell everything, to have my Trampy back." + +And her rough voice became gentle now, in her Anglo-Italian jargon, with a +dash of Spanish in it; everything became clear, everything yielded before +the violence of that fierce love. Lily was astounded to hear it: + +"That's what I call love!" she thought. "I had no idea, my! And all for +Trampy! It's worse than in the novels." + +And she was touched, in spite of herself, and, when Ave Maria cried, "Oh, +how happy you must be, if he loves you!" Lily dared not protest that she +didn't care a hang for that soaker, for fear of hurting the poor martyr. +She replied, on the contrary, that Trampy was very nice, but that he was +hers no longer, that he belonged to Ave Maria, since Ave Maria had the +proofs ... _if_ she had the proofs. + +"I have them here, Miss Lily, my marriage-lines. I was able to get them, +after he went. I had the certificate witnessed. My brother, when he came +to fetch me, never knew about it. I sewed it into the lining of a +portmanteau; no chance of losing it: here it is." + +And she produced a yellow document from her bodice and laid it on the +table. + +Lily seized upon it ... read it at a glance ... it was quite regular! Oh, +the footy rotter! Two wives! To say nothing of his thirty-six girls! And +what a fine trick she would play him! At last, she was about to get rid of +her festering sore! She could not breathe for happiness. And, as Ave Maria +was watching her movements, lest she should keep the paper, Lily handed it +back to her, certain that it was in good hands, that it would not be +lost. + +Then and there an idea came to her. Trampy would be at the theater that +afternoon with Tom, who, knowing little about all these stories, +interested only in the condition of those biceps of his, had taken Trampy +as his assistant and had told Lily so. And Lily had said nothing, +reserving to herself the right to have him turned off the stage by Jimmy, +with a smack in the eye, before everybody: the footy rotter, coming there +to defy her! Well, there would be no smack in the eye; she would simply +hand him over to Ave Maria, as one flings a lump of carrion to a tigress! + +"Wait a bit, you faithful husband!" she growled. "You'll see, presently!" + +And, first of all, when Ave Maria rose to go, Lily forbade her to do +anything of the kind, for fear that the brother, who must be out looking +for her, might drag her back to the booth at the fair and then take the +first train to some other place, after getting hold of the Bambinis. And +Lily meant none of all this to take place; she would rather go to the +police and have the brute arrested! + +"Stay here, Ave Maria," she said. "I'll give you back your Trampy this +afternoon." + +Oh, if she had been alone, how she would have flown at Glass-Eye, to work +off her superabundant joy! It would have been a merciless fight, with +slaps in the Mexican style! But a lady receiving her friends must set a +good example. She contented herself with hustling Glass-Eye by word and +gesture: + +"My new dress! My big hat!" + +Ave Maria, quite taken up with the excitement of seeing Trampy again, of +having him back again, left herself in Lily's hands. She felt as if she +were looking at a princess, when Lily made Glass-Eye spin round the room. +She could not even help smiling when she saw Glass-Eye catch her foot in +the dresses spread out on the floor, so much so that Lily asked her +angrily if she meant to go on hopping about like that for ever, if she +really wanted to have a candle lit in her glass eye to make her see that +bodice, there, right in front of her nose, damn it! And Glass-Eye's +fright, when she heard that ... though Glass-Eye was never surprised at +anything that Lily said or did! + +Going to the Astrarium, Lily, followed by Glass-Eye, walked along the +street with her cheeky feather waving like a flag in battle. Ave Maria, by +her side, kept close to the wall, with frightened glances to right and +left; Lily did not call her attention to the Astrarium posters for fear of +humiliating her: she would have had to explain that she was topping the +bill and poor Ave Maria, who was starring at the fair, would never have +understood. A professional abyss separated the two of them. Lily saw this +and had too kind a heart to let the other feel it. What a difference +between them! Merely in the way in which Lily entered the theater and +smiled to the stage-doorkeeper! Ave Maria followed very timidly, like a +beggar-woman stealing into a palace. She felt out of her element in those +big theaters, where she had not appeared for ever so long, having come +down to the level of one-horse circuses, patched canvas tents, acrobatic +performances in the open air, on the slack-wire stretched from tree to +tree. Lily looked a princess beside her, really. Ave Maria was even +surprised to see her address a gentleman who was there: it was the +architect, with a bandage over his eye. Ave Maria recognized him; and he, +rendered prudent by the blow which he had received from "her man," stepped +back instinctively at the sight of her. But Lily caught him by the lapel +of his coat: + +"You've been fooling me ... with your measurements," she said, "and there +are certain things that jossers oughtn't to meddle with; and it serves you +right, that black eye of yours; but I forgive you, because of the immense +service you're doing me ... without knowing it ... you lover of +second-rate goods!" she muttered, as she watched him slink off, taking her +forgiveness with him. + +The stage was almost empty. Tom had come, not Trampy; so much the better, +there would be all the more there presently, for the great scene! + +"Wait for me a minute," she said to Ave Maria. "Sit down over there, in +the corner." + +And Lily went up to her dressing-room; she wanted to look her best, to +bedizen herself ... a little red on her lips, a little blue on her eyelids +... to make Trampy regret the more what he was going to lose. And, when +she was ready, Jimmy passed and, icicle though he was, could not help +paying her a compliment on her good looks. He appeared quite +disconcerted: + +"Just imagine, Lily. What do you think happened to me, in the +impersonator's dressing-room? I had something to say to him ... I walk in +... see the impersonator half undressed ... and it's a woman, Lily, a +magnificent woman! You never told me, you kiddie!" + +"Hush!" said Lily. "Don't give her away; it's a secret, it's her living, +Jimmy." + +"Don't be afraid, Lily, I won't prevent any one from earning her living, +as long as she does all right on the stage. But I don't know where I am +now. That woman who came in with you, for instance," continued Jimmy +jestingly, "she looks just like a man; there's no knowing; nothing would +surprise me after that!" + +"She's a woman, Jimmy, a married woman! You'll see presently. We'll have a +good laugh; mind you're there! I want everybody to be there! It's a +surprise, Jimmy!" + +What a kiddie she was, thought Jimmy, as he went down the stairs. The +architect, the impersonator: the two scandals of her life. That +impersonator whom she kissed in front of him, a story that had gone round +the world, Lily's love affairs, one more ready to leave wife and children +for her sake: the exaggeration of the stage, always; professional +boasting. Like the story of the whippings, like those girls whom she had +described to him, and herself, with all over her skin--"Here, here, damn +it!"--wounds that you could put your finger into. Or like those who were +said to be done for, or burned alive, or drowned in shipwrecks, with waves +miles high, all for the honor of the profession; when, perhaps, it was +simply as good a way as another of retiring from the stage, to get +married, with a flourish of trumpets! It wasn't true, all that, or their +parade of vice either, all humbug, from end to end, their amorous +conquests, their orgies, their escapades, like their ostrich-feathers, +that long, or their sham diamonds, that big, and bouquets large enough to +fill a cab. But they were decent-hearted girls, all the same: that Lily, +what a kiddie, thought Jimmy, feeling quite comforted, quite glad on her +account. + +And just then, as luck would have it, he met Tom, to whom Glass-Eye had +brought Miss Lily's album, with a request for his autograph. Tom, whose +formidable muscles were hardly capable of wielding a pen, especially to +write "thoughts," was holding the album with a sheepish look, turning it +round and round: + +"I say," he said, as Jimmy passed, "write something; for me!" + +"All right!" said Jimmy. + +And he lightly turned the pages of the album, the famous album, said to be +crammed with passionate declarations. Not a bit of it! Nothing but foolery +and childish nonsense: + + "May joy and pleasure be your lot + . . . trot, trot, trot!" + + "... Regard me as a link. + Loving Pal." + +"_Un afetuoso saludo y un augurio de feliz viaje le desea Pedro y +Paolo_." + + "Hoping we shall meet again, if not here, there. + + "Joe Brooks." + +"_Puedo decir que nunca he visto yoo ... tan cuida y bella_...." + +There was page upon page, in this style, with, here and there, a rough +sketch: a heart pierced by an arrow, signed, "Castaigne;" a dried +shamrock: "Blarney Castle;" a bit of seaweed: "Dundee." Jimmy smiled to +himself and especially at what he heard beside him, where Glass-Eye, while +gazing wide-eyed at Tom's immense arms, was telling him all her troubles: +quite mad, Miss Lily, ought to be locked up! And _she_ ought to know: +never left her side since she began traveling by herself, day or night. + +"You're a lucky one, you are!" Tom broke in. + +"I should like to see you try it, just!" Glass-Eye retorted. "And meantime +I get more smacks than halfpence. Oh, I know she'll pay me all in a lump, +when she gets it! She's very generous, really. And her Pa and Ma ... yes +... do you know what she means to do? She's not angry with them any +longer. She's going to stuff them with turkey and pudding at the hotel and +stand them fifty francs' worth of flowers. She's forgiven them!" + +"That's more than I have!" replied Tom. "Her Pa will know what I am made +of to-morrow, the brute! He'll have one on the mug, for boxing my ears and +kicking me out ... you know ... because of the letters from Trampy." + +"If you do that, Tom, you'll have Miss Lily to reckon with! What! You're +laughing!" cried Glass-Eye angrily. "You don't know how it hurts ... on +one's bones! And those pillow-fights: I've had my nose smashed in one of +them before now! Nothing surprises me that Miss Lily says or does. Why, +this very morning, she wanted to put a lighted candle in my glass eye!" + +"Eh, what? A light in your eye?" exclaimed Tom suddenly. "I wonder if one +really could ... I say, Jimmy, could one?" + +"Yes," said Jimmy, greatly amused, "with an invisible wire under the +dress...." + +"Hurrah!" cried Tom. "Would you like two shillings a day, Glass-Eye? And +your food and clothes? You shall travel with me; you shall appear on the +stage. Come along to the cafe, we'll sign the engagement!" + +"But what will Miss Lily say?" objected Glass-Eye, trembling at the idea +of announcing her departure to her terrible mistress. + +"Well," said Tom, "I'll be nice to her Pa, if she's nice to you. Come +along!" + +"But I don't know how to sign my name." + +"You can make your mark, before two witnesses. Come along!" + +Glass-Eye, dazzled and beglamored, followed Tom. She, an artiste! On the +stage! At last! Going round the world with Tom ... living with him ... +married ... almost! + +"That's come in the nick of time!" said Jimmy, as he watched her go off +the stage. "Lily, perhaps ... in her new position ... will want a real +maid, not a Glass-Eye! Lily ... why, she's perfection! To think of the +abysses she has walked along without falling! There's more merit than one +thinks in that kind of life. And how I should like to get hold of the +people who talk ill of her. And that ... that ... oh, that one!" + +And Jimmy clenched his fists, at the thought of Trampy, and his heart +burst forth: all his patient, brave, manly heart, now well nigh +exhausted. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + + +Poor Ave Maria, indifferent to what was going on before her, was still +waiting on the stage. For that matter, it was but a few minutes since Lily +brought her there. Ave Maria felt inclined to go and meet Trampy on the +pavement, to throw her arms round his neck as soon as he appeared. But +Lily had earnestly recommended her not to move, whatever happened. So she +remained in her corner and, under the pale light, with her back to the +forest scene, in the shadow, Ave Maria looked like a lurking she-wolf, +ready to leap out at any moment. + +[Illustration: AVE MARIA] + +As for Lily, she tripped down the stairs to the stage, for a few seconds +contemplated all those bill-toppers at her feet, so to speak; but she took +the last stairs at a bound: Trampy had just entered! Ave Maria, in her +corner, behind the pillars and the confused heap of scenery, could not see +him. Lily preferred that. She would manage everything her own way and get +rid of him once and for all ... get rid of that footy rotter who had come +there to jeer at her. He stepped along, with his hat on one side and a +dead cigar between his teeth. Trampy, broken, diseased, done for, was +jubilant for all that; turned his broad smile from girl to girl, winked +his eye gaily at the Roofers, who drew back in disgust, and, with +outstretched hand: + +"How d'you do, Lily? How's my dear little wife?" + +He enjoyed the humiliation which he was inflicting upon her, would have +liked his clothes to be still shabbier, his shoes more down at heel, so +that he might thoroughly disgrace his dear little wife--that great +bill-topper, who was leaving the pink of husbands in such a state of +destitution. And he threw out his chest, increased his familiarities, and +even pretended to kiss her, pushed his blotched and pimpled mug close to +that charming face. Jimmy gave a bound: Trampy! On the stage! Lily's +tormentor! Jimmy, pale with fury, walked up to him, stiff-armed, ready to +break the jaw of that thief in the night and chuck him into the street, +without more words! But Lily stopped him with a quick gesture: + +"Why, Jimmy," she said, "would you keep a man from earning his living? Do +you find fault with a husband for loving his little wife? I am your little +wife, am I not?" she continued, tantalizing Trampy with her peach-like +cheek, tickling his nose with her fair curls. "Don't you deserve a dear +little wife?" + +"Why, of course I do!" Trampy agreed, surprised, all the same, at this +loving reception from his dear little wife. + +"There!" cried Lily, unable to restrain herself any longer and giving him +a box on the ears. "That'll teach you to call me your little wife, you +damned tramp cyclist! I've never been your little wife. I'll show you your +little wife, the real one. Come along, Ave Maria! Here's Trampy!" + +"Eh, what?" said Trampy, turning color. "Ave Maria? I don't know any Ave +Maria." + +But already Ave Maria was upon him, pressing him in her arms: her Trampy! +And her cough brought pink-red patches to her hectic cheeks. + +"What's this mean? I don't know you," he stammered, gazing horror-stricken +at this old, lean woman, who was taking possession of him before +everybody, taking possession of him who cared only for plump little +things, sultan that he was. "I don't know her, I don't know her!" + +"Here!" cried Lily, snatching the paper from Ave Maria's bodice. "Do you +know that? Can you read? Now will you deny that she's your wife ... your +wife ... your wife?" she repeated, rejoicing in being able to hurl the +word to Trampy, who turned pale with fright. + +"We'll try and arrange it," whispered Jimmy, still hardly recovered from +his surprise. "A divorce in Lily's favor first! She'll dictate your answer +for you; you've only got to say yes to everything. And then you can be off +somewhere; to West Australia. I'll pay your expenses. And don't you ever +dare to show your face again! Never! Do you understand?" + +"And that'll teach you to make little of people!" cried Lily. "Let's drink +to the health of Trampy, the faithful husband! I'll stand champagne all +round to the health of good old Trampy and his dear little wife!" + +But, without waiting for the champagne, already Ave Maria was dragging +Trampy to the door and the Roofer girls gave him a triumphal exit. They +sent him to Halifax, they sent him to Coventry. They flourished things at +his head, amid an uproar of jolly hootings, and took aim at him--"Ping! +Ping!"--and pinched him, as the Merry Wives did Falstaff in Windsor +Forest. And they slipped off their shoes in honor of his wedding, by Jove! +And Trampy fled under a shower of boots and slippers, fled like mad, as +though the devil were after him. + +Jimmy did not know if he was on his head or his heels for joy: + +"I'll stand the champagne!" he said. "To Miss Lily's health!" + +So much had happened in those few minutes: Lily free again ... and no +scandal ... the divorce assured ... Trampy admitting his misdeeds, +inventing them, if necessary, confessing anything they asked him to, as +long as they did not mention bigamy.... Jimmy, had it been possible, would +have offered a general picnic to the whole company. He, usually so calm, +felt inclined to sing, to laugh. Never would he have dared to hope.... And +it had all come so simply, like the things that are bound to happen. Lily +was free! + +"Bring the bottles up here," he said to the call-boy, "and biscuits and +cakes. We'll drink it here! We'll christen the stage, as if we were +launching a ship ... in champagne, here, by ourselves! among ourselves! +Here's to the stage-manager! Here's to all of us!" + +Lily, happy as happy could be, shook everybody by the hand, distributed a +"'K you" here and a "'K you" there. She would have liked to have Glass-Eye +by her side, to keep her in countenance, open her bag, give her her +handkerchief ... liked to be a little lady who can't do without her maid +... but, damn it, where was Glass-Eye? And Lily clenched her fist when she +saw her return with cakes in her hands, escorted by Tom, who helped to +carry the champagne. + +"Where have you been, Glass-Eye?" asked Lily severely. "What have you been +doing with Tom? Give me my handkerchief, Glass-Eye." + +"Here's your bag, Miss Lily," said Glass-Eye excitedly. "I'm going to +leave you, Miss Lily." + +"What for?" said Lily, feeling vexed. "Because I owe you a few little +things?" + +"Oh, no, not that! I'm going to be a star, too; on my hands: Demon Maud, +the lady with the flaming eye; a candle in my glass eye ... before two +witnesses ... I made my mark at the bottom." + +"She's drunk!" cried Lily, utterly dumfounded. "Or else she's going mad. +Jimmy! Tom! Glass-Eye's going mad!" + +But, when Tom had explained, Lily approved. Glass-Eye wasn't stupid, +really; very intelligent, though you'd never think it. Glad to see her +engaged.... And she shook her by the hand, like an old friend and comrade, +glad to hear of the success of others ... among artistes.... + +And, suddenly, with head thrown back, full-throated, her feather nodding +hysterically on her head, Lily laughed ... laughed ... laughed! + +Maud an artiste! On her hands! A candle in her eye! One fat freak the more +on the stage! Gee, they must drink to Glass-Eye's health: Glass-Eye, the +bill-topper! + +They were all laughing now, filling their glasses at a table in the middle +of the stage, eating cakes, amusing themselves with the corks, which went +pop, like toy guns, and applauding with their thumb-nails. To the +Astrarium! And long live jollity! That night, they would one and all risk +their skins. They were like soldiers drinking to their sweethearts, in the +trenches, before the battle. And everything promised well; already a +legend was forming among the painted faces: the booking office besieged; +ladies and gentlemen in motors; motors in a row, miles and miles of +motors; the street bursting with people who had come to book seats! And +champagne on the stage, cakes, my, for the asking! An orgy which would +start its trip around the world to-morrow, with those few bottles +transformed into a Niagara of champagne, enough to flood every greenroom +from the Klondike to Calcutta! + +They all enjoyed themselves and let themselves go. And the Roofers, who +worshiped Lily, in spite of her abominable tricks, raised their glasses to +her health, crowded round her, smiled merrily at her with their white +teeth, congratulated her for sending that footy rotter packing: + +"Here's to Miss Lily! And a round on the thumbnail in honor of Miss +Lily!" + +This christening of the Astrarium was turning into a triumph for her; and +there was the evening to come ... the evening! It made her forget Trampy, +Jimmy, Glass-Eye, everybody. And ... the next day ... her Pa, her Ma, the +New Trickers would be at her feet! Oh, she would give ten years of her +life if to-morrow could be there now! + +And the evening came. Lily did not leave the theater. She walked nervously +from her dressing-room to the stage, inspected the final operations, +interested herself in everything, stopped the boy-violinist, who was +crossing the stage with the other members of the band, congratulated him +on his approaching marriage with one of the Graces. She talked to the +artistes going up to their dressing-rooms, bestowed a smile upon Jimmy, +another on the stage-manager, joked with the limelight-men working their +apparatus on either side of the stage. The footlights lit up with a row of +flames, the storm approached. There was a ringing of electric +bells--"Ting! Ting! Ting!"--as in the machine-room of a ship before the +tempest; the orchestra roared; and, as though at a thunder-clap, the +velvet curtain split asunder: Patti-Patty was revealed on the stage, while +the band played as if possessed. Lily, in the shadow of the wings, put her +hand to her heart; her veins were ablaze. And that audience, at which she +peeped through a crack in the scenery; that audience was hers, with its +rustling silks, its bare shoulders, its diamonds, its flowers! She would +have liked to step forward, to say: + +"Here I am!" + +She felt herself excited by a curious feeling; an aggressive mood, which, +no doubt, came from all the healths she had drunk: to the Astrarium, to +this one, to that one, to all of us! Gee, what fun it had been: champagne, +cakes, my, tons of cakes! And Lily, who had long been unused to any such +excess, felt her head splitting. A fever seemed also to reign all over the +dressing-rooms and passages. They talked of front boxes reserved at a +thousand francs by the Aero Club; stalls at fifty francs; every seat in +the house filled; and the best people, nothing but the best! Lily, in her +exalted condition, took it that they had all come for her; and she had to +dazzle them all! And soar above them all! To a hurricane of applause from +"her favorite audience," the Astrarium audience, on a first night! + +And she felt so gay that she was not angry when Glass-Eye asked her, now +that _she_ was an artiste, too, to teach her her stage-smile. + +"Why, of course, Glass-Eye! I owe you that, to say nothing of the rest! +But you won't lose by waiting! Take my word for it: among friends, you +know!..." + +And she kissed her maid, felt inclined to cry, became quite sentimental at +her going.... + +She was less amiable to Nunkie, who was prowling around near her. Oh, how +angry she felt with that old rogue! Because of Thea, first of all; and +then it was he who gave her away, not Jimmy! Tom had told her. Nunkie +mumbled something to her: his dear girls; ungrateful creatures who were +leaving him! His poor life shattered! His pigeons, he had his pigeons +left; yes, and his home; but what was that compared with loving hearts? +And, as she was on such good terms with Jimmy and everybody, couldn't she +use her influence? Oh, if he could have the Bambinis, be appointed their +guardian! "He would bring together such a nice little family troupe: all +the joys of home! + +"You old wretch!" cried Lily, in a threatening voice. "Just go and look, +at the corner of Oxford Street and Newman Street, if you can see me! You +old snaky! You old bromide merchant! Hiding letters, too, you +nigger-driving humbug! Oh, you're sure to get the Bambinis, I _don't_ +think!" + +"_Ver-r-rdammt_!" + +Nunkie turned on his heel, shaking the passage with tremendous oaths. + +"I thought," Lily shot at him from behind sarcastically, "I thought one +ought never to swear! It's wicked to swear, Mr. Fuchs!" + +In her dressing-room, she went on laughing at Nunkie and his +"_Donner-r-r-wetter-r-r_!" and his "_S-s-satan_! _S-s-satan_!" It made her +comb her hair all awry and apply the grease-paint to her cheeks with a +trembling hand. She felt a buzzing in her head: that confounded music +which seemed to come from everywhere and hissed in her ears! But, when her +turn came, she'd show them! Never had she felt so light. She was sure of +herself, strangely sure. It seemed to her that, if need be, she'd have +shot up to the stars, damn it! + +As soon as she was ready, she went down to the stage. She didn't know why. +It was her wish to be everywhere, her craving for movement. The aerobike +had been taken from its cage, behind the back-drop; the stage-manager, +Jimmy and Jimmy's assistants were standing round it. Jimmy was testing +everything, for the last time, making sure that there would be no hitch: + +"Hullo, Lily!" he said, when he saw her. "Are you ready?" + +"Ready?" said Lily. "Look!" + +And she flung back her wrap with her two bare arms and stood, a figure all +charm and grace, with youth, joy and courage sparkling in her eyes. In the +mysterious half-light, amid the endless sounds from the band, Lily seemed +to shed rays. Jimmy, dazzled, looked at that dainty form, that delicate +breast, those rounded shoulders, that splendid body fashioned by years of +Spartan life, each muscle of which was quivering with enthusiasm. And she +laughed ... laughed ... head thrown back, full-throated; told the story of +Nunkie, with furious gestures, as though she were strangling the old +beast. And then came sudden displays of feeling, for the Three Graces and +the Bambinis. + +Jimmy had never seen her like that. The stage-manager also thought her +queer, for he looked at Jimmy as though to ask what on earth was the +matter with her. And, going up to him, he said: + +"Look how she's trembling! One would think she had a fever." + +"It's quite true," said Jimmy. + +And the two stared at each other in consternation when Lily, stooping to +pick up her cloak, was nearly losing her balance and coming to the ground. +They exchanged a few words in a whisper. Then the stage-manager said: + +"Go up to your dressing-room, Miss Lily. You mustn't stay here, you know. +We'll send for you when the time comes. Go and put your hair straight." + +It was only a pretext; but the same thought had passed through both their +minds: it was the champagne! Lily, who was accustomed to drink nothing but +water, was ... if not exactly drunk ... well ... + +Thereupon, in an instant, Jimmy made up his mind: it was finished and +settled, irrevocably, as though he had spent hours in reflecting. The +newspapers had expressed doubts; there had been suggestions of trickery. +An immediate, brilliant success was essential, to carry the thing off: a +hitch and all was lost and the luck of the Astrarium and his own fame +vanished in smoke! Lily was out of the question that night: she was +bubbling over at every pore with unnatural excitement ... she was not +Lily,--was not herself ... it meant certain death to her, the aerobike +smashed to pieces, the end of all things! Lily would do it to-morrow, the +next night; but not to-night. + +He had just time to go to his dressing-room and put on his white sweater, +black breeches, black stockings: an athletic costume which he always kept +at the theater in case of need. And quick, in the saddle: the moment had +come! He must succeed, now or never! And Jimmy, calm and sure of himself, +took his seat on the aerobike. A great silence followed.... + +Lily, at that very minute, anxious at not being sent for in her +dressing-room, was going back to the stage, but she was stopped at the top +of the stairs by the stage-manager, who said that he had received an order +by telephone from Cologne, from Harrasford: Lily not to perform that +night.... + +"Let me pass," cried Lily, laughing in spite of everything. "That's enough +of a joke. It's time for me to go on, I say! Are you mad? I tell you, it's +my turn!" + +But she ceased, as though struck by thunder. The aerobike, with wings wide +open, was taking flight toward the stars, in a tempestuous wind. + +It was done! The thing had shot past her very nose! She thought that she +would fall, so great was the pain at her heart. + +"No! No!" she gasped, with dilated eyes. + +And, suddenly, she understood and uttered a cry of rage! + +But she could have shouted, "Murder!" and it would have sounded as the +buzzing of a bee amid that explosion of cheers. And the orchestra grew +like a flame and the light appeared, increased and shone all over the +house. + +Lily flung herself back, closed her eyes so as not to see, fled to her +dressing-room with a shriek like a wounded beast's.... + + + + +CHAPTER V + + +She dropped into her chair, stopped up her ears; but the cheers never +ceased, kept on increasing, filled the theater with a roar as of thunder! +Oh, it seemed to her that her chest was on fire, that they were pounding +her heart; that some one was taking her by the hair and banging her head +against the walls! And that storm of applause kept on and kept on ... but +it wasn't for her! It was for Jimmy all the time: they had tried it with +her, that was all! To see if it worked! And she, she, she who, only just +now, was giving herself airs with the others: a poor rag, yes, that was +all she was, less than anybody; less than Tom, her old servant, less than +Glass-Eye, that idiot, less than Ave Maria, less than a performing dog, +less than anything, worse than anything, perhaps! Mad with rage she jumped +at her gollywog, pulled down the white-eyed idol--the traitor!--spat on +it, crushed it on the floor with her heel, furious, beside herself; and +then dropped into her chair again, with her two arms flat on the table, +her head between her arms, among the grease-paints, the powder, the +overturned box of spangles, which rolled about everywhere and strewed the +floor. She felt inclined to bite into her flesh to relieve herself, she +clenched her fists and dug her nails into her skin. Oh, she would have +liked to die, to die! It was so fierce a longing, so desperate a cry that +the force of her prayer ought to have struck her dead where she sat. And +suddenly the tears began to flow and she cried and cried, all convulsed +with sobs, floored, shipwrecked, done for. She cried and cried, as though +stupefied, saw nothing save through a thick veil of water, like a person +drowning, sinking. It seemed to her as if the tears would groove her face, +for always. Oh, what would she give to be at home, in bed! Never, never +again would she have the strength to do a thing. She was done for, buried +alive. And that coward of a Jimmy, to obey Harrasford's order! Oh, the +harm he had done her! She would rather have died smashed to a jelly on the +stage: she would have suffered less! Oh, to behave like that: to flash so +much before her eyes; and then to fling her to the ground! Oh, when she +had thought that he loved her and that she loved him also, perhaps! And +Lily cried and cried.... + + * * * * * + +Meanwhile, in front, the aerobike was receiving endless applause. The +disappearance through the opening, the plunge into space, the star +snatched from up above, that piece of theatrical symbolism filled the +audience with enthusiasm. The aerobike brought down the house, its success +surpassed all expectation, and the Astrarium was opening with a victorious +clamor. + +"Yes, but at what a cost!" said Jimmy to himself, in spite of the cheers. + +And, as soon as he was able to escape, putting off for a few minutes his +replies to the cards that poured in--the chairman of the Aero Club, +journalists begging for interviews--Jimmy had but one idea, to console +Lily for her disappointment of that evening: poor Lily! + +His heart was beating very loudly as he went to her dressing-room. Jimmy +was no longer the fellow who knew no fear. To fly away on the aerobike, to +risk his skin was easy, for him at least; but to face Lily ... to explain +to her ... with all those things seething within him ... and, oh, the pain +he was causing her! How could he approach her after that? And could he +ever get her to love him? Ah, perhaps it would have been better if he had +gone and broken his neck in the street, on the pavement! Jimmy was +trembling like a child; in his perturbation, he even forgot to knock at +the door ... turned the knob ... entered.... + +Lily heard nothing, seemed crushed into her chair, with her face buried in +her right arm folded on the table, while the left hung lifeless by her +side. Her whole attitude expressed abject misery, profound despair; she +seemed extinguished in a terrifying calmness. + +Jimmy, to attract her attention, closed the door noisily. Lily stirred no +more than a wax figure: one might have thought her dead. + +He shivered; and, stepping forward, leaning over to her, anxiously, he +placed his hand on her shoulder. + +It was like a spring that is suddenly released! Lily threw up her +sorrow-stricken face, down which the tears, mingling with the red paint, +flowed like blood, looked at him for a few seconds with a wandering air +and then leaped at him, as though she meant to bite him in the face; but +her lips shriveled up in silence, nothing came from them; and she crushed +Jimmy with an unspeakable look of terror and contempt. + +Jimmy did not flinch: + +"You must not be angry with me," he said gently. "I was bound to do it, +Lily; I had to save the theater." + +"And get rid of me!" cried Lily, wild-haired, hard-eyed, hoarse-throated, +with the tears drying on her red-hot cheeks. + +Jimmy was pale as death. Ah, all his dreams, too, were fading away! + +"Lily," he said, in a voice which he strove to make firm, but which +trembled with emotion. "I have done my duty to everybody, yourself +included! But for me, you would be lying dead at this minute and the +Astrarium would be ruined. You were not in a state to appear in public ... +this evening ... believe me, Lily. The stage-manager himself...." + +Lily lowered her head under his calm gaze.... + +"But you'll do it to-morrow," continued Jimmy, very quickly, "before Pa +and Ma! To-morrow and the following days ... and always! Your name will be +right at the top of the bill! Do you hear? To-morrow ... and always!" + +"But what...? Why...?" asked Lily, as though stupefied. + +"Poor Lily," he replied, gently raising that face all distorted with +grief. "Poor little Lily! I have caused you a heap of pain." + +Lily, for her sole answer, gave a convulsive sob; a tear leaped to her +eyelids. + +"Don't cry," whispered Jimmy, "don't cry any more. It will be your turn +to-morrow, before the New Trickers. To-morrow! Every night!" + +"Every night?" asked Lily, still incredulous and yet transfigured with +hope. "You're saying that, Jimmy; but...." + +"Do you doubt my word, Lily?" he replied, pressing her gently to him. +"What, I, your best friend, your only friend ... I who ... haven't I +always loved you, Lily? Do you think I've changed?... I love you more than +ever I did! I will explain everything later. And you doubt me ... who +would give my life for you; yes, life without you means nothing to me," +continued Jimmy, in a stifled voice and clasping Lily in his arms. + +Lily quivered in his embrace, hid her blushing features on his breast, +where she heard great dull throbs. She trembled from head to foot. Her +quickened senses seemed to perceive everything now; the passing +indisposition from which she had suffered, without knowing it, the light +fumes of the champagne: all that had suddenly gone, was far away; she had +never felt more lucid; she saw, she understood and was overcome with +delight, overcome with a delight beside which her enthusiasm of the +previous day seemed dark and dreary. The ardor of her eighteen years +swelled her breast. Success, in any case! To-morrow! And that man was +hers, that heart was hers! It was a dream, an enchantment! Her head rolled +back, a smile drew up her lips, her eyes, through her tangled curls, +seemed all ablaze. Jimmy bent his glowing face over her. Lily, on the +point of swooning, raised her lips to his. + +Vanished around them the low ceiling, the scratched walls, the shabby +rags. Standing on the wretched spangles that strewed the dusty floor, +Lily, drunk with joy ... Jimmy, distraught with pride ... seemed like +youth and love, in mid-sky, among the stars! + +CURTAIN + +[Illustration: Lily quivered in his embrace.] + +------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Popular Copyright Books +AT MODERATE PRICES + +Any of the following titles can be bought of your +bookseller at the price you paid for this volume + + +Marcaria. By Augusta J. Evans. +Mam' Linda. By Will N. Harben. +Maids of Paradise, The. By Robert W. Chambers. +Man in the Corner, The. By Baroness Orczy. +Marriage A La Mode. By Mrs. Humphry Ward. +Master Mummer, The. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. +Much Ado About Peter. By Jean Webster. +Old, Old Story, The. By Rosa N. Carey. +Pardners. By Rex Beach. +Patience of John Moreland, The. By Mary Dillon. +Paul Anthony, Christian. By Hiram W. Hays. +Prince of Sinners, A. By E. Phillips Oppenheim. +Prodigious Hickey, The. By Owen Johnson. +Red Mouse, The. By William Hamilton Osborne. +Refugees, The. By A. 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