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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Woman of Genius, by Mary Austin
-
-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: A Woman of Genius
-
-Author: Mary Austin
-
-Release Date: January 17, 2012 [EBook #38592]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WOMAN OF GENIUS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Garcia, Mary Meehan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
-book was produced from scanned images of public domain
-material from the Google Print project.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- A Woman of Genius
-
- BY MARY AUSTIN
-
-_Author of "The Land of Little Rain," "The Arrowmaker," "Isidro,"
-"Christ in Italy," etc., etc._
-
- GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
- 1912
-
- _Copyright, 1912, by_
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO.
-
- _All rights reserved, including that of
- translation into foreign languages,
- including the Scandinavian_
-
-
- TO
- LOU HENRY HOOVER
- AND SOME PLEASANT MEMORIES
- OF
- THE RED HOUSE IN HORNTON
- STREET
-
-
-
-
-
-BOOK I
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-It is strange that I can never think of writing any account of my life
-without thinking of Pauline Mills and wondering what she will say of it.
-Pauline is rather given to reading the autobiographies of distinguished
-people--unless she has left off since I disappointed her--and finding in
-them new persuasions of the fundamental lightness of her scheme of
-things. I recall very well, how, when I was having the bad time of my
-life there in Chicago, she would abound in consoling instances from one
-then appearing in the monthly magazines; skidding over the obvious
-derivation of the biographist's son from the Lord Knows Who, except that
-it wasn't from the man to whom she was legally married, to fix on the
-foolish detail of the child's tempers and woolly lambs as the
-advertisement of that true womanliness which Pauline loves to pluck from
-every feminine bush.
-
-There was also a great deal in that story about a certain other
-celebrity, for her relations to whom the writer was blackballed in a
-club of which I afterward became a member, and I think it was the things
-Pauline said about one of the rewards of genius being the privilege of
-association with such transcendent personalities on a footing which
-permitted one to call them by their first names in one's reminiscences,
-that gave me the notion of writing this book. It has struck me as
-humorous to a degree, that, in this sort of writing, the really
-important things are usually left out.
-
-I thought then of writing the life of an accomplished woman, not so much
-of the accomplishment as of the woman; and I have never been able to
-make a start at it without thinking of Pauline Mills and that curious
-social warp which obligates us most to impeach the validity of a woman's
-opinion at the points where it is most supported by experience. From the
-earliest I have been rendered highly suspicious of the social estimate
-of women, by the general social conspiracy against her telling the truth
-about herself. But, in fact, I do not think Mrs. Mills will read my
-book. Henry will read it first at his office and tell her that he'd
-rather she shouldn't, for Henry has been so successfully Paulined that
-it is quite sufficient for any statement of life to lie outside his
-wife's accepted bias, to stamp it with insidious impropriety. There is
-at times something almost heroic in the resolution with which women like
-Pauline Mills defend themselves from whatever might shift the centres of
-their complacency.
-
-But even without Pauline, it interests me greatly to undertake this
-book, of which I have said in the title as much as a phrase may of the
-scope of the undertaking, for if I know anything of genius it is wholly
-extraneous, derived, impersonal, flowing through and by. I cannot tell
-you what it is, but I hope to show you a little of how I was seized of
-it, shaped; what resistances opposed to it; what surrenders. I mean to
-put as plainly as possible how I felt it fumbling at my earlier life
-like the sea at the foot of a tidal wall, and by what rifts in the
-structure of living, its inundation rose upon me; by what practices and
-passions I was enlarged to it, and by what well meaning of my friends I
-was cramped and hardened. But of its ultimate operation once it had
-worked up through my stiff clay, of triumphs, profits, all the
-intricacies of technique, gossip of rehearsals, you shall hear next to
-nothing. This is the story of the struggle between a Genius for Tragic
-Acting and the daughter of a County Clerk, with the social ideal of
-Taylorville, Ohianna, for the villain. It is a drama in which none of
-the characters played the parts they were cast for, and invariably spoke
-from the wrong cues, which nevertheless proceeded to a successful
-dénouement. But if you are looking for anything ordinarily called plot,
-you will be disappointed. Plot is distinctly the province of fiction,
-though I've a notion there is a sort of order in my story, if one could
-look at it from the vantage of the gods, but I have never rightly made
-it out. What I mean to go about is the exploitation of the personal
-phases of genius, of which when it refers to myself you must not
-understand me to speak as of a peculiar merit, like the faculty for
-presiding at a woman's club or baking sixteen pies of a morning, which
-distinguished one Taylorvillian from another; rather as a seizure, a
-possession which overtook me unaware, like one of those insidious
-Oriental disorders which you may never die of, but can never be cured.
-You shall hear how I did successfully stave it off in my youth for the
-sake of a Working Taylor and Men's Outfitter, and was nearly intimidated
-out of it by the wife of a Chicago attorney who had something to do with
-stocks; how I was often very tired of it, and many times, especially in
-the earlier periods when I was trying to effect a compromise between it
-and the afore-mentioned Taylorvillian predilections, I should have been
-happiest to have been quit of it altogether.
-
-I shall try to have you understand that I have not undertaken to restate
-those phases of autobiography which are commonly suppressed, because of
-an exception to what the public has finally and at large concurred in,
-that it does not particularly matter what happens to the vessel of
-personality, so long as the essential fluid gets through; but from
-having gone so much farther to discover that it matters not a little to
-Genius to be so scamped and retarded. I have arrived at seeing the
-uncritical acceptance of poverty and heartbreak as essential
-accompaniments of Gift, very much of a piece with the proneness of
-Christians to regard the early martyrdoms as concomitants of faith, when
-every thinking person knows they arose in the cruelty and stupidity of
-the bystanders. Hardly any one seems to have recalled in this
-connection, that the initial Christian experience is a baptism of Joy,
-and it was only in the business of communicating it that it became
-bloody and tormenting. If you will go a little farther with me, you
-shall be made to see the miseries of genius, perhaps also the bulk of
-wretchedness everywhere, not so much the rod of inexplicable
-chastisement, as the reaction of a purblind social complacency.
-
-I shall take you at the sincerest in admitting the function of Art to be
-its re-kneading of the bread of life until it nourishes us toward
-greater achievement, as a basis for proving that much that you may be
-thinking about its processes is wrong, and most that you may have done
-for its support is beside the mark. If I have had any compunction about
-writing this book, it has been the fear that in the relation of
-incidents difficult and sordid, you might still miss the point of your
-being largely to blame for them. And even if you escape the banality of
-believing that my having lived for a week in Chicago on 85 cents was in
-any way important to my artistic development, and go so far as to
-apprehend it as it actually was, a foolish and unnecessary interference
-with my business of serving you anew with entertainment, you must go a
-little farther honestly to accept it, even when it came--this
-revitalizing fluid of which I was for the moment the vase, the cup--in
-circumstances which in the rule you live by, appear, when not actually
-reprehensible, at least ridiculous.
-
-Looking back over a series of struggles that have left me in a frame
-when no man under forty interests me very much, still within the
-possibility of personal romance, and at an age when most women have the
-affectional value of a keepsake only, the arbiter and leader of my
-world, I seem to see my life not much else but a breach in the social
-fabric, sedulously bricked up from within and battered from without,
-through which at last pours light and the fluid soul of Life. Something
-of all this I shall try to make plain to you, and incidentally how in
-the process I have perceived dimly this huge coil of social adjustment
-as a struggle _against_ the invasive forces of blessedness, the smother
-of sheep in the lanes stupidly to escape the fair pastures toward which
-a large Friendliness herds them. If you go as far as this with me, you
-shall avoid, who knows, what indirection, and that not altogether
-without entertainment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Of Taylorville, where I grew up and was married, the most distinguishing
-thing was that there was nothing to distinguish it from a hundred towns
-in Ohianna. To begin with, it was laid out about a square, and had two
-streets at right angles known as Main and Broad. Broad Street, I
-remember, ran east and west between the high school and the railway
-station, and Main Street had the Catholic cemetery on the south, and the
-tool and hoe works on the north to mark--there was no other visible
-distinction--the points at which it became country road. There were
-numerous cross streets, east and west, called after the Governors, or
-perhaps it was the Presidents, and north and south, set forth on
-official maps as avenues, taking their names from the trees with which
-they were falsely declared to be planted, though I do not recall that
-they were ever spoken of by these names except by the leading county
-paper which had its office in one corner of the square over the
-Coöperative store, was Republican in politics, and stood for Progress.
-
-The square was planted with maples; a hitching rack ran quite around it
-and was, in the number and character of the vehicles attached to it, a
-sort of public calendar for the days of the week and the seasons. On
-court days and elections, I remember, they quite filled the rack and
-overflowed to the tie-posts in front of the courthouse, which stood on
-its own ground a little off from the square, balanced on the opposite
-side by the Methodist Church. It was a perfect index to the country
-neighbourhoods that spread east and north to the flat, black corn lands,
-west to the marl and clay of the river district, and south to the
-tall-weeded, oozy Bottoms. Teams from the Bottoms, I believe, always had
-cockleburs in their tails; and spanking dapple grays drove in with
-shining top-buggies from the stock farms whose flacking windmills on the
-straight horizons of the north, struck on my childish fancy as some sort
-of mechanical scarecrow to frighten away the homey charms of the wooded
-hills. I recall this sort of detail as the only thing in my native town
-that affected my imagination. When I saw the flakes of black loam
-dropping from the tires, or the yellow clay of the river district caked
-solidly about the racked hubs, I was stirred by the allurement of travel
-and adventure, the movement of human enterprise on the fourwent ways of
-the world.
-
-From my always seeming to see them so bemired with their recent
-passages, I gather that my observations must have been made chiefly in
-winter on my way to school. From other memories of Taylorville arched in
-by the full-leaved elms and maples, smelling of dust and syringas, and
-never quite separable from a suspicion of boredom, I judge my summer
-acquaintance with its streets to have been chiefly by way of going to
-church, for, until the winter I was eleven years old, Taylorville, the
-world in fact, meant Hadley's pasture.
-
-It lay back of that part of the town where our house was, contiguous to
-a common of abandoned orchard and cow lot, and if it lacked anything of
-adventurous occasion and delight, we, Forrie and Effie and I, the McGee
-children, and the little Allinghams, did not know it. There was a sort
-of convention of childhood that we should never go straight to it by the
-proper path, but it must always be taken by assault or stealth: over the
-woodhouse and then along the top of the orchard fence as far as you
-could manage without falling off, and then tagging the orchard trees; I
-remember there were times when we felt obliged to climb up every tree in
-our way and down on the other side, and so to the stump lot where the
-earliest violets were to be found--how blue it would be with them in
-April about the fairy ring of some decaying trunk!--and beyond the stump
-lot, the alder brook and the Stone-pit pond where we caught a pike once,
-come up from the river to spawn. Up from the brook ranged a wood over
-the shallow hills, farther and darker than we dared, and along its banks
-was every variety of pleasantness. There was always something to be done
-there, springs to be scooped out, rills to be dammed; always something
-to eat, sassafras root, minnows taken by hand and half cooked on
-surreptitious fires, red haws and hazelnuts; always some place to be
-visited with freshness and discovery, dark umbrageous corners to provide
-that dreaded and delighted panic of the wild.
-
-But perhaps the best service the pasture did us was as a theatre for the
-dramatization of the bourgeoning social instinct. We played at church
-and school in it, at scalping and Robinson Crusoe and the Three Bears.
-We went farther and played at High Priests and Oracles and
-Sacrifice--and what were we at Taylorville to know of such things?
-
-If this were to be as full an account of my Art as it is of myself, I
-should have to stop here and try to have you understand how at this time
-I was all awash in the fluid stuff of it, buoyed and possessed by
-unknowledgable splendours, heroisms, tendernesses, a shifty glittering
-flood. I am always checked in my attempt to render this submerged
-childhood of mine by the recollection of my mother in the midst of the
-annoyance which any reference to it always caused her, trying judicially
-to account for it on the basis of my having read too much, with the
-lurking conviction at the bottom of all comment that a few more
-spankings might have effectually counteracted it. But though I read more
-than the other children, there was never very much to read in
-Taylorville at any time, and no amount of reading could have put into
-my mind what I found there--the sustaining fairy wonder of the world.
-
-I was not, I think, different in kind from the other children, except as
-being more consistently immersed in it and never quite dispossessed. I
-have lost and rediscovered the way to it some several times; have
-indeed, had to defend its approaches with violence and skill: this whole
-business of the biography has no other point, in fact, than to show you
-how far my human behaviour has been timed to keep what I believe most
-people part with no more distressfully than with their milk teeth.
-Effie, I know, has no recollection of this period other than that there
-was a time when the earth was hung with vestiges of splendour, and if my
-brother has kept anything of his original inheritance, he would sooner
-admit to a left over appetite for jujubes and liquorice; for Forester is
-fully of the common opinion that the fevers, flights and drops of
-temperament are the mere infirmity of Gift. There was a time, before I
-left off talking to Forester at all about my work, when he visibly
-permitted his pity to assuage his disgust at the persistence of so
-patent a silliness in me, and still earlier, before I owned three motor
-cars, an estate in Florida and a house on the Hudson, there were not
-wanting intimations of its voluntary assumption as a pose; pose in
-Forester's vocabulary standing for any frame of behaviour to which he is
-not naturally addicted. But there it was, the flux of experience rising
-to the surface of our plays, the reservoir from which later, without
-having personally contemplated such an act, I drew the authority for how
-Lady Macbeth must have felt, about to do a murder, from which if I had
-had a taste for it, I might have drawn with like assurance the necessity
-of the square of the hypotenuse to equal the squares of the other two
-sides.
-
-It is curious that, though I cannot remember how my father looked nor
-who taught me long division, I recall perfectly how the reddening
-blackberry leaves lay under the hoar frost in Hadley's pasture, and the
-dew between the pale gold wires of the grass on summer mornings, and the
-very words and rites by which we paid observance to Snockerty. I am not
-sure whether Ellen McGee or I invented him, but first and last he got us
-into as much trouble as though we had not always distinctly recognized
-him for an invention. The McGees lived quite around the corner of the
-pasture from us, and, as far as my memory serves, the whole seven of
-them had nothing to do but lie in wait for any appearance of ours in the
-stump lot; though in respect to their father being a section boss, and
-the family Catholic, we were not supposed, when we put on our good
-clothes and went out of the front gate, to meet them socially. I think
-there must have been also some parental restriction on our intercourse
-of play, for they never came to our house nor we to theirs; the little
-Allinghams, in fact, never would play with them. They came to play with
-us and only included the McGees on the implication of their being our
-guests. If at any time we three Lattimores were called away, Pauline,
-who was the eldest, would forthwith marshal her young tribe in exactly
-the same manner in which she afterward held Henry Mills in the paths of
-rectitude, and march them straight out of the big gate to their home. I
-remember how I used perfectly to hate the expression of the little
-Allinghams on these occasions and sympathize with the not always
-successfully repressed jeers of the McGees. Mrs. Allingham was the sort
-of woman who makes a point of having the full confidence of her
-children--detestable practice--and I have always suspected, in spite of
-the friendliness of the families, that the little Allinghams used to
-make a sort of moral instance of us whenever they fell into discredit
-with their parents. At any rate the report of our doings in Hadley's
-pasture as they worked around through her to our mother, would lead to
-episodes of marked coolness, in which we held ourselves each loftily
-aloof from the other, until incontinently the spirit of play swirled us
-together again in a joyous democracy.
-
-At the time when the Snockerty obsession overtook us, Ellen McGee was
-the only real rival I had for the leadership of the pasture; if she had
-not had, along with all her Irish quickness, a touch of Irish
-sycophancy, I should have lost all my ascendency after the advent of
-Snockerty. I feel sure now that Ellen must have invented him; she was
-most enviably furnished in all the signs of lucky and unlucky and what
-it meant if you put your stocking on wrong side out in the morning, with
-charms to say for warts, and scraps of Old World song that had all the
-force of incantations. Her fairy tales too had a more convincing sound,
-for she got them from her father, who had always known somebody who knew
-the human participators. It was commonly insisted by Mrs. Allingham that
-the McGee children would never come to anything, and I believe, in fact,
-they never did, but they supplied an element of healthful vulgarity in
-our lives that, remembering Alfred Allingham's adolescent priggishness,
-I am inclined to think was very good for us.
-
-If I have said nothing of my parents until now, it is because the part
-they played in our lives for the first ten years was, from our point of
-view, negligible. Parents were a sort of natural appendage of children,
-against whose solidarity our performance had room and opportunity. They
-kept the house together; they staved off fear--no one, for instance,
-would think of sleeping in a place where there were no parents--they
-bulked large between us and the unknown. There was a general notion of
-our elders toward rubbing it into us that we ought to be excessively
-grateful to them for not having turned us adrift, _sans_ food and
-housing, but I do not think we took it seriously.
-
-Parents existed for the purpose of rendering the world livable for
-children, and on the whole their disposition was friendly, except in
-cases like Mrs. Allingham, who contrived always to give you a guilty
-sense of having forgot to wipe your feet or tramped on the flower
-borders. I do not think we had a more active belief in our parents'
-profession of absorption in our interests than in my father's pretence
-to be desperately wounded by Forester's popgun, or scared out of his
-wits when Effie jumped at him from behind the syringa bush. It was
-admittedly nice of them and it kept the game going, but there were also
-times when they did not manage it so successfully as we could have
-wished. I think that we never questioned their right to punish us for
-disobedience, perhaps because there is, after all, something
-intrinsically sound about the right of might, though we sometimes
-questioned the occasion, as when we had been told we might play in the
-pasture for an hour, of the passage of which we knew as much as wild
-pigeons. There was always, to me at least, an inexplicableness about
-such reprisals that mitigated against their moral issue. There was one
-point, however, upon which we all three opposed an unalterable front; we
-would not kiss and make up after our private squabbles. We fought, or
-combined against neighbouring tribes, or divided our benefits with an
-even handedness that obtains nowhere as among children, but we would
-not be tricked into a status which it might be inconvenient to maintain.
-I am sure, though, that Mrs. Allingham used rather to put it over my
-mother for her inability to make little prigs of us.
-
-"Mothers," she would say on the rare occasions when she came to call in
-the beaded dolman and black kid gloves which other Taylorvillians wore
-only on Sunday, "MOTHERS," with the effect of making it all capitals,
-"have an inestimable privilege in shaping their children's characters."
-This was when we had had our faces surreptitiously washed and been
-brought in for ceremonial inspection; and a little later she would add,
-with the air of having tactfully conveyed advice under the guise of
-information, "I always insist"--here Forester would kick me
-furtively--"_insist_ on having the full confidence of mine," at which
-point my mother would make excuses to get me out of the room before I,
-who never could learn that people are not always of the mind they think
-they are, made embarrassing disclosures.
-
-Up to this time my mother figures chiefly as a woman who tied up our
-hurts and overruled my father when he tried to beg us off from going to
-church. I suppose it was the baby always in arms or expected that kept
-us from romping all over her as we did with my father; and much of her
-profession of interest in us, which came usually at the end of
-admonitory occasions, had the cold futility of the family prayers that
-my mother tried to make appear part of the habitual order when Cousin
-Judd came to stay with us.
-
-I do not know whether he suspected the hollowness of our morning
-worship, but I am sure I was never in the least imposed upon by the high
-moral attitude from which my mother attempted to deal with my
-misbehaviours. She used to conduct these interviews on the prescription
-of certain books by the reading of which I was afterward corrupted, on a
-basis of shocked solemnity that, as she was not without a sense of
-humour, often broke down under my raw disbelief. Forester, always
-amenable to suggestion, was sometimes reduced to writhing contrition by
-these inquisitorial attempts, but I came away from them oftenest not a
-little embarrassed by her inability to bring anything to pass by them.
-
-I do not think our detachment was greater than is common with young
-children in families where they are pushed out of their privilege of
-cuddling as fast as they were in ours. There was thirteen months between
-Forester and me, another brother, early dead, before Effie, and two that
-came after. The children who died were always sickly; I think it
-probable in the country phrase, so appalling in its easy acceptance, my
-mother had "never seen a well day"; and what was meant to be the joy of
-loving was utterly swamped for her in its accompanying dread. I seem to
-have been born into the knowledge that the breast, the lap, and the
-brooding tenderness were the sole prerogative of babies; it was
-imperative to your larger estate not to exhibit the weakness of wanting
-them. There comes back to me in this connection an evening with us
-three, Forester, Effie and I, squeezed on to the lowest step of the
-stairs for company, my mother in the dusk, rocking and singing one of
-those wildly sweet and tragic melodies that the men brought back out of
-the South as seeds are carried in a sheep's coat. To this day I cannot
-hear it without a certain swelling to let in the smell of the summer
-dusk and the flitter of the bats outside and the quaver of my mother's
-voice. I could see the baby's white gown hanging over her arm--it was
-the next one after Effie, and already she must have been expecting the
-next--and the soft screech of the rocker on the deal floor, and all at
-once I knew, with what certainty it hurts me still to remember, how it
-felt to be held so close ... _close_ ... and safe ... and the swell of
-the breast under the song, and the swing of the rocker ... knew it as if
-I had been but that moment dispossessed ... and the need ... as I know
-now I have always needed to be so enfolded.
-
-I do not remember just what happened; I seem to have come to from a fit
-of passionate crying, climbed up out of it by a hand that gripped me by
-the shoulder and shook me occasionally by way of hastening my
-composure. I was struggling desperately to get away from it ... away
-from the mother, who held me so to the mother I had just remembered ...
-and there was Jule, the maid, holding up the lamp, ordering me to bed in
-the dark for having spoiled our quiet evening. Then after what seemed a
-long time, Effie snuggled up to me under the covers, terrified by my
-sudden accession of sobs but too loyal to call down the household upon
-us.
-
-It came back ... the need of mothering. There was a time when I had lain
-abed some days with the measles or whatever. I was small enough, I
-remember, to lie in the crib bed that was kept downstairs for the
-prevalent baby ... and my mouth was dry with fever. I recall my mother
-standing over me and my being taken dreadfully with the need of that
-sustaining bosom, and her stooping to my stretched arms divinely ... and
-then ... I asked her to put me down again. I have had drops and
-sinkings, but nothing to compare with this, for there was nothing there
-you understand ... the release, the comforting ... it wasn't there ...
-_it was never there at all_!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-But I began to tell you how Ellen McGee and I invented Snockerty and
-arrived at our first contact with organized society, at least Forrie and
-Effie and I did, for it led to our being interdicted the society of the
-McGee children for so long that we forgot to inquire what inconvenience,
-if any, they suffered on account of it.
-
-You will see for yourself that Ellen must have invented him--where,
-indeed, should a saint-abhorring, Sunday-schooled Taylorville child get
-the stuff for it? God we knew, and were greatly bored by His inordinate
-partiality for the Jews as against all ancient peoples, and by the
-inquisitorial eye and ear forever at the keyhole of our lives, as Cousin
-Judd never spared to remind us; and personally I was convinced of a
-large friendliness brooding over Hadley's pasture, to the sense of which
-I woke every morning afresh, was called by it, and to it; walking apart
-from the others, I vaguely prayed. But Snockerty was of the stripe of
-trolls, leprechauns, pucks, and hobgoblins.
-
-We began, I remember, by thinking of him as resident in an old hollow
-apple tree, down which, if small trifles were dropped, they fell out of
-reach and sound. There was the inviting hole, arm high in the apple
-trunk, into which you popped bright pebbles, bits of glass--and I
-suppose He might have sprung very naturally from the need of justifying
-your having parted with something you valued and couldn't get back
-again, at the prompting of an impulse you did not understand. Very
-presently the practice grew into the acknowledgment of a personality
-amenable to our desires.
-
-We took to dropping small belongings in the tree for an omen of the day:
-whether the spring was full or not, or if we should find any pawpaws in
-the wood, and drew the augury from anything that happened immediately
-afterward: say, if the wind ruffled the leaves or if a rabbit ran out of
-the grass.
-
-It was Ellen who showed the most wit in interpreting the signs and
-afterward reconciling their inconsistencies, but it was I conceived the
-notion of propitiating Snockerty, who by this time had come to exercise
-a marked influence on all our plays, by a species of dramatic
-entertainment made up of scraps of school exercises, Sunday hymns,
-recitations, and particularly of improvisations in which Ellen and I
-vied. There were times when, even in the midst of these ritualistic
-observances, we would go off at a tangent of normal play, quite
-oblivious of Snockerty; other times we were so worked upon by our own
-performance as to make sacrifices of really valuable possessions and
-variously to afflict ourselves.
-
-It was I, I remember, who scared one of the little Allinghams almost
-into fits by my rendering in the name of Snockerty of an anathema which
-I had picked up somewhere, but it was Ellen who contrived to extend His
-influence over the whole of our territory by finding in every decaying
-stump and hollow trunk, a means of communication, and deriving therefrom
-authority for any wild prank that happened to come into her head. It is
-curious that in all the escapades which were imposed on us in the name
-of our deity, for which we were duly punished, not one word of the real
-cause of our outbreaks ever leaked through to our parents. It was the
-only thing, I believe, the little Allinghams never told their mother,
-not even when the second youngest in a perfect frenzy of propitiation,
-made a sacrifice of a handful of his careful curls which I personally
-hacked off for him with Forester's pocket knife. He lied like a little
-gentleman and said he had cut them off himself because he was tired of
-looking like a girl baby.
-
-I think it must have been about the end of Snockerty's second summer
-that Ellen's wild humour got us all into serious trouble which resulted
-in my first real contact with authority.
-
-Along the west side of Hadley's pasture, between it and the county road,
-lay the tilled fields of the Ross property, corn and pumpkins and
-turnips, against which a solemn trespass board advised us. It was that
-board, no doubt, which led to our always referring to the owner of it as
-old man Ross, for except as he was a tall, stooping, white-bearded,
-childless man, I do not know how he had deserved our disrespect. I have
-suspected since that the trespass sign did not originate wholly in the
-alleged cantankerousness of farmer Ross, and that the McGees knew more
-of the taste of his young turnips and roasting ears than they admitted
-at the time when Snockerty announced to Ellen through the hollow of a
-dark, gnarly oak at the foot of Hadley's hill, that he would be
-acceptably served by a feast of green corn and turnips out of Ross's
-field. This was the first time the idea of such a depredation had
-occurred to us, I believe, for we were really good children in the main,
-but I do not think we had any notion of disobeying. Personally I rather
-delighted in the idea of being compelled to desperate enterprises. I
-recall the wild freebooting dash, the scramble over the fence, the
-rustle of the corn full of delicious intimations of ambush and surprise,
-the real fear of coming suddenly on old man Ross among the rows, where I
-suspect we did a great deal of damage in the search for ears suitable to
-roast, and the derisive epithets which we did not spare to fling over
-our shoulders as we escaped into the brush with our booty. There was a
-perfect little carnival of wickedness in the safe hollow where we
-stripped the ears for roasting--fires too were forbidden us--where we
-dared old man Ross to come on, gave dramatic rehearsals of what we
-should do to him in that event, and revelled in forbidden manners and
-interdicted words. I remember the delightful shock of hearing Alfred
-Allingham declare that he meant to get his belly full of green corn
-anyway, for belly was a word that no well brought up Taylorville child
-was expected to use on any occasion; and finally how we all took hands
-in a wild dance around the fire and over it, crying,
-
- "Snockerty, Snockerty, Snockerty!"
-
-in a sort of savage singsong.
-
-Following on the heels of that, a sort of film came over the
-performance, an intimation of our disgust in each other at the
-connivance of wrongdoing. I remember, as we came up through the orchard
-rather late, this feeling grew upon us: the sense of taint, of
-cheapness, which swelled into a most abominable conviction of guilt as
-we discovered old man Ross on the front porch talking to our father. And
-then with what a heaviness of raw turnips and culpability we huddled in
-about our mother, going with brisk movements to and fro getting supper,
-and how she cuffed us out of her way, not knowing in the least what old
-man Ross had come about. Finally the overwhelming consciousness of
-publicity swooped down upon us at my father's coming in through the
-door, very white and angry, wanting to know if this were true that he
-had heard--and it was the utmost limit of opprobriousness that our
-father should get to know of our misdeeds at all. Times before, when we
-downrightly transgressed by eating wild crabs, or taking off our
-stockings to wade in the brook too early in the season, we bore our
-mother's strictures according to our several dispositions. Forester, I
-remember, was troubled with sensibility and used fairly to give us over
-to wrath by the advertisement of guilty behaviour. He had a vocation for
-confession, wept copiously under whippings which did him a world of
-good, and went about for days with a chastened manner which irritated me
-excessively. I believe now that he was quite sincere in it, but there
-was a feeling among the rest of us that he carried the admission of
-culpability too far. Myself, since I never entered on disobedience
-without having settled with myself that the fun of it would be worth the
-pains, scorned repentance, and endured correction with a philosophy
-which got me the reputation of being a hardened and froward child. That
-we did not, on this basis, get into more serious scrapes was due to
-Effie, who could never bear any sort of unpleasantness. Parents, if you
-crossed them, had a way of making things so very unpleasant.
-
-It was Effie who, if we went to the neighbours for a stated visit, kept
-her eye upon the clock, and if she found us yielding to temptation, was
-fertile in the invention of counter exploits just as exciting and quite
-within the parental pale, and when we did fall, had a genius for
-extrication as great as Forester's for propitiatory behaviour. So it
-fell out that our piratical descent on Ross's field was our first
-encounter with an order of things that transcended my mother's personal
-jurisdiction.
-
-Up to this time contact with our parents' world had got no farther than
-vainglorious imaginings of our proper entry into it, and now suddenly we
-found that we were in it, haled there by our own acts in the unhappy
-quality of offenders. I think this was the first time in my life that I
-had been glad it was Forester who was the boy and not I who was made to
-go with my father and Mr. Allingham to Ross's field to point out the
-damage, for which they paid.
-
-It was this which sealed the enormity of our offence, money was paid for
-it, and came near to losing its moral point with Forrie, who felt
-himself immeasurably raised in the estimate of the other boys as a
-public character. It served, along with my father's anger, which was so
-new to us, to raise the occasion to a solemn note against which mere
-switchings were inconsiderable. No doubt my brother has forgotten it by
-now, along with Effie, who got off with nothing worse than the
-complicity of having been one of us, but to me the incident takes rank
-as the beginning of a new kind of Snockertism which was to array itself
-indefinitely against the forces inappreciably sucking at the bottom of
-my life.
-
-It was as if, on the very first occasion of my swimming to the surface
-of my lustrous seas, I was taken with a line at the end of which I was
-to be played into shoals and shallows, to foul with my flounderings some
-clear pools and scatter the peace of many smaller fry--I mean the
-obligation of repute, the necessity of being loyal to what I found in
-the world because it had been founded in sincerity with pains. For what
-my father made clear to us as the very crux of our transgression, was
-that we had discredited our bringing up. Old man Ross could be paid for
-his vegetables, but there was nothing, I was given to understand, could
-satisfy our arrears to our parents' honour, which, it transpired, had
-been appallingly blackened in the event.
-
-Nothing in my whole life has so surprised me as the capacity of this
-single adventure for involving us in successive coils of turpitude and
-disaster; though it was not until we followed my father into the best
-room the next morning after he had seen Mr. Allingham, still rather
-sick, for the turnips had not agreed with us, that we realized the
-worst, rounding on us through a stream of dreadful, biting things that,
-as my father uttered them, seemed to float us clear beyond the pale of
-sympathy and hope. I remember my father walking up and down with his
-hands under his coat behind, a short man in my recollection, with a kind
-of swing in his walk which curiously nobody but myself seems to have
-noticed, and a sort of electrical flash in his manner which might have
-come, as in this instance, from our never being brought up before him
-except when we had done something thoroughly exasperating: I am not sure
-that I did not tell Ellen McGee, in an attempt to render the magnitude
-of our going over, that he rated us in full uniform, waving his sword,
-which at that moment hung with his regimentals over the mantelpiece.
-
-"Good heavens," he said, "you might have been arrested for it--my
-children--_mine_--and I thought I could have trusted you. Good heavens!"
-
-Suddenly he reached out as it were over my brother's shoulder, to whom
-in his capacity as the eldest son most of this tirade was addressed,
-with a word for me that was to go tearing its way sorely to the seat of
-memory and consciousness, and, lodging there, become the one point of
-attachment to support the memory of him beyond his death.
-
-"As for you, Olivia," I started at this, for I had been staying my
-misery for the moment on a red and black table cover which my mother
-valued, and I was amazed to find myself still able to hate--"as for you,
-Olivia May"--he would never allow my name to be shortened in the
-least--"I _am_ surprised at you."
-
-He had expected better of me then; he had reached beyond my surfaces and
-divined what I was inarticulately sure of, that I was different--no, not
-better--but somehow intrinsically different. He was surprised at me; he
-did not say so much of Forester, and he _did_ say that it was exactly
-what he had expected of the McGees, but he had had a better opinion of
-me. I recall a throb of exasperation at his never having told me. I
-might have lived up to it. But with all the soreness of having dropped
-short of a possible estimate, that phrase, which might have gone no
-deeper than his momentary disappointment, is all I have on which to hang
-the faith that perhaps ... perhaps some vision had shaped on his horizon
-of what I might become. I was never anything to my mother, I know, but a
-cuckoo's egg dropped in her creditable nest. "But," said my father, "I
-_am_ surprised at _you_."
-
-He was, I believe, one of those men who make a speciality of integrity
-and of great dependability in public service, which is often brought to
-answer for the want of private success; an early republican type fast
-being relegated to small towns and country neighbourhoods. He had a
-brilliant war record which was partly responsible for his office, and a
-string of debts pendent from some earlier mercantile enterprise, which,
-in the occasion they afforded of paying up under circumstances of great
-stringency, appeared somehow an additional burnish to his name. He was a
-man everybody liked; that he was extremely gentle and gay in his manner
-with us on most occasions, I remember very well, and I think he must
-have had a vein of romance, though I do not know upon what grounds
-except that among the few books that he left, many were of that
-character, and from the names of his children, Forester, Olivia May, and
-Ephemia, called Effie for short, which were certainly not Taylorvillian.
-Forester grew out of a heroic incident of his soldiering, of which I
-have forgotten all the particulars except that the other man's name was
-Forester, and my father's idea of giving it to his son who was born
-about that time, was that when he should grow up, and be distinguished,
-the double name of Forester Lattimore should serve at once as a reminder
-and a certificate of appreciation. I recall that we children, or perhaps
-it was only I, used to abound in dramatic imaginings of what would
-happen when this belated recognition took place, though in fact nothing
-ever came of it, which might have been largely owing to my brother's
-turning out the least distinguished of men.
-
-Whether if my father had lived he would have remained always as much in
-the dark as to the private sources of my behaviour, I try not to guess,
-but this incident picked him out for me among the ruck of fathers as a
-man distinguished for propriety, produced, in the very moment of
-pronouncing me unworthy of it, the ideal of a personal standard. If he
-hadn't up to this time affected greatly my gratitude or affections, he
-began to shine for me now with some of the precious quality which
-inheres in dreams. And before the shine had gone off I lost him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-My father's death, which occurred the March following, came suddenly,
-wholly fortuitous to the outward eye, and I have heard my mother say, in
-its inconsequence, its failure to line up with any conceivable moral
-occasion, did much to shake her faith in a controlling Providence; but
-affects me still as then, as the most incontrovertible of evidences of
-Powers moving at large among men, occupied with other affairs than ours.
-A little while ago, as I sat writing here on my veranda, looking
-riverward, an ant ran across my paper, which I blew out with my breath
-into space, and I did not look to see what disaster. It reminded me
-suddenly of the way I felt about my father's taking off. He was, he must
-have been, in the way of some god that March morning; that is one of the
-evidences by which you know that there are gods at all. You play happily
-about their knees, sometimes they play with you, then you stumble
-against a foot thrust out, or the clamour of your iniquity disturbs
-their proper meditations, and suddenly you are silenced. My mother was
-doubtless right; it would have been better if he had stayed with her and
-the children, certainly happier, but he got in the way of the Powers.
-
-It is curious that until I began just now to reconstruct the
-circumstances in which the news of his death came to me, I never
-realized that I might have been looking on, but high above it, at the
-very instant and occasion, for, from the window of my room in the second
-story of the Taylorville grammar school I could see the unfinished walls
-of the Zimmern block aglimmer with the light which the wind heaped up
-and shattered against their raw pink surfaces, and a loose board of the
-scaffolding allowed to remain up all winter, flacking like a torn leaf
-in the mighty current in which the school building, all the buildings,
-shook with the steady tremor of reeds in a freshet. Between them the
-tops of the maples, level like a shorn hedge, kept up an immensity of
-tormented motion that invaded even the schoolroom with a sense of its
-insupportable fatigues. I remember there were few at their desks that
-day, and all the discipline relaxed by the confusion of the wind. At the
-morning recess there had been some debate about dismissing the session,
-and one of the young teachers on the third floor had grown hysterical
-and been reprimanded by the principal.
-
-It must have been about eleven of the clock, while I was watching the
-little puffs of dust that rose between the planks of the flooring
-whenever the building shuddered and ground its teeth, divided between an
-affectation of timorousness which seemed to grow in favour as a suitable
-frame of behaviour, and the rapid rise of every tingling sense to the
-spacious movement of the weather and my private dramatization of the
-demolition of the building, from which only such occupants as I favoured
-should be rescued by my signal behaviour. Already several children had
-been abstracted by anxious parents, so that I failed to be even startled
-by another knocking until my attention was attracted by the teacher
-opening the door, and opening it wide upon my Uncle Alva.
-
-I saw him step back with a motion of his head sidewise, to draw her
-after him, but it took all the suggestive nods and winks that, as she
-drew it shut behind her, were focussed on my desk, to pull me up to the
-realization that his visit must have something to do with me. It was
-not, in fact, until I was halfway down the aisle after Miss Jessel
-called me, that I recovered my surprise sufficiently to assume the
-mysteriously important air that was proper to the fifth grade on being
-privileged to answer the door.
-
-There was not, I am sure, in the brief information that I was wanted at
-home, one betraying syllable; nothing sufficiently unusual in the way
-Miss Jessel tied me into my hood, nor in finding Effie tied into hers on
-the first floor, nor in the way her teacher kissed her--everybody kissed
-Effie who was allowed--nothing in Forester's having already cleared out
-without waiting for us. We got into the town in the wake of Uncle Alva
-and between the business blocks where the tall buildings abated the
-wind. There was no traffic in the streets that day. Here and there a
-foot passenger with his hat held down by both hands and his coat tails
-between his legs, staggered into doorways which were snapped to behind
-him, and from the glass of which faces looked out featureless in the
-blur of the wind. As we passed the side door of a men's clothing
-establishment one of these pale human orbs approached to the pane,
-exhibited a peering movement, rapped on the glass and beckoned. I know
-now this must have been the working of an instinct to which Taylorville
-was so habituated that it seemed natural to Uncle Alva--he was only my
-mother's half brother, not my father's--to send us on with a word about
-overtaking us, while he crossed the street at the instance of that
-beckoning finger to be chaffered with in the matter of my father's grave
-clothes. All this time there was not a word spoken that could convey to
-us children the import of our unexpected release. We drifted down the
-street, Effie and I, sidling against the blasts that drove furiously in
-the crossways, and finally as we caught our breath under a long red
-sandstone building, I recall being taken violently, as it were, by
-knowledge, and crying out that my father was dead, that he was dead and
-I should never see him again. I do not know how I knew, but I knew, and
-Effie accepted it; she came cuddling up to me in the smother of the
-wind, trying to comfort me as if, as I think did not occur to her, he
-had been my father only and not hers at all. I do not recall very well
-how we got across the town between the shut houses, high shouldered with
-the cold, except that Uncle Alva did not come up with us, and the vast
-lapping of the wind that swirled us together at intervals in a community
-of breathlessness, seemed somehow to have grown out of the occasion and
-be naturally commensurate with its desolating quality. I do not think it
-occurred to us as strange that we should have been left so to come to
-the knowledge that grew until, as we came in sight of our home, we were
-fairly taken aback to find it so little altered from what it had been
-when we left it three hours before. It had never been an attractive
-house: yellow painted, with chocolate trimmings and unshuttered windows
-against which the wind contrived. It cowered in a wide yard full of
-unpruned maples that now held up their limbs protestingly, that shook
-off from their stretched boughs, disclaimers of responsibility; the very
-smoke wrenched itself from the chimney and escaped, hurryingly upon the
-wind; the shrubbery wrung itself; whole flights of fallen leaves that
-had settled soddenly beside the borders all the winter, having at last
-got a plain sight of it, whirled up aghast and fled along the road. The
-blinds were down at the front windows, and no one came in or out.
-
-I remember our hanging there on the opposite side of the street for an
-appreciable interval before trusting ourselves to a usualness which
-every moment began to appear more frightening, and being snatched back
-from the brink of panic by the rattle of wheels in the road behind us as
-a light buggy, all aglitter from point to point of its natty
-furnishings, drew up at our gate and discharged from the seat beside the
-driver a youngish man, all of a piece with the turnout, in the trim and
-shining blackness of his exterior, who, with a kind of subdued tripping,
-ran up the walk and entered at the door without a knock. I am not sure
-that Effie identified him as the man who had taken away the babies,
-indeed, the two who came after Effie were so close together and went so
-soon, that I have heard her say that she has no recollection of anything
-except a house enlivened by continuous baby; but she had the knowledge
-common to every Taylorville child of the undertaker as the only man who
-was let softly in at unknocked doors, with his frock coat buttoned tight
-and the rim of his black hat held against his freshly shaven chin. We
-snatched the knowledge from one another as we caught hands together and
-fairly dove into the side entrance that opened on the living room.
-
-The first thing I was aware of was the sound of Forester blubbering, and
-then of the place being full of neighbours and my mother sitting by the
-fire in a chair out of the best room, crying heartily. We flung
-ourselves upon her, crying too, and were gathered up in a violence of
-grief and rocking, through which I could hear a great many voices in a
-kind of frightened and extenuating remonstrance, "Come now, Mrs.
-Lattimore. Now Sally--there, there----" at every word of which my
-mother's sobbing broke out afresh. I remember getting done with my
-crying first and being very hot and uncomfortable and thinking of
-nothing but how I should wriggle out of her embrace and get away,
-anywhere to escape from the burden of having to seem to care; and then,
-but whether it was immediately after I am not sure, going rather heavily
-upstairs and being overtaken in the middle of it by the dramatic
-suggestion of myself as an orphan child toiling through the world--I
-dare say I had read something like that recently--and carrying out the
-suggestion with an immense effect on Uncle Alva, who happened to be
-coming down at that moment. And then the insidious spread through all my
-soul of cold disaster, out of which I found myself unable to rise even
-to the appearance of how much I cared.
-
-Of all that time my father lay dead in the best room, for by the usual
-Taylorville procedure the funeral could not take place until the
-afternoon of the second day, I have only snatches of remembrance: of my
-being taken in to look at him as he lay in the coffin in a very nice
-coat which I had never seen him wear, and the sudden conviction I had of
-its somehow being connected with that mysterious summons which had taken
-Uncle Alva away from us that morning in the street; of the "sitting
-up," which was done both nights by groups of neighbours, mostly young;
-and the festive air it had with the table spread with the best cloth and
-notable delicacies; and mine and Forester's reprisals against one
-another as to the impropriety of squabbling over the remains of a layer
-cake. And particularly of Cousin Judd.
-
-He came about dusk from the farm--he had been sent for--looking shocked,
-and yet with a kind of enjoyable solemnity, I thought; and the first
-thing he wished to do was to pray with my poor mother.
-
-"We must submit ourselves to the will of God, Sally," he urged.
-
-"O God! _God!_" said my mother, walking up and down. "I'm not so sure
-God had anything to do with it."
-
-"It's a wrong spirit, Sally, a wrong spirit--a spirit of rebellion." My
-mother began to cry.
-
-"Why couldn't God have left him alone? What had he done that he should
-be taken away? What have _I_ done----"
-
-"You mustn't take it like this, Sally. Think of your duty to your
-children. 'The Lord giveth'----"
-
-"Go tell Him to give me back my husband, then----"
-
-Effie and I cowered in our corner between the base burner and the sewing
-machine; it was terrible to hear them so, quarrelling about God. My
-mother had her hands to her head as she walked; her figure touched by
-the firelight, not quite spoiled by childbearing, looked young to me.
-
-"Oh! Oh! Oh!" she cried with every step.
-
-"You mustn't, Sally; you'll be punished for it----"
-
-Cousin Judd shook with excitement; he was bullying her about her
-Christian submission. I went up to him suddenly and struck him on the
-arm with my fist.
-
-"You let her alone!" I cried. "Let her alone!"
-
-Somebody spoke out sharply, I think; a hand plucked me from behind--to
-my amazement my mother's.
-
-"Olivia, Olivia May! I _am_ surprised ... and your father not out of the
-house yet. Go up to your room and see if you can't learn to control
-yourself!"
-
-After all there was some excuse for Cousin Judd. There was, in the
-general estimate, something more than fortuitous circumstance that went
-to my father's taking off. Early in the winter, when work had been
-stopped on the Zimmern building, there had been a good deal of talk
-about some local regulations as to the removal of scaffolding and the
-security of foot passengers. That the contractors had not been brought
-to book about it was thought to be due to official connivance; my father
-had written to the paper about it. But the scaffolding had remained
-until that morning of the high wind, when it came down all together and
-a bit of the wall with it. That my father should have been passing on
-his way to the courthouse at the moment, was a leaping together of
-circumstances that seemed somehow to have raised it to the plane of a
-moral instance. It provided just that element of the dramatic in human
-affairs, which somehow wakens the conviction of having always expected
-it; though it hardly appeared why my father, rather than the contractor
-or the convincing city official, should have been the victim. If it
-wasn't an act of Providence, it was so like one that it contributed to
-bring out to the funeral more people than might otherwise have ventured
-themselves in such weather.
-
-It was also thought that if anything of that nature could have made up
-to her, my mother should have found much to console her in the funeral.
-The Masons took part in it, as also the G. A. R. and the Republican
-Club, though they might have made a more imposing show of numbers if all
-the societies had not been so largely composed of the same members. In
-addition to all this, my mother's crape came quite to the hem of her
-dress and Effie and I had new hats. I remember those hats very well;
-they had very tall crowns and narrow brims and velvet trimmings, and we
-tried them on for Pauline Allingham after we had gone up to bed the
-night before the funeral. Mrs. Allingham had called and Pauline had been
-allowed to come up to us. I remember her asking how we felt, and Effie's
-being as much impressed by the way in which I carried off the situation
-as if she had not been in the least concerned in it. And then we sat up
-in bed in our nightgowns and tried on the hats while Pauline walked
-about to get the effect from both sides, and refrained, in respect to
-the occasion, from offering any criticism.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was the evening after the funeral and everybody had gone away but one
-good neighbour. The room had been set in order while we were away at the
-cemetery; the lamp was lit and there was a red glow on everything from
-the deep heart of the base burner. The woman went about softly to set a
-meal for us, and under the lamp there was a great bowl of quince
-marmalade which she had brought over neighbourly from her own stores;
-the colour of it played through the clear glass like a stain upon the
-white cloth. It happened to have been a favourite dish of my father's.
-
-For the last year it had been a family use, he being delicate in his
-appetite, to make a point of saving for him anything which he might
-possibly eat, and taking the greatest satisfaction in his enjoyment.
-Therefore it came quite natural for me to get a small dish from the
-cupboard and begin to serve out a portion of Mrs. Mason's preserves for
-my father. All at once it came over me ... the meaning of bereavement;
-that there was nobody to be done for tenderly; the loss of it ... the
-need of the heart for all its offices of loving ... and the unavailing
-pain.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-It followed soon on my father's death that we gave up the yellow house
-with the chocolate trimmings and took another near the high school, and
-that very summer my mother lengthened my skirts halfway to my shoe tops
-and began to find fault with my behaviour "for a girl of your age." We
-saw no more of the McGees after that except as Ellen managed to keep on
-in the same class at school with me; and Pauline and I found ourselves
-with a bosom friendship on our hands.
-
-I went on missing my father terribly, but in a child's inarticulate
-fashion, and it is only lately that I have realized how much of my life
-went at loose ends for the loss out of it of a man's point of view and
-the appreciable standards which grow out of his relation to the
-community. Ever since the Snockerty episode there had been glimmers on
-my horizon of the sort of rightness owing from a daughter of Henry
-Lattimore, but now that I had no longer the use of the personal
-instance, I lost all notion of what those things might be; for though I
-have often heard my mother spoken of as one of the best women in the
-world, she was the last to have provided me with a definite pattern of
-behaviour.
-
-Pauline had struck out a sort of social balance for herself grounded on
-the fear of what was "common." Her mother had a day at home, from which
-seemed to flow an orderly perspective of social observances, for which
-my mother, never having arrived at the pitch of visiting cards, afforded
-me no criterion whatever.
-
-She had been a farmer's daughter in another part of the state, and had
-done something for herself in the way of school teaching before she
-married my father. My grandparents I never saw, but I seem to recall at
-such public occasions as county fairs and soldiers' reunions, certain
-tall, farmer-looking men and their badly dressed wives, who called her
-cousin and were answered by their Christian names, whom I understand to
-be my mother's relatives without accepting them as mine. They were all
-soldiers though, the men of our family; you saw it at once in the odd
-stiffness sitting on their farmer carriage like the firm strokes of a
-master on a pupil's smudged drawing. I think I got my first notion of
-the quality of experience in the way they exalted themselves in the
-memories of marches and battles. There had been a station of the
-underground railway not ten miles from Taylorville, and there had gone
-out from the town at the first call, a volunteer company with so many
-Judds and Wilsons and Lattimores on the roster that it read like the
-record of a family Bible. They had gone out from, they had come back to,
-a life as little relieved by adventure as the flat horizon of their
-corn lands, but in the interim they had stretched themselves, endured,
-conquered. I have heard political economists of the cross roads account
-variously for the prosperity of Ohianna in the decade following the
-civil outbreak, but I have never heard it laid to the revitalizing of
-our common stock by the shock of its moral strenuosities.
-
-To this day I question whether Cousin Judd got more out of his religion
-than out of this most unchristian experience, from which he had come
-back silver tipped as it were, from that emperym into which men pass
-when they are by great emotions a little removed from themselves, to
-kindle in my young mind a realization of the preciousness of passion
-over all human assets. It came to me, however, in the years between
-twelve and fifteen that my mother's relations did things with their
-knives and neglected others with their forks that were not done in
-circles that by virtue of just such observances, got themselves called
-Good Society. I was aware of a sort of gracelessness in their vital
-processes, in much the same way that I knew that the striped and
-flowered carpet in my mother's best room did not harmonize with the wall
-paper, and that the curtains went badly with them both. I have to go
-back to this, and to the fact that my clothes were chosen for wearing
-qualities rather than becomingness, to account for a behaviour that, as
-I began to emerge from the illumined mists of play, my mother
-complained of under the head of my "not taking an interest."
-
-How else was I to protect myself from the thousand inharmonies that
-chafed against the budding instinct of beauty: the plum-coloured ribbons
-I was expected to wear with my brown dress, the mottled Japanese pattern
-upon the gilt ground of the wall paper, against which I had pushed out a
-kind of shell, hung within with the glittering stuff of dreams.
-
-For just about the time I should have been absorbed in Cousin Lydia's
-beaded dolman and the turning of my mother's one silk, I was regularly
-victimized by the fits and starts of temperament, instinctive efforts
-toward the rehearsal of greater passions than had appeared above my
-horizon, flashes of red and blue and gold thrown up on the plain
-Taylorville surface of my behaviour, with the result of putting me at
-odds with the Taylorvillians.
-
-It was as if, being required to produce a character, I found myself with
-samples of a great many sorts on my hands which I kept offering, hopeful
-that they might be found to match with the acceptable article, which, I
-may say here, they never did. They were good samples too, considering
-how young I was, of the Magdas, Ophelias, Antigones I was yet to become,
-of the great lady, good comrade and lover, but the most I got by it was
-the suspicion of insincerity and affectation. I sensitively suffered the
-more from it as I was conscious of the veering of this inward
-direction, without being able to prove what I was sure of, its relevance
-to the Shining Destiny toward which I moved. If you ask how this
-assurance differed from the general human hope of a superior happiness,
-I can only say that the event has proved it, and as early as I was aware
-of it, moved me childishly to acts of propitiation. I wanted gratefully
-to be good, with a goodness acceptable to the Powers from which such
-assurance flowed, but it was a long time before I could separate my
-notion of this from my earliest ideal of what would have been suitable
-behaviour to my father, so that all the upward reach of adolescence was
-tinged by my sense of loss in him.
-
-It was when I was about thirteen and had not yet forgotten how my father
-looked, that I made an important discovery; on the opposite side of the
-church, and close to the Amen corner, sat a man with something in the
-cut of his beard, in the swing of his shoulders, at which some dying
-nerve started suddenly athrob. I must have seen him there a great many
-times without noticing, and perhaps the likeness was not so much as I
-had thought, and I had had to wait until my recollection faded to its
-note of faint suggestion, but from that day I took to going out of my
-way to school to pass by Mr. Gower's place of business for the sake of
-the start of memory that for the moment brought my father near again. I
-even went so far as to mention to my mother that I liked sitting in
-church where I could look at Mr. Gower because he reminded me of
-somebody. We were on our way home on Sunday night--we were always taken
-to church twice on Sunday--Forester was on ahead with Effie, and just as
-we came along under the shadow of the spool factory, I had reached up to
-tuck my hand under my mother's arm and make my timid suggestion.
-
-"Well, somebody who?" said my mother.
-
-"Of my father----"
-
-"Oh," said my mother, "that's just your fancy." But she did not shake
-off my hand from her arm as was her habit toward proffers of affection,
-and the moment passed for one of confidence between us. I was convinced
-that she must have taken notice of the likeness for herself. That was in
-the spring, and all that summer vacation I spent a great deal of time
-playing with Nettie Gower for the sake of seeing her father come at the
-gate about five in the afternoon the way mine had done.
-
-Nettie was not an attractive child, and of an age better suited to
-Effie, who couldn't bear her; the relation, it seemed, wanted an
-explanation, but it never occurred to me that so long as I withheld my
-own, another would be found for it. Nettie's brother found it about the
-time that my friendship with his sister was at its most flourishing. He
-was no nicer than you would expect a brother of Nettie's to be, though
-he was good-looking in a red-cheeked way, with a flattened curl in the
-middle of his forehead, and of late he had taken to hanging about
-Nettie and me, looking at me with a curious sort of smirk that I was not
-quite arrived at knowing for the beginning gallantry. He knew perfectly
-well that I did not come to see Nettie because I was fond of her, but it
-was yet for me to discover that he thought it was because I was fond of
-him. I remember I was making a bower in the asparagus bed; I was too old
-to play in the asparagus bed, but I was making a point of being good
-enough to do it on Nettie's account, and I had asked Charlie for his
-knife to cut the stems.
-
-"Come and get it." He was holding it out to me hollowed in his palm; and
-he would not let go my hand.
-
-"You don't want no knife," he leered sickeningly. "I know what you
-want." Suddenly I caught sight of Nettie's face with its straight thick
-plaits of hair and near-sighted eyes narrowed at me behind her glasses,
-and it struck me all at once that she had never taken my interest in her
-seriously either.
-
-"Well, what?" I began defensively.
-
-"This!" He thrust out his face toward mine, but I was too quick for him.
-That was my first sex encounter, and it didn't somehow make it any the
-less exasperating to realize that what lay behind my sudden interest in
-Nettie couldn't now be brought forward in extenuation, but I am always
-glad that I slapped Charlie Gower before the paralyzing sense of being
-trapped by my own behaviour overtook me. I hadn't found the words yet
-for the unimagined disgust of the boy's impertinence when, as I was
-helping to wipe the dishes that evening after supper, I tried to put it
-to my mother on a new basis which the incident seemed to have created,
-of our being somehow ranged together against such offences. It was the
-time for us to have emerged a little from the family relation to the
-freemasonry of sex, but my mother missed knowing it.
-
-"I am not going to Nettie Gower's any more," I began.
-
-"No?" said my mother; and of course I could not conceive that she had
-forgotten the confidence in which the connection with Nettie began.
-
-"That Charlie ... I just hate him. You know, he thought I was coming to
-see Nettie because of him."
-
-"Well," said my mother, turning out the dishwater, "perhaps you were."
-
-And that, I think it safe to say, is as near as my family ever came to
-understanding the processes at work behind the incidents of my growing
-up. Yet I think my mother very often did know that the key to my
-behaviour did not lie in the obvious explanation of it; and a sort of
-aversion toward what was strange, which I have come to think of as
-growing out of her unsophistication, kept her from admitting it. It was
-less disconcerting to have my springs of action accounted for on the
-basis of what Mrs. Allingham would have called "common," than to have
-it arraigned by her own standard as "queer." There was always in
-Taylorville a certain caddishness toward innovations of conduct, which
-we youngsters railed at as countrified, which I now perceive to have
-been no worse than the instinctive movement to lessen by despising it,
-the terror, the deep, far-rooted terror of the unknown. The incident
-served, however, to supersede with resentment the sense of personal
-definite loss in which it had begun.
-
-Before the year was out I had so far forgotten my father that I saw no
-resemblance to him in Mr. Gower and would not have recognized it had I
-met it anywhere, though the want of fathering had its share no doubt in
-landing me, as I cast about for an appreciable rule to live by, in what
-I have already described as a superior sort of Snockertism. The
-immediate step to it was my getting converted. That very winter all
-Taylorville and the six townships were caught up in one of those acute
-emotional crises called a Revival. It had begun in the Methodist, and
-gradually involved the whole number of Protestant churches, and had
-overflowed into the Congregational building as affording the greatest
-seating room; by the middle of February it was possible to feel through
-the whole community the ground swell of its disturbances. Night after
-night the people poured in to it to be flayed in spirit, striped,
-agonized, exalted at the hands of a practised evangelist, which they
-_liked_; as it had the cachet of being supernaturally good for them,
-they liked it with a deeper, more soul-stretching enjoyment than the
-operas, theatres, social adventure of cities, supposing they had been at
-hand.
-
-It hardly seems possible with all she had to do, and yet I think my
-mother could not have missed one of those meetings, going regularly with
-Cousin Judd, who drove in from the farm more times than you would have
-thought the farm could have spared him, or with Forester, who had been
-converted the winter before, though I think he must have regretted the
-smaller occasion. Left at home with Effie who was thought too young to
-be benefited by the preaching and too old to be laid by in an overcoat
-on the Sunday-school benches with dozens of others, heavy with sleep and
-the vitiated air, late, when I had finished my arithmetic and was afraid
-to go to bed in the empty house, I would open the window a crack toward
-the blur on the night from the tall, shutterless windows of the church,
-and catch the faint swell of the hymns and at times the hysteric shout
-of some sinner "coming through," and I was as drawn to it as any savage
-to the roll of the medicine drums.
-
-The backwash of this excitement penetrated even to the schoolroom, as
-from time to time some awed whisper ran of this and that one of our
-classmates being converted, and walking apart from us with the other
-saved in a chastened mystery. And finally Pauline Allingham and I talked
-it over and decided to get converted too. Pauline, I remember, had not
-been allowed to attend the meetings and considered her spiritual welfare
-jeopardized in the prohibition. We knew by this time perfectly well what
-we had to do, and had arranged to get excused from our respective
-rooms--Pauline was a grade behind me on account of diphtheria the
-previous winter--and to meet in the abandoned coal-hole between the
-boys' and girls' basement. Pauline, who had always an aptitude for
-proselyting, brought another girl from the sixth grade, who was also
-under conviction--we had the terms very pat--a thin, hatchet-faced girl
-who joined the Baptist Church and afterward married a minister, so that
-she might very easily have reckoned the incident at something like its
-supposititious value in her life. I remember that we knelt down in the
-dusty coal-hole where the little children used to play I-spy, and prayed
-by turns for light, aloud at first, and then, as we felt the approach of
-the compelling mood, silently, as we waited for the moment after which
-we might rather put it over our classmates on the strength of our
-salvation.
-
-It came, oh, it came! the sweep up and out, the dizzying lightness--not
-very different, in fact, from the breathless rush with which on a first
-night of _Magda_ or _Cleopatra_ I have felt my part meet me as I cross
-between the wings--the lift, the tremor of passion.
-
-"Oh," I said, "I'm saved! I'm saved! I know it."
-
-"So am I," said Flora Haines. "I was a long time ago, but I didn't like
-to say anything." And if I hadn't just been converted I should have
-thought it rather mean of her. In the dusk of the coal-hole we heard
-Pauline sniffling.
-
-"I suppose it's because I'm so much worse a sinner," she admitted, "but
-I just can't feel it."
-
-"You must give yourself into the Lord's hands, Pauline dear." Flora
-Haines had heard the evangelist. I began to offer myself passionately in
-prayer as a vicarious atonement for Pauline's shortcomings.
-
-"Don't you feel anything?" Flora urged, "not the least thing?"
-
-"Well ... sort of ... something," Pauline confessed.
-
-"Well, of course, that's it."
-
-"Yes, that's it," I insisted.
-
-"Well, I suppose it is," Pauline gave in, mopping her eyes with her
-handkerchief, "but it isn't the least like what I expected."
-
-We heard the school clock strike the quarter hour, and got up, brushing
-our knees rather guiltily. Flora Haines and I were kept in all that
-afternoon recess for exceeding our excuse, but Pauline saved herself by
-bursting into tears as soon as she reached her room, and being sent home
-with a headache.
-
-That was on Thursday, and Saturday afternoon we were all to meet at our
-house and go together to a great children's meeting, where we were
-expected to announce that we were saved. Pauline was a little late. I
-was explaining to Flora Haines that I was to join our church on
-probation on Sunday, but Flora, being a Baptist, had been put off by her
-minister until the Revival should be over and he could attend to all the
-baptisms at once. We naturally expected something similar from Pauline.
-
-"I hardly think," she said, stroking her muff and looking very ladylike,
-"that I shall take such an important step in life until I am older."
-
-"But," I objected, "how can anything be more important?"
-
-"It's your _soul_, Pauline!" Flora Haines was slightly scandalized.
-
-"That's just the reason; it's so important my mother thinks I ought not
-to take any steps until I can give it my most mature judgment."
-
-Flora Haines and I looked at one another silently; we might have known
-Pauline's mother wouldn't let her do anything so common as get
-converted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-I was duly taken into the church on the following Sabbath, to the great
-relief of my family, having for once exhibited the normal reaction of a
-young person in my circumstances, and though I have laid much to the
-door of that institution of the retarding of my development and the
-dimming of the delicate surface of happiness, I think now it was not
-wholly bad for me. If I hadn't up to this time found any way of being
-good by myself, I was now provided with a criterion of conduct toward
-which even those who hadn't been able to manage it for themselves, moved
-a public approbation. I have heard my mother say that even Mr. Farley,
-the banker, who read books on evolution and was a Freethinker
-(opprobrious term), had been known to pronounce the church an excellent
-thing for women.
-
-The church left you in no doubt about things. You attended morning and
-evening service; as soon as you were old enough for it, which was before
-you were fit, you taught in Sunday school; you waited on table at oyster
-suppers designed for the raising of the minister's salary, and if you
-had any talent for it you sang in the choir or recited things at the
-church sociables. And when you were married and consequently
-middle-aged, you joined the W. F. M. S. and the Sewing Society.
-
-It was after the incident of the coal-hole that I began to experience
-this easy irreproachability, and to build out of its ready-to-hand
-materials a sort of extra self, from which afterward to burst was the
-bitter wound of life. For my particular church went farther and provided
-a chart for all the by-lanes of behaviour. "You were never," said the
-evangelist, whose relish of the situation on the day that a score or so
-of us had renounced the devil and all his works, gave me a vague
-sensation of having made a meal and licked his lips over us, "you should
-never go anywhere that you could not take your Saviour with you," and
-when I saw Cousin Judd wag at my mother and she smile and pat her hymn
-book, I was apprised that we had come to the root of the whole matter.
-
-I have wondered since to how many young converts in Ohianna that phrase
-has been handed out and with what blighting consequences.
-
-For a Saviour as I knew Him at thirteen and a half, was a solemn
-presence that ran in your mind with the bleakness of plain, whitewashed
-walls and hard benches and a general hush, a vague sensation of your
-chest being too tight for you, and a little of the feeling you had when
-you had gone to call at the Allinghams and had forgotten to wipe your
-feet; and it was manifest if you took that incubus everywhere you went
-you wouldn't have any fun.
-
-It was fortunate at that time that it was not the desire for
-entertainment that moved me so much as the need of my youth to serve;
-the unparented hunger for authority. But with the pressure of that
-environment, if there had been anybody with the wit to see where my Gift
-lay, what anybody could have done about it it is difficult to say. When
-all that Taylorville afforded of the proper food of Gift, brightness,
-music, and the dance, was of so forlorn a quality, it has been a
-question if I do not owe the church some thanks for cutting out the
-possible cheapening of taste and the satisfaction of ill-regulated
-applause--that is, if Gift can be hurt at all by what happens to the
-possessor. It can be cramped and enfeebled in expression, rendered
-tormenting in its passage and futile to the recipient, but to whom it
-comes its supernal quality rises forever beyond all attainder.
-
-What happened to the actress during all the time I was undertaken by the
-church to be made into the sort of woman serviceable to Taylorville, was
-inconsiderable; what grew out of it for Olivia was no small matter, and
-much of it I lay without bitterness to Cousin Judd, who, from having got
-himself named adviser in my father's will, was in a position to affect
-my life to the worse.
-
-And yet, in so far as I am not an unprecedented sport on the family
-tree, I had more in common with this shrewd-dealing, loud-praying,
-twice-removed soldier cousin than with any of my kin, though I should
-hardly say as much to him, for he has never been in a theatre, and if he
-still considers me a hopeful subject for prayer it is because his
-Christian duty rises superior to his conviction.
-
-He is pricked out in my earlier recollections by the difficulty he seems
-to have had in effecting a compromise between the traditional
-distrustfulness of the Ohianna farmer toward the Powers in general, and
-particularly of the weather, and his obligation of Christian Joy, and
-for a curious effect of not belonging to his wife, a large,
-uninteresting woman with a sense of her own merit which she never
-succeeded in imposing on anybody but Cousin Judd. She had a keen
-appreciation of worldly values which led her always to select the best
-material for her clothes, and another feeling of their expensiveness
-which resulted in her being always a little belated in the styles. She
-approved of religion, though not active in it, and in twenty years she
-and Cousin Judd had arrived at a series of compromises and excuses which
-enabled her to appear at church one Sunday in five and still keep up the
-interest of the clergyman and congregation as to why she didn't come the
-other four.
-
-Whenever the days were short or the roads too heavy, Cousin Judd would
-put up over night at our house, and I remember how my mother would
-always be able to say, looking about the empty democrat wagon as though
-she expected her in ambush somewhere:
-
-"And you didn't bring Lydia?" and Cousin Judd being able to reply to it
-as if it were something he had expected up till the last moment, and
-been keenly disappointed:
-
-"Well, no, Liddy ain't feeling quite up to it," which my mother received
-without skepticism. After this they were free to talk of other things.
-
-What there was between Cousin Judd and me, with due allowance for the
-years, was the spark, the touch-and-go of vitality that rose in me to a
-hundred beckonings of running flood and waving boughs--music and
-movement; and only the moral enthusiasms of war and religion raised
-through his heavy farmer stuff. We should have loved one another had we
-known how; as it was, all our intercourse was marked on his part by the
-gracelessness of rusticity, and by the impertinence of adolescence on
-mine. I used regularly to receive his pious admonitions with what, for a
-Taylorville child, was flippancy; nevertheless there were occasions when
-we had set off of summer Sunday mornings together to early class, when
-the church was cool and dim and the smell of the honey locusts came in
-through the window, that I caught the thrill that ran from the pounding
-of his fist where he prayed at the other end of the long bench; and
-there was a kind of blessedness shed from him as with closed eyes and
-lifted chin he swung from peak to peak of the splendid measure of "How
-Firm a Foundation," that I garnered up and hugged to myself in place of
-Art and the Joy of Living. All of which was very good for me and might
-have answered if it had not come into Cousin Judd's head that he ought
-to overlook my reading.
-
-By this time I had worked through all my father's books and was ready to
-satisfy the itch of imagination even with the vicious inaccuracies of
-what was called Christian literature. The trouble all came of course of
-my not understanding the nature of a lie. Not that I couldn't tell a
-downright fib if I had to, or haven't on occasion, but a lie is to me
-just as silly a performance when it is about marriage or work as about
-the law of gravitation, and when it is presented to me in the form of
-human behaviour it makes me sick, like the smell of tuberoses in a close
-room; and I failed utterly to realize then that there are a great many
-people capable of living sincerely and at the same time blandly
-misrepresenting the facts of life in the interests of what is called
-morality. I do not think it probable that Cousin Judd accepted for
-himself the rule of behaviour prescribed by the books he recommended--I
-shall not tell you what they were, but if there are any Sunday-school
-libraries in Ohianna you will find them on the shelves--but I know that
-he and my mother esteemed them excellent for the young.
-
-So far as they thought of it at all, they believed that in surrounding
-me with intimations of a life in which there was nothing more important
-than settling with Deity the minor details of living, and especially how
-much you would pay to His establishment, they had done their utmost to
-provide me with a life in which nothing more important could happen. If
-you were careful about reading the Bible and doing good to people--that
-is, persuading them to go to church and to leave off swearing--all the
-more serious details such as making a living, marrying and having
-children would take care of themselves; and the trouble was, as I have
-said, that I believed it. And that was how I found myself farthest from
-Art and Life at the time when I found myself a young lady.
-
-I had to make this discovery for myself, for there were no social
-occasions in Taylorville to give a term to your advent into the grown-up
-world, though there was a definite privilege which marked your
-achievement of it. There was a period prior to this in which you bumped
-against things you were too old for, and carromed to the things for
-which you were quite too young, and about the end of your high-school
-term you had done with hair ribbons and begun to have company on your
-own account, and the sort of things began to happen which marked the
-point beyond which if you fell upon disaster it was your own fault. They
-happened to me.
-
-By dint of my doing her compositions and of her doing my arithmetic,
-Pauline Allingham and I had managed to keep together all through the
-high school, and it was in our last year, when we used to put in the
-long end of the afternoons at Pauline's, playing croquet, that I first
-took notice of Tommy Bettersworth. The Bettersworth yard abutted on the
-Allingham's for the space of one woodshed and a horse-chestnut tree, and
-it was along in October that I began to be aware that it was not
-altogether the view of the garden that kept Tommy on the woodshed or in
-the chestnut tree the greater part of the afternoon. It may be that the
-adventure with Charlie Gower had sharpened my perception, at any rate it
-had aroused my discretion; I was carefully oblivious to the proximity of
-Tommy Bettersworth. But there came a day when Pauline was not, when she
-wanted to tell me something about Flora Haines which she was afraid he
-might overhear.
-
-"Come around to the summer-house," she said, "Tommy's always hanging
-about; I can't think what makes him."
-
-"Always?" I suggested.
-
-"Why, you know yourself he was there last Saturday, and Thursday when
-we ..."
-
-"Is he there when you and Flora are there, or only ..."
-
-"Oh," Pauline gave a gasp, "No----Oh, I never thought ... Olive ... I do
-believe ... that's it!"
-
-"Well, what?"
-
-"It's _you_, Olive," solemnly. "It must be that ... he really is...."
-Pauline's reading included more romance than mine.
-
-"Well, he can't say I gave him any encouragement."
-
-"Oh, _of course_ not, darling," Pauline was sympathetic. "You
-couldn't ... it is _so_ interesting. What would the girls say?"
-
-"Pauline, if you ever ..."
-
-"Truly, I never will.... But just _think_!"
-
-But we reckoned without Alfred Allingham. Alfred was not a nice boy at
-that age; he had come the way of curled darlings to be a sly,
-tale-bearing, offensive little cad, and the next Saturday, when Pauline
-turned him off the croquet ground for ribaldry, he went as far as the
-rose border and jeered back at us.
-
-"I know why you don't want me," he mocked; "so's I can't see Olive and
-Tommy Bettersworth makin' eyes." He executed a jig to the tune of
-
- "Olive's mad and I am glad.
- And I know what'll please her----"
-
-At this juncture the wrist and hand of Tommy Bettersworth appeared over
-the partition fence armed with horse-chestnuts which thudded with
-precision on the offensive person of Alfred Allingham. Pauline and I
-escaped to the summer-house. I thought I was going to cry until I found
-I was giggling, at which I was so mortified that I did cry.
-
-"He'll tell everybody in school," I protested.
-
-"What do you care?" soothed Pauline, "besides, you have to be teased
-about somebody, you know, and have somebody to choose you when they play
-clap in and clap out. You just _have_ to. Look at me." Pauline had been
-carrying on the discreetest of flirtations with Henry Glave for some
-months. "Tommy Bettersworth is a nice boy, and besides, dear, we'll have
-so much more in common."
-
-Pauline was right. Unless you had somebody to be teased about you were
-really not in things. I was furiously embarrassed by it, but I was
-resigned. Tommy sent me two notes that winter and a silk handkerchief
-for Christmas which I pretended was from Pauline. I am not going to be
-blamed for this. It was at least a month earlier that I had observed
-Tommy Bettersworth's inability to get away from Nile's corner on his way
-home from school until I had passed there on mine. It struck me as a
-very interesting trait of masculine character; I would have liked to
-talk it over with my mother on the plane of human interest; it seemed
-possible she might have noted similar eccentricities. I remember I
-worked around to it Saturday morning when I was helping her to darn the
-tablecloths. My mother was not unprepared; she did her duty by me as it
-was conceived in Taylorville, and did it promptly.
-
-"You are too young to be thinking about the boys," she said. "I don't
-want to hear you talking about such things until the time comes."
-
-This was so much in line with what was expected of parents, that I
-blinked the obvious retort that the time for talking about such things
-was when they began to happen, and went on with the tablecloths. But I
-couldn't tell her about the handkerchief after that. It would have been
-positively unmaidenly. And after he had sent me a magnificent paper lace
-valentine, I distinctly encouraged Tommy Bettersworth.
-
-This being the case, I do not know just how it began to be conveyed to
-me, as in the lengthening evenings of spring, Tommy took to
-church-going, that his hands were coarse and his ears too prominent, and
-as I confided solemnly to Pauline, though I had the greatest respect for
-his character, I simply couldn't bear to have him about. This was the
-more singular since the church-going was the visible sign of the good
-influence that, according to the books, I was exercising; and though
-Tommy was as nearly inarticulate as was natural, I was in no doubt on
-whose account this new start proceeded. If I had not disliked Tommy very
-much at this period, why should I have taken to tucking myself between
-Forester and Effie on the way home, embarrassedly aware of Tommy, whose
-way did not lie in our direction, scuffling along with the Lawrences on
-the other side of the street? I seem to remember some rather heroic
-attempts on Tommy's part to account for his presence there on the ground
-of wanting to speak privately to Forester, certain shouts and sallies
-toward which my brother displayed a derisive consciousness of their not
-being pertinent to the occasion.
-
-I have often wondered how much of these tentative ventures toward an
-altered relation were observed by our elders; not much, I should think.
-At any rate no mollifying word drifted down from their heights of
-experience to our shallows of self-consciousness.
-
-My mother adhered to her notion of my not being at an age for "such
-things," borne out, I believe, by the consensus of paternal opinion that
-she might too easily "put notions" in my head; not inquiring what
-notions might by the natural process of living be already there. Perhaps
-they were not altogether wrong in this, so delicate is the process of
-sex development that nature herself obscures the processes. To this day
-I do not know how much my taking suddenly to going home with Belle
-Endsleigh by a short cut was embarrassment, and how much a discreet
-feminine awareness that in my absence Tommy would better manage to make
-the family take his walking with them as a matter of course, but I
-remember that I cried when my mother, who did not approve of Belle
-Endsleigh, scolded me. And then quite suddenly came the click and the
-loosened tension of the readjustment.
-
-Along about Easter Alfred Allingham told Pauline that Tommy had thrashed
-Charlie Gower, and though it was supposed to be the strictest secret, it
-was because Charlie had teased him about me. Pauline was rather
-scandalized by my insistence that Charlie wouldn't have done it if Tommy
-hadn't rather conspicuously brought it on himself.
-
-"I call it truly noble of him ... like a knight." Pauline could always
-throw the glamour of her reading around the immediate circumstance. "At
-any rate, after this you can't do anything less than treat him
-politely," she urged.
-
-Whether it would have made any difference in my attitude or not, it did
-in Tommy's. I saw that when he came out of the church with us next
-Sunday. There was a certain aggressive maleness in the way he strode
-beside me, that there was no mistaking. I looked about rather feebly for
-Belle.
-
-"I don't see her anywhere," Tommy assured me, "besides, we don't want
-her." As I could see Tommy in the light that streamed from the church
-windows, it occurred to me that if he was not good-looking he certainly
-looked good, and he had a moustache coming.
-
-Forester, who was going through a phase himself, had gone home with Amy
-Lawrence; Effie lagged behind with mother, talking to Mrs. Endsleigh
-about the prospects of the Sewing Society raising the money for
-repainting the parsonage. Looking back to see what had become of them I
-tripped on the boardwalk.
-
-"If you would take my arm" ... suggested Tommy. I was aware of the
-sleeve of his coat under my fingers.
-
-The next turn took us out of sound of the voices; the street lamps
-flared far apart in the long, quiet avenue. The shed pods of the maples
-slipped and popped under us with the sweet smell of the sap.
-
-"How did you like the sermon?" Tommy wished to know. What I had to say
-of it was probably not very much to the point. No one overtook us as we
-walked. There was a sense of tremendous occasions in the air, of things
-accomplished. I had established the privilege. I was walking home from
-church with a young man. I was a young lady.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-As often as I think of Olivia Lattimore growing up, I have wondered if
-there was really no evidence of dramatic talent about, or simply no one
-able to observe it. There was no theatre at Taylorville, and when from
-time to time third-rate stock companies performed indifferent plays at
-the Town Hall, Forrie and Effie and I heard nothing of them except that
-they were presumably wicked.
-
-Occasionally there were amateur performances in which, when I had won a
-grudging consent to take part, I failed to distinguish myself. Effie had
-a very amusing trick of mimicry, and if you had heard her recite "Curfew
-Shall Not Ring To-night," you would have thought that the Gift on its
-way from whatever high and unknowable source, in passing her had lighted
-haphazard on the most unlikely instrument. I was not even clever at my
-books except by starts and flashes.
-
-I graduated at the high school with Pauline, and afterward we had two
-years together at Montecito. This was the next town to Taylorville, and
-its bitter rival. Montecito had a Young Ladies' Seminary, a Business
-College, and the State Institution for the Blind, for which Taylorville
-so little forgave it that the new railroad was persuaded to leave
-Montecito four miles to the right and make its junction with the L. and
-C. at Taylorville. This carried the farmer shipping away from Montecito,
-but the victory was not altogether scathless; young ladies were still
-obliged to go to the seminary, and it enabled Montecito to put on the
-air of having retired from the vulgar competition of trade and become
-the Athens of the West.
-
-Pauline and I went over to school on Mondays and home on Fridays. The
-course of study was for three years, but because there was Effie to
-think of and my mother's means were limited, I had only two, and was
-never able to catch up with Pauline by the length of that extra year.
-She was always holding it out against me in extenuation and excuse; when
-she tried to account for my marriage having turned out so badly on the
-ground of my not having had Advantages, I knew she was thinking of
-Montecito. She thinks of it still, I imagine, to condone as she does, I
-am sure, with an adorable womanliness, what in my conduct she no longer
-feels able to countenance. And yet I hardly know what I might have drawn
-from that third year more than I took away from the other two, which
-was, besides the regular course of study, an acquaintance with a style
-of furnishings not all gilt wall paper and plush brocade, and a renewed
-taste for good reading. They made such a point of good reading at the
-seminary that I have always thought it a pity they could not go a
-little farther and make a practice of it.
-
-The difficulty with most of our reading was that it had no relativity to
-the processes of life in Ohianna; we had things as far removed from it
-as Dante and Euripides, things no nearer than "The Scarlet Letter" and
-"David Copperfield," from which to draw for the exigencies of
-Taylorville was to cause my mother to wonder, with tears in her eyes,
-why in the world I couldn't be like other people. I read; I gorged, in
-fact, on the best books, but I found it more convenient to go on living
-by the shallow priggishness of Cousin Judd's selection. All that
-splendid stream poured in upon me and sank and lost itself in the shifty
-undercurrent that made still, by times, distracting eddies on the
-surface of adolescence.
-
-But whatever was missed or misunderstood of its evidences, the Gift
-worked at the bottom, throve like a sea anemone under the shallows of
-girlishness, and, nourished by unsuspected means, was the source no
-doubt of the live resistance I opposed to all that grew out of
-Forester's making a vocation of being a good son. I do not know yet how
-to deal with sufficient tenderness and without exasperation with the
-disposition of widowed women, bred to dependence, to build out of their
-sons the shape of a man proper to be leaned upon. It is so justified in
-sentiment, so pretty to see in its immediate phases, that though my
-mother was young and attractive enough to have married again, it was
-difficult not to concur in her making a virtue, a glorification of
-living entirely in her boy. I seem to remember a time before Forrie was
-intrigued by the general appreciation, when it required some coercion to
-present him always in the character of the most dutiful son. He hadn't,
-for instance, invariably fancied himself setting out for prayer meeting
-with my mother's hymn book and umbrella, but the second summer after my
-father died, when he had worked on Cousin Judd's farm and brought home
-his wages, found him completely implicated. We were really not so poor
-there was any occasion for this, but mother was so delighted with the
-idea of a provider, and Forester was so pleased with the picture of
-himself in that capacity, that it was all, no doubt, very good for him.
-
-He always did bring home his wages after that, which led to his being
-consulted about meals, and the new curtains for the dining-room, and to
-being met in the evening as though all the house had been primed for his
-return, and merely gone on in that expectation while he was away. Effie,
-I know, had no difficulty in accepting him as the excuse for any amount
-of household ritual, making a fuss about his birthdays and trying on her
-new clothes for his approval, but Effie was five years younger than
-Forester and I was only twenty-two months. It was more, I think, than
-our community in the gaucheries and hesitancies of youth that
-disinclined me to take seriously my brother's opinions on window
-curtains and to sniff at my mother's affectionate pretence of his being
-the head of the family. At times when I felt this going on in our house,
-there rose up like a wisp of fog between me and the glittering promise
-of the future, a kind of horror of the destiny of women; to defer and
-adjust, to maintain the attitude of acquiescence toward opinions and
-capabilities that had nothing more to recommend them than merely that
-they were a man's! I could be abased, I should be delighted to be
-imposed upon, but if I paid out self-immolation I wanted something for
-my money, and I didn't consider I was getting it with my brother for
-whom I smuggled notes and copied compositions.
-
-It never occurred to my mother, until it came to the concrete question
-of spending-money, that there was anything more than a kind of natural
-perverseness in my attitude, which only served to throw into relief the
-satisfactoriness of her relations to her son. Forester, it appeared, was
-to have an allowance, and I wanted one too.
-
-"But what," said my mother, tolerantly, for she had not yet thought of
-granting it, "would you do with an allowance?"
-
-"Whatever Forester does."
-
-"But Forester," my mother explained, waving the stocking she had
-stretched upon her hand, "is a boy." I expostulated.
-
-"What has that got to do with it?"
-
-"Olivia!" The ridiculousness of having such a question addressed to her
-brought a smile to my mother's lips, which hung fixed there as I saw her
-mind back away suddenly in fear that I was really going to insist on
-knowing what that had to do with it.
-
-"I give you twenty-five cents a week for church money," she parried
-weakly.
-
-"That's what you think I ought to give. I want an allowance, and then I
-can deny myself and give what I like."
-
-"Forester earns his," said my mother; she hadn't of course meant the
-discussion to get on to a basis of reasonableness.
-
-"Well," I threatened, "I'll earn mine."
-
-That was really what did the business in the end. All the boys in
-Taylorville worked as soon as they were old enough, but it was the last
-resort of poverty that girls should be put to wages. Before that
-possibility my mother retreated into amused indulgence. She paid me my
-allowance, appreciably less than my brother's, on the first of the
-month, with the air of concurring in a joke, which I think now must have
-covered some vague hurt at my want of sympathy with the beautiful
-fiction of Forester's growing up to take my father's place with her.
-They had achieved by the time Forester was twenty, what passed for
-perfect confidence between them, though it was at the cost of
-Forester's living shallowly or not at all in the courts of boyhood which
-my mother was unable to reënter, and her voluntary withdrawal from
-varieties of experience from which his youth prevented him. My mother
-always thought it was made up to her in affection; what came out of it
-for Forester is still on the knees of the gods.
-
-I began to say how it was that the Gift took care of itself while
-Forester was engrossing the family attention. He had had a year at the
-business college in Montecito, which was considered quite sufficient,
-and rather more, in fact, than his accepted vocation as the support of
-his mother seemed to call for. Any question that might naturally come up
-of a profession for him, seemed to have been quashed beforehand by the
-general notion of an immediate salary as the means to that end. I do not
-recall a voice lifted on behalf of a life of his own. He had worked up
-from driving the delivery wagon in vacations to being dry goods clerk at
-the Coöperative, where his affability and easy familiarity with the
-requirements of women, made him immensely popular. Everybody liked to
-trade with Forester because he took such pains in matching things, and
-he was such a good boy to his mother. He paid the largest portion of his
-salary for his board, and took Effie, who adored him, about with him. I
-don't mean to say that he was not also good friends with Olivia, or that
-there was anything which prevented my doing my best with the three
-chocolate layer cakes and the angel's food I made for his party on his
-twenty-first birthday.
-
-The real unpleasantness on that occasion came of my mother's notion of
-distinguishing it among all other birthdays by paying over to Forester a
-third of the not very considerable sum left by my father, derived
-chiefly from his back pay as an officer, which she had always held as
-particularly set aside for us children. It was owing perhaps to a form
-of secretiveness that in unprotected woman does duty for caution, that
-Effie and I had scarcely heard of this sum until it was flourished
-before us on the day before the birthday, much as if it had been my
-father's sword, supposing the occasion to have required it being girded
-on his son.
-
-Forester was to have a third of that money in the form of a check under
-his plate on the morning of his birthday. Effie and I did full justice
-to the magnificence of the proposal. I was beating the whites of
-thirteen eggs by Pauline's recipe for angel food--mine called for only
-eleven--and Effie was rubbing up Mrs. Endsleigh's spoons, which had been
-borrowed for the party.
-
-I was always happier in the kitchen than in any room of the house, with
-its plain tinted walls, the plain painted woodwork (the parlour was
-hideously "grained"), and the red of Effie's geraniums at the window
-ledge. The stir of domesticity, all this talk of my father, intrigued
-me for the moment into the sense of being a valued and intrinsic part of
-the family.
-
-"His father would have wanted Forester to have that money," said my
-mother, "now that he's of age."
-
-"And when," I questioned, raised by the mention of thirds to the joyous
-inclusion, "are Effie and I to have ours?"
-
-"Oh," my mother's interest waned, "when you are married, perhaps."
-
-It had grown in my mind as I spoke, that I had been of age now more than
-a year and nothing had come of it. The suggestion that my father could
-have taken a less active interest in the event on my behalf, pressed
-upon a dying sensibility; I resented his being so committed to this
-posthumous slight and meant to defend him from it.
-
-"He'd have wanted me to have mine on my birthday, the same as Forester,"
-I insisted.
-
-"Oh, Olivia!" My mother's tone intimated annoyance at my claim to being
-supported by my father in my absurdities, but her good humour was proof
-against it. "Girls have theirs when they are married," she soothed.
-
-I held up the platter and whisked the stiff froth with the air of doing
-these things very dexterously; I wasn't going to admit by taking it
-seriously, that my brother's coming of age was any more important than
-mine, but I spare you the flippancies by which I covered the hurt of
-realizing that to everybody except myself, it was.
-
-"It is so like you, Olivia," said my mother, with tears in her eyes, "to
-want to spoil everything." What I had really spoiled was the free
-exercise of partiality by which she was enabled to distinguish Forester
-over her other children, according to her sense of his deserts; and,
-besides, what in the world would the child do with all that money?
-
-"The same thing that Forester does," I maintained, and then quickly to
-forestall another objection which I saw rising in her face. "If you were
-old enough to be married at nineteen, I guess I am old enough to be
-trusted with a few hundred dollars."
-
-But there I had struck again on the structure of tradition that kept
-Taylorville from direct contact with the issues of life; anybody was old
-enough to be married at eighteen, but money was a serious matter.
-Whenever I said things like that I could see my mother waver between a
-shocked wonder at having produced such unnaturalness, and the fear that
-somebody might overhear us. And I didn't know myself what I wanted with
-that money, except that I craved the sense of being important that went
-with the possession of it. And of course now that I had been refused it
-on the ground of sex, it was part of the general resistance that I
-opposed to things as they were, to have it on principle. Just when I
-had mother almost convinced that she ought to give it to me, she made it
-nearly impossible for me to accept, by asking Forester what she ought to
-do about it. When I had demanded it as the evidence of my taking rank
-with my brother as a personage, it was insufferable that it should come
-to me as a concession of his amiability.
-
-What I really wanted of course was to have it put under my plate with an
-affectionate speech about its being the legacy of a soldier and the
-witness of his integrity, coupled with the hope that I would spend it in
-a manner to give pleasure to my dear father, who was no doubt looking on
-at this happy incident.
-
-There was nothing in me then--there is nothing now--which advised me of
-being inappropriately the object of such an address, or my replying to
-it as gallantly as the junior clerk of the Coöperative. To do Forester
-justice, he came out squarely on the question of my being entitled to
-the money if he was, but he contrived backhandedly to convey his sense
-of my obtuseness in not deferring sentimentally to a male ascendancy
-that I did not intrinsically feel; and I can go back now to these
-disquieting episodes as the beginning of that maladjustment of my
-earlier years, in not having a man about toward whom I could actually
-experience the deference I was expected to exhibit.
-
-Well, I had my check for the same amount and on the same occasion as my
-brother's, but the feeling in the air of its being merely a concession
-to my forwardness, prevented me from making any return for it that
-interfered with Forester's carrying off the situation of coming into his
-father's legacy on coming of age, quite to my mother's satisfaction.
-What it might have made for graciousness for once in my life to have
-been the centre of that dramatic affectionateness, I can only guess.
-Firm in the determination that since no sentiment went to its bestowal
-none should go to its acknowledgment, I carried my check upstairs and
-shook all of the rugs out of the window to account for my eyes being red
-at ten o'clock in the morning. And that was the way the Powers took to
-provide against the complete submergence of the actress in the young
-lady, for though it turned out that I did spend the greater part of the
-money on my wedding clothes, a portion of it went for the only technical
-training I ever had.
-
-The real business of a young lady in Taylorville was getting married,
-but to avoid an obviousness in the interim, she played the piano or
-painted on satin or became interested in missions. If my money had
-fallen in eight months earlier I should undoubtedly have spent it on the
-third year at Montecito; as it was I decided to study elocution. It
-appeared a wholly fortuitous choice. I was not supposed to have any
-talent for it, but I burned to spend some of my money sensibly, and it
-was admittedly sensible for a young lady to take lessons in something.
-Effie was having music, Flora Haines painted plaques; when Olivia joined
-Professor Winter's elocution classes at Temperance Hall mother said it
-looked like throwing money away, but of course I could teach in case
-anything happened, which meant in case of my not being married or being
-left a widow with young children.
-
-Professor Winter was the kind of man who would have collected patch
-boxes and painted miniatures on ladies' fans; not that he could have
-done anything of the sort on his income, but it would have suited the
-kind of man he was. He had small neat ways and nice little tricks of
-discrimination, and microscopic enthusiasms that hovered and fluttered,
-enough of them when it came to the rendering of a favourite passage, to
-produce a kind of haze of appreciation like a swarm of midges. Not being
-able to afford patch boxes or Louis XV enamels, he collected accents
-instead. The man's memory for phonic variations was extraordinary; all
-our accustomed speech was a wild garden over which he took little
-flights and drops and humming poises, extracting, as it were by sips,
-your private history, things you would have probably told for the
-asking, but objected to having wrested from your betraying tongue. He
-would come teetering forward on his neat little boots, upon the toes of
-which he appeared to elevate himself by pressing the tips of his
-fingers very firmly together, and when you committed yourself no farther
-than to remark on the state of the weather or the election outlook, he
-would want to know if you hadn't spent some time of your youth in the
-South, or if it was your maternal or paternal grandfather who was
-Norwegian. Either of which would be true and annoying, particularly as
-you weren't aware of speaking other than the rest of the world, for if
-there was anything quite and completely abhorrent to the Taylorville
-mind it was the implication of being different from other
-Taylorvillians.
-
-Somewhere the Professor had picked up an adequate theory and practice of
-voice production, though I never knew anything of his training except
-that he had been an instructor in a normal school and was aggrieved at
-his dismissal. After he had advertised himself as open for private
-instruction and tri-weekly classes at Temperance Hall, there was
-something almost like a concerted effort at keeping him in the town,
-because of the credit he afforded us against Montecito. With the
-exception of a much-whiskered personage who came over from the business
-college in the winter to conduct evening classes in penmanship, he was
-the only man addressed habitually as Professor, and the only one who
-wore evening dress at public functions.
-
-His dress coat imparted a particular touch of elegance to occasions when
-he gave readings from "Evangeline" and "The Lady of the Lake"
-(Taylorville choice), and thoroughly discredited a disgruntled
-Montecitan who, on the basis of having been to Chicago on his wedding
-trip, insisted that such were only worn by waiters in hotels.
-
-It would be interesting to record that Professor Winter lent himself
-with alacrity to the unfolding of my Gift, but, in fact, his imagination
-hardly strayed so far. He taught phonics and voice production and taught
-them very well; probably he had no more practical acquaintance with the
-stage than I had. Certainly he never suggested it for me, and for my
-part I could hardly have explained why with so little encouragement I
-was so devoted to the rather tedious drill. Pauline was still at the
-seminary, and the regular hours of practice made a bulwark against an
-insidious proprietary air which Tommy Bettersworth began to wear.
-Besides the voice training, I had a system of physical culture,
-artificial and unsound as I have since learned, but serving to restrain
-my too exuberant gesture, and much memorizing of poems and plays for
-practice work. I hardly know if the Professor had any dramatic talent or
-not; probably not, as he made nothing, I remember, of stopping me in the
-middle of a great passion for the sake of a dropped consonant, and
-deprecated original readings on my part.
-
-It was his relish for musical cadence as much as its intellectual
-appreciation that led him to select the Elizabethan drama, in the great
-scenes of which I was letter perfect by the time I had come to the end
-of the Professor's instruction, and at the end too, it seemed, of my
-devices for dodging the destiny of women.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-I have tried to sketch to you how in Taylorville we were allowed to
-stumble on the grown-up consciousness of sex, but I can give you no idea
-of the extent to which we were prevented from the grown-up judgment.
-
-Somewhere between the ages of sixteen and eighteen, one was loosed on a
-free and lively social intercourse from which one was expected to emerge
-later, triumphantly mated. This was obligatory; otherwise your family
-sighed and said that somehow Olivia didn't seem to know how to catch a
-husband, and then painstakingly refrained from the subject in your
-presence; or your mother, if she was particularly loyal, said she had
-always thought there was no call for a girl to marry if she didn't feel
-to want to. But anything resembling maternal interference in your behalf
-was looked upon as worldly minded, or at the least unnecessary. The
-custom of chaperonage was unheard of; girls were supposed to be trusted.
-
-I do not recall now that I ever had any particular instruction as to how
-to conduct myself toward young men except that they were never on any
-account to take liberties. Whatever else went to the difficult business
-of mating you were supposed to pick up. That I did not pass through
-this period in entire obliviousness was due to Pauline, who had the
-keenest appreciation of her effect on the opposite sex. She was the sort
-of girl who is described as having always had a great deal of attention;
-she had a nice Procrustean notion of the sort of young man to be engaged
-to--our maiden imagination hardly went farther than that--and her young
-ladyhood appeared to be a process of trying it on the greatest possible
-number of eligible Taylorvillians. When she came home from Montecito she
-had already met Henry Mills at the house of a roommate where she had
-spent the Easter vacation, and he had sent her flowers at commencement
-and verses of his own composition.
-
-It was Pauline who explained to me that unless I had some young man like
-Tommy Bettersworth who could be counted on, I could hardly hope to be
-"in" things--when they made up a party to go sleighing, for instance, or
-a picnic to Willesden Lake. I liked being in things and did not
-altogether dislike Tommy Bettersworth. He was a thoroughly creditable
-beau and required very little handling, for even as early as that I had
-an inkling of what I have long since concluded, that a man who requires
-overmuch to be played and baited, held off and on, is rather poor game
-after you have got him. It worried Pauline not a little that I forgave
-Tommy so lightly for small offences; she was afraid it might appear that
-I liked him too much, when in truth it was only that I liked him too
-little. And for complacence, if I had had any disposition toward it, I
-was saved by the shocking example of Forester, all of whose relations
-were tinged by his vocation of model son. He had acquired by this time a
-manner, by the intimacy, greater than is common in boys, with which he
-lived into the feminine life of the household, and by his daily
-performance of measuring off petticoats and matching hose, which
-admitted him to families where we visited, on a footing that enabled him
-to flirt with the daughters under the very apron-strings of their
-mothers. You couldn't somehow maintain a strict virginal severity with a
-young man who had just taken an informed and personal interest in your
-mother's flannelette wrappers, the credit of whose dutifulness was a
-warrant for his not meaning anything in particular. In short, Forrie
-spooned.
-
-I think now there was some excuse for him; he had been wrenched very
-early by his affections from the normal outbreaks of adolescence; he had
-never to my knowledge been "out with the boys." Unless he got it in the
-business of junior clerk at the Coöperative, he could hardly be said to
-have a male life at all; he was being shaped to a man's performance at
-the expense of his mannishness. But against his philandering rose up,
-not only the fastidiousness of girlhood, but some latent sense of
-rightness, as keen in me as the violinist's for the variation of tone;
-something that questioned the justice of pronouncing thoroughly moral a
-young man who, if he never went over the brink, was willing to spend a
-considerable portion of his time on the edge of it. I should have
-admired Forester more at this juncture if he had been a little wild--and
-I knew perfectly that my mother would have interdicted any social life
-for me whatever if I had permitted a tithe of the familiarities allowed
-to my brother.
-
-Among the other things which a girl was expected to "pick up," along
-with the art of attracting a husband, was the vital information with
-which she was expected to meet the occasion of marrying one. It was all
-a part of the general assumption of the truth as something not suitable
-for the young to know, that nobody told us any of these things if they
-could help it. I do not mean to say that there was not a certain amount
-of half information whispered about among the girls, who by the avidity
-for such whisperings established themselves as not quite nice. But
-Pauline Allingham and I were nice girls. What this meant was that
-nothing that pertained to the mystery of marriage reached us through all
-the suppression and evasions of the social conspiracy, except the
-obviousness of maternity. I remember how intimations of it as part of
-our legitimate experience, began to grow upon us with a profound and
-tender curiosity toward very young children, and, particularly on
-Pauline's part, a great shyness of being seen in their company. But we
-were not expected to possess ourselves of accurate information until we
-were already involved in it.
-
-We had reached the age when matrons no longer avoided references to its
-most conspicuous phases in our presence, before we found words for
-mentioning it to one another. There was a young aunt of Pauline's lent
-something to that.
-
-She was a sister of Mr. Allingham, come to stay with them while her
-husband was absent somewhere in the West. Pauline told me about it one
-of the week-ends she spent at home from Montecito; this was Saturday
-afternoon, and she had found the aunt in the house on her return the
-evening before.
-
-"Do you know," she said, "it is very queer the way I feel about Aunt
-Alice--the way she is, you know. Mamma hadn't told me, and when I came
-into the sitting room and saw her, I thought I was going to cry; and it
-wasn't that I was sorry either ... I'm awfully fond of her. I just felt
-it."
-
-"Yes, I know," I admitted.
-
-"Aunt Alice is so sensible," Pauline explained a few weeks later, "she
-talks to me a great deal; she's only a few years older than I am. She
-has shown me all her things for the baby. Mamma didn't think she
-ought ... you know how mothers are. They're in the bureau drawer in the
-best room. I'll show them to you some time; Alice won't mind."
-
-Alice didn't mind, it appeared, so it must have been shyness that led
-us to select the afternoon when the married women were away, and though
-I cannot forgive the conditions which led us so surreptitiously to touch
-the fringe of the great experience, I own still to some tenderness for
-the two girls with their heads together that bright hot afternoon, over
-the bureau drawer in Mrs. Allingham's best room. Pauline showed me a
-little sacque which she had crocheted.
-
-"Mother thought I was too young, but Alice said I might."
-
-"You must have liked to, awfully," I envied.
-
-"That's one of the nice things about having children, I should
-think"--Pauline fingered a hemstitched slip--"you can make things for
-them."
-
-"Which would you rather have, girls or boys?" I hazarded.
-
-"Oh, girls; you can always dress them so prettily."
-
-"But boys ... they can do so many things when they grow up." I felt
-rather strongly on that point.
-
-"Alice says"--Pauline folded the little frock--"that she's so glad to
-have it she doesn't care which it is." Something, perhaps an echo of my
-mother's experience, pricked in me.
-
-"They aren't always as glad as that."
-
-"I suppose not. Alice is having this one because she wants it."
-
-We looked at one another. We would have liked to have spoken further, to
-have defined ourselves, despoiled ourselves of tenderness, nobilities,
-but around the whole subject lay the blank expanse of our ignorance. We
-locked the drawer again and went out and played croquet. And that was
-how we stood toward our normal destiny that summer when Pauline was
-wondering if Henry Mills meant to propose to her, and I was wondering
-how much longer I could keep Tommy Bettersworth from proposing to me.
-
-I managed to stave it off until the end of September. On the
-twenty-second of that month there was a picnic at Willesden Lake. There
-were ten couples of us, and Flora Haines, who was wanted to count even
-with a young man who was to join us at the lake, a stranger to most of
-us, nephew to one of the wealthiest farmers in the township. We had
-always wished there might have been young people at the Garrett farm,
-and there was some talk of this nephew, who was to come on a visit,
-being adopted.
-
-Some of our brothers had made his acquaintance, and Pauline, who had met
-him at Montecito, had warranted him as "interesting." I believe Flora
-Haines was invited to pair with him because every girl felt that Flora
-would be eminently safe to trust her own young man to in the event of
-Helmeth Garrett proving more worth while.
-
-Henry Mills, who was reading law at the county seat of the adjoining
-county, had come over for the picnic and was expected to bring matters
-to a crisis with Pauline, and Forester had a day off to take Belle
-Endsleigh, who was at the point of pitying him because, though he had
-such an affectionate disposition, so long as his mother depended on him
-he couldn't think of marrying. We had no chaperone of course; several of
-the couples were engaged, and there were brothers; we wouldn't have to
-put up with the implication that we were not able to manage by
-ourselves.
-
-It was the sort of day ... soft Indian summer, painted woodlands,
-gossamer glinting high in the windless air ... on which Forester found
-it necessary to hope brotherly that I should be able to get through it
-without being silly. By that he meant that the submerged Olivia, however
-interestingly she might read in a book, was highly incomprehensible and
-nearly always ridiculous to her contemporaries.
-
-Willesden Lake was properly a drainage pond of four or five acres in
-extent, drawn like a bow about the contour of two hills; water-lilies
-grew at the head where a stream came in, and muskrats built at the lower
-end. The picnic ground was in the hollow between the two hills, by a
-spring, where the grass grew smooth like a lawn to the roots of oaks
-burning blood red from leaf to leaf. As it turned out, though we put off
-lunch for him for an hour, young Mr. Garrett did not come, and as the
-party sat about on the mossy hummocks in the quiet of repletion, I
-thought nothing could be so much worth while as to leave Tommy in care
-of Flora Haines and get away into the woods by myself. The soul of the
-weather had got into my soul and I felt I should discredit myself with
-Forester if I stayed. There was a little footpath that led down by a
-rill to the lake, and as I took it, there was scarcely a sound louder
-than the soft down-rustle of the painted leaves. There were two or three
-old boats, half water-logged, tied at the head of the lake, and one of
-these I found and paddled across to the opposite bank. I had not known
-there was a path there opening from the dewberry bushes that dipped
-along the border, but the spirit in my feet answered to its invitation.
-I followed it up the hill through the leaf drift that heaped whispering
-in the smoky wood. I spread out my arms as I went and began to move to
-the rhythm of chanted verse. Where the red and gold and russet banners
-brushed me I was touched delicately as with flame. I had on a very
-pretty dress that day, I remember, a thin organdy with a leaf pattern,
-made up over yellow sateen, and the consciousness of suitability worked
-happily on my mind. At the top of the hill I struck into an old wood
-road where it passed through a grove of young hickory, blazing yellow
-like a host. Here I went slowly and dropped the chanting to the measure
-of classic English verse; it was the only means of expression
-Taylorville had provided me. Scene after scene I went through happy and
-oblivious. I had been at it half an hour perhaps, moving forward with
-the natural impetus of the play, in the faint old wagon tracks, and had
-got as far as
-
- --Flowers that affrighted she let fall
- From Dis's wagon!--
-
-when I was startled by the clapping of hands, and looked up to see a
-young man sitting on the top of a rail fence that ran straight across
-the way, as though he might have stopped there to rest in the act of
-climbing over.
-
-"I knew you would see me the next minute," he said, "and I wanted to be
-discovered in the act of appreciation." He sprang down from the fence
-and came toward me, taking off his hat. "I suppose you are from the
-picnic; I expected to find you somewhere about. I am Helmeth Garrett."
-
-"They're at the spring--we waited lunch for you. I am Miss Lattimore;
-Olivia May," I supplemented. I was a little doubtful about that point,
-for at Taylorville we called one another by our first names. I was
-pleased with the swiftness with which he struck upon a permissible
-compromise.
-
-"I owe you all sorts of apologies, Miss Olivia, but the mare I was to
-ride went lame and uncle couldn't spare me another, so I had an early
-lunch at the house and walked over." As he stood looking down at me I
-saw that he had a crop of unruly dark hair and what there was in his
-face that Pauline had found interesting. He wore a soft red tie,
-knotted loosely at the collar of a white flannel shirt, and for the rest
-of him was dressed very much as other young men. All at once a spark of
-irrepressible friendliness flashed up in smiles between us.
-
-It seemed the merest chance then that I had come across the wood to meet
-him. In the light of what has happened since, I see that the guardian of
-my submerged self was doing what it could for me; but against the
-embattled social forces of Taylorville what could even the gods do!
-
-"If you will take me to the others," he suggested, "I can make my
-excuses, and then we can talk." It was remarkable, I thought, that he
-should have discovered so early that we would wish to talk. We began to
-move in the direction of the lake.
-
-"Were you doing a play?" he asked. I nodded.
-
-"How long were you watching me?"
-
-"Since you passed the plum brush yonder; it was bully! Are you going on
-the stage?" I explained about Professor Winter and the elocution
-lessons.
-
-"They don't approve of the stage in Taylorville," I finished, touched by
-the vanishing trace of a realization that up to this moment the
-objection would have been stated personally.
-
-"And with all your talent! Oh, I know what I'm saying. I lived in
-Chicago four years and saw a lot of the theatre."
-
-He began to talk to me of the stage, probably much of it neither
-informed nor profitable, but I had never heard it talked of before in
-unembarrassed relevancy to living, and he had that trick of speech that
-goes with the achieving propensity, of accelerating his own energy as he
-talked, so that its backwater fairly floated us into the ease of
-intimacy. There was no doubt we were tremendously pleased with one
-another. I was throbbing still with the measure of verse and moved half
-trippingly to the rhythm of my blood.
-
-"Do you dance too?" What went with that implied something personal and
-complimentary.
-
-"Oh, no--a few steps I've picked up at school. That's another of the
-things we don't approve at Taylorville."
-
-"I say, what a lot of old mossbacks there must be about here anyway.
-Take my uncle, now...." He went on to tell me how he had tried to induce
-his uncle, who could afford it, to advance the money for technical
-training in engineering. Uncle Garrett was of the opinion that Helmeth
-would do better to get a job with some good man and "pick up things ...
-always managed to get along by rule of thumb himself," said the nephew,
-"and thinks all the rest of us ought to. I said, 'How would it be with a
-doctor, now, just to scramble up his medicine?' but you can't get
-through to my uncle. He thinks a man who can run a thrashing machine is
-an engineer."
-
-I remember that we found it necessary to sit down on the slope of the
-hill toward the pond while he sketched for me his notion of what an
-engineer's career might be. "But you've got to have technical
-training ... got to! Talk about rule of thumb ... it's like going at it
-with no thumbs at all." In the midst of this we remembered that we ought
-to be looking for the rest of the picnickers. Once in the boat, however,
-there was a muskrat's nest which, as something new to him, had to be
-poked into, and we stopped to gather lilies, which I could not have done
-by myself without wetting my dress. When we came at last to the spring,
-we found the lunch baskets huddled under the oak and nobody about.
-
-I think we must have been very far gone by this time in the young
-rapture of intimacy. The wood was smokily still, and we scuffed great
-heaps of the leaves together as we walked about pretending to look for
-the others. I remember it seemed a singular flame-touched circumstance
-that the leaves flew up from under our feet and fell lightly on our
-faces and our hair.
-
-"I suppose we can't help finding them; the wonder is they haven't been
-spoiling our good talk before now."
-
-"Oh," I protested, "if you hadn't been coming to look for them you
-wouldn't have met me."
-
-"And now that we have met, we are going to keep on. I'm coming to see
-you. May I?"
-
-"If you care so much...." A little spiral of wind rising fountain-wise
-out of the breathlessness whirled up a smother of brightening leaves; it
-caught my skirts and whipped them against his knees. It seemed to have
-blown our hands together too, though I am at a loss to know how that
-was.
-
-"Care!" he said. "If I care? Oh, you beauty, you wonder!" All at once he
-had kissed me.
-
-The electrical moment hung in the air, poised, took flight upward in
-dizzying splendour. Suddenly from within the wood came a little snigger
-of laughter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-I do not know how long it took for the certainty that I had been kissed
-by an utter stranger in the presence of the entire picnic, to work
-through the singing flames in which that kiss had wrapped me. We must
-have walked on almost immediately in the direction of the snigger; I
-remember a kind of clutch of my spirit toward the mere mechanical act of
-walking, to hold me fast to the time and place from which there was an
-inward rush to escape. We walked on. They were all sitting together
-under a bank of hazel and the girls' laps were filled with the brown
-clusters. Out of my whirling dimness I heard Helmeth Garrett explaining,
-as I introduced him, how he had come across me in the wood, looking for
-them.
-
-"And of course," suggested Charlie Gower, "in such good company you
-weren't in a hurry about looking for the rest of us." I remembered the
-asparagus bed and was glad I had slapped him.
-
-"No," my companion looked him over very coolly, "now that I've seen some
-of the rest of you I'm glad I didn't hurry." Plainly it wasn't going to
-do to try to take it out of Helmeth Garrett.
-
-As we began by common consent to move back to the spring, Forester drew
-me by the arm behind the hazel. He was divided between a brotherly
-disgust at my lapse, and delight to have caught the prim Olivia
-tripping.
-
-"Well," he exclaimed, "you _have_ done it!" Considering what I knew of
-Forester's affairs this was unbearable.
-
-"Oh! it isn't for _you_ to talk----"
-
-"What I want to know is, whether I am to thrash him or not?"
-
-"Thrash him?" I wondered.
-
-"For getting you talked about ... off there in the woods all afternoon!"
-
-"We weren't----" I began, but suddenly I saw the white bolls of the
-sycamores redden with the westering sun; we must have been three hours
-covering what was at most a half hour's walk. "Don't be vulgar,
-Forester," I went on, with my chin in the air.
-
-"Oh, well," was my brother's parting shot, "I don't know as I ought to
-make any objection, seeing you didn't."
-
-That, I felt, was the weakness of my position; I not only hadn't made
-any objection, I hadn't felt any shame; the annoyance, the hurt of
-outraged maidenliness, whatever was the traditional attitude, hadn't
-come. Inwardly I burned with the woods afire, the red west, the white
-star like a torch that came out above it. On the way home Helmeth
-Garrett rode with us as far as the main road and was particularly
-attentive to Pauline and Flora Haines. I remember it came to me dimly
-that there was something designedly protective in this; there was more
-or less veiled innuendo flying about which failed to get through to me.
-Pauline put it quite plainly for me when she came to talk things over
-the day after the picnic. She was sympathetic.
-
-"Oh, my dear, it must be dreadful for you," she cooed; "a perfect
-stranger, and getting you talked about that way!"
-
-"So I am talked about?"
-
-"My _dear_, what could you expect? And in plain sight of us. If you had
-only pushed him away, or something."
-
-"I couldn't," I said, "I was so ... astonished." In the night I had
-found myself explaining to Pauline how this affair of Helmeth Garrett
-had differed importantly from all similar instances; now I saw its
-shining surfaces dimmed with comment like unwiped glass.
-
-"That's just what I _said_!" Pauline was pleased with herself. "I told
-Belle Endsleigh you weren't used to that sort of thing ... you were
-_completely_ overcome. But of course he wasn't really a gentleman or he
-wouldn't have done it." I do not know why at this moment it occurred to
-me that probably Henry Mills hadn't proposed to Pauline after all, but
-before I could frame a discreet question she was off in another
-direction.
-
-"What will Tommy Bettersworth say?"
-
-"Why, what has he got to do with it?"
-
-"O-_liv_-ia! After the way you've encouraged him...."
-
-"You mean because I went to the picnic with him? Well, what can he do
-about it?" Pauline gave me up with a gesture.
-
-"Tommy is the soul of chivalry," she said, "and anybody can see he is
-crazy about you, simply crazy." What I really wanted was that she should
-go on talking about Helmeth Garrett. I wanted ground for putting to her
-that since all we had been sedulously taught about kissing and all "that
-sort of thing"--that it was horrid, cheapening, insufferable--had failed
-to establish itself, had in fact come as a sword, divining mystery, it
-couldn't be dealt with on the accepted Taylorville basis. I felt the
-quality of achievement in Helmeth Garrett's right to kiss me, a right
-which I was sure he lacked only the occasion to establish. But when the
-occasion came it went all awry.
-
-It was the next Sunday morning, and all down Polk Street the
-frost-bitten flower borders were a little made up for by the passage
-between the shoals of maple leaves that lined the walks, of whole flocks
-of bright winged, new fall hats on their way to church. Mother and Effie
-were in front and two of my Sunday-school scholars had scurried up like
-rabbits out of the fallen leafage and tucked themselves on either side
-of my carefully held skirts. Suddenly there was a rattle of buggy wheels
-on the winter roughed road; it turned in by Niles's corner and drove
-directly toward us; the top was down and I made out by the quick
-pricking of my blood, the Garrett bays and Helmeth with his hat off, his
-hair tousled, and a bright soft tie swinging free of his vest. You saw
-heads turning all along the block in discreet censure of his
-unsabbatical behaviour. He recognized me almost immediately and turned
-the team with intention to our side of the street. He was going to speak
-to me ... he was speaking. My mother's back stiffened, she didn't know
-of course. Forrie wouldn't have had the face to tell her, but how many
-eyes on us up and down the street did know? A Sunday-school teacher in
-the midst of her scholars ... and he had kissed me on Thursday!
-
-"Olivia," said my mother, "do you know that young man? Such manners ...
-Sunday morning, too. Well, I am glad that you had the sense to ignore
-him;" and I did not know until that moment that I had.
-
-It was because of my habit of living inwardly, I suppose, that it never
-occurred to me that the incident could have any other bearing on our
-relations than the secret one of confirming me in my impression of our
-intimacy being on a superior, excluding footing. He had come, as I was
-perfectly aware, to renew it at the point of breaking off, and this
-security quite blinded me to the effect my cold reception might have
-upon him. That he would fail to understand how I was hemmed and pinned
-in by Taylorville, hadn't occurred to me, not even when he passed us
-again on the way home from church, driving recklessly. His hat was on
-this time, determinedly to one side, and he was smoking, smoking a
-cigar. I thought at first he had not seen me, but he turned suddenly
-when he was quite past and swept me a flourish with it held between two
-fingers of the hand that touched his hat.
-
-At that time in Taylorville no really nice young man smoked, at least
-not when he would get found out. This offensiveness in the face of the
-returning church-goers was too flagrant to admit even the appearance of
-noticing it, but that it would be noticed, taken stock of in the general
-summing up of our relation, I was sickeningly aware.
-
-Tommy Bettersworth put one version of it for me comfortingly when he
-came in the evening to take me to church.
-
-"I saw you turn down that Garrett fellow this morning. Served him
-right ... that and the way you behaved Thursday ... just as if you did
-not find him worth rowing about. A lot of girls make a fuss, and it's
-only to draw a fellow on; and now you're going to church with me the
-same as usual; that'll show 'em what _I_ think of it." Now, I had clean
-forgotten that Tommy might come that evening. I was whelmed with the
-certainty that Helmeth Garrett had gone back to the farm after all
-without seeing me; and the moment Tommy came through the gate I had one
-of those rifts of lucidity in which I saw him whole and limited, pasted
-flat against the background of Taylorville without any perspective of
-imagination, and was taken mightily with the wish to explain to him
-where he stood, once for all, outside and disconnected with anything
-that was vital and important to me. But quite unexpectedly, before I
-could frame a beginning, he had presented himself to me in a new light.
-He was cover, something to get behind in order to exercise myself more
-freely in the things he couldn't understand.
-
-Something more was bound to come out of my relation to Helmeth Garrett;
-the incident couldn't go on hanging in the air that way; and in the
-meantime here was an opportunity to put it out of public attention by
-going out with Tommy. It did hang in the air, however, for three days,
-during which I pulsed and sickened with expectancy; by Thursday it had
-reached a point where I knew that if Helmeth Garrett didn't come and
-kiss me again I shouldn't be able to bear it. It was soon after sundown
-that I felt him coming.
-
-I took a great many turns in the garden, which, carrying me occasionally
-out of reach of the click of the gate latch, afforded me the relief of
-thinking that he might have arrived in the interval when I was out of
-hearing. His approaching tread was within me. When it was just seven my
-mother came out and called:
-
-"Olivia, I promised Mrs. Endsleigh a starter of yeast; I have just
-remembered. Could you take it to her?"
-
-The Endsleigh backyard was separated from ours by a vacant lot, the
-houses fronting on parallel streets; there was no sound at the gate and
-mother had the bowl in a white napkin held out to me, with a long
-message about where the sewing circle was to meet next Thursday.
-
-"If any body comes,"--for the life of me I couldn't have kept that
-back,--"you can tell them I'll be back in a minute," I cautioned her.
-
-"Are you expecting anybody?"
-
-"Only Tommy," I prevaricated, instantly and unaccountably. I saw my
-mother look at me rather oddly over the tops of the glasses she had
-lately assumed. On the Endsleigh's back porch I found Belle in evening
-dress gathering ivy berries for her hair.
-
-"Oh," she said, to my plain appearance, "aren't you going?"
-
-"Going where?"
-
-"Oh, if you don't know ... to Flora's." Belle was embarrassed.
-
-"I hadn't heard of it."
-
-"It's just a few friends," Belle wavered between sympathy and
-superiority. "Flora is so particular...."
-
-"I couldn't have gone anyway," I interpolated, "I have an engagement." I
-had to find Mrs. Endsleigh after that and deliver my errand.
-
-When I reached home mother was sitting placidly just outside the circle
-of the lamp, knitting. She only looked up as I entered and I had to drag
-it out of her at last.
-
-"Has anybody been here?"
-
-"Nobody that you would care to see."
-
-"But who?"
-
-"That fast-looking young man who tried to speak to you on Sunday. I'm
-glad you have a proper feeling about such things. Mr. Garrett's nephew,
-didn't you say? I told him you were engaged."
-
-"Oh, mother!" I was out in panting haste. At the gate I ran square into
-Tommy Bettersworth.
-
-"Did you see anybody?"
-
-"Nobody. I came through by Davis's. I was coming in," he suggested, as I
-stood peering into the dark.
-
-"I thought you'd be going to Flora's." A wild hope flashed in me that
-maybe he was going and I should be rid of him.
-
-"Oh, I don't care much for that crowd. I told her I had an engagement
-with you." So he had known I was not to be invited. I resented the
-liberty of his defence. "Let's go down to Niles's and have some ice
-cream," Tommy propitiated.
-
-"It's too cold for ice cream." I led the way back to the house. I was
-satisfied there was no one in the street. When we stepped into the fan
-of light from the lit window, Tommy saw my face.
-
-"Oh, I say, Ollie, you mustn't take it like that. Beastly cats girls
-are! Flora's just jealous because she thought she was invited to the
-picnic for that Garrett chap, and you got him; she wants to have a
-chance at him herself to-night." There was a green-painted garden seat
-on the porch between the front windows. I sat down in it.
-
-"It's not Flora I'm crying about ... it is being so misunderstood." I
-was thinking that Helmeth Garrett would suppose I had stayed away from
-Flora's on his account; she would never dare to say she had not invited
-me. Tommy's arm came comfortingly along the back of the bench.
-
-"It's just because they do understand that they are mad; they know a
-fellow would give his eyes to kiss you. Infernal cad! to snatch it like
-that; and I've never even asked you for one." His voice was very close
-to my ear. "I tell you, Olivia, I've thought of something. If you were
-to be engaged to me ... you know I've always wanted ... then nobody
-would have a right to say anything. They'd see that you just left it to
-me."
-
-"Oh," I blurted, "it's not so bad as that!"
-
-"You think about it," he urged. "I don't want to bother you, but if you
-need it, why here I am." It was because I was thinking of him so little
-that I hadn't noticed where Tommy's arm had got by this time. That
-unfulfilled kiss had seemed somehow to leave me unimaginably exposed,
-assailed. I was needing desperately then to be kissed again, to find
-myself revalued.
-
-"It's awfully good of you, Tommy...."
-
-I do not know how it was that neither of us heard Forester come up from
-the gate; all at once there was his foot on the step; as he came into
-the porch a soft sound drew him, he stared blankly on us for a moment
-and then laughed shortly.
-
-"Oh! it's you this time, Bettersworth. I thought it might be that
-Garrett chap."
-
-That was unkind of Forester, but there were extenuations. I found
-afterward that Belle had teased Flora to ask him and he had refused,
-thinking it unbrotherly when I was not to be invited, and he and Belle
-had quarrelled.
-
-"I don't know as it matters to you"--Tommy was valiant--"whom she
-kisses, if I don't mind it."
-
-"You? What have you got to do with it?"
-
-"Well, a lot. I'm engaged to her."
-
-
-
-
-BOOK II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-The first notion of an obligation I had in writing this part of my
-story, was that if it is to be serviceable, no lingering sentiment
-should render it less than literal, and none of that egotism turned
-inside out which makes a kind sanctity of the personal experience,
-prevent me from offering it whole. And the next was that the only way in
-which it could be made to appear in its complete pitiableness, would be
-to write it from the point of view of Tommy Bettersworth. For after all,
-I have emerged--retarded, crippled in my affectional capacities, bodily
-the worse, but still with wings to spread and some disposition toward
-flying. And when I think of the dreams Tommy had, how he must have
-figured in them to himself, large between me and all misadventure,
-adored, dependable; and then how he blundered and lost himself in the
-mazes of unsuitability, I find bitterness augmenting in me not on my
-account but his. The amazing pity of it was that it might all have
-turned out very well if I had been what I seemed to him and to my family
-at the time when I let him engage himself to me to save me from immanent
-embarrassment.
-
-My mother, though she took on for the occasion an appropriate
-solemnity, was frankly relieved to have me so well disposed. Tommy had
-been brought up in the church, had no bad habits, and was earning a
-reasonable salary with Burton Brothers, Tailors and Outfitters.
-
-There was nobody whose business it was to tell me that I did not love
-Tommy enough to marry him. I have often wondered, supposing a medium of
-communication had been established between my mother and me, if I had
-told her how much more that other kiss had meant to me than Tommy's mild
-osculation, she would have understood or made a fight for me? I am
-afraid she would only have seen in it evidence of an infatuation for an
-undesirable young man, one who smoked and drove rakishly about town in
-red neckties on Sunday morning. But in fact I liked Tommy immensely. The
-mating instinct was awake; all our world clapped us forward to the
-adventure.
-
-If you ask what the inward monitor was about on this occasion, I will
-say that it is always and singularly inept at human estimates. If, often
-in search of companionship, its eye is removed from the Mark, to fix
-upon the personal environment, it is still unfurnished to divine behind
-which plain exterior lives another like itself! I took Tommy's community
-of interest for granted on the evidence of his loving me, though,
-indeed, after all these years I am not quite clear why he, why Forester
-and Pauline couldn't have walked in the way with me toward the Shining
-Destiny. I was not conscious of any private advantage; certainly so far
-as our beginnings were concerned, none showed, and I should have been
-glad of their company ... and here at the end I am walking in it alone.
-
-About a month after my engagement, Henry Mills proposed to Pauline, and
-she began preparations to be married the following June. Tommy's salary
-not being thought to justify it so soon, the idea of my own marriage had
-not come very close to me until I began to help Pauline work initials on
-table linen.
-
-The chief difference between Pauline and me had been that she had lived
-all her life, so to speak, at home; nothing exigent to her social order
-had ever found her "out"; but Olivia seemed always to be at the top of
-the house or somewhere in the back garden, to whom the normal occasions
-presented themselves as a succession of cards under the door. I do not
-mean to say that I actually missed any of these appointed visitors, but
-all my early life comes back to me as a series of importunate callers
-whose names I was not sure of, and who distracted me frightfully from
-something vastly more pleasant and important that I wanted very much to
-do, without knowing very well what it was. But it was in the long
-afternoons when Pauline and I sat upstairs together sewing on our white
-things that I began to take notice of the relation of what happened to
-me to the things that went on inside, and to be intrigued away from the
-Vision by the possibility of turning it into facts of line and colour
-and suitability. It was the beginning of my realizing what came
-afterward to be such a bitter and engrossing need with me, the need of
-money.
-
-Much that had struck inharmoniously on me in the furnishings of
-Taylorville, had identified itself so with the point of view there, that
-I had come to think of the one as being the natural and inevitable
-expression of the other; now, with the growing appreciation of a home of
-my own as a medium of self-realization, I accepted its possibility of
-limitation by the figure of my husband's income without being entirely
-daunted thereby. For I was still of the young opinion that getting rich
-involved no more serious matter than setting about it. As I saw it then,
-Men's Tailoring and Outfitting did not appear an unlikely beginning; if
-Tommy had achieved the magnificence I planned for him, it wouldn't have
-been on the whole more remarkable than what has happened. What I had to
-reckon with later was the astonishing fact that Tommy liked plush
-furniture, and liked it red for choice.
-
-I do not know why it should have taken me by surprise to find him in
-harmony with his bringing up; there was no reason for the case being
-otherwise except as I seemed to find one in his being fond of me. His
-mother's house was not unlike other Taylorvillian homes, more austerely
-kept; the blinds were always pulled down in the best room, and they
-never opened the piano except when there was company, or for the little
-girls to practise their music lessons. Mrs. Bettersworth was a large,
-fair woman with pale, prominent eyes, and pale hair pulled back from a
-corrugated forehead, and his sisters, who were all younger than Tommy,
-were exactly like her, their eyes if possible more protruded, which you
-felt to be owing to their hair being braided very tightly in two braids
-as far apart as possible at the corners of their heads.
-
-They treated me always with the greatest respect. If there had been
-anybody who could have thrown any light on the situation it would have
-been Mr. Bettersworth. He was a dry man, with what passed in Taylorville
-for an eccentric turn of mind. He had, for instance, been known to
-justify himself for putting Tommy to the Men's Outfitters rather than to
-his own business of building and contracting, on the ground that Tommy
-wanted the imagination for it. Just as if an imagination could be of use
-to anybody!
-
-"So you are going to undertake to make Tommy happy?" he said to me on
-the occasion of my taking supper with the family as a formal
-acknowledgment of my engagement.
-
-"Don't you think I can do it?" He was looking at me rather quizzically,
-and I really wished to know.
-
-"Oh! I was wondering," he said, "what you would do with what you had
-left over." But it was years before I understood what he meant by that.
-
-About the time I was bridesmaid for Pauline, Tommy had an advantageous
-offer that put our marriage almost immediately within reach. Burton
-Brothers was a branch house, one of a score with the Head at Chicago, to
-whom Tommy had so commended himself under the stimulus of being engaged,
-that on the establishment of a new store in Higgleston they offered him
-the sales department. There was also to be a working tailor and a
-superintendent visiting it regularly from Chicago, which its nearness to
-the metropolis allowed.
-
-All that we knew of Higgleston was that it was a long settled farming
-community, which, having discovered itself at the junction of two
-railway lines that approached Chicago from the southeast, conceived
-itself to have arrived there by some native superiority, and awoke to
-the expectation of importance.
-
-It lay, as respects Taylorville, no great distance beyond the flat
-horizon of the north, where the prairie broke into wooded land again,
-far enough north not to have been fanned by the hot blast of the war and
-the spiritual struggle that preceded it, and so to have missed the
-revitalizing processes that crowded the few succeeding years. Whatever
-difference there was between it and Taylorville besides population, was
-just the difference between a community that has fought whole-heartedly
-and one that stood looking on at the fight.
-
-It was not far enough from Taylorville to have struck out anything new
-for itself in manners or furniture, but the necessity of going south two
-or three hours to change cars, and north again several hours more, set
-up an illusion of change which led to a disappointment in its want of
-variety. Tommy went out in July, and in a month wrote me that he would
-be able to come for me as soon as I was ready, and hoping it would not
-be long. If I had looked, as in the last hesitancies of girlhood I
-believe I did, for my mother to have raised an objection to my going so
-far from home, I found myself, instead, almost with the feeling of being
-pushed out of the nest. It seemed as if in hastening me out of the
-family she would be the sooner free to give herself without reproach to
-a new and extraordinary scheme of Forester's. What I guess now to have
-been in part the motive, was that she already had been touched by the
-warning of that disorder which finally carried her off, which, with the
-curious futility of timid women, she hoped, by not mentioning, to
-postpone.
-
-For a long time now Forester had found himself in the situation of
-having grown beyond his virtues. That assumption of mannishness which
-sat so prettily on his nonage was rendered inconspicuous by his
-majority. People who had forgotten that he had never had any boyhood,
-found nothing especially commendable in the mild soberness of
-twenty-three. I have a notion, too, that the happy circumstance of my
-marriage lit up for him some personal phases which he could hardly have
-regarded with complacence, for by this time he had passed, in his
-character of philanderer, from being hopefully regarded as reclaimable
-to constancy, to a sort of public understudy in the practice of the
-affections. However it had come about, the young ladies who still took
-on Forester at intervals, no longer looked on him so much as privileged
-but as eminently safe; and the number of girls in a given community who
-can be counted on for such a performance, is limited. That summer before
-I was married, after Belle Endsleigh had run away from home with a
-commercial traveller who disappointed the moral instance by making her a
-very good husband afterward, my brother found himself, as regards the
-young people's world, in a situation of uneasy detachment. And there was
-no doubt that the Coöperative, where he had been seven years, bored him
-excessively. It was then he conceived the idea of reinstating himself in
-the atmosphere of importance by setting himself up in business.
-
-Adjacent to Niles's Ice Cream Parlours, there was a small stationery and
-news agency which might be bought and enlarged to creditable
-proportions. There was, I believe, actually nothing to be urged against
-this as a matter of business; the difficulty was that to accomplish it
-my mother would be obliged to hypothecate the whole of her small
-capital. What my mother really thought about her property was that she
-held it in trust for the family interest, and that, with the secret
-intimation of her end which I surmise must have reached her by this
-time, she believed to be served by Forester's plan. It was so much the
-general view that by marrying I took myself out of the family
-altogether, that I felt convinced that she meant, so soon as that was
-accomplished, to undertake what, in the face of my protesting attitude,
-she had not the courage to begin. I remember how shocked she was at my
-telling her that this tying up of the two ends of life in a monetary
-obligation, would put her and Forester very much in the situation of a
-young man married to a middle-aged woman. I mention this here because
-the implication that grew out of it, of my marriage being looked forward
-to as a relief, had much to do with the failure out of my life at this
-juncture, of informing intimacy.
-
-A great deal of necessary information had come my way through Pauline's
-marriage, through the comment set free by Belle Endsleigh's affair,
-through the natural awakening of my mind toward the intimations of
-books. Marriage I began to perceive as an engulfing personal experience.
-Until now I hadn't been able to think of it except as a means of
-providing pleasant companionship on the way toward that large and
-shining world for which I felt myself forever and unassailably fit. It
-began to exhibit now, through vistas that allured, the aspect of a vast
-inhuman grin. Somewhere out of this prospect of sympathy and
-understanding, arose upon you the tremendous inundation of Life. Dimly
-beyond the point of Tommy's joyous possession of me, I was aware of an
-incalculable force by which the whole province of my being was assailed,
-very different from the girlish prevision of motherhood which had
-floated with the fragrance of orris root from Aunt Alice's bureau drawer
-in the Allingham's spare room.
-
-I don't say this is the way all girls feel about the approach of
-maternity, but I saw it then like the wolf in the fairy tale, which as
-soon as its head was admitted, thrust in a shoulder and so came bodily
-into the room and devoured the protestant. Long afterward, when I was in
-a position to know something of the private experience of trapeze
-performers, I learned that they came to a point sometimes in mid-spring
-when the body apprised them of inadequacy, a warning sure to be followed
-in no long time by disaster. I have thought sometimes that what reached
-me then was the advice of a body instinctively aware of being unequal to
-the demands about to be imposed upon it.
-
-I hardly know now by what road I arrived at the certainty that some
-women, Pauline for instance, were able to face this looming terror of
-childbearing by making terms with it. Life, it appeared, waited at
-their doors with respect, modified the edge of its inevitableness to
-their convenience. If Pauline had been accessible--but she was living in
-Chicago with Henry Mills, going out a great deal, and writing me
-infrequent letters of bright complacency. It was only in the last
-frightened gasp I fixed upon my mother. You must imagine for yourself
-from what you know of nice girls thirty years ago, how inarticulate the
-whole business was; the most I can do is to have you understand my
-desperate need to know, to interpose between marriage and maternity
-never so slight an interval in which to collect myself and leave off
-shrinking.
-
-About a week before my wedding we were sitting together at the close of
-the afternoon; my mother had taken up her knitting, as her habit was
-when the light failed. Something in the work we had been doing, putting
-the last touches to my wedding dress, led her to speak of her own, and
-of my father as a young man. The mention pricked me to notice what I
-recall now as characteristic of Taylorville women, that, with all she
-had been through, the war, her eight children, so many graves, there was
-still in her attitude, toward all these, a kind of untutored virginity.
-It made, my noticing it then and being touched by it, a sort of bridge
-by which it seemed for the moment she might be drawn over to my side. On
-the impulse I spoke.
-
-"Mother," I said, "I want to know?..."
-
-It seemed a natural sort of knowledge to which any woman had a right.
-Almost before the question was out I saw the expression of offended
-shock come over my mother's reminiscent softness, the nearly animal rage
-of terror with which the unknown, the unaccustomed, assailed her.
-
-"Olivia! Olivia!" She stood up, her knitting rigid in her hands, the
-ball of it speeding away in the dusk of the floor on some private terror
-of its own. "Olivia, I'll not hear of such things! You are not to speak
-of them, do you understand! I'll have nothing to do with them!"
-
-"I wanted to know," I said. "I thought you could tell me...."
-
-I went over and stood by the window; a little dry snow was blowing--it
-was the first week in November--beginning to collect on the edges of the
-walks and along the fences; the landscape showed sketched in white on a
-background of neutral gray. I heard a movement in the room behind me; my
-mother came presently and stood looking out with me. She was very pale,
-scared but commiserating. Somehow my question had glanced in striking
-the dying nerve of long since encountered dreads and pains. We faced
-them together there in the cold twilight.
-
-"I'm sorry, daughter"--she hesitated--"I can't help you. I don't
-know ... I never knew myself."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-It is no doubt owing to the habit of life in Higgleston being so little
-differentiated from Taylorville that I was never able to get any other
-impression of it than as a place one put up at on the way to some other;
-always it bore to my mind the air of a traveller's room in one of those
-stops where it is necessary to open the trunks but not worth while to
-unpack them. Nor do I think it was altogether owing to what I left there
-that my recollection of it centres paganly about the cemetery. In
-Taylorville, love and birth, though but scantily removed from the savour
-of impropriety, were still the salient facts of existence, but in
-Higgleston a funeral was your real human occasion. It was as if the
-rural fear of innovation had thrown them back for a pivotal centre upon
-the point of continuity with their past.
-
-It was a generous rolling space set aside for the dead, abutting on two
-sides on the boardwalks of the town, stretching back by dips and hollows
-to the wooded pastures. Near the gates which opened from the walk, it
-was divided off in single plots and family allotments, scattering more
-and more to the farthest neglected mounds that crept obscurely under the
-hazel thickets and the sapling oaks, happiest when named the least,
-assimilated quickliest to their native earth. It was this that rendered
-the pagan touch, for though nearly all Higgleston was church-going and
-looked forward to a hymn-book heaven, they seemed to me never quite
-dissevered from the untutored pastures to which their whole living and
-dying was a process of being reabsorbed.
-
-Higgleston, until this junction of railroads occurred, had been a close
-settled farming community, and a vague notion of civic improvement had
-ripped through the centre of its wide old yards and comfortable, country
-looking dwellings, a shadeless, unpaved street lined with what were
-known as business blocks, with a tendency to run mostly to front and a
-general placarded state of being to let, or about to be opened on these
-premises.
-
-Beyond the railway station there was a dingy region devoted to car shops
-and cheap lodgings, known locally as Track Town, whose inhabitants were
-forever at odds with the older rural population, withdrawing itself into
-a kind of aristocracy of priority and propriety; and between these an
-intermediary group, self styled, "the leading business men of the town,"
-forever and trivially busy to reconcile the two factions in the
-interests of trade. That Tommy was by reason of his position as managing
-salesman of Burton Brothers, generically of this class, might have had
-something to do with my never having formed any vital or lasting
-relations with either community; and it might have been for quite other
-reasons. For in the very beginning of my stay there, Life had seized me;
-that bubbling, frothing Force, working forever to breach the film of
-existence. I was used by it, I was abused by it. For what does Life care
-what it does to the tender bodies of women?
-
-My baby was born within ten months of my marriage and most of that time
-I was wretchedly, depressingly ill. All my memories of my early married
-life are of Olivia, in the mornings still with frost, cowering away from
-the kitchen sights and smells, or gasping up out of engulfing nausea to
-sit out the duty calls of the leading ladies of Higgleston in the cold,
-disordered house; of Tommy gulping unsuitable meals of underdone and
-overdone things, and washing the day's accumulation of dishes after
-business hours, patient and portentously cheerful, with Olivia in a
-wrapper, half hysterical with weakness--all the young wife's dreams gone
-awry! And Tommy too, he must have had visions of himself coming home to
-a well-kept house, of delicious little dinners and long hours in which
-he should appear in his proper character as the adored, achieving male.
-Not long ago I read a book of a man's life written by a man, in which he
-justified himself of unfaithfulness because his wife appeared before him
-habitually in curl papers--and there were days when I couldn't even do
-my hair!
-
-In the beginning we had taken, in respect to Tommy's position among
-those same live business men, a house rather too large for us, and we
-hadn't counted on the wages of a servant. Now with the necessity upon us
-of laying by money for the Great Expense, we felt less justified in it
-than ever. This pinch of necessity was of the quality of corrosion on
-what must have been meant for the consummate experience. I have to dwell
-on it here because in this practical confusion of my illness, was laid
-the foundation of our later failure to come together on any working
-basis. We hadn't, in fact, time to find it; no time to understand, none
-whatever in which to explore the use of passion and react into that
-superunion of which the bodily relation is the overt sign--young things
-we were, who had not fairly known each other as man and woman before we
-were compelled to trace in one another the lineaments of parents, all
-attention drawn away from the imperative business of framing a common
-ideal, to centre on the child.
-
-What this precipitance accomplished was, that, instead of being drawn
-insensibly to find in the exigencies of marriage the natural unfolding
-of that inward vitality, always much stronger in me than any exterior
-phase, I was by the shock of too early maternity driven apart from the
-usual, and I still believe the happier, destiny of women.
-
-With all this we were spared the bitterness of the unwelcoming thought.
-Little homely memories swim up beyond the pains and depressions to
-mark, like twigs and leafage on a freshet, the swelling of the new
-affection: Effie at Montecito, overruling all my mother's shocked
-suggestions as to her supposed obliviousness of my condition, sitting up
-nights to sew for me ... the dress I tried to make myself ... the bureau
-drawer from which I used to take the little things every night to look
-at them ... the smell of orris.
-
-"See, Tommy; I've done so much to-day. Isn't it pretty?"
-
-"My dear, you've shown that to me at least forty times and I've always
-said so."
-
-"Yes, but isn't it?... the little sleeves ... did you think anything
-_could_ be so small? Tommy, don't you wish it would _come_?"
-
-We had to make what we could of these moments of thrilled expectancy, of
-tender brooding curiosity.
-
-I scarcely recall now all the reasons why it was thought best for me to
-go back to my mother in August, and to the family physician, but I find
-it all pertinent to my subject. Whatever was done there was mostly
-wrong, though I was years finding it out. I mean that whatever chance I
-had of growing up into the competent mother of a family was probably
-lost to me through the inexactitudes of country practice. We hadn't then
-arrived at the realization that the well or ill going of maternity is a
-matter of sceptics rather than sentiment. Taylorville was a town of ten
-thousand inhabitants, but at that time no one had heard of such a thing
-as a trained nurse; the business of midwifery was given over in general
-to a widow so little attractive that she was thought not to have a
-chance of marrying again, and by the circumstance of having had two or
-three children of her own, believed to be eminently fit. To Olivia's
-first encounter with the rending powers of Life, there went any amount
-of affectionate consideration and much old wives' lore of an
-extraordinary character. It seems hardly credible now, but in the
-beginning of things going wrong, there were symptoms concealed from the
-doctor on the ground of delicacy.
-
-My baby, too, poor little man, was feeble from birth, a bottle baby; the
-best that could have been done would hardly have been a chance for him.
-Lying there in the hot, close room, all the air shut out with the light,
-in the midst of pains, I made a fight for him, tried to interpose such
-scraps of better knowledge as had come to me through reading, but they
-made no headway against my mother's confidential, "Well, I ought to
-know, I've buried five," and against Forester, who by the added
-importance of having invested all her fortune, had gained such way with
-my mother that she listened respectfully to his explication of what
-should be done for the baby. It was Forester who overbore with ridicule
-my suggestion that he should be fed at regular hours, for which I never
-forgave him. But I had enough to do to fortify my racked body against
-the time when I should be obliged to get up and go on again, as it
-seemed privately I never should be able.
-
-And they were all so fond and proud of my little Thomas Henry--he was
-named so for his father and mine--Effie simply adored him; the wonder of
-his smallness, the way in which he moved his limbs and opened and shut
-his eyes; quite as if there had never been one born before. The way they
-hung over him, and the wrong things they did! Even Cousin Lydia drove
-into church the first Sunday after, for the purpose of holding him for a
-quarter of an hour in her large, silk poplin arms, at the end of which
-time she had softened almost to the point of confidence.
-
-"I thought I was going to have one once," she admitted, "but somehow I
-couldn't seem to manage it." She looked over to where Cousin Judd sat
-with my mother. "He was always fond of young ones...." It occurred to me
-then that Cousin Lydia was probably a much misunderstood woman.
-
-Of the next six months at Higgleston after I returned to it with a three
-months' old baby I have scarcely any recollection that is not mixed up
-with bodily torment for myself and anxiety for the child. I think it
-probable that most of that time my husband found the house badly kept,
-the meals irregular and his wife hysterical. I hadn't anything to spare
-with which to consider what figure I might have cut in the eyes of the
-onlooker. Tommy shines out for me in that period by reason of the
-unwearying patience and cheerfulness with which he successfully ignored
-the general unsatisfactoriness of his home, and at times for a certain
-exasperation I had with him, as if by being somehow less quiescent he
-might have opposed a better front to the encroachments of distress. We
-did try help in the kitchen after our finances had a little recovered
-from the strain of my confinement, a Higgleston girl of no very great
-competence and a sort of back-door visiting acquaintance with two thirds
-of the community. Her chief accomplishments while she stayed with us,
-were concocted out of the scraps and fag ends of our private
-conversations. I could always tell that Ida had overheard something by
-the alacrity with which she banged the pots about in the kitchen in
-order that she might get through with her work and go out and tell
-somebody. In the end Tommy said that when it came to a choice between
-getting his own meals and losing his best customers he preferred the
-former.
-
-All this time I did not know how ill I was because of the consuming
-anxiety for the baby. I remember times in the night--the dreadful
-momentary revolt of my body rousing to this new demand upon it, before
-the mind waked to the selfless consideration; and the failure of
-composure which was as much weakness as fear; the long watching, the
-walking to and fro, and the debates as to whether we ought or ought not
-to venture on the expense of the doctor. And for long years afterward
-what is the bitterest of bitterness, finding out that we had done the
-wrong thing. To this day I cannot come across any notices of the more
-competent methods for the care of delicate children, without a
-remembering pang.
-
-All the time this was going on I was aware by a secondary detached sort
-of self, that there was a point somewhere beyond this perplexity of
-pain, at which the joyful possession of my son should begin. I was
-anxious to get at him, to have speech with him, to realize his
-identity--any woman will understand--and along about the time the blue
-flags and the live-for-evers and the white bridal wreaths were at their
-best in the cemetery, it came upon me terrifyingly that I might, after
-all, have to let him go without it. We were walking there that day, the
-first we had thought it safe to take the baby out, for it was customary
-to walk in the cemetery on Sunday and almost obligatory to your social
-standing. The oaks were budding, and the wind in the irises and the
-shadow of them on the tombstones, and the people all in their Sunday
-best, walking in the warm light, gave an effect of more aliveness than
-the sombre yards of the town could afford.
-
-Tommy had taken the baby from me, for, though I could somehow never get
-enough of the feel of him, his head in the hollow of my shoulder, his
-weight against my arm, I was so little strong myself that I was glad to
-pretend that it was because he was really getting heavy, and just then
-we passed a little mound, so low, where a new headboard had been set up
-with the superscription, "Only son of ---- and ---- aged eight months,"
-and it was the age, and the little mound was just the length of my boy.
-I think there was a rush of tears to cover that, the realization by a
-kind of prevision that it was just to that he was to come, tears checked
-in mid-course by the swift up-rush of the certainty, of the reality, of
-the absoluteness of human experience. For by whatever mystery or magic
-he had come to identity through me, he was my son as I knew, and not
-even death could so unmake him.
-
-I dwell upon this and one other incident which I shall relate in its
-proper place, as all that was offered to me of the traditional
-compensation for what women are supposed to be. If a sedulous social
-ideal has kept them from the world touch through knowledge and
-achievement, it has been because, sincerely enough, they have not been
-supposed to be prevented from world processes so much as directed to
-find them in a happier way. This would be reasonable if they found them.
-What society fails to understand, or dishonestly fails to admit, is that
-marriage as an act is not invariably the stroke that ushers in the
-experience of being married.
-
-Whatever proportions the change in my life had assumed to the outward
-eye, it was only by the imagined pain of loss that I began to perceive
-that I could never be quite in the same relation to things again, and to
-identify my experience with the world adventure. I had become, by the
-way of giving life and losing it, a link in the chain that leads from
-dark to dark; I had touched for the moment a reality from which the
-process of self-realization could be measured. It was the most and the
-best I was to know of the incident called maternity, that whether it
-were most bitter or most sweet it was irrevocable.
-
-I suppose, though he was always so inarticulate, that Tommy must have
-caught something of my mood from me. He didn't seem to see anything
-ridiculous in my holding on to a fold of the baby's skirt all the way
-home; and when we had come into the house and the boy was laid in his
-crib again, so wan and so little, I sat on my young husband's knee and
-cried with my face against his, and he did not ask me what it was about.
-
-I think, though, that we had not yet appreciated how near we were to
-losing him until my mother came to visit us along in the middle of the
-summer. She was quite excited, as she walked up from the station with
-Tommy, and for her, almost gay with the novelty of spending a month with
-a married daughter, and then as soon as she had sight of the child, I
-saw her checked and startled inquiry travel from me to Tommy and back
-to the child's meagre little features, and a new and amazing tenderness
-in all her manner to me. That night after I was in bed she came in her
-night-dress and kissed me without saying anything, and I was too
-surprised to make any motion of response. That was the first time I
-remember my mother having kissed me on anything less than an official
-occasion ... but she had buried five herself.
-
-Notwithstanding, my mother's coming and the care she took of the baby,
-seemed to make me, if anything, less prepared for the end. There were
-new remedies of my mother's to be tried which appeared hopeful. I
-recovered composure, thought of him as improving, when in fact it was
-only I who was stronger for a few nights' uninterrupted sleep. Then
-there was a day on which he was very quiet and she scarcely put him down
-from her lap at all. I do not know what I thought of that, nor of the
-doctor coming twice that day, unsummoned. I suppose my sensibilities
-must have been blunted by the strain, for I recall thinking when Tommy
-came home in the middle of the afternoon, how good it was we could all
-have this quiet time together. It was the end of June. I remember the
-blinds half drawn against the sun and the smell of lawns newly cut and
-the damask rose by the window; I was going about putting fresh flowers
-in the vases, a thing I had of late little time to do ... suddenly I
-noticed Tommy crying. He sat close to my mother trying to make the
-boy's poor little claws curl round his finger, and at the failure tears
-ran down unwiped. I had never seen Tommy cry. I put down my roses
-uncertain if I ought to go to him ... and all at once my mother called
-me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-Very closely on the loss of my baby, of which I have spared you as much
-as possible, came crowding the opening movement of my artistic career.
-Within a month I was in a hospital in Chicago, recovering from the
-disastrous termination of another expectancy that had come, scarcely
-regarded in the obsession of anxiety and overwork during the last weeks
-of my boy's life, and had failed to sustain itself under the shock of
-his death. And after the hospital there was a month of convalescence at
-Pauline's. It was the first time I had seen her since her marriage.
-
-I found her living in one of those curious, compressed city houses, one
-room wide and three deep, which, after the rambling, scattered homes of
-Higgleston, induced a feeling of cramp, until I discovered a kind of
-spaciousness in the life within. It was really very little else than
-relief from the accustomed inharmonies of rurality, a sort of scenic air
-and light that answered perfectly so long as you believed it real.
-Pauline's wall papers were soft, unpatterned, with wide borders; her
-windows were hung with plain scrim and the furniture coverings were in
-tone with the carpets. When ladies called in the afternoon, Pauline
-gave them tea which she made in a brass kettle over a spirit lamp. You
-can scarcely understand what that kettle stood for in my new estimate of
-the graciousness of living: a kind of sacred flame, round which gathered
-unimagined possibilities for the dramatization of that eager inward life
-which, now that the strictures of bodily pain were loosed, began to
-press toward expression. It rose insistently against the depressing
-figure my draggled and defeated condition must have cut in the face of
-Pauline's bright competency and the quality of assurance in her choice
-of the things among which she moved. Whatever her standards of behaviour
-or furniture, they were always present to the eye, not sunk below the
-plane of consciousness like mine, and she could always name you the
-people who practised them or the places where they could be bought and
-at what price. My expressed interest in the teakettle, led at once to
-the particular department store where I saw rows of them shining in the
-ticketed inaccessibility of seven dollars and ninety-eight cents. From
-point to point of such eminent practicability I was pricked to think of
-preëmpting some of these new phases of suitability for myself, finding
-myself debarred by the flatness of my purse. The effect of it was to
-throw me back into the benumbing sense of personal neglect with which
-the city had burst upon me. From the first, as I began to go about still
-in my half-invalided condition, I had been tremendously struck with the
-plentitude of beauty. Here was every article of human use made fair and
-fit so that nobody need have lacked a portion of it, save for an
-inexplicable error in the means of distribution. I, for instance, who
-had within me the witness of heirship, had none of it.
-
-That I should have felt it so, was no doubt a part of that Taylorvillian
-fallacy in which I had been reared, that all that was precious and
-desirable was shed as the natural flower and fruit of goodness. Here
-confronted with the concrete preciousness of the shop windows, I
-realized that if there had been anything originally sound in that
-proposition, I had at least missed the particular kind of goodness to
-which it was chargeable. I wanted, I absurdly wanted just then to
-collect my arrears of privilege and consideration in terms of hardwood
-furniture and afternoon teakettles, in graceful, feminine leisure, all
-the traditional sanctity and enthronement of women, for which I had paid
-with my body, with maternal anxieties and wifely submission. What
-glimmered on my horizon was the realization that it was not in such
-appreciable coin the debt was paid, the beginning of knowledge that
-seldom, except by accident, is it paid at all. What I learned from
-Pauline was that most of it came by way of the bargain counter. Not even
-the Shining Destiny was due to arrive merely by reason of your own
-private conviction of being fit, but demanded something to be laid down
-for it; though if you had named the whole price to me at that juncture,
-I should have refused to pay.
-
-Besides all this, the most memorable thing that came of my visit to
-Pauline was that I went to the theatre. It was Henry's suggestion; he
-thought I wanted cheering. Pauline was not going out much that season
-and her reluctance to claim my attention, in the face of my bereavement,
-to her own approaching Event, threw at times a shadow of constraint on
-our quiet evenings. Henry had fallen into a way of taking me out for
-timid and Higglestonian glimpses of the night sights of the city, but I
-am not sure it was the obligation of hospitality which led him to
-propose the theatre. I recall that he displayed a particular knowingness
-about what he styled "the attractions." What surprised me most was that
-I discovered no qualms in myself over a proceeding so at variance with
-my bringing up; and the piece, a broad comedy of Henry's selection, made
-no particular impression on me other than the singular one of having
-known a great deal about it before. My criticism of the acting brought
-Pauline around with a swing from the City Cousin attitude in which she
-had initiated the experience for me, to one æsthetically sympathetic.
-
-"The things men choose, my dear--and to anybody who has been saturated
-in Shakespeare as you have! You really must see Modjeska; it will be an
-inspiration to you. Henry, you must take her to see Modjeska."
-
-I had not yet made up my mind as to whether I liked Henry Mills, but I
-was willing to go and see Modjeska with him; we had orchestra seats and
-Pauline insisted on my wearing her black silk wrap. On the way, Henry
-told me a great deal about Madam Modjeska with that same air of
-knowingness which fitted so oddly with his assumption of the model
-husband. I had accustomed myself to think of Henry as an attorney, which
-in Taylorville meant a man who could be trusted with the administration
-of widows' property and Fourth of July orations. Henry, it transpired,
-was a sort of junior partner in one of those city firms whose concern is
-not with people who have broken the law, but with those who are desirous
-to sail as close to the wind as possible without breaking it. They had a
-great deal to do with stock companies, in connection with which Henry
-had found some personal advantage. He always referred to it as "our
-office" so that I am in doubt still as to the exact nature of his
-connection with it; its only relation to his private life was to lead to
-his habitually appearing in what is known as a business suit, and an air
-of shrewd reliability. If in the beginning he had any notions of his own
-as to what a husband ought to be, he had discarded them in favour of
-Pauline's, and if as early as that he had devised any system of paying
-himself off for his complicity in her ideals, I didn't discover it.
-
-I saw Modjeska with Henry, in "Romeo and Juliet," and afterward stole
-away to a matinée by myself and saw her as Rosalind. I do not know now
-if she was the great artist she seemed, it is so long since I have seen
-her, but she sufficed. I had no words in which to express my
-extraordinary sense of possession in her, the profound, excluding
-intimacy of her art. Long after Henry Mills had gone to his connubial
-pillow I remained walking up and down in my room in a state of intense,
-inarticulate excitement. I did not think concretely of the stage nor of
-acting; what I had news of, was a country of large impulses and
-satisfying movement. I felt myself strong, had I but known the way, to
-set out for it. When I found sleep at last, it was to dream, not of the
-theatre, but of Helmeth Garrett. I was made aware of him first by a
-sense of fulness about my heart, and then I came upon him looking as he
-had looked last in the Willesden woods, writing at a table, a pale blur
-about him of the causeless light of dreams. I recognized the carpet
-underfoot as a favourite Taylorvillian selection, but overhead, red
-boughs of sycamore and oak depended through the dream-fogged atmosphere.
-I stood and read over his shoulder what he wrote, and though the words
-escaped me, the meaning of them put all straight between us. He turned
-as he wrote and looked at me with a look that set us back in the wrapt
-intimacy of the flaming forest ... somehow we had got there and found it
-softly dark! In the interval between my dream and morning, that kiss
-which had been the source of so much secret blame and secret exultation
-was somehow accounted for: it was a waif out of the country of Rosalind
-and Juliet. The sense of a vital readjustment remained with me all that
-day; there had been after all, in the common phrase, "something between
-us." But I explained the recrudescence of memory on the basis that it
-was from Helmeth Garrett that I had first heard of Chicago and Modjeska.
-
-I came back to Higgleston reasonably well, with some fine points of
-achievement twinkling ahead of me, to have my new-found sense of
-direction put all at fault by the trivial circumstance of Tommy's having
-papered the living room. The walls when we took the house, had been
-finished hard and white, much in need of renewing, from the expense of
-which our immediate plunge into the cares of a family had prevented us.
-Casting about for any way of ridding it against my return, of the
-sadness of association, Tommy had hit upon the idea of papering the room
-himself in the evenings after closing hours, and by way of keeping it a
-pleasant surprise, had chosen the paper to his own taste. Any one who
-kept house in the early 80's will recall a type of paper then in vogue,
-of large unintelligent arabesques of a liverish bronzy hue, parting at
-regular intervals upon Neapolitan landscapes of pronounced pinks and
-blues. Tommy's landscapes achieved the added atrocity of having Japanese
-ladies walking about in them, and though the room wanted lighting, the
-paper was very dark. It must have cost him something too! From the
-amount of his salary which he had remitted for my hospital expenses he
-could hardly have left himself money to pay for his meals at
-Higgleston's one doubtful restaurant. The appearance of the kitchen,
-indeed, suggested that he had made most of them on crackers and tinned
-ham.
-
-I was glad to have discovered this before I said to him how much better
-it would have been for him to send me the money and let me select the
-paper in Chicago. What leaped upon me as he waved the lamp about to show
-me how cleverly he had matched the borders, was the surprising, the
-confounding certainty that after all our shared sorrow and anxiety we
-hadn't in the least come together. I had lived in the house with him for
-two years, had borne him a child and lost it, and he had chosen this
-moment of heartrending return, to give me to understand that he couldn't
-even know what I might like in the way of wall papers.
-
-I suppose all this time when the surface of my attention was taken up
-with the baby, I had been making unconscious estimates of my husband,
-but that night just as we had come from the station, the moment of
-calculating that on a basis of necessary economy, I should have to live
-at least three years with the evidence of his ineptitude, was the first
-of my regarding him critically as the instrument of my destiny. And I
-hadn't primarily selected him for that purpose. I do not know now
-exactly why I married Tommy, except that marriage seemed a natural sort
-of experience and I had taken to it as readily as though it had been
-something to eat, something to nourish and sustain. I hadn't at any rate
-thought of it as entangling. I did not then; but certainly it occurred
-to me that for the enlarged standard of living I had brought home with
-me, a man of Tommy's taste was likely to prove an unsuitable tool.
-
-Slight as the incident of the wall paper was, it served to check my
-dawning interest in domesticity, and set my hungering mind looking
-elsewhere for sustenance. We were still a little in arrears on account
-of the funeral expenses and my illness, and no more improvements were to
-be thought of; Tommy and I were of one mind in that we had the common
-Taylorvillian horror of debt. There were other things which seemed to
-put off my conquest of the harmonious environment, things every woman
-who has lost a child will understand ... starting awake at night to the
-remembered cry ... the blessed weight upon the arm that failed and
-receded before returning consciousness. I recall going into the bedroom
-once where a shawl had been dropped on the pillow, like ... so like ...
-and the memories of infinitesimal neglects that began to show now
-preposterously blamable.
-
-In my first year at Higgleston I had been rather driven apart from the
-community by the absorption of my condition and the intimation that
-instead of being the crown of life it merely saved itself by not being
-mentioned. Now, in my desperate need of the social function, I began to
-imagine, for want of any other likeness between us, a community of lack.
-I thought of Higgleston as aching for life as I ached, and began to
-wonder if we mightn't help one another.
-
-As the colder weather shut me more into the haunted rooms, Tommy thought
-it might be a good thing if I took an interest in the entertainment
-which the I. O. O. F., of which he was a Fellow, was undertaking for the
-benefit of their new hall. As the sort of service counted on from the
-wives of prominent members, it might also be beneficial to trade. On
-this understanding I did take an interest, with the result that the
-entertainment was an immense success. It led naturally to my being put
-in charge of the annual Public School Library theatricals and a little
-later to my being connected with what was the acute dramatic crisis of
-the Middle West.
-
-There should be a great many people still who remember a large, loose
-melodrama called "The Union Spy," or "The Confederate Spy," accordingly
-as it was performed north or south of Mason and Dixon's line,
-participated in by the country at large; a sort of localized Passion
-play lifted by its tremendous personal interest free of all theatrical
-taint. There was a Captain McWhirter who went about with the scenery and
-accessories, casting the parts and conducting rehearsals, sharing the
-profits with the local G. A. R. The battle scenes were invariably
-executed by the veterans of the order, with horrid realism. Effie wrote
-me that there had been three performances in Taylorville and Cousin Judd
-had been to every one of them.
-
-With the reputation I had acquired in Higgleston, it came naturally when
-the town, by its slighter hold on the event, achieved a single
-performance, for me to be cast for the principal part, unhindered by any
-convention on behalf of my recent mourning. Rather, so close did the
-subject lie to the community feeling, there was an instinctive sense of
-dramatic propriety in my sorrow in connection with the anguish of
-war-bereaved women. One can imagine such a sentiment operating in the
-choice of players at Oberammergau. In addition to my acting, I began
-very soon to take a large share of the responsibility of rehearsals.
-
-I do not know where I got the things I put into that business. Where, in
-fact, does Gift come from, and what is the nature of it? I found myself
-falling back on my studies with Professor Winter, on slight amateurish
-incidents of Taylorville, on my brief Chicago contact even, to account
-to Higgleston for insights, certainties, that they would not have
-accepted without some such obvious backing. Nevertheless the thing was
-there, the aptitude to seize and carry to its touching, its fruitful
-expression, the awkward eagerness of the community to relive its most
-moving actualities. Never in America have we been so near the democratic
-drama.
-
-In the final performance I surprised Tommy and myself with my success,
-most of all I surprised Captain McWhirter. He was arranging a production
-of "The Spy" at the twin towns of Newton and Canfield, about two hours
-south of us, and asked me to go down there for him and attend to
-alternate rehearsals. Tommy was immensely flattered, pleased to have me
-forget my melancholy, and the money was a consideration. I saw the
-captain through with two performances in each town, and three at
-Waterbury. All this time I had not thought of the stage professionally.
-I returned to Tommy and the wall paper after the final performance with
-a vague sense of flatness, to try to pull together out of Higgleston's
-unwilling materials the stuff of a satisfying existence.
-
-Suddenly in April came a telegram and a letter from Captain McWhirter at
-Kincade, to say that on the eve of production, his leading lady had run
-away to be married, and could I, would I, come down and see him through.
-The letter contained an enclosure for travelling expenses, and a
-substantial offer for my time. No reasonable objection presenting
-itself, I went down to him by Monday's train.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-On the morning between the second and third performance of "The Spy,"
-for McWhirter never let the people off with less than three if he could
-help it, as I was sitting in the dining room of the Hotel Metropole at
-Kincade, enjoying the sense of leisure a late breakfast afforded, I saw
-the captain making his way toward me through an archipelago of whitish
-island upon which the remains of innumerable breakfasts appeared to be
-cast away without hope of rescue from the languid waiters, steering as
-straight a course as was compatible with a conversation kept up over his
-shoulder with a man, who for a certain close-cropped, clean-shaven,
-ever-ready look, might have been bred for the priesthood and given it up
-for the newspaper business. It was a type and manner I was to know very
-well as the actor-manager, but as the first I had seen of that species,
-I failed to identify it. What I did remark was the odd mixture of
-condescension and importance which the captain managed to put into the
-fact of being caught in his company. He introduced him to me as Mr.
-O'Farrell, Mr. Shamus O'Farrell, as though there could be but one of him
-and that one fully accredited and explained. He defined him
-further--after some remarks on the performance of the evening before in
-a key which seemed to sustain the evidence of Mr. O'Farrell's name in
-favour of his nationality--as manager of the Shamrock Players Company,
-billed for the first of the week in Kincade.
-
-It turned out in the course of these remarks, which the captain
-delivered with a kind of proprietary air in us, that Mr. O'Farrell--he
-called himself The O'Farrell in his posters--had a proposition to make
-to me. He put it with an admirable mixture of compliment and
-depreciation, as though either was a sort of stopcock to meet a too
-reluctant modesty on my part or a too exorbitant demand for payment. I
-was afterward to know many variations of this singular blend, and to
-acquaint myself definitely how far it is safe to trust it in either
-direction before the stop was turned, but for the moment I was under the
-impression, as no doubt O'Farrell meant I should be, that a thing so
-perfectly asked for should not be refused.
-
-What he asked was that I should come over to the opera house where the
-rest of the company awaited us, to assist at a rehearsal in the part
-left open by the illness of the star. I do not now recall if the manager
-actually made me an offer in this first encounter, but it was in the air
-that if I suited the part and the part suited me, I was to regard myself
-as temporarily engaged in Miss Dean's place.
-
-So naturally had the occasion come about, that I cannot remember that I
-found any particular difficulty in reconciling myself to a possible
-connection with the professional stage. There had been no church of my
-denomination at Higgleston, and I had affiliated with one made up of the
-remnants of two or three other houseless sects, under the caption of the
-United Congregations, and there was nothing in its somewhat loosened
-discipline that positively forbade the theatre. In my work with
-McWhirter, the play had come to mean so much the intimate expression of
-life, so wove itself with all that had been profound and heroic in the
-experience of the people, that it seemed to come quite as a matter of
-course for me to be walking out between the captain and the manager
-toward the opera house. O'Farrell, too, must have beguiled me with that
-extraordinary Celtic faculty for the sympathetic note, for I am sure I
-received the impression as we went, that his play, "The Shamrock," meant
-quite as much to the Irish temperament, as "The Spy" could mean to
-Ohianna. The manager and McWhirter had crossed one another's trails on
-more than one occasion, which seemed to give the whole affair the colour
-of neighbourliness.
-
-It transpired in the course of our walk that Laurine Dean, America's
-greatest emotional actress--it was O'Farrell called her that--had been
-taken down at Waterbury with bronchitis, and the cast having been
-already disarranged by an earlier defection, he had been obliged to
-cancel several one-night stands and put in at Kincade to wait until a
-substitute could be procured from St. Louis or Chicago, which difficulty
-was happily obviated by the discovery of Mrs. Olivia Bettersworth.
-
-All this, as I was to learn later, was not so near the truth as it might
-be, but it served. I could never make out, so insistent was each to
-claim the credit of it, whether it was O'Farrell or McWhirter first
-thought of offering the part to me, but there it was for me to take it
-or leave it as I was so inclined. Our own performance was in Armory Hall
-and this was my first entrance of the back premises of a proper stage. I
-recall as we came in through the stage door having no feeling about it
-all but an odd one of being entirely habituated to such entrances.
-
-They were all there waiting for us, the Shamrocks, grouped around the
-prompter's table in a dimly lit, dusty space, with a half conscious
-staginess even in their informal groupings, men and women regarding me
-with a queer mixture of coldness and ingratiation. I had time to take
-that in, and an impression of shoppy smartness, before Manager O'Farrell
-with a movement like the shuffling of cards drew us all together in a
-kind of general introduction and commanded the rehearsal to begin. Well,
-I went on with it as I suppose it was foregone I should as soon as I had
-smelled the dust of action, which was the stale and musty cloud that
-rolled up on our skirts from the floor and shook down upon our
-shoulders from the wings, too unsophisticated even to guess at the
-situation which the manager's air of genial hurry was so admirably
-planned to cover. I read from the prompter's book--O'Farrell had
-sketched the plot to me on the way over--and did my utmost to keep up
-with his hasty interpolations of the business. I was feeling horribly
-amateurish and awkward in the presence of these second-rate folk, whom I
-took always far too seriously, and suddenly swamped in confusion at
-hearing the manager call out to me from the orchestra what was meant for
-instruction, in an utterly unintelligible professional jargon. McWhirter
-through some notion, I suppose, of keeping his work innocuously
-amateurish, had used no sort of staginess, and the phrase froze me into
-mortification. With the strain of attention I was already under I could
-not even make an intelligent guess at his meaning, as O'Farrell,
-mistaking my hesitation, repeated it with growing peremptoriness. I
-could see the rest of the cast who were on the stage with me, aware of
-my embarrassment, and letting the situation fall with a kind of sulky
-detachment, which struck me then, and still, as vulgar rather than
-cruel. Suddenly from behind me a voice smooth and full, translated the
-clipped jargon into ordinary speech. I had not time, as I moved to obey
-it, for so much as a grateful glance over my shoulder, but I knew very
-well that the voice had come from a young woman of about my own age,
-who, as I entered at the beginning of the rehearsal, had been sitting in
-the wings, taking in my introduction with the gaze of a tethered cow,
-quiet, incurious, oblivious of the tether. As soon as I was free from
-the first act, I got around to her.
-
-"Thank you so much," I began. "You see I am not used----"
-
-"Why do you care?" she wondered. "It is only a kind of slang. They all
-had to learn it once."
-
-I could see that she sprang from my own class. Taylorville, the high
-school, the village dressmaker, might have turned her out that moment;
-and by degrees I was aware that she was beautiful; pale, tanned
-complexion, thick untaught masses of brown hair, and pale brown eyes of
-a profound and unfathomed rurality. As she moved across the stage at the
-prompter's call, with her skirts bunched up on her hip with a safety
-pin, out of the dust, as if she had just come from scrubbing the dairy,
-I fairly started with the shock of her bodily perfection and her
-extraordinary manner of going about with it as though it were something
-picked up in passing for the convenience of covering. It provoked me to
-the same sort of involuntary exclamation as though one should see a
-child playing with a rare porcelain. By contrast she seemed to bring out
-in the others, streaks and flashes of cheapness, of the stain and wear
-of unprofitable use.
-
-She came to me again at the end of her scene. "Where do you live?" she
-wished to know. "I can come around with you and coach you with your
-part."
-
-"I'm not sure," I hesitated: "I don't know if I shall go on with it."
-She took me again with her slow, incurious gaze.
-
-"Why, what else are you here for?"
-
-That in fact appeared to be Mr. O'Farrell's view of it, and though I
-went through the form of taking the day to think it over and telegraph
-to Tommy, I did finally engage myself to the Shamrock Company for the
-term of Miss Dean's illness. My husband made no objection except that he
-preferred I should not use my own name, as indeed, O'Farrell had no
-notion of my doing, as the posters and programmes stood in Miss Dean's
-name already.
-
-We had from Thursday to Monday to get up my part. With all my quickness
-I could not have managed it, except for the alacrity with which, after
-the first day, all the company played up to my business, prompted me in
-my lines, and assisted in my make-up. There was, if I had but known it,
-a reason for this extra helpfulness, which, remembering the way the
-ladies of the United Congregations had pulled and hauled about the
-Easter entertainment, went far with me toward raising the estimate of
-professional acting among the blessed privileges. Several members of the
-cast had felt themselves entitled to Miss Dean's place, for the manager
-had refused to pay an understudy, and found it easier to concede it to
-me, a brilliant society woman as I had been figured to them--I suspected
-McWhirter there--a talented amateur who would return to privacy and
-trouble the profession no more, rather than to one who might be expected
-to develop tendencies to keep what she had got. Moreover, they had
-played to small houses of late, most of the salaries were in arrears,
-and from the first of my taking hold of it, it began to be certain that
-the piece would go. For I not only played the part of the gay,
-melodramatic Irish Eileen, but I played with it. There was all my youth
-in it, the youth I hadn't had, there was wild Ellen McGee and the wet
-pastures and the woods aflame. With Tommy and a home to fall back upon,
-with no professional standing to keep, with no bitterness and rancours,
-I adventured with the part, tossed it up and made sport of it, played it
-as a stupendous lark. The rest of the company took it from me that it
-was a lark, and were as solicitous to see it through for me as though I
-had been an only child among a lot of maiden aunts. And I did not know
-of course that this charm of good fellowship was based more directly on
-the box-office returns than on the community of art.
-
-Incidentally a great deal that went on in my behalf threw light on the
-character and disposition of the star.
-
-"I 'most wore my fingers off, hookin' 'er up," confided the dresser who
-took in her gowns for me, "but she won't let out an inch, not she. Well,
-this spell 'll pull 'er down a bit, that's one comfort."
-
-Cecelia Brune made me up. She was the youngest member of the company and
-that she was distractingly and unnecessarily pretty didn't obviate the
-certainty that in Milwaukee where she was born she had been known as
-Cissy Brown.
-
-"You don't really need anything but a little colour and black around the
-eyes," she insisted. "Dean is a sight when she's made up; got so much to
-cover. I'll bet she is no sicker than me, she's just taken the slack
-time to get her wrinkles massaged. Gee, if I had a face like hers I'd
-take it off and have it ironed!"
-
-Cecelia, I may remark, lived for her prettiness; she lived by it. She
-had a speaking part of half a dozen lines and a dance in the Village
-Green act, and her mere appearance on the street of any town where we
-were billed, was good for two solid rows clear across the house. In
-Cecelia's opinion this was the quintessence of art, to attract males and
-keep them dangling, and to eke out her personal adornment by gifts which
-she managed to extract from her admirers without having yet paid the
-inestimable price for them. Married woman as I was, I was too
-countrified to understand that inevitably she must finally pay it. She
-had all the dewy, large-eyed softness of look that one reluctantly
-disassociates from innocence, and a degree of cold, grubby calculation
-which she mistook, flaunted about in fact, for chastity. It was she who
-told me as much as I got to know for a great many years of Sarah
-Croyden, who had already taken me with the fascination of her Gift, the
-inordinate curiosity to know, to touch and to prove, which makes me
-still the victim of its least elusive promise and the dupe of any poor
-pretender to it. I wanted something to account for, except when she was
-under the obsession of a part, her marked inadequacy to her perfect
-exterior, for the rich full voice that, caught in the wind of her
-genius, gripped and threatened, but ran through her ordinary
-conversation as flaccid as a velvet ribbon.
-
-She was, by Cecelia's account, the daughter of a Baptist elder in a
-small New York town, strictly brought up--I could measure the weals of
-the strictness upon my own heart--and had run away with an actor named
-Lawrence, after one wild, brief encounter when O'Farrell had been
-playing in the town. That was before Cecelia's time and she had no
-report of the said Lawrence except that he was as handsome as they make
-them and a regular rotter.
-
-"She'd ought to have known," opined Cecelia--though where in her
-nineteen years she could have acquired the groundwork of such knowledge
-was more than I could guess--"She'd ought to have known what she was up
-against by his bein' so willing to marry her. He wouldn't have put his
-head in a noose like that without he had hold of the loose end of it
-himself."
-
-That he had so held it, transpired in less than a year, in the
-reappearance of a former wife who turned up at his lodging one night to
-wait his return from the theatre, where, no one knew by what diabolical
-agency, Lawrence had word of her, and made what Cecelia called a "get
-away." What passed between the two women on that occasion must have been
-noteworthy, but it was sunk forever under Sarah's unfathomable rurality.
-O'Farrell, who of his class was a very decent sort, had been so little
-able to bear the sight of beauty in distress that he offered the poor
-girl an unimportant part as an alternative to starvation, and Sarah had
-very quickly settled what was to become of her by developing
-extraordinary talent.
-
-I think no one of us at that time quite realized how good she was;
-Cecelia Brune, I know, did not even think her beautiful.
-
-"No style," she said, settling her corset at the hips and fluffing up
-her pompadour with my comb, "and no figgur." But myself, I seemed to see
-her the mere embodiment of a gift which had snatched at this chance
-encounter with an actor, to swing into opportunity, regardless of its
-host. Whenever I watched her acting, some living impulse deep within me
-reared its head.
-
-I have set all this down here because with the exception of Manager
-O'Farrell and Jimmy Vantine, the comedian, who was thirty-five,
-objectionable, and in love with Cecelia, these two women were all I ever
-saw again of the Shamrock players. Miss Dean I did not meet on this
-occasion, for though at the end of three weeks, before I had time to
-tire of travel and new towns and nightly triumphs, she wrote she would
-return to her work, it fell out that she did not actually return until I
-was well on my way home.
-
-"I thought she would have a quick recovery when she found out what a
-sweep you'd been makin'," remarked Cecelia. That was all the comment
-that passed on the occasion. If Mr. O'Farrell made no motion toward
-making me a permanent member of his company, there were reasons for it
-that I understood better later. I had to own to a little disappointment
-that nobody came to the station to see me off except Cecelia and Sarah
-Croyden. It is true Jimmy Vantine was there, but he left us in no doubt
-that he only came because Cecelia had promised to spend the interval
-between their train and my own in his company. He fussed about with my
-luggage in order to get me off as quickly as possible.
-
-The very bread-and-buttery relation of the Shamrocks to what was for me
-the community of Art, had never struck so sourly upon me as at the
-casual quality of their good-byes. I remembered noticing that morning
-how very little hair there was on the top of Jimmy Vantine's head, and
-that he did not seem to me quite clean. I found myself so let down after
-the three weeks' excitement that I thought it necessary at Springfield,
-where I changed, to interpose two days' shopping between me and
-Higgleston. Among other things I bought there was a spirit lamp and a
-brass teakettle.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Understand that up to this time I had not yet thought of the stage as a
-career for myself. I hadn't yet needed it. I had not then realized that
-the insight and passion which have singled me out among women of my
-profession couldn't be turned to render the mere business of living
-beautiful and fit. I hardly understand it now. Why should people pay
-night after night to see me loving, achieving, suffering, in a way they
-wouldn't think of undertaking for themselves? Life as I saw it was
-sufficiently dramatic: charged, wonderful. I at least felt at home in
-the great moments of kings, the tender hours of poets, and I hadn't
-thought of my participation in these things rendering me in any way
-superior to Higgleston or even different. If I had, I shouldn't have
-settled there in the first place. If I had glimpsed even at Tommy's
-exclusion from all that mattered passionately to me, I shouldn't have
-married him. It was because I had not yet begun to be markedly
-dissatisfied with either of them that I presently got myself the
-reputation of having trampled both Tommy and Higgleston underfoot. I
-must ask your patience for a little until I show you how wholly I
-offered myself to them both and how completely they wouldn't have me.
-
-The point of departure was of course that I didn't accept the
-Higglestonian reading of married obligations to mean that my whole time
-was to be taken up with just living with Tommy. It was as natural, and
-in view of the scope it afforded for individual development, a more
-convenient arrangement than living with my mother, but not a whit more
-absorbing. I couldn't, anyway, think of just living as an end, and
-accordingly I looked about for a more spacious occupation; I thought I
-had found it in the directing of that submerged spiritual passion which
-I had felt in the sustaining drama of the war. I had a notion there
-might be a vent for it in the shape of a permanent dramatic society by
-means of which all Higgleston, and I with them, could escape temporarily
-from its commonness into the heroic movement. It was all very clear in
-my own mind but it failed utterly in communication.
-
-I began wrongly in the first place by asking the Higgleston ladies to
-tea. Afternoon tea was unheard of in Higgleston, and I had forgotten, or
-perhaps I had never learned, that in Higgleston you couldn't do anything
-different without implying dissatisfaction with things as they were. You
-were likely on such occasions to be visited by the inquiry as to whether
-the place wasn't good enough for you. As a matter of fact afternoon tea
-was almost as unfamiliar to me as to the rest of them, but I had read
-English novels and I knew how it ought to be done. I knew for instance,
-that people came and went with a delightful informality and had tea made
-fresh for them, and were witty or portentous as the occasion demanded.
-My invitations read from four to five, and the Higgleston ladies came
-solidly within the minute and departed in phalanxes upon the stroke of
-five. They all wore their best things, which, from the number of black
-silks included, and black kid gloves not quite pulled on at the finger
-tips, gave the affair almost a funereal atmosphere. They had most of
-them had their tea with their midday meal, and Mrs. Dinkelspiel said
-openly that she didn't approve of eating between meals. They sat about
-the room against the wall and fairly hypnotized me into getting up and
-passing things, which I knew was not the way tea should be served. In
-Higgleston, the only occasion when things were handed about, were Church
-sociables and the like, when the number of guests precluded the
-possibility of having them all at your table; and by the time I got once
-around, the tea was cold and I realized how thin my thin bread and
-butter and chocolate wafers looked in respect to the huge, soft slabs of
-layer cake, stiffened by frosting and filling, which, in Higgleston went
-by the name of light refreshments. The only saving incident was the
-natural way in which Mrs. Ross, our attorney's wife who visited East
-every summer and knew how things were done, asked for "two lumps,
-please," and came back a second time for bread and butter. I think they
-were all tremendously pleased to be asked, though they didn't intend to
-commit themselves to the innovation by appearing to have a good time.
-And that was the occasion I chose for broaching my great subject,
-without, I am afraid, in the least grasping their incapacity to share in
-my joyous discovery of the world of Art which I so generously held out
-to them.
-
-It hadn't been possible to keep my professional adventure from the
-townspeople, nor had I attempted it. What I really felt was that we were
-to be congratulated as a community in having one among us privileged to
-experience it, and I honestly think I should have felt so of any one to
-whom the adventure had befallen. But I suspect I must have given the
-impression of rather flaunting it in their faces.
-
-I put my new project on the ground that though we were dissevered by our
-situation, there was no occasion for our being out of touch with the
-world of emotion, not, at least, so long as we had admission to it
-through the drama; and it wasn't in me to imagine that the world I
-prefigured to them under those terms was one by their standards never to
-be kept sufficiently at a distance.
-
-Mrs. Miller put the case for most of them with the suggestion thrown out
-guardedly that she didn't "know as she held with plays for church
-members"; she was a large, tasteless woman, whose husband kept the
-lumber yard and derived from it an extensive air of being in touch with
-the world's occupations. "And I don't know," she went on relentlessly,
-"that I ever see any good come of play acting to them that practise it."
-
-Mrs. Ross, determined to live up to her two lumps, came forward
-gallantly with:
-
-"Oh, but, Mrs. Miller, when our dear Mrs. Bettersworth----"
-
-"That's what I was thinking of," Mrs. Miller put it over her.
-
-"Well for my part," declared Mrs. Dinkelspiel, with the air of not
-caring who knew it, "I don't want my girls to sell tickets or anything;
-it makes 'em too forward." Mrs. Harvey, whose husband was in hardware,
-began to tell discursively about a perfectly lovely entertainment they
-had had in Newton Centre for the missionary society, which Mrs. Miller
-took exception to on the ground of its frivolity.
-
-"I don't know," she maintained, "if the Lord's work ain't hindered by
-them sort of comicalities as much as it's helped."
-
-I am not sure where this discussion mightn't have landed us if the
-general attention had not been distracted just then by my husband, an
-hour before his time, coming through the front gate and up the walk. He
-had evidently forgotten my tea party, for he came straight to me, and
-backed away precipitately through the portières as soon as he saw the
-assembled ladies sitting about the wall. It was not that which disturbed
-us; any Higgleston male would have done the same, but it was plain in
-the brief glimpse we had of him that he looked white and stricken. A
-little later we heard him in the back of the house making ambiguous
-noises such as not one of my guests could fail to understand as the
-precursor of a domestic crisis. I could see the little flutter of
-uneasiness which passed over them, between their sense of its demanding
-my immediate attention and the fear of leaving before the expressed
-time. Fortunately the stroke of five released them. The door was hardly
-shut on the last silk skirt when I ran out and found him staring out of
-the kitchen window.
-
-"Well?" I questioned.
-
-"I thought they would never go," he protested. "Come in here." He led
-the way to the living room as if somehow he found it more appropriate to
-the gravity of what he had to impart, and yet failed to make a beginning
-with his news. He shut the door and leaned against it with his hands
-behind him for support.
-
-"Has anything happened?"
-
-"Happened? Oh, I don't know. I've lost my job."
-
-"Lost? Burton Brothers?" I was all at sea.
-
-He nodded. "They're closing out; the manager's in town to-day. He told
-us...." By degrees I got it out of him. Burton Brothers thought they saw
-hard times ahead, they were closing out a number of their smaller
-establishments, centering everything on their Chicago house. Suddenly my
-thought leaped up.
-
-"But couldn't they give you something there ... in Chicago?" I was dizzy
-for a moment with the wild hope of it. Never to live in Higgleston any
-more--but Tommy cut me short.
-
-"They've men who have been with them longer than I have to provide
-for.... I asked."
-
-"Oh, well, no matter. The world is full of jobs." Looking for one
-appealed to me in the light of an adventure, but because I saw how pale
-he was I went to him and began to kiss him softly. By the way he yielded
-himself to me I grasped a little of his lost and rudderless condition,
-once he found himself outside the limits of a salaried employment. I
-began to question him again as the best way of getting the extent of our
-disaster before us.
-
-"What does Mr. Rathbone say?" Rathbone was our working tailor, a thin,
-elderly, peering man of a sort you could scarcely think of as having any
-existence apart from his shop. He used to come sidling down the street
-to it and settle himself among his implements with the air of a brooding
-hen taking to her nest; the sound of his machine was a contented
-clucking.
-
-"He was struck all of a heap. They're better fixed than we are." Tommy
-added this as an afterthought as likely to affect the tailor's attitude
-when he came to himself. "They" were old Rathbone and his daughter, one
-of those conspicuously blond and full-breasted women who seem to take to
-the dressmaking and millinery trades by instinct. As she got herself up
-on Sunday in her smart tailoring, with a hat "from the city," and her
-hair amazingly pompadoured, she was to some of the men who came to our
-church, very much what the brass teakettle was to me, a touch of the
-unattainable but not unappreciated elegancies of life. Tommy admired her
-immensely and was disappointed that I did not have her at the house
-oftener.
-
-"They've got her business to fall back on," Tommy suggested now with an
-approach to envy. He had never seen Miss Rathbone as I had,
-professionally, going about with her protuberant bosom stuck full of
-pins, a tape line draped about her collarless neck, and her skirt and
-belt never quite together in the back, so he thought of her
-establishment as a kind of stay in affliction.
-
-"And I have the stage," I flourished. It was the first time I had
-thought of it as an expedient, but I glanced away from the thought in
-passing, for to say the truth I didn't in the least know how to go about
-getting a living by it. I creamed some chipped beef for Tommy's supper,
-a dish he was particularly fond of, and opened a jar of quince
-marmalade, and all the time I wasn't stirring something or setting the
-table, I had my arms around him, trying to prop him against what I did
-not feel so much terrifying as exciting. We talked a little about his
-getting his old place back in Taylorville, and just as we were clearing
-away the supper things we saw Miss Rathbone, with her father tucked
-under her arm, pass the square of light raying out into the spring dusk
-from our window, and a moment later they knocked at our door. It was one
-of the things that I felt bound to like Miss Rathbone for, that she took
-such care of her father; she did everything for him, it was said, even
-to making up his mind for him, and this evening by the flare of the lamp
-Tommy held up to welcome them, it was clear she had made it up to some
-purpose. It must have been what he saw in her face that made my husband
-put the lamp back on the table from which the white cloth had not yet
-been removed, as if the clearing up was too small a matter to consort
-with the occasion.
-
-I was relieved to have my husband take charge of the visit, especially
-as he made no motion to invite them into the front room where the
-remains of the bread and butter and the chairs against the wall would
-have apprised Miss Rathbone of my having entertained company on an
-occasion to which she had not been invited. It was part of Tommy's sense
-of social obligation that we ought never to neglect Mr. Rathbone, whom,
-though his connection with the business was as slight as my husband's,
-he insisted on regarding as in some sort a partner. So we sat down
-rather stiffly about the table still shrouded in its white cloth, as
-though upon it were about to be laid out the dead enterprise of Burton
-Brothers, and looked, all of us, I think, a little pleased to find
-ourselves in so grave a situation.
-
-Miss Rathbone, who had always a great many accessories to her toilet,
-bags and handkerchiefs and scarves and things, laid them on the table as
-though they were a kind of insignia of office, and made a poor pretence
-to keep up with me the proper feminine detachment from the business
-which had brought them there. We neither of us, Miss Rathbone and I, had
-the least idea what the other might be thinking about or presumably
-interested in, though I think she made the more gallant effort to
-pretend that she did. On this evening I could see that she was full of
-the project for which she had primed her father, and was nervously
-anxious lest he shouldn't go off at the right moment or with the proper
-pyrotechnic.
-
-I remember the talk that went on at first, because it was so much in the
-way of doing business in Higgleston, and impressed me even then with its
-factitious shrewdness, based very simply on the supposition that
-Capitalists--it was under that caption that Burton Brothers
-figured--never meant what they said. Capitalists were always talking of
-hard times; it was part of their deep laid perspicacity. Burton Brothers
-wished to sell out the business; was it reasonable to suppose they would
-think it good enough to sell and not good enough to go on with?
-
-"Father thinks," said Miss Rathbone, and I am sure he had done so
-dutifully at her instigation, "that they couldn't ask no great price
-after talking about hard times the way they have."
-
-It was not in keeping with what was thought to be woman's place, that
-she should go on to the completed suggestion. In fact, so far as I
-remember it never was completed, but was talked around and about, as if
-by indirection we could lessen the temerity of the proposal that old
-Rathbone and Tommy should buy out the shop on such favorable terms as
-Burton Brothers, in view of their own statement of its depreciation,
-couldn't fail to make.
-
-"You could live over the store," Miss Rathbone let fall into the
-widening rings of silence that followed her first suggestion; "your rent
-would be cheaper, and it would come into the business."
-
-I felt that she made it too plain that the chief objection that my
-husband could have was the lack of money for the initial adventure; but
-because I realized that much of my instinctive resistance to a plan that
-tied him to Higgleston as to a stake, was due to her having originated
-it, I kept it to myself. I had a hundred inarticulate objections, chief
-of which was that I couldn't see how any plan that was acceptable to the
-Rathbones, could get me on toward the Shining Destiny, but when you
-remember that I hadn't yet been able to put that concretely to myself,
-you will see how impossible it was that I should have put it to my
-husband. In the end Tommy was talked over. I believe the consideration
-of going on in the same place and under the same circumstances without
-the terrifying dislocation of looking for a job, had more to do with it
-than Miss Rathbone's calculation of the profits. We wrote home for the
-money; Effie wrote back that everything of mother's was involved in the
-stationery business, which was still on the doubtful side of prosperity,
-but Tommy's father let us have three hundred dollars.
-
-The necessity of readjusting our way of life to Tommy's new status of
-proprietor, and moving in over the store, kept my plans for the dramatic
-exploitation of Higgleston in abeyance. It seemed however by as much as
-I was now bound up with the interest of the community, to put me on a
-better footing for beginning it, and on Decoration Day, walking in the
-cemetery under the bright boughs, between the flowery mounds, the Gift
-stirred in me, played upon by this touching dramatization of common
-human pain and loss. I recalled that it was just such solemn festivals
-of the people that I had had in mind to lay hold on and make the medium
-of a profounder appreciation. And the next one about to present itself
-as an occasion was the Fourth of July.
-
-I detached myself from Tommy long enough to make my way around to two or
-three of the ladies who usually served on the committee.
-
-"We ought to have a meeting soon now," I suggested; "it will take all of
-a month to get the children ready."
-
-"That's what we thought," agreed Mrs. Miller heavily. "They was to our
-house Thursday----" She went on to tell me who was to read the
-Declaration and who deliver the oration.
-
-"But," I protested, "that's exactly what they've had every Fourth these
-twenty years!"
-
-"Well, I guess," said Mrs. Harvey, "if Higgleston people want that kind
-of a celebration, they've a right to have it."
-
-"I guess they have," Mrs. Miller agreed with her.
-
-They had always rather held it out against me at Higgleston that I had
-never taken the village squabbles seriously, that I was reconciled too
-quickly for a proper sense of their proportions, and they must have
-reckoned without this quality in me now, for I was so far from realizing
-the deliberateness of the slight, that I thought I would go around on
-the way home and see our minister; perhaps he could do something. It
-appeared simply ridiculous that Higgleston shouldn't have the newest of
-this sort of thing when it was there for the asking.
-
-I found him raking the garden in his third best suit and the impossible
-sort of hat affected by professional men in their more human occasions.
-The moment I flashed out at him with my question about the committee, he
-fell at once into a manner of ministerial equivocation--the air of being
-man enough to know he was doing a mean thing without being man enough to
-avoid doing it. Er ... yes, he believed there had been a meeting ... he
-hadn't realized that I was expecting to be notified. I wasn't a regular
-member, was I?
-
-"No," I admitted, "but last year----" The intention of the slight began
-to dawn on me.
-
-"You see, the programme is usually made up from the children of the
-united Sunday schools...."
-
-"I know, of course, but what has that?..." He did know how mean it was;
-I could see by the dexterity with which he delivered the blow.
-
-"A good many of the mothers thought they'd rather not have them exposed
-to ... er ... professional methods." As an afterthought he tried to give
-it the cast of a priestly remonstrance which he must have seen didn't in
-the least impose on me.
-
-I suppose it was the fear of how I might put it to one of his best
-paying parishioners that led him to go around to the store the next
-morning and make matters worse by explaining to Tommy that though the
-children weren't to be contaminated by my professionalism, it could
-probably be arranged for me to "recite something." To do Tommy justice,
-he was as mad as a hatter. Being so much nearer to village-mindedness
-himself, I suppose my husband could better understand the mean envy of
-my larger opportunity, but his obduracy in maintaining that I had been
-offended led to the only real initiative he ever showed in all the time
-I was married to him.
-
-"I'd just like to _show_ them!" he kept sputtering. All at once he
-cheered up with a snort. "_I'll_ show them!" He was very busy all the
-evening with letters which he went out on purpose to post, with the
-result that when a few days later he made his contribution to the
-fireworks fund, he made it a little larger, as became a live business
-man, on the ground that he wouldn't be able to participate as his wife
-had "accepted an invitation to take charge of the programme at Newton
-Centre." Newton Centre was ten miles away, and though I couldn't do much
-on account of the difficulty of rehearsals, I managed to make the
-announcement of it in the county paper convey to them that what they had
-missed wasn't quite to be sicklied over with Mrs. Miller's asseveration
-of a notable want of moral particularity at Newton Centre. The very
-first time I went out to a Sunday-school social thereafter it was made
-plain to me that if I wanted to take up the annual Library
-entertainment, it was open to me.
-
-"And I always will say," Mrs. Miller conceded, "that there's nobody can
-make your children seem such a credit to you as Mrs. Bettersworth."
-
-"It's a regular talent you have," Mrs. Harvey backed her up, "like a
-person in the Bible." This scriptural reference came in so aptly that I
-could see several ladies nodding complacently. Mrs. Ross sailed quite
-over them and landed on the topmost peak of approbation.
-
-"I've always believed," she asserted, "that a Christian woman on the
-stage would have an uplifting influence."
-
-But by this time my ambition had slacked under the summer heat and the
-steady cluck of old Rathbone's machine and the mixed smell of damp
-woollen under the iron, and creosote shingle stains. There had been no
-loss of social standing in our living over the store; such readjustments
-in Higgleston went by the name of bettering yourself, and were
-commendable. But somehow I could never ask ladies to tea when the only
-entrance was by way of a men's furnishing store. The four rooms, opening
-into one another so that there was no way of getting from the kitchen to
-the parlour except through the bedroom, I found quite hopeless as a
-means of expressing my relation to all that appealed to me as inspiring,
-dazzling. Because I could not go out without making a street toilet, I
-went out too little, and suffered from want of tone. And suddenly along
-in September came a letter from O'Farrell offering me a place in his
-company, and a note from Sarah begging me to accept it. If up to that
-time I had not thought of the stage as a career, now at the suggestion
-the desire of it ravened in me like a flame.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-"And you never seem to think I might not _want_ my wife to go on the
-stage?"
-
-I do not know what unhappy imp prompted Tommy to take that tone with me;
-but whenever I try to fix upon the point of reprehensibleness which led
-on from my writing to O'Farrell that I would join him in ten days in
-Chicago, to the tragic termination of my marriage, I found myself
-whirled about this attitude of his in the deep-seated passionate Why of
-my life. Why should love be tied to particular ways of doing things?
-What was this horror of human obligation that made it necessary, since
-Tommy and I were so innocently fond of one another, that one of us
-should be made unhappy by it? Why should it be so accepted on all sides
-that it should be I? For my husband's feeling was but a single item in
-the total of social prejudice by which, once my purpose had gone abroad
-by way of the Rathbones, I found myself driven apart from the community
-interest as by a hostile tide, across which Higgleston gazed at me with
-strange, begrudging eyes. I recall how the men looked at me the first
-time I went out afterward, a little aslant, as though some ineradicable
-taint of impropriety attached in their minds to any association with
-the stage.
-
-Whatever attitude Tommy finally achieved in the necessity of sustaining
-the situation he had created for himself by his backing of my first
-professional venture, was no doubt influenced by the need of covering
-his hurt at realizing, through my own wild rush to embrace the present
-opportunity, how far I was from accepting life gracefully at his hands,
-the docile creature of his dreams. Little things come back to me ...
-words, looks ... sticks and straws of his traditions made wreckage by
-the wind of my desire, which my resentment at his implication in the
-general attitude, prevented me from fully estimating. My mother too, to
-whom I wrote my decision as soon as I had arrived at it, in a long
-letter designed to convince me that a wife's chief duty and becomingness
-lay in seeing that nothing of her lapped over the bounds prescribed by
-her husband's capacity, contributed to the exasperated sense I had of
-having every step toward the fulfilment of my natural gift dragged at by
-loving hands. Poor mother, I am afraid I never quite realized what a
-duckling I turned out to her, nor with what magnanimity she faced it.
-
-"But I suppose you think you are doing right," she wrote at the end, and
-then in a postscript, "I read in the papers there is a church in New
-York that gives communion to actors, but I don't expect you will get as
-far as that."
-
-It was finally Miss Rathbone who relieved the situation by pulling Tommy
-over to a consenting frame of mind in consideration of the neat little
-plumlet she extracted from it for herself by making me a travelling
-dress in three days. She brought it down to the house for me to try on,
-and it was pathetic to see the way my husband hung upon the effect she
-made for him of turning me out in a way that was a credit to them both.
-
-"You'll see," she seemed to be saying to him by nothing more explicit
-than an exclamation full of pins and a clever way of squinting at the
-hang of my skirt, "that when we two take a hand at the affairs of the
-great world we can come up to the best of them." And all the time I
-could hear the Higgleston ladies drumming up trade for her out of Newton
-Centre with their "Stylish? Oh, very. She makes all her clothes for Mrs.
-Bettersworth--Olivia Lattimore, the actress, you know."
-
-Just at the end though, when we were lying in bed the last morning,
-afraid to go to sleep again lest we shouldn't get up early enough to
-catch the train, I believe if Tommy had risen superior to his
-traditional objection to a married woman having interests outside her
-home, and claimed me by some strong personal need of his own, I should
-have answered it gladly. The trouble with my husband's need of me was
-that it left too much over.
-
-"But of course," he reminded me at the station, "you can give it up any
-minute if you want to." I think quite to the last he hoped I would rise
-to some such generous pretence and come back to him, but we neither of
-us had much notion of the nature of a player's contract.
-
-I had arranged to stay with Pauline until I could look about me, and
-from the little that I had been able to tell her of my affairs I could
-see she was in a flutter what to think of me. During the five days I was
-in her house I watched her swing through a whole arc of possible
-attitudes, to settle with truly remarkable instinct on the one which her
-own future permitted her most consistently to maintain.
-
-"You dear, ridiculous child," she hovered over the point with indulgent
-patronage, "what will you think of next?"
-
-Pauline herself was going through a phase at the time. They had moved
-out to a detached house at Evanston on account of its being better for
-the baby, and there was a visible diminution of her earlier effect of
-housewifely efficiency, in view of Henry's growing prosperity. You could
-see all Pauline's surfaces like a tulip bed in February, budding toward
-a new estimate of her preciousness in terms of her husband's income.
-When she took me by the shoulders, holding me off from her to give play
-to the pose of amused, affectionate bewilderment, I could see just where
-the consciousness of a more acceptable femininity as evinced by her
-being provided with a cook and a housemaid, prompted her to this
-gracious glozing of my not being in quite so fortunate a case. I was to
-be the Wonder, the sport on the feminine bush, dear and extenuated, made
-adorably not to feel my excluding variation; an attitude not uncommon in
-wives of well-to-do husbands toward women who work. It was an attitude
-successfully kept up by Pauline Mills for as long as I provided her the
-occasion. Just at first I suspect I rather contributed to it by my own
-feeling of its being such a tremendous adventure for me, Olivia
-Lattimore, with Taylorville, Hadley's pasture and the McGee children
-behind me, to be going on the stage. How I exulted in it all, the hall
-bedroom where I finally settled across from Sarah Croyden, the worry of
-rehearsals, the baked smell of the streets bored through by the raw lake
-winds, the beckoning night lights--the vestibule of doors opening on the
-solemn splendour of the world.
-
-At the rehearsals I met Cecelia Brune, if anything prettier than before,
-and quite perceptibly harder, and Jimmy Vantine, still in love with her,
-still with his bald crown not quite clean and the same objectionable
-habit of sidling about, fingering one's dress, laying hands on one as he
-talked. I met Manager O'Farrell, not a whit altered, and Miss Laurine
-Dean. I liked and I didn't like her. She drew by a certain warm charm of
-personality that repelled in closer quarters by its odours of
-sickliness. There was a quality in her beauty as of a flower kept too
-long in its glass, not so much withered as ready to fall apart. She had
-small appealing hands, such as moved one to take them up and handle
-them, and served somehow to mitigate a subtle impression of impropriety
-conveyed by her slight sidewise smile. She was probably good-natured by
-temperament and peevish through excessive use of cigarettes. She made a
-point of always speaking well of everybody, but it was a long time
-before I learned that no sort of blame was so deadly as her
-commendation. "Such a beautiful woman Miss Croyden is," she would say,
-"isn't it a pity about her nose," and though I had never thought of
-Sarah's nose as mitigating against her perfection, I found myself after
-that thinking of it. You could see that magnanimity, which was her
-chosen attitude, was often a strain to her. I do not think she had any
-gift at all, but she had a perception of it that had enabled her to
-produce a very tolerable imitation of acting and kept her, in a covert
-way, inordinately jealous of the gift in others. She was jealous of
-mine.
-
-It was not all at once I discovered it. In the beginning, because I
-never detected her in any of the obvious snatchings of lines and
-positions that went on at rehearsals, but even making a stand for me
-against incursions into my part which I was too unaccustomed to
-forestall, I thought of her as being of rather better strain than most
-of the company. I was probably the only member of it unaware of her
-deliberate measures not to permit me such a footing as might lead to my
-supplanting her with Manager O'Farrell, toward whom I began to find
-myself in what, for me, was an interesting and charming relation. It was
-a relation I should have been glad to maintain with any member of the
-company, but it was only O'Farrell who found himself equal to it. I was
-full and effervescing with the joy of creation; night by night as I felt
-the working of the living organism we should have been, transmitting
-supernal energies of emotion to the audience, who by the very
-communicating act became a part of us, I felt myself also warming toward
-my fellow players. I was so charged I should have struck a spark from
-any one of them when we met, but for the fact that by degrees I
-discovered that they presented to me the negative pole.
-
-I was aware of such communicating fluid between particular pairs of
-them. I saw it spark from eye to eye, heard it break in voices; it
-flashed like sheet lightning about our horizons on occasions of great
-triumph; but I was distinctly alive to the fact that the medium by which
-it was accomplished was turned from me. At times I was brushed by the
-wing of a suspicion that among the men, there was something almost
-predetermined in their denial of what was for me, the sympathetic,
-creative impulse. I was a little ashamed for them of the gaucherie of
-withholding what seemed so important to our common success, and yet I
-seemed always to be surprising all of them at it, except Jimmy Vantine
-and the manager. I couldn't of course, on account of his propensity for
-laying hands on one, take it from Jimmy, but between Mr. O'Farrell and
-me it ran with a pleasant, profitable warmth. I was conscious always of
-acting better the scenes I had with him. The thrill of them was never
-quite broken in off-the-stage hours. I felt myself sustained by it. For
-one thing the man had genuine talent, and I think besides Sarah Croyden
-and Jimmy Vantine, no one else in the company had very much. Jimmy had a
-gift, besmeared and discredited by his own cheapness, but O'Farrell had
-a real flowing genius and a degree of personal vitality that sketched
-him out as by fire from the flat Taylorville types I had known. We used
-to talk together about my own possibilities and I had many helpful hints
-from him, but in spite of this friendliness I never made any way with
-him against Miss Dean. Not that I tried, but by degrees I found that
-suggestions made and favours asked, were granted or accepted on the
-basis of their non-interference with our leading lady. I was not without
-intimations, which I usually disregarded because I found their
-conclusions impossible to maintain, that she even triumphed over me in
-little matters too inconsiderable to have been taken into account except
-on the understanding that we were pitted in a deliberate rivalry. I was
-hurt and amazed at times to discover that we presented this aspect to
-the rest of the company. I felt that I was being judged by my conduct of
-a business in which I was not engaged.
-
-The situation, however, had not developed to such a pitch by the time we
-played in Kincade, that it could affect my pleasure in the visit Tommy
-paid me there; I was overjoyed to have the arms of my own man about me
-again; I was proud of his pride in my success as _Polly Eccles_, and
-pleased to have him and Sarah pleased with one another. I thought then
-that if I could only have Tommy and my work I should ask no more of
-destiny; I do not now see why I couldn't, but I like best to think of
-him as he seemed to me then, wholesome and good, raised by his joy of
-our reunion almost to my excited plane, generous in his sharing of my
-triumphs. It seemed for the moment to put my feet quite on solid ground.
-I knew at last where I was.
-
-It was about a month after this that I began to find myself pitted
-against Miss Dean in a struggle for some dimly grasped advantage, with
-the dice cogged against me. I saw myself in the general estimate,
-convinced of handling my game badly, and could form no guess even at the
-expected moves. I smarted under a sense that Manager O'Farrell was not
-backing up the friendliness of our relations, and I remember saying to
-Sarah Croyden once that I suspected Miss Dean was using her sex
-attraction against me, but I missed the point of Sarah's slow,
-commiserating smile. At the time we were all more or less swamped by the
-discomforts of our wintry flights from town to town, execrable hotels,
-irregular and unsatisfying meals. One and another of us went down with
-colds, and finally toward the end of February, I was taken with a severe
-neuralgia. It reached its acutest stage the first night we played at
-Louisville.
-
-I had hurried home from the theatre the moment I was released from my
-part, to find relief from it in rest, but an hour or two later, still
-suffering and discovering that I had taken all my powders, I decided to
-go down to Sarah's room on the lower floor to ask for some that I knew
-she had. I slipped on my shoes and a thick gray dressing gown, and
-taking the precaution of wrapping my head in a shawl against the
-draughty halls, I went down to her. I was returning with the box of
-powders in my hand when I was startled by the sound of a door lifting
-carefully on the latch. The hotel was built in the shape of a capital T,
-with the stair halfway of the stem. I was almost at the foot of it
-facing the cross hall that gave me a view of the door of Miss Dean's
-room, and I saw now that it was slightly ajar. I shrank instinctively
-into the shadow of the recess where the stair began, for I was unwilling
-that anybody should see the witch I looked in my dressing gown and
-shawl. In the interval before the door widened I heard the tick of a
-tin-faced clock just across from me. Part of the enamel was fallen away
-from the face of it so that it looked as if eaten upon by discreditable
-sores; a chandelier holding two smoky kerosene lamps hung slightly awry
-at the crossing of the T, and cast a tipsy shadow. The door swung back
-slightly, it opened into the room, and a man came out of it and crossed
-directly in front of me, probably to his room in the other arm of the T.
-
-Once out of the door it snapped softly to behind him, and the man fell
-instantly into a manner that disconnected him with it to a degree that
-could only have been possible to an accomplished actor. If I had not
-seen him come out of it, I should have supposed him abroad upon such a
-casual errand as my own.
-
-But there was no mistaking that it was Manager O'Farrell. By the
-tin-faced clock it was a quarter past one. And he would have been home
-from the theatre more than an hour!
-
-I got up to my room somehow; I think my neuralgia must have left me with
-the shock; I can't remember feeling it any more after that. You have to
-remember that this was my first actual contact with sin of any sort.
-Generations of the stock of Methodism revolted in me. I had liked the
-man, I had thought of our relation as something precious, to be kept
-intact because it nourished the quality of our art, and I had all the
-conventional woman's horror of being brought in touch with looseness. It
-was part of the admitted business of the men of my class to keep their
-women from such contacts, and Manager O'Farrell had allowed me to enter
-into a sort of rivalry with a shameless woman--with his mistress.
-
-I have always been what the country people in Ohianna call a
-knowledgable woman, I have not much faculty of getting news of a
-situation through the facts as they present themselves, but I have
-instincts which under the stimulus of emotion work with extraordinary
-celerity and thoroughness. Now suddenly the half-apprehended suggestion
-of the last few months took fire from the excitement of my mind, and
-exploded into certainties. I sensed all at once intolerable things, the
-withholden eyes, the covert attention fixed on my relations with the
-manager and Miss Dean. I lay on the bed and shuddered with dry sobs;
-other times I lay still, awake and blazing. About daylight Sarah came up
-to inquire how my neuralgia did. She found me with the unopened box
-clutched tightly in my hand. She turned up the smoky gas and noted the
-dark circles under my eyes.
-
-"What has happened? Something, I know," she insisted gently. I blurted
-it out.
-
-"Mr. O'Farrell ... I saw him come out of Miss Dean's room ... at a
-quarter of one. He was ... oh, Sarah ... he was!..." I relapsed again
-into the horror of it.
-
-"Oh!" she said. She turned out the light and came and forced me gently
-under the covers and got into bed beside me.
-
-"Didn't you know?" she questioned.
-
-"Did you?"
-
-"No one really knows these things. I didn't want to be the first to
-suggest it to you."
-
-"Do the others know?"
-
-"As much as we do. It has been going on a long time."
-
-"And you put up with it--you go about with them?" I was astonished at
-the welling up of disgust in me. Sarah felt for my hand and held it.
-
-"My dear, in our business you have to learn to take no notice. It is not
-that these things are so much worse with actors, but it is more
-difficult to keep them covered up. You must know that a great many
-people do such things."
-
-"I know--_wicked_ people. I never thought of its being done by anybody
-you liked."
-
-"Oh, yes;" she was perfectly simple. "You can like them, you can like
-them greatly." I remembered that I oughtn't to have said that to Sarah
-Croyden.
-
-"You mustn't think Mr. O'Farrell such a bad man. He is probably fond of
-her. In some respects he is a very good man. When I was--left, without a
-penny, he might have made terms with me. Some managers would. But he
-gave me a living salary and left me to myself. He has been very kind to
-me."
-
-"But she----" I choked back my sick resentment to get at what had been
-tearing its way through my consciousness for the last three hours. "She
-must have thought that _that_ was what I wanted of him...."
-
-"Well, it is natural she should be anxious, with other women about. She
-is in love with him."
-
-"Did you think so? About me, I mean?"
-
-"No," said Sarah. "No, I didn't think so."
-
-It was light enough now to show the outline of the drifts along the
-sills and the fine gritty powder which the wind dashed intermittently
-against the panes; the filter of day under the scant blinds brought out
-in the affair streaks of vulgarity as evident as the pattern of the
-paper on the wall. It seemed to borrow cheapness from the broken castor
-of the bureau, as from my recollection of the eaten face of the clock
-and the leaning chandelier. I sat up in the bed and laid hold of Sarah
-in my eagerness to get clear of what by my mere knowledge of it, seemed
-an unbearable complicity.
-
-"I had a feeling for him," I admitted. "I could act better with him; but
-it was different from that--you know it was different."
-
-"Yes," said Sarah, "I know. I know because I am that way myself; it is
-_like_ that, but it isn't that." I was still, holding my breath while
-she considered; we were very close upon the twined roots of sex and
-art.
-
-"There's a feeling that goes with acting, with other sorts of things,
-painting and music, maybe, a feeling of your wanting to get _through_ to
-something and lay hold of it, and your not being able to leaves you ...
-aching somehow, and you think if there's a particular person ... I think
-O'Farrell would understand ... it is being able to act makes you know
-the difference I suppose. He really can act you know, and you can, but
-Dean wouldn't understand, nor the others. My--Mr. Lawrence didn't
-understand!" It was the first time she had ever mentioned him to me.
-"Sometimes I think they might have felt the difference just at first,
-but nobody told them and they got used to thinking it is ... the other
-thing." She drew me down into the bed again and covered me. "You mustn't
-take it to hard ... we all go through it once ... and you are safe so
-long as you know."
-
-"But I can't go on with it." I was positive on that point. "Sarah,
-Sarah, don't say I have to go on with it."
-
-"I know you can't. But you just have to."
-
-"I should never be able to face either of them again without showing
-that I know."
-
-"And then the others will know and they will think ..."
-
-I threw out my arms, seeing how I was trapped. I wanted to cry out on
-them; to despise the woman openly. "And they will think that I am
-jealous ... that I wanted it myself...."
-
-I rolled in the bed and bit my hands with shame and anger. Sarah caught
-me in her arms and held me until the paroxysm passed. I was quieted at
-last from exhaustion.
-
-"You can stay in your room to-day," she suggested. "I can bring your
-meals up to you; this neuralgia will give you an excuse, and you needn't
-see any one until you go to the theatre. That will give you one day.
-Maybe by to-morrow ..."
-
-But I had no confidence that to-morrow would bring me any sensible
-relief. The moral shock was tremendous. All my pride was engaged on the
-side of never letting anybody know; to have been misunderstood in the
-quality of my disgust would have been the intolerable last thing. Sarah
-brought up my breakfast before she had her own; she reported nobody
-about yet except Jimmy Vantine who had inquired for me. About half an
-hour later she came softly in again with a yellow envelope open in her
-hand. I saw by her face that it was for me and that the news it
-contained put the present situation out of question.
-
-"Is it from my husband?" I demanded. I hardly knew what I hoped or
-expected, a possibility of release flashed up in me.
-
-"It has been forwarded." She sat down on the bed beside me. "My poor
-Olivia ... you must try to think of it as anything but a way out. Mr.
-O'Farrell will let you go for this...." If it had to happen it couldn't
-have happened better.
-
-"Give it to me----"
-
-"Remember it is a way out."
-
-I read it hastily:
-
- Mother had a stroke. Come at once.
-
- Signed: FORESTER.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-It was a common practice in Taylorville never to send for the doctor
-until you knew what was the matter with you. So long as the symptoms
-failed to align themselves with any known disorder, they were supposed
-to be amenable to neighbourly advice, to the common stock of medical
-misinformation, to the almanac or some such repository of science; and
-though this practice led on too many occasions to the disease getting
-past the curable stages before the physician was called, I never
-remember to have heard it questioned.
-
-"You see," people remarked to one another at the funeral, "they didn't
-know what was the matter with her until it was too late," and it passed
-for all extenuation. It was natural then that my mother should have kept
-any premonitory symptoms of her indisposition even from Forester; close
-as they were in their affections she would have thought it indelicate to
-have spoken to him of her health. The first determinate stroke of it
-came upon her sitting quietly in her usual place at prayer meeting on a
-Wednesday evening.
-
-It had been Forester's habit to close the shop a little early on that
-evening, going around to the church to walk home with her, getting in
-before the last hymn to save his face with the minister by a show of
-regular attendance. But on this evening customers detained him beyond
-his usual hour, so that by the time he reached the corner opposite the
-church, he saw the people dribbling out by twos and threes, across the
-lighted doorway, and noted that my mother was not with them. He thought
-she might have slipped out earlier and gone around to the shop for him
-as occasionally happened, but seeing the lights did not go out at once
-in the church, he looked in to make sure, and saw her still sitting in
-her accustomed place. The sexton and the organist, who were fussing
-together about a broken pedal, appeared not to have observed her there,
-and one of them was reaching up to put out the light when Forester
-touched her on the shoulder. She started and seemed to come awake with
-an effort, and on the way home she stumbled once or twice in a manner
-that led him, totally unaccustomed as he was to think of my mother as
-ill in any sort, to get a little entertainment out of it by gentle
-rallying, which was dropped when he discovered that it caused her
-genuine, pained embarrassment. The following Tuesday he came home to the
-midday meal to find her lying on the floor, inarticulate and hardly
-conscious. There must have been two strokes in close succession, for she
-had managed after falling, to get a cushion from the worn sitting-room
-lounge under her head and to pull a shawl partly over her. Effie, who
-was at Montecito, was summoned home, and that evening, by the doctor's
-advice, the telegram was sent which separated me so opportunely from the
-Shamrocks. By the time I reached her, speech had returned in a measure,
-and by the end of a fortnight she was able to be lifted into the chair
-which she never afterward left.
-
-I remember as if it were yesterday, the noble outline of her face and of
-her head against the pillows, the smooth hair parted Madonna-wise and
-brought low across her ears, the blue of her eyes looking out of the
-dark, swollen circles, for all her fifty-two years, with the unawakened
-clarity of a girl's. Stricken as I was from my first realizing contact
-with sin, and my identification with it through the assumed passions of
-the stage, it grew upon me during the days of my mother's illness that
-there was a kind of intrinsic worth in her which I, with all my powers,
-must forever and inalienably miss. With it there came a kind of
-exasperation, never quite to leave me, of the certainty of not choosing
-my own values, but of being driven with them aside and apart.
-
-It was responsible in part for a feeling I had of being somehow less
-related to my mother's house than many of her distant kin who were
-continually arriving out of all quarters, in wagons and top buggies, to
-express a continuity of interest and kind which had the effect of
-constituting me definitely outside the bond.
-
-The situation was furthered no doubt, by the whisper of my connection
-with the stage which got about and set up in them an attitude of
-circumspection, out of which I caught them at times regarding me with a
-curiosity unmixed with any human sympathy. Yet I recall how keen an
-appetite I had for what this illness of my mother's had thrown into
-relief, the web of passionate human interactions, bone and body of the
-spirituality that went clothed as gracelessly in the routine of their
-daily lives as the figures of the men under the unyielding ugliness of
-store clothing. It came out in the talk of the women sitting about the
-base burner at night with their skirts folded back carefully across
-their knees, in the watches we found it necessary to keep for the first
-fortnight or so. I remember one of these occasions as the particular
-instance by which my mother emerged for me from her condition of
-parenthood, to the common plane of humanity, by way of an old romance of
-her's with Cousin Judd. Cousin Lydia sat up with her that night and
-Almira Jewett, a brisk, country clad woman of the Skaldic temperament
-who from long handling of the histories of her clan had acquired an
-absolute art of it. She was own sister to the woman who married my
-mother's half-brother, and the Saga of the Judds and the Wilsons and the
-Jewetts and the Lattimores ran off the points of her bright needles as
-she sat with her feet on the fender, with a click and a spark. Cousin
-Lydia never knitted; she sat with her hands folded in her large lap and
-time seemed to rest with her.
-
-"It will be hard on Judd," Almira offered to the unspoken reference
-forever in the air, as to the possible fatal termination of my mother's
-illness.
-
-"Yes, it'll be hard on him." A faint, so faint nuance of assent in
-Cousin Lydia's voice seemed to admit the succeeding comment, shorn of
-impertinence. I guessed that the several members of the tribe were
-relieved rather than constrained to drop their intimate concerns into
-Almira Jewett's impartial histories.
-
-"I never," Almira invited, "did get the straight of that. Sally was
-engaged to him, warn't she?"
-
-"Not to say engaged," Cousin Lydia paused for just the right shade of
-relation, "but so as to want to be. Judd set store by her; he'd have had
-it that way anyway, but Sally couldn't make up her mind to it on account
-of their being own cousins."
-
-"I reckon she had the right of it; the Lord don't seem no way pleased
-with kin marrying."
-
-"I don't know, I don't know;" Cousin Lydia dropped the speculation into
-the pit of her own experience. "It looks like He wouldn't have made 'em
-to care about it then. But being as she saw it that way, they couldn't
-have done different. Not that Judd didn't see it in the light of his
-duty, too." There was evidently nothing in the annals of the Judds and
-the Lattimores which allowed a violation of the inward monitor.
-
-"Well, I must say, he has turned it into grace, if ever a man has. Not
-to say but what you've helped him to it." It was in the manner of
-Almira's concession of not in the matter, that Cousin Judd had chosen
-Lydia chiefly for her capacity not to offer any distraction to his
-profounder passion, and nothing in Cousin Lydia's comment to deny it.
-From the room beyond we could hear the inarticulate, half-conscious
-notice of my mother's pain. Cousin Lydia moved to attend her.
-
-"All those years," I whispered to Almira, "she has loved him and he has
-loved my mother!" I was pierced through with the pure sword of the
-spirit which had divided them. But Almira was more practical.
-
-"She was better off," Almira insisted. "Lydia hadn't no knack with men
-folk ever. She knew Judd wouldn't have loved her, but so long as he
-loved your mother she was safe. They got a good deal out of it, her
-knowing and sympathizing. She could sympathize, you see, for she knew
-how it was herself, loving Judd that way. It was no more than right they
-should get what they could out of it. It was the only thing they had
-between them."
-
-"All those years!" I said again. I felt myself immeasurably lifted out
-of the mists and mires of the Shamrocks into clear and aching
-atmospheres.
-
-"I will say this for Lydia," extenuated the Skald, "that though she
-hadn't no gift to draw a man to her, she knew how to hold her hand off
-and let him go his own thought. It was religion kept your mother and
-Judd apart, and yet it was in religion they comforted one another. Lydia
-never put herself forward like she might, claiming it was her religion
-too. And she was one that appreciated church privileges."
-
-But I wondered where my father came in. It had been, I knew, a
-passionate attachment.
-
-"Like a new house," said Almira, "built up where the old one has been,
-but the cellars of it don't change. Real loving is never really got
-over." I felt the phrase sounding in some subterranean crypt of my own.
-
-With this new light on it, it came out for me wonderfully in my mother's
-face, as I watched her through the anxious days, how much her life had
-been stayed in renunciations. I suppose my new appreciation must have
-shone out for her as well, for I could see rising out of her disorder,
-like a drowned person out of the sea, a bond of our common experience.
-We were two women, together at last, my mother and I, and could have
-speech with one another.
-
-Something no doubt contributed to this new understanding by an affair of
-Forester's which, as I began to be acquainted with the incidents
-preceding it, I believed to be partly responsible for my mother's
-stroke. I have already sketched to you how Forester had grown up in the
-need of finding himself always at the centre of feminine interest
-without the opportunity of satisfying it normally by marriage, and how
-the too early stimulation of sentiment and affection had led to his
-being handed about from girl to girl in the attempt to gratify his need
-without transgressing any of the lines marked out by his profession as
-an eminently nice young man. It came naturally out of the mere
-circumstance of there being a limited number of girls at hand whom he
-might conceivably court without the intention of marrying, for him to
-fall into the society of others whom he might not court but who might
-nevertheless find it much to their advantage to marry him.
-
-I do not know how and when it came to my mother's ears that he was
-calling frequently at the Jastrows; very likely they brought it to her
-notice themselves. They were a poor, pushing sort, forever exposing
-themselves to the slights arising from their own undesirability, which
-they forever tearfully attributed to an undeserved and paraded poverty.
-They paraded it now as the insuperable bar to all that they might have
-done for my mother, all that they actually had it in their hearts to do
-on their assumption of a right of being interested, an assumption which,
-even in her weakness, before she could trust herself to talk very much,
-I felt her dumbly imploring me to deny. The girl--Lily they called
-her--was not without a certain appeal to the senses; and knowing rather
-more of my brother's methods, I did not find Mrs. Jastrow's pretension
-to a community of interest in what might be expected to come of his
-attention, altogether unjustified. But in view of mother's condition and
-what Effie told me of the way business was going--rather was not going
-at all--any kind of marriage would have been out of the question. It was
-the way I put the finality of that into my dealings with Mrs. Jastrow,
-that drew mother over into the only relation of normal human
-interdependence I was ever to have with her. Whenever Mrs. Jastrow would
-come to call with that air she had, in her dress and manner, of being
-pulled together and made the best of, I could see my mother's fears
-signalling to me from the region of tremors and faintness in which she
-had sunk, and I would set my wits up as a defence against what,
-considering all there was against her, was a really gallant effort on
-Mrs. Jastrow's part to make out of Forester's philanderings a basis for
-a family intimacy. It was plain that neither my mother nor Mrs. Jastrow
-dared put the question to Forester, but rested their case on such mutual
-admissions of it as they could wring from one another.
-
-I could never make out on my mother's part, whether she was really
-afraid of the issue, or if in the preoccupation of their affection both
-she and Forester had overlooked his young man's right to a woman and a
-life of his own. Through all her dumb struggle against it, never but
-once did my mother openly face the ultimate possibility of his marriage
-with Lily Jastrow.
-
-It was about the third week of her illness, and Mrs. Jastrow, making one
-of her interminable calls, had been brought so nearly to the point of
-tears by my imperiousness, that Effie had been obliged to draw her off
-into the kitchen to have her opinion about a recipe for a mince meat
-such as she knew the Jastrows couldn't afford to be instructed in, and
-so had gotten her out of the side door and started down the walk before
-the situation could come to a head. My mother watched her go.
-
-"Do you think," she hazarded suddenly, "that Forester really is engaged
-to her?"
-
-"To Lily? Oh, no; Forester doesn't get engaged to girls, he
-just--dangles." It was characteristic of my mother's partiality that
-even damaging insinuations such as this, slid off from it as too far
-from the possibility to be even entertained. Perhaps a trace of my old
-exasperation with the whole situation, and the glimpse I had of Mrs.
-Jastrow letting herself out of our gate with her assumption of being as
-good as anybody still to the fore but a little awry, prompted me to add:
-
-"And it is only natural for her mother to make the most of it. She's
-looking out for her own, just as you are."
-
-"A mother has a right to do that;" she protested, "to keep them from
-making themselves miserable. It is no more than her duty."
-
-"Yes," I said; the remark had the effect of a challenge.
-
-"Young people don't know how to choose for themselves; they make
-mistakes." She revolved something in her mind. "You, now ... you're
-unhappy, aren't you, Olivia?"
-
-"Yes; oh, yes." I had not thought of myself as being so particularly,
-but I did not see my way to deny it.
-
-"I've been afraid ... sometimes ... since you wrote me about going on
-the stage, maybe you weren't exactly ... satisfied. But it isn't that,
-is it?"
-
-"No, mother, it isn't that."
-
-"There! You see!" She shook off her weakness with the conviction. "And
-you mightn't have been if I hadn't looked out for you a little."
-
-"Why, mother, what could you possibly----" She triumphed.
-
-"You remember that Garrett boy that was visiting at his uncle's? He
-called that night; the night you were engaged to Tommy."
-
-"Yes, I remember. You sent him away?"
-
-"He wasn't suitable at all ... smoking, and driving about on Sunday that
-way...." Her tone was defensive. "He left a letter that night----"
-
-"Mother! You didn't tell me!"
-
-"I was thinking it over ... I had a right ... you were too young!"
-
-"Mother ... did you read it?"
-
-"I ... looked at it. You hadn't met him but once and I had a right to
-know; and that night you were engaged. I took it for a sign."
-
-"And the letter?" It seemed all at once an immeasurable and irreparable
-loss.
-
-"I sent it back ... and, anyway, it turned out all right." I was
-possessed for the moment with the conviction that it was all dreadfully,
-despairingly wrong.
-
-"I couldn't have borne for you to marry anybody but a Christian,
-Olivia!" I thought of Tommy's exceedingly slender claim to that
-distinction and I laughed.
-
-"Tommy smokes," I said; "he says he has to do it with the customers."
-
-"Oh, but not as a habit, Olivia." I overrode that.
-
-"Tell me what became of him--of Mr. Garrett. Did you ever hear?"
-
-"He went West," she recollected; "I asked his aunt. He quarrelled with
-them because his uncle wouldn't send him to school. At his age they
-thought it wasn't suitable. I wouldn't have wanted you to go West,
-Olivia."
-
-I took her worn hands in mine. "It's all right, mother. I'm not going
-West. And I'm not going on the stage any more. I'm done with it." I felt
-so, passionately, at the time. We sat quietly for a time in that
-assurance and listened to Effie singing in the kitchen.
-
-"Olivia," she began timidly at last, "aren't you ever going to have any
-more children?"
-
-"Oh, I hope so, mother. I haven't been strong, you know, since the first
-one. We didn't think it advisable."
-
-"Well, if you can manage it that way ..." There was a trace in her tone
-of the woman who hadn't been able to manage. I wished to reassure her.
-
-"When I was in the hospital the doctor told me ..." I could see the deep
-flush rising over her face and neck; there were some things which her
-generation had never faced. I let them fall with her hands and sat
-gazing at the red core of the base burner, waiting until she should take
-up her thought again.
-
-"I used to think those things weren't right, Olivia, but I don't know.
-Sometimes I think it isn't right, either, to bring them into the world
-when there is no welcome for them." She struggled with the admission.
-"You and I, Olivia, we never got on together."
-
-"But that's all past now, mother." She clung to me for a while for
-reassurance.
-
-"I hope so, I hope so; but still there are things I've always wanted to
-tell you. When you wrote me about going on the stage ... there are wild
-things in you, Olivia, things I never looked for in a daughter of mine,
-things I can't understand nor account for unless--unless it was I turned
-you against life ... my kind of life ... before you were born. Many's
-the time I've seen you hating it and I've been harsh with you; but I
-wanted you should know I was being harsh with myself ..."
-
-"Mother, dear, is it good for you to talk so?"
-
-"Yes, yes, I've wanted to. You see it was after your father came home
-from the war and we were all broken up. Forester was sickly, and there
-was the one that died. So when I knew you were coming, I--hated you,
-Olivia. I wanted things different. I hated you ... until I heard you
-cry. You cried all the time when you were little, Olivia, and it was I
-that was crying in you. I've expected some punishment would come of it."
-
-"Oh, hush, hush mother! I shouldn't have liked it either in your place.
-Besides, they say--the scientists--that it isn't so that things before
-you are born can affect you as much as that." She moved her head feebly
-on the pillows in deep-rooted denial.
-
-"They can say that, but we've never got on. There's things in you that
-aren't natural for any daughter of mine. They can say that, Olivia, but
-we--we know."
-
-"Yes, mother, we know."
-
-I took her hands again and nursed them against my cheek; after a time
-tears began to drip down her flaccid cheeks and I wiped them away for
-her.
-
-"Don't, mother, don't! We get along now, anyway! And as for the things
-in me which are different, do you know, mother, I'm getting to know that
-they are the best things in me."
-
-I honestly thought so; and after all these years I think so now.
-
-I wheeled her into the bedroom presently, where she fell into the light
-slumber of the feeble, and seemed afterward hardly to remember, but I
-was glad then to have talked it all out with her, for though she lived
-nearly two years after, before I saw her again another stroke had
-deprived her of articulateness.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-I went home to my husband after it began to seem certain that my
-mother's condition would not change for some time, but I knew in the
-going that neither Tommy nor Higgleston could ever present themselves to
-me again in the aspect of an absolute destiny. By the incidents of the
-past few weeks I had been pulled free from the obsession of
-inevitableness with which my life had clothed itself until now; I stood
-outside of it and questioned it in the light of what it might have been,
-what it might yet become. Suppose I had received Helmeth Garrett's
-letter; suppose my interest in Mr. O'Farrell had wavered a hair's
-breadth out of the community of work into that more personal and
-particular passion----?
-
-I quaked in the cold blasts which blew on me out of unsuspected doors
-opening on my life.
-
-And still I went back to Higgleston. There seemed nothing else to do. I
-think I deceived myself with the notion that there was something in
-Tommy's resistance to a more acceptable destiny, that could be resolved
-and dissipated by the proper stimulus. But I knew, in fact, that he and
-Higgleston suited one another admirably. To my husband, that he should
-keep a clothing store in a town of five thousand inhabitants was part
-of the great natural causation. The single change to which our condition
-was liable was that the business might take a turn which would enable us
-to move out of the store into a house of our own. It had not occurred to
-Tommy to take a turn himself. The Men's Tailors and Outfitters lay like
-most business in Higgleston, in the back water, rocking at times in the
-wake of the world traffic, but never moving with it. There was a vague
-notion of progress abroad which resulted in our going through the
-motions of the main current. The Live Business Men organized a Board of
-Trade and rented a room to hold meetings in, but I do not remember that
-when they had met, anything came of it. The great tides of trade went
-about the world and our little fleet rocked up and down. If I had ever
-had any hope that Tommy and I might out of our common stock, somehow
-hoist sail and make a way out of it, in that spring and summer I
-completely lost it.
-
-I believe Tommy thought we were perfectly happy. Considering how things
-turned out, I am glad to have it so; but the fact is, there was not
-between us so much as a common taste in furniture. In the five years of
-married life, our home had filled up with articles which by colour and
-line and unfitness jarred on every sense. Tommy had what he was pleased
-to call an ear for music, and if the warring discords of our furnishings
-could have been translated into sound he would have gone distracted
-with it; being as it was he bought me a fire screen for my birthday.
-Miss Rathbone hand-painted it for the Baptist bazaar, and Tommy had
-bought it at three times what we could have afforded for a suitable
-ornament. It was his notion of our relations that we and the Rathbones
-should do things like that by one another. I suppose you can find the
-like of that fire screen at some county fair still in Ohianna, but you
-will find nothing more atrocious. Tommy liked to have it sitting well
-out in the room where he could admire it. He would remark upon it
-sometimes with complacency, evenings after the store was shut up, before
-he sat down in his old coat and slippers to read the paper. Occasionally
-I read to him out of a magazine or a play I had picked up, in the
-intervals of which I used to catch him furtively keeping up with his
-newspaper out of the tail of his eye.
-
-Now and then we went out to a sociable or to the Rathbones for supper.
-Less frequently we had them to a meal with us. It was characteristic of
-business partnerships in Higgleston that they involved you in
-obligations of chicken salad and banana cake and the best tablecloth.
-Tommy enjoyed these occasions, and if he had allowed himself to
-criticise me at all, it would have been for my ineptitude at the happy
-social usage. Things went on so with us month after month.
-
-And if you ask me why I didn't take the chance life offers to women to
-justify themselves to the race, I will say that though the hope of a
-child presents itself sentimentally as opportunity, it figures primarily
-in the calculation of the majority, as a question of expense. The hard
-times foreseen by Burton Brothers hung black-winged in the air. We had
-not, in fact, been able to do more than keep up the interest on what was
-still due on the stock and fixtures. Nor had I even quite recovered the
-bodily equilibrium disturbed by my first encounter with the rending
-powers of life. There was a time when the spring came on in a fulness,
-when the procreant impulse stirred awake. I saw myself adequately
-employed shaping men for it ... maybe ... but the immediate deterring
-fact was the payment to be made in August.
-
-I went on living in Higgleston where human intercourse was organized on
-the basis that whatever a woman has of intelligence and worth, over and
-above the sum of such capacity in man, is to be excised as a superfluous
-growth, a monstrosity. Does anybody remember what the woman's world was
-like in small towns before the days of woman's clubs? There was a world
-of cooking and making over; there was a world of church-going and
-missionary societies and ministerial coöperation, half grudged and half
-assumed as a virtue which, since it was the only thing that lay outside
-themselves, was not without extenuation. And there was another world
-which underlay all this, coloured and occasioned it, sicklied over with
-futility; it was a world all of the care and expectancy of children
-overshadowed by the recurrent monthly dread, crept about by whispers,
-heretical but persistent, of methods of circumventing it, of a secret
-practice of things openly condemned. It was a world that went half the
-time in faint-hearted or unwilling or rebellious anticipation, and half
-on the broken springs of what as the subject of the endless,
-objectionable discussions, went by the name of "female complaints."
-
-In all this there was no room for Olivia. Somehow the ordering of our
-four rooms over the store didn't appeal to me as a justification of
-existence, and I didn't care to undertake again matching the adventures
-of my neighbours in the field of domestic economy with mine in the
-department of self-expression. Let any one who disbelieves it try if he
-can assure the acceptance of his art on its merit as work, free of the
-implication of egotism. You may talk about a new frosting for cake, or
-an aeroplane you have invented, but you must not speak of a new verse
-form or a plastic effect.
-
-All this time, in spite of my recent revulsion from it, I was consumed
-with the desire of acting. My new-found faculty ached for use. It woke
-me in the night and wasted me; I had wild thoughts such as men have in
-the grip of an unjustifiable passion. All my imaginings at that time
-were of events, untoward, fantastic, which should somehow throw me back
-upon the stage without the necessity on my part, of a moral conclusion.
-Sarah Croyden, to whom I wrote voluminously, could not understand why I
-resisted it; there was after all no actual opposition except what lay
-inherent in my traditions. Sarah had such a way of accepting life; she
-used it and her gift. Mine used me. I saw that it might even abuse me.
-She went, by nature, undefended and unharmed from the two-edged sword
-that keeps the gates of Creative Art, but me it pierced even to the
-dividing of soul and spirit. My husband stood always curiously outside
-the consideration. I think he was scarcely aware of what went on in me;
-if any news of my tormented state reached him, he would have seen,
-except as it was mollified by affection, what all Higgleston saw in it,
-the restlessness of vanity, a craving for excitement, for praise, and a
-vague taint of irregularity. He was sympathetic to the point of
-admitting that Higgleston was dull; he thought we might join the
-Chatauqua Society.
-
-"Or you might get up a class," he suggested hopefully; "it would give
-you something to think about."
-
-"Teach," I cried; "TEACH! when I'm just aching to learn!"
-
-"Well, then," he achieved a triumph of reasonableness, "if you don't
-know enough to teach in Higgleston, how are you going to succeed on the
-stage?"
-
-It was not Tommy, however, but a much worse man who made up my mind for
-me. He had been brought out from Chicago during my absence, to set up in
-Higgleston's one department store, that factitious air of things being
-done, which passed for the evidence of modernity. He had, in the set of
-his clothes, the way he made the most of his hair and the least of the
-puffiness about his eyes, the effect of having done something
-successfully for himself, which I believe was the utmost recommendation
-he had for the place. He preferred himself to my favour on the strength
-of having seen more than a little of the theatre. Very soon after my
-return, he took to dropping into my husband's store which, in view of
-its being patronized by men who were chiefly otherwise occupied during
-the day, was kept open rather late in the evenings. From sheer
-loneliness I had fallen into the habit of going down after supper to
-wait on a stray customer while Tommy made up the books. Mr. Montague,
-who went familiarly about town by the name of Monty, would come in then
-and loll across the counter chatting to me, while Tommy sat at his desk
-with a green shade over his eyes, and Mr. Rathbone, who never came more
-than a step or two out of his character as working tailor, clattered
-about with his irons in the back, half screened by the racks of custom
-made "Nobby suits, $9.98," which made up most of our stock in trade.
-
-I had already, without paying much attention to it, become accustomed
-to the shifting of men's interest in me the moment my connection with
-the stage became known: a certain speculation in the eye, a freshening
-of the wind in the neighbourhood of adventure; but by degrees it began
-to work through my preoccupations that Mr. Montague's attention had the
-quality of settled expectation, the suggestion of a relation apart from
-the casual social contact, which it wanted but an opportunity to
-fulfill. It took the form very early, when Tommy would look up from his
-entries and adding up to make his cheerful contribution to the
-conversation, of an attempt to include me in a covert irritation at the
-interruption. If by any chance he found me alone, his response to the
-potential impropriety of the occasion, awoke in me the plain vulgar
-desire to box his ears. But no experience so far served to reveal the
-whole offensiveness of the man's assurance.
-
-The week that Tommy went up to Chicago to do his summer buying, we made
-a practice of closing rather early in the long, enervating evenings,
-since hardly any customer could have been inveigled into the store on
-any account. I found it particularly irritating then, to have Mr.
-Montague leaning across the counter to me with a manner that would have
-caused the dogs in the street to suspect him of intrigue. The second or
-third time this happened I made a point of slipping around to Mr.
-Rathbone with the suggestion that if he would shut up and go home I
-would take the books upstairs with me and attend them.
-
-I was indifferent whether or not Mr. Montague should hear me, but I
-judged he had not, for far from accepting it as a hint that I wished to
-get rid of him, that air he had of covert understanding appeared to have
-increased in him like a fever. He made no attempt to resume the
-conversation, but stood tapping his boot with a small cane he affected,
-a flush high up under the puffy eyes, the corners of his mouth loosened,
-every aspect of the man fairly bristling with an objectionable maleness.
-I made believe to be busy putting stock in order, and in a minute more I
-could hear old Rathbone come puttering out of his corner to draw the
-dust cloths over the racks of ready-made suits and, after what seemed an
-interminable interval, fumbling at the knobs of the safe.
-
-"Oh," I snatched at the opportunity, "I changed the combination; let me
-show you." I was around beside him in a twinkling.
-
-"Good-night," I called to Montague over my shoulder.
-
-"Good-night," he said; the tone was charged. The fumbling of the locks
-covered the sound of his departure. I got Mr. Rathbone out at the door
-at last, and locked it behind him. I turned back to lower the flame of
-the acetylene lamp and in the receding flare of it between the shrouded
-racks I came face to face with Mr. Montague. He stood at the outer ring
-of the light and in the shock of amazement I gave the last turn of the
-button which left us in a sudden blinding dark. I felt him come toward
-me by the sharp irradiation of offensiveness.
-
-"Oh, you clever little joker, you!" The tone was fatuous.
-
-I dodged by instinct and felt for the button again to throw on the flood
-of light; it caught him standing square in the middle of the aisle in
-plain sight from the street; almost unconsciously he altered his
-attitude to one less betraying, but the response of his mind to mine was
-not so rapid.
-
-"I'm going to shut up the store," I was very quiet about it. "You'll
-oblige me by going----"
-
-"Oh, come now; what's the use? I thought you were a woman of the world."
-
-I got behind the counter, past him toward the door.
-
-"You an actress ... you don't mean to say! By Jove, I'm not going to be
-made a fool of after such an encouragement! I'm not going without----"
-
-"Mr. Montague," I said, "Tillie Hemingway is coming to stay with me
-nights; she will be here in a few minutes; you'd better not let her find
-you here." I unbarred the door and threw it wide open.
-
-"Oh, come now----" He struggled for some footing other than defeat. "Of
-course, if you can't meet me like a woman of the world----you're a nice
-actress, you are!" I looked at him; the steps and voices of passersby
-sounded on the pavement; he went out with his tail between his legs. I
-locked the door after him and double locked it.
-
-I climbed up to my room and locked myself in that. The boiling of my
-blood made such a noise in my ears that I could not hear Tillie
-Hemingway when she came knocking, and the poor girl went away in tears.
-After a long time I got to bed and sat there with my arms about my
-knees. I did not feel safe there; I knew I should never be safe again
-except in that little square of the world upon which the footlights
-shone, from which the tightening of the reins of the audience in my
-hands, should justify my life to me. I was sick with longing for it,
-aching like a woman abandoned for the arms of her beloved. I fled toward
-it with all my thought from illicit solicitation, but it was not the
-husband of my body I thought of in that connection, but the choice of my
-soul.
-
-People wonder why sensitive, self-respecting women are not driven away
-from the stage by the offences that hedge it; they are driven deeper and
-farther into its enfoldment. There is nothing to whiten the burning of
-its shames but the high whiteness of its ultimate perfection. It is so
-with all art, not back in the press of life, but forward on some
-over-topping headland, one loses behind the yelping pack and eases the
-sting of resentment. I did not agree in the beginning to make you
-understand this. I only tell you that it is so. All that night I sat
-with my head upon my knees and considered how I might win back to it.
-
-I tried, when my husband came home, to put the incident to him in a way
-that would stand for my new-found determination. I did not get so far
-with it. I saw him shrink from the mere recital with a man's
-timorousness.
-
-"Oh, come--he couldn't have meant so bad as that." His male dread of a
-"situation" plead with me not to insist upon it. "And he went just as
-soon as you told him to. Of course if he had tried to force you ... but
-you say yourself he went quietly."
-
-He was seeing and shrinking from what Higgleston would get out of the
-incident in the way of vulgar entertainment if I insisted on his taking
-it up; by the code there, I shouldn't have been subject to such if I
-hadn't invited it.
-
-"Of course," he enforced himself, "you did right to turn him down, but I
-don't believe he'll try it again."
-
-"He won't have a chance. I'm going back on the stage so soon;" the
-implication of my tone must have got through even Tommy's
-unimaginativeness; he said the only bitter thing that I ever heard from
-him.
-
-"Well, if you hadn't gone on the stage in the first place it probably
-wouldn't have happened."
-
-He came round to the situation in another frame when he learned that I
-had written to Sarah putting matters in train for an engagement.
-
-"You will probably be away all winter," he said. "It seems to me,
-Olivia, that you don't take any account of the fact that I am fond of
-you." We were sitting on a little shelf of a back balcony we had, for
-the sake of coolness, and I went and sat on his knee.
-
-"I'm fond of you, Tommy, ever so. But I can't stand the life here; it
-smothers me. And we don't do anything; we don't get anywhere."
-
-"I don't know what you mean, Olivia; we're building up quite a business;
-we'll be able to make a payment this year, and as the town improves----"
-
-"Oh, Tommy, come away; come away into the world with me. Let us go out
-and do things; let us be part of things."
-
-"Higgleston's good enough for me. We're building up trade, and everybody
-says the town is sure to go ahead----"
-
-"Oh, Tommy, Tommy, what do I care about a business here if we lose the
-whole world--and we'll be old and gray before we get the business paid
-for. Oh, it isn't because I don't care about you, Tommy, because I am
-not satisfied with you; it is the glory of the world I want, and the
-wonder of Art, and great deeds going up and down in it! I want us to
-have that, Tommy; to have it together ... you and I, and not another.
-It's all there in the world, Tommy, all the colour and the splendour ...
-great love and great work ... let us go out and take it; let us go...."
-I had slipped down from his knees to my own as I talked, pleading with
-him, and I saw, by the light of the lamp from within, his face, charged
-with pained bewilderment, settle into lines of habitual resistance to
-the unknown, the unknowable. My voice trailed out into sobbing.
-
-"Of course, Olivia, I don't want to keep you if you are not happy here,
-but I have to stay myself." His voice was broken but determined, with
-the determination of a little man not seeing far ahead of him. "I have
-to keep the business together."
-
-I went, as it was foredoomed I should, about the middle of September.
-Sarah and I had been so fortunate as to get engagements together. My
-going, upheaving as it had been in respect to my own adjustments, made
-hardly a ripple in the life around me. Even Miss Rathbone failed to rise
-to her former heights, but was obliged to piece out her interest with
-her customary dressmaker's manner of having temporarily overlaid her
-absorption in your affair with an unwilling distraction.
-
-The rest of Higgleston received the announcement with the air of not
-supposing it to be any of their business, but that in any case they
-couldn't approve of it. Mrs. Harvey put a common feminine view of it
-very aptly.
-
-"I shouldn't think," she said, "your husband would let you." It was not
-a view that was likely to have a deterrent effect upon me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-We had the good fortune that year, Sarah and I, to be with a manager who
-redeemed many O'Farrells. The Hardings--for his wife, under her stage
-name of Estelle Manning, played with him and was the better half of all
-his counsels--were of the sort of actor-managers to whom, if the
-American stage ever arrives at anything commensurate with its
-opportunity, it will owe much. They were not either of them of the
-stripe of genius, but up to the limit of their endowment, sound, sincere
-and able to interpret life to the people through the virtue of being so
-humanly of the people themselves. It was very good for me to be with
-them, not only for the stage craft they taught me, but for the healing
-of my mind against the contagion of irresponsibility. The Hardings
-taught me my way about the professional world, the management of my
-gift, its market value, but I am not sure I do not owe much more to the
-fact that they loved one another quite simply and devotedly, and to the
-certainty which they seemed to make for us all that loyalty, truth, and
-forbearance were part of the natural order of things.
-
-I was aware, when I was with the Shamrocks, of a subconscious current
-against which any mention of my husband appeared a kind of gaucherie;
-it was wholesome for me then, to find it expected of me by the Hardings
-that I should act better after I had received a long, affectionate
-letter from Tommy, and to be able to refer to it quite unaffectedly.
-Everybody in the company took the greatest interest in his coming on at
-Christmas to spend four days with me.
-
-We had a carefully chosen company, and clean, straightforward plays
-which met with gratifying success. At the end of February, when traffic
-was tied up during the great ice storm, I was near enough to get home to
-Taylorville and spend a week there.
-
-Tommy came to meet me and we were all happy together, mother sitting
-nearly inarticulate in her chair, pleased as a child to see me doing all
-the parts in our repertory, and Effie reading my press notices to
-whoever could be got to listen to them. I seemed to have found the
-groove in which the wheels of my life went round smoothly; I was
-justified of much that in my girlhood I had been made to feel so sorely,
-set me reprehensibly apart. I remember Forester telling how he had heard
-Charlie Gowers retailing the incident of my having slapped him when he
-tried to kiss me, getting a kind of reflected glory out of the incident
-being so much to my credit.
-
-I went back to Higgleston in May and was happier than I had been in the
-six years of my married life. I had my work and my husband; all that I
-wanted now was to bring the two into closer relation; it seemed not
-unlikely of accomplishment. With what I had saved of my salary, Tommy
-was able to make quite a payment on the business, and with the release
-of that pressure the whole grip of Higgleston seemed to be loosed from
-him. When I suggested that I might get permanent engagements in Chicago
-or St. Louis, where he could establish himself, he was disposed to view
-it as not unthinkable in connection with what might be expected from a
-live business man.
-
-I had to leave home early in the autumn for rehearsals, and to leave
-Tommy, by some chance of the weather a trifle under it. I felt I
-shouldn't have been able to do so if my husband and Miss Rathbone hadn't
-been eminently on those terms that fulfilled Tommy's ideal in respect to
-the womenfolk of his partner. Very likely, as she maintained, it was a
-feeling of caste that rendered her professional affectionateness
-offensive to me. One had to admit that when she applied it to her
-shuffling, peering old father, with red-lidded eyes and a nose that
-occasionally wanted wiping, it was every way commendable. At any rate I
-was glad on this occasion to take what she did for old Rathbone as an
-assurance that if Tommy fell ill, or anything untoward, he wouldn't lack
-for anything a woman might do for him.
-
-That winter Mr. Harding starred me, and what a wonderful winter it was!
-Sarah says, taking account of the cold and the condition of the roads,
-it was rather a hard one, but I was floated clear of all such
-considerations on the crest of success. Nothing whatever seemed to have
-gone wrong with it except that Tommy failed me at Christmas. He was to
-have spent a week, but wired me at the last moment that he could not
-leave before Wednesday, and then when he came stayed only until
-Saturday. He had something to say about the pressure of the holiday
-trade in neckties and cuff links such as the ladies of Higgleston
-habitually invested in, on behalf of their masculine members, and all
-the time he was with me, wore that efflorescence of appreciation which I
-have long since learned to recognize as the overt sign of male
-delinquency.
-
-If I thought of it at all in that connection, it was clean swept out of
-my mind by meeting early in January with Mr. Eversley and hearing him
-first apply to myself that phrase which I have chosen for the title to
-this writing. Mark Eversley, the greatest modern actor! So we all
-believed. He had been an old friend of Mr. Harding's; they had had their
-young struggles together; we crowded around our manager to hear him tell
-of them; struggles which, in so far as they identified themselves with
-our own, seemed to bring us by implication within reach of his present
-fame. Eversley played in St. Louis while we were there, and having an
-evening to spare, in spite of all the eager social appeal, chose to
-spend it with the Hardings. They had had dinner together, and as Mr.
-Harding did not come on until the second act, the great tragedian sat
-with him in his dressing room, visiting together between the cues like
-two boys in a dormitory. That was how Eversley happened to be standing
-in the wings in my great third act, and as I came out between gusts of
-applause after it, he was very kind to me.
-
-"You will go far, little lady," said he, his lean face alive with
-kindliness, "you will go farther and have to come back and pick up some
-dropped stitches, but in the end you will get where you are bound." It
-was not for me to tell him how the mere consciousness of his presence
-had carried me that night to the utmost pitch of my capacity; I stood
-and blushed with confusion while he fumbled for his card.
-
-"I will hear of you again," he said; "I am bound to hear of you; in the
-meantime here is my permanent address. It may be that I can be of use to
-you when you come to the bad places."
-
-"Oh," said Mrs. Harding, whose failure to win any conspicuous
-distinction for herself had not embittered her, "she seems to have
-cleared most of the hard places at a bound."
-
-"My dear young lady," Eversley appealed to me with a charming
-whimsicality, "whatever you do, don't let them put that into your head;
-you will indeed need me if you get to thinking that. You are, I suspect,
-a woman of genius, and in that case there will always be bad places
-ahead of you--you are doomed, you are driven; they will never let up on
-you."
-
-Well, he should know; he was a man of genius. I hope it might be true
-about me, but I was afraid. For to be a genius is no such vanity as you
-imagine. It is to know great desires and to have no will of your own
-toward fulfilment; it is to feed others, yourself unfed; it is to be
-broken and plied as the Powers determine; it is to serve, and to serve,
-and to get nothing out of it beyond the joy of serving. And to know if
-you have done that acceptably you have to depend on the plaudits of the
-crowd; the Powers give no sign; many have died not knowing.
-
-There is no more vanity in calling yourself a woman of genius if you
-know what genius means, than might be premised of one of the guinea pigs
-set aside for experimentation in a laboratory; but the guinea pigs who
-run free in the garden impute it to us. I wrote my mother and Tommy what
-Eversley had said, but I knew they would see nothing more in it than
-that he had paid me a compliment which it would not be modest to make
-much of in public.
-
-The successes of that year prolonged the season by a month, and by the
-time I got home to Higgleston the leaves were all out on the maples and
-the wide old yards smelled of syringa. I came back to it full of the
-love of the world, alive in every fibre of my being, and the first thing
-I noticed was that it caused my husband some embarrassment. There was a
-shyness in his resumption of our relations more than could be accounted
-for by the native Taylorvillian gaucheries of emotion.
-
-"My dear," I protested, "you don't seem a bit glad to see me."
-
-"You are away so much," he excused. "You're getting to seem almost a
-stranger."
-
-"Getting? I should say I am. This morning it seemed to me almost as if I
-waked up in another woman's house." I meant no more than to suggest how
-little the walls of it, the furniture, the draperies, expressed my new
-mood of creative power, but suddenly I saw my husband colour a deep,
-embarrassed red.
-
-"You never did take any interest in our life here ... in the
-business ... in me." He seemed to be making out a case against me.
-
-"Don't say in you, Tommy; but the life here, yes; there is so little to
-it. Another year and Mr. Harding says I could hope to stay in Chicago."
-My husband pushed away his plate; we were at breakfast the second
-morning.
-
-"Higgleston's good enough for me," he protested. He got up and stood at
-the window with his back to me, looking out at the side street and the
-tardy traffic of the town beginning to stir in it. "When you hate it
-so," he said, "I wonder you come back to it." But my mood was proof
-against even this.
-
-"Oh, Thomas, Thomas!" I got my hands about his arm and snuggled my head
-against it. "And you can't even guess why I come back?" He looked at me,
-vaguely troubled by the caress, but not responding to it.
-
-"Do you care so much?"
-
-"Ever and ever so." I thought he was in need of reassurance.
-
-I hardly know when I began to get an inkling of what was wrong with him;
-it trickled coldly to me from dropped words, inflections, sidelong
-glances. Whenever I went out I was aware of all Higgleston watching,
-watching like a cat at a mouse-hole for something to come out. What?
-Reports of my success had reached them through the papers. Were they
-looking for some endemic impropriety to break out on me as a witness to
-what a popular actress must inevitably become? By degrees it worked
-through to me that all Higgleston knew things about my situation that
-were held from me. What they expected to see come out in my behaviour
-was the stripe of chastisement.
-
-When I had been at home four or five days it occurred to me Miss
-Rathbone had not yet run in to see me with that quasi-familiarity which
-had grown out of the business association of our men. Old Rathbone had
-said that she had the trousseau of one of the Harvey girls in hand, but
-I knew that if the courtesy had been due from me, I couldn't have
-neglected it without the risk of being thought what Miss Rathbone
-herself would have called uppish. So the very next afternoon, having
-fallen in with some Higgleston ladies strolling the long street that led
-through the town from countryside to countryside, passing her gate, it
-struck me that here was an excellent opportunity to run in and exchange
-a greeting with her. I said as much to Mrs. Ross and Mrs. Harvey, as I
-swung the picket gate out across the board walk; there was something in
-their way of standing back from it that gave them the air of sheering
-off from any implication in the incident. They looked at the sidewalk
-and their lips were a little drawn; I should have known that look very
-well by that time. I threw out against it just that degree of impalpable
-resistance that was demanded by my official relation to the women of my
-husband's business partner, and clinched it with the click of the gate
-swinging to behind me, but as I went up the peony-bordered walk I
-wondered what Miss Rathbone would possibly have done to get herself
-talked about.
-
-I was let into the workroom by Tillie Hemingway, in the character of a
-baster, with her mouth full of threads; Miss Rathbone came hurrying from
-a fitting, and in the brief moment of crossing my half of the room to
-meet her I was aware that she had turned a sickly hue of fear. She must
-have seen me coming up the street with the other women, I surmised, and
-guessed that I knew. I felt a kind of compulsion on me to assure her by
-an extra graciousness that I did not know, and that it wouldn't make any
-difference if I did. She was not changed at all except perhaps as to a
-trifle more abundance of bosom and a greater insensibility to the pins
-with which she bristled. There was the same effect of modishness in the
-blond coiffure with the rats showing, and the well cut, half-hooked
-gown, but she seemed to know so little what to do with my visit that I
-was glad to cut it short and get away into the wide, overflowing day. I
-went on under the maples in leafage full and tender, following the faint
-scent of the first cutting of the meadows, quite to the end of the
-village and a mile or two into the country road, feeling the working of
-the Creative Powers in me, much as it seemed the sentiment earth must
-feel the summer, a warm, benignant process. I was at one with the soul
-of things and knew myself fruitful. At last when the dust of the roadway
-disturbed by the homing teams, collected in layers of the cooler air,
-and the bats were beginning, I tore myself away from the fair day as
-from a lover and went back to Tommy waiting patiently for his supper.
-While I was getting it on the table I recalled Miss Rathbone.
-
-"What," I said, "has she been doing to get herself talked about?"
-Suddenly there whipped out on his face the counterpart of the flinching
-which I had noted in the dressmaker.
-
-"Who said she had been talked about? What have they been telling you? A
-pack of lying old cats!"
-
-"So she _has_ been talked about?" I put down a pile of plates the better
-to account to myself for his excitement.
-
-"I might have known somebody would get at you. Why can't they come to
-me."
-
-"Tommy! Has Miss Rathbone been talked about with _you_? Oh, my dear!" I
-meant it for commiseration. Tommy went sullen all at once.
-
-"I don't want to talk about it. I won't talk about it!"
-
-"You needn't. And as for what the others say, you don't suppose I am
-going to believe it?" He turned visibly sick at the assurance.
-
-"I'll tell you about it after supper," he protested. "I meant to tell
-you." I kept my mind turned deliberately away from the subject until it
-was night and I heard the last tardy customer depart, then the shutters
-go up, and after a considerable interval my husband's foot upon the
-stairs.
-
-I hope I have made you understand how good he was, with what simple sort
-of goodness, not meant to stand the strain of the complexity in which he
-found himself. He wanted desperately to get out of it, to get in touch
-again with straight and simple lines of living. As he stood before me
-then his face was streaked red and white with the stress of the
-situation, like a man after a great bodily exertion. I was moved
-suddenly to spare him--after all what was the village dressmaker to us?
-Tommy flared out at me.
-
-"She is as good as you are ... she's as pure ... as kind-hearted. It's
-as much your fault as anybody's. You were away; you were always away."
-His voice trailed out into extenuation. There fell a long pause in which
-several things became clear to me.
-
-"Tell me," I said at last.
-
-Tommy sat down on the red plush couch. He had taken off his coat
-downstairs, for the evening was warm. There was pink in his necktie and
-the freckles stood out across his nose. I was taken with a wild sense of
-the ridiculous. Miss Rathbone, I knew, was six years my husband's
-senior.
-
-"I went there a good deal last winter," he began. "I never meant any
-harm ... my business partner ... it was lonesome here. Of course I ought
-to have known people would talk. Nobody told me. She was brave, she bore
-it a long time, and then I saw that something was the matter. I didn't
-know until she told me, how fond of her I was----"
-
-"Tommy, Tommy!" Strangely, it was I crying out. "Fond of her? Fond of
-_her_?"
-
-"I was fond of her," he insisted dully. "She suffered a lot on account
-of me." The words dropped to me through immeasurable cold space. I
-believe there were more explanations, excusings. I was aware of being
-wounded in some far, unreachable place. I sat stunned and watched the
-widening rings of pain and amazement spread toward me. By and by tears
-came; I cried long and quietly. I got down on the floor at my husband's
-knees and put my arms about his body, crying. After a time I remember
-his helping me to undress and we got into bed. We had but the one. I
-know it now for the sign that I never loved my husband as wives should
-love, that I felt no offence in this; sex jealousy was not awake in me.
-We lay in bed with our arms around one another and cried for the pain
-and bewilderment of what had happened to us.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-As if the attraction Miss Rathbone had for my husband had been a spell,
-the mere naming of which dissipated it, we spent the ensuing three or
-four days in the glow of renewal. It was Miss Rathbone herself who drew
-us out of that excluding intimacy; set us apart where we could feel the
-cold stiffness of our hurts and the injury we had inflicted each on the
-other.
-
-Whatever there had been between them, and I never knew very clearly
-what, they had failed to reckon on the recrudescence of the interest I
-had always had for my husband, and the tie of association. At any rate
-Miss Rathbone failed. I must suppose that she loved Tommy, that she was
-hungering for the sight of him, needing desperately to feel again the
-pressure of whatever bond had been between them. She came into the store
-on the fourth evening after my husband's admission of it, on one of the
-excuses she could so easily make out of her father's being there. I was
-sitting upstairs with some sewing when she came and neither saw nor
-heard her, but the unslumbering instinct, before I was half aware of it,
-had drawn me to the head of the stair.
-
-As I came down it, still in the shadow of the upper landing, I saw her
-leaning across the counter with that factious air of modishness which
-was so large a part of her stock in trade with Higgleston. She had on
-all her newest things, and I think she was rouged a little. Even with
-the width of the counter between them she had the effect of enveloping
-my husband with that manner of hers as with a net; to set up in him the
-illusion of all that I was in fact; mystery, passion, the air of the
-great world. I was pierced through with the realization that with men it
-is not so much being that counts, as seeming. There was a touch of the
-fatuous in the way Tommy submitted to the implication of her attitude as
-she took a flower from her breast and pinned it in his coat. The foot of
-the stair came almost to the end of the counter where they stood, and a
-trick of the light falling from the hanging lamp threw the upper half of
-it in shadow. I stood just within it with my hand upon the rail.
-Something in the avidity of yielding in my husband's manner was like a
-call in me; I moved involuntarily a step downward.
-
-They heard and then they saw me; they stopped frozen in their places and
-the thing that froze them was the consciousness of guilt. They stood
-confessed of a disloyalty. I turned full in their sight and walked back
-up the stair. It was very late that night when Tommy came up to me.
-
-"If that is going on in the house," I notified him, "you can't expect me
-to stay."
-
-"I dare say you'd be glad of a chance to leave."
-
-"Is that why you are offering it to me?"
-
-It was by such degrees we covered the distance between our situation and
-the open question of divorce. But there were lapses of tenderness and
-turning back upon the trail.
-
-"I don't want anybody but you, Olivia," Tommy would protest. "If you
-would only stay with me!"
-
-"Oh, Tommy, if you would only come away with me!"
-
-If either of these things had been possible for us, I think Tommy would
-have recovered from his infatuation and been the happier for it. Or even
-if Miss Rathbone had kept away from him. But that is what she couldn't
-or wouldn't do. She might have thought that by being seen coming in and
-out of the store, she could stave off criticism by the appearance of
-being on good terms with us. At any rate she came. I think her coming
-caused my husband some embarrassment, and, manlike, he made her pay for
-it. As I think of it now, I realize that I really did not know what went
-on in her; whether she had set a trap for my husband or yielded to an
-unconquerable passion. In any case she had imagination enough to see
-that unless she could maintain the tragic status, she cut rather a
-ridiculous figure. Sometimes I think people are drawn into these
-affairs not so much by the hope of happiness as the need, the
-deep-seated, desperate need of emotion, any kind of emotion. I think if
-we had taken her note, had had it out on the world-without-end basis,
-she would have been almost as well satisfied by a recognized romantic
-loss as by success. But I never knew exactly. She was equally in the
-dark about me. Now and then I had a glimpse of the figure I was in her
-eyes, in some stricture of my husband's on my behaviour--some criticism
-which bore the stamp of her suggestion; it was as if he was being
-dragged from me by an invisible creature of which I knew nothing but an
-occasional scraping of its claws. I try to do her the justice in my
-mind, of thinking that the situation which she had built up out of
-Tommy's loneliness was as real for her as it was for him. Nobody in
-Higgleston had ever taken my natural alienation from the people there as
-anything but deliberate and despising. To her, my husband was the victim
-of a cold, neglectful wife, and to him she contrived to be a figure of
-romance.
-
-"I owe her a lot," Tommy insisted; "she has suffered on account of me."
-He went back to that phrase again, "I owe her a lot."
-
-"What do you owe her that you can't pay?"
-
-"Well, I couldn't marry as long as you----"
-
-"You want to marry her?" I cried. "You want to marry _her_?"
-
-"I couldn't expect you to appreciate her," Tommy was sullen again;
-"you're so full of yourself." I held on to a graver matter.
-
-"You want us to be divorced?" I can hear that sounding hollowly in a
-great space out of which all other interests in life seemed suddenly to
-shrink and shrivel. I had learned to talk of divorce in the great world,
-but to me my marriage was one of the incontrovertible things.
-
-"We might as well be," I heard my husband say; "you are never at home
-any more." Then the reaction set in. "Stay with me, Olivia. I don't want
-anybody but you; just stay with me!"
-
-"You want me to give up the stage and live here in Higgleston
-_forever_?" The unfairness of this overcame me.
-
-"Well, why not, if you're married to me?"
-
-I believe he would have done it. He would have wasted me like that and
-thought little of it. I was married, and not altogether to Tommy, but to
-Higgleston and the clothing business. The condition he demanded of me
-was not of loving and being faithful, but of living over the store.
-Until now, though I knew I did not love my husband as life had taught me
-men could be loved, I had never given up expecting to. Somewhere,
-somehow, but I was certain it was not in Higgleston, the transmuting
-touch should find him which would turn my husband into the Lord of Life.
-Now I discovered myself pulled over into another point of view. He had
-become a man capable of being interested in the village dressmaker. The
-farther she drew him from me the more the stripe of Higgleston came out
-in him.
-
-I had planned to go up to Chicago for a week in August; to consult with
-Mr. Harding about the plays he was to produce the next season. I had not
-signed with him yet, but I knew that I should, that I could no more
-dissever myself from that connection than I could voluntarily surrender
-my own breath; I might try, but after the few respirations withheld,
-nature would have her way with me. It was not that I came to a decision
-about it; the whole matter appeared to lie in that region of finality
-that made the assumption of a decision ridiculous. I do not know if I
-expected to divorce my husband or if he or Miss Rathbone expected it. I
-think we were all a little scared by the situation we had evoked, as
-children might be at a dog they let loose. We felt the shames of
-publicity yelping at our heels.
-
-The day before I left, I went to see Miss Rathbone; I had to have a
-skirt shortened. It was absurd, of course, but there was really no one
-else to go to. If there had been I shouldn't have dared; all Higgleston
-would have known of it and drawn its own conclusion. As it was,
-Higgleston was extremely dissatisfied with the affair. It did not know
-whom properly to blame, me for neglecting my husband or Miss Rathbone
-for snapping him up; they felt balked of the moral conclusion.
-
-I hardly know what Miss Rathbone thought of my coming to her. I think
-she had braved herself for some sort of emotional struggle sharp enough
-to drown the whisper of reprobation. My quiet acceptance of the
-situation left her somehow toppling over her own defences. Sometimes I
-think the emotionalism which the attitude of that time demanded to be
-worked up over a divorce, drew people to it with that impulse which
-leads them to rush toward a fire or hurl themselves from precipices.
-Miss Rathbone must have been aching to fling out at me, to justify her
-own position by abuse of mine, and here she was down on the floor with
-her mouth full of pins squinting at the line of my skirt. It was then
-that I told her what I was going to Chicago for. "You'll be away from
-home all winter, then?" The question was a challenge.
-
-"I don't know, I haven't signed yet." For the life of me I couldn't have
-foreborne that; it was exactly the kind of an advantage she would have
-taken of me. If I chose not to sign for the next winter, where was she?
-She stood up blindly at last. "I guess I can do the rest without you,"
-she said. Some latent instinct of fairness flashed up in me.
-
-"But I think I shall sign," I admitted. "I couldn't stand a winter in
-Higgleston." I was glad afterward that I had said that; it gave her
-leave for the brief time that was left to them, to think of him as being
-given into her hands.
-
-I was greatly relieved to get away, even for a week, from the cold
-curiosity of Higgleston which, without saying so, had made me perfectly
-aware that I showed I had been crying a great deal lately. But no sooner
-was I freed from the pull of affection than I began to feel a deep
-resentment against Tommy. His attempt to charge his lapse of loyalty, on
-my art, on that thing in me which, as I read it, constituted my sole
-claim upon consideration, appeared a deeper indignity than his interest
-in the dressmaker. It was all a part of that revelation which sears the
-path of the gifted woman as with a flame, that no matter what her value
-to society, no man will spare her anything except as she pleases him. At
-the first summer heat of it I felt my soul curl at the edges. His
-repudiation of me as an actress began to appear a slight upon all that
-world of fineness which Art upholds, a thing not to be tolerated by any
-citizen of it. In its last analysis it seemed that my husband had
-deserted me in favour of Higgleston quite as much as I had deserted him,
-and it was for me to say whether I should consent to it. In that mood I
-met Mr. Harding and signed with him for the ensuing season, and then
-quite unaccountably, ten days before I was expected, I found myself
-pulled back to Higgleston. I had wired Tommy, and was surprised to have
-Mr. Ross meet me at the station.
-
-"Mr. Bettersworth is not very well," he explained, as he put me into
-Higgleston's one omnibus. "It came on him rather suddenly. Some kind of
-a seizure," he admitted, though I did not gather from his manner that it
-was particularly serious until the 'bus, instead of stopping at our
-store, drove straight on up the one wide street.
-
-"I thought you'd want to see him immediately," the attorney interposed
-to my arresting gesture. "You see he was taken at his partner's house."
-He seemed to avoid some unpleasant implication by not mentioning
-Rathbone's name.
-
-I scarcely remember what other particulars he gave me at the time; my
-next sharp impression was of my husband lying white and breathing
-heavily in the bed in the Rathbone's front room, the drapery of which
-had been torn hastily down to make room for him, regardless of the
-finished pieces of Miss Harvey's trousseau still crowding the chairs
-upon which they had been hastily thrust. Empty sleeves hung down and
-vaguely seemed to reach for what they could not clasp; strangely I was
-aware in them of an aching lack and loss which must have sprung in my
-bosom. I took my husband's hand and it dropped back from my clasp,
-waxlike and nerveless. I think I had been kneeling by the bed for some
-time, talk had been going on whisperingly around me; finally the light
-faded and I discovered that the doctor had gone. The beribboned bridal
-garments hung limply still on the chairs and mocked me with their empty
-arms. Presently I was aware that Miss Rathbone had come in with a lamp.
-She stood there on the other side of the bed and we looked at him and at
-one another.
-
-"How long?" I asked her.
-
-"Two or three days maybe, the doctor says."
-
-"Will he know me again."
-
-"The doctor says not."
-
-"Oh, Tommy, Tommy!" I began to shake with suppressed sobbing. Miss
-Rathbone looked at me with cold resentment.
-
-"You can cry as much as you like, it won't disturb him," she said.
-
-She seemed to have taken the fact that she wasn't to cry herself, as
-final. In a few minutes old Rathbone shuffled in from the shop and stood
-peering at Tommy with his little red-lidded eyes, wiping them furtively.
-I believe the old man was fond of his partner and it was not strange to
-him that Tommy should be lying ill at his home. Miss Rathbone came and
-took him by the shoulders as one does to a grieving child and turned his
-face to her bosom. She was a head taller than he, and as she looked
-across him to me there was compulsion in her look and pleading.
-
-"He is never to know," the look said, and I looked back, "Never."
-
-It was then that I realized how genuine her affection was for the
-feeble, snuffling old man; she would suffer at being lessened in his
-eyes.
-
-Some one came and took me away for a while, and by degrees I got to know
-the story. It had been the night before, just about the time I was taken
-with that strange impulse to return, that Tommy had shut up the store
-and gone over to the half-furnished room belonging to the Board of
-Trade, which had become a sort of club for the soberer men of the
-community. A great deal of talk went on there which gave them the
-agreeable impression of something being done, though there must have
-been much of it of the character of that which was going on in a group
-around Montague when Tommy came in at the door. He came in very quietly,
-blinded by the light, and they had their backs to him, shaking with the
-loose laughter which punctuates a ribald description. Then Montague's
-voice took it up again.
-
-"Rathbone'll get him," he said. "She's got the goods. The other one has
-probably got somebody on the side; these actresses are all alike."
-
-There was a word or two more to that before Tommy's fist in his jaw
-stopped him. Montague struck back, he was a heavier man than my husband,
-but in a minute the others had rushed in between them. They were drawn
-back and held; Tommy's nose bled profusely, he appeared dazed, and
-accepted Montague's forced apology without a word. The men were all
-scared and yet excited; some of them were ashamed of themselves. They
-suspected it was not the sort of thing that should go on at a Board of
-Trade, and agreed it ought to be kept out of the papers. Some one walked
-home with my husband, and on the way he was seized with a violent fit of
-vomiting.
-
-"Who was it hit me?" he asked at the door, and seemed but vaguely to
-remember what it was about. The next morning he opened the store as
-usual and appeared quite himself to old Rathbone, who came shuffling and
-sidestepping in to his nest at the accustomed hour. About half-past ten
-the tailor was made aware by the rapping of a customer on the deserted
-counter, that Tommy had gone out without a word. He must have gone
-straight to Miss Rathbone; those who met him on the street recalled that
-his gait was unsteady. She must have been greatly concerned to have him
-there at that hour, for people were moving about the streets and
-customers beginning to come in, and in the presence of Tillie Hemingway
-he could offer her no adequate explanation.
-
-She was desperately revolving the risk of taking him into the front room
-to have out of him what his distrait presence half declared, when he was
-taken with a momentary retching; she went into the next room to fetch
-him a glass of water and a moment after her back was turned she heard
-him pitch forward on the floor.
-
-When Rathbone had sent for me by the wire that passed me on the way
-home, he sent also to Tommy's father, who got in before noon the next
-day. I remember him as a quizzical sort of man always with his hands in
-his pockets, and a bristling brown moustache cut off square with his
-upper lip, and a better understanding of the situation than he had any
-intention of admitting. I had by some unconscious means derived from him
-that though he was fond of Tommy, he never had much opinion of his
-capacity. I think now it must have been his presence there and his
-manner of being likely to do the most unexpected thing, that pulled
-those same live business men who had stood listening in loose-mouthed
-relish of Monty's ribaldry, out of the possibility of entertainment in
-the case that might be made out of his implication in my husband's
-death, to the consideration of the town's repute as a place where such
-things could not possibly happen. By the time Forester came on, a covert
-discretion had supplied the event with its sole consoling circumstance
-of secrecy. Not even my family got to know what led up to that blow
-which had precipitated an unsuspected weakness. It was quite in
-accordance with what they believed of the life I had chosen, that my
-husband's death in a brawl should be among its contingencies. Poor
-Tommy's end took on a tinge of theatricality.
-
-It was toward the end of the second day that he began to respond to the
-stimulants the doctor had been pouring into him. He opened his eyes and
-looked at us, conscious, but out of all present time. Feebly his glance
-roved over the figures by the bed, and fell at last on me.
-
-"Ollie," he whispered, "Ollie!" It was a name he had not called for a
-long time.
-
-"Oh, my dear, my dear!" I took his hand again and felt a faint pressure.
-Miss Rathbone hardly dared to look at him with the others standing
-about. I whispered her name to him, and his partner's, but he did not so
-much as turn his eyes in their direction. I could see him studying me
-out of half-shut glances; there would be an appreciable interval before
-the sense of what he saw penetrated the dulled brain; I thought I knew
-the very moment when the significance of our standing all about his bed
-crying, took hold of him. All at once he spoke out clearly:
-
-"Is my father here?" I fancied he must have hit on that question as a
-confirmation; but before there could be any talk between them he slid
-off again into the deeps of insensibility. At the end of half an hour or
-so he started up almost strongly.
-
-"Ollie!" he demanded, "where is the baby?"
-
-"Asleep," I told him.
-
-"Then I will sleep too," and in a little while it was so.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Odd Fellows took charge of my husband's funeral, his body was moved
-from the Rathbones', to their hall and did not go back again to the
-rooms over the store. Miss Rathbone made up my crape for me. I believe
-it gave her a little comfort to do so. Forester came and settled up my
-husband's affairs; he was rather inclined to resent what he felt was an
-effort of the Rathbones to claim a larger share in the business than the
-books showed, but he thought my indifference natural to my grief. He was
-shocked a little at my determination to go on with my engagement; we
-were not so poor he thought, that I could not afford a little retirement
-to my widowhood. But in that strange renewal of communion after death, I
-felt my husband nearer than before. He would go with me at last out of
-Higgleston. Strangely, I wanted to see Miss Rathbone, but she kept away
-from me. That was as it should have been in Higgleston. She had tried to
-get my husband, she had been, in a way, the death of him. It was hardly
-expected that I could bear the sight of her, though it would have been
-Christian to forgive her.
-
-I did see her, however, the night before I went away. It was the dusk of
-the first of September. There was a moon coming up, large and dulled at
-the edges by the haze, and that strange earthy smell with the hint of
-decay in it, kept in by the banded mists that lay below the moon. The
-darkness crept close along the earth and spread upward like an
-exhalation into the sky where almost the full day halted. I had slipped
-out down a side street and across an open lot to the cemetery. I would
-have that hour with my dead free from observation.
-
-I went between the white head stones and the flower borders. As I neared
-my husband's grave, something moved upon it. It arose out of the low
-mound as I approached; for one heart-riving second I stopped,
-speechless; it moved again and showed a woman.
-
-"Miss Rathbone!" I called. "Henrietta!" I had not used her name before;
-I have just now remembered it.
-
-"You might have left me this," she said. I saw that she had covered the
-mound with flowers, and I was glad I had not brought any.
-
-"I am leaving," I answered. "I am going to-morrow ... where my work is."
-
-"Yes, _you_ can go. But I have to stay ... where my work is. I stay with
-him. You can go ... you always wanted to go. And I, I have been talked
-about and I daren't even cry for him, not even at night, for my father
-hears me." She was crying now, deeply, bitterly. "You never cared for
-him," she insisted, "and now he knows it; he knows and has come back to
-me ... to _me_."
-
-"He comes back," I admitted. I was stricken suddenly with the futility
-of all human conviction. Moving about the house that day I had been
-conscious of him beside me then, and now, lying there beside my boy,
-touching him ... mine ... sealed to me in the certainty of death. And he
-had come back to _her_. I did not know even now what she and my husband
-had been to one another.
-
-It swept over me somehow, drowningly, that this was the secret that the
-dead know, how to belong to all of us. They had no bond, how could they
-be unfaithful? For a moment I was caught up by the thought to nobility.
-
-"Look here, Henrietta, if you feel that way, I'll leave it to you. I'll
-not come here any more." I did not know what else I could do about it.
-
-"It's the least you _can_ do." She was accepting it as her right. Any
-woman will understand how I wanted to lay my hand there, above his
-breast. She must really have believed I did not love him. I turned back
-across the borders.
-
-"Good-bye, Henrietta." She made a nearly inarticulate sound. The last I
-saw of her in the dusk she was tucking her flowers into the fresh sod as
-one tucks a coverlet about a child. He had been, I suppose, both man and
-child to her.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK III
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-I have to take up my story again about eighteen months later at the
-point of my going out to Suburbia to ask Gerald McDermott for a part in
-his new play, which was being rehearsed with Sarah in the _rôle_ of
-_Bettina_. But before that there had been some rather mortifying
-experiences to teach me that though I was done with Higgleston, it was,
-to a certainty, not done with me. In any case I suppose the shock of my
-husband's death must have affected my work unfavourably, but the
-knowledge of his secret defection, and the excuse he found for it in
-what was best in me, made still corroding poison at the bottom of my
-wound.
-
-What it all amounted to in my career was that the season which should
-have swept me back to Chicago in triumphant establishment of my gift,
-trickled out in faint praise and cold esteem. It was not that you could
-place your finger and say just there was the difficulty, but what came
-of it was another year on the road with Cline and Erskine, in stock. The
-Hardings, notwithstanding their disappointment in what they expected to
-make of me, managed to be kind.
-
-"You'll pull up," they assured me; "it's because you are really an
-artist that you show what you've been through!" And they didn't know the
-half of what that was.
-
-To Henry Mills my engagement with Cline and Erskine, was a step forward
-into that blazoned and banal professionalism which passes in America for
-dramatic success; but Sarah knew, and I think I knew myself, that the
-dance they led us in the spotlight of copious advertisement, was a dance
-of death to much that the plastic art should be. In this instance it was
-demonstrated even to the hopeful eye of Henry Mills, for the play chosen
-proved so little suited to the semi-rural, Middle West cities where we
-played it, that before the season was half over we were recalled, and,
-after an empty interval, finished out the engagement in one of those
-sensation mongering shows with which such combinations as Cline and
-Erskine clutch at the fleeing skirts of a public they never understand.
-
-It was about a month after the closing of this engagement that I took
-Sarah's suggestion about applying to Gerald McDermott, but not before I
-had tried several other things. The truth was, as I knew very well when
-I faced it, that I had at the time nothing in me. To those who haven't
-it, a gift is a sort of extra possession, like an eye or a hand that can
-be commanded to its accustomed trick on any occasion; but to the owners
-of it it is a libation poured to the Unknown God. I had emptied my cup
-of its froth of youth, and as yet nothing had touched the profounder
-experience from which it should be fed and filled again, and I had no
-technique to supply the insufficiencies of my inspiration. Somewhere
-within me I felt the stuff of power, stiff and unworkable, needing the
-flux of passion and the shaping hand of skill.
-
-Looking back now from the vantage of a tolerable success, if you were to
-ask me what, more than any other thing, prevents the fulness of our
-native art, I should say the blank public misapprehension of its
-processes. Turning every way to catch the favourable wind, what met me
-then, was the general conviction on the part of my friends that if you
-had talent you succeeded anyway, and if you weren't succeeding it was
-because you hadn't any talent. I suffered many humiliations before I
-learned how absolutely, by that same society that so liberally resents
-the implication of any separateness in art, the artist is thrust back
-upon himself. To do what seemed necessary for the development of my
-gift, to have a year or two to travel and study, to connote its powers
-with its limitations, required money; and though there in Chicago there
-was money for every sort of adventure that stirred the imagination of
-man, there was none for the particular sort of investment I represented.
-At least not at the price I was prepared to pay.
-
-The half of what had been put into setting my brother on his feet would
-have served me, but I learned from Effie, that as much of my mother's
-capital as had been put into Forester's business, was not only
-impossible to be withdrawn from keeping him upright, but threatened not
-to hold him so for as long as it was necessary for mother to see in him
-the figure of a provider. This had been made plain at Christmas, when
-Effie had written me that a particular wheeled chair which my mother had
-set her heart upon because of a hope it held out of church-going, would
-be impossible unless I came forward handsomely. I did come forward on a
-scale commensurate with the Taylorville estimate of my salary, which was
-by no means comparable to its purchasing power in Chicago; and now I was
-beginning to realize that unless some one came forward for me, I stood
-to lose the Shining Destiny to which I felt myself appointed. I was slow
-in understanding that it was not to be looked for by any of the paths by
-which interest and succour are traditionally due. Not, for instance,
-from Pauline and Henry Mills.
-
-I was seeing a great deal of them since I had come to Chicago, not only
-because of our earlier friendship, but because I found myself constantly
-thrown back on all that they stood for, by my distaste for much that I
-saw myself implicated in as a theatrical star who had not quite made
-good. I hated, quite unjustly, I believe, the players with whom for the
-time I was professionally classed; I loathed the shallow shop talk, the
-makeshift rooms we lived in, the outward smartness and the pinch of
-anxiety it covered. I was irritated by my external and circumstantial
-resemblance to much that I felt instinctively, kept them where they
-were, and vexed at some cheapness in myself which seemed to be revealed
-by the irritation. I had been thrown up out of the freemasonry of the
-preliminary struggle into a kind of backwater of established
-second-rateness, where there were also second-rate manners and morals
-and social perceptions. It was a great relief to get away from it to
-Pauline's home in Evanston, and the air it had of being somehow
-established at the pivot of existence. Pauline had two children by now,
-and a manner of being abundantly equal to the world in which she moved,
-a manner which I was only just realizing was largely owing to the figure
-of her husband's income. What Pauline furnished me at her home, over and
-above the real affection there was still between us, was a sort of
-continuous performance of the domestic virtues.
-
-That faculty for knowing exactly what she wanted, which had led her to
-make the most of her housekeeping allowance in the days when making the
-most of it was her chief occupation, now that the centres of her
-activity had been shifted from the practical to the social and cultural,
-stood her in remarkable stead. I was so constantly amazed by the
-celerity and sureness with which she seized on just the attitude or
-opinion which suited best with the part she had cast herself for as the
-perfect wife and mother, that it was only when I discovered its complete
-want of relativity to the purpose of the play or to the rest of the
-company, that I was not taken in by it. I doubt now if Pauline ever had
-an idea or permitted herself a behaviour which was not conditioned by
-the pattern she had set for herself, which she intrigued both Henry and
-myself into believing was the only real and appreciable life.
-
-At the time of which I write it was a great comfort to me to get away
-from my own dreary professionalism, to the nursery at Evanston, or to
-add my small flourish to the _scene à faire_ of Henry's homecoming, made
-every day to seem the one event for which the household waited, from
-which, indeed, it took its excuse for being. For all of this was so well
-in line with what Henry, who with the amplification of his income had
-taken on a due rotundity of outline and a slight tendency to baldness,
-conceived as proper for a man's home to be, that he played up to it as
-much as was in him. He had still his air of knowingness about the
-theatre, and if there was at times in his manner a suggestion that he
-might have found it pleasanter to adjust his relation to me on the basis
-of what I was as an actress, if I had not been quite so much the friend,
-it was so far modified by his genuine admiration for his wife and his
-cession to her of every right of judgment in the home, that I was
-inclined to accept him at his own and Pauline's estimate as the model
-husband.
-
-It was only a few days before my visit to Gerald McDermott, that I had
-undertaken to state to Pauline the nature of the help I required and my
-title to it. I had gone out to dinner and found her putting on a new
-gown, one of those garments admirably contrived between the smartness of
-evening dress and the intimacy of negligée, in which Evanston ladies of
-that period were wont to receive their lords.
-
-"I'm needing something new myself," I said for a beginning, "and I'm
-divided between the certainty that if I don't get an engagement I can't
-afford it, and if I don't afford it I probably won't get an engagement."
-Pauline stopped in the process of hooking up, to take stock of me.
-
-"You absurd child!" The note of amused admonition with which she
-ordinarily accepted my professional exigencies turned on the note of
-correction. "Don't you think you put too much stress on those things?"
-
-"What things?" She had touched upon the spring of irritation.
-
-"Clothes, you know, and appearances. Isn't it better just to do your
-work well and rest upon that?"
-
-"Pauline, if you had ever looked for an engagement you would know that
-getting it is largely a matter of appearing equal to it, and clothes
-are the better part of appearing."
-
-"But if you know that your work is good, what do you care what people
-think of you?" I dodged the moral situation about to be precipitated on
-me.
-
-"It's about the only way you know it is good, knowing what people think
-of it."
-
-"Now see here," Pauline protested, reinforced by the evident superiority
-of her viewpoint to mine, "you're getting all wrong; these things you
-are thinking of, they are not the real things; they don't count, not in
-the long run; it's only the spiritual things that really matter." She
-had put on all the plastic effect of nobility that was part of her stock
-in trade with Henry Mills. I thrust out against it sharply.
-
-"Do you realize, Pauline, that if I don't get an engagement soon I
-shan't be able to pay my board?"
-
-"Oh, you poor dear!" She came over and took my hand. I don't know why
-women like Pauline do that, but when they do it it is a sign they are
-not equal to the situation and are trying to fake it with you.
-
-"I know it is hard"--she found the cooing note with facility--"but it
-will come right; it always does. I've always found that there is a way
-provided."
-
-Something flashed into my mind that I had read in the newspapers
-recently about the corporations Henry worked for, and I wondered if
-Pauline had the least notion how the way, for her, was humanly provided,
-but the sound of Henry's latchkey put an end to the conversation, which
-I hadn't felt sufficiently encouraging to warrant my taking up again.
-
-I went from Pauline's, at the very first opportunity, to Sarah Croyden,
-who was playing in Chicago, and doing her kindliest to blow the wind of
-hope into my sagging sails. I met Cecelia Brune there. It had been to me
-the witness of how far I had fallen from my mark, that I had been thrown
-with her again in my last engagement. Hers was the sort of talent that
-Cline and Erskine could play up to the limit of the inadmissible. There
-were not wanting intimations that Cecelia had moved her own limit a
-notch or two in that direction. She had taken a characteristic view of
-my reappearance in her neighbourhood.
-
-"Got into the band-wagon, didn't you?" she remarked. "I saw Dean on the
-road last year and she said you was going in for high-brow stunts.
-Nothin' to it. You stay with Cline and Erskine; they get you on like
-anything." Her own notion of getting on was to figure as the sole female
-attraction in a song and dance skit in what she pronounced "Vawdville."
-
-"It's the only place havin' a figgur does you any good!" That she did
-not recommend it for me must be taken for her estimate of mine.
-Nevertheless I was amused by her, and Sarah, I knew, was even a little
-fond. Sarah's affections were a sort of natural emanation from her, like
-the rays of a candle, and warmed all they lighted on. On this afternoon
-I found Cecelia drinking tea there and I wasn't able to conceal my
-professional depression from her sharp, shallow inquisitiveness. There
-were never two or three players got together, I believe, but the talk
-turned on the comparative ineffectiveness of Merit as against Pull in
-the struggle for success.
-
-"There's no two ways about it," insisted Cecelia Brune; "you gotta get a
-hold of some rich guy and freeze to him." The extent to which Cecelia
-had blossomed out in ostrich tips and orchids that bright spring
-afternoon, might have suggested to an experienced eye, that the freezing
-process had already begun. I say might have, because Sarah and I found
-it difficult to disassociate her from the hard, grubby innocence in
-which our acquaintance had begun. Sarah, I know, believed in her and had
-her in often to informal occasions as a bulwark against what, with all
-her faith and pains, she didn't finally save her from.
-
-"You can talk all you want to," Cecelia asseverated, "about man being
-the natural provider. I've noticed he don't work at the job much without
-he's gettin' something out of it. If you're sufferin' with that little
-old song and dance about men doin' for you because you're a woman and
-need it, you gotta get over it. There's nothin' laid down over that
-counter unless you deliver the goods." She was nibbling lumps of sugar
-moistened in her tea, and the wild rose of her cheeks and the
-distracting rings of her hair made her offensiveness a mere childish
-impertinence.
-
-"Look at Helen Matlock," she ran on, "gettin' five hundred a week. And
-when old Sedgwick put it up to her she said she'd die rather; and then
-she went home and found her mother sick, and what did she do? Never
-batted an eye, but told her she'd got an engagement, and went back and
-made it good. An' now she's gettin' five hundred. That's what I call
-doin' well by yourself."
-
-"She can't mean it," Sarah extenuated when Cecelia had gone; "she's too
-frank about it. When she stops talking I shall begin to suspect her."
-
-"But is it true, about Miss Matlock, I mean?" Just at that juncture
-Helen Matlock was doing the work I felt most drawn to, most fit to
-undertake.
-
-"I suppose so," Sarah allowed; "it's a common saying that the way to the
-footlights in the Majestic is through the manager's private room." She
-came over and sat beside me on the bed, which, under a Bagdad curtain,
-did duty as a couch. "There are other theatres besides the Majestic,"
-she said.
-
-"None that want me," I averred.
-
-"Oh," she cried, "you don't mean----?"
-
-"No," I had to own, "I don't mean that I have a chance to get on even
-by misbehaving myself. I'm not the kind to whom that sort of chance
-comes." Sarah stroked my hand a while.
-
-"I've been thinking, if you could get a small part or a season, you
-could take it under another name until you are quite yourself again.
-It's often done." I could see she had gone much farther than that with
-it in her thought. It was just such cover as that I was seeking for the
-renaissance of my acting power.
-
-And that was what led to my going out to Suburbia to see Gerald
-McDermott about the part of _Mrs. Brandis_ in "The Futurist."
-
-It was out quite in the frayed edge of outer fringe of real estate
-ventures which hedged Chicago round, in a district which was spoiled for
-country and not quite made into town, and from the number of weedy plots
-not built upon between the scroll-saw cottages, had almost a rural air.
-Leaning trolleys went zizzing along the banked highways, and at the ends
-of the unpaved avenues there were flat gleams of the lake. Depressed as
-I was by the consciousness of having fallen from the estate of actresses
-who command engagements to those who seek them, I was still able to be
-touched a little by curiosity by what Sarah had told me of McDermott and
-his wife, whom he had married for her pretty, feminine inconsequence,
-who, having no point of attachment to her husband's life but femininity,
-was able to imagine none for any other woman, and suffered incredibly in
-consequence.
-
-"If one could only discover why clever men marry that sort of women!" I
-wondered.
-
-"Oh, Jerry thought he was going to bend her to his will," Sarah
-explained. "But that kind don't bend, they just slump." I had hardly
-knocked at the door before I had an inkling of how painful to the author
-of "The Futurist" the process of slumping might be.
-
-I could hear the fretting of a child, hushed suddenly by my knock, then
-the patter of little feet across the floor and voices startled and
-pitched low. I was just debating whether I shouldn't pretend I hadn't
-heard anything and go away again, when Mr. McDermott opened the door. I
-had met him once at Sarah's and should have known him again by the
-pallor of his countenance against the dead blackness of his hair,
-straight and shining like an Indian's. The effect of boyishness that one
-derived from his tall, thin figure was increased now by the marks of
-weeping about his eyes. In the glimpse of the room behind him I was
-aware of a disorder only excusable in the face of a family catastrophe;
-one of the children that ran to his knee was still in its little
-petticoat, without a slip, and had not been washed or combed that day. I
-wavered an instant between the obligation of politeness to ignore the
-situation and the certainty that I couldn't.
-
-"Oh!" I cried. I snatched at my repertory for the proper mixture of
-commiseration and consternation. "Is any one ill?"
-
-His desperate need of help opened the door to me.
-
-"My wife" ... he began, but the state of the room accounted for that, as
-he perceived, taking it in afresh through my eyes. Mrs. McDermott was
-lying on the sofa in the coma of exhaustion. She lifted her face to me
-for a moment, swollen with crying, and then let herself go again into
-that pit in which a woman sinks an impossible situation. She was really
-faint, poor thing, and, if I judged by the state of the house, had had
-no luncheon. I took all that in at a glance, but it was none of my
-business.
-
-"Is it her heart?" I wanted to know of her husband as I bent over her.
-He caught up the suggestion eagerly.
-
-"Yes, her heart ... she is very weak." He did whatever I suggested on
-that explanation. I would have proposed putting her to bed if I had not
-feared that that would involve more revelations of the family disorder
-than I was willing to tax him with.
-
-We got her out of her faintness presently and found her a safety valve
-in pitying her poor children with that sloppy sort of maternal affection
-which is not inconsistent with a good deal of neglect. I wasn't working
-for anything but to save Jerry--I came to call him that before many
-weeks--from the embarrassment of what I was sure had been a family
-fracas which threatened at every moment to break out again. I suggested
-tea, for I was satisfied that both of them wanted food, and while I was
-making toast before the sitting-room fire, Mrs. McDermott managed to
-get herself and the children into some sort of order. I could see then
-how pretty she had been in a large-eyed, short-lipped way, and how
-charming in her youth had been the inconsequence which as the mistress
-of a family made her a sloven. Not to seem to notice too much the
-superficial air of being prepared for company which she managed to give
-the children by washing their faces surreptitiously, I explained to Mr.
-McDermott that I had come about the part of _Mrs. Brandis_.
-
-"Oh, you'll do," he assented heartily. "You'll do just as you are. _Mrs.
-Brandis_ is a widow you know ... that is, the _Mrs. Brandis_ that I
-created----"
-
-"Just as you conceived it of course," I insisted, "I should want to play
-it that way."
-
-"The trouble is that Moresco isn't satisfied so easily; he wants me to
-make changes in the part."
-
-"Well ..." I was prepared to make concessions.
-
-"I'm afraid he has somebody in mind ..."
-
-"Fancy Filette," his wife broke in, "a painting, flirting, immoral!..."
-Jerry scraped his chair back along the floor to cover the word, but I
-knew where I was in a twinkling.
-
-"Fancy Filette! She'll play it in short skirts!"
-
-"I'll be lucky if she doesn't insist on a song and dance."
-
-"He doesn't need to have her unless he wants to." Mrs. McDermott was
-positive on that point. She was sitting with both children on her lap,
-chiefly in order to keep up the fiction that I didn't know she had just
-been having hysterics, I had cautioned her against letting them climb
-over her, and she promptly let them, because the idea that she was
-tending them at a risk to her health, rather helped out with her own
-notion of herself as a misused but devoted wife and mother.
-
-Jerry looked at me over her head in a mute appeal to me to understand.
-
-"Unless Moresco puts on my play there is no chance for it," he
-protested. "I've been to the others. I'll tell you, though, if you go to
-him just as you are, he may think better of it. He can't possibly get
-anybody so good."
-
-We neither of us believed that Mr. Moresco would turn down Fancy Filette
-for anybody, but we kept up the game of thinking so from sheer
-desperation. I played too at the pretence that Jerry's wife was a
-delicate, idealized sort of creature who did not understand the great
-hard world. That was no doubt what had appealed to him in the beginning,
-but she wasn't made up for the part. She had begun to put on weight
-after she had children, and her hair wanted washing. I got away as soon
-as I could and went straight to Sarah.
-
-"They'd been having some kind of a row," I told her.
-
-"Oh, it must have been Fancy Filette who set her off," Sarah was
-certain. "She took to you as a relief, but you'll be in for it too if
-you get the part."
-
-I had to admit to myself after I had been to Mr. Moresco, that there was
-not much likelihood that I would get it. He laid the tips of his pudgy
-fingers together and addressed me with the slight blur in his speech
-which convinced one of the racial affinity which he commonly denied.
-
-"Mr. McDermott thinks it will suit me admirably," I told him.
-
-"Ah, yes, the author," the manager mentioned him as though it were a
-fact indulgently admitted to the discussion, "but then, my dear Miss
-Lattimore, we have to think of the audience."
-
-There was this peculiarity of Moresco's handling of an audience, that he
-treated it as an entity, a sort of human stratification of which the
-three front rows were lubricious, the body of the orchestra high-brow,
-the first balcony sentimental and virtuous, the gallery facetious. As
-far as possible he arranged his plays to meet the requirements.
-
-"Now we have Miss Croyden for _Bettina_, she is your type."--He meant as
-a woman, not as an artist; Sarah and I were both serious and
-respectable.--"For _Mrs. Brandis_ I think we should have something a
-little more snappy."
-
-"It isn't written snappy in the play," I reminded him.
-
-"Ah, no, that is the trouble; I have spoken to Mr. McDermott; he will
-perhaps change it."
-
-"And if he doesn't you will keep me in mind for it." I kept my voice
-with difficulty from being urgent. "You see, I don't feel like playing a
-heavy part this year." I glanced down at my mourning; I hoped he would
-accept it as an explanation. Two or three days later I saw Sarah and she
-remarked that Jerry was rewriting some parts of his play at the request
-of the manager.
-
-"The part of _Mrs. Brandis_?" Sarah nodded.
-
-"Mr. Moresco wants it more--more----"
-
-"Snappy," I supplied. "And who is to have it, have you heard?"
-
-"Fancy Filette!"
-
-"Oh, well, she's snappy enough, I suppose."
-
-"I know; I don't even like to be billed with her; but, anyway, the part
-wasn't worthy of you." But I felt as I went home to my lodging that that
-was only Sarah's kind way of putting it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-I saw more than a little of Jerry McDermott during the spring and summer
-that I stayed in Chicago, haunting managers' offices in my winter's suit
-and a fixed determination not to let any of them suspect that I knew I
-couldn't, for the moment, act at all. Where the gift had gone I did not
-know, nor when, in some desperate encounter with the chance of an
-engagement, I attempted to draw about me the tattered remnants of my old
-facility, had I any notion what would bring it back again.
-
-Effie wrote me to come home for the hot weather, but though I regretted
-afterward not having done so I could not make up my mind to leave
-Chicago. It seemed to me then that the deadly quality of Taylorville lay
-waiting like a trap, which in my present benumbed condition might close
-on me if I put myself in the way of it. I thought that if I got out of
-reach of the flare of light from the theatre doors, of the smell of back
-scenes and the florid grip of the posters, that I should never in this
-world win back to them. A summer in Taylorville would have saved me
-money, would have rested and perhaps restored the balance of my powers,
-but the inward monitor of which I was the mere shell and surface,
-clutched upon the city with the grip of desperation. I hung upon
-whatever slight attachments to the theatre my circumstances afforded,
-like the drowned upon a rope, and waited for the resuscitating touch.
-Somewhere beyond me I was aware of succour; not knowing from whence it
-should come, I grasped at everything within reach and was buffeted and
-torn about in the eddy of reverses.
-
-What more even than his need of me, drove me back on Gerald McDermott,
-was the certainty that he was deriving from Fancy Filette the quality I
-missed. She was playing in one of the cheaper theatres in one of those
-entertainments that men are supposed to resort to when their families
-are out of town, and I had a moment's feeling that he exposed his sex to
-ridicule by the avidity with which he surrendered himself to her
-perfectly obvious methods. Until he sent his family north to one of the
-lake resorts for the hot weather, I found myself involved in certain
-obligations of visiting at his house, where I saw that his wife created
-for him by her incompetence much the same sort of background that my
-bereaved and purse-pinched condition made for me, and watched with
-alternate sympathy and resentment his flight from it to the effective
-self-complacency which Miss Filette induced in him.
-
-I don't mean that Jerry wasn't fond of his wife in a way, and faithful
-to her, in so far as she didn't interfere with his male prerogative of
-being played upon by other women, but I do not think he had ever an
-inkling that the vortex of anger and despair which she forced him to
-share with her, in lieu of the passion which she couldn't any more
-excite, was of the same stripe as his need of the high, inflated mood
-that Miss Filette provided for him with her little bag of tricks. For
-from the first Jerry seized on me, poured himself out, despoiled himself
-of all the hopes, conjectures, half-guesses of his career, and that
-without in the least discovering that I was in need of much the same
-sort of relief myself. After his wife had taken the children to the
-country--though she used even then to come down on him suddenly with
-both of them and break up his work for days, or just when it was running
-smoothly, wire to him to rush up to Lake View and allay the horrors of
-her too active imagination--often evenings after the day's work, he
-would take me to dine at queer little French or Italian restaurants
-which were supposed to be preferred on account of the "atmosphere"
-rather than their cheapness, and uncoil for me there all the intricate
-turnings of his work upon itself, and the rich shapes and colours it
-took, played upon by the slanting eyes and carmine smile of Miss
-Filette. He would sit opposite me with a cigarette and a glass of "Dago
-red," his black, shining hair, which he wore too long, slanting above
-his forehead like a boding wing, uncramping his soul; and though I liked
-him as a friend, and as a playwright thought him immensely worth while,
-I was divided between exasperation at his tacit exclusion of me from the
-world of excited powers in which any stimulation of his maleness threw
-him, and fear that in missing his capacity for quick, shallow passions,
-I had missed the one indispensable thing for my art.
-
-"It is the chance of a lifetime," Jerry would be reassuring me, "to
-delineate a character that will be so intimate an expression of the one
-who is to play it ... it's really extraordinary that she should have
-been named Fancy ... it's symbolic."
-
-"Oh, if you imagine she is really in the least like the _Mrs. Brandis_
-you are creating ... besides, I happen to know her name is Powers,
-Amanda Powers." He caught at this delightedly.
-
-"Ah, she's a poet, a poet! Such self-knowledge! To think of her knowing
-what would suit her so exactly!"
-
-But I was not in the least interested in Miss Filette's psychology. What
-I was trying to get at was the source of the creative mood which I was
-sensible did not arise from anything Miss Filette was, but from what
-Jerry was able to think of her. I admitted it was a mood you had to be
-helped to, but I wasn't going to accept it from any male compliment to
-his inamorata. I set up Jerry's case alongside of Miss Dean and Manager
-O'Farrell, and a kind of fine intolerance drove me from it as ships are
-driven apart upon the tide.
-
-It drove me back in the first instance upon what Pauline and Henry Mills
-stood for in my life. I was full of a formless importunate capacity,
-like the motor impulses of a paralytic, and I imagined a relief from it
-in the shadow of some succoring male who, by assuming the traditional
-responsibility of getting a living, should leave me free to produce the
-perfect flower of Art. At the time I was as far from realizing as
-Pauline, that she was eminently the sort of woman the sheltered life
-produced; had Henry Mills been upon the market I should have seized upon
-him promptly as the solution of all my difficulties.
-
-Pauline did her best for me--that is to say, she brought out for me an
-infinite variety and arrangement of the sentimentalized sex attractions
-with which she charmed dull care from Henry's brow. It was only by
-degrees that I perceived that the utter want of relativity of the
-quality that was known in Evanston as True Womanliness, was due to its
-being conditioned very much as I thought of myself as happiest to be. It
-was not until Pauline went to the country for the hot weather without
-making any sensible change in my affairs, that I began to understand how
-little she contributed. What I chiefly missed was a place to walk to
-when I went out for exercise.
-
-I spent a great deal of time just walking, for there was not much doing
-in the theatrical line to interest me, and I was sustained and
-tormented by intimations that somewhere, not far from me, my Help walked
-too. I don't know where this conviction came from that there was help
-somewhere in the world; but by the middle of the summer the terrible,
-keen need of it walked with me through all my days and lay down with me
-at night. There were times when the certainty that it was there seemed
-almost enough to lift me again to a plane of power, other times when the
-sheer hunger of it bit into the bone. It was most like the sense I had
-had as a child of the large friendliness that brooded over Hadley's
-pasture; it was like the promise of the shining destiny that had moved
-between my youth and the common occurrence; but now at times, just along
-the edge of sleep, or out of the thick, waking drowse of heat, it shaped
-familiarly human. I think about that time I must have dreamed again the
-dream I had of Helmeth Garrett just after I had seen Modjeska, writing
-that letter in his uncle's house; and with the help of what my mother
-had told me I was able to read it plain. I do not distinctly remember
-dreaming this, but there were times when, just after waking, my mind
-would be full of him, and there would be a stir in me of the wings of
-power. But in the broad day, though I thought of him often, I could not
-so much as recall his face clearly.
-
-The one thing that I remembered about him was that I had pleased him. It
-was a mortifying certainty that Jerry's ready acceptance of me as a
-woman of whom his wife could not possibly be jealous, had defined for
-me, that I didn't in general know how to please and interest men. They
-often were interested in me, but I was never in the least conscious of
-what drew them or caused them to sheer away. I had a suspicion,
-doubtless of Taylorvillian extraction, that there was a sort of
-culpability in knowing; but it came back to me now almost with a thrill
-that I had known with Helmeth Garrett. I had been able, out of all the
-possible things which might be said, to choose the thing that swayed
-him. I hadn't known ever for what things my husband loved me; but in a
-brief hour with Helmeth Garrett I was conscious of much in my manner to
-him arising from his conscious need. And I had no more than shaped this
-in my mind than I felt a faint stirring within me as of power.
-
-About this time I began to be more aware of the Something Without,
-toward which my work tended, just after I had been asleep, as if the
-self of me had gone on seeking more successfully in the silences. I
-would arise very early with such a faint consciousness as a vine might
-have toward the nearest wall, and get up in the blue of the morning to
-go for long walks through the pleasant, empty streets, sometimes out to
-the lake shore where the glint of the moving water under the mist,
-struck faint sparkles from my stagnant surfaces. I would come back from
-these excursions beginning to faint with the day's heat, to wear through
-the afternoon with books and long drowses, and then in the cool of the
-evening It would call me again, and I would seek It until late at night,
-sometimes in the lit streets, fetid with the day's smells, sometimes on
-a roof garden or at a park concert, where the lights, the gayety, and
-the music served merely as a drug to my outer sense, which went on
-busily at its absorbing quest. Sometimes men spoke to me in these lonely
-wanderings; I would remember it afterward as one recalls little,
-unnoticed incidents in the midst of great excitement; but for the most
-part I was, except for the invisible presence, as unaccompanied as if
-the city had been quite empty. If I could have laid the anxiety of my
-diminishing bank account and the dread of not getting an engagement, I
-should have been almost happy.
-
-It was along early in August that Chicago was greatly stirred by the
-visit of one of the Presidential candidates--for that was a Presidential
-year--who was also a popular hero. It had come rather unexpectedly and
-the preparations for it were of the hastiest. There was to be speaking
-at Armory Hall, and a reception afterward, and I thought I would go and
-clasp hands with the great man, as if, perhaps, I might find in it, as
-many of his admirers did, a sort of king's touch for the lethargy of my
-spirit. The meeting began early in the sweating afternoon and dragged
-out three heavy hours. Nothing of any importance transpired there until
-we were moving up the right side of the hall toward the receiving
-committee. The hall was split lengthwise by a bank of chairs, and down
-the left aisle the company of those who had already gripped the broad
-palm of the candidate, had been elbowed to oblivion by the committee. It
-was in the very beginning of the handshaking and there were not so many
-of them as of us. They lingered in groups and talked with one another. I
-was about midway of the aisles and several persons deep in the crush,
-when I saw him. How well I knew the lock falling over his forehead, and
-the quick unconscious motion of the head that tossed it back! There was
-the indefinable air of the outdoor man about him, though he was quite
-correctly dressed and had a lady's light wrap over his arm.
-
-"Helmeth! Helmeth!" I cried out to him from the centre of my will. I
-fought my way to the outer edge of the moving crowd, I caught at chairs
-and struggled to maintain my position opposite him. He was talking to
-two or three men, and just at the edge of the group a woman stood with
-an air of waiting. I resented her immobility, so near him and so little
-moved by him.
-
-"Helmeth, Helmeth, Look! Look at me!" I demanded voicelessly across the
-bank of chairs.
-
-He heard me; slowly he turned; his attention wandered from the group.
-
-"Helmeth! Helmeth!" All my will was in my cry. Now he looked in my
-direction. There was that in his face that told me my cry had touched
-the outer ring of his consciousness. Then the lady who stood by, took
-advantage of his detachment to touch him on the arm. Only a man's wife
-touches him like that. I knew her at once; she was the type of woman who
-subscribes to the _Delineator_, and belongs to the church because she
-thinks it is an excellent thing for other people. She had blond hair,
-discreetly frizzled about the temples, and her dress had been made at
-home.
-
-As soon as she touched him, Helmeth Garrett turned to her with divided
-attention. I saw her take his arm; he looked back; the cry held him; his
-eyes roved up and down; the moving mass closed between us and carried me
-completely out of sight.
-
-It was fully a quarter of an hour before the crowd released me, and by
-that time he had quite vanished. I hung about the entrance to the hall,
-I pushed here and there in the press, elbowed out of it by resentful
-citizens. At last when the hall was closed and even the policemen had
-gone from before it, I went home, to lie awake half the night planning
-how to get at him. And the moment I woke from the doze of exhaustion
-into which I finally fell, I knew that the thread which bound me to
-Chicago had snapped. I stayed on two or three days, vaguely hoping to
-come across him. I even looked in the hotel registers before I accepted
-Sarah's urgent invitation to spend the rest of the month with her at
-Lake View.
-
-One night when the wind out of the lake was fresh enough to suggest, in
-the closed window and the drawn blind, a reciprocated intimacy, I told
-Sarah all about Helmeth Garrett.
-
-"And to think," I said, "how different it all might have been if only I
-had got that letter."
-
-"Yes," Sarah admitted, "but that doesn't prove you'd have been happy."
-
-"Not if we loved one another?"
-
-"Oh, I am not sure loving has anything to do with happiness, or is meant
-to. Sometimes I think God--or whoever it is manages things--has a very
-poor opinion of happiness, because you don't find it invariably along
-with the best of experiences. It happens, or it doesn't. If love does
-anything for you it is just to give you the use of yourself."
-
-"But it hasn't," I protested; "I'm just stumping along."
-
-"You haven't really had it--just being kissed once, what does that
-amount to?"
-
-"Oh, Sarah, Sarah, that is what hurts me! I haven't really had it. I'm
-never going to. I'll just go halting like this all my life."
-
-"No, you won't," Sarah shook her head, piecing her own knowledge slowly
-into comfort for me. "You remember what I told you that time when you
-found out about Dean and Mr. O'Farrell? There's a kind of feeling that
-goes with acting that is like loving, only it isn't. I don't know where
-it comes from. Maybe it is what they call genius, but I know you can
-slide off from loving into it. That is what makes Jerry think he has to
-be in love all the time; it is a little stair he climbs up, and then he
-goes sailing off. You don't think Fancy Filette really does anything for
-him?"
-
-"Goodness, no; she hasn't a teaspoonful of brains!"
-
-"Well, then," she triumphed. "After a while his genius will be so strong
-in him that he won't need that sort of thing and he will think it
-ridiculous."
-
-"And you think that will come to me?"
-
-"It did come. You didn't have to be in love to begin," Sarah objected.
-
-"Sarah, I will tell you the truth! I was in love all the time, I didn't
-know with whom, but always wanting somebody ... trying to get through to
-something; trying to mate. That was it. Nights when I would do my best,
-and the house would be storming and cheering, I would look around
-for ... for somebody. And I would go to my room, and he wouldn't be
-there! I used to think Tommy would be He, I wanted him to be. I thought
-some day I would turn around suddenly and find him changed into ...
-whatever it was I wanted. But I know now he never could have been that.
-And all this summer ... I've heard it calling. I've walked and walked.
-Sometimes it was just around the corner, but I never caught up with it.
-And when I saw Helmeth Garrett, I _knew_!"
-
-I had leaned back out of the circle of our small shaded lamp to make my
-confession, but Sarah came forward into it the better to show me the
-condoning tenderness of her smile.
-
-"It's no use, Sarah, I'm no genius; I have to be in love like the rest
-of them." She shook her head gently.
-
-"You'll get across. Love would help; I wish you had it. But I'll confess
-to you; I had love and it only opened the door. There's something
-beyond, bigger than all men. You must reach out and lay hold of it. Oh,
-if it were love one needed, I should die--I should die!" I had never
-seen her so moved before.
-
-"Tell me, Sarah; I've always wanted to know."
-
-"I want you to know, but it isn't easy! I didn't know anything about
-love ... how could I the way I was brought up! My father was a Baptist
-preacher. I had been taught that it was wrong to let anybody ... touch
-you; and when he kissed me I felt as if he had the right...."
-
-"I know, I know!" I had been kissed that way myself.
-
-"How can anybody know? I loved him, and I was the only one of many. He
-left me without a word, ... like a woman of the street ... not looking
-backward." She got up and moved about the room, the thick coil of her
-rich brown hair slipping to her shoulders, and her bodily perfection
-under the thin dressing gown distracting me even from the passion of her
-speech. I had a momentary pang of sympathy with the delinquent Lawrence,
-I could see how a man might be afraid almost, of the quality of her
-beauty.
-
-"Sometimes," she said, "I think marriage is a much more real relation
-than people think--that something real but invisible happens between
-them so that even if they are parted they are never quite the same
-again. It is like having a limb torn from you; you ache always, in the
-part you have lost." I knew something of what that ache could be, but I
-could only turn my face up to hers that she might see my tears.
-
-"You have enough of your own to bear," she said. "I must not lay my
-troubles on you; but I wanted to tell you how I know it is not love that
-makes art. I was dying for love when Mr. O'Farrell put me to acting. I
-was bleeding so ... and suddenly I reached out and laid hold of Whatever
-is, and I found I could act. It was as if the half of me that had been
-torn away had been between me and It, and I laid hold of It. That's how
-I know." She came behind me, leaning on my chair, and I put up my hands
-to her.
-
-"Oh, Sarah, Sarah, help me to lay hold of it, too!" But for all her shy
-confidences, deep within I didn't believe her.
-
-Toward the first of September we went back to the city, Sarah to begin
-rehearsals for _The Futurist_, and I to take up the dreary round of
-manager's offices and dramatic agencies. The best that was offered me
-was poor enough, but it had a faint savour of a superior motive clinging
-to it. It was from a Mr. Coleman, an actor manager of the old,
-heavy-jowled Shakespearian type, who was projecting a classic revival
-with himself in all the tragic parts, and I signed with him to play
-_Portia_, _Cleopatra_, and the wife of _Brutus_. We had been busy with
-rehearsals about ten days when I had a telegram from Forester saying
-that mother had died that day and I was to come immediately.
-
-It was late Sunday evening when I received it and I hunted up the
-manager at the hotel.
-
-"I'm going," I told him.
-
-"Well, of course, your contract----"
-
-"I'm going anyway ... and I know the lines." He was as considerate, I
-suppose, as could be expected.
-
-"I can give you three days," he calculated.
-
-"Four," I stipulated.
-
-"Well, four," he grudged. That would allow two days for the funeral.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-As it turned out I was more than a month in Taylorville and so saved
-myself from the Coleman players for a more kindly destiny, though at the
-time it did not appear so. It grew out of my realizing, in Effie's first
-clasp of me, something more than our common loss, more than family,
-something that I felt myself answer to before we could have any talk
-together that did not relate to the funeral and the manner of my
-mother's death.
-
-They thought from little things that came to mind afterward, that she
-must have been prepared for it, but forebore to trouble them with a
-presentiment of what could not in any case have been much longer
-delayed: she had clung to them more and been still more loath to trouble
-them with her wants. The Saturday before, she had made Effie understand
-that she wished all the photographs of my father brought together,
-queer, little old daguerrotypes of him as a young man, a tintype of him
-in his volunteer soldier dress, and a large, faded photo of him as an
-officer leaning on his sword. She kept them by her and would be seen
-poring upon them, as though she tried to fix the identity of one about
-to be met under unfamiliar or confusing circumstances, though they did
-not think of this until afterward. The Sunday of her death Cousin Judd
-had come in to sit with her, as his custom was, an hour earlier than the
-morning service. He had read the day's lesson from the Bible and sung
-the hymn, and then after an interval Effie, who was busy about the back
-of the house, heard him sing again my mother's favourite hymn,
-
- "Come, Thou fount of every blessing,
- Tune my heart to sing Thy praise."
-
-and as he sung she saw the tears rolling down his face. So she turned
-her back on them and let them say their good-byes without her, though
-she had no notion how near the final parting was.
-
-Forester was dressing--he and Effie had taken turns at church-going ever
-since mother's stroke--and he was surprised to find that Cousin Judd had
-gone off without him. Mother clung to him when he went to kiss her
-good-bye; she struggled with her impotence, but they made out that it
-was not because she wanted him to stay at home with her; and for the
-first time since her illness she wished not to be propped up at the
-window where she could sign to the neighbours going by, but seemed to
-want greatly to sleep. Effie wheeled her into the corner of the sitting
-room; and a little later she noticed that mother's head had slipped down
-on the pillow as it did sometimes, past her power to lift it up again.
-So my sister straightened the poor head with a kiss and went back to
-getting the dinner. She moved softly because mother seemed asleep, but
-at last when she went as usual to tell her that Forester was visible at
-the end of the street, on the way home, she saw that the head had
-slipped down again, and this time as she lifted it up there was no life
-in it at all.
-
-One of the strange incidents of that morning, and yet not strange when
-you think how much they had been to one another, was that Cousin Judd,
-though he had started home directly after church, could not get there,
-but when he had driven a little way out of town, drawn by he knew not
-what unseen force, turned back and pulled up in front of our door just
-as the doctor who had been summoned hastily was saying that mother had
-been dead an hour.
-
-It was Monday morning when I arrived, and the funeral could not be until
-Tuesday, to allow time for the news to penetrate to all the distant
-country places from which my mother's relatives would be drawn to it,
-moved and anxious to come, though many of them had not seen her for a
-matter of years. I think I realized at once how it would be about my
-getting back to Chicago, especially when I spoke to Effie about it. She
-cried out and clung to me in a way that made me see that I stood for
-something more to her than just sisterliness. Without saying anything I
-wrote to Mr. Coleman that I should be detained a week or longer, and
-that though I hoped he would be able to save my place for me, I didn't
-really expect that he would.
-
-It was not in the Taylorville cemetery that we buried my mother, but in
-a little plot set aside from the old Judd place, along with the rest of
-the Wilsons, Judds, and Jewetts, those that had dropped back peacefully
-to their native sod, and those sent home from Gettysburg and Appomattox.
-It was a longish ride; from turn to turn of the country road, teams
-dropped into the procession that led out from town. On either side the
-woods blazed like the ranked Cherubim, host on host; great shoals of
-fiery leaves lay in the shallows of the burying ground. At the last,
-shaken by the light breeze that sprung up, little flamy darts from the
-oak whirled into the grave with her. They were to say in their own
-fashion that there was nothing more natural. I think my mother must have
-found it so.
-
-We had scarcely got home again, still sitting about, veiled and
-voluminous, when I was drawn out of grief to meet Effie's emergency. It
-was Almira Jewett who brought me face to face with it. Almira had taken
-off her things and was getting tea for us in her brisk, capable way.
-
-"Anyhow," she said, "I 'spose you'll stay with your sister until she
-gets sort of used to things." It flashed on me that what she was
-expected to get used to, was going on just as she had been without the
-excuse of my mother's needing her.
-
-"Oh, I'll stay till the breaking up," I met her promptly.
-
-"My land!" said Almira Jewett, "you talking of the breakin' up and your
-mother ain't hardly out of the house yet. They do say there's nothing
-like play-acting to make you nimble in your feelings." I knew of course
-that they would lay it to the defibricating influence of my profession
-that I should take the breaking up of my mother's home so lightly, but I
-had caught a brief hiatus in Effie's sobs and I realized that what the
-poor child was afraid of, was being hypnotized into a situation against
-which her natural good sense revolted. I was bracing myself against the
-tradition of filial obligation that I felt was going to be put in force
-against me, when suddenly help arrived from an unsuspected quarter.
-
-"I 'spose you're going with a troupe yet?" Cousin Lydia interposed, for
-the first time in her life, I believe, delivering herself of a
-conclusion. "It's a pity, because if you was anyways settled you could
-take Effie with you. Forester was a good son;" she ruminated on that for
-a while. "He was what you call a real model son, but I don't know as I
-want to see Effie married to him the same as your mother was." It gave
-me a shock to think that all these years she must have been seeing how
-things were.
-
-"She shan't," I assured her, "not if I have to stay with Forrie myself."
-I had thought a good many times what was to become of Effie. I couldn't
-take her with me, of course, but I wasn't in the least prepared to see
-her intrigued by the popular sentiment into becoming a mere figurehead
-for Forester's _rôle_ of provider. "Keeping up a home" they called it in
-Taylorville, as though the house and furniture and the daily habit of
-coming back to it, were the pivotal facts of existence.
-
-It almost seemed as if it might come to that. After the others were all
-gone and the night closed in on us three, the spirit of the dead came
-and stood among us. Effie wept in Forrie's arms and said that he should
-not be quite bereft, he should have her anyway.
-
-"You poor child ... you've got a brother left; you too, Olivia. You
-shan't want for a home while I live." That of course was the sort of
-thing Taylorville expected of him. It began to seem as if I might have
-to make good my word about staying with my brother to let Effie free. I
-believe he would have accepted that without even a suspicion of what I
-surrendered by it. If anything, he would have seen in it only another
-dramatization of his _rôle_ of dutifulness. That a woman had any
-preferred employment beside cushioning life for the males of her family,
-had not impinged on the consciousness of Taylorville.
-
-But the very next morning I awoke anew to the purpose of rescuing Effie,
-and to the recollection of an incident of the funeral, noted but not
-taken into the reckoning in the stress of more absorbing emotions.
-
-"Effie, wasn't that Mrs. Jastrow I saw at the cemetery yesterday with
-her head done up in a black veil--crape, too? I have just recalled it."
-Effie nodded.
-
-"One would have thought," I resented, "that she was one of the family."
-
-"Ah, that's it; she thinks she is."
-
-"One of the family? Oh! you don't mean that Forrie----Where was Lily
-then?" I demanded.
-
-"She wouldn't come, of course, not being recognized as one of the family
-and yet counting herself one."
-
-"But, explain ... how could she? I thought that was broken off long
-ago."
-
-"When mother was first taken," Effie agreed, "but you see she made such
-a dead set at him, she had to keep it up somehow; she couldn't admit
-that Forrie hadn't wanted her. So they made it up between them, Lily and
-her mother, I mean, that she and Forrie had really been engaged, but it
-had been broken off because Forrie couldn't marry so long as mother----"
-She broke off with tears again, remembering how mother was now.
-
-"That was two years ago; you don't mean to say they've kept it up all
-the time?"
-
-"They've had to. You see Lily hadn't been careful about not getting
-herself talked about with Forester. Oh, not scandal, of course, but you
-know how it is when a girl is crazy after a man; everybody gets to hear
-of it. And then they had to make so much of the engagement never coming
-to anything on mother's account, it quite spoiled Lily's chances, and
-you know, Forester...."
-
-"Oh, he was taken in by it, no doubt; it was something to sentimentalize
-over and be self-sacrificing about."
-
-"Well, of course, he couldn't quite abandon the poor girl; and she
-really _is_ fond of him."
-
-"And perfectly safe to philander with. Well, now that he has no one
-depending on him I suppose he will marry her!"
-
-"That's what is worrying me," protested Effie; "you see it all depends
-on whether I go on depending on him." She broke down over that. Mother
-hadn't wanted Forester to marry Lily Jastrow, and everybody by the mouth
-of Almira Jewett, had thought it was Effie's duty to keep him from it if
-she could.
-
-"And I could, by just staying on. It's mother's money in the business,
-your's and mine as much as his, and this house ... it's partly ours ...
-if we stay in it."
-
-"Well if you _want_ to...."
-
-Effie came over and sobbed on my shoulder, "Oh, I don't," she said. "I
-suppose it is horrid and selfish. I'm fond of Forrie, but I want to do
-things in the world ... like you have ... and I want to marry and have
-babies. Oh, oh!" She was quite overwhelmed with the turpitude of it.
-
-"You shall, you shall," I determined for her.
-
-"Oh, Olivia, I have _wanted_ you so. I knew you'd understand. It was all
-right so long as mother lived; I could do anything for her, but now I
-want--I want to be _me_!" I understood very well what that want was. But
-first off I had to explain to Effie why I couldn't take her with me. It
-was wonderful how she entered into my feeling about my work, and my lack
-of success in Chicago.
-
-"_Of course_, you ought to go to New York. You'll be a great tragic
-actress, Olive, I know _that_. You could go, too, if you could get your
-share out of the business. You could have mine and yours!" She glowed
-over it. But the fact was we couldn't get the money out of the business.
-As it stood we couldn't have sold the shop for what mother had put into
-it, and, besides, we should have had to deal first with Forester's
-conviction that he was taking care of our shares for us. I needn't have
-worried about Effie; she was too pretty and competent not to have
-arranged for herself. The principal and his wife drove over from
-Montecito to say that they would be glad to have her come back and
-finish the course interrupted within a few months of graduation by my
-mother's illness. And for her board and tuition she was to act as the
-principal's secretary. Within a year she wrote that she was engaged to
-their son.
-
-In the meantime I undertook to stop the capacious maw of Forrie's need
-of being important; and the only way I saw to do it, involved my
-surrender of any hope I had of finding my own release in what my mother
-had left us of my father's hard won savings. I shouldn't have had any
-compunction, so fierce was my own need of success, about forcing my
-brother's hand, but I meant definitely not to leave any gap in his life
-for Effie to be drawn back into. Before we had come to this point, the
-second afternoon after the funeral in fact, circumstances had begun to
-work for me. Effie and I, looking out of the window, saw Mrs. Jastrow
-coming along by the front fence with all her gentility spread, as it
-were, by the feeling she had of her call on us being a diplomatic
-function.
-
-"She's coming to see how we take it," Effie averred.
-
-"Her coming to the funeral as one of the family? Well, how do we take
-it, Effie?"
-
-"Mother couldn't bear the idea of it." Tears came into my sister's eyes;
-I could see the wings of self-immolation hovering over her.
-
-"Look here, Effie, you go and take home Mrs. Endsleigh's spoons." There
-had been so many out of town connections dropping in for a meal that we
-had been obliged to fall back on our nearest neighbour.
-
-"Lily's respectable, isn't she? and Forester has encouraged her. Well,
-you don't want to spoil the poor girl's life, do you?"
-
-"Oh," said Effie, "oh, Olivia!" I could see she was torn between
-compunction and admiration for my way of putting it on high moral
-grounds. I heard her counting out the spoons in the kitchen as I went to
-let Mrs. Jastrow in.
-
-I think she didn't know any more than Effie did, what to make of my
-manner of receiving her. She sat on the edge of a chair and snivelled a
-little into a handkerchief which was evidently her husband's, but it was
-chiefly, I could see, because she had come prepared to snivel and
-couldn't quickly adjust herself to my change of base.
-
-"Poor Lily," she moaned, "she thought such a lot of Mr. Lattimore's
-mother; but I tell her she must bear up."
-
-"She must indeed," I assured her. "Forester needs all the sympathy he
-can get just now." I could see her peeping over the top of her
-handkerchief, trying to guess what to make of that; but the sentimental
-was easy for her.
-
-"That's what I tell her; they'll have to comfort each other. Them poor
-young things, they'd ought to be together. But Lily's so sensitive she
-couldn't bear to put herself forward."
-
-"I'll tell Forrie you called," I assured her.
-
-Mrs. Jastrow fanned herself with her damp handkerchief; her poor little
-pretence broke quite down under my friendliness.
-
-"He's got to marry her," she whispered. "Lily's been talked about, and
-he's _got to_." I could guess suddenly what it meant to her to have
-reached up so desperately for something better for her daughter than she
-had been able to manage for herself, and to come so near not getting it.
-I was able to put something like sympathy into my voice when I spoke to
-Forester at supper.
-
-"Mrs. Jastrow called to-day. She says Lily isn't bearing up as she
-might. I suppose you ought to go and see her!"
-
-Effie's eyes grew round at me over the teacups, but after all Forrie
-didn't know what had passed between mother and me in regard to Lily. If
-I chose to take his relation to her as a matter of course, he couldn't
-object to it. We heard Forrie in his room changing his collar before he
-went back to the shop again.
-
-"He'll go to her to-night after he closes up," Effie told me. "It will
-end with her getting him."
-
-"So long as he doesn't get you----" But it was unfair to put ideas like
-that in Effie's head. "After all it is a very good match for him in some
-ways; she'll always look up to him, and that is what Forrie needs."
-
-It was natural to Effie to judge every situation by what it had for
-those concerned; she wasn't troubled as I was by the pressure of an
-outside ideal. By the end of a month, when I thought of going back to
-the city, it was tacitly understood that as soon as convenient Forester
-was to marry Lily Jastrow. He meant, however, to be fair with us both
-about the property; he had given us notes for our share, and expected to
-pay interest. The note wasn't negotiable, as I learned immediately, and
-the interest wasn't any more than Effie would need for her clothing. I
-felt that the jaws of destiny which had opened to let Effie out, had
-closed on me instead. I returned to Chicago early in November; my place
-with the Coleman players had long been filled, and there was nothing
-whatever to do.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-Jerry's play, which had had its premier while I was away, was going on
-successfully. One of the first items of news Sarah told me about him was
-that his wife was expecting another child, undertaken in the hope that,
-if she couldn't hold her husband's roving fancy, she could at least fix
-his attention on her situation. All that she had got out of it so far,
-was a reason for staying at home, which left Jerry the freer to bestow
-his society where it was most acceptable.
-
-"Does she know--Miss Filette, I mean--about the child."
-
-"Not unless Jerry has told her--which he'd hardly do." Sarah laughed a
-little, and that was not usual with her; she had very little humour.
-"Fancy is so up in the air about the success of the play, she thinks she
-inspired it. I imagine they'd feel it an indelicacy of Mrs. McDermott to
-have intruded her condition on their relation. Of course it is
-understood that there's nothing really wrong about it...."
-
-"It is wrong if his wife is made unhappy by it." I hadn't Sarah's reason
-for being lenient. "Somebody ought to speak to Jerry."
-
-"You might--he would listen to you. It is just because there is so
-little in it that it is so hard to deal with."
-
-I suppose I took to interfering in the McDermott's affairs because I had
-so little of my own to interest me. Besides, I was fond of Jerry and
-didn't see how he was to be helped by getting his family into a muddle.
-
-"But after all," Sarah reminded me, "it is his own wife and his own
-inspiration." It wasn't in me to tell her, even if I had understood it
-myself at the time, that the secret of my resentment was that it should
-be so accepted on all sides that one must choose between them. I wanted,
-oh, I immensely wanted, what Jerry was getting out of his relation to
-Miss Filette, but I wanted it free of the implication that my
-abandonment of my husband to the village dressmaker put me in anything
-like the same case.
-
-"The real trouble with you," Jerry told me, "is that you are trying to
-live in Chicago and Taylorville at the same time."
-
-Not being able to make any headway with him, I went to call on Miss
-Filette. I wasn't on terms with her that would admit of an assault on
-her confidence, I didn't know her well enough to call on her in any
-case, but I wasn't to be thwarted of good intention by anything so small
-as a breech of manners in doing it. It wasn't so much the offense of my
-undertaking it that counted, I found, as Miss Filette's determination
-not to hear anything that would ruffle the surface of her complacency. I
-had to drop plumb into my revelation out of the opportunity she made for
-me in the question, as to whether the play would or would not go on the
-road before Christmas.
-
-"I should hope so," I dropped squarely on her; "Jerry's wife needs him.
-There's a child coming in April."
-
-"Yes," said Miss Filette; she was giving me tea and she poised the
-second lump over my cup with an inquiring eyebrow. "Have you seen what
-we have done with the second act lately?"
-
-"Anyway," I said to myself as I went, "she knows. She can't skid over
-the facts as she has my telling her."
-
-But it was the certainty that, knowing, she kept right on with Jerry,
-that drove me back on Pauline and Henry Mills. I fled to them to be
-saved from what, in the only other society I had access to, fretted all
-my finer instincts; to be ricocheted by them again on to that reef of
-moral squalour upon which the artist and woman in me were riven asunder.
-
-What I should have done was to take my courage in my hands and have gone
-on from Taylorville to New York. But the most I was equal to was a fixed
-determination to accept anything which would take me nearer Broadway,
-which, even then, was to the player world all that the lamp is to the
-moth. In the meantime I had settled in two housekeeping rooms in a
-street that I wouldn't have dared to give to a manager as an address;
-one of those neighbourhoods where there are always a great many
-perambulators, and waste paper blowing about. There was never anything
-for me, in the frame of life called Bohemian, more than a picturesque
-way of begging the question of poverty. What I looked for in a lodging,
-was escape from the bedraggled professionalism which went on in what
-were called studios, by means of a cot bed, an oil stove, and a few
-yards of art muslin. That I hadn't managed it so successfully as I
-hoped, was made plain to me a few days after I had moved in, by the
-discovery of a card tacked on the opposite door, that read, "Leon
-Griffin, the Varieté." It was the same theatre at which Cecelia Brune
-was playing the chief attraction in song and dance. In the glimpses I
-had of Mr. Griffin in the dark hall going in and out, I was aware that
-he gave much the same impression of unprofitable use that was associated
-in my mind with the Shamrocks.
-
-All this time I kept going through the motions of looking for an
-engagement. Now and then some shining bubble of opportunity seemed to
-float toward me, to dissolve in thin air as soon as I put my hand out to
-it. One of these brought me to Cline and Erskine's waiting room on the
-day that Cecelia Brune elected to register her complaint against what
-she considered a slight of her turn at the Varieté. She flounced about
-more than a little, not to let the rest of us escape the inference that
-she was not used to being kept waiting. When she had hooked and unhooked
-her handsome furs for the fourth time, she introduced me to Leon
-Griffin, who except for the name, I shouldn't have recognized for my
-hall neighbour. It was like being slapped in the face with my own hard
-condition to have him crowded on me in that character before the whole
-roomful. Life seemed so to have beggared him. In broad day he looked the
-sort of a man who has failed to sustain himself in the man's world, and
-must reinforce his value with the favour of women. Little touches of
-effeminacy about his dress failed to take the attention away from its
-shabbiness. His hair had the traditional thespian curl in spite of being
-cropped short, to allow of various make-ups, one surmised, and his very
-blue eyes were in a perpetual state of extenuating the meagreness of his
-other features. Being ashamed of my shame at meeting him there, I began
-to be very nice to him. Cecelia, in spite of her magnificent raiment,
-perhaps on account of it, had been disposed to graciousness. She drew us
-together with a wave of her hand.
-
-"She ought to be doin' _Ophelia_ on Broadway," she introduced me
-handsomely; "wouldn't that get you!"
-
-"I saw you with the Hardings last year," Griffin assented, almost as
-though I might think it a liberty. "Where are you playing now?" He had
-the stamp of too many reverses on his face not to estimate mine at its
-proper worth. He had fine instincts too, for as soon as I told him that
-I was out of an engagement that season, he put himself on record quite
-simply. "My turn goes off next week--I'm trying to get Cline to put it
-on the circuit." When we came out of the office together he fell into
-step with me. One of the young women ahead of us made the shape of a
-bubble with her hands and blew it from her. "Pouff" she said. "There
-goes another of my chances." She laughed with a fine courage.
-
-"They all go through with it," Griffin affirmed. "There's Eversley----"
-I have forgotten which of the well-known incidents he related.
-
-"Eversley told me I might come to it. What made you think of him?" I
-demanded.
-
-"I saw his name in the paper; he's to play here this winter. He's a
-wonder."
-
-"He said wonderful things to me once." I had just recalled them.
-
-"They'll come true then. Eversley never makes a mistake. Why, I remember
-once----" He broke off as though he had changed his mind about telling
-me. I was wondering if I couldn't get rid of him by stopping in at
-Sarah's, when he broke out again suddenly.
-
-"To think of you being out of an engagement and a girl like Cecelia
-Brown--yes, I know her name is Brown, Cissy Brown of Milwaukee----"
-
-"I've always suspected it," I admitted, "but it is her looks of course,
-and the clothes; Cecelia has lovely clothes."
-
-"Well, so could you if...." He checked himself. "I don't mean to say
-anything against a lady...."
-
-"I've always suspected that, too," I admitted, "but one doesn't like to
-say it."
-
-"Well, you know what she gets--thirty-five a week. A girl doesn't wear
-diamond sunbursts on that."
-
-"Mr. Griffin, I wish you'd tell me what sort of man it is that gives
-diamond sunbursts to Variety girls: I've never seen any of them."
-
-"You have probably, but you don't know it. You meet their wives in
-society."
-
-"Henry Mills." I don't know what made me say it; the image of him came
-tripping along the surface of my mind and slid off my tongue without
-having more than momentarily perched there.
-
-"Is he in business downtown, and has he got a perfectly proper family
-and too many dinners under his vest?"
-
-"Mr. Mills's home life is ideal; but I didn't mean----"
-
-"Neither did I, but that's the type. They mostly have ideal families,
-but they couldn't live up to them if they didn't have Cecelia Brunes on
-the side.... I beg your pardon."
-
-He had looked up and caught me blushing a deep, painful red, but it
-wasn't on account of what he had intimated. I was blushing because of
-the discovery in myself of needs which, compared to the ideal of life I
-had set for myself, were as much of a defection as anything our
-conversation had suggested for Henry Mills. I was conscious in those
-days of a slow, steady seepage of all my forces toward desperation.
-
-"You'll have to take a company out for yourself," was Jerry's solution.
-"I'll write you a play. I've got a ripping idea--a man, with a gift, and
-two women, good women both of them--that's where I score against the
-eternal triangle--each of them trying to save him from the other and
-breaking him between them." Jerry's plays were never anything more than
-dramatizations of his immediate experience. "You and Sarah Croyden, you
-set each other off; I'll write it for both of you." He walked up and
-down in my little room with his hands in his pockets and his shining
-black hair rising like quills.
-
-"Jerry, how long will it take you to write that play? And how much will
-it cost to produce it?"
-
-"Ten thousand dollars," he answered to the last question. "About
-eighteen months if I go right at it."
-
-"And I've money enough to last me to the end of February. No," to his
-swift generous gesture. "You have to live eighteen months on yours--and
-another child coming." I made up my mind that I should have to speak to
-Pauline and Henry Mills.
-
-Greater than any mystery of creative art to me, is the mystery by which
-the recipients of its benefits manage to keep ignorant of its essential
-processes. I have never been able to figure to myself how Pauline and
-Henry escaped knowing that the creative mood, the keen hunger of which
-is more importunate than any need of food or raiment, was to be had for
-very little more than they spent fattening their souls on its choice
-products. For it is always to be bought; it is the distinction of genius
-as against talent, always to know in what far, unlikely market the
-precious commodity is to be bought. How was it that Henry escaped
-knowing that the appealing femininity which plays so large a part in the
-success of an actress with an audience of Millses, is largely the result
-of having been the object of that solicitious protection which it is
-supposed to provoke? With what, since it was agreed between Pauline and
-me that I was not to pay down on that counter what Cecelia and Jerry
-parted with cheerfully, was I ultimately to pay for it? Now that I had
-on all sides of me the witness of desperation, I began to be irritated
-at the way in which, in view of our long friendship, they accepted it
-for me.
-
-As the holiday season approached, without any change in my circumstances
-other than a steady diminution of my bank account, I came to the
-conclusion that the only possible move was toward New York and that I
-should have to ask Henry to advance me the money for it. In view of what
-came to me afterward it was a reasonable proposition, but I reckoned
-without that extraordinary blankness to the processes of art which is
-common to those most entertained by it.
-
-It was a day or two after Christmas, from which I had been excused by my
-recent bereavement, that I went out to dinner there with the
-determination to bring something to pass commensurate with their usual
-attitude of high admiration for and confidence in my gift. We had gone
-into the library after dinner, at least it was a room that went by that
-name, though I don't know for what reason except that Henry smoked there
-and the furniture was upholstered in leather, as in Evanston it was
-indispensable that all libraries should be.
-
-Here and there were touches that suggested that if Henry moved his
-income up a notch or two, Pauline's taste might not be able to keep pace
-with it. Henry warmed his back at the gas log and wished to know how
-things went with me.
-
-"As well as I could expect them _here_. I've made up my mind to try for
-New York as soon as I can manage it."
-
-"What's the matter with Chicago?" Henry's manner implied that whatever
-you believed about it, you'd have to show him.
-
-"Well, I'd have to be capitalized to do anything here the same as in New
-York, and the field there is larger." I went on to explain something of
-what the metropolis had to offer.
-
-"I guess the worst thing about Chicago is that you're out of a job.
-People don't get sore on a place where they are doing well."
-
-"No. They generally light out for a place where there are more jobs." I
-thought I should get on better if I took Henry in his own key, but he
-forged ahead of me.
-
-"If there's anything the matter with your acting, why don't you ask
-somebody?"
-
-"There's nobody to ask. Besides, there isn't anything the matter with
-it; the matter is with me."
-
-"Well, I must say I don't see the difference."
-
-"Oh!" I cried. I hadn't realized that they wouldn't just take my word
-for it. "It is because I am empty--empty!" I trailed off, seeing how
-wide I was of his understanding. I shouldn't have questioned Henry
-Mills's word about the capitalization of a joint stock company; and I
-resented their discounting my own statement of my difficulties. Pauline
-got hold of my hand and patted it. I wondered if it was because all her
-own crises were complicated with Henry Mills that she always thought
-that affectionateness was part of the answer.
-
-"It is only that, with all your Gift, Henry can't understand how you
-need anything else," she extenuated.
-
-"I need food and clothes," I blurted out; "pretty soon I shall need a
-lodging."
-
-"Oh, my dear!" Pauline was shocked at the indelicacy. I don't know if
-she didn't understand how poor I was, or if it was only the general
-notion of the sheltered woman, to find in complaint a kind of heresy
-against the institution by which they are maintained. "After all," she
-caught up with her accustomed moral attitude, "there's a kind of
-nobility in suffering for your art. It's what gives you your spiritual
-quality." I thought I recognized the phrase as one that was current in
-the women's clubs of that period. I took hold of my courage desperately.
-
-"Well, I'm offering you a chance to suffer two thousand dollars' worth."
-Pauline's tact was proof even against that.
-
-"You Comedy Child!" she laughed indulgently.
-
-"You're getting ideas," Henry burbled on cheerfully; "all these
-long-hairs and high-brows you've been associating with, they've filled
-you up. That friend of yours, McDermott, somebody had him to the club
-the other day, talking about the conservation of Genius. Nothing in it.
-Let them work for their money the same as other people, I say."
-
-"You know you didn't have any money to begin with," Pauline reminded me.
-I was made to feel it a consideration that she hadn't pressed the point
-that if I couldn't do again what I had done then, there was something
-lacking in the application. They must have taken my gesture of despair
-for surrender.
-
-"I guess you were just getting it out of your system," Henry surmised
-comfortably.
-
-It was not the first nor the last time that I was to come squarely up
-against the lay conviction that whatever might be known about the
-processes of art, it wasn't the artist that knew it. Later, when Henry
-took me out to the car, he came round to what had been back of the whole
-conversation.
-
-"I suppose you could use more money in your business; most of us could,"
-he advised me, "but you don't want to let people find it out. There's
-nothing turns men against a woman so much as to have her always thinking
-about money."
-
-It was a very cold night as I came down the side street to my door,
-deserted as a country road. The narrow footpath trodden in the pavement
-looked like the track of desolation, the cold flare of the lamps was
-smothered in sodden splashes of snow. There had been the feeling of
-uneasiness in the air that goes before a storm all that forenoon, and in
-the interval that I had been revaluing a lifelong friendship in terms of
-what it wouldn't do for me, it had settled down to a heavy clogging
-snow. I was startled as I turned in at the entry to find a man behind
-me. He had come up unsuspected in the soft shuffle and turned in with
-me.
-
-By the light that filtered through the weather-fogged transom I saw that
-he was Griffin of the Varieté. Now as I fumbled blindly at the latch he
-came close to me.
-
-"Beg pardon!" He had put out his hand over mine and turned the key for
-me.
-
-"My fingers are so cold," I apologized. I turned my face toward him with
-the stiffness of cold and tears upon it and there was an answering
-commiseration in his eyes. I reached out for the key and he took my hand
-in his, holding it to his breast with a movement of excluding human
-kindness. If the gesture was at all theatrical I did not feel it. I let
-him hold it there for a moment before I went in and shut the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Depression, as well as the storm which held on heavily all night and the
-next day, kept me close, and the state of my coal bin kept me in bed
-most of the next day. Along late in the afternoon I was aroused from a
-lethargy of cold and crying, by Leon Griffin tapping at the door to know
-how I did. The snow by this time had settled down to a blinding drift,
-and the thermometer had fallen into an incalculable void of cold.
-Griffin was in his overcoat as though he had just come in or was just
-going out, though I learned later he had been sitting in it all day in
-his room. The impression it created of his being in the act of passing,
-led me to open my door to him, as I otherwise might not have done. A
-terrible, cold blast came in with him and a clattering of the shutters
-on the windward wall of the house. Outside, the day was falling dusk;
-there was no light in the room but the square blank of the window
-curtained by the sliding screen of snow, and my little stove which
-glowed like a carbuncle in its corner.
-
-"You're cozy here"--he put it as an excuse for lingering, for I hadn't
-asked him to have a chair--"you hardly feel the wind. On my side there's
-a trail of snow half across the room where the wind whips it in between
-the casings."
-
-Though he had come ostensibly to offer me a neighbourly attention, he
-was plainly in need of it himself; it was his last night at the Varieté
-and, between the storm and the depression of having nothing to turn to,
-he was coming down with a cold. I had him into my one easy chair and
-suggested tea.
-
-"I hardly slept any last night," he apologized over his second cup, "the
-shutter clacks so." I could hear it now like the stroke of desolation.
-
-That night when I heard him stamping off the snow in the hall, I had a
-hot drink for him, but when I saw him, by the rakish light of the hall
-lamp, wringing his hands with the cold before taking it, I insisted he
-should come on into my still warm room. I had to turn back first to
-light my own lamp and, in respect to my being in my dressing gown with
-my hair in two braids, to slip into my bedroom and experience, as I
-looked back at him through the crack in the door, the kind of softening
-a woman has toward a man she has made comfortable. The light of my lamp,
-which was shaded for reading, like a miniature calcium, brought out for
-me the frayed edge of his overcoat and all the waste and misuse of him,
-the kind of faded appeal that sort of man has for a woman; forlorn as he
-was, as he put the bowl back on the table, I was so much more forlorn
-myself that I was glad to have been femininely of use to him.
-
-Pauline wrote me to come out and stay with her during the protracted
-cold spell, but owing to the difficulty in delivery, the invitation
-failed to reach me until the severity of the weather was abated. In any
-case I was still too sore at what seemed to me the betrayal of my long
-confidence, to have been willing to have subjected myself to any
-reminders of it. And whatever kindness Pauline meant, it could hardly
-have done so much for me as Leon Griffin did by just needing me. It
-transpired that he had no stove in his room, and the heat from the
-register for which we were definitely charged in the rent, scarcely
-modified the edge of the cold. For the next two or three days we spent
-much of the time huddled over my stove. Snow ceased to fall on the
-second day, and nothing moved in our view except now and then the
-surface of it was flung up by the wind, falling again fountain-Pwise
-into the waste of the untrampled housetops that stretched from my window
-to the icy flat of the lake darkening under a dour horizon. Somehow,
-though I had never been willing to confess to my friends how poor I was,
-I made no bones of it with Griff, as I had heard Cecelia call him, a
-name that seemed somehow to suit the inconsequential nature of our
-relation better than his proper title. We frankly pooled our funds in
-the matter of food, which one or another of us slipped out to buy, and
-cooked on my stove. I took an interest in preparing it, such as I
-hadn't since the times when I imagined I was helping Tommy on the way to
-growing rich, and when the room was full of a warm savoury smell and the
-table pulled out from the wall to make it serve for two, we felt, for
-the time, restored to the graciousness of living. We fell back on the
-uses of domesticity, by association providing us with a sense of life
-going on in orderliness and stability. It came out for me in these
-moments that it is after all life, that Art needs rather than feeling,
-and that, to a woman of my capacity, was to be supplied not by innocuous
-intrigues like Jerry's but by the normal procedure of living. I believe
-I felt myself rather of a better stripe, to find it so in the domestic
-proceeding, though I do not really know that my necessity was any whit
-superior to Miss Filette's, except in offering the minimum possibility
-of making anybody unhappy by it. But because I knew my friends would
-think it ridiculous that I could lay hold of power again by so
-inconsiderable a handle as Leon Griffin, I suffered a corroding
-resentment. Griffin was getting up a new act for himself, and evenings
-as I helped him with it, I felt a faint stirring of creative power. When
-he had finished, I would take the shade off the lamp and render scenes
-for him from my favourite Elizabethan drama; and in the face of his
-unqualified admiration for me, I could almost act.
-
-Toward the end of the week as the cold abated, Mr. Griffin asked me to
-see a play in which some of his friends were playing; and Jerry being
-prodigal of favours, I responded with an invitation to "The Futurist." I
-hadn't mentioned Griff to Sarah, I never more than mentioned him to any
-of my friends, but I saw no reason why I should not speak of them to
-him, especially when they were so much upon the public tongue as Sarah
-was just then.
-
-"Croyden?" he said; "isn't that an unusual name?" He appeared to be
-puzzling over it. "I seem to remember a town somewhere by that name."
-
-"In New York," I told him. I was on the point of telling him how Sarah
-came by it, but an impulse of discretion saved me. I had seen "The
-Futurist" so many times now, that, once at the theatre, I occupied
-myself with looking at the audience and took no sort of notice of my
-escort until after Sarah's entrance near the close of the first act.
-
-"Well?" I laid myself open to compliments for my friend. I was startled
-by what I saw when I looked at him. He had shrunk away into the corner
-of his seat farthest from me, like a man whose garment had fallen from
-him unawares. The stark naked soul of him fed visibly upon her bodily
-perfection; Sarah's beauty took men like that sometimes when they were
-able to see it--there were those who thought her merely nice-looking. I
-could see his tongue moving about stealthily to wet his dry lips. I
-couldn't bear to look at him like that; it seemed a pitiful thing for a
-man to ache so with the beauty of a woman he had long ceased to deserve;
-it was as though he had laid bare some secret ache in me.
-
-Coming out of the theatre he surprised me with a knowledge of Sarah's
-affairs. He knew that she had begun with O'Farrell.
-
-"I played with him myself," he admitted; "that was before
-Miss--Miss----"
-
-"Croyden," I supplied; "that was the town she came from; I shouldn't
-have told you except that you seem to know."
-
-"I was expecting another name. Wasn't she--wasn't she married once? A
-fellow by the name of Lawrence."
-
-"Oh, well, you may call it married. He was a cur."
-
-"You can't tell me anything about him worse than I know myself." From
-the earnestness of his tone I judged that he had suffered something at
-the hands of Lawrence. "But I'll say this for him, he didn't stay with
-the other woman; she followed him and found him, but he wouldn't stay
-with her."
-
-"I don't see that that proves anything except that he was the greater
-scoundrel. The other woman was his wife."
-
-"It proves that he loved Miss Croyden best--that he couldn't bear the
-other woman after her." I thought it was no use matching ethical ideals
-with him and I let the matter drop. It came back to me next day that if
-he had been with O'Farrell in Lawrence's time, he might have known
-something of the other Shamrocks. I meant to ask him about it in the
-morning, but put it off as I observed that the recollection of it seemed
-to have stirred him past the point of being able to sleep. He was pale
-in the morning, and the rings under his eyes stood out plainly; he had
-the whipped look of a man who has been so long accused of misdemeanour
-that he comes at last to believe he has done it. I could see the impulse
-to confess hovering over him, and the hope that I might find in his
-misbehaviours the excusing clue which he was vaguely aware must be
-there, but couldn't himself lay hands on. I suppose souls in the Pit
-must have movements like that--seeking in one another the extenuations
-they can't admit to themselves.
-
-We didn't, however, strike the note of confidence until it was evening.
-Griffin kept up the form of looking for an engagement, which occupied
-his morning hours, and in the afternoon Jerry came in to see how I had
-come through the cold spell, and to win my interest with his wife to
-consent to his going as far as St. Louis with "The Futurist." I forget
-what reasons he had for thinking it advisable, except that they were all
-more or less complicated with Miss Filette.
-
-"But, heavens, Jerry, haven't you ever heard of the freemasonry of
-women? How can you think my sympathies wouldn't be with your wife?
-Especially in her condition."
-
-"It's only for a week; and, you know, except for her fussing, she is
-perfectly well. And look here, Olivia, you know exactly why I have to
-have--other things; why I can't just settle down to being--the plain
-head of the family." His tone was accusing.
-
-"I know why you _think_ you have to. Honest, Jerry, is it so imperative
-as all that?"
-
-"Honest to God, Olivia, unless I'm ... interested ... I can't write a
-word." His glance travelling over my dull little room and makeshift
-furniture, the cheap kerosene lamp, the broken hinge of the stove. "You
-ought to know," he drove it home to me. I felt myself involved by my
-toleration of Griffin in a queer kind of complicity.
-
-"What do you want me to do?"
-
-"Tell her you think it is to the advantage of the play for me to be
-there in St. Louis for the opening. It's always good for an interview,
-and that's advertising." After all I suppose I wouldn't have done it if
-I hadn't found his wife in a wrapper at four o'clock in the afternoon,
-when I went out there. If she wouldn't make any better fight for
-herself, who was I to fight for her? And as Jerry said, for him to be
-with the play, meant advertising.
-
-I talked it over with Griffin that evening, as we sat humped over my
-tiny stove before the lamps were lighted. Outside we could see the roofs
-huddling together with the cold, and far beyond, the thin line of the
-lake beaten white with the wind in a fury of self-tormenting. It made me
-think of poor little Mrs. Gerald under the lash of her husband's
-vagaries.
-
-"I can't help think that she'd feel it less if she made less fuss about
-it," I protested. Griffin shook his head.
-
-"It's a mercy she can do that; it's when you can't do anything it eats
-into you."
-
-I reflected. "There was a woman I knew who looked like that. O'Farrell's
-leading lady; she was jealous and there was nothing she could do. She
-looked gnawed upon!"
-
-"Miss Dean, you mean?"
-
-"I forgot you said that you knew her." I wanted immensely to know how he
-came to be mixed up with her. "She was jealous of me, but there was no
-cause. How well did you know her?"
-
-"I ... she ... I was married to her." His face was mottled with
-embarrassment; it occurred to me that his confusion must have been for
-his complicity in the fact of their not being married now, but he set me
-right. "I oughtn't to have told it on her, I suppose. She married me to
-go on the stage. I was boarding at her mother's and I couldn't have
-afforded to marry unless she had. You don't know how handsome she was. I
-knew she couldn't act.... I can't myself, but I know it when I see it.
-Her father had been an actor of a sort; he had taught her things, and I
-thought I could pull her along."
-
-"She _has_ got on." I let the fact stand for all it was worth.
-
-"Yes, she had something almost as good as acting ... she could get hold
-of people."
-
-"She had O'Farrell. Was it on his account you separated?"
-
-"Long before that. You see she could handle the managers in her own
-interest, but she didn't know what to do with me. So I--I got out of her
-way." Griffin's clothes were too loose for him, and his hair, which
-wanted trimming, disposed itself in what came perilously near to being
-ringlets, accentuating the effect of his having been shrivelled, and
-shrunk within the mark of his capacity. There was a certain shame about
-him as he made this admission, that made me feel that though to leave
-his wife free to seek her own sort of success had been a generous thing
-to do, it was all he could do; his moral nature had suffered an
-incurable strain.
-
-"Griff, did they tell you when you were young, that love was all bound
-up with what you should do in the world and what you could get for it?"
-
-"They never told me anything; I had to find it out."
-
-"Jerry too; he thought he was going to have a graceful, docile creature
-to keep him in a perpetual state of maleness. I should have thought
-you'd have left the stage after that," I said, reverting to the personal
-instance.
-
-"I ought to have, but somehow I kept feeling her; even when I wasn't
-thinking of her I could feel her somewhere pulling me. It was like
-living in the house where some one has died, and you keep thinking
-they're just in the next room and you don't want to go away for fear
-you'll lose them altogether."
-
-"I understand."
-
-The afternoon light had withdrawn into the bleak sky without
-illuminating it. I threw open the stove for the sake of the ruddy light,
-and the intimacy of our sitting there drew me on to counter confession.
-
-"It's like that with me all the time," I said, "only there hasn't really
-been anybody. Sarah says there doesn't have to be anybody; that we only
-think so because we have felt it that way once. She thinks it is
-just ... Personality ... whatever there is that we act to."
-
-"Well, I know you have to have it, anyway you can get it."
-
-"O'Farrell used to call it feeling your job. I wonder where he is now."
-So the talk drifted off to the perpetual professionalism of the
-unsuccessful, to incidents of rehearsals and engagements. I believe it
-would have been good for me to have run my mind in new pastures, but
-there was nobody to open the gates for me.
-
-I said as much to Sarah the very next time I saw her; it seemed a way of
-getting at what I hadn't yet told her, that I was within a week or two
-of the end of my means. I had the best of reasons for not calling my
-case to her attention, in the readiness with which she offered herself
-to my necessity.
-
-"You must go to New York of course; I've three hundred dollars, and I
-could send you something every month----" I cut her off absolutely.
-
-"I'd rather try Cecelia Brune's plan first," I assured her.
-
-"Not while you have me;" she was firm with me. "Besides, you don't
-really know that Cecelia----"
-
-"Didn't buy her diamond sunburst on thirty-five a week!" I told her all
-that Griffin had said. Sarah looked worried.
-
-"I'll tell you about the diamonds. About a year ago, while you were with
-the Hardings, she got into trouble. Oh, she loved him as much as she was
-able! He gave her the diamonds; but Cecelia cared. And then when the
-trouble came, he deserted her. That's what Cecelia couldn't understand.
-She had never given anything before, and she didn't realize that that
-had been her chief advantage. It gave her a scare."
-
-But in spite of Sarah's confidence in Cecelia's bitter experience
-keeping her straight, I could see that she had taken what Griffin had
-told me to heart. A day or two later she referred to the matter again.
-
-"If she goes over the line once, and doesn't have to pay for it, she is
-lost." She was standing at my window looking out over the roofs and
-chimneys cased in ice, and she might, for all the mark her profession
-has left on her, been looking across the pasture bars. I was irritated
-at her detachment, and her interest, in the face of my own problem, in
-an affair so unrelated as Cecelia Brune's.
-
-"Why do you care so much?"
-
-"You'd care too, if you had seen as much of her; it's like watching a
-drowning man: you don't stop to ask if he's worth it before you plunge
-in!"
-
-"I can't swim myself," I protested.
-
-I didn't want to be dragged in, rescuing Cecelia; I had myself to save
-and wasn't sure I could do it. It was after this talk, however, that
-Griff, who still hung about the Varieté from habit, told me that Sarah
-had fallen into the way of stopping to pick up Cecelia on her way home
-from her own theatre. He thought it a futile performance.
-
-"Nothing can stop that kind; they don't always know it, but that's what
-draws them to the stage in the first place. It's a kind of
-what-do-you-call-it, going back to the thing they were a long time ago."
-
-"Atavism," I supplied; I thought it very likely. All the centuries of
-bringing women up to be toys must have had its fruit somehow. Cecelia
-was made to be played with; she wasn't serviceable for anything else.
-And what was more, I didn't care to be identified with her even in the
-Christian attitude of a rescuer. I said as much to Sarah one evening
-about a week later, when I had gone with Jerry to give my opinion of
-some changes in the cast, preparatory to going on the road with his
-play, and in the overflow of his satisfaction at the way the audience
-rose to them, he had asked me to go to supper with him. Then as Sarah
-joined us and the spirit of the crowd caught him, pouring along the
-street, bright almost as by day and with the added brightness of evening
-garments, Jerry, always open to the infection of the holiday mood,
-proposed that for once we stretch a point by going to supper at
-Reeves's. Sarah and I demurred as women will at such a proposal from a
-man whose family exigencies are known to them, but Sarah found a
-prohibitory objection in a promise she professed to have made, to go
-around for Cecelia on her way home, which Jerry promptly quashed by
-including her in the invitation. I protested.
-
-"Supper at Reeves's is quite enough of an adventure for one time.
-Cecelia paints."
-
-"Not really," Sarah protested. "It's only that she uses so little
-make-up that she doesn't think it necessary to take it off."
-
-"All the better," insisted Jerry. "I never did take supper at Reeves's
-with a painted lady, and I'm told it is quite one of the things to do."
-
-I let it pass rather than spoil his high mood. It was not more than
-three blocks to the Varieté, and at the stage door Sarah insisted on
-getting out herself.
-
-"Why did you let her?" I protested to Jerry.
-
-"Because it will please her, and Miss Brune will be gone; Sarah doesn't
-realize how late we are." I could see her returning through the fogged
-glass of the stage door.
-
-"Cecelia's gone! The man said she was going to Reeves's too; we can pick
-her up there."
-
-"Oh," I objected, "I can stand Cecelia, but I draw the line at her
-gentleman friends. She didn't go there alone, I fancy."
-
-"We'll have a look at him, anyway, before we give him the glad hand,"
-Jerry temporized.
-
-The cab discharged us into the press of black-coated men and
-bright-gowned women that at that hour poured steadily into the anteroom
-of Reeves's, which was level with the pavement, divided from it by a
-screen of plate glass and palms. Beyond that and raised by a few steps,
-was the palm room, flanked on either side by dressing rooms; and opening
-out back, the great revolving doors, muffled with crimson curtains, that
-received the guests and sorted them like a hopper, according to the
-degree of their resistance to the particular allurements of Reeves's.
-There was a sleek, satin-suited attendant who swung the leaves of the
-door at just the right angle that inducted you to the public café, or to
-the corridor that led to private rooms, and was famed never to have made
-a mistake. Jerry dared us hilariously as we went up the steps, to put
-his discrimination to the test.
-
-"You and I alone then; Olivia's black dress would give us away," Sarah
-insisted.
-
-"I want you to stay here and watch for Cecelia," she whispered to me; "I
-must see her; I _must_."
-
-Her going on with Jerry would give her an opportunity to look through
-the café; if Cecelia hadn't already arrived, I would be sure to see her
-come in with the crowd that broke against the bank of palms into two
-streams of bright and dark, proceeding to the dressing rooms, and
-returning by twos and threes to be swallowed up by the hopper turning
-half unseen behind its velvet curtains. I slipped behind a group of
-bright-gowned women waiting for their escorts under the palms. I was
-hypnotized by the movement and the glitter; I believe I forgot what I
-was looking for; and all at once she was before me.
-
-The theatrical quality of Cecelia's prettiness and the length of her
-plumes would have picked her out anywhere even without the blackened rim
-of the eyelids and the air she had always of having just stepped into
-the spot light.
-
-She had stationed herself, with her professional instinct for effect,
-just under the Australian fern tree, waiting for her escort, and in the
-moment it took me to gather myself together he joined her. I had come up
-behind Cecelia and was brought face to face with him; it wasn't until he
-had wheeled into step with her that he saw me and his face went mottled
-all at once and settled to a slow purple. Cecelia was magnificent.
-
-"Oh, you here! How de do!" She slipped her hand under her escort's arm
-and sailed out with him. I caught the glint of the brass-bound door
-under the curtains. I don't know how long I stood staring before I
-started after her, to be met by the leaves of the revolving door which,
-reversing its motion, projected Sarah and Jerry into the palm room
-beside me.
-
-"I have been all over the café----" Sarah began.
-
-"Didn't you meet her?"
-
-"In the café? I was just telling you ..."
-
-"No, no. In the corridor, just now; they went through."
-
-"But they couldn't," urged Sarah. "I was standing at the door of the
-café with Jerry ..." The truth of the situation began to dawn on her.
-
-"There's such a crowd, of course you missed her." Jerry began to build
-up a probability by which we could sustain Sarah through the supper
-which followed. We all of us talked a great deal as people will when
-they are anxious not to talk of a particular thing. When we were in the
-dressing room again, putting on our wraps, Sarah turned on me.
-
-"She wasn't in the café at all," she declared.
-
-"I never said she was. I said she went through into the corridor." In
-the silence I could feel Cecelia dropping into the pit.
-
-"Did you know the man?"
-
-I nodded. "It was Henry Mills!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Before I had an opportunity to talk the incident over with Sarah, she
-had seen Cecelia.
-
-"She is perfectly furious with you," she reported. "She hasn't heard
-from Mr. Mills since, and she thinks it is on your account; that you
-have taken steps for breaking it off."
-
-"Well, if she admits there was something to break off ... I tell you,
-Sarah, you are fretting yourself to no purpose, the girl had been there
-before."
-
-"I'm afraid so." Sarah's taking it so much to heart was a credit to her,
-but I was more curious than commiserating.
-
-"Tell me, what is in the mind of a girl when she does things like that?
-What does she get out of it?"
-
-"Excitement, of course; the sense of being in the stir, and the feeling
-of being protected. She says Mr. Mills has been kind to her. It is odd,
-but she seems to think it is all right so long as it is going on; it is
-only when it is broken off she can't bear it. That is why she is so
-angry at you."
-
-"There might be something in that," I conceded. "When it is broken off
-she is able to realize how cheap and temporary it has been; while it is
-going on she can justify it on the ground that it is going on forever.
-That _would_ justify it, I suppose." I did not know how I knew this, but
-lately I had discovered in myself capacities for understanding a great
-many things of which I had had no experience. What concerned me was not
-Cecelia's relation to the incident.
-
-"Whatever am I going to do about going there again, to Pauline's, I
-mean?"
-
-"You can't tell!"
-
-"And I can't go there and not tell. I've got to choose between deceiving
-Pauline and condoning Henry, and I've no disposition to do either."
-Sarah thought it over.
-
-"There is only one thing you can do. You'll simply have to go to New
-York."
-
-"For a great many reasons besides. You needn't tell me that. But how?
-How?"
-
-"You know what I offered----"
-
-"What I refused. It is out of the question. Don't speak of it."
-
-"I suppose after this you couldn't ask the Millses?"
-
-"Sarah ... I did ask."
-
-"Well?" All her interest hung upon the interrogation.
-
-"They told me it was good for my spiritual development to suffer these
-things." We faced one another in deep, unsmiling irony. "Sarah, what do
-you suppose it costs a man for supper and a private room at Reeves's?"
-
-"Don't!" she begged. "It's only a step from that to Cecelia."
-
-"Yes; I remember she said that men never afforded protection to women
-except for value received."
-
-"You must go to New York," Sarah reiterated. "You must!"
-
-The truth was I had never told Sarah exactly how poor I was.
-
-In the end I let her go away without telling; at the worst I thought I
-might borrow from Jerry, who had given up the notion of going to St.
-Louis, largely no doubt because I had failed to back him up in it
-completely, and then just at the end changed his mind and went anyway. I
-knew nothing about it until Jerry wrote me from Springfield, for I had
-grown shy of going there where all Mrs. McDermott's conversation was set
-like a trap to catch me in something that would convict Jerry of
-misdemeanour. Jerry asked me to visit her in his absence, but I put it
-off as long as possible. I had to settle first about going to Pauline's.
-I arranged to spend the afternoon there, meaning to come away before
-dinner and so by leaving Henry to discover my attitude in the
-circumstance of my having been there without destroying his home, open
-the way to my meeting him again without embarrassment. To do that I
-should have left the house before the persuasive smell of the dinner
-began to creep up the stairs into the warm, softly lighted rooms, but
-from the beginning of my visit, Pauline, in order that I might not feel
-her failure to put her affection more cogently, had wound me about as
-with a cocoon of feminine devices, from which I hadn't been able to
-extricate myself earlier. I am not blaming her, I am not sure, indeed,
-seeing how completely she justified herself to Henry Mills by what she
-had to offer, that I had any right to expect her to understand how
-completely her playful and charming affectionateness failed of any
-possible use to me. But I felt myself so far helpless in the presence of
-it, that I stayed on until the smell of the roast unloosened all the
-joints of my resolution. I hadn't realized how hungry I was until I
-found myself at a point where what Henry might think of me became
-inconsiderable before the possibility of my being put out of the house
-before dinner was served.
-
-At the same time I could have wept at the indignity of wanting food so
-much. I remember to this day the wasteful heaping of the children's
-plates, and my struggle with the oblique desire to smuggle portions of
-my helping home to Griff, who looked even more of a stranger than I to
-soup and fish and roast, to say nothing of dessert.
-
-It wasn't until we had got as far as the salad that I had leisure to
-observe Henry grow rather red about the gills as he fed, and speculate
-as to how far it was due to his consciousness that I could bring down
-the pillars of his home with a word, and didn't intend to.
-
-There was nothing said during dinner about my prospects or the stage in
-general, but when Henry took me out to the car about nine o'clock, he
-cleared his throat several times as though to drag the subject up from
-the pit of his stomach, where it must have lain very uneasily.
-
-"You know," he began, "I've been thinking about that scheme of yours of
-going to New York. I am inclined to think there is something in it."
-
-"I haven't thought about it for a long time," I told him, which was only
-true in so far as I thought of it as a possibility.
-
-"It would freshen you up a whole lot," Henry insisted. "Everybody needs
-freshening. I have been taking a little stir about myself." So that was
-the way he wished me to think of his relation to Cecelia!
-
-"I've given it up," I insisted.
-
-We were standing under the swinging arc light in a bare patch the wind
-had cleared of the fine, white February grit. Little trails of it blew
-up under foot and were lost among the wind-shaken shadows. I could see
-Henry's purpose bearing down on me like the far spark of the approaching
-trolley.
-
-"I wouldn't do that," he advised. "It looks like pretty good business to
-me. You'd have to stay there some time to learn the ropes and if a few
-hundred dollars----"
-
-"I've given it up," I said again. The car came alongside and Henry
-helped me on to it.
-
-"If you were at any time to reconsider it, I hope you will let me
-know----" The roar of the trolley cut him off.
-
-I knew I was a fool not to have accepted the sop to my discretion; I
-don't know for what the Powers had delivered Henry Mills into my hands,
-if it wasn't to get out of his folly what his sober sense refused me.
-Without doubt there are some forms of integrity that, persisted in,
-cease to be a virtue and become merely a habit; I could no more have
-taken Henry Mills's money than I could have gone to New York without it.
-I went home shivering to my fireless little room. I put on my nightgown
-over my underwear and my dressing gown over that, and cried myself to
-sleep.
-
-It was a day or two later that I recalled that Jerry had asked me to go
-out and see his wife, and I thought if I must ask Jerry for help, it
-would be no more than prudent for me to do so, but I wasn't in the least
-prepared as I went up the path, from which the snow of the week before
-had never been cleared, to find the house shut and barred, and no smoke
-issuing from it. I made my way around to the kitchen door to try to
-discover some sign which would give me a clue to the length of time it
-had been deserted, if not the reason for it.
-
-While I was puzzling about among the empty milk bottles and garbage
-cans, a neighbour woman put her head out of a nearby window and
-announced the obvious fact that Mrs. McDermott wasn't in.
-
-"But in her condition----" I protested as though my informant had been
-in some way responsible for it.
-
-"Well, if her own mother's isn't the best place for a woman in her
-condition!... Three days ago," she answered to my second question. Mrs.
-McDermott's mother lived in Peoria, and I knew that when Jerry left
-there had been no such understanding, but as lingering there ankle deep
-in the dry snow didn't seem to clear the affair, I undertook to rid
-myself of a sense of blame by writing all that I knew of it to Jerry
-within the hour. It was the third day after that he came storming in on
-me like a man demented. He had been to Peoria immediately on receipt of
-my letter and his wife had refused to see him. It hardly seemed a time
-for indirection.
-
-"Jerry, what have you done?" I demanded.
-
-"Nothing--not a thing." I waited. "There was a fool skit in one of the
-St. Louis papers," he admitted. "The fool reporter didn't know I was
-married."
-
-"It was about you and Miss Filette?" He nodded.
-
-"She had bought all the St. Louis papers," he said, meaning his wife.
-
-"Well, that was natural; she wanted to read the notices; she was always
-proud of you."
-
-"She believed them too," he groaned. "And she's talked her mother over.
-They wouldn't even let me see the children." He put his head down on my
-table and sobbed aloud. I thought it might be good for him, but by and
-by my sensibilities got the better of me.
-
-"Would it do any good if I were to write?"
-
-"You? Oh, they think you're in it ... a kind of general conspiracy. You
-know you said that--that one of the things nobody had a right to deny an
-artist was the source of his inspiration."
-
-"Jerry! I said what you asked me." I was properly indignant too, when I
-had been so right on the whole matter. Besides, as Jerry had written
-little that winter except some inconsiderable additions to his play, I
-was rather of the opinion that he measured the validity of his passion
-by its importunity, rather than its effect on the sum of his production.
-"Besides, I told you you would never get your wife to understand."
-
-"If she would only be sensible," he groaned.
-
-"She isn't," I reminded him; "you didn't marry her to be sensible, but
-for her imagined capacity to go on repeating the tricks by which Miss
-Filette keeps you complacent with yourself. The trouble is, marriage and
-having children take that out of a woman."
-
-"An artist ought never to marry. I will always say that."
-
-I began to wonder if that were true, if Cecelia Brune were not after
-all the wiser. We beat back and forth on the subject for the time that I
-kept Jerry with me. The evening of the second day came a telegram.
-Jealousy tearing at the heart of poor little Mrs. McDermott had torn
-away the young life that nestled there.
-
-Jerry wrote me later that the baby had breathed and died and that his
-wife was likely to be ill a long time. In view of the extra expense
-incurred, I didn't feel that I ought to ask him for the loan I was now
-so desperately in need of.
-
-It was about this time that Griffin and I began to avoid one another
-about meal time. I have read how wild animals in sickness turn their
-backs on one another; one must in unrelievable misery ... we dodged in
-and out of our hall rooms like rabbits in a warren. And then suddenly we
-would meet and walk along the streets together, mostly at night when the
-alternate flare of the lamps and the darkness and the hurrying half-seen
-forms, numb the sense like the flicker of light on a hypnotist's screen,
-and we moved in a strange, incommunicable world out of which no help
-reached us. We saw women go by with the price of our redemption flashing
-at their breasts or in their hair. We saw men hurried, overburdened with
-work, and there was no work for us. In our own land we were exiled from
-the community of labour and we sighed for it more than the meanest
-Siberian prisoner for home. And then suddenly communication seemed to
-be reëstablished. Effie for no reason sent me half of the rent money. "I
-don't need it here, and I think maybe I shall get more out of it by
-investing it in you," she wrote. She had always such a way of making the
-thing she did seem the choice of her soul. I bought meat and vegetables
-and invited Griff to dinner. He took me that night to that sort of
-dreary entertainment known as musical comedy. He could often get tickets
-and it was a way of spending the evening that saved fuel. As we tramped
-back through the chill, trying for an effect of jocularity in his voice,
-so that he might seem to have made a joke in case I shouldn't like,
-Griff said to me.
-
-"I suppose you wouldn't go with a musical comedy?"
-
-"My dear Griff," I answered him in the same tone, "I'd go with a flying
-trapeze if only it paid enough."
-
-"I'm acquainted with Lowe, the tenor. I've been thinking I'd ask
-him----" We were as shy of speaking of an engagement as though it were
-wild game to be scared away by the mere mention of it.
-
-There was no reason why Griffin shouldn't have succeeded in musical
-comedy, he had a fairish voice and had turned his gift as many times as
-the minister's wife in Higgleston used to turn her black silk. It was
-not more than two days or three after that, as I was coming back to my
-cold room in the twilight--I had spent the day in the public library on
-account of the heat--and as I was fumbling at the lock as I had been
-that first evening he had spoken to me, I heard Leon Griffin come up the
-stair three steps at a time, and I knew before I heard it in his voice,
-that the times had turned for him. I struck out fiercely against a
-sudden blankness that seemed to swim up to the eyes and throat of me.
-
-He was trembling too as he came into the room.
-
-"Olive," he cried, "Olive, I've turned the trick. I'm going with the
-'Flim-Flams.'" That was the wretched piece we had seen together. He had
-never called me by my name before, and I had no mind to correct him. In
-the dusk he ran on about his engagement; they would go on the road
-presently and settle for the summer in some city. I heard him speak far
-from me. I was down, down in the pit of the cold room with the shabby
-furniture and the bleak light that disdained it from the one high
-window.
-
-"Don't take off your things," I heard him say. "I came to get you. We'll
-have a blow-out somewhere. Olive, Olive!" His quick sympathy came out,
-and the excusing charm. "Oh, my dear, you're crying!"
-
-"Griff, you're leaving me." It was as if I had accused him. I sank down
-in a chair; I was dabbling at my eyes and trying to get my veil off with
-cold fingers.
-
-"Not if you feel that way about it." He came and put his arms about me
-and constrained me until I leaned against his body. I knew what he was,
-what a man of that stamp must be feeling and thinking, and, knowing, I
-permitted it. I was crying still, I think ... his hands came fumbling
-under my veil ... presently he kissed me.
-
-"Olivia?"
-
-"Well, Griff!"
-
-"You know--it is for you to say if I shall leave you."
-
-"You mean that you will give up ... but how can you, Griff; it is the
-only thing that's been offered." We were sitting still on the low cot in
-my room and there was no light but the dull glow of the stove and the
-last trace of the day that came in at the window. We had not been out to
-dinner yet, and Griffin's arm was around me. I could feel it slack a
-little now as if he definitely forebore to constrain me.
-
-"I mean, Lowe could get you a place in the chorus."
-
-"But, Griff, I can't sing."
-
-"You can sing enough for that, and Lowe would get you the place if--if
-you belonged to me." I knew exactly what this implied, but no start
-responded to it. The nerve of propriety was ached out.
-
-"Of course I know I'm not in your class," Griff was going on. "I
-wouldn't do such a thing as ask you to marry me. But I'm awfully fond
-of you ... and you're up against it."
-
-"Yes, Griff, I'm up against it."
-
-"Your fine friends ... what would they do for you?"
-
-"Nothing whatever."
-
-"Well, then ... you needn't go under your own name, and this is a
-chance; you could live and maybe get somewhere. Lowe told me he meant to
-strike for Broadway. You aren't insulted, are you?"
-
-"No, I'm not insulted." Curiously that was true. I was drunk and shaking
-inside of me; I seemed to be poised upon the dizzying edge, but I was
-neither angry nor insulted.
-
-"And I'd never come back on you if you got your chance for yourself ...
-honest to God, Olive. I've had my lesson at that. You believe me, don't
-you?"
-
-I believed him. I hadn't any sense whatever of the moral values of the
-situation. It was too desperate for that.
-
-"I guess I ought to tell you ... I'm a bad sort ... bad with women.
-After I knew that my--that Miss Dean didn't want me, I didn't care what
-became of me. There was a woman in the company ... she liked me, and I
-thought it would give Laura a chance. That was what the divorce was
-about. I thought I could make it up to the other woman by marrying her.
-But that didn't work either." He was silent a while, forgetting perhaps
-that he had begun to explain himself to me. "There's a way you've got to
-like a person to live with them ... and, anyway, I'm not asking you to
-marry me." He got as much satisfaction out of that as if it were a
-superior abnegation.
-
-"You've got to decide, right away," Griffin urged me.
-
-"I must have a day to think," I insisted, not because I hoped that
-anything would interfere between me and disaster, but I wanted to be
-able to throw it up to the Powers that I had given them an opportunity.
-
-I knew what he was. I had always known. When he put his cheek against
-mine to kiss me I had felt the marks there of waste and looseness, just
-as I felt now that native trick he had for extenuation, for putting
-himself on the pathetic, the excusing side of things. But I did not
-shrink from him. I suppose it was because just then he was a symbol of
-the protection which I had so signally gone without. The need of
-trusting is stronger in women than experience. Nothing saved me but the
-persistent monitor of my art. Here, when all else was numbed by
-loneliness and hunger and unsuccess, it waked and warned me. I had not
-drawn back from Griffin nor the relation he proposed to me; but I
-couldn't stand for _Flim-Flam_. I think just at first, though, I made
-myself believe I was considering it.
-
-I went out to see Pauline the next afternoon. Not that I expected
-anything from her. It was merely that she represented all that stood
-opposed to what I was being coerced into, and I meant to give it a
-chance.
-
-"I am thinking of going with 'Flim-Flam'," I told her.
-
-"Oh, but my dear--surely not with that!"
-
-"I'll get eighteen dollars a week and my expenses."
-
-"Well, of course, if you want to sell yourself just for a salary!"
-Pauline's attitude could not have been improved on if she had known all
-that the engagement implied, but it wasn't in her to be ungracious for
-long. "I suppose you'll get experience?"
-
-"I'll get my board and clothes out of it," I told her bluntly. "And
-whether I like it or not, it is the only thing offered."
-
-"And you are just taking it on trust? I suppose that is the right way;
-you can never tell how things will be brought about." I don't know how
-much of this was honest, and how much derived from the capacity for
-self-deception which grows on women whose sole business in life is
-getting on with a man. At any rate, having shaken my situation around to
-the shape of a moral attitude, as a robin does a worm, nothing would
-have prevented her from swallowing it whole.
-
-Faint as I was I refused her invitation to dinner. With what I had in
-mind to do I didn't care to meet Henry Mills again. I was fiercer in my
-detestation of him and Cecelia than I had been before I had thought of
-being in the same case myself. I resented them as a ribald commentary on
-my necessity.
-
-As I rode home on the car, all my outer self was in a tumult, dazed and
-buzzing like a hive. I was dimly aware of moving, sitting upright, of
-paying my fare, and of great staring red posters that flashed upon me
-from the billboards. I remember that it occurred to me several times
-that if I could only understand what I read on them, it might be greatly
-to my profit. Somewhere deep under my confusion I was aware of being
-plucked by the fringes of my consciousness. Something was trying to get
-through to me.
-
-I refused to see Griffin at all that evening, and got into bed early,
-staring into the dark and seeing nothing but fragments of red letters
-that seemed about to shape themselves into the saving word, and then
-dissolved and left me blank. I tried to pray and realized that I had no
-connecting wires over which help might come.
-
-Belief in the God I had been brought up to, had been beaten out of me at
-Higgleston, very largely by the conviction of those who professed to
-know Him best, that He couldn't in any case be the God of my Gift. And
-I hadn't been thinking since then of the Something Without Us to which I
-acted, as Deity. Now it occurred to me, lying there in the dark, that if
-the God of the Church had cast me off, there must still be something
-which artists everywhere prayed to, a Distributer of Gifts who might be
-concerned about the conduct of His worshippers.
-
-I reached out for Him--and I did not know His name. I must pray though,
-I must pray to something which stood for Help. Slowly, as I cast back in
-my mind to find the name for it, I remembered Eversley. Eversley was
-everything which any player might wish to be, and Eversley had been
-kind. I would pray to Eversley. All at once there flashed across the
-blank of my mind, his name in letters of red. That was it! That was the
-name on the billboards! Eversley was in town. I recalled that Griff had
-spoken of it. I hadn't been able to spare a penny for a paper for a long
-time, or I should have known it. I would see Eversley. I got up and
-groped around in the cupboard for a piece of dry bread and ate it. Then
-I went back to bed and dropped asleep suddenly with the release of
-tension. To-morrow I would see Eversley.
-
-Griffin failed to understand my change of mood in the morning.
-
-"You aren't afraid that I shall try to hold you?"
-
-"No I'm not afraid."
-
-"Or that anybody will find it out?"
-
-"I shouldn't care if they did," I told him. "I'm going to see Eversley.
-I suppose it's fair to tell you, you'll be the last resort, Griff."
-
-"I'll be the foundation of your fortune, if Eversley will let me, but he
-won't." I think there was regret in his voice, but it was never in
-anything he said to me.
-
-"I know you're not mean, Griff; that's why I told you."
-
-"Oh, I'll tell you, too. I was mean once; I didn't mean to be, but it
-turned out that way." He was on the point of admitting something to me
-that I felt if I was to depend upon him I shouldn't hear.
-
-I got out as early as possible and walked until I found a billboard.
-Eversley was at the Playhouse; he had been playing here for three days.
-I walked past it several times considering the possibility of getting
-his address from the stage doorman, though I knew I couldn't.
-
-It was clear and bright, few people moved in the street. I walked
-between the alleyways and a row of ash-cans waiting for the belated
-carts of the cleaners. "Eversley, Eversley!" I called over and over as
-if it had been a charm. Suddenly in the still cold brightness, a torn
-fragment of newspaper flapped in the ash-can, it lifted and made a
-clumsy flight like a half-fledged bird and dropped beside me. Its one
-torn wing flapped gently as I passed it, and showed me part of a
-pictured face. I said to myself that I was in a pretty state when even
-a torn face in a paper looked like Eversley. I had gone on three steps,
-and suddenly I stopped. It was Eversley, of course; his picture would be
-in the papers. I went back and lifted the printed scrap. It was part of
-an interview with the great tragedian, three days old, and it told me
-the address of his hotel.
-
-It was nearly eleven when I arrived there. The foyer was crowded with
-people among whom I fancied I recognized several of my profession. They
-had the same desperate air that I knew must stand out on me. I thought
-the clerk recognized it.
-
-"Mr. Eversley is not in this morning," I was told. They pretended, too,
-not to know when he would be in. I understood that this meant that he
-was in, but probably asleep or breakfasting. I found a chair close to
-one of the elevators and waited. The room was warm and I was faint. I do
-not know how long I sat there; I must have been almost unconscious.
-Suddenly I snapped alert. There was Eversley and two or three others
-stepping into the elevator on the opposite side of the room. I was too
-late of course to catch them.
-
-"Mr. Eversley's apartments," I said to the elevator boy.
-
-"First turn to the left," he told me when he had let me out on the
-fourth floor. I was afraid to ask the number of the room lest he should
-suspect me of intruding. There were five or six doors down the left
-corridor. I knocked at one at a hazard, and was rejected by a large
-woman in deshabille. I was discouraged; somehow the prospect of knocking
-at every one of those doors and inquiring for Mr. Eversley daunted me. I
-was dividing between my dread of that and a still greater dread, if I
-should be found loitering too long in the corridor, of being taken for a
-suspicious person. In a few moments, however, a woman came out of one of
-the doors farthest down and moved toward me. I thought it was she I had
-seen getting into the elevator with Mr. Eversley; she had the gracious
-air of women who know themselves relied upon. She stopped, hypnotized by
-my evident wish to speak to her.
-
-"Mrs. Eversley?" She acknowledged it. "I am trying to find your husband;
-I have his permission," I interpolated as I saw her pleasant, open
-countenance close upon me. I learned afterward how much of her life went
-to saving him the strain of publicity, and I did not blame her.
-
-"My husband never sees visitors in the morning."
-
-"If you would show him this card," I begged. "Perhaps he would make an
-appointment." She recognized the writing on the card, and I saw her
-relenting. Mr. Eversley, it proved, would see me.
-
-He pretended kindly to have recognized me at once, but he didn't ask
-after the Hardings. He saw that it was the last lap with me.
-
-"My dear Miss Lattimore, sit here. Now, tell me."
-
-"So," I concluded at the end of half an hour, "I thought you could tell
-me if it is all gone. If I am never to have it back again, I can go with
-a musical comedy." I hadn't told him, of course, what the conditions
-were of my having even that, "but if you think it could be brought back
-again ..." I could hardly formulate a hope beyond that.
-
-"Never in the old way," he answered promptly. "_You_ wouldn't wish that.
-What you did at twenty you must not wish to do at thirty, for then there
-is no growth. What do you really feel about it?"
-
-"I feel," I said, "as if I could do something--something pressing to be
-done, but somehow different, so different that I do not know how to
-describe it to anybody nor to get them to believe in it."
-
-"And so you have begun to doubt it yourself?"
-
-"I shall believe you," I said.
-
-He sat still after that for a while, staring into the open fire and
-rubbing his fine expressive hands together in a meditative way. It was
-good to me to see him, just touched mellowly with age, the delicate
-carving in his face of nobility and gentleness. There were men like that
-then, men who made by their mere being, something more than a shibboleth
-of the traditional dependability. He seemed to be far away from me,
-groping around the root of truth in respect to that gift with which he
-was so richly endowed. He rose presently and took a play-book which lay
-face downward on the table.
-
-"Could you do a bit of this with me?" he suggested. "It will help me get
-my lines." The play was "Magda," new then on the American stage.
-Eversley was getting up the part of Colonel Schwartz. He explained the
-story to me a little and I began reading and prompting him. Presently I
-felt the familiar click of myself sliding into the part. All my winter
-in Chicago rose up in the part of _Magda_ to protest against the
-judgment of Taylorville.
-
-I knew better too than to attempt any sort of staginess with Eversley; I
-said the words, trying to understand them, and let the part have its way
-with me. It was not until we had laid down the book that I remembered I
-was still waiting judgment, and did not feel to want it.
-
-"I won't take up any more of your time," I suggested. "You have been
-very good to me." I got up to go. After all what was there that Eversley
-could do for me.
-
-"Well," he said, "and is it to be musical comedy?"
-
-"No," I told him, "no, it may be starvation or the lake, but I'll not
-let myself down like that.... Was that why you asked me to do the part?"
-I said after a while, in which he had sat gazing into the fire without
-taking any note of my standing.
-
-"Sit down," he said. "Have you ever heard of Polatkin?"
-
-I shook my head and sat provisionally on the edge of my chair.
-
-"Polatkin is a speculator; he speculates in ability. I think on the
-whole the best thing I can do for you is to introduce you to Polatkin."
-
-Mr. Eversley thought of Morris Polatkin because he had met him the day
-before in Chicago. Before I left the hotel it was arranged that I was to
-see him the next day, and if he liked me--by the tone in which Mark
-Eversley spoke of him I knew that was foregone--he would take me on to
-New York with him and put my gift on a paying basis.
-
-So suddenly had the release from strain come that I found myself
-toppling over my own resistance. I went out in the street and walked
-about until reminded by the gnawing in my stomach, that I had had
-nothing but the brewing of my twice-boiled coffee grounds for breakfast,
-I turned into the first attractive café and paid out almost my last cent
-for a comforting luncheon. It would have gone farther if I had bought
-food and cooked it at home, but I was past that. I had pinched and
-endured to the last pitch; I could no more. And besides the assurance of
-Mark Eversley, which as yet I could scarcely believe in, there had come
-a strange new courage upon me. For as I had suffered and struggled with
-_Magda_, suddenly from some high unknowable source, power descended. I
-had felt it fluttering low like a dove, hovering over me; it had perched
-on my spirit. I could feel it there now brooding about me with singing
-noises. It had come back! I rushed to meet it as to a lover.
-
-As I walked back to my lodging, a flood of hopes, half shapes of
-conquests and surmises, bore me like a widening flood apart from all
-that the last few months stood for. Suddenly at the door I realized how
-far it had carried me from Griffin; the figure of him was faint in my
-mind as one seen from the farther shore. I considered a little and then
-I wrote him a note and slipped it under the door. I went out again, and
-walked aimlessly all the rest of the afternoon, and when it was dark I
-stole softly up to my room again, but he heard me. He came knocking
-almost immediately, full of the appearance of rejoicing, but even the
-dusk didn't conceal from me that embarrassment was on him. He looked
-checked and confounded as when he had told me about his relation to Miss
-Dean, like a man caught in an unwarrantable assumption. Whatever Dean
-had done to him, it had broken the back of his egotism completely. He
-knew well enough he had no business with a woman like me, a friend of
-Mark Eversley's, and he was ashamed to have been caught thinking he had.
-He sidled and fluttered for an interval, making up his mind to a
-resumption of affectionateness, and finally making it up that he
-couldn't, and remembering an engagement somewhere for the evening.
-
-It was about eleven of the next day that I had a note from Eversley to
-come to his rooms to meet Mr. Polatkin. I went in a kind of haze of
-excitement, numb as to my feet and finger-tips, moving about by reflexes
-merely and with a vague doubt as each new point of the way presented
-itself, the car I took, the hotel stair, the length of the corridor, if
-I should be equal to any one of them, so far was my consciousness
-removed from the means of communication.
-
-Eversley shook hands with me out of a cloud, moving in an orbit miles
-outside of my own, and when he left me, saying that Polatkin would come
-up the next moment, it was as if he had withdrawn into the vastness of
-outer space. In the interval before I heard Mr. Polatkin's knock I
-rehearsed a great many ways of meeting him, none of which were from the
-right cue.
-
-I do not know why I hadn't been prepared by the name for his being a
-Jew, nor for the sudden shifting of the ground of our meeting which that
-fact made for me. So far as I had thought of him at all, it was in a
-kind of nebulosity of the high disinterestedness that was responsible
-for Mark Eversley's interest in me. It had been, his generous succour,
-all of a piece of that traditional protectiveness, the expectation of
-which is so drilled into women that it rose promptly in advance of any
-occasion for it. The mere supposition that he was to provide for me,
-had tinged my mind, unaware, with the natural response of a docility
-made ridiculous by the figure of Polatkin edging himself in through a
-door that an arrangement of furniture made impossible completely to
-open. His height did not bring him above the level of my eyes, and as
-much of him as was visible above his theatrical-looking, furred coat,
-was chiefly nose and pallid forehead disdained by tight, black, curly
-hair, and extraordinarily black eyes which seemed to have retreated
-under the brows for the purpose of taking council with the intelligence
-that informed them.
-
-I had put on my best to meet him, and though my husband had been dead
-more than two years, my best was still tinged with widowhood, for the
-chief reason that once having got into black I had not been able to
-afford to put it off for anything more suitable. I had put a good deal
-of white about the neck trying for an effect which I knew, as Polatkin's
-eyes travelled over me, had been feminine rather than professional. Now
-as I realized how I had unconsciously responded to the suggestion of
-preciousness in the fact of his coming to take care of me, I felt myself
-grow from head to foot one deep suffusing red. It comes out for me in
-retrospect how near I was to the situation which had intrigued Cecelia
-Brune and her kind, put at disadvantage, not by a monetary obligation so
-much as by the inevitable feminine reaction toward the source of care
-and protection. At the time, however, I was concerned to keep the
-stodgy little Jew, who stood hat in hand taking stock of me, from
-discovering that I had come to this meeting with a degree of personal
-expectation which I should have resented in him. I hoped indeed that my
-blush might pass with him for a denial of the very thing it confessed,
-or at least for mere shyness and gaucherie. I was helped from my
-confusion by the realization that Mr. Polatkin was not so much looking
-at me or speaking to me, as projecting me into the future and gauging me
-against a background of his own creation.
-
-I was standing still, after we had got through some perfunctory
-civilities, for I thought he would want me to act for him--but I found
-afterward that he had trusted Mr. Eversley for my capacity--and I had a
-feeling of being able to meet the situation better on my feet. I caught
-him looking at me with an irritating impersonality.
-
-"Jalowaski shall make your corsets," he affirmed; "he makes 'em for
-Eames and Gadski--a little more off there, a little longer here ...
-so...." He did not touch me, he was not even within touching distance,
-but he followed the outline of my figure with his thumb, flourishing out
-the alterations which made it more to his mind. "Jalowaski would fix you
-so you wouldn't believe it was you," he concluded.
-
-He appeared so well satisfied with his inspection that he expanded
-graciously. "And there is one thing you have which there is lots of
-actresses would give half they got for it. You have got imagination in
-the way you dress your hair. It is a wonder how some of them can act and
-yet ain't got no imagination at all about the way they look, only so it
-is stylish. For an actress it is all right for her to look stylish on
-the street, but there are times when she has to look otherways on the
-stage; y'understand me."
-
-I slid somehow into a chair; I don't know exactly what I expected, but
-it certainly hadn't been this appraisement, which I had the sense to see
-was favourable and yet resented.
-
-"The first thing we will see to yet, is some clothes; for you will
-excuse me, Miss Lattimore, but what you are wearing don't show you off
-at all. You don't need to wear black. Of course I know you are a widow,
-Mr. Eversley was telling me, but there are some actresses what make out
-like they was, because they think it becomes them, y' understand, but
-there is no need for you to wear it, for Mr. Eversley is telling me that
-your husband is dead more than two years already." He had loosened his
-coat to display an appropriate amount of gold fob dependent over a small
-balloon in the process of being inflated; now from somewhere in his
-inner recess he produced a folded paper.
-
-"It is better we have a contract from the start. Though of course it is
-all right if Mr. Eversley recommends you, but it is better we don't
-have misunderstandings." He spread the paper out and weighted it with
-one of his pudgy hands.
-
-"So you are going to take me ... you haven't seen me act yet."
-
-"Eversley has."
-
-"Well ... if you want to take his judgment ... but he hasn't told me
-anything about _you_ yet. What do you want of me; what are you going to
-do for me?"
-
-If Eversley had told him how desperate my situation was, it wasn't a
-good move to try to hold out against him now, it might have given him
-the idea that I was ungrateful, but I couldn't stand for being handed
-about this way like a female chattel. That Eversley had told him, I saw
-by the expression of astonishment on his face which slowly changed to
-one of amusement.
-
-"I'm going to save you from starving to death," he began, and then as
-the sense of my courage in the face of such an alternative grew upon
-him, "I'm going to make you one of the leading tragic actresses of
-America."
-
-"And what am I to do?"
-
-"Whatever I tell you. Eversley thinks you could study a while with Mrs.
-Delamater. She is wonderful, wonderful!" He described with his arms a
-circle scarcely larger than the arc of his cherubic contour, to show how
-wonderful she was.
-
-"I should like some dancing lessons, too," I submitted.
-
-"Do you dance? Ah, no, it is too much to expect; but if I could find me
-a dancer, Miss Lattimore, a born dancer!" He brought his arms into play
-again to describe a felicity which transcended expression. "But they are
-not so easy to find," he sighed audibly. "We must do what we can
-already."
-
-Eversley told me afterward that Polatkin had the soul of an actor, but
-the only part which he had ever been able to play without being
-ridiculous, was Fagin, and now he was too fat even for that, so that he
-took it out vicariously in the success of those whose opportunity he
-made. It was the dream of his life to find a real genius, a dancer or a
-prima donna; I believe I was the nearest he ever came to it; and I owe
-it to him to say that I couldn't have arrived at more than the faintest
-approach to it without him.
-
-It was that contract I signed with him there in Eversley's room which
-brought him in the end about three hundred per cent. on the money he
-advanced me, but I never begrudged it. He gave me a check then and
-there, and an address of a hotel in New York where I was to meet him
-within five days. He looked me well over as he shook hands with me.
-
-"You would be better if you would weigh about ten pounds more," he
-assured me, and I was mixed between resentment at his personality and
-thankfulness to have even that sort of interest taken in me. I had
-lunch with Mr. and Mrs. Eversley afterward; there was not time for half
-the things I wished to hear from him, but this sticks in my memory. I
-had put it to him that the meagreness of my personal experiences had, so
-far, tended to the skimping of my art.
-
-"There's no question as to that," he told me, "but it is nothing
-compared to the effect that your art will have on your experience. It's
-a mistake to let it set up in you an appetite for particular kinds of
-it. There's the experience of having done without experience, you can
-put that into your acting as well as the other, and you'll find it is
-often the most valuable." I was later to find the worth of that, but
-like most advice, it only proved itself in the event of my not taking
-it.
-
-There was not much to be done about my leaving Chicago; I had rooted
-there shallowly. I went out that afternoon to tell Pauline good-bye, for
-I wished to avoid Henry. It seemed a great step, my going away. There
-was a kind of finality about it. The casual character of my relation to
-the stage had disappeared; I was about to be married to it. Pauline
-cried a little; in spite of there being so much in my life that I
-couldn't tell her, I remembered how long we had been friends and that we
-were very fond of one another. She couldn't, of course, quite abandon
-her favourite moral attitude.
-
-"You have a great work, Olivia, a great responsibility. You must
-remember that you are the trustee of a rare gift."
-
-"I'll take as good care of it," I assured her, "as those who sent it
-take of me." At the time I believe I felt that the Powers _had_ taken
-notice of me at last.
-
-I got away as soon as possible; it seemed kinder to Griffin. We had been
-divided as by a sword; he knew now there was nothing between us and he
-was abashed at the memory of having touched me. All that time we had
-lurked behind the pressure of packing and settling my affairs; we never
-came out squarely and faced one another. I think some latent manhood
-that had risen to my need of him, slunk back with the certainty that I
-could do very well without him.
-
-"You'll be sure and hunt me up if you come to New York?" I urged; I
-wasn't going to be accused of disloyalty because of the rise in my
-fortunes. He shook his head.
-
-"You'll be up among the nobs then." He looked at me for a moment
-wistfully, "You'll remember that I said I wouldn't try to hold you?" I
-let him get what comfort he could out of the generosity he imagined in
-himself at that. Seen against the shining background which Polatkin's
-money had made for me, he looked almost weazened. "Good-bye," I said,
-with another handshake, and I set my face steadily toward New York.
-
-
-
-
-BOOK IV
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-The third season in New York found me in a very gratifying situation. I
-had made a public for myself, and friends, not only new friends but old
-ones drawn there by good fortune of their own. I had worked out my
-obligation to Polatkin, though I was still on such terms with him as
-allowed him to give me a good deal of advice, and for me to call him
-Poly in his more human moments. I used even to go out to his house at
-One Hundred and Twenty-Seventh Street to spend an hour with Mrs.
-Polatkin and the several little replicas of himself, of whom, in spite
-of their tendency to run mostly to nose and forehead, he was exceedingly
-proud. The help he had afforded me had uncovered new layers of capacity,
-to fill out satisfyingly the opportunities he created. I was a
-successful actress, there was no doubt whatever that I was a success; I
-would have been able to prove it by the figure of my salary. And often
-when the house rocked with applause, and I was called time after time
-before the curtain, I would question the high, half-lighted void. I
-would look and ache and cry out inwardly. For what? Well, I suppose I
-knew pretty well what I was looking for by the end of that year, though
-it wasn't a thing I could say much about, even to Sarah.
-
-Sarah and I had a flat together on Thirty-first Street. The second
-winter we had played together, in a comedy Jerry had written for us,
-with so much success that it was impossible that we should remain
-together long. To have kept together two players of such distinguished
-and equal quality would have been to miss the lustre of achievement
-which they might each shed on a lesser group, wholly without any other
-excuse for coherence. Our managers, too, contrived to get us not a
-little advertisement out of the circumstance of our being friends and
-undivided by success. There was, however, one fact known to us both,
-though without any conscious communication, which we would not for
-worlds have made known to an unsuspecting public; and that was that
-while I was still on the hither side of my full power, Sarah had come to
-the level of hers.
-
-Sarah was always wonderful in what I call static parts, parts all of one
-mood and consistency. She was notable as Portia; as Hermione, absolute.
-Perhaps the greatest favourite with her public was Galatea, which,
-besides being well within the average taste, allowed the greatest
-display of her bodily perfection. Yet with all this, Sarah knew that she
-was nearing the end of her contribution; knew it perhaps with that
-prescience of the Gift itself, folding up its wings for withdrawal. I
-have never been able to make up my mind whether she abandoned her
-talent because she had no more use for it, or if it left her because its
-time was served.
-
-I think we arrived at this certainty about our powers, night by night,
-that year as we came together after the performance, Sarah as though she
-had come back from a full meal, with a sense of things accomplished, but
-I--I came hungry--_always_! Sometimes it was merely with the feeling of
-interrupted capacity, as when one has left off in the middle of the
-course; when I would continue acting in my room, going over my part,
-recalling others, trying experiments with them, pouring myself out until
-Sarah, poor dear, fell asleep in the midst of her effort to be
-interested. Other times I would rage up and down, all my soul baffled
-and aching with incompletion.
-
-I do not mean to say I hadn't taken a healthy satisfaction in what had
-come to me, the knowledge of being worth while, of contributing
-something; not less in sheer bodily well-being, leisure, beautiful
-clothes, conscious harmony with my background. I had more feeling of
-home for that little flat of ours than I had ever known in my mother's
-house, or my husband's, for the plain reason that its lines and colours
-and adjustments were in tune with my temperament, as nothing I had had
-before had been. It wasn't until I had the means to give my personal
-preference full scope, that I discovered how much of gracelessness in
-myself had been but the unconscious reaction to inharmonies of colour
-and line. I had developed, in response to my environment, the quality
-called charm.
-
-And I was a successful actress. I have to go back to that to get
-anything like the effect of solidity which my world took on with that
-certainty. I was developing too, as my critics allowed, and gave promise
-of steady growth. I was well paid and well friended. I don't mean to
-say, either, that I did not get something out of being a part of the
-dramatic movement of my time, knowing and known of the best it afforded.
-I was integrally a part of that half-careless, hard-working, well-living
-crowd so envied of the street: I knew a great many notables by their
-first names. And all the time I wanted something! At last I knew what I
-wanted.
-
-"It will come," Sarah had faith for me. "Everything comes if it is
-called hard enough. But you mustn't allow yourself to be persuaded by
-your wanting it so much, to take any sort of substitute."
-
-That was on an occasion when my Taylorville training had revolted
-against some of the things that, though they passed current in my world,
-wore to me the indelible stamp of cheapness. Every now and then some
-aspect of it struck across my hereditary prejudices, and gave me a
-feeling of isolation, of separateness which drove me back in time, to
-condone the offences which set me apart in an inviolable loneliness. It
-was something my manager had said in my hearing about liking his leading
-woman to have a liaison with the leading man because "it kept her
-limbered up."
-
-"I might as well," I said to Sarah. "I could have my leading man any
-minute." This was true, though it was by no means the inevitable
-situation, and Sarah in acknowledging it had not spared to point out to
-me the probable outcome of such a relation.
-
-"This is the way we all end, isn't it?" I demanded. "Why should I go
-looking for an exceptional experience. We both of us know that I shall
-never come to my full power without passion and I have a notion that
-with experiences as with everything else, we have to eat as we are
-helped. And my leading man is the only thing on the plate." And then
-Sarah had replied to me with the advice I set down a moment ago.
-
-It wasn't, however, that I hadn't seen clearly and enough of the
-cheapness and betrayal that comes of such irregular relations, to be
-warned; if only it were possible for women to be warned against
-trusting. What I wanted, of course, was some such sane and open passion
-as I appreciated between the Hardings and Mark Eversley and his wife,
-noble, extenuating, without a shadow of wavering. How, when I was able
-to conceive such a relation and to discriminate it so readily from the
-ruck of affairs like Jerry's and my leading man's, I came finally to
-miss it, is one of the things that must have been written in my destiny.
-Perhaps the Distributers of the Gift were jealous.
-
-The beginning of the new coil of my affairs was in Sarah's going on the
-road early in January and my finding myself rather lonely in
-consequence, and going out rather too often to the McDermotts'. Jerry
-had settled his family at Sixty-seventh Street, then in that
-intermediate region which was at that time neither city nor suburb. Mrs.
-Jerry insisted that it was for the sake of the park for the children,
-though most of Jerry's friends were of the opinion that it was rather
-for the very thing for which they made use of it, an excuse for calling
-infrequently.
-
-No one could be on a footing of any intimacy with Mrs. Jerry without
-being set upon by the little foxes of suspicion and jealousy which
-gnawed upon the bosom that nursed them. Connubial misery was a kind of
-drug with her, the habit of which she could no more leave off than any
-drunkard, or than Jerry could his sentimentalized, innocuous
-infatuations. All this comes into my story, for slight as my connection
-was with Jerry's affairs, in my capacity as confidante, it served to set
-in motion the profound, confirming experience of my art. Or perhaps I
-merely seized on it objectively to excuse what was really the compulsion
-of the gods. I could have gone anywhere out of New York to separate
-myself from Jerry's affair; that I should have chosen to go to London is
-the best evidence perhaps, that I was not really choosing at all.
-
-It began with my spending mornings in the park with Jerry's children,
-who were nice children except for the way in which they continually
-reflected in their attitude toward their father, a growing consciousness
-of slighting and bitterness at home. Mrs. Jerry made a point of her
-generosity in rather forcing him on me on these occasions, and on the
-long walks which I fell in the habit of taking very early, or in the
-pale twilight whenever affairs at the theatre would permit me.
-
-I remember how the spring came on in the city that year. I saw it go
-with the children to school in a single treasured blossom, or trailing
-the Sunday trippers in dropped sprays of hepatica and potentilla back
-from the Jersey shore. Soft airs and scents of the field invaded the
-town and played in the streets in the hours when men were not using
-them. A spirit out of Hadley's pasture came and walked beside me. But it
-was not due to any suggestion of what there was in the invading season
-for me, that Jerry occasionally walked along with me, for the chief use
-Jerry had of the earth was to build cities upon.
-
-Jerry drew the sap of his being out of asphalt pavements, and the light
-that fanned out from the theatre entrances on Broadway was his natural
-aura. He had developed, he had branched and blossomed in the degree to
-which the inspiration of his work had been squeezed and strained through
-layers and layers of close-packed humanity; and the more he was played
-upon by the cross-bred, striped and ring-streaked passions and
-affections of society, the more delicate and fanciful and human his work
-became. His lean figure, now that it had filled out a little, was built
-to be the absolute excuse for evening clothes, and never showed to such
-an advantage as in their sleek, satiny blackness, with a good deal of
-white front, and the rather wide black ribbon to his glasses which
-brought out the natural pallor of his skin. His hair, which he wore
-parted very far at one side, and made to curve glossily to the contour
-of his head, was more like a raven's wing than ever, and had still its
-little trick of erecting slightly and spreading in excitement,
-especially when he was up for a curtain speech, and was, in the way he
-looked the part of the successful dramatist, a good half of the
-entertainment. His contribution to the occasion on which I was good
-enough to take his children for an outing to the Bronx or Van Cortlandt
-Park, was made by lying flat on his back with his hands clasped under
-his head waiting until I had exhausted myself with games before he was
-able to take any interest in me. I would come back to him after a while
-and sit on the grass beside him. Jerry's way of acknowledging the pains
-I had been at to amuse his offspring, was to pat one of my elbows with a
-hand which he immediately restored to its business of propping his head.
-
-"Jerry," I said, "I am convinced that something very nice is about to
-happen to me. Run your hands over the tops of the grass here and you can
-feel news of it coming up through the stems."
-
-"Well, at any rate you can take it when it comes," he reminded me.
-"There won't be anybody to be hurt by your good times but yourself."
-
-"Jerry, is it as bad as ever?"
-
-"So bad that if she doesn't let up on it soon I shall do something to
-bring on a crisis."
-
-"And spend the rest of your life regretting it. Besides there is Miss
-Doran; you'd have to think of her." Miss Doran was a dancer with a
-spirit in her feet and a South Jersey accent, whose effect on him Jerry
-was translating into quite the best thing he had done. It wasn't,
-however, that I cared in the least what became of her that I had thrown
-out that saving suggestion, but because it had been little more than a
-year since Jerry had disturbed the peace and broken the----not
-heart----let us say the organ of her literary ineptitudes--of Mineola
-Maxon Freear who had interviewed him once, and taken him with the snare
-of a superior comprehension. Mineola had advanced ideas as to the
-relation of the sexes, and a conviction that she was fitted to be the
-mentor of a literary career, and had missed the point of Jerry's
-philanderings quite as much as his wife missed them. With Mineola in
-mind and the tragedy she came near making out of it for herself, I
-ventured on a word of caution.
-
-"You don't want to forget, Jerry, that there's one good thing about your
-marriage; it keeps you from making another one just like it."
-
-"You think I'd do that?"
-
-"It is written in your forehead, Jerry, that you are to be attracted to
-the sort of woman whom you have the least use for. The kind that would
-make you a good wife, you couldn't possibly love well enough to live
-with her."
-
-"I could live with you," he affirmed.
-
-"Then it would be because you have never been in love with me. Look
-here, Jerry, what does the other all amount to? If you didn't have any
-one ... like Miss Doran, I mean ... do you mean that you wouldn't write
-plays at all?"
-
-"I'd write them harder and I'd write them different. How can a man tell?
-This thing _is_. Once you know it is to be had, you just can't hold back
-from it."
-
-"Not even if somebody else has to pay?"
-
-"Why should they?" Jerry sat up and began to pull up the grass by the
-roots and throw it about. "Why can't they see that all a man wants is to
-do his work?" I could see at any rate that he was near the breaking
-point, and I knew that if the break came from Jerry himself, it would
-be irrevocable. That was what put me in the notion of going away
-immediately. I had barely saved my face with Mrs. Jerry in the Mineola
-affair, and I thought if there was to be another crisis I had better
-clear out before it.
-
-I had put off deciding about my vacation until I could hear from Sarah,
-who was playing in the West and rather expected to go on to the coast,
-but now the idea of getting off quite by myself began to appeal to me.
-It was about a week after that at Rector's, where I had gone with a
-party of players on the spur of the moment, we saw Jerry come in with
-the dancer, and an air that said plainly that he knew very well what a
-married man laid himself open to when he came into a place like that
-with Clare Doran. I watched them by snatches all through the supper
-before I made up my mind to send the waiter to touch him on the sleeve
-and apprise him that I was there. What deterred me was the reflection
-that if it came into Mrs. Jerry's poor, befuddled head to make a case of
-his being seen there, the fact that I had stood her friend wouldn't in
-the least prevent her from having me up as a witness to her husband's
-private entertainments. I seemed to see in the set of Jerry's shoulders
-that he expected that his wife would do something, and that it would be
-unpleasant. The necessity of taking some stand myself, of living myself
-for or against Jerry's connubial independence, had cleared my soul of
-sundry vagrant impulses and left the call of destiny sounding plain
-above the din of supper and the gurgle of soft, sophisticated laughter.
-The authority of that call, coupled no doubt with some annoyance at
-Jerry for putting me in a place where I had to decide against him, led
-me to break it to him there that I was about to leave him with his
-situation on his hands, rather than at a less public occasion.
-
-He came at once with his napkin trailing from his hand and his raven's
-wing falling forward over his pale forehead, as he stooped to me.
-
-"I was wanting to see you," I said, as I put up my hand to him over the
-back of the chair. "I shall be leaving the next day after we close."
-
-"For where?"
-
-"London," I told him. "I shall be in time for the best of the theatrical
-season there." I hadn't thought of that as a reason until that moment.
-"Besides I am crazy to go; I smell primroses."
-
-"Nonsense, that's Moet '85. Besides, you've never smelled them, so how
-should you know?" That was true enough; Sarah and I had had six weeks of
-Paris the summer before and a week in London in August, where it rained
-most of the hours of every day, but as I said the word I realized that
-what had been pulling at my heart was the feel of the London pavements
-with the smell of the dust in the hot intervals between the showers,
-and the deep red of the roses the boys cried in the street.
-
-Jerry stood looking down on me, and his face was troubled.
-
-"I don't blame you for going."
-
-"Come too, Jerry; bring the wife and babies," Miss Doran was tired of
-sitting alone so long, she stood up as if for going. A flicker of
-consternation passed in his face between his divided interest and a
-suspicion of the reason for my desertion.
-
-"Look here, Olivia--oh, impossible!" It was plain that the dancer was
-going to make it uncomfortable for him for taking so much time to his
-good-bye. "I'll see you at your steamer." He clasped my hand with a
-detaining gesture. I could see him looking back at me from the doorway
-as though for the moment he had seen my destiny hovering over me. I have
-often wondered if Jerry hadn't provided me with an excuse, what the
-Powers would have done about getting me to London on this occasion.
-
-I had almost a mind the next day to go out to his house and persuade him
-to drop everything here and take his family abroad with me. That I did
-not was, I think, not so much due to what I thought such a plan might
-contribute toward the saving of Jerry's situation, as the conviction as
-soon as I had decided, that whatever it was that lay at the end of my
-journey, I was called to it. I was as certain that in London I would
-find what I went to seek as though it had been printed in my steamer
-ticket. I shut up the house and left the key of the flat at the bank. A
-letter I wrote to Sarah crossed hers to me saying that she thought she
-would stay on in the West for her vacation. Two days after the theatre
-closed for the season I sailed for London.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-For a week, perhaps, I was content merely with being there, simply happy
-and human. I had brought letters and addresses which I neglected. In
-spite of the excuse I had made to Jerry about it, I did not even go to
-the theatres. I turned aside from the traditional goals, to ride on the
-top of omnibuses and walk miles down the Strand and Piccadilly, touching
-shoulders with the crowd. The thing that I had striven for in my art,
-what men paint and write and act for, was upon me. Answers to all the
-questions about it that I had not the skill to put to myself, lurked for
-me behind the next one of the Greek marbles and the next. The pictures
-were luminous with it. In the soft spring nights it took the streets and
-turned the voices happy. It danced with the maids in the alleyways to
-the tune of the barrel organs. Then all at once I had a scare.
-That-Which-Walked-Beside-Me seemed about to take flight. I would be
-smiling at it secretly. I would catch myself in the motion of saluting
-it, and suddenly it would be gone. Mornings I would wake up in Chicago
-to the old struggle and depression; I would have to go out in the
-streets and court back my joy; it fled from me and concealed itself in
-the crowd. I followed it by the trail of the first name I lighted on in
-my address-book. It happened to be Mrs. Franklin Shane; I wrote her a
-note and then walked out in Hyde Park to see the last of the
-rhododendrons, and regretted it. Mrs. Franklin Shane was Pauline Mills
-raised to the _n_th power, which I did not fail to perceive was due to
-Franklin Shane being Henry multiplied by a million. The acute sense of
-values, which had established Pauline at the centre of Evanston, had
-landed Mrs. Shane at the outer rim of English exclusiveness. What she
-would do with her time and energy when she had penetrated to its royal
-core, interested me immensely.
-
-I had been entertained at her house the previous winter when I had been
-studying a play that made me perfectly willing to be exploited by Mrs.
-Franklin Shane, for the sake of what I got out of it to fatten my part.
-There in London she called for me in her car the afternoon of the day
-that brought her my note. I don't remember that anything was expressly
-said about it, but it was in the air that Mrs. Franklin Shane had
-arrived, in her study of Exclusiveness, at knowing that the younger
-members of it were addicted to the society of ladies of my profession,
-and meant to make the most of me. I thought it might be amusing to see
-what, supposing with me as a tolerable bait, she could catch a younger
-son, she would do with him. She was clever enough not to put the use she
-was to make of me, too obviously. I was invited to an informal
-reception the next afternoon in which she found herself involved by her
-husband's business exigencies; I gathered from her way of speaking of it
-that the guests were chiefly Americans and that she had made the best of
-the situation, extracting from it for herself a kernel of credit by not
-turning down her compatriots, now that she was assured of having the
-English aristocracy to play with.
-
-The house in front of which a hansom deposited me the next day, was
-notable; one could guess that the Franklin Shanes had been made to pay a
-pretty penny for the privilege of occupying it. It was stuffed full of
-the treasures of four hundred years of the selective instinct.
-
-"You must really see the Velasquez," my hostess had confided to me as
-soon as I had shaken hands with her, and I judged from the fact of her
-not mentioning my name to any other of her guests, that she was saving
-me for a special introduction.
-
-The Velasquez was very wonderful; there was also an early Holbein and a
-Titian so black with time that there was only one point in the room from
-which you could make out what it was about. I was slowly making my way
-to that point. I had been in the house half an hour and had met but one
-or two people whom I slightly knew, when I was aware of my hostess
-piloting toward me through the press, a black-coated male in whom I
-suspected one of the pegs upon which her social venture hung. It
-occurred to me that she had sent me to look at the pictures so that she
-might know where to find me. The room was packed with Americans,
-satisfying in the only way open to them, a natural curiosity as to the
-shell in which the only kind of society which wasn't open to them,
-lived, and the man blocking out a passage through it with his shoulders,
-was so tall that it brought my eyes on a level with his necktie. There
-was an odd freedom about it that set me at once to correct my impression
-of him by his face, and the moment I raised my eyes to him I knew him.
-
-I could hear Mrs. Franklin Shane mumbling the phrases of introduction,
-rendered unimportant by the radiant recognition that for the moment
-enveloped us, that burst around us as a flame in which our hostess
-seemed to shrivel and go out in a thin haze of silk and chiffon. I
-remember looking around for her presently, and wondering how she had got
-away from us. We began again at the point where we had left off.
-
-"So you did go on the stage then, in spite of Taylorville?"
-
-"And you," I pressed my foot into the velvet pile of the carpet to make
-sure that I stood. "You are an engineer, I suppose?"
-
-"In spite of my uncle!"
-
-Somewhere in the next room some one began to sing. I did not hear the
-song nor see the Titian. I was back in Willesden pasture and the soft
-rain of dying leaves was on my face. I was conscious of nothing but his
-hand which he had laid upon my arm to steady me against the pressure of
-the crowd which swayed and turned upon itself to let Mrs. Shane through,
-to drag me to be presented to the singer who was even more of a
-notability than I was.
-
-There was an interval then in which I appeared to be going through the
-forms of society, and going through them under an intolerable sense of
-injustice in the fact that having found Helmeth Garrett at last, now I
-had lost him. It was one of those occasions when the inward monitor is
-so bent on its own affairs that the habit of living goes on
-automatically, or does not go on at all. It went on so with me for half
-an hour. By degrees, what seemed an immense unbearable throbbing of the
-universe, resolved itself at the renewal of that electrifying touch on
-my arm, to the thrum of an orchestra in the refreshment room. I felt
-myself carried along by the pressure of the crowd in that direction, but
-just at the turn of the stair that went down to it I was drawn
-peremptorily aside.
-
-"Come," Mr. Garrett insisted, "come out of this. I want to talk to you."
-There was the old imperiousness in his manner, exclusive of all other
-considerations. He seemed to know the house. We took a turn through the
-hall came out presently at the _porte cochère_ where a line of carriages
-waited, supported by a line of skirt-coated figures like little wooden
-Noahs before an ark. I let him put me into a closed carriage without a
-word of protest. I had not taken leave of my hostess; I had not so much
-as thought of her. I suppose he had been arranging this in the interval
-in which I had not seen him. The moment the door of the carriage was
-shut, we clasped hands and laughed shamelessly.
-
-"You had three little freckles high up on your cheek, what became of
-them?" he demanded. All at once his mood changed again. "All the years
-I've been without you!... I saw a picture of you in a magazine three
-years ago in Alaska. I came near writing."
-
-"You should have. What were you doing there?"
-
-"Promoting Engineer, Alaska, Russia, Mexico." He began a gesture to
-include the whole round of the mining world, but left off to take my
-hand again. "The world _is_ round," he declared, as though he had
-somewhat doubted it. "It brings us back again to the old starting
-points."
-
-"They're always the same, I suppose, the places we set out from; but
-we ... we are never the same."
-
-"Is that a warning?" He looked at me, checked for a moment.
-
-"Only a platitude." I had thrown it out instinctively against his
-engulfing manner, against everything that rose up in me to assure me
-that nothing whatever had changed, that it would never change. The life
-of the London streets streamed around us; crossing Piccadilly Circus we
-were held up with the traffic; the roar of the city islanded us like a
-sea.
-
-"I suppose you know where we are going?" I suggested in one of the
-checked intervals.
-
-"To your hotel; Mrs. Shane gave me the address. I told her we were old
-friends. You mustn't be surprised if you find she expects us to have
-gone to school together. I wanted to get away where we could talk." I
-gave him an assenting smile. Still neither of us showed any disposition
-to begin. He took off his hat in the carriage and ran his fingers
-through his hair. About the temples it had gone gray a little. Now and
-then he gave a short contented laugh as a man will, put suddenly at
-ease.
-
-"I'm glad you kept the old name, Olivia Lattimore ... Olivia. I
-shouldn't have found you without."
-
-"You knew I had lost my husband."
-
-"I read that in the magazine. There's where I have the advantage of
-you." He dropped his light banter for a soberer tone. "My wife died two
-years ago." We were silent after that until the fact had been put behind
-us by a space of time.
-
-I don't know why London seems a more homey place than New York. It has
-been going on so long, perhaps, is so steeped in the essential essence
-of human living, and the buildings there are smaller, more personal, the
-mind is able to grasp them to the uttermost. I remember as we stopped at
-my hotel, being taken suddenly with a tremendous awareness of it all,
-the noble river flowing by, the human stream, miles on miles of homes,
-and the green countryside. I was aware of a city set in an island and an
-island in the sea, the wide immortal sea going around and around it, the
-coursing waves--I checked myself in an upward gesture of the arms, as
-though I had pulsed and surged with it. I caught in my companion's smile
-a delighted recognition.
-
-"Sh--" he said, "what'll Flora Haines think of you!"
-
-"Flora! Oh, Flora wouldn't even _think_ about a play-actor. What would
-your uncle----"
-
-"He's dead now." He stopped me.
-
-"They are all dead," I told him, "all those that mattered to us."
-
-We had another mood when we came to my rooms. I perceived suddenly what
-there was in him more than I had known. It was in his manner that he had
-commanded men. I was pierced through with a sense of his virility, the
-quality that goes to make a male. I was glad of an excuse to put away my
-hat and wrap, to escape for a moment from the effect he produced on
-me ... from inordinate pride in him that he could so produce it. The room
-was full of the tumult we created for one another.
-
-"Will you sit here?" I said at last. I believe I pushed a chair toward
-him.
-
-"No, you." He must have turned it back toward me, otherwise I do not
-know how I came to be so near him.
-
-"You know," I said, ... "I never got your letter."
-
-"I guessed as much when it came back to me. I should have come to you
-the next day, but I quarrelled with my uncle. I walked all the way to
-the railway station before I remembered. But what had I to offer you?"
-
-"It was so long ago ..."
-
-"No, no, yesterday." His arms were around me. "Olivia ... yesterday and
-to-day!"
-
-I think I moved a little to be the more completely engulfed by him, to
-lay against his the ache of my empty breast; all these years I had not
-known how empty. We kissed at last and Joy came upon us. We loved; we
-kissed again between laughter. I remember little snatches of explanation
-in the intervals of kissing.
-
-"All this time, Helmeth, I have wanted you so."
-
-"I was on my way to you. All last winter in Alaska ... in the long
-night, Olivia. I should have come soon."
-
-"Oh," I cried, "I have been drawn across the sea to you. All the way I
-felt you calling!"
-
-"We had to meet again; had to!"
-
-After a time I insisted that he should sit down. "You haven't had any
-tea." I tried to get control of myself. I was crossing the room to ring
-when he swept me up again.
-
-"Look here, Olivia, I don't want any tea. I want you. God!" he said, "do
-you know how I want you?" All at once I was crying on his breast.
-
-"Oh, Helmeth, Helmeth, do you know you have only seen me twice in your
-life."
-
-"And both times," he insisted, "I've wanted to marry you."
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was two or three days before we spoke of marriage again. I believe I
-scarcely thought of it; we had all the past to account for, and the
-present. We had moments of strangeness, and then we would kiss, and all
-the years would seem to each of us as full of the other as the very
-hour.
-
-"Where were you, Helmeth, the second summer after we met?" I had told
-him of my visit to Chicago and the dream of him I had had there.
-
-"Out in Arizona, carrying a surveyor's chain, dreaming of _you_! Often
-when the moonlight was all over that country like a lake, I would walk
-and walk. I had long talks with you; they were the only improving
-conversation I had."
-
-"For years," I said, "that dream of you was the only thing that kept my
-Gift awake. Times I would lose it, and then I would dream again and it
-would come back. I know now when I lost it completely, it was about a
-year before I saw you that time in Chicago." I had told him of that,
-too.
-
-"That year I married." I could see that there was something in the
-recollection always that weighed upon him.
-
-"I didn't," he said, "until after my aunt had told me about you. I went
-back there when she died; she was always good to me. You know, don't
-you, Olive, that in spite of everything ... everything ... there is only
-you."
-
-"Let us not talk of it." I do not know how it is proper to feel on such
-occasions, but I supposed that he must have had as I had, stinging tears
-to think of the dead and how their love was overmatched by this present
-wonder. I would have had, somehow, Tommy and my boy to share in it.
-
-I went rather tardily to make my apologies to Mrs. Franklin Shane. I
-hope they sounded natural.
-
-"My _dear_! you needn't expect me to be surprised at _anything_ Helmeth
-Garrett does." She talked habitually in italics. "My husband says that
-it is only because he so generally does right, that it is at all
-possible to get along with him." I snapped up crumbs like this with
-avidity.
-
-"His wife, too, you must have known her." I hinted. This was at the end
-of a rather complete account of Helmeth's business relations with Mr.
-Shane.
-
-"Oh, well," I could see Christian charity struggling with Mrs. Shane's
-profound conviction of the rectitude of her own way of life. "She was a
-_good_ woman, but no--imagination." She was so pleased to have hit upon
-a word which carried no intrinsic condemnation that she repeated it.
-"No imagination whatever. One feels," she modified the edge of her
-judgment still further, "that so much might have been made out of Mr.
-Garrett. These self-made men are so difficult."
-
-"Are you difficult?" I demanded when I had retailed the conversation to
-him that evening.
-
-"I suppose so; anyway I am self-made. She is right so far; I dare say it
-is badly done. You'll have to take a few tucks in me."
-
-"Not a tuck. I like you the way you are. Oh, I like you ... I like you
-_so_!" There was an interval after this before we could go on again.
-
-"Tell me how you made yourself, Helmeth. Don't leave anything out, not a
-single thing."
-
-"By mistakes mostly. Every time I had made one I knew it was a mistake
-and I didn't do it again. I don't know that I'm much of a success
-anyway, but I've got a large assortment of things not to do."
-
-"That was the way I learned how to act; filling in behind!"
-
-"I thought that came by instinct. What counts with a man, is not so much
-getting to know how to do it, but getting a chance to prove to other
-people that he knows how."
-
-"I've been through that too," I told him, but he was bent on making
-himself clear.
-
-"I suppose I ought to tell you, Olivia, I'm only a sort of scab
-engineer. I haven't any papers."
-
-"But if you can do the work? Mrs. Shane said----"
-
-"Oh, Shane will trust me; he's learned. What hurts is to have worked up
-a scheme to the point where it is necessary to have outside capital, and
-then have one of the outsiders stick out for a certificated engineer.
-That's what comes of my uncle's notion that a man should 'pick up' his
-professional training." There was the core of that old bitterness
-rankling in him still; he could not yield himself quite to consolation.
-
-"But you have got on, Helmeth, you got _here_." What "here" meant to me
-exactly, was more than my lover, more than the pleasant room behind us,
-the obsequious servitors, more even than the sleek, silvered river and
-the towered banks that took on shapes of romance under the London gray.
-There was something in the word to me of fulfilment, the knowledge of
-things done, the certainty of an unassailed capacity for doing. We were
-sitting with the broad window flung open, the top of a lime tree tapping
-the sill of it with soft shouldering touches, as of some wild creature
-against its mate, creaking a little in somnolent content. I put out my
-hand to touch his knee--oh, as I might have done it if the "here" had
-been the point toward which we had travelled together all these years.
-He laughed then as he often did when I touched him, a man's short full
-laugh of repletion. He thrust out his knee quite frankly till it
-touched mine, and closed his hand over my fingers; he returned to what
-had been in the air the previous moment with an effort. The suspicion
-that it was an effort, was all I had to prepare me for what was about to
-leap upon me.
-
-"Oh, I've pulled through, I've pulled through. But I'm not where I might
-have been. And I'm not rich, Olivia. Not what is called rich."
-
-"Is being called rich one of the things that goes with--what was it you
-called yourself--a promoting engineer?"
-
-"It goes with it if you are any good at it. Not that I care about money
-except for what it stands for ... and then there are the girls."
-
-"You have--girls." It struck me as absurd that I hadn't thought of it
-until that moment.
-
-"I thought Mrs. Shane would have told you. I have two. It isn't going to
-make any difference with you, Olivia?"
-
-"Ah, what difference should it make!" I was apprised within me by the
-haste I made to cover my consternation, that there was more difference
-in it than my words allowed. "Children of yours?" I said. "So much more
-of you for me to love." The apprehension was whelmed in the possessing
-movement with which he drew me to his breast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-We Had to go back to the subject of course, it couldn't be left hanging
-in the air like that. It was a day or two later at Hampton Court, where
-we had gone for no reason really, except that it seemed a more
-commensurate background for what was going on in us, the identification
-in each by the other, of the springs of immortal passion. We had roved
-through all the rooms, recharged for us with the exceptional experience,
-and come out at last on the river bank where there was quite a holiday
-air among the houseboats.
-
-Behind us we could hear the soft slither of the fountain in the sunk
-garden; the warm sun streaming on us through the filmy air, the flutter
-of curtains in the houseboats above the little pots of geraniums, the
-voices of young people laughing and calling across, began to steal
-across my mind with a sense of the extraordinary richness of life. Here
-was all the stuff of which I had built up my earliest dreams of the
-Shining Destiny ... young people growing up about me ... room to stretch
-my capacity to the uttermost ... the orderly social procedure. For the
-moment I believed that I might turn back on that path my feet had failed
-in, and find in it all that I had missed. I recalled that there were
-always children in my dream. For the instant they were back ... little
-heads and faces ... all the eyes on me ... soft curls, like wisps of
-gossamer. I suppose there must be such little unclaimed souls forever
-hovering and flitting, little winged things, to love's mighty candle.
-What should there be in the touch of a man's hand on a woman's that they
-should come crowding to it like homing doves?
-
-There was a maid going by with her charge, one of those glowing
-fair-haired English children who supply us with the images by which we
-prefigure the angelic choirs. Helmeth held out his hand to the boy, and
-with that swift spark that passes between the young and those by whom
-they are beloved, he toddled forward and laid hold of the inviting
-finger.
-
-If I had had more experience of the pang that shot through me then, I
-should have known it for jealousy. It drove me on toward what, until
-now, I had avoided.
-
-"Tell me about your girls, Helmeth." He felt in the pocket of his coat.
-
-"If you would care to see them----" He was so pleased and shy, I suppose
-he must have understood better than I how it was with me. "They are with
-an aunt in Los Angeles; it was handier for me to see them when I ran up
-from Mexico. They are rather decent kiddies. You'll see them when they
-come to New York this winter."
-
-"Shall you be in New York?" It struck coldly on me that he should speak
-of plans that seemed to be going on regardless of the extraordinary
-interruption of our love.
-
-"Until I get this Mexican scheme on its feet I shall be going back and
-forth."
-
-"They look like their mother," I suggested. I was looking still at the
-small, rather pale photographs he had handed me.
-
-"Because they look so little like me?"
-
-"You forget I saw her once, in Chicago."
-
-"I remember. You know, I think I went there that time because I heard
-you were playing there." He was silent a moment, pitching bits of sod
-into the river. "There is something that manages these things. If I had
-met you then we couldn't have been like this. And we might never have
-met again."
-
-When he said "like this," he had touched my knee with his hand with that
-possessive intimacy with which a man may touch his own woman. I had to
-go back to the photographs of the children to save myself from the
-blinding lightning of his eyes.
-
-"_Are_ they like their mother?"
-
-"I suppose so. I hope so--she was a good woman."
-
-"I'm sure of that." He sat up with intention.
-
-"Ah, it isn't just a sense of what is due her that makes me say that.
-She was thoroughly good. When I met her out in Idaho she was my chief's
-daughter and the only nice girl in the place. She wasn't what you
-are--no other woman is--but she was one of those plain, quiet women that
-have a kind of a grip on rightness. There was nothing could make her let
-go."
-
-"My mother was like that. I think I can understand."
-
-"Well, it was mighty good for me. I'm a bad lot, I suppose. I always
-want things harder than most, and I think the wanting justifies me in
-getting them, but she taught me better. She did things to me that made
-me fit for you, and I don't want us to forget that."
-
-"Oh, my dear, it is I who am not fit."
-
-But I could see he did not believe that. He had come upon me that day in
-the woods when happily the mood of Perdita had shut round the odd,
-blundering Olivia like an enchanter's bubble, through which iridescent
-surfaces he was always to see me; and by the mere act of loving he had
-fixed me in my happiest moment. He was the only man I ever knew, whom I
-could handle like an audience, perhaps he was the only man who never
-knew me in any other character than the lady of romance.
-
-We went that evening to see Beerbohm Tree in a Shakespearian piece,
-always so much more worth while in London than anything the same people
-can do on any other soil, as if the play had mellowed there by all the
-rich life it tapped with its four-hundred-year roots. Borne up by my
-mood and the beauty of the production, so much greater than anything we
-could manage in New York at that time, I was chanting bits of it all the
-way home, and when we came to my room again I moved before him in the
-part of Egypt's queen.
-
- "Who's born the day
- When I forget to send to Antony
- Shall die a beggar----"
-
-"Oh, Helmeth, if you could just see me do it!" I was aching to lay up my
-gift before him as on an altar.
-
-"You shall do them all for me when we are out in the shack in Mexico."
-
-"Mexico!" I was blank for the moment.
-
-"We'll have to live there for a few years, until I get this scheme on
-its legs. Look here, Olivia, you haven't said yet when you are going to
-marry me."
-
-"I've only known you four days!" I tried for the note of feminine
-evasion.
-
-"Four days and an afternoon, to be exact. What's that got to do with it,
-when you are made for me?"
-
-"Don't you like this, Helmeth?"
-
-He caught me to him with that frank delight in the pressure of his arm
-about my body, the feel of his cheek against mine that was as fresh to
-me as water in a wilderness. "It's not this I'm objecting to, but the
-trouble I shall have doing without you." He let me go at that, as
-though he would not add the persuasion of his touch to what he had to
-say.
-
-"The truth is I've no business to ask a woman to marry me for the next
-two years. I'm pledged to this Mexican proposition. I've staked all I
-have on it, and I've asked other men to put their money in, and I can't
-go back on it. I shall have to be back and forth between London and New
-York and the mines, for at least a couple of years. If it wasn't for
-wanting you so ... but now that I've found you again, I know there's no
-going on without you!"
-
-He turned his face toward me that I might see the lines of anxious
-thought there, the buffetings and disappointings, and through it all,
-the plain hunger of the man for his natural mate.
-
-I saw that and I didn't flinch from it. I took his face between my hands
-and drew it down to my breast.
-
-"I'm under contract for the next year," I told him. "I signed just
-before I left ... what does it all matter? Can't we be just ...
-engaged."
-
-"We'd be engaged to be married. And I couldn't take you to Mexico on an
-engagement."
-
-"I'm under contract," I told him again.
-
-"You mean to say that you'd go on acting after we were married?"
-
-It isn't worth while retailing what we said after that. It has been said
-so many times. It was the same thing that Tommy said, better put, more
-fully. He was ready, you understand, to make concession to my liking
-for the stage, to feel himself sincerely a poor substitute for what I
-had got for myself out of living, but there it was at the end, that he
-couldn't make for his own work the concessions he demanded of mine.
-
-"We would have to live in Mexico," he said at last. "That's
-incontrovertible. And besides there are the kiddies to think of. Their
-mother wouldn't want them brought up in the atmosphere of the stage." He
-had me there. I thought of Miss Dean and Griffin, of the Cecelia Brunes
-I had known, and Polatkin tracing the outline of my figure with his fat
-forefinger.
-
-"I wouldn't either," and my frank admission of it brought us out of the
-atmosphere of controversy to the community of our love again.
-
-"You understand, don't you, that I feel even more obligation to her
-_now_." I nodded. I understood fully that obstinate trace of disloyalty
-that came of his having given himself to what she wouldn't approve of,
-to what he couldn't for decency's sake admit of giving her daughters.
-
-"I know what people think of the life of the stage," I agreed; "and I
-know what's worse, that most of it is true. Not that it need to be; but
-it has got in the habit of being so."
-
-"Well, then, if you feel that way----" The inference was plain that he
-didn't know in that case why I held on to it.
-
-"It has got into my blood, Helmeth. I can't explain, and I didn't
-realize until we got to talking of it, but I don't believe I could live
-away from it. It is with me as it is with you about your engineering."
-If I had a momentary qualm lest that last should be not quite
-disingenuous, it passed in the realization that the comparison hadn't
-come home to him. I remembered how Forester would have accepted the
-abnegation of my gift to his necessity of being important, and I didn't
-hold it out against Helmeth that he failed to realize at all the place
-that my work occupied, just as work, in the scheme of my existence.
-
-We came back to it the next day and the next. It would have been
-simpler, of course, if it hadn't been for the children, and for my being
-at one with him in the opinion that the stage wasn't the proper
-atmosphere for the rearing of young ladies. I was still of the opinion
-which was exemplified in so far as I knew it, by Pauline and Mrs.
-Franklin Shane, that the function of mothering could not go on except by
-complete separateness from the business of making a living. All my
-training and heredity had fostered an ideal of family life which
-rendered obligatory a proper house and servants, in the neighbourhood of
-good schools, and the exclusion from it of everybody but those who found
-themselves in an identical situation. And if we had been able to imagine
-a compromise, Helmeth and I would have been hindered by the defrauded
-capacity for loving, from working it out logically. At the mere
-suggestion of anything to drive us apart, the mating instinct set us
-toward one another irresistibly. We would leave off any argument and
-fall to kissing. We were pierced through and through with loving.
-
-"Let us not think of it any more; something will work out for us. Let us
-just be happy the way we are," I would protest.
-
-"Oh, child, child, will you never understand that the way we are is what
-is so hard to bear!" Then he would snatch me up until the suffusing fire
-of his caress would steal through all my body and sing in me like
-bacchic sap of vineyards in the spring.
-
-"You oughtn't to marry me unless you can't help yourself," he would
-laugh shamelessly. So we fell deeper in love and not out of our
-difficulties.
-
-Toward the end of that week, the weather which had been thickening to a
-storm, brought us to one of those thunderous London days, full of a
-stifling murk that might have been breathed out by the nostrils of the
-greasy, hurrying snake that went by in the bed of the river.
-Inconsequential lightnings flashed in the smoky vault, from every
-quarter of which rolled unrelated thunder.
-
-Helmeth came over from Mr. Shane's office in London Wall; the need we
-had of being together was oppressive like the day which, when we had
-sought it in the Park, we could hear like some great monster bellowing
-for its mate. We went out and walked about for a time under the trees,
-fancying the relief of freshness in the green obscurity that under the
-ranked trunks, thickened to blackness. No one was about but a few
-belated nursery maids, scurrying in silhouette against the pale glow of
-the light pinned down and imprisoned under the thick cloud of foliage.
-We were on the Broad Walk, when suddenly a wind tore loose in the
-firmament. It made a whirling chaos of the murk, it wrung the treetops,
-but the air along the ground was stagnant as a cistern. Now and then a
-few great drops spattered on the leaves of the limes. Over a quarter of
-a mile from us, near the Alexandria gate, the tension of the day snapped
-suddenly in flame, a bolt had shattered one of the great trees. Straight
-across the grass toward us the bolt sped like a ball of light. It
-skimmed the ground knee high, flame points on its edges, flickered
-viciously as it drove at us.
-
-There was no time for anything. Helmeth cried out to me once and I
-stepped within the circle of his arms; we could hear the fire ball
-sizzling as it cleared the grass; within a yard of us it went out in a
-flare of gas and a crack like thunder. Suddenly buckets of rain were
-precipitated on us, we could hear the slap of them on the pavement as we
-ran.
-
-I was crying hysterically by the time we came to my room in a cab. I
-remember Helmeth trying to rid me of my wet things and my clinging to
-him crying.
-
-"Oh, my dear, my dear, it was so near, so near, I thought I was to lose
-you before I had had you--before I had had you at all!"
-
-"No, no ... not that, Olivia, not that!" His arms were around me and all
-my life up to that moment was no more to me than a path which led up to
-those arms. I remember that ... and the world dissolving in the wash of
-the rain outside ... and the lift of his breast; and deep under all,
-old, unimagined instincts reared their heads and bayed at the voice of
-their master....
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-After the evening of the storm we talked no more of marriage for a
-while, and about a week later I went over to Paris ostensibly to shop,
-and was joined there by Mr. Garrett on the way to Italy. I suppose that
-Italy must always lie like some lovely sunken island at the bottom of
-all passionate dreams, from which at the flood it may arise; the air of
-it is charged with subtle essences of romance. One supposes Italy must
-be organized for the need of lovers. Nothing occurred there to break the
-film of our enchanted bubble. For a month we kept to the hill towns and
-to Venice, where we could go about in the conspicuous privacy of a
-gondola, and all that time we met nobody we had ever known.
-
-It was all so easily managed--we had to think of the girls, of
-course--no one seeing our registered names side by side, Mrs. Thomas
-Bettersworth, New York, and Helmeth Garrett, Chilicojote, Mexico, would
-have thought of connecting them. Helmeth attended to all his business
-correspondence as though he were still in London, and nobody expected to
-hear from me in any case.
-
-It is strange how little history there is to happiness. We had come
-together past incredible struggles, anxieties, triumphs, defeats; we
-had been buffeted and stricken, and now suddenly we were stilled. If at
-any time the ghosts of the uneasy past rose upon us, we kissed and they
-were laid. So long as we kept in touch, there ran a river of fire
-between our blessed isolation and the world. And for the first time we
-looked upon the world free of the obligations of our being in it. We
-looked, and exchanged our separate knowledges as precious treasure. My
-exploration of life had been from within--I knew what Raphael was
-thinking about when he painted that fine blue vein on his Madonna's
-wrist. But Helmeth had looked on the movement of history; what he saw in
-Italy was the path of armies, lines of aqueducts, old Roman roads to and
-from mines. Everything began or ended for him in a mine, in Gaul or
-Austria or Ophir; dynasties were marked for him by change in the
-ownership of mines. So he drew me the white roads out of Italy as one
-draws fibre from a palm, and strung on them the world's great
-adventures. There were hours also when we let all this great fabric of
-art and history float from us, sure that by the vitalizing thread of
-understanding which ran between us like a new, live sense, we could pull
-it back again ... but we loved ... we loved.
-
-Nothing that happened to us there, came with a more revealing touch than
-the attitude in which I caught myself, looking out for and being
-surprised at not discovering in myself any qualms of conscience. All
-that I had known of such relations in other people, had made itself
-known by a subtle, penetrating, fetid savour, against which some
-instinct, as sure as a hound, threw up its head and bayed the tainted
-air.
-
-But in my own affair, the first compulsion that irked me was the
-necessity I was under of not telling anybody. I wasn't conscious at any
-time of any feeling that wouldn't have gone suitably with the outward
-form of marriage; there were times even when I failed to see why one
-should take exception to the neglect of such form. I was remade every
-pulse and fibre of me, my beloved's ... and so obviously, that the
-necessity of tagging my estate with a ceremony struck me as an
-impertinence. Marriage I think must be a fact, capable of going on
-independently of the prayer book and the county clerk. Whatever _you_
-may think, no god could have escaped the certainty of my being duly
-married.
-
-There were days though, just at first, when I suffered the need of
-completing my condition by an outward bond. I knew very well where the
-custom of wedding rings came from; I should have worn anklets and
-armlets as well, if only they could have been taken as the advertisement
-of my belonging wholly to my man. Depend upon it, the subjugation of
-woman will be found finally to rest in the attempt visibly to
-establish, what the woman herself concurs in, the inward conviction of
-possession.
-
-How much of what was in my own mind, was also in Helmeth's, I do not
-know, but because I had brought upon myself the condition of not being
-married, I failed to speak of what I found regrettable in it. What did
-come out for me satisfyingly, was the man's sheer content in his mate,
-the response, and our pride in it, of his blood and body to my presence,
-and the new relish it created in him for the processes of living, for
-his pipe and his meals, and his work. He had brought some estimates to
-figure out; evenings at work on these, he would call me to him and sit
-with his left arm thrown lightly about my chair, the pencil going as
-though my presence were an added fillip to activity. He took on weight
-in that holiday, and his mouth relaxed to a more youthful curve.
-
-We spent the last three weeks of it at a quiet hotel on the point of
-land that divides Lake Como from Lecco, opposite Cadenabbia. Times yet I
-will wake out of dreaming, to find the pulse of the city transmuted into
-the steady lisping of that silver fretted lake. We had come to a phase
-like that in our relation, deep and full and shining. We spent hours
-sitting on the parapet in the sun, looking at it. I would sit on the
-stone ledge and Helmeth would stretch himself, with his pipe, along the
-ground.
-
-"Helmeth," I said on such a morning, "do you know this is the first time
-I ever rested?" He gave a little gurgle of content; the sun turned on
-the sails of the fishing-boats and flashed us sympathy. "I'm afraid," I
-admitted, "I'm never going to want to do anything else."
-
-"Oh, I'm going to want to. This is good enough, but it wouldn't be half
-so good if I couldn't take it along with me and do things with it--great
-things." He threw his arm across my knees with one of those quick,
-intimate caresses, flooding me full of the delighted sense of how
-completely I belonged to him. "I feel," he said, "as if I had been going
-about with one arm or one hand, and now I've got a full set of them.
-Wait until I show you!"
-
-"When you talk of doing, Helmeth--that means leaving me."
-
-"That's for you to say, Olive." That was as near as he had come yet to
-reminding me that it was I who had chosen this instead of a relation
-which would have implied my going with him wherever his work led him,
-and that the choice was still open to me. The night after the storm he
-had written me:
-
- "There is nothing that troubles me about to-night except the fear
- that you may regret it, that you might ever come to have a doubt of
- how I feel about it. I want you to feel that whatever you choose is
- right to me, and though I hope for nothing so much as to make you
- my wife, I shall not urge you beyond what you feel that you can do
- without urging."
-
-It was a generous letter, and no doubt it had its weight in persuading
-me to trust the situation, in the face of that instinct which saves
-women, even from passions that seem their own justification. If he had
-counted on the naturalness of love to set up its own public obligation,
-he had not been far wrong with me. If it had been practicable, I should
-have walked out with him any day those first weeks to be married. But
-marriage is a very complicated business in Italy. In a measure I had
-satisfied my fret for the visible tie, with a ring which he had bought
-me in Florence, which, as the stones flashed in the sun, turned me back
-on the thought I had when first he set it on my hand.
-
-"Helmeth, do you suppose that we are pushed on to make laws and
-observances about marriage because the bond that comes into being then
-has a consistency and validity beyond what we feel about it?"
-
-"Oh, beyond what we feel about it, yes." He sat up then a little away
-from me, as he often did when he drew upon experiences lying beyond the
-points at which his life had been touched by mine, and began skipping
-little stones into the water. "Yes, I'm sure that what you feel about a
-thing that happens to you is not always the test of what it does to you.
-Sometimes I think feelings haven't much to do with our experiences
-except to get us into them." He left off skipping stones and began to
-pile them into a little heap. "I was thinking of Laura," he concluded.
-It was not often that he spoke to me of his wife.
-
-"I can't remember that I had a great deal of feeling about her; I was
-too busy, I suppose, getting on with my engineering; but she had a grip
-on me. She had a grip. Look here, my dear, I ought to tell you this,
-you're the wonder of the earth for me, and I know very well that my
-wife's world was a very little one; it was bounded by the church on one
-side and by conventions on all the others. But somehow I don't want to
-get too far away from it, and I don't want the girls to get too far." He
-swung about to look squarely up at me. "This that you've given me, it's
-heaven; it's a thing for a man to die for and die happy; but there's the
-other too." He laughed a little awkwardly; he caught my feet in one of
-his strong hands. "Have I made you understand?"
-
-"I understand that kind of life. It's like a clean, scrubbed room. I
-_know_. I was brought up in it. There have been times when I have been
-desperate because I couldn't go back and live there. But I ought to tell
-you, Helmeth, I can't find my way back."
-
-"You! Why should you? You were made to live in Kings' houses. But I
-wanted to be sure you weren't going to be disappointed if I haven't the
-manners that always belong to palaces. I've been in camps where a
-scrubbed room looked mighty good to me." He stretched himself and rolled
-over on the ground, lying with his back to the sun, soaking in it in
-simple, animal content. Little white flecks showed on the lake, the
-sails of the fisher-boats tilted slowly and composed themselves anew
-with the line of the shore and the flowing hills. Directly opposite, the
-walls of Cadenabbia showed white amid the green, like a little streak of
-Arcady.
-
-"We've never been," I reminded him.
-
-"I thought you wanted to leave it so you could always think of its being
-as romantic as it looks, without making sure that it isn't." That was
-the reason I had given him, but the truth was that Cadenabbia was on one
-of those tourist routes where, supposing anybody we knew to be wandering
-about Europe, we would be sure to run into them. This morning, however,
-I was seized with an irresistible desire to visit it.
-
-"But supposing it isn't as interesting as it looks," I submitted, "if I
-go there with you I shall never know it. And think how disappointed I
-should be if I should ever come there without you and find that it is
-the one place we ought to have seen."
-
-There was a little motor launch plying between the shores of the lake,
-and an hour before tea time we crossed in it. We spent the hour in the
-garden of the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, and then along the parapet we
-strolled in search of tea. It was the height of the tourist season and
-the gay groups moving in the streets between the quaint low houses, gave
-it a holiday air. We heard them calling one to the other, exchanging
-appreciations and information. All at once we heard them calling us.
-
-"Garrett, Garrett!" a party in the act of settling at a tea table in the
-garden of one of the hotels, dissolved and reorganized about us as the
-centre. There was laughter and garbled greetings and handshaking.
-Presently Helmeth began to introduce me. They were a party of
-Californians, all more or less acquainted and importunate; we were swept
-back by them to the table and tea. There were two married couples and
-one unmarried woman of about my age, and a boy of sixteen. I could see
-by the way she appropriated him, that his acquaintance with Miss Stanley
-had been of the degree that might have ripened into marriage, and that
-Miss Stanley had not wholly made up her mind that it wouldn't. She was
-one of those unmarried women who contrive by a multiplicity and vivacity
-of interests to deny what is explicitly advertised by their anxiety to
-have you understand that they consider themselves much better off just
-as they are. I could see her taking in all the details of my appearance,
-to find the key to what Mr. Garrett might presumably like in me, and
-striking out in her manner to him a quick sketch of me, bettered in the
-direction of what she believed it most to be. The other women, if they
-had been brought up in Taylorville, would have resembled Pauline Mills;
-that they didn't I could see was difference of geography. They were all
-full of gay talk and reminiscence of a mutual life in the West, on a
-footing that left me rather more than room to play the part, which I had
-cast for myself with celerity, of being a casual acquaintance of his,
-picked up at a hotel. He had introduced me to them as Mrs. Bettersworth,
-and whether they would have known me or not by my stage name, I took
-care they shouldn't have the opportunity.
-
-Nothing would do but he must stay to dinner; I guessed that there was
-that degree of acquaintance between them which would have made it
-unfriendly of him to refuse. I could see Miss Stanley prick up at his
-manner of leaving the decision to me, and realized that whatever we
-might have agreed upon, there would be no keeping our relation from
-being at least a matter of curiosity to the women, the elder of whom had
-promptly included me in the invitation.
-
-I invented a mythical travelling companion across the lake whom I must
-join, and managed to make my being in Mr. Garrett's company appear so
-casual that I came near to overdoing it by exciting his concern.
-
-"What's the matter; don't you like them?" He wished to know as he saw me
-to the landing.
-
-"Ever so," I insisted promptly, "but they wouldn't like me after a
-while. You behave as if we had been married five years."
-
-"Oh, well, haven't we?" He looked back and his brow gathered a little.
-"For two cents I'd tell them." But after all there was nothing he could
-do but see me comfortably off and go back to them. He told me afterward
-that Mr. Harwood, the elder of the two gentlemen, had been useful to him
-in business.
-
-It must have been close on to midnight when he waked me, sitting on the
-edge of my bed. He must have gone to his own room very softly, meaning
-not to disturb me; now I heard him calling my name in a whisper and his
-hand seeking for my face.
-
-I reached up and drew his down to me.
-
-"Oh, my dear----" I was startled at what I found there. "Beloved, why
-are you crying?" I could feel him shake with sudden uncontrollable
-emotion. I kept his head on my breast and comforted him.
-
-"When did you come in?"
-
-"An hour ago--you were asleep." The commonplace question seemed to quiet
-him.
-
-"Was it something went wrong at the dinner?"
-
-"Wrong, yes ... but not there, not there. It's all wrong, it has been
-wrong from the beginning."
-
-"Dear heart, tell me."
-
-"Olive, marry me; say you'll marry me!" There was urgency in his
-whisper, there was pain in it. "Say it; say it!"
-
-"I'll marry you. I've been waiting for you to ask."
-
-"Oh, my dear, when I have begged you so...."
-
-"Tell me," I urged....
-
-"There isn't anything to tell, only ... we walked along the parapet and
-were very happy together. They're a good sort. I've known them for
-years. And we found a peasant woman selling lace, good lace, the women
-said, and cheap ... Harwood bought some for his wife ... and Stanley
-bought his sister some. Harwood went back, pretending he'd forgotten
-something, and bought a piece his wife wanted and thought she couldn't
-afford. And I couldn't buy you any ... not openly. I wanted Miss Stanley
-to select some handkerchiefs that I said were for the girls and she said
-girls shouldn't wear that kind. Oh, Olive, don't you understand?"
-
-"I understand; you shall go back to-morrow and buy me some."
-
-"But it won't be the same ... and afterward ... after dinner we sat in
-the garden and Harwood sat with his arm round his wife's chair. And you
-were over here ... _hiding_! Oh, Olive, I want my wife, I want her ...
-in the light, before everybody. I want her." I was crying now.
-
-"It's all wrong," he insisted, "it's been wrong from the beginning. We
-belong together, before everybody." He kept repeating that phrase over
-and over. "All the years that we've been apart ... and now just to have
-it in a hole in a corner!"
-
-"No, no, my dear!" I protested. "Before God ... it's been before God!"
-We sobbed together. By and by Love came and comforted us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I suppose if it had been possible to go out and be married immediately
-we should have married the next morning; but in Italy there are
-observances--it would have taken three weeks at least and hardly less in
-Switzerland. In two weeks our vacation came to an end. Helmeth set out
-by the shortest route for Mexico and I interposed a week's shopping
-between me and Mrs. Franklin Shane to whom I had pledged myself for a
-week at her country house. In November I was to meet Helmeth Garrett in
-New York, "and settle things" he had stipulated. Somehow I could not
-bring myself to think of my relation to him as involving cataclysmal
-changes. I wouldn't say to myself that I intended to marry him, and I
-couldn't say that I wouldn't.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Within a week after my return, Polatkin came to see me about a project
-of a theatre of my own, which had been on the horizon since the year
-before. Polatkin himself was to furnish the money, which, considering
-what he had made out of me under our earlier contract, he was not in the
-least loath to do. He couldn't understand why I hesitated.
-
-"Is it that you think you are getting along without Polatkin? Well, you
-can try." I hastened to reassure him. "Well then--are you getting cold
-feet about that Ravenscroft woman? Understand me, she can't act at all.
-It's something scandalous the way she tries to act like you do, and she
-can't. If I was her manager I would introduce a tight rope into the
-third act and have her walk it, but what I would have something that
-wasn't copied from somebody else."
-
-"I wasn't thinking of Miss Ravenscroft," I confessed. "I'm thinking of
-getting married."
-
-"Married! Married! And leave the stage? My God--it is a sin----!" He
-clutched the air and shook handfuls of it in my face. "What do you want
-to get married for?" he demanded. "Ain't you getting on like anything?
-Ain't you popular? Ain't you making money?"
-
-"All of those," I admitted.
-
-"Well, then?" His wrath which had frothed white for a moment, cooled
-down into a fluid sort of bewilderment which seemed about to set and
-harden in a smile of disbelief.
-
-"The man I am going to marry lives in Mexico."
-
-"Mexico! Mexico!" he bubbled again. "I ask you is that any sort of a
-place for a man to live what marries the greatest tragic actress ever
-was going to be?
-
-"Ach, my Gott," in moments of great excitement he reverted to the trick
-of the tongue to which he was born. "All these years I have waited for
-this, I have said Miss Lattimore is a great actress, she has talent, she
-has brains, and when she will have passion--Pouff!" He blew out his
-loose lips and made a balloon with his hands to express the rate at
-which I would rise in the scale of tragic actresses. "And now that it
-has happened, she wants to live in Mexico." He deflated himself
-suddenly, folded his hands over what he believed to be his bosom, and
-looked at me reproachfully. This being the first time he had studied my
-face directly since I came home, I suppose he must have seen there my
-doubt and indecision.
-
-"Understand me," he said soberly, "I have known a lot of actresses, and
-I want to tell you that this marrying business don't pay. They got to
-come back to the stage; they got to. You ain't going to be any
-different down there in Mexico to what you are in New York, understand
-me. _Yah!_ Mexico!" The word seemed to inflame him. But he had the sense
-to let me alone for a while.
-
-A few days later I saw in the paper that he had taken the lease of the
-theatre he had mentioned to me, and I knew that he wasn't counting on my
-going to Mexico.
-
-I suppose if I had had the courage to look into my own mind to find out
-what I wished to do, I might have surmised what was going on there from
-the fact that I didn't mention the idea of marriage to Sarah. I have
-tried--all this book has had no other purpose in fact, than to try to
-tell how I came to be in the relation I was to Helmeth Garrett, came
-into it as to a room long prepared for me, without any struggles or
-tormenting, and without thinking much about the effect that his presence
-in my life would have upon my work. I suppose that in as much as I had a
-man's attitude toward work, I had come unconsciously to the man's habit
-of keeping love and my career, in two watertight compartments. I found I
-was not able to think of them as having much to do with one another.
-Still less had I the traditional shames of my situation.
-
-I remember the first time I went to rehearsal, groping about in my
-consciousness for the source of what I felt suddenly divide me from the
-rest of my company, and finding it in the knowledge of myself as a
-woman acquainted with passion, with a secret, delicious life. And far
-from identifying me with the cheapness and betrayal which until now I
-had supposed inseparable from the uncertified union, it set me apart in
-the aloofness of the exclusive, the distinguishing experience. It
-remained for Sarah to pierce me, in spite of all I intrinsically felt my
-relation to Helmeth Garrett to be, with the knowledge of where I stood
-in the world which I still believed had the last word about human
-conduct.
-
-It was not altogether the intent to deceive, that kept me from opening
-the matter to her in the beginning, but a feeling that the less advice I
-had about it the better. And if I did tell her, I wished first to
-arrange that I need not feel any constraint upon me of our habit of
-living together. I was anxious to have Helmeth find me when he came,
-free to be all to him that our love demanded, and in view of all the
-years in which Sarah and I had lived together, I did not know how to go
-about it. I began to think that I should have to tell her after all,
-when the Powers, who must have known very well what was going on, took
-that into account also.
-
-Sarah's season began a week before mine, and I remember her saying that
-she would be glad when we could come home together, as she had had an
-uneasy sensation for the last night or two, of some one following her.
-Sarah had any number of admirers, but the sort of men who were attracted
-to her still splendour, were not the kind to follow her home at night.
-
-"Turn them over to the police," I suggested. I had had to try that once
-or twice.
-
-"Oh, I couldn't!" She turned scarlet. Even after all those years I had
-not realized how all her life was timed to catch the slightest
-approaching footfall of what, to her simple faith, must inevitably come.
-I found her waiting for me at the stage door on my first night--no
-matter how many of them you have, first nights are always in the
-balance--and we were so taken up with discussing how I had got on with
-it, that it wasn't until I was fitting the key in the lock that I was
-recalled to the occasion of her annoyance. Just below us there seemed to
-be a man dodging in and out of the blocks of shadow made by the
-high-railed stairways that led up to the first floor of the row of flats
-in which our rooms were located. Something in the figure, or in our
-standing there before the shadowed door with the dull light of the
-transom over us, brushed me with a light wing of memory; I seemed to
-recall some such conjunction before, but it was gone before I could
-connote the suggestion with time or place. All I said to Sarah was that
-if we saw anything more of that we would certainly speak to the police.
-
-The next night we went to supper with friends, and it was after midnight
-when my cab--Sarah didn't afford cabs for herself--drew up at the door.
-The approach to it was by way of a handsome pair of stairs with an
-ornamental iron railing of so close a pattern that any one sitting on
-the steps in the dark, would be pretty well concealed by it. That there
-was some one so sitting, dropped there in a stupour of fatigue or
-drunkenness, we did not discover until we stumbled fairly on to him.
-
-The exclamation we raised, awoke him; it arrested the attention of the
-cab driver just turning from the curb, he raised his lamp and sent the
-rays of it streaming over us. The man I could see, was shabby, ill and
-embarrassed, he ducked his head from the light, but his hat had fallen
-off on the step and as he threw up his arm to protect himself from
-recognition I knew him by the gesture.
-
-"Griff," I cried. "Griffin! You!" I caught him by the arm. He let it
-fall at his side and stood looking at us pitifully, like a trapped
-animal.
-
-"I wasn't doing any harm," he mumbled. The cab driver seeing that we
-knew him, let down his lights and clattered away. I thought quickly; he
-must have been in want, he had looked for me and at the last was ashamed
-to claim me.
-
-"But, Griffin," I insisted, "you don't know how glad I am to see
-you--you must come in." He wasn't looking at me; he hadn't heard me.
-
-"Look out," he said, "she's going to faint!" He brushed past me to
-Sarah. She leaned limp against the railing; he steadied her as a man
-might a sacred vessel in jeopardy. But Sarah didn't faint so easily as
-that, she gathered herself away from his hand.
-
-"Come upstairs," she commanded. It was only one flight up. I don't know
-how we managed to get a light and to find ourselves in its pale flare,
-confronting one another. I could see then that my first surmise had been
-correct about Griffin, to the extent that he looked ill and in want. He
-was holding his hat, which he had picked up from the stairs, and fumbled
-it steadily in his hands. His hair, which wanted trimming more even than
-when I had last seen him, had still its romantic curl; he looked
-steadily out from under it at Sarah. I had an idea, though I think it
-must have been derived from my own dizziness at what rushed in upon me,
-that Sarah was floating in air, that she hung there swaying with the
-breeze from the open window, as a spirit. She was spirit white and her
-voice seemed to come from far.
-
-"Leon! Leon!" How he knew what she demanded of him only the God who
-makes men and women to love one another, knows.
-
-"She died," he said to the unspoken question. "She died two years ago.
-I've been all this time finding you." Suddenly a quick flame burst over
-Sarah.
-
-"You came--you came to me!" I could see that she moved toward him, all
-her magnificent body alight, her arms, her bosom. I turned quickly
-through the door into the room beyond. I couldn't stay to see that. I
-went on into my bedroom and knelt down, hiding my face in the
-bedclothes. I think I meant to pray, but no words came. I rose presently
-and went into the kitchen. The maid did not sleep in the flat but came
-every morning at nine; on the table there was a tray as she left it
-always, with everything laid out in case we should be hungry coming late
-from the theatre. I moved about softly and made chocolate and sandwiches
-and arranged them on the tray; I knew Sarah would understand. About half
-an hour after I had gone to my room again, I heard her go out to find
-it.
-
-From time to time I could catch a faint murmur from the front room. I
-put the pillow over my head and cried softly. I remembered how Griffin
-had looked at her that time in Chicago when I had taken him to "The
-Futurist," and how I had been ashamed ever to introduce him. I wondered
-whether his real name were Lawrence or Griffin. I had fallen asleep at
-last, and I was awakened by Sarah standing beside me in her white gown.
-
-"May I sleep with you, Olivia? I've put ... Mr. Lawrence ... in my
-room." I drew her under the cover with me; she was cold and now and then
-a shudder passed through her from head to foot.
-
-"You guessed, didn't you?" she whispered. "He said you knew him in
-Chicago. His ... Mrs. Lawrence is dead ... you heard him say that?" I
-understood she meant by that to extenuate his coming back to her. It was
-right for him to come if no other woman stood in the way; what there was
-in himself that stood in the way didn't seem to matter.
-
-"He's been ill," she said. "I hope you didn't mind my keeping him in the
-house, Olive.... We can be married to-morrow."
-
-I sat straight up in bed in my amazement.
-
-"Sarah! You don't mean that you are going to marry him!"
-
-"Why, what else is there to do?"
-
-"But, Sarah ..." I lay down again. After all what else was there to do?
-
-"You know, Olivia, you have never really loved anybody." I had no answer
-to that; suddenly she broke out shaking the bed with her sobs. "Oh, my
-dear, my dear, it is true that he loved me. It is true. He came back to
-me as soon as he was free. Oh, Olive, if you had known what it is all
-these years not to know if it was _true_! If he hadn't only taken me
-just as a stop-gap ... a fancy ... how was I to know?"
-
-I didn't think very much of the proof that he loved her now. Sarah,
-beautiful, prosperous, was a goal for any man to strive toward, even
-without the necessity which was written in every line of Leon Griffin
-Lawrence.
-
-"Sarah," I questioned gently, "do you mean to say you've loved him all
-this time, that you love him now?" She left off sobbing to answer me
-with that steady, patient truth with which she met any issue of life.
-
-"I loved him ... all the love I had I gave him. It's not the same now,
-of course; its wings are broken, but it is his. Once you've given you
-can't take it back again."
-
-"But he--he has no claim on you now. Sarah, do you need to marry him?"
-
-"I am married to him."
-
-"But, Sarah ... look here, Sarah, it isn't true that I have never loved.
-I didn't love the man I was married to, but I have learned something
-about love; I've learned that marriage without it is a thing no
-self-respecting woman should go into."
-
-"Love," said Sarah, "is a thing that once you've gone into, binds you by
-something that grows out of it that is stronger than love itself.
-Olivia, I am bound ... if you want to know, I'd rather be bound to--to
-Leon Lawrence by that tie than to the dearest love without it. Oh,
-Olivia, can't you see, can't you understand that I have to do
-_right_ ... that the way I see things there's a law ... not a civil law
-but a law of loving that goes on by itself; and being faithful to it is
-better to me than loving. You must see that, Olivia."
-
-"I see that this is the happiest thing for you and I'll not put anything
-in your way, Sarah." I kissed her. What, after all, does one soul know
-of another.
-
-It came to me as an extenuating circumstance when I looked him over the
-next morning, that Mr. Lawrence wouldn't live long enough to do her any
-particular harm. He had been so little of a man always to me, so much
-less so now, eaten through as he was by poverty and sickness, that I
-could never understand how he happened to be the vehicle of that
-appealing charm which even as I looked, drew me over to his side in
-something like a sympathetic frame.
-
-I could see that he regarded me anxiously, and I thought it to his
-credit to be able to realize that there might be somebody not absolutely
-delighted at his marrying Sarah. But it wasn't, as I learned later, any
-sense of his shortcomings that waked in his eye toward me.
-
-He was lying on the sofa in our little parlour, for the shock of the
-encounter had been too much for the abused and broken thing he was.
-Sarah had gone out, to consult Jerry, I believed about their
-marriage;--she wouldn't have asked me knowing how I felt about it.
-Griffin looked up at me with the old formless demand on my
-consideration.
-
-"You've never told her, have you?"
-
-"Told what?" On my part it was genuine amazement.
-
-"About us, you know ... there in Chicago." He dropped his eyes;
-something almost like a blush of shame overcame him. I stared.
-
-"Good heavens, Griff, I'd forgotten it."
-
-"Oh, well, I didn't know--some women----" He stopped, embarrassed by my
-sheer credulity of its having anything to do with his relation to Sarah.
-"I told you I was a bad lot," he protested, "but I swear that since my
-wife died and I could come back to her, I've been straight. You believe
-that, don't you?"
-
-"Oh, I'll believe it if it's any comfort to you." When I talked it over
-with Jerry afterward I could see the queer, twisted kind of moral
-standard by which he made it appear that any irregularity of his during
-his wife's life, was unfaithfulness to her, and not Sarah.
-
-She had come back with Jerry and I was walking with him to the City Hall
-for the license; he had begun by protesting just as I had, and had
-surrendered to his conviction that nothing less would satisfy Sarah.
-
-"After all," I said, "it shows that there is some sort of harmony
-between them, that he should realize that the only reparation he could
-make would be to come back to her."
-
-"Cur!" Jerry kicked at the pavement, "to pollute the life of a woman
-like Sarah with his wretched existence."
-
-"That's how you feel," I reminded him, "but remember how all these
-years Sarah has felt polluted by the thought that she wasn't married to
-him."
-
-"Oh, _damn_!"
-
-"Sarah thinks, and I'm beginning to think so too, that there is
-something to marriage that binds besides the ceremony."
-
-"I know." Jerry's wife had left him that summer and though he knew it
-was the best thing for both of them, he was trying to get her back
-again: "It binds of itself. If only they would tell us that in the
-beginning instead of putting up all this stuff about its being the law
-and religion. We think we can get out of it just by getting out of the
-law, and none of us know better until it is too late."
-
-"People like Sarah know. They know just the way swallows know to go
-south in winter. You'll see; she will be happier married, not because it
-is pleasant but because it is right."
-
-They were married that afternoon in our apartment, and it was not until
-I was settled in the hotel where I had elected to stay until I could
-find suitable quarters, that I realized that the chance of this marriage
-had accomplished for me the freedom that I had not known how to obtain
-for myself.
-
-I lay awake a long time after I came from the theatre, and the mere
-circumstance of my being alone and in a hotel, as well as the events
-that led up to it, brought back to me the sense of my lover, of his
-being just in the next room and presently to come in to me. I felt near
-and warm toward him. And then I thought of Sarah and Griffin and how
-almost I had become the stop-gap to his affections that she dreaded most
-to find herself to have been. It didn't seem very real in retrospect. I
-shuddered away from it. Then I began to think how I had first been
-kindly disposed toward him, and that brought up an image of the dim
-corridor of the hotel where I had come to my first knowledge of such
-relations, and my abhorrence and terror of it. I thought of O'Farrell
-and of Miss Dean, and that suspicion of sickliness which her personality
-had for me, and saw how it must have arisen from her consciousness of
-what she had done to Griffin rather than her relation to Manager
-O'Farrell. Then I thought of Helmeth Garrett and one night in Sienna
-when the moonlight poured white over the cathedral ... and a linden tree
-in bloom outside the window ... and a nightingale singing in it ...
-Suddenly it was mixed up in my mind with the slanting chandelier and the
-tin-faced clock, and slowly a sense of unutterable stain and shame began
-to percolate through and through me.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-It is a great mistake to suppose that assertiveness is the only mannish
-trait taken on by successful women, nor is pliability the only feminine
-mark they lose. By what insensible degrees it came about I do not know,
-but I found myself on the peak of popularity, very much of the male
-propensity to be beguiled. I was willing to be played upon, and so it
-was skilfully done, to concede to it more than the situation had a right
-to claim for itself. I pulled myself up afterward, or was pulled up by
-the sharp rein of destiny, but for the time, while my success was new, I
-was aware not only of the possibility of my being handled, but of my
-luxuriating in it, of demanding it as the price of my favour, and in
-particular, of valuing Polatkin for the way in which, by my own moods,
-my drops and exaltations he brought me to his hand.
-
-How much of the fact of my private life he was really acquainted with, I
-never knew, but he understood enough of its reaction to make even my
-resistences serve to push me on to the assured position of a theatre and
-a clientele of my own. It stood out for me as he described it, not so
-much as a means of dividing me from my beloved, but as a new and
-completer way of loving. I wanted more ways for that, space and
-opportunity. I wished to lay my gift down, a royal carpet for Helmeth
-Garrett to walk on; I would have done anything for him with it except
-surrender it. Not the least thing that came of my condition was the
-extraordinary florescence of my art.
-
-Every night as I drew its rich and shining fabric about me I was aware
-of all forms and passions, the mere masquerade of our delight in one
-another. Every night I embroidered it anew, I adored and caressed him
-with my skill. Polatkin went about wringing his hands over it.
-
-"You are a Wonder, a Wonder! And you are wasting it on them swine." That
-was his opinion of my support. "And to think you could have a theatre of
-your own, and what you like----"
-
-"A theatre like me--_Me_ spread over it, expressed, exemplified, carried
-out to the least detail?"
-
-"You shall have it even in the box office!" he responded magnificently.
-
-"How soon?"
-
-"I will bring the plans this afternoon; I got 'em ready in case you came
-around." But he was much too intelligent to undertake to bind me to them
-at that juncture.
-
-Things went on like this until the last week in November, then I had a
-telegram from Helmeth saying that he would be detained still longer.
-Every pulse of me had so been set to his coming on the twenty-seventh
-that I thought I should not be able to go on after that, I should go out
-like a light when the current is stopped. I had so little of him, not
-even a photograph, nothing but my ring and a few trinkets he had bought
-me in Italy. If I could have had a garment he had worn, a chair in which
-he had sat ... I went round and looked at the Astor House, because he
-told me that he had stopped there once, years ago.
-
-I stood that for three days and then I went down to New Rochelle where
-he had written me earlier, his girls were at school; not on my own
-account, you understand, but as a possible patron of the school on
-behalf of my niece, who was, if the truth must be told, less than two
-years old. While I was being shown about, I had Helmeth's children
-pointed out to me. They looked, as I had surmised, like their mother. If
-they had in the least resembled their father I should have snatched them
-to me. Everything might have turned out quite differently. They were,
-the principal said, nice girls and studious, but they did not look in
-the least like their father.
-
-It was one of those dark, gusty days that come at the end of November,
-damp without rain, and of a penetrating cold. There had been a great
-storm at sea lately and you could hear the wash of its disturbances all
-along the Sound. There was no steady wind, but now and then the damp air
-gave a flap like an idle wing. It was like the stir in me of a
-formless, cold desire, not equal to the demand Life was about to make on
-it. As I turned into the station road after a formal inspection of the
-premises, I met the girls coming back from their afternoon walk with the
-teachers, two and two. The Garrett girls were next to the last, they
-were very near of an age; I waited half hidden by a tree to watch them
-as they passed.
-
-They were well covered up from the weather in large blue coats with
-capes, and blue felt hats with butterfly bows to match at the ends of
-their flaxen braids. They looked like their mother ... I couldn't see
-them growing up to anything that would fit with Sarah and Jerry and
-Polatkin. The wing of the wind shook out some gathered drops of moisture
-as they passed, the branches of the trees clashed softly together, and
-as they turned into the grounds I noticed that the older one had
-something in her walk that reminded me of her father.
-
-I was pierced through with a formless jealousy of the woman who had
-borne them in her body. I was moved, but not with the impulse to draw
-them to my bosom. I felt back in the place where my boy had been, for
-the connecting link of motherliness and failed to find it. I had had it
-once, that knowledge of what is good to be done for small children and
-the wish to do it, but it was gone from me. It was as though I might
-have had a hand or a claw, any prehensile organ by which such things are
-apprehended, and when I reached it out after Helmeth's children it was
-withered.
-
-What I found in myself was the familiar attitude of the stage. I could
-have acted what swept through me then, I could have brought you to tears
-by it, but there was nothing I could do about it _but_ act. I wrote
-Helmeth that night that I had seen the children and then I burned the
-letter.
-
-He came at last. He was greatly concerned about his enterprise which was
-not yet established on that footing which he would like to have for it,
-and I think it was a relief to him to have me without the conventions
-and readjustments of marriage. It was tacitly understood between us that
-things were better as they were until that business was settled. I think
-he could not have had a great deal of money at the time; all that racing
-to and fro between London and Mexico must have cost something. His
-anxiety about the girls, which occasioned his sending them to the most
-expensive schools, and his affection for them, which led to their being
-carted about by their aunt to meet him occasionally at far-called
-places, was an additional drain.
-
-We were very happy; there is nothing whatever to tell about it. We met
-in brief intervals snatched from our work and did as other lovers do.
-Sometimes he would come for me at the theatre--the freshness of my
-acting never palled on him. Other times I would find him waiting for me
-in the little flat I had expressly chosen and furnished to be loved in.
-The pricking warmth of his presence would meet me as I came up the
-stair. Not long ago I found myself unexpectedly in a part of the city
-where we used to walk because we were certain not to meet any of our
-friends there. There was a tiny café where we used often to dine, and
-the memory of it swept over me terrifyingly fresh and strong.
-
-With all this, it was plain that we got on best when we were most alone.
-It was not that I did not every way like and was interested in the
-friends he introduced to me, outdoor men most of them, and their
-large-minded, capable wives. I got on with them tremendously, and found
-them as good for me as green food in the spring, sated as I was on the
-combined product of professionalism and temperament. It was chiefly that
-the simplicity and openness of their lives brought out for him the
-duplicity that lay at the bottom of ours. For it was plain that they
-wouldn't have understood, wouldn't have thought it necessary. They could
-have faced, those women, strange lands and untoward happenings, had many
-of them faced sterner things for the sake of their husbands, with the
-same courage and selflessness with which they would in my circumstances,
-have faced renunciation.
-
-It was the realization of this, so much sharper in him who had seen and
-known, that checked and harassed Helmeth; he wished to be at one with
-them, to be felicitated on my success and my charm, to include me if
-only by implication, in that community of adventure with which these
-mining and engineering folk had ringed the earth. And the necessity of
-holding our relation down to the outward forms of friendship established
-on the supposition of our having grown up together, fretted him.
-
-"It isn't honest," he broke out once after he had tried to persuade me
-to let him tell his friends that we were engaged. "It's all right
-between us; you are my wife in the sight of whatever gods there are, but
-that isn't what other people would call you."
-
-"Somehow, Helmeth, so long as it is with you, I don't care much what
-they call me."
-
-"Well, I care; I care a lot. You don't seem to remember you are going to
-be my girls' mother--sons' too, I hope. We ought to have some more
-children; Sanderson's got four." Sanderson had been our host at luncheon
-that day.
-
-Helmeth was knocking out the ashes of his pipe on my hearthstone; he
-paused in the occupation of refilling it to look down at me in a moody
-kind of impatience that was the worst I knew of him. There was the
-suggestion of a cleft in his strong, square chin which came out whenever
-he bit hard on a difficult proposition. The play of it now was like the
-tiny shadow of disaster.
-
-"I was down in old Brownlow's office the other day," he went on,
-"talking this Mexican scheme to him, and he had to break off in the
-middle of it to telephone to some chorus girl he had a date with. God!
-it made me hot to think of it!"
-
-"Because I'm in the same----" He cut me off with a sound of vexation.
-
-"Don't say it; don't even think of it! How long does this contract of
-yours last?"
-
-"To the end of the season," I told him.
-
-"Well, you chuck it just as soon as you can. I'll put this thing through
-somehow. We'll clear out of here." He had his pipe alight by now and
-began puffing more contentedly. "I don't think much of this burg
-anyway," he laughed as he settled himself in one of my chairs. "A man
-doesn't have a chance to get his feet on the ground."
-
-There were times when he almost made me share in his distaste for it.
-That was when I had drawn him into the circle of my professional
-acquaintances which somehow shrivelled at his touch like spiders in the
-heat. Understand that I hold by my art, that I have poured myself a
-libation on that altar, that I value it above all other means of
-expressing the drama of man's relation to the Invisible, and that I do
-not think you do enough for it, prize it enough, or use it rightly. But
-I suppose there is a yellow streak in me, or I wouldn't sicken so as I
-do at what it brings to pass in the personalities by which it is most
-forwarded. For since it must be that art cannot be served to the world,
-except by a cup emptied of much that is most desirable in the
-recipients, it ill becomes them as long as they fatten their souls at
-it, to take exception to the vessel from which it is drunk. Nevertheless
-I used to find myself, when Helmeth was with me, sniffing at the
-spiritual garments of my friends for the smell of burning. I resented
-Mr. Lawrence the most; it was not altogether for the incongruity of his
-possessing Sarah, her fine smudgeless personality and her lovely body,
-delicate and shapely as a pearl, but for the incontestable evidence he
-offered me of how low I had stooped. From the peak of my present
-prosperity, my troubles in Chicago, showed the merest accident, and the
-distance I had sprung away from them seemed somehow expressive of the
-strength with which I had sprung from all that Lawrence represented. Not
-all the care Sarah bestowed on him--and I think the best he could do for
-her was to provide her in his impaired health with an occasion for
-mothering--could quite distract the attention from the ineradicable mark
-of his cheapness.
-
-He was as much out of key with the society in which Sarah's success and
-mine had placed him, as he was flattered to find himself there. It had
-brought out in him in the way privation had not, that touch of
-theatricality which intrigued Sarah's unsophisticated fancy in the first
-place. He let his hair grow into curls and made a mysterious and
-incurable pain of his broken health. And though he offered it as the
-best he had to offer, with humility, he suffered an accession of that
-devoted manner which had won his way among women of his own class, but
-which among the sort he met at my rooms was ridiculous. Jerry too, with
-his married life in dissolution, for what looked to Helmeth, and in the
-light of his strong sense, was beginning to look to me like an aimless
-folly; out of all these blew a wind witheringly on the fine bloom of my
-happiness. We did best when we shut it out in a profound, exalted
-intimacy of passion.
-
-What leads me to think that Polatkin must have watched me rather closely
-all this time, is the fact that he waited until Mr. Garrett was gone to
-London again in the latter part of February, to put it to me that if I
-really meant to leave the stage permanently, and it was a contingency
-which, in speaking to me of it, he had the wit to speak seriously, I
-could do no better for myself than to take flight from it from the roof
-of my own theatre. He put it to me in his own dialect, mixed of the
-green room and Jewry, that I had torn a large hole in the surrounding
-professional atmosphere by the vitality of my acting that winter, and
-that it would be a great shame to go out into the obscurity of marriage
-without this final pyrotechnic burst.
-
-I could have, by his calculation, a short season to open with, and a
-whole year of brilliant success before--well before anything happened. I
-think by this time I must have known subconsciously that nothing would
-happen. It must be because no man naturally can imagine any more
-compelling business for a woman than being interested in him, that
-Helmeth failed to understand that he could as well have torn himself
-from the enterprise for which he had starved and sweated, as separate me
-from the final banquet of success. I had paid for it and I must eat.
-
-We opened in May, not the best time of year for such an adventure; but I
-suppose Polatkin was afraid to trust me to the distractions of another
-vacation. It occurs to me now, though at the time I didn't suspect him,
-that we couldn't have opened even then if he had not been much more
-forward with the plan than at any time he had permitted me to guess. At
-the last I came near, in his estimation, to jeopardizing the whole
-business by opening with "The Winter's Tale" with Sarah in the part of
-_Hermione_ and myself as _Perdita_. Jerry was writing me a new play, but
-in the process of breaking off a marriage that ought never to have been
-begun, he had found no time to complete it; but why, urged Polatkin, if
-we must fall back on Shakespeare, choose a part that did not introduce
-me to the audience until the play was half done? He stood out at least
-for _Juliet_ or _Cleopatra_. "Why, indeed," I retorted, "have a theatre
-of my own if it is not to do as I please in it?" I knew however that
-what I could put into _Perdita_ of Willesden Lake and the woods aflame,
-would have sustained even a more inconsiderable part.
-
-Effie and her husband came on to my opening night. I want to say here,
-if I have not explicitly said it, that my sister is a wonderful, an
-indispensable woman. When I think of her, the mystery of how she came
-out of Taylorville, full-fledged to her time, is greater than the
-mystery of how I came to be at all. For Effie is absolutely
-contemporaneous. She lives squarely not only in her century, but in the
-particular quarter of it now going. No clutch of tradition topples her
-toward the generation of women past. Most women of my acquaintance are
-either sodden with left-over conventions, or blowsy with racing after
-the to-be, but Effie is compacted, tucked in, detached from but
-distinctly related to her background of Montecito. She was president of
-the Woman's Club, chairman of the book committee of the circulating
-library, and though she had a letter every morning and a telegram every
-night from the woman with whom she had left her two babies, it didn't
-prevent her in the week she spent with me, from getting into touch with
-more Forward Movements than I was aware were in operation in New York.
-
-"But, good heavens, Effie, how can you find time for them? It's as much
-as I can do to attend to my own job."
-
-"Oh, you! You're a forward movement yourself. All I am doing is herding
-the others up to keep step with you. You know, Olivia, I've wondered if
-you didn't feel lonely at times, so far ahead that you don't find
-anybody to line up _with_. Every time I see a woman step out of the
-ranks in some achievement of her own, I think, 'Now, Olivia will have
-company.'"
-
-"But, heavens!" I said again. "I'm not thinking of the others at all. I
-don't even know that there are others, or at least who they are. I'm a
-squirrel in a cage. I go round because I must. I don't know what comes
-of it."
-
-"I'll tell you what comes--women everywhere getting courage to live
-lives of their own. Do you remember what you went through in Higgleston?
-Well, the more women there are like you, the less there will be of that
-for any of them. It is the conscious movement of us all toward liberty
-that's going round with you." I was dashed by the breadth and brightness
-of her view.
-
-"Effie," I said, "is this a new kind of toy to dangle before your
-intelligence to keep it from realizing it isn't getting anywhere?"
-
-"Like the love affairs of your friends?" she came back at me promptly.
-"No, it isn't; it's--well, I guess it's a religion."
-
-I believed as I dressed at the theatre that night, that it was the
-contagion of Effie's enthusiasm that keyed me up to a pitch that I
-thought I shouldn't have reached without Helmeth. I had counted so on
-his being there for the first night, but he was still in London, and for
-a week I hadn't heard from him.
-
-I needed something then to account, as I proceeded with my part, for the
-extraordinary richness of power, the delicacy and precision with which I
-put it over line by line to my audience. I played, oh, I played! I felt
-the audience breathing in the pauses like the silent wood; the lights
-went gold and crimson and the young dreams were singing. So vivid was
-the mood that, when from time to time I was swept out on billows of
-applause before the curtain, I fancied I saw him there, leaning to me,
-now from a balcony, or standing unobserved in a box behind the
-Sandersons' and some friends of his who had pleased, on his
-introduction, to take a great interest in me. It was a wonderful night,
-flooded with the certainty of success as by a full moon; we danced under
-it in spirit--I believe that Polatkin kissed me; two of my young men I
-saw with their hands on one another's shoulders, capering in the wings
-as I was being drawn before the curtain again and again to bob and smile
-like a cuckoo out of a clock, striking the perfect hour. And through it
-all was the sense of my beloved, the leaf-light touch of his kiss on my
-cheek, the pressure of his arm, so poignant that as I came out of the
-theatre late with Effie and her husband, I thought I could not bear it
-to go back to my room and find it empty.
-
-"Willis," I said to my brother-in-law, "you must lend me my sister
-to-night." I was sitting between them in the carriage, each of them
-holding a hand. I do not know what they were able to get of my acting,
-but nothing could have kept from them the knowledge of my tremendous
-success. I could see though, that in his excited state it wasn't going
-to be easy for him to spare his young wife, and that made it easier for
-me as we drew up in front of my door to change my mind suddenly and send
-her back with him. What really influenced me was the certainty that I
-could not bear even for Effie to disturb the sense of my lover's
-presence which I seemed to feel brooding over the room. I went up the
-steps warm with it.
-
-I had a moment of thinking as I opened the door and found the lights
-turned on, that my maid had left them so in anticipation of my return,
-and then I saw him. He was sitting by the dying fire; he had not heard
-me come up the stair, for his head was in his hands. He turned then at
-my exclamation, and I had time, before we crossed the width of the room
-to one another, to think that the attitude in which I had found him and
-the new writing of anxiety in his face, as he turned it to me, had its
-source in his finding me in what looked like a permanent relation to a
-theatre of my own. For a moment I thought that, and then my apprehension
-was buried on his breast.
-
-"Oh, my love, my love!" He held me off from him to let his eyes rove
-tenderly over my face, my breast, my hair. I do not know if he
-remembered the words he had spoken to me so long ago, or if they came
-spontaneously to the command of the old desire: "Oh, you beauty--you
-wonder...."
-
-Presently we moved to sit down, and stumbled over his bag upon the floor
-beside his chair. It brought me back to the miracle of his being there
-and to the certainty that he must have come to me direct from the
-steamer.
-
-"On the _Cunarder_," he admitted, "six days and a half. O Lord!" His
-gesture was expressive of the extreme weariness of impatience. "I came
-ashore with the quarantine officers. I couldn't cable. I left at two
-hours' notice."
-
-It occurred to me that he must have at least come ashore before sunset,
-and in that case he couldn't have come straight to me. I began to feel
-something ominous in the presence there of his bag. His overcoat, though
-the evening was so warm, lay beyond him on another chair. It flashed
-over me in a wild way that he had come to some sudden determination--he
-had been at the theatre that night--he had taken my being there in that
-circumstance as final--perhaps he meant to abandon me to my art, to
-surrender me at least to its more importunate claim. He followed my
-thought dully from far off.
-
-"I was at the theatre in time for your part," he said. "There wasn't a
-seat, but they knew me at the box office and let me in."
-
-"Then it _was_ you that I saw in the balcony, and in Sanderson's box? I
-thought it was a vision."
-
-"I had business with Sanderson." He turned back to what was beginning to
-make itself felt through his profound preoccupation, the charm of my
-presence. "There was that in your acting to-night that would have evoked
-visions," he smiled. "I had them myself." I knelt down on the floor
-beside his knees.
-
-"Helmeth, tell me," I begged. He began to stroke my face with his hand.
-
-"It doesn't seem so bad as it did a few moments ago, and yet it is bad
-enough. I must leave for Mexico in an hour."
-
-"Leave me?" I was still, in my mind, occupied with what now began to
-seem a monstrous disloyalty to him, my obligation to Polatkin. There had
-been a great deal about our new venture on the programme, even if he
-hadn't seen the papers, he must have learned it as soon as he came into
-the theatre.
-
-"Unless you can go with me in an hour ... yes, my dear, I know it is
-impossible...." He was silent a while, clasping and unclasping my hand
-on his knee, knitting his brows and staring into the fire with the
-expression of a man so long occupied with anxiety that his mind, in any
-moment of release, goes back to it automatically. I stirred presently
-when I saw that his perplexity had nothing to do with me. "I had a
-cable in London," he said. "Heaven only knows how long they were getting
-it down to the coast where they could send it; they have struck water in
-the mines." I failed to get the force of the announcement except that
-from the manner of his telling it, it was a great disaster. "I must
-leave on the twelve twenty-three," he warned me. I did understand that.
-
-"Oh, no, _no_! Helmeth!" I cried out. "Not now ... not so soon!" I clung
-to him crying. "Stay with me to-night ... just for to-night!" We rocked
-in one another's arms. I remember little broken snatches of explanation.
-
-"I've worked _so_, Olivia ... I've worked and sweated ... and now...."
-Presently he broke out again. "To have worked, and know that your work
-is sound, and to be played a trick, to lose by a ghastly trick! If there
-is a God, Olivia, why does He play tricks on a man like that?"
-
-"Hush, my dear! Oh, my dear ..."
-
-"Do you know what I've been doing since I came ashore? I've been buying
-pumps, Olivia, pumps, and machinery to work them. Think of the delay;
-and I'll have to ask Shane for more money ... more ... and I meant to be
-paying dividends." He held me off from him fiercely with both hands.
-"Olivia, suppose to-night instead of applause you had heard hisses,
-and people going out, turning their backs on you in your best
-lines ... oh ..." He broke off and covered his face with his hands.
-I crept up to him.
-
-"If they had, I should have come back to you, beloved. And I shouldn't
-have remembered it. Oh, beloved, what are all things worth except that
-they give us this?" I was on his knee now, and my hair was still in its
-maiden snood as it had been in the play. I drew it softly about his
-face.
-
-"Oh, my dear, to be _this_ to me, what does it matter about the mines?
-They will come straight again in a little time. But this ... this is
-_now_." I could feel the yielding in his frame. He was my man and I did
-what I would with him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Among all the devices with which we confound the Powers forever fumbling
-at our lives, none must puzzle them more than the set of obligations and
-interactions that go by the name of business. Unless, indeed, there is a
-god of business, which I doubt.
-
-Past all misguiding of our youth, past all time and distance and
-unlikelihood, the god who would be worshipped most by the welding of
-spirit into spirit, had brought us two together only to be rived apart
-by the necessity which tied us each, not only to our own, but to other
-people's means of making a living. The two or three hours following on
-Helmeth's announcement of the accident which had, who knows but at the
-instance of the Powers which was bent upon uniting us, shattered the
-point of his attachment to the Mexican scheme, we spent in that drowning
-realization of the source of being and delight for each in the other,
-which is the process and the end of loving. And then the withdrawing of
-whole electric constellations from the city skyline and the clatter of
-the morning traffic in the street, and the dispersing blueness, let in
-with them the considerations which whipped us apart.
-
-If there is a god of business he is of a superior subtlety, for even
-then we proposed to one another that the best way of being quit of the
-obligation was to serve our time to it; and it was in pursuance of some
-such idea that I found myself, toward the latter part of June, going out
-to Los Angeles to meet Mr. Garrett who would by that time, have come up
-the coast from Mazatplan to make purchases of supplies. I should have
-gone much farther than that merely to have touch with him, the warm
-pressure of his hand, his voice at my ear; all my dreams even, were
-tinged by the loss out of my life of his bodily presence. It was a
-singular flame-touched circumstance that the assured success of my new
-venture set up in me a fiercer need.
-
-There had not been time for much in his letters but accounts of his
-struggle with conditions at the mine and his slow conquest of the water
-that flooded all the lower levels, of disheartening, incompetent labour
-and the multiplied difficulty of distance from any base of supplies. But
-that little was all timed to our meeting again. "I will explain all that
-when I see you," "We will talk of that later," were phrases that cropped
-out in his letters many times. I did not know, even in the act of going
-there, just what he expected to bring to pass in our affairs by my being
-in Los Angeles. I only know that I wanted desperately to see him.
-
-One thing I gathered from his letters, that in the preoccupation and
-haste of his stay in New York he had wholly missed the significance of
-my new entanglement with Morris Polatkin. I have to suppose, to account
-for his never having any other conception of what my work was to me,
-that he had never known a professional woman or one who worked at
-anything except as a stop-gap between the inconsequence of youth and
-marriage. He felt himself, humbly, rather a poor substitute for the
-colour, the excitement and gayety of my career--why should so many
-people suppose that an actress's life is gay--but he balanced that with
-what he meant to purchase for me by his own achievement. He had, without
-thinking it necessary to account for it, the idea that is so generally
-and unexcusedly entertained that I am sometimes hypnotized into thinking
-it must be the right one, that a woman in becoming a man's wife ceases
-to be her own and becomes somehow mysteriously and inevitably his. It
-was not that in all our talk about it, he had any conclusions about the
-stage as an unsuitable profession for women, but that he was inherently
-unable to think of it as possible for his wife. We were saved from
-dispute by the proof I had had in Italy that his inability to think of
-me as having a life apart, arose chiefly in his need of me, which had in
-it something of the absolute quality of a child's need of its mother. I
-am glad now, in view of all that came of it, that I was spared the
-bitterness of not seeing, in his inability to accept the finality of my
-relation to my work, anything nobler than an insufferable male egotism.
-
-I have thought since, that we might have made more of our love, if we
-had but seen somewhere in the world the process of its being so made; if
-we could have moved for a time in a footing of intimacy among other
-pairs who had produced out of as unlikely material, a competent and
-satisfying frame of life. We did not know any but theatrical people
-among whom the wife had interests apart from her husband. That is where
-Taylorville betrayed us. And now you know what I meant when I said in
-the beginning that the social ideal, in which I was bred, is the villain
-of my plot; for we wished sincerely for the best, and the best that we
-knew was cast only in one mould. I have begun to think indeed, that
-this, more than anything else, accounts for the personal disaster which
-waits so often on the heels of genius, that we assume it to be the
-inalienable condition. For genius tends to spring from that stratum of
-society for which, when it has come to its full flower, it is most
-unfit, and it comes up slanting and aside like a blade of grass under a
-potsherd of the broken mould of unrelated ideals. Somewhere there must
-have been men and women working out our situation and working it out
-successfully, but the only example life afforded us was not of the
-acceptable pattern. Still my agreement with Mr. Garrett, that it was
-after all _the_ pattern, saved us from mutual accusation and
-recrimination.
-
-Concerned as I was to make the most and the best of him, I kept looking
-out all the way after the train struck into the southwest, for every
-intimation of the life there which would have helped me to get at the
-springs of his behaviour, and was by turns shocked away from its
-bleakness and drawn with a rush of sympathy toward what a man must
-endure to live in it. If I saw myself as he had sometimes sketched me,
-filling its bleak and unprofitable reaches with my gift as with flame
-and flower, I was as many times shudderingly brought face to face with
-the question as to where, in the wilderness, I was to find wherewithal
-to go on burning. At Los Angeles, a town of which I had heard him speak
-as a place with a spirit with which he was in sympathy, I had nothing to
-look at for a week but a great deal of rather formless, wooden
-architecture expressing nothing so much as the attempt to reconcile
-Taylorvillian tastes and perceptions with a subtropical opportunity.
-
-I do not know what that city may have become since I visited it, but at
-the time it was notable for a disposition to take the amplitude of its
-pretension for performance. Its theatrical season, if it had any, had
-dwindled to that execrable sort of entertainment which comes up in any
-community like a weed when the women are out of town; and if there had
-been anybody I knew there, I should have been debarred from making
-myself known to them until I had seen Mr. Garrett and learned his plans.
-I took to spending my time as far out of town as I could manage, and by
-degrees a strange, seductive beauty began to make itself felt with me, a
-large, unabashed kind of beauty that disdained prettiness and dared to
-dispense with charm. It was a land ribbed and sinewed with all I had set
-my hand to, making free with it as kings do with their dignity, and the
-moment Helmeth came, before the warmth of renewal had its way with us, I
-saw that the land had set its mark on him.
-
-He was thinner, his manner hurried, obsessed. There are times, no doubt,
-when loving must be set aside for the sterner business of living, but it
-wasn't what I had come to Los Angeles for. I was flushed with success, I
-had spread the crest of my femininity, I was prepared to be adorable,
-enchanting; and I found that what was expected of me, was to sit by in
-my room in the hotel on the chance of his having time for me between the
-exigencies of buying cog-wheels and iron piping. He was so tired at
-times that I was made to feel that my demand upon him for the lover's
-attitude was an additional harassment. And there was so little else I
-could do for him! Not that I wouldn't have been glad to have done him a
-wifely service, laid out his clothes and seen to it that he had his
-meals regularly, but what I could do was subservient to the necessity of
-keeping our relation secret. It struck witheringly on all my sweet
-illusion of what I could be to him, to have it so brought home to me
-that the uses of affection are largely dependent on the habit of living
-together.
-
-"At any rate," I said, consoling myself for his scant hours with me, "we
-shall have all day Sunday together. Helmeth, you don't mean to say----"
-something curiously like embarrassment suffused him.
-
-"I shall have to spend most of Sunday at Pasadena ... at the
-Howards' ... the girls are there, you know." I didn't know, and the
-circumstance of its having been kept from me smacked of offence. Why,
-since I had been good enough to come all this distance to comfort him
-with loving, had he not explained to me that I must share him with the
-children; ... why not have at least included me in a community of
-interest with them?
-
-"I thought," he extenuated, "that the girls were the chief obstacle to
-your marrying me; that you might get to feel differently about them if
-you didn't have them thrust too much upon you."
-
-"Oh, Helmeth!" I began to imagine a perversity in his avoidance of the
-main issue. "It isn't the girls--it isn't anything of yours, it is
-something of mine. It is my art you aren't willing for me to bring into
-the family with me."
-
-"It is because, then, I'm not accustomed to think of the stage as being
-the sort of thing that belongs in a family. I thought you agreed with me
-about that?"
-
-He had me there; if I had seen a way to separate all that I loved in my
-art, from all that was most objectionable in the practice of it, I
-should have married him and trusted to carrying my point afterward. I
-had a vision of Helmeth's girls overhearing Polatkin advising me about
-the fit of my corsets, and me calling him Poly. I came back on another
-path to my recently awakened resentment.
-
-"Just the same you ought to have told me. Mrs. Howard is Miss Stanley's
-sister, isn't she?"
-
-"They don't live together." He had answered my unspoken question, as
-though the ideas that were forming in my head had been in juxtaposition
-in his own before. "Miss Stanley and the young brother--you remember him
-at Cadenabbia?--live at the old place. She has been a mother to him."
-
-"Ah," I couldn't forbear to suggest, "and she's mothering your children
-now."
-
-"Good heavens, Olivia! you are not jealous, are you?"
-
-"Yes, I am," I told him. "I'm jealous of every minute you spend away
-from me. I'm jealous of the men you do business with, men who can talk
-with you, hear your voice. Oh, my dear, my dear----" I put my hands up
-to his shoulders and cried a little upon his breast; his arms were about
-me; for me all time and place dissolved only to keep them there.
-
-"Look here, Olivia, if you feel this way, let us go and be married
-to-day and then we can spend Sunday all together. I did not mean to
-urge you just now; things are pretty rough with me; it will be a year or
-two before I can straighten them out, but, after all, I guess our
-feelings count for something."
-
-"I couldn't," I protested, "you don't understand; there's Polatkin and
-Jerry; he has written this play for me, we are all tied up together; you
-know how it would be if any of your partners should withdraw."
-
-"A woman has no business to be tied up to any man but her husband--" he
-broke out, "think of any other man being able to tell my wife what she
-should or shouldn't do!" We went over that ground again until we ceased
-from sheer exhaustion.
-
-It came to this at last, that he proposed that I should marry him at
-once; I could go back to Mexico with him. I hadn't to begin rehearsals
-until September; we could have the summer together and then I could go
-back to my work until he could claim me.
-
-For a wild moment I yielded to the suggestion ... if I could have him
-and my art ... but I hope I am not altogether a cad. I saw what all his
-efforts could not keep me from seeing, that even to do that for me, to
-get me into his place in Mexico and back again would be a tax on him,
-and to ask him to do it with a reservation in my mind would be more than
-I would stand for.
-
-"It isn't fair, Helmeth, my letting you think that anything could pull
-me away from the stage. It isn't that I don't agree with you about how a
-husband and wife ought to be with one another, nor that I am not
-entirely of the opinion that the atmosphere of the stage is not the
-place to bring up children the way you want yours brought up; it is
-because not even the kind of marriage you offer me would hold me."
-
-"You mean that you'd leave me? That you'd go back to it?"
-
-"Well, why not? I left my first husband. I know that wasn't the way it
-seemed to me then, but that's what it amounted to ... and he fell in
-love with the village dressmaker." I had never told him that part of my
-life; I had never thought of it in the terms in which I had just stated
-it, I saw him grow slowly white under the sun-brown of his skin.
-
-"I see ... if your only idea in staying with me is that I might----Good
-God, Olivia, do you know what you've said to me?"
-
-"Nothing except what is right for you to know. Do you remember, Helmeth,
-what I told you Mark Eversley called me?"
-
-"A Woman of Genius; I remember." He was looking at me now as though the
-phrase were a sort of acid test which brought out in me traits
-unsuspected before.
-
-"Well, then, I'm those two things, a woman and a genius, and the woman
-was meant for you; don't think I don't know that and am not proud of it
-with every fibre of my brain and body. I should have been glad once; if
-it were possible I'd be glad now to have kept your house and borne your
-children, and see to it that they brushed their teeth and had hair
-ribbons to match their clothes."
-
-"Their mother thought that was important." He snatched at this as at an
-incontestable evidence of my being all that I was trying to show him
-that I was not.
-
-"It _is_ important.... I remember to this day the effect on me of my
-hair ribbons----" He broke in eagerly.
-
-"If you can see that ... if you understand what their mother wanted ...
-things I missed out of my life through having no mother, that I've heard
-you say you missed partly out of yours ... birthdays and Christmas and
-good chances to marry when they grow up----"
-
-"I do understand, Helmeth, but what I'm trying to tell you is that I
-can't go through with it. Those are the things that belong to the woman,
-that it takes all the woman's time to do the way their mother would have
-them done, and for me the woman has been swamped in the genius. Oh, I
-don't say that I'm not a better actress for having tried so long to be
-merely a woman, for being able even now, to know all that you mean when
-you say 'woman'; but there it is. I am an actress and I can't leave off
-being one just by saying so."
-
-"And I can't leave off being a proper father to my girls. I owe them
-the things we've been talking about just as I owe them a living. I
-suppose I should have married for their sakes, supposing I could get
-anybody to have me, even if I hadn't found you. And I don't want finding
-you to mean anything but the best to them." I had nothing to say to
-that, and he went back to a thought that had often been between us. "We
-ought to have married when we were young," he insisted as though somehow
-that made a better case of it, "if you hadn't begun you wouldn't have
-been called on to leave it off."
-
-"The point is that it won't leave _me_. Genius--I don't know what it is
-except that it is nothing to be conceited about because you can't help
-it--isn't a thing you can pick up or lay down at your pleasure; it's a
-possession."
-
-I could see that he didn't altogether follow me, that he was not very
-far removed, and that only by his admiration for me, from the
-Taylorvillian idea that to speak of yourself as a genius was to pay
-yourself an unwarrantable compliment, and that the most I could get him
-to understand of the meaning of my work, was what grew out of his being
-a most competent workman himself. He went back to the original
-proposition.
-
-"Does that mean, then, that you are not going to marry me?"
-
-"It means that I'm not going to leave the stage to do it."
-
-"It seems to me to mean that you don't love me as you have professed to.
-Oh, I know how women love ... good women."
-
-"Helmeth!"
-
-"I beg your pardon, Olivia." We stood aghast at what we had brought upon
-ourselves; across the breach of dissension we rushed together with
-effacing passion. After all, I believe I should have gone with him if he
-had had the wit to know that the point at which a woman is most prepared
-for yielding is the next instant after she has just stated the
-insuperable objection. Whether he knew or not, the whole of his outer
-attention was taken up with the purchase of pump fittings.
-
-Understand that I didn't for a moment suppose that I had lost him, that
-I didn't believe anything but that I could go to him at any moment if
-the whim seized me, that I couldn't in reason pull him back if the need
-of him arose. I finished out my vacation at resorts up and down the
-California coast, warm with the certainty that I should see him in New
-York the next winter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-The next season was a brilliant one, made so by the strength of my
-wanting him, and by the sense of completeness and finality which came to
-me out of the faith that we had been ordained to be lovers from the
-beginning. It began to seem, in the fashion in which we had been brought
-together as boy and girl and then mated in ways which, creditable as
-they had been, yet offered no obstacle to the freshness and vitality of
-our passion, that we had been guided by that intelligence which in any
-emergency of my gift, I felt rush to save it. That I had been prevented
-from any absorbing interest until it had grown and flowered in me,
-appeared now to have come about by direct manipulation of the Powers. I
-had curious and interesting adventures that winter in the farthest
-unexplored territory of the artistic consciousness, which tempt me at
-every turn to put by my story for the purpose of making them plain to
-you, and I am only deterred from it by the certainty that you couldn't
-get it plain in any case.
-
-A few days ago I picked up a copy of Dante and found myself convicted of
-shallowness in never having taken his passion for the cold-blooded
-Beatrice seriously, by finding the evidence of its absolute quality in
-the circle within circle of his hells and paradisos, the rhythm of aches
-and exaltations. And if you couldn't get that from Dante, how much less
-from anything I might have to say to you. After all these years I do not
-know what is the relation of Art to Passion, but I have experienced it.
-If I said anything it would be by way of persuading you that loving is
-not an end in itself, but the pull upward to our native heaven, which is
-no hymn-book heaven, but a world of the Spirit wherein things are made
-and remade and called good.
-
-What I made out of it at that time was the material of a satisfying
-success, and though I got on without him much better than I could have
-expected, the fact that after all, he did not get any nearer to me than
-the Pacific coast, had its effect in the year's adventures.
-
-That I missed my lover infinitely, that I was thinned in the body by the
-sheer want of him, that I had moments of mad resolve, of passionate
-self-abandoning cry to him, goes without saying. One need not in a
-certain society, say more of love than that one has it, to be understood
-as well as if one displayed a yellow ribbon in the company of Orangemen,
-but since I couldn't say it, an opinion passed current among my friends
-that I was working too hard and in need of a holiday. It came around at
-last to Polatkin himself noticing it, though I believe with a better
-understanding of the reason why I should be restless and sleepless
-eyed. It was just after I had heard from Helmeth that he couldn't
-possibly hope to be in New York for another year, that my manager
-suggested that it might be good business policy for me to play a short
-tour in three or four of the leading cities, a strictly limited season
-which would be enough to whet the public appetite without satisfying it.
-
-"What cities?"
-
-I believe that I jumped at it in the hope somehow that it might be
-stretched to include Los Angeles, where Helmeth was at that moment, and
-where I felt sure he would come to me. When I learned, however, that
-nothing was contemplated farther west than Chicago, I lost interest.
-That very day I had a telegram:
-
- "Will you marry me?
-
- "Signed: GARRETT."
-
-It was dated at Los Angeles, and as I could think of no reason for this
-urgency, I concluded that it must be because the association there with
-the idea of me, had been too much for him, and in that new yielding of
-mine to the beguiling circumstance, I was disposed to interpret it as
-evidence that he was coming round. I wired back:
-
- "If you marry my work.
-
- "OLIVIA."
-
-and prepared myself for the renewal of that dear struggle which, if it
-got us no further, at least involved us in coil upon coil of emotion,
-making him by the very force he spent on it, more completely mine. I
-expected him in every knock on the door, every foot on the stair, and
-had he come to me then, would no doubt have provoked him to that
-traditional conquest which, as it has its root in a situation made,
-affected for the express purpose of provocation, is the worst possible
-basis for a successful marriage.
-
-On the day on which at the earliest, I could have expected him from Los
-Angeles, I sent my maid away in order that, if I should find him there
-in the old place waiting for me, there should be no constraint on the
-drama of assault and surrender for which I found myself primed.
-
-Then by degrees it began to grow plain to me that he did not mean to
-come, that the question and my answer to it, had carried some sort of
-finality to his mind that was not apparent to mine. By the time I had a
-letter from him, written at the mine, with no reference in it to what
-had passed so recently between us, I understood that he would not ask me
-to marry him again. He had accepted the situation of being my lover
-merely, and I was not any more to be vexed by the alternative. I said to
-myself that it was better to have it resolved with so little pain, and
-that it should be my part to see that what we were to one another was to
-yield its proper fruit of happiness. I found myself at a loss, however,
-in the application; for though you may have satisfied yourself of the
-moral propriety of dispensing with the convention of publicity, you
-cannot very well, with a week's journey between you, get forward in the
-business of making a man happy. About this time Jerry began to be
-anxious about what I couldn't prevent showing in my face, the wasting
-evidence of love divided from its natural use of loving.
-
-"You'll break down altogether," he expostulated, "and then where will I
-be?" He was tremendously interested in his new play, which was by far
-the best thing he had done, and in the process of getting it to the
-public he had so identified it with my interpretation that he was no
-longer able to think of the one without the other. There had come into
-his manner a new solicitude very pleasing to me, born of his sense of
-possession in me, in as much as I was the lovely lady of his play, and a
-sort of awe of all that I put into it that transcended his own notion
-and yet was so integral a part of it. It had brought him out of his old
-acceptance of me as a foil and relief for the shallow iridescence that
-other women produced in him. He had begun to have for me a little of
-that calculating tenderness with which a man might regard the mother of
-his nursing child. Night by night then as he came hovering about me he
-could not fail to observe, though he could hardly have understood it,
-the wearing hunger with which I came from my work, pushed on by it to
-more and more desperate need of loving, and drawn back by its
-unrelenting grip from the artistic ruin in which the satisfaction of
-that hunger would involve me. Now at his very natural expression of
-concern, I felt myself unaccountably irritated.
-
-"Jerry," I demanded of him, "would it matter so much if we left off
-altogether writing plays and playing them? _What_ would it matter?"
-
-"You are in a bad way if you've begun to question that? What does living
-matter? We are here and we have to go on."
-
-"Yes, but when we go on at such pains? Is there any more behind us than
-there is behind a ball when it is set rolling? Are we aimed at
-anything?"
-
-"Oh, Lord, Olivia, what has that got to do with it?" He was sitting in
-my most commodious chair with his long knees crossed to prop up a
-manuscript from which he was reading me the notes of a tragedy he was
-about to undertake, and his quills were almost erect with the tweaking
-he had given them in the process of arriving at his climax. It was a
-curious fact that the breaking off of his marriage, which in the nature
-of the case could not be broken off sharp but had writhed and frayed him
-like the twisting of a green stick, by setting Jerry free for those
-light adventures of the affections which had been so largely responsible
-for the rupture of his domestic relations, instead of multiplying his
-propensity by his opportunity, had landed him on a plane of
-self-realization in which they were no longer needful. The poet in Jerry
-would never be able to resist the attraction of youth and freshness, but
-the man in him was forever and unassailably beyond their reach. I was
-never more convinced of this than when he turned on this occasion from
-the preoccupation of his creative mood, to offer whatever his point of
-attachment life had provided him, to bridge across the chasm of my
-spirit.
-
-"I don't see why it is important that we should know what we are working
-for; we might, in our confounded egotism, not approve of it, we might
-even think we could improve on the pattern. I write plays and you act
-them and a bee makes honey. I suppose there's a beekeeper about, but
-that's none of our business."
-
-"Ah, if we could only be sure of that--if He would only make himself
-manifest; that's what I'm looking for, just a hint of what He's trying
-to do with us."
-
-"Well, I can tell you: He'll smoke you out of New York and into a
-sanitarium, if you don't know enough to take a change and a rest."
-
-"Poly wants me to go on the road for a while; sort of triumphal
-progress. He thinks applause will cure me."
-
-"You're getting that now. What would bring you around would be a good
-frost."
-
-"You wouldn't want that in Chicago?" Jerry disentangled his limbs and
-sat up sniffing the wind of success.
-
-"If I could have you to open with my play in Chicago," he averred
-solemnly, "I'd be ready to sing the Lord Dismiss Us." He really thought
-so. To go back to the scene of his early struggle with his laurels fresh
-on him, to satisfy the predictions of his earliest friends and confound
-his detractors, above all to be received in his own country with that
-honour which is denied to prophets, seemed to him then almost as
-desirable in prospect as it proved in fact not to be. I found another
-advantage in the confusion and excitement of touring, in being able to
-conceal from myself that I hadn't had a satisfactory letter from Helmeth
-since the pair of telegrams that passed between us, and no letter at all
-for a long time. It was always possible to pretend to myself that the
-letters had been written but were delayed in forwarding.
-
-It was a raw spring day when we came to Chicago, the promise of the
-season in the sun, denied and flouted by the wind. It slanted the tails
-of the labouring teams and cast over the clean furrow, handfuls of the
-winter rubbish from the stubble yet unturned, and between field and
-field it wrung the tops of the leafless wood. Now and then it parted
-them on white painted spires without disturbing them or the rows of thin
-white gravestones. It laid bare the roots of my life to the cold blasts
-of memory, it rendered me again the pagan touch, the undivided part that
-the earth had in me. My dead were in its sod, in me the sap of its
-spiritual fervours and renunciations. What was I, what was my art but
-the flower, the bright, exotic blossom borne upon its topmost bough, its
-dying top; here in its abounding villages, in the deep-rutted county
-roads was the root and trunk. Outside, the wind flicked the landscape
-like the screen of the moving picture that the swift roll of the train
-made of it, and I felt again the pressure of my small son upon my arm,
-and the pleasant stir of domesticity and the return of my man. For the
-last hour Jerry had come to sit in my compartment, opposite me, and
-stare stonily out of the window; now and then his jaws relaxed and set
-again as he bit hard upon the bitter end of experience. No one, I
-suppose, can go through that country so teeming with the evidences of
-the common life, the common labour, the common hope of immortality, and
-not feel bereft in as much as the circumstances of his destiny divide
-him from it. We passed Higgleston; beyond the roofs of it the elms that
-marked the cemetery road, gathered green. The roofs of the town were
-steeped in windy light. I had no impulse to stop there. I withdrew from
-it as one does from a private affair upon which he has stumbled unaware.
-Rather it was not I who withdrew, but Life as it was lived there, turned
-its back upon me.
-
-Getting in to Chicago through that smoky wooden wilderness, within which
-the city obscures itself as a cuttlefish in its own inky cloud, I felt
-again the wounding and affront, the cold shoulder lifted on my needs,
-the eager hand stretched out to catch my contribution. Chicago received
-me with its hat off, bowing to meet me, and when I remembered how nearly
-it had let me fall into the pit prepared for me by Griffin and the
-"Flim-Flams," I burned with resentment.
-
-It was seven years now since I had seen the city or Pauline, the only
-friend I had made there who could be supposed to take an interest in my
-coming again. I meant of course to see Pauline; we had kept up a
-correspondence which with the years had shown a disposition to confine
-itself to a Christmas reminder, and an occasional marked copy of a
-magazine, but I meant, of course, to see her. I had trusted to her
-finding out through the newspapers that I would be there and on such a
-date. It fell in quite naturally with my inclination, to have her card
-sent up to me the next morning a little after eleven. I was needing to
-be distracted. On my way up from breakfast I had met Jerry going down
-with his suit case.
-
-"Back to New York," he admitted to my question, "as quick as I can get
-there."
-
-"But with all this success ... why, they fairly stood on their feet last
-night."
-
-"I know, I know," he looked unendurably harassed. "I can't stand it,
-Olivia, I can't stand it. This place is full of ghosts." I remembered
-that both his children had been born there and that he had not seem them
-for more than a year, and I did not press him.
-
-"I'll keep your end up for a week if I can," I assured him as he wrung
-my hand. He turned back when he was a step or two down the stair.
-
-"Don't stay too long yourself," he admonished. "New York's the place."
-
-I was feeling that when Pauline came to me. It wasn't until I saw her
-that I realized what a distance there was--in spite of our common youth,
-had always been--between us. It started out for us both in the first
-glimpse we had of one another, in the witness in all the inconsiderable
-elements of line and colour which go to make up a woman's appearance, of
-growth and amplitude in me and fulfilment in hers. Pauline had been in
-her girlhood, if not pretty, at least what is known as an attractive
-girl, and though there was only a matter of months between us, it came
-to me with a shock that she was now, not only not particularly
-attractive, but middle-aged. It was not so much in the fulness under her
-chin which apparently caused her no uneasiness, nor in the thickness of
-her waist, of which I was sure she made a virtue, but in the certainty
-that all that was ever to happen to her in the way of illuminating and
-self-forgetting passion, had already happened.
-
-She had reached, she must have reached about the time I was taking my
-flight upward by the help of Morris Polatkin, the full level of her
-capacity to experience. She was living still, as I saw by the card which
-I still held in my hand, in Evanston, and she was living there because
-it was no longer within the scope of her possibility to live anywhere
-else. All this flashed through me in the moment in which Pauline,
-checked by what she was able to guess of unfamiliar elements in me, was
-crossing the room and taking me by the hands in the old womanly way,
-keyed down to the certainty of not requiring it in her business any
-more. It was so patent that Pauline was now in the position of having
-done her duty toward life and Henry Mills, and was accepting all that
-came to her from it as her due, that it almost seemed for a moment that
-she had said something of the kind. What did pass between us besides a
-kiss of greeting, were some commonplaces about my being there and how
-pleased Henry and the children would be to see me. We sat down on a sofa
-together and for a moment the old girlish confidence put forth a tender
-sprig of renewal.
-
-"So many years since we were at school together! You've gone a long way
-since then, Olivia."
-
-"A long way," I admitted, but she didn't catch the double meaning the
-phrase had for me.
-
-"Henry and I were talking about it this morning. And the times you had
-here in Chicago, you poor dear; you had to make a good many starts
-before you got on the right road at last."
-
-"A great many."
-
-"But you found out that it all came right in the end, didn't you? That
-it was best just for you to trust ... you used to be bitter about it ...
-but trusting is always best."
-
-"Oh, if you think I've been trusting all these years ... I've been
-working."
-
-"Of course, _of_ course." Much of her old manner came back with the
-occasion for moralizing. "But you were too amusing, you were quite
-fierce with Henry because he wouldn't do anything about it." She laughed
-reminiscently. "And now, you see...." Her look travelled about the
-rose-coloured room, full of the evidence of prosperity.
-
-"Pauline," I said, "if you are thinking that I could have gone to New
-York and become the success I am, _without_ the help that you and Henry
-might have given me, you are making a great mistake. What did happen was
-that I had to accept it from a quarter where it wasn't so much to be
-expected, and was not nearly so agreeable."
-
-"That man Mark Eversley found for you, you mean. Well, I suppose you did
-get on better for a little start."
-
-"Start!" I cried. "Start! I had to have everything--food and clothes."
-A sudden recollection flashed upon me of those first days in New York,
-of myself become merely a dummy on which to hang a fat little Jew's
-notions of acceptable contours; the offence of it; the greater offence
-from which by the opportune appearance of the Jew I had so hardly
-escaped.
-
-"Have you any idea, Pauline, what it means to have a man invest money in
-you?... a man like Polatkin. I was his property, a horse he had entered
-for the race. He had a stake on me...."
-
-Pauline looked aghast; vague recollections of the actress heroines of
-fiction shaped her thought.
-
-"You don't mean to say, Olivia, that you--that you were----"
-
-"His mistress," I finished for her bluntly. "Is that the only thing your
-imagination takes offence at? Isn't it enough for me to tell you that he
-orders my corsets for me?" That did reach her. I could see her struggle
-with the habitual effort to put the unwelcome fact down, anywhere out of
-sight and knowledge, under the cotton wool of a moral sentiment. Even
-now if she could escape being implicated in my predicament by avoiding
-the knowledge of it, she would not only do that but convict herself of
-superiority as well. My gorge rose against it.
-
-"But if I didn't sell myself to the Jew," I drove it home to her, "it
-was chiefly because he was decenter to me than the circumstance gave me
-a right to expect. I came near doing it for a cheaper man and for a
-cheaper price, a man who had deserted one wife, and ... a bigamist in
-fact. If you don't know that there were days when I would have sold
-myself for something to eat, it was because you didn't take the pains
-to."
-
-"But you never said a word. Of course if you had told me the truth ..."
-she floundered and saved herself on what she believed to be a just
-resentment, but I had no notion of letting her off so easily. I did not
-know exactly how we had got launched on the subject, it had not been in
-my mind to do so when she came in, but all the events of the past year
-seemed to lead up to it, to come somehow to the point of rupture against
-her smooth acceptance of my success as being derived from the same
-process as her own.
-
-"I did tell you that I was in need of money to put me in the way of
-earning a living," I insisted. "I did not ask you for charity; what I
-offered you was the chance of a business investment, one that rendered
-the investor its due return. The fact that you did not know enough about
-the business to know how good it was"--I forestalled what I saw rising
-to her lips--"had nothing to do with it. You were my friend and
-professed to admire my talent; I had a right to have what I said about
-it heard respectfully." I had got up from the pink and white sofa where
-our talk had begun, and was trailing about the room in my breakfast
-gown, and the suggestion of staginess in the way the folds of it
-followed my movements, irritated me with the certainty that the effect
-of it on Pauline would be to mitigate the sincerity of what I said.
-
-"You'd known me long enough," I accused her, "to know that I wouldn't
-have asked for money until I was in the last extremity, and then I
-wouldn't have asked it for myself. I don't know that it would have
-mattered if I had starved, but my Gift was worth saving."
-
-"I didn't dream ..." she began. "I hadn't any idea ..."
-
-"Well, why didn't you ask Henry, then? Henry knows what becomes of women
-on the stage when they can't make a living." This was nearer to the mark
-than I had meant to let myself go, but I could see that it carried no
-illumination. She drew up her wrap and braced herself for one more
-gallant effort.
-
-"The things you've been through, my dear ... I don't wonder you feel
-bitter. But when it has all come out right, why not forget it?"
-
-"Oh, right! Right!"
-
-The room was full of vases and floral tokens of the triumph of the night
-before, and as I swung about with my arms out, disdaining her judgment
-of rightness for me, I knocked over a great basket of roses and orchids
-which had come from Cline and Erskine. I don't suppose Pauline had ever
-knocked over anything in her life, and the violence of my gesture must
-have stood for some unloosening of the bonds of convention, with an
-implication which only now began to work through to her.
-
-"You don't mean to say, Olivia, that you ... that you are not ... not a
-good woman?"
-
-"Oh," I said again, "good ... good ... what does it all mean? I'm a
-successful actress."
-
-"Olivia!"
-
-"Well, no, if you insist on knowing, I'm not what you would call a good
-woman." I threw it at her as though it had been a peculiar kind of scorn
-heaped up on her for being what I had just denied myself to be. I saw
-myself for once with all my thwarted and misspent instincts toward the
-proper destiny of women, enmeshed and crippled, not by any propensity
-for sinning, but by the conditions of loving which women like Pauline
-set up for me. "And if you want to know," I said, "why I'm not a good
-woman, it is because women like you don't make it seem particularly
-worth while."
-
-"Oh," she gasped, "this is horrible ... horrible!" The word came out in
-a whisper. I saw at last that she was done with me, that the only
-thought that was left to her was to get away, to put as much space as
-possible between us. I got around with my hand on the door to prevent
-her.
-
-"Pauline, Pauline!" I cried almost wildly, as if even at the last she
-could have helped me from myself. "Can't you remember that we grew up
-together, that we had the same training, the same ideals? Can't you
-remember that when we began I thought that the life you had chosen for
-yourself was the best, that I thought I had chosen it for myself too?
-Only--for heaven's sake, Pauline, try to understand me--there is
-something that chooses for us. Don't you know that I wouldn't have been
-any different from what you are if I hadn't been forced? Haven't you
-seen how I've been beaten back from all that I tried to be? All this"--I
-threw out my arms, as I stood against the door, to include all that had
-entered by implication in our conversation--"it had to come, and it came
-wrong because you won't understand that a Gift has its own way with us."
-
-I could see, though, that she wasn't understanding in the least, that
-she was badly scared and even indignant at being forced to listen to a
-justification of what, by her code, could have no justification. She was
-standing not far from me, crushed against the wall, as though by the
-weight of opprobriousness that I heaped upon her, and her whole
-attention was centred on the door and the chance of getting out of it
-and away from what, in the mere despair of reaching her intelligence
-with it, I flung out from me now wildly.
-
-"I suppose," I scoffed, "that it never occurs to you that a gifted woman
-could be as delicate and feminine as anybody, if only you didn't make
-her right to fostering care and protection conditional on her giving up
-her gift altogether. You," I demanded, "who tie up all the moral values
-of living to your own little set of behaviours, what right have you to
-deny us the opportunity to be loved honestly because you can't at the
-same time make us over into replicas of yourselves?"
-
-I was sick with all the shames and struggles of the women I had known. I
-forgot the door and went over to her.
-
-"You," I said, "who fatten your moral superiority on the best of all we
-produce, how do you suppose you are going to make us value the standards
-you set up, when the price you despise us for paying, nine times out of
-ten we pay to the men who belong to you? What right have you to judge
-what we have done when you've neither help nor understanding to offer us
-in the doing? What right ... what right?" For the moment I had turned
-away in the vehemence of my indignation; I was pacing up and down. In
-the instant when my attention was distracted from the door, Pauline made
-a dart for it. I could hear her scurrying down the hall, but I went on
-walking up and down in my room and talking aloud to her. I was beside
-myself with the sum of all indignities. Was it not this set of
-prejudices which for the moment had presented itself in the person of
-Pauline Mills, which at every turn of my life had been erected against
-the bourgeoning of my gift? Was it not in the process of combating the
-tradition of the preciousness of women as inherent in particular
-occupations, that I had lost the inestimable preciousness of myself? Was
-it for what came out of Pauline's frame of life--I thought of Cecelia
-Brune here--that I had sacrificed my public possession of the man I
-loved. And what came out of it that was more to the world than what I
-had to offer? Had I cut myself off from the comfort and stability of a
-home, simply because in my situation as famous tragedienne I didn't see
-my way to bring up Helmeth's children so as to make little Pauline
-Millses of them? I was still raging formlessly in this fashion when Miss
-Summers, our ingénue, came to tell me that the cab waited to take us to
-the theatre for the matinée.
-
-All through the performance, which I was told went remarkably well, I
-was conscious of nothing but the seismic shudders and upheavals of my
-world too long subjected to strain. It came back on me in intervals
-through the evening performance; I was physically sick with it. But by
-degrees through its subsidence, new worlds began to rise. By the time I
-left the theatre that night I knew what I would do.
-
-It had been a mistake, a natural but cruel mistake, for Helmeth and me
-to suppose that a way of living could at any time be worth the very sap
-and source of life. Love was the central fact around which all modes
-and occupations should arrange themselves. Let us but love then, and
-live as we may. In all the world there was no need like the need I had
-for his breast, his arm.
-
-Always the point of our conclusions had been that I agreed with him,
-that I _had_ thought that failing to repeat the pattern of their mother
-in his children, I had failed in all, that I didn't any more than he see
-my way to keeping on with my work and meeting him at the door every
-night when he came home, in the sort of garment that, in the ladies'
-journals, went by the name of house gown. I laughed to think that we had
-not seen before that it was ridiculous. I had no more doubt now, no more
-trepidation. What burned in me was so clear a flame that he could not
-but be illuminated. Only let me find him, let me go to him again. At the
-hotel desk where I paused for my key I asked them to send up telegraph
-blanks to my room. With them came letters forwarded from New York. I
-started, as one does at an unexpected presence, to find an envelope
-among them with his familiar superscription. For the first time I would
-rather not have had a letter from him; it would be interposing a fresher
-picture between me and my new resolution, to put him for the moment
-farther from me.
-
-I saw then that the letter in my hand had been posted at Los Angeles; it
-was as though he had leaped suddenly all that distance nearer than his
-Chilicojote, Mexico. I noticed that it was a very thin letter. A
-thousand conjectures rushed upon me, not one of them with any relativity
-to what I would find, for when I tore it open there floated out a
-printed slip. It was a clipping from a Pasadena newspaper and announced
-his engagement to Edith Stanley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-There is very little more to write. I held myself together until I had
-written to Helmeth to say that I understood why he had done what he had
-done, and that I hoped he would be happy. The letter was not written to
-invite an answer; there was nothing he could say to please me that would
-not have been disloyal to Miss Stanley. Accordingly no answer came,
-though it was a long time before I gave over the unconscious start at
-the sight of letters, the hope that somehow against all reason ...
-sometimes even yet....
-
-For I did not understand. I was married to him, much, much more married
-than I had ever been to Tommy Bettersworth, and it wasn't in me to
-understand how any man can take a woman as he had taken me, and not feel
-himself more bound than ever church and state could bind him. It was ten
-months since I had seen him, but that while my body still ached with the
-memory of him, he could have given himself to another woman, was an
-unbelievable offence. There are days yet when I do not believe it.
-
-There was nothing any of my friends could do for me. I had the sense to
-see that and did not trouble them. Sarah, who was the only one who
-might have comforted me out of her own experience, was all taken up with
-her husband's declining health. Mr. Lawrence died the next winter, and
-by that time my wound had got past the imperative need of speech. Effie
-was expecting another baby and wasn't to be thought of, so I turned at
-last, when the first sharp anguish was past, to Mark Eversley. He in all
-America stood for that high identification of his work with the source
-of power, that it is the private study of all my days to reach. I
-repaired to him as did Christians of old to favoured altars. That I did
-so return for comfort to that Distributer of Gifts by whose very mark on
-me I was set apart from the happier destiny, was evidence to me, the
-only evidence I could have at the time, that I had not been utterly
-mistaken in the choice I had made before I I knew all that the choice
-involved. Eversley and his wife were Christian Scientists, and, though
-they did not make me of their opinion, I owe them much in the way of
-practice and example that keeps me still within the circle of
-communicating fire. I re-established, never to be broken off again,
-practical intercourse with the Friends of the Soul of Man. I learned to
-apply directly for the things I had supposed came only by loving, and I
-found that they came abundantly. I grew in time even, to think of
-Helmeth without bitterness. What I was brought to see, over and above
-the wish to provide a home for his children, must have been at work in
-him, was much the same thing that had driven me to my work; the very
-need of me must have hurried him into the relief of being loved. It was
-the only way which his purblind male instinct pointed him, to find an
-outlet for what goes from me over the footlights night by night. For a
-man, to be loved is of the greatest importance, but with women it is
-loving that is the fructifying act.
-
-That I was able to go on loving him was, I suppose, the reason why the
-shock I had sustained left no regrettable mark upon my career. The mark
-it left on me was none other than work is supposed to leave on every
-woman. What I am sure of now is that it is not work, but the loss of
-love that leaves her impoverished of feminine graces. I grew barren of
-manner and was reputed to be entirely absorbed in my profession. It was
-not however, that I had excluded the more human interests, but they had
-taken flight. All the forces of my being had been by the shock of loss,
-dropped into some subterranean pit, where they ran on underground and
-watered the choicest product of my art. If I had married Helmeth
-Garrett, I might have grown insensible to him, as it was I seemed to
-have been fixed, though by pain, in the fruitful relation. The loss of
-him, the desperate ache, the start of memory, are just as good materials
-to build an artistic success upon as the joy of having. And I did build.
-I gathered up and wrought into the structure of my life the pain of
-loving as well as its delight. I am a successful actress. Whatever else
-has happened to me, I am at least a success.
-
-I never saw him again. I never saw Henry and Pauline Mills but once, and
-some bitterness in the occasion, came near to driving me toward that pit
-into which Pauline was willing to believe I had already descended. It
-was the second season after I had parted from her in Chicago, that some
-sort of brokers' convention had brought Henry on to New York and Pauline
-with him, and to the same hotel where Mark Eversley was shut up with an
-attack of bronchitis. Jerry and I, going up to call on him, came face to
-face with them.
-
-They were walking in the lobby. Pauline was in what for her, was evening
-dress, her manner a little daunted, not quite carrying it off with the
-air of being established at the pivot of existence which she could
-manage so well at Evanston. They were walking up and down, waiting, it
-seemed, for friends to join them, and they wheeled under the great
-chandelier just in time to come squarely across us. I could see Pauline
-clutch at her husband's arm, and the catch in her breath with which she
-jerked herself back from the impulse to nod, and looked deliberately
-away from me. For her, the evidence of my misdoing hung about me like an
-exhalation. She was afraid I should insist on speaking to her and some
-of her friends would come up and see me doing it. I didn't, however,
-offer to speak to her, I looked instead at Henry. I stood still in my
-tracks and looked at him steadily and curiously. I wished very much to
-know what he meant to do about it. He turned slowly as I looked, from
-deep red to mottled purple, and very much against his will his head
-bowed to me; his body, to which Pauline clung, dared not move lest she
-detect it, but quite above and independent of his smooth-vested,
-self-indulgent front, his head bowed to me. So went out of my life
-thirty years of intimacy which never succeeded in being intimate.
-
-But though one may excise thirty years of one's past without a tremor,
-one may not do it without a scar. To allay the irritation of Pauline's
-slight, I came near to being as abandoned as she believed, as I had
-moments of believing myself. For the possibility that Helmeth Garrett
-had found in our relation of setting it aside, made it at times of a
-cheapness which seemed to extend to me who had entertained it. I should
-have been happier, I thought, to have taken it lightly as he did. If so
-many women who had begun as I had begun, had gone on repeating the
-particular instance, wasn't it because they found that that was the
-easiest, the only possible way to bear it? How else could one ease the
-pain of loving except by being loved again? And if I was to lose the
-Pauline Millses of the world by what had been entered upon so
-sincerely, why, then, what more had I to risk on the light adventure?
-All this time I was sick with the need of being confirmed in my faith in
-myself as a person worthy to be loved, to feel sure that since my love
-had missed its mark, it wasn't I at least that had fallen short of it.
-
-It was that summer Jerry had been driven by some such need I imagined,
-as I admitted in myself, to put his future in jeopardy by another
-marriage which on the face of it, offered even a more immediate occasion
-for shipwreck than the first, and I hadn't scrupled to put forth to save
-him, the new capacity to charm which had come upon me with the
-experience of not caring any more myself to be charmed. I knew; it would
-have been a poor tribute to my skill as an actress if I hadn't by this
-time known, the moves by which a man who is susceptible of being played
-upon at all, can be drawn into a personal interest; and though I didn't
-then, and do not now believe that a love serviceable for the uses of
-living together, can be built up out of "made" love, I was willing for
-the time to pit myself against the game that was played by Miss
-Chichester for Jerry's peace of mind. I played it all the better for not
-being, as the young lady was, personally involved in the stake. That I
-thought afterward of doing anything for myself with what I had got, when
-at last I had by this means brought Jerry down from Newport to my place
-on the Hudson for a week end, was in part due to the extraordinary
-charm that Jerry displayed under the stimulus of a male interest in me,
-of whom for years he had thought of as being quite outside such
-consideration. There was a kind of wistfulness about Jerry when he was a
-little in love, that made him irresistible; no doubt I was also a little
-warmed by the fire which I had blown up.
-
-He was to come from Saturday to Monday, and the moment I saw him getting
-down from the dog-cart I had sent to the station for him, I knew that I
-had only to let that interest take its course, to find myself provided
-with a lover, whether or no I could command my heart to loving. I do not
-remember that I came to any conscious decision about it, but I know that
-I yielded myself to the growing sense of intimacy, that I consciously
-drew, as one draws perfume from a flower, all that came to me from him:
-his new loverliness, touched still with the old solicitous sense of the
-preciousness of my gift. I dramatized to the full the possibility of
-what hung in the air between us, I dressed myself, I set the stage
-accordingly.
-
-It was Saturday evening after dinner that I sent him to the garden to
-smoke, keeping the house long enough to fix his attention on my joining
-him, by wondering what kept me, and so overdid my part by just so much
-as I made myself conscious of the taint of theatricality. For as I went
-down the veranda steps to meet him in the rose walk, the response of
-the actress in me to the perfectness of the setting and my fitness for
-the part of the great lady of romance, drew up out of my past a faint
-reminder of myself going up another pair of stairs so many years ago in
-the figure of an orphan child toiling through the world. Out of that
-memory there distilled presently a cold dew over all my purpose.
-
-It was a perfect night, warm emanations from the earth shut in the smell
-of the garden, and light airs from the river stirred the full-leafed
-trees. At the bottom of the lawn the soft, full rush, of the Hudson made
-a stir like the hurrying pulse. Beyond the silver gleam of its waters,
-lay the farther bank strewn with primrose-coloured lights, and above
-that the moon, low and full-orbed and golden. Its diffusing light mixed
-and mingled with the shadow of the moving boughs. I was wearing about my
-shoulders a light scarf that from time to time blew out with the wind,
-and as we paced in the garden strayed across Jerry's breast and was
-caught back by me, but not before on its communicating thread, ran an
-electric spark. It must have been a good two hours after moonrise before
-we turned to go in, where the great hall lamp burned with a steady
-rose-red glow.
-
-At the foot of the veranda a breeze sprang up fresher than before, that
-caught my scarf from me and wrapped us both in it as in a warm,
-suffusing mood. We were so close that I had instinctively to put up my
-hand as a barricade against what was about to come from him to me, and
-as I did so I was aware of something that rose up from some subterranean
-crypt in me ... that old romance of my mother's ... women like her,
-worlds of patient, overworking, women who could do without happiness if
-only they found themselves doing right. Somehow they had laid on me, the
-necessity of being true to the best I had known, because it was the best
-and had been founded in integrity and stayed on renunciations. I knew
-what I had come into the garden to do. I had planned for it. I thought
-myself prepared to take up, as many women of my profession did, the next
-best in place of the best which life had denied me, but my past was too
-strong for me. The unslumbering instinct that saves wild creatures
-before they are well awake, had whipped me out of the soft entanglement,
-and before Jerry could grasp the change of mood in me, I was halfway up
-the stair.
-
-"This wind," I said, "I think it will blow up a rain before morning." I
-went on up before him. "You can see the river darkling below its
-surface, it does that before a change." I went on drawing the chairs
-back from the edge of the veranda, I called Elsa to fasten all the
-windows. When at last we came into the glow of the hall lamp, I could
-see his face white yet with what he had missed; he thought he had
-blundered. He caught at my hand as I gave him his bedroom candle in an
-effort to recapture what had just trembled in the air between us.
-
-"Olivia! I say ... Olivia!"
-
-"Your train leaves at nine-thirty," I reminded him. "I'll be up to pour
-your coffee."
-
-I went into my room and blew out my candle. The warm summer air came in
-between the white curtains. I knelt down beside my bed; an old habit,
-long discontinued. I was too much moved to pray, but I continued to
-kneel there a long time listening to the soft shouldering of the maples
-against the wall outside the window. Far within me there was something
-which inarticulately knew that whatever the world might think of me, in
-spite of what I had confessed to Pauline, I was a good woman; I had
-loved Helmeth Garrett with the kind of love by which the world is saved.
-Past all loss and forsaking, past loneliness and longing, there was
-something which had stirred in me which would never waken to a lighter
-occasion; and whether great love like that is the best thing that can
-happen to us or the most unusual, it had placed me forever beyond the
-reach of futility and cheapness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All this was several years ago. Jerry and I are the best of friends and
-I am far too busy a woman to miss out of my life anything Pauline Mills
-could have contributed to it. Besides, I am very much taken up with my
-nieces and nephews. Forester's oldest boy shows a creditable talent for
-the stage, and I have him at school here where I can watch him. I shall
-try him out on the road next summer. Effie's husband is in the
-legislature now, and Effie looks to see him governor. I am very fond of
-my sister; we grow together. I owe it to her to have found ways of
-making things easier for women who must tread my path of work and
-loneliness. It is partly at her suggestion that I have written this
-book, for Effie is very much of the opinion that the world would like to
-go right if somebody would only show it how. Sarah also added her word.
-
-"It is the fact of your telling, whether they believe you or not, of
-your not being ashamed to tell, that is going to help them," she
-insists. "At any rate it will help other women to speak out what they
-think, unashamed. Most women are not thinking at all what they are very
-willing to be thought of as thinking."
-
-I am the more disposed to take their word for it, since as they are both
-happy, they cannot be supposed to have the fillip of discontent. Sarah
-left the stage a year after Mr. Lawrence's death, to marry a banker from
-Troy, and she has never regretted it. She calls her oldest girl Olivia.
-It is the sane and sympathetic contact with the common destiny, which I
-get at her house and my sister's that keeps me from the resort of
-successive and inconsequent passions, such as fill the void in the
-lives of too many women who are under the necessity of producing daily
-the materials of fire. But you must not understand me to blame women for
-taking that path when so many are closed to them. Haven't they been told
-immemorially that loving is their proper function, their only one?
-
-Last year I walked in a suffrage parade because Effie wrote me that it
-was my duty, and the swing of it, the banners flying, the proud music,
-set gates wide for me on fields of new, inspiring experience ... all the
-paths that lead to the Shining Destiny ... why shouldn't women walk in
-them? I should think some of them might lead less frequently to bramble
-and morass.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"And after all," said Jerry, a day or two ago when I had read him some
-pages of my book, "you have only told your own story, you haven't found
-out why all the rest of us run so afoul of personal disaster. We, I
-mean, who as you say, nourish the world toward the larger expectation."
-
-"And after all," said I, "what is an artist but a specialist in human
-experience, and how can we find out how the world is made except by
-falling afoul of it?"
-
-"If when we fall we didn't pull the others down with us! I'm willing to
-learn, but why should others have to pay so heavily for my schooling?
-Where's the justice in making us so that we can't do without loving and
-then not let us be happy in it?"
-
-"I don't believe it is the loving that is wrong; it is the other things
-that are tied up with it and taken for granted must go with loving, that
-we can get on with."
-
-"Marriage, you mean?"
-
-"Not exactly ... living in one place and by a particular pattern ...
-thinking that _because_ you are married you have to leave off this and
-take up that which you wouldn't think of doing for any other reason."
-
-"You mean ... I know," he nodded; "my wife was always wanting me to do
-this and that, on the ground that it was what married people ought, and
-I couldn't see where it led or why it was important. But what if it
-should turn out that the others are wrong and we are right about it?"
-
-"Oh, I think we are _all_ wrong. People like us are after the truth of
-life, and marriage is the one thing that society won't take the trouble
-to learn the truth about. My baby, you know, I lost him because I didn't
-know how to take care of him, and there was nobody at hand who knew much
-more than I. But Effie's last baby came before its time and they saved
-it by science, by knowing what and how. Why can't there be a right way
-like that about marriage, and somebody to discover it?"
-
-"Then where would we come in--after it was all found out--if we are the
-experimentors?"
-
-"Oh, there'd be other fields. Why shouldn't it be that when we have
-found out our relation to the physical world--we are finding it, you
-know, radioactivity and laws of falling bodies--go on finding out the
-law of our relations to one another? And, when we've found that out,
-then there's all the Heavenly Host. We'd have to find out how to get on
-with Them."
-
-"And in the meantime we are spoiling a lot of people's lives because we
-can't get on with one another----" He broke off suddenly. "My wife is
-married again. I don't know if I told you."
-
-"Ah, then, you haven't quite spoiled her life; she has another chance.
-And the children?" He had been very fond of them, I knew.
-
-"I haven't done so much with my own life that I'd insist on controlling
-theirs."
-
-"You've done wonders," I assured him. "Jerry, honest, do you mind it so
-much, not having a wife and family?"
-
-"Oh, Lord, yes, Olivia; I need a wife the same as a man needs a watch,
-to keep the time of life for me." He faced me with a swift, sharp
-scrutiny. "Honest, do you mind?"
-
-"Sometimes," I admitted, "when I think of what's coming ... when I can't
-act any more."
-
-"You'll be leading them all still when you are seventy. You do better
-every season." He threw away his cigar and came and stood before me,
-preening his raven's wing which now had a little streak of white in it.
-"Olivia, what's the matter with you and me being married? We get on like
-everything."
-
-"There's more to it than that, Jerry."
-
-"Being in love, you mean? Well, I don't know that I would stick at a
-little thing like that." He was looking down at me with an effect of
-humour which I was glad to see covered a real anxiety about my answer.
-"I've been in love lots of times; I've been mad about several women. I
-don't feel that way about you, and I don't know that I care to. But if
-wanting you is loving, if worrying about you when you aren't quite up to
-yourself, and being proud of you when you are, if liking to be with you
-and wanting to read my manuscripts to you the minute I've written them,
-if owing you more than I owe any other woman and being glad to owe it,
-is loving you, why, I guess I love you enough for all practical
-purposes."
-
-"What would Tottie Lockwood say--or is it Dottie?" Miss Lockwood was
-Jerry's latest interest at the Winter Garden.
-
-"Oh, _she_? She isn't in a position to say anything. It's only vanity on
-her part and the lack of anything to do on mine. There'd be no time for
-Totties if you married me."
-
-"Jerry ... since you've asked me ... I suppose you know that I ... that
-I...." He put up an arresting hand.
-
-"I've guessed. There isn't anything you need to tell me. And I haven't
-an altogether clean record myself. But, I want you to know, Olivia, that
-there was never anything in my case that you could take exception, to so
-long as my wife was with me. I couldn't make her believe it but it's
-true. Except, of course, that I was a fool. I hope I'm done with that."
-
-"I'd want you to be a bit foolish about me, Jerry,--that is, if I make
-up my mind to it." I had to defend myself against the encouragement he
-got out of my admission. "But, Jerry, when did you begin to think
-about--what you've just said?"
-
-"About marrying you? Ever since that time I went down to your place ...
-when that Chichester girl...."
-
-"When I wouldn't take her place, a _pis aller_ merely. Well, suppose I
-had; suppose I had been ... what the Chichester girl wouldn't ... would
-you still have wanted to marry me?" I would not admit to myself why I
-had asked that question.
-
-"I don't know, Olivia ... men, don't you know, not often ... but I want
-to marry you now. I want it greatly." I held him off still, trying to
-get my own experience in shape where I could leave it behind me.
-
-"Such affairs never turn out well, do they?"
-
-"Hardly ever, I believe."
-
-"Unless you turn them into marriage," I hazarded.
-
-"You know," he conjectured, "I've a notion that the kind of loving that
-goes to making such affairs, can't be turned into marriage very easily.
-It's a kind of subconscious knowledge of their unfitness that keeps us
-from turning them into marriage in the first place."
-
-"I wonder."
-
-He let me be for the moment revolving many things in my mind.
-
-"It wouldn't be the vision and the dream, Jerry. You and I----"
-
-"Well, what of it? It might be something better. Something neither of us
-ever had, really. It would be company."
-
-"No, I've never had it." I remembered how blank the issue of my work had
-been to Helmeth Garrett.
-
-"Well, then, ... we have years of work in us yet. I'll buy Polatkin out
-of the theatre." He was going off at a tangent of what we might do
-together, but I had thought of something more pertinent.
-
-"We might solve the problem of how to keep our art and still be happy."
-
-"We might." He was looking down on me with great content, but quite
-soberly. "Tell me, Olivia, suppose we shouldn't, even with the
-unhappiness, with all you have been through, would you rather be what
-you are, or like the others?" We were silent as we thought back across
-the years together; there was very little by this time that we did not
-know of one another.
-
-"No," I said at last, "if being different meant being like the others,
-I'd not choose to have it any different."
-
-
-THE END
-
-
- THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS
- GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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