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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60950 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60950)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Footlights, by Rita Weiman
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Footlights
-
-
-Author: Rita Weiman
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 18, 2019 [eBook #60950]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOOTLIGHTS***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, David Wilson, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/footlights00weim
-
-
-
-
-
-FOOTLIGHTS
-
-by
-
-RITA WEIMAN
-
-
-[Publisher’s device]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York
-Dodd, Mead and Company
-1923
-
-Copyright, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1922
-by Rita Weiman
-
-Printed in U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- _To_
- MY MOTHER
- _on whose love and influence
- the curtain will never fall._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- PAGE
- The Curtain Rises ix
-
- Footlights 3
-
- Madame Peacock 67
-
- Grease-Paint 127
-
- The Back Drop 169
-
- Two Masters 219
-
- Up Stage 249
-
- Curtain! 289
-
- The Curtain Falls 341
-
-
-
-
-THE CURTAIN RISES
-
-
-Arched like the dome of heaven, illumined with a glow not brilliant
-but warm and intimate, carpeted with velvet that gives gently to the
-tread of many feet, the air vaguely scented with a perfume that has no
-name, row upon row of wide, soft-armed chairs facing a curtain that
-falls in long, mysterious folds—silent, expectant, tantalizing,
-inviting—a world all its own—THE THEATER.
-
-Behind that curtain—the same world bounded by brick walls. Scenery
-with act numbers scrawled in charcoal across its back being shoved
-into place, hustling property men, frantic stage manager, nervous
-director giving last minute husky orders, anxiously repeated lines
-and cues, the final touches of make-up, restive feet striding
-dressing-room floors. There is the murmur of hushed voices, its
-excited undercurrent like a rising chant, the tremulo of uncertainty,
-the eager activity of that suspended moment of waiting for the curtain
-to lift.
-
-Actors and audience—they must for a few brief hours change places if
-this world made for forgetfulness, this house of dreams is to realize
-its unwritten law:—“Abandon care, all ye who enter here:” The spirit
-of the theater lays magic fingers over tired eyes. The audience steps
-across the footlights and becomes the actor, throbs to his emotions,
-sheds his tears, tingles with his laughter. The actor must step across
-the footlights and become the audience, feel his pulse beat, sense his
-pleasure or disapproval, know his reaction.
-
-And in proportion to the measure with which each becomes the other,
-the enthusiasm with which the audience acts, the keenness with which
-the actor observes, the play lives. The house of dreams is alight!
-But if either should fail—and if one fail, it is because the other
-does—then the play is phantom. A stalking ghost walks the boards. The
-house of dreams goes dark!
-
-
-
-
-FOOTLIGHTS
-
-_SATIRE_
-
-
-The Romance of yesterday is the Satire of to-morrow. Juliet to-day
-would be a lovesick flapper. We’d regard with tongue in cheek her
-moonings to the moon. There is such a fine line between the smile of
-sympathy and the smile of sophistication, that the author confesses
-she is still in doubt which the heroine of “Footlights” will call
-forth—if either.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTLIGHTS
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Have you ever been in a small town, small time vaudeville house? Well,
-even if you have, and could live through it, you’ve probably never
-seen that mysterious region known as “backstage.” You’ve never heard
-warped boards creak under the lightest step. You’ve never stood in the
-wings waiting for your turn, trying to escape the draught that is
-everywhere, shivering but afraid to sneeze. You’ve never dodged
-misdirected tobacco juice. You’ve never endured the composite odors
-only a one time “opery-house,” sometime warehouse, another time
-stable, can produce. You’ve never done your three a day, rain, shine
-or blizzard, then rushed to catch a local with oil lamps swinging
-weirdly overhead and a jerky halt at every peach tree. But most of
-all, if you’re a woman, you’ve never known what it is to sit weeping
-in a pea-green walled dressing-room because you chose to do the darn
-thing yourself and won’t go back home and admit you’re beaten.
-
-If any one of these experiences had been yours, you’d probably walk
-straight into the pea-green dressing-room referred to, pat Elizabeth
-Parsons on the shoulder and say, “I’m with you, old girl! It’s a
-black, black world. No sunshine anywhere! Never was, never will be!”
-
-As it happened, those in her world at the moment were not of her
-world. They were a hardened lot, with hands ready to dig down and
-share a copper with a pal, with glib greeting in their own peculiar
-patois as they swung through the stage entrance, but inured to
-creaking boards, to combined odors, to oaths and tobacco juice and icy
-currents that gripped more sensitive shoulders like the hand of death.
-Life had handed them a deal that wasn’t exactly square, perhaps.
-Almost any of them would have been a knock-out on Broadway! But they
-had reached the point where emotion, as well as indignation, expressed
-itself in shrugs.
-
-They could snore peacefully in a swaying day-coach, dreaming of the
-hour when the flower of success would spring up by the wayside. So
-Elizabeth Parsons wept alone. Her make-up boxes reeled in every
-direction as her head went down in their midst. Her hands, pressed
-against her lips, tried to still the sobs she knew were cowardly. Her
-body shook with that least beautiful of human emotions, self-pity, and
-she wished she were dead.
-
-A gale of sleet and snow tore against her little alley window. It
-rattled the single pane furiously. It forced its way through cracks
-and dripped into pools of water on the stone floor. It blurred the
-already dull electric globes round her dressing-table with a dank mist
-and soaked a chill into her bones. But it had nothing whatever to do
-with her tears. They were the result of an accumulation of misery and
-loneliness, and finally the receipt of a wire from her booking agent
-advising her that her route had been changed. For the next three days
-she must play her own home town.
-
-It was the crowning humiliation! She had endured the disappointment of
-all the rest of it; but to go back to the barnlike old theater in Main
-Street, wedged between movies and tinsel acrobats, was too much. To
-hear the wagging tongues and see the wagging heads of those who had
-warned her two years ago that New York was a pit of the devil; to let
-them see that even his satanic majesty had let her sink into oblivion,
-was more than she could bear.
-
-From the stage at the foot of the iron stairs came a crashing chord
-and the voice of Jack Halloran, “The Funniest Man in the World,”
-singing a nasal travesty:—
-
- “Oh, Rigoletto—give me a stiletto!”
-
-Elizabeth raised her head, mopped away the tears, and rearranged her
-make-up. Her turn was next but one.
-
- “BETTY PARSONS—FAMOUS IMITATOR OF
- FAMOUS STARS
- STRAIGHT FROM BROADWAY.”
-
-So proclaimed the announcements that accompanied her pictures outside
-the theater. They always made Elizabeth smile. She had certainly come
-from Broadway—straight.
-
-She brushed back her soft brown hair, pinned a towel round it, laid on
-a layer of grease-paint. A supply was needed to blot out traces of the
-last bad half hour. She beaded the lashes, penciled black shadows
-under them that made her gray eyes look green, and carmined her lips
-so that the slightly austere New England lines of them softened into
-luscious curves.
-
-In the midst of transforming a primrose into an orchid, and with
-thoughts still fastened on the dreaded to-morrow, she did not hear the
-knock on her door. It was repeated. Turning, she saw a white square
-of paper shoved through the crack. She picked it up wonderingly.
-Communications from any one but her agent were almost unknown
-quantities.
-
- Dear Lizzie Parsons (she read),
-
- I’m outside of the door waiting to come in and say hello.
-
- Your old friend,
- Lou Seabury.
-
-In spite of her dread, in spite of her determination to die rather
-than face home folks, she dropped her powder puff, made one bound for
-the door, flung it wide.
-
-“Oh, Rigoletti—give me a yard of spaghetti,” warbled Halloran from
-below.
-
-With a little checked cry, Elizabeth reached out both hands. A plump,
-pink cheeked young man took them and somewhat diffidently stepped into
-the little square of room. But Elizabeth clung to him shamelessly and
-her voice caught when she tried to speak. He was the first link
-between two years of loneliness and the yesterdays of happy childhood.
-
-“Lou,” came at last, “Lou Seabury!”
-
-“I got a nerve, haven’t I,—walkin’ in on you like this?”
-
-His pink face flushed a deeper pink as she pulled the chair from the
-dressing-table, thrust him into it, and stood looking down. “You’re
-just an angel from heaven, that’s what you are! How ever in the world
-did you find me?”
-
-“I came over here yesterday to look at some threshin’ machines. Scott
-Brothers are sellin’ out and Dad got word they’re lettin’ their stuff
-go dirt cheap, so he sent me to take a squint. By Jiminy, I almost
-dropped dead when I went past the theater this afternoon and saw your
-picture. Maybe I didn’t go right up to the girl in the ticket box and
-tell her I was an old friend of yours!”
-
-Elizabeth’s tongue went into her cheek. “And what did she say?”
-
-“Asked why I didn’t come in to see you perform to-night and I said I
-would. But first I made up my mind I’d let you know I was here.
-Say—what is it you do?”
-
-“Imitations.”
-
-“Who do you imitate?”
-
-“Oh, Ethel Barrymore and Elsie Janis and Eddie Foy and George Cohan
-and Nazimova—” She reeled off a list, most of them strange to him.
-
-“I’ll bet you’re great. Gee—Lizzie—but you’re pretty.” His round face
-went scarlet as the words popped out and he shifted uneasily under the
-loose ill-fitting coat that hung from his broad shoulders.
-
-She met his wide-eyed admiration with a smile. “It’s the paint, Lou.”
-
-“No, sirree! You always were pretty. I used to watch you sittin’
-beside me in the choir, and when you threw back your head and sort of
-closed your eyes to sing, I didn’t wonder Sam Goodwin was crazy about
-you.”
-
-“Is he still organist at the First Presbyterian?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“And are you still in the choir?”
-
-“Yep.” His boyish brown eyes dropped. His plump hands twisted the brim
-of his wide slouch hat. “Guess that’s the most I’ll ever amount to.”
-
-“But that beautiful voice of yours—it’s a sin!”
-
-“My Dad don’t think so. Gimcracks, he calls it. I asked him once to
-give me enough to get it trained,” the eyes lifted with a twinkle,
-“and I never asked him again.”
-
-She patted his arm sympathetically. “He wouldn’t understand—of
-course.”
-
-“Gee, I wish I had your sand, Lizzie! To break away—and make good.”
-
-She turned swiftly to the mirror, picked up the discarded puff, dabbed
-some powder on her nose, then carefully rouged her nostrils. And if a
-tear smudged into the shadow under her eye, he didn’t notice it.
-
-He watched her fascinated, every move, every practiced touch to her
-make-up. She had unpinned the towel and her hair fluffed like a golden
-brown halo round her small, mobile face. And catching his rapt
-expression in the mirror, it flashed over her that to him she did
-represent success. The mere fact that she had broken the chains of New
-England tradition, that she had crossed the rubicon of the footlights,
-put her on a plane apart.
-
-Somehow the look in his nice eyes, of wonder, of envy, of homage—the
-look she had so often worn when from a fifty cent seat in the gallery
-she had studied the methods of the stars she impersonated—gave her new
-courage. To-night she would not go through her ten minutes listlessly
-with just one idea uppermost—to get her theater trunk packed in a rush
-so that she might snatch a few hours’ sleep before making the train in
-the dull gray dawn. To-night she would be sure at least of an audience
-of one, of interest and enthusiasm and a thrill of excitement—and
-these she would merit. She would do her turn for Lou Seabury in a way
-he’d never forget.
-
-She drew a stool from under the dressing-table, sat down and plied him
-with hurried questions about the folks at home. He gave her the latest
-news, little intimate bits that mean nothing but are so dear to one
-who knows no fireside but the battered washstand and cracked basin of
-a third-rate hotel room.
-
-Grand’pa Terwilliger, seventy-nine, was keeping company with the widow
-Bonser but was scared to marry her for fear folks would talk. Grace
-Perkins had a new baby. Stanley Perkins had married a stenographer in
-Boston and bought a flivver. He, Lou, had bought a victrola for
-fifteen dollars second-hand and had some crackerjack opera records for
-it. She ought to hear them!
-
-When finally she sent him round to the front of the house and hurried
-down the ugly iron steps, her low-heeled white slippers touched them
-with an eager lightness they had not known for months.
-
-The curtain was rung down on a one-act sketch. A placard announced
-“Miss Betty Parsons—in her Famous Imitations.”
-
-With a dazzling smile, Elizabeth sallied forth, cane in hand singing,
-“I’m a Yankee Doodle Dandy.”
-
-Through her repertoire she went, changing like a chameleon from the
-bland grin and strut of Eddie Foy to the crumpled pleading and
-out-flung hands of Nazimova in “The Doll’s House.” She plunged into
-Nora’s final scene with her husband:
-
- ... “When your terror was over—not for what threatened me, but for
- yourself ... then it seemed to me—as though nothing had happened.
- I was your lark again, your doll just as before—whom you would
- take twice as much care of in future, because she was so weak and
- fragile. Torwald—in that moment it burst upon me that I had been
- living here these eight years with a strange man.... Oh, I can’t
- bear to think of it! I could _tear_ myself to pieces!”
-
-The greater part of the audience had never heard of the Russian
-actress, knew less of the Scandinavian author. But the sob in the
-voice of the frail little girl on the stage, the anguish in her face
-got them by the throat.
-
-There was a spontaneous burst of applause that held for a moment while
-Betty bowed, glance straying into the misty auditorium, heart
-fluttering with a gratification it had not known since the Grand
-Central spilled her into the bewildering maze that is New York.
-
-She swung quickly into ragtime after that, the drawling syncopation
-and rolling step of a black-face comedian, and as a conclusion gave
-them Elsie Janis in one of the songs from her latest Broadway success.
-
-They brought her back several times. She threw them a final kiss,
-disappeared into the wings and whisked up the stairs. Lou was going to
-see the show to its finish, then call for her. He was sure they could
-persuade the proprietor of the hotel where she was staying to fix up a
-little supper of sandwiches and milk.
-
-She slipped out of her white dress and into a dark one, folded the
-former in layers of tissue paper and laid it in the top trunk tray,
-stuffing stockings into the corners to keep it in place. She gathered
-together her make-up, packed it into a tin box. To-morrow another
-pea-green dressing-room, or perhaps, saffron-yellow. The week
-following, one of chalk-blue. And so on, ad infinitum. Of such her
-infinite variety!
-
-A knock came at the door. She glanced at the gold watch which had been
-her grandmother’s. Ten-fifteen. Lou had probably tired of the show.
-
-Pulling on her black velvet tarn, she called gaily—“Come in!”
-
-A mellow voice answered interrogatively, “Miss Parsons?”
-
-It was then she wheeled about. Standing framed in the doorway was a
-tall man with a cloud of black hair sweeping from a white forehead and
-a pair of intense dark eyes. Elizabeth knew him instantly.
-
-No mistaking that face and long, lean figure.
-
-She drew a bewildered hand across a bewildered brow. In the doorway of
-her dressing-room stood Oswald Kane, famous New York theatrical
-producer!
-
-She made no attempt at speech, just stared at him.
-
-He smiled. “You expected some one else, I see. May I come in?” And as
-she nodded, “You know me?”
-
-She nodded again, indicated the chair and sank onto the low stool. She
-couldn’t have stood another instant.
-
-“You’re wondering, of course, why I am here,” the low musical voice
-went on.
-
-“Y-yes.”
-
-“I’m very much interested in your work, Miss Parsons. I have come to
-see it three times—last night and twice to-day. Until to-night,
-however, I was not quite sure of you. There was a listless quality.
-Had any one, perhaps, informed you that I was in front to-night?”
-
-“If any one had, I’d probably have died of nervousness.”
-
-He smiled again, ran a hand through his heavy hair, pushing it back
-from his forehead, and leaned forward. “You seem to be a very talented
-little girl. No technique, of course. You have the A B C’s of that to
-learn. But you have a flexible voice and expressive face, and you
-showed in that Nazimova bit emotional possibilities. Your reproduction
-of her tone and accent were really excellent.”
-
-“Th—thank you,” came with difficulty.
-
-“Of course, I have no proof that you can act. Even if you can, it will
-require infinite patience and training to make an actress of you. But
-I could do it, I believe.”
-
-Elizabeth gulped.
-
-He shook back his shock of hair. His burrowing eyes narrowed. His
-fingers hesitatingly played with the thin watch chain that spanned his
-high waistcoat. “The majority of actresses on the American stage are
-mere mummers. Those I have made are artistes. But in order to
-accomplish this, they have given themselves into my hands—absolutely.
-I have taken girls out of the chorus and made stars of them in the
-drama—not because they were lovely to look at, or quick or clever, but
-because I have worked hard with them, with infinite patience developed
-their personalities, injected into them the inspiration that is Oswald
-Kane.”
-
-“Yes,” said Elizabeth.
-
-“Of course there must be ability or I would not waste my time. I must
-be sure the seed is there to be nursed into a beautiful flower. But
-first and foremost, the actress I train must obliterate self. She must
-become so much clay for me to model. She must accept my direction
-without question. She must obey as a soldier obeys his commanding
-officer.”
-
-“Yes,” sighed Elizabeth.
-
-“I see you now not as you are, but as what I can make of you. No two
-of my stars are alike. Each has distinct and startling personality.
-That is why the American public looks to me for sensations. Not one is
-the actress she was when I discovered her. They are, one and all,
-Oswald Kane creations.” He leaned back, still studying her.
-
-Elizabeth felt a sea of eyes upon her in a gaze of hypnosis. She
-stared back like one in a trance.
-
-He sat for a long moment silent. Then the low, quiet voice went on,
-richly vibrant as the tones of a cello.
-
-“Yes, I think I might do something with you. That Nazimova bit showed
-promise. But it will require training and patience—infinite patience.
-You will have to work hard without complaint, hours over one line,
-weeks over one short scene. And no recognition, perhaps, for some
-years to come. You must not consider mundane things. Money must count
-for nothing. I cannot think of money in connection with my art. You
-must never grow tired or disgruntled. Above all, you must not
-question. And in the end, a great artiste, my child,—a great artiste.”
-
-Elizabeth nodded mechanically. She felt like screaming.
-
-He got up slowly as if still uncertain, moved into a corner of the
-little room, eyes still upon her. “Will you take off your hat and
-smooth down your hair. I must see your features at close range.”
-
-With fingers that trembled and stiffened, she pulled off her tam,
-combed back her fluffy brown hair and breathlessly lifted her profile
-to the light. It was, as he had said, a face not beautiful, but
-malleable to mood as wax, with gray eyes set wide apart, a short nose,
-full sensitive red lips, deep-cleft chin and swift change of
-expression that was almost a change of feature. And there was in her
-slim figure with its soft suggestion of curve, the magnetism of youth,
-the flame of enduring energy.
-
-He moved finally toward the door.
-
-“You will take the 11:18 to-night to New York, cancel all bookings,
-and I shall expect you at my theater to-morrow at noon.”
-
-Elizabeth found her voice at last. “If you knew how many, many times
-I’ve gone to your office, Mr. Kane, and begged on my knees for just
-one little word with you!”
-
-He smiled once more, that charming, somewhat deprecatory smile of his.
-“That is not my way of engaging artistes. I must seek them, not they
-me. I never see those who come to my office, unless I have sent for
-them. No, my way is to haunt out-of-the-way places. Railroad stations,
-unknown stock theaters, cheap theatrical hotels, vaudeville houses
-like this. There, occasionally, I find my flower among the weeds. And
-when I do, I pluck it to transplant in my own garden. If I discover
-one a year, I ask no more.”
-
-A sob broke in Elizabeth’s throat. “Oh, Mr. Kane—I—I’m so proud—and
-so—so grateful.”
-
-He took her trembling hand, patted it with his own rather soft,
-artistic one. “You must prove a good pupil, that is all. Remember—no
-mention of this when you go to cancel your booking—no mention of my
-name to any one. For a time we must keep the agreement to ourselves.
-Until you have my permission, the fact that you have come under my
-management is to remain absolutely unknown to any but ourselves.”
-
-She looked up at him wonderingly, “Anything you wish, of course.”
-
-He dropped her hand, ran his fingers once more through the dark thatch
-that persistently fell over his eyes. “I must have absolute faith in
-you, little girl,—and you in Oswald Kane.”
-
-“I—I have.”
-
-“That is as it should be. To-morrow, then, at noon.”
-
-He was gone.
-
-In less than twenty minutes, after the manner of such happenings, a
-miracle had been wrought.
-
-Elizabeth stood dazed an instant. Then she stumbled to the window,
-flung up the sash and leaned out to drink in the gale-slashed air with
-deep convulsive breaths.
-
-“Oh God,” she cried, tears streaming down her cheeks, “help me to make
-good. Help me—help me!”
-
-And so it happened that on a biting day in January, 1917, at the
-stroke of twelve, Elizabeth Parsons, aged twenty-three, entered the
-sanctum sanctorum of Oswald Kane, was handed a pen by his business
-manager and forthwith signed away five years of her life with an
-option on the next five, at the rate of fifty dollars per week for the
-first two years, one hundred for the third, and one hundred and fifty
-for each year following.
-
-But just then Elizabeth would have signed away her whole life for
-nothing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-On a brilliant night in January, 1920, under the sponsorship of Oswald
-Kane, Mme. Lisa Parsinova made her bow to an expectant New York
-public.
-
-For a long time, almost a year to be exact, Mr. Kane had been letting
-fall gentle hints of his discovery of a rare Russian genius, driven by
-the war to these shores. He was having her instructed in English, the
-story went, and once equal to the exigencies of emotional acting in a
-strange tongue, she would be presented by him to an American public
-which could not fail to be entranced by her great art. All this had
-been revealed in various interviews, bit by bit—a word here, a phrase
-there, a subtle suggestion elsewhere. At first he had not given out
-her name, had been gradually prevailed upon to do so, and by the time
-he announced the date of her première, “Mme. Lisa Parsinova” was on
-the lips of all that eager theater-going throng alert for a new
-sensation.
-
-Stories of a cloudy past had already gone the rounds, vaguely
-suggested by Mr. Kane’s press representative, not through the medium
-of the press. There were tales of her startling beauty, her lovers,
-her temper. But so far no one had been permitted even a glimpse of
-her.
-
-So that when she made her appearance the opening night, the gasp of
-thrilled admiration that met her was very genuine. The play was “The
-Temptress”—Oriental in atmosphere, written for her by Kane and a young
-collaborator whose name didn’t particularly matter. The plot was not
-by any means unconventional, that of a slave of early Egypt wreaking
-revenge through the ages upon the descendants of the master, who,
-because she refused to yield to him, threw her to the crocodiles.
-
-The first act, a prologue, took place on a flagged terrace of a palace
-by the slow-flowing Nile. As the curtain rose, faint zephyrs of
-incense wafted outward, a misty aroma. The terrace glistened under a
-golden moon with still stars piercing a sky of emerald. The tinkle of
-some far-off languorous instrument sounded soft against the night. And
-waiting, his lustful gaze on the marble steps, sat the master.
-
-Slowly, the slave descended. Sullen and silent, she slunk forward,
-like some halting panther in the night.
-
-Her body gleamed, golden as the moon, sinuous and satiny under the
-transparent cestus. Her bare feet moved noiselessly, every step one
-of infinite grace. She came forward, eyes brooding, and stood half
-shrinking, half defiant before the long stone bench where sat her
-master. Suddenly she raised her head, tossed back her short black hair
-and faced him.
-
-As by a signal, opera-glasses went up, a sigh of pleasure went through
-the house. The audience waited. She opened her lips and her voice,
-low and liquid, flowed out, thrilling through their veins. The thick
-contralto of it, the fascinating foreign accent, completely captivated
-them.
-
-He reached out, drew her toward him. One felt the wave of terror
-seizing her. His big hands grasped her shoulders. She gave a smothered
-cry and he laughed.
-
-She pleaded, then resisted, and finally, voice rising like a viol with
-strings drawn taut, defied him, calling upon the gods to save her for
-the man she loved.
-
-And all the while he laughed, a chuckling laugh full of anticipation.
-
-At last his arms closed round the golden body, his lips bent to hers.
-The sudden gleam of a tiny dagger, its clatter as he caught her
-upraised arm,—and he flung her from him, clapping his hands for the
-eunuchs who waited.
-
-With one swift word he condemned her.
-
-She crumpled at his feet. The black men lifted her. She cried out in
-horror, a curse upon him and his through all the ages.
-
-A long moan as they bore her away, a pause, a splash against the
-silence, and the curtain descended.
-
-For a breath the house sat motionless. Then came a surge of applause.
-But the curtain did not rise.
-
-Buzz of conversation met the upgoing lights. Only a few, however,
-moved from their seats. Those who did came together in the lobby and
-discussed the new star with a wonder close to awe.
-
-“They sure can turn them out over there,” avowed one seasoned first
-nighter. “Temperament, that’s the answer, Slav temperament. No little
-cut and dried two-by-four conventions to tie them down. They’ve got
-something the American woman don’t know the first thing about.”
-
-“Well, they know how to let go, for one thing!”
-
-The curtain rose on Act II, a modern drawing-room in the London home
-of an English peer, member of Parliament, on the occasion of his
-thirty-ninth birthday. He entered, big, handsome, with his little,
-clinging English wife.
-
-There was revealed the fact that for generations the oldest male of
-his line died before the age of forty, a violent death. They married,
-there were children, and always reaching the prime of manhood, they
-were cut down. A curse upon his family it seemed to be and the little
-wife trembled.
-
-Guests dropped in to tea. With them came the announcement that a
-prominent barrister was bringing a French authoress who had asked to
-meet their host. She had heard him in the House of Lords. They spoke
-of her beauty, her extraordinary personality.
-
-Then Mme. Parsinova appeared. In the brilliantly lighted set, the
-audience had its first good look at her. Slim, with a slenderness that
-made her seem tall, a mass of pitch-black hair piled high on her small
-head, a pair of burning eyes, dark and shadowed, creamy skin, a short
-nose, deep-cleft chin, and scarlet lips full and mobile, she seemed a
-living flame. She moved forward with gliding step, her lizard-green
-velvet gown clinging about her limbs, her sable cloak drooping from
-her shoulders. And one felt at once, as her white hand, weighted with
-a cabochon emerald, rested in his, the spell she would weave about the
-insular and very British member of Parliament.
-
-Not so insular at that, for it developed that in his veins ran a
-strain, a very thin strain, of the blood of Egypt.
-
-There followed the love story, obvious if you like, but with the
-everlasting thrill and appeal of a great passion, magnificently
-portrayed. For as the drama moved to its climax, the spirit of the
-slave which through the ages had visited its will upon the family of
-its master, found itself captive. The French woman fell madly in love
-with her victim and in the end gave her life that the curse might be
-lifted and his saved.
-
-In the climactic love scene at the end of Act III when passion tore
-from her lips, an onrushing tide, the beautiful voice ran a crescendo
-of emotion that was almost song. Its strange accent stirred and
-fascinated. Its abandon was that of a soul giving all, sweeping aside
-like an avalanche law, thought, ultimate penalty.
-
-And still at the curtain, when the house rang with demands for her,
-Parsinova did not appear. Oswald Kane made his accustomed speech,
-coming before the purple velvet curtain to tell his audience in his
-usual reticent manner how deeply he appreciated their reception of the
-genius he had discovered. He thanked them—he thanked them—he thanked
-them. He raised a graceful hand, pushed back his weight of hair and
-slipped into the wings while the house resounded once more with
-clapping hands and stamping feet, and a full fifteen minutes elapsed
-before the play could go on.
-
-All through the final act sounded the low note of tragedy, the
-realization that she who for centuries had ruthlessly taken toll must
-now once more be sacrificed that the one who had become dearer than
-life might endure.
-
-When the audience finally rose after another futile attempt to bring
-her out, the women’s eyes were red, the men’s faces white. New York
-was undoubtedly taken by storm. It had been more than a typical Kane
-first night. It had been a Kane ovation.
-
-In the first row a man got to his feet as if shaking off a spell. He
-was tall, very erect, almost rawboned, with hair turning gray about
-the temples, a demanding jaw, sharp straight nose and eyes that
-somehow seemed younger than the rest of his face, younger than the
-bushy black brows that mounted over them. They had caught Parsinova’s
-gaze, those eyes, as it swept once or twice over the audience. They
-had held it longer than was fair to her.
-
-“Great, isn’t she, Rand?” His companion tapped his arm as he stood
-gazing at the fallen curtain.
-
-“Paralyzing,” was the laconic reply. He wheeled about and made his way
-up the aisle, followed by the other man.
-
-Outside, close to the shadowy stage entrance, Oswald Kane’s car, a
-royal blue limousine, and a curious throng of bystanders waited.
-
-Inside, Oswald Kane himself begged the circle of those privileged
-by wealth, position, influence, who clustered round the door of the
-star’s dressing-room, to excuse her for to-night. Madame was
-completely exhausted.
-
-When both crowds, tired of waiting, had dispersed two figures hurried
-down the little alley that led to the stage door and entered the
-limousine.
-
-The door slammed.
-
-The car rolled out and east toward Fifth Avenue.
-
-The man switched off the light that illumined the woman’s white face.
-Her dark-shadowed eyes were burning with excitement. She leaned back,
-closing them, and heaved a great sigh. He leaned forward, hair falling
-over his eyes, echoed the sigh, and his hand shut tightly round her
-ungloved one. With a tense, almost nervous movement she drew it away,
-shrank imperceptibly into her corner.
-
-“They are at your feet,” he whispered. “I have made you.”
-
-She did not answer—merely opened her eyes and looked at him and
-through the darkness, something like tears glistened on the lashes.
-
-They drove on in silence. He recaptured her hand, held it to his lips.
-She looked away.
-
-The car drew up before a modest apartment building in a side street.
-He helped her out, entered with her, and the elevator swung them
-upward. He made a movement for the key she took from her bag but she
-unlocked the door and led the way into the foyer.
-
-Slowly he reached up, lifted the fur toque from her black hair and the
-wrap from her shoulders, and his touch lingered caressingly as he
-turned her toward him.
-
-“You are my creation!” he told her. “Parsinova cannot exist without
-me.”
-
-Into the throat of the great Russian actress with the questionable
-past came a flutter of fear. Her lips quivered. She gave a convulsive
-choking sound. Her eyes raced the length of the hall as though she
-wanted to run away, then went pleading up to his. He smiled down into
-them, drew her firmly to him.
-
-With a swift, hysterical laugh, a twist of her body, she was out of
-his arms and across the foyer.
-
-“Come,” she called.
-
-She opened a door at the other side. The gold flames of a log fire
-played upon the face of the little gray-haired woman in dusky silk who
-rose to greet her.
-
-“Mother,” said Parsinova, “kiss your child and thank Mr. Kane. I think
-I’ve made a hit.”
-
-Oswald Kane watched with a frown as she held out her arms adoringly to
-the little old woman.
-
-For over a year the little mother had had a way of appearing in the
-background whenever he claimed the few sentimental hours which should
-have been but small acknowledgment of his new pupil’s debt to him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-Parsinova instantly became the rage.
-
-She gave delicious interviews in which she misapplied American slang
-in a way that made the press chuckle. She spoke of the tragedy of
-Russia. She told of her struggles there. She gave her impressions of
-the American theater; American art; American fashions; the energy of
-the American man; the vitality of the American woman.
-
-“They do not give as we foreign women,” she said. “They take. And so
-it is that they grow rich—in beauty—and are forever young.”
-
-“But emotionally?” prompted the interviewer.
-
-“I have said—they are forever young. Emotionally—they are children
-always.”
-
-This statement was followed by indignant protest from American
-actresses and the sort of heated dramatic controversy that delighted
-the soul of Oswald Kane.
-
-She received all reporters in her dressing-room at the theater. If any
-one save Kane knew where she lived, no one had ever crossed the sacred
-threshold.
-
-“I live two lives quite a-part,” she said. “One in my home which is
-for me a-lone. And one in the theater which is for my dear public.”
-
-Mr. Kane amplified this by stating that her hours at home were spent
-in study. Others intimated that her hours at home were given to some
-mysterious romance.
-
-In spite of which she was not a hermit. Society, with a capital S,
-sought the privilege of entertaining her. Occasionally she accepted a
-dinner invitation—never on any day but Sunday, however—or permitted a
-tea to be given in her honor. She went nowhere during the week.
-
-Her dressing-room was always fragrant with flowers. Kane had had it
-done over when she took possession. An alcove had been cut off for her
-make-up table, and the orchid silken drapes, black rug, suspended
-lights and carved chairs of the outer room gave it more the impression
-of a salon. Here she held court. Here she read the hysterical notes of
-matinée girls, the pleas of dilletanti youth that she dine or sup with
-them, the tributes of actors, the encomium of the world in general.
-Here, every week or so, she went into tantrums, threatening to kill
-her maid in a voice that caused the stage hands to tremble, until Kane
-himself had to be called to calm her. Here she smoked Russian
-cigarettes and looked over the urgent invitations that piled mountain
-high upon the bronze tray.
-
-It was only at home in a cretonne hung bedroom, furnished with a rigid
-fourposter and dotted swiss curtains through which sunlight flowed,
-that she wept and sometimes felt lonely.
-
-She played of course to packed houses. The S. R. O. sign was a common
-occurrence. More than once in that same place in the front row, the
-footlights illumined the face of the man whose intent gaze had
-fastened on hers the opening night. He seemed never to tire of her
-art.
-
-Early in March Mrs. Collingwood Martin gave a reception for her.
-Mrs. Julian van Ness Collingwood Martin flattered herself, with
-justification, that in her wide old house facing Washington Square she
-maintained the nearest approach to a salon that could be found this
-side of Paris.
-
-Her high drawing-room brought together leading spirits of the
-professional, business and diplomatic worlds, and her gracefully
-tinted head was never troubled with fear that the wrong ones might
-meet. All those on her selected list were the right ones, each
-interested in what the other represented. Many a little coup between
-the artiste and the financier is consummated under the guise of
-drinking a cup of tea or punch. And more than one professional has
-amassed a neat little fortune by making wide-eyed queries of the Wall
-Street man about his end of the game.
-
-On the afternoon in question the rooms on the lower floor were crowded
-with laughter, perfume, silks, jewels, furs and the hum of animated
-voices.
-
-Bowls of early spring bloom, azaleas, jonquils, mammoth daisies, stood
-on tables and at either side of the arched doorway. A faint blue haze
-of cigarette smoke hung overhead. Twilight had sifted through sunlight
-before Parsinova appeared. She always came late.
-
-As she stood, a silhouette within the white arch between the shining
-bowls of jonquils, there was a general hush, then a forward movement.
-She was gowned entirely in black—black lace trailing from her feet, a
-black hat shadowing her face, and drooping from it to curl against her
-shoulder, a black paradise. Black pearls dangled from her ears and a
-strand of them about her neck emphasized its whiteness.
-
-“Isn’t she wonderful? What personality—what atmosphere!”
-
-“There’s no one like her.”
-
-“She fairly oozes temperament.”
-
-“Absolutely startling!”
-
-“By Jove—these foreigners! Naughty but—er—so promising, don’t you
-know!”
-
-Mrs. Collingwood Martin bore her triumphantly to a thronelike chair
-and presented the guests in turn.
-
-Parsinova’s manner was charming, a bit weary but gracious, and her
-efforts to carry on a conversation in colloquial English were
-excruciating.
-
-“That lit-tle French gentleman by the punch bowl,—I fear he has on a
-biscuit,” she told the group of adorers.
-
-They looked puzzled. Then one of them flung back his head with a
-laugh. “You mean he has a bun on.”
-
-“I shall never be right,” she sighed in the chorus of laughter that
-followed.
-
-From the music-room came a clear tenor singing the “Ave Maria.”
-Silence met the lifted voice and at the final sobbing note, gentle
-applause.
-
-Mrs. Collingwood Martin swept toward her guest of honor.
-
-“Darling,” she smiled with that touch of privileged intimacy she loved
-to assume, “here is some one most anxious to meet you. Let me present
-Signor Luigi Rogero of the Metropolitan.”
-
-Parsinova looked up and out from under dropped lids. Then she wondered
-whether any one saw the start she gave. Facing her with lips bent to
-her outstretched hand stood Lou Seabury.
-
-No mistaking him in spite of the close-fitting coat, carefully waxed
-little mustache and black-ribboned monocle! Due to a New York tailor’s
-art, his plump figure had grown slimmer. In place of the loose
-disjointed shamble of old home days, he bore himself with consummate
-_savoir faire_. But the pink cheeks and kind brown eyes were the same.
-
-Parsinova waited breathlessly for some sign of recognition. None came.
-In perfect English he merely voiced his satisfaction at the meeting
-and joined the group about her chair. It was not until she rose to
-leave and he craved the honor of escorting her to her car that she met
-his gaze with curious question in her own. But his eyes were blank so
-far as any subtle meaning was concerned.
-
-He followed down the steps, helped her into the perfectly appointed
-limousine. An impulse she made no attempt to curb prompted her to ask
-if she could drive him uptown. They had gone several blocks before
-either spoke. Then very low came the words:—
-
-“Lizzie Parsons,—you’re a wonder!”
-
-Instinctively she looked about to make sure his whisper had not been
-overheard. Then she gave a long, smothered laugh and clutched his hand
-just as she had that night in the three-a-day vaudeville theater.
-
-“Lou,” she breathed, “I’m so glad, so glad!”
-
-“Were you surprised to see me?”
-
-“Surprised? I almost died.” She gave a little gasp. “Were you
-surprised to see me?”
-
-“Not a bit.”
-
-“You knew me then—at once?”
-
-“I’ve known who you were ever since your opening. I was there. Matter
-of fact, I have you to thank for the brilliant idea that made me an
-Italian.”
-
-“Me?”
-
-“Yep.” He lapsed into the old lingo and she closed her eyes with a
-beatific smile. “You don’t think my brains would ever be equal to such
-an inspiration.”
-
-“Mine weren’t either. It was Oswald Kane’s.”
-
-“Nobody would ever guess that you’re anything but Russian from the
-word go.”
-
-“You did.”
-
-“That was only because I’d known you. And even then I mightn’t have
-been on if I hadn’t heard your imitations. Do you remember that
-night?”
-
-“Do I remember it! That was the night that ‘made me what I am
-to-day.’”
-
-He laughed.
-
-“I did my best to please you,” she went on, “and Oswald Kane was in
-front and liked my act. He came back afterward and arranged to sign
-me.”
-
-“So that was why you left me cold. I dated you for supper and went
-round after the show, to find my bird had flown. Believe me, I was the
-most disappointed rube in town.”
-
-“I wouldn’t have remembered my own name after Kane saw me.”
-
-“Is that why you canned it?”
-
-She laughed then, her low, rich contralto. “That was all his plan. I
-was as amazed when he told me about it as if he’d asked me to change
-my skin. He’s never told me why he did it—he doesn’t trouble to
-tell you why. But I suppose he thought the public needed a thrill,
-something new, something different. And my impersonations gave him the
-idea. I think I might have made good if he had let me go on as just
-plain Parsons. But of course, not half the hit that Parsinova has
-made.”
-
-“They sure are crazy about you. I wondered often how you were getting
-on.”
-
-“You didn’t guess that somebody was making a new woman of me, did
-you?”
-
-His gaze, as it traveled from her dark-rimmed eyes shadowed by the
-drooping hat, to the long white hands and slim black-swathed body,
-held the same look of awe it had worn the night he had seen her make
-up.
-
-“Lordy, girl!” he gasped. “How you must have worked to accomplish it!”
-
-“Work!” came in a breath. “I worked like a galley slave—never
-stopping, except for sleep. Even while I ate I studied—Russian and
-French, and gesture and movement. I even learned to eat herring. And
-all the time he was teaching me to act. In four years—almost—I’ve seen
-no one, talked to no one but him. I’ve had to obliterate self
-completely. He has in reality created Lisa Parsinova.”
-
-“He had to have the material to do it. The stuff was there.”
-
-“But he is a genius, Lou. He knows his public just as a magician knows
-his bag of tricks.”
-
-The traffic at Thirty-fourth Street halted them. They spoke in
-whispers, and every now and then her eyes rested with a look of
-caution on the inexpressive back of her chauffeur.
-
-“Do you think he can hear?” she asked.
-
-“’Course not.”
-
-“I have to be so careful.”
-
-She turned to him, eyes alight with interest as they started on up the
-Avenue. “Tell me about yourself. You’re another man, too.”
-
-“Dad died shortly after I saw you,” he explained. “Apoplexy. And I
-thought of you, the break you had made, the gamble you took. So I
-gathered together what he left me, sold out to my brother Jim, and
-came to New York to stake everything on that voice you took such stock
-in. I went to Fernald and he thought he could do something with it.
-I’ve been in training so to speak ever since. And this season he got
-me the job with the Metropolitan.”
-
-“If only I could hear you!”
-
-“Oh, I haven’t done much—not yet. A few matinées and one or two
-Saturday nights. Next year, though, they’ve promised me a go at
-leads.”
-
-“I knew if ever you had the chance you’d prove yourself.”
-
-“I owe a great part of that chance to Randolph,—you know, Hubert
-Randolph. He’s one of the directors of the Metropolitan. I met him at
-Fernald’s studio last winter and it was through him that Fernald
-pushed me. He’s interested in you, by the way,—thinks you’re the
-greatest actress of the century.”
-
-“The century is very young,” she smiled.
-
-“Well, Rand’s seen them all in the last fifteen or twenty years and
-knows what he’s talking about. We were at your opening together and he
-said then you were paralyzing.”
-
-“Did I do that to you, too?”
-
-“Paralyze me? Bet your life you did! When you walked out on that stage
-and raised your head, a ramrod went up my back. ‘That’s Lizzie
-Parsons,’ I said to myself, ‘or I’ll be shot.’ Then I thought I must
-be loony, that when I’d see you in a better light without the short
-wig, I’d laugh at my mistake. But in the second act I knew I was
-right, in spite of the black hair—”
-
-“It’s dyed, Lou.” She made the confession haltingly. “At first I
-didn’t want to. My hair seemed sort of part of me—the color, I mean.
-But that’s just why he made me do it; it was a question of
-personality, he said. I begged him to let me wear a wig but he was
-afraid it would be detected. And he was right, I dare say. He’s always
-right.”
-
-“Don’t you worry about the way it looks, either. You used to be just
-pretty. Now you’re a beauty!”
-
-“Am I—really?” There was a childish earnestness in the query.
-
-“Should have heard Randolph rave! Say, I’m dining with him to-night.
-Why not come along? He’s crazy to meet you and he won’t go to any of
-those society fandangles to do it.”
-
-“Meet a stranger—with you around? Oh—I couldn’t! I’d burst into
-straight English as naturally as you burst into song. And that would
-ruin me.”
-
-He patted her hand and his kind brown eyes beamed. “Nonsense! You’re
-too clever an actress for that.”
-
-There was something pathetic in the way she clung to his handclasp.
-“It’s so good finding you this way. I haven’t any friends—no one to
-whom I can actually talk. With me it isn’t a case of acting behind the
-footlights. I’m acting all the time, except when I’m alone.”
-
-“But it’s not acting any more—this Russian business, is it?”
-
-“No—it’s myself, the greater part of self, I dare say. But Lizzie
-Parsons isn’t all dead yet and I don’t want her to die—” She blinked
-up at him. “Don’t make me cry, please,—or the shadows will all come
-off my eyes.”
-
-His eyes took in the luxurious appointment of the car, mauve enameled
-vanity apparatus on one side, smoking outfit on the other, gilt vase
-with its spray of fresh orchids, soft tan cushions and robe of fur. He
-gave her a warming look of satisfaction.
-
-“I should say the exchange was all for the better. You must be making
-a mint.”
-
-“One hundred and fifty a week.”
-
-“One hundred and fifty—?”
-
-“That’s my contract.”
-
-“But good Lord—”
-
-“Oh, I made it with my eyes open. It extends over the first five
-years—with an option on the next five.”
-
-“But all this—” He waved his arm, bewildered, through the air.
-
-“All this he gives me—my clothes, my car and its upkeep, my jewels,
-though they’re mostly paste, everything except my home. I wouldn’t let
-him give me that.”
-
-He made an attempt to conceal the swift suspicion that would have
-clouded any man’s eyes. Instantly she saw and answered it.
-
-“Oh, don’t misunderstand! It’s purely a matter of business. I’ve got
-to be equipped to play my part off the stage and I don’t earn enough
-to do it on my own.”
-
-“Then why doesn’t he give you enough?”
-
-“I should probably grow too independent. This way he holds the reins.
-That’s only supposition, of course. I’ve never discussed it. One can’t
-discuss money with Oswald Kane.”
-
-“It’s a damned outrage!”
-
-“Oh, no it isn’t. He took a sporting chance. He staked time and effort
-and money on a venture that might have proved a hopeless failure. I
-had everything to gain. And now that I’ve made good under his
-guidance, it’s only fair that he should reap the harvest.”
-
-“Indefinitely?”
-
-“For six years to come, at any rate,—until my contract expires.” She
-leaned back, eyes closed, and an intensely weary look dropped the
-corners of her red, mobile mouth.
-
-They drew near the park. She urged him to ride with her a bit and they
-drove into the blue velvet dusk, past the shimmer of lake curled among
-the bushes. The car glided on swiftly through cool dark silence.
-
-“You haven’t told me yet how I inspired you to become an Italian,” she
-prompted.
-
-“Oh, that—simple enough! Randolph remarked the night of your première
-that there was an aura of romance about artistes from the other side,
-particularly when they hailed from Southern Europe; sort of Oriental,
-you understand. The next day I went to Fernald. ‘Can’t you change me
-to something Italian?’ I said. ‘Seabury’s a rotten name for an opera
-singer.’ Well, he did it. Of course, I make no attempt at accent—I
-couldn’t handle that job in conversation. But the people I’ve met
-don’t look for it; they understand the fact that I was brought up in
-England. All I have to be careful of is my grammar.”
-
-They laughed together. As her laugh bubbled girlishly into the quiet
-night, she halted it with a swift movement of hand to lips and once
-more sent that look of caution at her chauffeur’s back.
-
-He reminded her of his dinner engagement with Randolph. “He’s made up
-his mind to know you informally. And that’s all he has to do to get
-what he wants. He’s a human dynamo, that man. Never knew anybody with
-his finger in so many pies and able to put over whatever he tackles.
-Sooner or later you’re bound to meet him in his own way. Might as well
-be to-night.”
-
-“What good would it do? He’ll never know me—the real me.”
-
-“He’ll know a fascinating woman, any way you look at it.”
-
-But she dropped him at the bachelor apartment on Park Avenue in spite
-of his pleas.
-
-“Come and see me, Lou, often,” she murmured, giving him her address as
-he stepped out of the car. “You don’t know what a joy it is to play at
-being myself.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-It was inevitable that Parsinova should meet Hubert Randolph, as Lou
-Seabury had prophesied. It was not inevitable that he should prove to
-be the man whose intent gaze had held hers from the first row. But
-when one considers that Randolph had determined from the moment he saw
-her to know her in an unprofessional capacity, his accomplishment of
-that end was in the natural order of things.
-
-Hubert Randolph was not a self-made man. He had succeeded, made his
-name stand firm in the humming world of finance, in spite of the
-handicap of having been born to the purple. Early in his boyhood he
-had started out to forget that he was a Hamilton Randolph and he had
-been forgetting it satisfactorily ever since. At Harvard he had become
-the pal of men who tutored in their leisure hours, thereby improving
-his mind. Also, he had never taken the trouble to inform them to which
-particular Randolph family he belonged. It was unimportant. He had
-spent a winter in a shack in Arizona, partly for his health, but
-largely to familiarize himself with the workings of a matrix mine in
-which the Randolphs had an interest. He had chummed with the miners,
-chewed tobacco and acquired a red-bronze that had never quite worn
-off.
-
-He had climbed Pike’s Peak, had shot big game in the Andes. And then
-he had come back to civilization and taken a clerkship in the
-brokerage offices of Parker, Gaines and McCaffery, to study banking
-methods from the bottom up.
-
-At thirty-eight, or it may have been thirty-nine, he was an authority
-on banking, stood ace high in Washington, and was known as a patron of
-the arts. The Randolph family never understood why he had gone to all
-that bother. It was so old, so distinguished, that to have a member
-attempt to distinguish it further was almost an insult. However, Rand,
-as he was known among intimates, never troubled to consult the family
-as to his movements. He saw as little of them as possible.
-
-“Don’t concern yourself about me,” he was in the habit of telling his
-sister when she tried to propel him in the direction of one of her
-parties. “I’m a hopeless sort of devil who likes to choose his own
-friends.”
-
-Once she persuaded him to attend a tea and he appeared with a youth in
-a shiny coat and cuffs that separated from his shirt.
-
-“He’s a coming violinist,” he whispered. “I thought you’d like him to
-play. But he’s hungry—give him something to eat first.”
-
-She never attempted to persuade him after that.
-
-Parsinova met Hubert Randolph in a funny little restaurant which years
-back had been a stable. It was conducted by a group of painters for
-the benefit of a Disabled Veteran’s Relief Fund all their own. He had
-arranged the party for the Sunday following her meeting with Seabury
-but it took her old friend another week to convince her that she could
-carry it through.
-
-The occasion was not propitious. She had had a bad half hour that
-afternoon with Kane when he resented the omnipresence of her mother.
-
-“She annoys me. She seems to be behind you like a shadow. You must
-send her away! Some one is bound to discover her.”
-
-“That is impossible. She goes nowhere, sees no one. I shall keep her
-here.” Parsinova’s eyes glittered and for a moment it seemed likely
-that a backstage tantrum would be duplicated in fact.
-
-So that when she fastened the short black satin dress up the front
-into a high collar under her ears and pulled the brim of her black
-satin hat in a shading dip, it was in a mood that omened no
-particularly cordial reception of Mr. Hubert Randolph.
-
-Seabury called for her and Randolph met them in the cobbled courtyard
-that led to their unique dining place. In the dark she did not
-recognize him. But as they stood in the doorway where an old lantern
-swung, she stopped and peered at him.
-
-“I have seen you be-fore!”
-
-“Have you?”
-
-“Many times—in the firs’ row. And you look’ as if—you like me.”
-
-“I do,” came promptly with a smile.
-
-“No—no,” her eyes gave him a piquant uptilt, “my art, I mean to say.
-Me—you do not know.”
-
-“I’m going to.”
-
-He led the way indoors. She glanced about and her mood dissolved into
-a new interest. First the man, then the charm of this quaint place.
-The stalls had been left standing and in each a table was set. Over
-each from the beamed ceiling swung a lantern similar to the one
-outside. There were no brilliant lights, no noises of clinking glass
-and silver.
-
-She slid along the upholstered seat that lined the stall to the place
-he indicated at the table’s head. The men seated themselves at either
-side.
-
-“This is great, Rand,” remarked Seabury. “How is it you never brought
-me here?”
-
-“I saved it for Madame. What does she think of it?”
-
-“Fas-scinating. I feel quite like a thorough-bred horse.” Then she
-looked at him gratefully. “And one is not—on ex-hibition.”
-
-“I don’t want to exhibit you,” rejoined her host. “You’ll find that
-out.”
-
-She did find it out in the weeks that followed. They dined frequently
-at “The Mews,” sometimes with Seabury, more often alone.
-
-At first she protested. She could not! But in the end Randolph won
-out. They arrived always at six when the place was practically empty
-and by seven-thirty she was at the theater.
-
-As the weather turned warmer they drove occasionally to the country
-and back in time for the performance. She never permitted him to call
-for her but arranged to meet him at the theater. They never went to
-conspicuous hotels or restaurants. He seemed to enjoy being with her
-away from the stare of the world. One Sunday in April when they had
-planned to lunch at an inn that dots the shore of the Hudson, he
-appeared with two hampers and announced that they were going to
-picnic. They left the car at the top of a slope, scrambled down and
-unpacked the baskets with the anticipation of boy and girl off for a
-holiday. She pulled off her hat with its floating veil and sat
-cross-legged on the rug he had spread under a willow tree.
-
-Sitting there watching him, this man so intensely real, so intensely
-himself, a sense of infinite sadness swept over her. She wanted just
-for to-day to drop all sham. Not that her pose was ever difficult.
-Like all affectation used incessantly, she was no longer conscious of
-it. It was herself. But in these rare days spent with Randolph in the
-brimming sunlight, soft with young green things, she wanted with a
-ridiculously hopeless yearning to let him glimpse Elizabeth Parsons,
-the girl who would have let her hair fly in the wind for sheer joy of
-springtime, the girl who lived only in hidden moments.
-
-Sometimes she compromised by letting Parsinova express Elizabeth’s
-thoughts, her ideals, separating the two women only by the breadth of
-an accent. Often she caught him looking at her curiously, as if trying
-to link some simply expressed idea of living with the reputation of
-the woman sitting opposite him. But more frequently they were content
-to enjoy the moment, tramping through the woods, discovering new
-sun-flecked trails, drinking in the sweetness of April and
-companionship.
-
-He had suggested that he stop for her at her home but she put him off
-with excuses, obvious and sometimes lame.
-
-Once he reproached her.
-
-“Why don’t you let me come to see you?”
-
-“You can—at any time you wish.”
-
-“Not at the theater. When I worship you, I like it to be from the
-other side of the footlights.”
-
-“Oh! Then what is it you wish to do on this side?”
-
-“Adore you! And you haven’t even told me what street you live in.”
-
-“Then it should be quite ea-sy. One adores that which one knows least
-a-bout.”
-
-“In other words a man loves what he doesn’t understand and likes what
-he does?”
-
-“That is ex-actly what I wish to say. Is it not strange?—when a man
-wish’ to make a woman love him, he say:—‘_Mon adorée_, you are such a
-my-stery to me.’ And when a woman wish’ to make a man love her, she
-tell him:—‘_Mon amour_, I understan’ you per-fec’ly.’”
-
-He gave a ringing laugh, then leaned across the table.
-
-“Your foreign men have a dozen ways of telling a woman they want her
-love. We Americans, when we care—the real thing—are awkward as boys
-and a little afraid.”
-
-“A-fraid?” Parsinova’s eyes were wondering, while Elizabeth Parsons’
-soul cried out that she, too, could know such fear. “But why?”
-
-“Less experience.”
-
-Her eyes laughed into his then. “The Latin in love is an art-iste,—the
-American an art-i-san. Is that what you wish to say?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Have you ever heard that Ade classic?—
-
- ‘I never run from the man behind the gun,
- Tho’ other chaps are cowards,
- As for me—not!
- But my courage fades away,
- And I don’t know what to say,
- When I meet the little girl
- Behind the tea-pot.’”
-
-“Me-not. Tea-pot,” she repeated with a frown of concentration in which
-lurked a smile. “How ver-y droll your classics are.”
-
-His rather severe mouth lifted with a whimsical twist. “After all, it
-resolves itself into this—a man fears, not what a woman is, but what
-she seems to be.”
-
-Parsinova met the steady gaze with a quick startled look and bit her
-lip to keep it from quivering. But his next words answered the
-unspoken question that for a second shook her perfect poise.
-
-“I wonder—” he said slowly, “I wonder if you’re as simple as you seem
-complex.”
-
-She did not reply at once, did not lift her eyes. They wandered out
-through the wide window to the sheen of river and hazy Palisades in
-the distance. Randolph had driven her out to Longue Vue at the hour
-when the sun slides lazily into soft spring shadows.
-
-“Why do you think me—as you say—com-plex?” She lifted her eyes and the
-sun slanted across them. Perhaps that was why he failed to give her a
-direct answer.
-
-“Odd,” he observed, “I didn’t guess you had gray eyes. They look so
-dark from the stage. They’re wonderful eyes at close inspection, by
-the way.”
-
-“Are they, too,—com-plex?”
-
-“Full of secrets.”
-
-“Ah, but there you are wrong—quite wrong, my friend. Most of their
-life they ’ave given to study. What secret’ could they possess?”
-
-She hated herself while she said it, hated Kane and the stage and the
-success she had made. But most of all she hated Elizabeth Parsons for
-allowing Parsinova to dominate her. To this one man she wanted so
-devoutly to reveal herself as she was. Ridiculous, of course, the
-desire—for it was Parsinova who charmed him. That was all too evident.
-
-The hours she loved best were those in which he told her of his
-travels, his life in the West. In that she could evince an interest
-that was sincere. She could picture him in rough flannel shirt and
-corduroy trousers, hobnobbing with the miners, one of them. He was the
-true democrat, eager to learn first-hand instead of living by proxy.
-
-She would draw him out, welcoming the opportunity to be for the moment
-Elizabeth Parsons, if only as a listener.
-
-When he left her at the theater that evening, he startled her by
-saying abruptly:
-
-“I’m coming to dine with you next Sunday.”
-
-It was just as he helped her out of the car and she stopped short,
-hand still in his. “You—are coming—?”
-
-“That’s it, in your home. Oh, I’ve found out where you live. But I had
-a notion that I’d like you to tell me.”
-
-“How—did you find out?”
-
-“Had you followed, perhaps. At any rate, you can’t keep me away any
-longer.”
-
-“You—you must not come.”
-
-He regarded her closely, his thick brows coming together. “Is there
-any particular reason why you shut me out?”
-
-She remembered suddenly that her hand was still in his. His tense grip
-was hurting her.
-
-“Please!” She made a futile effort to draw it away.
-
-“Is there?”
-
-“Many—reasons.” Her lips hesitated over the words.
-
-“Any one reason, I should say.”
-
-In spite of herself, she looked up at him. “No—one.”
-
-“Right, then. Sunday next.”
-
-He dropped her hand quickly, stepped back into the car.
-
-The next three days she spent buying high-backed cathedral chairs
-and carved tables and tabourets for her living-room. Down came the
-cretonne hangings and up went heavy purple velvet ones that shut out
-the blessed light of day. She selected a black rug that made the room
-look hideously somber and for the divan, gold cushions weighted with
-tassels. When she finished, she had consumed several months’ salary.
-But the transformation was complete. Once more Elizabeth Parsons was
-wiped off this mortal sphere. Soon no shadow would be left of her, not
-even in the sacred nook she had saved to call “home.”
-
-With an anxiety close to terror she waited for Hubert Randolph. She
-was wearing white, soft, creamy, floating. There ought, at least, be
-some spot of light in the mysteriously shadowed room.
-
-He came at seven. She went to the door herself and let him into the
-little foyer. His eyes were alight with eagerness. They had the look
-of a small boy’s bound for a fishing trip on Sunday.
-
-He caught her hand. “You know how glad I am to be here.”
-
-“You know,” she rejoined to her own surprise, “how I am glad—for you
-to be here.”
-
-He followed into the living-room. “Odd,” he observed almost to
-himself, “I’ve pictured it often—but not like this. I’d an idea of
-light things—woman things about you.”
-
-She could have laughed with sardonic glee at the thought of how she
-had dragged down those light, woman things and spent a small fortune
-to create another atmosphere.
-
-“But on the whole,” he proceeded speculatively, “these are you, aren’t
-they?”
-
-“A woman is so man-y things—so man-y moods, I wish to say—that there
-is no one room can express her.”
-
-Her apartment was in one of those modern houses where dinner is cooked
-by a chef downstairs and sent up via the dumbwaiter. To Parsinova this
-had proved a convenience, saving as it did the necessity of curious
-servants. To-night she had arranged for one of the waiters from the
-restaurant below to serve them. But in spite of him, noiselessly in
-the background, it was a cozy, intimate little party that somehow
-brought them closer than all their former dinners. The small table
-set in a corner of the living-room, its glistening silver and lacy
-feminine damask, the dishes she had herself ordered, created a sense
-of home dangerous to the peace of mind of an actress wedded to her
-art.
-
-To crown the illusion, when the _café noir_ had been served and the
-waiter disappeared, Randolph pulled a pipe from his pocket and asked
-if he might light it. “I’ve always wondered what it would be like to
-smoke a pipe with you.”
-
-“But I do not—smoke a pipe.”
-
-“Don’t interpret me so literally. A pipe means fireside, something
-intimate and real. I’ve always thought it would be nice, one of these
-days, to see your face through pipe smoke. May I?”
-
-She nodded, curled on a cushion by the fire. It was a rainy night. The
-logs whirred merrily. “Now—tell me more about your won-der-ful West.”
-She lighted a cigarette and listened, eyes partly closed, and a sweet
-tranquillity bathed her soul.
-
-He pulled his chair closer. Unconsciously, perhaps, her head dropped
-against the arm. If a moment later she felt a hand lightly caress her
-hair, she gave no sign. Parsinova fans would undoubtedly have been
-amazed at the scene—the Russian actress curled like a kitten at the
-foot of a man’s chair while he painted with broad strokes pictures of
-prairie life.
-
-It was what he did just as he was leaving that shattered her serenity
-like an explosion. They were standing in the foyer and she had given
-him her hand with her “Good-night,” when suddenly she was in his arms.
-They closed round her, swept her to him and his lips were on hers. For
-a long moment they stood so. Then, without a word, he put her at arm’s
-length, held her eyes with a look whose intensity she found impossible
-to read. An instant later she was alone.
-
-But those few moments brought her up sharp. Hours afterward she felt
-the vice of his arms gripping her, the thrill of his kiss, and knew
-that she loved him. Subconsciously she had known it a long time. But
-she had never faced the issue. Content with a comradeship dear to both
-Elizabeth Parsons and Lisa Parsinova, she had drifted without any
-forward look, without taking count of what payment the future might
-exact. And now the hour had come. Elizabeth Parsons, who had never
-loved before, loved Hubert Randolph. Hubert Randolph loved Parsinova
-who, according to all report, had loved many times and with not too
-much reserve. Long hours she lay staring into the blank darkness of
-her room. Out of it she could draw nothing but misery.
-
-Heretofore she had accepted Parsinova’s manufactured past without
-question. Now it was a lurid flame, flaring through the smoke of all
-reasoning, torturing her—more real because it was unreal. Had it been
-fact, there would be no problem. As things were, it was the ghost at
-the banquet, a ghost of that which had never been. And there was no
-solution! There never would be!
-
-Elizabeth Parsons was New England. It was part of her plan of life to
-marry when she loved. That was as fundamental as the blood in her
-veins. The very intensity of emotion of which she was capable was
-reëxpressed in her intensity of adherence to the moral conduct
-generations of upright-living ancestors had laid down for her. From
-that there could be no swerving. It was part of her.
-
-Throughout the dragging hours of that night she tried desperately
-to read into the embrace of the man who had taken her love, some
-interpretation other than the obvious. And suddenly it came to her
-that even granted he might possibly be willing to give her his name,
-it was impossible for her to accept it. He did not know Elizabeth
-Parsons—would not, if he did, evince the slightest interest in her. It
-was the Russian actress he adored, the woman she was not. If he wanted
-her and she dared to marry him, she would have to live day and night a
-lie she could not—and what was more, would not—carry through. In love
-she would have to be herself. Brilliant as was her Slav rendering of
-it on the stage, in life she was just an American girl who wanted to
-live it with all her soul. When he took Parsinova in his arms, he
-would be holding Lizzie Parsons. The sophisticated Russian lips
-against his would be giving him New England kisses. Well—not quite
-that! But one certainty she must face. To the man who had fallen in
-love with the Russian actress, the American girl would mean less than
-nothing. She hated her! In the confusion of her soul she did not know
-which hated the other more.
-
-Had there been any doubt in her mind as to the hopelessness of her
-situation, Oswald Kane himself pounded the last nail in the coffin a
-few days later. A chatty little sheet given to imparting information
-about important people had got wind of Randolph’s devotion. It
-announced subtly that the walls the Russian actress had built up
-between herself and American men had evidently been shattered by one
-who heretofore had evinced but slight interest in the beauties of his
-own set. It hinted at their runs in his car out of New York and
-wondered amiably whether he intended converting his bungalow up
-Westchester way into a dovecote.
-
-The day it appeared on the news-stands Oswald Kane paid her an early
-visit. For the first time she saw him with his smooth exterior
-ruffled. It was a matinée day and she was having an eleven o’clock
-breakfast when he arrived. A note from Randolph asking why she had
-refused to see him the day before lay on the table beside her plate.
-She looked tired and her eyes needed no artificial shadows.
-
-Kane came into the room, then turned and stared at the new
-furnishings.
-
-“Do you like it?” she asked. “I’ve had it done over.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“I thought it safe—in case any one should find me out and drop in.”
-
-“Some one has found you out.” He handed her the society sheet, open at
-the pointed paragraph that concerned her.
-
-“I should like to know,” he began, his mellow voice going sharp, “who
-the man is.”
-
-She hastily slipped Randolph’s note into the pocket of her dress. “I
-should like to be able to tell you.”
-
-“You mean he does not exist.”
-
-“I mean that if he did, it would be quite my own affair, wouldn’t it?”
-
-“No. If you play a dangerous game and lose, Oswald Kane loses with
-you. If any man discovers the truth about you, it means your
-professional death as well as mine.”
-
-“You need never worry—about that.”
-
-Whether it was the hopeless note in her voice or the look in her eyes,
-his voice softened. He went close to her.
-
-“There is just one,” he whispered, “who knows you as you are. Lisa
-Parsinova has the right to no man’s love but Oswald Kane’s. Forget
-those New England prejudices!”
-
-She dropped quickly into a chair. “Lisa Parsinova has the right to no
-man’s love _at all_.”
-
-Her eyes closed. Her voice went on monotonously.
-
-“You see, I’ve thought it all out. I’ve swamped the girl I was and
-it’s as final as if I’d killed her. One of these days, perhaps—when my
-contract with you has been filled—Parsinova will sail back to Russia
-or be drowned or something, and out of her ashes will rise a spinster
-named Lizzie Parsons who doesn’t really matter, who’ll just pass
-out—alone. But until then you are quite safe. Only—please—never speak
-again of—of loving me.”
-
-Kane bowed. “You are a great artiste, in spite of that. And at least
-you cannot deny me the joy of the creator.”
-
-“I shall never forget what you’ve done for me. I shall never betray
-you in any way.”
-
-She kept her word to the letter. Had she followed inclination she
-would have gone through her performances mechanically. A numbness had
-taken hold of her, of utter misery, utter futility. But her work did
-not fall off in brilliance. Particularly in the love scenes and in the
-final tragic sacrifice, did her beautiful voice shake with a suffering
-so intense that it was real.
-
-Randolph she saw several times a week in his accustomed place in the
-first row. But his efforts to see her she ignored. A scene with him
-would be unbearable, leading as it must nowhere. So she left his notes
-unanswered, knowing he would eventually conclude that his passion the
-night of their last meeting had been unwelcome, that she was choosing
-the simplest means of telling him so. He wrote at first anxiously,
-then demandingly, and when she failed to answer—stopped. When the
-notes ceased to come she felt more miserably alone than ever in her
-life, reaching back into the past for their hours together as groping
-thoughts reach for memories of the dead.
-
-She grew thin as a rail and her pallor was no longer creamy. It was
-dead white, with unbecoming lines traced from nose to mouth. Seabury
-remarked the change and suggested that she needed a change of air.
-
-“You’ve been working too hard and you show it. When does your season
-close?”
-
-“Sometime in June.”
-
-“Why don’t you get Kane to let you off the end of this month?”
-
-“I don’t want to be let off. I’d like to play all summer.”
-
-“Good Lord, it would kill you!”
-
-“It will kill me if I don’t work.”
-
-“Look here!” He went over to her chair, looked at her closely. “What’s
-the matter?”
-
-He had dropped in to tea at her apartment. She was seated behind the
-copper samovar, white face emphasized against the dark hangings,
-fingers moving restlessly among the tea things.
-
-“Something’s wrong,” he persisted as she did not answer. “What is it?”
-
-“Oh, a million things,—a million little things that don’t count.”
-
-“Looks to me if it was one big thing that does.” He drew her out of
-the chair—toward the window. “Come on—’fess up to papa!”
-
-“Well, for one thing—” she bit her lip, woman-wise trying in her own
-soul to veer away from the big issue by concentrating on a lesser. “My
-mother’s blackmailing me.”
-
-“Your—what?”
-
-She looked up, met his stare of dismay. “The little old lady you see
-around here sometimes.”
-
-“I thought she was a maid. Look here—I don’t understand. You—why,
-Lizzie Parsons, you’ve been an orphan for years!”
-
-“I know I have. But I had to have some one—mother preferred—to protect
-me.”
-
-“I see—” A light dawned.
-
-“So I engaged her. She looked the part and seemed a gentle, pathetic
-soul—and now she’s blackmailing me.”
-
-He grinned in spite of the seriousness of it. “Is she likely ever to
-squeal?”
-
-“Not as long as I give her all the money she wants. But it’s getting
-on my nerves. She makes my life miserable by threatening to take my
-story to the newspapers.”
-
-“Next time she does it, send for me and I’ll bully her into keeping
-quiet.” He made a move toward the door. “Is she here? I’ll do it now.”
-
-“No—no!” She stopped him. “Let well enough alone.”
-
-He took her hand. “Poor kid, you are in a mess!”
-
-“I’ve committed suicide, Lou,” she said abruptly.
-
-He looked at her silently, then shook his head. “What else is
-bothering you?”
-
-“What—what makes you ask that?”
-
-“A blackmailing mama might make you look tired and worried but she
-wouldn’t put all that sorrow into your eyes. Why, you look like
-Isolde—by Jove, that’s it! Love stuff!”
-
-“How absurd!” She looked away. “Whom could I be in love with?”
-
-“Not with me, that’s a sure thing. Though, of course you know I’m in
-love with you.”
-
-“Lou—!”
-
-“Oh, don’t worry. I know I haven’t a chance. But I care enough to be
-darned upset by your condition. Now, come along, let papa fix things
-for you.”
-
-“They can’t be fixed, Lou, ever. When you’ve chosen to be two people
-in one, you’ve got to stand up and take the consequences if God
-ordains that two’s company and three’s a crowd.” She gave him a smile,
-whimsical but without mirth. “Have you ever heard that saying: ‘_Je
-suis ce que je suis, mais je ne suis pas ce que je suis?_’”
-
-Seabury’s brow wrinkled. “I sing French. I don’t speak it.”
-
-“It’s a play on verbs: ‘I am what I am, but I am not what I follow,’”
-she translated. “Well, that’s me!”
-
-He tried to persuade her to give him her confidence but she smiled and
-told him there was nothing further to confide.
-
-A few weeks later just before her season closed, he asked what plans
-she had made for the summer. Kane was arranging to send her on tour
-with “The Temptress” before opening in New York in a play being
-written for her. She would have July and part of August to rest.
-
-“I shall stay in town,” she told him, “and study.”
-
-He protested vehemently.
-
-“No use, Lou! I couldn’t bear being among people and this is the best
-place to hide away. Besides, there’s my mother to consider. I can’t
-risk having her run loose in New York without me.”
-
-“But you must rest!”
-
-“I must keep going, with as much work as I can manage.”
-
-He bent over her, his kind brown eyes troubled.
-
-“You’ll kill yourself.”
-
-“On the contrary, I wish that I weren’t so intensely alive.” Then she
-smiled and patted his shoulder. “Don’t worry about Lisa Parsinova.
-She’s in fine shape.”
-
-“But Lizzie Parsons?” he put in.
-
-“She doesn’t count.”
-
-“Seen Rand lately?” he asked casually as he got up to go.
-
-“A number of times.” She had seen him only too frequently from the far
-side of the footlights. “Have you?”
-
-“No. He’s busy. Getting ready to go to Arizona. But of course you know
-about that.”
-
-“Y—yes. Has he told you when he leaves?”
-
-“Tuesday of next week. May be gone a year. Don’t know why.”
-
-She turned her back to the light so that her face was blurred and
-misty and he could not read its expression. “Do you—do you think he
-looks quite well?” she prompted, eager for some news, any news of him.
-
-“Well, it struck me he looked a bit seedy last time I saw him—not just
-up to the mark, that is. Probably spring fever. How does he impress
-you?”
-
-“I—I hadn’t noticed any change.”
-
-When he had gone, she picked up the calendar on her desk and stared at
-the day and date. Friday! By this time next week, a stretch of
-continent would rush between her and Hubert Randolph. She shrugged her
-shoulders with a short laugh. What mattered miles when worlds
-stretched between them now!
-
-She went into her bedroom, locked the door. Lizzie Parsons leaned
-close to her mirror, stared into it. The white face and black-rimmed
-eyes of Lisa Parsinova stared back. A frenzy seized her. She caught
-hold of the first object her hand touched—a hair brush—and flung it
-full force at the reflected face. The glass splintered. Then she
-stepped back in trembling terror. Good heavens! Was she actually
-becoming that Russian fiend?
-
-On Monday night her gaze wandered instinctively toward Hubert’s
-accustomed place in the orchestra. He was not there. Of course she
-had expected that, but she would have liked just one more look at him.
-Women have a strange way of wanting that which tortures them.
-
-After the final curtain Kane appeared in her dressing-room and
-suggested that they take a drive up Riverside and a bite of supper
-somewhere along the road. He wanted to talk to her about the new play,
-about her route for the coming season and a date for her New York
-opening. His attitude had become thoroughly friendly and businesslike.
-He was too much the artist to allow failure in a lesser game to
-interfere with success in a greater.
-
-It was nearing one when they drove back through the soft summer night.
-The air touched her face like velvet but brought no drowsiness to her
-eyes, no balm to the realization of blankness ahead—not of weeks or
-months, but of years.
-
-With the passing of those years it was inevitable that she become
-Parsinova—with nothing left of poor, defunct Lizzie Parsons but the
-recollection of a love that had touched her life like the moon on a
-summer sea.
-
-The Drive was still dotted with strolling couples oblivious of
-passers-by. Cars sped past them, wheels expertly manipulated by one
-hand. Mingled young laughter rang out like bells.
-
-Kane’s rich voice flowed on, dwelling now on this, now on that scene
-of the play. She listened absently, eyes straying in a way that was
-absurd toward the magic of a June night, the enviable good fortune of
-those who could become part of it.
-
-“I shall give you even greater opportunities than you have had. I
-shall produce a piece of work that will be epoch-making,” he told her.
-
-She told him how pleased she was.
-
-When they arrived at her apartment she asked him not to trouble
-getting out of the car, and stood and watched it swing round the
-corner. Then slowly she turned and went indoors.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Parsinova unlocked her door, stepped into the little foyer and after
-an instant’s pause to take off hat and dustcoat, crossed the hall to
-her living-room. Once more cretonne hung in the doorway and slips of
-it covered the furniture. Summer had served as sufficient excuse to
-convert the place to its former simplicity. The sight of cathedral
-chairs and gold cushions had for the past few weeks depressed her to
-the point of mania. More than once she wanted to tear them to bits.
-
-The dim light from the foyer sifted weirdly into the dark, playing
-here and there like ghost hands lifting the shadows. She felt her way
-toward the fireplace, dropped to the floor, her head touching the
-chair arm, and stared at the spot where in the flames she had
-visualized the scenes he painted. It was blank now, just a vague
-square full of darkness, but it gave her back his voice, the sense of
-his strength, the caress of his arms. It sent once more sifting upward
-the aroma of cloudy pipe smoke through which he had wanted to see her
-face. Her eyes closed. Almost she sensed him there in the magic of one
-of those long silences that needed no words. Almost she could feel his
-touch upon her hair, her longing made it so real.
-
-Tears came hot under her lids, the first she had shed since that
-night. They streamed shamelessly down her cheeks and onto the sheer
-clinging dress. All pose—and she had grown used to posing even to
-herself—slid from her. Her poise slipped with it. The great Parsinova
-became just a lonely, huddled heap of a girl.
-
-She lay so, whispering his name shamelessly into the darkness when
-suddenly it seemed that she was being lifted and drawn into the big
-chair. It was like embarking into some dreamland of her own making.
-She held her breath, choked with the fear that she might shatter it.
-The caress upon her hair, arms closing round her, lips seeking hers!
-It was not until she had the actual sense of a rough coat against her
-cheek that, galvanized with terror, she started up and backed toward
-the floor lamp that stood at one side of the fireplace.
-
-The soft light went up. Hubert Randolph was sitting there! It was
-impossible of course! Slowly she went toward him, reached out a hand,
-touched his arm.
-
-He laughed. “Oh, I’m real enough!”
-
-She forgot her accent. At that moment she could not have assumed it
-even though the future, though life itself, depended on it. “But
-how—how—”
-
-“I’ve been waiting for you since eleven-thirty,” he put in, apparently
-not noticing the difference. “I concluded I was entitled at least to a
-‘good-by’ from the woman I love.”
-
-She gazed at him silently a moment and then because her heart and
-throat were full, she voiced a triviality. “How did you get in?”
-
-“Your little old woman! I bribed her. I’d had an idea I could go away
-without seeing you. Well, I couldn’t, that’s all.”
-
-Her nerves were quivering like live things. She moved toward the
-couch, dropped on it. “I—” she said at last haltingly—“I am not the
-woman you love.”
-
-He looked across at her.
-
-She went on without meeting his eyes. After the unconscious revelation
-she had given him during those moments when she thought herself alone,
-she could no more have stopped the confession that came now than she
-could have stopped her breath.
-
-“I am not any of the things you think me—not one of them. I am not
-Russian—not foreign at all. I was born in Vermont of American parents.
-Up to the time I met Kane, my struggle for existence was in cheap
-vaudeville houses, not in Moscow. I’ve never had any lovers—”
-
-“Well,” came with a low chuckle, “no man could object to that.”
-
-She looked up. Her eyes met his, amazed. “You don’t understand. I am
-not Lisa Parsinova—there is no such person. I am Lizzie Parsons and
-I’ve imposed on you just as I’m imposing on the American public.”
-
-“The American public asks chiefly to be charmed and interested. If
-you’re doing that for them, they don’t care whether you’re Yankee or
-Hindustani.”
-
-She continued to stare at him, in bewildered fashion striving to
-interpret his nonchalance. “You—you can’t possibly understand,” she
-breathed at last. “Aren’t you surprised?”
-
-“Not in the least. You see, I’ve been Kane’s backer for years. I was
-with him in the vaudeville house the night he first saw you. As a
-matter of fact, I was the one who suggested to him that you’d be a
-winner on Broadway. Of course the foreign stuff was his. Any number of
-times I’ve watched him work with you from an adjoining room. You don’t
-know what pride I’ve felt in your success.”
-
-“Then why, all these months, have you let me believe you were being
-fooled?”
-
-“Well, I hadn’t exactly taken count of the fact that I was going to
-love you. And when the blow came I realized that if I’d been lucky
-enough to make you care anything for me, you couldn’t go on acting to
-me. You’d have to tell me—and I wanted you to, because you couldn’t
-help it. That night when I had you in my arms, I thought some sort of
-admission would come. When it didn’t and you ignored all my attempts
-to see you, I could only conclude I’d lost out.”
-
-“You didn’t guess—”
-
-“Not until to-night.”
-
-She still groped uncertainly, not able to fasten on any one fact. “It
-was Kane, then, who told you where I lived.”
-
-“No. Your little old woman here.”
-
-“My little old woman?”
-
-“She’s a canny soul. Must have found one of my notes that you brought
-home from the theater or something like that, because she looked me up
-one day and offered to sell me some interesting information about you.
-I paid her _not_ to sell it and threatened her with jail if she went
-to anybody else. Told her she was guilty of a criminal offense that
-could send her up for twenty years. I think I made it strong enough
-to shut her up for the rest of her days.”
-
-“She’s been collecting from me just the same straight along.”
-
-He flung back his head. “I said she was canny. Before I go West I’ll
-have another talk with her.”
-
-“You—you’re going to-morrow?”
-
-“No, I’m waiting over. You close Saturday night. We’ll leave Sunday.”
-
-With the last words, he leaned forward. She took a quick step toward
-the wide chair, then stopped abruptly.
-
-“But what am I to do with Parsinova?”
-
-He pulled out his pipe, reflectively examined it.
-
-“Think of the novelty—I’ll have two wives in one.”
-
-Her lips tightened.
-
-“No, you won’t! I’m going to take that woman out on a lake this summer
-and capsize the boat—drown her! And the body will never be found. Then
-I’m going to let my hair go back to its own color! Which one of us is
-it,” she added suddenly, “that you love?”
-
-He laid his pipe on the chair arm.
-
-“The little girl who called to me in the dark. Now come back here,
-Lizzie Parsons, where you belong!”
-
-“I’ll always be jealous of that Russian devil!” she warned him.
-
-
-
-
-MADAME PEACOCK
-
-_CHARACTER DRAMA_
-
-
-The battle royal of all time is between character and circumstance.
-The way we meet the experience that waits for us round the corner is
-the eternal Comédie Humaine. Success is the hole in the ground—the
-banana peel—the stumbling block that may trip us up. It is as
-uncertain as to-morrow.
-
-
-
-
-MADAME PEACOCK
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Of course that was not her name. No one knew just how she had been
-christened—if at all. To a worshipful public she was known as Jane
-Goring, which, as names go, answered all purposes and was quite as
-simple as she was ornate. But “Peacock” was the title of the play in
-which she had made the season’s hit and a wave of fads in honor of it
-had typhooned over New York in consequence.
-
-There were perfumes with bottles far more valuable than their contents
-on which strutted the iridescent bird of beauty. There were soaps and
-powders and sachets sold in green satin boxes similarly decorated and
-similarly priced. Peacock feather fans swayed at dances and the opera
-despite the age-old hoodoo. Beaded bags were worked in the popular
-design. Dressmakers dictated the spreading train. Blues and greens in
-every conceivably odd shade were introduced as the new color. The
-peacock coiffure, originated by Goring, was imitated by dowager and
-débutante, by movie star and chorus queen, by the girl behind the
-counter even unto the cash girl—hair drawn flat over the top of the
-head and puffed out stiffly at the ears, the whole being completed by
-a comb that jutted at right angles. In Goring’s mahogany swirl,
-framing as it did a face rather broad at the cheek-bones and tapering
-heart-shaped to the chin, an impertinent nose and sleepy green-gray
-eyes that lifted at the corners, the effect was startling. But the
-variegated types it crowned north, south and east of Broadway would
-scarcely have inspired an artist to his best work.
-
-At the moment we make our bow to Jane Goring—for Goring bowed to no
-one—she was on the top rung of the ladder of success. Her head had
-reached the clouds and was held accordingly. So that when she looked
-at you, she always looked _down_ at you. Which made those whom she
-addressed feel infinitely small even when they were tall, always
-excepting representatives of the press. They found her always
-gracious, always smiling with corners of eyes and lips lifted and a
-look of wonder at their great kindness to her. Each time she received
-them it was in some new and amazing costume in one of the shades she
-had made popular, with jangling jade or emeralds in her ears and green
-lights darting from the comb in her hair. She spoke at length of the
-arts and collected immense royalties from candy boxes, silk
-advertisements and cold creams bearing her name and endorsement.
-
-Somewhere in the dim and distant past her flaming head and Jap-like
-eyes had graced the chorus. She had lived in a hall bedroom; had been
-caught frying chops over an alcohol stove; had been lectured by the
-landlady; had found the milk frozen to her window sill on winter
-mornings; had known the exquisite thrill of being raised to a few
-lines of persiflage with the musical comedy’s comedian. In those days
-a young newspaper man, Bob McNaughton, had found her out, proclaimed
-her a genius, and married her—not because of her genius, however, but
-because he adored her. They had spent their honeymoon one Sunday on
-the Palisades, and he had kissed her finger tips one by one and told
-her how he was going to make her.
-
-“There’s Jefferson who has our dramatic column—I’ll get him to give
-you a boost every now and then. He stands in with a bunch of critics.
-He’ll drop a word about you and they’re bound to take notice. You’ll
-see, darling, what I’m going to do for you!”
-
-And she had put her vivid head on his shoulder and gazed down at the
-shining river and murmured that she didn’t care whether he did
-anything for her or not. She loved him—she didn’t want anything in the
-world but him.
-
-The hall bedroom had given place to the third-story back, the frying
-chops to a French table d’hôte that boasted a bottle of red ink with a
-sixty-cent dinner, and Jane Goring was happy in the possession of a
-broad shoulder to weep on when the latest step came hard or the
-director asked casually if her legs were made of leather.
-
-In the years that followed, the ardent young husband had made good his
-promises. He had systematically press-agented Goring with a sincerity
-and enthusiasm born of love. Untiringly he had worked to bring her
-first to managerial, then to public notice. And his efforts, added to
-natural talent and a bizarre personality, had hoisted her to the top
-rung heretofore mentioned. “Peacock” marked the fourth season of her
-success.
-
-But long before that Bob McNaughton had awakened one morning to find
-gray hairs threading his brown, and himself still a reporter—by no
-means a star one. He had been so busy making her career that he had
-forgotten to make his own.
-
-It was about this time that his wife left him. Not actually left him,
-of course, for at that particular moment Goring would not have stooped
-to anything so disturbing as divorce. Waves of popular favor had begun
-to roll smoothly up the beach of her ambition. But her temperament
-demanded a home all her own. So they maintained separate
-apartments—had done so for several years—his a room and bath in a
-downtown bachelor hotel, hers a nine room and three-bath duplex in an
-uptown studio building.
-
-In the beginning they had seen each other occasionally. But each time
-they met, Bob seemed to have grown grayer. Whether this fact was a
-reminder that her own hair, left to itself, might show the same
-tendency, or whether it was just the look in his eyes—the same look
-they had worn that Sunday on the Palisades—seeing him began to tell on
-her nerves.
-
-More and more she denied herself to him until he became more of a
-stranger in her beautiful rooms than the flock of tame robins who
-pecked out of her hand at afternoon tea.
-
-As a matter of fact, few of Goring’s vast throng of admirers even
-guessed there was a husband in the offing. Women persistently married
-her off to her handsome leading man, and more than one young
-millionaire about town ecstatically visualized her presiding at his
-dinner table.
-
-So far as Jane Goring was concerned, Bob McNaughton belonged to
-another life. Thus it was rather a shock to come home from the theater
-one night when “Peacock” was at the height of its run and find her
-husband waiting for her. It was fully five months since she had seen
-him; over a year since she had been at home to him after the theater.
-
-He was striding up and down her drawing-room, hands thrust deep into
-his pockets, head bent. But when one considers that her drawing-room
-consisted of three thrown into one, it was not surprising that at
-first she was not conscious of another’s presence. She came in,
-switched on the sidelights, dropped her furs and sank on the
-davenport, hand hovering toward the table back of her, when from the
-other end of the room, her name was spoken.
-
-She sat up, startled, and saw Bob coming into the range of bluish
-light from a Chinese temple lamp at the side of the piano. Jane Goring
-looked her amazement. He drew nearer, stopped abruptly and faced her.
-
-“My apologies,” he said with a slight, rather twisted smile, “for
-calling so late.”
-
-She dropped back, the look of amazement still lighting her long sleepy
-eyes. “You did rather—startle me.”
-
-For a moment neither spoke. Then he indicated the other corner of the
-deep-cushioned couch, “May I sit down?”
-
-“Certainly.” It was accompanied by a slight shrug.
-
-His hand dove into his vest pocket and brought out a silver cigarette
-case. He clicked it open, held it out to her. She may or may not have
-noticed that his movements were tense and jerky, that the case was
-held not quite steadily. She gave a faint gesture of dissent,
-reaching once more to the table at her back, and opened a gold lacquer
-box.
-
-“I have a new special brand—imported for me from Egypt.”
-
-He took one of his own, pocketing the case, and she waited for some
-explanation of his visit.
-
-“You’re looking well,” he began after a moment without looking at her.
-
-“Feeling very fit,” she returned, and waited once more.
-
-He did not speak, just sat staring down at his rather tightly clenched
-hands.
-
-She did notice then that he was looking old—years older than when she
-had last seen him. Bob was forty-two,—to-night he looked fifty. Jane
-was,—well, not even “Who’s Who” knew exactly how old Jane Goring
-was—any woman who will tell her right age will tell anything!—but she
-looked well under thirty.
-
-The silence seemed to demand something of her.
-
-“And you?” she queried politely.
-
-He wheeled round in his corner. “That’s just what I’ve come to see you
-about,” he brought out. “Matter of fact, I waited until the last
-minute—didn’t want to bother you with it.”
-
-“The last minute?”
-
-“Yes. I’m pulling up stakes—beating it for Colorado to-morrow.”
-
-At the back of Jane Goring’s brain, though even to herself she did not
-acknowledge it, flared a sudden flash of relief. Like a jagged streak
-of lightning across a summer sky it was there—and gone.
-
-“Where—in Colorado?”
-
-“Denver.”
-
-“With what paper?”
-
-“None, for a time. It’s like this.” He paused, seemed to be searching
-for words, his hands clenched and unclenched nervously. “I’ve
-been seeing Frothingham, the specialist, you know. Oh, it’s
-nothing—contraction in the chest now and then and bit of a cough in
-bad weather. Beastly uncomfortable, though. He tells me if I go now I
-can get rid of it in six months or so.”
-
-Goring gazed at the breadth of shoulder on which her head had snuggled
-so peacefully in the old days. Not that that phase of it occurred to
-her just then, but she stared at the big frame and could scarcely
-credit what he told her.
-
-“But how in the world did you get such a thing?”
-
-“It got me, my dear,—before I knew it. Fellow living alone’s apt to
-grow careless. Anyway, there it is, and it’s up to me to light out.”
-
-Silence again for a moment, then—“I’m sorry, old boy,” she murmured.
-
-“That’s good to know.” He slid nearer to her along the couch. Her face
-through the pungent smoke from the Egyptian cigarette was an
-indefinite white blur, vague as a dream, impossible to read. “I was
-hoping, in a way, that you would be. Makes it easier for me to put up
-the proposition I have in mind.”
-
-“Yes?” she questioned as he paused again.
-
-“But first I want to outline something of my plans once I knock this
-bug on the head.”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“The Graystone has made me an offer. I’ve been interested in the movie
-game for the past few years; been studying it from the inside. And
-recently Crosby Stone—he’s vice-president of the Graystone—asked me to
-go to the Coast and take charge of the editorial department at their
-Western studio. I told him that for the present I couldn’t consider
-it—health needed jogging up. He said the job would be there for me
-whenever I wanted it.”
-
-“Seems to me an excellent idea,” she observed.
-
-“Now what I wanted to ask you is this.” He fumbled for his case once
-more. Against the light from the table lamp, his features formed a
-sharp tense silhouette. He bent forward, struck a match. It flared
-upward, emphasized the lines that were almost ridges in his face.
-Suddenly he turned, and his next words came thick. “Janey, I want you
-to do this much. Will you—when you close—take a run out to Colorado
-and spend part of the summer with me?”
-
-The tapering white hand that held the cigarette to her lips dropped as
-if stricken. She straightened and her drowsy green eyes looked down on
-him from the immense height of the top rung.
-
-“My dear boy!” she ejaculated.
-
-“Of course,” he put in quickly, “I wouldn’t expect you to stay in
-Denver. Must be any number of mountain resorts we could go to—I’ll ask
-Frothingham.”
-
-“But, my dear boy, I couldn’t possibly. To begin with, I’m taking
-‘Peacock’ on the road early in August, playing Philadelphia, Boston,
-Chicago—all the big cities. Cleeburg wants to keep me out in it until
-February when we begin work on a new production. That leaves me only a
-few weeks’ vacation—”
-
-“Spend them with me. Janey—” He leaned over with a swift, impulsive
-movement, lifted her left hand, the little finger of which was
-completely covered by a big beetle-green scarab, and kissed the tips
-one by one. “Janey, there’s just you—no one else! These last years
-have been hell. I’ve missed you—I’ve wanted you! A few weeks—is that
-too much to ask?”
-
-She drew her hand away—gently enough. But a little shudder of disgust
-ran down her spine. “But I can’t, don’t you see?” she began
-conversationally. “Those few weeks I must have to myself. I need the
-rest.”
-
-“Can’t we take it together? Can’t we go up into the mountains—away
-from the muck of the world—and get to know each other all over again?
-Remember our honeymoon, dear, the afternoon by the river? What a happy
-pair of kids we were! Let’s have a taste of that, just a taste again.”
-
-A slight flicker of amusement—oh, very slight—raised the corners of
-her upslanted eyes. “Afraid we’ve passed the honeymoon age, dear boy.”
-
-“It’s your love I want, Janey,” came from him desperately. “Just to
-feel that you’ll come to me for a time when I need you.”
-
-She got up, crushed the spark from her cigarette, tossed it with a
-gesture of distaste into the tray and moved toward the piano. In her
-trailing green gown with its fanlike train—Goring never wore short
-skirts—and her dangling scarab earrings, she looked very exotic, very
-tall and altogether unapproachable. She trailed the length of the room
-and stopped under the Chinese temple lamp. Its blue light shed an aura
-about her, giving her skin the moon-glow that Henner’s brush has made
-immortal.
-
-Her husband gazed after her. Mercifully she stopped with her back
-toward him, and he failed to get the expression that pressed close her
-lips. His eyes had followed her with dog-like pleading. Without
-meeting them she knew—felt it. Neither could she escape the urge in
-his voice. In the old days, that deep tender note had thrilled her,
-made her yearn for him, given her the assurance that whatever
-happened, Bob would be there to make things right. To-night it merely
-annoyed her, rendered her position more difficult. Seeing Bob at all
-had become trying and the very thought of the thing he now suggested
-irritated her beyond measure. She had so completely done with
-him—finished! Taking advantage of this sudden illness was taking
-advantage of her. With all her being she resented it.
-
-She stood for a moment turned from him, fingering the blue and gold
-tassel that hung from a bit of Chinese embroidery flung across the
-piano. Finally she turned back, face as void of light or shade as the
-old idol enshrined in a corner.
-
-“Suppose we have a snack of supper and talk things over,” she
-suggested.
-
-He was sitting bent almost double, elbows on knees, head in hands. A
-wave of contempt for his attitude of dejection swept over her. She was
-so palpitant with life, vibrating with the thrill—ever new, ever
-sweet—that the laurel wreath brings.
-
-Without waiting for a reply she rang. A tired-eyed maid appeared.
-Goring gave her directions and when the girl had gone out, proceeded
-to chat casually about affairs of the theater—a new firm of managers
-recently bobbed up on the horizon with a new play by a new author; the
-outlook for next season; the trend toward satirical comedy.
-
-Bob sat without moving, knuckles pressing white against his forehead,
-the veins on his hands standing out like blue welts.
-
-Presently he looked up.
-
-“I take it you are _not_ coming out to me.”
-
-Goring in the depths of a chair some distance from him stirred
-uneasily. “My dear boy, I’ve told you. It’s not only impractical—it’s
-impossible.”
-
-“Of course! I was an ass to think you might.”
-
-“Can’t you see? I’m not my own mistress. I belong to my public. I’ve
-got to conserve my strength for them—and my work.”
-
-“Yes,—I see.”
-
-“If I consulted my own desires—but I haven’t the moral right. I must
-sacrifice what you want—what I want—to what my public expects of me.”
-
-He might have reminded her of the years he had given to creating that
-public for her. He might have dwelt at length on his Machiavellian
-boosting of a red-haired show girl through the columns of his own
-paper and gradually with insertions here and there in periodicals of
-the theater, until managers began to ask who this Jane Goring was. He
-might have made mention of the evenings he had spent round the Lambs
-and the Friars adding to his list of acquaintances, as men can only at
-men’s clubs, those who would eventually be of service to her.
-
-He merely smiled with his lips, lighted another cigarette and tried to
-cover the fact that the flame flickered.
-
-“You must understand how I’m placed,” she persisted.
-
-“I understand.”
-
-His laconic reply, followed by flat silence, instead of alleviating,
-somehow increased her discomfort.
-
-After a moment he spoke. “Ever read ‘Frankenstein,’ Janey?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Queer tale of a chap who tried to create a superman.”
-
-“Well?” Her brows contracted, puzzled.
-
-“Well—his superman rose up and destroyed him.”
-
-“I fail to see—” The frown deepened.
-
-“Oh, just a flight of fancy. Don’t mind me.” Again his hand struck a
-flickering match.
-
-“Ought you to smoke so much?” she asked, to fill in the gap. “I
-shouldn’t think it would be good for—for—”
-
-“My lungs? Oh, nothing wrong with them—actually. Dare say they’ll pull
-up O.K. once I pull out of this town. Y’know what Paul Bourget said
-about New York. Fellow asked him how he liked our climate, and he
-answered, ‘But my dear man,—you do not have climate. You have samples
-of weather!’”
-
-She laughed and the weight of the air lifted somewhat. The maid
-brought in a steaming chafing dish, set it on a nest of tables and
-drew out the smaller two, placing them in front of the couch.
-
-Goring moved over, once more took the corner opposite her husband. His
-eyes traveled the length of her.
-
-“You grow more beautiful every time I see you, Janey. Success is a
-first rate old alchemist, isn’t it?”
-
-She smiled down, her whole face softening.
-
-The maid laid an embroidered doily of finest linen on each of the two
-small tables and brought silver platters of creamed mushrooms with a
-faint aroma of sherry. From a dusty bottle marked Amontillado she
-poured into slim-necked glasses the same wine, glistening and amber.
-
-When she had finished serving them, she asked tentatively if madame
-wished her to wait up.
-
-Goring wondered why the question brought from Bob a look of curiosity,
-why he turned and watched her, waiting; why he smiled—with his eyes
-this time—when she told the girl to go to bed.
-
-She moved nearer—the tables were placed side by side—and sipped the
-sherry. A few moments passed during which she noticed uncomfortably
-that he had not touched the dainty, tempting dish before him.
-
-“You’re not eating?”
-
-“Not particularly hungry.” He lifted his glass, twirling it between
-thumb and forefinger, his gaze never leaving her. “I want to fill my
-eyes with you, Janey. May be a long time before I see you again.”
-
-Her eyes warmed to the tense adulation in his. After all, he did look
-beastly ill, and the least she could do would be to give him the
-memory of a little kindness to carry away.
-
-“And I want you to know, Bob, that I’ll be thinking of you, hoping and
-praying that before long you’ll be quite fit again.” She leaned over,
-touching his hand lightly with hers. Instantly his closed over
-it—feverishly, as a man clings to hope when his ship of life has been
-broken into wreckage.
-
-“Will you, Janey?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“That will help—some.” He put down the glass and caught her other
-hand, drawing her nearer. “I’d like to feel there’s still a corner for
-me. No other fellow taking my place, I mean.”
-
-“How absurd! You know I haven’t time even to think of men.”
-
-“They have plenty of time to think of you.” Again that quizzical
-smile. “I’ve got that much over them, haven’t I? You’re _my_ wife.”
-
-She smiled back and tried to draw away but he held her with the grip
-of hot iron.
-
-“That’s what I’ve got over them, Janey—all of them. You may belong to
-your public now but you’ve been mine. We’ve had our youth together,
-haven’t we?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“We’ve had the best of life together.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Nobody can take that from me.” He spoke breathlessly.
-
-Suddenly his arm went round her, crushed her to him and his lips were
-against hers. “My love!” he whispered.
-
-Jane Goring’s body went rigid. She drew herself erect and the warmth
-died out of her eyes as swiftly as a flame extinguished. Sharply her
-slim white hands thrust out in defense. She pulled backward. Their
-gaze met—locked. In his was hurt question. In hers a flash of fury. He
-sat staring at her a moment and he did not look _up_. It was a look
-direct, straight, boring to the heart of her.
-
-And then he got to his feet. “I beg your pardon,” he began. “I—I
-thought—” He paused, jaws coming together as though clamped. Without
-another look at her he walked the length of the room.
-
-At the door he turned. “Damn me for my humility!” he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Exceeding the most exalted expectations, “Peacock” ran two full
-seasons. It might even have packed houses during the hot spell, save
-that the star decided to give herself a rest, well-earned, and, of
-course without her, the theater had to remain dark. At the end of four
-weeks spent at a fashionable Adirondack hotel where she was fêted like
-visiting royalty and her gowns created a sensation, she reopened and
-the continued success of the play warranted Cleeburg’s decision to
-give it another season on Broadway.
-
-During all that time Goring had not a word from her husband. Even of
-his Denver address she was unaware. But the fact that he did not write
-failed to disturb her. It was a relief rather. The first few months of
-his absence she dreaded another plea from him. In case his health had
-grown no better, or—as was quite possible—had grown worse, further
-excuses would be difficult. As the weeks rolled into months and the
-months accumulated into a year and still not a line, the thought of
-him lapsed into merely perfunctory curiosity. He must be alive or
-she’d have been informed. Hence, if ever she needed to get in touch
-with him it would be easy enough to do so through his former paper or
-his clubs. Thus she blotted even the thought of him from her books.
-
-Another season of acclaim on the road and she was back in New York
-ready for rehearsals. Her new play, made to order for her by a
-prominent dramatist, was read by him in her apartment the day of her
-arrival.
-
-Cleeburg met her at the Grand Central, full of enthusiasm, chewing the
-butt of a cigar while his hands outlined the plot as an artist smudges
-in with charcoal the foundations of his picture.
-
-Goring’s manager had started life as a newsboy somewhere east of
-Broadway and a few of the habits of childhood had become the habits of
-a lifetime. His manners were not Chesterfieldian. Frequently he forgot
-to take off his hat when a lady entered the room. His cigar was
-removed from the right-hand corner of his mouth only to be shifted to
-the left. But more than one actress out of a job could borrow a
-hundred or two from him with no surer guarantee than her I.O.U. And
-those of the chorus whose eyes had not grown hard from seeing too much
-of the Rialto when lights are brightest, affectionately called him
-“Papa.”
-
-Rudolph Cleeburg or ’Dolph as he was familiarly named—was short and
-stocky; heavily built, in fact, but with a lightness of foot that
-enabled him to prance about the stage while directing, and an Oriental
-imagination that carried him into any rôle he wanted to assume without
-making him appear ridiculous. One of the ablest directors in the
-country, in spite of English that sometimes tobogganed, he always took
-his productions personally in hand once the first rough edges were
-smoothed down. With Goring, of course, he assumed charge from the
-beginning. She would have no one else.
-
-The manager’s admiration for his star had at the start been of the
-proverbial cat-and-queen variety. But as their association stretched
-over the years, it was shorn of the awe in which he had first held her
-and once he had even reached the point of proposing. It was when she
-informed him that she and Bob had separated.
-
-“Divorce?” he had asked quickly. And with her shake of the head,
-“Well, if ever you do, there’s little ’Dolph waiting to step into his
-shoes. Don’t forget that, Jane. It’s straight goods.”
-
-The proposal had vastly amused her.
-
-They drove up town through the fresh sweetness of a May morning.
-Cleeburg’s panama dropped to the floor of the car as he excitedly
-sketched the story in the air, one idea tumbling after the other as
-fast as words would come. His bald head shone as did his eyes. All his
-features were prominent—nose, eyes, teeth—but most prominent of all
-was his smile which seemed to light like an arc his round commonplace
-face. This he flashed delightedly as Goring listened with a calmness
-unbroken.
-
-“It’s sure fire, Jane! Sure fire! We got a bigger go than ‘Peacock’
-and that’s going some.”
-
-Jane Goring said little until the apartment was reached. Then she
-shook hands with the author who was waiting for them, left the two men
-together while she changed from her traveling clothes, and an hour
-later glided in cool and revived in a peacock-blue house-gown whose
-sleeves floated outward like wings. Cleeburg’s watch was in his hand,
-but he pocketed it without a word as she entered, and settled back in
-his chair.
-
-The author opened his script and began to read. His voice filled the
-silent room, chorused occasionally by the gay trill of birds from the
-park across the way or city sounds from the street below.
-
-The manager’s smile broadened with satisfaction as he progressed. The
-cigar moved back and forth, propelled by emotion. But Goring listened
-without comment, eyes half closed, gazing down at the playwright’s
-head bowed over his manuscript.
-
-Presently a new sound broke upon the stillness. It was from neither
-bird nor branch, neither the clang of bells nor the rush of traffic.
-It was light and regular, and it came from within—the steady tapping
-of a slippered foot. Toward the end of Act II it became noticeable and
-Cleeburg looked round interrogatively.
-
-Tap—tap! Tap—tap! More swift, more impatient,—until the author’s voice
-proclaimed “Curtain.”
-
-Then Jane Goring spoke—and the tapping was explained. “But, my dear
-Mr. Thorne, you don’t expect me to play the lead in _that_?”
-
-Cleeburg wheeled about in his chair. “What’s the matter with it?”
-
-“Why, there’s nothing for me—not a thing!”
-
-“Nothing for you?”
-
-“Nothing! Not a single opportunity in those first two acts.”
-
-Cleeburg sprang up. His cigar rotaried excitedly. “No opportunities?
-My God, Jane, what do you want? As the play stands, you’re the whole
-show!”
-
-“As the play stands, you might as well hand it to Harrison
-Burke”—Burke was her leading man—“and let me retire,” came coolly.
-
-The playwright’s eyes began to smoulder. “I don’t get you, Miss
-Goring. This character has been absolutely built round you.”
-
-She turned on him, still cool, still aloof.
-
-“Then why is your man allowed to dominate every scene?”
-
-“He isn’t,” the author protested. “The sympathy is yours, even when
-I’ve been compelled to give him the long speeches.”
-
-“I don’t see it—not at all. You don’t even give me an opportunity to
-wear decent clothes.”
-
-“That comes in your last act,” Cleeburg burst out.
-
-“Well, I don’t want to wait until the last act.”
-
-“I can’t very well put a factory girl in satins,” the playwright
-observed.
-
-“Why make her a factory girl?”
-
-He threw up his hands and subsided.
-
-Cleeburg took to pacing the floor. “Look here, Jane,” he said finally,
-“let’s get a line on this. You’ve given ’em a fashion plate for three
-solid years. Show ’em you can do something else. Otherwise they’ll get
-sick and tired of you. This part’s great—just what you need. You act
-through the first two acts and in the last you splurge. What more do
-you want?”
-
-“I want it understood that I’m the star of the production!”
-
-“Well, it is. Nobody else has a chance. Good Lord, Burke’s speeches
-are just feeders! You’ve got—everything.”
-
-“I don’t see it.”
-
-The dramatist, who was sufficiently famous to be independent of
-stars, rose. “Under the circumstances, there’s no need to read
-further.”
-
-“Hold on! Hold on!” Cleeburg clutched his arm. “Don’t take it like
-that, old man. Let’s go into the thing and see what can be done to
-please all parties.”
-
-They did go into it for three long hours, at the end of which Jane
-Goring insisted that she must have luncheon. She was as unruffled as
-when she had entered—and as firm. Cleeburg was mopping his brow.
-Through his glasses the playwright’s eyes were blazing. It was then
-two forty-five. By that hour they had compromised to the extent of
-cutting some of the hero’s long speeches and giving her a chance to
-change her costume in the last act.
-
-At luncheon Cleeburg consumed little more than whiskey and soda, and
-wondered why he got no cooler. Likewise he swore at the twittering of
-the birds and the distant clang of street cars.
-
-When Jane Goring had finished the last morsel of her chicken salad and
-leisurely emptied her cup of Chinese tea, they adjourned once more to
-the drawing-room and the discussion was resumed.
-
-A lantern of golden fire was hanging in the Western sky by the time
-the play had been revamped to the star’s satisfaction. More than once
-its author took hat in hand and made for the door. But Cleeburg’s
-persuasive clutch and the whisper that an additional advance would be
-paid for his trouble detained him. And finally an agreement was
-reached.
-
-Her objection to the drama as it stood, however, necessitated a
-postponement of rehearsals and it was late July before the company
-assembled on the stage of a playhouse just off Broadway. It annoyed
-Goring to forego her usual few weeks of rest but since she wished to
-have a New York opening in October, there was nothing else to be done.
-
-The day the company was called was dank and humid, a breathless day
-thick with summer dust, ominous with thunderclouds.
-
-At ten Goring emerged from a cold bath, was dressed by her maid’s
-moist fingers, and at eleven crossed the soggy pavement from her car
-to the stage entrance. The drive downtown had been stifling. It
-dizzied her. To enter the dark passageway and look out into the space
-of auditorium, linen-covered, was a relief.
-
-What is there about an empty theater that fascinates? The bare boards
-of the stage, the heaps of scenery piled against bare brick walls, the
-bare table and chairs ranged to form a semicircle within which the
-actors move back and forth, the single electric light, bare of shade,
-jutting up in the center like a giant eye in the cool darkness—surely
-there is no illusion about them, no suggestion of the world of
-make-believe into which they evolve. Yet the very odor of the place
-redolent of grease-paint—those who love it sniff it as a thoroughbred
-sniffs tanbark.
-
-Manager, actors, author—they are about to conjure from those bare
-boards all the elements of life. Conflict, laughter, tears, love,
-hate, happiness—death! Theirs to build, theirs to take the written
-page and make of it a tingling human thing. Theirs to people empty
-chairs. Theirs to clothe with flesh and blood a skeleton. A wave of
-the wand and into emptiness springs a home with soft rugs and
-rich-colored hangings, deep divans, the ring of voices, the flooding
-of moonlight or warm glow of the sun. And best of all, out in that
-empty auditorium when the lights go up will throng a crowd whose
-hearts will be theirs to thrill, to wring, to charm. Theirs the
-blessed privilege, the joy of creation. That’s why they love it in
-spite of the ache of disappointment, the discouragement of failure.
-That’s why they cling to it.
-
-Those assembled on the stage that throttling day of July had risen
-tired from their beds, dragged wearily in from the street, noticed
-that the management had electric fans going and laughed at the idea of
-getting any relief from them. Yet the instant Goring appeared,
-followed a few minutes later by Cleeburg, a light sprang into their
-eyes, the spontaneous light of anticipation, and they promptly forgot
-the weather. The play had been read to them the day before and their
-parts assigned, so that they were ready to plunge into work.
-
-Goring shook hands with her leading man and nodded to the rest, all of
-whom were known to her—she had practically the same support from year
-to year—except a slight girl whose face was so thin that her eyes
-looked abnormally big and hungry. It made their expression almost
-frightened.
-
-The company ran quickly through the first act, parts in hand, while
-Cleeburg sat under an electric fan and listened. Then, after a few
-words with the author who was hunched in a seat somewhere in the
-ghostlike auditorium, he ripped off pongee coat, his collar and
-necktie, and real work began.
-
-Goring did little but read at the first rehearsals. She liked to
-conserve her energy for the long sessions Cleeburg put her through
-during the last weeks.
-
-When they left the theater at five everybody looked wilted but the
-star. The hour for lunch had been consumed largely with liquid
-refreshment and most of them again made for soda fountains.
-
-Goring dined with her manager on the Astor Roof. The storm,
-threatening all day, had not yet broken and a black hood of clouds
-bore down on the city like the shadow of death. Cleeburg, full of
-plans, ordered a near-champagne cup and substantial dinner and
-appeared not to notice the depression above and around them. But
-Goring it affected unpleasantly. She felt irritable, annoyed by the
-fact that he could eat a heavy dinner on such a night, prone to find
-fault with the service, rubbed the wrong way by the strum of the
-summer orchestra.
-
-“Did you notice how much older Burke looks?”
-
-“Looks good to me,” Cleeburg lifted a cup of steaming bullion while
-she played with a jellied one before her.
-
-“He’s losing his figure, I think.”
-
-“We ain’t any of us chickens, Jane.”
-
-She pushed the cup away.
-
-“Not that you ain’t a pippin,” he added hastily. “You’ve got the
-lines—you’ll always have ’em.”
-
-“Don’t talk as if I were a hundred.” Her voice was so sharp that it
-cut.
-
-“Good Lord, no! Not one on Broadway to-day can touch you.”
-
-She softened a bit. “Who’s the new girl?”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“The one who plays my sister.”
-
-“Oh, that one! Forget her name. Lewis has it.”
-
-“Where did you get her?”
-
-“She’s been hanging round the office, Lewis says, and couple of weeks
-ago she held me up on my way out. Poor little thing looked as if she
-needed a job so I gave her that sister bit. Hair’s something the color
-of yours—that decided me.”
-
-“She has a funny hysterical catch in her voice. Did you notice it?”
-
-“Probably she’s hungry. Looks it—poor kid! Must have Lewis slip her an
-advance on her salary.”
-
-With gusto he cut into the _filet mignon_ and helped himself to some
-new peas. The sight of the red blood oozing from the meat made Goring
-feel ill. She turned her attention to the _halibut parisienne_ the
-waiter placed before her. But even the slices of tomato and crisp
-garnishing of lettuce could not tempt her appetite.
-
-“I can’t see why you gave her the part—she’s so homely.”
-
-“That needn’t hurt you any.”
-
-“But she has a scene with me, even though it is only a bit.”
-
-“Maybe when she gets a square meal in her she won’t look so much like
-a ghost.”
-
-He lit a cigar, rolling it between his lips with the joy of an
-epicure.
-
-Goring cooled her hot throat with an ice, frowning at his complacent
-finality. It increased her own irritation, made her want to grip him
-by the shoulders and shake him.
-
-The girl _was_ homely. Why did he argue about it?
-
-A zigzag of lightning cut through the sky. With a crash it tore open
-and the deluge descended like the wrath of God sent to cleanse a
-heathen city. Crash after crash, fire upon fire, barrages of rain
-hurled against the buildings, shaking their very walls.
-
-Goring shivered. In spite of the stewing heat a chill went through
-her.
-
-“Let’s get out of this,” she said.
-
-“Better wait till it’s over.”
-
-“I want to go home now.”
-
-Cleeburg signed the check.
-
-Like the lightning his car zigzagged through the storm. Water sprang
-from the streets against the windshield. The noise about them was
-deafening. Goring clung to the window strap at her side. For some
-unknown reason her nerves were keyed to the nth degree. She felt
-choked, as if shrieking alone would clear her throat. The first day of
-work and this beastly weather, she told herself, were responsible.
-
-Throughout the long night the storm raged. And tossing between soft
-linen sheets she did not close her eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-They opened in Washington the end of August. Cleeburg tried to get
-Atlantic City but the theater had been booked weeks before his bid for
-it. Hence, in spite of the star’s popularity, they did not play to
-capacity. The season in the Capital was at low ebb. Most of the homes
-were closed and the usual Goring audiences were out of the city. Which
-after all was an advantage, for the play was still very rough.
-
-All things considered, both Goring and her manager were rather pleased
-than otherwise. The four weeks of rehearsal had been torrid,
-record-breaking heat rising from the pavements, the city consumed by
-fever. The effect upon the company had been in ratio thereto. They
-were limp by the date of opening, unequal to their best in spite of
-the utmost effort.
-
-And Goring’s rôle was difficult. She did not like it as well as
-“Peacock.” There was more drama, more opportunity for emotional
-acting, but less for the display of gowns and the bizarre beauty that
-had made both men and women flock to the other play. However, as
-Cleeburg had said, she couldn’t afford to stamp herself a one-part
-actress. And there was no denying the interest of the story.
-
-As never before, Cleeburg had put her through her paces. At the
-theater after the company had dispersed, at her apartment in the
-evenings, he had gone over her part again and again coaching her scene
-by scene, speech by speech, until the rest, knowing nothing of those
-extra sessions, judged her a miracle at quick study.
-
-“Unbend, Jane!” he would say, prancing up and down her long
-drawing-room. “Come off your perch! You love him, Jane! You love him!
-D’you know what that means? You’d die for him. He ain’t your kind and
-you’d go through hell to get to him. Ever felt that way? Well, think
-about it—concentrate on it—and you’ll get it over.”
-
-Vaguely, like a curtain lifted on another life, memory drifted before
-her eyes the vision of an afternoon on the Palisades when a
-vivid-haired girl clung to a brown-haired boy, whispering over and
-over that she loved him—didn’t want anything ever in the whole wide
-world but him.
-
-For purposes of the drama she concentrated on it.
-
-Quite like the actress she was, she flung herself into the passion of
-those first months as if she had lived them yesterday. Fortunately for
-her the Goring of to-day, the actress, was a shell into which emotion
-could be poured as one pours burning fluid into an empty vessel.
-
-Little ’Dolph, with cigar twirling, eyes popping, perspiration
-dripping from his forehead, and a silk handkerchief tied round his
-short neck, kept her keyed to the highest pitch—no let-down, no time
-to think of self or the weather or rest; no time for anything but the
-part in hand. Though he would not have known whence the quotation
-sprang, with him “The play’s the thing” was a litany.
-
-Critics in the Capital and in Baltimore were almost unanimous in the
-opinion that it was a vital thing, sure of ultimate success when
-placed on view for the thumbs-up, thumbs-down decision of that
-capricious goddess—Broadway.
-
-As a rule Goring and her leading man were the only two mentioned in
-the reviews, but this time almost every member of the company came in
-for a quota of praise. The old mother, the character man, the juvenile
-comedian, even the homely little sister with her wide hungry eyes and
-the queer catch in her voice, each had a word or two.
-
-Gloria Cromwell was the girl’s name. It was quite as ornate as she was
-plain. Goring laughed the first time she heard it.
-
-“Sounds as though she found it in a dime novel,” she told Cleeburg.
-“Why don’t you make her change it?”
-
-“Says it’s her own. Anyhow, it don’t matter.”
-
-“No—I dare say it doesn’t. She’s entitled to something to make her
-conspicuous.”
-
-Often she noticed the girl at rehearsal sitting in the theater after
-her bit was done, leaning forward, chin in her cupped hands, mop of
-reddish hair falling over eyes that devoured every move the star made.
-Once they met at the stage entrance on their way out.
-
-“Why don’t you go home earlier?” Goring asked. “I’m sure Mr. Cleeburg
-will excuse you when you’re through.”
-
-“I’d rather stay,” the girl answered in her peculiar breathless tone.
-“I can learn so much from you, Miss Goring. Besides,” she paused,
-hesitated, “I—live in a furnished room. It isn’t much to go home to.”
-
-“Have you been in New York long?” Goring put the question as they
-moved toward the street side by side.
-
-“A year and a half—that is, this time. I used to come whenever I could
-scrape together the fare while I was doing stock in the West. But
-there never seemed to be an opening for me. Then I decided I’d best
-just come and wait around or I’d never get a chance. And I waited, all
-right.”
-
-Another pause while the wide wistful eyes filled with the same look of
-fright they had worn that first day at the theater—only this time it
-was the fright of memory.
-
-“Mr. Cleeburg has been wonderful to me. I’ll never be able to thank
-him enough.”
-
-They had reached the curb. Goring smiled. “I shall tell him that,” she
-said, and with a nod stepped into her car and drove off.
-
-In Washington she noticed that Miss Cromwell was looking better,
-though the eyes were as hungry as ever and the figure as slight.
-Undoubtedly Cleeburg was right. What she had needed was a few square
-meals. Her strength seemed to increase as work increased and in their
-scene together Goring remarked a give and take that made her own work
-mount to greater intensity. It was a short scene in which the younger
-sister who had hovered like a silent brooding shadow in the background
-pleaded with the older not to break away from her own class, not to
-try to go into a world she did not understand—and was met by the
-defiance of one molded to make a place for herself in any world. The
-scene went so well, in fact, that the author, at Cleeburg’s request,
-lengthened it. At the end when Goring held out her arms and folded
-the weeping girl in them, a gratifying sniffle and the flutter of
-white went through the house. Which is the most either star or manager
-can ask.
-
-The company rehearsed the greater part of the night preceding the New
-York première, though Goring left the theater early to allow herself
-plenty of time for rest and the customary massage. She liked to relax
-thoroughly before the strenuous demands on the nerves which an opening
-always made. In her sea-blue silk draped bed she would lie for hours
-while the magic hands of the Swedish woman who attended her each day
-sent tingling through her veins an injection of new life. And finally
-a delicious drowsiness would creep over her like a thin veil drawn
-between her and the turmoil of the outside world. She would find
-herself presently floating on the waters of Lethe, arms outstretched,
-a smile upon her lips, a gentle undulation as of waves rising and
-falling beneath her. Small wonder that when she drifted back to
-reality some hours later she felt rejuvenated, with a calm and control
-equal to any emergency.
-
-She reached the theater a little after seven. On the way in she met
-Miss Cromwell. The girl’s eyes were burning. Their hungry look had
-gone completely and in its place had come a glow like a great light
-from within.
-
-“Oh, Miss Goring,” she breathed in passing, “I’m so thrilled. I’ve
-lived and lived for this—New York! And now it’s come! It’s actually
-come!”
-
-Goring nodded, voiced a perfunctory “Good luck,” and wondered in her
-soul what it would be like to feel once more that closing of the
-throat, that turmoil of beating heart, that utter abandon of joy in
-opportunity realized. It thrust her back to the day when she had
-signed her first contract with Cleeburg. She and Bob had sat facing
-each other a long space without a word, his two hands gripping hers
-until they ached. And then—
-
-“I’m so glad, little girl—so damn glad!” had come from him huskily.
-
-Then his hands had loosed and swept round her and he had held her
-close and she had cried into the lapel of his blue serge coat, tears
-of sheer happiness.
-
-Cleeburg came to her dressing-room shortly before the rise of the
-curtain to tell her the house was packed. They were standing three
-rows deep—he was sure of a knock-out. He brought her a pile of
-telegrams from members of the profession and friends in the social
-world. She read them leisurely. It was her first opening on which
-there was not a long one from her husband. Not that she really missed
-it, but the lack gave her a curious feeling of wonder as to what had
-become of him.
-
-Her maid gave her hair a final pat and she stepped back to survey. It
-was an odd Jane Goring who gazed critically out of the mirror. No
-jangling jade, no spreading tail, no sensuous color of plumage. Just a
-blue serge dress of last year’s cut, a little shabby, open at the
-throat. It had been selected by the author, not without some protest
-from the star. She had wanted at least to go to a good tailor, but he
-had dragged her into a department store and made her buy one from
-stock at twenty-nine forty-nine. She had to admit that the effect,
-while not beautiful, was absolutely in character. Her shoes she had
-insisted upon getting at a Fifth Avenue boot shop. Feet are more
-conspicuous on the stage than anywhere else in life and she must be
-well shod to do herself justice. Her hair, too, was groomed. The
-Goring coiffure was abandoned until the last act but the faint wave
-necessary to it could not have passed unnoticed in the coils clustered
-about the factory girl’s ears.
-
-She went out, followed by her maid, and waited in the wings for her
-cue. Then came the inevitable tightening of the heart cords, the tense
-straining of muscles to achieve the best, the twinge of fear, all the
-tearing thrill of embarkation on a new venture. It lasted only an
-instant, however, an instant that ended in her entrance, followed by a
-crashing burst of applause. She bowed again and again, and the
-sweetness of it flowed like wine in her blood. The play halted, action
-suspended in mid-air, while the actress took the tribute she had known
-would greet her.
-
-After which the audience settled back to be entertained. From the
-beginning interest was evident, the heroine’s fight to make her own
-life apart from the prejudice which is as rampant in the lower as in
-the upper classes holding them. The struggle of evolution is the most
-human, most vital problem in the world.
-
-All through the first act the conflict endured, the girl’s discontent
-striking like flint on steel until the final scene when the little
-sister, matted hair falling over her eyes, dropped on her knees,
-crying: “All I know is—you’re goin’. You’re leavin’ me! An’ you
-can’t—you mustn’t! You’re gonna get hurt with them people you don’t
-know. They’re gonna step on you an’ make fun of you an’ beat you down
-until you ain’t got no fight left. You don’t belong there—you don’t
-belong! Stay here with me! I’m your sister, your own blood—an’ I love
-you, I love you! Nobody couldn’t love you no more’n I do!”
-
-Gloria Cromwell’s slight figure shook with the words, her eyes burned
-into Goring’s. That queer hysterical note lifted her voice into a
-throb that was heartrending, and as the star drew her close she seemed
-to crumple like a broken flower.
-
-The applause that met the curtain’s descent was interspersed with the
-same gratifying sniffle they had encountered all along the route. A
-number of times it swung upward, members of the company taking it
-according to a schedule posted backstage.
-
- CURTAIN—ACT I
-
- First Curtain Tableau.
- Second 〃 Miss Goring and company
- Third 〃 Miss Goring and principals
- Fourth 〃 Miss Goring and principals
- Fifth 〃 Miss Goring and Mr. Burke
- Sixth 〃 Miss Goring
-
-The manner and order of taking the curtains had been carefully
-rehearsed the night before, but as it rose the fifth time with the
-star and leading man alone on the stage, an incident unanticipated
-occurred. Someone in the gallery shouted “Cromwell!” And the applause
-seemed to swell in answer.
-
-Goring at first paid no heed. The curtain fell—rose again and again.
-The call was repeated insistently. Goring went graciously to the wings
-and drew the girl onto the stage. She came, trembling so that she
-could scarcely walk, eyes wide and terrified but shining somehow
-behind it all. She made an awkward bow, clinging like a child to
-Goring’s hand.
-
-When several curtains had been taken alone and preparations were
-finally under way for Act II, Jane Goring picked her way past property
-men and scene shifters toward the dressing-room with a five-pointed
-star painted on the door—to an actress the gate of heaven. Miss
-Cromwell was waiting there.
-
-“Oh, Miss Goring,” she breathed, “that was so—so sweet of you!”
-
-Jane Goring looked down at her. “I take it you have friends in the
-gallery?” she said.
-
-“No, I have no friends in New York.”
-
-Goring continued to gaze down and her look was not altogether
-pleasant. But the girl did not see it. With an impulsive gesture, half
-apologetic, half worshipful, she lifted the star’s hand to her lips.
-
-“God bless you!” she murmured with that queer catch in her voice.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-At 5.00 a. m. ’Dolph Cleeburg was seated in the living-room-library
-den of his apartment completely surrounded by early editions and the
-butts of cigars. One of the latter circled joyously in his mouth as he
-and the author read over the various expressions of approval.
-
-“Here’s a fellow says Jane’s hair was too Fifth Avenue in the first
-act. By godfrey, ain’t that just like ’em? Can’t find fault with
-anything else, so have to pick on her hair.”
-
-“I told her to let it go,” the playwright remarked.
-
-“Well, that’s Jane. She’s got to look right or she can’t act. And, by
-gad, I’ve seen lots of Third Avenue girls got up like Fifth. Ain’t any
-law against it, is there?” He let the sheet rustle to the floor and
-picked up another. His collar and tie were open, his coat was off, his
-eyes held a blaze of excitement. A whiskey and soda stood on the
-tabouret beside him, untouched.
-
-“Listen to this, Ted!” He plunged into a eulogy that made his eyes
-snap and the cigar roll with a velocity impossible to estimate. “By
-godfrey,” came at the finish, “ain’t one of ’em don’t give some notice
-to that Cromwell kid”—and went on reading—“‘Managers—keep your eye on
-Miss Gloria Cromwell.’” Then he gave a long chuckle. “And to think I
-engaged her because she looked starved!”
-
-“She has something that gets you.” The author paused meditatively.
-“Wonder if it’s her voice?”
-
-“Nope,” came crisply from Cleeburg. “It’s her heart. Probably suffered
-like hell and that’s what puts her over.”
-
-In Jane Goring’s boudoir some five hours later, the actress sat
-propped up, also like an isle in a sea of newspapers. She had read
-them in the small hours as had her manager. Only differently. One of
-the society satellites who circle round a popular star even as the
-moon circles round the earth and just as inconstantly, now silvering
-her sky, now leaving it black, had at the play’s finish carried her
-off to a supper party and dance. In the midst of gayeties a flunky had
-been dispatched for the morning papers and, in a flurry of excitement
-like the froth of champagne, the notices had been consumed, gushed
-over, forgotten.
-
-Not so by Goring, of course. Alone in the white light of a new day,
-she reread them slowly, digesting each word. One watching her would
-have found in her eyes no glow of satisfaction, no thrill that once
-more she had scored. Rather was there the ghost of a frown on her
-brow. A frown somewhat difficult to interpret.
-
-At eleven Cleeburg had her on the phone. He had been ringing the
-apartment at regular intervals since eight but her maid had refused to
-disturb her. His voice ran the gamut of explosive enthusiasm.
-
-“Great, Jane, great! We’ve got ’em again! We’ve got ’em! Didn’t I tell
-you this one had it all over ‘Peacock’?”
-
-He wanted to come up and lunch with her but she told him she was
-tired, would see him later at the theater.
-
-The greater part of the day she spent resting, going over her notices
-and dictating letters to her secretary. Toward five she dressed and
-sent for her car. It was a crisp, clear blue October day. A run in the
-park or up Riverside—there were a number of things she had to think
-about—would fill in time until dinner.
-
-A restlessness unusual and unexplained made her pace the floor while
-she waited. So unusual was it, in fact, that it caused a vague wonder.
-By all previous portents she should have been exalted, lifted to the
-zenith of content through the knowledge that the star of her success
-still sailed high in the heavens. She was not. She felt nervous,
-distressed, with a weight on her chest that even the buoyant breezes
-from the river could not dissipate.
-
-Rolling up Riverside Drive with the ease of floating in ether, she had
-the sense of a great hand clutching her. The sensation was the same as
-that which she had experienced the first day of rehearsal—only
-intensified. It made breathing difficult, annoyed her to the point of
-exasperation.
-
-She ate no dinner, just swallowed a mouthful of tea and drove
-downtown. Little ’Dolph came to her dressing-room a few minutes later.
-He was jubilant. They were sold out weeks ahead. The play had hit the
-jaded metropolis in the eye—to quote him, with variations. It was good
-for another three seasons’ run. He rambled on at random, eyes popping,
-infectious smile lighting his round face like the smile of the sun at
-high noon. Presently he stopped, shifted his cigar and stared at her.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, Jane?”
-
-She looked down questioningly.
-
-“Ain’t said a word,” he continued. “What’s got you?”
-
-“Nothing. I’m tired, I dare say.”
-
-“Sure! Morning-after stuff! Don’t let down, though. We don’t want ’em
-saying second night’s off—the way it always is.”
-
-“You don’t have to tell me that.” Indignation was in her voice.
-
-“Oh, don’t get me wrong,” he apologized quickly. “And, Jane—”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Might let your hair go a bit in that first act—what?”
-
-Her eyes were like two rapier thrusts. He made for the door. “They’ll
-accept my hair just as it is,” was her verdict.
-
-Their little chat did not tend to lift in any degree the mood that
-held her. She gave up trying to shake it off.
-
-Fortunately it had no perceptible effect on her work. She was too
-clever for that. Many years on the stage had trained her to the
-difficult task of obliterating personal worries the instant the glow
-of the footlights would have revealed them to public gaze. In fact,
-she had almost succeeded in stamping them from consciousness when
-Gloria Cromwell made her entrance. At that moment there came a sudden
-burst of applause. Miss Cromwell tried to go on with her lines. They
-could not be heard. It was unprecedented, staggering. A girl, unknown,
-unheralded, was holding up the play! Of course, action had been
-suspended an instant when Goring came on, but this,—_this_ was
-unheard of.
-
-Faintness seized the star, blinded her,—then fury. She knew now the
-nature of the weight that had stifled her all day. In a way, she had
-known it from the beginning. It was this girl! The lengthening of the
-part on tour, last night’s acclaim, her notices this morning, all had
-formed a cumulative irritant that now expressed itself in a surge of
-throttling hatred.
-
-She jumped in on the girl’s lines, killing almost every speech. She
-changed her own so that cues would be missed. No move, no turn that
-would make the little sister’s performance fall flat was allowed to
-pass. Even the final speech, ending with the beautiful tableau that
-last night had brought down the house, was cut short. Like a red
-tongue of flame her rage swept over its object consuming every
-opportunity the part gave.
-
-Still she did not kill the applause that greeted the curtain.
-
-Storming to her dressing-room came Cleeburg.
-
-“What’s the matter? You cut the act a minute and a half!”
-
-“I was ill,” she told him. And barred the door, stripping off her
-dress while the maid prepared a dose of aromatics and bathed her head
-with eau de cologne.
-
-Since Gloria Cromwell appeared only in the first act, dying for
-exigencies of plot off-stage—the remainder of the performance went as
-usual.
-
-But that night, as once before, Goring tossed between sheets of finest
-linen and did not close her eyes.
-
-In the morning she sent for Cleeburg.
-
-He came, solicitous for her health, relieved by the fact that her
-aberration of the night before had not in any way affected the play’s
-reception.
-
-She met him, cool and smiling and looking very beautiful in a purple
-mandarin suit, the skirt of which was weighted with wicked Chinese
-embroidery. Her tapering white hands were ringless and low-heeled
-Chinese slippers made her look less tall. Greeting him, her hand clung
-to his.
-
-She led the way into the drawing-room.
-
-“’Dolph,” she began, and for the first time a rather plaintive note
-crept into her voice. “’Dolph, I’m unhappy.”
-
-In the act of lighting the omnipresent cigar, he looked up,
-astonished. “Why—what’s wrong?”
-
-“I’m unhappy—and for a reason you may not quite understand. But you
-can help make things right. You can make them _all_ right, if you
-will.”
-
-“Sure, Jane, you know me! Anything I can do—”
-
-“It has to do with the play.”
-
-“Fire ahead!” He resumed the operation of lighting.
-
-“’Dolph, that Cromwell girl, I simply can’t work with her.”
-
-Again the process of lighting was arrested. “Can’t work with her? Good
-God!”
-
-She went to him, struck a match and, bending over, held it to the
-weed. He laughed comfortably, settled back—patted her hand.
-
-“Sort of took the wind out of my sails, that did. Guess I didn’t get
-you straight, eh?”
-
-She sat down in a chair close to his, her back to the light.
-
-“Please _do_ get me right. I’ve nothing against her work, if _you_
-like it. It’s her personality that irritates me. There’s
-something—something snaky about her. She makes me nervous, makes me go
-off in my lines. You know, I told you in the beginning I didn’t like
-her.”
-
-“You said she was too homely.”
-
-“Well, she is.”
-
-“Not any more. Why, she’s got a face like—like Fiske. One of those
-faces you don’t get at first, but with so much behind it that you come
-to like it better than the kind that’s just easy to look at.”
-
-“I’ve never been able to like her, ’Dolph. I’ve tried to because you
-seemed to, and you know how absolutely I depend on your judgment. But
-I can’t, that’s all.” She looked away and the suggestion of a sob
-sounded in the words.
-
-Cleeburg’s cigar revolved silently for a few moments, then he leaned
-forward. “What are we going to do about it?”
-
-She turned to him, rested her white tapering hand pleadingly on his
-arm. “Get rid of her, ’Dolph.”
-
-“Get rid of her? Chuck her—just like that?” He snapped his fingers.
-
-“You can find some way that won’t hurt her feelings.”
-
-“Any way would be treating her rough.”
-
-“She’ll have no difficulty getting another engagement.”
-
-Cleeburg had been watching her over his cigar, round eyes studying her
-as they were in the habit of doing at rehearsal. Now he snapped the
-weed into the other corner of his mouth and smiled benignly. “That’s
-exactly why I ain’t letting her go.”
-
-Jane Goring’s eyes met his with a delicate film of tears veiling them.
-“Don’t you want to please me?”
-
-“I want to please the public,” said Cleeburg curtly, “and they like
-her. Say—what’s got into you, Jane, anyhow?”
-
-“I don’t know! I don’t know!” A few tears, well chosen, rolled over
-onto her white cheeks. She brushed them away. “I’m just miserable,
-that’s all. Last night made me so nervous that I gave a perfectly
-rotten performance. Just playing opposite her gives me goose-flesh.
-Something about her chokes me and she seems to feel it—to revel in it.
-She’s a snake, ’Dolph, and I simply can’t stand her.”
-
-“Seems to me a pretty nice kid.”
-
-The hand resting on his arm traveled its length. “’Dolph,—isn’t it
-important that I should be happy in my work?”
-
-“Sure!”
-
-“And if _she_ makes me unhappy?”
-
-He gave her hand an understanding squeeze and a slow twinkle appeared
-in his round eyes. “Ah, come on, Jane! Talk straight to yourself!
-She’s made too big a hit to suit you. That’s what’s eating you.”
-
-For an instant Jane Goring said nothing. A hard line tightened her
-mouth, but quickly she dissipated it, replacing it with a deprecatory
-smile.
-
-“How absurd, ’Dolph!”
-
-“’Course it’s absurd. Don’t try to hog it, Jane! Give the kid a
-chance!” He dropped back, regarding his cigar contemplatively.
-
-“But I tell you that’s not the reason. I simply can’t do anything if
-she’s in the company. She makes me bristle!”
-
-“Because she gets a big hand,” he put in. “Because she holds up the
-show!” He leaned forward once more. “And you honestly think I’d let a
-find like that get away from me?”
-
-Jane Goring got to her feet. She had attempted a new rôle. She had
-pleaded. Now she would play in character. She would demand.
-
-“Either she goes—or I do,” came succinctly.
-
-“Nonsense, Jane!” He, too, was on his feet.
-
-“I mean it. You can take your choice.”
-
-“Why, listen to me, old girl! You’ve got the public in the palm of
-your hand! You can afford to give the kid a square deal.”
-
-“I’ve told you—”
-
-Cleeburg’s round eyes narrowed. “What’re you trying to do—bully me?”
-
-“No. I want you to be fair.”
-
-“I am fair—to all concerned—”
-
-“Except to me who should be your first consideration.”
-
-“Look here, Jane, you’ve had things pretty much your own way for a
-good many years. To me there wasn’t anybody—not one of ’em—in your
-class, either as actress or woman. Darned if I wasn’t even afraid of
-you! You’ve laid down the law more than once and I let you get away
-with it. But I can’t let you grab a find out of my hand, just like
-that!” Again the fingers snapped. “And I won’t!”
-
-The peacock’s shriek is the one unbeautiful thing about him. It is
-blatant, raucous. It is crude as the rasp of iron on stone.
-
-Jane Goring’s voice rose belligerently to the housetops. “And I tell
-you, I won’t have her putting over that sob stuff on me! I won’t have
-it! I won’t have it!!” Stripped of iridescence, shorn of plumage, she
-stood facing him, nails grinding into palms, head thrust forward and
-upward, body rocking with the same fury that had seized her the night
-before.
-
-Cleeburg came to her, his round eyes softened and troubled, and put a
-hand on her shoulder. “Come, come, Jane! Don’t let’s do anything
-hasty. You and I’ve pulled along pretty comfortably for a long time.
-This thing is a tempest in a teapot. Let’s both think it over and have
-a nice calm talk later in the week.”
-
-When he had left, she settled down to weigh things and balance
-accounts.
-
-First and foremost, one discomforting thought was uppermost—she was
-losing her drag with her manager. It had been a revelation, amazing,
-most difficult to face, most delicate to handle. A few years ago
-’Dolph Cleeburg would have been, as he had frankly stated, afraid to
-cross her. Hers would have been the last word, the decisive one. Such
-incidents as the cutting of scenes, the dismissing of actors to whom
-she objected, were occurrences not uncommon. Gloria Cromwell would
-simply have received her two weeks’ notice accompanied by a pleasing
-smile from Cleeburg and, since he liked her, a contract and promise to
-put her in his next production. To-day Jane Goring had met open
-defiance, backed with a twinge of ridicule even harder to endure. Not
-subtly but poignantly she felt it. That smile that had lurked in his
-eye when he called the green-eyed monster by its right name—there was
-no mistaking it.
-
-Just one course remained. Her brain sprang instantly to that—to
-tighten her hold on him in some other way so that her will would still
-be the lever directing their business association. At any cost it must
-be accomplished. Times innumerable he had begged her to procure a
-divorce from the husband with whom she did not live, and marry him.
-That answer was the obvious one to her present situation. It gave to
-Jane Goring the one safe solution.
-
-She did not hesitate, did not stop to weigh Bob’s wishes in the
-matter. Circumstances had pushed her to take the step. Without delay
-she must act and efficiently. Immediately and as quietly as possible
-the whole affair must be put through, consummated. It must not be the
-usual theatrical divorce, with blaring of trumpets and long columns in
-the newspapers. If it could be managed, she wanted no publicity at
-all. Just as her present marriage was unknown generally, so would she
-conduct her second venture.
-
-Having arrived at a solution she called up her lawyer, made an
-appointment and drove downtown.
-
-Two hours later she left his office, a shadow across her eyes, her
-face drawn and a bit haggard. The thing was not so easy as she had
-anticipated—impossible, in fact, in New York as matters now stood.
-They had thrashed it out—viewed it from every conceivable angle—to
-reach a conclusion that placed the final decision entirely in Bob
-McNaughton’s hands. Unless Goring were willing to leave the state long
-enough to establish a residence, Bob was the one who must sue. He must
-be located, which would involve no great difficulty, and then, granted
-his consent could be gained, it would take the red tape of the law an
-indefinite time to unwind.
-
-What worried her was the fear that Bob might take this occasion to be
-nasty. The long silence since he had gone West made it difficult to
-gauge his attitude toward her. More than likely he would refuse and
-cause her no end of trouble.
-
-When she received word from her attorney that, through his former
-paper, Bob had been located with the Graystone Photoplay Company in
-Los Angeles, she decided to write instead of trusting to the cold
-terms of a legal request.
-
-Very carefully she worded the letter, making it most friendly but with
-the impersonal friendliness of those whose lives have never intimately
-touched. Since she had not heard from him in over two years, she
-wrote, she was quite sure he had by this time come to regard her as a
-sort of mythical being. Their separation had become so complete that a
-request she was about to make would, she knew, be nothing short of
-welcome to him. She wanted him to have his freedom. Herself—she no
-longer wanted to feel bound. She would always think of him as the best
-friend she ever had, but so many years had elapsed since their
-relationship had been that of husband and wife that it was rather a
-farce to keep up the pose any longer. She was sure he would agree in
-this. Knowing the New York laws he must realize that the move would
-have to come from him. California, she understood, was more lenient,
-and since he was now a resident, it would be practically easy. She
-assumed that by this time his health had been entirely restored and
-wished him every good wish in the world.
-
-Before sending off the letter she gave it to her attorney. Stamped
-with his approval but with no slight misgivings on her part, it was
-registered and posted; then tossed carelessly into a bag with
-thousands of others—tear-stained, anxious, pleading, desperate,
-breathless, threatening, thumb-marked, hopeless—all jumbled as human
-emotions are jumbled together in this puzzling world. With these it
-was flung into a mass of other bags similarly laden and started on its
-way across the country.
-
-Meanwhile instead of resuming their discussion, ’Dolph Cleeburg had
-diplomatically avoided seeing his star. For several days he stayed
-away from the theater and Goring was forced at every performance to
-endure the girl’s entrance—the applause that apparently had become a
-habit.
-
-The climax came when one of the Sunday papers featured the young
-actress’s picture on the same page as the star’s. That was the
-proverbial straw.
-
-Jane Goring scorned any further attempt to bring Cleeburg round to her
-way of thinking. If he was afraid to see her, was determined to keep
-Cromwell in the cast—very well, she would read him a lesson. She would
-prove to him who was the motive power that kept his play going. She
-would show him in whose hands lay his success or failure. Incidentally
-she would resort to the very feminine ruse of playing on his
-sympathy.
-
-At seven-thirty Monday evening she sent word to the theater that she
-was ill and could not appear.
-
-As she had anticipated, the stage manager phoned wildly, begging for a
-word with her. The situation was terrible! Terrible! She must come!
-They were sold out!
-
-Goring smiled. It was just what she had looked for. No understudy for
-her had been engaged so far. It was a matter with which they never
-concerned themselves, for no one could have replaced Goring with the
-public. The theater would have to remain dark—Cleeburg would have his
-lesson. Madame was very ill, her maid replied, too ill even to answer
-the telephone. The stage manager urged. He pleaded. In vain! A few
-minutes later Cleeburg himself was on the wire. Couldn’t she drag
-herself downtown? She must! To him she spoke, her voice so weak that
-it could scarcely be heard. She had tried—impossible. Her heart— And
-then the maid once more took the wire. Cleeburg was frantic. It meant
-a refund—the loss of thousands. He almost wept into the phone. At the
-psychological moment the maid told him madame had fainted.
-
-Jane Goring slept that night with a smile on her lips.
-
-She woke up in the morning to read that at half an hour’s notice
-Gloria Cromwell had gone on in her place—and hit Broadway straight
-between the eyes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Some months later word came from the West that Bob McNaughton had
-secured a divorce. There had been no personal reply to her letter.
-Calmly and quietly he had complied with her request, his lawyer merely
-notifying hers that Mrs. McNaughton’s wishes would be carried out to
-the letter. No possible way had she of gauging how he had taken it, no
-possible manner of knowing how, after all the years, such a request
-had affected him.
-
-Her relief was like a gale of wind sweeping over the city after a
-stifling day. For months she had been trembling on the brink of
-terrifying uncertainty. The day following Gloria Cromwell’s amazing
-success had found her really ill, so ill that had she remained away
-from the theater that night there would have been justification. She
-was stunned, utterly bewildered, sickened to the soul by the trick she
-told herself Fate had played her.
-
-Over and over she read the papers, as one gazes fascinated over the
-edge of a dizzying precipice. It was incredible! And worse still, it
-might easily have been avoided. She might have accepted the girl, made
-her a protégée, gracefully posed as having discovered a young genius
-and pushed her to the fore. She saw all that now. And—further irony—it
-would probably have redounded to her credit, a neat bit of
-self-advertisement. As things stood she had made herself a
-laughing-stock. She could not bear the thought of it.
-
-On the verge of hysteria, she dragged herself out of bed and dressed
-for the street. When her maid dared to protest, she turned on the girl
-ready to strangle her.
-
-Walking rapidly westward she veered north when she reached the Drive.
-It was a dull day, no clarity of air to fill the lungs, no shimmer of
-sunlight through the heavy clouds. Skeleton trees reached gaunt arms
-to the sky. Thick mud covered the ground which a month before had
-shown green and living. There was no cheer anywhere. Across the river
-the Palisades rose misty and unreal, as if they had never been more
-than mirages. Miles she made, on and on, seeking some way to still the
-terror voice in her breast.
-
-That night she drove down to the theater with a sense of dread. But
-whatever the flurry of gossip backstage, it ceased with her arrival.
-Members of the company inquired concerning her health—that was all.
-While she was dressing a knock came. The maid opened and the Cromwell
-girl stood in the doorway. She took a rather timid step forward.
-
-“I’m so glad you’re back, Miss Goring.” She spoke with a note of
-sincerity unmistakable, and in her wide eyes was a look of pleading as
-of unspoken apology for what she had done. “I just had to come and
-tell you.”
-
-“Thank you,” Goring replied and for her life could not say more. Her
-hatred was a living, searing thing.
-
-The coup she had made in absenting herself accomplished its end.
-Gloria Cromwell was withdrawn from the cast—to be featured by Cleeburg
-in a new production!
-
-Anxiously Goring waited for some reference to the turn events had
-taken. None came, not even when the girl left the company. Little
-’Dolph seemed to be full of the joy of living these days—cigar more
-active than ever, smile more genial, himself more generous to the
-down-and-outers and brimful of plans. In the weeks that followed he
-never spoke of their misunderstanding. Evidently his admiration had
-not in any way decreased. She had chosen, she concluded, the
-psychological moment to gain her freedom.
-
-When news came that it was consummated the weight of uncertainty
-lifted. She felt buoyant, with a clear course to steer ahead. Not that
-she was at all eager to marry her manager. But since it was the one
-sure way to secure her future, it must be gone through.
-
-She will always have reason to remember the bright spring day when she
-dropped into his office to break the news. For some time he had known
-Bob was suing.
-
-“Glad to hear it,” he remarked when she told him everything was
-settled. Then he swung round in his chair and gazed out of the window
-at a pair of fleecy, fluttering clouds in the very blue heavens.
-
-“Well, I took your advice, Jane,” he added casually.
-
-“What advice?”
-
-“Remember telling me once to make that Cromwell girl change her name?
-I went ahead and did it.”
-
-“You did?”
-
-“Sure! Changed it for her. She’s Mrs. ’Dolph now.” And he grinned
-happily.
-
-She understood then why he had been grinning in just that way for a
-number of weeks. Had she not been so absorbed in self, she would have
-noticed that his smile was gayer—different from any he had ever worn.
-It made his face quite boyish.
-
-The decline of Goring after that was gradual. As a matter of fact, it
-could have been dated actually from the night of her non-appearance.
-Upon the heels of that night followed a change, scarcely noticeable at
-first, in the sea of eyes and lips and hands to which she looked for
-signs of approval. Slowly—oh very slowly—there crept into the
-audience’s response to her a quality mechanical, automatic almost, as
-if largely force of habit, a quality that presaged the beginning of
-the end. Whether in herself or the public she could not tell. It was
-nothing tangible, nothing definite. But something had happened. The
-fine thread by which an actress chains herself to popular favor had
-snapped. In vain she told herself it was just nervous imagination. It
-made her choke with fear.
-
-One thing Jane Goring had failed to take into consideration: Than the
-highest rung of the ladder there is nothing higher; and unless one
-dies having reached the top, there must be a descent. Youth pushes its
-way upward relentlessly, and those who have been must make way for
-those who will be. A ladder with top rung overcrowded would of
-necessity break.
-
-Had she possessed the art of Bernhardt or the intellect of Fiske—that
-magnetic quality of soul that charms with the mellowing years—she
-could have laughed at time. But her ability consisted chiefly in a
-technique, the accumulated result of stage tricks that only up to a
-certain point can present itself as youth.
-
-With an eagerness that approached hysteria she reached out for the
-adulation that for years she had accepted without question as her due.
-The thirst for it was the thirst of fever. Even the tame robins she
-had always regarded as more or less of a joke, she began to seek them
-as they in the past had sought her. The desire to be seen about
-pursued by youth; to lunch and tea at fashionable restaurants in their
-company; to hold the center of the public eye at any cost, became a
-mania. It was as grim an effort as that of a doomed man to cling to
-the last moments of life.
-
-And when a year or so later came the inevitable day when Cleeburg said
-to her—trying to speak gently—
-
-“Come, Jane, let’s talk horse sense. No use your trying to play a
-chicken! God knows you ain’t one!”—
-
-Jane Goring went home, flung open her bedroom windows letting in an
-uncompromising flood of sunlight, sat down at her dressing-table and
-looked herself squarely in the face. The whiteness—smooth,
-glowing—which had made her skin like gardenia petals in the old days
-had gone long since. She had grown accustomed to simulating it with
-modern triumphs of the beauty parlor. But sitting there with God’s
-spotlight turned full on her, it was not the realization of muscles
-sagging as if pulled down by the hand of Time that made her shudder.
-It was not the gooselike shriveling of her throat when she turned her
-head that made her eyes shut with pain. It was the knowledge of ebbing
-self-confidence, the face to face admission that her day was done.
-From now on it would be—“Let’s go to see Jane Goring. She used to be—”
-or “Don’t let’s go to see Jane Goring. She used to be—”
-
-But always “She used to be—” Always that.
-
-There was no quibbling, no splitting of hairs. She knew! And with the
-acknowledgment she rose to her feet, a great overwhelming defiance
-seizing her. She would not let age get her. She would not go downhill.
-She would not become a has-been! Rather would she quit the stage now
-and let them say she had retired in her prime. Money she had—an income
-larger than she needed. She would cut herself off from the theater
-entirely; for looking in at the window of a house of cheer whose door
-is barred—that would be unbearable. She would have to travel, to seek
-diversion elsewhere. Then suddenly like the lifting of a rosy veil on
-barren waste, she saw her career a thing of the past and herself
-wandering down the declining years of life—alone. The desert youth
-takes no count of—aloneness—stretched bleak and endless, a reach of
-sand with no oasis to slake the thirst, no shade to cool the soul.
-
-And there swamped her with a sickening sense of need the longing for
-that bulwark of days gone, the one thing that endures, the one thing
-that counts not success nor failure, that survives when the ladder
-itself lies crumbled in ruins. Giving it no conscious name, she knew
-only that had Bob been there he would have shouldered the burden of
-this cold hour of facing truth. He would somehow have contrived to
-make it easier for her to hold her head high and continue to look
-down, even though that look must be directed toward the sunset.
-
-Bob, whose adoration had helped her always over the difficult places,
-Bob would to-day and through all the days to come have stood by to
-help her bridge this most difficult place of all.
-
-Bob!! Well, why not?
-
-Many hours she paced the floor, brows drawn together, hands clenched
-as if grappling with a flesh and blood thing.
-
-The peacock’s strut is slow and calculating. He lowers his head only
-to gaze upon his own reflection in the pool. To shed the trait that
-has made him world famous is to lay his gorgeous plumage in the dust.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The train steamed into the Santa Fé Station at Los Angeles. A woman
-descended, the sort to whom one gives a second glance in spite of
-tired lines round the eyes and little crinkles at their corners.
-Gowned in the latest cut of blue serge, with a tan traveling cloak
-swung across her arm, she cried New York the instant one laid eyes on
-her.
-
-She put her maid and bags into a cab, and sent them to the Ambassador
-Hotel. Stepping into another, she told the driver to take her to the
-Graystone Studio.
-
-It was an afternoon of late June. The languorous breath of California
-summer had kissed the foliage into mammoth bloom. They drove through
-lazy, sunny streets, somnolent under warm skies, into that vortex of
-activity modern commerce has planted in the midst of beauty, the frame
-of artifice sprung up mushroom-like in the very heart of Nature.
-
-Jane Goring descended at a row of small buildings that barricaded huge
-ones roofed with glass. She made her way past men and women with faces
-ghastly white and lips preternaturally red, mounted the steps and
-asked for Mr. McNaughton. The attendant wanted her name but she
-insisted upon being announced merely as a friend from the East. She
-had given Bob no warning of her visit and her eyes followed the man
-with a look half curious, half eager as he opened a door and
-disappeared along a corridor lined with offices.
-
-He came back presently and shut the door. Mr. McNaughton had gone
-home. She asked his address quite as a matter of course—in a way that
-brooked no refusal, and once more was driven out of bedlam to the
-quiet of drowsy green streets, past the beautiful Hollywood homes of
-picture stars who yesterday were unknown.
-
-Toward the sunset she went, melting amethystine into violet night.
-Shadows stretched across the road, cool and mellow, and a soft sense
-of fragrant tranquillity.
-
-She lay back, closing her eyes. When she opened them she had turned a
-corner and was pulling up before the lawn of a rambling Queen Anne
-cottage set snugly in a mass of shrubbery. She gave a little start,
-pleasure surmounting surprise. It looked very much as though Bob
-McNaughton had found time to make his own career.
-
-A gate with a lantern over it opened on a bricked path that led to the
-house. She paused there and looked in. Under a tree sat a man she
-scarcely knew. His hair was quite gray—iron gray—but the face under it
-was full and ruddy, the eyes keen, the mouth relaxed and smiling. The
-hand that held a newspaper which he no longer read was firm and
-capable. A hand accustomed to direct, the hand of a man sure of
-himself! Bob, who was almost fifty, looked less than forty!
-
-As she stood staring at him, the house door opened and a slim figure
-was silhouetted against the light from within. The figure stepped to
-the lawn, light shining through masses of soft brown hair like a halo,
-eyes glowing, red lips parted in eager welcome, and with a cry full of
-sweetness held out something to Bob McNaughton. He gave a laugh,
-sprang to his feet, bent down to the eager lips, then caught the
-something swiftly in his arms—with infinite tenderness hugged it close
-against his heart. And it gave a gurgle of delight.
-
-Jane Goring turned and went back to the waiting taxi.
-
-
-
-
-GREASE-PAINT
-
-_REALISM_
-
-
-There is no such thing—either in life or the theater. For what is real
-to one is unreal to another. The tenement of the stage is real to
-those who live in drawing-rooms—the drawing-room, real to those who
-know only the squalor of tenements. That which seizes our imaginations
-with grim claws, shakes our emotions with sordid passions we have
-never experienced—we call reality. That which is uncertain, sad,
-elusive, delicate—we call unreality. Both are life!
-
-
-
-
-GREASE-PAINT
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-She had weary eyes—eyes with the weight of centuries of knowledge upon
-them—eyes that could no longer open wide with astonishment at anything
-life might hold. The lashes were so long, so dark and straight that
-they were like a veil of night shadowing the grayness beneath. Her
-gaze came through, inviting you to penetrate, urging you by its very
-weariness to try to read the story those eyes might tell.
-
-A slow smile lifted the corners of her mouth, then let them droop
-before the smile was really born. Her walk as she trailed from the
-first line of show girls in her wide-spread bird of paradise costume
-was as measured as the muse of tragedy.
-
-And yet she was only twenty-six.
-
-That was Naomi Stokes, who counted numberless acquaintances but few
-friends; who knew many men better than they cared to be known but few
-as well as she might have cared to know them.
-
-Broadway was a playground to Naomi but she had long since learned that
-in the game played there, none are winners. Time is the _croupier_
-who rakes in the spoils and at Time Naomi had ceased to smile even
-wearily. He stood with his long arm suspended, ready, it seemed to
-her, to pounce upon each hour she might hold dear, jealous of all she
-had crowded into one short life. Man she knew too well to fear but the
-croupier with whom she had gambled so long, she dared not look in the
-face. And as one sings in the dark to silence fear, so she had
-developed a philosophy of life which she held close in those moments
-when she might be tempted to take measure of things. She could not
-afford to pause long nor to think much.
-
-Of that glittering section which stretches like some bejeweled
-recumbent queen of the night from Forty-second to Fiftieth Streets,
-Naomi was such an integral part that if a night passed without her
-appearance at one or another of the tightly wedged restaurants, their
-habitués wondered. When she moved between rows of tables with her
-long-lashed smile sweeping with lazy insolence the whole room, those
-who did not know asked who she was. Her name—in the theater merely
-that of another show girl—had for so long swung from lip to lip in the
-after-theater life of the White Way that soon it would of necessity be
-relegated to that past which hangs so cruelly over the present.
-
-Naomi knew this. And more than once, alone in her tiny two-room
-apartment and in spite of her philosophy, she wondered what would come
-after. A shrug avails little in the midday glare of reality.
-
-It was on a night following such a day—when the dregs of life had
-tasted particularly bitter—that Naomi and four others went to supper
-with Marshall Kent.
-
-Kent having more money than he could spend enjoyed spending it on
-Broadway. Having nothing better to do, he had never looked for
-anything better. He and Naomi were good pals in their way. He liked to
-stare through her lashes at the puzzle beneath. Most women were so
-revealing.
-
-But to-night she resented his set gaze, the ironic twitch of his thin
-lip. After her nasty, self-disclosing day she wanted a friend. Some
-one to whom she could be something more than heavy eyes and
-auburn-tinted hair, some one with whom she could share thoughts—and
-fears. But Marshy Kent had never given her friendship. No man had.
-
-All through supper she was silent, with a hard, shell-like silence her
-companions could not break. Finally she pushed her plate to one side
-and her glance sifted the smoke-thickened air.
-
-Beyond the table, in a space so small that they might have been
-squirrels chasing their tails, the crowd jostled and elbowed and
-glared at one another in an effort to keep time to a stamping,
-hilarious jazz. In the doorway beyond, another crowd jostled and
-elbowed and glared at one another and fought for the privilege of
-slipping crisp greenbacks to supercilious head-waiters. Through the
-befogged atmosphere the lights with their shades of brilliant yellow
-and black glimmered faintly. At the tables and on the dance floor
-jaded New Yorkers and curious out-of-towners pretended to enjoy
-themselves.
-
-Naomi swept it with a noxious sense of disgust. Suddenly it seemed
-a ton weight, as if the ceiling like some infernal machine were
-descending upon her. She lifted her shoulders and her head went back.
-Oh, for a breath of real fresh air!
-
-“What’s the matter, my dear?” put in Kent. “Off your feed?”
-
-“No.” She brought her eyes toward him, then they drifted back to the
-crowd at the door. “I was just thinking what a joke they are on
-themselves, fighting like that to get into a stuffy old hole where
-they’re going to be held up and fleeced.”
-
-Kent laughed.
-
-“Aren’t you worth the price of admission? You’re one of the exhibits,
-you know.”
-
-She shrugged.
-
-He looked down at the easy movement of the white shoulders under the
-narrow beaded straps that were the sole support of her black gown.
-
-“Any one with the eyes and arms of Naomi will always count,” he
-consoled.
-
-She pulled from his gaze.
-
-“Oh, what’s the use! You know I don’t matter to them any more than to
-you. You play around with me here because you haven’t any better way
-to pass your time. And they, poor idiots—”
-
-“By Jove, you _are_ off your feed!”
-
-She turned her back on his low, impudent chuckle.
-
-His tolerant eye traveled over the shoulder turned from him to the
-hot, wild mass clamoring at the doorway. Suddenly he became alert and
-a second later was on his feet, without apology pushing his way round
-the dance floor. Naomi saw him make for a man with a big frame and
-graying mustache who lingered impotently at the rear of the crowd.
-Kent reached out, grabbed his hand and with absolute disregard of
-intervening humanity, wrung it as if he never wanted to let it go. She
-wondered vaguely what it would be like to have some one as glad to see
-her. He passed a word to the head-waiter. The red velvet rope dropped
-as if by magic and, escorted by Kent, the party was led to a table a
-few paces from where she sat.
-
-The man glanced about with the curiosity, half amused, half critical
-of the sight-seeing stranger. Back of him came a girl of twenty-one or
-so with eager gray eyes a thousand years younger than Naomi’s, white
-teeth showing through parted lips and hair the dense, dusky black of
-an Indian’s. At her side walked a young man. As he passed Naomi, their
-glances met. They locked with that odd, unintentional arresting which
-means that two out of a vast throng have momentarily become
-individuals. Naomi’s slow gaze followed as he went on and it seemed to
-her that in the allotting of places, he deliberately chose the one
-facing her.
-
-Kent hovered over his friend with beaming enthusiasm. The ironic
-twitch of his thin lips was gone. The somewhat sagging shoulders of
-the man who keeps flesh down by massage rather than exercise had
-straightened. He scribbled his address. He took theirs. He admonished
-the waiter to treat them well, received that gentleman’s reassuring
-nod, and apologized finally for having to return to his own table.
-
-Naomi watched the younger man’s face as Marshall Kent sat down beside
-her. No—she had not been mistaken. She who knew so well how to read
-men’s eyes saw in his dark ones a look of intense, concentrated
-interest. The girl next to him saw it, too—and following it, thought
-she had never seen a face more fascinating than the one so smoothly
-white with its heavy-fringed lids and wave of glinting hair across the
-forehead. It was artificial, of course, but then you got used to that
-in New York. Her clear gray eyes went swiftly back to the dark ones
-that were fastened on Naomi’s.
-
-Kent pulled in his chair and settled back.
-
-“Well, little Marshy’s all het up!” one of the girls prompted. “Who’s
-your friend?”
-
-He was still beaming.
-
-“Fellow I haven’t seen since college—Alec McConnell. I was chucked. He
-went through to the finish. Mining engineer—big man in Idaho to-day.”
-
-“And the other two?” queried Naomi casually.
-
-“The one staring at you, my dear, is the son of Bill Dixon of
-Dixonville, Oregon, big ranch owner, king of the apple country.”
-
-“And the girl?”
-
-“Little friend of his being chaperoned by McConnell and his wife.
-First visit to the big town. Is that all?”
-
-Once more Naomi’s lazy gaze met the one which had not moved from her
-and a faint flush surged under her thick pallor. As the lids fell,
-they covered something of the look of the gamester. It was a
-calculating look that weighed possibilities, one she was quick to
-hide.
-
-Kent detected it rather by instinct than otherwise.
-
-“Oh, have a heart, Naomi!” he teased. “He’s so young and tender.”
-
-Naomi turned slowly in his direction. She said nothing for the moment
-but waited until the others got up to dance.
-
-“Well?” He was intrigued by her silence. “Well, Eve, do we tempt young
-Adam to eat the apple or do we let him go home in peace and grow
-them?”
-
-“I think we marry him,” she said quietly.
-
-Kent gave a start that brought him upright. Then he grinned, that
-drawling grin tinged with cynicism. The idea of any one marrying Naomi
-was amusing. She read his thought as plainly as if it had been put
-into words and her head went up suddenly. Though the lashes did not
-lift, a flash came through them. It was challenge.
-
-“You think I couldn’t?”
-
-“My dear Naomi—if you’ll pardon my brutality, I should say—not a
-chance in the world!”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“In the first place I have a hunch that little girl, Nan Crawford, has
-a pretty firm hold on young Bill. It’s plain to see they’re crazy
-about each other. Darn sweet kid, too. I suspect she’s here
-trousseauing. In the second, Bill is probably more sophisticated than
-you or I imagine. This isn’t his first visit to New York.”
-
-“I’m going to marry him just the same.”
-
-“And go out and live on an Oregon ranch, old dear?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-He laughed aloud this time.
-
-“You’d look sweet in a sunbonnet and gingham dress.”
-
-“Just what do you mean by that?” she asked, not quite sure what
-emphasis to put on “sweet.”
-
-“Just this! You belong here as surely as grease-paint belongs in the
-theater.”
-
-“No woman belongs here,” she flung at him. “There isn’t a woman made
-who hasn’t the right to a home.”
-
-“Then why does she start here?”
-
-“Because she’s young and a fool—in nine cases out of ten. Because she
-thinks this is living.”
-
-Her face went hard as nails; with contempt, with futility, with
-derisive defiance of herself. And then furtively she pulled a bit of
-lace from her bag and dabbed at her eyes.
-
-Kent’s mouth opened. It was the first time he had seen Naomi cry, had
-witnessed a woman’s tears without suspicion. Usually they meant that
-she wanted something.
-
-“Don’t mind me!” She met his astonishment with a swift effort to pull
-herself together. “I’ve had a rotten day.”
-
-“How, my dear?”
-
-“Oh, just the realization that to-night it’s this, and in two years
-it’ll be ham and eggs and a lunch counter—if I’m lucky.”
-
-“Nonsense!”
-
-“Oh, yes! I’ll just drop out and you’ll forget me—like the rest.
-What’s become of Emy Steward—and Cora Greene—and Ray Granville? You
-don’t even know and you used to give parties for them like this one.”
-
-He was silent, knowing she spoke the truth. Like comets across a
-glittering sky those beautiful girls had gleamed and gone. Gone when
-their beauty had gone, vanished into the night that engulfed them, too
-proud or too forgotten to accept the humiliation of charity.
-
-“We don’t last long, boy,” she added grimly. “And I’m one of those who
-can’t keep on fooling herself. I’ve had a beast of a day.”
-
-“Hence the ranch idea in Oregon.”
-
-“Yes.” A queer twist lifted her lips—then dropped them. “Inspiration,
-I call it. The Limited that will carry me away from the poorhouse!”
-
-“You’ll never put it over.”
-
-“Sporting enough to lay odds on it, Marshy old dear?”
-
-In all justice to Marshall Kent, it must be admitted that under normal
-conditions he would not have taken her up. But the restaurant happened
-to be one of the many which prided itself that prohibition meant
-nothing in its life and the silver flask reposing on Marshy’s hip had
-been refilled on frequent visits to a side chamber just off the main
-room. He looked out of the corner of an eye at Naomi stepping in where
-angels might fear to tread and the flushed, grudging admiration of
-gamester for gamester darted in the glance.
-
-“You’re on!” he said.
-
-“And you’ll keep off!” she urged, a bit breathless.
-
-“Yes—I’ll give you ground. What stakes?”
-
-“If I lose—”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“We’ll make it a hundred perfectos, best brand.”
-
-“Nice and impersonal!” observed Marshy, head to one side, now well
-into the game. “And if you win?”
-
-“The handsomest wedding present in town!”
-
-“I call that odds in your favor.”
-
-With a faint smile she leaned nearer, hand outstretched to clinch it.
-
-“Hold on! What’s the time limit?”
-
-“When he starts west I start with him.”
-
-“It’s a go. Only don’t expect any help from me.”
-
-“I won’t—except an introduction when he stops here on the way out.”
-
-“What makes you think he’ll stop?”
-
-“I know he will. He’ll find some excuse to.”
-
-And he did, of course. Waveringly, as he drew nearer the magnet of her
-eyes, he paused and tapped Marshy’s shoulder. The latter sprang up.
-
-“Mr. Kent, we’re such a bunch of rubes—I thought you might recommend
-the best show in town for to-morrow night.”
-
-Naomi waited as Marshy considered.
-
-“Why don’t you send your friend to ours?” she suggested in a low voice
-apparently to him alone.
-
-“What one is that?” asked the friend, flashing eagerly into the
-breach.
-
-Kent introduced him then to the upraised eyes round the table. But he
-saw only Naomi’s veiled ones. She gave him the name of the musical
-comedy and the theater—nothing more. And as he bowed and rejoined the
-older man and the girl with the dusky hair standing in the doorway,
-Marshall Kent dropped into his chair again.
-
-“Quick work, Naomi,” he murmured, “and Machiavellian method! One more
-move from you and the apple wouldn’t have looked nearly so inviting.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
- My dear Miss Stokes,
-
- This will be the fourth time I’ve seen the show and the third
- time I’ve asked you to go to supper. If you tell me you can’t
- again, I’ll think you don’t want to—and quit. No, on the whole, I
- won’t quit. I’ve never done that in my life. I’ll just hang round
- and bother you till you come, so better come to-night. I’ll be
- waiting for you.
-
- Sincerely,
- William Dixon.
-
-Naomi lifted the head-dress of paradise that swayed round her face and
-handed it absently to the dresser, still concentrating on the note
-which had been delivered at the theater by special messenger.
-
-“Sincerely, William Dixon.” Numberless notes she had received during
-her show girl career, but never one signed just like that.
-“Sincerely.” Probably it was a card index of the man.
-
-She laid it down speculatively, the look of Eve through her lashes.
-Three nights she had put him off. Yes, the apple might safely be held
-a bit closer to-night—but not too close.
-
-He was waiting just within the stage door, his face eager with
-anticipation, his hands in the pockets of his overcoat. As she came up
-the stairs that led from the chorus dressing-rooms under the stage, he
-stepped forward and both hands came out of the pockets.
-
-She clasped the right one, smiling up at him, and his frank eyes
-shone. He piloted her to a car at the curb. As the door slammed with
-the sudden intimacy of shutting out the rest of the world, he leaned
-forward, the glow of his eyes reflected in his voice.
-
-“Gee, this is great! I was afraid you’d turn me down again.” He did
-not wait for an answer but crowded into the next few moments all the
-hours of thought which her refusal of his invitations had lengthened
-into days. “You must have thought me an awful rube, staring at you the
-way I did. I’ve been afraid it made you sore at me. Did it?”
-
-“No woman thinks a man’s a rube for staring at her.”
-
-“I couldn’t help it. I just couldn’t take my eyes off you.”
-
-In the shadows of the car she smiled softly.
-
-“Funny, how I walked into that place, cussing the smoke and noise and
-then saw you. Lord, suppose I hadn’t gone!”
-
-She smiled again.
-
-He went on.
-
-“You’ve seen me every night in the first row at the theater, haven’t
-you?”
-
-“Yes, I’ve seen you.”
-
-“And I think it’s a punk show,” his teeth flashed in a quick grin. “So
-now you know why I came.”
-
-She looked at him from under weighty lids. As if he had to tell her!
-
-“One lone show girl can’t be worth a speculator’s ticket four times,”
-she prompted.
-
-“She’s worth lots more than that. Thank you for coming to-night.”
-
-His voice turned serious. He tucked the robe into her corner of the
-seat for no other reason than the magnet of bending over her, of
-breathing the faint fragrance that wafted from her like an aura. It
-was the ghost of grease-paint and flowers, of powder and perfume—that
-strange, exotic pot-pourri of the theater that clings to its women
-like essence of old Egypt.
-
-She gazed down at the bent head, at the hands that brushed hers with a
-boyish lingering as they drew the robe closer. How young he seemed!
-She felt for the moment much as a man of the world feels when within
-the scope of his worldliness there appears a radiant young girl. There
-was the same thrill of interest, the same desire to be the one
-privileged to open up avenues of possibilities. A man on Broadway who
-had something to learn! It was like finding a canary in a cage of
-monkeys!
-
-The strange exuberance was with her as they made their way among
-crowded tables to the one he had reserved. Amber satin clung to her
-supple body and long jet earrings almost touched her shoulders. She
-was conscious that in the attention she drew, she was giving him the
-sense of pride every man feels when the clatter of forks stops
-momentarily in tribute to the woman with him. But more than that, she
-had a sudden personal satisfaction in his pride and a curve softer
-than any her lips had known for years lifted their corners.
-
-His tanned skin and eyes that glowed seemed lifted straight to the sun
-rising above the mountains. She took a deep breath, as if from him she
-could get the stimulus of all outdoors. He looked at the slope of her
-white shoulders, at the droop of her shadowed eyes, as if in her were
-epitomized the lure of the city.
-
-She leaned across the table just as he did. Their hands almost met.
-Naomi had long, languid fingers that invited the touch.
-
-“You’re so—different,” he began. “So awfully different. I guess that’s
-no news to you, though.”
-
-“So are you—different.”
-
-“Me?”
-
-“Yes—from any man I’ve ever known. You’re like fresh air. The others
-are—stuffy—like a room that’s been shut tight.”
-
-He gave an embarrassed, pleased laugh.
-
-“Tell me about yourself,” she suggested, lifting the lever best
-calculated to open up the dam of formality where the male of the
-species is concerned.
-
-“Oh, nothing much to tell about me.”
-
-And he proceeded to tell it while they went through two courses. She
-got a vivid picture of Bill Dixon, a colt straining always against
-harness of any kind; a lad loathing routine to such an extent that he
-had quit college rather than submit to it; a young man, impulsive as
-the wind, more tied to the picturesqueness of ranch life than to the
-business of it; an only son worshipped by the man who had paved the
-way, who was both father and mother to him.
-
-He bent nearer to the white hands. “Now tell me about you.”
-
-“That would take too long. And if you find out all there is to know
-to-night, you won’t want to see me again.”
-
-“Won’t I, though! Besides—I could never find out all there is to know
-about you.”
-
-They danced. He was not a good dancer but as his arm went round her
-and his dark head bent to her glinting one, she felt herself
-completely encompassed. His bigness, his nearness, gave her a swift
-sense of helplessness that frankly frightened her. The reins of the
-future must be held in her cool hands, not in his.
-
-“I’m going to guess your age,” she announced when they were once more
-at opposite sides of the table, “if you’ll promise not to guess mine.”
-
-“I don’t give a darn how old you are.”
-
-“Oh, I’m not as old as all that. But you—you’re twenty-five.”
-
-“Next month. Bet, at that, I’m older than you.”
-
-“You are,” she lied, without a quiver.
-
-“But you’re the sort of woman who’ll always be young—even when you’re
-wrinkled and gray. It’s your coloring,” he went on, promptly
-contradicting himself. “That wonderful white skin—I’ve never seen skin
-so white—and the sheen of your hair and those eyes that make a fellow
-sort of—sort of want to jump in.”
-
-The eyes smiled at him with infinite promise.
-
-“I think we’re going to like each other,” she said.
-
-“I know one of us does already,” he grinned.
-
-“You’re a dear,” she vouchsafed.
-
-They saw each other every day after that. He managed to bring it
-about, either for luncheon or early dinner or after the theater. At
-least he thought he was the one who brought it about. And as Naomi
-opened his impetuous notes, or the boxes that held great clusters of
-flowers ordered with awkward disregard of everything but quantity, the
-Eve-smile lifted the corners of her mouth and her eyes looked a trifle
-less tired.
-
-Occasionally they drove out to the country for the day. But the
-countryside near New York rather amused him.
-
-“It all seems sort of puny,” he would say as she sat with face
-carefully veiled from a too-revealing sun. “I’m used to snow peaks
-that touch the sky and trees so high that when you’re on the mountain
-trails above them, you look down and can’t see where they begin.” He
-turned from the inadequate hills to the more absorbing scenery of a
-woman’s face misted by a fluttering veil. “No, sir! When I come east,
-I don’t want this. I want New York—the excitement, the thrill of it. I
-want—you.”
-
-It was said softly. His voice held the word like a caress and, looking
-up, she read in his eyes what she had read in many men’s—except that
-added to it was the new element of awe.
-
-That new element became infinitely dear to her. She let him keep it.
-Except when their hands brushed accidentally—or so it seemed to
-him—they did not touch save for the clasp that helped her into a cab
-or expressed “good-night.” The warmth of his arms closed round her
-only in the dance. She met the light of his eyes with her own only
-across restaurant tables. No debutante could have held herself more
-aloof—perhaps not quite so much so. But Naomi did not play the
-ingénue. It was her world knowledge—world old—that fascinated him,
-that made her—as he had said—different.
-
-She amused him with cryptic remarks about the men and women who came
-and went, with stories of familiar characters on Broadway, with a
-touch of cynicism, a touch of pessimism, that lack of faith in human
-nature which comes with disillusionment in self. But this, young Bill
-Dixon did not know nor count. He merely tossed up his shaggy head with
-the deep, long laugh that makes the whole body tingle and begged for
-more.
-
-She managed to fill his days with joy of her when she was with him,
-with longing for her when she cleverly denied him her companionship.
-She was the hundred women to one man which her training had taught her
-to be, knowing that to him she would thus become the one women. She
-caught hold of his imagination and twisted and played with it as a cat
-with a ball of twine, tossing it this way and that but always with paw
-poised to pounce.
-
-And simultaneously there flared into her own soul an eagerness of
-which Naomi Stokes had long since counted herself incapable. It was as
-if that brown-eyed, ardent gaze held her with the same absorbing
-quality of his arms when they danced. She began to look for
-it—jealously as if it might escape her.
-
-Meanwhile in a hotel room that was just four walls, another pair of
-gray eyes, not veiled, not mysterious, watched for him more and more
-anxiously, saw him less and less frequently. The girl from the West
-whose first visit to New York was to have opened up a fairyland of
-adventure for her and the boy she loved—the visit they had planned
-together—found its streets empty caverns at the foot of towering
-cliffs, saw in hotels and theaters and restaurants to which McConnell
-and his wife took her night after night in the hope of diverting her,
-only the possibility, eager yet dreaded, of singling from the crowd
-the faces of Bill Dixon and the woman who had taken him from her.
-
-She tried to hide her misery from the anxious eyes of her chaperones.
-But because she was young—a thousand years younger than Naomi—she
-could not hide it from the one she loved. And her quivering chin, her
-reproachful reminders of engagements he had overlooked, sent his mind
-and feet hurrying back to the woman whose red lips and drooping lids
-thrilled him like the dizzying lights of Broadway, like a draught of
-wine he had never before tasted.
-
-“Why does a girl think, because you’ve been together all your lives,”
-he blurted out one night as he and Naomi drove through the jerk and
-jam of traffic hold-up, “that she has a right to know your comings and
-goings as if you belonged to her? Good heavens, a fellow can change
-his mind, can’t he?”
-
-Naomi turned and smiled out of the window at the laughing sparkle of
-lights. The look, part sphinx, touched her mouth. In the dark he did
-not see its tinge of satire.
-
-He maintained for a second the silence that is usually accompanied by
-a bitten cigar or cigarette half-smoked, the silence of irritation.
-Then he swung about impatiently.
-
-“You’re not like that, Naomi! You’d never ask silly questions.”
-
-She leaned over, touched the hand that clenched and unclenched against
-his knee.
-
-“Don’t be angry, Billie-boy,” she whispered. “I like to hear you
-laugh.”
-
-His other hand closed quickly over the white fingers.
-
-“What is it you’ve done to me? I always thought caring about a woman
-meant wanting to be with her because she liked the things I do,
-because we understood each other. That’s the way I felt about—” he
-broke off. “But you—I want to be with you because you’re so
-different—because I don’t always understand you. I can’t get enough of
-it—of looking at you, of listening to you. Naomi, do you care—a little
-bit?”
-
-She lifted her eyes, lifted her lips, forgetting the game she was
-playing, forgetting the stakes. Then before he saw the move, she drew
-back. Not yet! She answered him instead with a shadowy smile and the
-long silent pressure of the hand held fast between his.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-It was an afternoon of late March, grim and forbidding, as if winter
-had thrown a last shadow across oncoming spring. The steam heat,
-turned off in the chorus dressing-rooms during a week of balmy
-weather, suddenly sputtered on and sang through the whole matinée
-performance.
-
-Naomi came out of the stage entrance, fur coat hugged about her, and
-shivering a bit, made for the curb to hail a taxi. As she glanced up
-and down the street at the ant-like army of cars, one of them slid
-toward her and a man stepped down.
-
-“Why, hello, Marshy,”—she reached out a hand—“haven’t seen you in
-weeks.”
-
-He took it.
-
-“Jump in.”
-
-“Good! Buy me some tea, won’t you? I’m frozen.”
-
-“We’ll have tea at your place. I want to talk to you.”
-
-She turned and stared at him as he slammed the door.
-
-His voice didn’t sound like Marshy Kent’s at all.
-
-“I’ve called on you half a dozen times,” he supplemented. “You’re
-never home.”
-
-“I’m busy.”
-
-“I know you are. That’s why I sidetracked you.”
-
-He did not speak again until they had mounted the flight of stairs to
-her apartment in a reconstructed house near the theater. But as she
-collected the seldom used tea things, he walked impatiently up and
-down the room.
-
-“Naomi, we’ve always been pretty good friends, haven’t we?” he began.
-
-“Friends?”
-
-“Pals then,” he corrected, not knowing why.
-
-“Well, yes, I suppose so.”
-
-“That’s why I’m going to put something up to you. I want you to listen
-quietly and then I want you to stand by me. Naomi—I’ve done a lot of
-things in my young life that I’m not exactly proud of. But the worst
-that could have been said of me was that I’ve been a waster. I’ve
-wasted one or two fortunes that the old Kents slaved to pile up—on
-cards—on the wheel—on the ponies—on women—I’ve never been anything but
-a waster. But that goes in more senses than one. I’ve never been a
-cad. Not until a month ago.”
-
-He waited for some response but Naomi merely struck a match and
-touched it to the wick of the samovar. If a quick question did flash
-to her lips, she held it back and kept her eyes lowered.
-
-“You know when that was. I was _non compos mentis_ and I egged you
-into making a bet—”
-
-“In other words, dear Marshy,” she filled in his pause, “you want me
-to let you off on the plea of—well, the undue influence of liquor. Of
-course I will.”
-
-He pushed aside her easy acquiescence with a sweep that almost knocked
-the cup from her hand. “But that’s not all. The bet’s not the thing
-that’s bothering me. It’s you. You and that boy, Dixon. Naomi, you’ve
-got to quit. You’ve got to, do you hear me?”
-
-“Quit—what?”
-
-“Don’t play the innocent! You know what I’m driving at. I’ve made
-myself your partner in the job of smashing that boy’s life. And I’m
-telling you—”
-
-“Wait a minute!”
-
-Very slowly she set down her cup. Very slowly she rose and went close
-to him. At the hard, driving note in his voice, at the sharp
-arraignment of his eyes, resentment brought her head up and her eyes
-defiant.
-
-“Marshy, men fall easily into the habit of talking to—to some women
-pretty much as they please. But in the years I’ve known you, you’ve
-never said a word to me that—that hurt. Don’t do it now—please.”
-
-“Then let him alone. I’ve been through hell this past week thinking of
-what I let those two young things in for. McConnell tells me the
-girl’s on the verge of collapse,—can’t eat, can’t sleep, just sits and
-waits for the boy to come and he stays away. Why, they grew up
-together, those kids. They were as good as engaged. And now he’s
-chucked her—for you.”
-
-He reached out, caught her by both shoulders with hands that shook.
-
-“I must have been crazy to take you up that night and promise not to
-interfere. If you don’t cry quits, here’s where I do! Young Dixon is a
-damn fine boy—McConnell says one of the finest—and I’m not going to
-stand to one side and see you smash his life and break that little
-girl’s heart. Understand?”
-
-The eyes that traveled up to his were more weary than he had ever seen
-them.
-
-“What about my life, Marshy? Doesn’t that count—at all? Doesn’t it
-matter that I’d like a chance? That perhaps if I marry Bill Dixon,
-he’ll never know—and I can forget? Doesn’t it matter that you’d be
-helping me away from being a has-been—and all that goes with it? Do
-you ever think of the hours I spend here in the dark—alone, trying not
-to see what’s going to happen to me when I count even less than I do
-now? But no, of course not! Only—if it were the other way round,
-Marshy, and I was a man and he a girl, you wouldn’t see any harm in
-it—would you? If it were you, Marshy, and a young girl—”
-
-“That’s different!”
-
-“Why is it different—why? It’s a man standing up for a man where he
-wouldn’t for a woman—that’s the only difference. It isn’t that you’re
-any better than I am. It’s only that you think all men are.”
-
-“Look here, Naomi, I know it’s hard on you, my putting it the way I
-have to. But conditions are conditions. We’ve both faced them too long
-to try and buck them. You keep away from that boy and you won’t regret
-it. I’ll guarantee that—any way you like. What’s it worth—?”
-
-“Marshy—you’re not trying to buy me off!”
-
-“Don’t put it so baldly—”
-
-He stopped. For her head had gone back and a laugh startlingly high
-and sharp cut the sudden stillness.
-
-“So you’re afraid of me, that’s it! It’s gone that far. He’s declared
-himself for me—and against her. It’s come to a crux, then—and
-McConnell’s asked you to help. Why, I didn’t dream it! I couldn’t have
-hoped for so much in such a short time. I wouldn’t have believed it.”
-
-Even with that high laugh of mockery, her shadowy eyes filled with the
-vision of the boy fighting—fighting them all doggedly, with hot,
-flaming defiance—for her—and it was sweeter than the thought of
-triumph.
-
-Kent’s voice broke in, uncompromising as judgment itself.
-
-“I know a way to stop it—without you. I hesitated to use it before. It
-didn’t seem cricket. But I’m going to him now with the plain,
-unvarnished truth—the story Broadway tells when it hears the name,
-Naomi Stokes,—the story I can add a few chapters to.”
-
-“Marshy!”
-
-“I’ll show him what a blithering fool he is. I’ll prove it the way I
-can. We’ll see then!”
-
-The vision vanished from Naomi’s eyes. She caught his arm, clutched it
-with the clinging fingers of a child who in sleep plunges from dreams
-into nightmare.
-
-“Marshy—you wouldn’t do that! You couldn’t! Why, you called yourself
-my pal. Could pals stab one another like that? Could I think of
-harming you that way? Not for anybody! And that boy’s nothing to you.
-Nothing! Won’t you give me this chance? Just this one. If you knew
-what it means to me! Marshy, don’t turn away. Listen—please—please!”
-
-But he kept his face turned determinedly from the pleading one
-streaked with tears, from the eyes he had so often smiled into when
-their mystery piqued and captivated him in idle moments. And in the
-rigid line of his jaw there was no yielding. He merely tried to tug
-away from her clinging fingers and a short phrase answered her.
-
-“Do you cry quits—or no?”
-
-She steadied her lips. Her arms fell listlessly. But even as she met
-the question, it came less in the form he put it than in the thought
-of what Bill Dixon had come to mean to her. Not ease for herself, not
-insurance against bleak years ahead, not the road that led away from
-terror; but a boy’s hearty laugh and ardent eyes, the warm clasp of
-his hand, the strength of his arms, what it would mean to lose them. A
-light that lifted the weight of centuries shone through her lashes. A
-smile that trembled caught her lips.
-
-“It isn’t quits, Marshy. No! Either way you win, so we might as well
-play to the finish.”
-
-When he had gone, she sank on the couch and tears unlike the bitter
-ones of early dawn and hard noon streamed silently down her cheeks.
-They were tears of wonder and passionate regret, of gratitude that
-she, Naomi Stokes, could know this engulfing tenderness. The thing she
-had never dreamed might come was hers. She loved him. Nothing could
-take that away. After stumbling through the years, she had found in
-one brief month the dearest thing in the world. And now Marshy was
-going to snatch it from her. Was that his man’s right? No! She would
-fight him—the whole world—to keep that which had suddenly become her
-reason for being.
-
-Yet she realized that she was not armed to fight, not Marshy, nor the
-world, nor truth. She, who had never lacked resources, to whom the
-game of life had been a game of wits, stood helpless now.
-
-She could only wait.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-Naomi made no pretense of trying to sleep. She did not even resort to
-the bromide she was in the habit of taking when rest refused to come.
-She merely lay, with blinds drawn to shut out the early morning,
-trying to see light where she knew there was none. At ten she sprang
-up, hand to the throat that was full, lids covering the eyes that
-pained. Ever since Marshy Kent’s visit, those eyes had been straining
-toward the future, the result, inevitable almost, of his revelation to
-Bill Dixon. In the endless, wakeful hours of the night she had
-rehearsed, as women do, everything that had probably transpired.
-
-Yet even in her misery she did not overlook the careful mask of
-make-up, as mechanical a part of her daily toilet as the brushing of
-her hair, or polishing of her glistening nails. She had grown to avoid
-facing her mirror without it.
-
-She flung on a negligée of orchid chiffon that clung round her with
-the afterglow of sunset. But like the orchid, she sought the damp
-darkness of her living-room and sat with head resting against her
-locked hands for a long time before she made a move to raise the
-blinds and let in a shaft of sunlight.
-
-She had just lifted one of them when the sharp summons of the bell
-came from downstairs. She pushed the electric button and waited
-without curiosity for the apartment bell to ring. Then she opened the
-door and peered into the shadowy hall.
-
-A girl stood there. The girl with her hair like a black cloud and eyes
-young and gray and tense.
-
-They traveled hungrily over the other woman as if to get in that
-moment the viewpoint of another pair of eyes that no longer sought
-hers.
-
-“May I come in, Miss Stokes? You don’t know me but my name is Nan
-Crawford,” she explained as Naomi said nothing.
-
-Naomi nodded. “I know.”
-
-The girl looked up quickly.
-
-“Has he—has he talked to you—about me?”
-
-“I’ve seen you with him,” was the non-committal answer.
-
-“It—it’s about Bill I want to see you,” she brought out the words with
-the same halting pause which had marked her hesitation in the doorway.
-
-Naomi motioned her to a chair. The girl’s pale face went a tinge
-whiter. Her lips quivered. She looked down.
-
-“I’ve been wanting to come to see you and hadn’t the courage.
-Yesterday I followed you here in a cab from the theater. But you were
-with Mr. Kent. I didn’t come up.” She fidgeted with the slightly
-frayed silk of her chair.
-
-“Miss Stokes, I—I’ve known Bill Dixon all my life. I’ve loved him all
-my life—and I thought he loved me. He used to tell me so. We—we’ve
-always loved the same things and done the same things—together—in the
-same way. We’ve ridden hours on horseback up into the mountains and
-gone shooting in the woods—and tramped to places other people didn’t
-know about. When I went away to school and he to college, we used to
-write each other about our woods and the longing to get back to
-them—together. We never planned anything—separately. We sort of
-always—belonged to each other.”
-
-She halted once more. It was because she couldn’t go on. The eyes
-lifted to meet Naomi’s were filmed. It was only too clear that she was
-putting herself through the ordeal of tearing open new wounds for some
-purpose. Naomi looked away. To play on her own sympathy, of course!
-She wouldn’t listen. It would do no good anyway.
-
-“I’m trying to tell you, Miss Stokes, how I love Bill Dixon—how much I
-want his happiness. And now he loves you. Oh, I don’t blame him!
-You’re very beautiful—more beautiful than I could ever dream of being.
-You’re like some gorgeous flower in a conservatory. I’ve never seen
-any one like you. At first I thought I could—perhaps—win him back—but
-I couldn’t. Not from you. I—I wouldn’t know how. I’ve thought about it
-a lot. And I—at first I thought I couldn’t live through it. But I’ve
-got to now. Bill can’t help loving you. I don’t blame him for that.”
-She got up suddenly and brushed a hand across her eyes. In the poise
-of her body, head thrown back, lip caught between her teeth, was
-life’s first big endurance test and her brave attempt to meet it.
-
-“But you’ve got to love him, Miss Stokes! You’ve got to make him
-happy. I’d give my life for him. That’s the way you’ve got to love
-him, too. If you don’t—if you fail him—ever—I’ll kill you!”
-
-Waves of astonishment swept over Naomi. Those eyes that burned behind
-the film of tears! Surely this was not their message! To demand
-happiness for the man of whom she was being robbed—surely that was not
-what the girl had come for.
-
-“My dear child—” Naomi began, instinctively speaking as if to one
-years younger.
-
-“I mean it! You think I wouldn’t but I’m not afraid. I have nothing to
-lose any more.”
-
-She stumbled toward the door, one hand reached out gropingly. There
-she turned and once more her eyes traveled over the other woman. Naomi
-felt that from their clear gray gaze she could not shield herself. A
-girl so near her own age—the girl she might have been! And in that
-moment she knew that Nan Crawford’s words had not been bravado, not
-foolish threat. She was battling in her own way for the thing she
-loved.
-
-She opened the door as if, now that her message was given, she could
-not make her escape quickly enough.
-
-“Make him happy,” came strangled. “You must! That’s what I came to
-tell you.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Through the window Naomi had lifted that morning, the shaft of
-sunlight receded slowly until it slipped away. Naomi had been sitting
-in the same position ever since her door had shut on a girl stumbling
-into the dark hallway. She sat there without moving and with a queer
-little twist of wonder at the problems we bring upon ourselves. All
-her life she had drifted with the least resistant current and without
-thinking much. Now, of a sudden, thought had come smashing upon her
-with the devastating violence of a hurricane.
-
-As daylight grayed she rose a bit stiffly and lighted the few lamps
-that sent a glow through the room.
-
-She went into her bedroom and started to dress. Bill was coming at
-five to take her to dinner. All afternoon she had waited for his usual
-phone call, for the big box of variegated flowers so different from
-those other men sent her. Neither came. But a peculiar lethargy held
-her, made her conscious only of the numbness of futility.
-
-She dressed without haste in a plain dark cloth suit, feeling with a
-curious finality that Bill was not coming. He had never kept her
-waiting like this. Yet as the thought swept over her, a loud, long
-ring came from downstairs. She went to the door, stood with eyes
-fastened on the dusk. A figure loomed out of it, head bent, feet
-taking the steps two at a time.
-
-He did not look up until they were in the room. Then his head went
-back and the look of desperation he wore made her go to him swiftly
-and push him into a chair. He sank down without resistance and covered
-his face with hands he made no attempt to steady. She lifted hers from
-his shoulders.
-
-“What is it, Bill? What’s happened?”
-
-“I—I’m late,” were his first shaky words. “Sorry.”
-
-“But what’s happened? Tell me!”
-
-“Naomi—I—” he broke off. “I don’t know how to put it. I feel that just
-telling you is an insult—”
-
-Ah, she knew now! She knew what was coming.
-
-“That man, Kent!” he stumbled on. “They had me all afternoon, he and
-Alec McConnell. I had to listen to things he said about you. If I’d
-been a _man_, I wouldn’t have given him the chance to say them.”
-
-Eyes clinging to hers, he waited for some question, some denial. He
-was giving her the chance to strike Marshy’s prosecution off the
-record without one word of cross-examination. He was urging her with
-his eyes to give Marshy the lie without even hearing what the man had
-told him.
-
-All her anguish of the night before had been, like so much feminine
-anguish, unnecessary. It was in her hands now. She had only to concoct
-a story of jealousy or an ancient grudge of Kent’s and this boy who
-had come to mean everything to her would accept it with the gladness
-of one who doesn’t want to question. Yet she turned her face from him
-and said nothing.
-
-“I listened until I couldn’t stand it. They made me! Then I knocked
-him down. Swine like that ought to be killed!”
-
-“He’s not swine,” she found herself saying in a voice that didn’t
-sound like her own. “He was probably telling you the truth for what he
-thought was your own good.”
-
-“Naomi!”
-
-“Oh yes, it was probably all true. You don’t know what I am, boy. You
-don’t know what I’ve been.”
-
-He was on his feet, grasping her arm, straining down to read her
-veiled eyes.
-
-“Naomi, do you know what you’re saying? He accused you of—” he halted.
-
-She took him up without waiting.
-
-“Of things he can prove to you, boy dear. I’ve known Marshy Kent years
-and years and he wouldn’t tell you anything about me he didn’t know he
-could back up.”
-
-In her submission to the inevitable, in her complete lack of defense,
-she was so helpless, so almost child-like that the boy’s fury against
-Kent flamed back to his eyes, burning out the horror of her dumb
-confession. His hands were knotted into the hard fists that had sent
-his informer spinning to the floor. His chin was fighting forward. His
-eyes fastened on the exotic beauty that was Naomi’s intensified by the
-fact that she was woman, helpless under the lash of another man. That
-was all he saw—a beautiful woman who needed his protection! And to
-every other vision his youth determined to blind itself.
-
-“I don’t care what he’s told me! I don’t care what you’ve been. I only
-know I love you. You’re the most glorious, fascinating woman in the
-world—and I want you, do you hear! I want you more than anything—more
-than anyone! I love you! Naomi—will you marry me—now—to-night?”
-
-Her eyes closed. All she had planned—all she had longed for! Marshy’s
-move had only succeeded in thrusting it more swiftly into her grasp.
-And yet she did not stop to think of that. All that registered were
-those three words: “I love you.” Their sweetness ran like some warm
-fluid through her veins.
-
-“We’ll get away from here!” he plunged on. “I’ll take you west—home.
-No Kents there to tell ugly stories. We’ll forget them ourselves.
-Nobody need ever know. We’ll be happy—and I’ll have you all to myself.
-Those lips and eyes—they’ll be all mine. Naomi—dearest—let me kiss
-them now!”
-
-Her arms had gone up instinctively but they dropped again without
-touching him. She held away, not looking at him.
-
-“No, Bill,—it can’t be.”
-
-“Naomi!”
-
-“No.”
-
-“You think that what he said makes any difference? I tell you, it
-doesn’t. I don’t care! I’d marry you—”
-
-“It’s not that. It’s just—I couldn’t make you happy, boy.”
-
-“Yes, you could. You’re the only woman—”
-
-“No—I couldn’t. Why, you don’t love me. You love the thing I
-represent—the thing that represents me—Broadway. Take me away from it
-and what would I be? A faded woman, Bill, a woman who would only make
-you hate her because she’s so different from what you thought. And I’d
-rather never have you than to see you in a short time—oh, it wouldn’t
-take long!—disgusted with me.”
-
-“You don’t love me—that’s it!” he flamed.
-
-“If I didn’t love you I’d marry you. Sounds queer, that, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Then we both care! What else matters?”
-
-“Only that I want to give you happiness—and I can’t.”
-
-“You’re the only woman who can.”
-
-“No I’m not, dear. You think so now. But it’s the grease-paint stuff
-you love! Out on the ranch—with my hair its own color you’d wonder why
-you did it.”
-
-He paid no attention to her last whispered words.
-
-“I’m willing to risk it! I’ll risk anything for you.”
-
-“You’d find me out, Bill—you’d be bound to. Why, I never go out in the
-sun without wearing a veil to keep the secret of my complexion to
-myself. And there, where you belong, I’d be in the sun all day.” She
-tried to smile. “How would I look going round a ranch like the queen
-of a harem? No, you’d have to see me as I am. And in a week you’d hate
-me.”
-
-He went close, hearing only the sob in her voice.
-
-“Dearest—you think I’m young—that I don’t know my own mind. You think
-I don’t know my woman when I meet her!”
-
-She smiled now, with a little shake of the head.
-
-“You don’t. You only think you do. You love the way people look at me
-in a restaurant. You love the way I wear my clothes. You love my
-coloring. It’s put on, boy. And so is the sheen of my hair you rave
-about and the blackness of my lashes. It’s all fake—like me.”
-
-“Why are you telling me all this?”
-
-“Because—because you mean more to me than anything in the world.
-Because I’d rather have your happiness than my own.”
-
-Even as the words came, they amazed her. All afternoon they had been
-struggling deep down in her consciousness. A girl with stark young
-eyes had opened wide those veiled ones.
-
-“Then that’s the only thing that counts,” he retaliated, eyes alight,
-and his arms went out. “If you love me, I don’t care about anything
-else.”
-
-She pulled back. Once his lips touched hers, she knew she could not go
-through with what she had to do. Recklessly—while the mood held her—as
-if she were another person playing a trick on Naomi Stokes, she moved
-round the room, turning off the soft lamplight. A second later the
-central chandelier flashed its glare and Naomi was at his side again.
-
-“Wait, Bill—I want to show you something.”
-
-She disappeared into the bedroom. When she came back, there was a
-white rag clenched in her hand.
-
-“I’m not really beautiful the way you see me.” And even as she spoke
-the words her eyes were frightened. “I’m a faker—but for once I’m
-going to be honest with you—with myself. I’m going to let you see the
-woman you don’t know, the woman you’d see—out there.”
-
-Without pausing to give herself breath she dragged the cloth, weighted
-with some thick lotion, across her face. It came away covered with
-color. She threw it aside. The face it left lifted to his was like
-tragedy, unmasked.
-
-“Look—I can scrape it off—the beauty you love so! This is the way I’ll
-be in broad daylight, Bill. These lines—they’re the years I’ve stolen
-from you. They’re the real me—the me you don’t know. Do you want me
-now?”
-
-He looked down on the face that in ten seconds had aged ten years.
-Dazedly he took in the circles under the eyes, the pinched lines from
-nostrils to mouth, the pallor of the lips. The luminous cream of her
-skin had given way to a whiteness that looked dead. All the exotic
-color of her—the color that fascinated him—was gone. It was almost as
-if some magic had wafted away the Naomi he knew, as if this were
-another woman.
-
-He stood there gazing down on her, confused, silent before the
-revelation he could not quite compass. Only the eyes of his Naomi
-remained, infinitely sad, infinitely lovely, even with the heavy black
-gone from their straight lashes.
-
-“You don’t want me now. You don’t want the woman I really am. Don’t
-stop to think! Don’t hesitate! Just answer me,” she whispered.
-
-But he did stop to think. Without quite meeting the eyes raised to
-his, holding his own away from the face that seemed suddenly a strange
-one, he lifted her two trembling hands, put them against his lips.
-
-“I’ve asked you to marry me, Naomi,” he said huskily. “I’m asking you
-again.”
-
-“Thank you for that, boy dear. You—you’re just everything I thought
-you were. But I’m not going to take you up. Not now! If you want me
-six months from now, come back for me. I’ll know then—that you need
-me. Only, dear—you won’t come.”
-
-He looked straight at her then, letting himself see only the eyes
-which had not changed. And she knew before he spoke that he was
-bowing, without argument, to her verdict.
-
-“I’ll come back for you,” he told her. “I won’t wait six months.
-You’ll see!”
-
-She simply shook her head and no smile of hope touched her pale lips.
-
-A few minutes later she stood looking for a long time at the door that
-had closed after him. Then she put on hat and coat and went down the
-steps and over to the theater.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
- Harvard Club,
- New York, July 30th.
-
- Dear Naomi,—
-
- This letter is going to be harder to write than an income tax
- report. When a man has never before been on his knees to a woman,
- they’re apt to be creaky and resist bending. But I’m on my knees
- to you, my dear,—in tribute, in abject apology, in the tenderest
- feeling I’ve ever known in my life.
-
- Last March Bill Dixon went home and I sat back with the sensation
- of a good Samaritan. I was blithering ass enough to think I was
- the one who had sent him away. To-day, four months later, I’ve
- learned the truth. It came with the announcement of his marriage
- to Nan Crawford. He told me what happened. He told me what you
- had done, Naomi.
-
- I’ve never had much belief in women. I’ve always thought them
- rather a poor lot. That’s the penalty of having begun early to
- know the wrong side of them—assuming there was no other. But
- you’ve given an old stager a faith he’s never known. For that I
- can’t repay you. But whatever I have, whatever I can give you of
- devotion and friendship is yours, dear girl. Knowing what you
- were equal to doing for that boy has suddenly made life worth
- living for me.
-
- I haven’t seen you in months. Will you make up for lost time?
- Shall we go to supper to-morrow night?
-
- Yours—I mean it—
- Marshy.
-
-Naomi’s eyes wandered from the letter to another that lay open on the
-desk beside it. It was in a boy’s rugged hand, incoherent,
-embarrassed. It told of his approaching marriage and tried to thank
-her for making him see that the old love was the true one. She had
-read it so many times that she could have told what it told her—with
-eyes shut.
-
-She reread Kent’s letter then. After a moment she picked up her pen
-and wrote:
-
- Thank you, dear Marshy. I can use your friendship. I need it. But
- I’ve quit going out to suppers—for good.
-
- Naomi.
-
-
-
-
-THE BACK DROP
-
-_DRAMA_
-
-
-Comedy met Tragedy at the crossroads of Life.
-
-“Know,” spake Tragedy, “from Wisdom have I learned that thou and I
-emanate from the same source—born of the folly of man and nourished by
-his deeds. The tie between us is so strong that we must follow, each
-upon the other’s heels, as long as the road of life has its turnings.”
-
-“Then come,” laughed Comedy, “a bargain let us conclude. Let each
-forever carry some suggestion of the other!”
-
-So, with a tear in the eye of Comedy and a smile under Tragedy’s
-frown, they linked arms and proceeded down the road together.
-
-
-
-
-THE BACK DROP
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
- RUDOLPH CLEEBURG
- Presents
- GLORIA CROMWELL
- in
- “LADY FAIR”
- A Comedy-Drama
- by
- _Bronson Reed_
-
-A car pulled up sharp at the curb and a woman leaned out to read the
-tall lettering. It loomed startling and white against a black ground.
-Along a street where theaters crowded each other like chorus girls in
-a manager’s office, that inky splash with its tracing of white paled
-to oblivion all the others.
-
-The man beside her watched her eagerly, studied the delicate profile
-with a kind of hunger. When she turned, his eyes went alight at the
-smile in hers.
-
-“It’s stunning, ’Dolph. But then you always do things right.”
-
-“Y’mean that? Do I always manage to suit you, kiddo?”
-
-“You know you do.” There was a low, tender note in the voice that
-would always be wistful. It was an odd voice—one that, breaking with
-the swift snap of a violin string, brought tears from its audience as
-one chokes at a broken chord.
-
-“H’m, that’s all I want.” He grinned sheepishly. “No fool like an old
-fool, eh?”
-
-He stepped out as the chauffeur swung open the door, and reached up to
-help her. Gloria Cromwell—in private life Mrs. Rudolph Cleeburg—was
-not tall and her intense slenderness made her look frail, yet standing
-next to her husband she measured a full inch above him. Any passerby
-taking in the round face, eyes and figure of the well-known manager,
-his bald pate and prominent features, would have smiled at the
-information that he was the most artistic producer in America. But
-then, no passerby would have noticed the hands, key to character, that
-tapered so incongruously. Even the man himself failed to take count of
-them. He knew only that he felt beauty like a tangible thing, that he
-expressed it through the two mediums he loved—the stage and his wife.
-
-He took her arm and they went down the cool dark alley to the stage
-door. It was a Sunday in September, hazy and languid, the first
-shadows of twilight creeping into the arms of night.
-
-In almost every building on the block rehearsals were under way.
-Behind blank front entrances with high iron gates locked fast,
-throbbed the pulsing life of the theater. No effort too great, no work
-too intense, to give to the world its most human tonic, amusement.
-
-The dress rehearsal of “Lady Fair” had been called for 8:00 p. m. They
-were early, having made good time from their place at Great Neck.
-Gloria crossed the stage set for Act I while Cleeburg paused to
-suggest to the electrician some experiments with the lights.
-
-“Try a couple of reds, Bill, in the foots for Act II. And cut out
-four or five of the ambers on top. They make her look too yellow, sick
-around the eyes. Get me? Too much shadow. We want to bring out all the
-flash in her hair. Light her up. It’s her big scene. And here—have a
-smoke!”
-
-He followed Gloria. She had tossed her hat on a table and stood taking
-in the new props he had provided while the company made the customary
-short tour that precedes a New York première.
-
-With the shadows of the unlighted stage about her and the dusky quiet
-of the empty house stretching at her feet, she seemed to the man who
-went toward her deplorably young and tender, with a something yearning
-from her that he had tried to reach and never even been able to
-define. Not for the first time he asked himself: Was it the almost
-childish form under the soft summer dress—or the delicate line of her
-long throat—or the intense red curve of lip—or her pallor topped by
-the tawny hair whose lights and shades he was so intent on featuring?
-No, none of these! It was the look of her eyes. Wide and hungry, with
-fright in their depths, they had arrested him six years before as he
-hurried through his outer office; arrested him and found her a job.
-The fright had gone long since. And the hunger which had been nothing
-more than actual physical hunger. But the look that was so much like
-the quality of her voice still lurked there, eluding him.
-
-He came up behind her as she stood examining the heavy black velvet
-drapes with crests of blue, purple and gold embroidered in the
-corners.
-
-“Like ’em?” he asked once more anxiously.
-
-She veered about. “They must have cost a fortune, ’Dolph. Wouldn’t
-those blue ones we had on the road have been good enough?”
-
-“Not for you. Only the best for my girl! And look at you against ’em.
-Those newspaper guys are right—there sure is something about you
-that’s got the rest of the bunch lashed to the mast!”
-
-“It’s what you’ve made me, ’Dolph.” The words came breathless, with
-that strange fascinating catch. “You’ve put me over just the way you
-did the rest. Goring and Wilbur and Chesterton. Without you I’d have
-been just an actress. Now they call me an artist. And you’ve done
-that—you’ve done every bit of it.”
-
-With a furtive glance to make sure the electrician was still occupied
-he went closer, laid an arm across her slim shoulders and gazed
-eagerly through the shadows into her face.
-
-“Say that again. Of course it ain’t true. They were all piking
-compared to you. But say it anyhow. It’s music to me—the greatest
-symphony and greatest opera rolled into one.”
-
-“It is true.”
-
-“Then if I never do anything else for you, that goes on the right side
-of the ledger—what? Sometimes, little girl, I feel like I was a dog,
-grabbing you the way I did right after I featured you and you thought
-you couldn’t turn me down.”
-
-“Nonsense!” She caught his hand and her clasp was so tight it seemed
-to grip.
-
-“I’m a pretty old piece of scenery and not easy to look at, at that.”
-He glanced through the drapes at the back drop. It represented a
-stretch of blue sky pierced with holes through which presently stars
-would glimmer. “Like that old thing,” he added. “Just a piece of
-shabby canvas, good enough for background.” And as she started to
-protest he laughed, a laugh that wasn’t much more than a sound. “Why,
-even Doug Fairbanks won’t be able to kid himself he’s young when he’s
-past half a century.”
-
-He turned as several members of the company strolled in and greeted
-each with a hearty handshake. With a smile for every one and an ear
-ready to listen, the Cleeburg of to-day had the same enthusiasm as the
-pudgy newsboy who years before had run fat little legs off to procure
-for a patron his favorite daily.
-
-“Hello there, glad to see you! Well, they tell me we’ve got a
-knock-out. Let’s have a look.”
-
-He made for the rear of the house with his stage director who had
-accompanied the play on tour.
-
-The curtain up, he leaned against the seat in front, a long black
-cigar jerking from corner to corner of his mouth like a propeller. Not
-a gesture, not an intonation escaped him. His concentration ignored
-any world but this. Had the building burned down, that stage before
-him would still have been the pivotal point of interest.
-
-When Gloria appeared between the black drapes, eyes luminous under the
-untamed hair, and the thrill of her voice came over the footlights, he
-sighed and a smile of anticipation spread across his face. It was the
-look of one whose senses are about to be lulled by rare music.
-
-The play had all the quality of delicately written French drama, its
-big scene at the end of the second act being calculated to bring even
-a New York audience straight out of its seat. Gloria and John Brooks
-were as finely teamed as a pair of high-stepping thoroughbreds. He had
-been her leading man two seasons. Little ’Dolph, with an eye to the
-future, had him tied up on a five-year contract.
-
-You would never have taken John Brooks for an actor. There was about
-his clothes no suggestion of the extreme that Broadway is tempted to
-affect. They were cut by a conservative tailor and he wore them with
-the ease of not caring particularly what he had on. Critics called him
-distinguished. When he walked into a stage drawing-room one knew
-instinctively that more exclusive drawing-rooms had opened to him. He
-never talked shop outside and never brought his social activities into
-the theater. But it was generally known that his friends numbered
-scientists and men of big business.
-
-On the stage he suggested a clean-cut Britisher, tall and well
-groomed, easy of manner, clipped of speech, yet with a more intense
-vitality and that gleam of humor under the straight black brows that
-is peculiarly, blessedly, of, by, and for America.
-
-The manager sat back, eyes half closed, lapping up the charm of it as
-a kitten laps cream. When the curtain fell he licked his lips and
-purred as he turned to the director, Lewis.
-
-“You’re right, Lewy! Never saw a pair to touch ’em. Gad, that give and
-take, that playing into each other’s hands—nothing like it in this old
-berg, I tell you!” He sprang up, bounded down the aisle like a rubber
-ball. “Immense!” he shouted. “That act runs on greased wheels. It’s
-sure fire! They’ll eat it alive.”
-
-He climbed into a box; with amazing ease jumped on to the stage. Bulky
-as was his figure, almost pouter pigeon in certain postures, there was
-nothing funny about Cleeburg in action. It was the fire of his genius,
-the spark that lighted his homely face with inspiration, that
-commanded respect. Even with a handkerchief tied round his neck as it
-always was in hot weather and the open sleeves of his silk shirt
-flopping like awkward wings, no one thought of smiling. One merely
-listened.
-
-He gave a few instructions to the property men and slipped back to his
-wife’s dressing-room, poking his head in at the door.
-
-She was changing to a tea-gown, a lovely shimmery gold thing that
-brought out the reds in her hair like touches of flame.
-
-“Well, how does it go?” she asked. “Any suggestions?”
-
-“Not half a one. Couldn’t be improved. And John—he was made for you!”
-
-She dropped her eyes to examine a tiny rip in the train.
-
-“Better mend this, Suzanne, before I go on. It might catch on
-something.”
-
-“Glad we’ve got him sewed up tight. First thing you know, one of the
-boys’d be offering to star him and then biffo, we’d lose him!”
-
-“He is—wonderful.” She did not raise her eyes as the maid’s needle
-flashed in and out of the soft fabric, then looked up suddenly. “Lewis
-thinks we have a big hit.”
-
-“Lewis knows his business. You never had a chance that touched
-it—comedy and the big heart stuff combined. Try a little more red,
-honey. You look pale. Tired out, eh?”
-
-“No—just a bit nervous, that’s all.” She turned hastily to the mirror,
-picked up a rabbit’s foot and dabbed some color across her cheek
-bones. As she bent forward, her teeth caught her lower lip and held
-it. And Cleeburg, noting the reflection of her eyes, fancied fright in
-them. Nerves, of course! Emotional tuning up of the vibrant artist!
-
-He went out front as the curtain rose on the second act. It revealed a
-boudoir. Not the sort bestowed upon woman by the average scenic
-decorator with its brilliant splashes of color and general air of a
-department store exhibit, but a room that suggested four walls
-enclosing feminine taste.
-
-Steadily Gloria and Brooks mounted to the big moment when the man’s
-passion, like a torrent crashing through ice, carried the woman with
-it. They stood facing each other and the voice of John Brooks came
-quiet, yet with the threat of doom.
-
-“We’ve played the game, you and I,—to the finish. And we’ve lost. No,
-not lost, because this is the end we wanted. We’ve been a pair of
-gamblers, banking on defeat, waiting to have the game get us. Now
-we’re going to lay down our cards, admit we’re beaten, and take what
-is greater than victory. You know what that is. I don’t have to tell
-you I love you—”
-
-The woman gave a terrified “No—no!” with arms thrust out to ward off
-the thing she had desired. The man followed with a quick laugh as he
-caught them and her to him.
-
-Cleeburg jumped up and speeding down the aisle made a trumpet of his
-hands.
-
-“Hey, John—play that for all it’s worth. Give it to ’em strong. You
-fall down a peg or two at the end. Got to keep up the tension. Get me?
-Don’t be afraid of too much pep. Can’t be done in this town. Let go!
-Give ’em the love stuff till they faint.”
-
-Again and again he put them through it. Up to the crucial point it
-went superbly. Then something seemed to snap. It was less in Brooks’
-rendering of the speech than the way he caught up Gloria and swept her
-to him. Instead of an onrush like a force irresistible, his embrace
-was almost measured. One felt that with very little effort she could
-have escaped.
-
-Sitting in the front row now, a puzzled seam between his eyes,
-Cleeburg noted that Gloria, too, appeared to hold off. Gloria, who
-flung herself into a part as if it were life! What had happened? He
-shook his head, began to pace the length of the seats.
-
-“You’ll let down the whole act, children. You’ll lose your curtain.
-Why, they’ve been wanting this to happen from the beginning. If you
-don’t give it to ’em and give it to ’em big, they’ll can you. Sure
-thing! Let’s have another go.”
-
-John Brooks’ thin lips came together. There was something tense about
-the way he went into the scene this time—muscles tight, hands
-clenched, voice husky. And when finally he swept her into his arms it
-was as if he would never let her go. Their lips met as the curtain
-fell. Even in the empty house one could feel the thrill of it.
-
-Cleeburg gave a chortle of relief. Just for a moment he had been
-afraid they were going to muff it.
-
-But he apologized for his persistence later over a bite of supper.
-
-“It’s the crux, old man. That’s why I kept you at it. You see, the
-woman is yours by every law of God. Once you know it, you don’t give a
-damn for the laws of man.”
-
-“I get you.”
-
-“Put over the feeling that it had to be. If you don’t the whole show
-goes fluey. You and the little girl do such bully team work, we don’t
-want one hitch to spoil it. Hope I haven’t played you out.”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right.” The other man smoothed his hair with a gesture
-of both long hands and looked across the table. “Afraid my thick head
-has tired Gloria, though.”
-
-She was leaning back, limp, face white as the moon that looked in
-between the pillars of the roof garden.
-
-“Not a bit.” Her lids lifted quickly and Cleeburg was startled at the
-fever under them. She leaned elbows on the table. “I was as stupid as
-John. We just couldn’t seem to get it.”
-
-“Well, don’t worry. It’ll go like hot cakes to-morrow night. You won’t
-worry, kiddo, will you?” He patted her arm anxiously. “I don’t like to
-see you look like this.”
-
-“Why, there isn’t a thing wrong with me—truly.” She turned to watch
-the dancers as they swayed past, two moving as one to the lure of
-darky music. In the center of the flagged floor a fountain sent up
-showering spray colored emerald, ruby and gold by lights from within.
-The place was filled with a soft languor. It seemed set very close
-beneath the Indian Summer sky.
-
-When she turned back she found Brooks gazing at her.
-
-“Come to think of it,” observed Cleeburg, glance traveling from one to
-the other, “you don’t look any too chipper yourself, old man. Didn’t
-notice it when you got in this morning but you’re both played out.”
-
-“Gloria had a little smash-up after the performance last night. Been
-working at top speed. Nothing wrong with me. We’re both tired, that’s
-all. There wasn’t a breath of air in the train, either.” Brooks lifted
-his glass of cider and a dry smile played round his lips. “I drink to
-thee only with mine eyes,” he said to Gloria.
-
-Cleeburg grinned. “Say, why not come out to the house with us now?
-Give you something stronger. Stop off, shoot a few things into a bag
-and a night in the country’ll do you good.”
-
-Brooks put down his glass. “Thanks, no. Think I’d better stick to my
-own bunk.”
-
-“How about next week then? Run you out after the show Saturday night.
-You can try a couple of holes of golf with Gloria Sunday.”
-
-“Sorry, old man, I’m booked.”
-
-“Well, any time you like. Ain’t a place, ours, where you have to wait
-for a bid.”
-
-“I know that.”
-
-“What’s the matter with you anyhow? Last summer, you used to run out
-every few weeks. This year, have to beg you to come!”
-
-“Not a bit of it,” laughed Brooks. “Wait till we get this opening off
-our chests and you won’t be able to get rid of me.”
-
-“Can’t come it too strong to suit us, eh kiddo?”
-
-Gloria’s eyes had drifted out to the swaying throng once more. “Of
-course not,” she said quickly, and pushed back her chair. “If you
-don’t mind, ’Dolph, I believe I am tired.”
-
-Cleeburg noticed as they went down to the car that her step lagged.
-When they had dropped Brooks at his flat and were speeding up Fifth
-Avenue, sleepy under the quiet hour when life in New York closes one
-eye, she turned swiftly. “’Dolph—you remember what you called yourself
-in the theater to-night—before the others came?”
-
-He thought a moment. Then his face went alight, all but the eyes.
-“Your old back drop, y’mean?”
-
-She nodded. “Don’t ever do that again—don’t!”
-
-Her vehemence made him shift his position so that he faced her.
-
-“Why, honey—”
-
-The break in her voice had been poignant. Her hand clasping his arm
-was feverish. He felt the heat of it through his thin coat. Even in
-the dark he could see her eyes, brilliant, with something of the
-fright he had read in them earlier in the evening. Only it was
-intensified.
-
-“Honey, what is it?”
-
-“I want you to know I love you,” she rushed on breathlessly. “It
-wasn’t just gratitude that made me marry you. I’ll always love you.
-You’re splendid and fine and generous. They don’t come any better.
-Never doubt it, ’Dolph! Never—will you?” She shook his arm, repeating
-the question over and over.
-
-“Why—kiddo—”
-
-“And I have made you happy?” she broke in on his amazement. “I have
-given you something for all you’ve given me?”
-
-He answered quickly enough then.
-
-“Everything, honey. Why, these past five years’ve been more than most
-fellows get in a lifetime. I ask myself often what an old tout like me
-ever did to deserve ’em. In the theater and out—hasn’t been a day that
-wasn’t heaven. That’s what you’ve given me.”
-
-She sat an instant silent. Then before he could divine her intention
-she had carried his hand to her lips. But it was not their moisture he
-noticed as he drew it hastily away and slipped an arm round her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Over Long Island, as Cleeburg drove in the following day, hung a mist
-that made the low hills look like a mirage melting into the sky. It
-was as if the smoke of the city reached its long arm far over green
-stretches and cool woodland, cloaking Nature with the garment of
-industry.
-
-Little ’Dolph sat forward, hat tossed to the floor, cigar ashes strewn
-over it like snow. He had smoked incessantly from the moment the car
-shot past the hedge surrounding the Cleeburg place. He had smoked with
-brow furrowed and teeth chewing on the butt of his weed, concentrating
-so intensely that for the first time in years it failed to circle from
-corner to corner of the friendly mouth. He was worried—and about
-Gloria. What had got her last night? What had brought the fever to her
-eyes and that desperate grip to her fingers? What had made her cry,
-with long sobs like a child’s when his arm went round her? Wasn’t like
-her. Not a bit. He’d never seen her like that, didn’t know how to
-handle it.
-
-Overwork must be the answer. She’d been at it for six years seeing
-results. And before that God knew how many without seeing them! He
-recalled the poor little starved thing she was when first those eyes
-with the strange glow back of them had begged for a chance. Since that
-chance had been hers she hadn’t stopped, not for a minute. And how she
-had mounted! For a second his look of distress vanished in a broad
-grin of pride. Gloria had the divine fire, whatever that might be.
-The light of it had always been in her soul but his was the
-satisfaction of having kindled it to flame. He had found in her the
-instrument to express all the seething love of beauty his unbeautiful
-body harbored. He could not have put it into words but the
-consciousness was there, a vital thing.
-
-He looked out anxiously at the hazy September landscape. Yes, must be
-overwork! If it had been anything else, she’d have told him. Dashed
-like hysteria, that breakdown last night! Give her a long vacation
-next summer, that’s what he’d do. He’d close her in the spring and
-take her abroad when he went to clinch those English contracts.
-
-Having reached the only decision possible in view of present demands
-on her, he settled back, applied a light to a final cigar and puffed
-peacefully until they pulled up at his office in the same building as
-the theater.
-
-Toward four-thirty she telephoned that she was feeling much better and
-laughed at the relief in his voice. If he worried about her that way,
-she’d give a perfectly rotten performance to-night!
-
-But in spite of her chaffing, Cleeburg, going to her dressing-room at
-seven, caught her unawares with head drooping into her hands and a
-look of utter dejection about the slim shoulders. She lifted both
-quickly as he entered and smiled up at him. He peered at the heavy
-blue smudges under her eyes.
-
-“Won’t need much make-up, will I?” she laughed, in quick response to
-the look. “You see, I’m trying to put the grease-paint men out of
-business.”
-
-“What is it?” He pulled a chair close to the dressing-table. It was
-higher than hers and so brought their faces on a level. “Something’s
-eating you. What? Tell me—tell your old ’Dolph.”
-
-She leaned over, brushed his cheek with her lips, then turned quickly
-to the mirror and dabbed the color on her face with the same nervous
-haste he had noticed the night before.
-
-“Nothing’s wrong, dear. Wait till we settle down for a steady run and
-you’ll see.”
-
-“It’s sure fire! Only keep an eye on that second act. Don’t be afraid
-to let go.”
-
-From the wings he watched the audience stream in—beautifully gowned
-women, perfectly groomed men, keen-eyed critics, his own colleagues
-with soft collars and clothes not too well pressed, here a familiar
-round-the-towner, there a merchant who took his first night
-subscription seats as religiously as his pew in church. Truly a motley
-such as only the Metropolis can produce. Little ’Dolph’s eyes shone
-and his broad mouth broadened. Those women with their feathery fans
-and glittering jewels; those men with their sleek heads and smart
-clothes; the press; the world theatrical; they constituted his court,
-this theater his kingdom.
-
-Only a few times since the throne had been his had he failed to give
-them what they expected of him. That was why to-night he saw in every
-pair of eyes an eager anticipation that was to him like strong
-stimulant. He slipped round to the front of the house as the curtain
-rose.
-
-All through the first act he divided attention between the stage and
-the audience, watching the latter laugh and chuckle and wink and
-furtively wipe its eye, and nodding as each effect came at the right
-moment. When the lights went up he dodged backstage, not to Gloria,
-but to Brooks.
-
-“Great, old boy! You’ve got ’em. Just keep up that tempo. Feeling
-fit?”
-
-“Fine!”
-
-“Look out for the end of this act, won’t you,” he added half
-apologetically.
-
-“Thought you were coming to that,” laughed Brooks.
-
-“No offense, you understand.”
-
-But he went back to his seat wishing the big scene finished. He
-couldn’t help a twitch of uncertainty. If they handled it as they had
-at first last night it would fall flat as a pancake.
-
-Eagerly he followed every line. It was scintillant as sunlit ice and
-very thin ice at that. The throng round him skated over it with the
-actors and when Gloria’s scene with Brooks arrived they were, as he
-had prophesied, keyed to an emotional pitch that only the limit of
-acting could satisfy.
-
-Then he held tight to the arms of his chair and literally his breath
-stopped.
-
-Brooks came to the climax. His vibrant voice fell across the quiet of
-the house.
-
-“We’ve played the game, you and I,—to the finish. And we’ve lost. No,
-not lost, because this is the end we wanted. We’ve been a pair of
-gamblers, banking on defeat, waiting to have the game get us. Now
-we’re going to lay down our cards, admit we’re beaten, and take what
-is greater than victory. You know what that is. I don’t have to tell
-you I love you—”
-
-Cleeburg felt the quick intake of breath, the surge forward, that
-pulsing reach of an audience. If only they’d play it now for all it
-was worth!
-
-Gloria pulled back and terror was in her voice.
-
-“No—no!”
-
-For a second Brooks seemed to hesitate. What in Sam Hill was the
-matter with him? Why the deuce didn’t he let go?
-
-Then suddenly his laugh went high. He strode to her. His arms swept
-out.
-
-She stood poised as if in resistance, the light from above playing
-over her, her eyes started up to his. One could feel the catch in her
-throat, the swaying at the edge of a precipice. And then the eyelids
-fell, the man’s embrace closed round her like an enveloping flame. Her
-lips went to his.
-
-With a deep sigh little ’Dolph subsided. The audience did likewise. It
-had them! An excited buzz, the crash of applause told him that. He
-dodged out of his seat and to the lobby. Nothing further was to be
-desired. “Lady Fair” had gone over with a bang.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was over a month later that the manager finally prevailed upon
-their leading man to week-end with them. He buttonholed Brooks after
-the performance one Saturday night and refused to take “no” for an
-answer.
-
-“Say, John, getting upstage? Cut your swell friends this week. You’re
-coming out with us, ain’t he kiddo?”
-
-They were standing within the stage door. Cleeburg linked a persuasive
-arm in the other man’s.
-
-Gloria smiled without looking directly at Brooks. She drew her
-squirrel wrap close about her and stepped out of the light.
-
-“John’s always welcome, of course. But if he has other plans we
-mustn’t interfere.”
-
-“You don’t say!” laughed Cleeburg. “Well, he’s going to chuck any
-other plans and give us the pleasure of his society.”
-
-Brooks held a light to his cigarette. The flare of it illumined his
-set mouth, the line of his jaw.
-
-“Another time, old man. There’s a game on at the club to-morrow
-afternoon.”
-
-“Good! That being the case, we’ll save you money.” He started down the
-narrow alley to the street.
-
-Brooks looked across at Gloria. She was looking down, struggling with
-the clasp of her glove.
-
-“Come on,” urged Cleeburg.
-
-An instant more Brooks hesitated. Then his head went back.
-
-“All right, I’m with you.” And he laughed as if with relief.
-
-They stopped off for his bag. They were still using the open car in
-spite of the winds of late October. Gloria liked the slash of air
-against her face, liked to get the first salty whiff of the Sound. She
-leaned back with lids drooping and hands clasped loosely and was
-silent all the way. The men talked of next year’s prospects.
-
-“‘Lady Fair’ is good for next year and a season in London. Think I’ll
-let you and Gloria take it over. She’s never had a lick at the other
-side,” chuckled Cleeburg. “Bound to knock ’em silly.”
-
-Gloria spoke for the first time.
-
-“I wouldn’t think about London—just yet.”
-
-Cleeburg started at the queer note in her voice. They turned into the
-drive where willows drooped their branches to the ground. Beyond shone
-the lights of the rambling old house, modernized by the family who had
-owned and loved it for generations, but untouched as to line or grace.
-High ceilings, French windows, arched doorways, tall fireplaces—these
-constituted the charm of the estate little ’Dolph had presented to the
-woman who had given him happiness.
-
-Supper for two was spread before the flaming logs at one end of the
-entrance hall. In the center of the table stood a bowl of autumn
-leaves, the wild red of Gloria’s hair. Cleeburg pulled up another
-chair as the chauffeur brought in their guest’s bag and helped him out
-of his overcoat.
-
-The latter stood gazing round the place with a look of real affection.
-
-“It’s good to be back,” he said with a deep breath.
-
-“Well, the house has been here. Your fault that you haven’t!” Cleeburg
-cocked his ear to the comforting pop of a champagne cork.
-
-“Gloria has enough of my company eight consecutive times a week,”
-smiled Brooks.
-
-“We missed you anyhow. Didn’t we, kiddo?”
-
-“Of course. Seeing you in the theater isn’t a bit like having you here
-under our own roof.” She took off her hat, pushing back the weight of
-hair as she sat down beside him. “They’re distinct and separate
-lives.”
-
-“I wonder if that’s true,” Brooks put in quickly. “Do you really think
-the life of the stage can be cut off completely from a man’s everyday
-existence?”
-
-“Why not?” There was almost an urge in her question, a plea in her
-eyes.
-
-“I’m inclined to believe,” he answered slowly, “that once the theater
-is in a man’s blood, it colors everything he thinks and feels and
-does. He’s got to put so much of himself into it that it becomes an
-essential part of him.”
-
-“But why is that more true of the stage than of any other profession?”
-
-“Because success on the stage depends less on executive ability than
-on sincerity. It’s swaying that crowd out there that counts.” He made
-a sweeping gesture of his long, thin hand. “And they know counterfeit
-when it’s handed them.”
-
-“You said it,” agreed Cleeburg. “Make a business of acting and you
-make a failure.”
-
-“Lord,” laughed Brooks, “here I am telling Gloria something she knows
-instinctively. Never saw a woman so charged with the power to make
-people feel.” He stopped abruptly.
-
-Gloria had been gazing into her glass as if into a crystal. She set it
-down and the next words came as though she did not want to say them.
-
-“If that’s so—I guess you’re right. I do live every thought and
-emotion of every part I play. I suppose that’s why they call us
-temperamental.” Her full sensitive lips curved in a half-smile. “You
-don’t need temperament to sell stocks and bonds or argue a case in
-court.”
-
-“I beg your pardon,” corrected Brooks. “A lawyer often has to be a
-darned fine actor. I know, because I started out to be one.”
-
-“What’s that?” grinned his host.
-
-“Fact! I haven’t made it generally known. It’s too funny even to make
-a good press story. But I was admitted to the bar before the stage got
-me.”
-
-“Well, I’ll be—!” Little ’Dolph’s fork halted in its hurried trip
-upward.
-
-Gloria pushed her plate aside and leaned farther over the table, eager
-interest warming her eyes. Brooks brought his round to meet them.
-Sitting there with the flames flickering over tawny hair and smoky
-gray dress, she seemed somehow part of them.
-
-“Tell us how it happened, John.”
-
-“Oh, there’s no story strung to it. I’d done stuff each year in
-college theatricals and the last year we took our show on tour. I got
-the bug and when an honest-to-God manager offered me a real job I fell
-for it.”
-
-“Have you ever wanted to go back to law?”
-
-“If I did,” his thin lips twisted, “they’d think it too much of a joke
-to take me seriously.”
-
-He said it with rather a grim smile and looking at Gloria. She twisted
-round in her chair, away from him. For a moment silence fell, broken
-only by little ’Dolph’s apparent enjoyment of his supper.
-
-A gale banged against the windows trying to break its way in. Gloria
-got up, went over and drew aside the curtain. Brooks followed.
-
-“I’d love to be out in it!” Her voice throbbed. Night shadows,
-beckoning, fell across her face.
-
-“It would never let you come back.”
-
-“What a wonderful fight, though, trying to conquer it!”
-
-“Do you think you could?”
-
-“Yes. I think determination can conquer anything—even oneself.”
-
-“If one could be sure of that.” He looked down at the full lips that
-trembled a little, at the eyes with flames back of them, and walked
-back to Cleeburg. “Think I’ll turn in, old man.”
-
-Half an hour later Cleeburg stopped at the door of his wife’s room on
-the way to his own. She was letting down her hair. It fell like a
-loosened mane over neck and shoulders. He took a deep breath, more of
-wonder than any other emotion. She turned, saw him and got suddenly to
-her feet.
-
-“Have you seen what a night it is, ’Dolph?”
-
-She opened the French windows. A gale of dead leaves flung itself into
-the room. She lifted her face, pulled her purple silk kimono closer
-and stepped on the balcony. He tried to halt her with a warning
-against catching cold. She laughed and beckoned to him.
-
-Black clouds raced across the moon. Trees dashed against the house
-with all the impotence of human effort against the walls of Destiny.
-There was no rain. The wind leaped up and drove Nature before it, a
-mocking god bent on destruction.
-
-“By godfrey, if you could only get that on the stage!” whistled
-Cleeburg.
-
-Gloria said nothing. Her face was still lifted, lips apart. Her arms
-darted out so that the long kimono sleeves spread like wings. Her
-whole body was poised as if for flight.
-
-Cleeburg stepped back and looked at her.
-
-She was part of the storm-torn night. Something about the abandon of
-the scene frightened him.
-
-“Come in, honey, won’t you? Catch your death if you stay out like
-this.”
-
-Her arms dropped. She turned and followed him indoors. But opening his
-own window a while later he saw her slim silhouette outlined against
-hers, upright with the dusky light of a lamp behind her.
-
-The next day at their noon breakfast he asked what time she had gone
-to bed.
-
-“I don’t know. The night was so fascinating, I stayed up with it until
-day came.” She looked as if she had not slept.
-
-Cleeburg lit a prodigiously long cigar, twirled it between his lips
-and settled back benignly in an armchair by the fire.
-
-“Well, children, I’m here for the afternoon. Drive over to the club or
-do whatever you like. Little ’Dolph’s going to get busy doing
-nothing.”
-
-He reached over without altering his position of solid comfort and
-picked at random one of the Sunday papers piled on the table beside
-him. His broad face was suffused with a look of utter peace and
-relaxation. Even the ever-active cigar suspended activities.
-
-Gloria’s lips touched his forehead.
-
-“We’ll go for a walk—back at four-thirty for tea.”
-
-His eyes went after her the length of the foyer to a side door opening
-on the gravel walk—Gloria in dull green sport coat and tam, a fur
-piece swung carelessly from one shoulder; and the tall well-knit man
-in knickerbockers whose elastic step so easily fell in with hers. Had
-they followed farther they would have seen two people tramping in
-silence along a country road strewn with leaves that faded from green
-to mottled dead brown under a sullen sky. They would have marveled at
-the set look of the man’s mouth, the quivering of the woman’s. Those
-sympathetic prominent eyes of his, always seeking the most beautiful
-way to simulate human emotion, would have clouded with question had
-they read the pain in both pairs that stared straight along the road
-without meeting.
-
-Half a mile or so the two walked and then abruptly the man turned.
-
-“I tried to avoid it, Gloria.”
-
-“I know.”
-
-“But he took the matter out of my hands. You saw that.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I could see he was hurt because I hadn’t been out this year. And
-little ’Dolph isn’t the sort of man you can hurt.”
-
-“No.”
-
-“We both know that, don’t we?”
-
-She looked up at him without answer. Tears stood in her eyes.
-
-He turned his from them and his lips went tighter.
-
-“He’s the finest that walks in shoe leather,” he added.
-
-“I told him that the night we came in from the road. But I was telling
-it more to myself than to him. John, I felt just knowing that you—that
-you cared, was disloyal to him.”
-
-“I wouldn’t have let you know it, Gloria. I was determined never to
-suggest it by so much as a word. Then when you went smash at the
-theater the day before we came in, I—somehow I didn’t have to tell
-you, did I?”
-
-“No.” It was a whisper.
-
-“I want you to believe I couldn’t be anything but square with little
-’Dolph. You do, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Why, even on the stage, I feel I haven’t the right to take you in my
-arms. And I must have shown it in some way or other. He noticed the
-difference at the dress rehearsal.”
-
-She walked on silently at his side.
-
-“But I’m glad you know. Don’t blame me for that. It’s the biggest,
-finest thing in my life, a thing I can’t help. I wouldn’t be human—”
-
-“We must never mention it again, John,” she broke in and her voice
-came throbbing as it had the night before. “We can’t help it, just as
-you say. But we must keep it locked up tight, so that it will harm no
-one—not even ourselves. We owe that to him.”
-
-“Yes. I’d made up my mind to that.”
-
-“You mustn’t see me away from the theater. You mustn’t come out here
-any more.”
-
-“I dare say it’s better that way.”
-
-Her eyes traveled along the leaf-strewn road, then up to the sulky
-sky. And because they were not seeing quite clearly she stumbled and
-almost fell across a fallen trunk.
-
-The man’s arm went round her, holding the slim body a moment. Then
-with a conscious tightening of muscles he drew it away and plunged on
-without a glance at her.
-
-Presently he turned and in the look he gave her was a sort of
-desperate pleading.
-
-“Is there any harm in telling you just once, Gloria, what you mean to
-me? I’ve been telling it to myself so long.”
-
-“I—I don’t think you’d better. I—I don’t believe I could listen.”
-
-He looked down. Her eyes, struck with terror, went up to his.
-
-“Please—don’t.”
-
-“It’s all right. I won’t.”
-
-They came to a trail through the woods.
-
-“Shall we take this back?” She turned into it.
-
-He reached up and broke a last branch of red leaves that trickled like
-blood from a dying tree, and handed it to her.
-
-“Have you noticed how intensely bright this live stuff looks when
-everything around it is dead or dying?”
-
-Little ’Dolph a mile or so distant, dozed by the fire with cigar still
-sidling from the corner of his mouth. His dreams were hazy and
-disjointed. But Gloria as he had seen her on the balcony the night
-before drifted through them. The howling night swept by, tearing at
-silken robe and wild hair. She seemed to sway with it. The clouds
-descended. He had a vague sense of effort to reach out, to hold her,
-that breathless catch at the heart of nightmare. Then suddenly he lost
-sight of her. A distant crash and he saw the clouds sweep her up
-and—while he stood rooted—carry her away.
-
-He sat up with a gasp. The cigar fell from his lips. His heart thumped
-madly.
-
-“What a shame! The banging of the screen door wakened him!” It was
-Gloria’s voice and she was coming toward him.
-
-He gave a great sigh of relief.
-
-“By godfrey, I’m glad to be awake! Come here, kiddo. Want to make sure
-I’ve still got you!”
-
-She whisked the branch of scarlet leaves across his face.
-
-“Just had a dream that took you right out of my young life and I
-couldn’t catch up!”
-
-She pulled off tam and coat, swung to the arm of his chair.
-
-“Can’t lose me, Dolphy dear!”
-
-“By-the-way,” remarked Brooks, as Gloria served tea, “please don’t
-mind if I beat it back to town to-night. I’ve got to see my lawyer at
-ten a. m., and you won’t be going in until to-morrow noon, will you?”
-
-“Yes, I do mind, by George!” came from ’Dolph. “We get you out here
-once in a blue moon and you can’t even stand it for one day. What do
-you want with a lawyer anyhow? Hold on to your pocket and attend to
-your own legal affairs.”
-
-“But if John has to go in, dear, we mustn’t keep him.”
-
-Brooks was looking down at the cap twirling between his hands.
-
-“See, old man! Your wife understands.”
-
-“All right!” Cleeburg got up, peeved, and went to the bell. “What time
-do you want the car? I’ll drive you to the station. But hanged if I
-don’t think you pay us a mighty poor compliment!”
-
-He still showed annoyance when Brooks went up to pack his bag.
-
-“What’s got him, anyhow?” he put to Gloria. “Damned if I ask him
-again!”
-
-All the way to the station he chewed on his cigar, responding
-laconically when his guest tried to make conversation. The little
-manager had a peculiar racial pride that John Brooks unwittingly had
-speared.
-
-“Good enough to hand out his weekly stipend; good enough to give him
-his living!” kept spinning round the active brain. “But not good
-enough any more to sit with at the table! Prefers his Fifth Avenue
-cronies for that.”
-
-As the car stopped, Brooks swung down, reached out a hand.
-
-“Thanks, old man. Had a great time!”
-
-“The hell you had!” said Cleeburg.
-
-He drove back still turning over his guest’s desertion and madder
-every minute. When the car pulled up he sprang out, intent upon
-talking the whole thing over with Gloria. He crossed the veranda,
-opened the front door.
-
-She was sitting in the chair he had occupied before the fire. Her body
-was bent forward, head lowered. He went nearer. She was stripping the
-branch she had brought in of its blood-red leaves. One by one she
-broke them off and dropped them into the fire. And her eyes never left
-them as they curled up and shriveled to a crisp.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-We who sit in the orchestra of life are inclined to smile, to lend
-willing ear to whispers of scandal from behind the footlights. Perhaps
-the standards are a bit less rigid on the surface. But so are
-emotions. They cannot be hidden as the rest of the world has learned
-to hide them but must be brought forth on the stage nightly that we at
-play may know the joy of laughter and tears for which our own lives do
-not exact payment.
-
-Those twin giants, Opportunity and Propinquity, stand guard at the
-stage door, ushering in with a flourish each newcomer. Human frailty
-is their stock in trade, the theater their most satisfactory market.
-For a year they had stalked the steps of Gloria Cromwell and John
-Brooks. For a year they had appeared at unexpected moments, working in
-absolute harmony, waiting with tongue in cheek for the unguarded
-second when the set line of the man’s mouth would relax; when his lips
-would tell her what his arms had not yet made known; when the woman’s
-voice with its strange thrilling note would meet his and confess.
-
-And they had been cheated. The unguarded second had come on the dingy
-stage of a small town theater during the tour of “Lady Fair”—with
-Gloria crumpling at his feet and his arms going round her in a sudden
-desperate clasp. Alone in her dressing-room, her opening eyes had met
-the look in his like a shaft of light struck through blindness. His
-whispered “Gloria,” the straining of her close as if to hold her
-always; the swift loosening of that hold; the step backward; the
-breaking of their locked gaze.
-
-If love could be classified—and of course it cannot—I wonder how we
-would label love that goes quietly on its way without hysteria,
-without big scenes, with no effort to grasp that to which it has no
-right; knowing that it must endure, even while it can never find
-fulfillment.
-
-’Dolph Cleeburg, with round eyes constantly in search of new angles on
-old conflicts, did not dream that daily in his own home, in his own
-theater, those eyes were looking upon drama more vibrant than any he
-could see in a mimic world—the quiet tragedy of passion which in daily
-contact with its object, yet soldierwise faces its own death knell.
-
-He took note of nothing but the crowds that jammed the theater. He
-planned gaily for next season’s tour, to be topped by triumphal entry
-into London.
-
-“You and John will be a knock-out over there,” he told Gloria, eyes
-popping. “Even if I am sore at him, I’ve got to admit he knows his
-job.”
-
-Gloria looked out at the hills, shorn of all but bare-limbed trees and
-covered with a fine frost, the gray beard of coming winter. It was
-their final week-end in the country, later than they usually remained.
-But she had wanted it so.
-
-“Have you spoken to John about going?” she asked.
-
-“Not since he was here. Haven’t spoken to him at all.”
-
-“Big baby!” she laughed.
-
-“Well, he hurt my feelings. I can’t forget the way he gave us the
-go-by.”
-
-“Then—then why send him abroad?” It came with a sharp intensity. “We
-can look the ground over when we cross this summer and engage an
-Englishman.”
-
-“Not on your life! You and John pull too well together. The pair of
-you will give ’em a taste of real American pep.”
-
-She hesitated, eyes riveted to the vista of cold hills. Suddenly she
-wheeled round, one hand grasping the drape that bordered the French
-window. The next words came like a catapult.
-
-“’Dolph, don’t book me for London! I’m not going! I don’t want to play
-there.”
-
-“You don’t—” Cleeburg’s jaw dropped in sheer amazement.
-
-“No,” she raced on. “I’ve been thinking about it—a lot. I don’t want
-to go.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“I’ve never been over. I don’t know any one—”
-
-“That won’t take long. Why, they’ll be giving you a rush the day after
-you land. And there’s John for company if you get homesick.”
-
-“Yes, I know. But”—she turned once more to the stripped hills, then
-back with something like terror in her eyes—“but it’s you I need,
-’Dolph. I don’t want to be so far away from you.”
-
-He got out of the chair that hugged his merry fire, went to her, laid
-a hand that trembled over hers.
-
-“Y’mean that, kiddo? After six years of me, do I honest-to-God matter
-as much as that?”
-
-Her hand curled up and over his, holding it tight.
-
-“Oh, ’Dolph, if you knew how much I need you! More now than ever
-before! Don’t send me away—don’t!”
-
-Cleeburg’s eyes went up to hers. Hers went down before them.
-
-“By godfrey!” he said finally, brushing a hand across his eyes. “Think
-I’m crying. Ain’t ashamed of it, either.”
-
-She did not answer.
-
-“You, too!” He peered under her lowered lids. “Fine pair of slushes,
-eh? Well, I want to tell you right now, honey—ain’t a knock-out I ever
-had that made a hit with me like this does.”
-
-She brought a smile to her silent lips.
-
-“All I’m looking for is the best thing for you,” he went on. “You’re
-the main guy in this combination. I’m just the old back drop like I
-told you. If you ain’t going to be happy in London, you don’t
-go—that’s all. But think it over! I’d like to see my little girl make
-the Britishers sit up. We’ll give them the once-over this summer. Then
-you can decide.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The memory of that afternoon with Gloria against the sunless winter
-twilight begging not to be sent away from him, was to little ’Dolph
-like some treasure one keeps in a vault—to be taken out, gazed upon
-and locked away again. Sometimes in the rear office that was his
-sanctum, when things had gone wrong or a lull came in the day’s
-activities, he would sink back in his chair, a smile slowly radiating
-his plain features, and before him would come a woman with arms
-outstretched toward him as if for protection against all the world.
-The wonder of it made him glow, sent the worries of business scurrying
-into the background.
-
-He was seated so one Saturday afternoon between the matinée and
-evening performances, after having rounded up the tour for next
-season. The immortal cigar circled contentedly and he lolled back,
-contemplating a sweep of intense blue sky—but seeing rather the Long
-Island hills against a somber one—when his secretary brought word that
-John Brooks was outside and wanted to see him.
-
-Cleeburg nodded.
-
-“Lo, stranger,” he said a bit sheepishly as the latter came in. “Time
-you showed up.”
-
-“I’ve been trying to see you for the past month,” Brooks informed him,
-throwing hat and coat on a chair and pulling another close to
-Cleeburg’s desk, “but you passed me up every time we met. Never mind,
-old man,” he added with a short smile as the other started to lay down
-his cigar, “I know why. You were sore at me—and with reason. We’ll let
-it go at that. I’m sorry.”
-
-“So’m I,” grinned little ’Dolph and sat back again. “When I like a
-fellow, I like him. Enemies can’t hurt my feelings. Now what’s on your
-mind?”
-
-Brooks got up as suddenly as he had sat down, took a turn the length
-of the room, and came back.
-
-“’Dolph”—he began somewhat awkwardly and stopped. “’Dolph,—when this
-season closes I’m going to ask you to get some one else for the road.
-I can’t go out next year.”
-
-For the space of a breath the manager said nothing. He sat blinking
-uncertainly as if not sure of his ears. Then he jerked forward.
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“I know it seems a rotten trick to pull. But I want you to take my
-word, ’Dolph, that I wouldn’t do it if I hadn’t justifiable reasons.”
-
-“Am I to understand that you’re handing me your notice?”
-
-“Yes, old man.”
-
-“You’re notifying me that you quit?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“When we close. If you can let me off before then—”
-
-Cleeburg’s laugh cut the sentence like an ax. It held—sharp,
-contemptuous. Then his teeth shut on his cigar until the end broke off
-in his mouth.
-
-“Who’s offering to star you?” came tersely.
-
-A flash from the other’s eye answered the arraignment. But his reply
-was low and quiet.
-
-“Nobody.”
-
-“Since when did you take me for an easy mark?”
-
-“’Dolph,” Brooks began, “you and I have been on the level with each
-other always. I’ve played fair and I’m going to keep on playing fair.
-I’m quitting for reasons I can’t make clear to you now. You’ll have to
-take my word for it.”
-
-“The hell I will!” Cleeburg shot out. “This has been coming a long
-time. I saw it when you were in the country. Swelled head—that’s the
-answer! Didn’t think they could do it to you. But those society snobs
-have got you thinking you’re Edwin Booth.”
-
-The other man’s thin lips opened. His eyes narrowed with a look almost
-of menace. Then in silence he picked up a flexible paper cutter and
-bent it slowly in two. There was a snap. He chucked the pieces on the
-desk.
-
-“That’s a damned injustice, Cleeburg. Wish you hadn’t said it. But it
-won’t change matters any. I’m quitting.”
-
-“Look here, sorry if I was hasty. You hit me hard—that’s all! Sit
-down. Let’s talk it over—cards on the table. What’s the big idea?”
-
-“I told you.”
-
-“No, you didn’t. Somebody’s after you. Somebody’s going long on the
-golden promise stuff. I ain’t a fool. That’s plain as the nose on your
-face. Now who is it? Kane? Coghlan? Surprised they didn’t try to get
-you long ago.”
-
-“They did. I turned them down.”
-
-Beads of perspiration had gathered on Cleeburg’s head. He pulled a
-handkerchief from his coat pocket and mopped mechanically.
-
-“Anything wrong downstairs?”
-
-“N-no.”
-
-The manager looked up sharply. “If there’s trouble, just spill it and
-I’ll settle things to your satisfaction.”
-
-“Nothing wrong, old man.”
-
-“Then look here, let’s get down to cases. If it’s business, we’ll talk
-business. You’ve got to stay. Gloria can’t get along without you.”
-
-Brooks’ eyes shifted to the window.
-
-“I don’t want any trouble for her,” little ’Dolph pursued. “I’ve got
-you billed together next season. Her public looks for you both. I’ll
-meet any offer you got. Yes—and top it.”
-
-Brooks turned back slowly, shook his head.
-
-Cleeburg sprang up.
-
-“Well, get me straight—will you? You’re tied up tight. And I won’t let
-you off. Now I’ll just about show you where you stand.” His thumb went
-down on the press-button in his desk as if it were going through the
-top. “Bring me Mr. Brooks’ contract,” he told his secretary.
-
-Brooks walked over to the window. His hands were shaking. His face was
-dead white. He stood staring out with jaws set and the look of a man
-going into battle.
-
-But Cleeburg saw nothing of that. His own hands opened and shut
-spasmodically. He tramped steadily back and forth the space of his
-desk, muttering to himself like the rumble of storm. Under the puzzled
-question that brought brows together was a frown of fury.
-
-When the contract was handed him, he rustled quickly through the
-pages, scanning the closely typed sheets, studying it clause for
-clause.
-
-“No, sir! I’ve got you!” he ended triumphantly.
-
-“’Dolph, I’ve never asked favors—not from you nor any other man. But I
-ask you now to let me off without any kick. You know me well enough to
-realize I wouldn’t, without some good reason.”
-
-“Then I’ve got to know what that reason is.”
-
-“I can’t tell you.”
-
-“Not the ghost of an excuse, yet you want me to let you quit without a
-murmur! What d’you think I am?”
-
-“I think you’re man enough not to try to hold me, contract or no
-contract.”
-
-“That won’t work! Here it is, black on white.” He banged down the
-contract. “No loophole for three years! It’s ironclad.”
-
-“Then I’ll have to break it,” the man at the window said quietly.
-
-Cleeburg went close to him. For some unaccountable reason this man
-calmly breaking all rules of the game, made him feel apologetic. An
-outraged sense of justice added to his fury.
-
-“Oh, you will—will you? Well, we’ll just look after that. Whatever
-you’ve got up your sleeve, Brooks, it’s a skunk trick. And I won’t
-stand for it, d’you hear? I’ll stop you from tying up with anybody
-else. S’help me, I will!”
-
-“I’m not tying up with anybody else. I’m quitting—for good.”
-
-“What?”
-
-“That’s why I want you to release me.”
-
-Cleeburg gave the same hard contemptuous laugh as before.
-
-“What’re you trying to put over?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-“You mean to tell me you’re chucking a profession when you’re right on
-top?”
-
-“I’m going back to the law—if the world hasn’t too keen a sense of
-humor to accept a one-time actor as a lawyer.”
-
-The manager gave him one long uncomprehending look, then flung back
-his head and roared. It was laughter not pleasant to listen to. Brooks
-stood it silently for a stretch while his hands twitched. Then his
-eyes flared as if fire were behind them. Still he did not turn from
-the window.
-
-“Let’s end this, will you? We’re not getting anywhere. And I’ve given
-you my ultimatum.”
-
-“Well, I’ll give you mine.” Cleeburg had lost all count of words. The
-bruise of bucking against a stone wall had made him see red. “You
-stick to Gloria or I’ll make it so hot for you that they’ll hoot you
-out of this town! That’s the only way to handle—swine!” He broke off,
-turned on his heel, went back to the desk. Suddenly he leaned across
-it. “What the hell do you want, anyhow?”
-
-Brooks came round like a pivot. The other man’s breath held at the
-look on his face. “I want your wife! Now for God’s sake throw me out,
-will you!”
-
-It was quite still in the room. Even the words were spoken in
-something less than a whisper. When they had come there was no outward
-intimation that a man had pulled down a mountain crashing about his
-head.
-
-Cleeburg’s hands clenched where they lay on the desk. He stared across
-it without changing position. The blood mounted to his wet forehead,
-then receded, leaving it gray white. His face was that of a man ready
-to kill. Then he shook his head a little vaguely, felt for the chair
-behind him, pulled it up to the desk. But he did not sink into it. He
-caught hold of the arm and stood so, steadying himself.
-
-“Nothing on God’s earth would have made me tell you, ’Dolph,” Brooks
-went on hoarsely. “I thought I could make you let me off without a
-word. But you can see for yourself—” He paused—then abruptly: “Do you
-know what it means to take her in my arms, loving her? Do you know
-what it means to want another man’s wife and feel her lips on yours
-every night?”
-
-Cleeburg moistened his own. They opened and closed. His nails dug into
-the varnish of the chair. His eyes, so long unseeing, visualized in a
-flash the scene they had gazed upon so often—Gloria in the arms of the
-man facing him, himself urging them to more intense expression, more
-abandon of love. Like a raging animal the fighting male leaped up in
-him—then subsided, knowing it had to fight only itself. He met the
-straight look. In turn it met his. And he knew that set mouth had
-spoken truth, clean, uncompromising; could not have spoken at all if
-it had been otherwise. He groped uncertainly,—spoke at last half in
-fear, the first thought that had seized him.
-
-“Does—does she—know?”
-
-John Brooks looked into the tortured face and lied without hesitation.
-
-“No.”
-
-“You mean—she hasn’t even guessed?”
-
-“No. And I don’t want her to.”
-
-“That’s why you kept away from us?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“That’s why you went back to town last time you were with us.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And I thought you were a damned snob!” A hand that trembled came
-across the desk top. “Sorry I said what I did. Pardon!”
-
-The other made an attempt to treat it lightly. Two shaking hands
-clasped.
-
-“No trouble about getting off now, eh?”
-
-“I—I’d like to eat dirt for the way I talked to you,” said Cleeburg.
-
-“Forget it! Your assumption was the only logical one. Another man
-would be after me with a gun for what I’ve told you.”
-
-“Look here,” little ’Dolph stumbled on, “I—I’ll star you myself.”
-
-“No,” Brooks smiled a bit grimly. “I’m quitting—for good.”
-
-’Dolph Cleeburg’s eyes, comprehending now, took in the drawn face and
-tired look of the man who had fought a losing battle—and won. And some
-strange click of memory brought simultaneously the same look of
-desperation in another face. Where had he seen it? When? Why did it
-haunt him? He sat down, picked up the halves of the paper cutter and
-tried to piece them together. Suddenly they rattled to the desk.
-Gloria! Gloria’s white face that night after he had put them through
-their paces, the night she had clung to him, the night of her strange
-outburst of hysteria. Gloria’s face when he suggested sending them
-abroad! Gloria’s face a dozen times since!
-
-His gaze moved slowly toward the door, straining as a man stares
-through the dark. His thumb pressed the button on his desk, not as
-before, but mechanically. He waited without moving. Yet his secretary
-stood in the doorway fully half a minute before he spoke.
-
-“Find out if Miss Cromwell is in her dressing-room. Say I’d like to
-see her here.”
-
-Brooks took a quick step toward him.
-
-“What do you want her for.”
-
-“To tell her you’re quitting.”
-
-“That’s not necessary. See here, ’Dolph, let’s drop it. You and I
-understand each other.”
-
-“No harm telling her, is there?”
-
-The other man stepped back and sat down with a gesture that told the
-futility of argument. He, too, sat with eyes on the door.
-
-Neither spoke. Little ’Dolph’s face seemed to sag. The skin fell
-heavily round the jaws. The eyes had a vague, helpless look. He took
-out his handkerchief, folded it carefully and put it back in his
-pocket. He got up, changed the position of a chair, came back to the
-desk.
-
-“’Dolph, what are you going to do?” Brooks brought out at last.
-
-“Just tell her,” he repeated.
-
-The door opened and Gloria came in, dressed for the street.
-
-“I’ve been waiting for you to take me to dinner,” she told Cleeburg.
-“What’s kept you, dear?”
-
-He got up, pushed his chair in her direction.
-
-“News,” came uncertainly after a second’s pause. “Rotten news. John’s
-leaving us.”
-
-The bomb was flung. He stood peering into her face, waiting for its
-answer rather than that of her lips.
-
-There would be surprise—there must be that! And after the first start
-of amazement, a protest. And indignation! The outburst of the actress
-about to lose the support on which she depends. His hands clenched.
-That she might not see, he clasped them behind him. God, let her know
-the anxiety natural under the circumstances! Let her rise up
-determined to hold this man to his business contract! Let her threaten
-with all the impersonal fury he himself had shown! Let her prove that
-to her John Brooks was merely part of her professional life! That as
-such she would not let him go!
-
-He waited while his silent lips moved in prayer.
-
-Gloria’s first swift glance was to Brooks. His linked with hers. Her
-fingers locked and unlocked. Twice she opened her lips without speech,
-then turned back to Cleeburg.
-
-“Has anything happened? There—there’s been no trouble between you, has
-there?” was all she said.
-
-“Of course not,” Brooks put in quickly. “I’ve told ’Dolph I’m quitting
-for good. That’s all there is to it.”
-
-Little ’Dolph did not take his eyes from her. Now it would
-come—surely. She had been too amazed, too taken back before. He waited
-for the throbbing voice to answer.
-
-“You—you’re leaving the stage?” it asked too quietly.
-
-“Yes,” Cleeburg plunged in. “He’s quitting us—cold. Get that? He’s
-leaving us in the lurch. What do you make of it?”
-
-With a look of sudden fear, Brooks sprang up. “See here, ’Dolph—”
-
-“John must have some good reason—”
-
-“Do you know what it is?”
-
-She glanced quickly from one to the other. Something in both faces
-brought her, too, to her feet. “Why should I?”
-
-“You didn’t seem surprised when I told you.”
-
-“I am surprised, of course.”
-
-“Then why in God’s name don’t you make him give you some explanation?”
-
-“Hasn’t he given you one?” she asked very low.
-
-“Yes! Do you want to hear it?”
-
-“’Dolph!” the other man fairly leaped at him.
-
-“Wait a minute!” Cleeburg stretched out a hand. His throat was so
-parched, he could scarcely bring out the words. “Wait a minute! I’ve
-got to go through with this. I’ve got to know.” He turned to Gloria.
-“You asked if anything happened. The biggest thing has happened since
-you came into the room. I sent for you to tell you John was going.
-That means you lose the best support you ever had or will have. It
-knocked me out completely. And you take it without a murmur. You’ve
-got him under contract, yet you don’t make the ghost of an effort to
-hold him.”
-
-Gloria’s voice shook as she answered.
-
-“Why should I try to hold him against his will?”
-
-“Why wouldn’t you put up the fight of your life to hold him—unless
-you’re afraid to?”
-
-“Afraid to?”
-
-“Let’s drop this!” came swift and sharp from Brooks.
-
-“I can’t—I’ve got to know,” Cleeburg broke in pitifully. Then to
-Gloria like a man pleading for life: “You didn’t want me to book you
-and John for London. You preferred not to go. That’s a fact, ain’t
-it?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Was it—was it because you didn’t want to be over there with
-him—alone?”
-
-She stared as he put the question—stared into the eyes that were like
-a bleeding animal’s.
-
-“I didn’t want to go without you. You know that.”
-
-He saw her mouth quiver at the corners and her teeth hold the lower
-lip. And all her nervousness that night of the dress rehearsal swept
-before him in torturing detail. He shook his head helplessly. He
-grasped the arm of a chair as he had once before and steadied himself.
-Haltingly the words he had known he must speak came at last.
-
-“Why wouldn’t you go without me? Was that—was it because you knew what
-I know now—that he loves you?”
-
-She gave a start. He saw her eyes fly to the other man’s. There was
-nothing of indignation in that look, nothing of anger. Terror—yes—and
-question! But back of both a glow—the instinctive look of the one
-woman to the one man that will live as long as the world. Because
-unconscious, it was all the revelation the man who watched her needed.
-A sort of groping wonder at his blindness seized him. Then little
-’Dolph sank into the chair and, like a candle snuffed, hope went out
-of his eyes.
-
-What she said as she turned back to him was merely a veil drawn across
-thought to hide its nakedness.
-
-She went over, laid a hand on his shoulder and looked into the poor
-haggard face that had not learned, as have women, to conceal its
-suffering. Her own was as white.
-
-“’Dolph, dear—whatever John has told you, I want you to believe that
-he’s never, by so much as a word, been disloyal to you.”
-
-He patted her hand and tried to smile.
-
-“I know that, kiddo. It’s all right. Honest it is.”
-
-“Don’t blame him. We’ve been together so much. The theater is so
-different from any other kind of life. It’s so—so intimate.”
-
-“’Dolph has been one hundred per cent there.” Brooks squared his
-shoulders as he spoke and went toward the door. “Another man would
-have put a bullet through my head.”
-
-“You—you’ll go on being his friend, ’Dolph?”
-
-“Don’t worry, kiddo.”
-
-“You and I will have each other.” Her voice broke.
-
-His empty eyes came round to her.
-
-“You’re going to stay on with me?”
-
-“Of course I am.”
-
-“Y’mean it?”
-
-“Of course I do.” She looked to Brooks and held out her hand.
-“Good-by, John.”
-
-He came over and took it and held it for a moment—tight.
-
-“Good-by, Gloria. I’ll be leaving town next week, if ’Dolph’s willing
-to have an understudy take my place from to-night on. I’m not likely
-to see you again.”
-
-Their eyes met and managed to smile. Then Gloria looked away.
-Something in her throat was fluttering like a wild thing.
-
-When she looked back the door had closed.
-
-“You’re all right, honey,” Cleeburg murmured huskily.
-
-Three hours later he let himself into the quiet office, switched on
-the light and went to the desk. A broken paper knife lay near the
-inkstand. He picked up the pieces, held them together with half a
-smile, then let them drop from his hand into the waste basket.
-
-The chair he had pushed forward for Gloria stood as she had left it.
-He drew it over, sat down, and with broad mouth firm but hands that
-shook a little, pulled a sheet of foolscap toward him and took up a
-pen.
-
-The pen moved across the sheet, sometimes hesitating, sometimes swift
-as a comet. But the determined line of little ’Dolph’s mouth never
-relaxed.
-
- _My dearest little girl_:
-
- I’ve been thinking a lot since dinner, and when a fellow has sort
- of lost the habit of thinking about anything but his next show it
- comes hard. But don’t you jump at the conclusion that what I’m
- going to say is hasty or that it ain’t final. For years there was
- a funny old feeling inside of me that I had something to tell the
- world and no way to tell it. I wanted to put over something on
- the stage that would sound like music or look like a beautiful
- painting. Scenery wouldn’t do it. The women I had trained
- couldn’t do it. I didn’t even know, myself, just what it was. I
- used to tell myself often I was a poor nut. Then you came along
- with that voice of yours and those eyes and the fire that hasn’t
- any name, and did it all for me. If there hadn’t ever been
- anything more for me than seeing those hopes come true, it would
- have been enough. But I’ve had you for almost six years. You made
- me happier than you know, kiddo. And what has a poor old dub like
- me ever done to expect more than the happiness life has already
- handed me through you? Why, that’s a fortune that makes the
- Rockefeller millions look like thirty cents. If I try to hog
- more, if I keep you from the thing you’ve got a right to, the
- thing you gave me for six years, shooting’s too good for me.
-
- You don’t think I could let you stay on with me, knowing that you
- and John belong together, do you? And you do belong together. You
- know I always said you made a fine team. Why, kiddo, it would
- finish me. I want you to be happy, that’s all. And I saw to-day
- where that happiness is for you.
-
- I fixed it so that John couldn’t get off to-night. And I’m going
- to fix it now so that you’ll play together the rest of your
- lives. I’m sailing Monday to fix up those English contracts. When
- I come back in the fall you’re going to be free. No, not free,
- I’m wrong. I want to take you and John by the hands and say—Bless
- you, my children!
-
- You remember, I called myself once your old back drop. Well,
- being that is about the best thing that’s ever happened to me.
- And I’ll keep on being that if you’ll let me, until you quit the
- game. Let me go on putting you over just like always and I’ll be
- O. K. Don’t you worry.
-
- God bless you, kiddo.
-
- ’Dolph.
-
-He folded the sheets without reading them, put them into an envelope,
-sealed it carefully, went downstairs and looked up the head usher.
-
-“Take this to Miss Cromwell and give it into her hands yourself,” he
-said. “And here, kid.” And he slipped the boy a dollar.
-
-
-
-
-TWO MASTERS
-
-_ROMANCE_
-
-
-Love is a fantasy, a dream that only sacrifice can make come true. The
-tragedy of it is not in dying, but in living without it.
-
-
-
-
-TWO MASTERS
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Across Bryant Park, chilled and damp under a gray sky emptied of
-stars, a man hurried. His overcoat collar was turned up. His soft hat
-was pulled down. His eyes between the two were dark-circled and
-deep-sunk. His feet covered the wet paths with the stumbling haste of
-one pursued.
-
-To the east the faint gold streaks of an autumn dawn cut the clouds.
-They reached up above the irregular skyline that is New York,
-heralding the day some minutes after it was born.
-
-The man sped across Fortieth Street and mounted the steps of one of
-the few brownstone houses, relic of an old aristocracy, that refused
-to be crowded out by the bourgeoisie of business. He fumbled in his
-coat pocket, brought out a key, dropped it in his anxiety, finally got
-the inner door open and made his way, still stumbling, up the stairs.
-
-At an apartment on the second floor—for the house maintained its aloof
-air of aristocracy only on the outside—he paused and squared his
-shoulders. His whole body seemed to steel itself and then, very
-softly, he inserted the key and entered.
-
-A gentle rustle came from the room beyond and a trained nurse with
-finger against her lips met him on the threshold.
-
-“She—she’s all right?” he whispered, lips twitching.
-
-“Sleeping.”
-
-“I tried to get back earlier. We rehearsed until a few minutes ago.”
-He threw hat and overcoat on a chair and sank into another. His head
-went down into his hands. “God, those hours, when every minute I
-thought—Miss Anderson,” he broke off, looking up to catch her
-expression, “she hasn’t taken a turn for the worse! She’ll pull
-through, won’t she?”
-
-She smiled, a little sadly, at the desperate, so familiar query.
-
-“She’s holding her own,” she answered with the formula equally
-familiar.
-
-“Can’t you tell me she’ll get well? Can’t you give me the assurance?”
-
-“No one can do that, Mr. Moore. We can only wait and hope.”
-
-She took a hesitant step toward him, hand outstretched to comfort.
-Then evidently realizing how futile such effort would be, she turned
-and went back to her place at the foot of the bed that was a misty
-blur in the darkened room beyond.
-
-He followed, precipitately yet with scarcely the sound of a footfall.
-The room was full of shadows. A thread of sunlight, forcing its way
-between blind and window, crept across the floor and gradually toward
-the bed. But Frank Moore did not need its delicate finger-touch to
-illumine the face that lay so still upon the pillow. He knew every
-precious line of it, every contour, all the shades of modeling that
-made it exquisite even though disease had in a few short weeks pressed
-into a gaunt mask the curves of beauty. He stood looking down at its
-stillness until a sudden broken cry came from him and he went quickly
-into the other room.
-
-With no shame for his man’s tears, he flung himself full length on the
-couch and gave way to the misery he must hide when the wistful gaze of
-the eyes he loved was on him. Long days of rehearsal, long nights of
-anxiety, had weakened his resistance. He lay shaking with all the
-pitiable helplessness of the strong man gone under.
-
-On side streets and flashing under the reflectors on the big
-twenty-four sheets along Sixth Avenue was his name in prominent black
-letters.
-
- Kane Theatre
- 45th Street
- beginning
- _November 5th_
-
- OSWALD KANE
- Presents
- the New Drama
- “THE LAUREL WREATH”
- by
- _Gaston Grisac_
- Featuring
- FRANKLYN MOORE
-
-How often they had dreamed of the day when he and she could look up
-and see that name as it stood out now, heralded, the featured one of
-the season’s big production! How often had she pictured herself
-stopping to read it each time it loomed before them, scanning it over
-and over on her theater program, leaning beyond the rail of the stage
-box to spur him to the success that must be his!
-
-And to-night—the night that was to have been the greatest in their
-life, she would be lying there, while he— He sprang up, with quick
-stride covered the floor, back and forth, back and forth, like a
-prisoner in a cell.
-
-The day nurse arriving at seven, found him dazed and blank-eyed from
-sheer weakness. As one feeds a child, she made him swallow some
-steaming coffee, then led him without difficulty back to the couch.
-
-“You must rest, Mr. Moore, or you won’t be equal to the performance
-to-night.”
-
-“I—can’t.”
-
-“But if I promise to call you when Mrs. Moore wakes up, won’t you try
-to sleep a bit?”
-
-“I can’t, I tell you!”
-
-“Please—”
-
-She plumped up the pillows and he fell back among them, exhausted. He
-did not sleep but a sort of numbness gripped him as if the blood had
-been drained from his veins. And while his body lay still, his mind
-moved with wonder. Ambition—hope—of what use? To-day for him, this day
-that was to make all the days to come, there was just one reality.
-That face in there with its lines of suffering, that frail body, that
-soul that must live on for him. Nothing else was worth a
-thought—nothing! All night long as he had rehearsed, perfecting under
-the subtle guidance of Oswald Kane, the minutest detail of
-characterization, the most delicate shading of the difficult rôle he
-had mastered, he had been standing in reality at her bedside. Like a
-well-ordered mechanism he had gone through the part. But the
-indeterminate something that was Franklyn Moore had been in that
-shadowy room—with her. Kane had noticed the lack. An anxious frown had
-drawn his expressive brows momentarily together. But he had said
-nothing until the dress rehearsal was over and the company had gone
-home to sleep in preparation for the night’s performance. Then he had
-linked his arm through Moore’s and drawn him into the darkness of the
-wings.
-
-“Frank, I know this is an ordeal for you. If there were any way of
-postponing the opening, I would do it. You know that. But it can’t be
-managed. We’re all set. They could only conclude that something was
-wrong with the play.”
-
-“Of course—I know. That’s all right.”
-
-“And, my boy, we can’t afford to let it fail because of this—this
-misfortune that has come to you. It’s on your shoulders. We must come
-through, Frank. We can’t stand a failure.” His anxiety was all too
-evident.
-
-“I was rotten—I know. But don’t worry—”
-
-“I won’t. I depend upon you, my boy, that’s all. And so does
-to-night’s success. Let me run you home.”
-
-“Thanks—no. I’d rather walk it. Want to be alone—you understand—pardon!”
-
-And he had stumbled out of the stage door into the new gray day.
-
-Now as he paced up and down, he wondered whether it would be humanly
-possible to keep faith with the man who was giving him the opportunity
-to blazon his name to the world. Could he go through with it? Could he
-be depended upon?
-
-The nurse appeared in the doorway and beckoned to him. From the pillow
-a pair of eyes, so large and dark that there seemed no other feature
-in the small face, fastened on the door as he entered. He dropped on
-his knees, laid his head beside hers. One hand strayed up and stroked
-his thick brown hair.
-
-“How did it go, darling?”
-
-He answered with another question of greater moment.
-
-“Are you feeling better?”
-
-“Much. They gave me something to make me sleep. I must have slept a
-long time. Is it morning?”
-
-“Ten o’clock.”
-
-“Really? What time did you get in?”
-
-“About half-past five.”
-
-“How did the rehearsal go?” she repeated.
-
-“Fine. Kane thinks it will be a knock-out.”
-
-“I’m sure it will.”
-
-He turned his face from hers for an instant of silence.
-
-The nurse moved about the room, lifting the blinds to the sunlight,
-preparing it for the day. Then she came over to the bed.
-
-“As soon as I have Mrs. Moore fixed up, I’ll let you come back,” she
-said.
-
-“You’ll let him tell me all about it, won’t you?” pleaded the voice
-from the pillow. “I couldn’t bear it if you didn’t.”
-
-“Yes—he can stay in here until—”
-
-“Until he’s ready to go to the theater. Please—please!”
-
-“If you don’t wear yourself out.”
-
-“I won’t—I promise.”
-
-The big dark eyes followed him out of the room.
-
-He stripped off his clothes, took a cold shower and in clean linens
-tried to persuade himself that he felt relaxed. He telephoned the
-doctor for a report on last night’s visit and was told Mrs. Moore was
-about the same. If she had gained some sleep that was decidedly in her
-favor. The doctor would be over at five and as Mr. Moore had
-requested, would make arrangements to stay until his return from the
-theater.
-
-The small face on the pillow was lifted eagerly as he reappeared. Two
-long braids of pale gold fell over the shoulders and onto the white
-spread. He had always adored that pale gold hair. It intensified the
-dark of her eyes, making them almost black. It made her mediæval, an
-Elaine of poetry. He called her “Elaine” which after all was not so
-very far from her own name, “Helen.”
-
-“No, I want you here.” She pointed to the foot of the bed. “Where I
-won’t miss a word or an expression. Now tell me—about everything.”
-
-In a low voice, without stress or excitement, he related the incidents
-that always occur at a dress rehearsal. Props that had to be replaced
-at the last minute. The leading woman’s gowns gone wrong. The house
-cat sauntering across the stage during the big scene and its portent,
-good luck! Kane’s decision to light him with white instead of amber in
-the final act. All the little shadings, the quaint superstitions, the
-unimportant incidents that make the stage the fascinating realm it is,
-even to the initiated.
-
-She listened with lips parted and an occasional faint nod of the head.
-It was her world, too, though the world in which she had failed.
-
-“I hope you weren’t too good, dear.”
-
-“I was rotten.”
-
-Her smile said she knew he couldn’t be that, but the lips told him:—
-
-“That’s good. A bad dress rehearsal is sure to mean a great opening.”
-A sudden longing, uncontrolled, held her eyes. “How I’d love to see
-it!”
-
-He bent down, lifted one of the white hands on the coverlet, pressing
-it against his lips.
-
-“I don’t know how I can go through without you,” came in spite of him.
-
-Her eyes clouded.
-
-“You must, dear! You mustn’t even think of me.”
-
-“It’s too much to ask,” the broken voice plunged on. “To go out and
-face that crowd with you—here! I can’t do it—I can’t!”
-
-“You must do it, my love.” The spirit so much stronger than the body
-shone from her eyes. “I’ll be thinking of you and praying for you.
-I’ll be with you all through the performance. I’ll follow each
-line—every tiny bit of business. But you must put me out of your mind.
-Only your part must count—only your success.”
-
-He was silent, pressing the little hand between his warm palms as if
-to send the vitality from his veins into hers. But the only vitalized
-part of her was the feverishly bright look of eyes that drew his.
-
-“Frank—”
-
-“Yes, darling—”
-
-“You know how I always loved the stage—how I always wanted to be a
-great actress.”
-
-“I know, my Elaine.”
-
-The big burning eyes traveled into the past. Haltingly, with breath
-uneven and the words only faintly spoken, she drifted on the tide of
-memory back toward that horizon of hope so many see but never reach.
-
-“Frank—do you remember in the old stock days when we first met—how
-jealous I was of you?”
-
-“Nonsense! You were just ambitious.”
-
-“No—jealous! Don’t you remember the time I wouldn’t speak to you for a
-week—because you walked off with the big scene?”
-
-“Mine was the better part.”
-
-Two tears she pretended not to be conscious of gathered in the dark
-eyes.
-
-“No, dear—it wasn’t in me. You tried to give it back to me—that
-scene—at every performance.” Her voice trailed away a little wearily
-and it was a full minute before the slow words came to her lips again.
-“But I couldn’t take it away from you, no matter how hard I tried.”
-
-She had carried him with her back to the days of struggle and hope,
-when success was a star at the top of the world and effort the ladder
-from which so many rungs fell away as climbing feet sought a firmer
-hold. The days when disappointments were shared with after-theater
-sandwiches and the monument of ambition took the form of a dingy stock
-theater on the Main Street of a small town.
-
-“And I felt like such a dog,” he reminisced. “That was when I began
-loving you—when I was trying to heal the hurt of your disappointment.
-That night when you walked out of the stage door in the pouring rain
-and your umbrella turned inside out and I tried to make you take my
-raincoat but you poked up that little head of yours and looked neither
-to right nor left like a real Mrs. Siddons. And then an old cab came
-jogging along and I scooped you up bodily and carried you into it,
-broken umbrella and all. Do you recall how I held you in my arms all
-the way to your boarding-house and kept telling you you had to marry
-me?”
-
-“Take me in your arms now, dear. Let’s live those days over again.”
-
-He looked, anxiously yet with an eager plea in his eyes, toward the
-nurse. She hesitated.
-
-“Frank,” came the voice from the pillow, “won’t you put your arms
-around me?”
-
-The nurse nodded, coming quickly to the bed. She slipped her own arm
-under the wasted body, lifted it. Then the man’s went in its place and
-silently he cradled the precious burden against him, bending down so
-that her position might not be changed. She gave a little sigh as his
-lips touched the silk of her hair.
-
-“I feel better now,” she said.
-
-They were quiet a few moments while the man’s eyes fastened blindly on
-a cornice of the ceiling.
-
-Her slim fingers curled round his.
-
-“We both love the theater so, don’t we?”
-
-“Yes—” But he was not thinking of her words.
-
-“Only I never had it, dear,—the spark. It is a spark—”
-
-“You have the greatest spark in the world, darling,—the love that you
-give and inspire—that will live on when the theater has forgotten me.”
-
-“It must never forget you.” She stopped, then softly went on, “I—I
-wanted so much for myself—at first. I could learn lines and be letter
-perfect in a few days—and look pretty.”
-
-“You were always beautiful. You always will be.”
-
-She gave a little tired movement of dissent.
-
-“It doesn’t matter much—because—because—anyway—”
-
-“I love you so,” he said in a shaking voice.
-
-“I used to tell myself the other thing—the spark—would come. It took
-New York to teach me that if you have the other thing—looking pretty
-and being letter perfect in a few days aren’t important. But Frank—”
-
-“Yes, sweetheart—”
-
-“I didn’t marry you because I was a failure. I married you because I
-loved you.”
-
-“You don’t have to tell me that.”
-
-“But I want to. Do you want me to tell you just when I knew I loved
-you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-She had told it to him dozens of times but he waited with the eager
-attention of one who had never before heard it.
-
-“Well, it was the time we both opened in ‘The Jungle-Beast.’ I had
-just come to New York. You’d been here six months. But I was too proud
-to let you know because I couldn’t get a job and was half starved. And
-then we met one day—in Cleeburg’s office—and you made him give me a
-part.”
-
-“He’d have given it to you without me.”
-
-“He would not. It was you who managed me. The best manager in the
-world,” she murmured.
-
-He had an insane impulse to clutch her tighter, hold her so that no
-power on earth or in heaven could drag her from him. But the muscles
-of his arms merely tightened without movement. She lay within them, a
-weight too pitifully light.
-
-“When we opened,” came at last, whispered so that the words were a
-breath, “I tried so hard—I put every bit of me into the part.”
-
-“And you were great in it, too.”
-
-“No, the papers told the truth. I just—wasn’t. They didn’t even
-mention my name—I was just an also-ran. But Frank—I was so happy—so
-proud. My own failure didn’t count. That was when I knew I loved you,
-dear,—belonged to you—for always.”
-
-“For always,” he repeated like an amen.
-
-“No matter what happens?”
-
-“No matter—” he could not go on.
-
-She lay there with eyes closed and a smile on her lips. A faint pink
-like the touch of sunset spread its delicate color on her cheeks. But
-only for the moment that had carried her into the past. When the eyes
-opened and looked up to his, they were troubled.
-
-“What is it, my Elaine?”
-
-“Frank—since then I’ve poured all my ambition into you. All these
-seven years—each step of yours up the ladder has been mine. And we
-have been happy—every minute of them, haven’t we?”
-
-He put his inarticulate lips against her forehead.
-
-“Nothing can take that away. It’s ours—forever. It’s more than life
-gives most people. And I’m not a real failure, because my longing has
-been satisfied—in you.” The clouded eyes struggled to his. “Come
-closer, dear. That’s why you mustn’t fail to-night. Tell me you
-won’t.”
-
-“But the thought of leaving you—it—it’s too much. I can’t stand it!”
-
-“You must, Frank! Everything depends on it.”
-
-“Do you think anything that matters there—will count?”
-
-“But if I want you there instead of here—if it means everything to
-me?”
-
-Her fingers twined feverishly through his. Her eyes were frightened.
-Her voice gathered sudden strength.
-
-“I want to spur you to triumph, darling, not defeat. I want you to
-ring the bell, so that—always—I can know I was a help not a
-hindrance.”
-
-“Elaine—you mustn’t talk any more. You’re tired.”
-
-“No—I’m not. Let me tell you the thing I want to say. You can’t serve
-two masters, dear, the theater and me. You love us both—but to-night
-the theater must come first. It is your master—mine, too. You must let
-it take you away from me when you want to stay. You must let it
-absorb you—mind and body. You must forget that I’m ill—forget me while
-I’m remembering you. No matter what happens! Frank—promise me—”
-
-“I can only—try.”
-
-Her two hands clung to his.
-
-“That’s not enough! Frank—I’d die now if I thought I was going to
-cause you to fail. You must appear—you must make good. You must do the
-best work of your career. After all, that will be serving me too,
-darling. You’ll be giving me the thing I want—your name the greatest
-on the American stage. No matter what happens, Frank—no matter what—”
-
-The nurse moved quickly to the bedside.
-
-“I can’t let Mr. Moore stay if you excite yourself. Take this—and
-please lie quiet for awhile.”
-
-“You won’t make him go?”
-
-“Not if you do as I say.”
-
-She took the powder and, closing her hands round his to reassure
-herself, settled back on the pillow. He remained in his cramped
-position, half kneeling, half lying beside her, filling his eyes with
-her, listening for every faint even breath that told him sleep had
-once more laid relaxing fingers upon her. Like a miser counting gold,
-he counted the minutes that gave them to each other, the minutes
-before the master she said he must obey claimed him. He heard those
-minutes being ticked away by the clock in the adjoining room with a
-terror that laid cold hands on his heart. The day must not go! It must
-not escape them so quickly!
-
-Once more he put his head down beside the pale gold one. For a long
-time neither moved. Then the faint grip of her fingers loosened,
-dropped away. But his arms stayed about her, numbed and tense.
-
-She awoke and lay smiling into his eyes, but neither made attempt to
-speak. Sometimes he whispered her name. Sometimes she murmured his.
-All the words that could have been spoken—all that he wanted to pour
-out—all that he felt—choked him. But the futility of trying to express
-it and the fear of weakening her held him silent. Theirs was a
-communion deeper than speech.
-
-It was late afternoon when she lifted her head, a sudden light
-illumining her spent eyes.
-
-“Frank—have they got your name on that billboard we can see from the
-front window?”
-
-“Yes, beloved.”
-
-“Big?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Almost as big as Kane’s?”
-
-“Yes, little lady of mine.”
-
-“Frank—I want to see it.”
-
-He started up with protest on his lips, but—
-
-“Impossible!” formed on the nurse’s before he could speak.
-
-“Please, Frank!”
-
-“I’m afraid it wouldn’t do, dear.”
-
-“If you’d wrap me in a blanket and carry me in. Just for a second—just
-to see it—once.”
-
-“Mrs. Moore,” the nurse put it, “it doesn’t seem much and I’d like to
-say ‘yes.’ But it would weaken you too much.”
-
-“No—no! It wouldn’t—it couldn’t! Why—it’s the thing I’ve been waiting
-for! It would give me new life. I want to see his name all lighted
-up. Please—please! Don’t deny me just this little thing.”
-
-Frank Moore’s gaze went desperately to the nurse’s. She stood locking
-and unlocking her hands, nervous uncertainty battling with
-professional caution.
-
-“We’ll wait until Dr. Griffith gets here. If he permits it—”
-
-With gaze fastened on her, Frank Moore knew that she was certain the
-doctor would not permit it. Yet when he came at five and the dark eyes
-went quickly to his with their anxious plea, he stood looking down at
-them for a moment, prolonged by silence—then bowed his head in quiet
-assent.
-
-The man who had been watching did not stop to question or consider
-why. He saw only the light that like white fire came again to the eyes
-he loved. Gathering her close, with head bent to hers, he carried her
-to the window that faced the park.
-
-Dusk with its faint blue haze of beauty had settled and through it
-glimmered the first sparkle of the evening star. A building off toward
-Broadway, mysteriously illuminated from below, glowed moonwhite and
-dreamlike. The city itself, at this weird hour between day and night,
-seemed scarcely real. But it was not on the unreality of material
-things that the dark eyes centered. Over the park they wandered and
-above the long black trellis of the elevated.
-
-There it was, shining beyond its reflectors, the big twenty-four
-sheet:—
-
- Kane Theatre
- 45th Street
- beginning
- _November 5th_
-
- OSWALD KANE
- Presents
- the New Drama
- “THE LAUREL WREATH”
- by
- _Gaston Grisac_
- Featuring
- FRANKLYN MOORE
-
-She gave a little joyful sigh.
-
-“Frank dear—it’s real—it’s real!”
-
-Her arms held closer round his neck.
-
-“I’ve asked Kane to keep your place vacant in the stage box,” came
-from him finally. “I couldn’t bear to have anyone else in it.”
-
-“I’ll be with you—rooting for you—don’t forget! I’ll be with
-you—always.”
-
-He put his face against hers. He could not speak. Through the dusk he
-saw only those great dark eyes with their strange glowing light. He
-stood with her so, while she read and re-read the name that spelled to
-her love, ambition, life. Suddenly—
-
-“I can’t leave you—I can’t!” he broke down.
-
-“’Sh! You must go on and on, darling. Remember,—don’t try to serve
-two masters. You will remember—won’t you? For me?”
-
-Their eyes held.
-
-“Yes,” came from him.
-
-“And Frank—”
-
-“Yes, my Elaine—”
-
-“Kiss me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-A Kane opening is not an ordinary first night. It happens, at the
-outside, twice a season at the two most artistic theaters in New York.
-It is an event as important socially as theatrically. Weeks before,
-the hum of it is in the air. The public palpitates with anticipation.
-When Oswald Kane imports a play from Paris, it is the most chic,
-effervescent and gay the winking eye of Paris has gazed upon. When he
-produces a period play, he trusts neither to his own imagination nor
-the costumer’s but enlists the advice of experts and dresses his
-product with the care of a modiste turning out a woman of fashion.
-Every member of his casts, down to the most minute part, is selected
-with an eye to ensemble effect. Sometimes the effect is overdone, a
-surface glazed too smooth to be startling. But it is never underdone,
-and the New York first night audience is often hypnotized under the
-hand of the magician into believing a mediocre piece of work an
-outstanding masterpiece.
-
-Through the audience that flowed into the Kane Theater on the night of
-November 5th, like an undulating stream of scented sparkling color,
-drifted that murmur of eagerness which was breath of life to the
-famous producer. In it he found all the satisfaction of a woman in her
-beauty or a painter in the eyes lifted to his canvas. Glitter, the
-incandescence of anticipation, they were the arclights along the path
-of his greatness. He stood in the wings, a gentle, artistic hand
-straying through the wavy black hair that fell across his forehead,
-giving his attention to the final details of to-night’s opening. As
-the actors assembled he gave each an encouraging word, the last moment
-stimulus of a faith not always felt.
-
-The mirror in a dressing-room just a few yards beyond Kane’s point of
-vantage reflected a face mask-like in its immobility. The man before
-it sat staring at the reflection as if it belonged to another. A shirt
-open at the neck showed muscles hard and tense. Even make-up could not
-widen the tight red line of the mouth. The eyes were dulled as if
-viewed through a curtain. Frank Moore went through his final
-preparations like a machine correctly set in motion. When the last
-touch had been given, he walked to the door and listened to the surge
-of the incoming throng like the song of the sea on a smooth beach.
-
-Suddenly rebellion shook him. What right had they? Pleasure! That was
-all they cared about. To make of him a puppet, a thing for their
-amusement! God, what a joke! Those lights, the chatter, the
-laughter—himself about to stalk on the stage!
-
-A few minutes later, as he made his entrance to an anticipatory round
-of applause, he had an insane desire to step down to the footlights
-and shout his thoughts to the upturned faces that came vague and white
-out of the dark. Those gay seekers who were using him for an hour’s
-diversion, why should they not know what that hour meant of anguish to
-him? Why should the curtain that lifted to them lift only on illusion?
-Why should their pleasure be permitted to surmount his pain?
-
-But those in front saw only a man going through his part with leaden
-apathy. Frank Moore, the spontaneous, the man who with the lift of an
-eyebrow or the flick of a little finger against a cigarette ash could
-carry an audience into his mood, what had happened to him? A stir,
-that faint but agonizing presage of dissatisfaction, sent its warning
-up and over the footlights. Moore felt it with the rest but it
-quickened neither fear nor blood in his veins. Only grim resentment
-and dull indifference. He could not shake them off. He didn’t care.
-
-Backstage the sensitive fingers of Oswald Kane on the pulse of his
-public trembled for the sum, always enormous, that would sink with the
-swaying ship of the production. As the act drew to its close his
-restless feet paced the boards, his black brows drew together. Yet
-when the curtain fell and Moore came off, the manager showed no
-anxiety. He approached the actor, gently taking his arm. Moore looked
-up a trifle dazedly as if not quite sure where he was.
-
-“Wish I could do something for you, old man!” was all the other man
-said.
-
-“Rotten, wasn’t I?” Moore answered with a tight smile.
-
-Kane said nothing.
-
-“Do my best this act,” Moore supplemented.
-
-“Shall I telephone and find out how things are? You might like to
-know.”
-
-“No—don’t—don’t! I couldn’t—stand it!” His strained eyes closed. He
-went quickly into his dressing-room and banged the door.
-
-Kane stood for a second, hesitant, then hurried out to the elevator
-that mounted to his studio at the top of the building.
-
-In the lobby critics exchanged a few cryptic remarks, conservatively
-trying to withhold snap judgment. But frankly puzzled, they asked each
-other what was the matter with Kane. He was permitting an actor like
-Franklyn Moore to walk through his part like an automaton.
-
-The auditorium darkened. The curtain lifted on Act II. Moore made his
-entrance. He played a statesman, ruthlessly trampling under iron hoof
-friends, family, wife, to reach the pinnacle of his ambition. But up
-to that moment he had not been iron. He had been wooden. Not ruthless
-force but numbed suffering marked his gestures, the intonation of his
-deep voice. More than once his hand strayed with desperate weariness
-to his thick brown hair. He managed to catch the gesture in time. But
-even halted midway, it marked itself as strangely out of character.
-
-As he came off at his first exit Kane was in his path, pacing up and
-down. Once more he took the actor’s arm, but this time his voice
-shook.
-
-“Do you want to go home, old man? Shall I step out now and explain? We
-can ring down the curtain.”
-
-“You mean I’ve flivved the whole thing, anyway. You mean there’s no
-use going on.”
-
-“No!” Kane pulled down the hands that tremblingly covered the staring,
-empty eyes. “No—don’t say that. But it was too much to ask of you. I
-had no right.”
-
-“You—you weren’t the only one who asked it of me. I’m going through
-with it, I tell you! I—I’ll get them yet.”
-
-A shout of laughter came from the auditorium. Kane could not control a
-sigh. It was relief after the murmuring quiet that had marked the
-play’s reception from the first. Moore looked up with a quick,
-comprehending glance. He _had_ flivved the production. Failure was
-upon his shoulders—his alone! He squared them determinedly. He waited
-attentively for his cue.
-
-When he walked on the stage again, he looked out upon the vague faces
-in that crowded cavern at his feet and then his gaze traveled to an
-empty chair in the stage box. It rested there an instant and gradually
-something was woven into the mauve velvet. Filmy and gauze-like as a
-cloud across the sun, it took at first no form. Only white and gentle
-and indefinite. But even before it floated into the folds of a woman’s
-gown, he knew that above it two dark eyes were sending the flame of
-inspiration into his, a silky blond head was bent forward with the
-light of love gleaming from it. The lips were slightly parted as if to
-call to him. Against the rail of the box rested transparent hands,
-ready to lift in applause. She was so eager, so intent, so full of
-faith and urge and hope that he did not realize his imagination had
-put her there. Those other men and women must see her, too. They must
-know now that the one he needed to help him onward had come because of
-that need.
-
-His head went up. A light lifted the curtain of his eyes. A live look
-loosened the tension of his mouth. He turned toward the leading woman
-and again his glance swept the audience. Something electric passed
-over them. Franklyn Moore had come to life. He was acting now. No, not
-acting! For as his deep voice responded to the unvoiced call which
-had come to him, it swept that waiting throng across the footlights.
-Not illusion but reality made them move forward with the drama. To
-them he was no longer an actor playing a part. He was a man living in
-anguish because in tearing the laurel wreath from another’s brow, he
-had torn down his own happiness. The wife he loved had turned to the
-man from whom he had snatched it.
-
-“Of what use is the applause of the multitude,” he pleaded, “if I must
-lose you?”
-
-And as he spoke the words only a few in that vast audience saw his
-eyes fasten on an empty chair in the stage box.
-
-The dark eyes that met his shone. The shadowy hands came together in
-applause. The white throat pulsed. She was so alive in all her
-vagueness. She was sending out to him what he had always known she
-would give him when the moment came, the spark she had said she
-lacked, the power of love to leap the chasm of uncertainty, to know
-the heights of achievement.
-
-His lips formed “Elaine!” He waited for the applause to die down. Then
-with the man’s eyes still on that box, the actor crossed the stage to
-the woman he had lost.
-
-“I ask you only not to leave me! Not now! Give me the chance to share
-with you the success that has robbed me of—everything. One chance!
-Just one!”
-
-And as she told him it was too late to ask anything of her and the
-door shut behind her, he lifted his two arms and his voice broke with
-the tragedy of the immortal tenor’s in “Il Pagliacci” as he cried
-out:—
-
-“I am at the top—and I am alone.”
-
-Even before the curtain fell the bravos rang out. The force of them
-was deafening. That drawing aside of the curtain of his soul, that
-sudden springing to life of the fire of genius had an effect more
-dynamic than would have been an easy success from the very beginning.
-
-It was like a clarion blast across a silent world. It galvanized the
-sullen crowd to action. It carried them out of their seats. Through
-the din and the repeated rise and fall of the curtain Moore did not
-move. They clamored for a speech. He shook his head. But like
-insistent children they shouted his name, and as the curtain remained
-lifted, he stepped downstage.
-
-“There’s nothing I can say—the credit for this is not mine— It belongs
-to one—” his voice halted. It broke. He stepped back.
-
-Construing his few words as a tribute to his illustrious manager, they
-called for Kane—called and waited. He did not come.
-
-From the wings members of the cast scurried in search of him. It was
-not like Oswald Kane on a first night to be far from the footlights at
-the curtain of the big act. He was always close at hand, after eight
-or ten calls, for a gracious speech of thanks.
-
-But to-night he could not be found. They sent a callboy to his studio.
-He was not there. He had evidently left the theater. Discouraged by
-Moore’s early failure, he had apparently given up all possible hope of
-the ultimate overwhelming triumph that was his.
-
-The curtain descended finally after announcement had been made that
-the manager could not be located.
-
-Keyed to his topmost effort, Moore changed for the last act. He had
-come through! He had scored—nothing could alter that. And _she_ had
-made him do it. It was her success! His Elaine’s! He had not failed
-her. Two masters! She had said he must serve only one. Had he? And if
-so was it not she, his beloved, whom he had served?
-
-He was on the stage, with that swift glance toward her place, that
-prayer to a filmy figure of his imagination. And yet not quite. More
-than his imagination—his spirit! They two were one, would be one for
-all time. He knew that now.
-
-With the same fire of inspiration he went through the final scenes.
-For her he played his part—to her he spoke his lines. “You’ve come
-back to me!” he cried as the door opened and the wife of the play
-entered. “You’ve come back. I haven’t lost you, dear.” And a vast
-throng of seasoned New Yorkers responded, unashamed of their emotion.
-
-The play was done. As the last clatter of hot hands died away Frank
-Moore covered with quick, precipitate steps the short space to his
-dressing-room. His eyes were still lifted and alight. He caught hold
-of the door knob and as he did so, another hand covered his.
-
-“Frank—”
-
-Oswald Kane was standing beside him.
-
-“I put it over!” came swiftly from the actor and with a breath of
-triumphant relief.
-
-“I know!”
-
-“But I wasn’t the one who did it. She did!”
-
-“I know that, too!”
-
-“You—?”
-
-“I was there with her.”
-
-“You—?” Frank Moore repeated.
-
-“When I saw you were winning out, I felt she ought to know. I went
-over to tell her.”
-
-“You saw her? You talked to her?”
-
-“Yes. She knew all about it. Frank—if you could have seen her joy! It
-was like a light from heaven.”
-
-Moore pushed past him.
-
-“I’ll go to her—I’ll see it now!”
-
-“Frank—wait!”
-
-The actor paused under the shaky, detaining hand.
-
-“Frank—not yet!”
-
-Frank Moore looked up dumbly.
-
-“You will see a smile on her lips,” Kane went on. “It will be
-there—always.”
-
-The man who heard him stood silent. One would have said no change had
-occurred. Then very low, he brought out:—
-
-“Are you telling me—?”
-
-“Yes, my boy.”
-
-Quietly the hand dropped away from the door. He stood looking up into
-the sympathetic face of the great manager. Then with slow, shuffling
-steps, he went back to the dismantled boards that faced the dark
-auditorium. With shoulders sagging and head bent he stood for a
-moment. And then a stagehand, moving the last piece of scenery, saw
-him lift his arms and stretch them out to an empty chair in the stage
-box.
-
-
-
-
-UPSTAGE
-
-_COMEDY_
-
-
-Like beauty, color is in the eye of the beholder. To one who looks
-through shadows, white is—well, gray. To the uninitiated, a chorus is
-like a game of roulette—rouge et noir. Yet even to play that game,
-some of the chips must be white.
-
-
-
-
-UPSTAGE
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-“And I said to him: ‘My deah boy, don’t talk to me as if I were your
-wife! And don’t imagine you’re the only twin six in town.’ And we
-settled it right then and there.” The full pouting lips broadened into
-a reminiscent smile. The pink and white cheeks dimpled. Miss Mariette
-Mallard, accent on the last syllable, laid her trump card on the table
-for the benefit of her listener whose black eyes sparkled with
-gratifying interest. “And then he went out and bought me a big—”
-
-Just what the “big” was remained a question, for Miss Mariette halted
-as a girl slid into the chair next to hers and stretched out a hand to
-dust a film of powder from the face of her mirror. They formed a queer
-assortment, those mirrors, all shapes and sizes, propped against both
-sides of the rack that ran down the center of the long make-up table.
-
-Above them, on a wire stretching from one dusty white washed wall to
-the other, was suspended a row of electric lights in a tin reflector.
-Before them, dumped hodge-podge, were boxes of rouge and mascaro,
-rabbits’ feet, puffs and eyebrow brushes. Into them gazed as many
-types as there are flowers of the field, with just two traits in
-common,—all were slender as birch trees, all young as Eve before the
-serpent appeared. Except that to most the apple was no longer
-forbidden fruit.
-
-At the moment there were some sixteen in various stages of preparing
-for the costume, largely imagination, which the prettiest chorus on
-Broadway wore in Scene I of “Good Night Cap.” It was one of those
-musical mélanges commonly known as girlie shows, and advertised in red
-splashes of poster as “A Bevy of Beauties All under Twenty.” Its
-prescription is filled each season with merely a change of lights and
-trappings to distinguish it from its predecessor.
-
-The bloods of New York patronize the Summer Garden with a loyalty that
-brings them back at least once a week. The one theater in town it is
-in which the chorus fraternizes with the audience, tripping down a
-runway into the aisles to trill their syncopated love ditties into the
-ears of selected members, or swinging overhead on ropes of roses, bare
-knees perilously near bald heads. Buyers, politicians, traveling
-salesmen, miners and perfectly proper tired business men with their
-smiling better halves all enter the place with a twinkle of
-anticipation and come out humming a medley of haunting tunes.
-
-On the night in question, one of early March, Miss Mariette Mallard’s
-voluminous moleskin wrap was draped over the back of her chair and she
-pulled it round her with a pretty baby shiver as she scanned the girl
-who had just come in. Then she winked at the black-eyed one.
-
-“Well,” she observed, forgetting to go on with her story, “how is
-mamma’s sparkler to-night?”
-
-The girl bit her lip, then turned with a grin that was not in her eyes
-and flashed under Miss Mariette’s little nose the hand that had dusted
-the mirror. On its third finger blinked a diamond, the size and
-brilliance of which was breath taking.
-
-Miss Mallard promptly turned her attention to the black-eyed one.
-“Gracie deah, suppose you had a block of ice like that—wouldn’t you try
-to make your clothes live up to it?”
-
-The black-eyed one giggled: “And I wouldn’t be so upstage about it
-until I did.”
-
-The object of their amusement set her teeth and turned back to the
-mirror, addressing the reflection: “I pay cash for my clothes. That’s
-more than some people can say.”
-
-The black-eyed one giggled again. “They look it,” she murmured
-sweetly.
-
-Miss Mariette indulged in a smile still more saccharine. “They look as
-if you paid nothing for them, my deah. Take my advice and pay cash to
-get rid of them.” She gave a dismissing flourish of her small hand and
-patted her pale blonde ringlets.
-
-The chorus girl of to-day buys her hats on Fifth Avenue and borrows
-her manner from the same thoroughfare. She never forgets that a lead
-awaits her if she’s clever enough to look and act the part. Not that
-Miss Mallard had any ambitions in that direction. She was content to
-be cute and cuddly and first on the left in the front row. But she did
-try to live up to the moleskin cloak and the car that called for her
-every night. Only at unguarded moments did Second Avenue scratch
-through Fifth. “You don’t know how to manage him, my deah,” she
-concluded, baby blue eyes fastened on the radiant stone.
-
-The girl’s lips opened, then shut tight. She had told them where the
-ring came from—and they didn’t believe her. Besides, if she tried to
-answer them she’d cry, and she’d die rather than let them see her do
-that! It was the same struggle she went through every night and two
-matinées a week—sometimes with bravado, more often in choking silence.
-Somehow they made her ashamed, those two, that for her the apple still
-hung high on the tree. If they wanted to think some man had given her
-the diamond, so much the better! It would make her seem popular—less a
-little fool!
-
-She downed the tears by vigorous motion.... She sprang up—a kick of
-her heel sent her chair spinning—and ripping open her one-piece serge
-dress, she tossed it on the hook in the wall where hung a plain brown
-ulster and imitation seal turban—alley cat caught in the rain, Miss
-Mariette had christened it. Then she gritted her teeth, pulled the
-chair back into place and slashed on make-up.
-
-Sallie MacMahon, listed in chorus annals as Zara May, was one of those
-who merited the splashing announcement of the red posters. Perhaps it
-was her long mermaid hair with its glisten of sunset on the sea;
-perhaps the fact that the lashes shading her deep blue eyes were the
-same gold; perhaps the transparent quality of her skin with the swift
-play of young blood under the surface; but whatever it was, Sallie’s
-beauty held a luminous quality Sallie herself did not possess. Sallie
-was just a girl, with a facility for doing what she was told. The
-daughter of a Scotch father with somber eyes and an Irish mother with
-laughing ones, both of whom had sailed the misty river into unknown
-lands after a stormy sojourn together in this one, she had been left
-at fifteen to take care of herself, with a love of the beautiful on
-one hand warring against a sense of economy on the other.
-
-Sallie loved soft furs and clinging silks such as swept into the
-chorus dressing-room nightly. But she had no desire to follow the
-tortuous path by which such luxuries are achieved. However, the fact
-that the Mallard girl and Grace assumed she had done so, did not at
-all disturb her. It was their ridicule she feared, their jibes at her
-clothes. Speeding across the stone floor under the Summer Garden stage
-she tried to bring a smile to her lips. They merely trembled.
-
-There came the march of a military air and the girls filed up the
-wobbly wooden steps and through a trap door. Sallie fluffed up her
-abbreviated skirt, brought the smile to her lips, fixed it as if it
-had been glued there. Her young, elastic body rippled through the
-number under the changing lights. She loved the jazz, loved the stir
-of rhythm, and had it not been for the ache in her heart whenever she
-set foot in the theater, she would have loved the work. She was
-nineteen. Music was in her blood.
-
-She danced through the varying scenes with swift changes of costume,
-hurried dabs of powder, and little time to nurse her woes. A number
-toward the end of Act II was her favorite. It was the one in which the
-girls trooped down the runway and trilled to some not always
-embarrassed male occupant of an aisle seat:—
-
- “Oh-oh-oh-oh-h-h-h-h—
- Won’t you—smile at me?”
-
-Often as she swayed through it, it never failed to give her a thrill.
-Likewise she never failed to get what she demanded.
-
-To-night, as she syncopated down the aisle, a light like blue fire
-darted from her deep eyes. Kindled by the smouldering defiance of
-earlier evening it was utterly unconscious of seeking an object. But
-the gentleman in the particular seat that was her territory could
-scarcely have been expected to know that. To him it constituted
-challenge.
-
- “Oh-oh-oh-oh-h-h-h-h—
- Won’t you—smile at me?”
-
-urged Sallie.
-
-The man’s lips parted. “You just bet I will!” came in a flash of white
-teeth.
-
-Sallie’s mind was not photographic. It registered no definite
-impression of the individuals occupying her particular aisle seat.
-They came and went, vague as shadows. But this man’s response and his
-quick flashing smile with its personal note, made her suddenly realize
-that she had been singing to the same pleasant grin every night that
-week.
-
-She was still wondering about him as Miss Mariette, at the close of
-the performance, stepped into a short-waisted chiffon dress and,
-pulling it over slender hips, slipped her arms through the spangled
-shoulder straps. She and Grace were booked for a party, and the
-latter emerged like a full-blown rose, black eyes dancing above a
-gown of American beauty satin. Then both sat down and took some of the
-make-up off their faces.
-
-Sallie was in the act of pinning on the alley cat.
-
-“Do show him to us, my deah!” persiflaged Miss Mallard. “Don’t be
-so-er-close, even if he is.”
-
-Sallie jabbed the pin into her head, winced in pain and, with chin
-trembling and eyes hot with starting tears, hurried into the corridor
-followed by the familiar titter. Blindly she made her way up the
-stairs to the stage entrance.
-
-Outside, a blaze of changing lights proclaimed that Broadway was
-rubbing the sleep from her eyes and preparing to dance. A gold haze
-lined the sky, veiling the night even to the silver-white buildings
-that reared their heads high into the heavens. Lined up at the curb
-was a row of taxis. The modern stage door Johnny no longer stands,
-bouquet in hand. He remains discreetly in his cab or car and only when
-the lady of his choice emerges does he do likewise.
-
-As Sallie started to cross the street someone called “Good-evening.”
-But that being a familiar method of address, she passed on without a
-glance.
-
-“I say,” pleaded the voice, “won’t you smile at me again?”
-
-Sallie turned then. Descending from a big yellow car which, had she
-known more of auto aristocracy, would have stamped itself as of
-prohibitive peerage, was the man of the aisle seat.
-
-He came nearer.
-
-Sallie turned flutteringly on her heel.
-
-“Wait, please,” he begged and his teeth gleamed as they had in the
-theater. They were nice teeth in a boyish mouth, and upon Sallie they
-had a disarming effect. In spite of an instinctive impulse to run, she
-hesitated. The talon scratches inflicted in the chorus dressing-room
-were still bleeding and the smile of the man who had ceased to be a
-shadow was balm.
-
-He reached her, lifted his hat.
-
-Sallie shifted uncertainly from one foot to the other.
-
-“Come for a ride, won’t you?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, I couldn’t,” she answered promptly.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“I—I just couldn’t, that’s all.”
-
-He gave her a curious, somewhat puzzled look. “Round the park—once?”
-
-“I—I—no, thank you, I couldn’t.”
-
-“Then let me drive you home.”
-
-“I—I don’t live very far. I always walk it.”
-
-“Well, ride it to-night. Please!” Again that disarming gleam.
-
-Sallie looked up with eyes clouded and a tremor on her lips. “It’s
-nice of you to want to take me, but—”
-
-“But I’ve been coming here every night this week trying to make a hit
-with you, and until to-night you never even knew I was alive. Don’t
-you think you ought to be a little kind to a fellow who’s as devoted
-as that?”
-
-“I—I’d like to, awfully—but—”
-
-“Then what’s to prevent?”
-
-She looked down, tracing a pattern with the toe of her boot.
-
-“Please—I—thanks just the same,” she brought out finally.
-
-She took a step toward the curb, away from him.
-
-And just then came one of those feathery gusts that send whirling the
-wheel of fate. Miss Mariette Mallard and Grace issued from the stage
-door, their exchange of glances telling too plainly that they were
-still enjoying the laugh at her expense. At the curb waited a
-limousine quite overshadowed by the gorgeousness of the big yellow
-touring car. They drew near, still giggling.
-
-Swift as a bird, Sallie veered back to him. Instantly he was at her
-side.
-
-“You can take me home”—it was breathless—“I’ll let you do that.”
-
-Eagerly he helped her in, took his place at the wheel. Sallie turned
-with the air of royalty. With the sweetest of smiles, her head
-inclined in the direction of the two girls. As the car sped round the
-corner she saw them halt abruptly and, like Lot’s wife, stand rooted
-where they stopped.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-To a woman, the discovery that events do not work out as she had
-planned comes in the nature of a disappointment. To a man, the same
-discovery adds zest to the determination to make them do so. The man
-in the yellow touring car was amazed to find that Sallie actually did
-permit him to drive her home and no farther. He had anticipated that
-run round the park at least once—probably twice—possibly three times.
-He had even anticipated a cozy supper at which, across a table not too
-wide, he could drink deep of a pair of well-like blue eyes shaded with
-gold. But Sallie gave him her address, ten blocks from the theater,
-and though he urged with all the masculine dominance of which he was
-capable, she got out of the car in front of a brownstone house sagging
-as if with the weight of its own years.
-
-The man looked up the steep steps to where a flicker of gaslight
-sifted on the broken mosaics of the vestibule.
-
-“Is this where you live?” he queried, still holding the hand by which
-he had helped her.
-
-Sallie nodded, adding as she tried to withdraw the hand, “Thanks ever
-so much.”
-
-“Here—just a minute!” He drew her back. “You haven’t told me your name
-yet!”
-
-“Zara May.”
-
-“On-the-level name, I mean.”
-
-“Oh”—she flashed him a smile—“that one’s good enough.”
-
-“Peaches and cream would fit better!” came in quick response.
-
-She jerked her hand away. “Good-night, Mr.—Mr.—”
-
-“Patterson. Jimmie Fowler Patterson. You’ll notice I’m not so stingy
-as somebody else!”
-
-She caught hold of the rusty iron railing.
-
-He sprang into the car. “Well, I can wait! See you to-morrow, Miss
-Zara May.”
-
-Two emotions played havoc with her dreams that night—exultation over
-the girls and fear. As through her narrow rear window she watched the
-patch of dull blue mellow into dull gray, she assured herself that
-to-morrow she would do nothing more than walk past the yellow car with
-a pleasant “Good-evening.”
-
-But of course she didn’t. Not to-morrow—nor any other night that found
-it waiting at the stage entrance. And that became every night.
-
-In the chorus dressing-room an aura of new interest surrounded her.
-That car commanded respect. Miss Mariette even restrained her
-inclination to persiflage until one evening some ten days later when
-Sallie came in after the final act and caught her hunched on the
-floor, back up, meowing with all her might while the alley cat reposed
-over one ear.
-
-All the old wounds tore open. The blood gushed to Sallie’s head. She
-grabbed the hat and slapped Miss Mariette’s face, leaving the latter
-too startled to retaliate in kind. And when Mr. Patterson begged her
-as he did each evening to drive out to supper, she stepped into the
-car, throat too full for speech.
-
-He gave a broad grin. “Shall we make it up the Drive and back to
-Montmartre?”
-
-“I’d just rather ride if you don’t mind.”
-
-They spun up Broadway, through Seventy-second Street and into the
-enveloping shadows of Riverside. The moon was up, a new crescent
-streaking its modest trail across the water. On the opposite shore the
-chain of lights was a necklace of clustering jewels laid on the plush
-of night.
-
-Sallie nestled into the deep leather-cushioned seat, somewhat to the
-far side. A sharp wind lifted the curls from under the despised turban
-and sent them flying across the man’s face. He stole a moment to turn
-and gaze.
-
-“You’re a winner!” he murmured.
-
-Sallie scarcely heard him. She was lost in the intoxication of tearing
-motor and racing March wind. Never had she experienced anything like
-it. And gradually the turmoil of it soothed her own. She closed her
-eyes.
-
-When they opened it was to meet a swift turn of road, the houses
-mounted to a higher level and before them, far into the star-eyed
-night, a stretch of wooded walk through which the Hudson shimmered.
-
-“What’s this?” she asked, hand grasping his coat sleeve as if to stop
-the onward rush.
-
-“Lafayette Boulevard. You’ve been up here—haven’t you?”
-
-“Never!”
-
-He slowed down, eyes mocking her.
-
-“Honestly! I’ve never even heard of it.”
-
-“Good Lord!” he whistled and stared at her.
-
-“How long have you been in the show business?”
-
-“About a year.”
-
-“Well, what have you been doing all that time?”
-
-“Working, most of it.”
-
-“But after working hours?”
-
-“Oh, home right after the show. I’m pretty tired then.”
-
-He gave another low whistle, still regarding her curiously, that
-puzzled, half-skeptical expression creeping into his eyes.
-
-“And Sundays?”
-
-“I visit the girls I used to work with.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“You mean where did I work?”
-
-He nodded, still with that curious measuring of her.
-
-“In Brooklyn—in a department store. I was at the perfumery. And one
-day Miss Barton, Bessie Barton—ever hear of her?”
-
-“Rather! Peach of a voice—in ‘Kiss Me Again.’”
-
-“Yes. She was playing over there last year and she came in to buy some
-French extract—it’s awfully expensive—”
-
-“I know.”
-
-“I waited on her. And after she’d bought a big bottle—it was
-eight-eighty an ounce—she asked me if I’d ever wanted to go on the
-stage. She said I was—” Sallie paused.
-
-“Go on,” he put in quickly. “She said you were a beauty who didn’t
-belong behind a counter.”
-
-“How did you know?” came wonderingly.
-
-“I don’t need blinders to make me see straight,” he remarked
-succinctly.
-
-She gave an embarrassed, stammering laugh. “Well—you—you’re right.
-That’s what she did say—and she’d have her manager give me a job if I
-wanted it. So I went with them—twenty-five a week. It was a lot more
-than I was getting at the store. And when she closed, they took me on
-at the Summer Garden.”
-
-“And you still go round with the Brooklyn crowd?”
-
-Some note in his voice put her on the defensive.
-
-“They’re my old friends—why shouldn’t I?”
-
-He stared at her again. “Queer!” he remarked to himself.
-
-They dashed up a hill.
-
-“I guess we’d better be going back,” she sighed regretfully.
-
-“What’s the matter? Don’t you like this?”
-
-“It—it’s wonderful!” Luxuriously she nestled down, eyes half closing
-again.
-
-“Then have a heart! I’ve been jitneying you from the theater for two
-solid weeks! Be a little sympathetic, won’t you?”
-
-She laughed, a ringing laugh free as the March wind. “You must think
-I’m an awful grafter.”
-
-“I think you’re a sweetness.”
-
-The laugh died down. “I guess we’d better be going back.”
-
-They swung round. “All right. But we’ll stop at Arrowhead first.”
-
-“What’s Arrowhead?”
-
-Once more that swift quizzical look, then his head went back with a
-long chuckle. “By George, you are cute!”
-
-“What’s so funny about my asking?”
-
-“It’s called Arrowhead Inn, sweetness—and we’re going there for
-supper.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Now I guess you think you’re not hungry?”
-
-“No—I am hungry.”
-
-Her prompt and unexpected reply pleased him hugely.
-
-“Right! There you are!”
-
-They were flying up a drive, round a grass plot and under a
-porte-cochère. Sallie saw a house girdled with glass that glowed, warm
-and alluring.
-
-She went into the hall while her host parked the car. A mirror on the
-wall reflected a face very different from the one she saw habitually
-in the jagged glass of the dressing-table or the mottled one above her
-washstand. Its eyes were glistening, red lips were laughing, and at
-one corner a dimple danced. The blood surged under the smooth skin and
-went singing through every vein.
-
-To a rotund observer standing nearby, the girl in the mirror looked
-like a golden-haired sprite. To Sallie she looked nothing more than
-happy. She proceeded to powder her nose critically and straighten the
-alley cat on the shining curls. She was still engaged in the process
-when Mr. James Patterson came in and bore her off under the rotund
-one’s fat nose. Mr. Patterson had already achieved a proprietory air
-that prohibited trespassing under penalty of the law.
-
-He refused the first table offered, selecting one close against the
-window with an intimate little lamp shedding its blush over the cloth.
-Sallie had never felt so important, not even the night of her stage
-debut, for then she had been conscious solely of the fact that she was
-dancing with no skirt on before a lot of people.
-
-The head-waiter helped her out of the ulster. Mr. Patterson then
-seated himself and for the first time Sallie saw him under revealing
-electricity.
-
-His hair, parted at the side and brushed straight from his forehead,
-gave evidence of having been in boyhood the color affectionately known
-as “carrots.” But frequent use of water and military brushes had
-charitably darkened it. Remnants of freckles lingered where no amount
-of hatless motoring could promote more than one coat of tan. Above
-them gray eyes, not so young as they might have been, searched a world
-with which they were well acquainted. Smiling, they were a boy’s. In
-repose, as old as any frequenter’s of stage doors.
-
-Sallie’s gaze settled, not on his features but on his clothes. Patch
-pockets slanted across the coat. The waistcoat was high and of the
-same dark blue material threaded with a hairline of white. From the
-sleeves she thought rather too short, he shook down blue silk shirt
-cuffs matched by a soft collar. His blue Persian tie was held in an
-immaculate four-in-hand by a small pearl scarfpin. The correctness,
-the perfection of detail, were to Sallie positively thrilling. As he
-picked up the menu she noticed that his hands were wide and muscular
-with no shine on the nails. She was glad he wasn’t a dude.
-
-He proceeded to order with the casual ease of one who knows the chef’s
-best dishes. Sallie pulled off her gloves, crossed her arms on the
-table, leaned forward to listen with a kind of awe. He turned back and
-as he did so his glance fell on her hand. It riveted there, then
-slowly traveled upward accompanied by the same long low whistle he had
-emitted as they drove uptown.
-
-“Whew, what a stone!”
-
-“Yes,” replied Sallie. “It used to be my mother’s.”
-
-He stared. After which came a knowing twinkle to his eyes and a laugh,
-equally knowing, to his lips. He said nothing.
-
-“Honestly it was,” Sallie protested.
-
-His stare probed her—then came a faint flash of resentment. “I wasn’t
-born yesterday—not quite,” he announced.
-
-Tears started to Sallie’s eyes. “Please—_please_ believe me!”
-
-“Your mother owned a stone like that and you had to work in a
-department store?”
-
-“It does sound funny. But it’s true! We never had any money after my
-father died. Nor before, either. He just saved and saved, and then
-when he was gone mother just spent and spent. She went crazy spending.
-She said he never gave us enough to eat when he was alive and she was
-going to make the best of it now that he was dead. So she went to the
-savings bank and took out every cent and had a wonderful time—for a
-while. Hats and dresses and movies every night. She was awfully
-pretty—”
-
-“I believe it,” came vehemently.
-
-“And she never did have a decent thing to wear while my father was
-living. Then one day she came home with this ring. ‘Baby,’ she
-said—she always called me her baby—‘there’s not much left and before
-it’s all gone, I want to be sure you’re fixed. If I put it in the bank
-I’ll take it out again, so this way we’ll always have something we can
-hock if we need to.’”
-
-He chuckled. “And did you ever need to?”
-
-“Often.”
-
-Unwittingly, perhaps, his gaze shifted from the diamond to her dress
-and hat. She needed no intuition to interpret that look. Experience
-had taught her exactly what it meant. And where defiance had met the
-girls in the dressing-room, a wave of shame now swept over her.
-
-Gazing at him in his immaculate perfection, her fingers twitched to
-toss the alley cat out of the window. Yet she could not apologize for
-it. She couldn’t explain that, being her father’s daughter, she was
-banking such of her earnings as could be spared against the day when
-the sapphire sparkle would fade from her eyes.
-
-As the ’busboy shook out the glistening white napkin, placing it
-across her knees, she felt an absurd inclination to slide under the
-table.
-
-Mr. Patterson’s attention, however, had turned to the silver dish of
-frogs’ legs submitted for approval. He regarded them critically,
-nodded to the waiter, and Sallie’s discomfort vanished in the thrill
-of a new experience, though she wished he had ordered a nice thick
-steak.
-
-When they were once more gliding down the Drive he leaned over,
-quickly freeing one hand, and gave hers a squeeze.
-
-“You’re an adorable infant!” he whispered. “Don’t know just what to
-make of you, but you’ve got me going!”
-
-Sallie looked up a little uncertainly. “My right name’s Sallie
-MacMahon,” she stammered.
-
-“I don’t care what it is,” came tenderly. “My name for you is the same
-as your mother’s—‘Baby!’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-“Gracie deah—will you gaze!”
-
-Miss Mallard’s wide, wondering orbs, accompanied by Grace’s, turned
-toward the door. Sallie MacMahon had just entered, resplendent in
-spring outfit. Above slim ankles billowed a skirt of silk the color of
-her eyes. The ankles ended in slippers mounted with buckles of cut
-steel. Her arms gleamed white through transparent clinging sleeves. A
-necklace of pearls clasped her throat and over the golden head brimmed
-a wide hat weighted with roses.
-
-She disrobed nonchalantly, hanging her garments against the sheet that
-ran round the wall for their protection. She pretended not to see the
-nudges of the girls but her heart sang a paean of triumph.
-
-Now they would stop laughing at her!
-
-Now they would treat her with respect!
-
-Yea—weep for her, ye wise ones! Sallie’s day had come. She had fallen
-from grace. Worse, actually reveled in her downfall! That very
-morning, without a struggle, she had gone to the bank and wantonly
-depleted her little horde. There had followed a wild debauch of
-spending such as her own mother had indulged in years before. Silks,
-laces, chiffons, feathers! Shades of Scotland, the Irish had won out!
-
-And having recklessly started at high speed, she could not stop. She
-had no desire to. Ridicule she might have endured indefinitely, but
-nightly to sit opposite to Mr. James Fowler Patterson in his
-perfectly tailored clothes, conscious of the variety and extent of
-them, _that_ had been the straw that broke the backbone of resistance.
-
-Once and once only had Mr. Jimmie essayed the rôle of godfather.
-Reaching home one evening after a long drive in the moonlight, he had
-followed her up the ladder-like steps to the dim vestibule. Standing
-there, he had clasped quickly round her wrist a narrow glittering
-bracelet.
-
-“To match the ring,” he had whispered.
-
-Sallie’s gaze had fastened on the jewels that laughed up through
-semi-darkness.
-
-“Oh—I—couldn’t!” she breathed at last. And don’t imagine it was easy.
-
-“Please! Just because I want you to.”
-
-“But I—I couldn’t, Jimmie.”
-
-“But if I ask you? I’m crazy about you, Baby. Never was so keen on a
-girl in my life.”
-
-Sallie gulped hard and, without looking at it, unclasped the clinging
-circlet.
-
-“Please,” he protested as she handed it back. “Please—dear!”
-
-She shook her head decisively.
-
-“But I want to see you in pretty things. I want you to have them.”
-
-“Thanks, Jimmie,—for wanting to give it to me. But you mustn’t—ever do
-that again. It wouldn’t be right for me to take it.”
-
-And Jimmie had been forced to content himself with flowers and kid
-gloves and perfume—French stuff at eight-eighty an ounce.
-
-That phrase of his, however—“I want to see you in pretty things”—clung
-to her consciousness. She wanted him to see her in them. She wanted to
-see herself in them. She wanted those girls to see her in them.
-
-After which the savings bank simply flew to meet her.
-
-“Well,” observed Miss Mallard, still devouring the new costume, “I’m
-glad you’re learning how to handle him.”
-
-Sallie slipped into her chair.
-
-“May we inspect the dog collar, my deah?” Miss Mallard pursued.
-
-With large indifference Sallie handed over the necklace and watched
-the blue eyes widen. Not hers to inform the lady that it had been
-purchased at a near-pearl establishment, guaranteeing that “Our pearls
-rival the real.”
-
-Miss Mariette fingered it lovingly, even to the tiny barrel of
-brilliants that formed the clasp. “Atta boy!” she breathed and let
-fall upon its possessor a look approaching homage.
-
-“Oh, that’s nothing,” Sallie found herself saying, drunk with the
-dazzle of scoring at last against her enemies, “I’m going to get a car
-of my own soon.” And promptly wondered _how_ she was going to get it.
-
-But feminine imagination, given full rein, took the bit between its
-teeth and galloped beyond Sallie’s control. She spoke of champagne
-supper parties and a house on Long Island and sables, with the
-largesse of an “Arabian Nights.” She tasted the sweets of seeing baby
-blue eyes and impudent black ones dilate with envy as the other girls
-gathered round. She swept on, heedless of sharp turns ahead, and not
-until the callboy shouted the half hour did she halt.
-
-At the curb that night she found a gray roadster barking its haste to
-be off like a pert pomeranian. Mr. J. F. Patterson stepped out, then
-stopped short with a gasp as he took in the glory of her. She gave him
-her hand—and waited. To her amazement he said not a word, merely
-helped her into the car. It snorted and raced up Broadway. Still not a
-word! She snuggled into the low seat, turned to look up at him. He was
-frowning.
-
-“What’s the matter, Jimmie?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-“Something is.”
-
-“Nothing, I tell you.” His tone was brusque. The frown settled deeper,
-bringing brows together.
-
-Sallie’s eyes filled. She had pictured something so different—Jimmie
-bounding with delight when he saw her! Jimmie covering her with
-admiration!
-
-But his mood did not change. Throughout the ride he brooded, silent,
-absorbed—though she tried desperately to make conversation.
-
-“Is this a new car, Jimmie?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Why didn’t you ever come in it before?”
-
-“In the repair shop.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-Silence.
-
-“I like it, Jimmie.”
-
-“Do you?”
-
-“Yes. It’s so—so cozy.”
-
-“Is it?”
-
-Silence.
-
-“Montgomery’s laid up, Jimmie. And the new lead’s made a big hit.”
-
-“Has he?”
-
-Silence—a long one.
-
-“Jimmie—I—I don’t want any supper.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“I—I think I want to go home.”
-
-“Just as you say.”
-
-“Jimmie—what—what’s wrong?”
-
-His eyes scanned the beauty of her, steel buckles, silken dress,
-rose-laden hat. They ended on the glossy pearls and his lips which had
-opened for speech snapped shut.
-
-He drove her home, without a word lifted his cap.
-
-“Jimmie—please—please don’t act that way.”
-
-“What way?”
-
-“So—so queer.”
-
-He gave a short laugh.
-
-She clapped a hand over her mouth, stared at him, eyes swimming, then
-fled up the steps.
-
-The following night Mr. Patterson was late for the first time. He
-swung round the corner just as Sallie appeared. She was wearing a
-violet suit, fluffy lace collar and cuffs, and a hat of violets. They
-made her eyes the same color. During a night of tearful and bewildered
-groping she had arrived at a conclusion. Jimmie hadn’t liked the way
-she looked! He wasn’t pleased with her dress or hat or something.
-Maybe he didn’t think they were becoming and hadn’t wanted to hurt her
-feelings. A lighter color, perhaps, something gayer! After which she
-rolled over with relief, stole a few hours’ sleep, and later embarked
-on another shopping tour.
-
-But the violet, apparently, made no more satisfactory impression than
-the blue. He handed her almost roughly into the car. They shot like a
-cannon ball into the darkness.
-
-There were no stars. The moon had reached the full, dwindled and
-slipped round to smile upon the other side of the world.
-
-Sallie gulped, groped for a fitting subject and finally burst out:
-
-“Jimmie, tell me about yourself. You never have told me much.”
-
-“Nothing to tell.”
-
-“How does it feel to have so much money?” she proceeded for want of
-something better to say.
-
-The effect was electric. He turned on her. The car jerked to the other
-side of the road. “You ought to know!”
-
-“I? Stop kidding!”
-
-“Yes, you!”
-
-“But—”
-
-“Look as if you’d come into a Rockefeller income!”
-
-“Well, I haven’t.”
-
-“No?”
-
-“You know it.”
-
-“I don’t know anything about women.”
-
-“Well, you ought to know all about me.”
-
-“Yes—I ought to.” He gave the same ugly laugh of the night before but
-in his eyes was real pain. “But who knows what to expect of a chorus
-queen.”
-
-“Jimmie!”
-
-“Oh, what’s the use?” came in husky desperation. “Let’s be merry!”
-
-Sallie stared, choked and bewildered, into the darkness. She didn’t
-know how to answer, how to act. This new Jimmie, this—this nasty one!
-He was a stranger. Small teeth settled into her lower lip. She felt
-like slipping to the floor of the car and crying her eyes out.
-
-For three nights they followed the same program—Sallie bewitching in a
-new costume chosen tearfully to conciliate the mysterious male—he
-taciturn, unresponsive, answering her labored conversation with husky
-monosyllables or hard cynicism that hurt without enlightening. Twice
-during those three days it drizzled and, instead of suggesting supper
-in the neighborhood as was their habit in bad weather, he drove the
-short ten blocks to the weary brownstone house and left her there.
-
-“As if he was anxious to get rid of me,” sobbed Sallie into her
-pillow.
-
-To dust and ashes in her mouth turned the sweets of her triumph over
-the girls. Though she continued to weave stories for their benefit, to
-elaborate on gifts in the past and the car in the future, to flash her
-diamond and twirl her pearls, the tang had gone out of it.
-
-By Friday she felt she couldn’t stand it another minute. What had she
-done? Under the glimmering stars she gazed up first in mute pleading,
-then—
-
-“Jimmie,” she choked, “take me home. I—I—guess I’d better—”
-
-The roadster snarled at the tug that sent it round the corner.
-
-“Oh—another date!”
-
-“Maybe!” His tone had brought defiance into hers.
-
-“H’m! Thought so!”
-
-“You—you’re horrid!”
-
-“And he’s all to the good—what?”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“Well—can’t blame you! What chance has a mean little bracelet against
-a string of oyster tears like that?” The volcano which had been
-rumbling all week sent up a sudden blinding glare. “Gad, what an ass
-I’ve been!” it spat out.
-
-“Don’t talk like that—don’t!”
-
-“I mean it,—a saphead! Swallowed that diamond yarn whole—hook, line
-and sinker.”
-
-“It wasn’t a yarn.”
-
-“You’ll tell me next your mother bought the pearls, too.”
-
-“No—I did.”
-
-The volcano roared a warning. “God!” A pause while his breath caught.
-
-“It’s true, I tell you! I bought them myself—they’re imitation.”
-
-He flung back his head. His laugh frightened her.
-
-“Oh—won’t you believe me?”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Won’t you—please?”
-
-“And I put you above them—way on top.” The volcano erupted with
-thunderous crash. “But you’re like the rest of them! Price—a string of
-pearls—a diamond! Rotten—that’s what—! Sit down! Sit down, I say!!
-I’ll get you home quick enough!”
-
-White and terrified, she subsided. Words rushed to her lips, clung
-there.
-
-He crashed on.
-
-“But you did put it over! Had me going so that I’d have staked my life
-on you. Got me with the baby stare stuff. ‘Baby’—huh! It’s a lesson—I
-won’t be such a damn fool next time!”
-
-“Jimmie,” the voice struggled to keep steady—“I swear to you—!”
-
-“I wouldn’t believe you on a stack of Bibles! Down on your
-luck—thought you had an easy mark! Then something better—pearls!—came
-along—”
-
-“I—I’ll never forgive—you!”
-
-“That’s right! Injured innocence—”
-
-“I—I could die this minute!”
-
-“It’s tough, though, when the first time a man really—cares—more than
-he ever thought—” The words halted painfully.
-
-“Oh, _won’t_ you listen? Jimmie—you—you had _so_ much—”
-
-“But the other fellow’s got more! Like all the rest—”
-
-They stopped with a jump that made the roadster snort in protest.
-
-“You—you don’t understand.” The sobs clamored to her lips.
-“To-morrow—please—please listen—”
-
-She sprang out of the car and up the steps, clinging to the iron rail.
-
-But to-morrow when she hurried out of the stage entrance, eyes darting
-to the curb, Mr. James Fowler Patterson was not there.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-“My deah—what has become of the orange motah?” Miss Mariette turned
-her round stare on Sallie.
-
-“What—d-do you mean?”
-
-“Well, the yellow peril doesn’t seem to be on duty any more.”
-
-“Oh! He—he’s out of town.”
-
-“M’m! Been ‘out’ some time, I take it.”
-
-“F-four weeks.” Sallie found it impossible to talk these days without
-a quiver. And the wells that had been her eyes were wept dry.
-
-“When does he return, my deah?”
-
-“Oh s-soon now, I g-guess.”
-
-“H’m!” Merciless blue eyes took in the small white face, listless
-shoulders and drooping mouth, while their owner hummed low and
-languorously, “When I Come Back to You.” After which she proceeded:
-“And the cobbles, my deah?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Pearls! The dog collar?”
-
-“Oh! I—I p-put it away.”
-
-“Ah?”
-
-“I—it—I thought I’d better not wear it round all the time.”
-
-After a moment of slow scrutiny Miss Mariette cast her eyes
-heavenward. “You were a wise child not to let him get back the
-diamond, too,” she drawled.
-
-“I d-don’t know what you’re talking about.”
-
-“Oh—d-don’t you? My deah, do I look as easy as that? It’s plain he’s
-gone his merry way tra-la.”
-
-Like a whip Sallie snapped round at her. “He hasn’t!”
-
-“Tra-la, tra-la-la!”
-
-“Don’t you dare—”
-
-“Then where’s the car, tra-la?”
-
-“I told you—”
-
-“The car he was giving you, I mean.”
-
-Grace, who had entered in time for the last words, tittered with all
-the old enjoyment.
-
-“Poor little car skidded on the way, Gracie deah,” announced Miss
-Mallard.
-
-Sallie’s throat closed in a hard knot. Her head almost dropped on the
-table. But not quite. Pride kept it up. Pride and the determination
-never to let them know how right they were.
-
-Yet Miss Mallard, having resumed her tactics of warfare allowed to
-slip no opportunity for attack. She teased and tormented and tra-la’d
-with purring delight, sharp little talons inflicting new wounds.
-
-Sallie began to slink into the dressing-room as if to hide from
-insinuating smiles. And coming out of the stage door, she fairly ran
-round the corner to escape the torturing vision of that line at the
-curb.
-
-The pearls she had recklessly let go. After what _he_ had said, she
-couldn’t bear to touch them. They curled in her hand like some
-wriggling reptile. Her first impulse had been to toss the necklace
-into an ashcan, but eventually she found herself back at the
-near-pearl shop. A suave salesman after much fingering and testing
-reminded her that they did not refund on merchandise but added that he
-might be able to resell at a loss if she cared to leave it. Sallie
-even hated the money—something more than half the amount she had
-paid—which his smooth hands finally counted into hers.
-
-One thing, though, she did determine in the long nights. There must be
-a car! Never must they be certain that Jimmie had gone for good! The
-savings account had long since gone the way of all flesh. And cars,
-like Pegasus, soar winged in the clouds. June had come gliding into
-the arms of May while Sallie suffered and waited, lived on bread and
-milk, and hopelessly priced the cheaper makes.
-
-Other lips, mustached, clean-shaven, young, and not so young, answered
-Sallie’s plea of “Won’t you smile at me?” Sallie did not hear them.
-Other eyes sought hers from motors at the curb. Sallie did not know
-they were there.
-
-She was in her room balancing accounts at 11:30 p. m. When she did
-sleep, figures whirled through her dreams; figures and Jimmie’s face.
-
-Then in the murky dawn of one June day came an inspiration. Yesterday
-she had seen a second-hand runabout painted a beautiful blue for only
-two hundred and fifty dollars, with a week’s trial before buying. Her
-diamond! She could get enough for that! A few months in which to tear
-up to the stage entrance and spring out; to display the shining blue
-body to startled eyes; to make them believe he had come back!
-Jimmie—who never would! She gazed out through the streaky window pane
-and for a time the car was forgotten.
-
-When the chorus had assembled for the Wednesday matinée, a ring
-dropped tinkling to the dressing-room floor. Sallie picked it up,
-proclaimed that the stone had come loose and wore it no more.
-
-Later, behind a window barred like a prison, Sallie MacMahon’s lips
-clung together and she looked away as her most precious possession
-passed into other hands—probably for all time.
-
-At last the night arrived when the girls sighted at the curb a little
-car blue as the heavens. One of them stepped lightly from the stage
-entrance, fetched a key from her bag, bent down, then sprang in and
-took the wheel as though running a motor were a daily pastime.
-
-Miss Mallard stopped in the center of the pavement.
-
-“I’ll tell the world!” she breathed, forgetting Fifth Avenue. “She
-wasn’t lying, Grace,—she wasn’t!”
-
-Sallie MacMahon smiled upon them, put her foot on the self-starter,
-heard the cheerful chug chug of the engine responding and, with terror
-chasing down her spine, spun round the corner.
-
-As she disappeared, Grace’s reply wafted on the breeze:
-
-“But he’s a piker, anyhow. It’s as big as a minute!”
-
-Up Broadway, eyes starting with fear, heart pounding, went Sallie. And
-every instant’s progress petrified her. Buildings descended. Motor
-trucks loomed up. Trolleys tore, gigantic, within an inch of the blue
-mite that held her. It was completely, totally swamped. Alone in it
-for the first time, she clung wildly to the wheel while all Broadway
-danced.
-
-Never had she traveled a distance to equal those ten blocks. Never
-before had the thought of the sagging brownstone house been a welcome
-one. A century later she reached her own street, turned in. Then
-something snapped. The blue runabout stood stock still. Sallie tried
-to recall the varied instructions of the garage man who had taught her
-to drive it. Without his guiding hand they were Greek.
-
-She fled in the direction of a passing policeman, caught his arm.
-“Please, would you mind? Something’s happened. It—it’s stuck.”
-
-He grinned as he took in the blue mite. “Better go and phone your
-garage, Miss. I’ll take care of it till you get back.”
-
-Sallie dropped his arm.
-
-“Why, I—I haven’t any—”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Garage.”
-
-“What do you do with it at night? Take it to bed with you?”
-
-“N-nothing. It—it’s new. I—I never thought—”
-
-“Then find some place to put it—quick. They’ll send you a man—”
-
-Sallie stood stock still as the car, then turned on her heel and
-dashed in the direction of the brownstone house. On the top step she
-dropped.
-
-Not a cent in the world! Diamond gone!! Car that was no good!! And no
-place to put it!!!
-
-Early in her career as a motorist she had discovered that cars have a
-way of gathering expense like dust by the wayside. There had been
-extra tires and repairs even while you were learning to run it. It
-fairly ate up gas. You needed twice as much as she had reckoned.
-
-And now—this!
-
-Helplessly she gazed at the point far down the block where the
-policeman stood guard. From time to time his glance roved
-impatiently—and when at last he swung on his way, leaving the blue
-mite unprotected, Sallie knew there was nothing left but to sit there
-and watch it all through the night.
-
-Then it was that the wells which had run dry filled once more,
-overflowed. Huddled in a corner of the stoop, she fastened her wilted
-gaze on a spot of blue parked close to Broadway and wondered what she
-was going to do with it when morning arrived.
-
-She came to drowsily as a clock struck one and something heavy
-descended on her shoulder. It pulled her upright, shook the sleep from
-her eyes and a cry from her lips. The policeman!
-
-“What are you doing out here?”
-
-She strained forward.
-
-“Jimmie!!!”
-
-“What are you doing, I say?”
-
-“Jimmie—is it—is it—you?”
-
-“Answer me!”
-
-“I—oh, I can’t believe it! You—_you!!_” Then panic seized her.
-“Jimmie—don’t—don’t go again! Wait—let me tell you! I’ve been praying
-you’d give me the chance to tell you. I—it was true,—I _did_ buy all
-those things myself. I did—I did! I was afraid you’d be ashamed of
-me.”
-
-He stood glaring silently down at her and when his voice did come, it
-was thick and tense.
-
-“Didn’t you know it was just those old clothes of yours that convinced
-me the story you gave me was straight?”
-
-“But the girls always made fun of them—and I wanted to look right for
-you. And you thought—oh, Jimmie, what you thought has nearly killed
-me!”
-
-“What could a man who knew his Broadway think when you appeared all of
-a sudden in a million dollars worth of finery?”
-
-“But it wasn’t true! I took all my money out of the bank to look nice
-just for you. Jimmie—if you go again—the way you did—I—I’ll die!”
-
-He gave no direct answer. Instead he gripped her shoulders until they
-ached.
-
-“What are you doing out here this time of night? Answer me that!”
-
-The car! Her eyes raced down the block. There it stood, untouched.
-
-“I—I hocked my diamond, Jimmie, and bought a car. I made the girls
-think you were going to give me one and I didn’t want them to know
-that you—you—” She turned away. “So I hocked the ring—and—and
-got—that!”
-
-He followed her eyes to where a spot of blue reposed near the corner.
-
-“And now it won’t go and I haven’t any money to put it anywhere.
-They’ve been keeping it where I bought it and I never thought about
-garaging. So—so when it broke down I just had to sit here and watch it
-all night.”
-
-The rushing words halted. She looked up at the face bent over hers. If
-Mr. James Fowler Patterson had a sense of humor—and he had—the comedy
-of the present situation failed to bring it to light. He stood and
-gazed down into the small tired face lifted with such desperate
-appeal.
-
-“I—”
-
-“Jimmie, won’t you believe me this time—please?”
-
-He bent closer. “If I tell you I could take a gun this minute and blow
-out what little brains I’ve got, will _you_ believe _me_? Will you?”
-He did not give her time to answer. “I deserve it—shooting’s too good.
-Why, even if you dressed up like a Christmas window, only a saphead
-who’s wasted all his life chasing up and down Broadway could have made
-such a mistake. What’s love, anyhow? And sweetheart—I do love you.
-These weeks without you have proved how much.”
-
-She closed her eyes as the words came.
-
-“Why,” he plunged on, “my dad had given me up as a bad job—said he was
-through! And six weeks ago I went to him and told him I’d found the
-girl who could make a man of me—asked him to take me on at the
-Patterson Iron Works, I didn’t care in what capacity. He thought I was
-joking—but I put on overalls and rolled up my sleeves. Because I
-wanted to be good enough for you. That was just about the time you
-showed up in all that gorgeousness. And I let the idea get hold of me—
-Don’t cry, honey,—I can’t stand it!”
-
-There was an instant of potent silence, then:
-
-“How did you happen to come past here to-night—Jimmie?” came
-smothered.
-
-“I’ve been coming past here every night.”
-
-“Then why—why did you stay away from the theater?”
-
-“I didn’t—for long. Wanted to—but couldn’t! I’ve watched you come out
-from around the corner—” He broke off. “Sweetness—you’ve been looking
-awfully sick.”
-
-“I’ve been awfully lonesome.”
-
-He lifted her chin.
-
-“Baby—”
-
-“Yes, Jimmie—dear—”
-
-“Will you forgive me?”
-
-“Jimmie—”
-
-“Yes, Baby—dear—”
-
-“Will you wait here till I get into my old rig, then take me for a
-ride in my new car?”
-
-
-
-
-CURTAIN!
-
-_MELODRAMA_
-
-
-It consists not in shouts, the leveled gun, the drawn sword, the
-flashlight in the dark. The quiet moment of decision that means
-happiness or wreck; the hesitant hand moving toward a doorknob that
-may open upon joy or the misery of revelation; two people waiting in
-stillness for the pendulum of uncertainty to swing—that is melodrama
-as it is played every day within the four walls that enclose your
-next-door neighbor.
-
-
-
-
-CURTAIN!
-
-CHAPTER I—ACT I
-
-
-John Shakespeare’s son remarked once in a play he lightly invited us
-to take “As You Like It” that all the world’s a stage. He told us that
-men and women have their exits and their entrances, that one man in
-his time plays many parts. But John Shakespeare’s son did not refer to
-the acts that make up this drama of living. The first act of
-introduction, the second of conflict, the third of revelation, the
-fourth of readjustment. Not that all lives can be so simply
-subdivided. To some dramas there are ten or twelve scenes,
-swift-changing, tense, terrifying. But whether few or many, live in
-acts we do—each with its conflict, its climax, each beginning a new
-problem, a new turn, a new development, until the final curtain is
-rung down that leaves the house of life in darkness.
-
-Partly because of this and partly because Nancy Bradshaw’s story is
-essentially of the theater, it seems but natural so to divide the
-telling of it.
-
-The first scenes had been that old familiar struggle of the young girl
-trying to convince managers that even though she has had her
-theatrical training somewhere west of Broadway she really can act. She
-had encountered and combated the habitual have-to-show-me look until
-one day in Jerry Coghlan’s office while the latter regarded her over
-horn-rimmed specs, she gave him a disarming smile and said quietly:
-
-“Yes, Mr. Coghlan, I know you’re from Missouri, but how can I show you
-unless you give me a chance?”
-
-Coghlan, being Irish, had tossed back his head with a roar of approval
-and given her what she asked. He had never regretted it.
-
-Nancy possessed two qualities that register with an audience more
-quickly than genius—charm and personality. I might better say,
-personality alone, because that includes charm, doesn’t it? By the
-time she had reached the place of leading woman and the age of
-twenty-six, she had a following many older and more experienced
-actresses envied. She was never idle. When Coghlan, who had her under
-contract, was unable to find a play or part for her, he loaned her to
-other managers who featured their good fortune in advance notices and
-electrics.
-
-Nancy had what Broadway calls class. She was supple and slender with
-an airy slimness that seemed more spiritual than of the body. She
-could curl up in a couch corner with child-like grace or stand tense
-and supplicating or sway with emotion. But whatever she did, one felt
-the spirit ruling the flesh. She had heavy gold hair that fell in deep
-sweeping waves over ears and forehead. The brows that mounted above
-gold-brown eyes were straight and black as were the lashes shading
-them. Her mouth, a bit too large for beauty, had a fascinating upcurve
-when she smiled but in repose was strangely firm and chiseled. One
-found oneself puzzling as to whether it belonged in a face whose charm
-lay in the fact that its actual features eluded one. I’ve called her
-eyes gold-brown. They weren’t always. At times across the footlights
-they looked green, at others hazel, and often in some scene of fury
-they went burning black.
-
-Audiences loved her in all her moods—the matinée girls because she
-might have been one of them; older women because she might have been
-their daughter; young men because she was so much a girl they wondered
-how much a woman she might be; and old men because, for a fleeting
-moment, she gave them back their youth.
-
-It looked pretty much as if Nancy’s drama of living were to flow
-smoothly to its final scene with no more conflict than a pastoral
-comedy. And then she met Richard Cunningham.
-
-She had seen him once when lunching at the Ritz with Ted Thorne,
-author of the play in which she was rehearsing. Thorne had returned
-the nod of a man several tables away and Nancy asked who he was.
-
-The young playwright’s eyes snapped as he answered: “You, too—eh?
-Never saw a woman yet who didn’t want to know Dick Cunningham.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t want to know him,” Nancy defended herself. “I just want
-to know about him.”
-
-“Amounts to the same thing, my dear. Well, when the papers speak of
-Cunningham, they call him a clubman—whatever that may mean—and
-turfman. He keeps a string of blooded horses at his place on Long
-Island that are the envy of exhibitors all over the country. He has a
-shooting box in the Adirondacks. He’s second Vice-president of a
-railroad or two, is a regular first-nighter, has more money than any
-one woman could spend, and no one woman has so far succeeded in
-annexing it. Men like him and women feel toward him much as they do
-toward original sin—they love and fear him at the same time.”
-
-“Thank you,” Nancy imitated his crisp tone. “After that, I really
-don’t think I care to know the gentleman.”
-
-“You will—sooner or later,” drawled Thorne.
-
-Nancy turned indifferently from the object of discussion, but in that
-one short glance she could have told you exactly what he looked like.
-Ted Thorne in a way was right. Cunningham was one of those men whom
-women sense the instant they enter a room, not so much for height, big
-shoulders and powerful dark head, as for a certain dynamic force that
-stimulates fear and curiosity at once. In Cæsar’s day he might have
-been a Marc Antony, but I doubt whether Cleopatra could ever have
-persuaded him to abandon his armies for her dear sake. More likely the
-devastating Egyptian would have descended from her throne, laid her
-dainty olive hand in his and followed where he led.
-
-For a man with manifold interests, Cunningham had few hobbies—two, to
-be exact—his horses and the theater. Actors, managers, dramatists,
-press-agents, all the busy bees in that hive of Broadway, knew
-him—some by sight only, others well enough to call him by his given
-name. No first night was complete without him. His familiar shoulders
-swung down the aisle at eight-thirty sharp, hand stretched here and
-there in greeting.
-
-It was said his love of the theater far exceeded his interest in
-women. In the same way, though in lesser degree, they were necessary
-to his happiness—for amusement. They entertained him. But as the play
-is done in a few hours and one seeks new diversion, so they had a way
-of revealing themselves to him that after a short period became a
-bore. He grew to know them too well—and the glamor was gone. To-morrow
-another play! To-morrow—!
-
-And then he met Nancy Bradshaw.
-
-It happened the opening night of Thorne’s comedy just at the time
-Coghlan surprised Nancy by elevating her to stardom.
-
-What a difference one little preposition makes! Stepping out of a taxi
-into dripping rain at the stage entrance, Nancy heard a shriek and saw
-her colored maid drop a hatbox on the wet pavement to point wildly at
-the electric sign outside the Coghlan Theater.
-
-Instead of:—
-
- “THE GAMESTER”
- with
- Nancy Bradshaw
-
-she read:—
-
- NANCY BRADSHAW
- in
- “The Gamester”
-
-It blinked and smiled at her, that dazzling announcement. She shut her
-eyes in ecstasy that hurt. When she opened them, shameless tears were
-streaming down her cheeks and a prayer was in her heart.
-
-Coghlan was waiting at the door of her dressing-room. She rushed at
-him, arms flung recklessly about his neck, and wept into the stiff
-white collar that held up his double chin.
-
-“You deserve it!” he told her, his own eyes a bit moist. “You deserve
-it. Never asked for it. Never nagged me for anything. Just worked like
-hell—and waited. How old are you, kid?”
-
-Nancy looked up. “T—twenty-three for publication.”
-
-“But on the level?”
-
-“Almost twenty-eight.”
-
-“Well, by the time you’re thirty-three, you’ll be the greatest actress
-in the country. Take it from me—Jerry Coghlan knows what he’s talking
-about!”
-
-With his prophecy singing in her ears, Nancy made her bow to New York
-as a star. The audience was with her from the first, sharing her joy,
-her triumph, eyes shining with hers, tears flowing when hers did. She
-took it all modestly enough, even dragging on the leading man to take
-the curtains with her. When finally they brought her out alone, she
-stood a bit left-center and one could plainly see her whole body
-shake, her lips tremble like some unaccustomed schoolgirl’s.
-
-It was at this moment that a man with towering shoulders and the
-stride of authority left his seat and made for the lobby. There he
-cornered Coghlan and without preamble made his point.
-
-“Jerry,” he said as they shook hands, “present me to Miss Bradshaw,
-will you?”
-
-“Sure!” said Jerry proudly.
-
-And thus brought about the climax to the first act of Nancy’s life
-drama.
-
-Cunningham wanted to give a supper party that night. But she told him
-friends were entertaining her and Thorne at one of those crowded and
-supposedly exclusive restaurants known as “Clubs.” He calmly followed
-them and with two other men managed to procure a table near theirs.
-Cunningham could procure anything anywhere.
-
-Nancy saw him instantly and wished he hadn’t come. Not that he gave
-any sign of deliberate interest in her. In fact, one would have said
-he did not know she was there. His eyes—non-committal, steel-colored
-eyes they were, the sort that read without permitting themselves to be
-read—scanned the menu. Supper ordered, he turned their full attention
-to his companions. But his presence made Nancy self-conscious.
-Probably, she concluded, because of what Ted Thorne had told her!
-
-As they recognized her, men sauntered from various parts of the room,
-white mustache to beardless youth, clamoring congratulations. And
-beside that sweet intoxication of dreams realized, the champagne set
-frankly before her was as plain water to the fountain of eternal
-youth. She drank in every word, hearing the same ones repeated many
-times.
-
-When Thorne managed to break through the circle with her and spin into
-a one-step, those they passed nudged each other. About the graceful
-figure in cloudy silver with light hair tumbling over dark eyes and
-lips curving in laughter, filmed the aura of the theater, fairyland of
-illusion, the one magic world that makes children of us all.
-
-As they went back to the table, she caught Cunningham watching her
-with an unlit cigarette between his lips and around them rather a
-puzzled look, as if he might be asking himself some question he could
-not answer.
-
-“So you’ve met,” whispered Ted, as Nancy returned his bow over the
-plumes of her black feather fan.
-
-“Yes, to-night. J. C. brought him back.” And added casually: “He’s
-asked me to make up my own party for supper some night. Will you
-come?”
-
-“I will that!” rejoined Thorne. “But before it happens, I’ll ask you
-to marry me.”
-
-“Don’t be a goose, Ted,” she laughed—and wondered why a frown replaced
-for a flash the twinkle in the sharp eyes behind Thorne’s glasses.
-They smiled again as he raised his champagne.
-
-“Here’s to you, Nancy girl—and the future. May it be a knock-out for
-you always!”
-
-Cunningham, however, did not wait for the date she had set. The
-following night he sent word to the theater, inviting her to ride next
-day. He had his horses in town for the Show and wanted her to try his
-pet stallion. His messenger would wait for an answer.
-
-There was a tone of assumption in the brief note that Nancy resented.
-She couldn’t tell exactly where nor what it was but she had a feeling
-that, though couched in terms of invitation, it had been written with
-the assurance that she would not refuse. At first she was tempted to,
-but anxiety to see his horses—at least that explanation she gave
-herself—made her compromise by writing that he might telephone her in
-the morning.
-
-By the time he called her, she had on her habit and half an hour later
-glided uptown in his car. Through the park, fairly purring as it sped
-over the smooth roads, it veered West and out at a street in the
-Sixties and pulled up before what appeared to be a two-story house.
-Potted dwarf firs stood at either side of the big arched door on a
-level with the street. Across the front above it were three windows,
-each with its green window box from which ivy trailed over the dull
-red brick. A saucy little building it was in the midst of drab flat
-houses, like a French cocotte dropped by mistake into a New England
-village.
-
-Nancy gazed, puzzled and curious, when the heavy iron-hinged door was
-drawn back and she stepped into the unmistakable pungent odor of the
-stable.
-
-Cunningham came to meet her. His hands, tingling with vitality, sent a
-glow through hers as he held them an instant. Then he led the way
-toward the rear. The floor was covered with a sort of porous rubber
-that gave to the step and Nancy felt an absurd inclination to bound
-into the air as she walked. Along the walls were cases filled with
-blue, red and yellow ribbons, each rosette with its streamers as dear
-to the sportsman as if it had been pinned upon him instead of an
-equine representative. Prints of blue ribboners with famous jockeys up
-hung between the cases. Several of the originals stamped at that
-moment in the stalls downstairs. Cunningham helped her down the run.
-
-“I want you to meet my best friends,” he said, stopping before the
-nearest stall. “Permit me—Lord Chesterfield!”
-
-With approved good manners his Lordship settled his velvet nose in her
-outstretched hand.
-
-“Chawmed, M’lord,” she smiled. Her wondering eyes went the length of
-the place.
-
-It was daintily white as a woman’s boudoir, each stall bordered in
-brilliant blue and bearing its occupant’s monogram in the same color.
-A border of blue ran round the white walls. Even the water buckets and
-feed boxes were white with horse’s heads painted on them.
-
-There was a rush forward and eager heads poked out as Cunningham went
-down the line. Satin bodies swaggered, priming themselves for
-approval.
-
-“No wonder they’re your friends!” Nancy observed. “You treat them so
-well.”
-
-“Do you think friendship has to be won that way?” he put quickly.
-
-“No. It’s usually given first and earned afterward.”
-
-“That’s not _friendship_ you’re speaking of.” The look he bent on her
-was disconcerting. Nancy turned to follow a groom who was leading two
-horses, saddled, toward the run.
-
-A few moments later they swung through the wide doorway into the
-autumn sunshine. Nancy had never ridden any but academy horses and the
-sense of the fine, spirited animal under her with his rearing head and
-shining coat made her blood dance. Flying down the bridle path was
-like soaring heavenward on Pegasus. Poetry was in the air, in her
-eyes, in the crack of the gravel under their horses’ feet. The man
-beside her sat his mount, a bay of sixteen hands, as if part of it.
-His muscular hands barely touched the reins.
-
-“How did you know that I rode?” she asked.
-
-“I recalled seeing your picture in riding habit in one of the
-magazines.”
-
-“But that doesn’t prove anything. It’s the privilege of an actress to
-be photographed in habit, even if she wouldn’t go near enough to a
-real horse to feed him a lump of sugar.”
-
-He laughed, looked down at her slim straight body in its tan coat, at
-the graceful limbs swung across her mount, at her glossy gold hair and
-the light of the sun in her eyes. “Well, I should have known you did
-anyway. There’s nothing vital you couldn’t do.”
-
-He put it not as a question but directly, as if giving her the
-information. She found no answer. This man left her strangely
-speechless. For no reason at all her cheeks went red with a deeper
-flush than the exercise had brought to them.
-
-She said little during the two hours of their ride. He told her of the
-fascination the theater had for him. Then her eyes shone through their
-black lashes and she told him it was her life. She loved it not as an
-artist loves his work but with the passion one gives a human thing.
-
-“That’s why you’ve made good,” he answered promptly. “Because you’ve
-given yourself completely.” He paused, then with the usual startling
-abruptness: “Do you know, I had an actual sense of pride last night,
-watching that crowd swarm round you. Odd, that—isn’t it—in a man who
-had just met you?”
-
-“Yes.” She did not meet the gaze she knew was turned on her.
-
-When they dismounted and he was handing her into the car, he bent down
-and into his non-committal eyes came a warmth that enveloped her like
-a flame.
-
-“And to think that I flipped a coin last night whether to go to the
-Show or go to see you!”
-
-She rode with him every day after that. He arranged it as a matter of
-course. He had a direct way of taking things into his own hands just
-as he had a direct way of looking and speaking. Often it made her gasp
-but at the same time possessed the attraction male dominance always
-holds for the primitive in woman. Particularly to the woman who has
-fought her own battles is there something hypnotic in having decision
-taken out of her hands.
-
-At the end of two weeks she called his horses by name; had fed them
-more sugar than was good for them; had dined and danced with him; and
-knew, though to herself she denied it, that tongues quick to wag, were
-busy with their names. Nancy Bradshaw, popular star, and Dick
-Cunningham who, in the eyes of the world, could like Joshua command
-sun and moon and stars to stand still!
-
-When his friends—men who made the nation’s pulse throb—stopped at
-their table in a restaurant or, as was frequently the case, joined
-them at his invitation and gave to Nancy the homage a charming actress
-always receives from men a bit jaded, Cunningham’s probing glance
-warmed and a smile softened his sharply determined mouth.
-
-He sent her flowers and books as a matter of course. Wherever they
-went he surrounded her with an atmosphere of unconscious luxury that
-was like a narcotic.
-
-And finally at the house of the fir trees, instead of that
-diamond-lighted district bounded by the Forties, he gave the
-supper-party they had planned the night of their meeting. Ted Thorne
-was there and Lilla Grant, ingénue of the company, a sinuous little
-thing with pert nose, full Oriental lips and eyes that might have come
-from Egypt. She had begged Nancy to let her meet Cunningham.
-
-“She’ll get there, that kid,” Jerry Coghlan had once remarked. “Don’t
-know yet whether her name used to be O’Shaughnessy or Rabinowitz. But
-take it from me, she’ll make her mark—maybe because it used to be
-both.”
-
-Lights shone in the upper windows as the four stepped from the car,
-not the brilliant light of electricity but one gentle and golden. They
-went up the flight of steps leading to the unique apartment above the
-stable.
-
-“Make yourselves at home. I’ll send a maid.” Cunningham opened the
-door to a room done in gray and rose, with enameled dressing-table and
-pier-glass, and rose brocade chairs, divan and hangings.
-
-Lilla dropped her frou-frou of cloak from bare shoulders and, taking
-the center of the floor, gazed round with glistening eyes.
-
-“What a duck you were to ask me!” she cried. “I’ve been just crazy to
-see this place.”
-
-Nancy turned. “You’ve heard of it?”
-
-“Heard of it! My dear, there have been _some_ parties given here!”
-
-Swift indignation swept the color into Nancy’s cheeks. The insinuating
-tone more than the words angered her. “Don’t talk like that!” Her eyes
-flashed black as they sometimes did in a big scene.
-
-Lilla looked up wickedly. “Crazy about him, aren’t you?”
-
-The color went, leaving her white. “Of course not.”
-
-“Well, don’t let him know it—that’s all I have to say.”
-
-She powdered her nose, head perked to one side, guided a brush over
-hair dense-dark as velvet, added a touch of mascaro to her lashes, and
-turning to the maid who had just come in asked whether her dress was
-hooked all the way up the back.
-
-“I do envy you, Nancy,” she frowned, taking in the other girl’s
-graceful figure in swathing black satin, relieved only by a splash of
-green fan. “One of these days—soon—I’m going to have a maid and not
-break my neck gathering myself together after the show.”
-
-As they went out Lilla linked her arm in Cunningham’s.
-
-“Do you live in this heavenly place?” she asked.
-
-“No. But I like to have people here—the people I like, I should say.
-That’s why I fixed up the second floor—for parties like this one.
-There’s a fully equipped kitchen at the back. And here’s my banquet
-hall.”
-
-The short corridor ended in the room of the three windows. They might
-have been entering an Italian Villa. Paneled oak stretched straight to
-the ceiling. At either end yawned a marble fireplace with logs
-sputtering the faint scent of fir. A refectory table, with couch the
-color of purple grapes backed against it fronted one. Drawn close to
-the other stood two old Medici chairs. On both mantels and smaller
-tables were candlesticks with thick yellow candles. The silver set for
-supper on the long table gleamed under the glow of branching
-candelabra.
-
-Cunningham watched Nancy’s face as she paused in the doorway. Her eyes
-had dreams in them.
-
-“Makes a great stage setting for you,” he whispered. “I’ll want you
-here all the time now.”
-
-A manservant passed cigarettes. They sat and chatted while they waited
-for the other guests, Mr. and Mrs. Courtleigh Bishop and several
-friends who were coming in from the Opera. Nancy was in a chair by the
-fire; Lilla nested in the couch depths, her somber gaze lidded as if
-heavy with secrets, following her host; and Thorne springing up every
-now and then to wander about the room, examining its treasures.
-
-Lilla watched and listened to the others, much as she watched and
-absorbed every word of the director at rehearsals. She had advanced by
-wits rather than wit and was clever enough to know the value of
-silence. Only when Cunningham brought her the spray of orchids he had
-supplied for each of the women did she look up from under thick lids.
-
-“You do everything just right,” she murmured, pinning them into the
-orange chiffon at her waist, “and I guess never anything wrong.”
-
-In her somnolent eyes was an obvious dare to which several weeks ago
-Cunningham would probably have responded. Now he smiled down amusedly
-at the round soft form sunk in the couch cushions and went back to
-Nancy. The somnolent eyes went after him.
-
-They persuaded Thorne who, unlike a number of writing men, hated to
-talk about himself, to tell the plot of his new play.
-
-“I’ve tackled a big problem,” he said. “Woman’s rights in love!”
-
-“You’ve tackled the universe,” came from Cunningham. “Fifty years ago
-it could have been summed up in one beautiful word, ‘Submission’.
-To-day—” He flung up his hands.
-
-Nancy smiled. “And you’re just the type a submissive woman would bore
-to death.”
-
-“Don’t you believe it,” chimed in Lilla. “He’s apt to fall for some
-baby doll who’ll tell him what a great big wonderful man he is and do
-exactly what he wants—when he’s around.”
-
-“You don’t subscribe to the fifty-fifty theory then, old man?”
-suggested Thorne when the laugh died down.
-
-“No, I believe in ninety-nine-one. At least women can make it that if
-they know how to handle us. Just as Miss Grant says, we’re nothing but
-a bunch of boobs.”
-
-“That’s what you like to make us think,” Nancy corrected. “And the
-unfortunate part of it is, we want to deceive ourselves just as much
-as you want to deceive us.”
-
-Cunningham blew a ring of feathery cigarette smoke and studied her
-through it. “I didn’t know you were such a cynic.”
-
-“Did you think dealing with theatrical managers had taught me
-nothing?” she laughed.
-
-At twelve Mrs. Bishop bubbled in commandeering a group of light-voiced
-women and husky-voiced men.
-
-She apologized for being late and wailed at the length of Russian
-Opera.
-
-“Courty can sleep through it all,” she sighed. “But the noise keeps me
-awake.”
-
-She caught Nancy by both hands, drawing her out of the chair.
-
-“I’ve been so anxious to know you, my dear. I begged Dicky to bring
-you to see me but he said you were the mountain—Mohammet would have to
-come to you.”
-
-All through the elaborate supper they gushed over her, with just that
-touch of patronage position assured permits itself toward those of the
-stage.
-
-But though conversation was light and general and Cunningham the
-perfect host, he might have been alone with the young star, so
-completely did his eyes disregard the others. They seemed to send
-their gaze round her like a cloak. She felt it unmistakably and a glow
-radiated from her eyes and voice, from her whole body.
-
-When the dregs of Crème de Menthe and Benedictine had settled in
-little green and gold pools at the bottom of cordial glasses, and
-candle flames gleamed faint blue in the dripping tallow; when laughing
-voices mellowed into distance and cars had slid off into darkness, two
-figures stood at the curb in front of the little house. The door swung
-slowly shut behind them. The woman looked up, the man down, and there
-flashed between them that secret look of understanding that can pass
-only when words no longer have value.
-
-The last car drove up. He helped her in. The door slammed. Without a
-word he took her to him. Just as his gaze had encompassed her, so his
-arms enclosed her now. Her lips trembled against his. For a moment,
-endless because of all time, there was silence—that intense beating
-silence that chokes.
-
-Then his voice came with a ring of triumph.
-
-“You know I want you.” And he waited for no answer. “You knew I wanted
-you that night we met.”
-
-“Yes—I knew.”
-
-“You’re the first woman I’ve ever wanted—for my wife.”
-
-The word danced into the soft gloom of night merging into day, out
-across the wraith-like Park, up to the sky where pale stars spelled it
-before her. She murmured it, and he bent closer.
-
-“Mine! Nancy—you don’t know how much it’s meant, seeing them gather
-round you and knowing that you were going to belong to me.”
-
-Their lips were one again. At the moment she took no count of the
-assurance that had brooked no denial. She only throbbed to the
-strength of him and smiled into the eyes so close to hers.
-
-The car sped past shadowy trees, past lamps paled against the rising
-dawn, through a world unreal not because light had not yet come but
-because these two were in a world apart. They spoke low, as lovers
-will though no one is there to hear; in short phrases, saying little
-yet so much, she seeking to hold close this wonder thing, he with the
-claim of the possessor.
-
-“Why do you love me, Dick?” came finally the eternal question.
-
-He told her the tale men have told women for centuries and will
-continue to tell them as long as the world shall last. “I love you
-because you’re different from other women. There’s no one like you.”
-
-“How—different?”
-
-“Why analyze it? You’re _You_, complete, apart—wonderful.”
-
-“But what attracted you—first? What made you—want me?”
-
-“Well, seeing you there in the center of that stage with a first night
-audience wearing out its hands, you looked so beautiful and
-frightened—give you my word I wanted to go up then and there and take
-you in my arms.”
-
-“It was the glamor of the stage then?”
-
-“No. You’re not the first actress I’ve known, dear. But you’re the
-only one in town that scandal has never touched.”
-
-She drew back a bit.
-
-“That’s not fair, Dick. We’re a much-talked-of profession but half the
-stories you hear aren’t true.”
-
-In the semi-gloom of the car she did not see the smile play about his
-knowing lips.
-
-“What does it matter?” was his reply. “You’re in the theater, yet not
-of it—sought after, made much of, yet unspoilt. And I’ve won you—for
-myself.”
-
-“Yes, you’ve won me.”
-
-He drew her close. “How much do you love me?”
-
-“Before all the world.” She closed her eyes as if to shut out all
-other vision.
-
-“I’m going to take you to Hawaii,” he whispered. “That’s the land of
-lovers—green lapping waters and purple hills and palm trees with music
-in them.”
-
-“You’ve been there?”
-
-“Yes. Then to China and Japan—and if you like, India. We’ll make a
-year of it.”
-
-She opened her eyes slowly and into them came a ray of amusement.
-
-“You mustn’t take me too far away, for too long, or the fickle public
-will forget me.”
-
-“They’re going to.”
-
-“Going to?”
-
-“Yes. I’m a jealous brute. You’ve got to belong to me exclusively.”
-
-“Dick”—she pulled away then, groping dazedly for one silent
-second—“Dick—you don’t mean—you can’t mean you want me to give up the
-stage?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-She stared at him, unbelieving. But his face was nothing more than a
-blur against the darkness. As the car rolled out of the Park, it
-rolled out of Eden.
-
-“But—but it’s my career—my life!”
-
-“I’ll make a new career—a new life for you.”
-
-“But it’s the biggest—the best part of me.”
-
-“The new life will be all of you.”
-
-“No, Dick! I couldn’t—I couldn’t!”
-
-He caught the hands that were raised to push him from her, caught them
-in both of his. “I want you for myself. I’m not satisfied with part of
-your time.”
-
-“But dear—can’t you see—”
-
-“Can’t _you_ see that if you remain on the stage, your evenings and
-part of your days will go to the public. I’ll still be going round
-alone—just as I am now. If you’re my wife you’ve got to take your
-place with me.”
-
-“But I can—except for a few hours. Dick, you say I’m different. Let me
-stay different!”
-
-“You’ll always be that. Let’s look at it sensibly. Dick Cunningham’s
-wife earning her living—why, it’s a joke!”
-
-“Every one would know it’s not a question of money.”
-
-“Then why do it? Give some one else a chance—some one who needs it.”
-
-“But it’s my life,” she repeated desperately. “And now, when success
-has just come—”
-
-“You said—‘before all the world’ awhile ago.”
-
-“Yes—and I meant it. I do love you, before everything. You know that.
-You’ve swept me off my feet. I can’t reason.” And then her hands came
-together and she cried out: “Oh, why did this have to happen—why?”
-
-“It had to happen,” he repeated huskily.
-
-“Why couldn’t you have cared for some one in your own set?”
-
-“I want you.”
-
-“Dick,” she said after a moment’s harsh stillness, “don’t make me
-choose. It—it’s too—it hurts too much. I couldn’t! I simply can’t do
-it. If you make me give up the stage, you make me tear out my heart.
-You wouldn’t ask that?”
-
-“It’s a question of which means more. I’m merely asking what any
-normal man has the right to ask of the woman he marries—first place.”
-
-“But you’ll have that.”
-
-“No. You won’t be free to give it to me.”
-
-“It’s queer”—her voice came shakily. “I’ve dreamed of love as every
-girl does. But I never dreamed it would mean this—this sacrifice.”
-
-“It won’t mean sacrifice to you. I’ll fill your life, Nancy. I’ll make
-you forget there ever was any other bond. Sweetheart—don’t you believe
-I will?”
-
-She swayed toward him—then just as quickly pulled back.
-
-“Haven’t I the right to ask it?” he urged.
-
-“Dick—”
-
-“Haven’t I?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know! I don’t know!”
-
-“Consider my side.”
-
-“I only know it’s everything you’re demanding—everything!”
-
-“I’m giving everything in exchange.”
-
-She closed her eyes with a very different expression from that of a
-few moments before. Then it had been to let him fill her vision. Now
-it was to shut him out.
-
-Vaguely it came to her that he couldn’t realize the enormity of the
-thing he was asking. Vaguely she repeated aloud:
-
-“No—I couldn’t! If I mean to you what you say, you won’t ask it.”
-
-He lifted her face so that the eyes opened to meet his. Even through
-the shadows he could read their anguish.
-
-“It’s because you mean what you do, that I can’t let you go on.”
-
-Her hands closed tight on each other and she turned to fasten her gaze
-on the awakening streets.
-
-“No, Dick—there’s no use. I couldn’t.”
-
-“Does what I offer balance so little that you can thrust it away
-without even stopping to consider?”
-
-“If I stop to consider—”
-
-“You’ll do what I ask,” he put in quickly. “Ah, I thought so! Nancy,
-can’t you see? The woman in you is greater than the actress. You won’t
-always be young and worshipped by your public but love—”
-
-“Will love last always?” And as his arms went out to answer: “No—no!
-Don’t try to influence me—don’t, please! I must think it over alone.
-It’s my whole life—just everything.”
-
-His arms dropped. They did not again reach out to her. He said
-good-night with the usual handclasp and left her at the door of the
-apartment house, haunting white, her dark eyes strained toward the
-first flicker of sun as it came haltingly out of the east.
-
-A month later she sent for him. In all that time he gave her no word,
-not even the message of a flower. He waited cleverly in silence—a
-silence that made the battle she fought all the more difficult. And in
-the end she sent for him, so completely had he absorbed her will. Not
-once during those weeks of struggle did her mind hark back to the
-fragment of conversation at the supper party. Because she could care
-with the intensity of the big woman and because she was in love, she
-did not realize that in sending for him she bowed before the god she
-had scorned—Submission.
-
-And so the curtain fell on Act I of Nancy Bradshaw’s life drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II—ACT II
-
-
-Out Long Island way on the North Shore where Newport goes to stretch
-her tired limbs after a busy season, there’s a house set like a long
-white couch on a green carpet that spreads straight to the Sound.
-
-The place is called Restawhile—and having some twenty rooms, not to
-speak of servant quarters, is known modestly as a cottage.
-
-Here Dick Cunningham brought his bride following their honeymoon trip
-through the Orient. Here they spent the greater part of each year. For
-with its kennels and stables, Nancy loved it next to the house of the
-fir trees which would always be her castle of romance. Besides, it was
-not too near Broadway, not near enough for whisperings of the Rialto
-to tug at the heart or fill the eyes. Or if the dull ache of longing
-too deep for tears did come, it was a place to hide them from a
-curious public.
-
-The announcement of Nancy’s marriage and retirement from the stage had
-come as a shock to the social world and a bomb to the theatrical.
-Broadway buzzed, Fifth Avenue bristled, and poor Jerry Coghlan almost
-went crazy. But as the calcium of the society column replaced her
-beloved footlights, the star of the theater became a star of the
-social realm and another nine days’ wonder became memory.
-
-The column told of her dinners and dances, of her trips to Florida,
-her visits to Newport. It listed her with her husband among
-inveterate first-nighters and usually added: “The one-time Nancy
-Bradshaw whose romantic marriage robbed the stage of one of its most
-promising young actresses.”
-
-Eventually it announced with clarion blast the arrival of Dick Junior
-and later Nancy the Second, quite as if a chubby Dick and Nancy
-Cunningham were more important than the same weight John and Mary
-Smith.
-
-A fairy tale come true even the most caustic observer would have
-remarked, had he known the history of the beautiful woman seated on
-the stone-paved veranda of Restawhile one April afternoon five years
-after the curtain descended on Act I.
-
-She wore a short white skirt, green sweater and white sport shoes.
-Strands of hair had been tossed across her eyes by a romp on the lawn
-with young Dicky. He sat at her feet now, pink legs outstretched, and
-mobilized between them a regiment of wooden soldiers.
-
-Ted Thorne and her former manager had driven out to read Thorne’s
-latest drama, written with Lilla Grant in mind. She was the season’s
-new darling and her hybrid little face with its eyes from the Orient
-and nose from Erin’s Isle decorated many a magazine cover and
-wood-cut. It might also have been seen at the Ritz lunching daily with
-varied and various conquests. She had acquired an air and no longer
-spoke of her profession as “the show business.” Her gowns were the
-talk of fashion editors, her hats the despair of imitators. She was
-colorful as a Bakst drawing and as decorative.
-
-The woman in white skirt and sweater that matched the lawn sat
-listening at one side of the tea table, while Coghlan at her right
-measured three fingers of Scotch against two of soda and the
-playwright’s voice sounded vibrant against the sweet spring stillness.
-It was a tense elemental story suggested to him by Nancy, with
-Hawaii—land of love—as a setting. Finally he closed the script and
-looked across at her.
-
-“What do you think of it?”
-
-“The best thing you’ve done, Ted,” she announced instantly.
-
-“Of course, it’s only in the rough. But I wanted your opinion. Am I
-like that fellow who knows all about the Himalayas because he never
-got there?”
-
-“Just like him—an authority,” she retorted.
-
-“But straight—how does it strike you?”
-
-“I love it! You’ve never written anything with greater emotional
-possibilities.”
-
-“How do you like Lilla for the lead?”
-
-“Just the type. And good from a box-office standpoint, too—she’s made
-such a hit this season.”
-
-“Some kid!” put in Jerry, tinkling the ice pleasantly against his
-glass. “Always said she’d make her mark. And take it from me, Jerry
-Coghlan knows what he’s talking about.”
-
-Nancy smiled. “You couldn’t find any one better to play an Hawaiian.”
-
-“Oh yes, we could!” came from Thorne.
-
-“Who?”
-
-“You.”
-
-She laughed and in her laughter the men detected nothing but mirth.
-
-“Don’t you ever have a hankering for the old game, Nancy?” Coghlan
-demanded. “Don’t the theater ever get in your blood?”
-
-She bent and lifted young Dick suddenly to her knees.
-
-“Here’s my theater,” was her answer.
-
-The playwright’s gaze traveled over the two gold heads to the father’s
-eyes that smiled from the baby face into his mother’s. Fat arms wound
-round her neck and she sank her lips in the fluffy curls.
-
-“You’ve got a part that suits you to perfection,” he said in a low
-voice.
-
-“Say, there ain’t any part Nancy couldn’t play! Always said she had
-class. And take it from me—”
-
-“It’s good to know you haven’t forgotten us,” Thorne interrupted,
-still in that low tone. “Whenever things get balled up I say to
-myself: ‘Here goes for a run out to Restawhile. Nancy’ll help me
-straighten them out.’”
-
-“It’s good to know you feel that way. You see”—she held Dicky
-closer—“I can give you the viewpoint of the audience now.”
-
-That night she told her husband of the play. They had dined at the
-Courtleigh Bishop place, some five miles distant, and during the drive
-home Nancy had been unusually quiet. She walked up the wide staircase,
-head bent, her long velvet cloak pulled close around her as if for
-protection against the country chill of April. But as he followed into
-her boudoir with its amber lights and drapes of cornflower blue she
-dropped into a chair, let the wrap slip from her shoulders and leaned
-forward, speaking rapidly.
-
-“Tell me something of your doings to-day, Dick. You haven’t yet.”
-
-He recounted the day’s activities—certain complications that had
-arisen in his Western interests. Cunningham, in spite of wealth or
-perhaps because of it, was not a waster. She listened eagerly to every
-word.
-
-“And, by-the-way,” he added, much as an afterthought; “I lunched with
-a former friend of yours, Lilla Grant. Met her as I was going into the
-Ritz. She was alone—so was I. So we joined forces.”
-
-She leaned back with a deep sigh.
-
-“I’m glad you told me that.”
-
-His reply held a note of surprise.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because Mary Bishop made it a point to inform me to-night that she’d
-seen you there. ‘Dicky still has a penchant for the theatrical
-profession,’ she said, ‘I saw him lunching to-day with a stage
-beauty.’ Of course, it amused me but I just had a feeling that I’d
-like to hear about it from you.”
-
-“It was of no importance. I might not have thought of mentioning it.”
-
-“No. Still—I suppose I’m silly and feminine—but if you hadn’t, I think
-it would have hurt.”
-
-“Do I demand to know every time Thorne comes out here?”
-
-“You don’t have to, Dick.” Her eyes were still intent on him.
-
-“I’ve lunched with Lilla Grant other days and haven’t thought of
-mentioning it.”
-
-“I know that, too.”
-
-His eyebrows shot up. “How?”
-
-“Other women.”
-
-He laughed. “How they do love each other!”
-
-She laughed with him. “It’s all right now. You’ve told me. I just
-didn’t want to think you’d deceive me.”
-
-“But, my dear girl, an omission like that is not deliberate deceit.”
-
-“Omission,” came softly, “is often twin sister to commission.”
-
-His lips went tight. “Does that mean you’d ever let anything as cheap
-as suspicion of me enter your mind?”
-
-She got up, brushing her mouth across the hard line of his. “If I love
-you as much as I do, it’s reasonable to suppose other women might.”
-
-And that was when she gave him the story of Thorne’s play—more to
-change the subject than anything else—with eyes shining and slim
-jeweled hands sending sparks into the room’s golden shadows. He
-listened, watching her, the light on her face, the blaze of enthusiasm
-under the thick lashes.
-
-“It’s a splendid part for Lilla,” she ended. “She’ll be fascinating in
-it, don’t you think?”
-
-“Great!” And after a moment, “Nancy—does seeing so much of Thorne and
-old Jerry ever tempt you to go back on the stage?”
-
-She went close to him as if his bigness were a shelter.
-
-“It’s a temptation I’d never acknowledge, dear heart—not even to
-myself.”
-
-“But you haven’t answered me.”
-
-“I did that when I made my choice—when I married you. I couldn’t be
-disloyal to that. Besides”—and all the woman of her went into the
-words—“you and the two little yous fill my life. I’ve no time for any
-other devotion.”
-
-He looked down at the head, reddened under the amber lights, at the
-graceful line of throat and shoulder, at the proud lips that were his.
-And his arms swept up and round her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Drama moves swiftly. No pause for explanation once the wheels are set
-going, no rambling into far corners for side lights as in the novel,
-but a tornado-like gathering of incident that hurls itself without
-notice into crashing storm. Life crowded into a few short hours, just
-as a few short hours so often crowd life into one crashing crisis.
-Without warning, or at least without warning heeded, one answers the
-doorbell or opens a telegram or takes up a telephone receiver. And
-behold, the face blanches, the heart stops beating, to beat again with
-hammer stroke too horrible to bear!
-
-It happened that Thorne’s roadster drew up under the porte-cochère one
-May day and, removing dusty goggles, he announced that he had come to
-talk about a scene that stumped him.
-
-“I’ve traveled to Mecca to consult the Oracle.”
-
-Nancy shook hands enthusiastically. Dick had been away for several
-days; her favorite mount, Lord Chesterfield, had been taken to town by
-the head groom for treatment under a famous “vet”; and endless dinners
-had bored her to a state of loneliness known only to those whose lives
-have hummed with activity. Her husband would not be back until
-to-morrow and to put in a few hours with Ted in the atmosphere of the
-theater was a welcome diversion.
-
-When they had discussed pros and cons and the kick in the big scene;
-when the playwright in hushed voice had told Dicky the usual pirate
-tale, and the three had lunched together under the trees, Nancy jumped
-up.
-
-“Ted, will you run me into town this afternoon? I want to have a look
-at Lord Chesterfield. He went lame last week, you know.”
-
-Thorne beamed.
-
-“Bully! It’s a whale of a day. Why not stay in? We can dine and I’ll
-run you out early.”
-
-But she refused. The kiddies were put to bed at six-thirty and she
-wanted to be back before then.
-
-“I’ll take the train back. Don’t bother about that.”
-
-She came downstairs presently buttoned into a gray topcoat. From under
-a tight little turban the sunset hair waved, held by a gray veil.
-
-They tore out of the grounds, along roads of glass at a pace that left
-both breathless. Nancy felt the sluggishness of the past few days
-lashed out of her blood. It flew happily to her cheeks, tingled to her
-finger tips, sent the laughter into her lips as the man beside her
-gave the latest bits of Broadway gossip, the latest funny story from a
-region teeming with them. She stored them up for Dick, picturing his
-enjoyment when on his return next day she should give them with all
-her embellishment of mimicry.
-
-The first pungent scent of summer, clover and sweet grass and
-occasional great mounds of hay, rose from the meadows as they sped
-past. The vault above was intensely turquoise and without a cloud. It
-would be a heavenly night with a young silver moon etched against the
-sky and all things filmed by its light. She wished Dick were going to
-be home. They could have taken a tearing ride like this with all the
-countryside to themselves.
-
-The breezes became sultry. City smoke crept in. The car jerked over
-cobbles, dodging barelegged youngsters and wedging at last into the
-clatter of Queensboro Bridge. Nancy’s nose crinkled. She had come to
-hate the city with its odors and noises and strained faces and heavy
-air, all the elements which had passed unnoticed when she was part of
-it and a struggler.
-
-From the cluttered Eastside they went through the district whose
-boarded doors and windows like the blank eyes of the blind proclaimed
-it fashionable; then the dust-covered green of the Park and out at the
-street in the Sixties where down the block three windows blinked
-coquettishly.
-
-Nancy descended, held out a hand. “Good luck, Ted. And let’s hear it
-when you’ve got it ready.”
-
-His alert gaze was bright with satisfaction. “You’ve set me on the
-right track. You always do.”
-
-She waved as he drove off, then rang the bell beside the big door. It
-swung back slowly, heavily, and the head-groom stood in the opening.
-She caught the look of surprise that swept over his face, passing as
-quickly after the manner of well-trained servants who are supposed to
-have no emotions.
-
-“How is Lord Chesterfield?” she inquired, stepping out of the
-sunlight.
-
-“He’s not been so fine to-day, madam. I think there’s pain in the left
-forefoot.”
-
-“I want to have a look at him.”
-
-“Yes, madam.”
-
-He closed the door, led the way to the run. But Nancy started toward
-the stairs.
-
-He turned. “Is there anything I can do for you, madam?”
-
-“No, that’s all right, Jarvis. I’ll just leave my coat and come down.”
-
-“I can take it.” He stepped forward hastily, with rather a note of
-apology. “The painters are up there, madam. The rain of two days ago
-made a leak in the roof and I had to have them in. The place is in
-something of a mess.”
-
-But Nancy was already halfway up the stairs. “It doesn’t matter.”
-
-She disappeared, dropped her coat on the divan in the gray room, and
-looked ceilingward. No sign of repairs there. Probably the leak was at
-the front of the house.
-
-Turning into the hall she noticed that Jarvis had followed her.
-
-“Pardon me, madam—will you be coming down to see Lord Chesterfield
-now?”
-
-“Just a minute.”
-
-She threw open the double oak doors at the end. And her breath stopped
-as she did on the threshold.
-
-A stream of sunshine flecked with motes came through the far window
-and centered on the couch. Lounging there in a position of uttermost
-comfort was Dick and at his feet, hatless and cross-legged like some
-willing slave of the harem, Lilla Grant. A look of flame was in his
-non-committal eyes and in her heavy ones, languor. The ripe red lips
-were raised. From her fingers a cigarette dangled as he leaned close
-and struck a match. All too evident, though, that it was not to light
-the cigarette those lips were lifted.
-
-Nancy’s hand went to her throat. That was all. Went to her throat and
-clung there.
-
-The two started at the sound of another’s presence. The match halted.
-Cunningham looked up. He straightened, sat for an instant without
-moving, then got to his feet.
-
-The provocation faded from Lilla’s lips. A moment before she had had
-the unmistakable air of being perfectly at home. Now as she followed
-the man’s sharp glance she stiffened. Uneasily she too rose and, as
-neither of the others spoke, gave a nervous little laugh.
-
-“Why, Nancy, this is a coincidence! We’ve been expecting Ted Thorne
-for tea and only half an hour ago tried you on the phone to get you,
-too.”
-
-Nancy made no attempt to refute the glib lie. She simply stood gazing
-at her husband as if her eyes were touching him. Then she turned away.
-
-“I think—I won’t wait,” she managed to say and went out, closing the
-door.
-
-At the other side she stopped, hands pressed tight to her lips, and
-waited for courage to go forward.
-
-Partway down the stairs she saw Jarvis looking up. Fright grayed his
-face.
-
-“I’ll see Lord Chesterfield now,” she told him and followed to the
-run.
-
-With gaze straining through the train window an hour later at meadow
-and woodland she did not see, she was carried back to Restawhile, to
-the babies waiting for her.
-
-The moon rose, as she had pictured it, paling the trees outside her
-room and the lawn beneath.
-
-At last her door opened. Cunningham entered, closing it softly,
-switched on the lights and saw her sitting hunched in a chair, with
-eyes bewildered as if they could not realize the thing they had
-revealed. He spoke her name—once, twice. She did not even glance at
-him.
-
-“Nancy, answer me!”
-
-She turned slowly.
-
-“I ask you not to jump at conclusions. Nancy—”
-
-“Yes!”
-
-“Why didn’t you wait?”
-
-Her gaze locked with his incredulously. “You think I could have
-waited?”
-
-“I understand,” he put in hastily. “That’s why I made no attempt to
-detain you. The situation was awkward.”
-
-She laughed. It might have been a cry from the soul.
-
-“Awkward, nothing more!” he hurried on. “I admit, it looked damning.
-I, myself, would have judged as you did. But I give you my word—”
-
-She swept it aside.
-
-“Jarvis tried to keep me from going up. That alone proves—”
-
-“Jarvis is a servant, with the view point of his class.”
-
-She uttered the thought that had been spinning round in her brain. “He
-would scarcely have tried to protect you if that had been her first
-visit.”
-
-“Why not? He concluded because a woman happened to be there with
-me—alone—Bah,” he broke off, “that end of it’s not worth considering!
-What you think is all that concerns me. And what you think is only too
-evident.”
-
-“What I think—what I think!” Her hands clasped and unclasped
-incessantly. Her voice came strangled.
-
-He had been pacing up and down. Now he pulled a chair close to hers.
-
-“But you’re wrong, dear. It’s circumstantial evidence and worth as
-much. I came back to-day unexpectedly, looked in at the uptown office
-before going home and found a message from Lilla, asking me to see her
-this afternoon without fail. I called her hotel and arranged to meet
-her at the stable. Jarvis had notified me that Lord Chesterfield was
-seedy and it occurred to me that by having her come there, I’d save
-time.”
-
-“You—” the words came haltingly as if difficult to speak—“you didn’t
-seem in haste when I saw you.”
-
-“Come now—be sporting, dear.” He tried to make a laugh cut the
-tension. “You know my interest in the theater.”
-
-“Yes—I know.”
-
-“Well, Lilla’s consulted me any number of times about one thing or
-another. And she has a Bohemian way of establishing palship that you
-don’t understand.”
-
-“Don’t I?”
-
-“No. I wouldn’t want you to. But the fact remains that Lilla on the
-floor with a cigarette in her mouth means no more than another woman
-at the tea table.”
-
-She made no reply.
-
-“Of course she lied when she said we were expecting Thorne,” he
-pursued. “You knew that, didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes. He was out here to-day and motored me in. But I’d have known
-anyway.”
-
-“Can’t understand why it’s so much easier for women to lie than tell
-the truth.”
-
-“Perhaps men teach them it’s easier.”
-
-There was a breath without words.
-
-“For instance,” she went on monotonously and her eyes dropped to the
-hands clenched against her knees, “you’re going to tell me I’ve no
-right to misjudge either you or Lilla.”
-
-“Why, my dearest,” Cunningham lifted her lowered face, looked long
-into it. “There’s nothing mysterious in the whole affair. Kane offered
-to star her in a new production if she’d get him the backing and she
-wants me to put up the money. That’s the long and short of it. I had
-every intention of consulting you.”
-
-She drew away, looking at him straight and direct. Her lips opened but
-closed without speech. She had been on the point of asking how it
-happened that he had arrived in town a day ahead of time without
-letting her know, why he had failed to telephone. But she could not
-bring herself to question him. And he gave little time.
-
-Lifting both her hands he unlocked them, drew them to his breast and
-met her eyes unwavering.
-
-“Lilla and I are nothing more than good pals, like—like you and
-Thorne. I want you to believe that.”
-
-“It’s impossible, Dick—after what I saw to-day.”
-
-“Why? Have you ever before had cause to doubt me?”
-
-“No.” She hesitated a bit before admitting it.
-
-“Then why seize on the first occasion?”
-
-“Seize on it? Seize on it?” She gave another low breathless laugh.
-“That—that’s funny! Seize on my own misery—seize on the shattering of
-all I hold dear!”
-
-“You’re nervous and hysterical now and things look monstrous. But I
-know you too well to think this mood can last.” His hands crept toward
-her shoulders. All through the interview there had been no conflict on
-his part, no man-woman antagonism, just an assumption of honest effort
-to convince her. And now he adroitly resorted to the means by which he
-had won her, a man’s most convincing way of setting himself right, the
-lover’s. He drew her, resisting, out of the chair—enfolded her in his
-arms—bent his lips, whispered: “No other woman could mean anything
-while I have you. Don’t you know that?”
-
-A moment passed, longer than any she had ever lived through. Then, so
-low that he could scarcely hear: “I’m going to believe you,
-Dick—because I want to believe you,” she said.
-
-Neither of them referred to it again. As if by mutual agreement the
-matter was sealed. Whatever scar the experience had left so far as
-Nancy was concerned, her lips were closed as the lips of the dead.
-
-When eventually she heard through Thorne that along the Rialto it was
-whispered Lilla actually was considering an offer from Kane, she felt
-immensely relieved. Dick had told her the truth then about that end of
-it. Why was the rest not true as well?
-
-And as if to assure her, his devotion duplicated that of their
-honeymoon. Her happiness seemed the thought paramount, her peace of
-mind his topmost concern. It continued so until business called him
-West, the tangle that for some time had been knotting his California
-interests. The letters he sent, when they were not of her and the
-children, spoke of his boredom after affairs of the day were done
-with, of the humidity and discomfort of the rainy season and
-emphasized his eagerness to return. They came from various coast
-cities—San Francisco, Sacramento, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles.
-
-“It’s possible you may not hear from me the next few weeks,” a final
-communication told her. “I find it necessary to go to New Mexico to
-look into a railroad proposition. For a time I may be located miles
-from any post office. But know that I’m safe and thinking of you, my
-dearest, and expect me back sometime in September.”
-
-Nancy packed when it arrived and left to visit the Bishops at Newport.
-Stopping overnight in town, she ran into Coghlan on his way to the
-Knickerbocker Grill, daily trysting place of managers.
-
-“Say, what d’you think of Lilla?” He chortled in the midst of pouring
-out plans for the coming season. “Gone to Hawaii to get atmosphere
-before she signs up for that lead. Atmosphere! Can you beat it? Paying
-her own expenses, too. Told her she was crazy, but nothing to it—had
-to go. Developing too much temperament for her own good, that kid!”
-
-Nancy had not yet brought herself to the point of hearing Lilla’s name
-without wincing. But she managed a smile and asked: “When does she
-return?”
-
-“Next month sometime. Told her rehearsals begin the fifteenth whether
-she’s on the job or not. So you can bank on it, she’ll be here.” His
-appraising yet impersonal glance ran the length of Nancy’s graceful
-figure, from the wide hat shading her eyes to the narrow brown pumps
-and slim ankles. “All to the good, Nancy,” he sighed regretfully, “all
-to the good! Just home and mother stuff too! And, by golly, five years
-ago I guyed myself into thinking I’d turn you out the greatest actress
-in America!”
-
-She wondered vaguely as she sped toward the worldly paradise whose
-gates had swung wide to her whether old Jerry was right. Would she
-have become a great actress or just the darling of a few fickle years?
-That girl with her wild dark eyes and swirl of golden hair, would the
-public she had loved have wept and laughed with her to-day? She
-wondered and smiled reminiscently, a smile with a tear, like some
-bittersweet memory of the dead.
-
-At the station she was met by her host, otherwise known as Mary
-Bishop’s husband, and in a supremely groomed car was driven through
-supremely groomed streets, ultra as the leaders who dwelt there.
-Courty Bishop sat back beside her, caressed his waxed mustache and
-regaled her with choice bits of news, just as Coghlan had regaled her
-the day before. After all, she told herself, there wasn’t much
-difference in the two worlds. Appraisingly, but with a look not quite
-so impersonal as that of her former manager, the sophisticated eyes
-turned to scan her beauty while his facile tongue rambled on.
-
-“I say—you top ’em all, Nancy! What a risk that boy, Dick,
-takes—leaving you alone so long!”
-
-“Not so much of a risk,” she laughed, mentally placing her husband
-next to the little man.
-
-“But what the deuce takes him such a distance this time of year?”
-
-“Oh, railroad stuff.”
-
-“Bore—the tropics in midsummer!”
-
-“Tropics?”
-
-“Well,—that’s what I’d call the Hawaiian Islands. One of my men,
-McIntyre, met him on the way out. Wrote that if Cunningham didn’t kick
-at going, guessed he couldn’t. But why in hades—”
-
-The woman beside him heard no more. Hawaii!! Like some giant machinery
-against her ears, his words became a whirr. She smiled mechanically,
-as so many women have done, while the world stood still.
-
-Fate had lifted the prompter’s hand and slowly the curtain descended
-on Act II of Nancy Bradshaw’s life drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III—ACT III
-
-
-The hum of arrival in that great hive, the Grand Central, kept up an
-incessant drone. Scurrying figures swarmed like bees from the gates to
-disappear into the night. Red caps raced back and forth, elbowing one
-another in the rush for spoils. City husbands reached out eagerly from
-roped-off lines to country wives and sunburned youngsters. Embraces
-and laughter and inarticulate efforts to tell everything in one moment
-kept the air abuzz. Life, centralized in one small area of space, was
-at its busiest.
-
-Into this hubbub from the Lake Shore Limited swung a man in tweed
-suit, the porter at his side laden with the trappings of a long trip.
-His big shoulders pushed through the throng into the lighted terminal
-and he looked around. Rapidly his glance traveled from face to face,
-then back along the congested line and once again its length. A look
-of annoyance that brought brows together followed the swift scrutiny
-and he made for the telephone booths. Impatiently he gave the operator
-a number, concentrating his gaze on her while she made the Long Island
-connection. When some three minutes later he emerged from the booth,
-the look of annoyance had changed to anger.
-
-With characteristic stride of authority he moved across the crowded
-stone floor, bounded up the steps and waited, peering at his watch in
-the outer gloom as taxis unloaded their burdens and took on others.
-When his turn came he sprang in, gave the address of a small select
-hotel off Fifth Avenue and all the way there sat staring fixedly out
-at the lighted shops, his lips a thin, angry line.
-
-The line had not disappeared as he stepped from the elevator to the
-door of a suite and imperatively rang the bell. It was opened by a
-girl in nursemaid’s cap who gave a start when she saw who it was. He
-pushed past with the same look he had cast about the station. Then he
-turned abruptly, sending at her a volley of rapid-fire questions.
-
-Madam was not there, she answered. Yes, the children were, but
-Mrs. Cunningham had gone to dinner and the theater. No, she did not
-believe any telegram had been received from him. Madam, she was sure,
-had not expected him to-night. They had been in town since the
-beginning of the week. No, Mrs. Cunningham had not gone out with any
-one. To The Coghlan Theatre, she believed.
-
-Her curious gaze followed him as he went down the hall to the
-elevator. Then softly she shut the door.
-
-At ten minutes to nine he strolled into The Coghlan Theater, the last
-of a fashionably late audience.
-
-The place was packed and he leaned leisurely against the rear
-balustrade to wait for the curtain before trying to locate his wife.
-
-Across the footlights palm trees swayed, recalling the land of secrets
-he had left behind. Something about the sensuous atmosphere so
-realistically reproduced made him turn away. Then his eyes took in the
-woman who held the center of the stage. Her voice—low, beautifully
-modulated—rolled toward him. Her eyes, burning black, turned in his
-direction. He gripped the rail, bent over it.
-
-Nancy!! In spite of the dark wig and olive tinted skin, there was no
-mistake! Nancy—on the stage of The Coghlan! The sudden sharp crackle
-of a program broke the stillness.
-
- NANCY BRADSHAW
- in
- “Broken Wings”
-
-There it was—Nancy Bradshaw—staring at him from the sheet he had not
-troubled to read.
-
-Nancy! Mrs. Richard Cunningham!
-
-He made the lobby like a bull gone mad. Generations of training, years
-of the will to control, were as if they had never been. He was the
-outraged male, bent on destroying the thing which had defied him.
-
-Outside he found Coghlan who, from the box-office, had glimpsed him
-sauntering in and evidently anticipated precisely what had happened.
-
-Jerry’s good-natured face with its row of chins was hard as an iron
-mask as he blocked Cunningham’s onrush.
-
-“Hello, there,” he said genially, reaching out a hand.
-
-Cunningham’s fists clenched white.
-
-“I’ve got to see my wife.”
-
-“Well, can’t see her from anywhere but in there until after the
-performance. Nobody goes backstage—strict orders.” Then smiling
-broadly, “Made a hell of a hit! You ought to be damn proud of her.”
-
-“I’m going to see her _now_!”
-
-Jerry grinned serenely. “Don’t blame you. Should have been here Monday
-for the opening—sensation, old man! Always said that in five years
-she’d be the greatest actress in the country. And take it from me—”
-
-From within, a swelling volume of applause told the fall of the
-curtain.
-
-Cunningham made a lunge to pass the figure that blocked him.
-
-“Careful, careful, old boy!” came firmly from the manager. “Hold tight
-there! They’ll be coming out—take it easy.”
-
-The other man’s face was set.
-
-“I’ve told you—”
-
-“And I tell _you_! This is my theater! Anybody who causes any
-disturbance gets out!”
-
-A prominent clubman sighted Cunningham at this juncture and hurried
-across the lobby. From that moment Nancy’s husband was forced to
-assume an easy pride calculated to disarm gossip, forced to become the
-center of a throng bent upon congratulating him on his wife’s success.
-
-During the ten minutes of intermission he bore it with a smile
-chiseled on his handsome face, then left the theater as the lights
-went low. Back to the hotel he tramped, turned and retraced his steps
-like some madman muttering to himself. Then up and down the dark alley
-of the stage entrance, watching for signs that the final curtain had
-fallen, unable to consider the sane and sensible alternative of
-waiting for his wife in the privacy of her own rooms.
-
-When at last they stood face to face under the brilliant lights of
-her dressing-room it was evident Coghlan had warned her.
-
-She was alone. In the little room where they had met five years ago
-they met once more. And to-night as that night a flame like a living
-thing darted between them. Then it had been white and warming. Now it
-filled the place, a devastating fury. But in the face of it she stood
-calm.
-
-It would have taken an observer less self-absorbed to note that her
-hand trembled as it grasped a chair-back, that her breath came
-quickly. In silence they measured each other. In silence she waited,
-her eyes never leaving him.
-
-At last he spoke and his voice was as hard as that of a judge
-pronouncing extreme penalty.
-
-“Well—have you anything to say for yourself?”
-
-She shook her head and not defiance but sadness was in the look she
-sent him. “Nothing I _want_ to say.”
-
-“You realize, of course, that I’m going to put a stop to this business
-here and now.”
-
-Again that look—half regret, half sorrow.
-
-“You can no longer put a stop to anything I do.”
-
-In his unreasoning wrath the actual import of her words missed him.
-
-“I don’t care what contracts you’ve made—to-night finishes them.”
-
-“Suppose we try to talk this over quietly”—she gave a slight gesture
-of weariness as she sat down before her dressing-table—“if it must be
-discussed.”
-
-“Must be discussed? Good God! I come back after three months, ring my
-home, find that my wife has moved into town without a word to me—”
-
-“You forget—you had overlooked giving me your address.”
-
-“And come up against the fact,” he rushed on, “that she’s taken
-advantage of my absence to put over— What’s your explanation of this
-damned outrage?” he broke off hotly.
-
-Her eyes, tense and brilliant, held his. He gave a short laugh.
-
-“I assume you and Coghlan have concocted one.”
-
-“Coghlan has no idea of my reason for doing it. He merely knows that
-in July I sent word to him that I would take this part if Lilla Grant
-refused it. He didn’t wait to find out, though she cabled him a week
-later saying Kane was going to star her.”
-
-“And you thought I’d let you get away with it! After five years of
-living with me you thought I’d stand for anything like this!”
-
-“It doesn’t matter whether you stand for it or not.”
-
-He had been pacing up and down, hands thrust into his pockets, ready
-to plunge through the walls. Now suddenly he veered about, stood
-rooted.
-
-“I mean it.” Softly she answered his amazement. “I’m back on the stage
-because I realize how little my leaving it meant to you.”
-
-He went close to her then, threat in every line of his big frame.
-
-“You’re my wife—the mother of my children.”
-
-“Yes—that’s all.”
-
-“All?”
-
-“I bore your name, I bore your children. I gave up the stage to do
-both. And in giving it up, I sacrificed your love.”
-
-Her back was turned but out of the shadows of her triple mirror gazed
-a face white with pity of him, with suffering for the thing which,
-through him, both had lost.
-
-“Sacrificed my love?” he began as a man feels his way along paths he
-is not sure of. “What in heaven’s name gave you that idea?”
-
-“Please,” she stopped him with a swift gesture, “please—don’t speak of
-it! I can’t bear it!”
-
-“Look here, Nancy,” came somewhat more calmly, “this is nonsense—silly
-woman stuff. I’m not saying you didn’t think you had some rational
-excuse for doing this thing. But it’s out of the question. It simply
-can’t continue. I made that clear when I married you. Boredom or
-restlessness or the sort of unreasoning mood that gets hold of women
-probably drove you to it.”
-
-“You drove me to it,” she answered quietly.
-
-“What’s got over you?” he came back sharply. “You talk like a mad
-woman.”
-
-“No—I’m quite sane. I see quite clearly—too clearly. I’ve had plenty
-of time to go over it—to face the truth. I thought when I married you
-that you loved the woman in me. Now I know it was the actress. You
-loved me for the thing I gave up because I loved you—the glamour of
-the stage. Popularity—the fact that I was conspicuous made me
-desirable. You demanded that I sacrifice all that. And when I did, I
-became the same to you as hundreds of women you’d known, women you
-were tired of. You cut me off completely from my old life, except as
-a spectator—then sought in that old life the thrill and interest I
-could no longer give you.”
-
-She paused. Her hand went to her throat as it had that day in the
-house of the fir trees.
-
-“All these five years when I’ve longed for a glimpse of it—just a
-glimpse—to become part of it again if only for a little while, I’ve
-felt guilty, almost as if I’d been untrue to you. I’ve thrust the
-thought aside as something unworthy. I’ve let you fill my life. Well,”
-she paused, “now I’ve gone back to it. I’ve gone back to the thing
-that made you love me. And I’ve gone—to stay.”
-
-Defiance at last leaped at him. It tore from her, as they stood
-measuring each other, like a panther from some rustling jungle. It
-gripped his throat.
-
-“Woman excuses!” he brought out at last. “Without rhyme or reason to
-back them! Well, they won’t answer. I’m still waiting for a straight,
-rational explanation. Suppose you let me have it—now.”
-
-“All right, I will. I didn’t want to, but since you demand it you
-shall have it. I’ve given you my reason, my motive. I’ve told you what
-sent me back to the stage. But the thing that brought me to my senses,
-that made me realize the truth, can be summed up in just three words:
-Hawaii—Lilla Grant.”
-
-She spoke as if merely voicing them were tearing open a wound
-unhealed, spoke them so low that they came like a breath.
-
-And hearing, he straightened, stood silent, too stunned to think of an
-answer.
-
-The noise of slamming doors and scurrying feet beat instead against
-the stillness, all the echoing movements that strike bare walls when
-the play is done.
-
-“It was rather funny—wasn’t it?—that I should have believed you that
-first time,” she went on. “But I told myself what I had seen was
-impossible; that if I had given up the thing that was life to me,
-surely you wouldn’t go back to it for the fascination of grease-paint
-and footlights. Surely you couldn’t seek in another woman the thing
-you had denied me! That’s why I accepted your half truths—eagerly.
-Because I wanted to—and one does so many foolish things when one wants
-to. That’s why it was so much harder when I did find out.”
-
-“Nancy—” he began.
-
-“Please don’t try to explain this away!” came breathlessly. “It can’t
-be set right. It’s done! And I’d like to go on being friends, because,
-you see, I _did_ love you.”
-
-“Then—” he seized on the note in her voice.
-
-“No! Never!”
-
-They were just two words, low as a conscience whisper. But they closed
-the gates of what had been with the grim certainty of fate. His
-steel-colored eyes—habitually so sure of themselves—wavered. His fists
-gripped against an enemy unknown. And only the woman whose gaze locked
-with his knew that the enemy was himself.
-
-He looked down at the blonde head round which the lights of the
-theater glimmered once more; those lights he had torn away to make her
-entirely his.
-
-“You mean that?” he brought out at last.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Finally?”
-
-“It can’t be otherwise—now.”
-
-He turned swiftly on his heel and went the length of the room, then
-back to where she stood. He pulled up sharp and his lips snapped
-together.
-
-“All right. But you leave one item out of the reckoning. As long as
-you bear my name, you respect it! If you persist in this—I’ll divorce
-you.”
-
-“The name is yours. I am Nancy Bradshaw again.”
-
-“What do you mean by that?”
-
-“Only what I said. You can have it back any time you want. I won’t
-make a move to stop you. You can have everything you’ve ever given
-me—everything. The one thing I had a right to keep—you’ve taken away.
-So what else matters?”
-
-She walked slowly over to where her clothes hung behind a cretonne
-curtain, took down a black hat and pulled it over her shining hair.
-She stood there, shoulders drooping, head bent.
-
-Outside the soft shuffle of the old watchman’s feet told he was going
-the rounds. Good-nights had been tossed from one to another of the
-departing company. That heavy quiet of night in a darkened theater
-rolled backstage. The world of make-believe had vanished. Only the
-shell remained.
-
-Cunningham leaned a bit heavily against the door. For the first time
-life had thwarted, left him impotent, and a new sensation, when
-unpleasant, is difficult to handle.
-
-The woman he had loved and desired, the woman who had stirred him, who
-had been his, came toward him as to a stranger.
-
-“I’m afraid I must go,” she said.
-
-He roused himself to a final stand.
-
-“You realize,” came hoarsely, “that I’ll fight this—fight it to a
-finish? You realize as well that the children will come to me?”
-
-Pain for what had been and what might have been; memories, all that
-had made these moments a requiem, vanished from her voice. She went
-close to him. Like his own her body went taut, her hands tense, her
-head high. Primitive even as himself, she met him, ready for combat.
-
-Suddenly something in her answering gaze, in the black of her eyes
-that could flame up like two live things, made clear the writing on
-the wall.
-
-“I don’t think you’ll try to do that. I shan’t attempt to keep them
-from you, of course. But they’re mine, you know,—and _I_ haven’t
-forfeited the right to them.”
-
-Without another word, she stood waiting for him to step aside. He
-hesitated, made as if to speak, then turned abruptly and the slam of a
-door resounded like thunder.
-
-One by one she turned off the lights. Out across the familiar boards
-she went to the center of the stage, set for to-morrow. Face lifted to
-the darkness, she stood where had come to her the struggle
-eternal—success, conflict, love, renunciation. And to her lips came
-the question woman will always ask, the question always unanswered:
-“Why?”
-
-And so the curtain descended on Act III of Nancy Bradshaw’s life
-drama.
-
-
-
-
-THE CURTAIN FALLS
-
-
-The lights of the auditorium flame high. The audience rises. It has
-stepped down from the footlights. It moves in undulating tide toward
-the wide-flung doors.
-
-Beyond those doors is night, the world of care. The brief hours of
-living in a house of dreams is over. Forgetfulness gives place to
-memory. The spirit of the theater lifts its magic touch from tired
-eyes.
-
-Backstage all is dark and wondering. Have we played our parts as an
-audience and sensed its heartbeats? Have we smiled its smiles? Teased
-its vanity? Gained its approval? We of this little play—have we
-succeeded in our striving to make a critical throng throb to it? Back
-of the swaying curtain, before which one of asbestos has dropped
-heavily, all is wild hope, eager prayer, despairing question.
-
-The house of dreams is empty, the soft-armed chairs shrouded as if
-each held a pale ghost. Is it to be alight or dark? Do we live or die?
-
-To-morrow holds the answer.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-A small number of clear typographic errors have been corrected.
-
-Consistent period spelling has been retained, as has inconsistent
-hyphenation.
-
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Footlights, by Rita Weiman</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world 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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Footlights</p>
-<p>Author: Rita Weiman</p>
-<p>Release Date: December 18, 2019 [eBook #60950]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOOTLIGHTS***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, David Wilson,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/footlights00weim">
- https://archive.org/details/footlights00weim</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="halftitle">
-<p class="fakeh2"><a name="png.001" id="png.001" href="#png.001"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>i<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>FOOTLIGHTS</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<div class="titlepage2">
-
-<h1 title="Footlights"><a name="png.003" id="png.003" href="#png.003"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>iii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>FOOTLIGHTS</h1>
-
-<p class="author"><small class="allsc">BY</small><br
- />RITA WEIMAN</p>
-
-<img src="images/device.jpg" alt="[Publisher’s Device]" />
-
-<p class="pub">NEW YORK<br
- />DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY<br
- /><small>1923</small></p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="verso">
-<p><small class="smc"><a name="png.004" id="png.004" href="#png.004"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>iv<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Copyright, 1919, 1920, 1921, 1922<br
- />By RITA WEIMAN</small></p>
-
-<p><small class="allsc">PRINTED IN U. S. A.</small></p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="dedication">
-<p class="sprd"><a name="png.005" id="png.005" href="#png.005"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>v<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><i>To</i><br
- />MY MOTHER</p>
-
-<p><i>on whose love and influence<br
- />the curtain will never fall.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="toc">
-<h2 title="Contents"><a name="png.007" id="png.007" href="#png.007"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>vii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-
-<table summary="Table of Contents">
-<tr><th class="dots"> </th><th class="pg">PAGE</th></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.009">The Curtain Rises</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.009">ix</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.013">Footlights</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.013">3</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.077">Madame Peacock</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.077">67</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.137">Grease-Paint</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.137">127</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.179">The Back Drop</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.179">169</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.229">Two Masters</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.229">219</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.259">Up Stage</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.259">249</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.299">Curtain!</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.299">289</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="dotz"><span class="text"><a href="#png.351">The Curtain Falls</a></span></p></td>
- <td class="pg"><a href="#png.351">341</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td colspan="2"> </td></tr><!-- TN: this is solely to stop Kindle applying "enhanced typesetting" -->
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="The Curtain Rises"><a name="png.009" id="png.009" href="#png.009"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>ix<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE CURTAIN RISES</h2>
-
-
-<p>Arched like the dome of heaven, illumined with a glow
-not brilliant but warm and intimate, carpeted with velvet
-that gives gently to the tread of many feet, the air
-vaguely scented with a perfume that has no name, row
-upon row of wide, soft-armed chairs facing a curtain that
-falls in long, mysterious folds—silent, expectant, tantalizing,
-inviting—a world all its own—THE THEATER.</p>
-
-<p>Behind that curtain—the same world bounded by brick
-walls. Scenery with act numbers scrawled in charcoal
-across its back being shoved into place, hustling property
-men, frantic stage manager, nervous director giving last
-minute husky orders, anxiously repeated lines and cues,
-the final touches of make-up, restive feet striding dressing-room
-floors. There is the murmur of hushed voices,
-its excited undercurrent like a rising chant, the tremulo
-of uncertainty, the eager activity of that suspended
-moment of waiting for the curtain to lift.</p>
-
-<p>Actors and audience—they must for a few brief hours
-change places if this world made for forgetfulness, this
-house of dreams is to realize its unwritten law:—“Abandon
-care, all ye who enter here:” The spirit of
-the theater lays magic fingers over tired eyes. The
-audience steps across the footlights and becomes the
-actor, throbs to his emotions, sheds his tears, tingles with
-his laughter. The actor must step across the footlights
-and become the audience, feel his pulse beat, sense his
-pleasure or disapproval, know his reaction.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.010" id="png.010" href="#png.010"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>x<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>And in proportion to the measure with which each becomes
-the other, the enthusiasm with which the audience
-acts, the keenness with which the actor observes, the play
-lives. The house of dreams is alight! But if either
-should fail—and if one fail, it is because the other does—then
-the play is phantom. A stalking ghost walks the
-boards. The house of dreams goes dark!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Footlights"><a name="png.011" id="png.011" href="#png.011"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>1<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>FOOTLIGHTS</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Satire"><i>SATIRE</i></h3>
-
-<p>The Romance of yesterday is the Satire of to-morrow.
-Juliet to-day would be a lovesick flapper. We’d regard with
-tongue in cheek her moonings to the moon. There is such
-a fine line between the smile of sympathy and the smile of
-sophistication, that the author confesses she is still in doubt
-which the heroine of “Footlights” will call forth—if either.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.013" id="png.013" href="#png.013"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>3<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>FOOTLIGHTS</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Have</span> you ever been in a small town, small time
-vaudeville house? Well, even if you have, and
-could live through it, you’ve probably never seen that
-mysterious region known as “backstage.” You’ve never
-heard warped boards creak under the lightest step.
-You’ve never stood in the wings waiting for your turn,
-trying to escape the draught that is everywhere, shivering
-but afraid to sneeze. You’ve never dodged misdirected
-tobacco juice. You’ve never endured the composite
-odors only a one time “opery-house,” sometime
-warehouse, another time stable, can produce. You’ve
-never done your three a day, rain, shine or blizzard, then
-rushed to catch a local with oil lamps swinging weirdly
-overhead and a jerky halt at every peach tree. But
-most of all, if you’re a woman, you’ve never known what
-it is to sit weeping in a pea-green walled dressing-room
-because you chose to do the darn thing yourself and
-won’t go back home and admit you’re beaten.</p>
-
-<p>If any one of these experiences had been yours, you’d
-probably walk straight into the pea-green dressing-room
-referred to, pat Elizabeth Parsons on the shoulder and
-say, “I’m with you, old girl! It’s a black, black world.
-No sunshine anywhere! Never was, never will be!”</p>
-
-<p>As it happened, those in her world at the moment were
-not of her world. They were a hardened lot, with hands
-ready to dig down and share a copper with a pal, with
-glib greeting in their own peculiar patois as they swung
-<a name="png.014" id="png.014" href="#png.014"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>4<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>through the stage entrance, but inured to creaking boards,
-to combined odors, to oaths and tobacco juice and icy
-currents that gripped more sensitive shoulders like the
-hand of death. Life had handed them a deal that wasn’t
-exactly square, perhaps. Almost any of them would
-have been a knock-out on Broadway! But they had
-reached the point where emotion, as well as indignation,
-expressed itself in shrugs.</p>
-
-<p>They could snore peacefully in a swaying day-coach,
-dreaming of the hour when the flower of success would
-spring up by the wayside. So Elizabeth Parsons wept
-alone. Her make-up boxes reeled in every direction as
-her head went down in their midst. Her hands, pressed
-against her lips, tried to still the sobs she knew were
-cowardly. Her body shook with that least beautiful of
-human emotions, self-pity, and she wished she were dead.</p>
-
-<p>A gale of sleet and snow tore against her little alley
-window. It rattled the single pane furiously. It forced
-its way through cracks and dripped into pools of water
-on the stone floor. It blurred the already dull electric
-globes round her dressing-table with a dank mist and
-soaked a chill into her bones. But it had nothing whatever
-to do with her tears. They were the result of an
-accumulation of misery and loneliness, and finally the
-receipt of a wire from her booking agent advising her
-that her route had been changed. For the next three
-days she must play her own home town.</p>
-
-<p>It was the crowning humiliation! She had endured
-the disappointment of all the rest of it; but to go back
-to the barnlike old theater in Main Street, wedged between
-movies and tinsel acrobats, was too much. To
-<a name="png.015" id="png.015" href="#png.015"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>5<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hear the wagging tongues and see the wagging heads of
-those who had warned her two years ago that New York
-was a pit of the devil; to let them see that even his
-satanic majesty had let her sink into oblivion, was more
-than she could bear.</p>
-
-<p>From the stage at the foot of the iron stairs came a
-crashing chord and the voice of Jack Halloran, “The Funniest
-Man in the World,” singing a nasal travesty:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>“Oh, Rigoletto—give me a stiletto!”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Elizabeth raised her head, mopped away the tears, and
-rearranged her make-up. Her turn was next but one.</p>
-
-<p class="poster">“BETTY PARSONS—FAMOUS IMITATOR OF<br
- />FAMOUS STARS<br
- />STRAIGHT FROM BROADWAY.”</p>
-
-<p>So proclaimed the announcements that accompanied
-her pictures outside the theater. They always made
-Elizabeth smile. She had certainly come from Broadway—straight.</p>
-
-<p>She brushed back her soft brown hair, pinned a towel
-round it, laid on a layer of grease-paint. A supply
-was needed to blot out traces of the last bad half hour.
-She beaded the lashes, penciled black shadows under
-them that made her gray eyes look green, and carmined
-her lips so that the slightly austere New England lines of
-them softened into luscious curves.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of transforming a primrose into an orchid,
-and with thoughts still fastened on the dreaded to-morrow,
-she did not hear the knock on her door. It was
-<a name="png.016" id="png.016" href="#png.016"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>6<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>repeated. Turning, she saw a white square of paper
-shoved through the crack. She picked it up wonderingly.
-Communications from any one but her agent were almost
-unknown quantities.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="noindent">Dear Lizzie Parsons (she read),</p>
-
-<p>I’m outside of the door waiting to come in and say
-hello.</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="yours">Your old friend,</span><br
- /><span class="smc">Lou Seabury</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In spite of her dread, in spite of her determination to
-die rather than face home folks, she dropped her powder
-puff, made one bound for the door, flung it wide.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Rigoletti—give me a yard of spaghetti,” warbled
-Halloran from below.</p>
-
-<p>With a little checked cry, Elizabeth reached out both
-hands. A plump, pink cheeked young man took
-them and somewhat diffidently stepped into the little
-square of room. But Elizabeth clung to him shamelessly
-and her voice caught when she tried to speak. He was
-the first link between two years of loneliness and the
-yesterdays of happy childhood.</p>
-
-<p>“Lou,” came at last, “Lou Seabury!”</p>
-
-<p>“I got a nerve, haven’t I,—walkin’ in on you like this?”</p>
-
-<p>His pink face flushed a deeper pink as she pulled the
-chair from the dressing-table, thrust him into it, and
-stood looking down. “You’re just an angel from heaven,
-that’s what you are! How ever in the world did you
-find me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I came over here yesterday to look at some threshin’
-machines. Scott Brothers are sellin’ out and Dad got
-<a name="png.017" id="png.017" href="#png.017"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>7<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>word they’re lettin’ their stuff go dirt cheap, so he sent me
-to take a squint. By Jiminy, I almost dropped dead
-when I went past the theater this afternoon and saw your
-picture. Maybe I didn’t go right up to the girl in the
-ticket box and tell her I was an old friend of yours!”</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth’s tongue went into her cheek. “And what
-did she say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Asked why I didn’t come in to see you perform to-night
-and I said I would. But first I made up my mind
-I’d let you know I was here. Say—what is it you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Imitations.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you imitate?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Ethel Barrymore and Elsie Janis and Eddie Foy
-and George Cohan and Nazimova—” She reeled off a
-list, most of them strange to him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you’re great. Gee—Lizzie—but you’re
-pretty.” His round face went scarlet as the words
-popped out and he shifted uneasily under the loose ill-fitting
-coat that hung from his broad shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>She met his wide-eyed admiration with a smile. “It’s
-the paint, Lou.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sirree! You always were pretty. I used to
-watch you sittin’ beside me in the choir, and when you
-threw back your head and sort of closed your eyes to sing,
-I didn’t wonder Sam Goodwin was crazy about you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he still organist at the First Presbyterian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“And are you still in the choir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.” His boyish brown eyes dropped. His plump
-hands twisted the brim of his wide slouch hat. “Guess
-that’s the most I’ll ever amount to.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.018" id="png.018" href="#png.018"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>8<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“But that beautiful voice of yours—it’s a sin!”</p>
-
-<p>“My Dad don’t think so. Gimcracks, he calls it. I
-asked him once to give me enough to get it trained,” the
-eyes lifted with a twinkle, “and I never asked him again.”</p>
-
-<p>She patted his arm sympathetically. “He wouldn’t
-understand—of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee, I wish I had your sand, Lizzie! To break away—and
-make good.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned swiftly to the mirror, picked up the discarded
-puff, dabbed some powder on her nose, then carefully
-rouged her nostrils. And if a tear smudged into the
-shadow under her eye, he didn’t notice it.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her fascinated, every move, every
-practiced touch to her make-up. She had unpinned the
-towel and her hair fluffed like a golden brown halo round
-her small, mobile face. And catching his rapt expression
-in the mirror, it flashed over her that to him she did represent
-success. The mere fact that she had broken the
-chains of New England tradition, that she had crossed
-the rubicon of the footlights, put her on a plane apart.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the look in his nice eyes, of wonder, of envy,
-of homage—the look she had so often worn when from a
-fifty cent seat in the gallery she had studied the methods
-of the stars she impersonated—gave her new courage.
-To-night<!-- TN: original lacks hyphen; added for consistency --> she would not go through her ten minutes listlessly
-with just one idea uppermost—to get her theater
-trunk packed in a rush so that she might snatch a few
-hours’ sleep before making the train in the dull gray
-dawn. To-night she would be sure at least of an audience
-of one, of interest and enthusiasm and a thrill of
-<a name="png.019" id="png.019" href="#png.019"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>9<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>excitement—and these she would merit. She would do
-her turn for Lou Seabury in a way he’d never forget.</p>
-
-<p>She drew a stool from under the dressing-table, sat
-down and plied him with hurried questions about the
-folks at home. He gave her the latest news, little intimate
-bits that mean nothing but are so dear to one who
-knows no fireside but the battered washstand and cracked
-basin of a third-rate hotel room.</p>
-
-<p>Grand’pa Terwilliger, seventy-nine, was keeping
-company with the widow Bonser but was scared to marry
-her for fear folks would talk. Grace Perkins had a new
-baby. Stanley Perkins had married a stenographer in
-Boston and bought a flivver. He, Lou, had bought a
-victrola for fifteen dollars second-hand and had some
-crackerjack opera records for it. She ought to hear
-them!</p>
-
-<p>When finally she sent him round to the front of the
-house and hurried down the ugly iron steps, her low-heeled
-white slippers touched them with an eager lightness
-they had not known for months.</p>
-
-<p>The curtain was rung down on a one-act sketch. A
-placard announced “Miss Betty Parsons—in her Famous
-Imitations.”</p>
-
-<p>With a dazzling smile, Elizabeth sallied forth, cane in
-hand singing, “I’m a Yankee Doodle Dandy.”</p>
-
-<p>Through her repertoire she went, changing like a
-chameleon from the bland grin and strut of Eddie Foy
-to the crumpled pleading and out-flung hands of Nazimova
-in “The Doll’s House.” She plunged into Nora’s
-final scene with her husband:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><a name="png.020" id="png.020" href="#png.020"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>10<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>... “When your terror was over—not for what threatened
-me, but for yourself ... then it seemed to me—as
-though nothing had happened. I was your lark again, your
-doll just as before—whom you would take twice as much
-care of in future, because she was so weak and fragile.
-Torwald—in that moment it burst upon me that I had been
-living here these eight years with a strange man.... Oh,
-I can’t bear to think of it! I could <em>tear</em> myself to pieces!”</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The greater part of the audience had never heard of
-the Russian actress, knew less of the Scandinavian author.
-But the sob in the voice of the frail little girl on
-the stage, the anguish in her face got them by the throat.</p>
-
-<p>There was a spontaneous burst of applause that held
-for a moment while Betty bowed, glance straying into
-the misty auditorium, heart fluttering with a gratification
-it had not known since the Grand Central spilled her into
-the bewildering maze that is New York.</p>
-
-<p>She swung quickly into ragtime after that, the drawling
-syncopation and rolling step of a black-face comedian,
-and as a conclusion gave them Elsie Janis in one of the
-songs from her latest Broadway success.</p>
-
-<p>They brought her back several times. She threw them
-a final kiss, disappeared into the wings and whisked
-up the stairs. Lou was going to see the show to its finish,
-then call for her. He was sure they could persuade the
-proprietor of the hotel where she was staying to fix up
-a little supper of sandwiches and milk.</p>
-
-<p>She slipped out of her white dress and into a dark one,
-folded the former in layers of tissue paper and laid it in
-the top trunk tray, stuffing stockings into the corners to
-keep it in place. She gathered together her make-up,
-<a name="png.021" id="png.021" href="#png.021"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>11<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>packed it into a tin box. To-morrow another pea-green
-dressing-room, or perhaps, saffron-yellow. The week following,
-one of chalk-blue. And so on, ad infinitum.
-Of such her infinite variety!</p>
-
-<p>A knock came at the door. She glanced at the gold
-watch which had been her grandmother’s. Ten-fifteen.
-Lou had probably tired of the show.</p>
-
-<p>Pulling on her black velvet tarn, she called gaily—“Come
-in!”</p>
-
-<p>A mellow voice answered interrogatively, “Miss Parsons?”</p>
-
-<p>It was then she wheeled about. Standing framed in
-the doorway was a tall man with a cloud of black hair
-sweeping from a white forehead and a pair of intense
-dark eyes. Elizabeth knew him instantly.</p>
-
-<p>No mistaking that face and long, lean figure.</p>
-
-<p>She drew a bewildered hand across a bewildered brow.
-In the doorway of her dressing-room stood Oswald Kane,
-famous New York theatrical producer!</p>
-
-<p>She made no attempt at speech, just stared at him.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled. “You expected some one else, I see. May
-I come in?” And as she nodded, “You know me?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded again, indicated the chair and sank onto
-the low stool. She couldn’t have stood another instant.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re wondering, of course, why I am here,” the low
-musical voice went on.</p>
-
-<p>“Y-yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very much interested in your work, Miss Parsons.
-I have come to see it three times—last night and
-twice to-day. Until to-night, however, I was not quite
-sure of you. There was a listless quality. Had any one,
-<a name="png.022" id="png.022" href="#png.022"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>12<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>perhaps, informed you that I was in front to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“If any one had, I’d probably have died of nervousness.”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled again, ran a hand through his heavy hair,
-pushing it back from his forehead, and leaned forward.
-“You seem to be a very talented little girl. No technique,
-of course. You have the A B C’s of that to
-learn. But you have a flexible voice and expressive
-face, and you showed in that Nazimova bit emotional
-possibilities. Your reproduction of her tone and accent
-were really excellent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Th—thank you,” came with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I have no proof that you can act. Even
-if you can, it will require infinite patience and training
-to make an actress of you. But I could do it, I believe.”</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth gulped.</p>
-
-<p>He shook back his shock of hair. His burrowing eyes
-narrowed. His fingers hesitatingly played with the thin
-watch chain that spanned his high waistcoat. “The
-majority of actresses on the American stage are mere
-mummers. Those I have made are artistes. But in order
-to accomplish this, they have given themselves into
-my hands—absolutely. I have taken girls out of the
-chorus and made stars of them in the drama—not because
-they were lovely to look at, or quick or clever, but
-because I have worked hard with them, with infinite patience
-developed their personalities, injected into them
-the inspiration that is Oswald Kane.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course there must be ability or I would not waste
-my time. I must be sure the seed is there to be nursed
-<a name="png.023" id="png.023" href="#png.023"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>13<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>into a beautiful flower. But first and foremost, the actress
-I train must obliterate self. She must become so
-much clay for me to model. She must accept my direction
-without question. She must obey as a soldier obeys
-his commanding officer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” sighed Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>“I see you now not as you are, but as what I can make
-of you. No two of my stars are alike. Each has distinct
-and startling personality. That is why the American
-public looks to me for sensations. Not one is the actress
-she was when I discovered her. They are, one and all,
-Oswald Kane creations.” He leaned back, still studying
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth felt a sea of eyes upon her in a gaze of hypnosis.
-She stared back like one in a trance.</p>
-
-<p>He sat for a long moment silent. Then the low, quiet
-voice went on, richly vibrant as the tones of a cello.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I think I might do something with you. That
-Nazimova bit showed promise. But it will require training
-and patience—infinite patience. You will have to
-work hard without complaint, hours over one line, weeks
-over one short scene. And no recognition, perhaps, for
-some years to come. You must not consider mundane
-things. Money must count for nothing. I cannot think
-of money in connection with my art. You must never
-grow tired or disgruntled. Above all, you must not question.
-And in the end, a great artiste, my child,—a great
-artiste.”</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth nodded mechanically. She felt like screaming.</p>
-
-<p>He got up slowly as if still uncertain, moved into a
-<a name="png.024" id="png.024" href="#png.024"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>14<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>corner of the little room, eyes still upon her. “Will you
-take off your hat and smooth down your hair. I must
-see your features at close range.”</p>
-
-<p>With fingers that trembled and stiffened, she pulled off
-her tam, combed back her fluffy brown hair and breathlessly
-lifted her profile to the light. It was, as he had
-said, a face not beautiful, but malleable to mood as wax,
-with gray eyes set wide apart, a short nose, full sensitive
-red lips, deep-cleft chin and swift change of expression
-that was almost a change of feature. And there was in
-her slim figure with its soft suggestion of curve, the magnetism
-of youth, the flame of enduring energy.</p>
-
-<p>He moved finally toward the door.</p>
-
-<p>“You will take the 11:18 to-night to New York, cancel
-all bookings, and I shall expect you at my theater to-morrow
-at noon.”</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth found her voice at last. “If you knew how
-many, many times I’ve gone to your office, Mr. Kane,
-and begged on my knees for just one little word with
-you!”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled once more, that charming, somewhat deprecatory
-smile of his. “That is not my way of engaging
-artistes. I must seek them, not they me. I never see
-those who come to my office, unless I have sent for them.
-No, my way is to haunt out-of-the-way places. Railroad
-stations, unknown stock theaters, cheap theatrical hotels,
-vaudeville houses like this. There, occasionally, I
-find my flower among the weeds. And when I do, I pluck
-it to transplant in my own garden. If I discover one a
-year, I ask no more.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.025" id="png.025" href="#png.025"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>15<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-A sob broke in Elizabeth’s throat. “Oh, Mr. Kane—I—I’m
-so proud—and so—so grateful.”</p>
-
-<p>He took her trembling hand, patted it with his own
-rather soft, artistic one. “You must prove a good pupil,
-that is all. Remember—no mention of this when you go
-to cancel your booking—no mention of my name to any
-one. For a time we must keep the agreement to ourselves.
-Until you have my permission, the fact that you
-have come under my management is to remain absolutely
-unknown to any but ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him wonderingly, “Anything you
-wish, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped her hand, ran his fingers once more
-through the dark thatch that persistently fell over his
-eyes. “I must have absolute faith in you, little girl,—and
-you in Oswald Kane.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I have.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is as it should be. To-morrow, then, at noon.”</p>
-
-<p>He was gone.</p>
-
-<p>In less than twenty minutes, after the manner of such
-happenings, a miracle had been wrought.</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth stood dazed an instant. Then she stumbled
-to the window, flung up the sash and leaned out to drink
-in the gale-slashed air with deep convulsive breaths.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh God,” she cried, tears streaming down her cheeks,
-“help me to make good. Help me—help me!”</p>
-
-<p>And so it happened that on a biting day in January,
-1917, at the stroke of twelve, Elizabeth Parsons, aged
-twenty-three, entered the sanctum sanctorum of Oswald
-Kane, was handed a pen by his business manager and
-<a name="png.026" id="png.026" href="#png.026"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>16<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>forthwith signed away five years of her life with an option
-on the next five, at the rate of fifty dollars per week
-for the first two years, one hundred for the third, and
-one hundred and fifty for each year following.</p>
-
-<p>But just then Elizabeth would have signed away her
-whole life for nothing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.027" id="png.027" href="#png.027"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>17<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">On</span> a brilliant night in January, 1920, under the
-sponsorship of Oswald Kane, Mme. Lisa Parsinova
-made her bow to an expectant New York public.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time, almost a year to be exact, Mr. Kane
-had been letting fall gentle hints of his discovery of a
-rare Russian genius, driven by the war to these shores.
-He was having her instructed in English, the story went,
-and once equal to the exigencies of emotional acting in
-a strange tongue, she would be presented by him to an
-American public which could not fail to be entranced by
-her great art. All this had been revealed in various interviews,
-bit by bit—a word here, a phrase there, a subtle
-suggestion elsewhere. At first he had not given out
-her name, had been gradually prevailed upon to do so,
-and by the time he announced the date of her première<!-- TN: original reads "premiére" -->,
-“Mme. Lisa Parsinova” was on the lips of all that eager
-theater-going throng alert for a new sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of a cloudy past had already gone the rounds,
-vaguely suggested by Mr. Kane’s press representative, not
-through the medium of the press. There were tales of
-her startling beauty, her lovers, her temper. But so far
-no one had been permitted even a glimpse of her.</p>
-
-<p>So that when she made her appearance the opening
-night, the gasp of thrilled admiration that met her was
-very genuine. The play was “The Temptress”—Oriental
-in atmosphere, written for her by Kane and a young
-collaborator whose name didn’t particularly matter. The
-<a name="png.028" id="png.028" href="#png.028"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>18<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>plot was not by any means unconventional, that of a
-slave of early Egypt wreaking revenge through the ages
-upon the descendants of the master, who, because she refused
-to yield to him, threw her to the crocodiles.</p>
-
-<p>The first act, a prologue, took place on a flagged terrace
-of a palace by the slow-flowing Nile. As the curtain
-rose, faint zephyrs of incense wafted outward, a misty
-aroma. The terrace glistened under a golden moon with
-still stars piercing a sky of emerald. The tinkle of
-some far-off languorous instrument sounded soft against
-the night. And waiting, his lustful gaze on the marble
-steps, sat the master.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, the slave descended. Sullen and silent, she
-slunk forward, like some halting panther in the night.</p>
-
-<p>Her body gleamed, golden as the moon, sinuous and
-satiny under the transparent cestus. Her bare feet
-moved noiselessly, every step one of infinite grace. She
-came forward, eyes brooding, and stood half shrinking,
-half defiant before the long stone bench where sat her
-master. Suddenly she raised her head, tossed back her
-short black hair and faced him.</p>
-
-<p>As by a signal, opera-glasses went up, a sigh of pleasure
-went through the house. The audience waited.
-She opened her lips and her voice, low and liquid, flowed
-out, thrilling through their veins. The thick contralto
-of it, the fascinating foreign accent, completely captivated
-them.</p>
-
-<p>He reached out, drew her toward him. One felt the
-wave of terror seizing her. His big hands grasped her
-shoulders. She gave a smothered cry and he laughed.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.029" id="png.029" href="#png.029"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>19<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-She pleaded, then resisted, and finally, voice rising like
-a viol with strings drawn taut, defied him, calling upon
-the gods to save her for the man she loved.</p>
-
-<p>And all the while he laughed, a chuckling laugh full of
-anticipation.</p>
-
-<p>At last his arms closed round the golden body, his lips
-bent to hers. The sudden gleam of a tiny dagger, its
-clatter as he caught her upraised arm,—and he flung her
-from him, clapping his hands for the eunuchs who waited.</p>
-
-<p>With one swift word he condemned her.</p>
-
-<p>She crumpled at his feet. The black men lifted her.
-She cried out in horror, a curse upon him and his through
-all the ages.</p>
-
-<p>A long moan as they bore her away, a pause, a splash
-against the silence, and the curtain descended.</p>
-
-<p>For a breath the house sat motionless. Then came a
-surge of applause. But the curtain did not rise.</p>
-
-<p>Buzz of conversation met the upgoing lights. Only a
-few, however, moved from their seats. Those who did
-came together in the lobby and discussed the new star
-with a wonder close to awe.</p>
-
-<p>“They sure can turn them out over there,” avowed
-one seasoned first nighter. “Temperament, that’s the
-answer, Slav temperament. No little cut and dried two-by-four
-conventions to tie them down. They’ve got
-something the American woman don’t know the first
-thing about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they know how to let go, for one thing!”</p>
-
-<p>The curtain rose on Act II, a modern drawing-room
-in the London home of an English peer, member of
-<a name="png.030" id="png.030" href="#png.030"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>20<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Parliament, on the occasion of his thirty-ninth birthday. He
-entered, big, handsome, with his little, clinging English
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>There was revealed the fact that for generations the
-oldest male of his line died before the age of forty, a
-violent death. They married, there were children, and
-always reaching the prime of manhood, they were cut
-down. A curse upon his family it seemed to be and the
-little wife trembled.</p>
-
-<p>Guests dropped in to tea. With them came the announcement
-that a prominent barrister was bringing a
-French authoress who had asked to meet their host. She
-had heard him in the House of Lords. They spoke of her
-beauty, her extraordinary personality.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mme. Parsinova appeared. In the brilliantly
-lighted set, the audience had its first good look at her.
-Slim, with a slenderness that made her seem tall, a mass
-of pitch-black hair piled high on her small head, a pair
-of burning eyes, dark and shadowed, creamy skin, a
-short nose, deep-cleft chin, and scarlet lips full and mobile,
-she seemed a living flame. She moved forward
-with gliding step, her lizard-green velvet gown clinging
-about her limbs, her sable cloak drooping from her shoulders.
-And one felt at once, as her white hand, weighted
-with a cabochon emerald, rested in his, the spell she
-would weave about the insular and very British member
-of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Not so insular at that, for it developed that in his
-veins ran a strain, a very thin strain, of the blood of
-Egypt.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.031" id="png.031" href="#png.031"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>21<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-There followed the love story, obvious if you like, but
-with the everlasting thrill and appeal of a great passion,
-magnificently portrayed. For as the drama moved to its
-climax, the spirit of the slave which through the ages had
-visited its will upon the family of its master, found itself
-captive. The French woman fell madly in love with her
-victim and in the end gave her life that the curse might
-be lifted and his saved.</p>
-
-<p>In the climactic love scene at the end of Act III when
-passion tore from her lips, an onrushing tide, the beautiful
-voice ran a crescendo of emotion that was almost
-song. Its strange accent stirred and fascinated. Its
-abandon was that of a soul giving all, sweeping aside like
-an avalanche law, thought, ultimate penalty.</p>
-
-<p>And still at the curtain, when the house rang with demands
-for her, Parsinova did not appear. Oswald Kane
-made his accustomed speech, coming before the purple
-velvet curtain to tell his audience in his usual reticent
-manner how deeply he appreciated their reception of
-the genius he had discovered. He thanked them—he
-thanked them—he thanked them. He raised a graceful
-hand, pushed back his weight of hair and slipped into the
-wings while the house resounded once more with clapping
-hands and stamping feet, and a full fifteen minutes
-elapsed before the play could go on.</p>
-
-<p>All through the final act sounded the low note of
-tragedy, the realization that she who for centuries had
-ruthlessly taken toll must now once more be sacrificed
-that the one who had become dearer than life might
-endure.</p>
-
-<p>When the audience finally rose after another futile
-<a name="png.032" id="png.032" href="#png.032"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>22<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>attempt to bring her out, the women’s eyes were red, the
-men’s faces white. New York was undoubtedly taken
-by storm. It had been more than a typical Kane first
-night. It had been a Kane ovation.</p>
-
-<p>In the first row a man got to his feet as if shaking off
-a spell. He was tall, very erect, almost rawboned, with
-hair turning gray about the temples, a demanding jaw,
-sharp straight nose and eyes that somehow seemed
-younger than the rest of his face, younger than the bushy
-black brows that mounted over them. They had caught
-Parsinova’s gaze, those eyes, as it swept once or twice
-over the audience. They had held it longer than was
-fair to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Great, isn’t she, Rand?” His companion tapped his
-arm as he stood gazing at the fallen curtain.</p>
-
-<p>“Paralyzing,” was the laconic reply. He wheeled about
-and made his way up the aisle, followed by the other
-man.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, close to the shadowy stage entrance, Oswald
-Kane’s car, a royal blue limousine, and a curious throng
-of bystanders waited.</p>
-
-<p>Inside, Oswald Kane himself begged the circle of those
-privileged by wealth, position, influence, who clustered
-round the door of the star’s dressing-room, to excuse
-her for to-night. Madame was completely exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>When both crowds, tired of waiting, had dispersed
-two figures hurried down the little alley that led to the
-stage door and entered the limousine.</p>
-
-<p>The door slammed.</p>
-
-<p>The car rolled out and east toward Fifth Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>The man switched off the light that illumined the
-<a name="png.033" id="png.033" href="#png.033"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>23<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>woman’s white face. Her dark-shadowed eyes were
-burning with excitement. She leaned back, closing them,
-and heaved a great sigh. He leaned forward, hair falling
-over his eyes, echoed the sigh, and his hand shut tightly
-round her ungloved one. With a tense, almost nervous
-movement she drew it away, shrank imperceptibly into
-her corner.</p>
-
-<p>“They are at your feet,” he whispered. “I have made
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer—merely opened her eyes and
-looked at him and through the darkness, something like
-tears glistened on the lashes.</p>
-
-<p>They drove on in silence. He recaptured her hand,
-held it to his lips. She looked away.</p>
-
-<p>The car drew up before a modest apartment building
-in a side street. He helped her out, entered with her,
-and the elevator swung them upward. He made a movement
-for the key she took from her bag but she unlocked
-the door and led the way into the foyer.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly he reached up, lifted the fur toque from her
-black hair and the wrap from her shoulders, and his
-touch lingered caressingly as he turned her toward
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“You are my creation!” he told her. “Parsinova cannot
-exist without me.”</p>
-
-<p>Into the throat of the great Russian actress with the
-questionable past came a flutter of fear. Her lips quivered.
-She gave a convulsive choking sound. Her eyes
-raced the length of the hall as though she wanted to run
-away, then went pleading up to his. He smiled down
-into them, drew her firmly to him.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.034" id="png.034" href="#png.034"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>24<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-With a swift, hysterical laugh, a twist of her body, she
-was out of his arms and across the foyer.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” she called.</p>
-
-<p>She opened a door at the other side. The gold flames
-of a log fire played upon the face of the little gray-haired
-woman in dusky silk who rose to greet her.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother,” said Parsinova, “kiss your child and thank
-Mr. Kane. I think I’ve made a hit.”</p>
-
-<p>Oswald Kane watched with a frown as she held out her
-arms adoringly to the little old woman.</p>
-
-<p>For over a year the little mother had had a way of
-appearing in the background whenever he claimed the
-few sentimental hours which should have been but small
-acknowledgment of his new pupil’s debt to him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III"><a name="png.035" id="png.035" href="#png.035"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>25<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Parsinova</span> instantly became the rage.</p>
-
-<p>She gave delicious interviews in which she misapplied
-American slang in a way that made the press
-chuckle. She spoke of the tragedy of Russia. She told
-of her struggles there. She gave her impressions of the
-American theater; American art; American fashions; the
-energy of the American man; the vitality of the American
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>“They do not give as we foreign women,” she said.
-“They take. And so it is that they grow rich—in
-beauty—and are forever young.”</p>
-
-<p>“But emotionally?” prompted the interviewer.</p>
-
-<p>“I have said—they are forever young. Emotionally—they
-are children always.”</p>
-
-<p>This statement was followed by indignant protest from
-American actresses and the sort of heated dramatic controversy
-that delighted the soul of Oswald Kane.</p>
-
-<p>She received all reporters in her dressing-room at the
-theater. If any one save Kane knew where she lived, no
-one had ever crossed the sacred threshold.</p>
-
-<p>“I live two lives quite a-part,” she said. “One in my
-home which is for me a-lone. And one in the theater
-which is for my dear public.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Kane amplified this by stating that her hours at
-home were spent in study. Others intimated that her
-hours at home were given to some mysterious romance.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of which she was not a hermit. Society, with
-<a name="png.036" id="png.036" href="#png.036"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>26<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a capital S, sought the privilege of entertaining her.
-Occasionally she accepted a dinner invitation—never on
-any day but Sunday, however—or permitted a tea to
-be given in her honor. She went nowhere during the
-week.</p>
-
-<p>Her dressing-room was always fragrant with flowers.
-Kane had had it done over when she took possession.
-An alcove had been cut off for her make-up table, and the
-orchid silken drapes, black rug, suspended lights and
-carved chairs of the outer room gave it more the impression
-of a salon. Here she held court. Here she read
-the hysterical notes of matinée girls, the pleas of dilletanti
-youth that she dine or sup with them, the tributes of
-actors, the encomium of the world in general. Here,
-every week or so, she went into tantrums, threatening to
-kill her maid in a voice that caused the stage hands to
-tremble, until Kane himself had to be called to calm her.
-Here she smoked Russian cigarettes and looked over the
-urgent invitations that piled mountain high upon the
-bronze tray.</p>
-
-<p>It was only at home in a cretonne hung bedroom, furnished
-with a rigid fourposter and dotted swiss curtains
-through which sunlight flowed, that she wept and sometimes
-felt lonely.</p>
-
-<p>She played of course to packed houses. The S. R. O.
-sign was a common occurrence. More than once in that
-same place in the front row, the footlights illumined the
-face of the man whose intent gaze had fastened on hers
-the opening night. He seemed never to tire of her art.</p>
-
-<p>Early in March Mrs. Collingwood Martin gave a reception
-for her. Mrs. Julian van Ness Collingwood
-<a name="png.037" id="png.037" href="#png.037"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>27<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Martin flattered herself, with justification, that in her
-wide old house facing Washington Square she maintained
-the nearest approach to a salon that could be found this
-side of Paris.</p>
-
-<p>Her high drawing-room brought together leading
-spirits of the professional, business and diplomatic worlds,
-and her gracefully tinted head was never troubled with
-fear that the wrong ones might meet. All those on her
-selected list were the right ones, each interested in what
-the other represented. Many a little coup between the
-artiste and the financier is consummated under the guise
-of drinking a cup of tea or punch. And more than one
-professional has amassed a neat little fortune by making
-wide-eyed queries of the Wall Street man about his end of
-the game.</p>
-
-<p>On the afternoon in question the rooms on the lower
-floor were crowded with laughter, perfume, silks, jewels,
-furs and the hum of animated voices.</p>
-
-<p>Bowls of early spring bloom, azaleas, jonquils, mammoth
-daisies, stood on tables and at either side of the
-arched doorway. A faint blue haze of cigarette smoke
-hung overhead. Twilight had sifted through sunlight before
-Parsinova appeared. She always came late.</p>
-
-<p>As she stood, a silhouette within the white arch between
-the shining bowls of jonquils, there was a general
-hush, then a forward movement. She was gowned
-entirely in black—black lace trailing from her feet, a
-black hat shadowing her face, and drooping from it to
-curl against her shoulder, a black paradise. Black pearls
-dangled from her ears and a strand of them about her
-neck emphasized its whiteness.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.038" id="png.038" href="#png.038"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>28<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Isn’t she wonderful? What personality—what atmosphere!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no one like her.”</p>
-
-<p>“She fairly oozes temperament.”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely startling!”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove—these foreigners! Naughty but—er—so
-promising, don’t you know!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Collingwood Martin bore her triumphantly to a
-thronelike chair and presented the guests in turn.</p>
-
-<p>Parsinova’s manner was charming, a bit weary but gracious,
-and her efforts to carry on a conversation in
-colloquial English were excruciating.</p>
-
-<p>“That lit-tle French gentleman by the punch bowl,—I
-fear he has on a biscuit,” she told the group of adorers.</p>
-
-<p>They looked puzzled. Then one of them flung back
-his head with a laugh. “You mean he has a bun on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never be right,” she sighed in the chorus of
-laughter that followed.</p>
-
-<p>From the music-room came a clear tenor singing the
-“Ave Maria.” Silence met the lifted voice and at the
-final sobbing note, gentle applause.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Collingwood Martin swept toward her guest of
-honor.</p>
-
-<p>“Darling,” she smiled with that touch of privileged intimacy
-she loved to assume, “here is some one most anxious
-to meet you. Let me present Signor Luigi Rogero
-of the Metropolitan.”</p>
-
-<p>Parsinova looked up and out from under dropped lids.
-Then she wondered whether any one saw the start she
-gave. Facing her with lips bent to her outstretched hand
-stood Lou Seabury.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.039" id="png.039" href="#png.039"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>29<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-No mistaking him in spite of the close-fitting coat,
-carefully waxed little mustache and black-ribboned
-monocle! Due to a New York tailor’s art, his plump
-figure had grown slimmer. In place of the loose disjointed
-shamble of old home days, he bore himself with
-consummate <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">savoir faire</i>. But the pink cheeks and kind
-brown eyes were the same.</p>
-
-<p>Parsinova waited breathlessly for some sign of recognition.
-None came. In perfect English he merely
-voiced his satisfaction at the meeting and joined the
-group about her chair. It was not until she rose to
-leave and he craved the honor of escorting her to her car
-that she met his gaze with curious question in her own.
-But his eyes were blank so far as any subtle meaning
-was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>He followed down the steps, helped her into the perfectly
-appointed limousine. An impulse she made no
-attempt to curb prompted her to ask if she could drive
-him uptown. They had gone several blocks before either
-spoke. Then very low came the words:—</p>
-
-<p>“Lizzie Parsons,—you’re a wonder!”</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively she looked about to make sure his
-whisper had not been overheard. Then she gave a long,
-smothered laugh and clutched his hand just as she had
-that night in the three-a-day vaudeville theater.</p>
-
-<p>“Lou,” she breathed, “I’m so glad, so glad!”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you surprised to see me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Surprised? I almost died.” She gave a little gasp.
-“Were you surprised to see me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“You knew me then—at once?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.040" id="png.040" href="#png.040"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>30<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’ve known who you were ever since your opening.
-I was there. Matter of fact, I have you to thank for the
-brilliant idea that made me an Italian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.” He lapsed into the old lingo and she
-closed her eyes with a beatific smile. “You don’t think
-my brains would ever be equal to such an inspiration.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine weren’t either. It was Oswald Kane’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody would ever guess that you’re anything but
-Russian from the word go.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was only because I’d known you. And even
-then I mightn’t have been on if I hadn’t heard your imitations.
-Do you remember that night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do I remember it! That was the night that ‘made
-me what I am to-day.’”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I did my best to please you,” she went on, “and
-Oswald Kane was in front and liked my act. He came
-back afterward and arranged to sign me.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that was why you left me cold. I dated you for
-supper and went round after the show, to find my bird
-had flown. Believe me, I was the most disappointed
-rube in town.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t have remembered my own name after
-Kane saw me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that why you canned it?”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed then, her low, rich contralto. “That was
-all his plan. I was as amazed when he told me about it
-as if he’d asked me to change my skin. He’s never told
-<a name="png.041" id="png.041" href="#png.041"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>31<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>me why he did it—he doesn’t trouble to tell you why.
-But I suppose he thought the public needed a thrill,
-something new, something different. And my impersonations
-gave him the idea. I think I might have
-made good if he had let me go on as just plain Parsons.
-But of course, not half the hit that Parsinova has
-made.”</p>
-
-<p>“They sure are crazy about you. I wondered often
-how you were getting on.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t guess that somebody was making a new
-woman of me, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>His gaze, as it traveled from her dark-rimmed eyes
-shadowed by the drooping hat, to the long white hands
-and slim black-swathed body, held the same look of awe
-it had worn the night he had seen her make up.</p>
-
-<p>“Lordy, girl!” he gasped. “How you must have
-worked to accomplish it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Work!” came in a breath. “I worked like a galley
-slave—never stopping, except for sleep. Even while I
-ate I studied—Russian and French, and gesture and
-movement. I even learned to eat herring. And all the
-time he was teaching me to act. In four years—almost—I’ve
-seen no one, talked to no one but him. I’ve had
-to obliterate self completely. He has in reality created
-Lisa Parsinova.”</p>
-
-<p>“He had to have the material to do it. The stuff was
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he is a genius, Lou. He knows his public just as
-a magician knows his bag of tricks.”</p>
-
-<p>The traffic at Thirty-fourth Street halted them. They
-spoke in whispers, and every now and then her eyes
-<a name="png.042" id="png.042" href="#png.042"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>32<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>rested with a look of caution on the inexpressive back of
-her chauffeur.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think he can hear?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“’Course not.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have to be so careful.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him, eyes alight with interest as they
-started on up the Avenue. “Tell me about yourself.
-You’re another man, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dad died shortly after I saw you,” he explained.
-“Apoplexy. And I thought of you, the break you had
-made, the gamble you took. So I gathered together what
-he left me, sold out to my brother Jim, and came to New
-York to stake everything on that voice you took such
-stock in. I went to Fernald and he thought he could do
-something with it. I’ve been in training so to speak ever
-since. And this season he got me the job with the
-Metropolitan.”</p>
-
-<p>“If only I could hear you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I haven’t done much—not yet. A few matinées
-and one or two Saturday nights. Next year, though,
-they’ve promised me a go at leads.”</p>
-
-<p>“I knew if ever you had the chance you’d prove yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I owe a great part of that chance to Randolph,—you
-know, Hubert Randolph. He’s one of the directors of
-the Metropolitan. I met him at Fernald’s studio last
-winter and it was through him that Fernald pushed me.
-He’s interested in you, by the way,—thinks you’re the
-greatest actress of the century.”</p>
-
-<p>“The century is very young,” she smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Rand’s seen them all in the last fifteen or
-<a name="png.043" id="png.043" href="#png.043"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>33<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>twenty years and knows what he’s talking about.
-We were at your opening together and he said then you
-were paralyzing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did I do that to you, too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Paralyze me? Bet your life you did! When you
-walked out on that stage and raised your head, a ramrod
-went up my back. ‘That’s Lizzie Parsons,’ I said to myself,
-‘or I’ll be shot.’ Then I thought I must be loony,
-that when I’d see you in a better light without the short
-wig, I’d laugh at my mistake. But in the second act I
-knew I was right, in spite of the black hair—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s dyed, Lou.” She made the confession haltingly.
-“At first I didn’t want to. My hair seemed sort of part
-of me—the color, I mean. But that’s just why he made
-me do it; it was a question of personality, he said. I
-begged him to let me wear a wig but he was afraid it
-would be detected. And he was right, I dare say. He’s
-always right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you worry about the way it looks, either. You
-used to be just pretty. Now you’re a beauty!”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I—really?” There was a childish earnestness in
-the query.</p>
-
-<p>“Should have heard Randolph rave! Say, I’m dining
-with him to-night. Why not come along? He’s crazy to
-meet you and he won’t go to any of those society fandangles
-to do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meet a stranger—with you around? Oh—I
-couldn’t! I’d burst into straight English as naturally as
-you burst into song. And that would ruin me.”</p>
-
-<p>He patted her hand and his kind brown eyes beamed.
-“Nonsense! You’re too clever an actress for that.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.044" id="png.044" href="#png.044"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>34<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-There was something pathetic in the way she clung to
-his handclasp. “It’s so good finding you this way. I
-haven’t any friends—no one to whom I can actually talk.
-With me it isn’t a case of acting behind the footlights.
-I’m acting all the time, except when I’m alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s not acting any more—this Russian business,
-is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—it’s myself, the greater part of self, I dare say.
-But Lizzie Parsons isn’t all dead yet and I don’t want her
-to die—” She blinked up at him. “Don’t make me cry,
-please,—or the shadows will all come off my eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>His eyes took in the luxurious appointment of the car,
-mauve enameled vanity apparatus on one side, smoking
-outfit on the other, gilt vase with its spray of fresh orchids,
-soft tan cushions and robe of fur. He gave her
-a warming look of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>“I should say the exchange was all for the better.
-You must be making a mint.”</p>
-
-<p>“One hundred and fifty a week.”</p>
-
-<p>“One hundred and fifty—?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s my contract.”</p>
-
-<p>“But good Lord—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I made it with my eyes open. It extends over
-the first five years—with an option on the next five.”</p>
-
-<p>“But all this—” He waved his arm, bewildered,
-through the air.</p>
-
-<p>“All this he gives me—my clothes, my car and its upkeep,
-my jewels, though they’re mostly paste, everything
-except my home. I wouldn’t let him give me that.”</p>
-
-<p>He made an attempt to conceal the swift suspicion that
-<a name="png.045" id="png.045" href="#png.045"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>35<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>would have clouded any man’s eyes. Instantly she saw
-and answered it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t misunderstand! It’s purely a matter of
-business. I’ve got to be equipped to play my part off
-the stage and I don’t earn enough to do it on my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why doesn’t he give you enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should probably grow too independent. This way
-he holds the reins. That’s only supposition, of course.
-I’ve never discussed it. One can’t discuss money with
-Oswald Kane.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a damned outrage!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no it isn’t. He took a sporting chance. He
-staked time and effort and money on a venture that
-might have proved a hopeless failure. I had everything
-to gain. And now that I’ve made good under his guidance,
-it’s only fair that he should reap the harvest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indefinitely?”</p>
-
-<p>“For six years to come, at any rate,—until my contract
-expires.” She leaned back, eyes closed, and an
-intensely weary look dropped the corners of her red,
-mobile mouth.</p>
-
-<p>They drew near the park. She urged him to ride with
-her a bit and they drove into the blue velvet dusk, past
-the shimmer of lake curled among the bushes. The car
-glided on swiftly through cool dark silence.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t told me yet how I inspired you to become
-an Italian,” she prompted.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that—simple enough! Randolph remarked the
-night of your première that there was an aura of romance
-about artistes from the other side, particularly when they
-<a name="png.046" id="png.046" href="#png.046"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>36<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hailed from Southern Europe; sort of Oriental, you understand.
-The next day I went to Fernald. ‘Can’t you
-change me to something Italian?’ I said. ‘Seabury’s a
-rotten name for an opera singer.’ Well, he did it. Of
-course, I make no attempt at accent—I couldn’t handle
-that job in conversation. But the people I’ve met don’t
-look for it; they understand the fact that I was brought
-up in England. All I have to be careful of is my grammar.”</p>
-
-<p>They laughed together. As her laugh bubbled
-girlishly into the quiet night, she halted it with a swift
-movement of hand to lips and once more sent that look
-of caution at her chauffeur’s back.</p>
-
-<p>He reminded her of his dinner engagement with Randolph.
-“He’s made up his mind to know you informally.
-And that’s all he has to do to get what he wants. He’s a
-human dynamo, that man. Never knew anybody with
-his finger in so many pies and able to put over whatever
-he tackles. Sooner or later you’re bound to meet him
-in his own way. Might as well be to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“What good would it do? He’ll never know me—the
-real me.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll know a fascinating woman, any way you look at
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>But she dropped him at the bachelor apartment on
-Park Avenue in spite of his pleas.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and see me, Lou, often,” she murmured, giving
-him her address as he stepped out of the car. “You
-don’t know what a joy it is to play at being myself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter IV"><a name="png.047" id="png.047" href="#png.047"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>37<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">It</span> was inevitable that Parsinova should meet Hubert
-Randolph, as Lou Seabury had prophesied. It was
-not inevitable that he should prove to be the man whose
-intent gaze had held hers from the first row. But when
-one considers that Randolph had determined from the
-moment he saw her to know her in an unprofessional
-capacity, his accomplishment of that end was in the
-natural order of things.</p>
-
-<p>Hubert Randolph was not a self-made man. He had
-succeeded, made his name stand firm in the humming
-world of finance, in spite of the handicap of having been
-born to the purple. Early in his boyhood he had started
-out to forget that he was a Hamilton Randolph and he
-had been forgetting it satisfactorily ever since. At
-Harvard he had become the pal of men who tutored in
-their leisure hours, thereby improving his mind. Also,
-he had never taken the trouble to inform them to which
-particular Randolph family he belonged. It was unimportant.
-He had spent a winter in a shack in Arizona,
-partly for his health, but largely to familiarize himself
-with the workings of a matrix mine in which the Randolphs
-had an interest. He had chummed with the
-miners, chewed tobacco and acquired a red-bronze that
-had never quite worn off.</p>
-
-<p>He had climbed Pike’s Peak, had shot big game in the
-Andes. And then he had come back to civilization and
-taken a clerkship in the brokerage offices of Parker,
-<a name="png.048" id="png.048" href="#png.048"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>38<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Gaines and McCaffery, to study banking methods from
-the bottom up.</p>
-
-<p>At thirty-eight, or it may have been thirty-nine, he
-was an authority on banking, stood ace high in Washington,
-and was known as a patron of the arts. The
-Randolph family never understood why he had gone to
-all that bother. It was so old, so distinguished, that to
-have a member attempt to distinguish it further was almost
-an insult. However, Rand, as he was known
-among intimates, never troubled to consult the family
-as to his movements. He saw as little of them as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t concern yourself about me,” he was in the habit
-of telling his sister when she tried to propel him in the
-direction of one of her parties. “I’m a hopeless sort of
-devil who likes to choose his own friends.”</p>
-
-<p>Once she persuaded him to attend a tea and he appeared
-with a youth in a shiny coat and cuffs that
-separated from his shirt.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a coming violinist,” he whispered. “I thought
-you’d like him to play. But he’s hungry—give him
-something to eat first.”</p>
-
-<p>She never attempted to persuade him after that.</p>
-
-<p>Parsinova met Hubert Randolph in a funny little restaurant
-which years back had been a stable. It was conducted
-by a group of painters for the benefit of a Disabled
-Veteran’s Relief Fund all their own. He had arranged
-the party for the Sunday following her meeting
-with Seabury but it took her old friend another week to
-convince her that she could carry it through.</p>
-
-<p>The occasion was not propitious. She had had a bad
-<a name="png.049" id="png.049" href="#png.049"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>39<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>half hour that afternoon with Kane when he resented the
-omnipresence of her mother.</p>
-
-<p>“She annoys me. She seems to be behind you like a
-shadow. You must send her away! Some one is bound
-to discover her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is impossible. She goes nowhere, sees no one.
-I shall keep her here.” Parsinova’s eyes glittered and
-for a moment it seemed likely that a backstage tantrum
-would be duplicated in fact.</p>
-
-<p>So that when she fastened the short black satin dress
-up the front into a high collar under her ears and pulled
-the brim of her black satin hat in a shading dip, it was in
-a mood that omened no particularly cordial reception of
-Mr. Hubert Randolph.</p>
-
-<p>Seabury called for her and Randolph met them in the
-cobbled courtyard that led to their unique dining place.
-In the dark she did not recognize him. But as they
-stood in the doorway where an old lantern swung, she
-stopped and peered at him.</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen you be-fore!”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Many times—in the firs’ row. And you look’ as if—you
-like me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” came promptly with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>“No—no,” her eyes gave him a piquant uptilt, “my
-art, I mean to say. Me—you do not know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to.”</p>
-
-<p>He led the way indoors. She glanced about and
-her mood dissolved into a new interest. First the man,
-then the charm of this quaint place. The stalls had
-been left standing and in each a table was set. Over
-<a name="png.050" id="png.050" href="#png.050"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>40<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>each from the beamed ceiling swung a lantern
-similar to the one outside. There were no brilliant
-lights, no noises of clinking glass and silver.</p>
-
-<p>She slid along the upholstered seat that lined the stall
-to the place he indicated at the table’s head. The men
-seated themselves at either side.</p>
-
-<p>“This is great, Rand,” remarked Seabury. “How is it
-you never brought me here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I saved it for Madame. What does she think of
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fas-scinating. I feel quite like a thorough-bred
-horse.” Then she looked at him gratefully. “And one
-is not—on ex-hibition.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to exhibit you,” rejoined her host.
-“You’ll find that out.”</p>
-
-<p>She did find it out in the weeks that followed. They
-dined frequently at “The Mews,” sometimes with Seabury,
-more often alone.</p>
-
-<p>At first she protested. She could not! But in the end
-Randolph won out. They arrived always at six when the
-place was practically empty and by seven-thirty she was
-at the theater.</p>
-
-<p>As the weather turned warmer they drove occasionally
-to the country and back in time for the performance.
-She never permitted him to call for her but arranged to
-meet him at the theater. They never went to conspicuous
-hotels or restaurants. He seemed to enjoy
-being with her away from the stare of the world. One
-Sunday in April when they had planned to lunch at
-an inn that dots the shore of the Hudson, he appeared
-with two hampers and announced that they were
-<a name="png.051" id="png.051" href="#png.051"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>41<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>going to picnic. They left the car at the top of a slope,
-scrambled down and unpacked the baskets with the anticipation
-of boy and girl off for a holiday. She pulled off
-her hat with its floating veil and sat cross-legged on the
-rug he had spread under a willow tree.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting there watching him, this man so intensely real,
-so intensely himself, a sense of infinite sadness swept
-over her. She wanted just for to-day to drop all sham.
-Not that her pose was ever difficult. Like all affectation
-used incessantly, she was no longer conscious of it. It
-was herself. But in these rare days spent with Randolph
-in the brimming sunlight, soft with young green things,
-she wanted with a ridiculously hopeless yearning to let
-him glimpse Elizabeth Parsons, the girl who would have
-let her hair fly in the wind for sheer joy of springtime,
-the girl who lived only in hidden moments.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes she compromised by letting Parsinova express
-Elizabeth’s thoughts, her ideals, separating the two
-women only by the breadth of an accent. Often she
-caught him looking at her curiously, as if trying to link
-some simply expressed idea of living with the reputation
-of the woman sitting opposite him. But more frequently
-they were content to enjoy the moment, tramping through
-the woods, discovering new sun-flecked trails, drinking
-in the sweetness of April and companionship.</p>
-
-<p>He had suggested that he stop for her at her home but
-she put him off with excuses, obvious and sometimes
-lame.</p>
-
-<p>Once he reproached her.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you let me come to see you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can—at any time you wish.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.052" id="png.052" href="#png.052"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>42<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Not at the theater. When I worship you, I like it to
-be from the other side of the footlights.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Then what is it you wish to do on this side?”</p>
-
-<p>“Adore you! And you haven’t even told me what
-street you live in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it should be quite ea-sy. One adores that
-which one knows least a-bout.”</p>
-
-<p>“In other words a man loves what he doesn’t understand
-and likes what he does?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is ex-actly what I wish to say. Is it not
-strange?—when a man wish’ to make a woman love him,
-he say:—‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mon adorée</i>, you are such a my-stery to me.’
-And when a woman wish’ to make a man love her, she
-tell him:—‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mon amour</i>, I understan’ you per-fec’ly.’”</p>
-
-<p>He gave a ringing laugh, then leaned across the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Your foreign men have a dozen ways of telling a
-woman they want her love. We Americans, when we
-care—the real thing—are awkward as boys and a little
-afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“A-fraid?” Parsinova’s eyes were wondering, while
-Elizabeth Parsons’ soul cried out that she, too, could know
-such fear. “But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Less experience.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes laughed into his then. “The Latin in love is
-an art-iste,—the American an art-i-san. Is that what
-you wish to say?”</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tb">“Have you ever heard that Ade classic?—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>‘I never run from the man behind the gun,</div>
-<div>Tho’ other chaps are cowards,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>As for me—not!</div>
-<div>But my courage fades away,</div>
-<div>And I don’t know what to say,<a name="png.053" id="png.053" href="#png.053"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>43<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a></div>
-<div>When I meet the little girl</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Behind the tea-pot.’”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Me-not. Tea-pot,” she repeated with a frown of
-concentration in which lurked a smile. “How ver-y
-droll your classics are.”</p>
-
-<p>His rather severe mouth lifted with a whimsical twist.
-“After all, it resolves itself into this—a man fears, not
-what a woman is, but what she seems to be.”</p>
-
-<p>Parsinova met the steady gaze with a quick startled
-look and bit her lip to keep it from quivering. But his
-next words answered the unspoken question that for a
-second shook her perfect poise.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder—” he said slowly, “I wonder if you’re as
-simple as you seem complex.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply at once, did not lift her eyes. They
-wandered out through the wide window to the sheen of
-river and hazy Palisades in the distance. Randolph had
-driven her out to Longue Vue at the hour when the sun
-slides lazily into soft spring shadows.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you think me—as you say—com-plex?”
-She lifted her eyes and the sun slanted across them.
-Perhaps that was why he failed to give her a direct
-answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Odd,” he observed, “I didn’t guess you had gray eyes.
-They look so dark from the stage. They’re wonderful
-eyes at close inspection, by the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are they, too,—com-plex?”</p>
-
-<p>“Full of secrets.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but there you are wrong—quite wrong, my friend.
-<a name="png.054" id="png.054" href="#png.054"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>44<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Most of their life they ’ave given to study. What
-secret’ could they possess?”</p>
-
-<p>She hated herself while she said it, hated Kane and the
-stage and the success she had made. But most of all she
-hated Elizabeth Parsons for allowing Parsinova to dominate
-her. To this one man she wanted so devoutly to
-reveal herself as she was. Ridiculous, of course, the
-desire—for it was Parsinova who charmed him. That
-was all too evident.</p>
-
-<p>The hours she loved best were those in which he told
-her of his travels, his life in the West. In that she could
-evince an interest that was sincere. She could picture
-him in rough flannel shirt and corduroy trousers, hobnobbing
-with the miners, one of them. He was the true
-democrat, eager to learn first-hand instead of living by
-proxy.</p>
-
-<p>She would draw him out, welcoming the opportunity
-to be for the moment Elizabeth Parsons, if only as a
-listener.</p>
-
-<p>When he left her at the theater that evening, he
-startled her by saying abruptly:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming to dine with you next Sunday.”</p>
-
-<p>It was just as he helped her out of the car and she
-stopped short, hand still in his. “You—are coming—?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it, in your home. Oh, I’ve found out where
-you live. But I had a notion that I’d like you to tell
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How—did you find out?”</p>
-
-<p>“Had you followed, perhaps. At any rate, you can’t
-keep me away any longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you must not come.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.055" id="png.055" href="#png.055"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>45<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He regarded her closely, his thick brows coming together.
-“Is there any particular reason why you shut
-me out?”</p>
-
-<p>She remembered suddenly that her hand was still in his.
-His tense grip was hurting her.</p>
-
-<p>“Please!” She made a futile effort to draw it away.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Many—reasons.” Her lips hesitated over the words.</p>
-
-<p>“Any one reason, I should say.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of herself, she looked up at him. “No—one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right, then. Sunday next.”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped her hand quickly, stepped back into the
-car.</p>
-
-<p>The next three days she spent buying high-backed
-cathedral chairs and carved tables and tabourets for her
-living-room. Down came the cretonne hangings and up
-went heavy purple velvet ones that shut out the blessed
-light of day. She selected a black rug that made the
-room look hideously somber and for the divan, gold cushions
-weighted with tassels. When she finished, she
-had consumed several months’ salary. But the transformation
-was complete. Once more Elizabeth Parsons
-was wiped off this mortal sphere. Soon no shadow would
-be left of her, not even in the sacred nook she had saved
-to call “home.”</p>
-
-<p>With an anxiety close to terror she waited for Hubert
-Randolph. She was wearing white, soft, creamy, floating.
-There ought, at least, be some spot of light in the
-mysteriously shadowed room.</p>
-
-<p>He came at seven. She went to the door herself and
-let him into the little foyer. His eyes were alight with
-<a name="png.056" id="png.056" href="#png.056"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>46<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>eagerness. They had the look of a small boy’s bound
-for a fishing trip on Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>He caught her hand. “You know how glad I am to
-be here.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know,” she rejoined to her own surprise, “how I
-am glad—for you to be here.”</p>
-
-<p>He followed into the living-room. “Odd,” he observed
-almost to himself, “I’ve pictured it often—but not
-like this. I’d an idea of light things—woman things
-about you.”</p>
-
-<p>She could have laughed with sardonic glee at the
-thought of how she had dragged down those light, woman
-things and spent a small fortune to create another atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>“But on the whole,” he proceeded speculatively, “these
-are you, aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>“A woman is so man-y things—so man-y moods, I wish
-to say—that there is no one room can express her.”</p>
-
-<p>Her apartment was in one of those modern houses
-where dinner is cooked by a chef downstairs and sent up
-via the dumbwaiter. To Parsinova this had proved a
-convenience, saving as it did the necessity of curious
-servants. To-night she had arranged for one of the
-waiters from the restaurant below to serve them. But
-in spite of him, noiselessly in the background, it was a
-cozy, intimate little party that somehow brought them
-closer than all their former dinners. The small table set
-in a corner of the living-room, its glistening silver and
-lacy feminine damask, the dishes she had herself ordered,
-created a sense of home dangerous to the peace of mind
-of an actress wedded to her art.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.057" id="png.057" href="#png.057"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>47<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-To crown the illusion, when the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">café noir</i> had been
-served and the waiter disappeared, Randolph pulled
-a pipe from his pocket and asked if he might light it.
-“I’ve always wondered what it would be like to smoke a
-pipe with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I do not—smoke a pipe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t interpret me so literally. A pipe means fireside,
-something intimate and real. I’ve always thought
-it would be nice, one of these days, to see your face
-through pipe smoke. May I?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, curled on a cushion by the fire. It was a
-rainy night. The logs whirred merrily. “Now—tell me
-more about your won-der-ful West.” She lighted a
-cigarette and listened, eyes partly closed, and a sweet
-tranquillity bathed her soul.</p>
-
-<p>He pulled his chair closer. Unconsciously, perhaps,
-her head dropped against the arm. If a moment later
-she felt a hand lightly caress her hair, she gave no sign.
-Parsinova fans would undoubtedly have been amazed at
-the scene—the Russian actress curled like a kitten at
-the foot of a man’s chair while he painted with broad
-strokes pictures of prairie life.</p>
-
-<p>It was what he did just as he was leaving that
-shattered her serenity like an explosion. They were
-standing in the foyer and she had given him her hand
-with her “Good-night,” when suddenly she was in his
-arms. They closed round her, swept her to him and his
-lips were on hers. For a long moment they stood so.
-Then, without a word, he put her at arm’s length, held
-her eyes with a look whose intensity she found impossible
-to read. An instant later she was alone.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.058" id="png.058" href="#png.058"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>48<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-But those few moments brought her up sharp. Hours
-afterward she felt the vice of his arms gripping her, the
-thrill of his kiss, and knew that she loved him. Subconsciously
-she had known it a long time. But she had
-never faced the issue. Content with a comradeship dear
-to both Elizabeth Parsons and Lisa Parsinova, she had
-drifted without any forward look, without taking count
-of what payment the future might exact. And now the
-hour had come. Elizabeth Parsons, who had never loved
-before, loved Hubert Randolph. Hubert Randolph
-loved Parsinova who, according to all report, had loved
-many times and with not too much reserve. Long hours
-she lay staring into the blank darkness of her room. Out
-of it she could draw nothing but misery.</p>
-
-<p>Heretofore she had accepted Parsinova’s manufactured
-past without question. Now it was a lurid
-flame, flaring through the smoke of all reasoning, torturing
-her—more real because it was unreal. Had it
-been fact, there would be no problem. As things were,
-it was the ghost at the banquet, a ghost of that which
-had never been. And there was no solution! There
-never would be!</p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth Parsons was New England. It was part of
-her plan of life to marry when she loved. That was as
-fundamental as the blood in her veins. The very intensity
-of emotion of which she was capable was reëxpressed
-in her intensity of adherence to the moral conduct generations
-of upright-living ancestors had laid down for her.
-From that there could be no swerving. It was part of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the dragging hours of that night she tried
-<a name="png.059" id="png.059" href="#png.059"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>49<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>desperately to read into the embrace of the man who had
-taken her love, some interpretation other than the obvious.
-And suddenly it came to her that even granted he
-might possibly be willing to give her his name, it was impossible
-for her to accept it. He did not know Elizabeth
-Parsons—would not, if he did, evince the slightest
-interest in her. It was the Russian actress he adored,
-the woman she was not. If he wanted her and she
-dared to marry him, she would have to live day and night
-a lie she could not—and what was more, would not—carry
-through. In love she would have to be herself.
-Brilliant as was her Slav rendering of it on the stage, in
-life she was just an American girl who wanted to live it
-with all her soul. When he took Parsinova in his arms,
-he would be holding Lizzie Parsons. The sophisticated
-Russian lips against his would be giving him New England
-kisses. Well—not quite that! But one certainty
-she must face. To the man who had fallen in love with
-the Russian actress, the American girl would mean less
-than nothing. She hated her! In the confusion of her
-soul she did not know which hated the other more.</p>
-
-<p>Had there been any doubt in her mind as to the hopelessness
-of her situation, Oswald Kane himself pounded
-the last nail in the coffin a few days later. A chatty little
-sheet given to imparting information about important
-people had got wind of Randolph’s devotion. It announced
-subtly that the walls the Russian actress had
-built up between herself and American men had evidently
-been shattered by one who heretofore had evinced but
-slight interest in the beauties of his own set. It hinted
-at their runs in his car out of New York and wondered
-<a name="png.060" id="png.060" href="#png.060"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>50<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>amiably whether he intended converting his bungalow up
-Westchester way into a dovecote.</p>
-
-<p>The day it appeared on the news-stands Oswald Kane
-paid her an early visit. For the first time she saw him
-with his smooth exterior ruffled. It was a matinée day
-and she was having an eleven o’clock breakfast when he
-arrived. A note from Randolph asking why she had refused
-to see him the day before lay on the table beside
-her plate. She looked tired and her eyes needed no artificial
-shadows.</p>
-
-<p>Kane came into the room, then turned and stared at
-the new furnishings.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you like it?” she asked. “I’ve had it done over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it safe—in case any one should find me out
-and drop in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some one has found you out.” He handed her the
-society sheet, open at the pointed paragraph that concerned
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to know,” he began, his mellow voice
-going sharp, “who the man is.”</p>
-
-<p>She hastily slipped Randolph’s note into the pocket of
-her dress. “I should like to be able to tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean he does not exist.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that if he did, it would be quite my own affair,
-wouldn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. If you play a dangerous game and lose, Oswald
-Kane loses with you. If any man discovers the truth
-about you, it means your professional death as well as
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You need never worry—about that.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.061" id="png.061" href="#png.061"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>51<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Whether it was the hopeless note in her voice or the
-look in her eyes, his voice softened. He went close to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“There is just one,” he whispered, “who knows you as
-you are. Lisa Parsinova has the right to no man’s love
-but Oswald Kane’s. Forget those New England prejudices!”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped quickly into a chair. “Lisa Parsinova
-has the right to no man’s love <em>at all</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes closed. Her voice went on monotonously.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, I’ve thought it all out. I’ve swamped the
-girl I was and it’s as final as if I’d killed her. One of
-these days, perhaps—when my contract with you has
-been filled—Parsinova will sail back to Russia or be
-drowned or something, and out of her ashes will rise a
-spinster named Lizzie Parsons who doesn’t really matter,
-who’ll just pass out—alone. But until then you are
-quite safe. Only—please—never speak again of—of
-loving me.”</p>
-
-<p>Kane bowed. “You are a great artiste, in spite of
-that. And at least you cannot deny me the joy of the
-creator.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never forget what you’ve done for me. I shall
-never betray you in any way.”</p>
-
-<p>She kept her word to the letter. Had she followed
-inclination she would have gone through her performances
-mechanically. A numbness had taken hold of her,
-of utter misery, utter futility. But her work did not fall
-off in brilliance. Particularly in the love scenes and in
-the final tragic sacrifice, did her beautiful voice shake
-with a suffering so intense that it was real.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.062" id="png.062" href="#png.062"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>52<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Randolph she saw several times a week in his accustomed
-place in the first row. But his efforts to see
-her she ignored. A scene with him would be unbearable,
-leading as it must nowhere. So she left his notes unanswered,
-knowing he would eventually conclude that his
-passion the night of their last meeting had been unwelcome,
-that she was choosing the simplest means of
-telling him so. He wrote at first anxiously, then demandingly,
-and when she failed to answer—stopped.
-When the notes ceased to come she felt more miserably
-alone than ever in her life, reaching back into the past for
-their hours together as groping thoughts reach for
-memories of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>She grew thin as a rail and her pallor was no longer
-creamy. It was dead white, with unbecoming lines
-traced from nose to mouth. Seabury remarked the
-change and suggested that she needed a change of air.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been working too hard and you show it.
-When does your season close?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sometime in June.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you get Kane to let you off the end of this
-month?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to be let off. I’d like to play all
-summer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord, it would kill you!”</p>
-
-<p>“It will kill me if I don’t work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” He went over to her chair, looked at
-her closely. “What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>He had dropped in to tea at her apartment. She was
-seated behind the copper samovar, white face emphasized
-<a name="png.063" id="png.063" href="#png.063"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>53<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>against the dark hangings, fingers moving restlessly
-among the tea things.</p>
-
-<p>“Something’s wrong,” he persisted as she did not
-answer. “What is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a million things,—a million little things that don’t
-count.”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks to me if it was one big thing that does.”
-He drew her out of the chair—toward the window.
-“Come on—’fess up to papa!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, for one thing—” she bit her lip, woman-wise
-trying in her own soul to veer away from the big issue by
-concentrating on a lesser. “My mother’s blackmailing
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your—what?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up, met his stare of dismay. “The little
-old lady you see around here sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she was a maid. Look here—I don’t
-understand. You—why, Lizzie Parsons, you’ve been an
-orphan for years!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know I have. But I had to have some one—mother
-preferred—to protect me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see—” A light dawned.</p>
-
-<p>“So I engaged her. She looked the part and seemed
-a gentle, pathetic soul—and now she’s blackmailing me.”</p>
-
-<p>He grinned in spite of the seriousness of it. “Is she
-likely ever to squeal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as long as I give her all the money she wants.
-But it’s getting on my nerves. She makes my life miserable
-by threatening to take my story to the newspapers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Next time she does it, send for me and I’ll bully her
-<a name="png.064" id="png.064" href="#png.064"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>54<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>into keeping quiet.” He made a move toward the door.
-“Is she here? I’ll do it now.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—no!” She stopped him. “Let well enough
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>He took her hand. “Poor kid, you are in a mess!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve committed suicide, Lou,” she said abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her silently, then shook his head. “What
-else is bothering you?”</p>
-
-<p>“What—what makes you ask that?”</p>
-
-<p>“A blackmailing mama might make you look tired and
-worried but she wouldn’t put all that sorrow into your
-eyes. Why, you look like Isolde—by Jove, that’s it!
-Love stuff!”</p>
-
-<p>“How absurd!” She looked away. “Whom could I
-be in love with?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not with me, that’s a sure thing. Though, of course
-you know I’m in love with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lou—!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t worry. I know I haven’t a chance. But I
-care enough to be darned upset by your condition. Now,
-come along, let papa fix things for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“They can’t be fixed, Lou, ever. When you’ve chosen
-to be two people in one, you’ve got to stand up and take
-the consequences if God ordains that two’s company and
-three’s a crowd.” She gave him a smile, whimsical but
-without mirth. “Have you ever heard that saying: ‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je
-suis ce que je suis, mais je ne suis pas ce que je suis?</i>’”</p>
-
-<p>Seabury’s brow wrinkled. “I sing French. I don’t
-speak it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a play on verbs: ‘I am what I am, but I am not
-what I follow,’” she translated. “Well, that’s me!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.065" id="png.065" href="#png.065"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>55<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He tried to persuade her to give him her confidence but
-she smiled and told him there was nothing further to
-confide.</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks later just before her season closed, he
-asked what plans she had made for the summer. Kane
-was arranging to send her on tour with “The Temptress”
-before opening in New York in a play being written
-for her. She would have July and part of August to
-rest.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall stay in town,” she told him, “and study.”</p>
-
-<p>He protested vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>“No use, Lou! I couldn’t bear being among
-people and this is the best place to hide away. Besides,
-there’s my mother to consider. I can’t risk having her
-run loose in New York without me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must rest!”</p>
-
-<p>“I must keep going, with as much work as I can manage.”</p>
-
-<p>He bent over her, his kind brown eyes troubled.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll kill yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, I wish that I weren’t so intensely
-alive.” Then she smiled and patted his shoulder.
-“Don’t worry about Lisa Parsinova. She’s in fine
-shape.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Lizzie Parsons?” he put in.</p>
-
-<p>“She doesn’t count.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seen Rand lately?” he asked casually as he got up to
-go.</p>
-
-<p>“A number of times.” She had seen him only too
-frequently from the far side of the footlights. “Have
-you?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.066" id="png.066" href="#png.066"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>56<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“No. He’s busy. Getting ready to go to Arizona.
-But of course you know about that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Y—yes. Has he told you when he leaves?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tuesday of next week. May be gone a year. Don’t
-know why.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned her back to the light so that her face was
-blurred and misty and he could not read its expression.
-“Do you—do you think he looks quite well?” she
-prompted, eager for some news, any news of him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it struck me he looked a bit seedy last time I
-saw him—not just up to the mark, that is. Probably
-spring fever. How does he impress you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I hadn’t noticed any change.”</p>
-
-<p>When he had gone, she picked up the calendar on her
-desk and stared at the day and date. Friday! By this
-time next week, a stretch of continent would rush between
-her and Hubert Randolph. She shrugged her shoulders
-with a short laugh. What mattered miles when worlds
-stretched between them now!</p>
-
-<p>She went into her bedroom, locked the door. Lizzie
-Parsons leaned close to her mirror, stared into it. The
-white face and black-rimmed eyes of Lisa Parsinova
-stared back. A frenzy seized her. She caught hold of
-the first object her hand touched—a hair brush—and
-flung it full force at the reflected face. The glass
-splintered. Then she stepped back in trembling terror.
-Good heavens! Was she actually becoming that
-Russian fiend?</p>
-
-<p>On Monday night her gaze wandered instinctively
-toward Hubert’s accustomed place in the orchestra. He
-<a name="png.067" id="png.067" href="#png.067"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>57<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was not there. Of course she had expected that, but
-she would have liked just one more look at him.
-Women have a strange way of wanting that which tortures
-them.</p>
-
-<p>After the final curtain Kane appeared in her dressing-room
-and suggested that they take a drive up Riverside
-and a bite of supper somewhere along the road. He
-wanted to talk to her about the new play, about her route
-for the coming season and a date for her New York opening.
-His attitude had become thoroughly friendly and
-businesslike. He was too much the artist to allow failure
-in a lesser game to interfere with success in a greater.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearing one when they drove back through the
-soft summer night. The air touched her face like velvet
-but brought no drowsiness to her eyes, no balm to the
-realization of blankness ahead—not of weeks or months,
-but of years.</p>
-
-<p>With the passing of those years it was inevitable that
-she become Parsinova—with nothing left of poor, defunct
-Lizzie Parsons but the recollection of a love that had
-touched her life like the moon on a summer sea.</p>
-
-<p>The Drive was still dotted with strolling couples oblivious
-of passers-by. Cars sped past them, wheels expertly
-manipulated by one hand. Mingled young laughter rang
-out like bells.</p>
-
-<p>Kane’s rich voice flowed on, dwelling now on this, now
-on that scene of the play. She listened absently, eyes
-straying in a way that was absurd toward the magic of
-a June night, the enviable good fortune of those who
-could become part of it.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.068" id="png.068" href="#png.068"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>58<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I shall give you even greater opportunities than you
-have had. I shall produce a piece of work that will be
-epoch-making,” he told her.</p>
-
-<p>She told him how pleased she was.</p>
-
-<p>When they arrived at her apartment she asked him
-not to trouble getting out of the car, and stood and
-watched it swing round the corner. Then slowly she
-turned and went indoors.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter V"><a name="png.069" id="png.069" href="#png.069"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>59<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Parsinova</span> unlocked her door, stepped into the little
-foyer and after an instant’s pause to take off hat
-and dustcoat, crossed the hall to her living-room. Once
-more cretonne hung in the doorway and slips of it covered
-the furniture. Summer had served as sufficient excuse
-to convert the place to its former simplicity. The
-sight of cathedral chairs and gold cushions had for the
-past few weeks depressed her to the point of mania.
-More than once she wanted to tear them to bits.</p>
-
-<p>The dim light from the foyer sifted weirdly into the
-dark, playing here and there like ghost hands lifting the
-shadows. She felt her way toward the fireplace, dropped
-to the floor, her head touching the chair arm, and stared
-at the spot where in the flames she had visualized the
-scenes he painted. It was blank now, just a vague
-square full of darkness, but it gave her back his voice,
-the sense of his strength, the caress of his arms. It sent
-once more sifting upward the aroma of cloudy pipe smoke
-through which he had wanted to see her face. Her eyes
-closed. Almost she sensed him there in the magic of one
-of those long silences that needed no words. Almost she
-could feel his touch upon her hair, her longing made it
-so real.</p>
-
-<p>Tears came hot under her lids, the first she had shed
-since that night. They streamed shamelessly down her
-cheeks and onto the sheer clinging dress. All pose—and
-she had grown used to posing even to herself—slid from
-<a name="png.070" id="png.070" href="#png.070"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>60<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>her. Her poise slipped with it. The great Parsinova
-became just a lonely, huddled heap of a girl.</p>
-
-<p>She lay so, whispering his name shamelessly into the
-darkness when suddenly it seemed that she was being
-lifted and drawn into the big chair. It was like embarking
-into some dreamland of her own making. She held
-her breath, choked with the fear that she might shatter
-it. The caress upon her hair, arms closing round her, lips
-seeking hers! It was not until she had the actual sense
-of a rough coat against her cheek that, galvanized with
-terror, she started up and backed toward the floor lamp
-that stood at one side of the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>The soft light went up. Hubert Randolph was sitting
-there! It was impossible of course! Slowly she went
-toward him, reached out a hand, touched his arm.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. “Oh, I’m real enough!”</p>
-
-<p>She forgot her accent. At that moment she could not
-have assumed it even though the future, though life itself,
-depended on it. “But how—how—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been waiting for you since eleven-thirty,” he put
-in, apparently not noticing the difference. “I concluded
-I was entitled at least to a ‘good-by’ from the woman I
-love.”</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at him silently a moment and then because
-her heart and throat were full, she voiced a triviality.
-“How did you get in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your little old woman! I bribed her. I’d had an
-idea I could go away without seeing you. Well, I
-couldn’t, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>Her nerves were quivering like live things. She moved
-<a name="png.071" id="png.071" href="#png.071"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>61<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>toward the couch, dropped on it. “I—” she said at
-last haltingly—“I am not the woman you love.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked across at her.</p>
-
-<p>She went on without meeting his eyes. After the unconscious
-revelation she had given him during those moments
-when she thought herself alone, she could no more
-have stopped the confession that came now than she could
-have stopped her breath.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not any of the things you think me—not one
-of them. I am not Russian—not foreign at all. I was
-born in Vermont of American parents. Up to the time I
-met Kane, my struggle for existence was in cheap vaudeville
-houses, not in Moscow. I’ve never had any
-lovers—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” came with a low chuckle, “no man could object
-to that.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up. Her eyes met his, amazed. “You
-don’t understand. I am not Lisa Parsinova—there is
-no such person. I am Lizzie Parsons and I’ve imposed
-on you just as I’m imposing on the American public.”</p>
-
-<p>“The American public asks chiefly to be charmed and
-interested. If you’re doing that for them, they don’t
-care whether you’re Yankee or Hindustani.”</p>
-
-<p>She continued to stare at him, in bewildered fashion
-striving to interpret his nonchalance. “You—you can’t
-possibly understand,” she breathed at last. “Aren’t
-you surprised?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least. You see, I’ve been Kane’s backer
-for years. I was with him in the vaudeville house the
-<a name="png.072" id="png.072" href="#png.072"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>62<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>night he first saw you. As a matter of fact, I was the one
-who suggested to him that you’d be a winner on Broadway.
-Of course the foreign stuff was his. Any number
-of times I’ve watched him work with you from an adjoining
-room. You don’t know what pride I’ve felt in your
-success.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why, all these months, have you let me believe
-you were being fooled?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hadn’t exactly taken count of the fact that
-I was going to love you. And when the blow came I
-realized that if I’d been lucky enough to make you care
-anything for me, you couldn’t go on acting to me. You’d
-have to tell me—and I wanted you to, because you
-couldn’t help it. That night when I had you in my arms,
-I thought some sort of admission would come. When it
-didn’t and you ignored all my attempts to see you, I
-could only conclude I’d lost out.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t guess—”</p>
-
-<p>“Not until to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>She still groped uncertainly, not able to fasten on any
-one fact. “It was Kane, then, who told you where I
-lived.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Your little old woman here.”</p>
-
-<p>“My little old woman?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a canny soul. Must have found one of my
-notes that you brought home from the theater or something
-like that, because she looked me up one day and
-offered to sell me some interesting information about you.
-I paid her <em>not</em> to sell it and threatened her with jail if
-she went to anybody else. Told her she was guilty of a
-criminal offense that could send her up for twenty years.
-<a name="png.073" id="png.073" href="#png.073"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>63<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>I think I made it strong enough to shut her up for the
-rest of her days.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s been collecting from me just the same straight
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>He flung back his head. “I said she was canny. Before
-I go West I’ll have another talk with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you’re going to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m waiting over. You close Saturday night.
-We’ll leave Sunday.”</p>
-
-<p>With the last words, he leaned forward. She took a
-quick step toward the wide chair, then stopped abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“But what am I to do with Parsinova?”</p>
-
-<p>He pulled out his pipe, reflectively examined it.</p>
-
-<p>“Think of the novelty—I’ll have two wives in one.”</p>
-
-<p>Her lips tightened.</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t! I’m going to take that woman out
-on a lake this summer and capsize the boat—drown her!
-And the body will never be found. Then I’m going to
-let my hair go back to its own color! Which one of us
-is it,” she added suddenly, “that you love?”</p>
-
-<p>He laid his pipe on the chair arm.</p>
-
-<p>“The little girl who called to me in the dark. Now
-come back here, Lizzie Parsons, where you belong!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll always be jealous of that Russian devil!” she
-warned him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Madame Peacock"><a name="png.075" id="png.075" href="#png.075"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>65<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>MADAME PEACOCK</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Character Drama"><i>CHARACTER DRAMA</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>The battle royal of all time is between character and circumstance.
-The way we meet the experience that waits
-for us round the corner is the eternal Comédie Humaine.
-Success is the hole in the ground—the banana peel—the
-stumbling block that may trip us up. It is as uncertain as
-to-morrow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.077" id="png.077" href="#png.077"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>67<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>MADAME PEACOCK</h2>
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Of</span> course that was not her name. No one knew just
-how she had been christened—if at all. To a worshipful
-public she was known as Jane Goring, which, as
-names go, answered all purposes and was quite as simple
-as she was ornate. But “Peacock” was the title of the
-play in which she had made the season’s hit and a wave
-of fads in honor of it had typhooned over New York in
-consequence.</p>
-
-<p>There were perfumes with bottles far more valuable
-than their contents on which strutted the iridescent
-bird of beauty. There were soaps and powders and
-sachets sold in green satin boxes similarly decorated and
-similarly priced. Peacock feather fans swayed at dances
-and the opera despite the age-old hoodoo. Beaded bags
-were worked in the popular design. Dressmakers dictated
-the spreading train. Blues and greens in every conceivably
-odd shade were introduced as the new color.
-The peacock coiffure<!-- TN: original reads "coiffeur" -->, originated by Goring, was imitated
-by dowager and débutante, by movie star and chorus
-queen, by the girl behind the counter even unto the cash
-girl—hair drawn flat over the top of the head and puffed
-out stiffly at the ears, the whole being completed by a
-comb that jutted at right angles. In Goring’s mahogany
-swirl, framing as it did a face rather broad at the cheek-bones
-and tapering heart-shaped to the chin, an impertinent
-nose and sleepy green-gray eyes that lifted at the
-corners, the effect was startling. But the variegated
-<a name="png.078" id="png.078" href="#png.078"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>68<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>types it crowned north, south and east of Broadway
-would scarcely have inspired an artist to his best work.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment we make our bow to Jane Goring—for
-Goring bowed to no one—she was on the top rung
-of the ladder of success. Her head had reached the
-clouds and was held accordingly. So that when she
-looked at you, she always looked <em>down</em> at you. Which
-made those whom she addressed feel infinitely small even
-when they were tall, always excepting representatives
-of the press. They found her always gracious, always
-smiling with corners of eyes and lips lifted and a
-look of wonder at their great kindness to her. Each
-time she received them it was in some new and amazing
-costume in one of the shades she had made popular,
-with jangling jade or emeralds in her ears and green
-lights darting from the comb in her hair. She spoke at
-length of the arts and collected immense royalties from
-candy boxes, silk advertisements and cold creams bearing
-her name and endorsement.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the dim and distant past her flaming head
-and Jap-like eyes had graced the chorus. She had lived
-in a hall bedroom; had been caught frying chops over
-an alcohol stove; had been lectured by the landlady;
-had found the milk frozen to her window sill on winter
-mornings; had known the exquisite thrill of being raised
-to a few lines of persiflage with the musical comedy’s
-comedian. In those days a young newspaper man, Bob
-McNaughton, had found her out, proclaimed her a genius,
-and married her—not because of her genius, however,
-but because he adored her. They had spent their
-<a name="png.079" id="png.079" href="#png.079"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>69<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>honeymoon one Sunday on the Palisades, and he had kissed her
-finger tips one by one and told her how he was going to
-make her.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s Jefferson who has our dramatic column—I’ll
-get him to give you a boost every now and then. He
-stands in with a bunch of critics. He’ll drop a word
-about you and they’re bound to take notice. You’ll see,
-darling, what I’m going to do for you!”</p>
-
-<p>And she had put her vivid head on his shoulder and
-gazed down at the shining river and murmured that she
-didn’t care whether he did anything for her or not. She
-loved him—she didn’t want anything in the world but
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The hall bedroom had given place to the third-story
-back, the frying chops to a French table d’hôte that
-boasted a bottle of red ink with a sixty-cent dinner, and
-Jane Goring was happy in the possession of a broad
-shoulder to weep on when the latest step came hard or
-the director asked casually if her legs were made of
-leather.</p>
-
-<p>In the years that followed, the ardent young husband
-had made good his promises. He had systematically
-press-agented Goring with a sincerity and enthusiasm
-born of love. Untiringly he had worked to bring her
-first to managerial, then to public notice. And his efforts,
-added to natural talent and a bizarre personality, had
-hoisted her to the top rung heretofore mentioned. “Peacock”
-marked the fourth season of her success.</p>
-
-<p>But long before that Bob McNaughton had awakened
-one morning to find gray hairs threading his brown, and
-<a name="png.080" id="png.080" href="#png.080"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>70<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>himself still a reporter—by no means a star one. He
-had been so busy making her career that he had forgotten
-to make his own.</p>
-
-<p>It was about this time that his wife left him. Not actually
-left him, of course, for at that particular moment
-Goring would not have stooped to anything so disturbing
-as divorce. Waves of popular favor had begun to roll
-smoothly up the beach of her ambition. But her temperament
-demanded a home all her own. So they maintained
-separate apartments—had done so for several
-years—his a room and bath in a downtown bachelor hotel,
-hers a nine room and three-bath duplex in an uptown
-studio building.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning they had seen each other occasionally.
-But each time they met, Bob seemed to have grown
-grayer. Whether this fact was a reminder that her own
-hair, left to itself, might show the same tendency, or
-whether it was just the look in his eyes—the same look
-they had worn that Sunday on the Palisades—seeing him
-began to tell on her nerves.</p>
-
-<p>More and more she denied herself to him until he
-became more of a stranger in her beautiful rooms than
-the flock of tame robins who pecked out of her hand at
-afternoon tea.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, few of Goring’s vast throng of
-admirers even guessed there was a husband in the offing.
-Women persistently married her off to her handsome
-leading man, and more than one young millionaire
-about town ecstatically visualized her presiding at his dinner
-table.</p>
-
-<p>So far as Jane Goring was concerned, Bob McNaughton
-<a name="png.081" id="png.081" href="#png.081"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>71<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>belonged to another life. Thus it was rather a shock
-to come home from the theater one night when “Peacock”
-was at the height of its run and find her husband waiting
-for her. It was fully five months since she had seen him;
-over a year since she had been at home to him after
-the theater.</p>
-
-<p>He was striding up and down her drawing-room, hands
-thrust deep into his pockets, head bent. But when one
-considers that her drawing-room consisted of three thrown
-into one, it was not surprising that at first she was not
-conscious of another’s presence. She came in, switched
-on the sidelights, dropped her furs and sank on the
-davenport, hand hovering toward the table back of her,
-when from the other end of the room, her name was
-spoken.</p>
-
-<p>She sat up, startled, and saw Bob coming into the range
-of bluish light from a Chinese temple lamp at the side
-of the piano. Jane Goring looked her amazement. He
-drew nearer, stopped abruptly and faced her.</p>
-
-<p>“My apologies,” he said with a slight, rather twisted
-smile, “for calling so late.”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped back, the look of amazement still lighting
-her long sleepy eyes. “You did rather—startle me.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment neither spoke. Then he indicated the
-other corner of the deep-cushioned couch, “May I sit
-down?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly.” It was accompanied by a slight shrug.</p>
-
-<p>His hand dove into his vest pocket and brought out a
-silver cigarette case. He clicked it open, held it out to
-her. She may or may not have noticed that his movements
-were tense and jerky, that the case was held not
-<a name="png.082" id="png.082" href="#png.082"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>72<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>quite steadily. She gave a faint gesture of dissent, reaching
-once more to the table at her back, and opened a gold
-lacquer box.</p>
-
-<p>“I have a new special brand—imported for me from
-Egypt.”</p>
-
-<p>He took one of his own, pocketing the case, and she
-waited for some explanation of his visit.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re looking well,” he began after a moment without
-looking at her.</p>
-
-<p>“Feeling very fit,” she returned, and waited once more.</p>
-
-<p>He did not speak, just sat staring down at his rather
-tightly clenched hands.</p>
-
-<p>She did notice then that he was looking old—years
-older than when she had last seen him. Bob was forty-two,—to-night
-he looked fifty. Jane was,—well, not even
-“Who’s Who” knew exactly how old Jane Goring was—any
-woman who will tell her right age will tell anything!—but
-she looked well under thirty.</p>
-
-<p>The silence seemed to demand something of her.</p>
-
-<p>“And you?” she queried politely.</p>
-
-<p>He wheeled round in his corner. “That’s just what
-I’ve come to see you about,” he brought out. “Matter
-of fact, I waited until the last minute—didn’t want to
-bother you with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“The last minute?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’m pulling up stakes—beating it for Colorado
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>At the back of Jane Goring’s brain, though even to
-herself she did not acknowledge it, flared a sudden flash
-of relief. Like a jagged streak of lightning across a summer
-sky it was there—and gone.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.083" id="png.083" href="#png.083"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>73<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Where—in Colorado?”</p>
-
-<p>“Denver.”</p>
-
-<p>“With what paper?”</p>
-
-<p>“None, for a time. It’s like this.” He paused, seemed
-to be searching for words, his hands clenched and unclenched
-nervously. “I’ve been seeing Frothingham, the
-specialist, you know. Oh, it’s nothing—contraction in
-the chest now and then and bit of a cough in bad weather.
-Beastly uncomfortable, though. He tells me if I go now
-I can get rid of it in six months or so.”</p>
-
-<p>Goring gazed at the breadth of shoulder on which her
-head had snuggled so peacefully in the old days. Not
-that that phase of it occurred to her just then, but she
-stared at the big frame and could scarcely credit what he
-told her.</p>
-
-<p>“But how in the world did you get such a thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“It got me, my dear,—before I knew it. Fellow living
-alone’s apt to grow careless. Anyway, there it is, and
-it’s up to me to light out.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence again for a moment, then—“I’m sorry, old boy,”
-she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good to know.” He slid nearer to her along
-the couch. Her face through the pungent smoke from
-the Egyptian cigarette was an indefinite white blur, vague
-as a dream, impossible to read. “I was hoping, in a
-way, that you would be. Makes it easier for me to put
-up the proposition I have in mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” she questioned as he paused again.</p>
-
-<p>“But first I want to outline something of my plans once
-I knock this bug on the head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.084" id="png.084" href="#png.084"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>74<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“The Graystone has made me an offer. I’ve been interested
-in the movie game for the past few years; been
-studying it from the inside. And recently Crosby Stone—he’s
-vice-president of the Graystone—asked me to go
-to the Coast and take charge of the editorial department
-at their Western studio. I told him that for the present
-I couldn’t consider it—health needed jogging up. He
-said the job would be there for me whenever I wanted
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me an excellent idea,” she observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now what I wanted to ask you is this.” He
-fumbled for his case once more. Against the light from
-the table lamp, his features formed a sharp tense silhouette.
-He bent forward, struck a match. It flared upward,
-emphasized the lines that were almost ridges in his
-face. Suddenly he turned, and his next words came
-thick. “Janey, I want you to do this much. Will you—when
-you close—take a run out to Colorado and spend
-part of the summer with me?”</p>
-
-<p>The tapering white hand that held the cigarette to her
-lips dropped as if stricken. She straightened and
-her drowsy green eyes looked down on him from the immense
-height of the top rung.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear boy!” she ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” he put in quickly, “I wouldn’t expect you
-to stay in Denver. Must be any number of mountain
-resorts we could go to—I’ll ask Frothingham.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear boy, I couldn’t possibly. To begin
-with, I’m taking ‘Peacock’ on the road early in August,
-playing Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago—all the big cities.
-<a name="png.085" id="png.085" href="#png.085"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>75<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Cleeburg wants to keep me out in it until February when
-we begin work on a new production. That leaves me only
-a few weeks’ vacation—”</p>
-
-<p>“Spend them with me. Janey—” He leaned over with
-a swift, impulsive movement, lifted her left hand, the little
-finger of which was completely covered by a big beetle-green
-scarab, and kissed the tips one by one. “Janey,
-there’s just you—no one else! These last years have
-been hell. I’ve missed you—I’ve wanted you! A few
-weeks—is that too much to ask?”</p>
-
-<p>She drew her hand away—gently enough. But a little
-shudder of disgust ran down her spine. “But I can’t,
-don’t you see?” she began conversationally. “Those few
-weeks I must have to myself. I need the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t we take it together? Can’t we go up into the
-mountains—away from the muck of the world—and get
-to know each other all over again? Remember our
-honeymoon, dear, the afternoon by the river? What a
-happy pair of kids we were! Let’s have a taste of
-that, just a taste again.”</p>
-
-<p>A slight flicker of amusement—oh, very slight—raised
-the corners of her upslanted eyes. “Afraid we’ve passed
-the honeymoon age, dear boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your love I want, Janey,” came from him desperately.
-“Just to feel that you’ll come to me for a time
-when I need you.”</p>
-
-<p>She got up, crushed the spark from her cigarette, tossed
-it with a gesture of distaste into the tray and moved
-toward the piano. In her trailing green gown with its
-fanlike train—Goring never wore short skirts—and her
-<a name="png.086" id="png.086" href="#png.086"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>76<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>dangling scarab earrings, she looked very exotic, very
-tall and altogether unapproachable. She trailed the
-length of the room and stopped under the Chinese temple
-lamp. Its blue light shed an aura about her, giving her
-skin the moon-glow that Henner’s brush has made immortal.</p>
-
-<p>Her husband gazed after her. Mercifully she stopped
-with her back toward him, and he failed to get the expression
-that pressed close her lips. His eyes had followed
-her with dog-like pleading. Without meeting them
-she knew—felt it. Neither could she escape the urge in
-his voice. In the old days, that deep tender note had
-thrilled her, made her yearn for him, given her the assurance
-that whatever happened, Bob would be there to
-make things right. To-night it merely annoyed her, rendered
-her position more difficult. Seeing Bob at all had
-become trying and the very thought of the thing he now
-suggested irritated her beyond measure. She had so
-completely done with him—finished! Taking advantage
-of this sudden illness was taking advantage of her. With
-all her being she resented it.</p>
-
-<p>She stood for a moment turned from him, fingering
-the blue and gold tassel that hung from a bit of Chinese
-embroidery flung across the piano. Finally she turned
-back, face as void of light or shade as the old idol enshrined
-in a corner.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose we have a snack of supper and talk things
-over,” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p>He was sitting bent almost double, elbows on knees,
-head in hands. A wave of contempt for his attitude of
-dejection swept over her. She was so palpitant with life,
-<a name="png.087" id="png.087" href="#png.087"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>77<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>vibrating with the thrill—ever new, ever sweet—that the
-laurel wreath brings.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting for a reply she rang. A tired-eyed
-maid appeared. Goring gave her directions and when the
-girl had gone out, proceeded to chat casually about affairs
-of the theater—a new firm of managers recently bobbed
-up on the horizon with a new play by a new author; the
-outlook for next season; the trend toward satirical
-comedy.</p>
-
-<p>Bob sat without moving, knuckles pressing white
-against his forehead, the veins on his hands standing out
-like blue welts.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he looked up.</p>
-
-<p>“I take it you are <em>not</em> coming out to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Goring in the depths of a chair some distance from
-him stirred uneasily. “My dear boy, I’ve told you. It’s
-not only impractical—it’s impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course! I was an ass to think you might.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you see? I’m not my own mistress. I belong
-to my public. I’ve got to conserve my strength for them—and
-my work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,—I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I consulted my own desires—but I haven’t the
-moral right. I must sacrifice what you want—what I
-want—to what my public expects of me.”</p>
-
-<p>He might have reminded her of the years he had given
-to creating that public for her. He might have dwelt at
-length on his Machiavellian boosting of a red-haired show
-girl through the columns of his own paper and gradually
-with insertions here and there in periodicals of the theater,
-until managers began to ask who this Jane Goring was.
-<a name="png.088" id="png.088" href="#png.088"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>78<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>He might have made mention of the evenings he had
-spent round the Lambs and the Friars adding to his list
-of acquaintances, as men can only at men’s clubs, those
-who would eventually be of service to her.</p>
-
-<p>He merely smiled with his lips, lighted another cigarette
-and tried to cover the fact that the flame flickered.</p>
-
-<p>“You must understand how I’m placed,” she persisted.</p>
-
-<p>“I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>His laconic reply, followed by flat silence, instead of
-alleviating, somehow increased her discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>After a moment he spoke. “Ever read ‘Frankenstein,’
-Janey?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Queer tale of a chap who tried to create a superman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” Her brows contracted, puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—his superman rose up and destroyed him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I fail to see—” The frown deepened.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just a flight of fancy. Don’t mind me.” Again
-his hand struck a flickering match.</p>
-
-<p>“Ought you to smoke so much?” she asked, to fill in
-the gap. “I shouldn’t think it would be good for—for—”</p>
-
-<p>“My lungs? Oh, nothing wrong with them—actually.
-Dare say they’ll pull up O.K. once I pull out of this town.
-Y’know what Paul Bourget said about New York. Fellow
-asked him how he liked our climate, and he answered,
-‘But my dear man,—you do not have climate. You have
-samples of weather!’”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed and the weight of the air lifted somewhat.
-The maid brought in a steaming chafing dish, set it on
-a nest of tables and drew out the smaller two, placing
-them in front of the couch.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.089" id="png.089" href="#png.089"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>79<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Goring moved over, once more took the corner opposite
-her husband. His eyes traveled the length of her.</p>
-
-<p>“You grow more beautiful every time I see you, Janey.
-Success is a first rate old alchemist, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled down, her whole face softening.</p>
-
-<p>The maid laid an embroidered doily of finest linen
-on each of the two small tables and brought silver platters
-of creamed mushrooms with a faint aroma of sherry.
-From a dusty bottle marked Amontillado she poured into
-slim-necked glasses the same wine, glistening and amber.</p>
-
-<p>When she had finished serving them, she asked tentatively
-if madame wished her to wait up.</p>
-
-<p>Goring wondered why the question brought from Bob
-a look of curiosity, why he turned and watched her, waiting;
-why he smiled—with his eyes this time—when she
-told the girl to go to bed.</p>
-
-<p>She moved nearer—the tables were placed side by side—and
-sipped the sherry. A few moments passed during
-which she noticed uncomfortably that he had not touched
-the dainty, tempting dish before him.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not eating?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not particularly hungry.” He lifted his glass, twirling
-it between thumb and forefinger, his gaze never leaving
-her. “I want to fill my eyes with you, Janey. May
-be a long time before I see you again.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes warmed to the tense adulation in his. After
-all, he did look beastly ill, and the least she could do
-would be to give him the memory of a little kindness to
-carry away.</p>
-
-<p>“And I want you to know, Bob, that I’ll be thinking
-of you, hoping and praying that before long you’ll be
-<a name="png.090" id="png.090" href="#png.090"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>80<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>quite fit again.” She leaned over, touching his hand
-lightly with hers. Instantly his closed over it—feverishly,
-as a man clings to hope when his ship of life has
-been broken into wreckage.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you, Janey?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will help—some.” He put down the glass and
-caught her other hand, drawing her nearer. “I’d like to
-feel there’s still a corner for me. No other fellow taking
-my place, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“How absurd! You know I haven’t time even to think
-of men.”</p>
-
-<p>“They have plenty of time to think of you.” Again
-that quizzical smile. “I’ve got that much over them,
-haven’t I? You’re <em>my</em> wife.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled back and tried to draw away but he held
-her with the grip of hot iron.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I’ve got over them, Janey—all of them.
-You may belong to your public now but you’ve been
-mine. We’ve had our youth together, haven’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve had the best of life together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody can take that from me.” He spoke breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly his arm went round her, crushed her to him
-and his lips were against hers. “My love!” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring’s body went rigid. She drew herself erect
-and the warmth died out of her eyes as swiftly as a flame
-extinguished. Sharply her slim white hands thrust out
-<a name="png.091" id="png.091" href="#png.091"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>81<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in defense. She pulled backward. Their gaze met—locked.
-In his was hurt question. In hers a flash of
-fury. He sat staring at her a moment and he did not
-look <em>up</em>. It was a look direct, straight, boring to the
-heart of her.</p>
-
-<p>And then he got to his feet. “I beg your pardon,” he
-began. “I—I thought—” He paused, jaws coming together
-as though clamped. Without another look at her
-he walked the length of the room.</p>
-
-<p>At the door he turned. “Damn me for my humility!”
-he said.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.092" id="png.092" href="#png.092"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>82<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Exceeding</span> the most exalted expectations, “Peacock”
-ran two full seasons. It might even have
-packed houses during the hot spell, save that the star decided
-to give herself a rest, well-earned, and, of course
-without her, the theater had to remain dark. At the end
-of four weeks spent at a fashionable Adirondack hotel
-where she was fêted like visiting royalty and her gowns
-created a sensation, she reopened and the continued success
-of the play warranted Cleeburg’s decision to give it
-another season on Broadway.</p>
-
-<p>During all that time Goring had not a word from
-her husband. Even of his Denver address she was unaware.
-But the fact that he did not write failed to disturb
-her. It was a relief rather. The first few months
-of his absence she dreaded another plea from him. In
-case his health had grown no better, or—as was quite
-possible—had grown worse, further excuses would be
-difficult. As the weeks rolled into months and the months
-accumulated into a year and still not a line, the thought
-of him lapsed into merely perfunctory curiosity. He
-must be alive or she’d have been informed. Hence, if
-ever she needed to get in touch with him it would be
-easy enough to do so through his former paper or his
-clubs. Thus she blotted even the thought of him from
-her books.</p>
-
-<p>Another season of acclaim on the road and she was
-back in New York ready for rehearsals. Her new play,
-<a name="png.093" id="png.093" href="#png.093"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>83<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>made to order for her by a prominent dramatist, was
-read by him in her apartment the day of her arrival.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg met her at the Grand Central, full of enthusiasm,
-chewing the butt of a cigar while his hands outlined
-the plot as an artist smudges in with charcoal the
-foundations of his picture.</p>
-
-<p>Goring’s manager had started life as a newsboy somewhere
-east of Broadway and a few of the habits of childhood
-had become the habits of a lifetime. His manners
-were not Chesterfieldian. Frequently he forgot to take
-off his hat when a lady entered the room. His cigar was
-removed from the right-hand corner of his mouth only to
-be shifted to the left. But more than one actress out
-of a job could borrow a hundred or two from him with
-no surer guarantee than her I.O.U. And those of the
-chorus whose eyes had not grown hard from seeing too
-much of the Rialto when lights are brightest, affectionately
-called him “Papa.”</p>
-
-<p>Rudolph Cleeburg or ’Dolph as he was familiarly
-named—was short and stocky; heavily built, in fact, but
-with a lightness of foot that enabled him to prance about
-the stage while directing, and an Oriental imagination
-that carried him into any rôle he wanted to assume without
-making him appear ridiculous. One of the ablest
-directors in the country, in spite of English that sometimes
-tobogganed, he always took his productions personally
-in hand once the first rough edges were smoothed
-down. With Goring, of course, he assumed charge from
-the beginning. She would have no one else.</p>
-
-<p>The manager’s admiration for his star had at the start
-been of the proverbial cat-and-queen variety. But as
-<a name="png.094" id="png.094" href="#png.094"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>84<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>their association stretched over the years, it was shorn of
-the awe in which he had first held her and once he had
-even reached the point of proposing. It was when she
-informed him that she and Bob had separated.</p>
-
-<p>“Divorce?” he had asked quickly. And with her
-shake of the head, “Well, if ever you do, there’s little
-’Dolph waiting to step into his shoes. Don’t forget that,
-Jane. It’s straight goods.”</p>
-
-<p>The proposal had vastly amused her.</p>
-
-<p>They drove up town through the fresh sweetness of a
-May morning. Cleeburg’s panama dropped to the floor
-of the car as he excitedly sketched the story in the air,
-one idea tumbling after the other as fast as words would
-come. His bald head shone as did his eyes. All his
-features were prominent—nose, eyes, teeth—but most
-prominent of all was his smile which seemed to light like
-an arc his round commonplace face. This he flashed delightedly
-as Goring listened with a calmness unbroken.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s sure fire, Jane! Sure fire! We got a bigger go
-than ‘Peacock’ and that’s going some.”</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring said little until the apartment was reached.
-Then she shook hands with the author who was
-waiting for them, left the two men together while she
-changed from her traveling clothes, and an hour later
-glided in cool and revived in a peacock-blue house-gown
-whose sleeves floated outward like wings. Cleeburg’s
-watch was in his hand, but he pocketed it without
-a word as she entered, and settled back in his
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>The author opened his script and began to read. His
-voice filled the silent room, chorused occasionally by the
-<a name="png.095" id="png.095" href="#png.095"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>85<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>gay trill of birds from the park across the way or city
-sounds from the street below.</p>
-
-<p>The manager’s smile broadened with satisfaction as he
-progressed. The cigar moved back and forth, propelled
-by emotion. But Goring listened without comment, eyes
-half closed, gazing down at the playwright’s head bowed
-over his manuscript.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a new sound broke upon the stillness. It
-was from neither bird nor branch, neither the clang of
-bells nor the rush of traffic. It was light and regular,
-and it came from within—the steady tapping of a slippered
-foot. Toward the end of Act II it became noticeable
-and Cleeburg looked round interrogatively.</p>
-
-<p>Tap—tap! Tap—tap! More swift, more impatient,—until
-the author’s voice proclaimed “Curtain.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jane Goring spoke—and the tapping was explained.
-“But, my dear Mr. Thorne, you don’t expect
-me to play the lead in <em>that</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg wheeled about in his chair. “What’s the
-matter with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there’s nothing for me—not a thing!”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing! Not a single opportunity in those first two
-acts.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg sprang up. His cigar rotaried excitedly.
-“No opportunities? My God, Jane, what do you want?
-As the play stands, you’re the whole show!”</p>
-
-<p>“As the play stands, you might as well hand it to Harrison
-Burke”—Burke was her leading man—“and let me
-retire,” came coolly.</p>
-
-<p>The playwright’s eyes began to smoulder. “I don’t get
-<a name="png.096" id="png.096" href="#png.096"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>86<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>you, Miss Goring. This character has been absolutely
-built round you.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned on him, still cool, still aloof.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why is your man allowed to dominate every
-scene?”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t,” the author protested. “The sympathy is
-yours, even when I’ve been compelled to give him the long
-speeches.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see it—not at all. You don’t even give me an
-opportunity to wear decent clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“That comes in your last act,” Cleeburg burst out.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t want to wait until the last act.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t very well put a factory girl in satins,” the
-playwright observed.</p>
-
-<p>“Why make her a factory girl?”</p>
-
-<p>He threw up his hands and subsided.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg took to pacing the floor. “Look here, Jane,”
-he said finally, “let’s get a line on this. You’ve given ’em
-a fashion plate for three solid years. Show ’em you can
-do something else. Otherwise they’ll get sick and tired
-of you. This part’s great—just what you need. You
-act through the first two acts and in the last you splurge.
-What more do you want?”</p>
-
-<p>“I want it understood that I’m the star of the production!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it is. Nobody else has a chance. Good Lord,
-Burke’s speeches are just feeders! You’ve got—everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see it.”</p>
-
-<p>The dramatist, who was sufficiently famous to be
-<a name="png.097" id="png.097" href="#png.097"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>87<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>independent of stars, rose. “Under the circumstances,
-there’s no need to read further.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on! Hold on!” Cleeburg clutched his arm.
-“Don’t take it like that, old man. Let’s go into the thing
-and see what can be done to please all parties.”</p>
-
-<p>They did go into it for three long hours, at the end of
-which Jane Goring insisted that she must have luncheon.
-She was as unruffled as when she had entered—and as
-firm. Cleeburg was mopping his brow. Through his
-glasses the playwright’s eyes were blazing. It was then
-two forty-five. By that hour they had compromised to
-the extent of cutting some of the hero’s long speeches
-and giving her a chance to change her costume in the
-last act.</p>
-
-<p>At luncheon Cleeburg consumed little more than whiskey
-and soda, and wondered why he got no cooler.
-Likewise he swore at the twittering of the birds and the
-distant clang of street cars.</p>
-
-<p>When Jane Goring had finished the last morsel of her
-chicken salad and leisurely emptied her cup of Chinese
-tea, they adjourned once more to the drawing-room and
-the discussion was resumed.</p>
-
-<p>A lantern of golden fire was hanging in the Western
-sky by the time the play had been revamped to the star’s
-satisfaction. More than once its author took hat in hand
-and made for the door. But Cleeburg’s persuasive
-clutch and the whisper that an additional advance would
-be paid for his trouble detained him. And finally an
-agreement was reached.</p>
-
-<p>Her objection to the drama as it stood, however,
-<a name="png.098" id="png.098" href="#png.098"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>88<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>necessitated a postponement of rehearsals and it was late
-July before the company assembled on the stage of a
-playhouse just off Broadway. It annoyed Goring to
-forego her usual few weeks of rest but since she wished
-to have a New York opening in October, there was nothing
-else to be done.</p>
-
-<p>The day the company was called was dank and humid,
-a breathless day thick with summer dust, ominous with
-thunderclouds.</p>
-
-<p>At ten Goring emerged from a cold bath, was dressed by
-her maid’s moist fingers, and at eleven crossed the soggy
-pavement from her car to the stage entrance. The drive
-downtown had been stifling. It dizzied her. To enter
-the dark passageway and look out into the space of auditorium,
-linen-covered, was a relief.</p>
-
-<p>What is there about an empty theater that fascinates?
-The bare boards of the stage, the heaps of scenery piled
-against bare brick walls, the bare table and chairs ranged
-to form a semicircle within which the actors move back
-and forth, the single electric light, bare of shade, jutting
-up in the center like a giant eye in the cool darkness—surely
-there is no illusion about them, no suggestion of
-the world of make-believe into which they evolve. Yet
-the very odor of the place redolent of grease-paint—those
-who love it sniff it as a thoroughbred sniffs tanbark.</p>
-
-<p>Manager, actors, author—they are about to conjure
-from those bare boards all the elements of life. Conflict,
-laughter, tears, love, hate, happiness—death!
-Theirs to build, theirs to take the written page and make
-of it a tingling human thing. Theirs to people empty
-<a name="png.099" id="png.099" href="#png.099"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>89<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>chairs. Theirs to clothe with flesh and blood a skeleton.
-A wave of the wand and into emptiness springs a home
-with soft rugs and rich-colored hangings, deep divans,
-the ring of voices, the flooding of moonlight or warm
-glow of the sun. And best of all, out in that empty
-auditorium when the lights go up will throng a crowd
-whose hearts will be theirs to thrill, to wring, to charm.
-Theirs the blessed privilege, the joy of creation. That’s
-why they love it in spite of the ache of disappointment,
-the discouragement of failure. That’s why they cling to
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Those assembled on the stage that throttling day of
-July had risen tired from their beds, dragged wearily in
-from the street, noticed that the management had electric
-fans going and laughed at the idea of getting any relief
-from them. Yet the instant Goring appeared, followed
-a few minutes later by Cleeburg, a light sprang into
-their eyes, the spontaneous light of anticipation, and they
-promptly forgot the weather. The play had been read
-to them the day before and their parts assigned, so that
-they were ready to plunge into work.</p>
-
-<p>Goring shook hands with her leading man and nodded
-to the rest, all of whom were known to her—she had
-practically the same support from year to year—except
-a slight girl whose face was so thin that her eyes looked
-abnormally big and hungry. It made their expression
-almost frightened.</p>
-
-<p>The company ran quickly through the first act, parts in
-hand, while Cleeburg sat under an electric fan and listened.
-Then, after a few words with the author who
-was hunched in a seat somewhere in the ghostlike
-<a name="png.100" id="png.100" href="#png.100"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>90<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>auditorium, he ripped off pongee coat, his collar and necktie,
-and real work began.</p>
-
-<p>Goring did little but read at the first rehearsals. She
-liked to conserve her energy for the long sessions Cleeburg
-put her through during the last weeks.</p>
-
-<p>When they left the theater at five everybody looked
-wilted but the star. The hour for lunch had been consumed
-largely with liquid refreshment and most of them
-again made for soda fountains.</p>
-
-<p>Goring dined with her manager on the Astor Roof.
-The storm, threatening all day, had not yet broken and
-a black hood of clouds bore down on the city like the
-shadow of death. Cleeburg, full of plans, ordered a near-champagne
-cup and substantial dinner and appeared not
-to notice the depression above and around them. But
-Goring it affected unpleasantly. She felt irritable, annoyed
-by the fact that he could eat a heavy dinner
-on such a night, prone to find fault with the service,
-rubbed the wrong way by the strum of the summer orchestra.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you notice how much older Burke looks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks good to me,” Cleeburg lifted a cup of steaming
-bullion while she played with a jellied one before
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s losing his figure, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t any of us chickens, Jane.”</p>
-
-<p>She pushed the cup away.</p>
-
-<p>“Not that you ain’t a pippin,” he added hastily.
-“You’ve got the lines—you’ll always have ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk as if I were a hundred.” Her voice was
-so sharp that it cut.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.101" id="png.101" href="#png.101"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>91<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Good Lord, no! Not one on Broadway to-day can
-touch you.”</p>
-
-<p>She softened a bit. “Who’s the new girl?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“The one who plays my sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that one! Forget her name. Lewis has it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get her?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s been hanging round the office, Lewis says, and
-couple of weeks ago she held me up on my way out.
-Poor little thing looked as if she needed a job so I gave
-her that sister bit. Hair’s something the color of yours—that
-decided me.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has a funny hysterical catch in her voice. Did
-you notice it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably she’s hungry. Looks it—poor kid! Must
-have Lewis slip her an advance on her salary.”</p>
-
-<p>With gusto he cut into the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">filet mignon</i> and helped
-himself to some new peas. The sight of the red blood
-oozing from the meat made Goring feel ill. She turned
-her attention to the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">halibut parisienne</i> the waiter placed
-before her. But even the slices of tomato and crisp garnishing
-of lettuce could not tempt her appetite.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see why you gave her the part—she’s so
-homely.”</p>
-
-<p>“That needn’t hurt you any.”</p>
-
-<p>“But she has a scene with me, even though it is only
-a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe when she gets a square meal in her she won’t
-look so much like a ghost.”</p>
-
-<p>He lit a cigar, rolling it between his lips with the joy
-of an epicure.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.102" id="png.102" href="#png.102"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>92<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Goring cooled her hot throat with an ice, frowning
-at his complacent finality. It increased her own irritation,
-made her want to grip him by the shoulders and
-shake him.</p>
-
-<p>The girl <em>was</em> homely. Why did he argue about it?</p>
-
-<p>A zigzag of lightning cut through the sky. With a
-crash it tore open and the deluge descended like the
-wrath of God sent to cleanse a heathen city. Crash after
-crash, fire upon fire, barrages of rain hurled against the
-buildings, shaking their very walls.</p>
-
-<p>Goring shivered. In spite of the stewing heat a chill
-went through her.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s get out of this,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Better wait till it’s over.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to go home now.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg signed the check.</p>
-
-<p>Like the lightning his car zigzagged through the storm.
-Water sprang from the streets against the windshield.
-The noise about them was deafening. Goring clung
-to the window strap at her side. For some unknown
-reason her nerves were keyed to the nth degree. She
-felt choked, as if shrieking alone would clear her throat.
-The first day of work and this beastly weather, she told
-herself, were responsible.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the long night the storm raged. And tossing
-between soft linen sheets she did not close her eyes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III"><a name="png.103" id="png.103" href="#png.103"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>93<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">They</span> opened in Washington the end of August.
-Cleeburg tried to get Atlantic City but the theater
-had been booked weeks before his bid for it. Hence, in
-spite of the star’s popularity, they did not play to
-capacity. The season in the Capital was at low ebb.
-Most of the homes were closed and the usual Goring
-audiences were out of the city. Which after all was
-an advantage, for the play was still very rough.</p>
-
-<p>All things considered, both Goring and her manager
-were rather pleased than otherwise. The four weeks of
-rehearsal had been torrid, record-breaking heat rising
-from the pavements, the city consumed by fever. The
-effect upon the company had been in ratio thereto. They
-were limp by the date of opening, unequal to their best
-in spite of the utmost effort.</p>
-
-<p>And Goring’s rôle was difficult. She did not like it as
-well as “Peacock.” There was more drama, more opportunity
-for emotional acting, but less for the display
-of gowns and the bizarre beauty that had made both
-men and women flock to the other play. However, as
-Cleeburg had said, she couldn’t afford to stamp herself
-a one-part actress. And there was no denying the interest
-of the story.</p>
-
-<p>As never before, Cleeburg had put her through her
-paces. At the theater after the company had dispersed,
-at her apartment in the evenings, he had gone over her
-part again and again coaching her scene by scene, speech
-<a name="png.104" id="png.104" href="#png.104"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>94<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>by speech, until the rest, knowing nothing of those extra
-sessions, judged her a miracle at quick study.</p>
-
-<p>“Unbend, Jane!” he would say, prancing up and down
-her long drawing-room. “Come off your perch! You
-love him, Jane! You love him! D’you know what that
-means? You’d die for him. He ain’t your kind and
-you’d go through hell to get to him. Ever felt that way?
-Well, think about it—concentrate on it—and you’ll get
-it over.”</p>
-
-<p>Vaguely, like a curtain lifted on another life, memory
-drifted before her eyes the vision of an afternoon on
-the Palisades when a vivid-haired girl clung to a brown-haired
-boy, whispering over and over that she loved him—didn’t
-want anything ever in the whole wide world but
-him.</p>
-
-<p>For purposes of the drama she concentrated on it.</p>
-
-<p>Quite like the actress she was, she flung herself into
-the passion of those first months as if she had lived them
-yesterday. Fortunately for her the Goring of to-day, the
-actress, was a shell into which emotion could be poured
-as one pours burning fluid into an empty vessel.</p>
-
-<p>Little ’Dolph, with cigar twirling, eyes popping, perspiration
-dripping from his forehead, and a silk handkerchief
-tied round his short neck, kept her keyed to the
-highest pitch—no let-down, no time to think of self or
-the weather or rest; no time for anything but the part
-in hand. Though he would not have known whence the
-quotation sprang, with him “The play’s the thing” was
-a litany.</p>
-
-<p>Critics in the Capital and in Baltimore were almost
-unanimous in the opinion that it was a vital thing, sure
-<a name="png.105" id="png.105" href="#png.105"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>95<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of ultimate success when placed on view for the thumbs-up,
-thumbs-down decision of that capricious goddess—Broadway.</p>
-
-<p>As a rule Goring and her leading man were the only
-two mentioned in the reviews, but this time almost every
-member of the company came in for a quota of praise.
-The old mother, the character man, the juvenile comedian,
-even the homely little sister with her wide hungry
-eyes and the queer catch in her voice, each had a word
-or two.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria Cromwell was the girl’s name. It was quite
-as ornate as she was plain. Goring laughed the first
-time she heard it.</p>
-
-<p>“Sounds as though she found it in a dime novel,” she
-told Cleeburg. “Why don’t you make her change it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Says it’s her own. Anyhow, it don’t matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I dare say it doesn’t. She’s entitled to something
-to make her conspicuous.”</p>
-
-<p>Often she noticed the girl at rehearsal sitting in the
-theater after her bit was done, leaning forward, chin in
-her cupped hands, mop of reddish hair falling over eyes
-that devoured every move the star made. Once they
-met at the stage entrance on their way out.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you go home earlier?” Goring asked.
-“I’m sure Mr. Cleeburg will excuse you when you’re
-through.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather stay,” the girl answered in her peculiar
-breathless tone. “I can learn so much from you, Miss
-Goring. Besides,” she paused, hesitated, “I—live in a
-furnished room. It isn’t much to go home to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you been in New York long?” Goring put
-<a name="png.106" id="png.106" href="#png.106"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>96<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the question as they moved toward the street side by
-side.</p>
-
-<p>“A year and a half—that is, this time. I used to
-come whenever I could scrape together the fare while I
-was doing stock in the West. But there never seemed
-to be an opening for me. Then I decided I’d best just
-come and wait around or I’d never get a chance. And
-I waited, all right.”</p>
-
-<p>Another pause while the wide wistful eyes filled with
-the same look of fright they had worn that first day at
-the theater—only this time it was the fright of memory.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Cleeburg has been wonderful to me. I’ll never
-be able to thank him enough.”</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the curb. Goring smiled. “I shall
-tell him that,” she said, and with a nod stepped into her
-car and drove off.</p>
-
-<p>In Washington she noticed that Miss Cromwell was
-looking better, though the eyes were as hungry as ever
-and the figure as slight. Undoubtedly Cleeburg was
-right. What she had needed was a few square meals.
-Her strength seemed to increase as work increased and in
-their scene together Goring remarked a give and take
-that made her own work mount to greater intensity. It
-was a short scene in which the younger sister who had
-hovered like a silent brooding shadow in the background
-pleaded with the older not to break away from her own
-class, not to try to go into a world she did not understand—and
-was met by the defiance of one molded to
-make a place for herself in any world. The scene went
-so well, in fact, that the author, at Cleeburg’s request,
-lengthened it. At the end when Goring held out her
-<a name="png.107" id="png.107" href="#png.107"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>97<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>arms and folded the weeping girl in them, a gratifying
-sniffle and the flutter of white went through the house.
-Which is the most either star or manager can ask.</p>
-
-<p>The company rehearsed the greater part of the night
-preceding the New York première, though Goring left
-the theater early to allow herself plenty of time for rest
-and the customary massage. She liked to relax
-thoroughly before the strenuous demands on the nerves
-which an opening always made. In her sea-blue silk
-draped bed she would lie for hours while the magic hands
-of the Swedish woman who attended her each day sent
-tingling through her veins an injection of new life. And
-finally a delicious drowsiness would creep over her like
-a thin veil drawn between her and the turmoil of the outside
-world. She would find herself presently floating on
-the waters of Lethe, arms outstretched, a smile upon
-her lips, a gentle undulation as of waves rising and falling
-beneath her. Small wonder that when she drifted
-back to reality some hours later she felt rejuvenated,
-with a calm and control equal to any emergency.</p>
-
-<p>She reached the theater a little after seven. On the
-way in she met Miss Cromwell. The girl’s eyes were
-burning. Their hungry look had gone completely and in
-its place had come a glow like a great light from within.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Miss Goring,” she breathed in passing, “I’m so
-thrilled. I’ve lived and lived for this—New York!
-And now it’s come! It’s actually come!”</p>
-
-<p>Goring nodded, voiced a perfunctory “Good luck,”
-and wondered in her soul what it would be like to feel
-once more that closing of the throat, that turmoil of
-beating heart, that utter abandon of joy in opportunity
-<a name="png.108" id="png.108" href="#png.108"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>98<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>realized. It thrust her back to the day when she had
-signed her first contract with Cleeburg. She and Bob
-had sat facing each other a long space without a word,
-his two hands gripping hers until they ached. And then—</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so glad, little girl—so damn glad!” had come
-from him huskily.</p>
-
-<p>Then his hands had loosed and swept round her and
-he had held her close and she had cried into the lapel
-of his blue serge coat, tears of sheer happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg came to her dressing-room shortly before the
-rise of the curtain to tell her the house was packed. They
-were standing three rows deep—he was sure of a knock-out.
-He brought her a pile of telegrams from members
-of the profession and friends in the social world. She
-read them leisurely. It was her first opening on which
-there was not a long one from her husband. Not that
-she really missed it, but the lack gave her a curious feeling
-of wonder as to what had become of him.</p>
-
-<p>Her maid gave her hair a final pat and she stepped
-back to survey. It was an odd Jane Goring who gazed
-critically out of the mirror. No jangling jade, no spreading
-tail, no sensuous color of plumage. Just a blue
-serge dress of last year’s cut, a little shabby, open
-at the throat. It had been selected by the author, not
-without some protest from the star. She had wanted
-at least to go to a good tailor, but he had dragged her
-into a department store and made her buy one from stock
-at twenty-nine forty-nine. She had to admit that the effect,
-while not beautiful, was absolutely in character.
-Her shoes she had insisted upon getting at a Fifth Avenue
-boot shop. Feet are more conspicuous on the stage than
-<a name="png.109" id="png.109" href="#png.109"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>99<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>anywhere else in life and she must be well shod to do
-herself justice. Her hair, too, was groomed. The Goring
-coiffure<!-- TN: original reads "coiffeur" --> was abandoned until the last act but the
-faint wave necessary to it could not have passed unnoticed
-in the coils clustered about the factory girl’s ears.</p>
-
-<p>She went out, followed by her maid, and waited in
-the wings for her cue. Then came the inevitable tightening
-of the heart cords, the tense straining of muscles to
-achieve the best, the twinge of fear, all the tearing thrill
-of embarkation on a new venture. It lasted only an
-instant, however, an instant that ended in her entrance,
-followed by a crashing burst of applause. She bowed
-again and again, and the sweetness of it flowed like
-wine in her blood. The play halted, action suspended
-in mid-air, while the actress took the tribute she had
-known would greet her.</p>
-
-<p>After which the audience settled back to be entertained.
-From the beginning interest was evident, the heroine’s
-fight to make her own life apart from the prejudice
-which is as rampant in the lower as in the upper
-classes holding them. The struggle of evolution is the
-most human, most vital problem in the world.</p>
-
-<p>All through the first act the conflict endured, the
-girl’s discontent striking like flint on steel until the final
-scene when the little sister, matted hair falling over
-her eyes, dropped on her knees, crying: “All I know
-is—you’re goin’. You’re leavin’ me! An’ you can’t—you
-mustn’t! You’re gonna get hurt with them people
-you don’t know. They’re gonna step on you an’
-make fun of you an’ beat you down until you ain’t got
-no fight left. You don’t belong there—you don’t
-<a name="png.110" id="png.110" href="#png.110"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>100<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>belong! Stay here with me! I’m your sister, your own
-blood—an’ I love you, I love you! Nobody couldn’t
-love you no more’n I do!”</p>
-
-<p>Gloria Cromwell’s slight figure shook with the words,
-her eyes burned into Goring’s. That queer hysterical
-note lifted her voice into a throb that was heartrending,
-and as the star drew her close she seemed to crumple
-like a broken flower.</p>
-
-<p>The applause that met the curtain’s descent was interspersed
-with the same gratifying sniffle they had encountered
-all along the route. A number of times it
-swung upward, members of the company taking it according
-to a schedule posted backstage.</p>
-
-<div class="ctr">
-CURTAIN—ACT I
-<table summary="Roster of curtain calls">
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditzi"><span class="txt">First Curtain<span class="ns"> . . . . . .</span></span></p></td><td>Tableau.</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditz"><span class="txt">Second<span class="ns">   〃</span></span></p></td><td>Miss Goring and company</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditz"><span class="txt">Third<span class="ns">   〃</span></span></p></td><td>Miss Goring and principals</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditz"><span class="txt">Fourth<span class="ns">   〃</span></span></p></td><td>Miss Goring and principals</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditz"><span class="txt">Fifth<span class="ns">   〃</span></span></p></td><td>Miss Goring and Mr. Burke</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="dots"><p class="ditz"><span class="txt">Sixth<span class="ns">   〃</span></span></p></td><td>Miss Goring</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>The manner and order of taking the curtains had
-been carefully rehearsed the night before, but as it rose
-the fifth time with the star and leading man alone on
-the stage, an incident unanticipated occurred. Someone
-in the gallery shouted “Cromwell!” And the applause
-seemed to swell in answer.</p>
-
-<p>Goring at first paid no heed. The curtain fell—rose
-again and again. The call was repeated insistently.
-Goring went graciously to the wings and drew the girl
-onto the stage. She came, trembling so that she could
-<a name="png.111" id="png.111" href="#png.111"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>101<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>scarcely walk, eyes wide and terrified but shining somehow
-behind it all. She made an awkward bow, clinging
-like a child to Goring’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>When several curtains had been taken alone and preparations
-were finally under way for Act II, Jane Goring
-picked her way past property men and scene shifters
-toward the dressing-room with a five-pointed star
-painted on the door—to an actress the gate of heaven.
-Miss Cromwell was waiting there.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Miss Goring,” she breathed, “that was so—so
-sweet of you!”</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring looked down at her. “I take it you
-have friends in the gallery?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I have no friends in New York.”</p>
-
-<p>Goring continued to gaze down and her look was not
-altogether pleasant. But the girl did not see it. With
-an impulsive gesture, half apologetic, half worshipful,
-she lifted the star’s hand to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you!” she murmured with that queer catch
-in her voice.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter IV"><a name="png.112" id="png.112" href="#png.112"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>102<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcapA">At</span> 5.00 <span class="allsc">A. M.</span> ’Dolph Cleeburg was seated in the
-living-room-library den of his apartment completely
-surrounded by early editions and the butts of cigars.
-One of the latter circled joyously in his mouth as he
-and the author read over the various expressions of approval.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a fellow says Jane’s hair was too Fifth Avenue
-in the first act. By godfrey, ain’t that just like ’em?
-Can’t find fault with anything else, so have to pick on
-her hair.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told her to let it go,” the playwright remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s Jane. She’s got to look right or she
-can’t act. And, by gad, I’ve seen lots of Third Avenue
-girls got up like Fifth. Ain’t any law against it, is
-there?” He let the sheet rustle to the floor and picked
-up another. His collar and tie were open, his coat
-was off, his eyes held a blaze of excitement. A
-whiskey and soda stood on the tabouret beside him,
-untouched.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to this, Ted!” He plunged into a eulogy that
-made his eyes snap and the cigar roll with a velocity
-impossible to estimate. “By godfrey,” came at the finish,
-“ain’t one of ’em don’t give some notice to that Cromwell
-kid”—and went on reading—“‘Managers—keep your
-eye on Miss Gloria Cromwell.’” Then he gave a long
-chuckle. “And to think I engaged her because she looked
-starved!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.113" id="png.113" href="#png.113"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>103<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“She has something that gets you.” The author
-paused meditatively. “Wonder if it’s her voice?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope,” came crisply from Cleeburg. “It’s her heart.
-Probably suffered like hell and that’s what puts her
-over.”</p>
-
-<p>In Jane Goring’s boudoir some five hours later, the
-actress sat propped up, also like an isle in a sea of newspapers.
-She had read them in the small hours as had
-her manager. Only differently. One of the society
-satellites who circle round a popular star even as the
-moon circles round the earth and just as inconstantly,
-now silvering her sky, now leaving it black, had at the
-play’s finish carried her off to a supper party and dance.
-In the midst of gayeties a flunky had been dispatched for
-the morning papers and, in a flurry of excitement
-like the froth of champagne, the notices had been consumed,
-gushed over, forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Not so by Goring, of course. Alone in the white light
-of a new day, she reread them slowly, digesting each
-word. One watching her would have found in her eyes
-no glow of satisfaction, no thrill that once more she had
-scored. Rather was there the ghost of a frown on her
-brow. A frown somewhat difficult to interpret.</p>
-
-<p>At eleven Cleeburg had her on the phone. He had
-been ringing the apartment at regular intervals since
-eight but her maid had refused to disturb her. His
-voice ran the gamut of explosive enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“Great, Jane, great! We’ve got ’em again! We’ve
-got ’em! Didn’t I tell you this one had it all over ‘Peacock’?”</p>
-
-<p>He wanted to come up and lunch with her but she
-<a name="png.114" id="png.114" href="#png.114"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>104<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>told him she was tired, would see him later at the theater.</p>
-
-<p>The greater part of the day she spent resting, going
-over her notices and dictating letters to her secretary.
-Toward five she dressed and sent for her car. It was
-a crisp, clear blue October day. A run in the park or
-up Riverside—there were a number of things she had
-to think about—would fill in time until dinner.</p>
-
-<p>A restlessness unusual and unexplained made her pace
-the floor while she waited. So unusual was it, in fact,
-that it caused a vague wonder. By all previous portents
-she should have been exalted, lifted to the zenith
-of content through the knowledge that the star of her
-success still sailed high in the heavens. She was not.
-She felt nervous, distressed, with a weight on her chest
-that even the buoyant breezes from the river could not
-dissipate.</p>
-
-<p>Rolling up Riverside Drive with the ease of floating
-in ether, she had the sense of a great hand clutching
-her. The sensation was the same as that which she had
-experienced the first day of rehearsal—only intensified.
-It made breathing difficult, annoyed her to the point of
-exasperation.</p>
-
-<p>She ate no dinner, just swallowed a mouthful of tea
-and drove downtown. Little ’Dolph came to her dressing-room
-a few minutes later. He was jubilant. They
-were sold out weeks ahead. The play had hit the jaded
-metropolis in the eye—to quote him, with variations. It
-was good for another three seasons’ run. He rambled on
-at random, eyes popping, infectious smile lighting his
-round face like the smile of the sun at high noon. Presently
-he stopped, shifted his cigar and stared at her.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.115" id="png.115" href="#png.115"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>105<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“What’s the matter with you, Jane?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked down questioningly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t said a word,” he continued. “What’s got you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing. I’m tired, I dare say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Morning-after stuff! Don’t let down, though.
-We don’t want ’em saying second night’s off—the way
-it always is.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t have to tell me that.” Indignation was in
-her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t get me wrong,” he apologized quickly.
-“And, Jane—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Might let your hair go a bit in that first act—what?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were like two rapier thrusts. He made for
-the door. “They’ll accept my hair just as it is,” was her
-verdict.</p>
-
-<p>Their little chat did not tend to lift in any degree the
-mood that held her. She gave up trying to shake it off.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately it had no perceptible effect on her work.
-She was too clever for that. Many years on the stage
-had trained her to the difficult task of obliterating personal
-worries the instant the glow of the footlights would
-have revealed them to public gaze. In fact, she had almost
-succeeded in stamping them from consciousness
-when Gloria Cromwell made her entrance. At that moment
-there came a sudden burst of applause. Miss
-Cromwell tried to go on with her lines. They could not
-be heard. It was unprecedented, staggering. A girl, unknown,
-unheralded, was holding up the play! Of course,
-action had been suspended an instant when Goring came
-on, but this,—<em>this</em> was unheard of.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.116" id="png.116" href="#png.116"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>106<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Faintness seized the star, blinded her,—then fury. She
-knew now the nature of the weight that had stifled her
-all day. In a way, she had known it from the beginning.
-It was this girl! The lengthening of the part on tour,
-last night’s acclaim, her notices this morning, all had
-formed a cumulative irritant that now expressed itself
-in a surge of throttling hatred.</p>
-
-<p>She jumped in on the girl’s lines, killing almost every
-speech. She changed her own so that cues would be
-missed. No move, no turn that would make the little
-sister’s performance fall flat was allowed to pass. Even
-the final speech, ending with the beautiful tableau
-that last night had brought down the house, was cut
-short. Like a red tongue of flame her rage swept
-over its object consuming every opportunity the part
-gave.</p>
-
-<p>Still she did not kill the applause that greeted the
-curtain.</p>
-
-<p>Storming to her dressing-room came Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter? You cut the act a minute and
-a half!”</p>
-
-<p>“I was ill,” she told him. And barred the door, stripping
-off her dress while the maid prepared a dose of aromatics
-and bathed her head with eau de cologne.</p>
-
-<p>Since Gloria Cromwell appeared only in the first act,
-dying for exigencies of plot off-stage—the remainder of
-the performance went as usual.</p>
-
-<p>But that night, as once before, Goring tossed between
-sheets of finest linen and did not close her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning she sent for Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>He came, solicitous for her health, relieved by the fact
-<a name="png.117" id="png.117" href="#png.117"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>107<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>that her aberration of the night before had not in any
-way affected the play’s reception.</p>
-
-<p>She met him, cool and smiling and looking very beautiful
-in a purple mandarin suit, the skirt of which was
-weighted with wicked Chinese embroidery. Her tapering
-white hands were ringless and low-heeled Chinese
-slippers made her look less tall. Greeting him, her hand
-clung to his.</p>
-
-<p>She led the way into the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph,” she began, and for the first time a rather
-plaintive note crept into her voice. “’Dolph, I’m unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>In the act of lighting the omnipresent cigar, he looked
-up, astonished. “Why—what’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m unhappy—and for a reason you may not quite
-understand. But you can help make things right. You
-can make them <em>all</em> right, if you will.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, Jane, you know me! Anything I can do—”</p>
-
-<p>“It has to do with the play.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fire ahead!” He resumed the operation of lighting.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph, that Cromwell girl, I simply can’t work with
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the process of lighting was arrested. “Can’t
-work with her? Good God!”</p>
-
-<p>She went to him, struck a match and, bending over,
-held it to the weed. He laughed comfortably, settled
-back—patted her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Sort of took the wind out of my sails, that did. Guess
-I didn’t get you straight, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down in a chair close to his, her back to the
-light.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.118" id="png.118" href="#png.118"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>108<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Please <em>do</em> get me right. I’ve nothing against her
-work, if <em>you</em> like it. It’s her personality that irritates
-me. There’s something—something snaky about her.
-She makes me nervous, makes me go off in my lines.
-You know, I told you in the beginning I didn’t like her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You said she was too homely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not any more. Why, she’s got a face like—like
-Fiske. One of those faces you don’t get at first, but with
-so much behind it that you come to like it better than the
-kind that’s just easy to look at.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve never been able to like her, ’Dolph. I’ve tried
-to because you seemed to, and you know how absolutely
-I depend on your judgment. But I can’t, that’s all.”
-She looked away and the suggestion of a sob sounded in
-the words.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg’s cigar revolved silently for a few moments,
-then he leaned forward. “What are we going to do
-about it?”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him, rested her white tapering hand
-pleadingly on his arm. “Get rid of her, ’Dolph.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get rid of her? Chuck her—just like that?” He
-snapped his fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“You can find some way that won’t hurt her feelings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Any way would be treating her rough.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have no difficulty getting another engagement.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg had been watching her over his cigar, round
-eyes studying her as they were in the habit of doing at
-rehearsal. Now he snapped the weed into the other
-corner of his mouth and smiled benignly. “That’s exactly
-why I ain’t letting her go.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.119" id="png.119" href="#png.119"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>109<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Jane Goring’s eyes met his with a delicate film of tears
-veiling them. “Don’t you want to please me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to please the public,” said Cleeburg curtly,
-“and they like her. Say—what’s got into you, Jane, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know! I don’t know!” A few tears, well
-chosen, rolled over onto her white cheeks. She brushed
-them away. “I’m just miserable, that’s all. Last night
-made me so nervous that I gave a perfectly rotten performance.
-Just playing opposite her gives me goose-flesh.
-Something about her chokes me and she seems to
-feel it—to revel in it. She’s a snake, ’Dolph, and I
-simply can’t stand her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me a pretty nice kid.”</p>
-
-<p>The hand resting on his arm traveled its length.
-“’Dolph,—isn’t it important that I should be happy in
-my work?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure!”</p>
-
-<p>“And if <em>she</em> makes me unhappy?”</p>
-
-<p>He gave her hand an understanding squeeze and a
-slow twinkle appeared in his round eyes. “Ah, come on,
-Jane! Talk straight to yourself! She’s made too big
-a hit to suit you. That’s what’s eating you.”</p>
-
-<p>For an instant Jane Goring said nothing. A hard line
-tightened her mouth, but quickly she dissipated it, replacing
-it with a deprecatory smile.</p>
-
-<p>“How absurd, ’Dolph!”</p>
-
-<p>“’Course it’s absurd. Don’t try to hog it, Jane! Give
-the kid a chance!” He dropped back, regarding his cigar
-contemplatively.</p>
-
-<p>“But I tell you that’s not the reason. I simply can’t
-<a name="png.120" id="png.120" href="#png.120"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>110<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>do anything if she’s in the company. She makes me
-bristle!”</p>
-
-<p>“Because she gets a big hand,” he put in. “Because
-she holds up the show!” He leaned forward once more.
-“And you honestly think I’d let a find like that get away
-from me?”</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring got to her feet. She had attempted a
-new rôle. She had pleaded. Now she would play in
-character. She would demand.</p>
-
-<p>“Either she goes—or I do,” came succinctly.</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense, Jane!” He, too, was on his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it. You can take your choice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, listen to me, old girl! You’ve got the public in
-the palm of your hand! You can afford to give the kid
-a square deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you—”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg’s round eyes narrowed. “What’re you trying
-to do—bully me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I want you to be fair.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am fair—to all concerned—”</p>
-
-<p>“Except to me who should be your first consideration.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Jane, you’ve had things pretty much your
-own way for a good many years. To me there wasn’t
-anybody—not one of ’em—in your class, either as actress
-or woman. Darned if I wasn’t even afraid of you!
-You’ve laid down the law more than once and I let you
-get away with it. But I can’t let you grab a find out of
-my hand, just like that!” Again the fingers snapped.
-“And I won’t!”</p>
-
-<p>The peacock’s shriek is the one unbeautiful thing about
-<a name="png.121" id="png.121" href="#png.121"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>111<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>him. It is blatant, raucous. It is crude as the rasp of
-iron on stone.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring’s voice rose belligerently to the housetops.
-“And I tell you, I won’t have her putting over that
-sob stuff on me! I won’t have it! I won’t have it!!”
-Stripped of iridescence, shorn of plumage, she stood facing
-him, nails grinding into palms, head thrust forward
-and upward, body rocking with the same fury that had
-seized her the night before.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg came to her, his round eyes softened and
-troubled, and put a hand on her shoulder. “Come, come,
-Jane! Don’t let’s do anything hasty. You and I’ve
-pulled along pretty comfortably for a long time. This
-thing is a tempest in a teapot. Let’s both think it over
-and have a nice calm talk later in the week.”</p>
-
-<p>When he had left, she settled down to weigh things
-and balance accounts.</p>
-
-<p>First and foremost, one discomforting thought was
-uppermost—she was losing her drag with her manager.
-It had been a revelation, amazing, most difficult to face,
-most delicate to handle. A few years ago ’Dolph Cleeburg
-would have been, as he had frankly stated, afraid
-to cross her. Hers would have been the last word, the
-decisive one. Such incidents as the cutting of scenes, the
-dismissing of actors to whom she objected, were occurrences
-not uncommon. Gloria Cromwell would simply
-have received her two weeks’ notice accompanied by a
-pleasing smile from Cleeburg and, since he liked her, a
-contract and promise to put her in his next production.
-To-day Jane Goring had met open defiance, backed with
-<a name="png.122" id="png.122" href="#png.122"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>112<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a twinge of ridicule even harder to endure. Not subtly
-but poignantly she felt it. That smile that had lurked
-in his eye when he called the green-eyed monster by its
-right name—there was no mistaking it.</p>
-
-<p>Just one course remained. Her brain sprang instantly
-to that—to tighten her hold on him in some other way so
-that her will would still be the lever directing their business
-association. At any cost it must be accomplished.
-Times innumerable he had begged her to procure a divorce
-from the husband with whom she did not live, and
-marry him. That answer was the obvious one to her
-present situation. It gave to Jane Goring the one safe
-solution.</p>
-
-<p>She did not hesitate, did not stop to weigh Bob’s wishes
-in the matter. Circumstances had pushed her to take
-the step. Without delay she must act and efficiently.
-Immediately and as quietly as possible the whole affair
-must be put through, consummated. It must not be the
-usual theatrical divorce, with blaring of trumpets and
-long columns in the newspapers. If it could be managed,
-she wanted no publicity at all. Just as her present marriage
-was unknown generally, so would she conduct her
-second venture.</p>
-
-<p>Having arrived at a solution she called up her lawyer,
-made an appointment and drove downtown.</p>
-
-<p>Two hours later she left his office, a shadow across
-her eyes, her face drawn and a bit haggard. The thing
-was not so easy as she had anticipated—impossible, in
-fact, in New York as matters now stood. They had
-thrashed it out—viewed it from every conceivable angle—to
-reach a conclusion that placed the final decision
-<a name="png.123" id="png.123" href="#png.123"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>113<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>entirely in Bob McNaughton’s hands. Unless Goring were
-willing to leave the state long enough to establish a residence,
-Bob was the one who must sue. He must be
-located, which would involve no great difficulty, and then,
-granted his consent could be gained, it would take the
-red tape of the law an indefinite time to unwind.</p>
-
-<p>What worried her was the fear that Bob might take
-this occasion to be nasty. The long silence since he had
-gone West made it difficult to gauge his attitude toward
-her. More than likely he would refuse and cause her no
-end of trouble.</p>
-
-<p>When she received word from her attorney that,
-through his former paper, Bob had been located with the
-Graystone Photoplay Company in Los Angeles, she decided
-to write instead of trusting to the cold terms of a
-legal request.</p>
-
-<p>Very carefully she worded the letter, making it most
-friendly but with the impersonal friendliness of those
-whose lives have never intimately touched. Since she
-had not heard from him in over two years, she wrote, she
-was quite sure he had by this time come to regard her as
-a sort of mythical being. Their separation had become
-so complete that a request she was about to make would,
-she knew, be nothing short of welcome to him. She
-wanted him to have his freedom. Herself—she no longer
-wanted to feel bound. She would always think of him
-as the best friend she ever had, but so many years had
-elapsed since their relationship had been that of husband
-and wife that it was rather a farce to keep up the pose
-any longer. She was sure he would agree in this. Knowing
-the New York laws he must realize that the move
-<a name="png.124" id="png.124" href="#png.124"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>114<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>would have to come from him. California, she understood,
-was more lenient, and since he was now a resident,
-it would be practically easy. She assumed that by
-this time his health had been entirely restored and wished
-him every good wish in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Before sending off the letter she gave it to her attorney.
-Stamped with his approval but with no slight misgivings
-on her part, it was registered and posted; then tossed
-carelessly into a bag with thousands of others—tear-stained,
-anxious, pleading, desperate, breathless, threatening,
-thumb-marked, hopeless—all jumbled as human
-emotions are jumbled together in this puzzling world.
-With these it was flung into a mass of other bags similarly
-laden and started on its way across the country.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile instead of resuming their discussion, ’Dolph
-Cleeburg had diplomatically avoided seeing his star. For
-several days he stayed away from the theater and Goring
-was forced at every performance to endure the girl’s
-entrance—the applause that apparently had become a
-habit.</p>
-
-<p>The climax came when one of the Sunday papers featured
-the young actress’s picture on the same page as the
-star’s. That was the proverbial straw.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring scorned any further attempt to bring Cleeburg
-round to her way of thinking. If he was afraid to
-see her, was determined to keep Cromwell in the cast—very
-well, she would read him a lesson. She would prove
-to him who was the motive power that kept his play going.
-She would show him in whose hands lay his success
-or failure. Incidentally she would resort to the very
-feminine ruse of playing on his sympathy.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.125" id="png.125" href="#png.125"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>115<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-At seven-thirty Monday evening she sent word to the
-theater that she was ill and could not appear.</p>
-
-<p>As she had anticipated, the stage manager phoned
-wildly, begging for a word with her. The situation was
-terrible! Terrible! She must come! They were sold
-out!</p>
-
-<p>Goring smiled. It was just what she had looked for.
-No understudy for her had been engaged so far. It was
-a matter with which they never concerned themselves,
-for no one could have replaced Goring with the public.
-The theater would have to remain dark—Cleeburg would
-have his lesson. Madame was very ill, her maid replied,
-too ill even to answer the telephone. The stage manager
-urged. He pleaded. In vain! A few minutes later
-Cleeburg himself was on the wire. Couldn’t she drag
-herself downtown? She must! To him she spoke, her
-voice so weak that it could scarcely be heard. She had
-tried—impossible. Her heart— And then the maid
-once more took the wire. Cleeburg was frantic. It
-meant a refund—the loss of thousands. He almost wept
-into the phone. At the psychological moment the maid
-told him madame had fainted.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring slept that night with a smile on her lips.</p>
-
-<p>She woke up in the morning to read that at half an
-hour’s notice Gloria Cromwell had gone on in her place—and
-hit Broadway straight between the eyes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter V"><a name="png.126" id="png.126" href="#png.126"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>116<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Some</span> months later word came from the West that
-Bob McNaughton had secured a divorce. There had
-been no personal reply to her letter. Calmly and quietly
-he had complied with her request, his lawyer merely notifying
-hers that Mrs. McNaughton’s wishes would be
-carried out to the letter. No possible way had she of
-gauging how he had taken it, no possible manner of knowing
-how, after all the years, such a request had affected
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Her relief was like a gale of wind sweeping over the
-city after a stifling day. For months she had been trembling
-on the brink of terrifying uncertainty. The day
-following Gloria Cromwell’s amazing success had found
-her really ill, so ill that had she remained away from the
-theater that night there would have been justification.
-She was stunned, utterly bewildered, sickened to the
-soul by the trick she told herself Fate had played her.</p>
-
-<p>Over and over she read the papers, as one gazes fascinated
-over the edge of a dizzying precipice. It was incredible!
-And worse still, it might easily have been
-avoided. She might have accepted the girl, made her a
-protégée, gracefully posed as having discovered a young
-genius and pushed her to the fore. She saw all that
-now. And—further irony—it would probably have redounded
-to her credit, a neat bit of self-advertisement.
-As things stood she had made herself a laughing-stock.
-She could not bear the thought of it.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.127" id="png.127" href="#png.127"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>117<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-On the verge of hysteria, she dragged herself out of
-bed and dressed for the street. When her maid dared
-to protest, she turned on the girl ready to strangle her.</p>
-
-<p>Walking rapidly westward she veered north when she
-reached the Drive. It was a dull day, no clarity of air
-to fill the lungs, no shimmer of sunlight through the
-heavy clouds. Skeleton trees reached gaunt arms to the
-sky. Thick mud covered the ground which a month before
-had shown green and living. There was no cheer
-anywhere. Across the river the Palisades rose misty and
-unreal, as if they had never been more than mirages.
-Miles she made, on and on, seeking some way to still
-the terror voice in her breast.</p>
-
-<p>That night she drove down to the theater with a sense
-of dread. But whatever the flurry of gossip backstage,
-it ceased with her arrival. Members of the company inquired
-concerning her health—that was all. While she
-was dressing a knock came. The maid opened and the
-Cromwell girl stood in the doorway. She took a rather
-timid step forward.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so glad you’re back, Miss Goring.” She spoke
-with a note of sincerity unmistakable, and in her wide
-eyes was a look of pleading as of unspoken apology for
-what she had done. “I just had to come and tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” Goring replied and for her life could
-not say more. Her hatred was a living, searing thing.</p>
-
-<p>The coup she had made in absenting herself accomplished
-its end. Gloria Cromwell was withdrawn from
-the cast—to be featured by Cleeburg in a new production!</p>
-
-<p>Anxiously Goring waited for some reference to the
-<a name="png.128" id="png.128" href="#png.128"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>118<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>turn events had taken. None came, not even when the
-girl left the company. Little ’Dolph seemed to be full
-of the joy of living these days—cigar more active than
-ever, smile more genial, himself more generous to the
-down-and-outers and brimful of plans. In the weeks
-that followed he never spoke of their misunderstanding.
-Evidently his admiration had not in any way decreased.
-She had chosen, she concluded, the psychological moment
-to gain her freedom.</p>
-
-<p>When news came that it was consummated the weight
-of uncertainty lifted. She felt buoyant, with a clear
-course to steer ahead. Not that she was at all eager to
-marry her manager. But since it was the one sure way
-to secure her future, it must be gone through.</p>
-
-<p>She will always have reason to remember the bright
-spring day when she dropped into his office to break the
-news. For some time he had known Bob was suing.</p>
-
-<p>“Glad to hear it,” he remarked when she told him
-everything was settled. Then he swung round in his chair
-and gazed out of the window at a pair of fleecy, fluttering
-clouds in the very blue heavens.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I took your advice, Jane,” he added casually.</p>
-
-<p>“What advice?”</p>
-
-<p>“Remember telling me once to make that Cromwell
-girl change her name? I went ahead and did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! Changed it for her. She’s Mrs. ’Dolph now.”
-And he grinned happily.</p>
-
-<p>She understood then why he had been grinning in just
-that way for a number of weeks. Had she not been so
-absorbed in self, she would have noticed that his smile
-<a name="png.129" id="png.129" href="#png.129"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>119<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was gayer—different from any he had ever worn. It
-made his face quite boyish.</p>
-
-<p>The decline of Goring after that was gradual. As a
-matter of fact, it could have been dated actually from
-the night of her non-appearance. Upon the heels of that
-night followed a change, scarcely noticeable at first, in
-the sea of eyes and lips and hands to which she looked
-for signs of approval. Slowly—oh very slowly—there
-crept into the audience’s response to her a quality mechanical,
-automatic almost, as if largely force of habit,
-a quality that presaged the beginning of the end.
-Whether in herself or the public she could not tell. It
-was nothing tangible, nothing definite. But something
-had happened. The fine thread by which an actress
-chains herself to popular favor had snapped. In vain
-she told herself it was just nervous imagination. It made
-her choke with fear.</p>
-
-<p>One thing Jane Goring had failed to take into consideration:
-Than the highest rung of the ladder there is
-nothing higher; and unless one dies having reached the
-top, there must be a descent. Youth pushes its way upward
-relentlessly, and those who have been must make
-way for those who will be. A ladder with top rung overcrowded
-would of necessity break.</p>
-
-<p>Had she possessed the art of Bernhardt or the intellect
-of Fiske—that magnetic quality of soul that charms
-with the mellowing years—she could have laughed at
-time. But her ability consisted chiefly in a technique,
-the accumulated result of stage tricks that only up to a
-certain point can present itself as youth.</p>
-
-<p>With an eagerness that approached hysteria she reached
-<a name="png.130" id="png.130" href="#png.130"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>120<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>out for the adulation that for years she had accepted without
-question as her due. The thirst for it was the thirst
-of fever. Even the tame robins she had always regarded
-as more or less of a joke, she began to seek them as they
-in the past had sought her. The desire to be seen about
-pursued by youth; to lunch and tea at fashionable restaurants
-in their company; to hold the center of the
-public eye at any cost, became a mania. It was as grim
-an effort as that of a doomed man to cling to the last moments
-of life.</p>
-
-<p>And when a year or so later came the inevitable day
-when Cleeburg said to her—trying to speak gently—</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Jane, let’s talk horse sense. No use your trying
-to play a chicken! God knows you ain’t one!”—</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring went home, flung open her bedroom windows
-letting in an uncompromising flood of sunlight, sat
-down at her dressing-table and looked herself squarely in
-the face. The whiteness—smooth, glowing—which had
-made her skin like gardenia petals in the old days had
-gone long since. She had grown accustomed to simulating
-it with modern triumphs of the beauty parlor. But
-sitting there with God’s spotlight turned full on her, it was
-not the realization of muscles sagging as if pulled down
-by the hand of Time that made her shudder. It was not
-the gooselike shriveling of her throat when she turned
-her head that made her eyes shut with pain. It was the
-knowledge of ebbing self-confidence, the face to face admission
-that her day was done. From now on it would
-be—“Let’s go to see Jane Goring. She used to be—”
-or “Don’t let’s go to see Jane Goring. She used to be—”</p>
-
-<p>But always “She used to be—” Always that.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.131" id="png.131" href="#png.131"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>121<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-There was no quibbling, no splitting of hairs. She
-knew! And with the acknowledgment she rose to her
-feet, a great overwhelming defiance seizing her. She
-would not let age get her. She would not go downhill.
-She would not become a has-been! Rather would she
-quit the stage now and let them say she had retired in
-her prime. Money she had—an income larger than she
-needed. She would cut herself off from the theater entirely;
-for looking in at the window of a house of cheer
-whose door is barred—that would be unbearable. She
-would have to travel, to seek diversion elsewhere. Then
-suddenly like the lifting of a rosy veil on barren waste,
-she saw her career a thing of the past and herself wandering
-down the declining years of life—alone. The desert
-youth takes no count of—aloneness—stretched bleak and
-endless, a reach of sand with no oasis to slake the thirst,
-no shade to cool the soul.</p>
-
-<p>And there swamped her with a sickening sense of need
-the longing for that bulwark of days gone, the one thing
-that endures, the one thing that counts not success nor
-failure, that survives when the ladder itself lies crumbled
-in ruins. Giving it no conscious name, she knew
-only that had Bob been there he would have shouldered
-the burden of this cold hour of facing truth. He would
-somehow have contrived to make it easier for her to hold
-her head high and continue to look down, even though
-that look must be directed toward the sunset.</p>
-
-<p>Bob, whose adoration had helped her always over the
-difficult places, Bob would to-day and through all the
-days to come have stood by to help her bridge this most
-difficult place of all.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.132" id="png.132" href="#png.132"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>122<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Bob!! Well, why not?</p>
-
-<p>Many hours she paced the floor, brows drawn together,
-hands clenched as if grappling with a flesh and blood
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>The peacock’s strut is slow and calculating. He lowers
-his head only to gaze upon his own reflection in the pool.
-To shed the trait that has made him world famous is to
-lay his gorgeous plumage in the dust.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tb">The train steamed into the Santa Fé Station at Los
-Angeles. A woman descended, the sort to whom one
-gives a second glance in spite of tired lines round the eyes
-and little crinkles at their corners. Gowned in the latest
-cut of blue serge, with a tan traveling cloak swung across
-her arm, she cried New York the instant one laid eyes
-on her.</p>
-
-<p>She put her maid and bags into a cab, and sent them
-to the Ambassador Hotel. Stepping into another, she
-told the driver to take her to the Graystone Studio.</p>
-
-<p>It was an afternoon of late June. The languorous
-breath of California summer had kissed the foliage into
-mammoth bloom. They drove through lazy, sunny
-streets, somnolent under warm skies, into that vortex
-of activity modern commerce has planted in the midst of
-beauty, the frame of artifice sprung up mushroom-like in
-the very heart of Nature.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring descended at a row of small buildings that
-barricaded huge ones roofed with glass. She made her
-way past men and women with faces ghastly white and
-lips preternaturally red, mounted the steps and asked
-for Mr. McNaughton. The attendant wanted her name
-<a name="png.133" id="png.133" href="#png.133"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>123<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>but she insisted upon being announced merely as a friend
-from the East. She had given Bob no warning of her
-visit and her eyes followed the man with a look half
-curious, half eager as he opened a door and disappeared
-along a corridor lined with offices.</p>
-
-<p>He came back presently and shut the door. Mr. McNaughton
-had gone home. She asked his address quite
-as a matter of course—in a way that brooked no refusal,
-and once more was driven out of bedlam to the quiet of
-drowsy green streets, past the beautiful Hollywood homes
-of picture stars who yesterday were unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the sunset she went, melting amethystine into
-violet night. Shadows stretched across the road, cool
-and mellow, and a soft sense of fragrant tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>She lay back, closing her eyes. When she opened them
-she had turned a corner and was pulling up before the
-lawn of a rambling Queen Anne cottage set snugly in a
-mass of shrubbery. She gave a little start, pleasure surmounting
-surprise. It looked very much as though Bob
-McNaughton had found time to make his own career.</p>
-
-<p>A gate with a lantern over it opened on a bricked
-path that led to the house. She paused there and looked
-in. Under a tree sat a man she scarcely knew. His
-hair was quite gray—iron gray—but the face under it
-was full and ruddy, the eyes keen, the mouth relaxed
-and smiling. The hand that held a newspaper which he
-no longer read was firm and capable. A hand accustomed
-to direct, the hand of a man sure of himself! Bob, who
-was almost fifty, looked less than forty!</p>
-
-<p>As she stood staring at him, the house door opened
-and a slim figure was silhouetted against the light from
-<a name="png.134" id="png.134" href="#png.134"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>124<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>within. The figure stepped to the lawn, light shining
-through masses of soft brown hair like a halo, eyes glowing,
-red lips parted in eager welcome, and with a cry full
-of sweetness held out something to Bob McNaughton.
-He gave a laugh, sprang to his feet, bent down to the
-eager lips, then caught the something swiftly in his arms—with
-infinite tenderness hugged it close against his
-heart. And it gave a gurgle of delight.</p>
-
-<p>Jane Goring turned and went back to the waiting taxi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Grease-paint"><a name="png.135" id="png.135" href="#png.135"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>125<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>GREASE-PAINT</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Realism"><i>REALISM</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>There is no such thing—either in life or the theater. For
-what is real to one is unreal to another. The tenement of
-the stage is real to those who live in drawing-rooms—the
-drawing-room, real to those who know only the squalor of
-tenements. That which seizes our imaginations with grim
-claws, shakes our emotions with sordid passions we have
-never experienced—we call reality. That which is uncertain,
-sad, elusive, delicate—we call unreality. Both are
-life!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.137" id="png.137" href="#png.137"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>127<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>GREASE-PAINT</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">She</span> had weary eyes—eyes with the weight of centuries
-of knowledge upon them—eyes that could no
-longer open wide with astonishment at anything life
-might hold. The lashes were so long, so dark and straight
-that they were like a veil of night shadowing the grayness
-beneath. Her gaze came through, inviting you to
-penetrate, urging you by its very weariness to try to
-read the story those eyes might tell.</p>
-
-<p>A slow smile lifted the corners of her mouth, then let
-them droop before the smile was really born. Her walk
-as she trailed from the first line of show girls in her wide-spread
-bird of paradise costume was as measured as the
-muse of tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>And yet she was only twenty-six.</p>
-
-<p>That was Naomi Stokes, who counted numberless acquaintances
-but few friends; who knew many men better
-than they cared to be known but few as well as she might
-have cared to know them.</p>
-
-<p>Broadway was a playground to Naomi but she had
-long since learned that in the game played there, none
-are winners. Time is the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">croupier</i> who rakes in the
-spoils and at Time Naomi had ceased to smile even wearily.
-He stood with his long arm suspended, ready, it
-seemed to her, to pounce upon each hour she might hold
-dear, jealous of all she had crowded into one short life.
-Man she knew too well to fear but the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">croupier</span> with
-whom she had gambled so long, she dared not look in
-<a name="png.138" id="png.138" href="#png.138"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>128<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the face. And as one sings in the dark to silence fear,
-so she had developed a philosophy of life which she held
-close in those moments when she might be tempted to
-take measure of things. She could not afford to pause
-long nor to think much.</p>
-
-<p>Of that glittering section which stretches like some bejeweled
-recumbent queen of the night from Forty-second
-to Fiftieth Streets, Naomi was such an integral part that
-if a night passed without her appearance at one or another
-of the tightly wedged restaurants, their habitués
-wondered. When she moved between rows of tables with
-her long-lashed smile sweeping with lazy insolence the
-whole room, those who did not know asked who she was.
-Her name—in the theater merely that of another show
-girl—had for so long swung from lip to lip in the after-theater
-life of the White Way that soon it would of necessity
-be relegated to that past which hangs so cruelly over
-the present.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi knew this. And more than once, alone in her
-tiny two-room apartment and in spite of her philosophy,
-she wondered what would come after. A shrug avails
-little in the midday glare of reality.</p>
-
-<p>It was on a night following such a day—when the
-dregs of life had tasted particularly bitter—that Naomi
-and four others went to supper with Marshall Kent.</p>
-
-<p>Kent having more money than he could spend enjoyed
-spending it on Broadway. Having nothing better to do,
-he had never looked for anything better. He and
-Naomi were good pals in their way. He liked to stare
-through her lashes at the puzzle beneath. Most women
-were so revealing.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.139" id="png.139" href="#png.139"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>129<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-But to-night she resented his set gaze, the ironic twitch
-of his thin lip. After her nasty, self-disclosing day she
-wanted a friend. Some one to whom she could be something
-more than heavy eyes and auburn-tinted hair,
-some one with whom she could share thoughts—and
-fears. But Marshy Kent had never given her friendship.
-No man had.</p>
-
-<p>All through supper she was silent, with a hard, shell-like
-silence her companions could not break. Finally
-she pushed her plate to one side and her glance sifted
-the smoke-thickened air.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the table, in a space so small that they might
-have been squirrels chasing their tails, the crowd jostled
-and elbowed and glared at one another in an effort to
-keep time to a stamping, hilarious jazz. In the doorway
-beyond, another crowd jostled and elbowed and glared
-at one another and fought for the privilege of slipping
-crisp greenbacks to supercilious head-waiters. Through
-the befogged atmosphere the lights with their shades of
-brilliant yellow and black glimmered faintly. At the
-tables and on the dance floor jaded New Yorkers and
-curious out-of-towners pretended to enjoy themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi swept it with a noxious sense of disgust. Suddenly
-it seemed a ton weight, as if the ceiling like some
-infernal machine were descending upon her. She lifted
-her shoulders and her head went back. Oh, for a breath
-of real fresh air!</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter, my dear?” put in Kent. “Off
-your feed?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” She brought her eyes toward him, then they
-drifted back to the crowd at the door. “I was just
-<a name="png.140" id="png.140" href="#png.140"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>130<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>thinking what a joke they are on themselves, fighting
-like that to get into a stuffy old hole where they’re going
-to be held up and fleeced.”</p>
-
-<p>Kent laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you worth the price of admission? You’re
-one of the exhibits, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>She shrugged.</p>
-
-<p>He looked down at the easy movement of the white
-shoulders under the narrow beaded straps that were
-the sole support of her black gown.</p>
-
-<p>“Any one with the eyes and arms of Naomi will always
-count,” he consoled.</p>
-
-<p>She pulled from his gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what’s the use! You know I don’t matter to
-them any more than to you. You play around with me
-here because you haven’t any better way to pass your
-time. And they, poor idiots—”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove, you <em>are</em> off your feed!”</p>
-
-<p>She turned her back on his low, impudent chuckle.</p>
-
-<p>His tolerant eye traveled over the shoulder turned
-from him to the hot, wild mass clamoring at the doorway.
-Suddenly he became alert and a second later was on his
-feet, without apology pushing his way round the dance
-floor. Naomi saw him make for a man with a big frame
-and graying mustache who lingered impotently at the
-rear of the crowd. Kent reached out, grabbed his hand
-and with absolute disregard of intervening humanity,
-wrung it as if he never wanted to let it go. She wondered
-vaguely what it would be like to have some one
-as glad to see her. He passed a word to the head-waiter.
-The red velvet rope dropped as if by magic
-<a name="png.141" id="png.141" href="#png.141"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>131<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and, escorted by Kent, the party was led to a table a
-few paces from where she sat.</p>
-
-<p>The man glanced about with the curiosity, half
-amused, half critical of the sight-seeing stranger. Back
-of him came a girl of twenty-one or so with eager gray
-eyes a thousand years younger than Naomi’s, white
-teeth showing through parted lips and hair the dense,
-dusky black of an Indian’s. At her side walked a young
-man. As he passed Naomi, their glances met. They
-locked with that odd, unintentional arresting which
-means that two out of a vast throng have momentarily
-become individuals. Naomi’s slow gaze followed as he
-went on and it seemed to her that in the allotting of
-places, he deliberately chose the one facing her.</p>
-
-<p>Kent hovered over his friend with beaming enthusiasm.
-The ironic twitch of his thin lips was gone.
-The somewhat sagging shoulders of the man who keeps
-flesh down by massage rather than exercise had straightened.
-He scribbled his address. He took theirs. He
-admonished the waiter to treat them well, received that
-gentleman’s reassuring nod, and apologized finally for
-having to return to his own table.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi watched the younger man’s face as Marshall
-Kent sat down beside her. No—she had not been mistaken.
-She who knew so well how to read men’s eyes
-saw in his dark ones a look of intense, concentrated interest.
-The girl next to him saw it, too—and following
-it, thought she had never seen a face more fascinating
-than the one so smoothly white with its heavy-fringed
-lids and wave of glinting hair across the forehead. It
-was artificial, of course, but then you got used to that
-<a name="png.142" id="png.142" href="#png.142"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>132<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in New York. Her clear gray eyes went swiftly back
-to the dark ones that were fastened on Naomi’s.</p>
-
-<p>Kent pulled in his chair and settled back.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, little Marshy’s all het up!” one of the girls
-prompted. “Who’s your friend?”</p>
-
-<p>He was still beaming.</p>
-
-<p>“Fellow I haven’t seen since college—Alec McConnell.
-I was chucked. He went through to the finish.
-Mining engineer—big man in Idaho to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the other two?” queried Naomi casually.</p>
-
-<p>“The one staring at you, my dear, is the son of Bill
-Dixon of Dixonville, Oregon, big ranch owner, king of
-the apple country.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the girl?”</p>
-
-<p>“Little friend of his being chaperoned by McConnell
-and his wife. First visit to the big town. Is that all?”</p>
-
-<p>Once more Naomi’s lazy gaze met the one which had
-not moved from her and a faint flush surged under her
-thick pallor. As the lids fell, they covered something
-of the look of the gamester. It was a calculating look
-that weighed possibilities, one she was quick to hide.</p>
-
-<p>Kent detected it rather by instinct than otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, have a heart, Naomi!” he teased. “He’s so
-young and tender.”</p>
-
-<p>Naomi turned slowly in his direction. She said nothing
-for the moment but waited until the others got up
-to dance.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” He was intrigued by her silence. “Well,
-Eve, do we tempt young Adam to eat the apple or do
-we let him go home in peace and grow them?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we marry him,” she said quietly.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.143" id="png.143" href="#png.143"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>133<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Kent gave a start that brought him upright. Then
-he grinned, that drawling grin tinged with cynicism.
-The idea of any one marrying Naomi was amusing. She
-read his thought as plainly as if it had been put into
-words and her head went up suddenly. Though the
-lashes did not lift, a flash came through them. It was
-challenge.</p>
-
-<p>“You think I couldn’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Naomi—if you’ll pardon my brutality, I
-should say—not a chance in the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place I have a hunch that little girl, Nan
-Crawford, has a pretty firm hold on young Bill. It’s
-plain to see they’re crazy about each other. Darn
-sweet kid, too. I suspect she’s here trousseauing. In
-the second, Bill is probably more sophisticated than you
-or I imagine. This isn’t his first visit to New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to marry him just the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“And go out and live on an Oregon ranch, old dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed aloud this time.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d look sweet in a sunbonnet and gingham dress.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just what do you mean by that?” she asked, not
-quite sure what emphasis to put on “sweet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just this! You belong here as surely as grease-paint
-belongs in the theater.”</p>
-
-<p>“No woman belongs here,” she flung at him. “There
-isn’t a woman made who hasn’t the right to a home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why does she start here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because she’s young and a fool—in nine cases out
-of ten. Because she thinks this is living.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.144" id="png.144" href="#png.144"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>134<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Her face went hard as nails; with contempt, with
-futility, with derisive defiance of herself. And then
-furtively she pulled a bit of lace from her bag and
-dabbed at her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Kent’s mouth opened. It was the first time he had
-seen Naomi cry, had witnessed a woman’s tears without
-suspicion. Usually they meant that she wanted something.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mind me!” She met his astonishment with
-a swift effort to pull herself together. “I’ve had a rotten
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“How, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just the realization that to-night it’s this, and
-in two years it’ll be ham and eggs and a lunch counter—if
-I’m lucky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! I’ll just drop out and you’ll forget me—like
-the rest. What’s become of Emy Steward—and
-Cora Greene—and Ray Granville? You don’t even
-know and you used to give parties for them like this
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, knowing she spoke the truth. Like
-comets across a glittering sky those beautiful girls had
-gleamed and gone. Gone when their beauty had gone,
-vanished into the night that engulfed them, too proud
-or too forgotten to accept the humiliation of charity.</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t last long, boy,” she added grimly. “And
-I’m one of those who can’t keep on fooling herself. I’ve
-had a beast of a day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hence the ranch idea in Oregon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” A queer twist lifted her lips—then dropped
-<a name="png.145" id="png.145" href="#png.145"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>135<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>them. “Inspiration, I call it. The Limited that will
-carry me away from the poorhouse!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll never put it over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sporting enough to lay odds on it, Marshy old dear?”</p>
-
-<p>In all justice to Marshall Kent, it must be admitted
-that under normal conditions he would not have taken
-her up. But the restaurant happened to be one of the
-many which prided itself that prohibition meant nothing
-in its life and the silver flask reposing on Marshy’s
-hip had been refilled on frequent visits to a side chamber
-just off the main room. He looked out of the corner
-of an eye at Naomi stepping in where angels might fear
-to tread and the flushed, grudging admiration of gamester
-for gamester darted in the glance.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re on!” he said.<!-- TN: period invisible --></p>
-
-<p>“And you’ll keep off!” she urged, a bit breathless.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—I’ll give you ground. What stakes?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I lose—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll make it a hundred perfectos, best brand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nice and impersonal!” observed Marshy, head to
-one side, now well into the game. “And if you win?”</p>
-
-<p>“The handsomest wedding present in town!”</p>
-
-<p>“I call that odds in your favor.”</p>
-
-<p>With a faint smile she leaned nearer, hand outstretched
-to clinch it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on! What’s the time limit?”</p>
-
-<p>“When he starts west I start with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a go. Only don’t expect any help from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t—except an introduction when he stops here
-on the way out.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.146" id="png.146" href="#png.146"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>136<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“What makes you think he’ll stop?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he will. He’ll find some excuse to.”</p>
-
-<p>And he did, of course. Waveringly, as he drew nearer
-the magnet of her eyes, he paused and tapped Marshy’s
-shoulder. The latter sprang up.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Kent, we’re such a bunch of rubes—I thought
-you might recommend the best show in town for to-morrow
-night.”</p>
-
-<p>Naomi waited as Marshy considered.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you send your friend to ours?” she suggested
-in a low voice apparently to him alone.</p>
-
-<p>“What one is that?” asked the friend, flashing eagerly
-into the breach.</p>
-
-<p>Kent introduced him then to the upraised eyes round
-the table. But he saw only Naomi’s veiled ones. She
-gave him the name of the musical comedy and the
-theater—nothing more. And as he bowed and rejoined
-the older man and the girl with the dusky hair standing
-in the doorway, Marshall Kent dropped into his chair
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick work, Naomi,” he murmured, “and Machiavellian
-method! One more move from you and the apple
-wouldn’t have looked nearly so inviting.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.147" id="png.147" href="#png.147"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>137<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="noindent">My dear Miss Stokes,</p>
-
-<p>This will be the fourth time I’ve seen the show and the
-third time I’ve asked you to go to supper. If you tell me
-you can’t again, I’ll think you don’t want to—and quit. No,
-on the whole, I won’t quit. I’ve never done that in my
-life. I’ll just hang round and bother you till you come, so
-better come to-night. I’ll be waiting for you.</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="yours2">Sincerely,</span><br
- /><span class="smc">William Dixon</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Naomi lifted the head-dress of paradise that swayed
-round her face and handed it absently to the dresser,
-still concentrating on the note which had been delivered
-at the theater by special messenger.</p>
-
-<p>“Sincerely, William Dixon.” Numberless notes she
-had received during her show girl career, but never one
-signed just like that. “Sincerely.” Probably it was
-a card index of the man.</p>
-
-<p>She laid it down speculatively, the look of Eve through
-her lashes. Three nights she had put him off. Yes,
-the apple might safely be held a bit closer to-night—but
-not too close.</p>
-
-<p>He was waiting just within the stage door, his face
-eager with anticipation, his hands in the pockets of his
-overcoat. As she came up the stairs that led from the
-chorus dressing-rooms under the stage, he stepped forward
-and both hands came out of the pockets.</p>
-
-<p>She clasped the right one, smiling up at him, and
-<a name="png.148" id="png.148" href="#png.148"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>138<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>his frank eyes shone. He piloted her to a car at the
-curb. As the door slammed with the sudden intimacy
-of shutting out the rest of the world, he leaned forward,
-the glow of his eyes reflected in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Gee, this is great! I was afraid you’d turn me
-down again.” He did not wait for an answer but
-crowded into the next few moments all the hours of
-thought which her refusal of his invitations had lengthened
-into days. “You must have thought me an awful
-rube, staring at you the way I did. I’ve been afraid it
-made you sore at me. Did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“No woman thinks a man’s a rube for staring at her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t help it. I just couldn’t take my eyes off
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>In the shadows of the car she smiled softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny, how I walked into that place, cussing the
-smoke and noise and then saw you. Lord, suppose I
-hadn’t gone!”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled again.</p>
-
-<p>He went on.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve seen me every night in the first row at the
-theater, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’ve seen you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I think it’s a punk show,” his teeth flashed in
-a quick grin. “So now you know why I came.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him from under weighty lids. As if he
-had to tell her!</p>
-
-<p>“One lone show girl can’t be worth a speculator’s
-ticket four times,” she prompted.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s worth lots more than that. Thank you for
-coming to-night.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.149" id="png.149" href="#png.149"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>139<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-His voice turned serious. He tucked the robe into
-her corner of the seat for no other reason than the
-magnet of bending over her, of breathing the faint fragrance
-that wafted from her like an aura. It was the
-ghost of grease-paint and flowers, of powder and perfume—that
-strange, exotic pot-pourri of the theater that
-clings to its women like essence of old Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>She gazed down at the bent head, at the hands that
-brushed hers with a boyish lingering as they drew the
-robe closer. How young he seemed! She felt for the
-moment much as a man of the world feels when within
-the scope of his worldliness there appears a radiant
-young girl. There was the same thrill of interest, the
-same desire to be the one privileged to open up avenues
-of possibilities. A man on Broadway who had something
-to learn! It was like finding a canary in a cage
-of monkeys!</p>
-
-<p>The strange exuberance was with her as they made
-their way among crowded tables to the one he had reserved.
-Amber satin clung to her supple body and long
-jet earrings almost touched her shoulders. She was
-conscious that in the attention she drew, she was giving
-him the sense of pride every man feels when the
-clatter of forks stops momentarily in tribute to the
-woman with him. But more than that, she had a sudden
-personal satisfaction in his pride and a curve softer
-than any her lips had known for years lifted their corners.</p>
-
-<p>His tanned skin and eyes that glowed seemed lifted
-straight to the sun rising above the mountains. She
-took a deep breath, as if from him she could get the
-<a name="png.150" id="png.150" href="#png.150"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>140<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>stimulus of all outdoors. He looked at the slope of her
-white shoulders, at the droop of her shadowed eyes, as
-if in her were epitomized the lure of the city.</p>
-
-<p>She leaned across the table just as he did. Their
-hands almost met. Naomi had long, languid fingers
-that invited the touch.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re so—different,” he began. “So awfully different.
-I guess that’s no news to you, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“So are you—different.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—from any man I’ve ever known. You’re like
-fresh air. The others are—stuffy—like a room that’s
-been shut tight.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave an embarrassed<!-- TN: original reads "embarassed" -->, pleased laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me about yourself,” she suggested, lifting the
-lever best calculated to open up the dam of formality
-where the male of the species is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing much to tell about me.”</p>
-
-<p>And he proceeded to tell it while they went through
-two courses. She got a vivid picture of Bill Dixon, a
-colt straining always against harness of any kind; a
-lad loathing routine to such an extent that he had quit
-college rather than submit to it; a young man, impulsive
-as the wind, more tied to the picturesqueness of
-ranch life than to the business of it; an only son worshipped
-by the man who had paved the way, who was
-both father and mother to him.</p>
-
-<p>He bent nearer to the white hands. “Now tell me
-about you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would take too long. And if you find out all
-<a name="png.151" id="png.151" href="#png.151"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>141<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>there is to know to-night, you won’t want to see me
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t I, though! Besides—I could never find out
-all there is to know about you.”</p>
-
-<p>They danced. He was not a good dancer but as his
-arm went round her and his dark head bent to her
-glinting one, she felt herself completely encompassed.
-His bigness, his nearness, gave her a swift sense of
-helplessness that frankly frightened her. The reins of
-the future must be held in her cool hands, not in his.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to guess your age,” she announced when
-they were once more at opposite sides of the table, “if
-you’ll promise not to guess mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t give a darn how old you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m not as old as all that. But you—you’re
-twenty-five.”</p>
-
-<p>“Next month. Bet, at that, I’m older than you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are,” she lied, without a quiver.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’re the sort of woman who’ll always be young—even
-when you’re wrinkled and gray. It’s your coloring,”
-he went on, promptly contradicting himself.
-“That wonderful white skin—I’ve never seen skin so
-white—and the sheen of your hair and those eyes that
-make a fellow sort of—sort of want to jump in.”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes smiled at him with infinite promise.</p>
-
-<p>“I think we’re going to like each other,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I know one of us does already,” he grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a dear,” she vouchsafed.</p>
-
-<p>They saw each other every day after that. He managed
-to bring it about, either for luncheon or early
-<a name="png.152" id="png.152" href="#png.152"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>142<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>dinner or after the theater. At least he thought he was
-the one who brought it about. And as Naomi opened
-his impetuous notes, or the boxes that held great clusters
-of flowers ordered with awkward disregard of everything
-but quantity, the Eve-smile lifted the corners of
-her mouth and her eyes looked a trifle less tired.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally they drove out to the country for the
-day. But the countryside near New York rather
-amused him.</p>
-
-<p>“It all seems sort of puny,” he would say as she sat
-with face carefully veiled from a too-revealing sun. “I’m
-used to snow peaks that touch the sky and trees so high
-that when you’re on the mountain trails above them,
-you look down and can’t see where they begin.” He
-turned from the inadequate hills to the more absorbing
-scenery of a woman’s face misted by a fluttering veil.
-“No, sir! When I come east, I don’t want this. I want
-New York—the excitement, the thrill of it. I want—you.”</p>
-
-<p>It was said softly. His voice held the word like a
-caress and, looking up, she read in his eyes what she had
-read in many men’s—except that added to it was the
-new element of awe.</p>
-
-<p>That new element became infinitely dear to her. She
-let him keep it. Except when their hands brushed accidentally—or
-so it seemed to him—they did not touch
-save for the clasp that helped her into a cab or expressed
-“good-night.” The warmth of his arms closed round
-her only in the dance. She met the light of his eyes
-with her own only across restaurant tables. No debutante
-could have held herself more aloof—perhaps not
-<a name="png.153" id="png.153" href="#png.153"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>143<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>quite so much so. But Naomi did not play the ingénue<!-- TN: original reads "ingenue" -->.
-It was her world knowledge—world old—that fascinated
-him, that made her—as he had said—different.</p>
-
-<p>She amused him with cryptic remarks about the men
-and women who came and went, with stories of familiar
-characters on Broadway, with a touch of cynicism, a
-touch of pessimism, that lack of faith in human nature
-which comes with disillusionment in self. But this,
-young Bill Dixon did not know nor count. He merely
-tossed up his shaggy head with the deep, long laugh that
-makes the whole body tingle and begged for more.</p>
-
-<p>She managed to fill his days with joy of her when
-she was with him, with longing for her when she cleverly
-denied him her companionship. She was the hundred
-women to one man which her training had taught her
-to be, knowing that to him she would thus become the
-one women. She caught hold of his imagination and
-twisted and played with it as a cat with a ball of twine,
-tossing it this way and that but always with paw poised
-to pounce.</p>
-
-<p>And simultaneously there flared into her own soul an
-eagerness of which Naomi Stokes had long since counted
-herself incapable. It was as if that brown-eyed, ardent
-gaze held her with the same absorbing quality of his
-arms when they danced. She began to look for it—jealously
-as if it might escape her.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile in a hotel room that was just four walls,
-another pair of gray eyes, not veiled, not mysterious,
-watched for him more and more anxiously, saw him less
-and less frequently. The girl from the West whose first
-visit to New York was to have opened up a fairyland
-<a name="png.154" id="png.154" href="#png.154"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>144<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of adventure for her and the boy she loved—the visit
-they had planned together—found its streets empty
-caverns at the foot of towering cliffs, saw in hotels and
-theaters and restaurants to which McConnell and his
-wife took her night after night in the hope of diverting
-her, only the possibility, eager yet dreaded, of singling
-from the crowd the faces of Bill Dixon and the woman
-who had taken him from her.</p>
-
-<p>She tried to hide her misery from the anxious eyes
-of her chaperones. But because she was young—a
-thousand years younger than Naomi—she could not hide
-it from the one she loved. And her quivering chin, her
-reproachful reminders of engagements he had overlooked,
-sent his mind and feet hurrying back to the
-woman whose red lips and drooping lids thrilled him
-like the dizzying lights of Broadway, like a draught of
-wine he had never before tasted.</p>
-
-<p>“Why does a girl think, because you’ve been together
-all your lives,” he blurted out one night as he and Naomi
-drove through the jerk and jam of traffic hold-up, “that
-she has a right to know your comings and goings as if
-you belonged to her? Good heavens, a fellow can
-change his mind, can’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>Naomi turned and smiled out of the window at the
-laughing sparkle of lights. The look, part sphinx,
-touched her mouth. In the dark he did not see its tinge
-of satire.</p>
-
-<p>He maintained for a second the silence that is usually
-accompanied by a bitten cigar or cigarette half-smoked,
-the silence of irritation. Then he swung about
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.155" id="png.155" href="#png.155"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>145<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“You’re not like that, Naomi! You’d never ask silly
-questions.”</p>
-
-<p>She leaned over, touched the hand that clenched and
-unclenched against his knee.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be angry, Billie-boy,” she whispered. “I like
-to hear you laugh.”</p>
-
-<p>His other hand closed quickly over the white fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it you’ve done to me? I always thought
-caring about a woman meant wanting to be with her
-because she liked the things I do, because we understood
-each other. That’s the way I felt about—” he
-broke off. “But you—I want to be with you because
-you’re so different—because I don’t always understand
-you. I can’t get enough of it—of looking at you, of
-listening to you. Naomi, do you care—a little bit?”</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her eyes, lifted her lips, forgetting the game
-she was playing, forgetting the stakes. Then before he
-saw the move, she drew back. Not yet! She answered
-him instead with a shadowy smile and the long silent
-pressure of the hand held fast between his.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III"><a name="png.156" id="png.156" href="#png.156"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>146<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">It</span> was an afternoon of late March, grim and forbidding,
-as if winter had thrown a last shadow across
-oncoming spring. The steam heat, turned off in the
-chorus dressing-rooms during a week of balmy weather,
-suddenly sputtered on and sang through the whole matinée
-performance.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi came out of the stage entrance, fur coat hugged
-about her, and shivering a bit, made for the curb to
-hail a taxi. As she glanced up and down the street at
-the ant-like army of cars, one of them slid toward her
-and a man stepped down.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, hello, Marshy,”—she reached out a hand—“haven’t
-seen you in weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>He took it.</p>
-
-<p>“Jump in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good! Buy me some tea, won’t you? I’m frozen.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have tea at your place. I want to talk to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned and stared at him as he slammed the door.</p>
-
-<p>His voice didn’t sound like Marshy Kent’s at all.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve called on you half a dozen times,” he supplemented.
-“You’re never home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you are. That’s why I sidetracked you.”</p>
-
-<p>He did not speak again until they had mounted the
-flight of stairs to her apartment in a reconstructed house
-near the theater. But as she collected the seldom used
-<a name="png.157" id="png.157" href="#png.157"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>147<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>tea things, he walked impatiently up and down the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Naomi, we’ve always been pretty good friends,
-haven’t we?” he began.</p>
-
-<p>“Friends?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pals then,” he corrected, not knowing why.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I’m going to put something up to you.
-I want you to listen quietly and then I want you to
-stand by me. Naomi—I’ve done a lot of things in my
-young life that I’m not exactly proud of. But the worst
-that could have been said of me was that I’ve been a
-waster. I’ve wasted one or two fortunes that the old
-Kents slaved to pile up—on cards—on the wheel—on
-the ponies—on women—I’ve never been anything but
-a waster. But that goes in more senses than one. I’ve
-never been a cad. Not until a month ago.”</p>
-
-<p>He waited for some response but Naomi merely struck
-a match and touched it to the wick of the samovar. If
-a quick question did flash to her lips, she held it back
-and kept her eyes lowered.</p>
-
-<p>“You know when that was. I was <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">non compos mentis</i>
-and I egged you into making a bet—”</p>
-
-<p>“In other words, dear Marshy,” she filled in his pause,
-“you want me to let you off on the plea of—well, the
-undue influence of liquor. Of course I will.”</p>
-
-<p>He pushed aside her easy acquiescence with a sweep
-that almost knocked the cup from her hand. “But
-that’s not all. The bet’s not the thing that’s bothering
-me. It’s you. You and that boy, Dixon. Naomi,
-you’ve got to quit. You’ve got to, do you hear me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit—what?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.158" id="png.158" href="#png.158"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>148<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Don’t play the innocent! You know what I’m driving
-at. I’ve made myself your partner in the job of
-smashing that boy’s life. And I’m telling you—”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Very slowly she set down her cup. Very slowly she
-rose and went close to him. At the hard, driving note
-in his voice, at the sharp arraignment of his eyes, resentment
-brought her head up and her eyes defiant.</p>
-
-<p>“Marshy, men fall easily into the habit of talking to—to
-some women pretty much as they please. But in
-the years I’ve known you, you’ve never said a word to
-me that—that hurt. Don’t do it now—please.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let him alone. I’ve been through hell this past
-week thinking of what I let those two young things in
-for. McConnell tells me the girl’s on the verge of collapse,—can’t
-eat, can’t sleep, just sits and waits for the
-boy to come and he stays away. Why, they grew up
-together, those kids. They were as good as engaged.
-And now he’s chucked her—for you.”</p>
-
-<p>He reached out, caught her by both shoulders with
-hands that shook.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have been crazy to take you up that night
-and promise not to interfere. If you don’t cry quits,
-here’s where I do! Young Dixon is a damn fine boy—McConnell<!-- TN: original reads "McConnel" -->
-says one of the finest—and I’m not going to
-stand to one side and see you smash his life and break
-that little girl’s heart. Understand?”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes that traveled up to his were more weary
-than he had ever seen them.</p>
-
-<p>“What about my life, Marshy? Doesn’t that count—at
-all? Doesn’t it matter that I’d like a chance?
-<a name="png.159" id="png.159" href="#png.159"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>149<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>That perhaps if I marry Bill Dixon, he’ll never
-know—and I can forget? Doesn’t it matter that you’d
-be helping me away from being a has-been—and all that
-goes with it? Do you ever think of the hours I spend
-here in the dark—alone, trying not to see what’s going
-to happen to me when I count even less than I do now?
-But no, of course not! Only—if it were the other way
-round, Marshy, and I was a man and he a girl, you
-wouldn’t see any harm in it—would you? If it were
-you, Marshy, and a young girl—”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s different!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why is it different—why? It’s a man standing up
-for a man where he wouldn’t for a woman—that’s the
-only difference. It isn’t that you’re any better than I
-am. It’s only that you think all men are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Naomi, I know it’s hard on you, my
-putting it the way I have to. But conditions are conditions.
-We’ve both faced them too long to try and buck
-them. You keep away from that boy and you won’t
-regret it. I’ll guarantee that—any way you like.
-What’s it worth—?”</p>
-
-<p>“Marshy—you’re not trying to buy me off!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t put it so baldly—”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped. For her head had gone back and a
-laugh startlingly high and sharp cut the sudden stillness.</p>
-
-<p>“So you’re afraid of me, that’s it! It’s gone that
-far. He’s declared himself for me—and against her.
-It’s come to a crux, then—and McConnell’s asked you
-to help. Why, I didn’t dream it! I couldn’t have
-hoped for so much in such a short time. I wouldn’t
-have believed it.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.160" id="png.160" href="#png.160"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>150<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Even with that high laugh of mockery, her shadowy
-eyes filled with the vision of the boy fighting—fighting
-them all doggedly, with hot, flaming defiance—for her—and
-it was sweeter than the thought of triumph.</p>
-
-<p>Kent’s voice broke in, uncompromising as judgment
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>“I know a way to stop it—without you. I hesitated
-to use it before. It didn’t seem cricket. But I’m going
-to him now with the plain, unvarnished truth—the story
-Broadway tells when it hears the name, Naomi Stokes,—the
-story I can add a few chapters to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Marshy!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show him what a blithering fool he is. I’ll prove
-it the way I can. We’ll see then!”</p>
-
-<p>The vision vanished from Naomi’s eyes. She caught
-his arm, clutched it with the clinging fingers of a child
-who in sleep plunges from dreams into nightmare.</p>
-
-<p>“Marshy—you wouldn’t do that! You couldn’t!
-Why, you called yourself my pal. Could pals stab one
-another like that? Could I think of harming you that
-way? Not for anybody! And that boy’s nothing to
-you. Nothing! Won’t you give me this chance? Just
-this one. If you knew what it means to me! Marshy,
-don’t turn away. Listen—please—please!”</p>
-
-<p>But he kept his face turned determinedly from the
-pleading one streaked with tears, from the eyes he had
-so often smiled into when their mystery piqued and captivated
-him in idle moments. And in the rigid line of
-his jaw there was no yielding. He merely tried to tug
-away from her clinging fingers and a short phrase answered
-her.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.161" id="png.161" href="#png.161"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>151<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Do you cry quits—or no?”</p>
-
-<p>She steadied her lips. Her arms fell listlessly. But
-even as she met the question, it came less in the form he
-put it than in the thought of what Bill Dixon had come
-to mean to her. Not ease for herself, not insurance
-against bleak years ahead, not the road that led away
-from terror; but a boy’s hearty laugh and ardent eyes,
-the warm clasp of his hand, the strength of his arms,
-what it would mean to lose them. A light that lifted
-the weight of centuries shone through her lashes. A
-smile that trembled caught her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t quits, Marshy. No! Either way you win,
-so we might as well play to the finish.”</p>
-
-<p>When he had gone, she sank on the couch and tears
-unlike the bitter ones of early dawn and hard noon
-streamed silently down her cheeks. They were tears
-of wonder and passionate regret, of gratitude that she,
-Naomi Stokes, could know this engulfing tenderness.
-The thing she had never dreamed might come was hers.
-She loved him. Nothing could take that away. After
-stumbling through the years, she had found in one brief
-month the dearest thing in the world. And now Marshy
-was going to snatch it from her. Was that his man’s
-right? No! She would fight him—the whole world—to
-keep that which had suddenly become her reason for
-being.</p>
-
-<p>Yet she realized that she was not armed to fight, not
-Marshy, nor the world, nor truth. She, who had never
-lacked resources, to whom the game of life had been a
-game of wits, stood helpless now.</p>
-
-<p>She could only wait.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter IV"><a name="png.162" id="png.162" href="#png.162"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>152<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Naomi</span> made no pretense of trying to sleep. She
-did not even resort to the bromide she was in
-the habit of taking when rest refused to come. She
-merely lay, with blinds drawn to shut out the early
-morning, trying to see light where she knew there was
-none. At ten she sprang up, hand to the throat that
-was full, lids covering the eyes that pained. Ever since
-Marshy Kent’s visit, those eyes had been straining toward
-the future, the result, inevitable almost, of his revelation
-to Bill Dixon. In the endless, wakeful hours of the night
-she had rehearsed, as women do, everything that had
-probably transpired.</p>
-
-<p>Yet even in her misery she did not overlook the careful
-mask of make-up, as mechanical a part of her daily
-toilet as the brushing of her hair, or polishing of her
-glistening nails. She had grown to avoid facing her
-mirror without it.</p>
-
-<p>She flung on a negligée of orchid chiffon that clung
-round her with the afterglow of sunset. But like the
-orchid, she sought the damp darkness of her living-room
-and sat with head resting against her locked hands for a
-long time before she made a move to raise the blinds and
-let in a shaft of sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>She had just lifted one of them when the sharp summons
-of the bell came from downstairs. She pushed
-the electric button and waited without curiosity for the
-<a name="png.163" id="png.163" href="#png.163"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>153<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>apartment bell to ring. Then she opened the door and
-peered into the shadowy hall.</p>
-
-<p>A girl stood there. The girl with her hair like a
-black cloud and eyes young and gray and tense.</p>
-
-<p>They traveled hungrily over the other woman as if
-to get in that moment the viewpoint of another pair of
-eyes that no longer sought hers.</p>
-
-<p>“May I come in, Miss Stokes? You don’t know me
-but my name is Nan Crawford,” she explained as Naomi
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi nodded. “I know.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl looked up quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Has he—has he talked to you—about me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen you with him,” was the non-committal answer.</p>
-
-<p>“It—it’s about Bill I want to see you,” she brought
-out the words with the same halting pause which had
-marked her hesitation in the doorway.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi motioned her to a chair. The girl’s pale face
-went a tinge whiter. Her lips quivered. She looked
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been wanting to come to see you and hadn’t
-the courage. Yesterday I followed you here in a cab
-from the theater. But you were with Mr. Kent. I
-didn’t come up.” She fidgeted with the slightly frayed
-silk of her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Stokes, I—I’ve known Bill Dixon all my life.
-I’ve loved him all my life—and I thought he loved me.
-He used to tell me so. We—we’ve always loved the
-same things and done the same things—together—in the
-same way. We’ve ridden hours on horseback up into
-<a name="png.164" id="png.164" href="#png.164"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>154<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the mountains and gone shooting in the woods—and
-tramped to places other people didn’t know about. When
-I went away to school and he to college, we used to
-write each other about our woods and the longing to get
-back to them—together. We never planned anything—separately.
-We sort of always—belonged to each
-other.”</p>
-
-<p>She halted once more. It was because she couldn’t
-go on. The eyes lifted to meet Naomi’s were filmed.
-It was only too clear that she was putting herself through
-the ordeal of tearing open new wounds for some purpose.
-Naomi looked away. To play on her own sympathy,
-of course! She wouldn’t listen. It would do no good
-anyway.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m trying to tell you, Miss Stokes, how I love Bill
-Dixon—how much I want his happiness. And now he
-loves you. Oh, I don’t blame him! You’re very beautiful—more
-beautiful than I could ever dream of being.
-You’re like some gorgeous flower in a conservatory. I’ve
-never seen any one like you. At first I thought I could—perhaps—win
-him back—but I couldn’t. Not from
-you. I—I wouldn’t know how. I’ve thought about it
-a lot. And I—at first I thought I couldn’t live through
-it. But I’ve got to now. Bill can’t help loving you.
-I don’t blame him for that.” She got up suddenly and
-brushed a hand across her eyes. In the poise of her
-body, head thrown back, lip caught between her teeth,
-was life’s first big endurance test and her brave attempt
-to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve got to love him, Miss Stokes! You’ve
-got to make him happy. I’d give my life for him.
-<a name="png.165" id="png.165" href="#png.165"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>155<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>That’s the way you’ve got to love him, too. If you
-don’t—if you fail him—ever—I’ll kill you!”</p>
-
-<p>Waves of astonishment swept over Naomi. Those
-eyes that burned behind the film of tears! Surely this
-was not their message! To demand happiness for the
-man of whom she was being robbed—surely that was
-not what the girl had come for.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear child—” Naomi began, instinctively speaking
-as if to one years younger.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it! You think I wouldn’t but I’m not afraid.
-I have nothing to lose any more.”</p>
-
-<p>She stumbled toward the door, one hand reached out
-gropingly. There she turned and once more her eyes
-traveled over the other woman. Naomi felt that from
-their clear gray gaze she could not shield herself. A
-girl so near her own age—the girl she might have been!
-And in that moment she knew that Nan Crawford’s
-words had not been bravado, not foolish threat. She
-was battling in her own way for the thing she loved.</p>
-
-<p>She opened the door as if, now that her message was
-given, she could not make her escape quickly enough.</p>
-
-<p>“Make him happy,” came strangled. “You must!
-That’s what I came to tell you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter V"><a name="png.166" id="png.166" href="#png.166"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>156<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Through</span> the window Naomi had lifted that morning,
-the shaft of sunlight receded slowly until it
-slipped away. Naomi had been sitting in the same position
-ever since her door had shut on a girl stumbling into
-the dark hallway. She sat there without moving and
-with a queer little twist of wonder at the problems we
-bring upon ourselves. All her life she had drifted with
-the least resistant current and without thinking much.
-Now, of a sudden, thought had come smashing upon her
-with the devastating violence of a hurricane.</p>
-
-<p>As daylight grayed she rose a bit stiffly and lighted
-the few lamps that sent a glow through the room.</p>
-
-<p>She went into her bedroom and started to dress.
-Bill was coming at five to take her to dinner. All afternoon
-she had waited for his usual phone call, for the
-big box of variegated flowers so different from those
-other men sent her. Neither came. But a peculiar
-lethargy held her, made her conscious only of the numbness
-of futility.</p>
-
-<p>She dressed without haste in a plain dark cloth suit,
-feeling with a curious finality that Bill was not coming.
-He had never kept her waiting like this. Yet as the
-thought swept over her, a loud, long ring came from
-downstairs. She went to the door, stood with eyes
-fastened on the dusk. A figure loomed out of it, head
-bent, feet taking the steps two at a time.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.167" id="png.167" href="#png.167"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>157<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He did not look up until they were in the room. Then
-his head went back and the look of desperation he wore
-made her go to him swiftly and push him into a chair.
-He sank down without resistance and covered his face
-with hands he made no attempt to steady. She lifted
-hers from his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Bill? What’s happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’m late,” were his first shaky words. “Sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what’s happened? Tell me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Naomi—I—” he broke off. “I don’t know how to
-put it. I feel that just telling you is an insult—”</p>
-
-<p>Ah, she knew now! She knew what was coming.</p>
-
-<p>“That man, Kent!” he stumbled on. “They had me
-all afternoon, he and Alec McConnell. I had to listen to
-things he said about you. If I’d been a <em>man</em>, I wouldn’t
-have given him the chance to say them.”</p>
-
-<p>Eyes clinging to hers, he waited for some question,
-some denial. He was giving her the chance to strike
-Marshy’s prosecution off the record without one word
-of cross-examination. He was urging her with his eyes
-to give Marshy the lie without even hearing what the
-man had told him.</p>
-
-<p>All her anguish of the night before had been, like
-so much feminine anguish, unnecessary. It was in her
-hands now. She had only to concoct a story of jealousy
-or an ancient grudge of Kent’s and this boy who
-had come to mean everything to her would accept
-it with the gladness of one who doesn’t want to question.
-Yet she turned her face from him and said
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“I listened until I couldn’t stand it. They made me!
-<a name="png.168" id="png.168" href="#png.168"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>158<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Then I knocked him down. Swine like that ought to be
-killed!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not swine,” she found herself saying in a
-voice that didn’t sound like her own. “He was probably
-telling you the truth for what he thought was your
-own good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Naomi!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, it was probably all true. You don’t know
-what I am, boy. You don’t know what I’ve been.”</p>
-
-<p>He was on his feet, grasping her arm, straining down
-to read her veiled eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Naomi, do you know what you’re saying? He accused
-you of—” he halted.</p>
-
-<p>She took him up without waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“Of things he can prove to you, boy dear. I’ve known
-Marshy Kent years and years and he wouldn’t tell you
-anything about me he didn’t know he could back up.”</p>
-
-<p>In her submission to the inevitable, in her complete
-lack of defense, she was so helpless, so almost child-like
-that the boy’s fury against Kent flamed back to his
-eyes, burning out the horror of her dumb confession.
-His hands were knotted into the hard fists that had
-sent his informer spinning to the floor. His chin was
-fighting forward. His eyes fastened on the exotic beauty
-that was Naomi’s intensified by the fact that she was
-woman, helpless under the lash of another man. That
-was all he saw—a beautiful woman who needed his protection!
-And to every other vision his youth determined
-to blind itself.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care what he’s told me! I don’t care what
-you’ve been. I only know I love you. You’re the most
-<a name="png.169" id="png.169" href="#png.169"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>159<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>glorious, fascinating woman in the world—and I want
-you, do you hear! I want you more than anything—more
-than anyone! I love you! Naomi—will you
-marry me—now—to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes closed. All she had planned—all she had
-longed for! Marshy’s move had only succeeded in
-thrusting it more swiftly into her grasp. And yet she
-did not stop to think of that. All that registered were
-those three words: “I love you.” Their sweetness ran
-like some warm fluid through her veins.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll get away from here!” he plunged on. “I’ll take
-you west—home. No Kents there to tell ugly stories.
-We’ll forget them ourselves. Nobody need ever know.
-We’ll be happy—and I’ll have you all to myself. Those
-lips and eyes—they’ll be all mine. Naomi—dearest—let
-me kiss them now!”</p>
-
-<p>Her arms had gone up instinctively but they dropped
-again without touching him. She held away, not looking
-at him.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Bill,—it can’t be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Naomi!”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think that what he said makes any difference?
-I tell you, it doesn’t. I don’t care! I’d marry you—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not that. It’s just—I couldn’t make you happy,
-boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you could. You’re the only woman—”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I couldn’t. Why, you don’t love me. You love
-the thing I represent—the thing that represents me—Broadway.
-Take me away from it and what would I
-be? A faded woman, Bill, a woman who would only
-<a name="png.170" id="png.170" href="#png.170"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>160<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>make you hate her because she’s so different from what
-you thought. And I’d rather never have you than to see
-you in a short time—oh, it wouldn’t take long!—disgusted
-with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t love me—that’s it!” he flamed.</p>
-
-<p>“If I didn’t love you I’d marry you. Sounds queer,
-that, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we both care! What else matters?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only that I want to give you happiness—and I can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the only woman who can.”</p>
-
-<p>“No I’m not, dear. You think so now. But it’s the
-grease-paint stuff you love! Out on the ranch—with my
-hair its own color you’d wonder why you did it.”</p>
-
-<p>He paid no attention to her last whispered words.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willing to risk it! I’ll risk anything for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d find me out, Bill—you’d be bound to. Why,
-I never go out in the sun without wearing a veil to keep
-the secret of my complexion to myself. And there, where
-you belong, I’d be in the sun all day.” She tried to
-smile. “How would I look going round a ranch like the
-queen of a harem? No, you’d have to see me as I am.
-And in a week you’d hate me.”</p>
-
-<p>He went close, hearing only the sob in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Dearest—you think I’m young—that I don’t know my
-own mind. You think I don’t know my woman when I
-meet her!”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled now, with a little shake of the head.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t. You only think you do. You love the
-way people look at me in a restaurant. You love the way
-I wear my clothes. You love my coloring. It’s put on,
-boy. And so is the sheen of my hair you rave about and
-<a name="png.171" id="png.171" href="#png.171"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>161<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the blackness of my lashes. It’s all fake—like me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you telling me all this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because—because you mean more to me than anything
-in the world. Because I’d rather have your happiness
-than my own.”</p>
-
-<p>Even as the words came, they amazed her. All afternoon
-they had been struggling deep down in her consciousness.
-A girl with stark young eyes had opened wide
-those veiled ones.</p>
-
-<p>“Then that’s the only thing that counts,” he retaliated,
-eyes alight, and his arms went out. “If you love me, I
-don’t care about anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>She pulled back. Once his lips touched hers, she knew
-she could not go through with what she had to do. Recklessly—while
-the mood held her—as if she were another
-person playing a trick on Naomi Stokes, she moved round
-the room, turning off the soft lamplight. A second later
-the central chandelier flashed its glare and Naomi was at
-his side again.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait, Bill—I want to show you something.”</p>
-
-<p>She disappeared into the bedroom. When she came
-back, there was a white rag clenched in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not really beautiful the way you see me.” And
-even as she spoke the words her eyes were frightened.
-“I’m a faker—but for once I’m going to be honest with
-you—with myself. I’m going to let you see the woman
-you don’t know, the woman you’d see—out there.”</p>
-
-<p>Without pausing to give herself breath she dragged the
-cloth, weighted with some thick lotion, across her face.
-It came away covered with color. She threw it aside.
-The face it left lifted to his was like tragedy, unmasked.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.172" id="png.172" href="#png.172"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>162<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Look—I can scrape it off—the beauty you love so!
-This is the way I’ll be in broad daylight, Bill. These
-lines—they’re the years I’ve stolen from you. They’re
-the real me—the me you don’t know. Do you want me
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>He looked down on the face that in ten seconds had
-aged ten years. Dazedly he took in the circles under
-the eyes, the pinched lines from nostrils to mouth, the
-pallor of the lips. The luminous cream of her skin had
-given way to a whiteness that looked dead. All the exotic
-color of her—the color that fascinated him—was
-gone. It was almost as if some magic had wafted
-away the Naomi he knew, as if this were another
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>He stood there gazing down on her, confused, silent
-before the revelation he could not quite compass. Only
-the eyes of his Naomi remained, infinitely sad, infinitely
-lovely, even with the heavy black gone from their straight
-lashes.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t want me now. You don’t want the woman
-I really am. Don’t stop to think! Don’t hesitate!
-Just answer me,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>But he did stop to think. Without quite meeting the
-eyes raised to his, holding his own away from the face
-that seemed suddenly a strange one, he lifted her two
-trembling hands, put them against his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve asked you to marry me, Naomi,” he said huskily.
-“I’m asking you again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you for that, boy dear. You—you’re just
-everything I thought you were. But I’m not going to
-take you up. Not now! If you want me six months
-<a name="png.173" id="png.173" href="#png.173"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>163<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>from now, come back for me. I’ll know then—that you
-need me. Only, dear—you won’t come.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked straight at her then, letting himself see only
-the eyes which had not changed. And she knew before
-he spoke that he was bowing, without argument, to her
-verdict.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come back for you,” he told her. “I won’t wait
-six months. You’ll see!”</p>
-
-<p>She simply shook her head and no smile of hope
-touched her pale lips.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later she stood looking for a long time
-at the door that had closed after him. Then she put on
-hat and coat and went down the steps and over to the
-theater.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter VI"><a name="png.174" id="png.174" href="#png.174"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>164<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="sig"><span class="yours2">Harvard Club,</span><br
- />New York, July 30th.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">Dear Naomi,—</p>
-
-<p>This letter is going to be harder to write than an income
-tax report. When a man has never before been on his
-knees to a woman, they’re apt to be creaky and resist bending.
-But I’m on my knees to you, my dear,—in tribute, in
-abject apology, in the tenderest feeling I’ve ever known in
-my life.</p>
-
-<p>Last March Bill Dixon went home and I sat back with
-the sensation of a good Samaritan. I was blithering ass
-enough to think I was the one who had sent him away.
-To-day, four months later, I’ve learned the truth. It came
-with the announcement of his marriage to Nan Crawford.
-He told me what happened. He told me what you had done,
-Naomi.</p>
-
-<p>I’ve never had much belief in women. I’ve always
-thought them rather a poor lot. That’s the penalty of
-having begun early to know the wrong side of them—assuming
-there was no other. But you’ve given an old
-stager a faith he’s never known. For that I can’t repay you.
-But whatever I have, whatever I can give you of devotion
-and friendship is yours, dear girl. Knowing what you were
-equal to doing for that boy has suddenly made life worth
-living for me.</p>
-
-<p>I haven’t seen you in months. Will you make up for
-lost time? Shall we go to supper to-morrow night?</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="yours">Yours—I mean it—</span><br
- /><span class="smc">Marshy</span>.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><a name="png.175" id="png.175" href="#png.175"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>165<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Naomi’s eyes wandered from the letter to another that
-lay open on the desk beside it. It was in a boy’s rugged
-hand, incoherent, embarrassed<!-- TN: original reads "embarassed" -->. It told of his approaching
-marriage and tried to thank her for making him see
-that the old love was the true one. She had read it so
-many times that she could have told what it told her—with
-eyes shut.</p>
-
-<p>She reread Kent’s letter then. After a moment she
-picked up her pen and wrote:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Thank you, dear Marshy. I can use your friendship. I
-need it. But I’ve quit going out to suppers—for good.</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smc">Naomi.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="The Back Drop"><a name="png.177" id="png.177" href="#png.177"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>167<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE BACK DROP</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Drama"><i>DRAMA</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>Comedy met Tragedy at the crossroads of Life.</p>
-
-<p>“Know,” spake Tragedy, “from Wisdom have I learned
-that thou and I emanate from the same source—born of the
-folly of man and nourished by his deeds. The tie between
-us is so strong that we must follow, each upon the other’s
-heels, as long as the road of life has its turnings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then come,” laughed Comedy, “a bargain let us conclude.
-Let each forever carry some suggestion of the other!”</p>
-
-<p>So, with a tear in the eye of Comedy and a smile under
-Tragedy’s frown, they linked arms and proceeded down the
-road together.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.179" id="png.179" href="#png.179"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>169<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE BACK DROP</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p class="poster"><span class="longdash">———</span><br
- />RUDOLPH CLEEBURG<br
- />Presents<br
- />GLORIA CROMWELL<br
- />in<br
- />“LADY FAIR”<br
- />A Comedy-Drama<br
- />by<br
- /><i>Bronson Reed</i></p>
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">A car</span> pulled up sharp at the curb and a woman
-leaned out to read the tall lettering. It loomed
-startling and white against a black ground. Along a
-street where theaters crowded each other like chorus girls
-in a manager’s office, that inky splash with its tracing of
-white paled to oblivion all the others.</p>
-
-<p>The man beside her watched her eagerly, studied
-the delicate profile with a kind of hunger. When she
-turned, his eyes went alight at the smile in hers.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s stunning, ’Dolph. But then you always do things
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Y’mean that? Do I always manage to suit you,
-kiddo?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know you do.” There was a low, tender note
-in the voice that would always be wistful. It was an odd
-voice—one that, breaking with the swift snap of a violin
-string, brought tears from its audience as one chokes at
-a broken chord.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.180" id="png.180" href="#png.180"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>170<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“H’m, that’s all I want.” He grinned sheepishly.
-“No fool like an old fool, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>He stepped out as the chauffeur swung open the door,
-and reached up to help her. Gloria Cromwell—in private
-life Mrs. Rudolph Cleeburg—was not tall and her
-intense slenderness made her look frail, yet standing next
-to her husband she measured a full inch above him.
-Any passerby taking in the round face, eyes and figure of
-the well-known manager, his bald pate and prominent
-features, would have smiled at the information that he
-was the most artistic producer in America. But then, no
-passerby would have noticed the hands, key to character,
-that tapered so incongruously. Even the man himself
-failed to take count of them. He knew only that he felt
-beauty like a tangible thing, that he expressed it through
-the two mediums he loved—the stage and his wife.</p>
-
-<p>He took her arm and they went down the cool dark
-alley to the stage door. It was a Sunday in September,
-hazy and languid, the first shadows of twilight creeping
-into the arms of night.</p>
-
-<p>In almost every building on the block rehearsals were
-under way. Behind blank front entrances with high iron
-gates locked fast, throbbed the pulsing life of the theater.
-No effort too great, no work too intense, to give to the
-world its most human tonic, amusement.</p>
-
-<p>The dress rehearsal of “Lady Fair” had been called
-for 8:00 <span class="allsc">P. M.</span> They were early, having made good time
-from their place at Great Neck. Gloria crossed the stage
-set for Act I while Cleeburg paused to suggest to the
-electrician some experiments with the lights.</p>
-
-<p>“Try a couple of reds, Bill, in the foots for Act II.
-<a name="png.181" id="png.181" href="#png.181"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>171<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>And cut out four or five of the ambers on top. They
-make her look too yellow, sick around the eyes. Get
-me? Too much shadow. We want to bring out all the
-flash in her hair. Light her up. It’s her big scene. And
-here—have a smoke!”</p>
-
-<p>He followed Gloria. She had tossed her hat on a table
-and stood taking in the new props he had provided while
-the company made the customary short tour that precedes
-a New York première.</p>
-
-<p>With the shadows of the unlighted stage about her and
-the dusky quiet of the empty house stretching at her feet,
-she seemed to the man who went toward her deplorably
-young and tender, with a something yearning from her
-that he had tried to reach and never even been able to
-define. Not for the first time he asked himself: Was
-it the almost childish form under the soft summer dress—or
-the delicate line of her long throat—or the intense red
-curve of lip—or her pallor topped by the tawny hair
-whose lights and shades he was so intent on featuring?
-No, none of these! It was the look of her eyes. Wide
-and hungry, with fright in their depths, they had arrested
-him six years before as he hurried through his outer
-office; arrested him and found her a job. The fright had
-gone long since. And the hunger which had been nothing
-more than actual physical hunger. But the look that
-was so much like the quality of her voice still lurked
-there, eluding him.</p>
-
-<p>He came up behind her as she stood examining the
-heavy black velvet drapes with crests of blue, purple and
-gold embroidered in the corners.</p>
-
-<p>“Like ’em?” he asked once more anxiously.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.182" id="png.182" href="#png.182"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>172<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-She veered about. “They must have cost a fortune,
-’Dolph. Wouldn’t those blue ones we had on the road
-have been good enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for you. Only the best for my girl! And look
-at you against ’em. Those newspaper guys are right—there
-sure is something about you that’s got the rest of
-the bunch lashed to the mast!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what you’ve made me, ’Dolph.” The words came
-breathless, with that strange fascinating catch. “You’ve
-put me over just the way you did the rest. Goring and
-Wilbur and Chesterton. Without you I’d have been just
-an actress. Now they call me an artist. And you’ve
-done that—you’ve done every bit of it.”</p>
-
-<p>With a furtive glance to make sure the electrician was
-still occupied he went closer, laid an arm across her slim
-shoulders and gazed eagerly through the shadows into
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Say that again. Of course it ain’t true. They were
-all piking compared to you. But say it anyhow. It’s
-music to me—the greatest symphony and greatest opera
-rolled into one.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then if I never do anything else for you, that goes
-on the right side of the ledger—what? Sometimes, little
-girl, I feel like I was a dog, grabbing you the way I did
-right after I featured you and you thought you couldn’t
-turn me down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” She caught his hand and her clasp was
-so tight it seemed to grip.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a pretty old piece of scenery and not easy to look
-at, at that.” He glanced through the drapes at the back
-<a name="png.183" id="png.183" href="#png.183"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>173<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>drop. It represented a stretch of blue sky pierced with
-holes through which presently stars would glimmer.
-“Like that old thing,” he added. “Just a piece of shabby
-canvas, good enough for background.” And as she
-started to protest he laughed, a laugh that wasn’t much
-more than a sound. “Why, even Doug Fairbanks won’t
-be able to kid himself he’s young when he’s past half a
-century.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned as several members of the company strolled
-in and greeted each with a hearty handshake. With
-a smile for every one and an ear ready to listen, the
-Cleeburg of to-day had the same enthusiasm as the pudgy
-newsboy who years before had run fat little legs off to
-procure for a patron his favorite daily.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello there, glad to see you! Well, they tell me we’ve
-got a knock-out. Let’s have a look.”</p>
-
-<p>He made for the rear of the house with his stage director
-who had accompanied the play on tour.</p>
-
-<p>The curtain up, he leaned against the seat in front, a
-long black cigar jerking from corner to corner of his
-mouth like a propeller. Not a gesture, not an intonation
-escaped him. His concentration ignored any world but
-this. Had the building burned down, that stage before
-him would still have been the pivotal point of interest.</p>
-
-<p>When Gloria appeared between the black drapes, eyes
-luminous under the untamed hair, and the thrill of her
-voice came over the footlights, he sighed and a smile of
-anticipation spread across his face. It was the look of
-one whose senses are about to be lulled by rare music.</p>
-
-<p>The play had all the quality of delicately written
-French drama, its big scene at the end of the second act
-<a name="png.184" id="png.184" href="#png.184"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>174<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>being calculated to bring even a New York audience
-straight out of its seat. Gloria and John Brooks were
-as finely teamed as a pair of high-stepping thoroughbreds.
-He had been her leading man two seasons. Little ’Dolph,
-with an eye to the future, had him tied up on a five-year
-contract.</p>
-
-<p>You would never have taken John Brooks for an actor.
-There was about his clothes no suggestion of the extreme
-that Broadway is tempted to affect. They were
-cut by a conservative tailor and he wore them with the
-ease of not caring particularly what he had on. Critics
-called him distinguished. When he walked into a stage
-drawing-room one knew instinctively that more exclusive
-drawing-rooms had opened to him. He never talked
-shop outside and never brought his social activities into
-the theater. But it was generally known that his friends
-numbered scientists and men of big business.</p>
-
-<p>On the stage he suggested a clean-cut Britisher, tall
-and well groomed, easy of manner, clipped of speech, yet
-with a more intense vitality and that gleam of humor
-under the straight black brows that is peculiarly, blessedly,
-of, by, and for America.</p>
-
-<p>The manager sat back, eyes half closed, lapping up the
-charm of it as a kitten laps cream. When the curtain
-fell he licked his lips and purred as he turned to the director,
-Lewis.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, Lewy! Never saw a pair to touch ’em.
-Gad, that give and take, that playing into each other’s
-hands—nothing like it in this old berg, I tell you!” He
-sprang up, bounded down the aisle like a rubber
-ball. “Immense!” he shouted. “That act runs on
-<a name="png.185" id="png.185" href="#png.185"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>175<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>greased wheels. It’s sure fire! They’ll eat it alive.”</p>
-
-<p>He climbed into a box; with amazing ease jumped on to
-the stage. Bulky as was his figure, almost pouter pigeon
-in certain postures, there was nothing funny about Cleeburg
-in action. It was the fire of his genius, the spark
-that lighted his homely face with inspiration, that commanded
-respect. Even with a handkerchief tied round
-his neck as it always was in hot weather and the open
-sleeves of his silk shirt flopping like awkward wings, no
-one thought of smiling. One merely listened.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a few instructions to the property men and
-slipped back to his wife’s dressing-room, poking his head
-in at the door.</p>
-
-<p>She was changing to a tea-gown, a lovely shimmery
-gold thing that brought out the reds in her hair like
-touches of flame.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, how does it go?” she asked. “Any suggestions?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not half a one. Couldn’t be improved. And John—he
-was made for you!”</p>
-
-<p>She dropped her eyes to examine a tiny rip in the
-train.</p>
-
-<p>“Better mend this, Suzanne, before I go on. It might
-catch on something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glad we’ve got him sewed up tight. First thing you
-know, one of the boys’d be offering to star him and then
-biffo, we’d lose him!”</p>
-
-<p>“He is—wonderful.” She did not raise her eyes as
-the maid’s needle flashed in and out of the soft fabric,
-then looked up suddenly. “Lewis thinks we have a big
-hit.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.186" id="png.186" href="#png.186"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>176<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Lewis knows his business. You never had a chance
-that touched it—comedy and the big heart stuff combined.
-Try a little more red, honey. You look pale.
-Tired out, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—just a bit nervous, that’s all.” She turned hastily
-to the mirror, picked up a rabbit’s foot and dabbed
-some color across her cheek bones. As she bent forward,
-her teeth caught her lower lip and held it. And
-Cleeburg, noting the reflection of her eyes, fancied fright
-in them. Nerves, of course! Emotional tuning up of
-the vibrant artist!</p>
-
-<p>He went out front as the curtain rose on the second
-act. It revealed a boudoir. Not the sort bestowed upon
-woman by the average scenic decorator with its brilliant
-splashes of color and general air of a department store
-exhibit, but a room that suggested four walls enclosing
-feminine taste.</p>
-
-<p>Steadily Gloria and Brooks mounted to the big moment
-when the man’s passion, like a torrent crashing
-through ice, carried the woman with it. They stood facing
-each other and the voice of John Brooks came quiet,
-yet with the threat of doom.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve played the game, you and I,—to the finish.
-And we’ve lost. No, not lost, because this is the end we
-wanted. We’ve been a pair of gamblers, banking on
-defeat, waiting to have the game get us. Now we’re
-going to lay down our cards, admit we’re beaten, and
-take what is greater than victory. You know what that
-is. I don’t have to tell you I love you—”</p>
-
-<p>The woman gave a terrified “No—no!” with arms
-thrust out to ward off the thing she had desired. The
-<a name="png.187" id="png.187" href="#png.187"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>177<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>man followed with a quick laugh as he caught them and
-her to him.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg jumped up and speeding down the aisle made
-a trumpet of his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, John—play that for all it’s worth. Give it to
-’em strong. You fall down a peg or two at the end.
-Got to keep up the tension. Get me? Don’t be afraid
-of too much pep. Can’t be done in this town. Let go!
-Give ’em the love stuff till they faint.”</p>
-
-<p>Again and again he put them through it. Up to the
-crucial point it went superbly. Then something seemed
-to snap. It was less in Brooks’ rendering of the speech
-than the way he caught up Gloria and swept her to him.
-Instead of an onrush like a force irresistible, his embrace
-was almost measured. One felt that with very little
-effort she could have escaped.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting in the front row now, a puzzled seam between
-his eyes, Cleeburg noted that Gloria, too, appeared to
-hold off. Gloria, who flung herself into a part as if it
-were life! What had happened? He shook his head,
-began to pace the length of the seats.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll let down the whole act, children. You’ll lose
-your curtain. Why, they’ve been wanting this to happen
-from the beginning. If you don’t give it to ’em and give
-it to ’em big, they’ll can you. Sure thing! Let’s have
-another go.”</p>
-
-<p>John Brooks’ thin lips came together. There was
-something tense about the way he went into the scene
-this time—muscles tight, hands clenched, voice husky.
-And when finally he swept her into his arms it was as if
-he would never let her go. Their lips met as the
-<a name="png.188" id="png.188" href="#png.188"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>178<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>curtain fell. Even in the empty house one could feel the
-thrill of it.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg gave a chortle of relief. Just for a moment
-he had been afraid they were going to muff it.</p>
-
-<p>But he apologized for his persistence later over a bite
-of supper.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the crux, old man. That’s why I kept you at it.
-You see, the woman is yours by every law of God. Once
-you know it, you don’t give a damn for the laws of man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I get you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Put over the feeling that it had to be. If you don’t
-the whole show goes fluey. You and the little girl do
-such bully team work, we don’t want one hitch to spoil
-it. Hope I haven’t played you out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s all right.” The other man smoothed his
-hair with a gesture of both long hands and looked across
-the table. “Afraid my thick head has tired Gloria,
-though.”</p>
-
-<p>She was leaning back, limp, face white as the moon
-that looked in between the pillars of the roof garden.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit.” Her lids lifted quickly and Cleeburg
-was startled at the fever under them. She leaned elbows
-on the table. “I was as stupid as John. We just
-couldn’t seem to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t worry. It’ll go like hot cakes to-morrow
-night. You won’t worry, kiddo, will you?” He patted
-her arm anxiously. “I don’t like to see you look like
-this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, there isn’t a thing wrong with me—truly.”
-She turned to watch the dancers as they swayed past,
-two moving as one to the lure of darky music. In the
-<a name="png.189" id="png.189" href="#png.189"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>179<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>center of the flagged floor a fountain sent up showering
-spray colored emerald, ruby and gold by lights from
-within. The place was filled with a soft languor. It
-seemed set very close beneath the Indian Summer sky.</p>
-
-<p>When she turned back she found Brooks gazing at her.</p>
-
-<p>“Come to think of it,” observed Cleeburg, glance
-traveling from one to the other, “you don’t look any too
-chipper yourself, old man. Didn’t notice it when you
-got in this morning but you’re both played out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gloria had a little smash-up after the performance
-last night. Been working at top speed. Nothing wrong
-with me. We’re both tired, that’s all. There wasn’t a
-breath of air in the train, either.” Brooks lifted his glass
-of cider and a dry smile played round his lips. “I drink
-to thee only with mine eyes,” he said to Gloria.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg grinned. “Say, why not come out to the
-house with us now? Give you something stronger. Stop
-off, shoot a few things into a bag and a night in the
-country’ll do you good.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks put down his glass. “Thanks, no. Think I’d
-better stick to my own bunk.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about next week then? Run you out after the
-show Saturday night. You can try a couple of holes of
-golf with Gloria Sunday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry, old man, I’m booked.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, any time you like. Ain’t a place, ours, where
-you have to wait for a bid.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you anyhow? Last summer,
-you used to run out every few weeks. This year, have
-to beg you to come!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.190" id="png.190" href="#png.190"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>180<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Not a bit of it,” laughed Brooks. “Wait till we get
-this opening off our chests and you won’t be able to get
-rid of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t come it too strong to suit us, eh kiddo?”</p>
-
-<p>Gloria’s eyes had drifted out to the swaying throng
-once more. “Of course not,” she said quickly, and
-pushed back her chair. “If you don’t mind, ’Dolph, I
-believe I am tired.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg noticed as they went down to the car that
-her step lagged. When they had dropped Brooks at
-his flat and were speeding up Fifth Avenue, sleepy under
-the quiet hour when life in New York closes one eye, she
-turned swiftly. “’Dolph—you remember what you
-called yourself in the theater to-night—before the others
-came?”</p>
-
-<p>He thought a moment. Then his face went alight, all
-but the eyes. “Your old back drop, y’mean?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded. “Don’t ever do that again—don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Her vehemence made him shift his position so that he
-faced her.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, honey—”</p>
-
-<p>The break in her voice had been poignant. Her hand
-clasping his arm was feverish. He felt the heat of it
-through his thin coat. Even in the dark he could see
-her eyes, brilliant, with something of the fright he had
-read in them earlier in the evening. Only it was intensified.</p>
-
-<p>“Honey, what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to know I love you,” she rushed on breathlessly.
-“It wasn’t just gratitude that made me marry
-you. I’ll always love you. You’re splendid and fine
-<a name="png.191" id="png.191" href="#png.191"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>181<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and generous. They don’t come any better. Never
-doubt it, ’Dolph! Never—will you?” She shook his
-arm, repeating the question over and over.</p>
-
-<p>“Why—kiddo—”</p>
-
-<p>“And I have made you happy?” she broke in on his
-amazement. “I have given you something for all you’ve
-given me?”</p>
-
-<p>He answered quickly enough then.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything, honey. Why, these past five years’ve
-been more than most fellows get in a lifetime. I ask
-myself often what an old tout like me ever did to deserve
-’em. In the theater and out—hasn’t been a day that
-wasn’t heaven. That’s what you’ve given me.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat an instant silent. Then before he could divine
-her intention she had carried his hand to her lips. But
-it was not their moisture he noticed as he drew it hastily
-away and slipped an arm round her.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.192" id="png.192" href="#png.192"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>182<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Over</span> Long Island, as Cleeburg drove in the following
-day, hung a mist that made the low hills look
-like a mirage melting into the sky. It was as if the
-smoke of the city reached its long arm far over green
-stretches and cool woodland, cloaking Nature with the
-garment of industry.</p>
-
-<p>Little ’Dolph sat forward, hat tossed to the floor, cigar
-ashes strewn over it like snow. He had smoked incessantly
-from the moment the car shot past the hedge surrounding
-the Cleeburg place. He had smoked with brow
-furrowed and teeth chewing on the butt of his weed, concentrating
-so intensely that for the first time in years it
-failed to circle from corner to corner of the friendly
-mouth. He was worried—and about Gloria. What had
-got her last night? What had brought the fever to her
-eyes and that desperate grip to her fingers? What had
-made her cry, with long sobs like a child’s when his arm
-went round her? Wasn’t like her. Not a bit. He’d
-never seen her like that, didn’t know how to handle it.</p>
-
-<p>Overwork must be the answer. She’d been at it for
-six years seeing results. And before that God knew how
-many without seeing them! He recalled the poor little
-starved thing she was when first those eyes with the
-strange glow back of them had begged for a chance.
-Since that chance had been hers she hadn’t stopped, not
-for a minute. And how she had mounted! For a second
-his look of distress vanished in a broad grin of pride.
-<a name="png.193" id="png.193" href="#png.193"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>183<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Gloria had the divine fire, whatever that might be. The
-light of it had always been in her soul but his was the
-satisfaction of having kindled it to flame. He had found
-in her the instrument to express all the seething love of
-beauty his unbeautiful body harbored. He could not
-have put it into words but the consciousness was there,
-a vital thing.</p>
-
-<p>He looked out anxiously at the hazy September landscape.
-Yes, must be overwork! If it had been anything
-else, she’d have told him. Dashed like hysteria,
-that breakdown last night! Give her a long vacation
-next summer, that’s what he’d do. He’d close her in the
-spring and take her abroad when he went to clinch those
-English contracts.</p>
-
-<p>Having reached the only decision possible in view of
-present demands on her, he settled back, applied a light
-to a final cigar and puffed peacefully until they pulled
-up at his office in the same building as the theater.</p>
-
-<p>Toward four-thirty she telephoned that she was feeling
-much better and laughed at the relief in his voice.
-If he worried about her that way, she’d give a perfectly
-rotten performance to-night!</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of her chaffing, Cleeburg, going to her
-dressing-room at seven, caught her unawares with head
-drooping into her hands and a look of utter dejection
-about the slim shoulders. She lifted both quickly as he
-entered and smiled up at him. He peered at the heavy
-blue smudges under her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t need much make-up, will I?” she laughed, in
-quick response to the look. “You see, I’m trying to put
-the grease-paint men out of business.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.194" id="png.194" href="#png.194"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>184<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“What is it?” He pulled a chair close to the dressing-table.
-It was higher than hers and so brought their
-faces on a level. “Something’s eating you. What?
-Tell me—tell your old ’Dolph.”</p>
-
-<p>She leaned over, brushed his cheek with her lips, then
-turned quickly to the mirror and dabbed the color on
-her face with the same nervous haste he had noticed the
-night before.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing’s wrong, dear. Wait till we settle down for
-a steady run and you’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s sure fire! Only keep an eye on that second act.
-Don’t be afraid to let go.”</p>
-
-<p>From the wings he watched the audience stream in—beautifully
-gowned women, perfectly groomed men, keen-eyed
-critics, his own colleagues with soft collars and
-clothes not too well pressed, here a familiar round-the-towner,
-there a merchant who took his first night subscription
-seats as religiously as his pew in church. Truly
-a motley such as only the Metropolis can produce. Little
-’Dolph’s eyes shone and his broad mouth broadened.
-Those women with their feathery fans and glittering jewels;
-those men with their sleek heads and smart clothes;
-the press; the world theatrical; they constituted his court,
-this theater his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>Only a few times since the throne had been his had he
-failed to give them what they expected of him. That
-was why to-night he saw in every pair of eyes an eager
-anticipation that was to him like strong stimulant. He
-slipped round to the front of the house as the curtain
-rose.</p>
-
-<p>All through the first act he divided attention between
-<a name="png.195" id="png.195" href="#png.195"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>185<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the stage and the audience, watching the latter laugh and
-chuckle and wink and furtively wipe its eye, and nodding
-as each effect came at the right moment. When the
-lights went up he dodged backstage, not to Gloria, but to
-Brooks.</p>
-
-<p>“Great, old boy! You’ve got ’em. Just keep up that
-tempo. Feeling fit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fine!”</p>
-
-<p>“Look out for the end of this act, won’t you,” he added
-half apologetically.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you were coming to that,” laughed Brooks.</p>
-
-<p>“No offense, you understand.”</p>
-
-<p>But he went back to his seat wishing the big scene
-finished. He couldn’t help a twitch of uncertainty. If
-they handled it as they had at first last night it would
-fall flat as a pancake.</p>
-
-<p>Eagerly he followed every line. It was scintillant as
-sunlit ice and very thin ice at that. The throng round
-him skated over it with the actors and when Gloria’s
-scene with Brooks arrived they were, as he had prophesied,
-keyed to an emotional pitch that only the limit
-of acting could satisfy.</p>
-
-<p>Then he held tight to the arms of his chair and literally
-his breath stopped.</p>
-
-<p>Brooks came to the climax. His vibrant voice fell
-across the quiet of the house.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve played the game, you and I,—to the finish.
-And we’ve lost. No, not lost, because this is the end we
-wanted. We’ve been a pair of gamblers, banking on
-defeat, waiting to have the game get us. Now we’re
-going to lay down our cards, admit we’re beaten, and
-<a name="png.196" id="png.196" href="#png.196"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>186<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>take what is greater than victory. You know what that
-is. I don’t have to tell you I love you—”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg felt the quick intake of breath, the surge
-forward, that pulsing reach of an audience. If only
-they’d play it now for all it was worth!</p>
-
-<p>Gloria pulled back and terror was in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“No—no!”</p>
-
-<p>For a second Brooks seemed to hesitate. What in
-Sam Hill was the matter with him? Why the deuce
-didn’t he let go?</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly his laugh went high. He strode to her.
-His arms swept out.</p>
-
-<p>She stood poised as if in resistance, the light from
-above playing over her, her eyes started up to his. One
-could feel the catch in her throat, the swaying at the
-edge of a precipice. And then the eyelids fell, the man’s
-embrace closed round her like an enveloping flame. Her
-lips went to his.</p>
-
-<p>With a deep sigh little ’Dolph subsided. The audience
-did likewise. It had them! An excited buzz, the
-crash of applause told him that. He dodged out of his
-seat and to the lobby. Nothing further was to be desired.
-“Lady Fair” had gone over with a bang.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tb">It was over a month later that the manager finally prevailed
-upon their leading man to week-end with them.
-He buttonholed Brooks after the performance one Saturday
-night and refused to take “no” for an answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, John, getting upstage? Cut your swell friends
-this week. You’re coming out with us, ain’t he
-kiddo?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.197" id="png.197" href="#png.197"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>187<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-They were standing within the stage door. Cleeburg
-linked a persuasive arm in the other man’s.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria smiled without looking directly at Brooks. She
-drew her squirrel wrap close about her and stepped out
-of the light.</p>
-
-<p>“John’s always welcome, of course. But if he has
-other plans we mustn’t interfere.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say!” laughed Cleeburg. “Well, he’s going
-to chuck any other plans and give us the pleasure of
-his society.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks held a light to his cigarette. The flare of it
-illumined his set mouth, the line of his jaw.</p>
-
-<p>“Another time, old man. There’s a game on at the
-club to-morrow afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good! That being the case, we’ll save you money.”
-He started down the narrow alley to the street.</p>
-
-<p>Brooks looked across at Gloria. She was looking
-down, struggling with the clasp of her glove.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” urged Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>An instant more Brooks hesitated. Then his head
-went back.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, I’m with you.” And he laughed as if with
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>They stopped off for his bag. They were still using
-the open car in spite of the winds of late October. Gloria
-liked the slash of air against her face, liked to get the
-first salty whiff of the Sound. She leaned back with lids
-drooping and hands clasped loosely and was silent all
-the way. The men talked of next year’s prospects.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Lady Fair’ is good for next year and a season in
-London. Think I’ll let you and Gloria take it over.
-<a name="png.198" id="png.198" href="#png.198"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>188<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>She’s never had a lick at the other side,” chuckled Cleeburg.
-“Bound to knock ’em silly.”</p>
-
-<p>Gloria spoke for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t think about London—just yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg started at the queer note in her voice. They
-turned into the drive where willows drooped their
-branches to the ground. Beyond shone the lights of the
-rambling old house, modernized by the family who had
-owned and loved it for generations, but untouched as to
-line or grace. High ceilings, French windows, arched
-doorways, tall fireplaces—these constituted the charm of
-the estate little ’Dolph had presented to the woman who
-had given him happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Supper for two was spread before the flaming logs at
-one end of the entrance hall. In the center of the table
-stood a bowl of autumn leaves, the wild red of Gloria’s
-hair. Cleeburg pulled up another chair as the chauffeur
-brought in their guest’s bag and helped him out of
-his overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>The latter stood gazing round the place with a look
-of real affection.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s good to be back,” he said with a deep breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the house has been here. Your fault that you
-haven’t!” Cleeburg cocked his ear to the comforting
-pop of a champagne cork.</p>
-
-<p>“Gloria has enough of my company eight consecutive
-times a week,” smiled Brooks.</p>
-
-<p>“We missed you anyhow. Didn’t we, kiddo?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. Seeing you in the theater isn’t a bit like
-having you here under our own roof.” She took off
-her hat, pushing back the weight of hair as she sat
-<a name="png.199" id="png.199" href="#png.199"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>189<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>down beside him. “They’re distinct and separate lives.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if that’s true,” Brooks put in quickly.
-“Do you really think the life of the stage can be cut
-off completely from a man’s everyday existence?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” There was almost an urge in her question,
-a plea in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m inclined to believe,” he answered slowly, “that
-once the theater is in a man’s blood, it colors everything
-he thinks and feels and does. He’s got to put
-so much of himself into it that it becomes an essential
-part of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why is that more true of the stage than of any
-other profession?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because success on the stage depends less on executive
-ability than on sincerity. It’s swaying that
-crowd out there that counts.” He made a sweeping gesture
-of his long, thin hand. “And they know counterfeit
-when it’s handed them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You said it,” agreed Cleeburg. “Make a business of
-acting and you make a failure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord,” laughed Brooks, “here I am telling Gloria
-something she knows instinctively. Never saw a
-woman so charged with the power to make people feel.”
-He stopped abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria had been gazing into her glass as if into a
-crystal. She set it down and the next words came as
-though she did not want to say them.</p>
-
-<p>“If that’s so—I guess you’re right. I do live every
-thought and emotion of every part I play. I suppose
-that’s why they call us temperamental.” Her full sensitive
-lips curved in a half-smile. “You don’t need
-<a name="png.200" id="png.200" href="#png.200"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>190<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>temperament to sell stocks and bonds or argue a case in
-court.”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” corrected Brooks. “A lawyer
-often has to be a darned fine actor. I know, because I
-started out to be one.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” grinned his host.</p>
-
-<p>“Fact! I haven’t made it generally known. It’s too
-funny even to make a good press story. But I was admitted
-to the bar before the stage got me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll be—!” Little ’Dolph’s fork halted in its
-hurried trip upward.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria pushed her plate aside and leaned farther over
-the table, eager interest warming her eyes. Brooks
-brought his round to meet them. Sitting there with the
-flames flickering over tawny hair and smoky gray dress,
-she seemed somehow part of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us how it happened, John.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, there’s no story strung to it. I’d done stuff each
-year in college theatricals and the last year we took our
-show on tour. I got the bug and when an honest-to-God
-manager offered me a real job I fell for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you ever wanted to go back to law?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I did,” his thin lips twisted, “they’d think it too
-much of a joke to take me seriously.”</p>
-
-<p>He said it with rather a grim smile and looking at
-Gloria. She twisted round in her chair, away from him.
-For a moment silence fell, broken only by little ’Dolph’s
-apparent enjoyment of his supper.</p>
-
-<p>A gale banged against the windows trying to break
-its way in. Gloria got up, went over and drew aside
-the curtain. Brooks followed.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.201" id="png.201" href="#png.201"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>191<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’d love to be out in it!” Her voice throbbed.
-Night shadows, beckoning, fell across her face.</p>
-
-<p>“It would never let you come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a wonderful fight, though, trying to conquer
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think you could?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I think determination can conquer anything—even
-oneself.”</p>
-
-<p>“If one could be sure of that.” He looked down at
-the full lips that trembled a little, at the eyes with
-flames back of them, and walked back to Cleeburg.
-“Think I’ll turn in, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later Cleeburg stopped at the door of his
-wife’s room on the way to his own. She was letting
-down her hair. It fell like a loosened mane over neck
-and shoulders. He took a deep breath, more of wonder
-than any other emotion. She turned, saw him and got
-suddenly to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen what a night it is, ’Dolph?”</p>
-
-<p>She opened the French windows. A gale of dead
-leaves flung itself into the room. She lifted her face,
-pulled her purple silk kimono closer and stepped
-on the balcony. He tried to halt her with a warning
-against catching cold. She laughed and beckoned to him.</p>
-
-<p>Black clouds raced across the moon. Trees dashed
-against the house with all the impotence of human effort
-against the walls of Destiny. There was no rain. The
-wind leaped up and drove Nature before it, a mocking
-god bent on destruction.</p>
-
-<p>“By godfrey, if you could only get that on the stage!”
-whistled Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.202" id="png.202" href="#png.202"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>192<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Gloria said nothing. Her face was still lifted, lips
-apart. Her arms darted out so that the long kimono<!-- TN: original reads "kimona" -->
-sleeves spread like wings. Her whole body was poised
-as if for flight.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg stepped back and looked at her.</p>
-
-<p>She was part of the storm-torn night. Something
-about the abandon of the scene frightened him.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in, honey, won’t you? Catch your death if
-you stay out like this.”</p>
-
-<p>Her arms dropped. She turned and followed him indoors.
-But opening his own window a while later he
-saw her slim silhouette outlined against hers, upright
-with the dusky light of a lamp behind her.</p>
-
-<p>The next day at their noon breakfast he asked what
-time she had gone to bed.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. The night was so fascinating, I stayed
-up with it until day came.” She looked as if she had
-not slept.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg lit a prodigiously long cigar, twirled it between
-his lips and settled back benignly in an armchair
-by the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, children, I’m here for the afternoon. Drive
-over to the club or do whatever you like. Little ’Dolph’s
-going to get busy doing nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>He reached over without altering his position of solid
-comfort and picked at random one of the Sunday papers
-piled on the table beside him. His broad face was suffused
-with a look of utter peace and relaxation. Even
-the ever-active cigar suspended activities.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria’s lips touched his forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll go for a walk—back at four-thirty for tea.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.203" id="png.203" href="#png.203"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>193<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-His eyes went after her the length of the foyer to a
-side door opening on the gravel walk—Gloria in dull
-green sport coat and tam, a fur piece swung carelessly
-from one shoulder; and the tall well-knit man in knickerbockers
-whose elastic step so easily fell in with hers.
-Had they followed farther they would have seen two
-people tramping in silence along a country road strewn
-with leaves that faded from green to mottled dead brown
-under a sullen sky. They would have marveled at the
-set look of the man’s mouth, the quivering of the woman’s.
-Those sympathetic prominent eyes of his, always
-seeking the most beautiful way to simulate human emotion,
-would have clouded with question had they read the
-pain in both pairs that stared straight along the road
-without meeting.</p>
-
-<p>Half a mile or so the two walked and then abruptly
-the man turned.</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to avoid it, Gloria.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he took the matter out of my hands. You
-saw that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could see he was hurt because I hadn’t been out
-this year. And little ’Dolph isn’t the sort of man you
-can hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“We both know that, don’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him without answer. Tears stood
-in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He turned his from them and his lips went tighter.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the finest that walks in shoe leather,” he added.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.204" id="png.204" href="#png.204"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>194<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I told him that the night we came in from the road.
-But I was telling it more to myself than to him. John,
-I felt just knowing that you—that you cared, was disloyal
-to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t have let you know it, Gloria. I was
-determined never to suggest it by so much as a word.
-Then when you went smash at the theater the day before
-we came in, I—somehow I didn’t have to tell you,
-did I?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” It was a whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to believe I couldn’t be anything but
-square with little ’Dolph. You do, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, even on the stage, I feel I haven’t the right
-to take you in my arms. And I must have shown it in
-some way or other. He noticed the difference at the
-dress rehearsal.”</p>
-
-<p>She walked on silently at his side.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m glad you know. Don’t blame me for that.
-It’s the biggest, finest thing in my life, a thing I can’t
-help. I wouldn’t be human—”</p>
-
-<p>“We must never mention it again, John,” she broke in
-and her voice came throbbing as it had the night before.
-“We can’t help it, just as you say. But we must keep
-it locked up tight, so that it will harm no one—not even
-ourselves. We owe that to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’d made up my mind to that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t see me away from the theater. You
-mustn’t<!-- TN: original reads "musn’t" --> come out here any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say it’s better that way.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes traveled along the leaf-strewn road, then
-<a name="png.205" id="png.205" href="#png.205"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>195<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>up to the sulky sky. And because they were not seeing
-quite clearly she stumbled and almost fell across a fallen
-trunk.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s arm went round her, holding the slim
-body a moment. Then with a conscious tightening of
-muscles he drew it away and plunged on without a glance
-at her.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he turned and in the look he gave her was
-a sort of desperate pleading.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there any harm in telling you just once, Gloria,
-what you mean to me? I’ve been telling it to myself so
-long.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t think you’d better. I—I don’t believe I
-could listen.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked down. Her eyes, struck with terror, went
-up to his.</p>
-
-<p>“Please—don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all right. I won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>They came to a trail through the woods.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we take this back?” She turned into it.</p>
-
-<p>He reached up and broke a last branch of red leaves
-that trickled like blood from a dying tree, and handed it
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you noticed how intensely bright this live stuff
-looks when everything around it is dead or dying?”</p>
-
-<p>Little ’Dolph a mile or so distant, dozed by the fire
-with cigar still sidling from the corner of his mouth. His
-dreams were hazy and disjointed. But Gloria as he had
-seen her on the balcony the night before drifted through
-them. The howling night swept by, tearing at silken
-robe and wild hair. She seemed to sway with it. The
-<a name="png.206" id="png.206" href="#png.206"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>196<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>clouds descended. He had a vague sense of effort to
-reach out, to hold her, that breathless catch at the heart
-of nightmare. Then suddenly he lost sight of her. A
-distant crash and he saw the clouds sweep her up and—while
-he stood rooted—carry her away.</p>
-
-<p>He sat up with a gasp. The cigar fell from his lips.
-His heart thumped madly.</p>
-
-<p>“What a shame! The banging of the screen door
-wakened him!” It was Gloria’s voice and she was coming
-toward him.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a great sigh of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“By godfrey, I’m glad to be awake! Come here,
-kiddo. Want to make sure I’ve still got you!”</p>
-
-<p>She whisked the branch of scarlet leaves across his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Just had a dream that took you right out of my
-young life and I couldn’t catch up!”</p>
-
-<p>She pulled off tam and coat, swung to the arm of his
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t lose me, Dolphy dear!”</p>
-
-<p>“By-the-way,” remarked Brooks, as Gloria served
-tea, “please don’t mind if I beat it back to town to-night.
-I’ve got to see my lawyer at ten <span class="allsc">A. M.</span>, and you won’t be
-going in until to-morrow noon, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do mind, by George!” came from ’Dolph.
-“We get you out here once in a blue moon and you can’t
-even stand it for one day. What do you want with a
-lawyer anyhow? Hold on to your pocket and attend
-to your own legal affairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if John has to go in, dear, we mustn’t keep him.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks was looking down at the cap twirling between
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.207" id="png.207" href="#png.207"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>197<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“See, old man! Your wife understands.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right!” Cleeburg got up, peeved, and went to the
-bell. “What time do you want the car? I’ll drive you
-to the station. But hanged if I don’t think you pay
-us a mighty poor compliment!”</p>
-
-<p>He still showed annoyance when Brooks went up to
-pack his bag.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s got him, anyhow?” he put to Gloria.
-“Damned if I ask him again!”</p>
-
-<p>All the way to the station he chewed on his cigar, responding
-laconically when his guest tried to make conversation.
-The little manager had a peculiar racial
-pride that John Brooks unwittingly had speared.</p>
-
-<p>“Good enough to hand out his weekly stipend; good
-enough to give him his living!” kept spinning round the
-active brain. “But not good enough any more to sit with
-at the table! Prefers his Fifth Avenue cronies for that.”</p>
-
-<p>As the car stopped, Brooks swung down, reached out
-a hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, old man. Had a great time!”</p>
-
-<p>“The hell you had!” said Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>He drove back still turning over his guest’s desertion
-and madder every minute. When the car pulled
-up he sprang out, intent upon talking the whole thing
-over with Gloria. He crossed the veranda, opened the
-front door.</p>
-
-<p>She was sitting in the chair he had occupied before the
-fire. Her body was bent forward, head lowered. He
-went nearer. She was stripping the branch she had
-brought in of its blood-red leaves. One by one she broke
-them off and dropped them into the fire. And her eyes
-never left them as they curled up and shriveled to a crisp.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III"><a name="png.208" id="png.208" href="#png.208"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>198<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">We</span> who sit in the orchestra of life are inclined to
-smile, to lend willing ear to whispers of scandal
-from behind the footlights. Perhaps the standards are
-a bit less rigid on the surface. But so are emotions.
-They cannot be hidden as the rest of the world has
-learned to hide them but must be brought forth on the
-stage nightly that we at play may know the joy of
-laughter and tears for which our own lives do not exact
-payment.</p>
-
-<p>Those twin giants, Opportunity and Propinquity, stand
-guard at the stage door, ushering in with a flourish each
-newcomer. Human frailty<!-- TN: original reads "fraility" --> is their stock in trade, the
-theater their most satisfactory market. For a year they
-had stalked the steps of Gloria Cromwell and John
-Brooks. For a year they had appeared at unexpected
-moments, working in absolute harmony, waiting with
-tongue in cheek for the unguarded second when the set
-line of the man’s mouth would relax; when his lips would
-tell her what his arms had not yet made known; when
-the woman’s voice with its strange thrilling note would
-meet his and confess.</p>
-
-<p>And they had been cheated. The unguarded second
-had come on the dingy stage of a small town theater
-during the tour of “Lady Fair”—with Gloria crumpling
-at his feet and his arms going round her in a sudden
-desperate clasp. Alone in her dressing-room, her opening
-eyes had met the look in his like a shaft of light struck
-<a name="png.209" id="png.209" href="#png.209"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>199<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>through blindness. His whispered “Gloria,” the straining
-of her close as if to hold her always; the swift
-loosening of that hold; the step backward; the breaking
-of their locked gaze.</p>
-
-<p>If love could be classified—and of course it cannot—I
-wonder how we would label love that goes quietly
-on its way without hysteria, without big scenes, with
-no effort to grasp that to which it has no right; knowing
-that it must endure, even while it can never find fulfillment.</p>
-
-<p>’Dolph Cleeburg, with round eyes constantly in search
-of new angles on old conflicts, did not dream that daily
-in his own home, in his own theater, those eyes were looking
-upon drama more vibrant than any he could see in a
-mimic world—the quiet tragedy of passion which in daily
-contact with its object, yet soldierwise faces its own death
-knell.</p>
-
-<p>He took note of nothing but the crowds that jammed
-the theater. He planned gaily for next season’s tour,
-to be topped by triumphal entry into London.</p>
-
-<p>“You and John will be a knock-out over there,” he told
-Gloria, eyes popping. “Even if I am sore at him, I’ve
-got to admit he knows his job.”</p>
-
-<p>Gloria looked out at the hills, shorn of all but bare-limbed
-trees and covered with a fine frost, the gray beard
-of coming winter. It was their final week-end in the
-country, later than they usually remained. But she had
-wanted it so.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you spoken to John about going?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not since he was here. Haven’t spoken to him at
-all.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.210" id="png.210" href="#png.210"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>200<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Big baby!” she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he hurt my feelings. I can’t forget the way
-he gave us the go-by.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then—then why send him abroad?” It came
-with a sharp intensity. “We can look the ground
-over when we cross this summer and engage an Englishman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not on your life! You and John pull too well together.
-The pair of you will give ’em a taste of real
-American pep.”</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated, eyes riveted to the vista of cold hills.
-Suddenly she wheeled round, one hand grasping the drape
-that bordered the French window. The next words
-came like a catapult.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph, don’t book me for London! I’m not going!
-I don’t want to play there.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t—” Cleeburg’s jaw dropped in sheer
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“No,<!-- TN: comma invisible -->” she raced on. “I’ve been thinking about it—a lot.
-I don’t want to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve never been over. I don’t know any one—”</p>
-
-<p>“That won’t take long. Why, they’ll be giving you
-a rush the day after you land. And there’s John for
-company if you get homesick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know. But”—she turned once more to the
-stripped hills, then back with something like terror in
-her eyes—“but it’s you I need, ’Dolph. I don’t want
-to be so far away from you.”</p>
-
-<p>He got out of the chair that hugged his merry fire,
-went to her, laid a hand that trembled over hers.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.211" id="png.211" href="#png.211"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>201<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Y’mean that, kiddo? After six years of me, do I
-honest-to-God matter as much as that?”</p>
-
-<p>Her hand curled up and over his, holding it tight.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ’Dolph, if you knew how much I need you!
-More now than ever before! Don’t send me away—don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg’s eyes went up to hers. Hers went down
-before them.</p>
-
-<p>“By godfrey!” he said finally, brushing a hand across
-his eyes. “Think I’m crying. Ain’t ashamed of it,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer.</p>
-
-<p>“You, too!” He peered under her lowered lids.
-“Fine pair of slushes, eh? Well, I want to tell you right
-now, honey—ain’t a knock-out I ever had that made a
-hit with me like this does.”</p>
-
-<p>She brought a smile to her silent lips.</p>
-
-<p>“All I’m looking for is the best thing for you,” he
-went on. “You’re the main guy in this combination.
-I’m just the old back drop like I told you. If you ain’t
-going to be happy in London, you don’t go—that’s all.
-But think it over! I’d like to see my little girl make the
-Britishers sit up. We’ll give them the once-over this
-summer. Then you can decide.”</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tb">The memory of that afternoon with Gloria against the
-sunless winter twilight begging not to be sent away from
-him, was to little ’Dolph like some treasure one keeps in
-a vault—to be taken out, gazed upon and locked away
-again. Sometimes in the rear office that was his sanctum,
-when things had gone wrong or a lull came in the
-<a name="png.212" id="png.212" href="#png.212"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>202<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>day’s activities, he would sink back in his chair, a smile
-slowly radiating his plain features, and before him would
-come a woman with arms outstretched toward him as if
-for protection against all the world. The wonder of it
-made him glow, sent the worries of business scurrying
-into the background.</p>
-
-<p>He was seated so one Saturday afternoon between the
-matinée and evening performances, after having rounded
-up the tour for next season. The immortal cigar circled
-contentedly and he lolled back, contemplating a sweep
-of intense blue sky—but seeing rather the Long Island
-hills against a somber one—when his secretary brought
-word that John Brooks was outside and wanted to see him.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Lo, stranger,” he said a bit sheepishly as the latter
-came in. “Time you showed up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been trying to see you for the past month,”
-Brooks informed him, throwing hat and coat on a chair
-and pulling another close to Cleeburg’s desk, “but you
-passed me up every time we met. Never mind, old man,”
-he added with a short smile as the other started to lay
-down his cigar, “I know why. You were sore at me—and
-with reason. We’ll let it go at that. I’m sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“So’m I,” grinned little ’Dolph and sat back again.
-“When I like a fellow, I like him. Enemies can’t hurt
-my feelings. Now what’s on your mind?”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks got up as suddenly as he had sat down, took
-a turn the length of the room, and came back.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph”—he began somewhat awkwardly and
-stopped. “’Dolph,—when this season closes I’m going
-<a name="png.213" id="png.213" href="#png.213"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>203<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to ask you to get some one else for the road. I can’t go
-out next year.”</p>
-
-<p>For the space of a breath the manager said nothing.
-He sat blinking uncertainly as if not sure of his ears.
-Then he jerked forward.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it seems a rotten trick to pull. But I want
-you to take my word, ’Dolph, that I wouldn’t do it if
-I hadn’t justifiable reasons.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I to understand that you’re handing me your
-notice?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re notifying me that you quit?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p>“When we close. If you can let me off before then—”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg’s laugh cut the sentence like an ax. It
-held—sharp, contemptuous. Then his teeth shut on his
-cigar until the end broke off in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s offering to star you?” came tersely.</p>
-
-<p>A flash from the other’s eye answered the arraignment.
-But his reply was low and quiet.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Since when did you take me for an easy mark?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph,” Brooks began, “you and I have been on the
-level with each other always. I’ve played fair and I’m
-going to keep on playing fair. I’m quitting for reasons
-I can’t make clear to you now. You’ll have to take my
-word for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“The hell I will!” Cleeburg shot out. “This has
-been coming a long time. I saw it when you were in the
-<a name="png.214" id="png.214" href="#png.214"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>204<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>country. Swelled head—that’s the answer! Didn’t
-think they could do it to you. But those society snobs
-have got you thinking you’re Edwin Booth.”</p>
-
-<p>The other man’s thin lips opened. His eyes narrowed
-with a look almost of menace. Then in silence he picked
-up a flexible paper cutter and bent it slowly in two.
-There was a snap. He chucked the pieces on the desk.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a damned injustice, Cleeburg. Wish you
-hadn’t said it. But it won’t change matters any. I’m
-quitting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, sorry if I was hasty. You hit me hard—that’s
-all! Sit down. Let’s talk it over—cards on
-the table. What’s the big idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you didn’t. Somebody’s after you. Somebody’s
-going long on the golden promise stuff. I ain’t a fool.
-That’s plain as the nose on your face. Now who is it?
-Kane? Coghlan? Surprised they didn’t try to get you
-long ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“They did. I turned them down.”</p>
-
-<p>Beads of perspiration had gathered on Cleeburg’s head.
-He pulled a handkerchief from his coat pocket and
-mopped mechanically.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything wrong downstairs?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-no.”</p>
-
-<p>The manager looked up sharply. “If there’s trouble,
-just spill it and I’ll settle things to your satisfaction.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing wrong, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then look here, let’s get down to cases. If it’s business,
-we’ll talk business. You’ve got to stay. Gloria
-can’t get along without you.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.215" id="png.215" href="#png.215"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>205<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Brooks’ eyes shifted to the window.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want any trouble for her,” little ’Dolph pursued.
-“I’ve got you billed together next season. Her
-public looks for you both. I’ll meet any offer you got.
-Yes—and top it.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks turned back slowly, shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg sprang up.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, get me straight—will you? You’re tied up
-tight. And I won’t let you off. Now I’ll just about
-show you where you stand.” His thumb went down on
-the press-button in his desk as if it were going through
-the top. “Bring me Mr. Brooks’ contract,” he told his
-secretary.</p>
-
-<p>Brooks walked over to the window. His hands were
-shaking. His face was dead white. He stood staring
-out with jaws set and the look of a man going into battle.</p>
-
-<p>But Cleeburg saw nothing of that. His own hands
-opened and shut spasmodically. He tramped steadily
-back and forth the space of his desk, muttering to himself
-like the rumble of storm. Under the puzzled question
-that brought brows together was a frown of fury.</p>
-
-<p>When the contract was handed him, he rustled
-quickly through the pages, scanning the closely typed
-sheets, studying it clause for clause.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir! I’ve got you!” he ended triumphantly.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph, I’ve never asked favors—not from you nor
-any other man. But I ask you now to let me off without
-any kick. You know me well enough to realize I
-wouldn’t, without some good reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ve got to know what that reason is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.216" id="png.216" href="#png.216"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>206<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Not the ghost of an excuse, yet you want me to let
-you quit without a murmur! What d’you think I am?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re man enough not to try to hold me,
-contract or no contract.”</p>
-
-<p>“That won’t work! Here it is, black on white.”
-He banged down the contract. “No loophole for three
-years! It’s ironclad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll have to break it,” the man at the window
-said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg went close to him. For some unaccountable
-reason this man calmly breaking all rules of the
-game, made him feel apologetic. An outraged sense of
-justice added to his fury.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you will—will you? Well, we’ll just look after
-that. Whatever you’ve got up your sleeve, Brooks, it’s
-a skunk trick. And I won’t stand for it, d’you hear?
-I’ll stop you from tying up with anybody else. S’help
-me, I will!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not tying up with anybody else. I’m quitting—for
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why I want you to release me.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg gave the same hard contemptuous laugh as
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“What’re you trying to put over?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to tell me you’re chucking a profession
-when you’re right on top?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going back to the law—if the world hasn’t too
-keen a sense of humor to accept a one-time actor as a
-lawyer.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.217" id="png.217" href="#png.217"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>207<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-The manager gave him one long uncomprehending
-look, then flung back his head and roared. It was
-laughter not pleasant to listen to. Brooks stood it silently
-for a stretch while his hands twitched. Then his
-eyes flared as if fire were behind them. Still he did not
-turn from the window.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s end this, will you? We’re not getting anywhere.
-And I’ve given you my ultimatum.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll give you mine.” Cleeburg had lost all
-count of words. The bruise of bucking against a stone
-wall had made him see red. “You stick to Gloria or I’ll
-make it so hot for you that they’ll hoot you out of this
-town! That’s the only way to handle—swine!” He
-broke off, turned on his heel, went back to the desk.
-Suddenly he leaned across it. “What the hell do you
-want, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks came round like a pivot. The other man’s
-breath held at the look on his face. “I want your wife!
-Now for God’s sake throw me out, will you!”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite still in the room. Even the words were
-spoken in something less than a whisper. When they
-had come there was no outward intimation that a man
-had pulled down a mountain crashing about his head.</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg’s hands clenched where they lay on the desk.
-He stared across it without changing position. The blood
-mounted to his wet forehead, then receded, leaving it
-gray white. His face was that of a man ready to kill.
-Then he shook his head a little vaguely, felt for the chair
-behind him, pulled it up to the desk. But he did not
-sink into it. He caught hold of the arm and stood so,
-steadying himself.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.218" id="png.218" href="#png.218"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>208<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Nothing on God’s earth would have made me tell
-you, ’Dolph,” Brooks went on hoarsely. “I thought I
-could make you let me off without a word. But you
-can see for yourself—” He paused—then abruptly:
-“Do you know what it means to take her in my arms,
-loving her? Do you know what it means to want another
-man’s wife and feel her lips on yours every night?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleeburg moistened his own. They opened and closed.
-His nails dug into the varnish of the chair. His eyes,
-so long unseeing, visualized in a flash the scene they had
-gazed upon so often—Gloria in the arms of the man facing
-him, himself urging them to more intense expression,
-more abandon of love. Like a raging animal the fighting
-male leaped up in him—then subsided, knowing it
-had to fight only itself. He met the straight look. In
-turn it met his. And he knew that set mouth had spoken
-truth, clean, uncompromising; could not have spoken at
-all if it had been otherwise. He groped uncertainly,—spoke
-at last half in fear, the first thought that had
-seized him.</p>
-
-<p>“Does—does she—know?”</p>
-
-<p>John Brooks looked into the tortured face and lied
-without hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean—she hasn’t even guessed?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. And I don’t want her to.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why you kept away from us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why you went back to town last time you were
-with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.219" id="png.219" href="#png.219"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>209<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“And I thought you were a damned snob!” A hand
-that trembled came across the desk top. “Sorry I said
-what I did. Pardon!”</p>
-
-<p>The other made an attempt to treat it lightly. Two
-shaking hands clasped.</p>
-
-<p>“No trouble about getting off now, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’d like to eat dirt for the way I talked to you,”
-said Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>“Forget it! Your assumption was the only logical
-one. Another man would be after me with a gun for
-what I’ve told you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” little ’Dolph stumbled on, “I—I’ll star
-you myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Brooks smiled a bit grimly. “I’m quitting—for
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>’Dolph Cleeburg’s eyes, comprehending now, took in
-the drawn face and tired look of the man who had fought
-a losing battle—and won. And some strange click of
-memory brought simultaneously the same look of desperation
-in another face. Where had he seen it? When?
-Why did it haunt him? He sat down, picked up the
-halves of the paper cutter and tried to piece them together.
-Suddenly they rattled to the desk. Gloria!
-Gloria’s white face that night after he had put them
-through their paces, the night she had clung to him, the
-night of her strange outburst of hysteria. Gloria’s face
-when he suggested sending them abroad! Gloria’s face
-a dozen times since!</p>
-
-<p>His gaze moved slowly toward the door, straining as a
-man stares through the dark. His thumb pressed the
-button on his desk, not as before, but mechanically. He
-<a name="png.220" id="png.220" href="#png.220"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>210<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>waited without moving. Yet his secretary stood in the
-doorway fully half a minute before he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Find out if Miss Cromwell is in her dressing-room.
-Say I’d like to see her here.”</p>
-
-<p>Brooks took a quick step toward him.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want her for.”</p>
-
-<p>“To tell her you’re quitting.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not necessary. See here, ’Dolph, let’s drop
-it. You and I understand each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“No harm telling her, is there?”</p>
-
-<p>The other man stepped back and sat down with a gesture
-that told the futility of argument. He, too, sat
-with eyes on the door.</p>
-
-<p>Neither spoke. Little ’Dolph’s face seemed to sag.
-The skin fell heavily round the jaws. The eyes had a
-vague, helpless look. He took out his handkerchief,
-folded it carefully and put it back in his pocket. He
-got up, changed the position of a chair, came back to
-the desk.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph, what are you going to do?” Brooks brought
-out at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Just tell her,” he repeated.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened and Gloria came in, dressed for the
-street.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been waiting for you to take me to dinner,” she
-told Cleeburg. “What’s kept you, dear?”</p>
-
-<p>He got up, pushed his chair in her direction.</p>
-
-<p>“News,” came uncertainly after a second’s pause.
-“Rotten news. John’s leaving us.”</p>
-
-<p>The bomb was flung. He stood peering into her face,
-waiting for its answer rather than that of her lips.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.221" id="png.221" href="#png.221"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>211<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-There would be surprise—there must be that! And
-after the first start of amazement, a protest. And indignation!
-The outburst of the actress about to lose
-the support on which she depends. His hands clenched.
-That she might not see, he clasped them behind him.
-God, let her know the anxiety natural under the circumstances!
-Let her rise up determined to hold this man to
-his business contract! Let her threaten with all the impersonal
-fury he himself had shown! Let her prove
-that to her John Brooks was merely part of her professional
-life! That as such she would not let him
-go!</p>
-
-<p>He waited while his silent lips moved in prayer.</p>
-
-<p>Gloria’s first swift glance was to Brooks. His linked
-with hers. Her fingers locked and unlocked. Twice
-she opened her lips without speech, then turned back to
-Cleeburg.</p>
-
-<p>“Has anything happened? There—there’s been no
-trouble between you, has there?” was all she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” Brooks put in quickly. “I’ve told
-’Dolph I’m quitting for good. That’s all there is to it.”</p>
-
-<p>Little ’Dolph did not take his eyes from her. Now it
-would come—surely. She had been too amazed, too
-taken back before. He waited for the throbbing voice
-to answer.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you’re leaving the stage?” it asked too quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Cleeburg plunged in. “He’s quitting us—cold.
-Get that? He’s leaving us in the lurch. What do you
-make of it?”</p>
-
-<p>With a look of sudden fear, Brooks sprang up.
-“See here, ’Dolph—”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.222" id="png.222" href="#png.222"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>212<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“John must have some good reason—”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what it is?”</p>
-
-<p>She glanced quickly from one to the other. Something
-in both faces brought her, too, to her feet. “Why
-should I?”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t seem surprised when I told you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am surprised, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why in God’s name don’t you make him give
-you some explanation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hasn’t he given you one?” she asked very low.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Do you want to hear it?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph!” the other man fairly leaped at him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute!” Cleeburg stretched out a hand.
-His throat was so parched, he could scarcely bring out
-the words. “Wait a minute! I’ve got to go through
-with this. I’ve got to know.” He turned to Gloria.
-“You asked if anything happened. The biggest thing
-has happened since you came into the room. I sent for
-you to tell you John was going. That means you lose
-the best support you ever had or will have. It knocked
-me out completely. And you take it without a murmur.
-You’ve got him under contract, yet you don’t make the
-ghost of an effort to hold him.”</p>
-
-<p>Gloria’s voice shook as she answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I try to hold him against his will?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why wouldn’t you put up the fight of your life to
-hold him—unless you’re afraid to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Afraid to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s drop this!” came swift and sharp from Brooks.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t—I’ve got to know,” Cleeburg broke in pitifully.
-Then to Gloria like a man pleading for life:
-<a name="png.223" id="png.223" href="#png.223"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>213<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>“You didn’t want me to book you and John for London.
-You preferred not to go. That’s a fact, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it—was it because you didn’t want to be over
-there with him—alone?”</p>
-
-<p>She stared as he put the question—stared into the eyes
-that were like a bleeding animal’s.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t want to go without you. You know that.”</p>
-
-<p>He saw her mouth quiver at the corners and her teeth
-hold the lower lip. And all her nervousness that
-night of the dress rehearsal swept before him in torturing
-detail. He shook his head helplessly. He
-grasped the arm of a chair as he had once before and
-steadied himself. Haltingly the words he had known he
-must speak came at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Why wouldn’t you go without me? Was that—was
-it because you knew what I know now—that he loves
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a start. He saw her eyes fly to the other
-man’s. There was nothing of indignation in that look,
-nothing of anger. Terror—yes—and question! But
-back of both a glow—the instinctive look of the one
-woman to the one man that will live as long as the
-world. Because unconscious, it was all the revelation the
-man who watched her needed. A sort of groping wonder
-at his blindness seized him. Then little ’Dolph sank
-into the chair and, like a candle snuffed, hope went out
-of his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>What she said as she turned back to him was merely
-a veil drawn across thought to hide its nakedness.</p>
-
-<p>She went over, laid a hand on his shoulder and looked
-<a name="png.224" id="png.224" href="#png.224"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>214<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>into the poor haggard face that had not learned, as have
-women, to conceal its suffering. Her own was as white.</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph, dear—whatever John has told you, I want
-you to believe that he’s never, by so much as a word,
-been disloyal to you.”</p>
-
-<p>He patted her hand and tried to smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, kiddo. It’s all right. Honest it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t blame him. We’ve been together so much.
-The theater is so different from any other kind of life.
-It’s so—so intimate.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Dolph has been one hundred per cent there.”
-Brooks squared his shoulders as he spoke and went
-toward the door. “Another man would have put a bullet
-through my head.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you’ll go on being his friend, ’Dolph?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t worry, kiddo.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and I will have each other.” Her voice broke.</p>
-
-<p>His empty eyes came round to her.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re going to stay on with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Y’mean it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I do.” She looked to Brooks and held out
-her hand. “Good-by, John.”</p>
-
-<p>He came over and took it and held it for a moment—tight.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, Gloria. I’ll be leaving town next week, if
-’Dolph’s willing to have an understudy take my place
-from to-night on. I’m not likely to see you again.”</p>
-
-<p>Their eyes met and managed to smile. Then Gloria
-looked away. Something in her throat was fluttering
-like a wild thing.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.225" id="png.225" href="#png.225"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>215<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-When she looked back the door had closed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re all right, honey,” Cleeburg murmured huskily.</p>
-
-<p>Three hours later he let himself into the quiet office,
-switched on the light and went to the desk. A broken
-paper knife lay near the inkstand. He picked up the
-pieces, held them together with half a smile, then let
-them drop from his hand into the waste basket.</p>
-
-<p>The chair he had pushed forward for Gloria stood as
-she had left it. He drew it over, sat down, and with
-broad mouth firm but hands that shook a little, pulled
-a sheet of foolscap toward him and took up a pen.</p>
-
-<p>The pen moved across the sheet, sometimes hesitating,
-sometimes swift as a comet. But the determined
-line of little ’Dolph’s mouth never relaxed.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="noindent"><i>My dearest little girl</i>:</p>
-
-<p>I’ve been thinking a lot since dinner, and when a fellow
-has sort of lost the habit of thinking about anything but his
-next show it comes hard. But don’t you jump at the conclusion
-that what I’m going to say is hasty or that it ain’t
-final. For years there was a funny old feeling inside of me
-that I had something to tell the world and no way to tell
-it. I wanted to put over something on the stage that would
-sound like music or look like a beautiful painting. Scenery
-wouldn’t do it. The women I had trained couldn’t do it.
-I didn’t even know, myself, just what it was. I used to tell
-myself often I was a poor nut. Then you came along with
-that voice of yours and those eyes and the fire that hasn’t
-any name, and did it all for me. If there hadn’t ever been
-anything more for me than seeing those hopes come true,
-it would have been enough. But I’ve had you for almost
-six years. You made me happier than you know, kiddo.
-And what has a poor old dub like me ever done to expect
-more than the happiness life has already handed me through
-<a name="png.226" id="png.226" href="#png.226"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>216<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>you? Why, that’s a fortune that makes the Rockefeller millions
-look like thirty cents. If I try to hog more, if I keep
-you from the thing you’ve got a right to, the thing you gave
-me for six years, shooting’s too good for me.</p>
-
-<p>You don’t think I could let you stay on with me, knowing
-that you and John belong together, do you? And you
-do belong together. You know I always said you made a
-fine team. Why, kiddo, it would finish me. I want you to
-be happy, that’s all. And I saw to-day where that happiness
-is for you.</p>
-
-<p>I fixed it so that John couldn’t get off to-night. And I’m
-going to fix it now so that you’ll play together the rest of
-your lives. I’m sailing Monday to fix up those English contracts.
-When I come back in the fall you’re going to be
-free. No, not free, I’m wrong. I want to take you and
-John by the hands and say—Bless you, my children!</p>
-
-<p>You remember, I called myself once your old back drop.
-Well, being that is about the best thing that’s ever happened
-to me. And I’ll keep on being that if you’ll let me, until
-you quit the game. Let me go on putting you over just
-like always and I’ll be O. K. Don’t you worry.</p>
-
-<p>God bless you, kiddo.</p>
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smc">’Dolph.</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>He folded the sheets without reading them, put them
-into an envelope, sealed it carefully, went downstairs
-and looked up the head usher.</p>
-
-<p>“Take this to Miss Cromwell and give it into her hands
-yourself,” he said. “And here, kid.” And he slipped
-the boy a dollar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Two Masters"><a name="png.227" id="png.227" href="#png.227"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>217<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>TWO MASTERS</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Romance"><i>ROMANCE</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>Love is a fantasy, a dream that only sacrifice can make
-come true. The tragedy of it is not in dying, but in living
-without it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.229" id="png.229" href="#png.229"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>219<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>TWO MASTERS</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcapA">Across</span> Bryant Park, chilled and damp under a
-gray sky emptied of stars, a man hurried. His
-overcoat collar was turned up. His soft hat was pulled
-down. His eyes between the two were dark-circled and
-deep-sunk. His feet covered the wet paths with the
-stumbling haste of one pursued.</p>
-
-<p>To the east the faint gold streaks of an autumn dawn
-cut the clouds. They reached up above the irregular
-skyline that is New York, heralding the day some minutes
-after it was born.</p>
-
-<p>The man sped across Fortieth Street and mounted the
-steps of one of the few brownstone houses, relic of an
-old aristocracy, that refused to be crowded out by the
-bourgeoisie of business. He fumbled in his coat pocket,
-brought out a key, dropped it in his anxiety, finally got
-the inner door open and made his way, still stumbling,
-up the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>At an apartment on the second floor—for the house
-maintained its aloof air of aristocracy only on the outside—he
-paused and squared his shoulders. His whole
-body seemed to steel itself and then, very softly, he inserted
-the key and entered.</p>
-
-<p>A gentle rustle came from the room beyond and a
-trained nurse with finger against her lips met him on
-the threshold.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.230" id="png.230" href="#png.230"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>220<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“She—she’s all right?” he whispered, lips twitching.</p>
-
-<p>“Sleeping.”</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to get back earlier. We rehearsed until a
-few minutes ago.” He threw hat and overcoat on a
-chair and sank into another. His head went down into
-his hands. “God, those hours, when every minute I
-thought—Miss Anderson,” he broke off, looking up to
-catch her expression, “she hasn’t taken a turn for the
-worse! She’ll pull through, won’t she?”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled, a little sadly, at the desperate, so familiar
-query.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s holding her own,” she answered with the formula
-equally familiar.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you tell me she’ll get well? Can’t you give
-me the assurance?”</p>
-
-<p>“No one can do that, Mr. Moore. We can only wait
-and hope.”</p>
-
-<p>She took a hesitant step toward him, hand outstretched
-to comfort. Then evidently realizing how futile such effort
-would be, she turned and went back to her place at
-the foot of the bed that was a misty blur in the darkened
-room beyond.</p>
-
-<p>He followed, precipitately yet with scarcely the sound
-of a footfall. The room was full of shadows. A thread
-of sunlight, forcing its way between blind and window,
-crept across the floor and gradually toward the bed. But
-Frank Moore did not need its delicate finger-touch to
-illumine the face that lay so still upon the pillow. He
-knew every precious line of it, every contour, all the
-shades of modeling that made it exquisite even though
-disease had in a few short weeks pressed into a gaunt
-<a name="png.231" id="png.231" href="#png.231"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>221<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>mask the curves of beauty. He stood looking down at
-its stillness until a sudden broken cry came from him
-and he went quickly into the other room.</p>
-
-<p>With no shame for his man’s tears, he flung himself
-full length on the couch and gave way to the misery he
-must hide when the wistful gaze of the eyes he loved was
-on him. Long days of rehearsal, long nights of anxiety,
-had weakened his resistance. He lay shaking with all
-the pitiable helplessness of the strong man gone
-under.</p>
-
-<p>On side streets and flashing under the reflectors on
-the big twenty-four sheets along Sixth Avenue was his
-name in prominent black letters.</p>
-
-<p class="poster"><span class="smc">Kane Theatre</span><br
- />45th Street<br
- />beginning<br
- /><i>November</i> 5th<br
- /><span class="longdash">———</span><br
- />OSWALD KANE<br
- />Presents<br
- />the New Drama<br
- />“THE LAUREL WREATH”<br
- />by<br
- /><i>Gaston Grisac</i><br
- />Featuring<br
- />FRANKLYN MOORE</p>
-
-<p>How often they had dreamed of the day when he and
-she could look up and see that name as it stood out now,
-heralded, the featured one of the season’s big production!
-<a name="png.232" id="png.232" href="#png.232"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>222<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>How often had she pictured herself stopping to read it
-each time it loomed before them, scanning it over and
-over on her theater program, leaning beyond the rail of
-the stage box to spur him to the success that must be
-his!</p>
-
-<p>And to-night—the night that was to have been the
-greatest in their life, she would be lying there, while he—
-He sprang up, with quick stride covered the floor, back
-and forth, back and forth, like a prisoner in a cell.</p>
-
-<p>The day nurse arriving at seven, found him dazed
-and blank-eyed from sheer weakness. As one feeds a
-child, she made him swallow some steaming coffee, then
-led him without difficulty back to the couch.</p>
-
-<p>“You must rest, Mr. Moore, or you won’t be equal
-to the performance to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I promise to call you when Mrs. Moore
-wakes up, won’t you try to sleep a bit?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t, I tell you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Please—”</p>
-
-<p>She plumped up the pillows and he fell back among
-them, exhausted. He did not sleep but a sort of numbness
-gripped him as if the blood had been drained from
-his veins. And while his body lay still, his mind moved
-with wonder. Ambition—hope—of what use? To-day
-for him, this day that was to make all the days to come,
-there was just one reality. That face in there with its
-lines of suffering, that frail body, that soul that must
-live on for him. Nothing else was worth a thought—nothing!
-All night long as he had rehearsed, perfecting
-under the subtle guidance of Oswald Kane, the minutest
-<a name="png.233" id="png.233" href="#png.233"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>223<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>detail of characterization, the most delicate shading of
-the difficult rôle he had mastered, he had been standing
-in reality at her bedside. Like a well-ordered mechanism
-he had gone through the part. But the indeterminate
-something that was Franklyn Moore had been
-in that shadowy room—with her. Kane had noticed the
-lack. An anxious frown had drawn his expressive brows
-momentarily together. But he had said nothing until
-the dress rehearsal was over and the company had gone
-home to sleep in preparation for the night’s performance.
-Then he had linked his arm through Moore’s and drawn
-him into the darkness of the wings.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, I know this is an ordeal for you. If there
-were any way of postponing the opening, I would do it.
-You know that. But it can’t be managed. We’re all
-set. They could only conclude that something was wrong
-with the play.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course—I know. That’s all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“And, my boy, we can’t afford to let it fail because of
-this—this misfortune that has come to you. It’s on your
-shoulders. We must come through, Frank. We can’t
-stand a failure.” His anxiety was all too evident.</p>
-
-<p>“I was rotten—I know. But don’t worry—”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. I depend upon you, my boy, that’s all.
-And so does to-night’s success. Let me run you
-home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks—no. I’d rather walk it. Want to be alone—you
-understand—pardon!”</p>
-
-<p>And he had stumbled out of the stage door into the
-new gray day.</p>
-
-<p>Now as he paced up and down, he wondered whether
-<a name="png.234" id="png.234" href="#png.234"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>224<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>it would be humanly possible to keep faith with the man
-who was giving him the opportunity to blazon his name
-to the world. Could he go through with it? Could he
-be depended upon?</p>
-
-<p>The nurse appeared in the doorway and beckoned to
-him. From the pillow a pair of eyes, so large and dark
-that there seemed no other feature in the small face,
-fastened on the door as he entered. He dropped on his
-knees, laid his head beside hers. One hand strayed
-up and stroked his thick brown hair.</p>
-
-<p>“How did it go, darling?”</p>
-
-<p>He answered with another question of greater moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you feeling better?”</p>
-
-<p>“Much. They gave me something to make me sleep.
-I must have slept a long time. Is it morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ten o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really? What time did you get in?”</p>
-
-<p>“About half-past five.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did the rehearsal go?” she repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine. Kane thinks it will be a knock-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure it will.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned his face from hers for an instant of silence.</p>
-
-<p>The nurse moved about the room, lifting the blinds
-to the sunlight, preparing it for the day. Then she came
-over to the bed.</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as I have Mrs. Moore fixed up, I’ll let you
-come back,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll let him tell me all about it, won’t you?” pleaded
-the voice from the pillow. “I couldn’t bear it if you
-didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—he can stay in here until—”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.235" id="png.235" href="#png.235"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>225<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Until he’s ready to go to the theater. Please—please!”</p>
-
-<p>“If you don’t wear yourself out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t—I promise.”</p>
-
-<p>The big dark eyes followed him out of the room.</p>
-
-<p>He stripped off his clothes, took a cold shower and
-in clean linens tried to persuade himself that he felt relaxed.
-He telephoned the doctor for a report on last
-night’s visit and was told Mrs. Moore was about the
-same. If she had gained some sleep that was decidedly
-in her favor. The doctor would be over at five and as
-Mr. Moore had requested, would make arrangements to
-stay until his return from the theater.</p>
-
-<p>The small face on the pillow was lifted eagerly as
-he reappeared. Two long braids of pale gold fell over
-the shoulders and onto the white spread. He had always
-adored that pale gold hair. It intensified the dark of
-her eyes, making them almost black. It made her mediæval,
-an Elaine of poetry. He called her “Elaine”
-which after all was not so very far from her own name,
-“Helen.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I want you here.” She pointed to the foot of the
-bed. “Where I won’t miss a word or an expression.
-Now tell me—about everything.”</p>
-
-<p>In a low voice, without stress or excitement, he related
-the incidents that always occur at a dress rehearsal.
-Props that had to be replaced at the last minute. The
-leading woman’s gowns gone wrong. The house cat
-sauntering across the stage during the big scene and its
-portent, good luck! Kane’s decision to light him with
-white instead of amber in the final act. All the little
-<a name="png.236" id="png.236" href="#png.236"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>226<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>shadings, the quaint superstitions, the unimportant incidents
-that make the stage the fascinating realm it is,
-even to the initiated.</p>
-
-<p>She listened with lips parted and an occasional faint
-nod of the head. It was her world, too, though the world
-in which she had failed.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you weren’t too good, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was rotten.”</p>
-
-<p>Her smile said she knew he couldn’t be that, but the
-lips told him:—</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good. A bad dress rehearsal is sure to mean
-a great opening.” A sudden longing, uncontrolled, held
-her eyes. “How I’d love to see it!”</p>
-
-<p>He bent down, lifted one of the white hands on the
-coverlet, pressing it against his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know how I can go through without you,” came
-in spite of him.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes clouded.</p>
-
-<p>“You must, dear! You mustn’t even think of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too much to ask,” the broken voice plunged on.
-“To go out and face that crowd with you—here! I
-can’t do it—I can’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“You must do it, my love.” The spirit so much
-stronger than the body shone from her eyes. “I’ll be
-thinking of you and praying for you. I’ll be with you
-all through the performance. I’ll follow each line—every
-tiny bit of business. But you must put me out of
-your mind. Only your part must count—only your success.”</p>
-
-<p>He was silent, pressing the little hand between his
-warm palms as if to send the vitality from his veins into
-<a name="png.237" id="png.237" href="#png.237"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>227<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hers. But the only vitalized part of her was the feverishly
-bright look of eyes that drew his.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, darling—”</p>
-
-<p>“You know how I always loved the stage—how I
-always wanted to be a great actress.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, my Elaine.”</p>
-
-<p>The big burning eyes traveled into the past. Haltingly,
-with breath uneven and the words only faintly
-spoken, she drifted on the tide of memory back
-toward that horizon of hope so many see but never
-reach.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—do you remember in the old stock days when
-we first met—how jealous I was of you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense! You were just ambitious.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—jealous! Don’t you remember the time I
-wouldn’t speak to you for a week—because you walked
-off with the big scene?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine was the better part.”</p>
-
-<p>Two tears she pretended not to be conscious of gathered
-in the dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No, dear—it wasn’t in me. You tried to give it back
-to me—that scene—at every performance.” Her voice
-trailed away a little wearily and it was a full minute before
-the slow words came to her lips again. “But I
-couldn’t take it away from you, no matter how hard I
-tried.”</p>
-
-<p>She had carried him with her back to the days of struggle
-and hope, when success was a star at the top of the
-world and effort the ladder from which so many rungs
-fell away as climbing feet sought a firmer hold. The
-<a name="png.238" id="png.238" href="#png.238"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>228<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>days when disappointments were shared with after-theater
-sandwiches and the monument of ambition took the form
-of a dingy stock theater on the Main Street of a small
-town.</p>
-
-<p>“And I felt like such a dog,” he reminisced. “That
-was when I began loving you—when I was trying to heal
-the hurt of your disappointment. That night when you
-walked out of the stage door in the pouring rain and your
-umbrella turned inside out and I tried to make you take
-my raincoat but you poked up that little head of yours
-and looked neither to right nor left like a real Mrs. Siddons.
-And then an old cab came jogging along and I
-scooped you up bodily and carried you into it, broken
-umbrella and all. Do you recall how I held you in my
-arms all the way to your boarding-house and kept telling
-you you had to marry me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Take me in your arms now, dear. Let’s live those
-days over again.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked, anxiously yet with an eager plea in his
-eyes, toward the nurse. She hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank,” came the voice from the pillow, “won’t you
-put your arms around me?”</p>
-
-<p>The nurse nodded, coming quickly to the bed. She
-slipped her own arm under the wasted body, lifted it.
-Then the man’s went in its place and silently he cradled
-the precious burden against him, bending down so that
-her position might not be changed. She gave a little sigh
-as his lips touched the silk of her hair.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel better now,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>They were quiet a few moments while the man’s eyes
-fastened blindly on a cornice of the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.239" id="png.239" href="#png.239"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>229<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Her slim fingers curled round his.</p>
-
-<p>“We both love the theater so, don’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—” But he was not thinking of her words.</p>
-
-<p>“Only I never had it, dear,—the spark. It is a
-spark—”</p>
-
-<p>“You have the greatest spark in the world, darling,—the
-love that you give and inspire—that will live on when
-the theater has forgotten me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must never forget you.” She stopped, then softly
-went on, “I—I wanted so much for myself—at first. I
-could learn lines and be letter perfect in a few days—and
-look pretty.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were always beautiful. You always will be.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave a little tired movement of dissent.</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t matter much—because—because—anyway—”</p>
-
-<p>“I love you so,” he said in a shaking voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I used to tell myself the other thing—the spark—would
-come. It took New York to teach me that if you
-have the other thing—looking pretty and being letter
-perfect in a few days aren’t important. But Frank—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sweetheart—”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t marry you because I was a failure. I married
-you because I loved you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t have to tell me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I want to. Do you want me to tell you just when
-I knew I loved you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>She had told it to him dozens of times but he waited
-with the eager attention of one who had never before
-heard it.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.240" id="png.240" href="#png.240"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>230<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Well, it was the time we both opened in ‘The Jungle-Beast.’
-I had just come to New York. You’d been here
-six months. But I was too proud to let you know because
-I couldn’t get a job and was half starved. And
-then we met one day—in Cleeburg’s office—and you made
-him give me a part.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’d have given it to you without me.”</p>
-
-<p>“He would not. It was you who managed me. The
-best manager in the world,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>He had an insane impulse to clutch her tighter, hold
-her so that no power on earth or in heaven could drag
-her from him. But the muscles of his arms merely
-tightened without movement. She lay within them, a
-weight too pitifully light.</p>
-
-<p>“When we opened,” came at last, whispered so that the
-words were a breath, “I tried so hard—I put every bit
-of me into the part.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you were great in it, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, the papers told the truth. I just—wasn’t. They
-didn’t even mention my name—I was just an also-ran.
-But Frank—I was so happy—so proud. My own failure
-didn’t count. That was when I knew I loved you, dear,—belonged
-to you—for always.”</p>
-
-<p>“For always,” he repeated like an amen.</p>
-
-<p>“No matter what happens?”</p>
-
-<p>“No matter—” he could not go on.</p>
-
-<p>She lay there with eyes closed and a smile on her lips.
-A faint pink like the touch of sunset spread its delicate
-color on her cheeks. But only for the moment that had
-carried her into the past. When the eyes opened and
-looked up to his, they were troubled.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.241" id="png.241" href="#png.241"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>231<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“What is it, my Elaine?”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—since then I’ve poured all my ambition into
-you. All these seven years—each step of yours up the
-ladder has been mine. And we have been happy—every
-minute of them, haven’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>He put his inarticulate lips against her forehead.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing can take that away. It’s ours—forever.
-It’s more than life gives most people. And I’m not a
-real failure, because my longing has been satisfied—in
-you.” The clouded eyes struggled to his. “Come
-closer, dear. That’s why you mustn’t fail to-night. Tell
-me you won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the thought of leaving you—it—it’s too much. I
-can’t stand it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You must, Frank! Everything depends on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think anything that matters there—will
-count?”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I want you there instead of here—if it means
-everything to me?”</p>
-
-<p>Her fingers twined feverishly through his. Her
-eyes were frightened. Her voice gathered sudden
-strength.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to spur you to triumph, darling, not defeat. I
-want you to ring the bell, so that—always—I can know
-I was a help not a hindrance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Elaine—you mustn’t talk any more. You’re tired.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I’m not. Let me tell you the thing I want to
-say. You can’t serve two masters, dear, the theater and
-me. You love us both—but to-night the theater must
-come first. It is your master—mine, too. You must let
-it take you away from me when you want to stay. You
-<a name="png.242" id="png.242" href="#png.242"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>232<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>must let it absorb you—mind and body. You must
-forget that I’m ill—forget me while I’m remembering
-you. No matter what happens! Frank—promise
-me—”</p>
-
-<p>“I can only—try.”</p>
-
-<p>Her two hands clung to his.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not enough! Frank—I’d die now if I thought
-I was going to cause you to fail. You must appear—you
-must make good. You must do the best work of
-your career. After all, that will be serving me too, darling.
-You’ll be giving me the thing I want—your name
-the greatest on the American stage. No matter what
-happens, Frank—no matter what—”</p>
-
-<p>The nurse moved quickly to the bedside.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t let Mr. Moore stay if you excite yourself.
-Take this—and please lie quiet for awhile.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t make him go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you do as I say.”</p>
-
-<p>She took the powder and, closing her hands round his
-to reassure herself, settled back on the pillow. He remained
-in his cramped position, half kneeling, half lying
-beside her, filling his eyes with her, listening for every
-faint even breath that told him sleep had once more laid
-relaxing fingers upon her. Like a miser counting gold,
-he counted the minutes that gave them to each other,
-the minutes before the master she said he must obey
-claimed him. He heard those minutes being ticked away
-by the clock in the adjoining room with a terror that laid
-cold hands on his heart. The day must not go! It must
-not escape them so quickly!</p>
-
-<p>Once more he put his head down beside the pale gold
-one. For a long time neither moved. Then the faint
-<a name="png.243" id="png.243" href="#png.243"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>233<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>grip of her fingers loosened, dropped away. But his arms
-stayed about her, numbed and tense.</p>
-
-<p>She awoke and lay smiling into his eyes, but neither
-made attempt to speak. Sometimes he whispered her
-name. Sometimes she murmured his. All the words
-that could have been spoken—all that he wanted to pour
-out—all that he felt—choked him. But the futility of
-trying to express it and the fear of weakening her held
-him silent. Theirs was a communion deeper than speech.</p>
-
-<p>It was late afternoon when she lifted her head, a sudden
-light illumining her spent eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—have they got your name on that billboard
-we can see from the front window?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, beloved.”</p>
-
-<p>“Big?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Almost as big as Kane’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, little lady of mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—I want to see it.”</p>
-
-<p>He started up with protest on his lips, but—</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible!” formed on the nurse’s before he could
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Please, Frank!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid it wouldn’t do, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’d wrap me in a blanket and carry me in. Just
-for a second—just to see it—once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Moore,” the nurse put it, “it doesn’t seem much
-and I’d like to say ‘yes.’ But it would weaken you too
-much.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—no! It wouldn’t—it couldn’t! Why—it’s the
-thing I’ve been waiting for! It would give me new life.
-<a name="png.244" id="png.244" href="#png.244"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>234<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>I want to see his name all lighted up. Please—please!
-Don’t deny me just this little thing.”</p>
-
-<p>Frank Moore’s gaze went desperately to the nurse’s.
-She stood locking and unlocking her hands, nervous uncertainty
-battling with professional caution.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll wait until Dr. Griffith gets here. If he permits
-it—”</p>
-
-<p>With gaze fastened on her, Frank Moore knew that
-she was certain the doctor would not permit it. Yet when
-he came at five and the dark eyes went quickly to his
-with their anxious plea, he stood looking down at them
-for a moment, prolonged by silence—then bowed his head
-in quiet assent.</p>
-
-<p>The man who had been watching did not stop to question
-or consider why. He saw only the light that like
-white fire came again to the eyes he loved. Gathering
-her close, with head bent to hers, he carried her to the
-window that faced the park.</p>
-
-<p>Dusk with its faint blue haze of beauty had settled
-and through it glimmered the first sparkle of the evening
-star. A building off toward Broadway, mysteriously
-illuminated from below, glowed moonwhite and dreamlike.
-The city itself, at this weird hour between day and
-night, seemed scarcely real. But it was not on the unreality
-of material things that the dark eyes centered.
-Over the park they wandered and above the long black
-trellis of the elevated.</p>
-
-<p>There it was, shining beyond its reflectors, the big
-twenty-four sheet:—</p>
-
-<p class="poster"><a name="png.245" id="png.245" href="#png.245"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>235<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><span class="smc">Kane Theatre</span><br
- />45th Street<br
- />beginning<br
- /><i>November</i> 5th<br
- /><span class="longdash">———</span><br
- />OSWALD KANE<br
- />Presents<br
- />the New Drama<br
- />“THE LAUREL WREATH”<br
- />by<br
- /><i>Gaston Grisac</i><br
- />Featuring<br
- />FRANKLYN MOORE</p>
-
-<p>She gave a little joyful sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank dear—it’s real—it’s real!”</p>
-
-<p>Her arms held closer round his neck.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve asked Kane to keep your place vacant in the
-stage box,” came from him finally. “I couldn’t bear to
-have anyone else in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be with you—rooting for you—don’t forget! I’ll
-be with you—always.”</p>
-
-<p>He put his face against hers. He could not speak.
-Through the dusk he saw only those great dark eyes with
-their strange glowing light. He stood with her so, while
-she read and re-read the name that spelled to her love,
-ambition, life. Suddenly—</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t leave you—I can’t!” he broke down.</p>
-
-<p>“’Sh! You must go on and on, darling. Remember,—don’t
-<a name="png.246" id="png.246" href="#png.246"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>236<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>try to serve two masters. You will remember—won’t
-you? For me?”</p>
-
-<p>Their eyes held.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” came from him.</p>
-
-<p>“And Frank—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my Elaine—”</p>
-
-<p>“Kiss me.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.247" id="png.247" href="#png.247"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>237<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">A Kane</span> opening is not an ordinary first night. It
-happens, at the outside, twice a season at the two
-most artistic theaters in New York. It is an event as
-important socially as theatrically. Weeks before, the
-hum of it is in the air. The public palpitates with anticipation.
-When Oswald Kane imports a play from
-Paris, it is the most chic, effervescent and gay the winking
-eye of Paris has gazed upon. When he produces a
-period play, he trusts neither to his own imagination nor
-the costumer’s but enlists the advice of experts and
-dresses his product with the care of a modiste turning
-out a woman of fashion. Every member of his casts,
-down to the most minute part, is selected with an eye to
-ensemble effect. Sometimes the effect is overdone, a
-surface glazed too smooth to be startling. But it is never
-underdone, and the New York first night audience is
-often hypnotized under the hand of the magician into
-believing a mediocre piece of work an outstanding masterpiece.</p>
-
-<p>Through the audience that flowed into the Kane Theater
-on the night of November 5th, like an undulating
-stream of scented sparkling color, drifted that murmur
-of eagerness which was breath of life to the famous producer.
-In it he found all the satisfaction of a woman in
-her beauty or a painter in the eyes lifted to his canvas.
-Glitter, the incandescence of anticipation, they were the
-arclights along the path of his greatness. He stood in
-<a name="png.248" id="png.248" href="#png.248"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>238<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the wings, a gentle, artistic hand straying through the
-wavy black hair that fell across his forehead, giving his
-attention to the final details of to-night’s opening. As
-the actors assembled he gave each an encouraging word,
-the last moment stimulus of a faith not always felt.</p>
-
-<p>The mirror in a dressing-room just a few yards beyond
-Kane’s point of vantage reflected a face mask-like
-in its immobility. The man before it sat staring at the
-reflection as if it belonged to another. A shirt open at
-the neck showed muscles hard and tense. Even make-up
-could not widen the tight red line of the mouth. The
-eyes were dulled as if viewed through a curtain. Frank
-Moore went through his final preparations like a machine
-correctly set in motion. When the last touch had been
-given, he walked to the door and listened to the surge
-of the incoming throng like the song of the sea on a
-smooth beach.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly rebellion shook him. What right had they?
-Pleasure! That was all they cared about. To make of
-him a puppet, a thing for their amusement! God, what
-a joke! Those lights, the chatter, the laughter—himself
-about to stalk on the stage!</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later, as he made his entrance to an
-anticipatory round of applause, he had an insane desire
-to step down to the footlights and shout his thoughts to
-the upturned faces that came vague and white out of the
-dark. Those gay seekers who were using him for an
-hour’s diversion, why should they not know what that
-hour meant of anguish to him? Why should the curtain
-that lifted to them lift only on illusion? Why should
-their pleasure be permitted to surmount his pain?</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.249" id="png.249" href="#png.249"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>239<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-But those in front saw only a man going through his
-part with leaden apathy. Frank Moore, the spontaneous,
-the man who with the lift of an eyebrow or the flick of
-a little finger against a cigarette ash could carry an audience
-into his mood, what had happened to him? A stir,
-that faint but agonizing presage of dissatisfaction, sent
-its warning up and over the footlights. Moore felt it
-with the rest but it quickened neither fear nor blood in
-his veins. Only grim resentment and dull indifference.
-He could not shake them off. He didn’t care.</p>
-
-<p>Backstage the sensitive fingers of Oswald Kane on the
-pulse of his public trembled for the sum, always enormous,
-that would sink with the swaying ship of the production.
-As the act drew to its close his restless feet
-paced the boards, his black brows drew together. Yet
-when the curtain fell and Moore came off, the manager
-showed no anxiety. He approached the actor, gently
-taking his arm. Moore looked up a trifle dazedly as if
-not quite sure where he was.</p>
-
-<p>“Wish I could do something for you, old man!” was
-all the other man said.</p>
-
-<p>“Rotten, wasn’t I?” Moore answered with a tight
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>Kane said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Do my best this act,” Moore supplemented.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I telephone and find out how things are? You
-might like to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—don’t—don’t! I couldn’t—stand it!” His
-strained eyes closed. He went quickly into his dressing-room
-and banged the door.</p>
-
-<p>Kane stood for a second, hesitant, then hurried out
-<a name="png.250" id="png.250" href="#png.250"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>240<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to the elevator that mounted to his studio at the top of
-the building.</p>
-
-<p>In the lobby critics exchanged a few cryptic remarks,
-conservatively trying to withhold snap judgment. But
-frankly puzzled, they asked each other what was the matter
-with Kane. He was permitting an actor like Franklyn
-Moore to walk through his part like an automaton.</p>
-
-<p>The auditorium darkened. The curtain lifted on Act II. Moore made his entrance. He played a statesman,
-ruthlessly trampling under iron hoof friends, family, wife,
-to reach the pinnacle of his ambition. But up to that
-moment he had not been iron. He had been wooden.
-Not ruthless force but numbed suffering marked his gestures,
-the intonation of his deep voice. More than once
-his hand strayed with desperate weariness to his thick
-brown hair. He managed to catch the gesture in time.
-But even halted midway, it marked itself as strangely
-out of character.</p>
-
-<p>As he came off at his first exit Kane was in his path,
-pacing up and down. Once more he took the actor’s arm,
-but this time his voice shook.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want to go home, old man? Shall I step out
-now and explain? We can ring down the curtain.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean I’ve flivved the whole thing, anyway. You
-mean there’s no use going on.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” Kane pulled down the hands that tremblingly
-covered the staring, empty eyes. “No—don’t say that.
-But it was too much to ask of you. I had no right.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you weren’t the only one who asked it of me.
-I’m going through with it, I tell you! I—I’ll get them
-yet.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.251" id="png.251" href="#png.251"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>241<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-A shout of laughter came from the auditorium. Kane
-could not control a sigh. It was relief after the murmuring
-quiet that had marked the play’s reception from the
-first. Moore looked up with a quick, comprehending
-glance. He <em>had</em> flivved the production. Failure was
-upon his shoulders—his alone! He squared them determinedly.
-He waited attentively for his cue.</p>
-
-<p>When he walked on the stage again, he looked out
-upon the vague faces in that crowded cavern at his feet
-and then his gaze traveled to an empty chair in the stage
-box. It rested there an instant and gradually something
-was woven into the mauve velvet. Filmy and gauze-like
-as a cloud across the sun, it took at first no form. Only
-white and gentle and indefinite. But even before it
-floated into the folds of a woman’s gown, he knew that
-above it two dark eyes were sending the flame of inspiration
-into his, a silky blond head was bent forward with
-the light of love gleaming from it. The lips were slightly
-parted as if to call to him. Against the rail of the box
-rested transparent hands, ready to lift in applause. She
-was so eager, so intent, so full of faith and urge and hope
-that he did not realize his imagination had put her there.
-Those other men and women must see her, too. They
-must know now that the one he needed to help him
-onward had come because of that need.</p>
-
-<p>His head went up. A light lifted the curtain of his
-eyes. A live look loosened the tension of his mouth. He
-turned toward the leading woman and again his glance
-swept the audience. Something electric passed over
-them. Franklyn Moore had come to life. He was acting
-now. No, not acting! For as his deep voice
-<a name="png.252" id="png.252" href="#png.252"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>242<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>responded to the unvoiced call which had come to him, it
-swept that waiting throng across the footlights. Not
-illusion but reality made them move forward with the
-drama. To them he was no longer an actor playing a
-part. He was a man living in anguish because in tearing
-the laurel wreath from another’s brow, he had torn
-down his own happiness. The wife he loved had turned
-to the man from whom he had snatched it.</p>
-
-<p>“Of what use is the applause of the multitude,” he
-pleaded, “if I must lose you?”</p>
-
-<p>And as he spoke the words only a few in that vast
-audience saw his eyes fasten on an empty chair in the
-stage box.</p>
-
-<p>The dark eyes that met his shone. The shadowy
-hands came together in applause. The white throat
-pulsed. She was so alive in all her vagueness. She was
-sending out to him what he had always known she would
-give him when the moment came, the spark she had said
-she lacked, the power of love to leap the chasm of uncertainty,
-to know the heights of achievement.</p>
-
-<p>His lips formed “Elaine!” He waited for the applause
-to die down. Then with the man’s eyes still on that
-box, the actor crossed the stage to the woman he had
-lost.</p>
-
-<p>“I ask you only not to leave me! Not now! Give
-me the chance to share with you the success that has
-robbed me of—everything. One chance! Just one!”</p>
-
-<p>And as she told him it was too late to ask anything of
-her and the door shut behind her, he lifted his two arms
-and his voice broke with the tragedy of the immortal
-tenor’s in “Il Pagliacci” as he cried out:—</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.253" id="png.253" href="#png.253"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>243<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I am at the top—and I am alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Even before the curtain fell the bravos rang out. The
-force of them was deafening. That drawing aside of the
-curtain of his soul, that sudden springing to life of the
-fire of genius had an effect more dynamic than would
-have been an easy success from the very beginning.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a clarion blast across a silent world. It
-galvanized the sullen crowd to action. It carried them
-out of their seats. Through the din and the repeated rise
-and fall of the curtain Moore did not move. They
-clamored for a speech. He shook his head. But like
-insistent children they shouted his name, and as the curtain
-remained lifted, he stepped downstage.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing I can say—the credit for this is not
-mine— It belongs to one—” his voice halted. It broke.
-He stepped back.</p>
-
-<p>Construing his few words as a tribute to his illustrious
-manager, they called for Kane—called and waited. He
-did not come.</p>
-
-<p>From the wings members of the cast scurried in search
-of him. It was not like Oswald Kane on a first night to
-be far from the footlights at the curtain of the big act.
-He was always close at hand, after eight or ten calls, for
-a gracious speech of thanks.</p>
-
-<p>But to-night he could not be found. They sent a callboy
-to his studio. He was not there. He had evidently
-left the theater. Discouraged by Moore’s early failure,
-he had apparently given up all possible hope of the ultimate
-overwhelming triumph that was his.</p>
-
-<p>The curtain descended finally after announcement had
-been made that the manager could not be located.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.254" id="png.254" href="#png.254"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>244<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Keyed to his topmost effort, Moore changed for the
-last act. He had come through! He had scored—nothing
-could alter that. And <em>she</em> had made him do it. It
-was her success! His Elaine’s! He had not failed her.
-Two masters! She had said he must serve only one.
-Had he? And if so was it not she, his beloved, whom he
-had served?</p>
-
-<p>He was on the stage, with that swift glance toward
-her place, that prayer to a filmy figure of his imagination.
-And yet not quite. More than his imagination—his
-spirit! They two were one, would be one for all
-time. He knew that now.</p>
-
-<p>With the same fire of inspiration he went through the
-final scenes. For her he played his part—to her he spoke
-his lines. “You’ve come back to me!” he cried as the
-door opened and the wife of the play entered. “You’ve
-come back. I haven’t lost you, dear.” And a vast
-throng of seasoned New Yorkers responded, unashamed
-of their emotion.</p>
-
-<p>The play was done. As the last clatter of hot hands
-died away Frank Moore covered with quick, precipitate
-steps the short space to his dressing-room. His eyes
-were still lifted and alight. He caught hold of the door
-knob and as he did so, another hand covered his.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—”</p>
-
-<p>Oswald Kane was standing beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“I put it over!” came swiftly from the actor and with
-a breath of triumphant relief.</p>
-
-<p>“I know!”</p>
-
-<p>“But I wasn’t the one who did it. She did!”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, too!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.255" id="png.255" href="#png.255"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>245<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“You—?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was there with her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—?” Frank Moore repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“When I saw you were winning out, I felt she ought to
-know. I went over to tell her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You saw her? You talked to her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. She knew all about it. Frank—if you could
-have seen her joy! It was like a light from heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>Moore pushed past him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go to her—I’ll see it now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—wait!”</p>
-
-<p>The actor paused under the shaky, detaining hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank—not yet!”</p>
-
-<p>Frank Moore looked up dumbly.</p>
-
-<p>“You will see a smile on her lips,” Kane went on.
-“It will be there—always.”</p>
-
-<p>The man who heard him stood silent. One would
-have said no change had occurred. Then very low, he
-brought out:—</p>
-
-<p>“Are you telling me—?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my boy.”</p>
-
-<p>Quietly the hand dropped away from the door. He
-stood looking up into the sympathetic face of the great
-manager. Then with slow, shuffling steps, he went back
-to the dismantled boards that faced the dark auditorium.
-With shoulders sagging and head bent he stood
-for a moment. And then a stagehand, moving the last
-piece of scenery, saw him lift his arms and stretch them
-out to an empty chair in the stage box.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Upstage"><a name="png.257" id="png.257" href="#png.257"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>247<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>UPSTAGE</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Comedy"><i>COMEDY</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>Like beauty, color is in the eye of the beholder. To one
-who looks through shadows, white is—well, gray. To the
-uninitiated, a chorus is like a game of roulette—rouge et
-noir. Yet even to play that game, some of the chips must be
-white.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.259" id="png.259" href="#png.259"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>249<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>UPSTAGE</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I">CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcapA">“And</span> I said to him: ‘My deah boy, don’t talk to
-me as if I were your wife! And don’t imagine
-you’re the only twin six in town.’ And we settled it
-right then and there.” The full pouting lips broadened
-into a reminiscent smile. The pink and white cheeks
-dimpled. Miss Mariette Mallard, accent on the last
-syllable, laid her trump card on the table for the benefit
-of her listener whose black eyes sparkled with gratifying
-interest. “And then he went out and bought me a
-big—”</p>
-
-<p>Just what the “big” was remained a question, for
-Miss Mariette halted as a girl slid into the chair next
-to hers and stretched out a hand to dust a film of powder
-from the face of her mirror. They formed a queer
-assortment, those mirrors, all shapes and sizes, propped
-against both sides of the rack that ran down the center
-of the long make-up table.</p>
-
-<p>Above them, on a wire stretching from one dusty white
-washed wall to the other, was suspended a row of electric
-lights in a tin reflector. Before them, dumped
-hodge-podge, were boxes of rouge and mascaro, rabbits’
-feet, puffs and eyebrow brushes. Into them gazed as
-many types as there are flowers of the field, with just
-two traits in common,—all were slender as birch trees,
-all young as Eve before the serpent appeared. Except
-that to most the apple was no longer forbidden fruit.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment there were some sixteen in various
-<a name="png.260" id="png.260" href="#png.260"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>250<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>stages of preparing for the costume, largely imagination,
-which the prettiest chorus on Broadway wore in Scene I of “Good Night Cap.” It was one of those musical
-mélanges commonly known as girlie shows, and advertised
-in red splashes of poster as “A Bevy of Beauties
-All under Twenty.” Its prescription is filled each season
-with merely a change of lights and trappings to distinguish
-it from its predecessor.</p>
-
-<p>The bloods of New York patronize the Summer Garden
-with a loyalty that brings them back at least once a week.
-The one theater in town it is in which the chorus fraternizes
-with the audience, tripping down a runway into
-the aisles to trill their syncopated love ditties into the
-ears of selected members, or swinging overhead on ropes
-of roses, bare knees perilously near bald heads.
-Buyers, politicians, traveling salesmen, miners and perfectly
-proper tired business men with their smiling better
-halves all enter the place with a twinkle of anticipation
-and come out humming a medley of haunting
-tunes.</p>
-
-<p>On the night in question, one of early March, Miss
-Mariette Mallard’s voluminous moleskin wrap was draped
-over the back of her chair and she pulled it round her
-with a pretty baby shiver as she scanned the girl who
-had just come in. Then she winked at the black-eyed
-one.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” she observed, forgetting to go on with her
-story, “how is mamma’s sparkler to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>The girl bit her lip, then turned with a grin that was
-not in her eyes and flashed under Miss Mariette’s little
-nose the hand that had dusted the mirror. On its third
-<a name="png.261" id="png.261" href="#png.261"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>251<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>finger blinked a diamond, the size and brilliance of
-which was breath taking.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mallard promptly turned her attention to the
-black-eyed one. “Gracie deah, suppose you had a block
-of ice like that—wouldn’t you try to make your clothes
-live up to it?”</p>
-
-<p>The black-eyed one giggled: “And I wouldn’t be so
-upstage about it until I did.”</p>
-
-<p>The object of their amusement set her teeth and turned
-back to the mirror, addressing the reflection: “I pay
-cash for my clothes. That’s more than some people can
-say.”</p>
-
-<p>The black-eyed one giggled again. “They look it,”
-she murmured sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mariette indulged in a smile still more saccharine.
-“They look as if you paid nothing for them, my
-deah. Take my advice and pay cash to get rid of them.”
-She gave a dismissing flourish of her small hand and
-patted her pale blonde ringlets.</p>
-
-<p>The chorus girl of to-day buys her hats on Fifth Avenue
-and borrows her manner from the same thoroughfare.
-She never forgets that a lead awaits her if she’s clever
-enough to look and act the part. Not that Miss Mallard
-had any ambitions in that direction. She was content
-to be cute and cuddly and first on the left in the front
-row. But she did try to live up to the moleskin cloak
-and the car that called for her every night. Only at
-unguarded moments did Second Avenue scratch through
-Fifth. “You don’t know how to manage him, my
-deah,” she concluded, baby blue eyes fastened on the
-radiant stone.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.262" id="png.262" href="#png.262"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>252<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-The girl’s lips opened, then shut tight. She had told
-them where the ring came from—and they didn’t believe
-her. Besides, if she tried to answer them she’d
-cry, and she’d die rather than let them see her do that!
-It was the same struggle she went through every night
-and two matinées a week—sometimes with bravado,
-more often in choking silence. Somehow they made her
-ashamed, those two, that for her the apple still hung
-high on the tree. If they wanted to think some man
-had given her the diamond, so much the better! It
-would make her seem popular—less a little fool!</p>
-
-<p>She downed the tears by vigorous motion.... She
-sprang up—a kick of her heel sent her chair spinning—and
-ripping open her one-piece serge dress, she tossed it
-on the hook in the wall where hung a plain brown
-ulster and imitation seal turban—alley cat caught in the
-rain, Miss Mariette had christened it. Then she gritted
-her teeth, pulled the chair back into place and slashed
-on make-up.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie MacMahon, listed in chorus annals as Zara
-May, was one of those who merited the splashing announcement
-of the red posters. Perhaps it was her
-long mermaid hair with its glisten of sunset on the sea;
-perhaps the fact that the lashes shading her deep blue
-eyes were the same gold; perhaps the transparent quality
-of her skin with the swift play of young blood under the
-surface; but whatever it was, Sallie’s beauty held a
-luminous quality Sallie herself did not possess. Sallie
-was just a girl, with a facility for doing what she was
-told. The daughter of a Scotch father with somber
-eyes and an Irish mother with laughing ones, both of
-<a name="png.263" id="png.263" href="#png.263"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>253<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>whom had sailed the misty river into unknown lands
-after a stormy sojourn together in this one, she had been
-left at fifteen to take care of herself, with a love of the
-beautiful on one hand warring against a sense of economy
-on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie loved soft furs and clinging silks such as swept
-into the chorus dressing-room nightly. But she had
-no desire to follow the tortuous path by which such luxuries
-are achieved. However, the fact that the Mallard
-girl and Grace assumed she had done so, did not at
-all disturb her. It was their ridicule she feared, their
-jibes at her clothes. Speeding across the stone floor
-under the Summer Garden stage she tried to bring a
-smile to her lips. They merely trembled.</p>
-
-<p>There came the march of a military air and the girls
-filed up the wobbly wooden steps and through a trap
-door. Sallie fluffed up her abbreviated skirt, brought
-the smile to her lips, fixed it as if it had been glued there.
-Her young, elastic body rippled through the number
-under the changing lights. She loved the jazz, loved the
-stir of rhythm, and had it not been for the ache in her
-heart whenever she set foot in the theater, she would
-have loved the work. She was nineteen. Music was in
-her blood.</p>
-
-<p>She danced through the varying scenes with swift
-changes of costume, hurried dabs of powder, and little
-time to nurse her woes. A number toward the end of
-Act II was her favorite. It was the one in which the
-girls trooped down the runway and trilled to some
-not always embarrassed male occupant of an aisle
-seat:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>“Oh-oh-oh-oh-h-h-h-h—<a name="png.264" id="png.264" href="#png.264"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>254<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a></div>
-<div>Won’t you—smile at me?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Often as she swayed through it, it never failed to give
-her a thrill. Likewise she never failed to get what she
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>To-night, as she syncopated down the aisle, a light
-like blue fire darted from her deep eyes. Kindled by the
-smouldering defiance of earlier evening it was utterly
-unconscious of seeking an object. But the gentleman in
-the particular seat that was her territory could scarcely
-have been expected to know that. To him it constituted
-challenge.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>“Oh-oh-oh-oh-h-h-h-h—</div>
-<div>Won’t you—smile at me?”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">urged Sallie.</p>
-
-<p>The man’s lips parted. “You just bet I will!” came
-in a flash of white teeth.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie’s mind was not photographic. It registered no
-definite impression of the individuals occupying her particular
-aisle seat. They came and went, vague as shadows.
-But this man’s response and his quick flashing
-smile with its personal note, made her suddenly realize
-that she had been singing to the same pleasant grin
-every night that week.</p>
-
-<p>She was still wondering about him as Miss Mariette,
-at the close of the performance, stepped into a short-waisted
-chiffon dress and, pulling it over slender hips,
-slipped her arms through the spangled shoulder straps.
-She and Grace were booked for a party, and the latter
-<a name="png.265" id="png.265" href="#png.265"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>255<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>emerged like a full-blown rose, black eyes dancing above
-a gown of American beauty satin. Then both sat down
-and took some of the make-up off their faces.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie was in the act of pinning on the alley cat.</p>
-
-<p>“Do show him to us, my deah!” persiflaged Miss
-Mallard. “Don’t be so-er-close, even if he is.”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie jabbed the pin into her head, winced in pain
-and, with chin trembling and eyes hot with starting tears,
-hurried into the corridor followed by the familiar titter.
-Blindly she made her way up the stairs to the stage entrance.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, a blaze of changing lights proclaimed that
-Broadway was rubbing the sleep from her eyes and preparing
-to dance. A gold haze lined the sky, veiling
-the night even to the silver-white buildings that reared
-their heads high into the heavens. Lined up at the
-curb was a row of taxis. The modern stage door Johnny
-no longer stands, bouquet in hand. He remains discreetly
-in his cab or car and only when the lady of his
-choice emerges does he do likewise.</p>
-
-<p>As Sallie started to cross the street someone called
-“Good-evening.” But that being a familiar method of
-address, she passed on without a glance.</p>
-
-<p>“I say,” pleaded the voice, “won’t you smile at me
-again?”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie turned then. Descending from a big yellow car
-which, had she known more of auto aristocracy, would
-have stamped itself as of prohibitive peerage, was the
-man of the aisle seat.</p>
-
-<p>He came nearer.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie turned flutteringly on her heel.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.266" id="png.266" href="#png.266"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>256<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Wait, please,” he begged and his teeth gleamed as
-they had in the theater. They were nice teeth in a
-boyish mouth, and upon Sallie they had a disarming
-effect. In spite of an instinctive impulse to run, she
-hesitated. The talon scratches inflicted in the chorus
-dressing-room were still bleeding and the smile of the
-man who had ceased to be a shadow was balm.</p>
-
-<p>He reached her, lifted his hat.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie shifted uncertainly from one foot to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Come for a ride, won’t you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I couldn’t,” she answered promptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I just couldn’t, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave her a curious, somewhat puzzled look.
-“Round the park—once?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I—no, thank you, I couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let me drive you home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I don’t live very far. I always walk it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ride it to-night. Please!” Again that disarming
-gleam.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie looked up with eyes clouded and a tremor on her
-lips. “It’s nice of you to want to take me, but—”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’ve been coming here every night this week trying
-to make a hit with you, and until to-night you never
-even knew I was alive. Don’t you think you ought
-to be a little kind to a fellow who’s as devoted as
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’d like to, awfully—but—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what’s to prevent?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked down, tracing a pattern with the toe of her
-boot.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.267" id="png.267" href="#png.267"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>257<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Please—I—thanks just the same,” she brought out
-finally.</p>
-
-<p>She took a step toward the curb, away from him.</p>
-
-<p>And just then came one of those feathery gusts that
-send whirling the wheel of fate. Miss Mariette Mallard
-and Grace issued from the stage door, their exchange
-of glances telling too plainly that they were still enjoying
-the laugh at her expense. At the curb waited a
-limousine quite overshadowed by the gorgeousness of
-the big yellow touring car. They drew near, still giggling.</p>
-
-<p>Swift as a bird, Sallie veered back to him. Instantly
-he was at her side.</p>
-
-<p>“You can take me home”—it was breathless—“I’ll let
-you do that.”</p>
-
-<p>Eagerly he helped her in, took his place at the wheel.
-Sallie turned with the air of royalty. With the sweetest
-of smiles, her head inclined in the direction of the two
-girls. As the car sped round the corner she saw them
-halt abruptly and, like Lot’s wife, stand rooted where<!-- TN: original reads "where where" -->
-they stopped.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II"><a name="png.268" id="png.268" href="#png.268"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>258<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">To</span> a woman, the discovery that events do not work
-out as she had planned comes in the nature of a
-disappointment. To a man, the same discovery adds
-zest to the determination to make them do so. The man
-in the yellow touring car was amazed to find that Sallie
-actually did permit him to drive her home and no farther.
-He had anticipated that run round the park at least
-once—probably twice—possibly three times. He had
-even anticipated a cozy supper at which, across a table
-not too wide, he could drink deep of a pair of well-like
-blue eyes shaded with gold. But Sallie gave him her
-address, ten blocks from the theater, and though he
-urged with all the masculine dominance of which he was
-capable, she got out of the car in front of a brownstone
-house sagging as if with the weight of its own
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The man looked up the steep steps to where a flicker
-of gaslight sifted on the broken mosaics of the vestibule.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this where you live?” he queried, still holding the
-hand by which he had helped her.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie nodded, adding as she tried to withdraw the
-hand, “Thanks ever so much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here—just a minute!” He drew her back. “You
-haven’t told me your name yet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Zara May.”</p>
-
-<p>“On-the-level name, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.269" id="png.269" href="#png.269"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>259<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Oh”—she flashed him a smile—“that one’s good
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peaches and cream would fit better!” came in quick
-response.</p>
-
-<p>She jerked her hand away. “Good-night, Mr.—Mr.—”</p>
-
-<p>“Patterson. Jimmie Fowler Patterson. You’ll notice
-I’m not so stingy as somebody else!”</p>
-
-<p>She caught hold of the rusty iron railing.</p>
-
-<p>He sprang into the car. “Well, I can wait! See you
-to-morrow, Miss Zara May.”</p>
-
-<p>Two emotions played havoc with her dreams that
-night—exultation over the girls and fear. As through
-her narrow rear window she watched the patch of dull
-blue mellow into dull gray, she assured herself that to-morrow
-she would do nothing more than walk past the
-yellow car with a pleasant “Good-evening.”</p>
-
-<p>But of course she didn’t. Not to-morrow—nor any
-other night that found it waiting at the stage entrance.
-And that became every night.</p>
-
-<p>In the chorus dressing-room an aura of new interest
-surrounded her. That car commanded respect. Miss
-Mariette even restrained her inclination to persiflage until
-one evening some ten days later when Sallie came in
-after the final act and caught her hunched on the floor,
-back up, meowing with all her might while the alley
-cat reposed over one ear.</p>
-
-<p>All the old wounds tore open. The blood gushed to
-Sallie’s head. She grabbed the hat and slapped Miss
-Mariette’s face, leaving the latter too startled to retaliate
-in kind. And when Mr. Patterson begged her as he
-<a name="png.270" id="png.270" href="#png.270"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>260<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>did each evening to drive out to supper, she stepped into
-the car, throat too full for speech.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a broad grin. “Shall we make it up the
-Drive and back to Montmartre?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d just rather ride if you don’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p>They spun up Broadway, through Seventy-second
-Street and into the enveloping shadows of Riverside.
-The moon was up, a new crescent streaking its modest
-trail across the water. On the opposite shore the chain
-of lights was a necklace of clustering jewels laid on the
-plush of night.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie nestled into the deep leather-cushioned seat,
-somewhat to the far side. A sharp wind lifted the curls
-from under the despised turban and sent them flying
-across the man’s face. He stole a moment to turn and
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a winner!” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie scarcely heard him. She was lost in the intoxication
-of tearing motor and racing March wind. Never
-had she experienced anything like it. And gradually the
-turmoil of it soothed her own. She closed her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>When they opened it was to meet a swift turn of road,
-the houses mounted to a higher level and before them,
-far into the star-eyed night, a stretch of wooded walk
-through which the Hudson shimmered.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this?” she asked, hand grasping his coat sleeve
-as if to stop the onward rush.</p>
-
-<p>“Lafayette Boulevard. You’ve been up here—haven’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.271" id="png.271" href="#png.271"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>261<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He slowed down, eyes mocking her.</p>
-
-<p>“Honestly! I’ve never even heard of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord!” he whistled and stared at her.</p>
-
-<p>“How long have you been in the show business?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what have you been doing all that time?”</p>
-
-<p>“Working, most of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But after working hours?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, home right after the show. I’m pretty tired
-then.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave another low whistle, still regarding her curiously,
-that puzzled, half-skeptical expression creeping
-into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“And Sundays?”</p>
-
-<p>“I visit the girls I used to work with.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean where did I work?”</p>
-
-<p>He nodded, still with that curious measuring of her.</p>
-
-<p>“In Brooklyn—in a department store. I was at the
-perfumery. And one day Miss Barton, Bessie Barton—ever
-hear of her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! Peach of a voice—in ‘Kiss Me Again.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. She was playing over there last year and she
-came in to buy some French extract—it’s awfully expensive—”</p>
-
-<p>“I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I waited on her. And after she’d bought a big bottle—it
-was eight-eighty an ounce—she asked me if I’d
-ever wanted to go on the stage. She said I was—”
-Sallie paused.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.272" id="png.272" href="#png.272"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>262<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Go on,” he put in quickly. “She said you were a
-beauty who didn’t belong behind a counter.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know?” came wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t need blinders to make me see straight,” he
-remarked succinctly.</p>
-
-<p>She gave an embarrassed, stammering laugh. “Well—you—you’re
-right. That’s what she did say—and
-she’d have her manager give me a job if I wanted it. So
-I went with them—twenty-five a week. It was a lot more
-than I was getting at the store. And when she closed,
-they took me on at the Summer Garden.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you still go round with the Brooklyn crowd?”</p>
-
-<p>Some note in his voice put her on the defensive.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re my old friends—why shouldn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>He stared at her again. “Queer!” he remarked to
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>They dashed up a hill.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess we’d better be going back,” she sighed regretfully.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter? Don’t you like this?”</p>
-
-<p>“It—it’s wonderful!” Luxuriously she nestled down,
-eyes half closing again.</p>
-
-<p>“Then have a heart! I’ve been jitneying you from
-the theater for two solid weeks! Be a little sympathetic,
-won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed, a ringing laugh free as the March wind.
-“You must think I’m an awful grafter.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re a sweetness.”</p>
-
-<p>The laugh died down. “I guess we’d better be going
-back.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.273" id="png.273" href="#png.273"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>263<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-They swung round. “All right. But we’ll stop at
-Arrowhead first.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s Arrowhead?”</p>
-
-<p>Once more that swift quizzical look, then his head
-went back with a long chuckle. “By George, you are
-cute!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s so funny about my asking?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s called Arrowhead Inn, sweetness—and we’re going
-there for supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I guess you think you’re not hungry?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I am hungry.”</p>
-
-<p>Her prompt and unexpected reply pleased him hugely.</p>
-
-<p>“Right! There you are!”</p>
-
-<p>They were flying up a drive, round a grass plot and
-under a porte-cochère. Sallie saw a house girdled with
-glass that glowed, warm and alluring.</p>
-
-<p>She went into the hall while her host parked the car.
-A mirror on the wall reflected a face very different from
-the one she saw habitually in the jagged glass of the
-dressing-table or the mottled one above her washstand.
-Its eyes were glistening, red lips were laughing, and at
-one corner a dimple danced. The blood surged under
-the smooth skin and went singing through every vein.</p>
-
-<p>To a rotund observer standing nearby, the girl in the
-mirror looked like a golden-haired sprite. To Sallie
-she looked nothing more than happy. She proceeded
-to powder her nose critically and straighten the alley cat
-on the shining curls. She was still engaged in the process
-when Mr. James Patterson came in and bore her
-off under the rotund one’s fat nose. Mr. Patterson
-<a name="png.274" id="png.274" href="#png.274"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>264<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>had already achieved a proprietory air that prohibited
-trespassing under penalty of the law.</p>
-
-<p>He refused the first table offered, selecting one close
-against the window with an intimate little lamp shedding
-its blush over the cloth. Sallie had never felt so
-important, not even the night of her stage debut, for
-then she had been conscious solely of the fact that she
-was dancing with no skirt on before a lot of people.</p>
-
-<p>The head-waiter helped her out of the ulster. Mr.
-Patterson then seated himself and for the first time
-Sallie saw him under revealing electricity.</p>
-
-<p>His hair, parted at the side and brushed straight
-from his forehead, gave evidence of having been in boyhood
-the color affectionately known as “carrots.” But
-frequent use of water and military brushes had charitably
-darkened it. Remnants of freckles lingered where
-no amount of hatless motoring could promote more than
-one coat of tan. Above them gray eyes, not so young
-as they might have been, searched a world with which
-they were well acquainted. Smiling, they were a boy’s.
-In repose, as old as any frequenter’s of stage doors.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie’s gaze settled, not on his features but on his
-clothes. Patch pockets slanted across the coat. The
-waistcoat was high and of the same dark blue material
-threaded with a hairline of white. From the sleeves
-she thought rather too short, he shook down blue silk
-shirt cuffs matched by a soft collar. His blue Persian tie
-was held in an immaculate four-in-hand by a small pearl
-scarfpin. The correctness, the perfection of detail, were
-to Sallie positively thrilling. As he picked up the menu
-she noticed that his hands were wide and muscular
-<a name="png.275" id="png.275" href="#png.275"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>265<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with no shine on the nails. She was glad he wasn’t a
-dude.</p>
-
-<p>He proceeded to order with the casual ease of one
-who knows the chef’s best dishes. Sallie pulled off her
-gloves, crossed her arms on the table, leaned forward
-to listen with a kind of awe. He turned back and as
-he did so his glance fell on her hand. It riveted there,
-then slowly traveled upward accompanied by the
-same long low whistle he had emitted as they drove uptown.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew, what a stone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Sallie. “It used to be my mother’s.”</p>
-
-<p>He stared. After which came a knowing twinkle to
-his eyes and a laugh, equally knowing, to his lips. He
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Honestly it was,” Sallie protested.</p>
-
-<p>His stare probed her—then came a faint flash of resentment.
-“I wasn’t born yesterday—not quite,” he announced.</p>
-
-<p>Tears started to Sallie’s eyes. “Please—<em>please</em> believe
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother owned a stone like that and you had to
-work in a department store?”</p>
-
-<p>“It does sound funny. But it’s true! We never had
-any money after my father died. Nor before, either.
-He just saved and saved, and then when he was gone
-mother just spent and spent. She went crazy spending.
-She said he never gave us enough to eat when he was
-alive and she was going to make the best of it now that
-he was dead. So she went to the savings bank and took
-out every cent and had a wonderful time—for a while.
-<a name="png.276" id="png.276" href="#png.276"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>266<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Hats and dresses and movies every night. She was awfully
-pretty—”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe it,” came vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>“And she never did have a decent thing to wear while
-my father was living. Then one day she came home
-with this ring. ‘Baby,’ she said—she always called me
-her baby—‘there’s not much left and before it’s all gone,
-I want to be sure you’re fixed. If I put it in the bank
-I’ll take it out again, so this way we’ll always have something
-we can hock if we need to.’”</p>
-
-<p>He chuckled. “And did you ever need to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Often.”</p>
-
-<p>Unwittingly, perhaps, his gaze shifted from the diamond
-to her dress and hat. She needed no intuition to interpret
-that look. Experience had taught her exactly what
-it meant. And where defiance had met the girls in the
-dressing-room, a wave of shame now swept over her.</p>
-
-<p>Gazing at him in his immaculate perfection, her fingers
-twitched to toss the alley cat out of the window.
-Yet she could not apologize for it. She couldn’t explain
-that, being her father’s daughter, she was banking such
-of her earnings as could be spared against the day when
-the sapphire sparkle would fade from her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>As the ’busboy shook out the glistening white napkin,
-placing it across her knees, she felt an absurd inclination
-to slide under the table.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Patterson’s attention, however, had turned to the
-silver dish of frogs’ legs submitted for approval. He
-regarded them critically, nodded to the waiter, and Sallie’s
-discomfort vanished in the thrill of a new experience,
-though she wished he had ordered a nice thick steak.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.277" id="png.277" href="#png.277"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>267<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-When they were once more gliding down the Drive he
-leaned over, quickly freeing one hand, and gave hers a
-squeeze.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an adorable infant!” he whispered. “Don’t
-know just what to make of you, but you’ve got me
-going!”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie looked up a little uncertainly. “My right
-name’s Sallie MacMahon,” she stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care what it is,” came tenderly. “My name
-for you is the same as your mother’s—‘Baby!’”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III"><a name="png.278" id="png.278" href="#png.278"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>268<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">“Gracie</span> deah—will you gaze!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mallard’s wide, wondering orbs, accompanied
-by Grace’s, turned toward the door. Sallie MacMahon
-had just entered, resplendent in spring outfit.
-Above slim ankles billowed a skirt of silk the color of
-her eyes. The ankles ended in slippers mounted with
-buckles of cut steel. Her arms gleamed white through
-transparent clinging sleeves. A necklace of pearls
-clasped her throat and over the golden head brimmed a
-wide hat weighted with roses.</p>
-
-<p>She disrobed nonchalantly, hanging her garments
-against the sheet that ran round the wall for their protection.
-She pretended not to see the nudges of the girls
-but her heart sang a paean of triumph.</p>
-
-<p>Now they would stop laughing at her!</p>
-
-<p>Now they would treat her with respect!</p>
-
-<p>Yea—weep for her, ye wise ones! Sallie’s day had
-come. She had fallen from grace. Worse, actually reveled
-in her downfall! That very morning, without a
-struggle, she had gone to the bank and wantonly depleted
-her little horde. There had followed a wild debauch
-of spending such as her own mother had indulged in
-years before. Silks, laces, chiffons, feathers! Shades
-of Scotland, the Irish had won out!</p>
-
-<p>And having recklessly started at high speed, she could
-not stop. She had no desire to. Ridicule she might
-have endured indefinitely, but nightly to sit opposite to
-<a name="png.279" id="png.279" href="#png.279"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>269<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Mr. James Fowler Patterson in his perfectly tailored
-clothes, conscious of the variety and extent of them, <em>that</em>
-had been the straw that broke the backbone of resistance.</p>
-
-<p>Once and once only had Mr. Jimmie essayed the rôle
-of godfather. Reaching home one evening after a long
-drive in the moonlight, he had followed her up the ladder-like
-steps to the dim vestibule. Standing there, he had
-clasped quickly round her wrist a narrow glittering bracelet.</p>
-
-<p>“To match the ring,” he had whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie’s gaze had fastened on the jewels that laughed
-up through semi-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—I—couldn’t!” she breathed at last. And don’t
-imagine it was easy.</p>
-
-<p>“Please! Just because I want you to.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I—I couldn’t, Jimmie.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I ask you? I’m crazy about you, Baby.
-Never was so keen on a girl in my life.”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie gulped hard and, without looking at it, unclasped
-the clinging circlet.</p>
-
-<p>“Please,” he protested as she handed it back. “Please—dear!”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head decisively.</p>
-
-<p>“But I want to see you in pretty things. I want you
-to have them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, Jimmie,—for wanting to give it to me. But
-you mustn’t—ever do that again. It wouldn’t be right
-for me to take it.”</p>
-
-<p>And Jimmie had been forced to content himself with
-flowers and kid gloves and perfume—French stuff at
-eight-eighty an ounce.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.280" id="png.280" href="#png.280"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>270<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-That phrase of his, however—“I want to see you in
-pretty things”—clung to her consciousness. She wanted
-him to see her in them. She wanted to see herself in
-them. She wanted those girls to see her in them.</p>
-
-<p>After which the savings bank simply flew to meet her.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” observed Miss Mallard, still devouring the
-new costume, “I’m glad you’re learning how to handle
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie slipped into her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“May we inspect the dog collar, my deah?” Miss Mallard
-pursued.</p>
-
-<p>With large indifference Sallie handed over the necklace
-and watched the blue eyes widen. Not hers to inform
-the lady that it had been purchased at a near-pearl establishment,
-guaranteeing that “Our pearls rival the
-real.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mariette fingered it lovingly, even to the tiny
-barrel of brilliants that formed the clasp. “Atta boy!”
-she breathed and let fall upon its possessor a look approaching
-homage.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s nothing,” Sallie found herself saying, drunk
-with the dazzle of scoring at last against her enemies,
-“I’m going to get a car of my own soon.” And promptly
-wondered <em>how</em> she was going to get it.</p>
-
-<p>But feminine imagination, given full rein, took the bit
-between its teeth and galloped beyond Sallie’s control.
-She spoke of champagne supper parties and a house on
-Long Island and sables, with the largesse of an “Arabian
-Nights.” She tasted the sweets of seeing baby blue eyes
-and impudent black ones dilate with envy as the other
-girls gathered round. She swept on, heedless of sharp
-<a name="png.281" id="png.281" href="#png.281"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>271<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>turns ahead, and not until the callboy shouted the half
-hour did she halt.</p>
-
-<p>At the curb that night she found a gray roadster barking
-its haste to be off like a pert pomeranian. Mr. J. F.
-Patterson stepped out, then stopped short with a gasp as
-he took in the glory of her. She gave him her hand—and
-waited. To her amazement he said not a word,
-merely helped her into the car. It snorted and raced
-up Broadway. Still not a word! She snuggled into the
-low seat, turned to look up at him. He was frowning.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter, Jimmie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing, I tell you.” His tone was brusque. The
-frown settled deeper, bringing brows together.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie’s eyes filled. She had pictured something so different—Jimmie
-bounding with delight when he saw her!
-Jimmie covering her with admiration!</p>
-
-<p>But his mood did not change. Throughout the ride he
-brooded, silent, absorbed—though she tried desperately
-to make conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this a new car, Jimmie?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you ever come in it before?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the repair shop.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>Silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I like it, Jimmie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It’s so—so cozy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.282" id="png.282" href="#png.282"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>272<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Montgomery’s laid up, Jimmie. And the new lead’s
-made a big hit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has he?”</p>
-
-<p>Silence—a long one.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie—I—I don’t want any supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I think I want to go home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just as you say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie—what—what’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>His eyes scanned the beauty of her, steel buckles,
-silken dress, rose-laden hat. They ended on the glossy
-pearls and his lips which had opened for speech snapped
-shut.</p>
-
-<p>He drove her home, without a word lifted his cap.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie—please—please don’t act that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“What way?”</p>
-
-<p>“So—so queer.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave a short laugh.</p>
-
-<p>She clapped a hand over her mouth, stared at him,
-eyes swimming, then fled up the steps.</p>
-
-<p>The following night Mr. Patterson was late for the
-first time. He swung round the corner just as Sallie
-appeared. She was wearing a violet suit, fluffy lace collar
-and cuffs, and a hat of violets. They made her eyes
-the same color. During a night of tearful and bewildered
-groping she had arrived at a conclusion. Jimmie
-hadn’t liked the way she looked! He wasn’t pleased
-with her dress or hat or something. Maybe he didn’t
-think they were becoming and hadn’t wanted to hurt her
-feelings. A lighter color, perhaps, something gayer!
-<a name="png.283" id="png.283" href="#png.283"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>273<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>After which she rolled over with relief, stole a few hours’
-sleep, and later embarked on another shopping tour.</p>
-
-<p>But the violet, apparently, made no more satisfactory
-impression than the blue. He handed her almost roughly
-into the car. They shot like a cannon ball into the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>There were no stars. The moon had reached the full,
-dwindled and slipped round to smile upon the other side
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie gulped, groped for a fitting subject and finally
-burst out:</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie, tell me about yourself. You never have told
-me much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“How does it feel to have so much money?” she proceeded
-for want of something better to say.</p>
-
-<p>The effect was electric. He turned on her. The car
-jerked to the other side of the road. “You ought to
-know!”</p>
-
-<p>“I? Stop kidding!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you!”</p>
-
-<p>“But—”</p>
-
-<p>“Look as if you’d come into a Rockefeller income!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know anything about women.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you ought to know all about me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—I ought to.” He gave the same ugly laugh of
-the night before but in his eyes was real pain. “But
-who knows what to expect of a chorus queen.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.284" id="png.284" href="#png.284"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>274<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Jimmie!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what’s the use?” came in husky desperation.
-“Let’s be merry!”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie stared, choked and bewildered, into the darkness.
-She didn’t know how to answer, how to act. This
-new Jimmie, this—this nasty one! He was a stranger.
-Small teeth settled into her lower lip. She felt like slipping
-to the floor of the car and crying her eyes out.</p>
-
-<p>For three nights they followed the same program—Sallie
-bewitching in a new costume chosen tearfully to
-conciliate the mysterious male—he taciturn, unresponsive,
-answering her labored conversation with husky monosyllables
-or hard cynicism that hurt without enlightening.
-Twice during those three days it drizzled and, instead of
-suggesting supper in the neighborhood as was their habit
-in bad weather, he drove the short ten blocks to the
-weary brownstone house and left her there.</p>
-
-<p>“As if he was anxious to get rid of me,” sobbed Sallie
-into her pillow.</p>
-
-<p>To dust and ashes in her mouth turned the sweets of
-her triumph over the girls. Though she continued to
-weave stories for their benefit, to elaborate on gifts in
-the past and the car in the future, to flash her diamond
-and twirl her pearls, the tang had gone out of it.</p>
-
-<p>By Friday she felt she couldn’t stand it another minute.
-What had she done? Under the glimmering stars she
-gazed up first in mute pleading, then—</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie,” she choked, “take me home. I—I—guess
-I’d better—”</p>
-
-<p>The roadster snarled at the tug that sent it round the
-corner.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.285" id="png.285" href="#png.285"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>275<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Oh—another date!”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe!” His tone had brought defiance into hers.</p>
-
-<p>“H’m! Thought so!”</p>
-
-<p>“You—you’re horrid!”</p>
-
-<p>“And he’s all to the good—what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—can’t blame you! What chance has a mean
-little bracelet against a string of oyster tears like that?”
-The volcano which had been rumbling all week sent up
-a sudden blinding glare. “Gad, what an ass I’ve been!”
-it spat out.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk like that—don’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it,—a saphead! Swallowed that diamond
-yarn whole—hook, line and sinker.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t a yarn.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll tell me next your mother bought the pearls,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I did.”</p>
-
-<p>The volcano roared a warning. “God!” A pause
-while his breath caught.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true, I tell you! I bought them myself—they’re
-imitation.”</p>
-
-<p>He flung back his head. His laugh frightened her.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—won’t you believe me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you—please?”</p>
-
-<p>“And I put you above them—way on top.” The volcano
-erupted with thunderous crash. “But you’re like
-the rest of them! Price—a string of pearls—a diamond!
-Rotten—that’s what—! Sit down! Sit down, I say!!
-I’ll get you home quick enough!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.286" id="png.286" href="#png.286"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>276<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-White and terrified, she subsided. Words rushed to
-her lips, clung there.</p>
-
-<p>He crashed on.</p>
-
-<p>“But you did put it over! Had me going so that I’d
-have staked my life on you. Got me with the baby stare
-stuff. ‘Baby’—huh! It’s a lesson—I won’t be such a
-damn fool next time!”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie,” the voice struggled to keep steady—“I
-swear to you—!”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t believe you on a stack of Bibles! Down
-on your luck—thought you had an easy mark! Then
-something better—pearls!—came along—”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’ll never forgive—you!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right! Injured innocence—”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I could die this minute!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s tough, though, when the first time a man really—cares—more
-than he ever thought—” The words halted
-painfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, <em>won’t</em> you listen? Jimmie—you—you had <em>so</em>
-much—”</p>
-
-<p>“But the other fellow’s got more! Like all the rest—”</p>
-
-<p>They stopped with a jump that made the roadster
-snort in protest.</p>
-
-<p>“You—you don’t understand.” The sobs clamored to
-her lips. “To-morrow—please—please listen—”</p>
-
-<p>She sprang out of the car and up the steps, clinging to
-the iron rail.</p>
-
-<p>But to-morrow when she hurried out of the stage entrance,
-eyes darting to the curb, Mr. James Fowler Patterson
-was not there.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter IV"><a name="png.287" id="png.287" href="#png.287"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>277<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">“My</span> deah—what has become of the orange motah?”
-Miss Mariette turned her round stare on Sallie.</p>
-
-<p>“What—d-do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the yellow peril doesn’t seem to be on duty
-any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! He—he’s out of town.”</p>
-
-<p>“M’m! Been ‘out’ some time, I take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“F-four weeks.” Sallie found it impossible to talk
-these days without a quiver. And the wells that had
-been her eyes were wept dry.</p>
-
-<p>“When does he return, my deah?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh s-soon now, I g-guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!” Merciless blue eyes took in the small white
-face, listless shoulders and drooping mouth, while their
-owner hummed low and languorously, “When I Come
-Back to You.” After which she proceeded: “And the
-cobbles, my deah?”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pearls! The dog collar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I—I p-put it away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—it—I thought I’d better not wear it round all the
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>After a moment of slow scrutiny Miss Mariette cast
-her eyes heavenward. “You were a wise child not to
-let him get back the diamond, too,” she drawled.</p>
-
-<p>“I d-don’t know what you’re talking about.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.288" id="png.288" href="#png.288"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>278<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Oh—d-don’t you? My deah, do I look as easy as
-that? It’s plain he’s gone his merry way tra-la.”</p>
-
-<p>Like a whip Sallie snapped round at her. “He
-hasn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tra-la, tra-la-la!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you dare—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then where’s the car, tra-la?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you—”</p>
-
-<p>“The car he was giving you, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>Grace, who had entered in time for the last words, tittered
-with all the old enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little car skidded on the way, Gracie deah,”
-announced Miss Mallard.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie’s throat closed in a hard knot. Her head almost
-dropped on the table. But not quite. Pride kept it
-up. Pride and the determination never to let them
-know how right they were.</p>
-
-<p>Yet Miss Mallard, having resumed her tactics of warfare
-allowed to slip no opportunity for attack. She
-teased and tormented and tra-la’d with purring delight,
-sharp little talons inflicting new wounds.</p>
-
-<p>Sallie began to slink into the dressing-room as if to
-hide from insinuating smiles. And coming out of the
-stage door, she fairly ran round the corner to escape the
-torturing vision of that line at the curb.</p>
-
-<p>The pearls she had recklessly let go. After what <em>he</em>
-had said, she couldn’t bear to touch them. They curled
-in her hand like some wriggling reptile. Her first impulse
-had been to toss the necklace into an ashcan, but
-eventually she found herself back at the near-pearl shop.
-A suave salesman after much fingering and testing
-<a name="png.289" id="png.289" href="#png.289"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>279<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>reminded her that they did not refund on merchandise but
-added that he might be able to resell at a loss if she
-cared to leave it. Sallie even hated the money—something
-more than half the amount she had paid—which his
-smooth hands finally counted into hers.</p>
-
-<p>One thing, though, she did determine in the long nights.
-There must be a car! Never must they be certain that
-Jimmie had gone for good! The savings account had
-long since gone the way of all flesh. And cars, like
-Pegasus, soar winged in the clouds. June had come gliding
-into the arms of May while Sallie suffered and waited,
-lived on bread and milk, and hopelessly priced the
-cheaper makes.</p>
-
-<p>Other lips, mustached, clean-shaven, young, and not
-so young, answered Sallie’s plea of “Won’t you smile at
-me?” Sallie did not hear them. Other eyes sought hers
-from motors at the curb. Sallie did not know they were
-there.</p>
-
-<p>She was in her room balancing accounts at 11:30 <span class="allsc">P. M.</span>
-When she did sleep, figures whirled through her dreams;
-figures and Jimmie’s face.</p>
-
-<p>Then in the murky dawn of one June day came an inspiration.
-Yesterday she had seen a second-hand runabout
-painted a beautiful blue for only two hundred and fifty
-dollars, with a week’s trial before buying. Her diamond!
-She could get enough for that! A few months in which
-to tear up to the stage entrance and spring out; to display
-the shining blue body to startled eyes; to make them
-believe he had come back! Jimmie—who never would!
-She gazed out through the streaky window pane and for a
-time the car was forgotten.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.290" id="png.290" href="#png.290"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>280<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-When the chorus had assembled for the Wednesday
-matinée, a ring dropped tinkling to the dressing-room
-floor. Sallie picked it up, proclaimed that the stone had
-come loose and wore it no more.</p>
-
-<p>Later, behind a window barred like a prison, Sallie
-MacMahon’s lips clung together and she looked away as
-her most precious possession passed into other hands—probably
-for all time.</p>
-
-<p>At last the night arrived when the girls sighted at the
-curb a little car blue as the heavens. One of them
-stepped lightly from the stage entrance, fetched a key
-from her bag, bent down, then sprang in and took
-the wheel as though running a motor were a daily
-pastime.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Mallard stopped in the center of the pavement.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell the world!” she breathed, forgetting Fifth
-Avenue. “She wasn’t lying, Grace,—she wasn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie MacMahon smiled upon them, put her foot on
-the self-starter, heard the cheerful chug chug of the
-engine responding and, with terror chasing down her
-spine, spun round the corner.</p>
-
-<p>As she disappeared, Grace’s reply wafted on the breeze:</p>
-
-<p>“But he’s a piker, anyhow. It’s as big as a minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Up Broadway, eyes starting with fear, heart pounding,
-went Sallie. And every instant’s progress petrified
-her. Buildings descended. Motor trucks loomed
-up. Trolleys tore, gigantic, within an inch of the blue
-mite that held her. It was completely, totally swamped.
-Alone in it for the first time, she clung wildly to the
-wheel while all Broadway danced.</p>
-
-<p>Never had she traveled a distance to equal those
-<a name="png.291" id="png.291" href="#png.291"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>281<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ten blocks. Never before had the thought of the sagging
-brownstone house been a welcome one. A century
-later she reached her own street, turned in. Then something
-snapped. The blue runabout stood stock still.
-Sallie tried to recall the varied instructions of the garage
-man who had taught her to drive it. Without his
-guiding hand they were Greek.</p>
-
-<p>She fled in the direction of a passing policeman,
-caught his arm. “Please, would you mind? Something’s
-happened. It—it’s stuck.”</p>
-
-<p>He grinned as he took in the blue mite. “Better go
-and phone your garage, Miss. I’ll take care of it till
-you get back.”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie dropped his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“<!-- TN: superfluous opening single quote removed -->Why, I—I haven’t any—”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Garage.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you do with it at night? Take it to bed
-with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“N-nothing. It—it’s new. I—I never thought—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then find some place to put it—quick. They’ll
-send you a man—”</p>
-
-<p>Sallie stood stock still as the car, then turned on her
-heel and dashed in the direction of the brownstone house.
-On the top step she dropped.</p>
-
-<p>Not a cent in the world! Diamond gone!! Car that
-was no good!! And no place to put it!!!</p>
-
-<p>Early in her career as a motorist she had discovered
-that cars have a way of gathering expense like dust
-by the wayside. There had been extra tires and repairs
-<a name="png.292" id="png.292" href="#png.292"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>282<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>even while you were learning to run it. It fairly ate
-up gas. You needed twice as much as she had reckoned.</p>
-
-<p>And now—this!</p>
-
-<p>Helplessly she gazed at the point far down the block
-where the policeman stood guard. From time to time
-his glance roved impatiently—and when at last he swung
-on his way, leaving the blue mite unprotected, Sallie
-knew there was nothing left but to sit there and watch
-it all through the night.</p>
-
-<p>Then it was that the wells which had run dry filled
-once more, overflowed. Huddled in a corner of the stoop,
-she fastened her wilted gaze on a spot of blue parked
-close to Broadway and wondered what she was going
-to do with it when morning arrived.</p>
-
-<p>She came to drowsily as a clock struck one and something
-heavy descended on her shoulder. It pulled her
-upright, shook the sleep from her eyes and a cry from
-her lips. The policeman!</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing out here?”</p>
-
-<p>She strained forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie!!!”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing, I say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie—is it—is it—you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Answer me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I—oh, I can’t believe it! You—<em>you!!</em>” Then panic
-seized her. “Jimmie—don’t—don’t go again! Wait—let
-me tell you! I’ve been praying you’d give me the
-chance to tell you. I—it was true,—I <em>did</em> buy all those
-things myself. I did—I did! I was afraid you’d be
-ashamed of me.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.293" id="png.293" href="#png.293"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>283<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He stood glaring silently down at her and when his
-voice did come, it was thick and tense.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you know it was just those old clothes of yours
-that convinced me the story you gave me was straight?”</p>
-
-<p>“But the girls always made fun of them—and I wanted
-to look right for you. And you thought—oh, Jimmie,
-what you thought has nearly killed me!”</p>
-
-<p>“What could a man who knew his Broadway think
-when you appeared all of a sudden in a million dollars
-worth of finery?”</p>
-
-<p>“But it wasn’t true! I took all my money out of
-the bank to look nice just for you. Jimmie—if you go
-again—the way you did—I—I’ll die!”</p>
-
-<p>He gave no direct answer. Instead he gripped her
-shoulders until they ached.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing out here this time of night?
-Answer me that!”</p>
-
-<p>The car! Her eyes raced down the block. There it
-stood, untouched.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I hocked my diamond, Jimmie, and bought a car.
-I made the girls think you were going to give me one
-and I didn’t want them to know that you—you—” She
-turned away. “So I hocked the ring—and—and got—that!”</p>
-
-<p>He followed her eyes to where a spot of blue reposed
-near the corner.</p>
-
-<p>“And now it won’t go and I haven’t any money to
-put it anywhere. They’ve been keeping it where I
-bought it and I never thought about garaging. So—so
-when it broke down I just had to sit here and watch
-it all night.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.294" id="png.294" href="#png.294"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>284<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-The rushing words halted. She looked up at the face
-bent over hers. If Mr. James Fowler Patterson had a
-sense of humor—and he had—the comedy of the present
-situation failed to bring it to light. He stood and
-gazed down into the small tired face lifted with such
-desperate appeal.</p>
-
-<p>“I—”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie, won’t you believe me this time—please?”</p>
-
-<p>He bent closer. “If I tell you I could take a gun this
-minute and blow out what little brains I’ve got, will
-<em>you</em> believe <em>me</em>? Will you?” He did not give her time
-to answer. “I deserve it—shooting’s too good. Why,
-even if you dressed up like a Christmas window, only
-a saphead who’s wasted all his life chasing up and down
-Broadway could have made such a mistake. What’s
-love, anyhow? And sweetheart—I do love you. These
-weeks without you have proved how much.”</p>
-
-<p>She closed her eyes as the words came.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he plunged on, “my dad had given me up as
-a bad job—said he was through! And six weeks ago
-I went to him and told him I’d found the girl who could
-make a man of me—asked him to take me on at the
-Patterson Iron Works, I didn’t care in what capacity.
-He thought I was joking—but I put on overalls and
-rolled up my sleeves. Because I wanted to be good
-enough for you. That was just about the time you
-showed up in all that gorgeousness. And I let the idea
-get hold of me— Don’t cry, honey,—I can’t stand it!”</p>
-
-<p>There was an instant of potent silence, then:</p>
-
-<p>“How did you happen to come past here to-night—Jimmie?”
-came smothered.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.295" id="png.295" href="#png.295"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>285<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’ve been coming past here every night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why—why did you stay away from the theater?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t—for long. Wanted to—but couldn’t! I’ve
-watched you come out from around the corner—” He
-broke off. “Sweetness—you’ve been looking awfully
-sick.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been awfully lonesome.”</p>
-
-<p>He lifted her chin.</p>
-
-<p>“Baby—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Jimmie—dear—”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you forgive me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmie—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Baby—dear—”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you wait here till I get into my old rig, then
-take me for a ride in my new car?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="sect">
-<h2 title="Curtain!"><a name="png.297" id="png.297" href="#png.297"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>287<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CURTAIN!</h2>
-
-<h3 title="Melodrama"><i>MELODRAMA</i></h3>
-
-
-<p>It consists not in shouts, the leveled gun, the drawn sword,
-the flashlight in the dark. The quiet moment of decision
-that means happiness or wreck; the hesitant hand moving
-toward a doorknob that may open upon joy or the misery of
-revelation; two people waiting in stillness for the pendulum
-of uncertainty to swing—that is melodrama as it is played
-every day within the four walls that enclose your next-door
-neighbor.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title=""><a name="png.299" id="png.299" href="#png.299"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>289<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CURTAIN!</h2>
-
-
-
-
-<h3 title="Chapter I—Act I">CHAPTER I—ACT I</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">John Shakespeare’s</span> son remarked once in a
-play he lightly invited us to take “As You Like It”
-that all the world’s a stage. He told us that men and
-women have their exits and their entrances, that one man
-in his time plays many parts. But John Shakespeare’s
-son did not refer to the acts that make up this drama
-of living. The first act of introduction, the second of
-conflict, the third of revelation, the fourth of readjustment.
-Not that all lives can be so simply subdivided.
-To some dramas there are ten or twelve scenes, swift-changing,
-tense, terrifying. But whether few or many,
-live in acts we do—each with its conflict, its climax,
-each beginning a new problem, a new turn, a new development,
-until the final curtain is rung down that leaves
-the house of life in darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Partly because of this and partly because Nancy
-Bradshaw’s story is essentially of the theater, it seems
-but natural so to divide the telling of it.</p>
-
-<p>The first scenes had been that old familiar struggle
-of the young girl trying to convince managers that even
-though she has had her theatrical training somewhere
-west of Broadway she really can act. She had encountered
-and combated the habitual have-to-show-me
-look until one day in Jerry Coghlan’s office while the
-latter regarded her over horn-rimmed specs, she gave
-him a disarming smile and said quietly:</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.300" id="png.300" href="#png.300"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>290<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Yes, Mr. Coghlan, I know you’re from Missouri,
-but how can I show you unless you give me a chance?”</p>
-
-<p>Coghlan, being Irish, had tossed back his head with
-a roar of approval and given her what she asked. He
-had never regretted it.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy possessed two qualities that register with an
-audience more quickly than genius—charm and personality.
-I might better say, personality alone, because
-that includes charm, doesn’t it? By the time she had
-reached the place of leading woman and the age of
-twenty-six, she had a following many older and more
-experienced actresses envied. She was never idle.
-When Coghlan, who had her under contract, was unable
-to find a play or part for her, he loaned her to
-other managers who featured their good fortune in advance
-notices and electrics.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had what Broadway calls class. She was
-supple and slender with an airy slimness that seemed
-more spiritual than of the body. She could curl up in a
-couch corner with child-like grace or stand tense and
-supplicating or sway with emotion. But whatever she
-did, one felt the spirit ruling the flesh. She had heavy
-gold hair that fell in deep sweeping waves over ears and
-forehead. The brows that mounted above gold-brown
-eyes were straight and black as were the lashes shading
-them. Her mouth, a bit too large for beauty, had a
-fascinating upcurve when she smiled but in repose was
-strangely firm and chiseled. One found oneself puzzling
-as to whether it belonged in a face whose charm lay
-in the fact that its actual features eluded one. I’ve called
-her eyes gold-brown. They weren’t always. At times
-<a name="png.301" id="png.301" href="#png.301"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>291<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>across the footlights they looked green, at others hazel,
-and often in some scene of fury they went burning black.</p>
-
-<p>Audiences loved her in all her moods—the matinée
-girls because she might have been one of them; older
-women because she might have been their daughter;
-young men because she was so much a girl they wondered
-how much a woman she might be; and old men because,
-for a fleeting moment, she gave them back their youth.</p>
-
-<p>It looked pretty much as if Nancy’s drama of living
-were to flow smoothly to its final scene with no more
-conflict than a pastoral comedy. And then she met
-Richard Cunningham.</p>
-
-<p>She had seen him once when lunching at the Ritz with
-Ted Thorne, author of the play in which she was rehearsing.
-Thorne had returned the nod of a man several
-tables away and Nancy asked who he was.</p>
-
-<p>The young playwright’s eyes snapped as he answered:
-“You, too—eh? Never saw a woman yet who didn’t want
-to know Dick Cunningham.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t want to know him,” Nancy defended herself.
-“I just want to know about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Amounts to the same thing, my dear. Well, when
-the papers speak of Cunningham, they call him a clubman—whatever
-that may mean—and turfman. He keeps
-a string of blooded horses at his place on Long Island
-that are the envy of exhibitors all over the country. He
-has a shooting box in the Adirondacks. He’s second
-Vice-president of a railroad or two, is a regular first-nighter,
-has more money than any one woman could
-spend, and no one woman has so far succeeded in annexing
-it. Men like him and women feel toward him much
-<a name="png.302" id="png.302" href="#png.302"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>292<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>as they do toward original sin—they love and fear him
-at the same time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” Nancy imitated his crisp tone. “After
-that, I really don’t think I care to know the gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will—sooner or later,” drawled Thorne.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy turned indifferently from the object of discussion,
-but in that one short glance she could have told
-you exactly what he looked like. Ted Thorne in a way
-was right. Cunningham was one of those men whom
-women sense the instant they enter a room, not so much
-for height, big shoulders and powerful dark head, as for
-a certain dynamic force that stimulates fear and curiosity
-at once. In Cæsar’s day he might have been a Marc
-Antony, but I doubt whether Cleopatra could ever have
-persuaded him to abandon his armies for her dear sake.
-More likely the devastating Egyptian would have descended
-from her throne, laid her dainty olive hand in his
-and followed where he led.</p>
-
-<p>For a man with manifold interests, Cunningham had
-few hobbies—two, to be exact—his horses and the theater.
-Actors, managers, dramatists, press-agents, all the
-busy bees in that hive of Broadway, knew him—some by
-sight only, others well enough to call him by his given
-name. No first night was complete without him. His
-familiar shoulders swung down the aisle at eight-thirty
-sharp, hand stretched here and there in greeting.</p>
-
-<p>It was said his love of the theater far exceeded his
-interest in women. In the same way, though in lesser
-degree, they were necessary to his happiness—for amusement.
-They entertained him. But as the play is done
-in a few hours and one seeks new diversion, so they had
-<a name="png.303" id="png.303" href="#png.303"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>293<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>a way of revealing themselves to him that after a short
-period became a bore. He grew to know them too well—and
-the glamor was gone. To-morrow another play!
-To-morrow—!</p>
-
-<p>And then he met Nancy Bradshaw.</p>
-
-<p>It happened the opening night of Thorne’s comedy just
-at the time Coghlan surprised Nancy by elevating her
-to stardom.</p>
-
-<p>What a difference one little preposition makes! Stepping
-out of a taxi into dripping rain at the stage entrance,
-Nancy heard a shriek and saw her colored maid drop a
-hatbox on the wet pavement to point wildly at the electric
-sign outside the Coghlan Theater.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of:—</p>
-
-<p class="poster">“THE GAMESTER”<br
- />with<br
- />Nancy Bradshaw</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">she read:—</p>
-
-<p class="poster">NANCY BRADSHAW<br
- />in<br
- />“The Gamester”</p>
-
-<p>It blinked and smiled at her, that dazzling announcement.
-She shut her eyes in ecstasy that hurt. When
-she opened them, shameless tears were streaming down
-her cheeks and a prayer was in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Coghlan was waiting at the door of her dressing-room.
-She rushed at him, arms flung recklessly about his neck,
-and wept into the stiff white collar that held up his double
-chin.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.304" id="png.304" href="#png.304"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>294<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“You deserve it!” he told her, his own eyes a bit moist.
-“You deserve it. Never asked for it. Never nagged me
-for anything. Just worked like hell—and waited. How
-old are you, kid?”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy looked up. “T—twenty-three for publication.”</p>
-
-<p>“But on the level?”</p>
-
-<p>“Almost twenty-eight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, by the time you’re thirty-three, you’ll be the
-greatest actress in the country. Take it from me—Jerry
-Coghlan knows what he’s talking about!”</p>
-
-<p>With his prophecy singing in her ears, Nancy made her
-bow to New York as a star. The audience was with her
-from the first, sharing her joy, her triumph, eyes shining
-with hers, tears flowing when hers did. She took it all
-modestly enough, even dragging on the leading man to
-take the curtains with her. When finally they brought
-her out alone, she stood a bit left-center and one could
-plainly see her whole body shake, her lips tremble like
-some unaccustomed schoolgirl’s.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this moment that a man with towering shoulders
-and the stride of authority left his seat and made
-for the lobby. There he cornered Coghlan and without
-preamble made his point.</p>
-
-<p>“Jerry,” he said as they shook hands, “present me to
-Miss Bradshaw, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure!” said Jerry proudly.</p>
-
-<p>And thus brought about the climax to the first act
-of Nancy’s life drama.</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham wanted to give a supper party that night.
-But she told him friends were entertaining her and Thorne
-at one of those crowded and supposedly exclusive
-<a name="png.305" id="png.305" href="#png.305"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>295<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>restaurants known as “Clubs.” He calmly followed them
-and with two other men managed to procure a table near
-theirs. Cunningham could procure anything anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy saw him instantly and wished he hadn’t come.
-Not that he gave any sign of deliberate interest in her.
-In fact, one would have said he did not know she was
-there. His eyes—non-committal, steel-colored eyes they
-were, the sort that read without permitting themselves to
-be read—scanned the menu. Supper ordered, he turned
-their full attention to his companions. But his presence
-made Nancy self-conscious. Probably, she concluded,
-because of what Ted Thorne had told her!</p>
-
-<p>As they recognized her, men sauntered from various
-parts of the room, white mustache to beardless youth,
-clamoring congratulations. And beside that sweet intoxication
-of dreams realized, the champagne set frankly
-before her was as plain water to the fountain of eternal
-youth. She drank in every word, hearing the same ones
-repeated many times.</p>
-
-<p>When Thorne managed to break through the circle
-with her and spin into a one-step, those they passed
-nudged each other. About the graceful figure in cloudy
-silver with light hair tumbling over dark eyes and lips
-curving in laughter, filmed the aura of the theater, fairyland
-of illusion, the one magic world that makes children
-of us all.</p>
-
-<p>As they went back to the table, she caught Cunningham
-watching her with an unlit cigarette between his
-lips and around them rather a puzzled look, as if he
-might be asking himself some question he could not
-answer.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.306" id="png.306" href="#png.306"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>296<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“So you’ve met,” whispered Ted, as Nancy returned
-his bow over the plumes of her black feather fan.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, to-night. J. C. brought him back.” And added
-casually: “He’s asked me to make up my own party for
-supper some night. Will you come?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will that!” rejoined Thorne. “But before it happens,
-I’ll ask you to marry me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be a goose, Ted,” she laughed—and wondered
-why a frown replaced for a flash the twinkle in the sharp
-eyes behind Thorne’s glasses. They smiled again as he
-raised his champagne.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s to you, Nancy girl—and the future. May it
-be a knock-out for you always!”</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham, however, did not wait for the date she
-had set. The following night he sent word to the theater,
-inviting her to ride next day. He had his horses in town
-for the Show and wanted her to try his pet stallion. His
-messenger would wait for an answer.</p>
-
-<p>There was a tone of assumption in the brief note that
-Nancy resented. She couldn’t tell exactly where nor
-what it was but she had a feeling that, though couched
-in terms of invitation, it had been written with the assurance
-that she would not refuse. At first she was tempted
-to, but anxiety to see his horses—at least that explanation
-she gave herself—made her compromise by writing
-that he might telephone her in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>By the time he called her, she had on her habit and
-half an hour later glided uptown in his car. Through
-the park, fairly purring as it sped over the smooth roads,
-it veered West and out at a street in the Sixties and
-pulled up before what appeared to be a two-story house.
-<a name="png.307" id="png.307" href="#png.307"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>297<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Potted dwarf firs stood at either side of the big arched
-door on a level with the street. Across the front above
-it were three windows, each with its green window box
-from which ivy trailed over the dull red brick. A saucy
-little building it was in the midst of drab flat houses, like
-a French cocotte dropped by mistake into a New England
-village.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy gazed, puzzled and curious, when the heavy
-iron-hinged door was drawn back and she stepped into
-the unmistakable pungent odor of the stable.</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham came to meet her. His hands, tingling
-with vitality, sent a glow through hers as he held them an
-instant. Then he led the way toward the rear. The
-floor was covered with a sort of porous rubber that gave
-to the step and Nancy felt an absurd inclination to bound
-into the air as she walked. Along the walls were cases
-filled with blue, red and yellow ribbons, each rosette with
-its streamers as dear to the sportsman as if it had been
-pinned upon him instead of an equine representative.
-Prints of blue ribboners with famous jockeys up hung
-between the cases. Several of the originals stamped at
-that moment in the stalls downstairs. Cunningham helped
-her down the run.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to meet my best friends,” he said, stopping
-before the nearest stall. “Permit me—Lord Chesterfield!”</p>
-
-<p>With approved good manners his Lordship settled his
-velvet nose in her outstretched hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Chawmed, M’lord,” she smiled. Her wondering eyes
-went the length of the place.</p>
-
-<p>It was daintily white as a woman’s boudoir, each stall
-<a name="png.308" id="png.308" href="#png.308"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>298<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>bordered in brilliant blue and bearing its occupant’s monogram
-in the same color. A border of blue ran round the
-white walls. Even the water buckets and feed boxes
-were white with horse’s heads painted on them.</p>
-
-<p>There was a rush forward and eager heads poked out
-as Cunningham went down the line. Satin bodies swaggered,
-priming themselves for approval.</p>
-
-<p>“No wonder they’re your friends!” Nancy observed.
-“You treat them so well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think friendship has to be won that way?”
-he put quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“No. It’s usually given first and earned afterward.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not <em>friendship</em> you’re speaking of.” The look
-he bent on her was disconcerting. Nancy turned to
-follow a groom who was leading two horses, saddled,
-toward the run.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later they swung through the wide
-doorway into the autumn sunshine. Nancy had never
-ridden any but academy horses and the sense of the fine,
-spirited animal under her with his rearing head and shining
-coat made her blood dance. Flying down the bridle
-path was like soaring heavenward on Pegasus. Poetry
-was in the air, in her eyes, in the crack of the gravel
-under their horses’ feet. The man beside her sat his
-mount, a bay of sixteen hands, as if part of it. His
-muscular hands barely touched the reins.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that I rode?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I recalled seeing your picture in riding habit in one
-of the magazines.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that doesn’t prove anything. It’s the privilege
-of an actress to be photographed in habit, even if she
-<a name="png.309" id="png.309" href="#png.309"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>299<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>wouldn’t go near enough to a real horse to feed him a
-lump of sugar.”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed, looked down at her slim straight body
-in its tan coat, at the graceful limbs swung across her
-mount, at her glossy gold hair and the light of the sun in
-her eyes. “Well, I should have known you did anyway.
-There’s nothing vital you couldn’t do.”</p>
-
-<p>He put it not as a question but directly, as if giving
-her the information. She found no answer. This man
-left her strangely speechless. For no reason at all her
-cheeks went red with a deeper flush than the exercise
-had brought to them.</p>
-
-<p>She said little during the two hours of their ride. He
-told her of the fascination the theater had for him.
-Then her eyes shone through their black lashes and she
-told him it was her life. She loved it not as an artist
-loves his work but with the passion one gives a human
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s why you’ve made good,” he answered
-promptly. “Because you’ve given yourself completely.”
-He paused, then with the usual startling abruptness:
-“Do you know, I had an actual sense of pride last night,
-watching that crowd swarm round you. Odd, that—isn’t
-it—in a man who had just met you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” She did not meet the gaze she knew was
-turned on her.</p>
-
-<p>When they dismounted and he was handing her into
-the car, he bent down and into his non-committal eyes
-came a warmth that enveloped her like a flame.</p>
-
-<p>“And to think that I flipped a coin last night whether
-to go to the Show or go to see you!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.310" id="png.310" href="#png.310"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>300<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-She rode with him every day after that. He arranged
-it as a matter of course. He had a direct way of taking
-things into his own hands just as he had a direct way
-of looking and speaking. Often it made her gasp but
-at the same time possessed the attraction male dominance
-always holds for the primitive in woman. Particularly
-to the woman who has fought her own battles
-is there something hypnotic in having decision taken out
-of her hands.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of two weeks she called his horses by name;
-had fed them more sugar than was good for them; had
-dined and danced with him; and knew, though to herself
-she denied it, that tongues quick to wag, were busy with
-their names. Nancy Bradshaw, popular star, and Dick
-Cunningham who, in the eyes of the world, could like
-Joshua command sun and moon and stars to stand
-still!</p>
-
-<p>When his friends—men who made the nation’s pulse
-throb—stopped at their table in a restaurant or, as was
-frequently the case, joined them at his invitation and
-gave to Nancy the homage a charming actress always
-receives from men a bit jaded, Cunningham’s probing
-glance warmed and a smile softened his sharply determined
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>He sent her flowers and books as a matter of course.
-Wherever they went he surrounded her with an atmosphere
-of unconscious luxury that was like a narcotic.</p>
-
-<p>And finally at the house of the fir trees, instead of
-that diamond-lighted district bounded by the Forties,
-he gave the supper-party they had planned the night of
-their meeting. Ted Thorne was there and Lilla Grant,
-<a name="png.311" id="png.311" href="#png.311"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>301<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ingénue of the company, a sinuous little thing with pert
-nose, full Oriental lips and eyes that might have come
-from Egypt. She had begged Nancy to let her meet
-Cunningham.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll get there, that kid,” Jerry Coghlan had once
-remarked. “Don’t know yet whether her name used to
-be O’Shaughnessy or Rabinowitz. But take it from me,
-she’ll make her mark—maybe because it used to be both.”</p>
-
-<p>Lights shone in the upper windows as the four stepped
-from the car, not the brilliant light of electricity but one
-gentle and golden. They went up the flight of steps
-leading to the unique apartment above the stable.</p>
-
-<p>“Make yourselves at home. I’ll send a maid.” Cunningham
-opened the door to a room done in gray and
-rose, with enameled dressing-table and pier-glass, and
-rose brocade chairs, divan and hangings.</p>
-
-<p>Lilla dropped her frou-frou of cloak from bare
-shoulders and, taking the center of the floor, gazed round
-with glistening eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What a duck you were to ask me!” she cried. “I’ve
-been just crazy to see this place.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy turned. “You’ve heard of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heard of it! My dear, there have been <em>some</em> parties
-given here!”</p>
-
-<p>Swift indignation swept the color into Nancy’s cheeks.
-The insinuating tone more than the words angered her.
-“Don’t talk like that!” Her eyes flashed black as they
-sometimes did in a big scene.</p>
-
-<p>Lilla looked up wickedly. “Crazy about him, aren’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>The color went, leaving her white. “Of course not.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.312" id="png.312" href="#png.312"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>302<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Well, don’t let him know it—that’s all I have to say.”</p>
-
-<p>She powdered her nose, head perked to one side,
-guided a brush over hair dense-dark as velvet, added a
-touch of mascaro to her lashes, and turning to the maid
-who had just come in asked whether her dress was hooked
-all the way up the back.</p>
-
-<p>“I do envy you, Nancy,” she frowned, taking in the
-other girl’s graceful figure in swathing black satin, relieved
-only by a splash of green fan. “One of these
-days—soon—I’m going to have a maid and not break
-my neck gathering myself together after the show.”</p>
-
-<p>As they went out Lilla linked her arm in Cunningham’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you live in this heavenly place?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No. But I like to have people here—the people
-I like, I should say. That’s why I fixed up the
-second floor—for parties like this one. There’s a fully
-equipped kitchen at the back. And here’s my banquet
-hall.”</p>
-
-<p>The short corridor ended in the room of the three
-windows. They might have been entering an Italian
-Villa. Paneled oak stretched straight to the ceiling.
-At either end yawned a marble fireplace with logs sputtering
-the faint scent of fir. A refectory table, with
-couch the color of purple grapes backed against it fronted
-one. Drawn close to the other stood two old Medici
-chairs. On both mantels and smaller tables were candlesticks
-with thick yellow candles. The silver set for supper
-on the long table gleamed under the glow of branching
-candelabra.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.313" id="png.313" href="#png.313"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>303<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Cunningham watched Nancy’s face as she paused in
-the doorway. Her eyes had dreams in them.</p>
-
-<p>“Makes a great stage setting for you,” he whispered.
-“I’ll want you here all the time now.”</p>
-
-<p>A manservant passed cigarettes. They sat and
-chatted while they waited for the other guests, Mr.
-and Mrs. Courtleigh Bishop and several friends who were
-coming in from the Opera. Nancy was in a chair by the
-fire; Lilla nested in the couch depths, her somber gaze
-lidded as if heavy with secrets, following her host; and
-Thorne springing up every now and then to wander about
-the room, examining its treasures.</p>
-
-<p>Lilla watched and listened to the others, much as she
-watched and absorbed every word of the director at
-rehearsals. She had advanced by wits rather than wit
-and was clever enough to know the value of silence.
-Only when Cunningham brought her the spray of orchids
-he had supplied for each of the women did she
-look up from under thick lids.</p>
-
-<p>“You do everything just right,” she murmured, pinning
-them into the orange chiffon at her waist, “and I
-guess never anything wrong.”</p>
-
-<p>In her somnolent eyes was an obvious dare to which
-several weeks ago Cunningham would probably have
-responded. Now he smiled down amusedly at the round
-soft form sunk in the couch cushions and went back to
-Nancy. The somnolent eyes went after him.</p>
-
-<p>They persuaded Thorne who, unlike a number of writing
-men, hated to talk about himself, to tell the plot of
-his new play.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.314" id="png.314" href="#png.314"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>304<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’ve tackled a big problem,” he said. “Woman’s
-rights in love!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve tackled the universe,” came from Cunningham.
-“Fifty years ago it could have been summed up
-in one beautiful word, ‘Submission’. To-day—” He
-flung up his hands.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy smiled. “And you’re just the type a submissive
-woman would bore to death.”<!-- TN: original has single closing quote --></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you believe it,” chimed in Lilla. “He’s apt
-to fall for some baby doll who’ll tell him what a great
-big wonderful man he is and do exactly what he wants—when
-he’s around.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t subscribe to the fifty-fifty theory then,
-old man?” suggested Thorne when the laugh died
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I believe in ninety-nine-one. At least women
-can make it that if they know how to handle us. Just
-as Miss Grant says, we’re nothing but a bunch of boobs.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what you like to make us think,” Nancy corrected.
-“And the unfortunate part of it is, we want to
-deceive ourselves just as much as you want to deceive
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham blew a ring of feathery cigarette smoke
-and studied her through it. “I didn’t know you were
-such a cynic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you think dealing with theatrical managers had
-taught me nothing?” she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>At twelve Mrs. Bishop bubbled in commandeering
-a group of light-voiced women and husky-voiced men.</p>
-
-<p>She apologized for being late and wailed at the length
-of Russian Opera.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.315" id="png.315" href="#png.315"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>305<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Courty can sleep through it all,” she sighed. “But
-the noise keeps me awake.”</p>
-
-<p>She caught Nancy by both hands, drawing her out
-of the chair.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been so anxious to know you, my dear. I
-begged Dicky to bring you to see me but he said you
-were the mountain—Mohammet would have to come to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>All through the elaborate supper they gushed over
-her, with just that touch of patronage position assured
-permits itself toward those of the stage.</p>
-
-<p>But though conversation was light and general and
-Cunningham the perfect host, he might have been alone
-with the young star, so completely did his eyes disregard
-the others. They seemed to send their gaze round her
-like a cloak. She felt it unmistakably and a glow
-radiated from her eyes and voice, from her whole
-body.</p>
-
-<p>When the dregs of Crème<!-- TN: original reads "Crême" --> de Menthe and Benedictine
-had settled in little green and gold pools at the
-bottom of cordial glasses, and candle flames gleamed faint
-blue in the dripping tallow; when laughing voices mellowed
-into distance and cars had slid off into darkness,
-two figures stood at the curb in front of the little house.
-The door swung slowly shut behind them. The woman
-looked up, the man down, and there flashed between
-them that secret look of understanding that can pass
-only when words no longer have value.</p>
-
-<p>The last car drove up. He helped her in. The door
-slammed. Without a word he took her to him. Just
-as his gaze had encompassed her, so his arms enclosed
-<a name="png.316" id="png.316" href="#png.316"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>306<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>her now. Her lips trembled against his. For a moment,
-endless because of all time, there was silence—that
-intense beating silence that chokes.</p>
-
-<p>Then his voice came with a ring of triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“You know I want you.” And he waited for no answer.
-“You knew I wanted you that night we met.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—I knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the first woman I’ve ever wanted—for my
-wife.”</p>
-
-<p>The word danced into the soft gloom of night merging
-into day, out across the wraith-like Park, up to the sky
-where pale stars spelled it before her. She murmured
-it, and he bent closer.</p>
-
-<p>“Mine! Nancy—you don’t know how much it’s
-meant, seeing them gather round you and knowing that
-you were going to belong to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Their lips were one again. At the moment she took
-no count of the assurance that had brooked no denial.
-She only throbbed to the strength of him and smiled into
-the eyes so close to hers.</p>
-
-<p>The car sped past shadowy trees, past lamps paled
-against the rising dawn, through a world unreal not because
-light had not yet come but because these two were
-in a world apart. They spoke low, as lovers will though
-no one is there to hear; in short phrases, saying little
-yet so much, she seeking to hold close this wonder thing,
-he with the claim of the possessor.</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you love me, Dick?” came finally the eternal
-question.</p>
-
-<p>He told her the tale men have told women for centuries
-and will continue to tell them as long as the
-<a name="png.317" id="png.317" href="#png.317"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>307<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>world shall last. “I love you because you’re different
-from other women. There’s no one like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How—different?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why analyze it? You’re <em>You</em>, complete, apart—wonderful.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what attracted you—first? What made you—want
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seeing you there in the center of that stage with
-a first night audience wearing out its hands, you looked
-so beautiful and frightened—give you my word I wanted
-to go up then and there and take you in my arms.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was the glamor of the stage then?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. You’re not the first actress I’ve known, dear.
-But you’re the only one in town that scandal has never
-touched.”</p>
-
-<p>She drew back a bit.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not fair, Dick. We’re a much-talked-of profession
-but half the stories you hear aren’t true.”</p>
-
-<p>In the semi-gloom of the car she did not see the smile
-play about his knowing lips.</p>
-
-<p>“What does it matter?” was his reply. “You’re in
-the theater, yet not of it—sought after, made much of,
-yet unspoilt. And I’ve won you—for myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you’ve won me.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew her close. “How much do you love me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Before all the world.” She closed her eyes as if
-to shut out all other vision.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to take you to Hawaii,” he whispered.
-“That’s the land of lovers—green lapping waters and
-purple hills and palm trees with music in them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been there?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.318" id="png.318" href="#png.318"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>308<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Yes. Then to China and Japan—and if you like,
-India. We’ll make a year of it.”</p>
-
-<p>She opened her eyes slowly and into them came a ray
-of amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t take me too far away, for too long, or
-the fickle public will forget me.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re going to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Going to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I’m a jealous brute. You’ve got to belong
-to me exclusively.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dick”—she pulled away then, groping dazedly for
-one silent second—“Dick—you don’t mean—you can’t
-mean you want me to give up the stage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>She stared at him, unbelieving. But his face was nothing
-more than a blur against the darkness. As the car
-rolled out of the Park, it rolled out of Eden.</p>
-
-<p>“But—but it’s my career—my life!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll make a new career—a new life for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s the biggest—the best part of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“The new life will be all of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Dick! I couldn’t—I couldn’t!”</p>
-
-<p>He caught the hands that were raised to push him
-from her, caught them in both of his. “I want you for
-myself. I’m not satisfied with part of your time.”</p>
-
-<p>“But dear—can’t you see—”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t <em>you</em> see that if you remain on the stage, your
-evenings and part of your days will go to the public.
-I’ll still be going round alone—just as I am now.
-If you’re my wife you’ve got to take your place with
-me.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.319" id="png.319" href="#png.319"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>309<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“But I can—except for a few hours. Dick, you say
-I’m different. Let me stay different!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll always be that. Let’s look at it sensibly.
-Dick Cunningham’s wife earning her living—why, it’s
-a joke!”</p>
-
-<p>“Every one would know it’s not a question of money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why do it? Give some one else a chance—some
-one who needs it.”<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --></p>
-
-<p>“But it’s my life,” she repeated desperately. “And
-now, when success has just come—”</p>
-
-<p>“You said—‘before all the world’ awhile ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—and I meant it. I do love you, before everything.
-You know that. You’ve swept me off my feet.
-I can’t reason.” And then her hands came together and
-she cried out: “Oh, why did this have to happen—why?”</p>
-
-<p>“It had to happen,” he repeated huskily.</p>
-
-<p>“Why couldn’t you have cared for some one in your
-own set?”</p>
-
-<p>“I want you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dick,” she said after a moment’s harsh stillness,
-“don’t make me choose. It—it’s too—it hurts too much.
-I couldn’t! I simply can’t do it. If you make me give
-up the stage, you make me tear out my heart. You
-wouldn’t ask that?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a question of which means more. I’m merely
-asking what any normal man has the right to ask of the
-woman he marries—first place.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ll have that.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. You won’t be free to give it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s queer”—her voice came shakily. “I’ve dreamed
-<a name="png.320" id="png.320" href="#png.320"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>310<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of love as every girl does. But I never dreamed it would
-mean this—this sacrifice.”</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t mean sacrifice to you. I’ll fill your life,
-Nancy. I’ll make you forget there ever was any other
-bond. Sweetheart—don’t you believe I will?”</p>
-
-<p>She swayed toward him—then just as quickly pulled
-back.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t I the right to ask it?” he urged.</p>
-
-<p>“Dick—”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know! I don’t know!”</p>
-
-<p>“Consider my side.”</p>
-
-<p>“I only know it’s everything you’re demanding—everything!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m giving everything in exchange.”</p>
-
-<p>She closed her eyes with a very different expression
-from that of a few moments before. Then it had been
-to let him fill her vision. Now it was to shut him out.</p>
-
-<p>Vaguely it came to her that he couldn’t realize the
-enormity of the thing he was asking. Vaguely she repeated
-aloud:</p>
-
-<p>“No—I couldn’t! If I mean to you what you say,
-you won’t ask it.”</p>
-
-<p>He lifted her face so that the eyes opened to meet
-his. Even through the shadows he could read their
-anguish.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s because you mean what you do, that I can’t let
-you go on.”</p>
-
-<p>Her hands closed tight on each other and she turned
-to fasten her gaze on the awakening streets.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Dick—there’s no use. I couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.321" id="png.321" href="#png.321"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>311<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Does what I offer balance so little that you can thrust
-it away without even stopping to consider?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I stop to consider—”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll do what I ask,” he put in quickly. “Ah, I
-thought so! Nancy, can’t you see? The woman in you
-is greater than the actress. You won’t always be young
-and worshipped by your public but love—”</p>
-
-<p>“Will love last always?” And as his arms went out
-to answer: “No—no! Don’t try to influence me—don’t,
-please! I must think it over alone. It’s my
-whole life—just everything.”</p>
-
-<p>His arms dropped. They did not again reach out to
-her. He said good-night with the usual handclasp and
-left her at the door of the apartment house, haunting
-white, her dark eyes strained toward the first flicker of
-sun as it came haltingly out of the east.</p>
-
-<p>A month later she sent for him. In all that time he
-gave her no word, not even the message of a flower. He
-waited cleverly in silence—a silence that made the battle
-she fought all the more difficult. And in the end she
-sent for him, so completely had he absorbed her will.
-Not once during those weeks of struggle did her mind
-hark back to the fragment of conversation at the supper
-party. Because she could care with the intensity of
-the big woman and because she was in love, she did not
-realize that in sending for him she bowed before the
-god she had scorned—Submission.</p>
-
-<p>And so the curtain fell on Act I of Nancy Bradshaw’s
-life drama.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter II—Act II"><a name="png.322" id="png.322" href="#png.322"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>312<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER II—ACT II</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">Out</span> Long Island way on the North Shore where
-Newport goes to stretch her tired limbs after a
-busy season, there’s a house set like a long white couch
-on a green carpet that spreads straight to the Sound.</p>
-
-<p>The place is called Restawhile—and having some
-twenty rooms, not to speak of servant quarters, is known
-modestly as a cottage.</p>
-
-<p>Here Dick Cunningham brought his bride following
-their honeymoon trip through the Orient. Here they
-spent the greater part of each year. For with its kennels
-and stables, Nancy loved it next to the house of the fir
-trees which would always be her castle of romance. Besides,
-it was not too near Broadway, not near enough for
-whisperings of the Rialto to tug at the heart or fill the
-eyes. Or if the dull ache of longing too deep for tears
-did come, it was a place to hide them from a curious
-public.</p>
-
-<p>The announcement of Nancy’s marriage and retirement
-from the stage had come as a shock to the social
-world and a bomb to the theatrical. Broadway buzzed,
-Fifth Avenue bristled, and poor Jerry Coghlan almost
-went crazy. But as the calcium of the society column
-replaced her beloved footlights, the star of the theater became
-a star of the social realm and another nine days’
-wonder became memory.</p>
-
-<p>The column told of her dinners and dances, of her
-trips to Florida, her visits to Newport. It listed her
-<a name="png.323" id="png.323" href="#png.323"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>313<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>with her husband among inveterate first-nighters and
-usually added: “The one-time Nancy Bradshaw whose
-romantic marriage robbed the stage of one of its most
-promising young actresses.”</p>
-
-<p>Eventually it announced with clarion blast the arrival
-of Dick Junior and later Nancy the Second, quite as if
-a chubby Dick and Nancy Cunningham were more important
-than the same weight John and Mary Smith.</p>
-
-<p>A fairy tale come true even the most caustic observer
-would have remarked, had he known the history of the
-beautiful woman seated on the stone-paved veranda of
-Restawhile one April afternoon five years after the curtain
-descended on Act I.</p>
-
-<p>She wore a short white skirt, green sweater and white
-sport shoes. Strands of hair had been tossed across her
-eyes by a romp on the lawn with young Dicky. He sat
-at her feet now, pink legs outstretched, and mobilized
-between them a regiment of wooden soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>Ted Thorne and her former manager had driven out
-to read Thorne’s latest drama, written with Lilla Grant
-in mind. She was the season’s new darling and her hybrid
-little face with its eyes from the Orient and nose
-from Erin’s Isle decorated many a magazine cover and
-wood-cut. It might also have been seen at the Ritz
-lunching daily with varied and various conquests. She
-had acquired an air and no longer spoke of her profession
-as “the show business.” Her gowns were the talk
-of fashion editors, her hats the despair of imitators.
-She was colorful as a Bakst drawing and as decorative.</p>
-
-<p>The woman in white skirt and sweater that matched
-the lawn sat listening at one side of the tea table, while
-<a name="png.324" id="png.324" href="#png.324"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>314<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Coghlan at her right measured three fingers of Scotch
-against two of soda and the playwright’s voice sounded
-vibrant against the sweet spring stillness. It was a tense
-elemental story suggested to him by Nancy, with Hawaii—land
-of love—as a setting. Finally he closed the script
-and looked across at her.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“The best thing you’ve done, Ted,” she announced
-instantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, it’s only in the rough. But I wanted your
-opinion. Am I like that fellow who knows all about the
-Himalayas because he never got there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just like him—an authority,” she retorted.</p>
-
-<p>“But straight—how does it strike you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I love it! You’ve never written anything with greater
-emotional possibilities.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you like Lilla for the lead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the type. And good from a box-office standpoint,
-too—she’s made such a hit this season.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some kid!” put in Jerry, tinkling the ice pleasantly
-against his glass. “Always said she’d make her mark.
-And take it from me, Jerry Coghlan knows what he’s
-talking about.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy smiled. “You couldn’t find any one better to
-play an Hawaiian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, we could!” came from Thorne.</p>
-
-<p>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“You.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed and in her laughter the men detected
-nothing but mirth.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you ever have a hankering for the old game,
-<a name="png.325" id="png.325" href="#png.325"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>315<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Nancy?” Coghlan demanded. “Don’t the theater ever
-get in your blood?”</p>
-
-<p>She bent and lifted young Dick suddenly to her knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s my theater,” was her answer.</p>
-
-<p>The playwright’s gaze traveled over the two gold heads
-to the father’s eyes that smiled from the baby face into
-his mother’s. Fat arms wound round her neck and she
-sank her lips in the fluffy curls.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got a part that suits you to perfection,” he
-said in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, there ain’t any part Nancy couldn’t play!
-Always said she had class. And take it from me—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s good to know you haven’t forgotten us,” Thorne
-interrupted, still in that low tone. “Whenever things get
-balled up I say to myself: ‘Here goes for a run out to
-Restawhile. Nancy’ll help me straighten them out.’”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s good to know you feel that way. You see”—she
-held Dicky closer—“I can give you the viewpoint of
-the audience now.”</p>
-
-<p>That night she told her husband of the play. They
-had dined at the Courtleigh Bishop place, some five miles
-distant, and during the drive home Nancy had been unusually
-quiet. She walked up the wide staircase, head
-bent, her long velvet cloak pulled close around her as if
-for protection against the country chill of April. But
-as he followed into her boudoir with its amber lights and
-drapes of cornflower blue she dropped into a chair, let
-the wrap slip from her shoulders and leaned forward,
-speaking rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me something of your doings to-day, Dick. You
-haven’t yet.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.326" id="png.326" href="#png.326"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>316<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He recounted the day’s activities—certain complications
-that had arisen in his Western interests. Cunningham,
-in spite of wealth or perhaps because of it, was not
-a waster. She listened eagerly to every word.</p>
-
-<p>“And, by-the-way,” he added, much as an afterthought;
-“I lunched with a former friend of yours, Lilla Grant.
-Met her as I was going into the Ritz. She was alone—so
-was I. So we joined forces.”</p>
-
-<p>She leaned back with a deep sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you told me that.”</p>
-
-<p>His reply held a note of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because Mary Bishop made it a point to inform me
-to-night that she’d seen you there. ‘Dicky still has a
-penchant for the theatrical profession,’ she said, ‘I saw
-him lunching to-day with a stage beauty.’ Of course,
-it amused me but I just had a feeling that I’d like to hear
-about it from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was of no importance. I might not have thought
-of mentioning it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Still—I suppose I’m silly and feminine—but
-if you hadn’t, I think it would have hurt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do I demand to know every time Thorne comes out
-here?”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t have to, Dick.” Her eyes were still intent
-on him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve lunched with Lilla Grant other days and haven’t
-thought of mentioning it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, too.”</p>
-
-<p>His eyebrows shot up. “How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Other women.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.327" id="png.327" href="#png.327"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>317<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-He laughed. “How they do love each other!”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed with him. “It’s all right now. You’ve
-told me. I just didn’t want to think you’d deceive
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear girl, an omission like that is not deliberate
-deceit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Omission,” came softly, “is often twin sister to
-commission.”</p>
-
-<p>His lips went tight. “Does that mean you’d ever
-let anything as cheap as suspicion of me enter your
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p>She got up, brushing her mouth across the hard line
-of his. “If I love you as much as I do, it’s reasonable
-to suppose other women might.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was when she gave him the story of Thorne’s
-play—more to change the subject than anything else—with
-eyes shining and slim jeweled hands sending sparks
-into the room’s golden shadows. He listened, watching
-her, the light on her face, the blaze of enthusiasm under
-the thick lashes.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a splendid part for Lilla,” she ended. “She’ll be
-fascinating in it, don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Great!” And after a moment, “Nancy—does seeing
-so much of Thorne and old Jerry ever tempt you to go
-back on the stage?”</p>
-
-<p>She went close to him as if his bigness were a shelter.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a temptation I’d never acknowledge, dear heart—not
-even to myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you haven’t answered me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did that when I made my choice—when I married
-you. I couldn’t be disloyal to that. Besides”—and all
-<a name="png.328" id="png.328" href="#png.328"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>318<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the woman of her went into the words—“you and the
-two little yous fill my life. I’ve no time for any other
-devotion.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked down at the head, reddened under the amber
-lights, at the graceful line of throat and shoulder,
-at the proud lips that were his. And his arms swept up
-and round her.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="tb">Drama moves swiftly. No pause for explanation once
-the wheels are set going, no rambling into far corners for
-side lights as in the novel, but a tornado-like gathering
-of incident that hurls itself without notice into crashing
-storm. Life crowded into a few short hours, just as a
-few short hours so often crowd life into one crashing
-crisis. Without warning, or at least without warning
-heeded, one answers the doorbell or opens a telegram or
-takes up a telephone receiver. And behold, the face
-blanches, the heart stops beating, to beat again with hammer
-stroke too horrible to bear!</p>
-
-<p>It happened that Thorne’s roadster drew up under
-the porte-cochère one May day and, removing dusty goggles,
-he announced that he had come to talk about a scene
-that stumped him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve traveled to Mecca to consult the Oracle.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy shook hands enthusiastically. Dick had been
-away for several days; her favorite mount, Lord Chesterfield,
-had been taken to town by the head groom for
-treatment under a famous “vet”; and endless dinners
-had bored her to a state of loneliness known only to those
-whose lives have hummed with activity. Her husband
-would not be back until to-morrow and to put in a few
-<a name="png.329" id="png.329" href="#png.329"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>319<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hours with Ted in the atmosphere of the theater was a
-welcome diversion.</p>
-
-<p>When they had discussed pros and cons and the kick
-in the big scene; when the playwright in hushed voice
-had told Dicky the usual pirate tale, and the three had
-lunched together under the trees, Nancy jumped up.</p>
-
-<p>“Ted, will you run me into town this afternoon? I
-want to have a look at Lord Chesterfield. He went lame
-last week, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Thorne beamed.</p>
-
-<p>“Bully! It’s a whale of a day. Why not stay in?
-We can dine and I’ll run you out early.”</p>
-
-<p>But she refused. The kiddies were put to bed at
-six-thirty and she wanted to be back before then.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take the train back. Don’t bother about that.”</p>
-
-<p>She came downstairs presently buttoned into a gray
-topcoat. From under a tight little turban the sunset hair
-waved, held by a gray veil.</p>
-
-<p>They tore out of the grounds, along roads of glass at a
-pace that left both breathless. Nancy felt the sluggishness
-of the past few days lashed out of her blood. It
-flew happily to her cheeks, tingled to her finger tips, sent
-the laughter into her lips as the man beside her gave the
-latest bits of Broadway gossip, the latest funny story
-from a region teeming with them. She stored them up
-for Dick, picturing his enjoyment when on his return next
-day she should give them with all her embellishment of
-mimicry.</p>
-
-<p>The first pungent scent of summer, clover and sweet
-grass and occasional great mounds of hay, rose from the
-meadows as they sped past. The vault above was
-<a name="png.330" id="png.330" href="#png.330"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>320<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>intensely turquoise and without a cloud. It would be a
-heavenly night with a young silver moon etched against
-the sky and all things filmed by its light. She wished
-Dick were going to be home. They could have taken a
-tearing ride like this with all the countryside to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The breezes became sultry. City smoke crept in. The
-car jerked over cobbles, dodging barelegged youngsters
-and wedging at last into the clatter of Queensboro Bridge.
-Nancy’s nose crinkled. She had come to hate the city
-with its odors and noises and strained faces and heavy
-air, all the elements which had passed unnoticed when
-she was part of it and a struggler.</p>
-
-<p>From the cluttered Eastside they went through the
-district whose boarded doors and windows like the blank
-eyes of the blind proclaimed it fashionable; then the
-dust-covered green of the Park and out at the street in
-the Sixties where down the block three windows blinked
-coquettishly.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy descended, held out a hand. “Good luck, Ted.
-And let’s hear it when you’ve got it ready.”</p>
-
-<p>His alert gaze was bright with satisfaction. “You’ve
-set me on the right track. You always do.”</p>
-
-<p>She waved as he drove off, then rang the bell beside
-the big door. It swung back slowly, heavily, and the
-head-groom stood in the opening. She caught the look
-of surprise that swept over his face, passing as quickly
-after the manner of well-trained servants who are supposed
-to have no emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“How is Lord Chesterfield?” she inquired, stepping
-out of the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.331" id="png.331" href="#png.331"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>321<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“He’s not been so fine to-day, madam. I think there’s
-pain in the left forefoot.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to have a look at him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, madam.”</p>
-
-<p>He closed the door, led the way to the run. But Nancy
-started toward the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>He turned. “Is there anything I can do for you,
-madam?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that’s all right, Jarvis. I’ll just leave my coat
-and come down.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can take it.” He stepped forward hastily, with
-rather a note of apology. “The painters are up there,
-madam. The rain of two days ago made a leak in the
-roof and I had to have them in. The place is in something
-of a mess.”</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy was already halfway up the stairs. “It
-doesn’t matter.”</p>
-
-<p>She disappeared, dropped her coat on the divan in
-the gray room, and looked ceilingward. No sign of repairs
-there. Probably the leak was at the front of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p>Turning into the hall she noticed that Jarvis had followed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, madam—will you be coming down to
-see Lord Chesterfield now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>She threw open the double oak doors at the end. And
-her breath stopped as she did on the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>A stream of sunshine flecked with motes came through
-the far window and centered on the couch. Lounging
-there in a position of uttermost comfort was Dick and
-<a name="png.332" id="png.332" href="#png.332"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>322<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at his feet, hatless and cross-legged like some willing
-slave of the harem, Lilla Grant. A look of flame was
-in his non-committal eyes and in her heavy ones, languor.
-The ripe red lips were raised. From her fingers a cigarette
-dangled as he leaned close and struck a match.
-All too evident, though, that it was not to light the cigarette
-those lips were lifted.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy’s hand went to her throat. That was all.
-Went to her throat and clung there.</p>
-
-<p>The two started at the sound of another’s presence.
-The match halted. Cunningham looked up. He
-straightened, sat for an instant without moving, then
-got to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>The provocation faded from Lilla’s lips. A moment
-before she had had the unmistakable air of being
-perfectly at home. Now as she followed the man’s
-sharp glance she stiffened. Uneasily she too rose and,
-as neither of the others spoke, gave a nervous little
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Nancy, this is a coincidence! We’ve been expecting
-Ted Thorne for tea and only half an hour ago
-tried you on the phone to get you, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy made no attempt to refute the glib lie. She
-simply stood gazing at her husband as if her eyes were
-touching him. Then she turned away.</p>
-
-<p>“I think—I won’t wait,” she managed to say and
-went out, closing the door.</p>
-
-<p>At the other side she stopped, hands pressed tight
-to her lips, and waited for courage to go forward.</p>
-
-<p>Partway down the stairs she saw Jarvis looking up.
-Fright grayed his face.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.333" id="png.333" href="#png.333"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>323<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’ll see Lord Chesterfield now,” she told him and
-followed to the run.</p>
-
-<p>With gaze straining through the train window an hour
-later at meadow and woodland she did not see, she was
-carried back to Restawhile, to the babies waiting for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>The moon rose, as she had pictured it, paling the
-trees outside her room and the lawn beneath.</p>
-
-<p>At last her door opened. Cunningham entered, closing
-it softly, switched on the lights and saw her sitting
-hunched in a chair, with eyes bewildered as if they could
-not realize the thing they had revealed. He spoke her
-name—once, twice. She did not even glance at him.</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy, answer me!”</p>
-
-<p>She turned slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“I ask you not to jump at conclusions. Nancy—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you wait?”</p>
-
-<p>Her gaze locked with his incredulously. “You think
-I could have waited?”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand,” he put in hastily. “That’s why I
-made no attempt to detain you. The situation was awkward.”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed. It might have been a cry from the soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Awkward, nothing more!” he hurried on. “I admit,
-it looked damning. I, myself, would have judged
-as you did. But I give you my word—”</p>
-
-<p>She swept it aside.</p>
-
-<p>“Jarvis tried to keep me from going up. That alone
-proves—”</p>
-
-<p>“Jarvis is a servant, with the view point of his class.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.334" id="png.334" href="#png.334"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>324<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-She uttered the thought that had been spinning round
-in her brain. “He would scarcely have tried to protect
-you if that had been her first visit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? He concluded because a woman happened
-to be there with me—alone—Bah,” he broke off, “that
-end of it’s not worth considering! What you think is
-all that concerns me. And what you think is only too
-evident.”</p>
-
-<p>“What I think—what I think!” Her hands clasped
-and unclasped incessantly. Her voice came strangled.</p>
-
-<p>He had been pacing up and down. Now he pulled
-a chair close to hers.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’re wrong, dear. It’s circumstantial evidence
-and worth as much. I came back to-day unexpectedly,
-looked in at the uptown office before going home and
-found a message from Lilla, asking me to see her this
-afternoon without fail. I called her hotel and arranged
-to meet her at the stable. Jarvis had notified me that
-Lord Chesterfield was seedy and it occurred to me that
-by having her come there, I’d save time.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—” the words came haltingly as if difficult to
-speak—“you didn’t seem in haste when I saw you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come now—be sporting, dear.” He tried to make
-a laugh cut the tension. “You know my interest in the
-theater.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Lilla’s consulted me any number of times about
-one thing or another. And she has a Bohemian way of
-establishing palship that you don’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I wouldn’t want you to. But the fact remains
-<a name="png.335" id="png.335" href="#png.335"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>325<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>that Lilla on the floor with a cigarette in her mouth
-means no more than another woman at the tea table.”</p>
-
-<p>She made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she lied when she said we were expecting
-Thorne,” he pursued. “You knew that, didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He was out here to-day and motored me in.
-But I’d have known anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t understand why it’s so much easier for women
-to lie than tell the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps men teach them it’s easier.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a breath without words.</p>
-
-<p>“For instance,” she went on monotonously and her eyes
-dropped to the hands clenched against her knees, “you’re
-going to tell me I’ve no right to misjudge either you
-or Lilla.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, my dearest,” Cunningham lifted her lowered
-face, looked long into it. “There’s nothing mysterious
-in the whole affair. Kane offered to star her in a new
-production if she’d get him the backing and she
-wants me to put up the money. That’s the long
-and short of it. I had every intention of consulting
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>She drew away, looking at him straight and direct.
-Her lips opened but closed without speech. She had been
-on the point of asking how it happened that he had
-arrived in town a day ahead of time without letting her
-know, why he had failed to telephone. But she could
-not bring herself to question him. And he gave little
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Lifting both her hands he unlocked them, drew them
-to his breast and met her eyes unwavering.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.336" id="png.336" href="#png.336"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>326<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Lilla and I are nothing more than good pals, like—like
-you and Thorne. I want you to believe that.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s impossible, Dick—after what I saw to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why? Have you ever before had cause to doubt
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” She hesitated a bit before admitting it.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why seize on the first occasion?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seize on it? Seize on it?” She gave another low
-breathless laugh. “That—that’s funny! Seize on my
-own misery—seize on the shattering of all I hold dear!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re nervous and hysterical now and things look
-monstrous. But I know you too well to think this
-mood can last.” His hands crept toward her shoulders.
-All through the interview there had been no conflict
-on his part, no man-woman antagonism, just an assumption
-of honest effort to convince her. And now he
-adroitly resorted to the means by which he had won
-her, a man’s most convincing way of setting himself right,
-the lover’s. He drew her, resisting, out of the chair—enfolded
-her in his arms—bent his lips, whispered:
-“No other woman could mean anything while I have
-you. Don’t you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>A moment passed, longer than any she had ever lived
-through. Then, so low that he could scarcely hear:
-“I’m going to believe you, Dick—because I want to believe
-you,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of them referred to it again. As if by mutual
-agreement the matter was sealed. Whatever scar the
-experience had left so far as Nancy was concerned, her
-lips were closed as the lips of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>When eventually she heard through Thorne that along
-<a name="png.337" id="png.337" href="#png.337"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>327<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the Rialto it was whispered Lilla actually was considering
-an offer from Kane, she felt immensely relieved.
-Dick had told her the truth then about that end of it.
-Why was the rest not true as well?</p>
-
-<p>And as if to assure her, his devotion duplicated that
-of their honeymoon. Her happiness seemed the thought
-paramount, her peace of mind his topmost concern. It
-continued so until business called him West, the tangle
-that for some time had been knotting his California
-interests. The letters he sent, when they were not of
-her and the children, spoke of his boredom after affairs
-of the day were done with, of the humidity and discomfort
-of the rainy season and emphasized his eagerness to return.
-They came from various coast cities—San Francisco,
-Sacramento, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s possible you may not hear from me the next
-few weeks,” a final communication told her. “I find it
-necessary to go to New Mexico to look into a railroad
-proposition. For a time I may be located miles from
-any post office. But know that I’m safe and thinking
-of you, my dearest, and expect me back sometime in
-September.”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy packed when it arrived and left to visit the
-Bishops at Newport. Stopping overnight in town, she
-ran into Coghlan on his way to the Knickerbocker Grill,
-daily trysting place of managers.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, what d’you think of Lilla?” He chortled in
-the midst of pouring out plans for the coming season.
-“Gone to Hawaii to get atmosphere before she signs up
-for that lead. Atmosphere! Can you beat it? Paying
-her own expenses, too. Told her she was crazy, but
-<a name="png.338" id="png.338" href="#png.338"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>328<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>nothing to it—had to go. Developing too much temperament
-for her own good, that kid!”</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had not yet brought herself to the point of
-hearing Lilla’s name without wincing. But she managed
-a smile and asked: “When does she return?”</p>
-
-<p>“Next month sometime. Told her rehearsals begin
-the fifteenth whether she’s on the job or not. So you
-can bank on it, she’ll be here.” His appraising yet impersonal
-glance ran the length of Nancy’s graceful figure,
-from the wide hat shading her eyes to the narrow brown
-pumps and slim ankles. “All to the good, Nancy,” he
-sighed regretfully, “all to the good! Just home and
-mother stuff too! And, by golly, five years ago I guyed
-myself into thinking I’d turn you out the greatest actress
-in America!”</p>
-
-<p>She wondered vaguely as she sped toward the worldly
-paradise whose gates had swung wide to her whether
-old Jerry was right. Would she have become a great
-actress or just the darling of a few fickle years? That
-girl with her wild dark eyes and swirl of golden hair,
-would the public she had loved have wept and laughed
-with her to-day? She wondered and smiled reminiscently,
-a smile with a tear, like some bittersweet memory
-of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>At the station she was met by her host, otherwise
-known as Mary Bishop’s husband, and in a supremely
-groomed car was driven through supremely groomed
-streets, ultra as the leaders who dwelt there. Courty
-Bishop sat back beside her, caressed his waxed mustache
-and regaled her with choice bits of news, just as
-Coghlan had regaled her the day before. After all, she
-<a name="png.339" id="png.339" href="#png.339"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>329<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>told herself, there wasn’t much difference in the two
-worlds. Appraisingly, but with a look not quite so impersonal
-as that of her former manager, the sophisticated
-eyes turned to scan her beauty while his facile
-tongue rambled on.</p>
-
-<p>“I say—you top ’em all, Nancy! What a risk that
-boy, Dick, takes—leaving you alone so long!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so much of a risk,” she laughed, mentally placing
-her husband next to the little man.</p>
-
-<p>“But what the deuce takes him such a distance this
-time of year?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, railroad stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bore—the tropics in midsummer!”</p>
-
-<p>“Tropics?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,—that’s what I’d call the Hawaiian Islands.
-One of my men, McIntyre, met him on the way out.
-Wrote that if Cunningham didn’t kick at going, guessed
-he couldn’t. But why in hades—”</p>
-
-<p>The woman beside him heard no more. Hawaii!!
-Like some giant machinery against her ears, his words
-became a whirr. She smiled mechanically, as so many
-women have done, while the world stood still.</p>
-
-<p>Fate had lifted the prompter’s hand and slowly the
-curtain descended on Act II of Nancy Bradshaw’s life
-drama.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h3 title="Chapter III—Act III"><a name="png.340" id="png.340" href="#png.340"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>330<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>CHAPTER III—ACT III</h3>
-
-
-<p class="dropcap"><span class="dropcap">The</span> hum of arrival in that great hive, the Grand
-Central, kept up an incessant drone. Scurrying
-figures swarmed like bees from the gates to disappear
-into the night. Red caps raced back and forth, elbowing
-one another in the rush for spoils. City husbands
-reached out eagerly from roped-off lines to country
-wives and sunburned youngsters. Embraces and
-laughter and inarticulate efforts to tell everything in
-one moment kept the air abuzz. Life, centralized in
-one small area of space, was at its busiest.</p>
-
-<p>Into this hubbub from the Lake Shore Limited swung
-a man in tweed suit, the porter at his side laden with
-the trappings of a long trip. His big shoulders pushed
-through the throng into the lighted terminal and he looked
-around. Rapidly his glance traveled from face to face,
-then back along the congested line and once again its
-length. A look of annoyance that brought brows together
-followed the swift scrutiny and he made for the
-telephone booths. Impatiently he gave the operator a
-number, concentrating his gaze on her while she made
-the Long Island connection. When some three minutes
-later he emerged from the booth, the look of annoyance
-had changed to anger.</p>
-
-<p>With characteristic stride of authority he moved across
-the crowded stone floor, bounded up the steps and waited,
-peering at his watch in the outer gloom as taxis unloaded
-their burdens and took on others. When his turn came
-<a name="png.341" id="png.341" href="#png.341"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>331<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>he sprang in, gave the address of a small select hotel
-off Fifth Avenue and all the way there sat staring fixedly
-out at the lighted shops, his lips a thin, angry line.</p>
-
-<p>The line had not disappeared as he stepped from the
-elevator to the door of a suite and imperatively rang
-the bell. It was opened by a girl in nursemaid’s cap
-who gave a start when she saw who it was. He pushed
-past with the same look he had cast about the station.
-Then he turned abruptly, sending at her a volley of
-rapid-fire questions.</p>
-
-<p>Madam was not there, she answered. Yes, the children
-were, but Mrs. Cunningham had gone to dinner and
-the theater. No, she did not believe any telegram had
-been received from him. Madam, she was sure, had
-not expected him to-night. They had been in town since
-the beginning of the week. No, Mrs. Cunningham had
-not gone out with any one. To The Coghlan Theatre,
-she believed.</p>
-
-<p>Her curious gaze followed him as he went down the
-hall to the elevator. Then softly she shut the door.</p>
-
-<p>At ten minutes to nine he strolled into The Coghlan
-Theater, the last of a fashionably late audience.</p>
-
-<p>The place was packed and he leaned leisurely against
-the rear balustrade to wait for the curtain before trying
-to locate his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Across the footlights palm trees swayed, recalling the
-land of secrets he had left behind. Something about
-the sensuous atmosphere so realistically reproduced
-made him turn away. Then his eyes took in the woman
-who held the center of the stage. Her voice—low,
-beautifully modulated—rolled toward him. Her eyes,
-<a name="png.342" id="png.342" href="#png.342"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>332<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>burning black, turned in his direction. He gripped the
-rail, bent over it.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy!! In spite of the dark wig and olive tinted
-skin, there was no mistake! Nancy—on the stage of
-The Coghlan! The sudden sharp crackle of a program
-broke the stillness.</p>
-
-<p class="poster">NANCY BRADSHAW<br
- />in<br
- />“Broken Wings”</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">There it was—Nancy Bradshaw—staring at him from the
-sheet he had not troubled to read.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy! Mrs. Richard Cunningham!</p>
-
-<p>He made the lobby like a bull gone mad. Generations
-of training, years of the will to control, were as if they
-had never been. He was the outraged male, bent on
-destroying the thing which had defied him.</p>
-
-<p>Outside he found Coghlan who, from the box-office,
-had glimpsed him sauntering in and evidently anticipated
-precisely what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>Jerry’s good-natured face with its row of chins was
-hard as an iron mask as he blocked Cunningham’s onrush.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, there,” he said genially, reaching out a hand.</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham’s fists clenched white.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got to see my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, can’t see her from anywhere but in there until
-after the performance. Nobody goes backstage—strict
-orders.” Then smiling broadly, “Made a hell of a hit!
-You ought to be damn proud of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to see her <em>now</em>!”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.343" id="png.343" href="#png.343"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>333<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-Jerry grinned serenely. “Don’t blame you. Should
-have been here Monday for the opening—sensation, old
-man! Always said that in five years she’d be the greatest
-actress in the country. And take it from me—”</p>
-
-<p>From within, a swelling volume of applause told the
-fall of the curtain.</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham made a lunge to pass the figure that
-blocked him.</p>
-
-<p>“Careful, careful, old boy!” came firmly from the manager.
-“Hold tight there! They’ll be coming out—take
-it easy.”</p>
-
-<p>The other man’s face was set.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you—”</p>
-
-<p>“And I tell <em>you</em>! This is my theater! Anybody who
-causes any disturbance gets out!”</p>
-
-<p>A prominent clubman sighted Cunningham at this
-juncture and hurried across the lobby. From that moment
-Nancy’s husband was forced to assume an easy pride
-calculated to disarm gossip, forced to become the center
-of a throng bent upon congratulating him on his wife’s
-success.</p>
-
-<p>During the ten minutes of intermission he bore it with
-a smile chiseled on his handsome face, then left the
-theater as the lights went low. Back to the hotel he
-tramped, turned and retraced his steps like some madman
-muttering to himself. Then up and down the dark
-alley of the stage entrance, watching for signs that the
-final curtain had fallen, unable to consider the sane and
-sensible alternative of waiting for his wife in the privacy
-of her own rooms.</p>
-
-<p>When at last they stood face to face under the
-<a name="png.344" id="png.344" href="#png.344"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>334<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>brilliant lights of her dressing-room it was evident Coghlan
-had warned her.</p>
-
-<p>She was alone. In the little room where they had met
-five years ago they met once more. And to-night as that
-night a flame like a living thing darted between them.
-Then it had been white and warming. Now it filled
-the place, a devastating fury. But in the face of it she
-stood calm.</p>
-
-<p>It would have taken an observer less self-absorbed
-to note that her hand trembled as it grasped a chair-back,
-that her breath came quickly. In silence they
-measured each other. In silence she waited, her eyes
-never leaving him.</p>
-
-<p>At last he spoke and his voice was as hard as that
-of a judge pronouncing extreme penalty.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—have you anything to say for yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head and not defiance but sadness
-was in the look she sent him. “Nothing I <em>want</em> to
-say.”</p>
-
-<p>“You realize, of course, that I’m going to put a stop
-to this business here and now.”</p>
-
-<p>Again that look—half regret, half sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>“You can no longer put a stop to anything I do.”</p>
-
-<p>In his unreasoning wrath the actual import of her
-words missed him.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care what contracts you’ve made—to-night
-finishes them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose we try to talk this over quietly”—she gave
-a slight gesture of weariness as she sat down before her
-dressing-table—“if it must be discussed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Must be discussed? Good God! I come back after
-<a name="png.345" id="png.345" href="#png.345"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>335<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>three months, ring my home, find that my wife has moved
-into town without a word to me—”</p>
-
-<p>“You forget—you had overlooked giving me your address.”</p>
-
-<p>“And come up against the fact,” he rushed on, “that
-she’s taken advantage of my absence to put over—
-What’s your explanation of this damned outrage?” he
-broke off hotly.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, tense and brilliant, held his. He gave a
-short laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I assume you and Coghlan have concocted one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Coghlan has no idea of my reason for doing it. He
-merely knows that in July I sent word to him that I
-would take this part if Lilla Grant refused it. He didn’t
-wait to find out, though she cabled him a week later
-saying Kane was going to star her.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you thought I’d let you get away with it! After
-five years of living with me you thought I’d stand for
-anything like this!”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t matter whether you stand for it or not.”</p>
-
-<p>He had been pacing up and down, hands thrust into
-his pockets, ready to plunge through the walls. Now
-suddenly he veered about, stood rooted.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean it.” Softly she answered his amazement.
-“I’m back on the stage because I realize how little my
-leaving it meant to you.”</p>
-
-<p>He went close to her then, threat in every line of
-his big frame.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re my wife—the mother of my children.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes—that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“All?”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.346" id="png.346" href="#png.346"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>336<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I bore your name, I bore your children. I gave up
-the stage to do both. And in giving it up, I sacrificed
-your love.”</p>
-
-<p>Her back was turned but out of the shadows of her
-triple mirror gazed a face white with pity of him, with
-suffering for the thing which, through him, both had lost.</p>
-
-<p>“Sacrificed my love?” he began as a man feels his
-way along paths he is not sure of. “What in heaven’s
-name gave you that idea?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please,” she stopped him with a swift gesture,
-“please—don’t speak of it! I can’t bear it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Nancy,” came somewhat more calmly,
-“this is nonsense—silly woman stuff. I’m not saying you
-didn’t think you had some rational excuse for doing this
-thing. But it’s out of the question. It simply can’t
-continue. I made that clear when I married you. Boredom
-or restlessness or the sort of unreasoning mood
-that gets hold of women probably drove you to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You drove me to it,” she answered quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s got over you?” he came back sharply. “You
-talk like a mad woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I’m quite sane. I see quite clearly—too clearly.
-I’ve had plenty of time to go over it—to face the truth.
-I thought when I married you that you loved the woman
-in me. Now I know it was the actress. You loved me
-for the thing I gave up because I loved you—the glamour
-of the stage. Popularity—the fact that I was conspicuous
-made me desirable. You demanded that I
-sacrifice all that. And when I did, I became the same
-to you as hundreds of women you’d known, women you
-were tired of. You cut me off completely from my old
-<a name="png.347" id="png.347" href="#png.347"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>337<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>life, except as a spectator—then sought in that old life
-the thrill and interest I could no longer give you.”</p>
-
-<p>She paused. Her hand went to her throat as it had
-that day in the house of the fir trees.</p>
-
-<p>“All these five years when I’ve longed for a glimpse
-of it—just a glimpse—to become part of it again if only
-for a little while, I’ve felt guilty, almost as if I’d been
-untrue to you. I’ve thrust the thought aside as something
-unworthy. I’ve let you fill my life. Well,” she
-paused, “now I’ve gone back to it. I’ve gone back to
-the thing that made you love me. And I’ve gone—to
-stay.”</p>
-
-<p>Defiance at last leaped at him. It tore from her, as
-they stood measuring each other, like a panther from
-some rustling jungle. It gripped his throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Woman excuses!” he brought out at last. “Without
-rhyme or reason to back them! Well, they won’t
-answer. I’m still waiting for a straight, rational explanation.
-Suppose you let me have it—now.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, I will. I didn’t want to, but since you
-demand it you shall have it. I’ve given you my reason,
-my motive. I’ve told you what sent me back to the stage.
-But the thing that brought me to my senses, that made
-me realize the truth, can be summed up in just three
-words<!-- TN: original reads "word" -->: Hawaii—Lilla Grant.”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke as if merely voicing them were tearing open
-a wound unhealed, spoke them so low that they came
-like a breath.</p>
-
-<p>And hearing, he straightened, stood silent, too stunned
-to think of an answer.</p>
-
-<p>The noise of slamming doors and scurrying feet beat
-<a name="png.348" id="png.348" href="#png.348"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>338<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>instead against the stillness, all the echoing movements
-that strike bare walls when the play is done.</p>
-
-<p>“It was rather funny—wasn’t it?—that I should have
-believed you that first time,” she went on. “But I
-told myself what I had seen was impossible; that if I
-had given up the thing that was life to me, surely you
-wouldn’t go back to it for the fascination of grease-paint
-and footlights. Surely you couldn’t seek in another
-woman the thing you had denied me! That’s why I accepted
-your half truths—eagerly. Because I wanted to—and
-one does so many foolish things when one wants
-to. That’s why it was so much harder when I did find
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy—” he began.</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t try to explain this away!” came breathlessly.
-“It can’t be set right. It’s done! And I’d
-like to go on being friends, because, you see, I <em>did</em> love
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then—” he seized on the note in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“No! Never!”</p>
-
-<p>They were just two words, low as a conscience whisper.
-But they closed the gates of what had been with the
-grim certainty of fate. His steel-colored eyes—habitually
-so sure of themselves—wavered. His fists gripped against
-an enemy unknown. And only the woman whose gaze
-locked with his knew that the enemy was himself.</p>
-
-<p>He looked down at the blonde head round which the
-lights of the theater glimmered once more; those lights
-he had torn away to make her entirely his.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that?” he brought out at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.349" id="png.349" href="#png.349"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>339<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“Finally?”</p>
-
-<p>“It can’t be otherwise—now.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned swiftly on his heel and went the length of
-the room, then back to where she stood. He pulled up
-sharp and his lips snapped together.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. But you leave one item out of the reckoning.
-As long as you bear my name, you respect it!
-If you persist in this—I’ll divorce you.”</p>
-
-<p>“The name is yours. I am Nancy Bradshaw again.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only what I said. You can have it back any time
-you want. I won’t make a move to stop you. You
-can have everything you’ve ever given me—everything.
-The one thing I had a right to keep—you’ve taken away.
-So what else matters?”</p>
-
-<p>She walked slowly over to where her clothes hung behind
-a cretonne curtain, took down a black hat and pulled
-it over her shining hair. She stood there, shoulders
-drooping, head bent.</p>
-
-<p>Outside the soft shuffle of the old watchman’s feet
-told he was going the rounds. Good-nights had been
-tossed from one to another of the departing company.
-That heavy quiet of night in a darkened theater rolled
-backstage. The world of make-believe had vanished.
-Only the shell remained.</p>
-
-<p>Cunningham leaned a bit heavily against the door. For
-the first time life had thwarted, left him impotent, and
-a new sensation, when unpleasant, is difficult to handle.</p>
-
-<p>The woman he had loved and desired, the woman
-who had stirred him, who had been his, came toward
-him as to a stranger.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.350" id="png.350" href="#png.350"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>340<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>
-“I’m afraid I must go,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>He roused himself to a final stand.</p>
-
-<p>“You realize,” came hoarsely, “that I’ll fight this—fight
-it to a finish? You realize as well that the children
-will come to me?”</p>
-
-<p>Pain for what had been and what might have been;
-memories, all that had made these moments a requiem,
-vanished from her voice. She went close to him. Like
-his own her body went taut, her hands tense, her head
-high. Primitive even as himself, she met him, ready
-for combat.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly something in her answering gaze, in the
-black of her eyes that could flame up like two live
-things, made clear the writing on the wall.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think you’ll try to do that. I shan’t attempt
-to keep them from you, of course. But they’re mine,
-you know,—and <em>I</em> haven’t forfeited the right to
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>Without another word, she stood waiting for him to
-step aside. He hesitated, made as if to speak, then
-turned abruptly and the slam of a door resounded like
-thunder.</p>
-
-<p>One by one she turned off the lights. Out across
-the familiar boards she went to the center of the stage,
-set for to-morrow. Face lifted to the darkness, she stood
-where had come to her the struggle eternal—success,
-conflict, love, renunciation. And to her lips came the
-question woman will always ask, the question always unanswered:
-“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>And so the curtain descended on Act III of Nancy
-Bradshaw’s life drama.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="The Curtain Falls"><a name="png.351" id="png.351" href="#png.351"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>341<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE CURTAIN FALLS</h2>
-
-
-<p>The lights of the auditorium flame high. The audience
-rises. It has stepped down from the footlights. It
-moves in undulating tide toward the wide-flung doors.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond those doors is night, the world of care. The
-brief hours of living in a house of dreams is over. Forgetfulness
-gives place to memory. The spirit of the
-theater lifts its magic touch from tired eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Backstage all is dark and wondering. Have we played
-our parts as an audience and sensed its heartbeats? Have
-we smiled its smiles? Teased its vanity? Gained its
-approval? We of this little play—have we succeeded in
-our striving to make a critical throng throb to it? Back
-of the swaying curtain, before which one of asbestos has
-dropped heavily, all is wild hope, eager prayer, despairing
-question.</p>
-
-<p>The house of dreams is empty, the soft-armed chairs
-shrouded as if each held a pale ghost. Is it to be alight
-or dark? Do we live or die?</p>
-
-<p>To-morrow holds the answer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<h2>Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>A small number of clear typographic errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Consistent period spelling has been retained, as has inconsistent hyphenation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOOTLIGHTS***</p>
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