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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 #64255 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64255)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The City of Comrades, by Basil King
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The City of Comrades
-
-Author: Basil King
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2021 [eBook #64255]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Image source(s): https://archive.org/download/cityofcomrades00kingiala
-
-Produced by: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF COMRADES ***
-
-
-
-
-
-BOOKS BY BASIL KING
-
-
- GOING WEST
- THE CITY OF COMRADES
- ABRAHAM’S BOSOM
- THE LIFTED VEIL
- THE SIDE OF THE ANGELS
- THE LETTER OF THE CONTRACT
- THE WAY HOME
- THE WILD OLIVE
- THE INNER SHRINE
- THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT
- LET NO MAN PUT ASUNDER
- IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY
- THE STEPS OF HONOR
- THE HIGH HEART
-
-HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK
-
-ESTABLISHED 1817
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her. “Don’t make
-a noise or you’ll frighten my friend. She’s nervous already.”
-
-(See p. 32)]
-
-
-
-
- _The_
- CITY OF COMRADES
-
- BY
- BASIL KING
-
- _Author of_
- “THE INNER SHRINE” “THE WILD OLIVE”
- “THE WAY HOME” “THE HIGH HEART” ETC.
-
- _I dream’d in a dream, I saw a city invincible to the attacks
- of the whole of the rest of the earth;_
- _I dream’d that was the new City of Friends;_
- _Nothing was greater there than the quality of robust love—it
- led the rest;_
- _It was seen every hour in the actions of the men of that city,_
- _And in all their looks and words._
-
- —WALT WHITMAN.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
- NEW YORK AND LONDON
-
- Copyright, 1919, by Harper & Brothers
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- _“’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her.
- “Don’t make a noise or you’ll frighten my
- friend. She’s nervous already.”_ _Frontispiece_
-
- _“Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls
- into his pocket before?”_ _Facing p. 204_
-
- _“You’re going home to marry me.”_
- _“How can I be going home to marry you, when—when
- I never knew till within half an hour that
- you—that you cared anything about me?”_ ” _290_
-
- _“That you should ’ave come back to this—and me
- believin’ the war ’ad done ye good—lifted you
- up, like. Not but what you was the best man
- ever lived before the war—”_ ” _344_
-
-
-
-
-THE CITY OF COMRADES
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER I_
-
-
-“No.”
-
-“No?”
-
-“No.”
-
-In the slow swirl of Columbus Circle, at the southwest corner of
-Central Park, two seedy, sinister individuals could hold an exceedingly
-private conversation without drawing attention to themselves. There
-were others like us on the scene, in that month of June, 1913, cast
-up from the obscurest depths of New York. We could revolve there for
-five or ten minutes, in company with other elements of the city’s life,
-to be eliminated by degrees, sucked into other currents, forming new
-combinations or reacting to the old ones.
-
-In silence we shuffled along a few paces, though not exactly side
-by side. Lovey was just sufficiently behind me to be able to talk
-confidentially into my ear. My own manner was probably that of a man
-anxious to throw off a dogging inferior. Even among us there are social
-degrees.
-
-“Yer’ll be sorry,” Lovey warned me, reproachfully.
-
-“Very well, then,” I jerked back at him over my shoulder; “I shall be
-sorry.”
-
-“If I didn’t know it was a good thing I wouldn’t ’a’ wanted to take ye
-in on it—not you, I wouldn’t; and dead easy.”
-
-“I don’t care for it.”
-
-“Ye’re only a beginner—”
-
-“I’m not even that.”
-
-“No, ye’re not even that; and this’d larn ye. Just two old ladies—lots of
-money always in the ’ouse—no resistance—no weepons nor nothink o’ that
-kind; and me knowin’ every hinch of the ground through workin’ for ’em
-two years ago—”
-
-“And suppose they recognized you?”
-
-“That’s it. That’s why I must have a pal. If they’d git a look at any one
-it’d have to be at you. But you don’t need to be afraid, never pinched
-before nor nothink. Once yer picter’s in the rogues’ they’ll run ye in if
-ye so much as blow yer nose. You’d just get by as an unknown man.”
-
-“And if I didn’t get by?”
-
-“Oh, but you would, sonny. Ye’re the kind. Just look at ye! Slim and
-easy-movin’ as a snake, y’are. Ye’d go through a man’s clothes while he’s
-got ’em on, and he wouldn’t notice ye no more’n a puff of wind. Look at
-yer ’and.”
-
-I held it up and looked at it. A year ago, a month ago, I should have
-studied it with remorse. Now I did it stupidly, without emotions or
-regrets.
-
-It was a long, slim hand, resembling the rest of my person. It was
-strong, however, with big, loosely articulated knuckles and muscular
-thumbs—again resembling the rest of my person. At the Beaux Arts, and in
-an occasional architect’s office, it had been spoken of as a “drawing”
-hand; and Lovey was now pointing out its advantages for other purposes. I
-laughed to myself.
-
-“Ye’re too tall,” Lovey went on, in his appraisement. “That’s ag’in’ ye.
-Ye must be a good six foot. But lots o’ men are too tall. They gits over
-it by stoopin’ a bit; and when ye stoops it frightens people, especially
-women. They ain’t near as scared of a man that stands straight up as
-they’ll be of one that crouches and wiggles away. Kind o’ suggests evil
-to ’em, like, it does. And these two old ladies—”
-
-As we reached the corner of the Park I rounded slowly on my tempter. Not
-that he thought of his offer as temptation, any more than I did; it was
-rather on his part a touch of solicitude. He was doing his best for me,
-in return for what he was pleased to take as my kindness to him during
-the past ten days.
-
-He was a small, wizened man, pathetically neat in spite of cruel
-shabbiness. It was the kind of neatness that in our world so often
-differentiates the man who has dropped from him who has always been
-down. The gray suit, which was little more than a warp with no woof on
-it at all, was brushed and smoothed and mended. The flannel shirt, with
-turned-down collar, must have been chosen for its resistance to the show
-of dirt. The sky-blue tie might have been a more useful selection, but
-even that had had freshness steamed and pressed into it whenever Lovey
-had got the opportunity. Over what didn’t so directly meet the eye the
-coat was tightly buttoned up.
-
-The boots were the weakest point, as they are with all of us. They were
-not noticeably broken, but they were wrinkled and squashed and down at
-the heel. They looked as if they had been worn by other men before having
-come to the present possessor; and mine looked the same. When I went into
-offices to apply for work it was always my boots that I tried to keep out
-of sight; but it was precisely what the eye of the fellow in command
-seemed determined to search out and judge me by.
-
-You must not think of Lovey as a criminal. He had committed petty crimes
-and he had gone to jail for them; but it had only been from the instinct
-of self-preservation. He worked when he got a job; but he never kept a
-job, because his habits always fired him. Then he lived as he could,
-lifting whatever small object came his way—an apple from a fruit-stall, a
-purse a lady had inadvertently laid down, a bag in a station, an umbrella
-forgotten in a corner—anything! The pawnshops knew him so well that he
-was afraid to go into them any more—except when he was so tired that
-he wanted to be sent to the Island for a month’s rest. In general, he
-disposed of his booty for a few pennies to children, to poverty-stricken
-mothers of families, to pals in the saloons. As long as a few dollars
-lasted he lived, as he himself would have said, honestly. When he was
-driven to it he filched again; but only when he was driven to it.
-
-It was ten days now since he had begun following me about, somewhat as a
-stray dog will follow you when you have given him a bone and a drink of
-water. For a year and more I had seen him in one or another of the dives
-I hung about. The same faces always turn up there, and we get to have
-the kind of acquaintance, silent, haunted, tolerant, that binds together
-souls in the Inferno. In general, it is a great fraternity; but now and
-then—often for reasons no one could fathom—some one is excluded. He comes
-and goes, and the others follow him with resentful looks and curses.
-Occasionally he is kicked out, which was what happened to Lovey whenever
-his weakness afforded the excuse.
-
-It was when he was kicked out of Stinson’s that I had picked him up. It
-was after midnight. It was cold. The sight of the abject face was too
-much for me.
-
-“Come along home with me, Lovey,” I had said, casually; and he came.
-
-Home was no more than a stifling garret, and Lovey slept on the floor
-like a dog. But in the morning I found my shoes cleaned as well as he
-could clean them without brush or blacking, my clothes folded, and the
-whole beastly place in such order as a friendly hand could bring to it.
-Lovey himself was gone.
-
-Twice during the interval he had stolen in in the same way and stolen
-out. He asked no more than a refuge and the privilege of sidling timidly
-up to me with a beseeching look in his sodden eyes when we met in bars.
-Once, when by hook or by crook he had got possession of a dollar, he
-insisted on the honor of “buying me a drink.”
-
-On this particular afternoon I had met him by chance in the region of
-Broadway between Forty-second Street and Columbus Circle. I can still
-recall the shy, half-frightened pleasure in his face as he saw me
-advancing toward him. He might have been a young girl.
-
-“Got somethin’ awful good, sonny, to let ye in on,” were the words with
-which he stopped me.
-
-I turned round and walked back with him to the Circle, and round it.
-
-“No, Lovey,” I said decidedly, when we had got to the corner of the Park,
-“it’s not good enough. I’ve other fish to fry.”
-
-A hectic flush stole into the cheeks, which kept a marvelous youth and
-freshness. The thin, delicate features, ascetic rather than degraded,
-sharpened with a frosty look of disappointment.
-
-“Well, just as you think best, sonny,” he said, resignedly. He asked,
-abruptly, however, “When did ye have yer last meal?”
-
-“The day before yesterday.”
-
-“And when d’ye expect to have yer next?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. Sometime; possibly to-night.”
-
-“Possibly to-night— ’Ow?”
-
-“I tell you I don’t know. Something will happen. If it doesn’t—well, I’ll
-manage.”
-
-He had found an opening.
-
-“Don’t ye see ye carn’t go on like that? Ye’ve got to live.”
-
-“Oh no, I haven’t.”
-
-“Don’t say that, sonny,” he burst out, tenderly. “Ye’ve got to live! Ye
-must do it—for my sake—now. I suppose it’s because we’re—we’re Britishers
-together.” He looked round on the circling crowd of Slavs, Mongolians,
-Greeks, Italians, aliens of all sorts. “We’re different from these
-Yankees, ain’t we?”
-
-Admitting our Anglo-Saxon superiority, I was about to say, “Well, so
-long, Lovey,” and shake him off, when he put in, piteously, “I suppose I
-can come up and lay down on yer floor again to-night?”
-
-“I wish you could, Lovey,” I responded. “But—but the fact is I—I haven’t
-got that place any more.”
-
-“Fired?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“Where’ve ye gone?”
-
-“Nowhere.”
-
-“Where did ye sleep last night?”
-
-I described the exact spot in the lumber-yard near Greeley’s Slip. He
-knew it. He had made use of its hospitality himself on warm summer nights
-such as we were having.
-
-“Goin’ there again to-night?”
-
-I said I didn’t know.
-
-He gazed at me with a kind of timid daring. “You wouldn’t be—you wouldn’t
-be goin’ to the Down and Out Club?”
-
-I smiled.
-
-“Why should you ask me that?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. See you talkin’ to one of those fellas oncet. Chap
-named Pyncheon. Worse than missions and ’vangelists, they are.”
-
-“Did you ever think of going there yourself?”
-
-“Oh, Lord love ye! I’ve thought of it, yes. But I’ve fought it off. Once
-ye do that ye’re done for.”
-
-“Well, I don’t believe I’m done for—” I began; but he interrupted me
-coaxingly.
-
-“I say, sonny. I’ll go to Greeley’s Slip. Then if you’ve nothin’
-else on ’and, you come there, too—and we’ll be fellas together. But
-don’t—don’t—go to the Down and Out!”
-
-As I walked away from him I had his “fellas together” amusingly, and
-also pathetically, in my heart. Lovey was little better than an outcast.
-I knew him by no name but that which some pothouse wag had fixed on
-him derisively. From hints he had dropped I gathered that he had had a
-wife and daughters somewhere in the world, and intuitively I got the
-impression that without being a criminal he had been connected with a
-crime. As to his personal history he had never confided to me any of the
-details beyond the fact that in his palmy days he had been in a ’at-shop
-in the Edgware Road. I fancied that at some time or another in his career
-his relatives in London—like my own in Canada—had made up a lump sum and
-bidden him begone to the land of reconstruction. There he had become
-what he was—an outcast. There I was becoming an outcast likewise. We were
-“fellas together.” I was thirty-one and he was fifty-two. My comparative
-youth helped me, in that I didn’t look older than my age; but he might
-easily have been seventy.
-
-Having got rid of him, I drifted diagonally across the Park, but with
-a certain method in the seeming lack of method in taking my direction.
-Though I had an objective point, I didn’t dare to approach it otherwise
-than by a roundabout route. It is probable that no gaze but that of the
-angels was upon me; but to me it seemed as if every glance that roved up
-and down the Park must spot my aim.
-
-For this reason I assumed a manner meant to throw observation off the
-scent. I loitered to look at young people on horseback or to stare at
-some specially dashing motor-car. I strolled into by-paths and out of
-them. I passed under the noses of policemen in gray-blue uniforms and
-tried to infuse my carriage with the fact which Lovey had emphasized,
-that I had never yet been pinched. I had never yet, so far as I knew,
-done anything to warrant pinching; and that I had no intentions beyond
-those of the ordinary law-abiding citizen was what I hoped my swagger
-would convey.
-
-Though I was shabby, I was not sufficiently so to be unworthy to take
-the air. The worst that could be said of me was that I was not shabby as
-the working-man is at liberty to be. Mine was the suspicious, telltale
-shabbiness of the gentleman—far more damning than the grime and sweat of
-a chimney-sweep.
-
-Now that I was alone again, I had a return of the sensation that had been
-on me since waking in the morning—that I was walking in the air. I felt
-that I bounced like a bubble every time I stepped. The day before I had
-been giddy; now I was only light. It was as if at any minute I might go
-up. Unconsciously I ground my footsteps into the gravel or the grass to
-keep myself on the solid earth.
-
-It was not the first time I had gone without food for twenty-four hours,
-but it was the first time I had done it for forty-eight. Moreover, it was
-the first time I had ever been without some prospect of food ahead of me.
-With a meal surely in sight on the following day I could have waited for
-it. More easily I could have waited for a drink or two. Drink kept me
-going longer than food, for in spite of the reaction after it the need of
-it had grown more insistent. Had I been offered my choice between food
-and life, on the one hand, and drink and death, on the other, I think I
-should have chosen drink and death.
-
-But now there was no likelihood of either. I had husbanded my last
-pennies after my last meal, to make them spin out to as many drinks as
-possible. I had begged a few more drinks, and cadged a few more. But I
-had come to my limit in all these directions. Before I sought the shelter
-of Greeley’s Slip a hint had been given me at Stinson’s that I might come
-in for the compliments showered on Lovey ten days previously. Now as I
-walked in the Park the craving inside me was not because I hadn’t eaten,
-but because I hadn’t drunk that day.
-
-Two or three bitter temptations assailed me before I reached Fifth
-Avenue. One was in the form of a pretty girl of eight or ten, who came
-mincing down a flowery path, holding a quarter between the thumb and
-forefinger of her left hand. Satan must have sent her. I could have
-snatched the quarter and made my escape, only that I lacked the nerve.
-Then there was a newsboy counting his gains on a bench. They were laid
-out in rows before him—pennies, nickels, and dimes. I stood for a minute
-and looked down at him, estimating the ease with which I could have
-stooped and swept them all into my palm. He looked up and smiled. The
-smile didn’t disarm me; I was beyond the reach of any such appeal. It was
-again that I didn’t have the nerve. Lastly an old woman, a nurse, was
-dealing out coins to three small children that they might make purchases
-of a blind man selling bootlaces and pencils. I could have swiped them
-all as neatly as a croupier pulls in louis d’or with his rake—but I was
-afraid.
-
-These were real temptations, as fierce as any I ever faced. By the time I
-had reached the Avenue I was in a cold perspiration, as much from a sense
-of failure as from the effort at resistance. I wondered how I should ever
-carry out the plans I had in mind if I was to balk at such little things
-as this.
-
-The plans I had in mind still kept me from making headway as the crow
-flies. I went far up the Avenue; I crossed into Madison Avenue; I went
-up that again; I crossed into Park Avenue. I crossed and recrossed and
-crisscrossed and descended, and at last found myself strolling by a house
-toward which I scarcely dared to turn my eyes, feeling that even for
-looking at it I might be arrested.
-
-I slackened my pace so as to verify all the points which experts had
-underscored in my hearing. There was the vacant lot which the surrounding
-buildings rendered so dark at night. There was the low, red-brown fence
-inclosing the back premises, over which a limber, long-legged fellow
-like me could leap in a second. There were the usual numerous windows—to
-kitchen, scullery, pantry, laundry—of any good-sized American house,
-some one of which was pretty sure to be left unguarded on a summer
-night. There were the neighboring yards, with more low fences, offering
-excellent cover in a get-away, with another vacant lot leading out on
-another street a little farther down.
-
-I had so many times strolled by the house as I was doing now, and had so
-many times rehearsed its characteristics, that I made the final review
-with some exactitude before passing on my way.
-
-My way was not far. There was nothing to do but to go back into the Park.
-As it was nearly six o’clock, it was too late to search for a job that
-day, and I should have had no heart for doing so in any case. I had found
-a job that morning—that of handling big packing-cases in a warehouse—but
-I was too exhausted for the work. When in the effort to lift one onto a
-truck I collapsed and nearly fainted, I was told in a choice selection of
-oaths to beat it as no good.
-
-I sat on a bench, therefore, waiting for the dark and thinking of the
-house of which I had just inspected the outside. It was not a house
-picked at random. It was one that had possessed an interest for me during
-all the three years I had been in New York. I had, in fact, brought a
-letter of introduction to its owner from the man under whom I had worked
-in Montreal. Chiefly through my own carelessness, nothing came of that,
-but I never failed, when I passed this way, to stare at the dwelling as
-one in which I might have had a footing.
-
-The occupant was also a well-known architect in New York. In the
-architects’ offices in which I found employment I heard him praised,
-criticized, condemned. His work was good or bad according to the
-speaker’s point of view. I thought it tolerably good, with an
-over-emphasis on ornament.
-
-It was an odd fact that, in starting out on what was clear in my mind
-as a new phase in my career, no other house suggested itself as a field
-of operations. As to this one I felt documented, and that was all. I
-had no sense of horror at what I was about to do; no remorse from the
-position from which I had fallen. I suppose my mind was too sick for
-that, and my body too imperatively clamorous. I had said to Lovey that I
-didn’t have to live—but I did. I had seen that very morning that I did.
-I had stood at the edge of Greeley’s Slip and watched the swirling of
-the brown-green water with a view to making an end of it. One step and I
-should be out of all this misery and disgrace! The world would be rid of
-me; my family would be rid of me; I should be rid of myself, which would
-be best of all. Had I been quite sure as to the last point, I think I
-could have done it. But I wasn’t quite sure. I was far from quite sure.
-I could imagine the step over the edge of Greeley’s Slip as a step into
-conditions worse than those I was enduring now; and so I had drawn back.
-I had drawn back and wandered up-town, in the hope of securing a job that
-would give me a breakfast.
-
-I wonder if you have ever done that? I wonder if you have ever gone from
-dock to station and from station to shop and from shop to warehouse,
-wherever heavy, unskilled labor may be in demand, and extra hands are
-treated with a brutality that slaves would kick against, in the hope of
-earning fifty cents? I wonder if in your grown-up life you have ever
-known a minute when fifty cents stood for your salvation? I wonder if
-with fifty cents standing for your salvation you ever saw the day when
-you couldn’t get it? No? Then you will hardly understand how natural, how
-much a matter of course, the thing had become which I was resolved to do.
-
-It was no sudden idea. I had been living in the company of men who took
-such feats for granted. Their talk had amazed me at first, but I had
-grown used to it. I had grown used to the thing. I had come to find a
-piquancy in the thought of it.
-
-Then Lovey’s suggestions had not been thrown away on me. True, he was out
-for small game, while I, if I went in for it, would want something bigger
-and more exciting; but the basic idea was the same. Lovey could make a
-haul and live for weeks on the fruit of it; I might do the same and live
-for months. And if I didn’t pull it off successfully, if I was nabbed
-and sent away—why, then there would be some let-up in the struggle which
-had become so infernal. Even if I got a shot through the heart—and the
-tales I heard were full of such accidents—the tragedy would not lack its
-element of relief. It might be out of one hell into another—but it would
-at least be out of one.
-
-Not that I hadn’t found a bitter pleasure in the life! I had. I found
-it still. In one of Dostoyevsky’s novels an old rake talks of the joys
-of being in the gutter. Well, there are such joys. They are not joys
-that civilization knows or that aspiration would find legitimate; but
-one reaches a point at which it is a satisfaction to be oneself at one’s
-worst. Where all the pretenses with which poor human nature covers itself
-up are cast aside the soul can stalk forth nakedly, hideously, and be
-unashamed. In the presence of each other we were always unashamed. We
-could kick over all standards, we could drop all poses, we could flout
-all duties, we could own to all crimes, and be “fellas together.” As I
-went lower and lower down it became to me a kind of acrid delight, of
-positively intellectual delight, to know that I was herding with the most
-degraded, and that there was no baseness or bestiality to which I was not
-at liberty to submit myself.
-
-If there had never been any reactions from this state of mind!—but God!
-
-It was a disadvantage to me that I was not like my cronies. I couldn’t
-open my lips without betraying the fact that I belonged to another
-sphere. Though the broken-down man of education is not unknown in the
-underworld, he is comparatively rare. He is comparatively rare and
-under suspicion, like a white swan in a flock of black ones. I might be
-open-handed, ingratiating, and absurdly fellow-well-met, but I was always
-an outsider. They would take my drinks, they would return me drinks, we
-would swap stories and experiences with all outward show of equality; but
-no one knew better than myself that I was not on a footing with the rest
-of them. Women took to me readily enough, but men were always on their
-guard. Try as I would I never found a mate among them, I never made a
-friend. Therefore, now that I was down and out, I had no one of whom to
-ask a good turn, no one who would have done me a good turn, but poor,
-useless old Lovey sneaking in the shade.
-
-I was in a measure between two worlds. I had been ejected from one
-without having forced a way into the other. When I say ejected I mean the
-word. The bitterest moment in my life was on that night when my eldest
-brother came to his door in Montreal and gave me fifty dollars, with the
-words:
-
-“And now get out! Don’t let any of us ever see your face or hear your
-name again.”
-
-As I stumbled down the steps he gave me a kick that didn’t reach me
-and which I had lost the right to resent. He himself went back to the
-dinner-party his wife was entertaining inside, and of which the talk and
-laughter reached me as I stood humbly on the door-step. From the other
-side of the street I looked back at the lighted windows. It was the last
-touch of connection with my family.
-
-But it had been a kindly, patient family. My father was one of the best
-known and most highly honored among Canadian public men. As he had
-married an American, I had a good many cousins in New York, though I had
-not made myself known to any of them since coming there to live. I didn’t
-want them. Had I met one of them in the street, I should have passed
-without speaking; but, as it happened, I never met one. I saw their names
-in the papers, and that was all.
-
-My father and mother had had five children, of whom I was the fourth.
-My two brothers were married, prosperous and respected—one a lawyer in
-Montreal, the other a banker in Toronto. My elder sister was married to
-a colonel in the British army; the younger one—the only member of the
-family younger than myself—still lived at home.
-
-We three sons were all graduates of McGill, in addition to which I had
-been sent to the Beaux Arts in Paris. Out of that I had come with some
-degree of credit; and there had been a year in which I was in sight—oh,
-very distant sight!—of the beginning of the fulfilment of my childhood’s
-ambition to revolutionize the art of architecture in Canada. But in the
-second year that vision went out; and in the third came the night on my
-brother Jerry’s door-step.
-
-I had nothing to complain of. The family had borne with me—and borne with
-me. When we reached the time when I was supposed to be earning my own
-living and my father’s allowance came to an end, my mother, who had some
-money of her own, kept it up. She would be keeping it up still if she
-knew where I was—but she didn’t know. From the moment of leaving Montreal
-I decided to carry out Jerry’s injunction. They should neither see my
-face nor hear my name again. I didn’t stop to consider how cruel this
-would be to the best mother a man ever had—to say nothing of the best
-father—or rather, when I did stop to consider it it seemed to me that I
-was taking the kindest course. I had no confidence in myself or in the
-future. New surroundings and associations would not give me a new heart,
-whatever hopes those who wished me well might be building on the change.
-For a new heart I needed something which I hadn’t got and saw no means of
-getting.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER II_
-
-
-Somewhere about dusk I fell asleep. It was dark when I woke up. It was
-dark and still and sultry, as it often is in New York in the middle of
-June.
-
-The lamps were lit in the Park, and in their glow shadowy forms moved
-stealthily. When they went in twos I took them to be lovers; when they
-went alone I put them down as prowlers of the night. I didn’t know what
-they were after, but whatever it might be I was sure it was no good.
-
-Not that that mattered to me! I had long been in a situation where I
-couldn’t be particular. When I had risen and stretched myself I, too,
-moved stealthily, dogged by a crime I hadn’t yet committed, but of which
-the guilt was already in the air.
-
-As I had nothing by which to tell the time, I was obliged to wait till
-a clock struck. I hoped it was eleven at least, but when the sound came
-over the trees it was only nine. Only nine, and I could do nothing before
-one! Nothing before one, and nowhere to go! Nowhere to go, and no food
-to eat, and not a drop to drink! Doubtless I could have found water; but
-water made me sick. With four hours to wait, I thought again of the dark
-river with its velvety current, running below Greeley’s Slip.
-
-Aimlessly I drifted toward it—that is, I drifted toward Columbus Circle,
-whence I could drift farther still through squalid, fetid, dimly lighted
-streets down to the water’s edge. The night was so hot that the thought
-of the plunge began to appeal to me. After all, it would be an easy,
-pleasant way of stepping out.
-
-But I didn’t do it. The unknown beyond the river once more drove me back.
-Besides, the adventure I had planned was not without its fascination.
-I wanted to see what it held in store. If it held nothing—well, then,
-Greeley’s Slip would still be accessible in the morning.
-
-So I skulked back into the depths of the Park again. Those who went as
-twos began to disappear, and the lonely shadows to steal along more
-furtively. Now and then one of them approached me or hung in the distance
-suggestively. It was not like any of the encounters that take place in
-daylight. It was more as if these dark ghosts had floated up from some
-evil spirit land, into which before morning they would float down again.
-
-But twelve o’clock struck at last, and I took midnight as a call. It was
-a call to leave the great human division in which I had hitherto been
-classed, and become a criminal. Once I had done this thing, I should
-never be able to go back. The angel with the flaming sword would guard
-that way, and I could never regain even such status as that which I was
-abandoning.
-
-If my head had not been swimming I might at the last minute have felt a
-qualm at that, but my mind had lost the faculty of deconcentration. It
-was fixed on the thing before me in such a way that I couldn’t get it
-off. For this reason I went, on leaving the Park, directly to the street
-and number where my thoughts were.
-
-I was surprised by the emptiness and silence of the thoroughfares. Not
-till then had I remembered that at this season of the year most of the
-houses would be closed. Closed they were, looking dark and blank and
-forbidding. I happened to know that the house to which I was bound was
-not closed; and though the fact that there were so few to pass in the
-streets rendered me more conspicuous, it also made me the less subject to
-observation.
-
-Indeed, there were no observers at all when I approached the black spot
-made by the vacant lot. There was nothing but myself and the blackness.
-Not a light in the house! Hardly a light in any of the houses roundabout!
-Not a footfall on the pavements! If ever there was a good opportunity to
-do what I had come for, it was mine.
-
-But I passed. The black spot frightened me. It was like a black gulf into
-which I might sink down. I re-passed.
-
-I went farther up the street and took myself to task. It was a repetition
-of my recoil from the children in the afternoon. I must have the nerve—or
-I must own to myself that I hadn’t. If I hadn’t it, then I had no
-alternative but Greeley’s Slip.
-
-I turned in my steps and passed the house again. If from the blank
-windows any one had been looking out my actions would have been
-suspicious. I went far down the street, and came back again far up it.
-Then when I had no more power of arguing with myself I suddenly found
-my footsteps crushing the dusty, sun-dried shoots of nettle and blue
-succory. I was in the vacant lot.
-
-All at once fear left me. As well as any old hand in the business
-I seemed to know what lay before me. At every second some low-down
-prompting, sprung from nameless depths in my nature, told me what to do.
-
-I noted in the first place how accurate the experts had been as to light
-and shade. The house stood so far up on one of the long avenues that the
-buildings were thinning out. So, too, the street lamps. They were no
-more than in the proportion of two to three as compared to their numbers
-half a mile lower down. Just here they were so placed that not a ray fell
-into the three or four thousand square feet which had probably never been
-built upon since Manhattan was inhabited. Even the wall of the house was
-windowless on this side, for the reason that within a few months some new
-building would probably block the outlook.
-
-Once I had crept close to the wall, I knew I presented neither silhouette
-nor shade to any chance passer-by. I could feel my way at leisure,
-cautiously treading burdock and fireweed underfoot. I came to the low
-wooden fence, in which there was a gate for tradesmen, which was possibly
-unlocked; but I didn’t run the risk of a click. With my long legs a
-stride took me over into a small brick-paved court.
-
-I paused to reconnoiter. The obscurity here was so dense that only my
-architect’s instincts told me where the doors and windows would probably
-be. I located them by degrees. The doors I let alone. The windows I
-tried, first one and then another, but with no success. There was
-probably some simple fastening that I could have dealt with had I had a
-pocket-knife, but the one I had carried for years had long since been
-lying in a pawnshop. To reflect I sat down on the cover of a bin that was
-doubtless used for refuse.
-
-A footstep alarmed me. It was heavy, measured, slow. With the ease of
-a snake I was down on my belly, crawling toward cover. Cover offered
-itself in the form of the single shrub that the court contained—lilac
-or syringa—growing close against the kitchen wall. Lovey would have
-commended the silence and swiftness with which I slipped behind it.
-
-The footstep receded, slow, measured, heavy. Coming to the conclusion
-that it was a policeman in the Avenue, I raised my head. I had no sense
-of queerness in my situation. It seemed as much a matter of course as if
-I had been doing the same sort of thing ever since I was born.
-
-There was apparently a providence in all this, for, looking up, I spied a
-window I had not seen before, because it was hidden by the shrub. This,
-if any, would have been neglected by the servants when they went to bed.
-
-With scarcely the stirring of a leaf I got on my feet again—and, lo! the
-miracle. The window was actually open. I had nothing to do but push it
-a few inches higher, drag myself up and wriggle in. I accomplished this
-without a sound that could be detected twenty feet away.
-
-Coming down on my hands and knees, I found myself amid the odor of
-eatables, chiefly that of fruit. I rested a minute to get my bearings,
-which I did by the sense of smell. I knew I must be in a sort of pantry.
-By putting out my hands carefully, so as to knock nothing over, I
-perceived that it was little more than a closet with shelves. A thrill of
-excitement passed through me from head to foot when my hand rested on an
-apple.
-
-I ate the apple there and then, kneeling upright, my toes bent under me.
-I ate another and another. Feeling cautiously, I discovered a tin box
-in which there were bread and cake. I ate of both. Getting softly on
-my feet, I groped for other things, which proved in the main to be no
-more than tea, coffee, spices, and starch. Then my fingers ran over a
-strawlike surface, and I knew I had hold of a demijohn.
-
-Smell told me that it contained sherry, and such knowledge of
-housekeeping as I possessed suggested that it was cooking-sherry. I took
-a long swig of it. Two long swigs were enough. It burnt me, and yet
-it braced me. With the food I had eaten I felt literally like a giant
-refreshed with wine.
-
-It occurred to me that this was a point at which I might draw back. But
-the spell of the unknown was upon me, and I determined to go at least a
-little farther. Very, very stealthily I opened the door.
-
-I was not in a kitchen, as I expected to find myself, but in a servants’
-dining-room. I got the dim outlines of chairs and what I took to be a
-dresser or a bookcase. Another open door led into a hall.
-
-My knowledge of the planning of houses aided me at each step I took.
-From the hallway I could place the kitchen, the laundry, and the back
-staircase. I knew the front hall lay beyond a door which was closed. At
-the foot of the back staircase I stood for some minutes and listened.
-Not a sound came from anywhere in the house. The kitchen clock ticked
-loudly, and presently startled me with a gurgle and a chuckle before it
-struck one. After this manifestation I had to wait till my heart stopped
-thumping and my nerves were quieted before venturing on the stairs. As
-the first step creaked, I kept close to the wall to get a firmer support
-for my tread. On reaching a landing I could see up into another hall.
-Here I perceived the glimmer or reflection of a light. It was a very dim
-or distant light—but it was a light.
-
-I stood on the landing and waited. If there were people moving about I
-should hear them soon. But all I did hear was the heavy breathing of the
-servants, who were sleeping on the topmost floor.
-
-Creeping a little farther up, I discovered that the light was in a
-bedroom—the first to open from the front hall up-stairs. Between the
-front hall and the back hall the door was ajar. That would make things
-easier for me, and I dragged myself noiselessly to the top. I was now
-at the head of the first flight of back stairs, and looking into the
-master’s section of the house. Except for that one dim light the house
-was dark. It was not, however, so dark that my architect’s eye couldn’t
-make a mental map quite sufficient for my guidance.
-
-It was clearly a dwelling that had been added to, with some rambling
-characteristics. The first few feet of the front hall were on a level
-with the back hall, after which came a flight of three or four steps to
-a higher plane, which ran the rest of the depth of the building to the
-window over the front door. In the faint radiance through this window I
-could discern a high-boy, a bureau, and some chairs against the wall. I
-could see, too, that from this higher level one staircase ran down to the
-front door and another up to a third story. What was chiefly of moment to
-me was the fact that the bedroom with the light was lower than the rest
-of this part of the house, and somewhat cut off from it.
-
-With movements as quiet as a cat’s I got myself where I could peep into
-the bedroom where the lamp burned. It proved to be a small electric lamp
-with a rose-colored shade, standing beside a bed. It was a rose-colored
-room, evidently that of a young lady. But there was no young lady there.
-There was no one.
-
-The fact that surprises me as I record all this is that I was so
-extraordinarily cool. I was cooler in the act than I am in the memory of
-it. I walked into that bedroom as calmly as if it had been my own.
-
-It was a pretty room, with the usual notes of photographs, bibelots, and
-flowered cretonne which young women like. The walls were in a light, cool
-green set off by a few colored reproductions of old Italian masters. Over
-the small white virginal bed was a copy of Fra Angelico’s “Annunciation.”
-Two windows, one of which was a bay, were shaded by loosely hanging
-rose-colored silk, and before the bay window the curtains were drawn.
-Diagonally across the corner of this window, but within the actual room,
-stood a simple white writing-desk, with a white dressing-table near
-it, but against the wall. On the table lay a gold-mesh purse, in which
-there was money. I slipped it into my pocket, with some satisfaction in
-securing the first fruits of my adventure.
-
-With such booty as this it again occurred to me to be on the safe side
-and to go back by the way I came. I was, in fact, looking round me to
-see if there was any other small valuable object I could lift before
-departing when I heard a door open in some distant part of the house—and
-voices.
-
-They were women’s voices, or, rather, as I speedily inferred, girls’
-voices. By listening intently I drew the conclusion that two girls had
-come out of a room on the third floor and were coming down the stairs.
-
-It was the minute to make off, and I tried to do so. I might have
-effected my escape had I not been checked by the figure of a man looming
-up suddenly before me. He sprang out of nowhere—a tall, slender man, in
-a dark-blue suit, with trousers baggy at the knees, and wearing an old
-golfing-cap. I jumped back from him in terror, only to find that it was
-my own reflection in the pier-glass. But the few seconds’ delay lost me
-my chance to get away.
-
-By the time I had tiptoed to the door the voices were on the same floor
-as myself. Two girls were advancing along the hall, evidently making
-their way to this chamber. My retreat being cut off, I looked wildly
-about for a place in which to hide myself. In the instants at my disposal
-I could discover nothing more remote than the bay window, screened by its
-loose rose-colored hangings. By the time the young ladies were on the
-threshold I was established there, with the silk sections pulled together
-and held tightly in my hand.
-
-The first words I heard were: “But it will seem so like a habit. Men will
-be afraid of you.”
-
-This voice was light, silvery, and staccato. That which replied had a
-deep mezzo quality, without being quite contralto.
-
-“They won’t be nearly so much afraid of me,” it said, fretfully, “as I am
-of them. I wish—I wish they’d let me alone!”
-
-“Oh, well, they won’t do that—not yet awhile; unless, as I say, they see
-you’re hopeless. Really, dear, when a girl breaks a third engagement—”
-
-“They must see that she wouldn’t do it if she didn’t have to. Here—this
-is the hook that always bothers me.”
-
-There were tears in the mezzo voice now, with a hint of exasperation that
-might have been due to the lover or the hook, I couldn’t be sure which.
-
-“But that’s what I don’t see—”
-
-“You don’t see it because you don’t know Stephen—that is, you don’t know
-him well.”
-
-“But from what I do know of him—”
-
-“He seems very nice. Yes, of course! But, good Heavens! Elsie, I want a
-husband who’s something more than very nice!”
-
-“And yet that’s pretty good, as husbands go.”
-
-“If I can’t reach a higher standard than as husbands go I sha’n’t marry
-any one.”
-
-“Which seems to me what’s very likely to happen.”
-
-“So it seems to me.”
-
-The silence that followed was full of soft, swishing sounds, which I
-judged to come from the taking off of a dress and the putting on of
-some sort of negligée. From my experience of the habits of girls, as
-illustrated by my sisters and their friends, I supposed that they were
-lending each other services in the processes of undoing. The girl with
-the mezzo voice had gone up to Elsie’s room to undo her; Elsie had come
-down to render similar assistance. There is probably a psychological
-connection between this intimate act and confidence, since girls most
-truly bare their hearts to each other when they ought to be going to bed.
-
-The mezzo young lady was moving about the room when the conversation was
-taken up again.
-
-“I don’t understand,” Elsie complained, “why you should have got engaged
-to Stephen in the first place.”
-
-“I don’t, either”—she was quite near me now, and threw something that
-might have been a brooch or a chain on the little white desk—“except on
-the ground that I wanted to try him.”
-
-“Try him? What do you mean?”
-
-“Well, what’s an engagement? Isn’t it a kind of experiment? You get as
-near to marriage as you can, while still keeping free to draw back. To
-me it’s been like going down to the edge of the water in which you can
-commit suicide, and finding it so cold that you go home again.”
-
-“Don’t you ever mean to be married at all?” Elsie demanded, impatiently.
-
-“I don’t mean to be married till I’m sure.”
-
-Elsie burst out indignantly: “Regina Barry, that’s the most pusillanimous
-thing I ever heard. You might as well say you’d never cross the Atlantic
-unless you were sure the ship would reach the other side.”
-
-“My trouble about crossing the Atlantic is in making up my mind whether
-or not I want to go on board. One might be willing to risk the second
-step, but one can’t risk the first. Even the hymn that says ‘One step
-enough for me’ implies that at least you know what that’s to be.”
-
-“You mean that you balk at marriage in any case.”
-
-“I mean that I balk at marriage with any of the men I’ve been engaged to.
-I must say that; and I can’t say more.”
-
-During another brief silence I surmised that Regina Barry had seated
-herself before the dressing-table and was probably doing something to her
-hair. I wish I could say here that in my eavesdropping I experienced a
-sense of shame; but I can’t. Whatever creates a sense of shame had been
-warped in me. The moral transitions that had turned me into a burglar
-had been gradual but sure. With the gold-mesh purse in my pocket a
-burglar I had become, and I felt no more repugnance to the business than
-I did to that of the architect. Notwithstanding the natural masculine
-interest these young ladies stirred in me, I meant to wait till they had
-separated—gone to bed—and fallen asleep. Then I would slip out from my
-hiding-place, swipe the brooch or the chain that had been thrown on the
-desk, and go.
-
-“What was the matter with the first man?” Elsie began again.
-
-“I don’t know whether it was the matter with him or with me. I didn’t
-trust him.”
-
-“I should say that was the matter with him. And the next man?”
-
-“Nothing. I simply couldn’t have lived with him.”
-
-“And what’s wrong with Stephen is that he’s no more than very nice. I
-see.”
-
-“Oh no, you don’t see, dear! There’s a lot more to it than all that, only
-I can’t explain it.” I fancied that she wheeled round in her chair and
-faced her companion. “The long and short of it is that I’ve never met
-the man with whom I could keep house. I can fall in love with them for a
-while—I can have them going and coming—I can welcome them and say good-by
-to them—but when it’s a question of all welcome and no good-by—well, the
-man’s got to be different from any I’ve seen yet.”
-
-“You’ll end by not getting any one at all.”
-
-“Which, from my point of view, don’t you see, won’t be an unmixed evil.
-Having lived happily for twenty-three years without a husband, I don’t
-see why I should throw away a perfectly good bone for the most enticing
-shadow that ever was.”
-
-“I don’t believe you’re human.” Before there could be a retort to this
-Elsie went on to ask, “How did poor Stephen take it?”
-
-“Well, he didn’t go into fits of laughter. He took it more or less lying
-down. If he hadn’t—”
-
-“If he hadn’t—what?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. The least little bit of fight on his part—or even
-contempt—”
-
-As this sentence remained unfinished I could hear Elsie rise.
-
-“Well, I’m off to bed,” she yawned. “What time do you have breakfast?”
-
-There was some little discussion of household arrangements, after which
-they said their good nights.
-
-With Elsie’s departure I began for the first time to be uncomfortable.
-I can’t express myself otherwise than to say that as long as she was
-there I felt I had a chaperon. In spite of the fact that I had become a
-professional burglar the idea of being left alone with an innocent young
-lady in her bedroom filled me with dismay.
-
-I was almost on the point of making a bolt for it when I heard Elsie call
-out from the hallway: “Ugh! How dark and poky! For mercy’s sake, come up
-with me!”
-
-Miss Barry lingered at the dressing-table long enough to ask: “Wouldn’t
-you rather sleep in mother’s room? That communicates with this, with only
-a little passage in between. The bed is made up.”
-
-“Oh no,” Elsie’s staccato came back. “I don’t mind being up there, and my
-things are spread out; only it seems so creepy to climb all those stairs.”
-
-“Wait a minute.”
-
-She sprang up. I breathed freely. My sense of propriety was saved. The
-voices were receding along the front hall. Once the young ladies had
-begun to mount the stairs I would slip out by the back hall and get off.
-Relaxing my hold on the silk hangings I stepped out cautiously.
-
-My first thought was for the objects I had heard thrown down with a
-rattle on the writing-desk. They proved to be a string of small pearls, a
-diamond pin, and some rings of which I made no inspection before sweeping
-them all into my pocket.
-
-I was ready now to steal away, but, to my vexation, the incorrigible
-maidens had begun to talk love-affairs again at the foot of the staircase
-leading up to the third floor. They had also turned on the hall light,
-so that my chances were diminished for getting away unseen.
-
-Knowing, however, that sooner or later they would have to go up the
-next flight, I stood by the writing-desk and waited. I was not nervous;
-I was not alarmed. As a matter of fact the success of my undertaking
-up to the present point, together with the action of food and wine,
-combined to make me excited and hilarious. I chuckled in advance over the
-mystification of Miss Regina Barry, who would find on returning to her
-room that her rings, her necklet, and her gold-mesh purse had melted into
-the atmosphere.
-
-In sheer recklessness I was now guilty of a bit of deviltry before which
-I would have hesitated had I had time to give it a second thought. On
-the desk there was a scrap of blank paper and a pen. Stooping, I printed
-in the neat block letters I had once been accustomed to inscribe below a
-plan:
-
- There are men different from those you have seen hitherto. Wait.
-
-This I pinned to the pincushion on the dressing-table, beginning at
-once to creep toward the door, so as to seize the first opportunity of
-slipping down the back stairs.
-
-But again I was frustrated.
-
-“I’m all right now,” I heard Elsie say, reassuringly. “Don’t come up. Go
-back and go to bed.”
-
-Miss Barry spoke as she returned along the hall toward her room: “The
-cook sleeps in the next room to you, so that if you’re afraid in the
-night you’ve only to hammer on the wall. But you needn’t be. This house
-is as safe as a prison.”
-
-I had barely time to get into the bay window again and pull the curtains
-to.
-
-Some five minutes followed, during which I heard the opening and shutting
-of drawers and closets and the swish and frou-frou of skirts. I began to
-curse my idiocy in fastening that silly bit of writing to the pincushion.
-My only hope lay in the possibility that she would go to bed and to sleep
-without seeing it.
-
-With hearing grown extraordinarily acute I could trace every movement
-she made about the room. Presently I knew she had come back to the
-dressing-table again. Pulling up a chair, she sat down before it, to
-finish, I suppose, the arranging of her hair.
-
-For a few seconds there was a silence, during which I could hear the
-thumping of my heart. Then came the faint rattling of paper. I knew when
-she read the thing by the slight catch in her breath. I expected more
-than that. I thought she would call out to her friend or otherwise give
-an alarm. If she went to a telephone to summon the police I decided to
-make a dash for it. Indeed, I meant to make a dash for it as it was, as
-soon as I knew her next move.
-
-But of all the next moves, the one she made was the one I had least
-counted on. With a sudden tug at the hangings she pulled them apart—and I
-was before her.
-
-I was before her and she was before me. It is this latter detail of which
-I have the most vivid recollection. In the matter of time all other
-recollections of the moment seem to come after that and to be subsidiary
-to it.
-
-My immediate impression was of two enormous, wonderful, burning eyes,
-full of amazement. Apart from the eyes I hardly saw anything. It was as
-if the light of a dark lantern had been suddenly turned on me and I was
-blinded by the blaze. I was blinded by the blaze and shriveled up in
-it. No words can do justice to my sudden sense of being a contemptible,
-loathsome reptile.
-
-“’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her. She raised her hand.
-“Don’t make a noise or you’ll frighten my friend. She’s nervous already.”
-
-Instinctively I pulled off my cap, stepping out of my hiding-place into
-the middle of the room. As I did so she recoiled, supporting herself by
-a hand on the writing-desk. Now that the discovery was made, I could see
-her grow pale, while the hand on the desk trembled.
-
-“You mustn’t be afraid,” I began to whisper.
-
-“I’m not afraid,” she whispered back; “but—but what are you doing here?”
-
-“I’ll show you,” I returned, with shamefaced quietness. “I shall also
-show you that if you’ll let me go without giving an alarm you won’t be
-sorry.”
-
-Pulling all the things I had stolen out of my pocket, I showered them on
-the dressing-table.
-
-“Oh!”
-
-The smothered exclamation made it plain to me that she hadn’t missed the
-articles.
-
-“May I ask you to verify them?” I went on. “If you should find later
-that something had disappeared, I shouldn’t like you to think that I had
-carried it away.”
-
-She made a feint at examining the jewelry, but I could see that she was
-incapable of making anything like a count. It was I who insisted on going
-over the objects one by one.
-
-“There’s this,” I said, touching the gold-mesh purse, but not picking it
-up. “I see there’s money in it; but it has not been opened. Then there’s
-this,” I added, indicating the pearl necklet; “and this,” which was the
-brooch. “The rings,” I continued, “I don’t know anything about. There
-are three here. That’s all I remember seeing; but I didn’t notice in
-particular.”
-
-She said, in a breathless whisper, “That’s all there were.”
-
-“Then may I ask if you mean to let me go?”
-
-“How can I stop you?”
-
-“Oh, in two or three ways. You could call your servants, or you could
-ring up the police—”
-
-Her big, burning eyes were fixed on me hypnotically. The color began to
-come back to her cheeks, but she trembled still.
-
-“How—how did you get in?”
-
-I explained to her.
-
-“And the only thing I’ve taken,” I went on, “is the food I ate and the
-wine I drank; but if you knew how much I needed them—”
-
-“Were you hungry?”
-
-“I hadn’t eaten anything for two days, and very little for two days
-before that.”
-
-“Then you’re not—you’re not one of those gentleman burglars who do this
-sort of thing out of bravado?”
-
-“As we see in novels or plays. I don’t think you’ll find many of them
-about. I’m a burglar,” I pursued, “or I—I meant to be one—but I’m not a
-gentleman.”
-
-“You speak like a gentleman.”
-
-“Unfortunately, a gentleman is not made by speech. A gentleman could
-never be in the predicament in which you’ve caught me.”
-
-“Well, then, you were a gentleman once.”
-
-“My father was a gentleman—and is.”
-
-“English?”
-
-“I’d rather not tell you. Now that I’ve restored the things, if you’ll
-give me your word that I sha’n’t be molested I shall—”
-
-“You sha’n’t be molested, only—”
-
-As she hesitated I insisted, “Only what, may I ask?”
-
-Her manner was a mixture of embarrassment and pity. She had not hitherto
-taken her eyes from me since we had begun to speak. Now she let them
-wander away; or, rather, she let them shift away, to return to me
-swiftly, as if she couldn’t trust me without watching me. By this time
-she was trembling so violently, too, that she was obliged to grasp the
-back of a chair to steady herself. She was too little to be tall, and
-yet too tall to be considered little. The filmy thing she wore, with its
-long, loose sleeves, gave her some of the appearance of an angel, only
-that no angel ever had this bright, almost hectic color in the cheeks,
-and these scarlet lips.
-
-“Was it,” she asked, speaking, as we both did, in low tones, and
-rapidly—“was it because you—you had no money that you did this?”
-
-I smiled faintly. “That was it exactly; but now—”
-
-“Then won’t you let me give you some?”
-
-I still had enough of the man about me to straighten myself up and say:
-“Thanks, no. It’s very kind of you; but—but the reasons which make it
-impossible for me to—to steal it make it equally impossible for me to
-take it as a gift.”
-
-“But why—why was it impossible for you to steal it, when you had come
-here to do it?”
-
-“I suppose it was seeing the owner of it face to face. I’d sunk low
-enough to steal from some one I couldn’t visualize—but what’s the use?
-It’s mere hair-splitting. Just let me say that this is my first attempt,
-and it hasn’t succeeded. I may do better next time if I can get up the
-nerve.”
-
-“Oh, but there won’t be a next time.”
-
-“That we shall have to see.”
-
-“Suppose”—the mixture of embarrassment and pity made it hard for her to
-speak—“suppose I said I was sorry for you.”
-
-“You don’t have to say it. I see it. It’s something I shall never forget
-as long as I live.”
-
-“Well, since I’m sorry for you, won’t you let me—?”
-
-“No,” I interrupted, firmly. “I’m grateful for your pity; I’ll accept
-that; but I won’t take anything else.” I began moving toward the door.
-“Since you’re good enough to let me go, I had better be off; but I can’t
-do it without thanking you.”
-
-For the first time she smiled a little. Even in that dim light I could
-see it was what in normal conditions would be commonly called a generous
-smile, full, frank, and kindly. Just now it was little more than a
-quivering of the long scarlet lips. She glanced toward the little heap of
-things on the desk.
-
-“If it comes to that, I have to thank you.”
-
-I raised my hand deprecatingly.
-
-“Don’t.”
-
-I had almost reached the threshold when her words made me turn.
-
-“Do you know who I am?”
-
-“I think I do,” was all I could reply.
-
-“Well, then, why shouldn’t you come back later—in some more usual
-manner—and let me see if there isn’t something I could do for you?”
-
-“Do for me in what way?”
-
-“In the way of getting you work—or something.”
-
-My heart had leaped up for a minute, but now it fell. Why it should have
-done either I cannot say, since I could be nothing to her but a fool who
-had tried to be a thief, and couldn’t, as we say in our common idiom, get
-away with it.
-
-I thanked her again.
-
-“But you’ve done a great deal for me as it is,” I added. “I couldn’t
-ask for more.” Somewhat disconnectedly I continued, “I think you’re the
-pluckiest girl I ever saw not to have been afraid of me.”
-
-“Oh, it wasn’t pluck. I saw at once that you wouldn’t do me any harm.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“In general. I was surprised. I was excited. In a way I was overcome.
-But I wasn’t afraid of you. If you’d been a tramp or a colored man or
-anything like that it would have been different. But one isn’t afraid of
-a—of a gentleman.”
-
-“But I’m not a—”
-
-“Well then, a man who has a gentleman’s traditions. You’d better go now,”
-she whispered, suddenly. “If you want to come back as I’ve suggested—any
-time to-morrow forenoon—I’d speak to my father—”
-
-“Not about this?” I whispered, hurriedly.
-
-“No, not about this. This had better be just between ourselves. I shall
-never say anything to any one about it, and I advise you to do the same.”
-I had made a low bow, preparatory to getting out, when she held up the
-scrap of paper she had crumpled in her hand. “Why did you write this?”
-
-But I got out of the room without giving a reply.
-
-I was descending the back stairs when I heard a door open on the third
-floor and Elsie’s voice call out, “Regina, are you talking to anybody
-down there?”
-
-There was a tremor in the mezzo as it replied: “N-no. I’m just—I’m just
-moving about.”
-
-“Well, for Heaven’s sake go to bed! It’s after two o’clock. I never was
-in a house like this in all my life before. It seems to be full of people
-crawling round everywhere. I think I’ll come down to your mother’s bed,
-after all.”
-
-“Do,” was the only word I heard as I stole into the servants’
-dining-room, then into the closet with shelves, where I shut the door
-softly. A few seconds later I was out on the cool ground, in the dark,
-behind the shrub.
-
-I lay there almost breathlessly, not because I was unable to get up, but
-because I couldn’t drag myself away. I wanted to go over the happenings
-of the last hour and seal them in my memory. They were both terrible to
-me and beautiful.
-
-I had been there some fifteen minutes when I heard the open window above
-me closed gently and the fastening snapped. I knew that again she was
-near me, though, as before, she didn’t suspect my presence. I wondered if
-the chances of life would ever bring us so close to each other again.
-
-Above me, where the shrub detached itself a little from the wall of the
-house, I could see the stars. Lying on my back, with my head pillowed
-on the crook of my arm, I watched them till it seemed to me they began
-to pale. At the same time I caught a thinning in the texture of the
-darkness. I got up with the silence in which I had lain down. Crossing
-the brick-paved yard and striding over the low wall, I was again in the
-vacant lot.
-
-It was not yet dawn, but it was the dark-gray hour which tells that dawn
-is coming. I was obliged to take more accurate precautions than before,
-as, crushing the tangle of nettle, burdock, fireweed, and blue succory, I
-crept along in the shadow of the house wall to regain the empty street.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER III_
-
-
-The city was beginning to wake. Mysterious carts and wagons rumbled along
-the neighboring avenues. From a parallel street came the buzz and clang
-of a lonely early-morning electric car. Running footsteps would have
-startled one if they had not been followed by the clinking of peaceful
-milk-bottles in back yards. Clanking off into the distance one heard the
-tread of solitary pedestrians bent on errands that stirred the curiosity.
-Here and there the lurid flames of torches lit up companies of gnomelike
-men digging in the roadways.
-
-Going toward Greeley’s Slip, I skirted the Park, though it made the walk
-longer. Under the dark trees men were lying on benches and on the grass,
-but for reasons I couldn’t yet analyze I refused to thrust myself among
-them. A few hours earlier I would have done this without thinking, as
-without fear; but something had happened to me that now made any such
-course impossible.
-
-My immediate need was to get back to poor old Lovey and lie down by
-his side. That again was beyond my power to analyze. I suppose it was
-something like a homing instinct, and Lovey was all there was to welcome
-me.
-
-“Is that you, sonny?” he asked, sleepily, as I stooped to creep into the
-cubby-hole which a chance arrangement of planks made in a pile of lumber.
-
-“Yes, Lovey.”
-
-“Glad ye’ve come.”
-
-When I had stretched myself out I felt him snuggle a little nearer me.
-
-“You don’t mind, sonny, do you?”
-
-“No, Lovey. It’s all right. Go to sleep again.”
-
-For myself, I could do nothing but lie and watch the coming of the
-dawn. I could see it beating itself into the darkness long before there
-was anything to which one could give the name of light. It was like a
-succession of great cosmic throbs, after each of which the veil was a
-little more translucent.
-
-In my nostrils was the sweet, penetrating smell of lumber, subtly laden
-with the memories of the days when I was a boy. The Canadian differs from
-the American largely, I think, in the closeness of his forest-and-farm
-associations. Not that the American hasn’t the farm and the forest, too,
-but he has moved farther away from them. The mill, the factory, and the
-office have supplanted them—in imagination when not in fact, and in fact
-when not in imagination. If the woods call him he has to go to them—for a
-week, or two, or three at a time; but he comes back inevitably to a life
-in which the woods play little part. The Canadian never leaves that life.
-The primeval still enters into his cities and his thoughts. Some day it
-may be different; but as yet he is the son of rivers, lakes, and forests.
-There is always in him a strain of the _voyageur_. The true Canadian
-never ceases to smell balsam or to hear the lapping of water on wild
-shores.
-
-It was balsam that I smelled now. The lapping of water soothed me as the
-river, too, began to wake. It woke with a faint noise of paddle-wheels,
-followed by a bellow like the call of some sea monster to its mate.
-Right below me and close to the slip I heard the measured dip of oars.
-Hoarse calls of men, from deck to deck or from deck to dock, had a weird,
-watchful sound, as though the darkness were peopled with Flying Dutchmen.
-Lights glided up and down the river—which itself remained unseen—mostly
-gold lights, but now and then a colored one. Chains of lights fringed the
-New Jersey shore, where, far away, sleepless factories threw up dim red
-flares. A rising southeast wind not only hid the stars under banks of
-clouds, but went whistling eerily round the corners of the lumber-piles.
-The scent of pine, and all the pungent, nameless odors of the riverside,
-began to be infused with the smell—if it is a smell—of coming rain.
-
-I can best describe myself as in a kind of trance in which past and
-present were merged into one, and in which there seemed to be no period
-when two wonderful, burning eyes had not been watching me in pity and
-amazement. As long as I lived I knew they would watch me still. In their
-light I got my life’s significance. In their light I saw myself as a boy
-again, with a boy’s vision of the future. The smell of lumber carried me
-back to our old summer home on the banks of the Ottawa, where I had had
-my dreams of what I should do when I was big. All boys being patriotic,
-they were dreams not merely of myself, but of my country. It worried me
-that it was not sufficiently on the great world map, that apart from its
-lakes and prairies and cataracts it had no wonders to show mankind. As we
-were a traveling family, I was accustomed to wonders in other countries,
-and easily annoyed when one set of cousins in New York and another in
-England took it for granted that we lived in an Ultima Thule of snow. I
-meant to show them the contrary.
-
-From the beginning my ardors and indignations translated themselves into
-stone. I had seen St. Peter’s in one country, St. Paul’s in another, and
-Chartres and châteaux in a third. I had seen New York transforming itself
-under my very eyes—the change began when I was in my teens—into a town of
-prodigious towers which in themselves were symbolical. Then I would go
-home to a red-gray city, marvelously placed between river and mountain,
-where any departure from its original French austerity was likely to be
-in the direction of the exuberant, the unchastened, the fantastic. All
-new buildings in Canada, as in most of the States, lacked “school.”
-
-“School” was, more or less in secret, the preoccupation of my
-youth—“school” with some such variation from traditional classic lines as
-would create or stimulate the indigenous. I had not yet learned what New
-York was to teach me later—that necessity was the mother of art, and that
-pure new styles were formed not by any one’s ingenuity or by the caprice
-of changing taste, but because human needs demanded them. Rejecting the
-art nouveau, which later made its permanent home in Germany, I combined
-all the lines in which great buildings had ever been designed, from the
-Doric to the Georgian, in the hope of evolving a type which the world
-would recognize as distinctively Canadian, and to which I should give my
-name. In imagination I built castles, cathedrals and theaters, homes,
-hotels and offices. They were in the style to be known as Melburyesque,
-and would draw students from all parts of the architectural earth to
-Montreal.
-
-It was not an unworthy dream, and even if I could never have worked it
-out I might have made of it something of which not wholly to be ashamed.
-But as early as before I went to the Beaux Arts the curse of Canada—the
-curse, more or less, of all northern peoples—began to be laid upon me. In
-Paris I had some respite from it, but almost as soon as I had hung out my
-shingle at home I was suffering again from its cravings. I will not say
-that I put up no fight, but I put up no fight commensurate with the evil
-I had to face. The result was what I have told you, and for which I now
-had to suffer in my soul the most scorching form of recompense.
-
-The point I found it difficult to decide was as to whether or not I ever
-wanted to see Regina Barry again—or whether I had it in me to go back and
-show myself to her in the state from which I had fallen more than three
-years before. In the end it was that possibility alone which enabled me
-to endure the real coming of the dawn.
-
-For it came—this new day which out of darkness might be bringing me a new
-life.
-
-As I lay with my face turned toward the west I got none of its first
-glories. Even on a cloudy morning, with a spattering of rain, I knew
-there must be splendors in the east, if no more than gray and lusterless
-splendors. Light to a gray world is as magical as hope to a gray heart;
-and as I watched the lamps on the New Jersey heights grow wan, while the
-river unbared its bosom to the day, that thing came to me which makes
-disgrace and shame and humiliation and every other ingredient of remorse
-a remedy rather than a poison.
-
-I myself was hardly aware of the fact till Lovey and I had crept out of
-our cubby-hole, because all round us men were going to work. Sleepers in
-the open generally rise with daylight, but we had kept longer than usual
-to our refuge because we didn’t want to fare forth into the rain. As
-sooner or later it would come to a choice between going out and being
-kicked out, we decided to move of our own accord.
-
-I must leave to your imagination the curious sensation of the down and
-out in having nothing to do but to get up, shake themselves, and walk
-away. On waking after each of these homeless nights it had seemed to me
-that the necessity for undressing to go to bed and dressing when one got
-up in the morning was the primary distinction between being a man and
-being a mere animal. Not to have to undress just to dress again reduced
-one to the level of the horse. Stray dogs got up and went off to their
-vague leisure just as Lovey and I were doing. Not to wash, not to go
-to breakfast, not to have a duty when washing and breakfasting were
-done—knocked out from under one all the props that civilization had built
-up and deprived one of the right to call oneself a man.
-
-I think it was this last consideration that had most weight with me as
-Lovey and I stood gazing at the multifarious activities of the scene.
-There were men in sight, busy with all kinds of occupations. They were
-like ants; they were like bees. They came and went and pulled and hauled
-and hammered and climbed and dug, and every man’s eyes seemed bent on his
-task as if it were the only one in the world.
-
-“It means two or three dollars a day to ’em if they ain’t,” Lovey
-grunted, when I had pointed this fact out to him. “Don’t suppose they’d
-work if they didn’t ’ave to, do ye?”
-
-“I dare say they wouldn’t. But my point is that they do work. It’s
-Emerson who says that every man is as lazy as he dares to be, isn’t it?”
-
-“Oh, anybody could say that.”
-
-“And in spite of the fact that they’d rather be lazy, they’re all doing
-something. Look at them. Look at them in every direction to which your
-eyes can turn—droves of them, swarms of them, armies of them—every one
-bent on something into which he is putting a piece of himself!”
-
-“Well, they’ve got ’omes or boardin’-’ouses. It’s easy enough to git a
-job when ye can give an address. But when ye carn’t—”
-
-We were to test that within a minute or two. Fifteen or twenty brownies
-were digging in a ditch. Of all the forms of work in sight it seemed that
-which demanded the least in the way of special training.
-
-Approaching a fiercely mustachioed man of clearly defined nationality, I
-said, “Say, boss, could you give my buddy and me a job?”
-
-Rolling toward me a pair of eyes that would have done credit to a bandit
-in an opera, he emitted sounds which I can best transcribe as, “Where
-d’live?”
-
-“That’s the trouble,” I answered, truthfully. “We don’t live anywhere and
-we should like to.”
-
-He looked us over. “Beat it,” he commanded, nodding toward the central
-quarters of the city.
-
-“But, boss,” I pleaded, “my buddy and I haven’t got a quarter between us.”
-
-He pointed with his thumb over his left shoulder. “Getta out.”
-
-“We haven’t got a nickel,” I insisted; “we haven’t got a cent.”
-
-“Cristoforo, ca’ da cop.”
-
-As Cristoforo sprang from the ditch to look for a policeman, Lovey and I
-shuffled off again into the rain.
-
-We stood for a minute at the edge of one of the long, sordid avenues
-where a sordid life was surging up and down. Men, women, and children
-of all races and nearly all ranks were hurrying to and fro, each bent on
-an errand. It was the fact that life provided an errand for each of them
-that suddenly struck me as the most wonderful thing in creation. There
-was no one so young or so old, no one so ignorant or so alien, that he
-was not going from point to point with a special purpose in view. Among
-the thousands and the tens of thousands who would in the course of the
-morning pass the spot on which we stood, there would probably not be one
-who hadn’t dressed, washed, and breakfasted as a return for his daily
-contribution to the common good. Never before and hardly ever since did
-I have such a sense of life’s infinite and useful complexity. There was
-no height to which it didn’t go up; there was no depth to which it didn’t
-go down. No one was left out but the absolute wastrel like myself, who
-couldn’t be taken in.
-
-Though it was not a cold day, the steadiness of the drizzle chilled me.
-The dampness of the pavements got through the worn soles of my boots,
-and I suppose it did the same with Lovey’s. The lack of food made the
-old man white, and that of drink set him to trembling. The fact that he
-hadn’t shaved for the past day or two gave his sodden face a grisly look
-that was truly appalling. Though the pale-blue eyes were extinct, as if
-the spirit in them had been quenched, they were turned toward me with the
-piteous appeal I had sometimes seen in those of a blind dog.
-
-It was for me to take the lead, and yet I couldn’t wholly see in what
-direction to take it. While I was pondering, Lovey made a variety of
-suggestions.
-
-“There doesn’t seem to be nothink for it, sonny, but to go and repent
-for a day or two. I ’ate to do it; kind o’ deceivin’ like, it is; but
-they’ll let us dry ourselves and give us a feed if we ’ave a sense of
-sin.”
-
-I wondered if he had in mind anything better than what I had myself.
-
-“Where?”
-
-He took the negative side first.
-
-“We couldn’t go to the Saviour, because I’ve put it over on ’em twice
-this year already. And the ’Omeless Men won’t do nothink for ye onless
-you make it up in menial work.”
-
-“I won’t try either of them,” I said, briefly.
-
-“Don’t blame you, sonny, not a bit. Kind o’ makes a hypercrite of a man,
-it does. I ’ate to be a hypercrite, only when I carn’t ’elp it.”
-
-He went on to enumerate other agencies for the raising of the fallen, of
-most of which he had tested the hospitality during the past few years.
-I rejected them as he named them, one by one. To this rejection Lovey
-subscribed with the unreasoning dislike all outcast men feel for the hand
-stretched down to them from higher up. Nothing but starvation would have
-forced him to any of these thresholds; and for me even starvation would
-not work the miracle.
-
-“What’s the matter with the Down and Out?” I sprang on him, suddenly.
-
-He groaned. “Oh, sonny! It’s just—just what I was afeared of.”
-
-I turned and looked down into his poor, bleared, suffering old face.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because—because—oncet ye try that they’ll—they’ll never let ye go.”
-
-“But suppose you don’t want them to let you go?”
-
-He backed away from me. If the dead eyes could waken to expression, they
-did it then.
-
-“Oh, sonny!” He shook as if palsied. “Ye don’t know ’em, my boy. I’ve
-summered and wintered ’em—by lookin’ on. I’ve had pals of my own—”
-
-“And what are they doing now, those pals of your own?”
-
-“God knows; I don’t. Yes, I do; some of ’em. I see ’em round, goin’ to
-work as reg’lar as reg’lar, and no more spunk in ’em than in a goldfish
-when ye shakes yer finger at their bowl.”
-
-Afraid of exciting suspicion by standing still, we began drifting with
-the crowd.
-
-“Is there much that you can call spunk in you and me?”
-
-Again he lifted those piteous, drunken eyes. “We’re fellas together,
-ain’t we? We’re buddies. I ’ear ye say so yerself when you was speakin’
-to that Eyetalian.”
-
-I have to confess that with his inflection something warm crept into my
-cold heart. You have to be as I was to know what the merest crumbs of
-trust and affection mean. A dog as stray and homeless as myself might
-have been more to me; but since I had no dog....
-
-“Yes, Lovey,” I answered, “we’re buddies, all right. But for that very
-reason don’t you think we ought to try to help each other up?”
-
-He stopped, to turn to me with hands crossed on his breast in a spirit of
-petition.
-
-“But, sonny, you don’t mean—you carn’t mean—on—on the wagon?”
-
-“I mean on anything that’ll get us out of this hell of a hole.”
-
-“Oh, well, if it’s only that, I’ve—I’ve been in tighter places than this
-before—and—and look at me now. There’s ways. Ye don’t have to jump at
-nothink onnat’rel. If ye’d only ’ave listened to me yesterday—but it
-ain’t too late even now. What about to-night? Just two old ladies—no
-violence—nothink that’d let you in for nothink dishonorable.”
-
-“No, Lovey.”
-
-We drifted on again. He spoke in a tone of bitter reproach.
-
-“Ye’d rather go to the Down and Out! It’ll be the down, all right, sonny;
-but there’ll be no out to it. Ye’ll be a prisoner. They’ll keep at ye
-and at ye till yer soul won’t be yer own. Now all these other places ye
-can put it over on ’em. They’re mostly ladies and parsons and greenhorns
-that never ’ad no experience. A little repentance and they’ll fall for it
-every time. Besides”—he turned to me with another form of appeal—“ye’re a
-Christian, ain’t ye? A little repentance now and then’ll do ye good. It’s
-like something laid by for a rainy day. I’ve tried it, so I know. Ye’re
-young, sonny. Ye don’t understand. And when it’ll tide ye over a time
-like this—they’ll git ye a job, very likely—and ye can backslide by and
-by when it’s safe. Why, it’s all as easy as easy.”
-
-“It isn’t as easy as easy, Lovey, because you say you don’t like it
-yourself.”
-
-“I like it better than the Down and Out, where they won’t let ye
-backslide no more. Why, I was in at Stinson’s one day and there was a
-chap there—Rollins was his name, a plumber—just enj’yin’ of himself
-like—nothink wrong—and come to find out he’d been one of their men. Well,
-what do ye think, sonny? A fellow named Pyncheon blew in—awful ’ard
-drinker for a young ’and, he used to be—and he sat down beside Rollins
-and pled with ’im and plod with ’im, and—well, ye don’t see Rollins
-round Stinson’s no more. I tell ye, sonny, ye carn’t put nothing over on
-’em. They knows all the tricks and all the trade. Give me kind-’earted
-ladies; give me ministers of the gospel; give me the stool o’ repentance
-two or three times a month; but don’t give me fellas that because they’ve
-knocked off the booze theirselves wants every one else to knock it off,
-too, and don’t let it be a free country.”
-
-We came to the corner to which I had been directing our seemingly aimless
-steps. It was a corner where the big red and green jars that had once
-been the symbols for medicines within now stood as a sign for soda-water
-and ice-cream.
-
-“Let’s go in here.”
-
-Lovey hung back. “What’s the use of that? That ain’t no saloon.”
-
-“Come on and let us try.”
-
-Pushing open the screen door, I made him pass in before me. We found
-ourselves in front of a white counter fitted up like a kind of bar. As a
-bar of any sort was better than none, Lovey’s face took on a leaden shade
-of brightness.
-
-In the way of a guardian all we could see at first was a white-coated
-back bent behind the counter. When it straightened up it was topped by a
-friendly, boyish face.
-
-Lovey leaped back, pulling me by the arm.
-
-“That’s that very young Pyncheon I was a-tellin’ you of,” he whispered,
-tragically; “him what got Rollins, the plumber, out of Stinson’s. Let’s
-’ook it, sonny! He won’t do us no good.”
-
-But the boyish face had already begun to beam.
-
-“Hel-lo, old sport! Haven’t seen you in a pair of blue moons. Put it
-there!”
-
-The welcome was the more disconcerting because in the mirror behind
-Pyncheon I could see myself in contrast to his clean, young, manly
-figure. I have said I was shabby without being hideously so, but that was
-before I had slept a fourth night on the bare boards of a lumber-yard,
-to be drenched with rain in the morning. It was also before I had gone
-a fourth morning without shaving, and with nothing more thorough in the
-way of a wash than I could steal in a station lavatory. The want of food,
-the want of drink, to say nothing of the unspeakable anguish within, had
-stamped me, moreover, with something woebegone and spectral which, now
-that I saw it reflected in the daylight, shook me to the soul.
-
-I never was so timid, apologetic, or shamefaced in my life as when I
-grasped the friendly hand stretched out to me across the counter. I
-had no smile to return to Pyncheon’s. I had no courtesies to exchange.
-Not till that minute had I realized that I was outside the system of
-fellowship and manhood, and that even a handshake was a condescension.
-
-“Pyn,” I faltered, hoarsely, “I want you to take me to the Down and Out.
-Will you?”
-
-“Sure I will!” He glanced at Lovey. “And I’ll take old Lovikins, too.”
-
-“Don’t you be so fresh with your names, young man!” Lovey spoke up,
-tartly. “’Tain’t the first time I’ve seen you—”
-
-“And I hope it won’t be the last,” Pyn laughed.
-
-“That’ll depend on how polite ye’re able to make yerself.”
-
-“Oh, you can count me in on politeness, old sport, so long as you come to
-the Down and Out.”
-
-“I’ll go to the Down and Out when I see fit. I ain’t goin’ to be dragged
-there by the ’air of the ’ead, as I see you drag poor Rollins, the
-plumber, a month or two ago.”
-
-“Quit your kiddin’, Lovey. How am I going to drag you by the ’air of the
-’ead when you’re as bald as a door-knob? Say, you fellows,” he went on,
-pulling one of the levers before him, “I’m going to start you off right
-now with a glass of this hot chocolate. The treat’s on me. By the time
-you’ve swallowed it Milligan will be here, and I can get off long enough
-to take you over to Vandiver Street.” He dashed in a blob of whipped
-cream. “Here, old son, this is for you; and there’s more where it came
-from.”
-
-“I didn’t come in ’ere for nothink of the kind,” Lovey protested. “I
-didn’t know we was comin’ in ’ere at all. You take it, sonny.”
-
-“Go ahead, Lovikins,” Mr. Pyncheon insisted. “’E’s to ’ave a bigger one,”
-he mimicked. “Awful good for the ’air of the ’ead. ’Ll make it sprout
-like an apple-tree—I beg your pardon, happle-tree—in May.”
-
-Before Pyncheon had finished, the primitive in poor Lovey had overcome
-both pride and reluctance, and the glass of chocolate was pretty well
-drained. The sight of his sheer animal avidity warned me not to betray
-myself. While Pyncheon explained to Milligan and made his preparations
-for conducting us, I carried my chocolate to the less important part of
-the shop, given up to the sale of tooth-brushes and patent medicines, to
-consume it at ease and with dignity.
-
-Pyncheon having changed to a coat, in the buttonhole of which I noticed
-a little silver star, and a straw hat with a faint silver line in the
-hatband, we were ready to depart.
-
-“I’ll go with ye, sonny,” Lovey explained; “but I ain’t a-goin’ to stay.
-No Down and Out for mine.”
-
-“You wouldn’t leave me, Lovey?” I begged, as I replaced the empty glass
-on the counter. “I’m looking to you to help me to keep straight.”
-
-He edged up to me, laying a shaking hand on my arm.
-
-“Oh, if it’s that— But,” he added more cheerfully, “we don’t have to stay
-no longer than we don’t want to. There’s no law by which they can keep us
-ag’in’ our will, there ain’t.”
-
-“No, Lovey. If we want to go we’ll go—but we’re buddies, aren’t we? And
-we’ll stick by each other.”
-
-“Say, you fellows! Quick march! I’ve only got half an hour to get there
-and back.”
-
-Out in the street, Lovey and I hung behind our guide. He was too brisk
-and smart and clean for us to keep step with. Alone we could, as we
-phrased it, get by. With him the contrast called attention to the fact
-that we were broken and homeless men.
-
-“You go ahead, Pyn—” I began.
-
-“Aw, cut that out!” he returned, scornfully. “Wasn’t I a worse looker
-than you, two and a half years ago? Old Colonel Straight picked me up
-from a bench in Madison Square—the very bench from which he’d been picked
-up himself—and dragged me down to Vandiver Street like a nurse’ll drag a
-boy that kicks like blazes every step of the way.”
-
-As we were now walking three abreast, with Pyn in the middle, I asked the
-question that was most on my mind:
-
-“Was it hard, Pyn—cutting the booze out?”
-
-“Sure it was hard! What do you think? You’re not on the way to a picnic.
-For the first two weeks I fought like hell. If the other guys hadn’t sat
-on my head—well, you and old Lovey wouldn’t have had no glass of hot
-chocolate this morning.”
-
-“I suppose the first two weeks are the worst.”
-
-“And the best. If you’re really out to put the job through you find
-yourself toughening to it every day.”
-
-“And you mean by being out to put the job through?”
-
-“Wanting to get the durned thing under you so as you can stand on it and
-stamp it down. Booze’ll make two kinds of repenters, and I guess you guys
-stand for both. Old Lovey here”—he pinched my companion’s arm—“he’ll
-forsake his bad habits just long enough to get well fed up, a clean shirt
-on his back, and his nerves a bit quieted down. But he’ll always be
-looking forward to the day when he’ll be tempted again, and thinking of
-the good time he’ll have when he falls.”
-
-“If you’ll mind yer own business, young Pyn—” Lovey began, irritably.
-
-“Then there’s another kind,” this experienced reformer went on,
-imperturbably, “what’ll have a reason for cutting the blasted thing out,
-like he’d cut out a cancer or anything else that’ll kill him. I’ve always
-known you was that kind, Slim, and I told you so nearly a year ago.”
-
-“I seen ye,” Lovey put in. “Was speakin’ about it only yesterday. Knew
-you was after no good. I warned ye, didn’t I, Slim?”
-
-Curiosity prompted me to say, “What made you think I had a motive for
-getting over it?”
-
-“Looks. You can always tell what a man’s made for by the kind of looker
-he is. As a looker you’re some swell. Lovikins here, now—”
-
-“If I can’t do as well as the likes o’ you, ye poor little snipe of a
-bartender for babies—”
-
-“What’ll you bet you can’t?” Pyn asked, good-naturedly.
-
-“I ain’t a bettin’ man, but I can show!”
-
-“Well, you show, and I’ll lay fifty cents against you. You’ll be umpire,
-Slim, and hold the stakes. Is that a go?”
-
-“I don’t ’ave no truck o’ that kind,” Lovey declared, loftily. “I’m a
-doer, I am—when I get a-goin’. I don’t brag beforehand—not like some.”
-
-I was still curious, however, about myself.
-
-“And what did you make out of my looks, Pyn?”
-
-He stopped, stood off, and eyed me.
-
-“Do you know what you’re like now?”
-
-“I know I’m not like anything human.”
-
-“You’re like a twenty-dollar bill that’s been in every pawnshop, and
-every bar, and every old woman’s stocking, and every old bum’s pocket,
-and is covered with dirt and grease and microbes till you wouldn’t hardly
-hold it in your hand; but it’s still a twenty-dollar bill—that’ll buy
-twenty dollars’ worth every time—and whenever you like you can get gold
-for it.”
-
-“Thank you, Pyn,” I returned, humbly, as we went on our way again.
-“That’s the whitest thing that has ever been said to me.”
-
-Before we reached Vandiver Street, Pyn had given us two bits of
-information, both of which I was glad to receive.
-
-One was entirely personal, being a brief survey of his fall and rise.
-The son of a barber in one of the small towns near New York, he had gone
-to work with a druggist on leaving the high school. His type, as he
-described it, had been from the beginning that of the cheap sport. Cheap
-sports had been his companions, and before he was twenty-one he had
-married a pretty manicure girl from his father’s establishment. He had
-married her while on a spree, and after the spree had repented. Repenting
-chiefly because he wasn’t earning enough to keep a wife, he threw the
-blame for his mistake on her. When a baby came he was annoyed; when a
-second baby came he was desperate; when a third baby promised to appear
-he was overwhelmed. Since the expenses of being a cheap sport couldn’t be
-reduced, he saw no resource but flight to New York, leaving his wife to
-fend for herself and her children.
-
-Folly having made of him a hard drinker, remorse made of him a harder
-one. And since no young fellow of twenty-four is callous enough to take
-wife-desertion with an easy conscience, my own first talks with him had
-been filled with maudlin references to a kind of guilt I hadn’t at the
-time understood. All I knew was that from bad he had gone to worse,
-and from worse he was on the way to the worst of all, when old Colonel
-Straight rescued him.
-
-The tale of that rescue unfolded some of the history of the Down and
-Out. As to that, Pyn laid the emphasis on the fact that the club was
-not a mission—that is, it was not the effort of the safe to help those
-who are in danger; it was the effort of those who are in danger to help
-themselves. Built up on unassisted effort, it was self-respecting. No
-bribes had ever been offered it, and no persuasions but such as a man who
-has got out of hell can bring to bear on another who is still frying in
-the fire. Its action being not from the top downward, but from the bottom
-upward, it had a native impulse to expansion.
-
-Its inception had been an accident. Two men who had first met as Pyncheon
-and I had first met had lost sight of each other for several years. At
-a time when each had worked his salvation out they had come together
-by accident on Broadway, and later had by another accident become
-responsible for a third. Finding him one night lying on the pavement of
-a lonely street, they had seemingly had no choice but to pick him up and
-carry him to a cheap but friendly hostelry which they knew would not
-refuse him. Here they had kept him till he had sobered up and taken the
-job they found for him. Watching over him for months, they finally had
-the pleasure of restoring him to his wife and seeing a broken home put on
-its feet again. This third man, in gratitude for what had been done for
-him, went after a fourth, and the fourth after a fifth, and so the chain
-was flung out. By the time their number had increased to some twenty-five
-or thirty Providence offered them a dwelling-place.
-
-The dwelling-place, with the few apparently worthless articles it
-contained, was all the club had ever accepted as a gift. Even that
-might have been declined had it not been for the fact that it was going
-begging. When old Miss Smedley died it was found that she had left her
-residence in Vandiver Place as a legacy to St. David’s Church, across
-the way. She had left it, however, as an empty residence. As an empty
-residence it was in a measure a white elephant on the hands of a legatee
-that had no immediate use for it.
-
-St. David’s Church, you will remember, was not now the fashionable house
-of prayer it had been in its early days. Time was when Vandiver Place was
-the heart of exclusive New York. In the ’forties and ’fifties no section
-of the city had been more select. In the ’sixties and ’seventies, when
-Doctor Grace was rector of St. David’s, it had become time-honored. In
-the ’eighties and ’nineties the old families began to move up-town and
-the boarding-houses to creep in; and in the early years of the twentieth
-century the residents ceded the ground entirely to the manufacturer of
-artificial flowers and the tailor of the ready-to-wear. In 1911 the
-line of houses that made it a cul-de-sac was torn down and a broad
-thoroughfare cut through a congeries of slums, the whole being named
-Vandiver Street. Vandiver Place was gone; and with it went Miss Smedley.
-
-Rufus Legrand, who succeeded Doctor Grace as rector of St. David’s,
-offered Miss Smedley’s house as a home for the Down and Out; but it was
-Beady Lamont, a husky furniture-mover and ardent member of the club, who
-suggested this philanthropic opportunity to Rufus Legrand.
-
-“Say, reverent, my buddy’s give in at last, on’y I haven’t got no place
-to put him. But, say, reverent, there’s that old house I helped to move
-the sticks out of two or three months ago. There’s three beds left in it,
-and a couple of chairs. Me and him could bunk there for a few nights,
-while he got straightened out, and—”
-
-“But you’d have no bedclothes.”
-
-“Say, reverent, we don’t want no bedclothes. Sleepin’ in the Park’ll
-learn you how to do without sheets.”
-
-“My daughter, Mrs. Ralph Coningsby, could undoubtedly supply you with
-some.”
-
-“Say, reverent, that ain’t our way. We don’t pass the buck on no one.
-What we haven’t got we do without till we can pay for it ourselves. But
-that old house ain’t doin’ nothing but sit on its haunches; and if I
-could just get Tiger into the next bed to mine at night—we don’t want no
-bedclothes nor nothing but what we lay down in—and take him along with me
-when I go to work by day, so as to keep my search-lights on him, like—”
-
-Rufus Legrand had already sufficiently weighed the proposal.
-
-“I’m sure I don’t see why you shouldn’t sleep in the old place as long as
-you like, Beady, if you can only make yourselves comfortable.”
-
-“Say, reverent, now you’re shouting.”
-
-So another accident settled the fate of Miss Smedley’s lifelong home; and
-before many weeks the Down and Out was in full possession.
-
-It was in full possession of the house with the refuse the heirs had
-not considered good enough to take away—three iron bedsteads that the
-servants had used; an equal number of humble worn-out mattresses; two
-tolerably solid wooden chairs, three that needed repairs, which were
-speedily given them; some crockery more or less chipped and cracked; and
-a stained steel-engraving of Franklin in the _salon_ of Marie Antoinette.
-
-True to its principles, the club accepted neither gifts of money nor
-contributions in kind. Its members were all graduates of the school of
-doing without. To those who came there a roof over the head was a luxury,
-while to have a friend to stand by them and care whether they went to the
-devil or not was little short of a miracle.
-
-But by the time Billy Pyncheon had been brought in by old Colonel
-Straight, gratitude, sacrifice, and enthusiasm on the part of one or
-another of the members had adequately fitted up this house to which Lovey
-and I were on the way. It had become, too, the one institution of which
-the saloon-keepers of my acquaintance were afraid. We were all afraid of
-it. It had worked so many wonders among our pals that we had come to look
-on it as a home of the necromantic. Missions of any kind we knew how to
-cope with; but in the Down and Out there was a sort of wizardry that
-tamed the wildest hearts among us, cast out devils, and raised the nearly
-dead. I myself for a year or more—ever since I had seen the spell it had
-wrought on Pyn, for whom from the first I had felt a sympathy—had been
-haunted by the dread of it; and here I was at the door.
-
-The door when we got to it was something of a disappointment. It was at
-the head of a flight of old-time brownstone steps, and was just like any
-other door. About it was nothing of the magical or cabalistic Lovey and I
-had been half expecting.
-
-More impressive was the neat little man who opened to our ring. He was a
-wan, wistful, smiling little figure of sixty-odd, on whom all the ends of
-the world seemed to have come. He was like a man who has been dead and
-buried and has come to life again—but who shows he has been dead. If I
-had to look like that....
-
-But I took comfort in the thought of Pyn. Pyn showed nothing. He was like
-one of the three holy men who went through Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace—the
-smell of fire had not passed on him. A heartier, healthier, merrier
-fellow it would have been difficult to find.
-
-He entered now with the air of authority which belongs to the member of a
-club.
-
-“Fellows had their breakfast, Spender?”
-
-Spender was all welcome, of the wistful, yearning kind.
-
-“The men at work is gone; but the guys under restraint is still at table.”
-
-“Mr. Christian not here yet?”
-
-“Never gets here before nine; and it’s not half past seven yet.”
-
-Pyn turned to me. “Say, do you want to go in and feed, or will you wash
-up first, or go to bed, or what?”
-
-With this large liberty of choice I asked if we could do whatever we
-liked. It was Spender who explained.
-
-“That’s the rule for new arrivals, unless they’ve got to be put under
-restraint at once.”
-
-“I don’t want to be put under no restraint,” Lovey declared, indignantly.
-
-“That’ll be all right,” Spender replied, kindly, “unless there’s vermin—”
-
-Lovey jumped.
-
-“See here, now! Don’t you begin no such immodest talk to me.”
-
-“There, there, Lovikins,” Pyn broke in. “Spender don’t mean no harm. All
-sorts have to come to a place like this. But when we see a gentleman we
-treat him like a gentleman. All Spender wants to know is this, Is it eats
-for you first, or a bath?”
-
-“And I don’t want no bath,” Lovey declared, proudly.
-
-“Then it’ll be eats. Quick march! I’ve got to beat it back to my job.”
-
-Pyn’s introduction of us to those already in the dining-room was simple.
-
-“This is Lovey. This is Slim. You guys’ll make ’em feel at home.”
-
-Making us feel at home consisted in moving along the table so as to give
-us room. In words there was no response to Pyn, who withdrew at once, nor
-was there more than a cursory inspection of us with the eyes. Whatever
-was kindly was in the atmosphere, and that was perceptible.
-
-As we sat before two empty places, one of our new companions rose, went
-to the dresser behind us, and brought us each a plate, a spoon, a knife,
-and a cup and saucer. A big man went to the kitchen door and in a voice
-like thunder called out, “Mouse!”
-
-By the time he had returned to his place a stumpy individual with a big
-red mustache and a limp appeared on the threshold. An explanation of the
-summons was given him when a third of our friends pointed at us with a
-spoonful of oatmeal porridge before he put it in his mouth.
-
-Mouse withdrew into the kitchen, coming back with two basins of porridge,
-which he placed, steaming hot, before us. Presently, too, he filled our
-cups with coffee. Bread and butter, sugar and milk, were all on the
-table. The meal went on in silence, except for the smacking of lips and
-the clinking of spoons on the crockeryware.
-
-Of our fellow-guests I can only say that they presented different
-phases of the forlorn. The man next to me was sallow, hatchet-faced,
-narrow-breasted, weak of physique, and looked as if he might have been a
-tailor. His hair was a shock of unkempt black curls, and his dark eyes
-the largest and longest and most luminous I ever saw in a man. In their
-nervous glance they made me think of a horse’s eyes, especially when he
-rolled them toward me timidly.
-
-Opposite was a sandy, freckled-face type, whom I easily diagnosed as a
-Scotchman. Light hair, light eyebrows, and a heavy reddish mustache set
-off a face scored with a few deep wrinkles, and savage like that of a
-beast fretted with a sense of helplessness. The shaking hand that passed
-the bread to me was muscular, freckled, and covered with coarse, reddish
-hairs. I put him down as a gardener.
-
-At the head of the table was a huge, unwieldy fellow who looked as if
-he had all run to fat, but who, as I afterward learned, was a mass of
-muscle and sinew, like a Japanese wrestler. He had bloated cheeks and
-bloated hands, and a voice so big and bass that when he spoke, as he
-did on going to the door to summon Mouse, he almost shook the dishes on
-the dresser. He proved to be, too, a pal of Beady Lamont’s, and as a
-piano-mover by profession he frequented Beady’s spheres.
-
-At the big man’s right was a poor little whippersnapper, not more than
-five foot two, who looked as if a puff would blow him away; and opposite
-him a tall, spare, fine-looking Irishman, a hospital attendant, whose
-face would have been full of humor had it not been convulsed for the time
-being with a sense of mortal anguish. It was he who had brought us our
-dishes and took pains to see that our needs were supplied.
-
-No more than any of the others were we eager for conversation. The fact
-that we were having good warm food served in a more or less regular
-way was enough to occupy all that was uppermost in our thoughts. Poor
-Lovey ate as he had drunk the chocolate half an hour before, with a
-greed that was almost terrible. Once more I might have done the same
-had I not taken his example as a warning. Not that anything I did would
-have attracted attention in that particular gathering. Each man’s gaze
-was turned inward. His soul’s tragedy absorbed him to the exclusion of
-everything else. Reaction from the stupor of excess brought nothing but
-a sense of woe. There was woe on all faces. There would have been woe in
-all thoughts if conscious thought had not been outside the range of these
-drugged and stultified faculties.
-
-What was more active than anything else was a blind fellow-feeling. They
-did little things for one another. They did little watchful things for
-Lovey and me. They even quarreled over their kindnesses like children
-eager to make themselves useful.
-
-“You’ll want to know where the barth-room is,” the timid tailor said to
-me as we rose from the table. “I’ll show you.”
-
-There was a snarl from the whippersnapper across the way.
-
-“Aw, put your lid on, Headlights. How long have you been showin’
-barth-rooms in this here shebang?” He beckoned to me. “You come along o’
-me, Slim—”
-
-It was the Irishman who intervened to keep the peace.
-
-“Listen to Daisy now, will you? He’s like a fox-terrier that owns the
-house and grounds and barks at every wan who goes by. Look now, Daisy!
-You take this ould gent up to the bath-room on the top floor; and you,
-Headlights, show Slim to the one on the second floor, and every wan o’
-you’ll have a bite at the cake.”
-
-With this peaceable division of the honors we started off.
-
-I must describe the club as very humble. The rooms themselves, as was
-natural with an old New York residence, did not lack dignity. Though too
-narrow for their height, they had admirable cornices and some exquisite
-ceiling medallions. It is probable, too, that in days when there were no
-skyscrapers in the neighborhood the house was light enough, but now it
-wore a general air of dimness. The furnishings were just what you might
-have expected from the efforts of very poor men in giving of their small
-superfluity. There were plenty of plain wooden chairs, and a sufficiency
-of tables to match them. In the two down-stairs sitting-rooms, which
-must once have been Miss Smedley’s front and back drawing-rooms, there
-were benches against the wall. A roll-top desk, which I learned was the
-official seat of Mr. Christian, was so placed as to catch the light from
-Vandiver Street. A plain, black, wooden cross between the two front
-windows, and Franklin in the _salon_ of Marie Antoinette in the place
-of honor over a fine old white marble mantelpiece, completed the two
-reception-rooms.
-
-The floor above was given over to the dormitories for outsiders, and
-contained little more than beds. They were small iron beds, made up
-without counterpanes. As every man made his own, the result would
-not have passed the inspection of a high-class chambermaid, but they
-satisfied those who lay down in them. Since outsiders came in, like
-Lovey and me, with little or nothing in the way of belongings, it was
-unnecessary to make further provision for their wardrobes than could be
-found in the existing closets and shelves. In the front bedroom, which
-I suppose must have been Miss Smedley’s, there were nine small beds; in
-the room back of that there were seven; and in a small room over the
-kitchen, given up to the men positively under restraint, there were five.
-Twenty-one outsiders could thus be cared for at a time.
-
-On the third floor were the dormitories for club members—men who had kept
-sober for three months and more, and who wore a star of a color denoting
-the variety of their achievements. On this floor, too, was a billiard,
-card, and smoking room, accessible to any one, even to outsiders, who had
-kept sober for three weeks. On the top floor of all were a few bedrooms,
-formerly those of Miss Smedley’s servants, reserved for the occasional
-occupancy of such grandees as had preserved their integrity for three
-years and more; and here, too, was the sacred place known as “the
-lounge,” to which none were admitted who didn’t wear the gold or silver
-star representing sobriety for at least a year.
-
-The whole was, therefore, a carefully arranged hierarchy in which one
-mounted according to one’s merit. Little Spender wore the gold star,
-indicating a five years’ fight with the devil; and Mouse, the cook, a
-blue one, which meant that he had been victorious for three months.
-All others in the club when Lovey and I arrived were outsiders like
-ourselves. Outsiders gave their word to stay a week, generally for the
-purpose of sobering up, but beyond that nothing was asked of them. At the
-beginning of the second week they could either continue their novitiate
-or go.
-
-This information was given me by Spender as we stood on the threshold of
-the bath-room before I passed in. When the tale was ended, however, the
-Scotchman, who had taken little or no part in our reception, pushed by me
-and entered.
-
-“You’ll be wanting a shave,” he said, in explanation of his rudeness.
-“There are my things”—he got down on all-fours to show me a safety razor
-and a broken cup containing a brush and shaving-soap, hidden behind
-one of the legs of the bath-tub—“and you’ll oblige me by putting them
-back. Daisy, the wee bye you saw at the table, is doing the same by
-your chum. I make no doubt your own things have been held in your last
-rooming-house.”
-
-When I had admitted that this was exactly the case and had thanked my
-friends for their courtesies, they withdrew, leaving me to my toilet.
-
-After the good meal the bath was a genuine luxury. It was a decent
-bath-room, kept by the men, as all the house was kept, in a kind of dingy
-cleanliness. Cleanliness, I found, was not only a principle of the club;
-it was one of the first indications that those who came in for shelter
-gave of a survival of self-respect. Some of their efforts in that way
-were amusing or pathetic, as the case might be, but they were always
-human and touching.
-
-While shaving I had an inspiration that was to have some effect on what
-happened to me afterward. I decided to let my mustache grow. As it grew
-strongly in any case, a four days’ absence of the razor had given my
-upper lip a deep walnut tinge, and, should I leave the club after the
-week to which I had tacitly pledged myself by coming there at all, I
-should look different from when I entered. To look different was the
-first of the obscure and violent longings of which my heart was full. It
-would be the nearest possible thing to getting away from my old self. Not
-to be the same man at all as the one who had exchanged those few strange
-sentences with Regina Barry seemed to be the goal toward which I was
-willing to struggle at any cost of sacrifice.
-
-Having bathed and shaved, I was not an ill-looking fellow till it
-came to putting on my shirt again. Any man who has worn a shirt for
-forty-eight hours in a city or on a train knows what a horror it becomes
-in the exposed spots on the chest and about the wrists. I had had but
-one shirt for a week and more—and but the one soft collar. You can see
-already, then, that in spite of some success in smartening up my damp and
-threadbare suit I left the bath-room looking abject.
-
-I was not, however, so abject as Lovey when I found him again in the
-front sitting-room down-stairs.
-
-In the back sitting-room our table companions were all arranged in a row
-against the wall. In spite of the fact that there were plenty of chairs,
-they sat huddled together on one bench; and though there was tobacco,
-as there were books, papers, and magazines, they sought no occupation.
-When I say that they could have smoked and didn’t, the wrench that had
-been given to their normal state of mind will be apparent. Close up to
-one another they pressed, the Scotchman against the piano-mover, and the
-piano-mover against the wee bye Daisy, like lovebirds on the perch of a
-cage or newly captured animals too terrified even to snap.
-
-Without comment on any one’s part, Lovey roamed the front sitting-room
-alone.
-
-“I say, sonny,” he began, fretfully, as I entered, “this ain’t no place
-for you and me.”
-
-I tried to buck him up.
-
-“Oh, well, it’s only for a week. We can stand it for that long. They’re
-very civil to us.”
-
-“But they’re watchin’ of us already like so many cats.”
-
-“Oh no, they’re not. They’re only kind.”
-
-“I don’t want none o’ that sort of kindness. What do ye think that
-two-foot-four of a Daisy says to me when ’e offered me the loan of ’is
-razor? ‘Lovey,’ says ’e, ‘I’m goin’ to ’elp ye to knock off the booze.
-It’ll be terr’ble hard work for an old man like you.’ ‘To ’ell with you!’
-says I. ‘Ye ain’t goin’ to ’elp me to do no such thing, because knock it
-off is somethink I don’t mean.’ ‘Well, what did you come in ’ere for?’
-says ’e. ‘I come in ’ere,’ I says to ’im, ‘because my buddy come in ’ere;
-and wherever ’e goes I’ll foller ’im.’”
-
-“Then that’s understood, Lovey,” I said, cheerfully. “If I go at the end
-of the week, you go; and if I stay, you stay. We’ll be fellas together.”
-
-He shook his head mournfully.
-
-“If you go at the end of the week, sonny, I go, too; but if you
-stay—well, I don’t know. I’ve been in jails, but I ’ain’t never been
-in no such place as this—nobody with no spunk. Look at ’em in there
-now—nothink but a bunch of simps.”
-
-“You won’t leave me, Lovey?”
-
-The extinct-blue eyes were raised to mine.
-
-“No, sonny; I won’t leave ye—not for ’ardly nothink.”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER IV_
-
-
-I don’t know how we got the idea that before we went any farther we
-should be interviewed by Andy Christian, but I suppose somebody must
-have told us. We had heard of him, of course. He was, in fact, the
-master wizard whose incantations were wrecking our institutions. It was
-a surprise to us, therefore, to see, about nine o’clock, a brisk little
-elderly man blow in and blow past us—the metaphor is the most expressive
-I can use—with hardly more recognition than a nod.
-
-“Hello, fellows!” he called out, as he passed through the hall and
-glanced in at Lovey and me in the sitting-room. “Hello, boys!” he said,
-casually, through the second door, to the other group, after which he
-went on his way to talk domestic matters with Mouse in the kitchen.
-
-He seemed a mild-mannered man to have done all the diabolical work we
-had laid at his door. Neatly dressed in a summery black-and-white check,
-with a panama hat, he was like any other of the million business men who
-were on their way to New York offices that morning. It was only when he
-came back from the kitchen and was in conference with some of the men in
-the back parlor that I caught in him that look of dead and buried tragedy
-with which I was to grow so familiar in other members of the club.
-Superficially he was clean-shaven, round-featured, rubicund, and kindly,
-with a quirk about the lips and a smile in his twinkling gray eyes that
-seemed always about to tell you the newest joke. His manner toward Lovey
-and me, when he came into the front sitting-room, was that of having
-known us all our lives and of resuming a conversation that only a few
-minutes before had been broken off.
-
-“Let me see! Your name is—?”
-
-He looked at Lovey as though he knew his name perfectly well, only that
-for the second it had slipped his memory.
-
-Lovey went forward to the roll-top desk at which Mr. Christian had seated
-himself, and whispered, confidentially, “My name is Lovey, Your Honor.”
-
-The quirk about the lips seemed to execute a little caper.
-
-“Is that your first name or your second?”
-
-“It’s my only name.”
-
-“You mean that you have another name, but you don’t want to tell it?”
-
-“I mean that if I ’ave another name it ain’t nobody’s business but mine.”
-
-The head of the club was now writing in a ledger, his eye following the
-movement of his pen.
-
-“I see that you’re a man of decided opinions.”
-
-“I am—begging Your Honor’s parding,” Lovey declared, with dignity.
-
-“That’ll help you in the fight you’re going to put up.” Before Lovey
-could protest that he wasn’t going to put up no fight the gentle voice
-went on, “And you seem like a respectable man, too.”
-
-“I’m as respectable as anybody else—at ’eart. I don’t use bad langwidge,
-nor keep bad company, nor chew, nor spit tobacco juice over nothink, and
-I keeps myself to myself.”
-
-“All that’ll be a great help to you. What’s been your occupation?”
-
-“’atter.”
-
-As our host was less used to the silent “h” than I, it became necessary
-for me to say, “Hatter, sir.”
-
-I suppose it was my voice. Christian looked up quickly, studying me with
-a long, kind, deep regard. Had I been walking two thousand years ago on
-the hills of Palestine and met Some One on the road, he might have looked
-at me like that.
-
-The glance fell. Lovey’s interrogation continued.
-
-“And would you like that kind of job again—if we could get it for
-you—ultimately?”
-
-“I don’t want no job, Your Honor. I can look after myself. I didn’t come
-in ’ere of my own free will—nor to pass the buck—nor nothink.”
-
-There was an inflection of surprise, perhaps of disapproval in the tone.
-
-“You didn’t come in here of your own free will? I think it’s the first
-time that’s been said in the history of the club. May I ask how it
-happened?”
-
-I couldn’t help thinking that I ought to intervene.
-
-“He came in on my account, sir,” I said, getting up and going forward to
-the desk. “He’s trying to keep me straight.”
-
-“That is, he’ll keep straight if you do?”
-
-“That’s it, sir, exactly.”
-
-He continued to write, speaking without looking up at us.
-
-“Then I can’t think of anything more to your credit, Mr.—Mr. Lovey—is
-that it?”
-
-“I don’t want no mister, Your Honor—not now I don’t.”
-
-“When a man takes so fine a stand as you’re taking toward this young
-fellow he’s a mister to me. I respect him and treat him with respect. I
-see that we’re meant to understand each other and get on together.”
-
-Poor Lovey had nothing to say. The prospect of temptation and fall being
-removed by his own heroism rendered him both proud and miserable at once.
-
-When the writing was finished the kind eyes were again lifted toward me.
-Though the inspection was so mild, it pierced me through and through. It
-still seemed to cover me as he said: “You needn’t tell me your real name
-if you don’t want to—but in general we prefer it.”
-
-“I’ll tell anything you ask me, sir. My name is Frank Melbury.” In order
-to conceal nothing, I added, “As a matter of fact, it’s Francis Worsley
-Melbury Melbury; but I use it in the shortened form I’ve given you.”
-
-“Thanks. You’re English?”
-
-“I’m a Canadian. My father is Sir Edward Melbury, of Montreal.”
-
-“Married?”
-
-“No, sir. Single.”
-
-“And you have a profession?”
-
-“Architect.”
-
-“Have you worked at that profession here in New York?”
-
-I gave him the names of the offices in which from time to time I had
-found employment.
-
-“And would you like to work at it again?”
-
-“I should, sir.”
-
-“As a matter of fact, we have a number of architects, not exactly in
-the club, but friendly toward it, and on intimate terms with us. I’ll
-introduce you to some of them when—when you get on your feet. How old
-are you? Thirty?”
-
-“Thirty-one.”
-
-For some two minutes he went on writing.
-
-“How long since you’ve been drinking?”
-
-“My last drink was three days ago.”
-
-“And how long since you’ve been actually drunk?”
-
-“About a week.”
-
-“And before that?”
-
-“It was pretty nearly all the time.”
-
-“It’s a great advantage to you to come to us sober. It means that you
-know what you’re doing and are to some extent counting the cost. Men will
-take any kind of vow when they’re”—his glance traveled involuntarily to
-the back room—“when they’re coming off a spree. The difficulty is to make
-them keep their promises when they’ve got over the worst of it. In your
-case—”
-
-“I’ve got a motive, sir.”
-
-“Then so much the better.”
-
-I turned to Lovey.
-
-“Lovey, would you mind stepping into the next room? There’s something I
-want to speak about privately.”
-
-“If it’s to let me in for worse, sonny—”
-
-“No, it won’t let you in for anything. It’s only got to do with me.”
-
-“Then I don’t pry into no secrets,” he said, as he moved away
-reluctantly; “only, when fellas is buddies together—”
-
-“I’ve a confession to make,” I continued, when Lovey was out of earshot.
-“Last night I—”
-
-“Hold on! Is it necessary for you to tell me this or not?”
-
-I had to reflect.
-
-“It’s only necessary in that I want you to know the worst of me.”
-
-“But I’m not sure that we need to know that. It often happens that a man
-does better in keeping his secrets in his own soul and shouldering the
-full weight of their responsibility. Isn’t it enough for us to know of
-you what we see?”
-
-“I don’t know that I can judge of that.”
-
-“Then tell me this: What you were going to say—is it anything for which
-you could be arrested?”
-
-“It’s nothing for which I shall be arrested.”
-
-“But it’s an offense against the law?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-“And what renders you immune?”
-
-“The fact that—that the person most concerned has—has forgiven it.”
-
-“Man or woman?”
-
-“Woman.”
-
-His eyes wandered along the cornice as he thought the matter out. I saw
-then that they were wonderfully clear gray eyes, not so much beautiful as
-perfect—perfect in their finish as to edge and eyelash, but perfect most
-of all because of their expression of benignity.
-
-“I don’t believe I should give that away,” he said, at last; “not now, at
-any rate. If you want to tell me later—” He changed the subject abruptly
-by saying, “Is that the only shirt you’ve got?”
-
-I told him I had two or three clean ones in my trunk, but that that was
-held by my last landlord.
-
-“How much did you owe him?”
-
-I produced a soiled and crumpled bill. He looked it over.
-
-“We’ll send and pay the bill, and get your trunk.”
-
-The generosity almost took my breath away.
-
-“Oh, but—”
-
-“We should be only advancing the money,” he explained; “and we should
-look to you to pay us back when you can. It’s quite a usual procedure
-with us, because it happens in perhaps six of our cases out of ten. I
-don’t have to point out to you,” he continued, with a smile, “what I’m
-always obliged to underscore with chaps like those in there, that if
-you don’t make good what we spend on your account the loss comes not on
-well-disposed charitable people who give of their abundance, but on poor
-men who steal from their own penury. The very breakfast you ate this
-morning was paid for in the main by fellows who are earning from twelve
-to twenty-five dollars a week, and have families to support besides.”
-
-I hung my head, trying to stammer out a promise of making good.
-
-“You see those boys in there? There are five of them, and two will
-probably stick to us. That’s about the proportion we keep permanently of
-all who come in. I don’t know which two they will be—you never can tell.
-Perhaps it will be the piano-mover and the Scotchman; perhaps the man
-they call Headlights and the Irishman; perhaps the little chap and some
-other one of them. But whichever they are they’ll chip in for the sake of
-the new ones we shall reclaim, and take on themselves the burden of the
-work.”
-
-The thought that for the comforts I had enjoyed that morning I was
-dependent on the sacrifice of men who had hardly enough for their own
-children made me redden with a shame I think he understood.
-
-“Their generosity is wonderful,” he went on, quietly; “and I tell it to
-a man like you only because you can appreciate how wonderful it is. It’s
-the fact that so much heart’s blood goes into this work that makes it so
-living. These fellows love to give. They love to have you take the little
-they can offer. You never had a meal at your own father’s table that was
-laid before you more ungrudgingly than the one you ate this morning. The
-men who provide it are doing humble work all over the city, all over the
-country—because we’re scattered pretty far and wide. And every stroke of
-a hammer, and every stitch of a needle, and every tap on a typewriter,
-and every thrust of a shovel, and every dig of a pick, and every minute
-of the time by which they scrape together the pennies and the quarters
-and the dollars they send in to us is a prayer for you. I suppose you
-know what prayer really is?”
-
-His glance was now that of inquiry.
-
-“I’d like to have you tell me, sir,” I answered, humbly.
-
-He smiled again.
-
-“Well, it isn’t giving information to a wise and loving Father as to what
-He had better do for us. It’s in trying to carry out the law of His being
-in doing things for others. That isn’t all of it, by any means; but it’s
-a starting-point. Spender tells me that that nice fellow Pyncheon brought
-you in. Well, then, every glass of soda-water Pyncheon draws is in its
-way a prayer for you, because the boy’s heart is full of you. Prayer is
-action—only it’s kind action.”
-
-“Thank you, sir,” I said, with an effort to control the tremor of my
-voice; “I think I understand you.”
-
-“You yourself will be praying all through this week, in your very effort
-to buck up. You’ll be praying in helping that poor man Lovey to do the
-same. In his own purblind way—of course I understand his type and what
-you’re trying to do for him—he’ll be praying, too. Prayer is living—only,
-living in the right way.” He said, suddenly, “I suppose you rather dread
-the week.”
-
-“Well, I do—rather—sir.”
-
-“Then I’ll tell you what will make it easier—what will make it pass
-quickly and turn it into a splendid memory.” He nodded again toward the
-back room. “Chum up with these fellows. You wouldn’t, of course, be
-condescending to them—”
-
-“It’s for them to be condescending to me.”
-
-He surprised me by saying: “Perhaps it is. You know best. But here we
-try to get on a broad, simple, human footing in which we don’t make
-comparisons. But you get what I mean. The simplest, kindliest approach
-is the best approach. Just make it a point to be white with them, as I’m
-sure they’ve been white with you.”
-
-I said I had never been more touched in my life than by the small
-kindnesses of the past two hours.
-
-“That’s the idea. If you keep on the watch to show the same sort of thing
-it will not only make the time pass, but it will brace you up mentally
-and spiritually. You see, they’re only children. Fundamentally you’re
-only a child yourself. We’re all only children, Frank. Some one says that
-women grow up, but that men never do. Well, I don’t know about women, but
-I’ve had a good deal to do with men—and I’ve never found anything but
-boys. Now you can spoil boys by too much indulgence, but you can’t spoil
-them by too much love.”
-
-He stopped abruptly, because he saw what was happening to me.
-
-The next thing I knew was his arm across my shoulders, which were shaking
-as if I was in convulsions.
-
-“That’s all right, old boy,” I heard him whisper in my ear. “Just go up
-to the bath-room and lock the door and have it out. It’ll do you good.
-The fellows in there won’t notice you, because lots of them go through
-the same thing themselves.” Still with his arm across my shoulders he
-steered me toward the hall. “There you are! You’ll be better when you
-come down. We’re just boys together, and there’s nothing to be ashamed
-of. Only, when you see other fellows come in through the week—we have two
-or three new ones every day—you’ll bear with them, won’t you? And help
-them to take a brace.”
-
-He was still patting me tenderly on the back as with head bowed and
-shoulders heaving I began to stumble up-stairs.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER V_
-
-
-My acquaintance with Ralph Coningsby was the hinge on which my destiny
-turned. A hinge is a small thing as compared with a door, and so was my
-friendship with Coningsby in proportion to the rest of my life; but it
-became its cardinal point.
-
-I met him first at the meeting of the club at which the Scotchman and
-the piano-mover presented themselves for membership. As to the five
-outsiders whom Lovey and I had found on arriving, Christian’s prediction
-was verified. Three went out when their week was over and they had got
-sobered up. Two stayed behind to go on with the work of reform. At the
-end of another week each stood up with his next friend, as a bridegroom
-with his best man, and asked to be taken into fellowship.
-
-That was at the great weekly gathering, which took place every Saturday
-night. Among the hundred and fifty-odd men who had assembled in the two
-down-stairs sitting-rooms it was not difficult to single out Coningsby,
-since he was the only man I could see in whom there was nothing blasted
-or scorched or tragic. There was another there of whom this was true, but
-I didn’t meet him till toward the end of the evening.
-
-I had now been some ten days within the four walls of the club, not
-sobering up, as you know, but trying to find myself. The figure of speech
-is a good one, for the real Frank Melbury seemed to have been lost. This
-other self, this self I was anxious to get rid of, had left him in some
-bright and relatively innocent world, while it went roaming through a
-land of sand and thorns. I had distinctly the feeling of being in search
-of my genuine identity.
-
-For this I sat through long hours of every day doing absolutely
-nothing—that is, it was absolutely nothing so far as the eye could see;
-but inwardly the spirit was busy. I came, too, to understand that that
-was the secret of the long, stupefied forenoons and afternoons on the
-part of my companions. They were stupefied only because sight couldn’t
-follow the activity of their occupation. Beyond the senses so easily
-staggered by strong drink there was a man endeavoring to come forth and
-claim his own. In far, subliminal, unexplored regions of the personality
-that man was forever at work. I could see him at work. He was at work
-when the flesh had reached the end of its short tether, and reeled back
-from its brief and helpless efforts to enjoy. He was at work when the
-sore and sodden body could do nothing but sit in lumbering idleness. He
-was at work when the glazed eye could hardly lift its stare from a spot
-on the floor.
-
-That was why tobacco no longer afforded solace, nor reading distraction,
-nor an exchange of anecdotes mental relaxation. I don’t mean to say that
-we indulged in none of these pastimes, but we indulged in them slightly.
-On the one hand, they were pale in comparison with the raw excitement our
-appetites craved; and on the other, they offered nothing to the spirit
-which was, so to speak, aching and clamorous. Apart from the satisfaction
-we got from sure and regular food and sleep, our nearest approach to
-comfort was in a kind of silent, tactual clinging together. None of us
-wanted to be really alone. We could sit for hours without exchanging
-more than a casual word or two, when it frightened us to have no one else
-in the room. The sheer promiscuity of bed against bed enabled us to sleep
-without nightmares.
-
-The task of chumming up had, therefore, been an easy one. So little was
-demanded. When a new-comer had been shown the ropes of the house there
-was not much more to do for him. One could only silently help him to find
-his lost identity as one was finding one’s own.
-
-“That’s about all there is to it,” Andrew Christian observed when I had
-said something of the sort to him. “You can’t push a man into the kingdom
-of heaven; he’s got to climb up to it of his own accord. There’s no
-salvation except what one works out through one’s own sweat and blood.”
-He gave me one of his quick, semi-humorous glances. “I suppose you know
-what salvation is?”
-
-I replied that I had heard a great deal about it all my life, but I was
-far from sure of what it entailed in either effort or accomplishment.
-
-“Salvation is being normal. The intuitive old guys who coined language
-saw that plainly enough when they connected the idea with health.
-Fundamentally health is salvation and salvation is health—only perfect
-health, health not only of the body, but of the mind. Did it ever strike
-you that health and holiness and wholeness are all one word?”
-
-I said it never had.
-
-“Well, it’s worth thinking about. There’s a lot in it. You’ll get a lot
-out of it. The holy man is not the hermit on his knees in the desert,
-or the saint in colored glass, or anything that we make to correspond
-to them. He’s the fellow who’s whole—who’s sound in wind and limb and
-intelligence and sympathy and everything that makes power. When we
-say, ‘O worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness,’ we mean, O worship
-the Lord in the beauty of the all-round man, who’s developed in every
-direction, and whose degree of holiness is just in proportion to that
-development.”
-
-“That’s a big thought, sir,” I said. “I don’t believe many people who
-speak the English language ever get hold of it. But how does it happen
-that one of the two words is spelt with a ‘w,’ while the other—”
-
-He laughed, showing two rows of small, regular white teeth, as pretty as
-a girl’s.
-
-“That was another lot of intuitive guys; and a very neat trick they
-played on us. They saw that once the Anglo-Saxon, with his fine, big
-sporting instinct, got hold of the idea that holiness meant spreading out
-and living out in all manly directions—and by that I don’t mean giving
-free rein to one’s appetites, of course—but they saw that once the idea
-became plain to us the triumph of lust would be lost. So they inserted
-that little bluffing, blinding ‘w,’ which doesn’t belong there at all,
-to put us off the scent; and off the scent we went. Church and state
-and human society have all combined to make holiness one of the most
-anemic, flat-chested words in the language, when it’s really a synonym of
-normality.”
-
-We exchanged these thoughts in the narrow hall of the club, as he
-happened to be passing, and stopped for a few words. It was always his
-way. He never treated us to long and formal interviews. From a handclasp
-and a few chance sentences we got the secret of a personality which gave
-out its light and heat like radium, without effort and without exhaustion.
-
-“What do yer think ’e says to me?” Lovey demanded of me one day.
-“‘Lovey,’ says ’e, ‘yer’ve got a terr’ble responsibility on ye with
-that young fella, Slim. If you go under ’e goes under, and if you keep
-straight ’e keeps straight.’ What do yer think of that?”
-
-“I think you’re doing an awful lot for me, Lovey.”
-
-He slapped his leg.
-
-“Ye got that number right, old son. There’s nobody else in the world
-I’d ’a’ done it for. If you ’adn’t taken a fancy to me, like, that
-night, and arsked me to go ’ome with you—But, say, Slim,” he went on,
-confidentially, “wouldn’t you like to ’ave a drink?”
-
-Wouldn’t I like to have a drink? There was thirst in the very rustle of
-Lovey’s throat. There was the same thirst in my own. It was more than
-a thirst of the appetite—it was a thirst of the being, of whatever had
-become myself. It was one of the moments at which the lost identity
-seemed farther away than ever, and the Frank Melbury of the last three
-years the man in possession.
-
-I couldn’t, however, let Lovey see that.
-
-“Oh, one gets used to going without drinks.”
-
-“Do ye? I don’t. I’d take a drink of ’air-oil if anybody’d give me one.
-I’d take a drink of ink. Anything that comes out of a bottle’d be better’n
-nothink, after all this water from a jug.”
-
-During the first few days at the club this was my usual state, not
-of mind, but of sensation. During the next few days I passed into a
-condition that I can best express as one of physical resignation. The
-craving for drink was not less insistent, but it was more easily denied.
-Since I couldn’t get it I could do without it, and not want to dash my
-head against a stone. But after the words with Andrew Christian I have
-just recorded I began to feel—oh, ever so slightly!—that Nature had a
-realm of freedom and vigor in which there was no need of extraordinary
-stimulants, and of which sunshine, air, and water might be taken as the
-symbols. With the resting of my overexcited nerves and the response of a
-body radically healthy to regular sleep and simple food, I began to feel,
-at least at intervals, that water, air, and sunshine were the natural
-elements to thrive on.
-
-My first glance at Ralph Coningsby showed me a man who had thriven on
-them. He was the type to whom most of us take at sight—the clean, fresh,
-Anglo-Saxon type, blue-eyed and fair, whom you couldn’t do anything but
-trust.
-
-“God! how I should like to look like that!” I said to myself the minute I
-saw him come in.
-
-I knew by this time that at the big weekly meetings there were sometimes
-friendly visitors whose touch with the club was more or less accidental.
-I had no difficulty in putting this man down as one. He entered as if he
-were at any ordinary gathering of friends, with a nod here, a handshake
-there, and a few words with some one else. Then for a minute he stood,
-letting his eyes search the room till they rested on me, where I stood in
-a corner of the front sitting-room.
-
-There was at once that livening of the glance that showed he had found
-what he was looking for. Making his way through the groups that were
-standing about, he came up and offered his hand.
-
-“Your name’s Melbury, isn’t it? Mine’s Coningsby. I think you must be the
-same Melbury who went to the Beaux Arts in the fall of the year in which
-I left in the spring.”
-
-“Oh, you’re that Coningsby? You used to know Bully Harris?”
-
-“Rather! He and I lived together for a year in the Rue de Seine.”
-
-“And he and I spent a year in the same house in the Rue Bonaparte.”
-
-“And now he’s out in Red Wing, Minnesota, doing very well, I hear.”
-
-“The last time I saw him was in London. We dined together at the
-Piccadilly and did a theater.”
-
-“And Tommy Runt? Do you ever hear of him?”
-
-“Not since he went back to Melbourne; but that chap he was always about
-with—Saunderson, wasn’t it?—he was killed in a motor accident near
-Glasgow.”
-
-“So I heard. Some one told me—Pickman, I think it was—an Englishman—but
-you didn’t know Pickman, did you? He left the year I came, which must
-have been three or four years before your time. By the way, why don’t we
-sit down?”
-
-In the process of sitting down I remembered my manners.
-
-“Mr. Coningsby, won’t you let me introduce you to my friend, Mr. Lovey?”
-
-Lovey was seated, nursing a knee and looking as wretched as a dog to
-whom no one is paying the customary attention. He resented Coningsby’s
-appearance; he resented a kind of talk which put me beyond his reach.
-
-When Coningsby, who seated himself between us, had shaken hands and made
-some kindly observation, Lovey replied, peevishly:
-
-“I ain’t in ’ere for nothink but to save Slim.”
-
-“That’s what the boys call me,” I laughed, in explanation.
-
-Coningsby having duly commended this piece of self-sacrifice, we went on
-with the reminiscences with which we had begun. It was the most ordinary
-kind of breaking the ice between one man and another; but for me the
-wonder of it was precisely in that fact. You have to be down and out to
-know what it means when some one treats you as if you had never been
-anything but up and in. There was not a shade in Coningsby’s manner, nor
-an inflection in his tone, to hint at the fact that we hadn’t met at the
-New Netherlands or any other first-class club. It was nothing, you will
-say, but what any gentleman would be impelled to. Quite true! But again
-let me say it, you would have to be in my place to know what it means to
-be face to face with the man who is impelled to it.
-
-We stopped talking, of course, when business began, Coningsby giving me
-any necessary explanations in an undertone, and pointing out the notables
-whom I didn’t already know by sight.
-
-One of these was Colonel Straight, who with Andrew Christian had founded
-the club. I don’t believe that he had ever been a colonel, but he looked
-like one; neither can I swear that his real name was Straight, though it
-suited him. In our world the sobriquet often clings closer to us, and
-fits us more exactly, than anything given by inheritance or baptism.
-Here was a man with a figure as straight as an arrow and a glance as
-straight as a sunbeam. What else could his name have been? With one leg
-slightly shorter than the other, as if he had been wounded in battle, a
-magnificent white mustache, a magnificent fleece of white hair—he had all
-the air not only of an old soldier, but of an old soldier in high command.
-
-“You wouldn’t think, to look at him,” Coningsby whispered, “that he’s
-only an old salesman for ready-made clothes.”
-
-“No; he ought to be at the head of a regiment.”
-
-“But the odd thing I notice about this club is that a man’s status and
-occupation in the world outside seem to fall away from him as soon as he
-passes the door. They become irrelevant. The only thing that counts is
-what he is as a man; and even that doesn’t count for everything.”
-
-“What does count for everything?” I asked, in some curiosity.
-
-“That he’s a man at all.”
-
-“That’s it exactly,” I agreed, heartily. “I hadn’t put it to myself in
-that way; but I see that it’s what I’ve been conscious of.”
-
-“As an instance of that you can take the friendship between Straight and
-Christian. From the point of view of the outside world they’re of types
-so diverse that you’d say that the difference precluded friendship of any
-kind. You know what Christian is; but the colonel is hardly what you’d
-call a man of education. Without being illiterate, he makes elementary
-grammatical mistakes, and unusual ideas floor him. But to say that he and
-Christian are like brothers hardly expresses it.”
-
-I pondered on this as the meeting, with Christian in the chair, came to
-order and the routine of business began.
-
-When it grew uninteresting to people with no share in the management of
-the club I got an opportunity to whisper, “You settled in New York?”
-
-“I’m with Sterling Barry; the junior of the four partners.”
-
-The reply seemed to strip from me the few rags of respectability with
-which I had been trying to cover myself up. Had he gone on to say, “And I
-saw you break into his house and steal his daughter’s trinkets,” I should
-scarcely have felt myself more pitilessly exposed.
-
-It was perhaps a proof of what the club had done for me that I no longer
-regarded this crime with the same sang-froid as when I entered. Even on
-the morning of my first talk with Andrew Christian I could have confessed
-it more or less as I should have owned to a solecism in etiquette. During
-the intervening ten days, however, I had so far reverted to my former
-better self that the knowledge that I was the man who had crept into a
-house and begun to rob it filled me with dismay.
-
-I had to pretend that I didn’t want to interrupt the conducting of
-business to conceal the fact that I was unable to reply.
-
-“You’ve worked in New York, too?” he began again, when there was a chance
-of speaking.
-
-I had by this time so far recovered myself as to be able to tell him the
-names of my various employers. I didn’t add that they had fired me one
-after another because of my drinking-spells, since I supposed he would
-take that for granted.
-
-“Ever thought of Barry’s?”
-
-“I brought a letter of introduction to him from McArdle, of Montreal; but
-I never presented it.”
-
-“Pity.”
-
-“Yes, perhaps it was. But you see I didn’t like McArdle’s work, though I
-studied under him. As I was afraid of getting into the same old rut, I
-went to Pritchard.”
-
-“What do you think of Barry’s things now?”
-
-“Oh, I like them—though they’re not so severe as I should go in for
-myself. The modern French is a little too florid, and he goes them one
-better.”
-
-“Just my feeling. I should like you to see a bit of work I’ve been doing
-on my own; rather a big order—for me, that is—in which I’ve had to be as
-American as the deuce, and yet keep to the best lines.”
-
-“Like to,” I managed to whisper back as we heard Christian announce that
-two new men were now to be admitted to the club.
-
-I was interested in the ceremony, having by this time got on friendly
-terms with both the piano-mover and the Scotchman, and learned something
-of their history. With necessary divergences the general trend of these
-tales was the same. Both were married men, both had children, in both
-cases “the home was broken up”—the phrase had become classic in the club;
-though in the one instance the wife had taken the children to her own
-people, and in the other she was doing her best to support them herself.
-
-Their names being called, there was a scraping of chairs, after which the
-two men lumbered forward, each accompanied by his next friend. The office
-of next friend, as I came to learn, was one of such responsibility as
-to put a strain on anything like next friendship. The Scotchman’s next
-friend was a barber, who, as part of his return for the club’s benefits
-to himself, had that afternoon cut the hair of all of us inmates—nineteen
-in number; while the piano-mover had as his sponsor the famous Beady
-Lamont. The latter pair moved forward like two elephants, their tread
-shaking the floor.
-
-I shall not describe this initiation further than to say that everything
-about it was simple, direct, and impressive. The four men being lined in
-front of Mr. Christian’s desk, the spokesman for the authorities was old
-Colonel Straight.
-
-“The difference between this club and every other club,” he said, in
-substance, “is that men goes to other clubs to amuse theirselves, and
-here they come to fight. This club is an army. Any one who joins it joins
-a corps. You two men who wants to come in with us ’ave got to remember
-that up to now you’ve been on your own and independent; and now you’ll
-be entering a company. Up to now, if you worked you worked for yourself;
-if you loafed you loafed for yourself; if you was lounge lizards you
-was lounge lizards on your own account and no one else’s; and if you
-got drunk no one but you—leaving out your wife and children; though why
-I leave them out God alone knows!—but if you got drunk no one but you
-had to suffer. Now it’s going to be all different. You can’t get drunk
-without hurting us, and we can’t get drunk without hurting you. T’other
-way round—every bit of fight we put up helps you, and every bit of fight
-you put up helps us.
-
-“Now there’s lots of things I could say to you this evening; but the only
-one I want to jam right home is this: You and us look at this thing from
-different points of view. You come here hoping that we’re going to help
-you to keep straight. That’s all right. So we are; and we’ll all be on
-the job from this night forward. You won’t find us taking no vacation,
-and your next friends here’ll worry you like your own consciences.
-They’ll never leave you alone the minute you ain’t safe. You’ll hear ’em
-promise to hunt for you if you go astray, and go down into the ditch with
-you and pull you out. There’ll be no dive so deep that they won’t go
-after you, and no kicks and curses that you can give ’em that they won’t
-stand in order to haul you back. That’s all gospel true, as you’re going
-to find out if you go back on your promises. But that ain’t the way the
-rest of us—the hundred and fifty of us that you see here to-night—looks
-at it at all. What we see ain’t two men we’re tumbling over each other
-to help; we see two men that’s coming to help us. And, oh, men, you’d
-better believe that we need your help! You look round and you see this
-elegant house—and the beds—and the grub—and everything decent and
-reg’lar—and you think how swell we’ve got ourselves fixed. But I tell
-you, men, we’re fighting for our life—the whole hundred and fifty of us!
-And another hundred and fifty that ain’t here! And another hundred and
-fifty that’s scattered to the four winds of the earth; we’re fighting for
-our life; we’re fighting with our back against the wall. We ain’t out of
-danger because we’ve been a year or two years or five years in the club.
-We’re never out of danger. We need every ounce of support that any one
-can bring to us; and here you fellows come bringing it! You’re bringing
-it, Colin MacPherson, and you’re bringing it, Tapley Toms; and there
-ain’t a guy among us that isn’t glad and grateful. If you go back on your
-own better selves you go back on us first of all; and if either of you
-falls, you leave each one of us so much the weaker.”
-
-That, with a funny story or two, was the gist of it; but delivered in
-a low, richly vibrating voice, audible in every corner of the room and
-addressed directly and earnestly to the two candidates, its effect was
-not unlike that of Whitfield’s dying man preaching to dying men. All
-the scarred, haunted faces, behind each of which there lurked memories
-blacker than those of the madhouse, were turned toward the speaker
-raptly. Knowledge of their own hearts and knowledge of his gave the words
-a power and a value beyond anything they carried on the surface. The
-red-hot experience of a hundred and fifty men was poured molten into the
-minute, to give to the promises the two postulants were presently called
-on to make a kind of iron vigor.
-
-Those promises were simple. Colin MacPherson and Tapley Toms took the
-total-abstinence pledge for a week, after which they would be asked to
-renew it for similar periods till they felt strong enough to take it
-for a month. They would remain as residents of the club till morally
-re-established, but they would look for work, in which the club would
-assist them, and send at least three-quarters of their earnings to their
-wives. As soon as they were strong enough they would set up homes for
-their families again, and try to atone for their failure in the mean
-time. They would do their best to strengthen other members of the club,
-and to live in peace with them. The religious question was shelved by
-asking each man to give his word to reconnect himself with the church in
-which he had been brought up.
-
-The promises exacted of the next friends were, as became veterans, more
-severe. They were to be guardians of the most zealous activity, and
-shrink from no insult or injury in the exercise of their functions. If
-their charges fell irretrievably away, their brothers in the club would
-be sorry for them, even though the guilt would not be laid at their door.
-
-When some twenty or thirty members had renewed their vows for a third or
-fourth or fifth week, as the case happened to be, the meeting broke up
-for refreshments.
-
-It was during this finale to the evening that Coningsby brought up a
-man somewhat of his own type, and yet different. He was different in
-that, though of the same rank and age, he was tall and dark, and carried
-himself with a slight stoop of the shoulders. An olive complexion touched
-off with well-rounded black eyebrows and a neat black mustache made one
-take him at first for a foreigner, while the dreaminess of the dark eyes
-was melancholy and introspective, if not quite despondent.
-
-“Melbury, I want you to know Doctor Cantyre, who holds the honorable
-office of physician in ordinary to the club.”
-
-Once more I was in conversation with a man of antecedents similar to
-my own, and once more the breaking of the ice was that between men
-accustomed to the same order of associations. In this case we found
-them in Cantyre’s tourist recollections of Montreal and Quebec, and his
-enjoyment of winter sports.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER VI_
-
-
-There was nothing more than this to the meeting that night, but early the
-next afternoon I was called to the telephone. As such a summons was rare
-in the club, I went to the instrument in some trepidation.
-
-“Hello! This is Frank Melbury.”
-
-“This is Doctor Cantyre. You remember that we met last evening?”
-
-“Oh, rather!”
-
-“I’m motoring out in my runabout to see a patient who lives a few miles
-up the river, and I want you to come along.”
-
-The invitation, which would mean nothing to you but a yes or a no, struck
-me almost speechless. There was first the pleasure of it. I have not
-laid stress on the fact that the weather was sickeningly hot, because it
-didn’t enter into our considerations. We were too deeply concerned with
-other things to care much that the house was stifling; and yet stifling
-it was. But more important than that was the fact that any one in the
-world should want to show me this courtesy. Remember that I had been
-beyond the reach of courtesies. A drink from some one who would expect
-me to give him a drink in return was the utmost I had known in this
-direction for months, and I might say for years.
-
-Is it any wonder that in my reply I stammered and stuttered and nearly
-sobbed?
-
-“Oh, but, I say, I—I look too beastly for an expedition of—of that sort.
-I’m awfully sorry, but—but I—well, you know how it is.”
-
-“Oh, get out! You’ve got to have the air. I’m your doctor. I’m not going
-to see you cooped up there day after day in weather like this. Besides,
-I’m bringing along a couple of dust-coats—the roads will be dusty part of
-the way—and we shall both be covered up. Expect me by half past two.”
-
-As he put up the receiver without waiting for further protests, there was
-nothing for me but submission.
-
-“I’ve been ’ere as long as you ’ave,” Lovey complained when I told him of
-my invitation, “and nobody don’t ask me to go hout in no automobiles.”
-
-“Oh, but they will.”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“Them swells’ll take you away, sonny. See if they don’t.”
-
-“Not from you, Lovey.”
-
-He grabbed me by the arm.
-
-“Will you promise me that, Slim?”
-
-“Yes, Lovey; I promise you.”
-
-“And we’ll go on being buddies, even when the rich guys talks to you
-about all them swell things?”
-
-“Yes, Lovey. We’re buddies for life.”
-
-With this Mizpah between us he released my arm and I was able to go and
-make my preparations.
-
-In spite of the heat and the fact that on a windless day there was no
-dust to speak of, Cantyre was buttoned up in a dust-coat. It would have
-seemed the last word in tact if he hadn’t gone further by pretending to
-be occupied in doing something to the steering-wheel while I hid my seedy
-blue serge in the long linen garment he handed me out. As even an old
-golf-cap can look pretty decent, I was really like anybody else by the
-time I had snuggled myself in by his side.
-
-During the first mile or two of the way I could hardly listen to Cantyre,
-to say nothing of making conversation. In spasmodic sentences between his
-spells of attention to the traffic he told me of his patient and where
-she lived; but as it was nothing I was obliged to register in my mind, I
-could give myself to the wonder of the occasion, in awe at the miracle
-which had restored me to something like my old place in the world at the
-very moment when I seemed farthest away from it. Here I was, with not
-a penny to my name and not two coats to my back, tooling along like a
-gentleman with a gentleman, and as a man with his friend. Moreover, here
-I was with a new revelation, a convincing revelation, of something I had
-long since ceased to believe—that in this world there was such a thing as
-active brotherly kindness.
-
-I came out of these thoughts to find that we were following the avenue
-with part of which I had made myself so familiar ten days before. I began
-to ask myself if Cantyre had a motive in bringing me this way. The houses
-were thinning out. Vacant lots became frequent. I noted the southern
-limit of my pacings up and down on that strange midnight. Cantyre slowed
-the pace perceptibly. My heart thumped. If he accused me of anything, I
-was resolved to confess all.
-
-As we passed one particular vacant lot, a tangle of nettle, fireweed, and
-blue succory, I noticed that Cantyre’s gaze roamed round about it, to the
-neglect of the machine. We had slowed down to perhaps ten miles an hour.
-
-“Do you know whose house that is?” he asked, suddenly.
-
-But I refused to betray myself before it was necessary.
-
-“Whose?” I riposted.
-
-“Sterling Barry, the architect’s.”
-
-The machine almost stopped. He looked the façade up and down, saying, as
-he did so: “It’s closed for the season. They left town a few days ago.
-Barry’s bought the old Hornblower place at Rosyth, Long Island.”
-
-To my relief, we sped on again; but I was not long in learning the motive
-behind his interest.
-
-Chiefly for the sake of not seeming dumb, I said, as we got into the
-country, “You and Ralph Coningsby are by way of being great friends,
-aren’t you?”
-
-“No,” he replied, promptly. “I see him when I go to the club; not very
-often elsewhere. I know his sister, Elsie Coningsby, better. Not that I
-know her very well. She happens to be a great friend of—of a—of a great
-friend—or, rather, some one who was a great friend—of mine. That’s all.”
-
-So that was it!
-
-I said, after we had spun along some few miles more, “Your name is
-Stephen, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes. How did you know?”
-
-I hedged. “Oh, I must have heard some one call you that.”
-
-“That’s funny. Hardly any one does. They mostly say Cantyre—or just
-doctor.” He added, after a minute or two, “You call me Stephen, and I’ll
-call you Frank.”
-
-Once more the swift march of happenings gave me a slight shock.
-
-“Oh, but we hardly know each other.”
-
-“That would be true if there weren’t friendships that outdistance
-acquaintanceships.”
-
-“Oh, if you look at it that way—”
-
-“That’s the way it strikes me.”
-
-“But, good Heavens! man, think of what—of what I am!”
-
-His gaze was fixed on the stretch of road ahead of him.
-
-“What’s that got to do with it? It wouldn’t make any difference to me if
-you were a murderer or a thief.”
-
-“How do you know I’m not?” I couldn’t help asking.
-
-“I don’t know that you’re not; but I say it wouldn’t make any difference
-to me if you were.”
-
-The word I am tempted to use of myself at this unexpected offer of
-good-will is flabbergasted. I am not emotional; still less am I
-sentimental; both in sentiment and emotion my tendency is to go slow.
-
-After a brief silence I said: “Look here! Do you go round making friends
-among the riffraff of mankind?”
-
-“I don’t go round making friends among people of any sort. I’m not the
-friendly type. I know lots of people, of course; but—but I don’t get
-beyond just knowing them.”
-
-“Is that because you don’t want to?”
-
-“Not altogether. I’m a—I’m a lonesome sort of bloke. I never was a good
-mixer; and when you’re not that, other fellows instinctively close up
-their ranks against you and shut you out. Not that that matters to me. I
-hardly ever see a lot with whom I should want to get in. You’re—you’re an
-exception.”
-
-“And for Heaven’s sake, why?”
-
-“Oh, for two or three reasons—which I’m not going to tell you. One of
-these days you may find out.”
-
-We left the subject there and sped along in silence.
-
-This, then, was the man Regina Barry had turned down; and,
-notwithstanding his kindness to myself, I could understand her doing it.
-For a high-spirited girl such as she evidently was he would have been
-too melancholy. “Very nice” was what she had called him, and very nice
-he was; but he lacked the something thoroughly masculine that means more
-to women than to men. Men are used to the eternal-feminine streak in
-themselves and one another; but women put up with it only when it is like
-a flaw in an emerald, noticeable to the expert, but to no one else.
-
-I asked him how he came to be what Coningsby called physician in ordinary
-to the club.
-
-“By accident. Rufus Legrand asked me to go over and see what I could do
-for a bad case of D. T.”
-
-“He’s the rector of the church opposite, isn’t he?”
-
-“Yes, and an awfully good sort. Only parson I know who thinks more of God
-than he does of a church. I shouldn’t be surprised if one of these days
-he got the true spirit of religion.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“What they’re doing at the Down and Out.”
-
-“Oh, but they skip religion there altogether.”
-
-“They don’t skip religion; they only skip the word—and for a reason.”
-
-“What reason?”
-
-“The reason that it’s been so misapplied as to have become nearly
-unintelligible. If you told the men at the club that such and such a
-thing was religion they’d most of ’em kick like the deuce; but when they
-get the thing without explanation they take to it every time. But you
-were asking me about my connection with the club. It began four years
-ago, when they first got into Miss Smedley’s house. Fellow had the
-old-fashioned horrors—bad. As I’d been making dipsomania a specialty
-Legrand railroaded me in, and there I’ve stayed.”
-
-When we drew up at the gate of an old yellow mansion standing in large
-grounds Cantyre left me in the machine while he went in to visit his
-patient. The blue-green hills were just beginning to veil themselves in
-the diaphanous mauve of afternoon, and between them the river with its
-varied life flowed silently and rapidly. It was strange to me to remember
-that a short time ago I had been wishing myself under it, and that this
-very water would be washing the oozy, moss-grown piles of Greeley’s Slip.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER VII_
-
-
-No later than that evening my life took still another step.
-
-A little before nine, just as I was about to go to bed—our hours at the
-club were early—Ralph Coningsby dropped in for a word with me. I happened
-to be at the foot of the stairs in the hall when Spender admitted him,
-and he refused to come farther inside.
-
-“Been dining with my wife’s father and mother over the way,” he said, in
-explanation of his dinner jacket and black tie, “and just ran across to
-say something while I was in the neighborhood. You said last night you’d
-come and see the Grace Memorial with me.”
-
-“If you say so,” I smiled, “I suppose I must have; but it’s the first
-time to my knowledge that I ever heard of it.”
-
-“Oh, that’s the bit of work I told you about—the thing I’m doing on my
-own. It’s over here at St. David’s. You see, when Charlie Grace died he
-left a sum of money to build and endow this institution in memory of his
-father.”
-
-I smiled again.
-
-“I know I must have heard the name of Charlie Grace, but it seems to have
-slipped my memory. All the same—”
-
-“I’ll tell you about him to-morrow. I merely want to say now that I’ll
-look in about ten in the morning, and take you across the street—”
-
-The difficulty I had had to confront in the afternoon was before me again.
-
-“I don’t know about that, Coningsby. The fact is I’m not—Well, hang it
-all! Can’t you see? I haven’t a rag in the world but what I stand up in,
-and I can’t go where I’m likely to run into decent people.”
-
-“You won’t run into any one but carpenters and painters. I’m not going to
-take no for an answer, old chap. Besides, there’s method in this madness,
-for—now don’t buck!—for I’m going to put you on a job.”
-
-I could only stare vacantly.
-
-“On a job?”
-
-“Mrs. Grace wants some measurements and specifications which she thinks
-I haven’t given her exactly enough; and the first thing to be done is to
-go over the whole blooming place with a foot-rule and a tape-measure; but
-I’ll tell you about that to-morrow, too. For a chap with your training
-it will be office-boy’s work; but as you’re doing nothing else for the
-moment—”
-
-It is needless to say that I hardly slept that night. It was not the
-prospect of work alone that excited me; it was that of being gradually
-drawn into the sphere in which I might meet Regina Barry. I was still
-uncertain as to whether I wanted to do that or not. There was no hour of
-the day when I didn’t think of her, and yet it was always with a sense
-of thankfulness that she couldn’t know where I was or guess at what had
-become of me. If I could have been granted the privilege of seeing her
-without having her see me I should have jumped at it; but the ordeal of
-her recognition was beyond my strength to face. Rather than have her say
-with her eyes, “You were the man who came into my room and tried to rob
-me,” I would have shot myself.
-
-And yet I had to admit the fact that this danger was in the air. Ralph
-Coningsby’s sister was the Elsie of that tragic night; Cantyre was the
-Stephen. I was being offered work by Sterling Barry’s partner, and might
-soon be doing it for Sterling Barry himself. The fatality that brought
-about these unfoldings might go farther still, and before I knew it I
-might find myself in the precise situation that filled me with terror—and
-yet made me shiver with a kind of harsh delight. Before I could sleep I
-had to make a compromise with my courage. I would not shoot myself rather
-than meet her. I would meet her first, if it had to be. I would take that
-one draft of the joy I had put forever out of reach—and shoot myself
-afterward.
-
-But in the morning I was more self-confident. Having examined myself
-carefully in the cracked mirror in the bath-room, I found that my
-mustache, which had grown tolerably long and thick, changed my appearance
-not a little. Moreover, food, rest, and sobriety had smoothed away the
-unspeakable haggardness that had creased my forehead, hardened my mouth,
-and burnt into my eyes that woebegone desolation which I had noticed
-among my companions when I arrived at the club. It is no exaggeration to
-say that I was not only younger by ten years, but that I was changed in
-looks, as a landscape is changed when, after being swept by rains, it is
-bathed in sunshine. The one hope I built on all this was that, were I to
-meet Regina Barry face to face, she would not recognize me at a first
-glance, while I could keep her from getting a second.
-
-On the way across the street Coningsby told me something of Charlie
-Grace and his memorial. He had been the son of a former rector of St.
-David’s—an important man in the New York of his day, who had outlived
-his usefulness and been asked to resign his parish. The son had never
-forgiven this slight, and the William Grace Memorial was intended to
-avenge it. It had been the express desire of the widow, Mrs. Charlie
-Grace, that he, Ralph Coningsby, should have sole charge of the building,
-and the work had been going on since the previous autumn. In the coming
-autumn the house would be ready for furnishing. It was for this purpose
-that Mrs. Grace required the exact measurements of each room, with the
-disposition of the wall spaces. During the summer she could thus consider
-what she would have to do when the time came in October.
-
-Only a corner of the new building was visible from Vandiver Street, the
-main entrance being on Blankney Place, which was a parallel thoroughfare.
-Standing in the middle of the grass-plot in front of the dumpy, spurious
-1840 Gothic rectory, we had the length of the dumpy, spurious 1840
-Gothic church in front of us. The memorial had to be fitted in behind
-the chancel, on the space formerly occupied by a Sunday-school room.
-This space had been enlarged by the purchase of the lot in Blankney
-Place, giving an entry from a more populous neighborhood. The purpose
-of the memorial had been more or less dictated by Mrs. Ralph Coningsby,
-who, as Esther Legrand, the rector’s daughter, had from her childhood
-upward worked among the people round about and knew their needs. As
-far as I could gather, it was to be a sort of neighborhood club, with
-parlors, reading-rooms, playing-rooms, a dancing-room, a smoking-room, a
-billiard-room, a lecture-room, a gymnasium, baths, and so on, and open
-to those who were properly enrolled, of both sexes and all ages. Of the
-committee in charge Mrs. Coningsby was apparently the moving spirit,
-though Mrs. Grace was reserving to herself the pleasure of fitting the
-house up.
-
-Before going inside we discussed the difficulties of harmonizing a
-modern building with the efforts of the early nineteenth century, and I
-had an opportunity to commend Coningsby’s judgment. He had kept to the
-brownstone of the church and rectory, and had suggested their spirit
-while working on sober, well-proportioned lines.
-
-In the middle of this I broke off to say: “Look here, old chap! I hope
-you’re not inventing this job of yours just for the sake of giving me
-something to do.”
-
-His frank gaze convinced me.
-
-“Honest, I’m not. Mrs. Grace is particularly anxious to have the
-measurements sent down to her at Rosyth, and we’re so short-handed—”
-
-“Then that’s all right. Let’s go in, and you can show me what I’m to do.”
-
-As Coningsby had said, it was office-boy’s work, but it suited me. It was
-a matter of getting broken in again, and—whether it came by accident or
-my friend’s good-heartedness—an easy job in which there was no thinking
-or responsibility was the most effective means that could have been found
-of nursing me along. At the end of a week I was treated to the well-nigh
-incredible wonder of a check.
-
-Early on a Sunday morning I took it to Christian, asking that it should
-be turned in toward my expenses at the club.
-
-Having read its amount, he held it in his fingers, twisting it and
-turning it.
-
-“You see, Frank,” he said, after thinking for a minute, “the primary
-object of the club is not to be paid for what it spends—though that is an
-object—it’s to help fellows to get on their feet. Of you nineteen chaps
-who are in the house at present twelve are regularly paying for their
-board and lodging, and that pretty well carries us along. If there’s a
-deficit it’s covered by the back payments of men who’ve gone out and who
-are making up. So that this isn’t pressing for the minute—”
-
-“But I should like to pay it, sir.”
-
-“Yes, of course; but it’s a question of what is most urgent. Now this
-isn’t urgent; we can extend your credit; whereas, the first bit of bluff
-we’ve all got to put up when we’re pulling ourselves together is in
-clothes.”
-
-He asked me how long my present job would go on. I said for about three
-weeks.
-
-“Then keep this check,” he pursued, handing it back to me, “till you get
-as much again. That will be enough to turn you out quite smart. Go to
-Straight, at Bruch Brothers—all our fellows go to him—and he’ll advise
-you to the best advantage.”
-
-The words were accompanied by such a smile that I, who am not emotional,
-felt my eyes smart.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER VIII_
-
-
-The summer passed with no more than two or three other incidents worth
-the jotting down.
-
-In the first place, the day arrived when I had to make up my mind
-either to leave the club or to join it. Expecting some opposition from
-Lovey as to joining it, I was surprised to find him take the suggestion
-complacently.
-
-“I’ve found out,” he whispered to me, “that yer can jine this club—and
-fall. Yer can fall three times before they’ll turn ye out.”
-
-“Oh, but you wouldn’t want to fall in cold blood.”
-
-“Well,” he muttered, doubtfully, “I ain’t partic’lar about the blood.
-Now my hadvice’d be this: ’Ere we are in July. That’s all right; we
-can jine. Then in Haugust we can ’ave a wee little bit of a fall—just
-two or three days like. We can do the same in September; and the same
-in Hoctober. That’ll use up our three times, and we can come back under
-cover for the worst months of the winter. We can’t fall no more after
-that; but in the spring we can try somethink else. There’s always things.”
-
-“And suppose I don’t mean to fall?”
-
-He looked hurt.
-
-“Oh, if you can keep straight without me—”
-
-“But if I can’t, Lovey? If I must keep straight and need you to help me?”
-
-He clasped his hands against his stomach and drew a dismal face.
-
-“That’d be a tight place for me.”
-
-“And isn’t there,” I continued, “another point of view? Suppose we did
-what you suggest, do you think it would be treating all these nice
-fellows decently?”
-
-“Oh, if you’re going to start out treatin’ people decent—”
-
-“Well, why shouldn’t we? We can do it—you and I together.”
-
-He drew a deep sigh.
-
-“I must say, Slim, yer do beat everythink for puttin’ things on me.”
-
-But in the end we were both admitted at one of the Saturday-evening
-meetings with, as usual, a large gathering of friends, and some bracing
-words from Straight. Pyn stood up with me as next friend, and little
-Spender did the same by Lovey. I have not said that during the ten days
-before I went to work Pyn blew in at the club during some minutes of
-every lunch hour to watch my progress. It was he, too, who found Lovey
-the job of washing windows, by which that worthy also had a chance of
-returning to honest ways. Indeed, though I cannot repeat it frequently
-enough, of the many hands stretched out to help me upward none was
-stronger in its grasp than that of the kindly keeper of the soda-water
-fountain to whom the club had given a veritable new birth.
-
-Our admission as members had taken place while I was still doing the
-measurements at the memorial. By the time they were finished Coningsby
-had a new proposal. As it was the middle of July, he was anxious to take
-his wife and two little children to the country for a month. Carpenters,
-plasterers, painters, and plumbers were still at work on the building,
-and they couldn’t be left without oversight. Would I undertake to give
-that—at a reasonable salary?
-
-I had grown familiar with the work by this time, and had been able to
-throw into the furtherance of Coningsby’s plans an enthusiasm largely
-sprung of gratitude. In addition I was getting back my self-confidence in
-proportion as I got back my self-respect. The fact, too, that in the new
-summer suit and straw hat to which the colonel’s advice had helped me I
-could go about the streets without being ashamed of myself did something
-to restore my natural poise.
-
-I could see that by taking this work I should really be helping
-Coningsby. He needed the rest; his wife and babies undoubtedly needed
-the change. It was not easy for a man with so important a piece of work
-as this on hand to get any one satisfactorily to take his place. I
-could accept the offer, then, without the suspicion—which any man would
-hate—that it was being made to me from motives of philanthropy. I was
-really being useful—more useful than in taking the measurements for Mrs.
-Grace, which any novice could have done—and making a creditable living
-for the first time in years.
-
-Then, too, I had a great deal of Cantyre’s company. He spent most of the
-summer in town; chiefly because of his patients, but partly from a lack
-of incentive in going away. He explained that lack of incentive to me
-during one of the spins in his runabout to which he treated me on three
-or four evenings a week. Now and then I worked Lovey off on him for
-an outing, but he, Cantyre, was generally a little peevish after such
-occasions. It was not that he objected to giving Lovey or any one else
-the air; it was that he suspected me of not really caring to go out with
-him. There are always men—very good fellows, too—in whom there is this
-strain of the jealousy of school-girls.
-
-On this particular evening I had been kidding him about his depression,
-doing my best to rouse him out of it.
-
-“Oh, I’ll pull round in time,” he said, in his resigned, lifeless tone.
-“If you knew the reason—”
-
-I did know the reason, of course. My conscience never ceased to plague
-me with the fact that, though I could return Regina Barry’s trinkets,
-Cantyre’s secret was a theft I couldn’t get rid of. It was, indeed,
-partly to lead him on to confiding it to me of his own accord, so that I
-might know it legitimately, so to speak, that I brought the subject up.
-
-“I suppose it’s about a girl.”
-
-So long a time passed that I thought he was not going to respond to this
-challenge, when he said, “Yes.”
-
-“Wouldn’t she have you?” I asked, bluntly.
-
-“She said she would—and changed her mind.”
-
-“So that you were actually engaged?”
-
-“For about a month.”
-
-“Did she— You don’t mind my asking questions, do you?”
-
-“Not if you won’t mind if I don’t answer.”
-
-“Then with that proviso I’ll go on. Did she tell why she—why she broke it
-off?”
-
-“Not—not exactly.”
-
-“And haven’t you found out?”
-
-“Elsie Coningsby, she’s her great friend, told me something of it. She
-said there were two kinds of women. Some liked to be wooed, and others
-weren’t satisfied unless they were conquered.”
-
-“And you took the wrong method?”
-
-“So it seems.”
-
-“Well, why don’t you turn round now and take the right one?”
-
-His dreamy, melancholy eyes slid toward me.
-
-“Do you see me doing that? I’m the kind of bloke that would like a woman
-to conquer him. If it comes to that, there are two kinds of men.”
-
-He had told me so much that I felt it right to give him a warning.
-
-“Since you say she’s a friend of Elsie Coningsby’s, I mayn’t be able to
-help finding out who she is.”
-
-“Oh, I shouldn’t mind that—not with you. As a matter of fact, I should
-like to introduce you to her one of these days.”
-
-I broke in more hastily than I intended, “No, no; don’t do that—for God’s
-sake!”
-
-He swung round in amazement. “Why—why, what’s the matter?”
-
-I tried to recover myself. “Oh, nothing! Only, you must see for yourself
-that—that after what I’ve been through I’m not—not a lady’s man.”
-
-“Oh, get out!” was his only observation.
-
-We lapsed into one of our long silences, which was broken when we turned
-back toward town.
-
-“Look here, Frank,” he said, suddenly, “you can’t go on living down there
-in Vandiver Street. Besides, the club will be needing your bed for some
-one else.”
-
-“I know,” I said. “I’ve been thinking about it. I simply don’t want to
-move.”
-
-“You’ll have to, though.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so.”
-
-He went on to suggest a small apartment in the bachelor house he was
-living in himself. Now was the time to rent, before men began coming
-back to town. He knew of a little suite of three rooms and a bath which
-ought to be within my means. As we passed the house we stopped and looked
-at it. I liked it and promised to turn the matter over in my mind.
-
-Next day I broached it to Lovey. The effect was what I expected. He
-grasped me by the arm, looking up at me with eyes the more eloquent from
-the fact that they were dead.
-
-“Y’ain’t goin’ to leave me, Slim?”
-
-“It wouldn’t be leaving you, Lovey.”
-
-“Y’ain’t goin’ to live in another ’ouse, where I sha’n’t be seein’ ye
-every day?”
-
-“You could get a room near.”
-
-“’Twouldn’t be the same thing—not noway, it wouldn’t be. Oh, Slim!”
-
-With a gesture really dramatic he smote his chest with his two clenched
-fists, and drew a long, grating sigh.
-
-We were sitting on our beds, which were side by side in one of the
-dormitories. It was the nearest thing to privacy the club-house ever
-allowed us.
-
-“This’ll be the hend of me; and it’ll be the hend of you, Slim, if I
-ain’t there to watch over you. You’ll never keep straight without me,
-sonny.” He was struck with a new idea, and, indeed, I had thought of it
-myself. “Didn’t ye say,” he went on, as he leaned forward and tapped my
-knee, “that in them rooms there was one little dark room?”
-
-“Very little and very dark.”
-
-“But it wouldn’t be too little or too dark for me, Slim, not if I
-could be your valet, like. I could do everythink for you, just like a
-gentleman. My father was a valet, and he larned me before he couldn’t
-larn me nothink else. I could keep your clothes so as you’d never need
-new ones, and I could mend and darn and cook your breakfasts—I’m a swell
-cook—I can bile tea and coffee and heggs—many’s the time I’ve done it—”
-
-“All right, Lovey,” I interrupted. “It’s a bargain. We’re buddies.”
-
-“No, Slim; we won’t be buddies no more. We’ll call that off. We’ll just
-be master and man. I’ll know my place and I’ll keep it. I sha’n’t call
-you Slim, nor sonny—”
-
-“Oh yes, you must.”
-
-He shook his head.
-
-“No; not after we’ve moved from the club. I’ll call you Mr. Melbury and
-say sir to you; and you must call me Lovey, just as if it was my real
-name.” He added, unexpectedly to me: “I suppose ye know it ain’t my real
-name?”
-
-“Oh, what does it matter?”
-
-“It only matters like this: I ain’t—I ain’t—” He got up in some agitation
-and went to one of the windows. After looking out for a second or two he
-turned half round toward me. “Ye ain’t thinking me any better than I am,
-Slim, are you?”
-
-“I’m not thinking whether you’re better or worse, Lovey. I just like you.”
-
-“And I’ve took an awful fancy to you, Slim. Seems as if you was my whole
-family. But—but you’re not, sonny. I’ve—I’ve got a family. They’re dead
-to me and I’m dead to them; but they’re my family. Did ye know that,
-Slim?”
-
-“I didn’t know it, and you needn’t tell me.”
-
-“But if I was awful bad, sonny? If I was wuss than anythink that’d ever
-come into your ’ead?”
-
-“We won’t talk about that. Perhaps there are things that I could tell
-you which would show that there’s not much difference between us.”
-
-“I ’ope there is, Slim. And she was terr’ble aggravatin’; a drinkin’
-woman, besides. I didn’t drink then—’ardly not at all. It was after I was
-acquitted I begun that. And my two gells—well, bein’ acquitted didn’t
-make no difference to them; they’d seen. Only, they didn’t swear that way
-in their hevidence. They swore she fell down the stairs she was found at
-the bottom of, her neck broken; and, bein’ a drinkin’ woman, the jury
-thought—But the two gells knew. And when I was let off they didn’t ’ave
-no more to do with me—so I come over ’ere—”
-
-I rose and went to him, laying my hand on his shoulder.
-
-“Don’t, Lovey. That’s enough. I don’t care who you are or what you’ve
-done, we’ll stick it out together. The only thing is that we’ll have to
-give up the booze.”
-
-“For good and all, Slim?”
-
-“Yes; for good and all.”
-
-“It’ll be awful ’ard.”
-
-“Yes, it will be; but the worst of that is over.”
-
-He seized one of my hands in both of his.
-
-“Slim, if it’s got to be a ch’ice between you and liquor—well, I’m danged
-if—if I won’t”—he made a great resolution—“give up the liquor—and so ’elp
-me!”
-
-So when I moved Lovey moved with me. Washing windows having become
-a lucrative profession, he insisted on taking no wages from me and
-on paying for his own food. In the matter of names we agreed on a
-compromise. “Before company,” as he expressed it, I was Mr. Melbury and
-sir; when we were alone together we reverted to the habits of Greeley’s
-Slip and the Down and Out, and I became Slim and sonny.
-
-I was truly sorry to leave the club, for its simple, brotherly ways,
-wholesome and masculine, if never the most refined, had become curiously
-a part of me. I had liked the fellowship with rough men who were perhaps
-all the more human for being rough. For the first time in my life I had
-known something of genuine fraternity. I do not affirm that we lived
-together without disagreements or misunderstandings or that there were no
-minutes electric with the tension that makes for an all-round fight. But
-there was always some “wise guy,” as we called him, to make peace among
-us; and on the whole we lived together with a mutual courtesy that proved
-to me once for all that it is nothing external which makes a gentleman.
-Finer gentlemen in the essentials of the word I never met than some of
-those who were just struggling up from the seemingly bottomless pit.
-
-Thus the summer of 1913 became for me a very happy one. There were
-reserves to that happiness, and there were fears; but the optimism most
-of us bring to the day’s work enabled me to face them. Of Regina Barry I
-heard much from my friend Cantyre, and I made what I heard suffice me. He
-was always willing to talk of this girl, whom he never named; and little
-by little I formed an image in my heart, which would never be anywhere
-but in my heart as long as I could help it. As long as I could help it
-I should not see her, nor should she see me. As to that I was now quite
-positive. Nothing could be gained by my seeing her, while by her seeing
-me everything might be lost.
-
-If everything was lost in one way I was sure it would be lost in another.
-Because I have said little or nothing of the fight I was making you
-must not suppose that I was free from the necessity of making it. I was
-making it every day and hour. There were times when, if I hadn’t had
-Lovey to think of, I should have yielded to that suggestion which had
-come to me as neatly as it had come to him of having a little fall. Falls
-were far from unknown among us. They were accepted as an unhappy matter
-of course. Some of our steadiest members had made full use of the three
-times the law of the club allowed them before finally settling down. I
-believed that I could exercise this privilege—and come back. But not so
-with Lovey! Once he failed in this attempt, I knew he would be gone. As
-a matter of fact, he would have failed at any time after the first week
-if it hadn’t been on my account; so I couldn’t fail on his. When I would
-have done it eagerly, wildly, I was withheld by the old-fashioned motto
-of _noblesse oblige_.
-
-And yet in proportion as I grew stronger I realized more clearly that
-my future was, as it were, balanced on the point of a pin. Once I had
-met Regina Barry, and her eyes had said, “You are the man who stole my
-gold-mesh purse,” I knew it would be all up with me. She wouldn’t have to
-say a word. Her look would bring the accusation. Then, if I was weak I
-should go off and get drunk; I should drink till I drank myself to death.
-If I was strong I should shoot myself. There was just one thing of which
-I was sure—I should never face that silent charge a second time.
-
-But as the weeks went by and nothing happened I began to be confident
-that nothing would. We reached the end of September and I never heard
-Regina Barry’s name. Even Cantyre hadn’t told me that, and didn’t suppose
-that I knew it. I calculated the chances against our ever meeting.
-I built something, too, on the possibility that were we to meet she
-wouldn’t know me again.
-
-In this I got encouragement from the fact that one day in Fifth Avenue I
-met my uncle Van Elstine. He didn’t know me. He wouldn’t have cut me for
-anything in the world; he was too good-natured and kind; but he let his
-wandering gaze rest on me as on any passing stranger, and went on his
-way. I argued then that time, vicissitude, a hard life, and a mustache
-had worked an effective disguise. If my own uncle, who had known me
-all my life, could go by like that, how much more one to whom I could
-be nothing but a sinister shadow seen for three or four minutes in a
-rose-colored gloom.
-
-So I reasoned and became a little comforted. And then one day my
-arguments were put to the test.
-
-It was quite at the end of September. The memorial was now so nearly
-completed that Coningsby, who had returned to town, left it almost
-entirely to my charge. A new bit of work at Atlantic City having come
-his way, he was closely absorbed in it. Mrs. Grace had motored up once
-or twice to consult me as to papers, rugs, and other details of interior
-decoration. I found her a grave, beautiful woman who gave the impression
-of nourishing something that lasts longer than grief—a deep regret. Our
-intercourse was friendly but impersonal.
-
-Once she was accompanied by a young lady whose voice I recognized as they
-approached the room in which I was at work. It was a clear, bell-like,
-staccato voice, whose tones would have made my heart stop still had I
-heard it in heaven. Mrs. Grace entered the room, followed by a girl as
-Anglo-Saxon in type as her brother, only with a decision and precision in
-the manner which he had not.
-
-In my confusion I was uncertain as to whether or not there was an
-introduction, but I remember her saying: “Oh, Mr. Melbury, Ralph is so
-indebted to you for all the help you’ve given him. He says if it hadn’t
-been for you he wouldn’t have been able to get away from New York this
-summer.”
-
-She, too, regarded me impersonally, as her brother’s assistant, and no
-more. I mean by that that she showed none of the interest good people
-generally display in a brand that has been plucked from the burning.
-
-“Is it possible she doesn’t know it?” I asked Cantyre the next time I saw
-him.
-
-“Of course she doesn’t. That would be the last thing Coningsby would tell
-her. We never speak of these things outside the club. If a fellow likes
-to do it himself—well, that’s his own affair.”
-
-But early in October I came face to face with it all.
-
-I was standing at one of the upper windows, looking down into Blankney
-Place, when I saw a motor drive up to the door. I knew it was Mrs.
-Grace’s motor, having seen it a number of times already. When the footman
-held open the door Mrs. Grace herself stepped out, to be followed by Miss
-Coningsby, who in turn was followed by....
-
-I strolled away from the window into the interior of the house. I was not
-so much calm as numb. There were details about which I had to speak to
-Mrs. Grace, but they all went out of my mind. They went out of my mind
-as matters with which I had no more concern. A dying man might feel that
-way about the earthly things he is leaving behind. I was, in fact, not
-so much like a dying man as like a man who in the full flush of vigor is
-told that he must in a few minutes face the firing-squad.
-
-So I stood doing nothing, thinking nothing, while I listened to the three
-voices as they floated up, first from the lower floor, then from the
-stairway, then from the floor on which I was waiting in this seeming
-nervelessness.
-
-They drifted nearer—Mrs. Grace’s gentle tones, Elsie Coningsby’s silvery
-tinkle, and then the rich mezzo, which by association of ideas seemed to
-shed round me a rose-colored light.
-
-Mrs. Grace and Miss Coningsby came in together, the one in black, the
-other in white. Both bade me a friendly, impersonal good morning, while
-Mrs. Grace proceeded at once to the question of rugs. Didn’t I think that
-good serviceable American rugs, with some of those nice Oriental druggets
-people used in summer cottages, would be better than anything more
-fragile and expensive?
-
-I made such answers as I could, keeping my eyes on the door. Presently
-she appeared on the threshold, looking about with interest and curiosity
-in her great, dark eyes. Of the minute I retain no more than a vision in
-rough green English tweed, with a goldish-greenish motoring-veil round
-the head like a nimbus. She impressed me as at once more delicate and
-more strong than I remembered her—eager, alert, independent.
-
-“This is to be the men’s smoking-room,” Miss Coningsby explained.
-
-“Wouldn’t you know it?” Miss Barry said, lightly. “One of the nicest
-rooms in the house—I think the very nicest. It’s wonderful how well men
-do themselves, isn’t it?”
-
-“Oh, but in this case it’s Hilda.”
-
-“It’s your brother first of all. You’ll see. It will be the snuggest
-corner of the whole place, and they won’t let a woman look into it.”
-
-She glanced at me—but casually. She glanced again—but casually again. As
-no one introduced me, a greeting between us was not called for. But when
-Mrs. Grace finished her questions about the rugs and they were passing
-into the next room, Regina Barry turned and looked at me a third time. It
-was now an inquiring look, and significant.
-
-“Elsie, who’s that man?” I heard her say, after she had joined her
-companions.
-
-The reply gave my name.
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“He’s been helping Ralph all summer. That’s how he and Esther were able
-to get away.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Now we’re going on to the day nursery—”
-
-But Regina Barry said: “Wait a minute! No; go on. I’ll overtake you.
-I’m—I’m perfectly sure that that’s the very man who—” She added, as if
-forcing herself to a determination: “I’m going back to speak to him. Tell
-Hilda I’ll be with her in an instant.”
-
-So I waited, repeating to myself the formula agreed on two or three
-months before, that I would see her first—and shoot myself afterward.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER IX_
-
-
-“Haven’t we met before?”
-
-Regina Barry said this as she came into the room with her rapid, easy
-movement and took two or three paces toward me, stopping as abruptly as
-she entered.
-
-I hung my head, crimsoning slowly.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I thought so, though I didn’t recognize you at first. I knew I had some
-association with you, but it was so vague—”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Then I had no idea you were an architect.”
-
-“How could you?”
-
-“You see, meeting you for so short a time—”
-
-“And practically in the dark—”
-
-“I don’t remember that. But I had no chance to ask anything about you. I
-only hoped you’d come back.”
-
-“Oh, I couldn’t have done that.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“I should think you’d understand.”
-
-“I don’t—considering that I asked you particularly.”
-
-“I know you asked me particularly, but anything in life—or death—would
-have been easier than to obey you.”
-
-“What did I do to frighten you so?”
-
-“Nothing but show me too much mercy.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t think anything of that.”
-
-“Of what? Of the crime—or of the forgiveness?”
-
-“Of the crime, of course.”
-
-I stepped back from her in amazement.
-
-“You didn’t think anything of—”
-
-“Why, no! I’ve often done the same myself.”
-
-“You? You’ve often done—”
-
-“Of course! Everybody has—at one time or another in their lives.
-Naturally it doesn’t happen every day—and one wouldn’t want it to.
-One wouldn’t have anything left in the house if it did; but once in a
-way—it’s nothing. What astonishes me is that you should have thought of
-it.”
-
-“But—but you’ve thought of it.”
-
-“Oh, well—that’s different. But please don’t suppose that I’ve thought
-of it seriously. It simply happened that that evening—” The only sign of
-embarrassment she gave was in grasping the greenish-goldish veil with her
-left hand and pulling it round over her bosom. The great eyes, of which
-the light made one doubtful as to the color, glowed feverishly, and the
-long scarlet lips threw at me one of their daring, challenging smiles.
-“Do you want me to be absolutely frank?”
-
-“We began with frankness, didn’t we? Why shouldn’t we keep it up?”
-
-“Well, it happened that that evening I’d broken off my engagement.”
-
-Not to betray all I had learned by my eavesdropping behind the
-rose-colored hangings, I merely said, “Indeed?”
-
-“Yes; and so I was a little—well, perhaps a little excited. And anything
-that happened impressed me more than it would have done ordinarily.
-If I’ve thought of the way you appeared—and what happened when you
-did—it’s only been because it was part of the hours right after—” There
-was another of those smiles that were amusingly apologetic as well as
-amusingly provocative. “You’re—you’re not married, are you?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Nor engaged?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Ever been?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Then you can’t imagine what it is to have been engaged and nearly
-married—and then to find yourself free again. Everything associated with
-the minute comes to be imprinted on your memory. That’s why I’ve thought
-of it, though I didn’t for the minute recognize you as the man.”
-
-“And now that you have recognized me—”
-
-“I hope you’ll do as I asked you before, and come and see us again.” She
-added, as she was about to turn away, “How’s Annette?”
-
-I had been puzzled hitherto; I was now bewildered.
-
-“You mean Annette Van Elstine? Did you know she was my cousin?”
-
-“Of course! Didn’t she bring you?”
-
-“Bring me?” I stammered. “Bring me—where?”
-
-“Why, to our house!”
-
-“When?”
-
-“The time we’re talking about—when you upset Mrs. Sillinger’s coffee and
-broke the cup.”
-
-It is difficult to say whether I was relieved or not. I could only
-falter, “I—I don’t believe I’m the man.”
-
-She came back two or three steps toward me.
-
-“Why, of course you’re the man! Isn’t your name Melbury?”
-
-“Yes—but—but I’m not the only Melbury. Could it have been my—my brother,
-Jack?”
-
-“What’s your name?”
-
-“Frank.”
-
-She gazed at me a minute before saying: “Then—then I think it must have
-been—your brother. I remember now that Annette did call him Jack.” She
-continued, “But what did you mean when—when you said it was you?”
-
-“Don’t you know?”
-
-“I haven’t the remotest idea.”
-
-“Look at me again.”
-
-“I can’t look at you again, because I’m looking at you all the time.
-You’re most wonderfully like your brother.”
-
-“I don’t think I am. I met my uncle Van Elstine in the street the other
-day and he didn’t know me.”
-
-“Oh, well, strangers often see resemblances that escape members of a
-family. All I get by looking at you is that I see your brother. He was
-awfully nice. We so—we so wished he’d come back. He—he wasn’t like
-everybody else.”
-
-“He’s married now.”
-
-I wonder if I am right in thinking that a slight shadow crossed her face.
-There may have been, too, a forced jauntiness in her tone as she said,
-“Oh, is he?”
-
-I nodded.
-
-She turned away again, but again wheeled half round to face me.
-
-“Well, now we know what I meant; but what on earth did you mean?”
-
-I drew myself up for real inspection.
-
-“Can’t you think?”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“I must say you seemed inordinately penitent over a broken cup, even if
-Mrs. Sillinger was so cross. She said you spilled the coffee all over her
-dress; but you didn’t.”
-
-“You mean Jack.”
-
-“Oh yes! What a bother! I shall always get you mixed up in the future.”
-
-“I hope not—for his sake.”
-
-“Now don’t tease me. Tell me where we met.”
-
-“If I do—”
-
-She brightened, the smile of the scarlet lips growing vividly brilliant.
-
-“I know. It was at the Millings’, at Tarrytown.”
-
-“I’m afraid not.”
-
-“Then it was at the Wynfords’, at Old Westbury? They always have so many
-people there—”
-
-“Think again.”
-
-“What’s the good of thinking when, if I could remember you, I should do
-it right away?”
-
-“It seems extraordinary to me that you can have forgotten.”
-
-“You seem very sure of the impression you made on me.”
-
-“I am.”
-
-“And I’ve forgotten all about it!”
-
-“You haven’t forgotten the impression; you’ve only forgotten me.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Melbury, tell me! Please! I’ve got to run off and overtake Mrs.
-Grace; and I can’t do it unless I know.”
-
-You will admit that my duty at this juncture required some considering.
-In the end I said: “I sha’n’t tell you to-day. I may do it later. In
-any case, I’ve given you so many tips that you can’t fail to see for
-yourself what they lead to. You’ll probably have recalled by to-night.”
-
-“Then I shall ring you up to-morrow and tell you.”
-
-“No, please don’t do that; and yet, on second thoughts, I know that when
-you’ve remembered you won’t want to.”
-
-She said, while withdrawing again toward the adjoining room, “You
-certainly know how to make a thing mysterious.”
-
-“I’m not making anything mysterious. You’ll see that, after it’s all come
-back to you.”
-
-But, having passed into the next room, she returned to the threshold to
-say: “I know you’re only making fun of me. I never met you, because I
-couldn’t have forgotten you. And I couldn’t have forgotten you, because
-you’re so like your brother. But we’ll talk about it all some other time.”
-
-The first thing I did was to go to a room where there was a full-length
-mirror fixed to the wall and examine myself in the glass. Was it possible
-that I had changed so much in the brief space of four months? The
-reflection told me nothing. In the tall, slim figure in the neat gray
-check I could still see the sinister fellow who had slept at Greeley’s
-Slip and skulked about the Park and crept into a house at midnight.
-The transformation had come so imperceptibly that the one image was
-no more vital to me than the other. Inwardly, too, I felt no great
-assurance against a relapse. I was like an insect toiling up a slippery
-perpendicular. Not only was each step difficult, but it might in the
-end land me at the bottom where I began. In other words, I had still
-within me the potentialities of the drunkard; and to the drunkard all
-aberrations are possible.
-
-That night I put the question up to Lovey.
-
-“Lovey, do I look the same as I did four or five months ago?”
-
-“You looks just as good to me, sonny.”
-
-“Yes, but suppose you hadn’t seen me in the mean while, and had come on
-me all of a sudden, would you know right off that it was me?”
-
-“Slim, if I was blind and deaf and dumb, and couldn’t see nothink nor
-’ear nothink nor feel nothink, I’d know it was you if you come ’arf a
-mile from where I was.”
-
-Since this intuitiveness was of no help to me, I worked round to the
-subject when, later in the evening, I had gone in to smoke a good-night
-pipe with Cantyre.
-
-He had a neat little corner suite which gave one a cheery view of the
-traffic in Madison Avenue north and south by a mere shifting of the eyes.
-I sat in the projecting semicircle that commanded this because, after
-my own outlook into an airshaft, I enjoyed the twinkling of the lights.
-To me the real Ville Lumière is New York. It scatters lights with the
-prodigal richness with which the heaven scatters stars. It strings them
-in long lines; it banks them in towering façades; it flings them in
-handfuls up into the darkness; it writes them on the sky. Twilight offers
-you a special beauty because, wherever you are in the city, it brings
-out for you in one window or another that first wan, primrose-colored
-beacon—in some ways more beautiful than the evening star. Behind the
-star you don’t know what there is, while behind the light there is a
-palpitating history. Then as you look down from some high perch other
-histories light their lamps, till within half an hour the whole town is
-ablaze with them—a light for every life-tale—as in pious places there is
-one for every shrine.
-
-Those who were looking at ours saw nothing but a green-shaded lamp, and
-yet it lit up such bits of drama as Cantyre’s and mine. So behind every
-other shining star, in tower or tenement, dwelling-house or hotel, there
-was tragedy, comedy, adventure, farce, or romance, all in multifold
-complexity, while before each human story there glowed this tranquil fire.
-
-If I had not been an architect, with a knowledge of interior decoration
-as part of my profession, I might not have been worried by the sybaritic
-note in Cantyre’s rooms. Being fond of flowers, he had sheaves of
-gladioluses and chrysanthemums wherever he could stack them. Over the
-tables he threw bits of beautiful old brocades, ineffable in color.
-Framed and glazed, a seventeenth-century chasuble embroidered in
-carnations did duty as a fire-screen. Japanese pottery grotesques and
-Barye bronzes jostled one another on the mantelpiece and low bookcases,
-while the latter housed rows of handsome volumes bound to suit Cantyre’s
-special taste and stamped with his initials. He himself, stretched in a
-long chair, wore a dressing-gown of an indescribable shade of plum faced
-with an equally indescribable shade of blue. The plum socks and blue
-leather slippers couldn’t have been an accident; and as I had dropped in
-on him unexpectedly I knew that all this _recherche_ was not to dazzle
-any one—I could have forgiven that—but for his own enjoyment.
-
-No one could have been kinder to me than he was—and I liked him. I
-reminded myself that it was none of my business if his tastes were
-fastidious, and that to spend his money this way was better than in
-lounging about bar-rooms, as I had done; and yet I could understand
-that a girl like Regina Barry should be impatient of these traits in a
-husband.
-
-I sat, however, with my back to it all, astride of a small chair, my pipe
-in my mouth, looking down on the lights and traffic.
-
-Breaking a long silence, I said, as casually as I could do it: “I met
-Sterling Barry’s daughter the other day—Miss Regina Barry, her name is,
-isn’t it?”
-
-Vague, restless movements preceded the laconic response, “Where?”
-
-“She came to the memorial with Mrs. Grace.”
-
-Hearing him strike a match, I knew he was making an effort at sang-froid
-by lighting a cigarette.
-
-“Did you—did you—think her—pretty?”
-
-“Pretty wouldn’t be the word.”
-
-“Beautiful?”
-
-“Nor beautiful.”
-
-“What then?”
-
-“No word that I know would be adequate. You might say fascinating if it
-hadn’t been vulgarized; and chic would be worse.”
-
-“She’s tremendously animated—and vivid.”
-
-“She has the most living eyes and mouth I’ve ever seen in a human being.
-I’ve never seen a face so aglow with mind, emotion, and color. She’s all
-flame, but a flame like that of the burning bush, afire from a force
-within.”
-
-He spoke bitterly. “And people talk about that being conquered!”
-
-To lead him further I said, “Has any one talked of it?”
-
-“Didn’t you know?”
-
-“How should I know? You—you’ve never told me.”
-
-“Well, I’m—I’m telling you now.”
-
-My sympathy was quite genuine.
-
-“Thanks, old boy. I can see—I can see how hard it must have gone with
-you.”
-
-“How hard it’s going, Frank. There’s a difference in tense. If you knew
-her better—”
-
-“I’m not sure that I care to know her better; and that, old man, isn’t
-said out of rudeness. I don’t belong to her world any more; and I’d
-rather not try to get back into it.”
-
-“Oh, get out! As a matter of fact I’m going to take you to see her.”
-
-“You needn’t do that, because she asked me to come.”
-
-“Right off the bat like that? The first time she’d ever seen you?”
-
-“It wasn’t exactly that. She knew my brother Jack; and my cousin, Annette
-van Elstine, is a friend of hers.”
-
-“Annette van Elstine is your cousin? Why didn’t you tell me that before?”
-
-“Oh, for reasons. I should think you’d see. Why should I claim Annette as
-a cousin? One of the smartest women in New York, I’m told she is.”
-
-“One of the very smartest. She could do anything for you.”
-
-“So there you are! When you think of what I was when you first met
-me—what I am still, really—” It seemed to me, however, that I had found
-my opening, so I went on in another vein. “I met Annette’s father in the
-street one day, not long ago, and he went by without recognizing me. Have
-I changed very much—since the spring?”
-
-“I should know you anywhere, Frank; but Coningsby and Christian were
-saying last week that they wouldn’t take you to be the same man any more.”
-
-“Did they mean morally—or physically?”
-
-“Oh, they meant in looks. They said they’d never seen any one in whom
-good clothes and a straight life had so thoroughly created a new man.”
-
-“So that you think my uncle might reasonably—”
-
-“Pass you without recognition? Oh, Lord, yes! Besides, your mustache
-changes you a lot. I’d shave that off again if I were you; and you want
-to get back to your old self.”
-
-To end the subject I said merely: “I’m glad to hear that I don’t look as
-I did; because—because I shouldn’t like to think that the good old fellow
-had cut me.”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER X_
-
-
-My problem was now as to how to tell Regina Barry who I was; and it would
-have been more urgent had I not felt sure that sooner or later she must
-guess. Indeed, she might have guessed already. I had no means of knowing.
-During the four or five days since her visit to the memorial no echo of
-our meeting had come back to me.
-
-But I was not left long in doubt.
-
-The William Grace Memorial was now practically ready for furnishing.
-Mrs. Grace was about to move back to town in order to undertake the
-task. Coningsby and I were going through the rooms one day with an eye
-to details that might have been overlooked when he said, “Well, there
-doesn’t seem much more for you to do here, does there?”
-
-I replied that as far as any further need of my services was concerned I
-might knock off work there and then—thanking him for all his help through
-the summer.
-
-“And now,” he went on, “I should like you to come in on this job at
-Atlantic City if you’d care to. You see, you and I understand each other;
-we speak the same language both professionally and socially; and it’s not
-so easy as you might think to pick up a chap of whom you can say that.
-Why not come up to our little place—say to-morrow night—and dine with us,
-and we could talk it over? My wife told me to ask you.”
-
-Knowing that Coningsby had been aware of the state of my wardrobe a few
-months earlier, I blushed to the roots of my hair as I put the question:
-“What shall I wear? Tails—or a dinner jacket and black tie?”
-
-“Oh, a dinner jacket. There’ll be just ourselves.”
-
-But when I went I found not only my host and hostess, but Regina Barry to
-make the party square.
-
-The Coningsbys lived on the top floor of an apartment-house on the summit
-of the ridge between the west side of the Park and the Hudson. Below
-them lay a picturesque tumble of roofs running down to the river, beyond
-which the abrupt New Jersey heights drew a long straight line against the
-horizon. Sunset and moonset were the special beauties of the site, with
-the swift and ceaseless current to add life and mystery to the outlook.
-
-The apartment differed from Cantyre’s in that its simplicity would have
-been bare had it not produced an impression of containing just enough.
-The walls of the drawing-room were of a pale-gold ocher against which
-every spot of color told for its full value. On this background the green
-of chairs, the rose of lamp-shades, the mahogany of tables, and the
-satinwood of cabinets pleased and rested the eye. There were no pictures
-in the room but a portrait of Mrs. Coningsby, which one of the great
-artists of the day had painted for her as a gift. In its richness of
-copper-colored hair and diaphanous jade-green draperies the room got all
-the decoration it required.
-
-I had heard Regina Barry’s voice on entering, and knew that I was up
-against my fate. That is to say, the revolver lay ready in my desk.
-Knowing that such a meeting as this must occur some time, I was in
-earnest as to using the weapon on the day when her eyes accused me. As I
-took off my overcoat and hat and laid them on a settle in the hall, I
-said I should probably do it when I went home that night. It would depend
-on how she looked at me.
-
-Meeting me at the door of the drawing-room, Mrs. Coningsby was sweet and
-kindly in her welcome without being over-demonstrative. I had heard of
-her beauty, but was not prepared for anything so magnificent. Her height,
-her complexion, her hair, her free movements—were those of a goddess. I
-liked and admired Coningsby; but I wondered how even he had caught this
-Atalanta and imprisoned her in a flat on the west side of New York.
-
-“You know Miss Barry, don’t you?” were the words with which she directed
-me toward the end of the room, where the other guest was seated in a low
-arm-chair by a corner of the fireplace.
-
-So the supreme moment came. I went the length of the room knowing that I
-was facing it.
-
-I suppose it is instinct that tells women how to avoid comparisons with
-each other by creating contrasts. Knowing that in competition with her
-hostess she would have everything to lose, Miss Barry used Mrs. Coningsby
-as a foil. In other words, she had divined the fact that her friend would
-be in black with a spangling of blue-green sequins, and so had enhanced
-her own vividness by dressing in a bright rose-red. What she lacked in
-beauty, therefore, she made up in a brilliancy that stood out against the
-pale-gold ocher background with the force of a flaming flower.
-
-As I stooped to take the hand she held up languidly I tried to search
-her eyes. They told me nothing. The fire in them seemed not exactly to
-have gone out, but to have been hidden behind some veil of film through
-which one could get nothing but a glow. Had she meant to baffle me she
-couldn’t have done it more effectively; but, as I learned later, she
-meant nothing of the kind. Her greeting, as far as I could judge of it,
-was precisely that which she would have accorded to any other diner-out.
-
-During the exchange of commonplaces that ensued there were two things I
-noticed with curiosity and uneasiness. She wore the string of pearls I
-had seen once before—had had in my pocket, as a matter of fact—and the
-long diamond bar-pin. As to her rings I could not be sure, having on the
-night when I meant to steal them noticed nothing but their number. But
-the pearls and the diamonds arrested my attention—and my questionings.
-Was she wearing them on purpose? Was she holding them up as silent
-reminders between her and me? Was I to understand from merely looking at
-them the charge her eyes refused to convey?
-
-I had no means of seeking an answer to these questions, because Coningsby
-came in and the process of being welcomed had to be gone through again.
-Moreover, the commonplaces which, when carried on _à deux_, might have
-led to something more personal remained as commonplaces and no more when
-tossed about _à quatre_.
-
-On our going in to dinner the same tone was maintained, and I learned
-nothing from any interchange of looks. There was, in fact, no interchange
-of looks. Miss Barry talked to her right and to her left, but rarely
-across the table. When it became necessary to speak a word directly to
-me she did it with so hasty a glance that it might easily not have been
-a glance at all. The burning eyes that had watched me so intently on our
-first meeting, and studied me with so much laughing curiosity on our
-second, kept themselves hidden. Since it was on them that I had reckoned
-to tell me what I was so eager to be sure of, I was like a man who hopes
-to look through a window and finds it darkened by curtains.
-
-After dinner, however, I got an opportunity. Coningsby and his wife were
-summoned to the nursery to discuss the manifestations of some childish
-ailment. Miss Barry and I being left alone before the fire, I was able to
-say, “Well, have you thought of it?”
-
-Some of the customary vivacity returned to her lips and eyes. She had at
-no time seemed unkindly—only absent and rather dreamy. She was rather
-dreamy still, but more on the spot mentally.
-
-“Thought of what?”
-
-“Of—of where we first met.”
-
-“Oh, that! I’m sorry to say I’ve been too busy to do any searching in my
-memory. But one of these days I must.”
-
-There was no mistaking the sincerity of her tone. She had not searched in
-her memory; she had not considered it worth while. Her interest in our
-meeting at the memorial had probably passed before she had driven away.
-
-I must plead guilty to feeling piqued. That she should be so much in
-my mind and that I should occupy so small a place in hers not only
-disappointed but annoyed me. I said to myself, “Oh, well, if she cares
-so little there is no reason why I should care more.” Aloud I made it:
-“Please don’t bother about it. One of these days the recollection will
-come back to you of its own accord.”
-
-“Yes; I dare say.” She went on without transition, “Whom did your brother
-marry?”
-
-I told her.
-
-“He wasn’t like everybody else,” she pursued. “I wonder—I wonder if you
-are?”
-
-“Wouldn’t that depend on what you mean by being like everybody else? I
-don’t know that I get your standard.”
-
-“Oh, men are so much alike. There’s no more difference between them than
-between so many beans in a bottle.”
-
-“I don’t see that. To my mind they’re all distinct from one another.”
-
-“In little ways, yes. But when it comes to the big ways—”
-
-“What are the big ways?”
-
-She weighed this, a forefinger against a cheek.
-
-“The big ways are those which indicate character, aren’t they? While the
-little ones only make for habits. Men differ as to their habits, but in
-character they’re all cut on the same pattern—two or three patterns at
-most.”
-
-“But can’t you say the same of women?”
-
-“Very likely; only I don’t have to marry a woman.”
-
-Since she had become personal, I ventured to do the same.
-
-“Oh, so it’s a question of marriage!”
-
-“What other question is there when a girl like me is twenty-three?
-One has to decide that tiresome bit of business before one can tackle
-anything else.”
-
-I grew bolder.
-
-“Decide as to whom to marry—or whether or not to marry at all?”
-
-“Suppose I said as to whether or not to marry at all?”
-
-“You mean that you’d like advice?”
-
-“I’d listen to advice—if you’ve any to give.”
-
-I gathered all my strength together for the most tremendous effort of my
-life.
-
-“Then, I should say this: That there are men in the world different from
-any you’ve ever seen yet. Wait!”
-
-She laughed—an intelligent laugh, full of music, mirth, and comprehension.
-
-“Do you know, that reminds me of something awfully strange that happened
-to me a few months ago? Some one else said just those words to me—or,
-rather, wrote them down.”
-
-I pulled my chair so that her eyes rested on me more directly.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Oh, I can’t tell you. I said I never would—so I mustn’t. I should love
-to—though I never shall.”
-
-“Was it—interesting?”
-
-“Thrilling! But there! I’m not going to tell you. I shouldn’t have
-mentioned it if what you say hadn’t been so oddly like—”
-
-But Coningsby came back into the room to ask if Miss Barry wouldn’t join
-his wife in the nursery to see little Rufus while he was awake. In the
-mean time he and I would retire to his own snuggery and talk business.
-
-While I followed his account of the hotel he was building sufficiently to
-get his ideas and to know what he expected of me, I was saying to myself:
-“She doesn’t know me. She doesn’t know me at all. It never occurs to her
-as a possibility that the man who wrote those words is the one she is now
-asked to meet at dinner. How am I ever to get the nerve to let her know?”
-
-When I found the opportunity I put the question, “Have your wife and Miss
-Barry any idea about me?”
-
-“About you? You mean about—”
-
-“The Down and Out.”
-
-“Lord, no! What would be the good of that?”
-
-“The only good would be that—that I shouldn’t be sailing under false
-colors.”
-
-“False colors be hanged! We’ve all got a right to the privacy of our
-private lives. You don’t go nosing into any one else’s soul; why should
-any one else go nosing into yours? Why, if I were to tell my wife all I
-could tell her about myself I should be ashamed to come home.”
-
-I knew this argument, and yet when I came to apply it to my attitude
-toward Regina Barry I was not satisfied.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XI_
-
-
-A few days later I was surprised to receive a note from Annette van
-Elstine. It ran:
-
- DEAR FRANK,—I have just heard that you are in New York—that you
- have been here some time. Why did you never come to see me? It
- was not kind. And didn’t you know that your mother has been
- heartbroken over your disappearance? Jerry and Jack knew you
- were somewhere in this country, but they’ve kept your mother in
- the dark. What does it all mean? Come to tea with me—just me—on
- Friday afternoon at five, and tell me all about it.
-
- Your affectionate
-
- ANNETTE.
-
-As this was the first bit of connection with my own family since Jerry
-had practically kicked me down his steps, I was deeply perturbed by it.
-I am not without natural affection, and yet I seemed to have died to the
-old life as completely as Lovey to that with his daughters. I had never
-forgotten Jerry’s words: “And now get out. Don’t let any of us ever see
-your face or hear your name again.”
-
-The very fact that he was justified had roused the foolish remnant of my
-pride.
-
-I had loved my mother; I had reverenced my father; though my brothers
-were indifferent to me, I had felt a genuine tenderness for my sisters.
-But since that night on Jerry’s steps it had been to me as if I had put
-myself on one side of a flood and left them on the other, and that there
-was no magic skiff that would carry me back whence I came. I cannot say
-that I grieved for them; and it was the last of my thoughts that they
-would grieve for me. I accepted the condition that we were dead to each
-other, and tried to bury memory.
-
-And now came this first stirring of resurrection. It hurt me. I didn’t
-want it. It was like the return of life to a frozen limb. Numbness was
-preferable to anguish.
-
-“Lovey,” I said, as the old man hung about me when I was undressing that
-night, “how would you feel if one of your daughters—”
-
-He raised himself from the task of pulling off my boots, which to humor
-him I allowed him to perform, and looked at me in terror.
-
-“They ain’t—they ain’t after me?”
-
-“No, no! But suppose they were—wouldn’t you like to see them?”
-
-He dropped the boot he held in his hand.
-
-“Y’ain’t goin’ to ’ave them ’unted up for me, Slim?”
-
-“I don’t know anything about them, Lovey. That isn’t my point at all. But
-suppose—just suppose—you could see them again; would you do it?”
-
-He shook his bald head.
-
-“They’re dead to me. I’m dead to them. If we was to see each other now
-’twouldn’t be nothink but diggin’ up a corpse.”
-
-“Nothink but diggin’ up a corpse,” I repeated to myself as I turned east
-from Fifth Avenue, leaving the brown trees of the Park behind me, and
-took the few steps necessary to reach my uncle Van Elstine’s door. He
-had married my mother’s sister, and during the lifetime of my aunt the
-families had been fairly intimate. Of late years they had drifted apart,
-as families will, though touch-and-go relations were still maintained.
-
-I have to admit that while waiting for Annette in the library up-stairs I
-was nervous. I was coming back to that family life in which I should have
-interests, affections, cares, responsibilities. For the past three years
-I had had no one to think of but myself; and if in that freedom there
-were heartaches, there were no complexities.
-
-Though it was not yet dark, the curtains were drawn and the room was
-lighted not only by a shaded lamp, but by the flicker of a fire. When
-Annette, wearing a tea-gown, appeared at last in the doorway she stood
-for a second to examine me.
-
-“Why, Jack!” she exclaimed, then. “I didn’t know you were in New York.
-Have you brought Frank with you?”
-
-“I am Frank,” I laughed, going forward to offer my hand. “I didn’t know
-Jack and I were so much alike. But you’re the second person who has said
-it within a few days.”
-
-“It’s your mustache, I think,” she explained as we shook hands. “I never
-saw you wear one before.”
-
-“I never did.”
-
-“Do sit down. They’ll bring tea in a minute. I’m so glad to see you. But
-if it’s not a rude question, tell me why you’ve been here all this time
-and never let me know.”
-
-It would be difficult to define the conditions which made Annette at the
-age of thirty-three what Cantyre styled one of the smartest women in New
-York, but the minute you saw her you felt that it was so. My uncle Van
-Elstine was only comfortably off; their house was not large; though they
-entertained a good deal, their manner of living was not showy. But my
-aunt Van Elstine had established the tradition—some women have the art
-of doing it—that whatever she had and did and said was “the thing,” and
-Annette, as her only child and heiress, had kept it up.
-
-As far as I could understand the matter, which had been explained to
-me once or twice, my aunt was exclusive. In the rush of the newly come
-and the rise of the newly rich, which marked the last quarter of the
-nineteenth century in New York, she and a few like-minded friends had
-made it their business to pick and choose and form what might literally
-be called an _élite_. By 1913, however, the _élite_ was not only formed
-but founded on a rock as firm as the granite of Manhattan, and Annette’s
-picking and choosing could be on another principle. Hers was that more
-civilized American tendency to know every one worth knowing, which is
-still largely confined, so they tell me, to Washington and New York.
-Where her mother had withdrawn Annette went forward. Her _flair_ for the
-important or the soon to be important was unerring. Hers was one of the
-few drawing-rooms through which every one interesting, both domestic and
-foreign, was bound at some time to pass. Being frankly and unrestrainedly
-curious, she kept in touch with the small as well as with the great,
-with the young as well as with the old, maintaining an enormous
-correspondence, and getting out of her correspondents every ounce of
-entertainment they could yield her. On her side she repaid them by often
-lending them a helping hand.
-
-The warmth of her greeting now was due not to the fact that I was her
-cousin, but to her belief that I had been up to something. It was always
-those who had been up to something with whom she was most eager to come
-heart to heart. Without temptations of her own, as far as I could ever
-see, she got from the indiscretions of others the same sort of pleasure
-that a scientist finds in studying the wrigglings of microbes under a
-microscope.
-
-Having some inkling of this, I answered her questions not untruthfully,
-but with reservations, saying that I had not come to see her because I
-had been down on my luck.
-
-“And how did you come to be down on your luck?”
-
-“Can’t you guess?”
-
-“You don’t look it now.”
-
-“I’ve been doing better lately. I’ve made two or three friends who’ve
-given me a hand.” Carrying the attack in her direction, I asked, “How did
-you hear that I was in New York?”
-
-“Hilda Grace told me. She said you’d been working on that memorial of
-hers. She thought it awfully strange—you won’t think me rude in repeating
-it?—that a man like you should be only in a secondary position.”
-
-“If she knew how glad I was to get that—”
-
-She changed the subject abruptly.
-
-“When did you last hear from home?”
-
-I thought it sufficient to say: “Not for a long time. I may as well admit
-that nowadays I never hear from home at all.”
-
-“And, if it’s not a rude question, why don’t you?”
-
-“Partly, I suppose, because I don’t write.”
-
-“So I understood from Jack. But, Frank dear, do you think it kind?”
-
-I broke in with the question, the answer to which I had really come to
-get, “When did you last see Jack?”
-
-“About eighteen months ago; just before he was married. He knew you were
-somewhere about, but he wasn’t confidential on the subject.”
-
-“No; he wouldn’t be. Did he seem all right?”
-
-“Quite; and awfully in love with Mary Sweet. What’s she like, really?”
-
-I described my new sister-in-law as I remembered her, going on to say:
-“I suppose you gave Jack a good time. Did you—did you take him about
-anywhere?”
-
-“Let me see. I took him to—where was it? I took him to the
-Wynfords’—and—and—oh, yes!—to the Barrys’. And it’s too funny! I really
-think Regina fell in love with him at first sight. For a month or two
-she questioned me about him every time we met. Then all of a sudden she
-stopped. If she was struck by the thunderbolt, as the French put it—well,
-all I can say is that it serves her right.”
-
-“Serves her right—what for?”
-
-“Oh, the way she’s carried on. It’s disgraceful. Do you know her? Her
-father is an architect, like you.”
-
-Annette’s round, dusky face, which had no beauty but a quick, dimpling
-play of expression, was one that easily betrayed her ruling passion of
-curiosity. It was now so alight with anticipation that I tried to be more
-than ever casual.
-
-“I’ve—I’ve just met her.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Once at the memorial, when she came with Mrs. Grace; and a few nights
-ago I dined with her at the Coningsbys’.”
-
-“I wonder she didn’t take you for Jack.”
-
-To this I was not obliged to make a response for the reason that, the man
-having arrived with the tea, Annette had to give her attention to the
-placing of the tray.
-
-When I had taken a cup of tea from her hand I created a diversion with
-the question, “What did you mean by saying the way she carried on was
-disgraceful?”
-
-“Why, the way she gets engaged and disengaged. It’s been three times in
-as many years, and goodness knows how many more experiments—”
-
-“I suppose she’s trying to find the right man.”
-
-“It’s pretty hard on those she takes up and puts down in the process.
-She’ll get left in the end, you’ll see if she doesn’t.”
-
-“Isn’t it better to get left than to marry the wrong man?”
-
-“The very day I took Jack to see her she’d broken off her engagement to
-Jim Hunter. I didn’t know it at the time. It was two or three days later
-before it came out. If I had known it and told Jack—”
-
-“Well, what then?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t say anything. They were awfully taken with each other. But
-I’m glad he was saved. If he hadn’t gone straight back to Montreal he
-might now be in the place of poor Stephen Cantyre.”
-
-“I see a good deal of Cantyre.”
-
-“So I understand.”
-
-“Who told you?”
-
-“Elsie Coningsby.”
-
-“You seem to have got a good deal of information about me all of a
-sudden.”
-
-“Because you’ve dropped right into the little circle in which we all know
-one another with a kind of village-like intimacy. New York is really a
-congeries of villages.”
-
-“But any one could see that Cantyre would never make a husband for a
-high-spirited girl like Miss Barry.”
-
-“How do you know she’s high-spirited, if it’s not a rude question?”
-
-“Oh, one can tell.”
-
-“You’ve seen her only twice. You must have noticed her very particularly.”
-
-“I’ve noticed Cantyre very particularly; and just as he wouldn’t make her
-the right kind of husband she wouldn’t make him the right kind of wife.”
-
-When Annette said anything in which there was a special motive a series
-of concentric shadows fled over her face like ripples from the spot where
-a stone is thrown into a pool.
-
-“Well, I’m glad you don’t like her, if it isn’t a rude thing to say.”
-
-“What has my liking her or not liking her got to do with it?”
-
-“Nothing but the question of your own safety. If she notices how much
-you’re like Jack—”
-
-“If she was going to notice that,” I said, boldly, “she would have done
-it already.”
-
-“And so much the worse for you if she has—unless you’re put on your
-guard.”
-
-“If you mean put on my guard against the danger of being Cantyre’s
-successor in a similar experience—”
-
-“That was my idea.”
-
-“Well, I can give you all the reassurance you need, Annette. In the first
-place, I’ve got no money—”
-
-The relevance of her interruption did not come to me till nearly a year
-later.
-
-“Frank dear, I must ask you, while I think of it, didn’t you know that
-your mother was very, very ill?”
-
-All the blood in my body seemed to rush back to my heart and to stay
-there. We talked no more of Regina Barry, nor of anything but stark
-fundamental realities. In an instant they became as much the essentials
-of my life as if Regina Barry had never existed. Annette showed herself
-much better informed as to my career than she pretended to be, giving me
-to understand that the day on which I disappeared my mother had received
-a kind of death-blow. She was of the type to leave the ninety and nine in
-the wilderness to go after that which was lost; and in her inability to
-do so she had been seized, so Annette told me, with a mortal pining away.
-With her decline my father was declining also, and all because of me.
-
-“I’ve been the most awful rotter, Annette,” I groaned, as I staggered to
-my feet. “You know that, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes, Frank, I do know it. That’s why I’ve been so glad to get hold of
-you at last, and ask you to—to redeem yourself.”
-
-“Redeem myself by going back?”
-
-She looked up at me and nodded.
-
-“Oh, but how can I?”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XII_
-
-
-My question was answered next evening by Beady Lamont.
-
-Greatly to Lovey’s disgust, I made it a point to attend every Saturday
-meeting at the club.
-
-“Them low fellas ain’t fit company for you, Slim,” he would protest.
-“What’s the use of cuttin’ out the booze and bein’ rich if you don’t ’old
-yer ’ead above the likes o’ that?”
-
-“They’ve been awfully white with us, Lovey.”
-
-“They wasn’t no whiter with us than they’d be with anybody else; and
-don’t three out o’ every five give ’em the blue Peter?”
-
-But though we had this discussion once a week, he always accompanied me
-to Vandiver Street, showing his disapproval when he got there in sitting
-by himself and refusing to respond to advances.
-
-I have to confess that I needed the fellowship of men who had been
-through the same mill as myself, in order to keep up the fight. Again let
-me repeat it, I am giving you but a faint idea of the struggle I had to
-make. No evil habit relinquishes its hold easily, and the one to which
-I had given myself over is perhaps the most tenacious of all. It would
-be wearisome if I were to keep telling you how near I came at times to
-courting the old disaster, and how close the shave by which I sheered
-away; but I never felt safer than a blind man walking along the edge of
-a cliff. More than once I tore the blue star from my buttonhole, though
-on each occasion I juggled myself into putting it back again. I juggled
-myself as I did on the morning when I gazed at the brown-green water
-flowing beneath Greeley’s Slip. I said that what I didn’t do to-day I
-would still be free to do to-morrow, thus tiding myself over the worst
-minutes, if only by a process of postponement.
-
-But among my brothers at the club I heard so many tales of heroic
-resistance that I grew ashamed of my periods of weakness. What Pyn and
-Mouse and the Scotchman and the piano-mover and Beady Lamont could do, I
-told myself, I also could do. Moreover, new men came in, and more than
-one of the educated type turned to me for help. To a journalist named
-Edmonds, and to an actor named Prince, I stood as next friend, and only
-declined to officiate in the same capacity for Headlights, the big-eyed
-tailor, and the wee bye Daisy, when they returned, penitent, on the
-ground that I couldn’t watch over more than two men efficiently. With the
-actor I had no trouble, but twice I had to go down to Stinson’s and pull
-Edmonds out of a drunken spell. To keep him out was putting me on all
-my mettle; and in order to maintain my mettle I had to stay out myself.
-My courage was no whit nobler than that of the man who would turn tail
-in the battle if it weren’t for shame before his comrades; but there is
-something to be got out of even such valor as that.
-
-And in the club I got it. Perhaps we were all putting up a bluff. Perhaps
-those whom I looked upon as heroes were inwardly no more glorious than I.
-But when the fellows whom I patted on the back patted me in their turn, I
-was obliged to live up to their commendation. There came, indeed, a time
-when I couldn’t help seeing that in the eyes of new-comers especially I
-was taken as a pillar of the club, and knew that I couldn’t fall without
-bringing down some of the living walls along with me. To be strong enough
-to hold up my portion of the weight became once more with me then a
-question of _noblesse oblige_.
-
-The Saturday evening after my talk with Annette was a special one. After
-the actor, the journalist, Headlights, and Daisy had renewed their pledge
-for a week, Lovey and I stood up with the Scotchman, the piano-mover,
-and three or four others, and repeated ours for a month. It probably
-seems a simple thing to you; but for us who knew what had been our perils
-during the preceding month and the months preceding that, it was a
-solemn undertaking. The first vow of all had been relatively easy, since
-new resolutions have an attraction in themselves. The weekly vows that
-came afterward were not so fiercely hard, because they were but weekly.
-When it came to promising for a month—well, I can only say that to us a
-month had the length which it has to a child. It seemed to stretch on
-indefinitely ahead of one. The foe, retreating as we pressed forward, was
-always keeping up a rear-guard fight, and we never woke in the morning
-without being aware that we might strike an ambush before nightfall. We
-got so tired of the struggle that we often thought of the relief it would
-be to be captured; and many a time the resolution was made that when this
-month was up....
-
-And just at these minutes the chaps who seemed stronger would close in
-about us, or those who seemed weaker would make some appeal, and when the
-critical Saturday evening came round we would walk up again, impelled by
-forces beyond our control, and repledge ourselves.
-
-On such occasions there was always some word spoken to us by men who had
-fought longer than we had and seen the enemy routed more effectively.
-That night the speaker to the blue-star men was that club benefactor and
-favorite, Beady Lamont. He was a huge mass of muscle, turning the scale
-at three hundred and more. Strength was in every movement when he walked
-and every pose when he stood still. To my architect’s eye he planted his
-legs as though they were ancient Egyptian monoliths. Comparatively small
-round the abdomen, his chest was like a great drum. His arms—but why give
-a description? Hercules must have been like him, and Goliath of Gath,
-and Charlemagne, and the Giants that were in Those Days. They said that
-in drink he used to be terrible; but now his big, jolly face was all a
-quiver of good-will.
-
-His voice was one of those husky chuckles of which the very gurgles
-make you laugh. To make you laugh was his principle function in the
-club. On this evening he began his talk with a string of those amusing,
-disconnected anecdotes which used to be a feature of after-dinner
-speeches, somewhat as a boy will splash about in the water before he
-begins to swim. But when he swam it was with vigor.
-
-“And now some of you blue-star guys is probably hittin’ a question that
-sooner or later knocks at the nuts of most of us chaps that’s trying to
-make good all over again. That’s families. Say, ain’t families the deuce?
-You may run like a hare, or climb like a squirrel, or light away like a
-skeeter—and your family’ll be at your heels. It’s somethin’ fierce. You
-can never get away from them; they’ll never let you get away from them.
-Because”—his voice fell to a tone of solemnity—“because no matter how
-fast you sprint, or how high you climb, or how graceful you can dodge—you
-carries your family with you. You can no more turn your back on it than
-you can on your own stummick. You may refuse to pervide for it, you may
-treat it cruel, you may leave it to look out for itself; but you can
-never git away from knowin’ in your heart that if you’re a bum husband
-or father or son you’re considerable more bum as a man. That’s why the
-family is after us. Can’t shake ’em off! Got ’em where they won’t be
-shook off. God A’mighty Hisself put ’em there, and, oh, boys, listen to
-me and I’ll tell you why.”
-
-He made dabs at his wrists as though to turn up his sleeves, like a man
-warming to his work. Taking a step or two forward he braced his left
-hand on his barrel-shaped hip, while his gigantic forefinger was pointed
-dramatically toward his audience.
-
-“Say, did any of you married guys ever wish to God you was single again?
-Sure you did! Was any of you chaps with two or three little kids to feed
-ever sorry for the day when he heard the first of his young ones cry?
-Surest thing you know! Did any of us with a father and a mother, with
-brothers and sisters, too, very likely, ever kick because we hadn’t been
-born an orphan and an only child? You bet your sweet life we did! The
-drinkin’ man don’t want no hangers-on. He wants to be free. Life ain’t
-worth a burnt match to him when he’s got other people to think of, and a
-home to keep up, and can’t spend every penny on hisself. Some of us here
-to-night has cursed our wives; some of us has beat our children; some of
-us has cut out father and mother as if they’d never done nothin’ for us,
-and we could cast off from ’em with no more conscience than a tug’ll cast
-off from a liner.
-
-“But, boys, when God A’mighty put us into this world He put us into
-a family first of all. He gives us kindness there, and care, and
-eddication, and the great big thing that fills the whole universe and
-that we ain’t got no other name for only love. As soon as we’d got pretty
-well grown He give us another feeling—one that druv us by and by to go
-and start a family for ourselves. Most of us went and started one, and
-them that haven’t done it yet’ll do it before the next few years is out.
-But, boys, what’s it all for? Everything’s got to be for somethin’ or
-else it’s just lumberin’ up the ground; and this here matter of families
-is either the worst or the best thing you’ll find anywhere on earth. If
-it’s not the best it’s the worst, and it has to be one or t’other.
-
-“Now I stand before you as one who used to think it was the worst. I
-won’t say nothin’ of my father and mother. Them things is too sacred to
-be trotted out. But I’ll speak of my wife, because she’s that grateful
-for what’s been done for me—and everything done for me has been done
-twice as much, ten times as much, for her—that she’d like me to bring
-her into whatever I’ve got to say. I’ve known the time when I was as
-crazy to be quit of my family as a dog to be rid of the tin can tied to
-his tail. I had a wife, then, and three children; and, O my God! but I
-thought they was a drag! I couldn’t go nowhere without thinkin’ I ought
-to be with ’em, and I couldn’t take a drink without knowin’ I had to
-steal it from my little boy and my two little girls. They was the p’ison
-of my life. There was nights when I was reelin’ home and I used to hope
-that the house had been burnt down durin’ the day and they buried in
-the ashes. That’d leave me free again. Not to have no home—not to have
-to ante up for no one but myself—was the only thing I ever prayed for.
-And by gum, but my prayer was answered! One night I come home and found
-the house empty. My wife had decamped, and left a note that run somethin’
-like this: ‘Dear Beady,’ says she, ‘I can’t stand this life no more,’
-says she. ‘If it was only me I wouldn’t mind; but I can’t see my children
-kicked and beat and starved and hated, not by no one.’ And then she
-signed her name.
-
-“Well, say, boys, most of you has heard what happened to me after that.
-I sure had one grand time while it lasted—and it lasted just about six
-months. I saw a man oncet—we was movin’ a party from Harlem to the
-Bronx—fall down a flight of stairs with a sofa on his back, and he sure
-did get some pace on. Well, my pace was just about as quick—and as dead
-easy as he struck the landin’ at the bottom I struck the gutter. Now you
-know the rest of my story, because some of you guys has had a hand in it.
-
-“But what I want to tell you is this: That when I begun to come to again,
-as you might say, the first thing I wondered about was the wife and the
-kids. I couldn’t get ’em out of my mind, nohow. What did I ever have ’em
-for? I asked myself. Why in hell did I ever get married? Nobody never
-druv me into it. I did it of my own accord. I went hangin’ after the
-girl, who had a good place in the kitchen department of a big store,
-and I never let her have no peace till she said she’d marry me, and did
-it. Why had I been such a crazy fool? There was days and days, sittin’
-right in there in that back room, when I asked myself that; and at last
-I got the answer. I’m goin’ to tell it to you now, because there’s a
-lot of you shysters that’s only been a few weeks in the club that’s
-askin’ yourselves that very same thing. You’ve got wives and kids, the
-Lord knows where—scattered to the four winds of heaven, for anything you
-know—and you wish you hadn’t. But, say, don’t you go on wishin’ no such
-thing; for I’m goin’ to tell you what God A’mighty said to me right there
-in that back settin’-room.”
-
-He squared himself now, planting his Egyptian monoliths with a force
-which in itself was a kind of eloquence. His hands were thrust deep into
-his trousers pockets and his big chest expanded.
-
-“‘Beady,’ God A’mighty says to me, and it was just as if I’d heard
-His voice, ‘if a man don’t have no one to think about but hisself he
-becomes the selfishest of all things under the sun. I’m God,’ says He,
-‘with nothin’ to do but enj’y myself; and yet if I didn’t have you and
-the other things I make to care for and think about I wouldn’t have
-nothin’. I’ve just got to have ’em, for if I didn’t I’d go crazy. So I
-make beautiful worlds, and grand men, and noble women, and pretty kids,
-and strong animals, and sweet birds to sing, and nice flowers to bloom,
-and everything like that. I don’t make nothin’ ugly nor nothin’ bad,
-nor no sickness nor sufferin’ nor poverty. You guys does all that for
-yourselves, and I don’t take no rest day nor night tryin’ to show you how
-not to. Listen to me, Beady,’ says He. ‘Stop thinkin’ about yourself and
-that awful hulk of a body, and what it wants to eat and especially to
-drink. Don’t pay no more attention to it than you can help. Say, you’re
-my son, and you’re just like me. What you want is not the booze; it’s
-somethin’ outside yourself to think about. I’ve given you a wife and
-three fine youngsters. Now get out and get after them. Cut out livin’
-for yourself and live for them. You must lose your life to find it; and
-the quickest way to lose your life is not to think about your beastly
-cravings at all.’
-
-“Well, by gum! boys, if I didn’t take God A’mighty at His word. I says
-to myself, I’ll prove this thing or bust—and if I was to bust there’d be
-some explosion. When you fellows had kept me here long enough to let me
-be pretty nigh sure of myself I went and looked up the wife, and—well,
-there! I needn’t say no more. Some of you dubs has been up to my little
-place and you know that Whatever spoke to me that day in that back room
-is in my little tenement in the Bronx if He ever was anywhere—and that
-brings me at last to my p’int.
-
-“I’m speakin’ to you blue-star men because you’ve showed pretty well
-by this time the stuff you’re made of. As long as you was in danger
-of slippin’ back I wouldn’t say this to you at all. But, say, you’ve
-weathered the worst of it, so it’s time for me to speak.
-
-“Has any of you a wife? Then go back to her. Have you kids? Then go back
-to ’em. Have you a father or a mother? Then for God’s sake let them
-know that you’re doin’ well. Go to ’em—write to ’em—call ’em up on the
-’phone—send ’em a telegraph—but don’t let ’em be without the peace o’
-mind that’ll come from knowin’ that you’re on your two feet. One of the
-most mysterious things in this awful mysterious life is the way somebody
-is always lovin’ somebody. Here in these two rooms is a hundred and
-sixty-three by actual count of the seediest and most gol-darned boobs
-that the country can turn out. As we look at each other we can’t help
-askin’ if any one in their tarnation senses could care for the likes of
-us. And yet for every bloomin’ one of us you can foot up to eight or ten
-that’ll have us in their hearts as if we was gold-headed cherubs.
-
-“Say, boys, I’ll tell you somethin’ confidential like, and don’t think
-I’m braggin’. The furniture-movin’ business is the grandest one there is.
-For a man that’s mastered it there don’t seem anything in the world left
-for him to learn. He’s ready to command a army or to run a ocean liner.
-But there’s one thing I’ll be hanged if even a furniture-mover knows
-anything about—and that’s love. I’ve thought about it and thought about
-it—and it gets me every time. I don’t know what it is, or where it comes
-from, or how they brew the durned thing in hearts like yours and mine.
-All I know is that it’s there—and that this old world goes round in it.
-I’m buttin’ into it all the time, and it kind o’ turns me shy like. My
-own little home is so full of it that sometimes it makes me choke. If I
-try to get away from it and come down here—well, I’m blest if some bloke
-don’t begin ladlin’ it out to me when he don’t hardly know what he’s
-doin’. The furniture-movin’ business is that shiny with it when you know
-how to see it— But I’ll not say no more. You’d laff. You’re laffin’ at
-me now, and I don’t blame you. All I’ve wanted to do is to put some of
-you boys wise. If there’s a blue-star man who knows any one in the world
-that’s fond of him—then for Christ’s sake get after ’em! And do it not
-later than to-night.”
-
-And so I did it. Before going to bed I wrote a long letter to my father,
-giving him such details of my history during the past three years as I
-thought he would like to know. I hinted that if he or my mother would
-care for a visit from me I could go home for a few days.
-
-Then I waited.
-
-In a week I got my reply. It read:
-
- MY DEAR FRANK,—I am glad to receive your letter, but sorry that
- it should ever have been necessary for you to write it. That
- you should be doing well no one could be more thankful for than
- I. I have given your messages to your mother, and she wishes me
- to send you her love. I consider it my duty to add, however,
- that no messages can withdraw the sword you have thrust into
- her heart—and mine.
-
- Your affectionate father,
-
- EDWARD MELBURY.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XIII_
-
-
-After that my work took me to Atlantic City, though not before I had
-had a number of meetings with Regina Barry, each of which, with one
-exception, took me by surprise.
-
-The exception was the first. Cantyre urged me so strongly to come with
-him to call on Mrs. Barry and her daughter that in the end I yielded.
-
-I found Mrs. Barry a charming invalid lady, keeping to the background and
-allowing her daughter to take all the initiative. From her as well as
-from Regina I got the reflex action of their liking for Jack. Mrs. Barry
-had seen him only once, but had preserved the memory of the pleasure
-which the meeting had given her. She repeated the statement, which had
-already grown familiar, that she thought Jack different from other men.
-Perhaps he was, though I could never see it. Perhaps she thought I was,
-myself, though she didn’t say so in words.
-
-In any case, the call was followed by an invitation to dinner, and not
-long after that Annette placed me next to Miss Barry at lunch. Mrs. Grace
-did the same, and so did Cantyre when he insisted on my joining a party
-he gave at a theater. Two or three other meetings were accidental, and if
-I say that in all of them Miss Barry herself made the advances it is only
-to emphasize my nervousness. I had no right to be meeting her; I had no
-business to be allowing her to talk to me and show that—well, that she
-didn’t dislike me. The revolver was still in my desk and I began to ask
-myself if it wasn’t my duty to make use of it. True, she had not accused
-me with her eyes, but she was in some ways doing worse. What was to be
-the end of it?
-
-I welcomed the work at Atlantic City, then, for more reasons than one.
-It took me away from New York; it kept me out of danger. Cantyre having
-confided to me the fact that his hopes were not dead, it left the field
-free to him. Never for a moment did he suspect that in my heart there was
-anything that could interfere with him; nor did he so much as dream that
-in hers....
-
-It is curious that in proportion as the craving for drink diminished
-its place was taken by another craving for what I knew I couldn’t have.
-There was every reason why I couldn’t have it, why I could never have it.
-Atlantic City offered me, therefore, the readiest means of flight.
-
-When that should be over I was planning a still further retirement.
-Sterling Barry was in California, directing the first stages of the
-erection of a block of university buildings in which he took great pride.
-Coningsby himself had suggested that when the Atlantic City job was
-finished there would be an opening for me there if I cared to make a bid
-for it. I did so care, and he promised to speak for me. Once I reached
-the Pacific, I was resolved not to come back for years, and perhaps never
-to come back at all.
-
-It is lucky for me that I am temperamentally inclined to look forward.
-The retrospective view in my case would very soon have led me back to
-Greeley’s Slip, but I was rarely inclined to dwell on it. Once when I was
-crossing the Atlantic as a small boy our steamer had run on the rocks at
-Cape Clear. To enable us to get off her before she slipped back into the
-water and went down, long rope ladders were lowered to us from the top
-of the cliff, and up them we had to climb. This we did in a foggy Irish
-dawn, seeing just the rope rung ahead of us. Had we been able to look
-farther up the face of the cliff my mother and sisters would hardly have
-had the nerve for the ascent. As it was, they could see that single rung
-and no more, and so could keep their gaze upward without fear.
-
-In the same way I kept my own gaze forward. I tried not to look ahead
-of the day, and at Atlantic City the days, even in November, were
-bearable enough. The booming of the long miles of breakers acted on me
-as a sedative. They dulled memory; they dulled pain; at the same time
-they incited me to work as the piercing wail of the bagpipes incites
-the Highlander to fight. I got companionship from them and a sense
-of timelessness. In their roll and tumble and crash I could hear the
-_poluphoisboio thalasses_ in which Homer put the sound of breakers
-forever into speech.
-
-So November went by, and a great part of December. Christmas was
-approaching, and I was eager to have it over. Not that it mattered to me;
-but the sense that there was a gay companionship in the world from which
-I was excluded got slightly on my nerves. Cantyre, who came down to spend
-a week-end with me whenever he could, having to go for that season to his
-relatives in Ohio, I looked for nothing more festal than a merry meal
-with Lovey.
-
-The late afternoon on the day before Christmas Eve was both windy and
-foggy, with a dash of drizzle in the air. The men had knocked off
-working, and as I left the half-finished building I stood for a minute
-to get the puffs of wet wind in my face. The lights along the Board
-Walk were reflected on the wet planks as in a blurred mirror. Here and
-there a pedestrian beat his way against the wind, and an occasional
-rolling-chair—the jinrikisha of Atlantic City—disappeared into the
-aureole of the sea-front.
-
-As I came down our rickety temporary steps I became aware that a woman’s
-figure darted out of the shelter of a pavilion on the shore edge and
-walked rapidly across toward me. She wore an ulster and a tam-o’-shanter
-cap, and made a gallant little figure in the wind. More than that I
-did not take time to notice, as I had no suspicion that she could have
-anything to do with me.
-
-I was, in fact, turning southward toward the house where I was staying
-when she managed to beat her way in front of me.
-
-“Don’t you know me?”
-
-I stopped in astonishment.
-
-“Why—why, what are you doing here?”
-
-“I was waiting for you.”
-
-I could think of nothing better to say than, “On an evening like this?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t mind that. We arrived only this afternoon. You see, my
-father can’t get back from California, and mother wouldn’t spend
-Christmas in town. We’re not going to have any Christmas, and so—”
-
-We struggled across the walk to the pavilion, which, though open on all
-sides, afforded at least an overhead protection.
-
-“How did you know where to find me?” I asked, stupidly.
-
-“Ralph Coningsby told me—and the time you would be coming out. I—I’ve
-something—something rather special to—to say to you.”
-
-I stood looking down at her. In the wooden ceiling above our heads there
-was an electric light that shed its beams through the whirl of mist right
-into her upturned face. There was a piteous quiver in the scarlet lips,
-and to the eyes had returned that mingling of compassion and amazement
-with which she had watched me when I pulled out her trinkets and threw
-them on the desk. It was the first time I had seen it since that night.
-
-As I look back we seem to have gazed at each other in this way for an
-immeasurably long while, but I suppose it was only for some seconds. I
-knew why she was there. The truth had dawned on her at last, and she had
-come to tell me it wouldn’t make any difference.
-
-But it would.
-
-I had left the revolver in my desk in town; but I reminded myself that
-there was a train between eight and nine and that I should have plenty of
-time to catch it.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XIV_
-
-
-For my own sake, rather than for Regina Barry’s, I made an effort to
-escape from the pitiless pavilion light overhead.
-
-“You’ll need to go back to your hotel. Sha’n’t we walk along? Then you
-can tell me as we go.”
-
-The tramp through the gale and spray would have been exhilarating were
-it not that confidential things had to be thrown out into the tempest.
-As we left the pavilion, however, a voice floated toward me from the
-semi-darkness.
-
-“Chair, boss?”
-
-Another minute and we were seated side by side in the odd little
-vehicle—something between a baby’s perambulator and a touring-car—with
-the leather curtains buttoned to protect us, and a view through the
-wind-shield of a long line of lights shining into fog. There was a
-minute of surprise in the fact that, involuntarily expecting to go at a
-heightened speed, we found ourselves literally creeping at the snail’s
-pace which was the customary gait of our pusher.
-
-But that was only subconscious. I took note of it without taking note of
-it, to remember it when I pieced the circumstances together on returning
-home. The one thing of which I was really aware was that in this curious
-conveyance I was seated at her side, and able, as she sat half turned
-toward me, to look her in the eyes.
-
-Now that we were there, she lost some of her self-possession. After the
-months in which I had been afraid of her she seemed suddenly to have
-become afraid of me. Crouching back into her corner of the chair, she
-grew small and apologetic.
-
-“Mother made me come. She said some one ought to tell you.”
-
-It was like a little cry—the cry of a child confessing before it is
-accused. I could follow her mental action. She wanted me to understand
-that nothing but _force majeure_ would have induced her to waylay a man
-as he was coming home from work and take him in a kind of ambush.
-
-Having once already talked with her at cross-purposes, I was careful to
-let her state her message before betraying my conviction of what it was
-to be.
-
-“It’s very kind of Mrs. Barry,” I began, vaguely.
-
-“You see, she likes you,” she broke in, impulsively. “If you had any
-one belonging to you in this country I dare say she—But she’s awfully
-maternal, mother is; and when Annette told her—”
-
-“What did Annette tell her?”
-
-“That’s it. Oh, Mr. Melbury, I’m so sorry that I should be the one to
-bring the news.”
-
-“If it’s bad news,” I said, encouragingly, “I’d rather have you to share
-it with me than any one else in the world.”
-
-She asked, abruptly, “Have you heard anything from home—lately?”
-
-I had once more the sensation of the blood rushing back to my heart and
-staying there. All I could do was to shake my head.
-
-“That’s what Annette thought. We told her she ought to write to you.”
-
-In my excitement I clutched her by the hand, but I think she was hardly
-aware of the act any more than I.
-
-“But what is it?”
-
-“It’s—it’s about your father.”
-
-“He’s not—he’s not—dead?”
-
-She fell back again into her corner of the chair, withdrawing her hand.
-I, too, fell back into my corner, staring out through the wind-shield.
-Knowing that by not saying no she was really saying yes, I was obliged
-not only to get possession of the fact, but to control my sense of it.
-
-I may say at once that it was the first sudden shock of my life. Every
-other trial had come to me by degrees—I had more or less seen it on the
-way and had been ready to meet it. This was something I had hardly ever
-thought of. That it might happen some time had been vaguely in the back
-of my mind, of course; but I had never considered it as an event of the
-day and hour. Now that it had occurred, my mental heavens seemed to fall.
-
-I have told you so little of my family life that you hardly realize the
-degree to which my father was its center and support. My memory cannot
-go back to the time when he was not an important man, not only in the
-estimation of his children, but in that of the entire country. One of the
-youngest of that group of men who in the ’sixties and ’seventies took
-the scattered colonies of Great Britain lying north of the border of the
-United States and welded them into a gigantic, prosperous whole, he had
-outlived all but the sturdiest of his contemporaries. With Macdonald,
-Mount Stephen, Strathcona and a few others he had had the vision of a
-new white man’s empire stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific and
-from the Great Lakes to the Arctic, and through good times and evil he
-had never let it go. That there were evil times as well as good ones is
-a matter of history; but however dark the moment, my father was one of
-those who never lost for a fraction of an instant his belief in ultimate
-success. In helping to build up the vast financial system of the Canadian
-Pacific Railway there was no door, in Europe or America, where money
-could be borrowed at which he did not knock. There were days when the
-prospect was so hopeless and the treasury so empty that he was obliged
-to pledge everything he possessed, and after that to use nothing but his
-honor and his name. The winning out is one of the fairy-tales of the
-modern world. He had begun to reap his reward just as my memory of him
-opens. Of his days of struggle I knew only by hearsay. By the time I was
-five he was already a man of considerable wealth, honored throughout the
-Dominion, honored in Great Britain, and one of the eight or ten Canadian
-baronets created by the Queen.
-
-I see him as tall, spare, and vigorous, with thin, clear-cut,
-clean-shaven features, a piercing eye, and a mouth that sagged at the
-corners not from dejection, but from determination. Spartan in his own
-life, he required his children to be Spartan in theirs. Though with our
-added means our manner of living increased in dignity, it gained little
-in the way of luxury; and many were the shifts to which my brothers and I
-were pushed to indulge the follies of young men.
-
-My brothers did this no more than experimentally, covering their tracks
-and returning to right ways before their digressions could be noticed.
-I was invariably caught, coming in for some dramatic moments with my
-father, which increased in tension with the years. I have often wondered
-what his own youth could have been that he had so little mercy on what
-was at first not much worse than high spirits and boisterousness. Though
-I am far from blaming any one but myself for my ultimately going wrong, I
-have sometimes thought that a gentler handling might have led me aright
-when sheer repression only made me obstinate. That gentler handling my
-mother would have given me had not my father felt that it was weak.
-This knowledge only added to my perversity, the result being a state of
-continuous rebellion on my part and permanent displeasure on his.
-
-“You’re getting in worse and worse with the old man,” my brother Jack
-warned me a few months before I left Montreal for good. “I heard him
-telling mother that if you didn’t turn over a new leaf he’d cut you out
-of his will.”
-
-The information that he had so cut me out was the last form of appeal
-he ever made to me. I didn’t believe he meant it otherwise than as
-a bluff—a stroke of the pen could have reinstated me; but merely as
-a bluff it angered me. It implied that I might be induced to do for
-money what I hadn’t done for love or duty, and I was foolish enough to
-consider it part of my manhood to prove that any one who so judged me was
-mistaken. In that phase of my misguided life there was a kind of crazy,
-Cordelia-like attempt to show my father that it was not because of his
-money that I cared for him—or didn’t care for him; but all I succeeded
-in doing was to rouse the resentment of a man who had hardly ever been
-defied.
-
-But I had repented of that kind of bravado long before I had repented of
-anything else. My letter to him in October had been quite sincere. To be
-cut out of his will had never meant anything to me but the loss of his
-affection. I was sorry for that loss, sorrier than any words I have could
-tell you. But when he wrote to me, in answer to my October letter, I knew
-from his tone that I had definitely killed whatever had once existed
-between him and me, and that all that was left for me was to bury it. I
-had been trying to bury it for the past eight weeks, and I do not deny
-that the effort was a bitter one.
-
-You must understand that I had now come in for a set of emotions that
-had not belonged to me before I went to the Down and Out. I can explain
-it only on the ground that months of abstinence from anything that
-could inflame the senses or disturb the poise of the mind had induced a
-sanity of judgment to which I had been a stranger. In this new light I
-was really a prodigal son—not from any hope of a ring on my hand or the
-fatted calf, but genuinely from affection for the parents I had wronged.
-
-To have this impulse to arise and go to my father thrown back on itself
-was the hardest thing in my experience. Somehow I had kept the conviction
-that if ever I repented that door would be open to my return. It had
-not really occurred to me that they wouldn’t say at home, “It is meet
-that we should make merry and be glad.” That my brothers might refuse
-to join in the chorus was a possibility. That my sister might not be
-over-enthusiastic in doing so I should be able to understand. But that
-my father and mother.... Throughout my stay in Atlantic City I had been
-saying to myself, “Well, if I’ve thrust a sword into your hearts, old
-dears, you’ve jolly well thrust one into mine; and so we’re quits.”
-
-“When did it happen?” was the first question I was sufficiently master of
-myself to ask.
-
-“Annette heard yesterday. I think it was the day before.”
-
-“Do you know if—if he’d been ill?”
-
-“He hasn’t been well for a long time, Annette says—not for two or
-three years; but the end was—well, it was heart failure. He was in his
-motor—going home. When the car drove up to the door they found him—”
-
-It was the picture thus presented that made me put my hand to my forehead
-and bow my head. I was thinking of him seated in his corner of the car,
-stately, unbending, unpardoning, dead. I was thinking of the plight of
-my poor little mother when the man she had for so many years worshiped
-and obeyed was no longer there to give her his commands. I was thinking
-of the commotion in the family, of the stir of interest throughout the
-community. A prince and a great man would have fallen in Israel, and all
-our Canadian centers would be aquiver with the news. Jerry and Jack would
-cable to my sister in England, as well as to our uncles and aunts in that
-country and in the United States. There were cousins and friends who
-wouldn’t be forgotten. I alone was left out.
-
-That was, however, more than I could believe. It was more, too, than I
-was willing to allow Regina Barry to suppose.
-
-“There must be a telegram for me at my rooms in New York,” I managed to
-stammer, though I fear my tone lacked conviction.
-
-To this she said nothing. She had, in fact, as Cantyre informed me later,
-already ascertained that up to the hour of her departure from New York
-there was none.
-
-I talked to Cantyre on the telephone immediately on returning to my
-hotel. He said that, though in my rooms there were some odds and ends
-of mail matter which he hadn’t yet forwarded, there was no telegram or
-Canadian letter. Having called up Annette, I got a repetition of the
-meager information Miss Barry had given me, though I learned in addition
-that the funeral was to take place on the following day, which would be
-Christmas Eve. Her father had already gone to Montreal to take part in
-the ceremony. The embarrassment of her tone in saying she was surprised
-that I had received no announcement told me that she was not surprised.
-It was the last touch to the certainty that I had been omitted with
-intention.
-
-After that, for a time, my grief gave place to rage. The punishment
-was so much greater than the crime that my heart cried out against its
-injustice. Had I stayed down in the depths where I was I should have
-accepted it phlegmatically; but having made the effort to rise, and made
-it with some success....
-
-I acquitted my mother and my sister of any share in the injury done to
-me. My mother was the tenderest little creature God ever made, but she
-had always been under the domination of my father, and had now come under
-that of her sons. Never having asserted herself, she would hardly begin
-to do it at this date, though she might weep her heart out in secret. I
-knew my sister would put in a good word for me, but as the youngest of
-the family and a girl she would easily be overruled.
-
-Jack might be mercifully inclined, but he would do as Jerry insisted.
-Jerry—who as Sir Gerald Melbury would now cut a great swath as head of
-the family—Jerry would be my father over again. He would be my father
-over again, only on a smaller scale. My father was tyrannical by
-instinct; Jerry would be so by imitation. My father believed his word
-to be law because he didn’t know how to do anything else; Jerry would
-believe his word to be law in order to be like my father. My father
-wouldn’t forgive me because I had outraged his affections; Jerry wouldn’t
-forgive me because my father hadn’t done it first. As far as he could
-bring it about, my future would be locked and sealed with my father’s
-death, not because he, Jerry, would be so shocked at my way of life, but
-because the laws of the Medes and Persians alter not.
-
-Nothing remained for me, then, but to grin and bear it, and bide my
-time. That I had friends of my own was to me a source of that kind of
-consolation which is largely pride. Cantyre and the Coningsbys, Regina
-Barry and her mother—came closer to me now than any one with whom I had
-ties of blood. “Our relatives,” George Sand writes somewhere, “are the
-friends given us by Nature; our friends are the relatives given us by
-God.”
-
-As relatives given me by God I regarded Lovey and Christian and Colonel
-Straight and Pyn and Beady Lamont and all that band of humble, helpful
-pals to whom I was knit in the bonds of the “robust love” which was the
-atmosphere of brave old Walt Whitman’s City of Friends. There was no pose
-among them, nor condemnation, nor severity. Forgiveness was exercised
-there till seventy times seven. They forbore one another in love, and
-endeavored to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace to a
-degree of which Some One would have said that He had not found the like,
-no, not in Israel.
-
-My family were all of Israel, and of the strictest sect. They fasted
-twice in the week, so to speak; in theory, if not in practice, they
-gave tithes of all that they possessed; they could sincerely thank God
-that they were not as such men as composed the Down and Out; and yet it
-was precisely among those who smote their breasts and didn’t dare so
-much as to lift up their eyes unto heaven that I found the sympathy that
-raised me to my feet and bade me be a man. No wonder, then, that that
-evening I kept poor old Lovey near me, that I took him down to the café,
-where there were only men, and made him dine with me, and told him of my
-bereavement.
-
-“Is he, now?” he said, drawing a melancholy face. “No one can’t live
-forever, can they? He’d have been an old, aged man, I expect.”
-
-I told him my father’s age.
-
-“Ah, well, at that time of life they gits carried off. Too bad you didn’t
-know in time for the funeral. Ye’d ’ave liked to see him laid away safe
-underground, wouldn’t ye, Slim? I ’ope he was in some good benefit club,
-like, that’ll take care of the expenses of burial. Awful dear, coffins
-is; but I suppose your family has a plot in some churchyard.”
-
-When I had assured him that this was the case he continued: “And as for
-goin’ off sudden—well, it’s awful ’ard on relations when a old, ancient
-man’ll lay round sick and don’t know when ’is time’s come. I’ve knowed
-’em when you’d swear they hung on a-purpose, just to spite them as ’ad to
-take care of ’em. I ’ad a grandfather o’ me own—well, you’d think that
-old man just couldn’t die. Ninety, I believe he was, and a wicked old
-thing when he got silly, like. Take the pepper, he would, and pour it
-into the molasses-jug, and everything like that. Terr’ble fun he was for
-us young ones, especially one day when he dressed all up in ’is Sunday
-clothes and went out in the street without ’is pants. I don’t suppose yer
-guv’nor ever did the like o’ that, Slim. Don’t seem as if old people on
-this side ’ad them playful ways.”
-
-In this sort of reminiscence the evening went by, and in the morning I
-received a note that did much to comfort me. It was no more than the
-conventional letter of condolence from Mrs. Barry, but it was tactfully
-couched.
-
-“A loss like yours,” she wrote, “painful as it is at all times, becomes
-tragically so when the support one finds in family ties is too far away
-to sustain one. I have often found in my own experience that loneliness
-added a more poignant element to grief. I wish you would remember, dear
-Mr. Melbury, that you have friends at this Christmas-time quite near you.
-Run in and see us whenever you feel the need of a friendly word. We are
-leading a life here absolutely without engagements, and you will cheer us
-up more than we can cheer you. If on Christmas Eve you would care to look
-in between four and five you would find us here, and we could give you a
-cup of tea.”
-
-Needless to say all through the day of Christmas Eve my thoughts were
-with the gathering in our house on the slopes of Mount Royal. I saw
-in fancy every detail of the lugubrious pomp through which Christians
-contradict their Saviour in his affirmation that there is no death.
-Solemnity, blackness, muffled drums, and long lines of men throwing awe
-into their faces—would smite the heart with a sense of the final, the
-irreparable, the gone and lost. Flowers would lend a timid touch of
-brightness, but they would bloom in little more than irony. The roll of
-many wheels, the tramp of many feet, and a funeral service in which the
-triumphant note itself would be turned into a dirge, these would be the
-massive accompaniment to the few sobs welling up from hearts in which
-they would be irrepressible. Though shut out in person, in spirit I was
-there, standing in the shrouded room, witnessing my mother’s farewell
-kiss, watching the lid placed on the coffin, marching with my brothers,
-kneeling in the church, hearing the clods fall in the grave. At the very
-moment when Mrs. Barry handed me a cup of tea I was saying to myself,
-“Now it is all over, and they are coming back to the darkened, empty
-house.”
-
-I was not cheerful as a companion, and apparently no one expected me to
-be so. We can scarcely be said to have talked; we merely kept each other
-company. It was Miss Barry herself who suggested, when we had finished
-tea, that she and I should take a walk.
-
-The weather had grown clear, bright, and windless. All along the
-promenade there was Christmas in the shops and in the air. It was not
-like any Christmas I had ever known before, with the blare, the lights,
-the gay, homeless people, and the thundering of breakers under starlight;
-but some essential of the ancient festival was present there, and it
-reached me. It reached me with a yearning to have something belonging to
-me that I could claim as my own—something to which I should belong and
-that wouldn’t cast me off—something that would love me, something that I
-should love, with a love different from that with which even the City of
-Friends could supply me.
-
-But out on the crowded, starry sea-front we neither walked nor talked. We
-sauntered and kept silent. On my side, I had the feeling that there was
-so much to say that I could say nothing; on hers, I divined that there
-was the same. I will not affirm that in view of all the circumstances
-I could be anything but uneasy; and yet I was ecstatic. This wonderful
-creature was beside me, comforting me, liking to be with me! But if she
-knew exactly who I was....
-
-I was swept by an intense longing that she should be told. It was a
-longing I was never free from, though it didn’t often seize me so
-imperiously as to-night. It seized me the more imperiously owing to
-the fact that I could see her moving farther and farther away from any
-recollection and realization coming through herself. I had hoped that
-both would occur to her without my being obliged to say in so many words,
-“I am the man who tried a few months ago to steal your jewelry.”
-
-But if ever the shadow of this suggestion crossed her mind, it didn’t
-cross it now. From the beginning the face and figure of that man had been
-blurred behind the memory of my brother Jack. Recent events had fixed me,
-just as she saw me, definitely in conditions in which sneak-thieving is
-unimaginable. I was the son of Sir Edward Melbury, Baronet, of Montreal
-and Ottawa, a man who would rank among the notables of the continent.
-Though a son in disfavor, I was still a son, and moreover I was
-exercising an honorable craft with some credit. I might propose to her,
-I might marry her, I might live my whole life with her, and the chances
-were that she would never connect me with the man she had seen for a few
-hurried minutes on pulling the rose-colored hangings aside.
-
-For this very reason it seemed to me I must tell her before our
-friendship went any further. It was an additional reason that I began
-to think that the information would be a shock to her. How I got that
-impression I can scarcely tell you; the ways in which it was conveyed to
-me were so trifling, so infinitesimal.
-
-For example, I asked her one day what she meant by her oft-repeated
-statement that I was different from other men.
-
-“Our men,” she explained, promptly, “have no life apart from their
-businesses and professions. Business and profession are stamped all
-over them. They are in their clothes, their faces, the tones of their
-voices. You’d know Ralph Coningsby was an architect, and Stephen Cantyre
-a doctor, and Rufus Legrand a clergyman, the minute you heard them speak.
-Now you wouldn’t know what you were. You might be anything—anything a
-gentleman can be, that is. I’ve heard some one say that Oxford is a
-town in a university, and Cambridge a university in a town. In just the
-same way my father, for instance, is a man in an architect. You’re an
-architect in a man. With you the man is the bigger. With us he’s the
-smaller. It isn’t merely business before pleasure; it’s business before
-human nature; and somehow I’ve a preference for seeing human nature put
-first.”
-
-There was little in this to say what I have just hinted at. There was
-barely sufficient to let me see that she was putting me above most of her
-men acquaintances, in a place in which I had no right to be. Though it
-was as far as she ever went, it was far enough to create my suspicion and
-to make me feel that the earliest confession would not come too soon.
-
-When we got down to the less frequented end of the Board Walk the moment
-seemed to have arrived. The crowd had thinned out to occasional groups
-of stragglers or lovers going two and two. Only here and there one came
-on a shop; only here and there on a hotel. One got an opportunity to see
-the stars, and to hear the ocean as something more than a drumbeat to the
-blare.
-
-By a simultaneous movement we paused by the rail, to look down on the
-dim, white, moving line of breakers. It was one of those instants when
-between two people drawn closely to each other something leaps. Had there
-been nothing imperative to keep us apart I should have seized her in my
-arms; she would have nestled there. I had distinctly the knowledge that
-she would have responded to anything—and that the initiative was mine.
-
-As a rocket that bursts into cascades of fire suddenly goes out, so
-suddenly the moment passed, leaving us with a sense of coldness,
-primarily due to me.
-
-Somewhat desperately I began: “Do you know what has made the difficulties
-between me and my family?”
-
-She was gazing off toward the dark horizon.
-
-“Vaguely.”
-
-“Do you know that for years I gave them a great deal of trouble?”
-
-“Vaguely.”
-
-“Do you know that—”
-
-“Do you know,” she interrupted, quietly, “that I used to have a brother?”
-
-The question so took me by surprise that I answered, blankly, “No.”
-
-“Yes, I had. He was nearly ten years older than I, which would make him
-about your age. He was—he was wild.”
-
-“And is he—is he dead?”
-
-“He shot himself—about five years ago. It was a terrible story, and I
-don’t want to tell it to you. I only want to say that my mother feels
-that if—if father hadn’t been so hard on him—if he’d played him along
-gently—he might easily have been saved. It’s what Mr. Christian—he’s had
-great experience in that sort of thing—he does a wonderful work among men
-that have gone under—but it’s what he used to tell father; only father
-hadn’t nearly so much patience with his own son as he would have had with
-some one else’s, and so— I wonder if you can understand that when mother
-heard that you had been—had been—well, a little like my brother—”
-
-“Who told her?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. These things get about. It might have been Annette.”
-
-“And assuming that I was what you call wild, have you any idea how wild I
-was?”
-
-Her response to this was to say: “I like a man to have spirit. The men
-who always keep on the safe side—” She left this sentiment there, to add,
-less irrelevantly than it sounded: “Mother wants you to come and dine
-with us to-morrow evening. It will be Christmas Day, but we sha’n’t keep
-it as Christmas. We don’t have any Christmases since—since Tony died. We
-simply—we simply sha’n’t be alone.”
-
-In the turn our talk had taken there was so much human need that I found
-my efforts at confession paralyzed. That a family whom I had regarded as
-enviably care-free should be living in the shadow of a great tragedy,
-and nursing a sorrow in which there was this element of remorse, was
-curiously illuminating as a discovery. It seemed to cast into other
-people’s lives the sort of sharp revealing ray that a flash of lightning
-throws on a dark road. Here was a girl whom I had thought of hitherto as
-immune from the more sordid varieties of trial; and yet she had at least
-tasted of their cup. It gave me a new conception of her. I began to see
-her not as a flat surface or as static like a portrait, but as a living,
-palpitating human being with duties round her and a vista of experiences
-as background.
-
-The immediate inference was that I must assist them over Christmas, as
-they would assist me; and to do that I must put off telling Regina Barry
-where she had seen me first.
-
-To be quite free, however, I had to get a kind of permission from Lovey.
-My relations with him had grown to be peculiar. He seemed to develop two
-personalities, from the one to the other of which he glided more or less
-unconsciously. Though even in our privacy he refused any longer to speak
-of us as buddies and fellas together, he called me Slim and sonny, and
-referred without hesitation to our fraternal past. On my part I found it
-almost consoling, in view of the bluff I was putting up, to have some one
-near me who knew me at my worst. Where I had to pretend before others
-there was no pretense at all with him; and so I got the relief that comes
-at any time when one can drop one’s mask.
-
-Here in Atlantic City I was paying all his expenses, but no wages. In New
-York I offered him nothing but his room. How he lived I didn’t always
-know, beyond the fact that it was honestly. As to this he was so frank
-that I could have little doubt about it.
-
-“There’s many a good thing I lets go by, Slim, all on account o’ you.
-Washin’ windows ain’t nothink but old woman’s work when a man’s been a
-’atter. If it wasn’t to save you, sonny—”
-
-“Yes, I know, Lovey. One of these days I may get a chance to make it up
-to you.”
-
-“Oh, well, as for makin’ it up, so long as you goes on with the fancy
-you took to me that night at Stinson’s, like—”
-
-“Oh, I do. You see that, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes; I see it right enough, Slim. It kind o’ passes the buck on me, as
-you might say. But there! Lord love ye, I don’t complain! Ye’re a fine
-young fella, and what I does for you—self-denial ye might call it—I don’t
-grudge. When I sees ye goin’ round like a swell with other swells I just
-says to myself, ‘Lovey, that’s your work, old top’; and I feels kind o’
-satisfied.”
-
-It was kind o’ satisfied that he showed himself when I told him I had
-been asked to eat my Christmas dinner with Mrs. and Miss Barry.
-
-“Ain’t that grand!” he commented, exultingly. “Ye’ll put on them swell
-togs—”
-
-“But it will leave you alone, Lovey,” I reminded him.
-
-“Lord love ye, Slim, I don’t mind that! What’s Christmas to me? I don’t
-pay no attention to all that foolishness—except the plum puddin’.”
-
-I felt it right to throw out a warning.
-
-“In your dining-room, Lovey, with all the chauffeurs, there’ll be things
-to drink, very likely.”
-
-He put on his melancholy face.
-
-“It won’t make no difference to me, Slim. The Down and Out has got me
-bound by so many promises, like, that I can’t take a sip o’ nothink, not
-no more than a dead man that’s got a bottle in ’is coffin. I’m one that
-can take it or leave it, as I feel inclined.”
-
-“If you’re going to try taking it or leaving it to-morrow I sha’n’t
-accept Mrs. Barry’s invitation to dinner.”
-
-The effect was what I had expected.
-
-“You go to the dinner, Slim, my boy, and I’ll let you see me ’ittin’ the
-’ay before you starts.”
-
-“But you could hit the hay and get out of bed again.”
-
-“No; because I’ll make you lock the door. I ain’t a-goin’ to ’ave ye ’ave
-no hanxiety on my account.”
-
-So we settled it—not that I was to lock him in, but that he was to
-guarantee me against being anxious; and I suppose Christian would say
-that another bit of victory was scored.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XV_
-
-
-A few days later I learned that my father had established a small trust
-fund for my benefit, and that the income was to be paid to me quarterly.
-He had thus, after all, recognized me as his son, though not on the
-footing of his other sons. Each of his other sons would have— But I won’t
-go into that. It is enough to say that for every dollar I should receive
-Jerry and Jack would have twenty or thirty, and so would my sisters. Even
-in my mother’s life interest I was not to have a share when she no longer
-needed it.
-
-Among the many sins I have to confess, that of being specially mercenary
-is not one. I make this affirmation in order that you may not condemn me
-too severely when I say that for days I labored under a sense of outrage.
-Mine was the state of mind common among evil-doers who object to paying
-the penalty of which they have had fair warning. My father had told me
-with his own mouth that on account of certain indulgences which I had
-refused to give up he had cut me off altogether. I had chosen to take my
-own way and to brave the consequences; and now when the latter proved to
-be not so bad as I had been bidden to expect I was indignant.
-
-When I informed Andrew Christian of the bequest I added that I had
-practically made up my mind to refuse it. He gave me that look which
-always seemed about to tell you a good joke.
-
-“Why do you think he left you anything?”
-
-“I suppose he wanted to feel that if the worse came to the worst I
-shouldn’t be quite penniless.”
-
-“But why should he want to feel that?”
-
-“Well, hang it all, sir, when everything is said and done I was his son!”
-
-“You were his son, and he—he cared for you.”
-
-“He cared for me to—to that extent.”
-
-“And considering your attitude toward him, could you expect him to care
-for you more?”
-
-I said, unwillingly, “No, I suppose not.”
-
-“Could you expect him to care for you as much?”
-
-“I—I’d given up thinking he cared for me at all.”
-
-“And this shows he did. In spite of all you made him suffer—and, what was
-probably worse in his eyes, made your mother suffer—he loved you still. I
-know you’re not thinking of the money, Frank.”
-
-“No, I’m not; and that’s perfectly sincere.”
-
-“You’re thinking of his affection for you; and now you’re assured of it.
-The amount of money he left you is secondary. That, and the way in which
-he left it to you, were determined by something else.”
-
-I looked at him hard as I said, “And what was that?”
-
-His look as he answered me was frank, straight, and fearless.
-
-“The fact that he didn’t trust you.” I suppose he must have seen how I
-winced, for he went on at once: “That’s about the bitterest pill fellows
-like us have to swallow. In addition to everything else that we bring on
-ourselves we forfeit other people’s confidence. There’s the nigger in
-the woodpile, even when we buck up. Your father was fond of you, Frank;
-but he was afraid that if he did for you all he would have done if you’d
-gone straight it would only send you to the devil. Don’t you see that?”
-
-With some relief as well as some reluctance I admitted that I did.
-
-“It takes years, Frank, old boy, for men who’ve been where you and I have
-been to build up a life which gives a reasonable promise of making good.
-In seven or eight months you’ve done splendidly. I don’t know that we’ve
-ever had a fellow in the club whose been more game—”
-
-“It’s the club that’s been game.”
-
-“True; but you’ve got out of it the best that it can give. I’ll say that
-for you. Only don’t imagine for a moment that your fight is over.”
-
-“Oh no, sir; I don’t.”
-
-“It’s perfectly true that if you resist the devil he will flee from you;
-but he can show a marvelous power of coming back. Some of your toughest
-tussles lie ahead. Now I’m only reminding you of that to show you that
-your father has perhaps done the very wisest thing for you. A large part
-of your safety lies in the necessity for your working. If you weren’t
-absolutely obliged to do it in order to live like a respectable man
-there’s no telling what tide of suppressed temptations might rush in and
-engulf you.”
-
-I nodded slowly.
-
-“I see that. Thank you for pointing it out to me.”
-
-“But, Frank, old fellow, that’s not the chief thing I want you to see.
-What will give you more satisfaction than anything else is the knowledge
-that what has been done for you has been done in love. Your father has
-shown his love for you; you show your love for him. Accept this gift
-graciously. Enjoy it and make the best of it. Your life with him isn’t
-over.”
-
-My expression must have been one of inquiry, because he went on:
-
-“One of the sublimest and truest things that ever fell from a pen is
-this, ‘Love is of God; and every one that love is born of God, and
-knoweth God.’ It’s almost a startling thing to realize that by the sheer
-act of love we’re sons of God and know Him.”
-
-“Ah, but what kind of love?” I asked, with some incredulity.
-
-“Are there more kinds than one? The kingdom of love is like that of
-minerals or that of vegetation—one in essence, though multiform in
-manifestation. Just as one will give us coal and diamonds with much
-the same ingredients, and another the strawberry, the rose, and the
-apple-tree, all closely akin, so love shows itself in a million ways, and
-yet remains always love.”
-
-“And would you say that the love of parents and children, the love of
-husbands and wives, the love of sweethearts, and the love of God—”
-
-“—are all fundamentally related? Yes, I would. I can’t understand love
-in any other sense, if it’s to be real love. Do you remember how often
-we’ve talked of the spirit there is in the world that throws dust into
-our eyes by creating distinctions and confusions where neither confusion
-nor distinction exists? Well, the same evil imp is forever at work to
-stultify love by trying to take the meaning from the word. And when it
-has stultified love it has stultified God, since the one is identical
-with the other.”
-
-I became argumentative.
-
-“But if all love is identical with God, how do you account for what would
-commonly be called a wrong love?”
-
-“There’s no such thing as a wrong love. Men are wrong and women are
-wrong, and they treat love wrongly; but love itself is always right.
-There a distinction must be made between love and passion; but it’s easy
-enough to make it. One of these days we’ll take the time to talk that
-over. At present my point is simply this—that there’s only one love as
-there’s only one God, and it’s only by understanding the unity of both
-that we get the significance of either. Moreover, the same pen that
-wrote, ‘Every one that loveth is born of God,’ wrote, ‘He that dwelleth
-in love dwelleth in God.’ You see then how magical a thing love is, and
-why any kind of love—remember I’m speaking of love, not of physical
-passion, which is another thing—but you can see how any kind of love
-should work wonders.” He asked, suddenly, “Have you written to your
-mother since your father died?”
-
-I said I had not, that I hadn’t supposed a letter from me would be
-welcome.
-
-“Don’t ask whether it would be welcome or not. Do your duty—and let other
-people take care of theirs. Let your mother see that, so far from feeling
-sore over the provision in your father’s will, you take it in the way
-I’ve tried to indicate. It will be an amazing comfort to her; and if you
-want to give your brothers and sisters the surprise of their young lives
-you’ll be doing it.” He took my hand and pressed it. “Good-by now, old
-chap. I’ve got to go and see Momma about the meals for to-morrow.”
-
-He passed on to the kitchen, where a Greek named Pappa—nicknamed Momma by
-the boys—had taken the place of Mouse; but he left me with a new outlook.
-
-Following his instructions, I began almost immediately to get some of
-the reward he promised me. My mother wrote to me within a week, timidly
-but tenderly, and with joy at being in touch with me again. A few weeks
-later my sister wrote, affectionately, if with reserve. When my birthday
-came in March, and I was thirty-two, I had small presents from them both,
-and from my two sisters-in-law as well. I noticed that all letters, even
-from my mother, were hesitatingly expressed, and in something like an
-undertone of awe. My family, too, felt apparently that I had put an abyss
-between myself and them, and that in the effort to recross it there was
-a suggestion of the supernatural. It was as if my father were saying to
-them, “This, thy brother, was dead, and is alive again”—and they were
-experiencing some of the strangeness that Mary and Martha must have known
-when Lazarus came back to the house at Bethany.
-
-But that was not my only reward, though of what I received in addition I
-find it difficult to tell you. Indeed, I should make no attempt to tell
-you at all were it not so essential to this small record of a human life.
-All I want to say is that that thing came to me as a new revelation which
-is probably an every-day fact to you—that by the simple process of loving
-I could dwell in God, I could be aware that God was all round me.
-
-I mean that once I understood that love was God the great mystery that
-had tantalized me all my life was solved. All my life I had been tortured
-by the questions: Who is God? What is God? What is my relation to Him—or
-have I any? And now I seemed to have found the answer. When I got back to
-love—the common, natural love for my father and mother and sisters—when
-I got back to feeling more gently toward my brothers—I began to see—you
-must forgive me if I seem blatant, but that is not my intention—I began
-to see faintly and very inadequately that I was actually in touch with
-God.
-
-I am far from saying that all my difficulties were overcome. Of course
-they were not. I mean only that that divine force of which I had been
-told the universe was full, but which had always seemed apart from me,
-remote from my needs, actually came, in some measure at least, within
-my possession. Just as Beady Lamont found the furniture-moving business
-shiny with it, once he knew where to look for it, so I began to see my
-work as an architect. It was as if a golden key had been put into my hand
-which unlocked the richest of life’s secrets.
-
-All at once people whom I had known to be well disposed toward me,
-and whom I had dismissed at that, began to translate God to me. Ralph
-Coningsby, Cantyre, Lovey, Christian, Pyn, not to speak of others, were
-like reflectors that threw the rays of the great Central Sun straight
-into my soul. I am not declaring that there was no tarnish on the
-surfaces that caught those beams and transmitted them to me—probably
-there was—but light and warmth were poured into me for all that. Not that
-there was a change in their attitude toward me; the change was in my
-point of view, in my capacity for seeing. What I had thought of only as
-human aid I now perceived to be the celestial bread and wine; and where I
-had supposed I was living only with men, I knew I was walking with God.
-
-And yet there was a love with regard to which I could not have this
-peace of mind. Christian would perhaps have ascribed that defect to the
-fact that there was passion in it. My own fear was that, having had its
-inception in a moment of crime, it could never free itself from the
-conditions that gave it birth.
-
-After the Christmas dinner there was a change toward me in the bearing
-of Regina Barry and her mother. Without growing colder, they became
-slightly more formal; and that I understood. As they had come so far in
-my direction, it was for me to go some of the distance in theirs, and I
-didn’t.
-
-I didn’t because I couldn’t. I was like a man who would have been glad
-to walk if paralysis hadn’t nailed him to his seat. As, however, it was
-emotional paralysis and not physical, there was no means by which they
-could become aware of it; nor could I make up my mind to tell them.
-
-For quite apart from my damnable secret was the common, every-day fact
-that I had no income sufficient to maintain a wife in anything like the
-comfort to which Regina Barry had been accustomed. Though she might have
-accepted what I had to offer, I felt the usual masculine scruples as to
-offering it. This, too, was something that couldn’t be explained unless
-there was some urgent need of the explanation; and so when I was mad to
-go forward I had, to my shame and confusion, to hang back.
-
-Their retreat was managed with tact and dignity. During the week after
-Christmas I saw them on a number of occasions, always by invitation,
-though I had no further talk with Regina Barry alone. Two or three times
-I guessed she would have been willing to go out to walk with me, but I
-didn’t suggest it. As she had proposed it once, she could hardly do so
-a second time, and so we sat tamely in a sitting-room. Like that minute
-on Christmas Eve when she would have flown into my arms had I opened
-them, other minutes came and went; and I saw my coldness reacting on her
-visibly.
-
-At the end of ten days a note told me that they had returned to New York,
-apologizing for the fact that they had not had time to bid me good-by.
-Though seeing plainly enough the folly of a correspondence, I wrote in
-response to that note, hoping that a correspondence might ensue. But I
-got no answer. I got nothing. Not so much as a message was sent to me on
-the days when Ralph Coningsby came down.
-
-I did not resent this; I only suffered. I suffered the more because of
-supposing that she suffered too. And yet when I next saw her I found
-nothing to support that theory.
-
-When I went to New York for a few days in February I called, but they
-were not at home. Having left my card, I waited for a message that would
-name an hour when I should find them; but I waited in vain. During the
-four days my visit lasted I heard nothing kindlier than what Cantyre
-repeated, that they were sorry to have been out when I came.
-
-As I sent them flowers before leaving the city, a note from Mrs. Barry
-thanked me for them cordially; but there was not a syllable in it that
-gave me an excuse for writing in response. Reason told me that it was
-better that it should be so, but reason had ceased to be sufficient as a
-guide.
-
-In March I made an errand that took me to town for a week-end, and on
-the Sunday afternoon I called again at the house which had so curiously
-become the focusing-point of my destiny. Miss Barry was at home and
-receiving. I found her with two or three other people, and she welcomed
-me as doubtless she had welcomed them. Even when I had outstayed them she
-betrayed none of that matter-of-course intimacy which had marked her
-attitude toward me in December. She seemed to have retired behind all
-sorts of mental fortifications over which I couldn’t at first make my way.
-
-When we were seated in the style of Darby and Joan at the opposite
-corners of a slumbering fire she told me her father had made one hurried
-visit from California, and that, now that he had returned to the Pacific
-coast, she and her mother were thinking of joining him there. Should they
-do so, they would probably remain till it was time to go to Long Island
-in June. Two or three protestations against this absence came to my lips,
-but of course I couldn’t utter them.
-
-I could have sworn that she was saying to herself, “You don’t seem to
-care!” though aloud it became, “We’ve never been in California, and we
-want to see what it’s like.”
-
-I seized the opportunity to rejoin, “You’ve a fancy for seeing what
-things are like, haven’t you?”
-
-She took up the challenge instantly. “Why do you say that?”
-
-“Only because of what you’ve said at different times yourself.”
-
-“Such as?”
-
-“I don’t want to quote. I was thinking of the taste you’ve frequently
-acknowledged for making experiments.”
-
-“Experiments in things—or people?”
-
-“I was thinking of people.”
-
-She marched right into my camp by saying, boldly, “Oh, you mean the
-number of times I’ve—I’ve broken engagements?”
-
-“Perhaps I mean rather the number of times you’ve formed them.”
-
-“Did you ever buy a house?”
-
-I replied with some wonder that I had not.
-
-“Well, we’ve bought two—this one and the one at Rosyth. But before buying
-either we rented each for a season to see whether or not we liked it.”
-
-“And you did.”
-
-“But we’ve rented others which we didn’t. So you see.”
-
-“I see that experiments are justified. Is that what you mean?”
-
-“If one is satisfied with anything that comes along, by all means take
-it. But if one only wants what one wants—”
-
-“And you know what you want?”
-
-Her eyes were all fire; her lips had the daring scarlet of a poppy.
-
-“I’ve never got beyond knowing what I don’t want.”
-
-“That is, you’ve never taken anything up except in the long run to throw
-it down?”
-
-“Your expressions are too harsh. One doesn’t throw down everything one
-doesn’t want. One sets it aside.”
-
-“And would it be discreet to ask why you—why you set certain things—and
-people—aside?”
-
-She looked at the fire as if considering.
-
-“Do you mean—men?”
-
-“To narrow the inquiry down, suppose I say I do.”
-
-“And”—she threw me a swift, daring glance—“and marriage?”
-
-“That defines the question still further.”
-
-Her words came as the utterance of long, long thoughts.
-
-“One couldn’t marry a man one didn’t trust.”
-
-“No; of course not.”
-
-“Nor a milksop.”
-
-“You couldn’t.”
-
-“Nor a man who wasn’t a thoroughbred.”
-
-“Just what do you mean by that?”
-
-“Oh, don’t you know? If not I can’t explain. All I can say is that there
-are things a thoroughbred couldn’t do.”
-
-“What sort of things?”
-
-“Why should you want me to tell you? You know as well as I do. The things
-that make a man impossible—mean things—ignoble things.”
-
-“Criminal things?”
-
-“Criminal things, too, I suppose. I don’t know so much about them; but I
-do see a lot of meanness and pettiness and— Oh, well, the sort of lack of
-the fastidious in honor that—that puts a man out of the question.”
-
-“Aren’t you very hard to please?”
-
-“Possibly.”
-
-“And if you don’t find what—what you’re looking for?”
-
-“I shall do without it, I suppose.”
-
-“And if you think you find it—and then discover that, after all—”
-
-She shrugged her shoulders.
-
-“I don’t know. I’ve never been absolutely disillusioned so far. When
-disillusion has come to me—as it has—I could see it on the way. But if
-I—I cared for some one and found I was deceived in him— But what’s the
-use in talking of it?” she laughed. “Please don’t think I’m putting forth
-a claim to be treated better than the average. It’s only when I see the
-average—”
-
-“The average of men?”
-
-“No, the average of women. When I see what they’re willing to take—and
-marry—and live with—I can only say that I find myself very well off as I
-am.”
-
-This conversation did not make it easier for me to go back to the
-starting-point of our acquaintance; but the moment came when I did it.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XVI_
-
-
-I did not, however, do it that spring, since the event that compelled me
-at last to the step took up all my attention.
-
-It was toward the end of April that I received a telegram signed by my
-sister’s name:
-
-“Mother seriously ill. Wants to see you. Come at once.”
-
-In spite of my alarm at this summons I saw the opportunity of putting
-up a good front before my relatives. Taking Lovey with me as valet, and
-stopping at the best hotel, I presented the appearance of a successful
-man.
-
-Though anxiety on my mother’s account made my return a matter of
-secondary interest, I could see the surprise and relief my apparent
-prosperity created. My brothers had been expecting one of whom they would
-have to be ashamed. Furthermore, they had not been too confident as to
-my attitude with regard to my father’s will. Looking for me to contest
-it, they had suspected that behind my acquiescence lay a ruse. When they
-saw that there was none, that I made no complaint, that I seemed to have
-plenty of money, that I traveled with a servant, that I had the air of a
-man of means—a curious note of wonder and respect stole into their manner
-toward me. I know that in private they were saying to each other that
-they couldn’t make me out; and I gave them no help in doing so.
-
-I gave them no help during all the month I remained in Montreal. I
-arranged with Coningsby to take that time, and my little stock of savings
-was sufficient to finance me. Though I was once more putting up a bluff,
-it was a bluff that I felt to be justified; and in the end it found its
-justification.
-
-I have no intention of giving you the details of those four weeks of
-watching beside a bed where the end was apparent from the first. Now that
-I look back upon them, I can see that they were not without their element
-of happiness, since to my mother at least it was happiness to know that
-I was beside her. The joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth was
-on her face from the day I appeared, and never left it up to that moment
-when we took our last look at her dear smiling features.
-
-When the lawyer came to read us her will I found, to my amazement, that
-she had left me everything she possessed.
-
-It was then that I reaped that which I had sown at Andy Christian’s
-suggestion. Since with a good grace I had accepted my father’s will, the
-rest of the family could hardly do otherwise with regard to my mother’s.
-She left a note saying that, had my father lived a few months longer,
-he would have seen that I had re-established myself sufficiently to be
-allowed to share equally with the rest of the family in what he had to
-leave; but, as it was too late for that, she was endeavoring to right the
-seeming injustice—which he had not meant as an injustice—as far as lay in
-her power. These words from her pen being much more emphatic than any I
-could remember from her lips, my brothers and sisters, whatever they felt
-inwardly, could only give their assent to them.
-
-What my mother possessed included not only the personal estate she
-had inherited from her father, considerably augmented by her husband’s
-careful management, but books, furniture, and jewelry. The books and
-furniture I made over to my sister to remain in the two houses, the one
-in Montreal, the other on the Ottawa. Some of the jewelry I gave to her,
-to my sister in England, and to my two sisters-in-law, though keeping the
-bulk for my wife—when I got one.
-
-For I was now in a position to marry. Though my mother had had no great
-wealth, what she left me, together with the trust fund established by my
-father and what I earned, would assure me enough to live in at least as
-much comfort as Ralph Coningsby. I could, therefore, propose to Regina
-Barry and feel I could make a home for her.
-
-I had again come to the conclusion that if I asked her she would accept
-me. I make no attempt to analyze this feeling on her part, because I saw
-plainly enough that it was founded on mistake. That is to say, having
-developed an ideal of the man whom she could marry, she had nursed
-herself into the belief that I came up to it, when, as a matter of fact,
-I did not.
-
-Now I had seen enough of husbands and wives to know that in most
-marriages there is some such illusion as this, and that it can be
-successfully maintained for years. When the illusion itself has faded
-it can live on as the illusion of an illusion. By the time there is no
-illusion or shadow of illusion left at all it has ceased in the majority
-of cases to matter. Time has welded what mutual distaste might have put
-asunder, and the married state remains undisturbed.
-
-I was, therefore, obliged to face the consideration that if I married
-the woman I loved she would probably never discover what I felt it my
-duty to confess. Was it really, then, my duty to confess it? Since no
-one knew it but myself, was it not rather my duty to keep it concealed?
-Other men had secrets from their wives—especially those that concerned
-the days when they were unmarried—and all were probably the happier for
-the secrecy. Even Ralph Coningsby, who was the most model husband I could
-think of, had said that if he were to tell his wife all he could tell her
-about himself he would be ashamed to go home. There were weeks when I
-debated these questions every day and night, arriving at one conclusion
-by what I may call my rough horse sense, and at another by my instinct.
-Horse sense said, “Marry her and keep mum.” Instinct warned, “You can
-never marry her and be safe and happy with such a secret as this to come
-between you.”
-
-Throughout this wavering of opinion I knew that when the time came I
-should act from instinct. It wasn’t merely that I wanted to be safe; it
-was also that, all pros and cons apart, there was such a thing as honor.
-Not even to be happy—not even to make the woman I cared for happy—could I
-ignore that.
-
-I am not sure how much Andrew Christian understood of the circumstances
-when, without giving him the facts or mentioning a name, I asked his
-advice. He only said:
-
-“You’ve had some experience, Frank, of the potency of love, haven’t you?
-Well, love has a twin sister—truth. In love and truth together there’s a
-power which, if we have the patience to wait for its working out, will
-solve all difficulties and meet all needs.”
-
-My experiences during the past few months having given me some reason to
-believe this, I decided, so far as I came actively to a decision, to let
-it rule my course; but in the end the critical moment came by what you
-would probably call an accident.
-
-It was the last Sunday in June. My work in Atlantic City being over, Mrs.
-Grace had asked me to come down for the week-end to her little place in
-Long Island. It was not exactly a party, though there were two or three
-other people staying in the house. My chief reason for accepting the
-invitation—as I think it was the chief reason for its being given—was
-that the Barry family were in residence on the old Hornblower estate,
-which was the adjoining property.
-
-As a matter of fact, Mrs. Grace and her guests were all asked to
-Idlewild, as the late Mrs. Hornblower had named her house, to Sunday
-lunch.
-
-The path from the one dwelling to the other was down the gentle slope
-of Mrs. Grace’s gardens, across a meadow, at the other side of which it
-joined the Idlewild avenue, and then up a steep hill to the rambling
-red-and-yellow house. Here one dominated the Sound for a great part of
-the hundred and twenty miles between Montauk Point and Brooklyn.
-
-Sauntering idly through the hot summer noon, I found myself beside Mrs.
-Grace, while the rest of the party straggled on ahead. As my hostess was
-not more free than other women from the match-making instinct, it was
-natural that she should give to the conversation a turn that she knew
-would not be distasteful to me.
-
-“She’s a wonderful girl,” she observed, “with just that danger to
-threaten her that comes from being over-fastidious.”
-
-“I know what you mean by her being over-fastidious; but why is it a
-danger?”
-
-“In the first place, because people misunderstand her. They’ve ascribed
-to light-mindedness what has only been the thing that literary people
-call the divine searching for perfection.”
-
-“And do you know the kind of thing she’d consider perfect?”
-
-It was so stupid a question that I couldn’t be surprised to see a gleam
-of quiet mischief in her glance as she replied, “From little hints she’s
-dropped to me, quite confidentially, I rather think I do.”
-
-Fair men blush easily, but I tried to ignore the fact that I was doing it
-as I said, “That’s quite a common delusion at one stage of the game; but
-suppose she were to find that she was mistaken?”
-
-The answer shelved the question, though she did it disconcertingly: “Oh,
-well, in the case she’s thinking of I don’t believe she will.”
-
-I was so eager for data that I pushed the inquiry indiscreetly.
-
-“What makes you so sure?”
-
-“One can tell. It isn’t a thing one can put into words. You know by a
-kind of intuition.”
-
-“Know what?”
-
-“That a certain kind of person can never have had any but a certain kind
-of standard.” She gave me another of those quietly mischievous glances.
-“I’ll tell you what she said to me one day not long ago. She said she’d
-only known one man in her life—known him well, that is—of whom she was
-sure that he was a thoroughbred to the core.”
-
-“But you admitted at the beginning that that kind of conviction is a
-danger.”
-
-“It would be a danger if her friends couldn’t bear her out in believing
-it to be justified.”
-
-Unable to face any more of this subtle flattery, I was obliged to let the
-subject drop.
-
-The lunch was like any other lunch. As an unimportant person at a
-gathering where every one knew every one else more or less intimately, I
-was to some extent at liberty to follow my own thoughts, which were not
-altogether happy ones. For telling what I had to tell, the necessity had
-grown urgent. What was lacking, what had always seemed to be lacking, was
-the positive opportunity. This I resolved to seek; but suddenly I found
-it before me.
-
-This was toward the middle of the afternoon, when the party had broken
-up. It had broken up imperceptibly by dissolving into groups that
-strolled about the lawns and descended the long flights of steps leading
-to the beach below. As I had not been seated near Miss Barry at table,
-it was no more than civil for me to approach her when the party was on
-the veranda and the lawn. Our right to privacy was recognized at once by
-a withdrawal of the rest of the company. It was probably assumed that I
-was to be the fourth in the series of experiments of which Jim Hunter
-and Stephen Cantyre had been the second and the third; and, though my
-fellow-guests might be sorry for me, they would not intervene to protect
-me.
-
-Considering it sufficient to make their adieux to Mrs. Barry, they left
-us undisturbed in a nook of one of the verandas. Here we were out of
-sight of any of the avenues and pathways to the house, and Mrs. Barry was
-sufficiently in sympathy with our desire to be alone not to send any one
-in search of us. On the lawn robins were hopping, and along the edge of
-shorn grass the last foxgloves made upright lines of color against the
-olive-green scrub-oak. Far down through the trees one caught the silvery
-glinting of water.
-
-The sounds of voices and motor wheels having died away, Miss Barry said,
-languidly: “I think they must be all gone. They’ll say I’m terribly rude
-to keep myself out of sight. But it’s lovely here, isn’t it? And this is
-such a cozy spot in which to smoke and have coffee. I read here, too,
-and— Oh, dear, what’s happening?”
-
-It was then that the little accident which was to play so large a part
-in my life occurred. She had leaned forward from her wicker chair to
-set her empty coffee-cup on the table. As she did so the string of
-pearls which she wore at the opening of her simple white dress loosened
-itself and slipped like a tiny snake to the floor of the veranda. From
-a corresponding chair on the other side of the table I sprang up and
-stooped. When I raised myself with the pearls in my right hand I slipped
-them into my pocket.
-
-Between the fingers of my left hand I held a lighted cigar. Bareheaded,
-I was wearing white flannels and tennis shoes. Now that the moment had
-come, I felt extraordinarily cool—as cool as on the night when I had
-slipped this string of pearls into my pocket before. I looked down and
-smiled at her. Leaning back in her chair, she looked up and smiled at me.
-
-I shall always see her like that—in white with a slash of silk of the red
-of her lips somewhere about her waist, and a ribbon of the same round her
-dashing Panama hat. Her feet in little brown shoes were crossed. With
-an elbow on the arm of her chair, she held a small red fan out from her
-person, though she wasn’t actively using it.
-
-“What does that mean?” she asked, idly, at last.
-
-[Illustration: “Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls into his
-pocket before?”]
-
-“Doesn’t it remind you of anything?”
-
-“No—of nothing.”
-
-“Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls into his pocket before?”
-
-“Why, no!” She added, as if an idea had begun to dawn in the back of her
-memory, “Not in that way.”
-
-“Oh, I remember. You didn’t see him put them in at all. You only saw him
-take them out.”
-
-The smile remained on her features, but something puzzled gave it faint
-new curves.
-
-“Why—”
-
-“It was like this, wasn’t it?”
-
-I drew out the pearls and threw them on the table.
-
-She bent forward slightly, still smiling, like a person watching with
-bewildered intensity a conjurer’s trick.
-
-“Why—”
-
-“Only your gold-mesh purse was with them—and your diamond bar-pin—and
-your rings.”
-
-“Why—who, who on earth could have told you?”
-
-I, too, continued to smile, consciously wondering if I should be as calm
-as this in the hour of death.
-
-“Who do you think?”
-
-“It wasn’t Elsie Coningsby?”
-
-“No. She was in the house, but—”
-
-“How did you know that?” She uttered a mystified laugh. “She _was_ there!
-It was one of the nights she stayed with me when papa and mamma were down
-here superintending some changes before we could move in. But I never
-told her anything about it.”
-
-“Why didn’t you—when she was right on the spot?”
-
-“Oh, because.”
-
-The smile disappeared. She stopped looking up at me to turn her eyes
-toward the foxgloves and scrub-oak.
-
-“Yes? Because—what?”
-
-“Because I promised—that man—I wouldn’t.”
-
-“Why should you have made him such a promise?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. Just at the time I was—I was sorry for him.”
-
-“And aren’t you sorry for him still?”
-
-She looked up at me again with one of her bright challenges.
-
-“Look here! Do you know him?”
-
-“Tell me first what I asked you. Aren’t you sorry for him still?”
-
-“I dare say I am. I don’t know.”
-
-“What did you—what did you—think of him at the time?”
-
-“I thought he was—terrible.”
-
-“Terrible—in what way?”
-
-“I don’t know that I can tell you in what way. It was so awful to think
-that a man who had had some advantages should have sunk to that. If he’d
-been a real burglar—I mean a professional criminal—I should have been
-afraid of him; but I shouldn’t have had that sensation of something meant
-for better things that had been debased.”
-
-“Didn’t he tell you he was hungry?”
-
-The smile came back—faintly.
-
-“You seem to know all about it, don’t you? It’s the strangest thing I
-ever knew. No one in this world could have told you but himself. Yes, he
-did say he was hungry; but then, a man who’d been what he must have been
-shouldn’t have got into that condition. He’d stolen into our pantry, poor
-creature, and drunk the cooking-wine. He told me that—” Without rising,
-her figure became alert with a new impulse. “Oh, I see! You do know him.
-He was an Englishman. I remember that.”
-
-I placed myself fully before her. “No, he wasn’t an Englishman.”
-
-“He spoke like one.”
-
-“So do I, for the matter of that.”
-
-“Then he was a Canadian. Was he?”
-
-“He was a Canadian.”
-
-“Oh, then that accounts for it. But you did puzzle me at first. But how
-did you come to meet him? Was it at that Down and Out Club that papa and
-Mr. Christian are so interested in? You go to it, too, don’t you? I think
-Stephen Cantyre said you did.”
-
-“Yes, I go to it, too.”
-
-She grew pensive, resting her chin on a hand, with her elbow on the arm
-of the chair.
-
-“I suppose it’s all right; but I never can understand how men can be so
-merciful to one other’s vices. It looks as if they recognized the seed of
-them within themselves.”
-
-“Probably that’s the reason.”
-
-“Women don’t feel like that about one another.”
-
-“They haven’t the same cause.”
-
-“I hope he’s doing better—that man—and picking up again.”
-
-“He is.”
-
-She asked, in quite another tone, “You’re not going back to New York
-to-morrow, are you?”
-
-“I’m not sure—yet.”
-
-“Hilda said she was going to try to persuade you and the Grahams to stay
-till Tuesday. If you can stay, mamma and I were planning—”
-
-I put myself directly in front of her, no more than a few feet away, my
-hands in the pockets of my jacket.
-
-“Look at me again. Look at me well. Try to recall—”
-
-Slowly, very slowly, she struggled to her feet. The color went out of her
-lips and the light from her eyes as she backed away from me in a kind of
-terror.
-
-“What—what—are you trying to make me—to make me understand?”
-
-“Think! How should I know all that I’ve been saying if—”
-
-“If the man himself didn’t tell you. But he did.”
-
-“No, he didn’t. No one had to tell me.”
-
-She reached the veranda rail, which she clutched with one hand, while the
-other, clenched, was pressed against her breast.
-
-“You don’t mean—”
-
-“Yes, I do mean—”
-
-“Oh, you can’t?”
-
-“Why can’t I.”
-
-“Because—because it isn’t—it isn’t possible! You”—she seemed to be
-shivering—“you could never have—”
-
-“But I did.”
-
-She gasped brokenly. “You? You?”
-
-I nodded. “Yes—I.”
-
-I tried to tell her, but I suppose I did it badly. Put into a few bald
-words the tale was not merely sordid, it was low. I could give it no
-softening touch, no saving grace. It was more beastly than I had ever
-imagined it.
-
-Fortunately she didn’t listen with attention. The means were indifferent
-to her when she knew the end. For the minute, at any rate, she saw me not
-as I stood there, clean and in white, but as I had been a year before,
-dirty and in rags. But she saw more than that. With every word I uttered
-she saw the ideal she had formed broken into shivers, like a shattered
-looking-glass.
-
-She interrupted my preposterous story to gasp, “I can’t believe it!”
-
-“But it’s true.”
-
-“Then you mustn’t mind if—if I put you to a test. Did you—did you write
-anything while you were there?”
-
-“I printed something—in the same kind of letters you’ve seen at the
-bottom of architects’ plans.”
-
-“And how did you come to do it?”
-
-I recounted the circumstance, at which she nodded her head in
-verification.
-
-“So that was how you knew the words you repeated to me a few months ago?”
-
-“That was how. I said there were men in the world different from any
-you’d seen yet; and I told you to wait.”
-
-She made a tremendous effort to become again the daring mistress of
-herself which she generally was. She smiled, too, nervously, and with a
-kind of sickening, ghastly whiteness.
-
-“Funny, isn’t it? There are men in the world different from any I’d seen
-before that time. I’ve—I’ve waited—and found out.”
-
-Before I could utter a rejoinder to this she said, quite courteously,
-“Will you excuse me?”
-
-I bowed.
-
-With no further explanation she marched down the length of the
-veranda—carrying herself proudly, placing her dainty feet daintily,
-walking with that care which people show when they are not certain of
-their ability to walk straight—and entered the house.
-
-I didn’t know why she had gone; but I knew the worst was over. Though I
-felt humiliation to the core of the heart’s core, I also felt relief.
-
-With a foot dangling, I sat sidewise on the veranda rail and waited.
-Glancing at my watch, I saw it was not yet four, and I had lived through
-years since I had climbed the hill at one. My sensations were comparable
-only to those of the man who has been on trial for his life and is
-waiting for the verdict.
-
-I waited nervously, and yet humbly. Now that it was all over, it seemed
-to me that the bitterness of death was past. Whatever else I should have
-to go through in life, nothing could equal the past quarter of an hour.
-
-The sensations I hadn’t had while making my confession began to come to
-me by degrees. Looking back over the chasm I had crossed, I was amazed
-to think I had had the nerve for it. I trembled reminiscently; the cold
-sweat broke out on my forehead. It was terrible to think that at that
-very minute she was in there weighing the evidence, against me and in my
-favor.
-
-Mechanically I relighted the cigar that had gone out. Against me and
-in my favor! I was not blind to the fact that in my favor there was
-something. I had gone down, but I had also struggled up again; and you
-can make an appeal for the man who has done that.
-
-She was long in coming back. I glanced at my watch, and it was nearly
-half past four. Her weighing of the evidence had taken her half an hour,
-and it was evidently not over yet. Well, juries were often slow in
-coming to a verdict; and doubtless she was balancing the extenuating
-circumstance that I had struggled up against the main fact that I had
-gone down.
-
-What she considered her ideal had during the past few weeks been
-gradually transferring itself from her mind to my own. She wouldn’t marry
-a man she couldn’t trust; she wouldn’t marry a man who hadn’t what she
-called spirit; she wouldn’t marry a milksop. But she had well-defined—and
-yet indefinable—conceptions as to how far in spirit a man should go, and
-of the difference between being a milksop and a man of honor. She might
-find it hard to admit that the pendulum of human impulse that swung far
-in one direction might swing equally far in the other; and therein would
-lie my danger.
-
-But I must soon know. It was ten minutes of five. The jury had been out
-more than three-quarters of an hour.
-
-A new quality was being transmuted into the atmosphere. It was as if the
-lightest, flimsiest veil had been flung across the sun. In the distant
-glinting of the sea, which had been silver, there came a tremulous shade
-of gold. The foxgloves bowed themselves like men at prayer. The robins
-betook themselves to the branches. From unseen depths of the scrub-oak
-there was an occasional luscious trill, as the time for the singing of
-birds wasn’t over yet.
-
-Round me there was silence. I might have been sitting at the door of an
-empty house. I listened intently for the sound of returning footsteps,
-but none came.
-
-At a quarter past five a chill about the heart began to strike me. I had
-been waiting more than an hour. Could it be possible that...?
-
-It would be the last degree of insult. Whatever she did, she wouldn’t
-subject me to that. It would be worse than her glove across the face.
-It was out of the question. I couldn’t bear to think of it. Rather than
-think of it, I went over the probabilities that she would come back with
-the smile of forgiveness. It would doubtless be a tearful smile, for
-tears were surely the cause of her delay. When she had controlled them,
-when she was able to speak and bid me be of good comfort, I should hear
-the tap of her high heels coming down the uncarpeted stairway. No red
-Indian ever listened for the tread of a maid’s moccasins on forest moss
-so intently as I for that staccato click.
-
-But only the birds rewarded me, and the cries of boys who had come to
-bathe on the beach below. There was more gold in the light; more trilling
-in the branches; a more pungent scent from the trees, the flowers, and
-the grass; and that was all.
-
-It was half past five; it was a quarter to six; it was six.
-
-At six o’clock I knew.
-
-My hat was lying on a chair near by. I picked it up—and went.
-
-I went, not by the avenue and the path, but down the queer, rickety
-flights of steps that led from one jutting rock to another over the face
-of the cliff, till I reached the beach. It was a broad, whitish, sandy
-beach, with a quietly lapping tide almost at the full. Full tide was
-marked a few feet farther up by a long, wavy line of seaweed and other
-jetsam.
-
-It was the delicious hour for bathing. As far as one could see in either
-direction there were heads bobbing in the water and people scrambling
-in and out. Shrill cries of women and children, hoarse shouts of men,
-mingled with the piping of birds overhead. Farther out than the bathers
-there were rowboats, and beyond the rowboats sails. In the middle of
-the Sound a steamer or two trailed a lazy flag of smoke. Far, far to the
-south and the west a haze like that round a volcano hung over New York. I
-should return there next day to face new conditions. I only wished to God
-that it could be that night.
-
-The new conditions were, briefly, three: I could use the revolver still
-lying in my desk; or I could begin to drink again; or, like the bull
-wounded in the ring, I could seek shelter in the dumb sympathy of the
-Down and Out.
-
-The last seemed to me the least attractive. I had climbed that hill, and
-found it led only to a precipice that I had fallen over.
-
-Neither did the first possibility charm me especially. Apart from the
-horror of it, it was too brief, too sudden, too conclusive. I wanted the
-gradual, the prolonged.
-
-It was the second course to which my mind turned with the nearest
-approach to satisfaction. Christian had told me that some of my severest
-tussles lay ahead; and now I had come to the one in which I should go
-under. In that the flesh at least would get its hour of compensation,
-when all was said and done.
-
-At the foot of Mrs. Grace’s steps I paused to recall Christian’s words of
-a few days previously:
-
-“In love and truth together there’s a power which, if we have the
-patience to wait for its working out, will solve all difficulties and
-meet all needs.”
-
-I had tried that—love and truth together!—and at the result I could only
-laugh.
-
-My immediate fear was lest Mrs. Grace and the Grahams would be on the
-veranda, vaguely expecting to offer me their congratulations. When
-half-way up the steps I heard voices and knew that they were there. So be
-it! I had faced worse things in my life; and now I could face that.
-
-But as I advanced up the lawn I saw them moving about and talking with
-animation. As soon as Mrs. Grace caught sight of me she hurried down
-the steps, meeting me as I passed among the flower-beds. She held a
-newspaper marked Extra in her hand, and seemed to have forgotten that I
-had love-affairs.
-
-“Have you seen this? Colt, the chauffeur, was at the station and brought
-it back. It’s just come down from New York.”
-
-Glad of anything that would distract attention from myself, I took the
-paper in my hand and pretended to be reading it. All I got was the
-vague information that some one had been assassinated—some man and his
-morganatic wife. What did it matter to me? What did it matter to any one?
-Of all that was printed there, only five syllables took possession of my
-memory—and that because they were meaningless, “Gavrilo Prinzip!”
-
-I was repeating them to myself as I handed the paper back, and we
-exchanged comments of which I have no recollection. More comments were
-passed with the Grahams, and then, blindly, drunkenly, I made my way to
-my room.
-
-There I found nothing to do less classic than to sit at the open window,
-to look over at the red-and-yellow house on the opposite hill. It was
-my intention to think the matter out, but my brain seemed to have
-stopped working. Nothing came to me but those barbaric sounds, that kept
-repeating themselves with a kind of hiss: “Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo
-Prinzip!”
-
-From my stupefied scanning of the paper I hadn’t grasped the fact that
-a name utterly unknown that morning was being flashed round the world
-at a speed more rapid than that of the earth round the sun. Still less
-did I suspect that it was to become in its way the most sinister name in
-history. I kept repeating it only as you repeat senseless things in the
-minutes before you go to sleep.
-
-“Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo Prinzip!”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XVII_
-
-
-I came back as Major Melbury, of one of the Canadian regiments.
-
-It was in November, 1916, that I was invalided home to Canada, lamed and
-wearing a disfiguring black patch over what had been my left eye.
-
-There were other differences of which I can hardly tell you in so
-many words, but which must transpire as I go on. Briefly, they summed
-themselves up in the fact that I had gone away one man and I was coming
-back another. My old self had not only been melted down in the crucible,
-but it had been stamped with a new image and superscription. It was of a
-new value and a new currency, and, I think I may venture to add, of that
-new coinage minted in the civil strife of mankind.
-
-The day of my sailing from Liverpool was exactly two years four months
-and three weeks from that on which I had last seen Regina Barry; and
-because it was so I must tell you at once of an incident that occurred at
-the minute when I stepped on board.
-
-Having come up the long gangway easily enough, I found that at the top,
-where passengers and their friends congregate, my difficulties began.
-
-When my left eye had been shot out the right had suffered in sympathy,
-and also from shock to the retina. For a while I had been blind. Rest and
-care in the hospital my sister, Mabel Rideover, maintained at Taplow
-had, however, restored the sight of my right eye; and now my trouble was
-only with perspective. People and things crowded on one another as they
-do in the vision of a baby. I would dodge that which was far away, and
-allow myself to bump into objects quite near me.
-
-As I stepped on deck I had a minute or two of bewilderment. There were so
-many men more helpless than I that whatever care there was to give was
-naturally bestowed on them. Moreover, most of those who thronged the top
-of the gangway had too many anxieties of their own to notice that a man
-who at worst was only half blind didn’t know which way to turn.
-
-But I did turn—at a venture. The venture took me straight into a woman
-holding a baby in her arms, whom I crushed against the nearest cabin
-wall. The woman protested; the baby screamed. I was about, in the
-rebound, to crash into some other victim when I felt from behind me a
-hand take me by the arm. An almost invisible guide began to pilot me
-through the crowd. All I caught sight of was a Canadian nurse’s uniform.
-
-It is one of the results of the war that men, who are often reduced to
-the mere shreds of human nature, grow accustomed to being taken care of
-by women, who remain the able-bodied ones.
-
-“Thanks,” I laughed, as the light touch pushed me along, slightly in
-advance. “You caught me right in the nick of time. I can see pretty well
-with my good eye, only I can’t measure distances. They tell me that will
-come by degrees.”
-
-Even though occupied with other thoughts, I was surprised that my rescuer
-didn’t respond to my civility, for another result of the war is the ease
-with which the men and women who have been engaged in it get on terms
-of natural acquaintanceship. When artificial barriers are removed, it
-is extraordinary how quickly we go back to primitive human simplicity.
-Social and sex considerations have thus been minimized to a degree which,
-it seems to me, will make it difficult ever to re-establish them in their
-old first place. They say it was an advance in civilization when we
-ceased to see each other as primarily males and females and knew we were
-men and women. Possibly the war will lead us a step farther still and
-reveal us as children of one family.
-
-That a nurse shouldn’t have a friendly word for a partly incapacitated
-man struck me, therefore, as odd, though my mind would not have dwelt on
-the circumstance if she hadn’t released my arm as abruptly as she had
-taken it. Having helped me to reach a comparatively empty quarter of the
-deck, she had counted, apparently, on the slowness and awkwardness of my
-movements to slip away before I could turn round.
-
-When I managed this feat she was already some yards down the length of
-the deck, hurrying back toward the crowd from which we had emerged. I saw
-then that she was too little to be tall and too tall to be considered
-little. Moreover, she carried herself proudly, placing her dainty feet
-daintily, and walking with that care which people display when they
-are not certain of their ability to walk straight. Reaching one of the
-entrances, she went in, exactly as I had seen a woman pass through a
-doorway two years four months and three weeks before.
-
-I was sure it was she—and yet I told myself it couldn’t be. I told myself
-it couldn’t be, for the reason that I had been deceived so frequently
-before that I had grown distrustful of my senses. All through the
-intervening time I had been getting glimpses of a slight figure here,
-of an alert movement there, of the poise of a head, of the wave of a
-hand—that for an instant would make my heart stop beating; but in the
-end it had meant nothing but the stirring of old memories. In this case
-I could have been convinced if the coincidence had not put too great a
-strain on all the probabilities.
-
-I was to learn later that there was no coincidence; but I must tell my
-story in its right order.
-
-The right order takes me back to my return to New York, after my week-end
-at Mrs. Grace’s, on the morning of June 29, 1914.
-
-During the two or three hours of jogging down the length of Long Island
-in the train I tried to keep out of my mind all thoughts but one; having
-deposited my bags at my rooms, I should go to Stinson’s.
-
-With regard to this intention I was clearly aware of a threefold blend of
-reaction.
-
-First, there was the pity of it. I could take a detached view of this
-downfall, just as if I had heard of it in connection with Beady Lamont or
-old Colonel Straight. Though I should be only a man dropped in the ranks,
-while they would have been leaders, the grief of my comrades over my
-collapse would be no less sincere.
-
-But by tearing my mind away from that aspect of the case I reverted to
-the satisfaction at being in the gutter, of which the memories had never
-ceased to haunt me. I cannot expect to make you, who have always lived on
-the upper levels, understand this temptation; I can only tell you that
-for men who have once been outside the moral law there is a recurrent
-tugging at the senses to get there again. I once knew an Englishman who
-had lived in the interior of Australia and had “gone black.” On his
-return to make his home in England he was seized with so consuming a
-nostalgia for his black wives and black children that in the end he went
-back to them. Something like this was the call I was always hearing—the
-call of Circe to go down.
-
-But I knew, too, that there was method in this madness. I was
-deliberately starting out to earn the wages of sin; and the wages of
-sin would be death. I must repeat that going to Stinson’s would be no
-more than a slow, convenient process of committing suicide. It would be
-committing suicide in a way for which Regina Barry would not have to feel
-herself responsible, as she would were I to use the revolver. Having
-brought so much on her, I was unwilling to bring more, even though my
-heart was hot against her.
-
-My heart was hot against her—and yet I had to admit that she had been
-within her rights. When all was said that could be said in my favor,
-I had deceived her. I had let her go on for the best part of a year
-believing me to be what I was not, when during much of the time I could
-see that such a belief was growing perilous to her happiness. I had been
-a coward. I should have said from the first moment—the moment when she
-took me for my brother Jack—“I am a crook.” Then all would have been open
-and aboveboard between us; but as it was there was only one way out. Any
-other way—any way that would have allowed me to go on living longer than
-the time it would take drink to kill me—would have been unbearable.
-
-The checkmate to these musings came when my eyes fell upon Lovey. He was
-at the door of the apartment, not only to welcome me, but to give me
-ocular demonstration that he had kept the faith while I had been away.
-It was the first time since the beginning of our association that I had
-left him for forty-eight hours; and that he was on his honor during those
-two days was no secret between us. The radiant triumph of his greeting
-struck into me like a stab.
-
-For Lovey now was almost as completely reconstructed as I. I use the
-qualifying “almost” only because the longer standing of his habits and
-the harder conditions of his life had burnt the past more indelibly into
-him. Of either of us one could say, as the Florentines are reported to
-have said of Dante, “There goes a man who has been in hell”; but the
-marks of the experience had been laid more brutally on my companion than
-on me.
-
-Otherwise he showed cheering signs of resuscitation. Neat, even at the
-worst of times, he was now habitually scrubbed and shaved, and as elegant
-as Colonel Straight’s establishment could turn him out. He had, in fact,
-for the hours he had free from washing windows, metamorphosed himself
-into the typical, self-respecting English valet, with a pride in his work
-sprung chiefly of devotion.
-
-And for me he made a home. I mean by that that he was always
-there—something living to greet me, to move about in the dingy little
-apartment. As I am too gregarious, I may say too affectionate, to live
-contentedly alone, it meant much to me to have some one else within the
-walls I called mine, even if actual companionship was limited.
-
-But whatever it was, I was about to destroy it. I could scarcely look him
-in the eyes; I could hardly say a word to him.
-
-While unpacking my suit-case he said, timorously, “Y’ain’t sick, Slim?”
-
-I began to change the suit I had been wearing for one that would attract
-less attention at Stinson’s.
-
-“No, Lovey; I’m all right. I’m just—I’m just going out.”
-
-And I went out. I went out without bidding the poor old fellow good-by,
-though I knew it was the last the anxious pale-blue eyes would see of
-me in that phase of comradeship. When next we met I should probably be
-drunk, and he would have come to get drunk in my company. It would then
-be a question as to which of us would hold out the longer.
-
-And that was the thought that after an hour or two turned me back. I
-could throw my own life away, but I couldn’t throw away his. However
-reckless I might be on my own account, I couldn’t be so when I held
-another man’s fate in my hand.
-
-Even so, I didn’t go back at once. Half-way to Stinson’s—I was on foot—I
-came to a sudden halt. It was as if the sense of responsibility toward
-Lovey wouldn’t allow me to go any farther. I said to myself that I
-must think the matter out—that I must find and would find additional
-justification for my course before going on.
-
-To do that I turned into a chance hotel.
-
-I like the wide hospitality of American hotels, where any tired or
-lonesome wayfarer can enter and sit down. I have never been a clubman.
-Clubs are too elective and selective for my affinities; they are too
-threshed and winnowed and refined. I have never in spirit had any desire
-to belong to a chosen few, since not only in heart, but in tastes and
-temperament, I belong to the unchosen many. I enjoy, therefore, the
-freedom and promiscuity of the lobby, where every Tom, Dick, and Harry
-has the same right as I.
-
-Annoyed by the fact that a halt had been called in my errand of
-self-destruction, I began to ask myself why. The only answer that came to
-me was that this old man, this old reprobate, if one chose to call him
-so, cared for me. He had been giving me an affection that prompted him to
-the most vital sacrifice, to the most difficult kind of self-control.
-
-Then suddenly that truth came back to me which Andrew Christian had
-pointed out a few months earlier, and which in the mean time had grown
-dim, that any true love is of God.
-
-I was startled. I was awed. In saying these things I am trying only to
-tell you what happened in my inner self; and possibly when a man’s inner
-self has plumbed the depths like mine it means more to him to get a bit
-of insight than it does to you who have always been on the level. In any
-case this question rose within me: Was it possible that out of this old
-man, this drunkard, this murderer, cast off by his children, cast out
-by men, some feeble stream was welling up toward me from that pure and
-holy fountain that is God? Was it possible that this strayed creature
-had, through what he was giving me—me!—been finding his way back to the
-universal heart? If ever a human being had been dwelling in love he
-had been dwelling in it for a year and more; and there were the words,
-distilled out of the consciousness of the ages, and written for all time,
-“He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God.” Was it God that this poor,
-purblind old fellow had all unconsciously been bringing me, shedding
-round us, keeping us straight, making us strong, making us prosperous,
-helping us to fight our way upward?
-
-I went back.
-
-But on the way I had another prompting—one that took me into the office
-of a tourist company to consult time-tables and buy tickets.
-
-“Lovey,” I said, when I got home, “we must both begin packing for all
-we’re worth. We’re leaving for Montreal to-night.”
-
-“Goin’ to see your people, Slim, and stay in that swell hotel?”
-
-“Not just now, Lovey. Later, perhaps. First of all we’re going for a
-month into the woods north of the Ottawa.”
-
-His jaw dropped. “Into the woods?”
-
-“Yes, old sport. You’ll like it.”
-
-“Oh no, I won’t, Slim. I never was in no woods in my life—except London
-and New York. There’s one thing I never could abide, and that’s trees.”
-
-“You won’t say that when you’ve seen real trees. We’ll shoot and fish and
-camp out—”
-
-“Camp out? In a tent, like? Oh, I couldn’t, sonny! I’d ketch me death!”
-
-“Then if you do we’ll come back; only, we’ve got to go now.”
-
-“Why have we? It’s awful nice here in New York; and I don’t pay no
-attention to people that says it’s too hot.”
-
-I made the appeal which I knew he would not resist. Laying my hand on his
-shoulder, I said: “Because, old man, I’m—I’m in trouble. I want to get
-away where—where I sha’n’t see—some one—again—and I need you.”
-
-“It ain’t that girl, Slim? She—she haven’t turned you down?”
-
-The words took me so much by surprise that I hadn’t time to get angry.
-All I could feel was a foolish, nervous kind of coolness.
-
-“Lovey, what I want you to know I’ll tell you; and at present I’m telling
-you this: I’ve got to get out; I’ve got to get out quick; and I need you
-to buck me up. No one can buck me up like you.”
-
-“Oh, if it’s that!” He would have followed me then to places more
-dreadful than the Canadian woods. “Will you take all your suits—or only
-just them new summer things?”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XVIII_
-
-
-Thus it happened that when war broke out I was deep in the wilderness.
-For more than a month I had had no contact with the outside world, not a
-letter, not a newspaper. I had escaped from New York without leaving an
-address, since Cantyre was absent. I had meant to write to him to have my
-letters forwarded, but I never had. Could I have guessed that war was to
-begin and to last so long I might have acted differently; but the name of
-Gavrilo Prinzip was still meaningless.
-
-All sportsmen in my part of Canada know Jack Hiller’s, just as
-frequenters of the Adirondacks know Paul Smith’s. From Jack Hiller’s
-we struck farther in, to the rude camp where I had spent many a happy
-holiday when I was a lad. Two guides, an Indian and a half-breed, did the
-heavy work; and some long-forgotten, atavistic sporting strain in Lovey
-allowed him, groaningly and discontentedly, to enjoy himself.
-
-But if I expected to find peace I saw I was mistaken. The distance I had
-put between myself and the house dominating Long Island Sound was only
-geographical. In spirit I was always back on that veranda, living through
-again the minutes of the long waiting. So the solitude was no solitude
-for me. And then one day the half-breed’s canoe shot over the waters of
-the lake, bringing supplies from Jack Hiller’s, with the news that the
-world had gone to war.
-
-I wonder how many hundreds of thousands of men and women there are to
-whom the war came as a blessed opportunity to get away from uselessness
-or heartache. Stranded, purposeless, spiritless, futile, tired, empty,
-with something broken in the life or seemingly at an end, they suddenly
-found themselves called on to put forth energies they never knew they
-had, to meet needs they had never heard of.
-
-“Son of man, can these dry bones live?” one might have been asking
-oneself a few years previously; and all at once there were multitudes,
-multitudes in the valley of decision, energized into newness of being.
-Among them I was only one humble, stupid individual; but the summons was
-like that which came to the dust when it was bidden to be Adam and a man.
-
-I have no intention of telling you in detail what happened to me between
-that August morning in 1914 and the day I stepped on board the boat at
-Liverpool more than two years later. There is no need. You know the
-outlines of that tale already. My case hardly differed externally from
-any other of the millions of cases you have heard about. The machine of
-war does not vary in its working much more than any other machine, except
-for the drama played in each man’s soul.
-
-And of that I can say nothing. I don’t know why—but I cannot. Day and
-night I think of what I saw and heard and did in those two years, but
-some other language must be coined before I can begin to speak of it.
-
-In this I am not singular; it is a rule to which I know few, if any,
-exceptions. I have heard returned soldiers on the lecture platform,
-telling part of the truth, and nothing but the truth, but never the whole
-truth nor the most vital truth. I have talked with some of them when the
-lectures were over, and a flare in the eye has said, “This is for public
-consumption; but you and I know that the realities are not to be put into
-words.”
-
-One little incident I must give you, however, before I revert to what
-happened on the boat.
-
-Having in that early August made my way to Ottawa with Lovey, and decided
-that I must respond at once to the country’s call, I expected a struggle
-with him, or something bitter in the way of protest. But in this I was
-mistaken. He, too, had been thinking the matter over, and, hard as it
-would be for him to see me do it, that quiet valor which practically no
-Englishman is without raised him at once to the level of his part.
-
-“All right, Slim. It’s yer dooty to go, and mine to give ye up. We won’t
-say no more about that.”
-
-“Thanks, Lovey, for making it so easy for me. I’ll never forget it as
-long as I live. Now there’s only one thing—”
-
-“If it’s about me goin’ straight, sonny, while ye’re away, I’ll swear to
-God not to look so much as on the same side o’ the street as a drop o’
-liquor till He brings ye back to me.”
-
-“Then I believe He will bring me back, old fellow.”
-
-“Sure He’ll bring ye back. Ye’ll be ’ome before Christmas; and, Slim, if
-it isn’t goin’ to cost ye too much money, won’t ye ’old on to them rooms
-so as I can keep our little place together, like, and ’ave it all clean
-and nice for you—?”
-
-Having consented to this, I was able to make further provision for the
-old man when Cantyre joined me for a day or two in Montreal to bid me
-good-by. Lovey’s heroism was the sort of thing to draw out Cantyre’s
-sentimental vein of approval.
-
-“I’ll take him and look after him, Frank. He’ll valet me till you come
-back. I’ve always wanted a man to do that sort of thing, and only haven’t
-had one because I thought it would look like putting on side. But now
-that he drops down to me out of heaven, as you might say, I’ll take him
-as a souvenir of you.”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XIX_
-
-
-All these interests had seemed far away from me during the two and a half
-years over there; but in proportion as I drew near Liverpool that morning
-they reformed themselves in the mists of the near future, as old memories
-come back with certain scents and scenes. Not till the damp, smoky haze
-of the great port was closing in round me did I realize that my more
-active part in the vast cosmic episode was at an end, and that I had come
-to the hour I had so often longed for—and was going home.
-
-I was going home; and yet, for the minute, at any rate, I was not glad.
-There is always something painful in the taking up again of forsaken
-ties, however much we once loved them. It was like a repetition of the
-effort with which I had renewed my relations with my people. The actual
-has a way of seizing us in its tentacles and making us feel that it is
-the only life we ever truly led. There was a time when I seemed to forget
-that I had ever been anywhere but in the trenches. During the month or
-two that I was blind I got so used to the condition as to find it strange
-that I had ever seen. And always, in face of the fierce intensity of the
-present, the life in New York was remote, shadowy, and dim, as they say
-the life in prison becomes from its very monotony to those who look back
-on it after their release.
-
-What it really amounted to was that during those two years I seemed to
-have grown in the size of my mental conceptions. Having been hurled into
-an existence gigantic, monstrous, in which there were no limits to either
-the devotion or the cruelty of human beings toward one another, all other
-ways of living had grown pale and small. If you can imagine yourself
-swirling through space, riding both zephyrs and tempests equally as a
-matter of course, you can understand how tame it would seem to be tied
-down to earth again, to go at nothing more stimulating than a walking
-pace. Otherwise typified, a lion that has been in a cage, and after two
-and a half years of free roving in the jungle finds itself returned to
-the cage again, would probably have the same sinking of the heart as I
-when I saw the hulk of the _Assiniboia_ loom up before me in the dock.
-
-And then came that odd little incident of the nurse to connect me with
-the past by a new form of excitement. I have to confess that it was
-excitement largely compounded of wonder and distress. A dull ache told me
-that sensation was returning to a deadened nerve, and that where I had
-supposed there was paralysis at least there was going to be reaction and
-perhaps a pang.
-
-For by this time I had passed through that process which is commonly
-known as “getting over it.” That is, a new self was living a new life on
-a new plane of existence. All that belonged to the period before I went
-to enlist at Ottawa was on the other side of a flood. I had not precisely
-forgotten; I had only died and become a transmigrated soul. Whatever was
-past was past. I might suffer from it; I might feel its consequences;
-but I couldn’t live it again. On the other hand, I was living vividly in
-the present. Not so much consciously or by word as because I couldn’t
-help it, I had merged everything I was into one dominating purpose with
-which, as far as I was aware, Regina Barry had nothing to do. The aims
-for which the war was being fought were my aims; I had no others. When
-these objectives were won my life, it seemed to me, would be over. It
-would melt away in that victory as dawn into sunrise. It would not be
-lost; it would only be absorbed—a spark in the blaze of noonday.
-
-So mentally I was pressing forward. Though I could do no more fighting,
-I had been told that there was still work by which I could contribute
-to the object beside which no other object could be taken into
-consideration. I was being sent back for that reason. Not much had been
-told me as yet about what I was to do, but I understood that it was to be
-in connection with American public opinion. It will be remembered that
-at the end of 1916 the United States was not only not in the war, but it
-was still doubtful as to whether or not she ever would be. The hand of a
-cautious listener being on the pulse of a patient people, it was on the
-beat of that pulse that the issue turned.
-
-I understood that, with my acquaintance ranging among high and low, I
-was to do what I could to make the pulse a little quicker. I might not
-be able to do much, but we had all learned the value of small individual
-contributions. It was argued that in proportion as the American people
-began to see on which side the balance of righteousness dipped, my
-game leg and my black patch, and the haggardness and gauntness and
-batteredness of my whole appearance, would have some appeal. The appeal
-would be the stronger for the fact that I was not an Englishman, but a
-Canadian—blood-brother to the man of his own continent, blood-brother
-to the Briton, blood-brother to the Frenchman, blood-son of the great
-ideals fathered by the Anglo-Saxon race, and in which all free peoples in
-the course of two hundred years had been made participants—and quick to
-spring to their defense. I was to be, therefore, a kind of unobtrusive,
-unaccredited ambassador to the man in the office and the street, with
-instructions to be inoffensive but persuasive.
-
-And on this mission all my conscious thought was set. No hermit in the
-desert was ever more entirely self-dedicated to the saving of his soul
-than I to the quiet preaching of this new crusade among men like Ralph
-Coningsby and Stephen Cantyre and Beady Lamont and Headlights and Daisy
-and Momma and Mouse, and any others with whom I should come in contact.
-In fulfilling this task I wanted no one to disturb or distract me; and
-here at the very outset was some one who might do both.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XX_
-
-
-After having found my cabin and seen to my belongings I hobbled up on
-deck once more, to verify my vision of the Canadian nurse’s uniform.
-I discovered the uniform in two or three instances, but in none that
-corresponded to the figure too little to be tall and too tall to be
-considered little I had watched receding down the deck.
-
-As for the costume itself, it was not difficult to find myself beside
-one of the ladies who wore it—a beautiful, grave woman, of the type of
-Bouguereau’s Consolatrice, who, with hands resting on the deck rail, was
-looking down at the movement on the dock.
-
-“There seem to be a number of nurses going back,” I observed, after an
-introductory word or two.
-
-“There are three in our party—myself and the two over there.”
-
-The two over there were two I had already seen, neither of them being my
-pilot of a half-hour previously.
-
-“I thought I saw another,” I threw off, casually.
-
-“I believe there is one—an American girl from Lady Rideover’s hospital at
-Taplow.”
-
-As I had just come from Lady Rideover’s hospital at Taplow, and Lady
-Rideover herself was my sister, I suggested, without mentioning the
-relationship, that in this speculation there was some mistake.
-
-“She may not have come directly from there,” the Consolatrice admitted;
-“but I know she was with Lady Rideover six months ago.”
-
-“But six months ago I was with Lady Rideover myself.”
-
-“Well, she was there then.”
-
-“But I should have seen her if she had been.”
-
-She turned slowly round on me, with deep, kind eyes. “Would you? You
-could see all the time?”
-
-I had forgotten that. There had been two months when I hadn’t seen at
-all. Any one might have come and gone during that time.
-
-Remarking on the inconvenience of having no list of passengers, I asked
-my companion if she knew the young lady’s name.
-
-“No; but I can inquire of my friends. They may know.”
-
-Having crossed to speak to the nurses on the other side of the deck, she
-came back without the information.
-
-“But Miss Prynne,” she added, “that’s the short one, says that the young
-lady came over about two years ago with Lady Rideover’s sister, Miss
-Melbury, of Montreal.”
-
-I withdrew to ponder. I had been in continuous if desultory communication
-with my sisters during all my time abroad, and no mention of Regina Barry
-had ever escaped either. I had not supposed that they knew one another. I
-couldn’t bring myself to believe that I had been under the same roof with
-her at Taplow and had not been aware of it. And here she was on board
-the ship on which I was returning home, and able to come to my aid at a
-minute when I wanted help.
-
-I had often wished that some of my New York correspondents would speak of
-her, but no one ever had. Except in the case of Cantyre this was hardly
-strange, for—apart from Hilda Grace, who never wrote to me—no one knew
-that Regina Barry and I had meant anything to each other. If Cantyre had
-spoken of her, it would have been on his own account; but confidential
-as he was in private talk, his letters were never more than a few terse
-lines. So I had rather bitterly imagined her as going on with the testing
-of other men, as she had tested Jim Hunter, Cantyre, and me—trying them
-and finding them wanting. In ungenerous moments I went so far as to hope
-that Nemesis might overtake her in some tremendous passion in which she
-herself would be tried and tossed aside.
-
-It was, however, the second day out before I actually came face to face
-with her. Her absence from the deck had been part of the mystery. Having
-swung into the Mersey, we remained there all Sunday night—it was a Sunday
-we had gone on board—and much of Monday. Accepting as necessary the
-secrecy which in war-time enshrouds an Atlantic voyage, the passengers
-had made themselves as comfortable as the conditions permitted, and taken
-air and exercise by promenading the decks. There could have been no
-better opportunity for finding familiar faces, but, apart from one or two
-distant acquaintances, I saw none. The three nurses’ uniforms I had noted
-already were continually about; but I never found the fourth.
-
-And then on Tuesday, after we had lost sight of the Irish coast, there
-was another queer little incident. As I could walk but little, I had been
-reading in the music-room. Tired of doing that and eager to continue my
-search for the missing uniform, I had limped to the doorway, screened by
-a heavy portière, leading out toward the companionway. But while I stood
-turning up the collar of my overcoat the portière was suddenly pulled
-aside, and we were before each other, with a suggestion of a similar
-occurrence three and a half years before.
-
-The very differences in my appearance—the mustache, the patch over my
-left eye, the military coat—must have helped to recall the earlier
-occasion by the indirect means of contrast. As for her, she was what she
-had seemed to me then—two great flaming eyes. They were tired eyes now,
-haunted, tragic perhaps, and I saw later that when you caught them off
-their guard they were pensive, if not mournful. They were, indeed, all I
-could see of her, for the rest of her features were hidden by the veil
-over the lower part of the face which women occasionally copy from the
-Turkish lady’s yashmak. A small black cap, held by a jade-green pin, and
-a long, shapeless black ulster or coat completed a costume quite unlike
-the uniform for which I had been looking.
-
-I can only describe that encounter as the meeting of two transmigrated
-souls. She had gone as far in her direction as I in mine; but I couldn’t
-tell at a glance in what direction she had gone. It was what struck me
-dumb. When Paolo and Francesca met in space they had nothing to say to
-each other except with the eyes. In some such case as that we found
-ourselves. The pressure of topics was too great to allow of immediate
-selection. She seemed to wait for me to utter the first word, and as I
-was at a loss she dropped the portière behind her, inclined her head, and
-passed on into the saloon.
-
-Though it was my place to follow her, I couldn’t, for the minute, take
-so obvious a course. I was not only too mystified by what I had heard of
-her, but too confused as to our standing toward each other. I couldn’t
-begin with a “How do you do?” as if we had parted on the ordinary social
-terms, while anything more dramatic would have been absurd. Hobbling
-along the deck, I took refuge in the smoking-room in order to reflect.
-
-Reflection was not easy. Over its calm fields emotion spread like water
-through a broken dike. For two and a half years the emotional had been so
-stemmed and banked and dammed in me that I had thought it under control
-forever. I had had enough to do in giving orders or carrying them out.
-But, now that the repressed had broken its bounds again, the tide swept
-everything away with it.
-
-Not that I knew just what I was experiencing; on the contrary, I couldn’t
-have disentangled the element of anger from that of curiosity, nor that
-of curiosity from that of joy. All I could say for certain was that never
-in my life had I been so anxious to keep free; never had I so much needed
-concentration and single-mindedness. The task to which I had vowed my
-undivided energy and heart demanded a genuine celibacy of the will; and
-now of all the women in the world....
-
-I was working on this train of thought when I became aware that people
-were running along the deck. Glancing about me at the same moment, I saw
-I was alone in the smoking-room. A whistle blew, piercingly, alarmingly.
-By the time I had struggled to my feet the ship changed her course so
-sharply as to throw me against a chair.
-
-I knew what it was, of course. We had been talking of the possibility
-ever since we left the Mersey. However much we tried to keep the mind
-away from the subject, it came back to it, as a mischievous boy makes
-straight for the thing forbidden him.
-
-My first thought was for the girl in the yashmak. I must find her, see
-she had a life-belt, and take her to her boat. Before I had scrambled to
-the door, however, it flew open, apparently of its own accord, while a
-wild nor’wester positively blew the young lady in.
-
-It also blew away anything like Paolo-and-Francesca sentiment.
-
-“Oh, here you are!” she exclaimed, breathlessly. “I’ve been hunting for
-you everywhere. They say we’ve sighted a periscope. Take this and put it
-on.”
-
-Of the two life-belts she carried she flung one to me, beginning to
-fasten the other about herself.
-
-“But the one you’ve brought me must belong to some one else,” I objected,
-as I aided her. “I’ve got one of my own in my cabin. I’ll just run down—”
-
-She brushed this aside. “No; this is yours. I went and got it.”
-
-“You—” I began in astonishment.
-
-“I’m a nurse—or a kind of one,” she said, hastily. “That’s what I’m here
-for.”
-
-“But you knew where my cabin was?”
-
-“I found out. Oh, hurry—please!”
-
-She helped me as a medieval lady might have helped her lord to buckle on
-his sword; and presently we were out on deck.
-
-As we had twice already drilled in the unsightly things, we had lost
-the sense of the grotesque appearance presented by ourselves and our
-fellow-travelers. Besides, we were too eager to descry the periscope to
-have any more thought of ourselves than a wild duck of how it looks when
-skimming away from a sniper. Indeed, it was chiefly of a hunted wild duck
-that our zigzagging boat reminded me.
-
-It was a sullen day, with that scudding of low, gray clouds which looks
-as if the heavens were hastening to some Armageddon of their own. The
-sea had hardly got over the swell left by one gale when it was being
-lashed into fury by another. The _Assiniboia_ pitched and rolled and
-tore through the waters like a monster goaded by innumerable stings. I
-should have found it next to impossible to struggle along the deck had my
-protectress not stood by and steadied me.
-
-There was a kind of foolish pretense at the chivalrous in my tone as I
-said, “I’ll just see you to your boat before going over to mine.”
-
-“We’re in the same boat,” she answered, briefly. “Do come along.”
-
-I thought of my forty-eight hours of unfruitful search for her.
-
-“But I didn’t see you at Number Seven when we drilled yesterday.”
-
-“I’m there now,” she said, with the same brevity. Feeling, apparently,
-that some explanation was needed, she went on: “I’ve—I mean they—they’ve
-changed me. Miss Prynne has let me have—or rather she’s taken— That is,”
-she finished, in confusion, “we’re all nurses together—and we’ve—we’ve
-exchanged.”
-
-In spite of some inward observations, I spared her any other comment
-than to say, “How jolly!” as if the exchange had been the most
-matter-of-course thing in the world.
-
-I spoke just now of riding tempests and zephyrs, and something like that
-it was to plow along at every ounce of steam, with cross seas, head
-seas, seas abeam, and seas abaft, as each new zigzag caught them. On the
-roaring of the wind and the plunge and thunder of the waves one rose
-into regions of tumultuous play where life and death were the stakes. I
-saw no signs of fear, and still less of panic; nor, so far as the eye
-could read, anything more than a sporting excitement. One would have
-said that our peril was accepted as being all in the game, part of the
-day’s work. By the end of 1916 Atlantic travelers had come to take the
-submarine for granted, just as the statesmen of Plantagenet and Tudor
-times took the headsman’s block as one of the natural risks of going into
-politics.
-
-But we looked instinctively for a periscope. It is not an easy thing for
-any one to see, and for me it was more difficult than for most. I saw
-none; or I saw a hundred. With the imperfect vision of my one eye the
-crests of the billows bristled with moving four-inch pipes; and then
-suddenly all would disappear and I saw nothing but the waves curling
-upward into coronets of foam with veils of trailing lace.
-
-Not that I was worse off in this respect than my fellow-travelers. As
-they ran for their boats they would pause, take a hurried look at the
-seas, exclaiming, “There it is!” and then, more doubtfully, “No, no!”
-all in one breath. The “No, no!” was generally uttered in a tone of
-disappointment, since to cross the ocean and sight no submarine would
-have been like journeying through Egypt and missing the pyramids.
-
-And yet our danger was apparent. Only a fortnight before the
-_Kamouraska_, sister ship to the _Assiniboia_, had been sent to the
-bottom in these very waters, with great loss of life. Of the tragedy
-the papers had given us realistic pictures that were fresh in all our
-minds. There was a preliminary scene on board not unlike the one we
-were enacting. We saw later a shell bursting on the deck, somewhere
-amidships. We saw the passengers and crew taking to the boats with shells
-kicking up geysers among them as they tried to get away. We saw the great
-ship sticking as straight up out of the water as a Cleopatra’s Needle,
-before going slowly down. We saw the U-boat herself lying on the water
-like a crocodile, some four thousand yards away; we saw Queenstown as a
-morgue. All this was as vividly in our minds as a rehearsal to the actors
-of a play; and yet we were probably no more nervous than the company on a
-first night when the curtain is going up.
-
-The word went round that it was the fate of the _Kamouraska_, with the
-futility of her surrender as a means of saving the passengers’ lives,
-that prompted our captain to flight and fight. Our wireless calls were
-undoubtedly going up and down the Irish coast and out into the ocean.
-Within an hour or two, if we could hold out so long, destroyers would be
-rushing to our rescue. We had nothing to be terribly afraid of with more
-than an imaginative fear.
-
-That imaginative fear was quickened by the seemingly maddened action
-of our ship. I can best describe her as a leviathan gone insane. If
-insanity were to overtake a whale it would probably splash the deep in
-some such frenzy as this—so many angles out of the course one way—then a
-violent heeling over—so many angles out of the course another way—anyway,
-anywhere, anything—to get out of that straight, staid line from port to
-port which makes an ocean-going ship a liner. I admit that in this wild,
-erratic dashing there was something that alarmed us, and something, too,
-that made us laugh. It was the comic side of madness, in which you can
-hardly see the terrible because of the grotesque.
-
-By the time we reached life-boat No. 7 there were many signs that neither
-officers nor passengers were going to take more chances than they were
-obliged to. At No. 5 on one side of us a young officer was on top,
-peeling off the tarpaulin covering. At No. 9 on the other side some of
-the crew were already mounted, examining supplies and oars. At our own
-boat, cranks were being fitted to the davits to swing the boat outward.
-All along the line similar preparations were in progress, while men
-and women—luckily we had no children on board—carrying such wraps and
-hand-bags as they might reasonably take, stood in groups, waiting for
-what was to happen next.
-
-Our view of the sea was largely cut off here by the bulk of the
-life-boats, though wherever there was a chink there was also a cluster of
-heads. So many saw periscopes—and so many didn’t see them—that it became
-a mild joke. In general we surmised that if a U-boat was cruising round
-us at all she had only been porpoising—sticking up her periscope for a
-second or two to get a look round, and withdrawing it before it could be
-seen by any eye not on that very spot.
-
-The girl in the yashmak and I arrived so late on the scene that there
-were no places left by the rail, and we were obliged to content ourselves
-with second-hand information as to what was taking place. Our excitement
-had, therefore, a lack of point, like that of the small boy behind the
-line of grown-up people watching a procession. We fell back in the end
-into a kind of alcove, where, being partially protected from wind and
-tumult, we could speak to each other without shouting.
-
-I took the opportunity to thank her for her kindness to me when I came on
-board on Sunday; but with my opening words the air of Francesca meeting
-Paolo in space came over her again. I understood her to say that her help
-on Sunday was a little thing, that she would have given it to any one.
-
-“Of course,” I agreed, “you would have given it to any one; but in this
-case you gave it to me. You must allow me to thank you before anything
-happens that might—that might make gratitude too late.”
-
-As I think of her now I can see that she was mistress of herself in the
-way that a letter-perfect actress is mistress of herself, repeating words
-that have been learned to fit a certain situation. She had foreseen that
-I would say something of the kind; she had foreseen that when I did she
-might be a prey to troublesome emotions; and so had fortified herself in
-advance by a studied set of phrases.
-
-“I’m so little of a nurse that I should be ashamed not to do for a
-soldier the few small things in my power.”
-
-If she had never made me suffer anything, and if the moment had not been
-one that might conceivably end our relations forever, I should probably
-not have uttered the words that came to me next.
-
-“Was it only because I’m a soldier—?”
-
-She interrupted skilfully. “Only because you’re a soldier? Isn’t a
-soldier the most splendid man in the world—especially at a time like
-this?”
-
-Bang!
-
-It was one of our two guns. As a merchantman, not built to withstand the
-concussion of cannon, the _Assiniboia_ shuddered.
-
-With an involuntary start my companion caught me by the sleeve.
-The impulse to seize her hand and draw it gently within my arm was
-irresistible. Had I reflected, I might not have done this, since my
-dominant desire was to keep stripped and unencumbered for the race.
-
-She allowed me to retain her hand just long enough to show that she was
-not mortally offended, after which she gently disengaged herself. To
-cover the constraint that both of us felt I went on to wonder if our shot
-had taken effect. A young man who had gone to find out came back with the
-news that the lookout, having spied the pin furrow of the periscope, the
-shot had been fired at a venture. As far as could be observed it had done
-nothing but send up a waterspout.
-
-On receiving this information I went on with our interrupted
-personalities.
-
-“Ever since Sunday I’ve wondered what had become of you; but then I’ve
-been looking for the uniform.”
-
-“I always intended taking that off when I got on board. You see, I never
-was a nurse in any but an amateur sense, and so—”
-
-It was my opportunity to spring the surprise I had been holding in
-reserve ever since my talk with the Consolatrice in the dock at Liverpool.
-
-“When did you last see Mabel?”
-
-She spoke with a sharp, sudden mezzo cry that might have been caused by
-pain.
-
-“Who told you that?”
-
-“Who told me what?”
-
-Bang!
-
-It was our second gun, and though the girl in the yashmak started again,
-she did not seize my arm. To hold the drama at its instant of suspense,
-I pretended to be more interested in the effect of the shot than in
-anything else in the world, as in other circumstances I should have been.
-I turned to this one and that one, inviting their guesses, noting all
-the while that over Regina Barry’s eyes there spread the surface fire
-that a flaming sunset casts on troubled water.
-
-She harked back to the subject as soon as it was clear that we had missed
-our aim again.
-
-“Lady Rideover promised me she’d never tell you.”
-
-Her tone having become accusatory, I broke in on it with studied
-nonchalance.
-
-“And she never did. To the best of my recollection she never mentioned
-your name to me. But is there anything wrong in my knowing that you and
-she are friends?”
-
-Color mounted to her brows where the yashmak couldn’t conceal it, though
-she ignored the question.
-
-“And I’m sure it wasn’t your sister Evelyn.”
-
-“Why shouldn’t it have been?”
-
-“Because she promised me, too. I should be frightfully hurt if I thought
-she—”
-
-“Then I’ll relieve your mind by assuring you that she didn’t. But to me
-the curious thing is that you shouldn’t have wanted me to know.”
-
-She ignored this, too, a furrow of perplexity deepening between her brows.
-
-“It isn’t possible that Lady Rideover or Evelyn, without telling you in
-words, should have allowed you to suspect—”
-
-“Not any more than they allowed me to suspect that I was being nursed by
-a houri out of paradise.”
-
-She hastened to make a correction. “Oh, I never acted as nurse to you! It
-was that Miss Farley.”
-
-“But you were at Taplow when I was there, and in and out of my room.”
-
-The peculiar light in her eyes, partly of amazement, partly of
-incredulity, reminded me of a poor trapped lady I had once seen in the
-prisoner’s dock while a witness recounted the secrets of her life with
-remarkable exactness of detail.
-
-“But you couldn’t see me!” she began, helplessly.
-
-“No, but I could hear.”
-
-“And you didn’t hear me. If I went into your room, which I didn’t often
-do—”
-
-I launched a theory that was purely inspiration.
-
-“Oh, I know. If you came into my room you didn’t make a sound. You
-arranged that with Mabel. But haven’t you heard that the blind develop an
-extra sense?”
-
-“Not as quickly as that—or with that precision.” She brightened with a
-new thought. “If your extra sense told you I was there, why didn’t you
-speak to me?”
-
-“Suppose I said that I respected your incognita? If you didn’t want to
-speak to me it must have been for a reason. I couldn’t ignore that.”
-
-Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!
-
-A shell from the submarine struck the water somewhere near us, though all
-we saw was a column of white spume on the port side of the ship, while we
-were on the starboard.
-
-She ignored even this. Standing erect, with her hands in the pockets of
-her ulster, with no feature to betray her but her eyes, she surmised,
-calmly, “Some of the other nurses or one of the patients must have given
-you a hint.”
-
-“None of them ever pronounced your name in my hearing.”
-
-“Then I give up guessing!” she said, with a touch of impatience.
-
-“Which is what I can’t do.”
-
-“But what have you to guess at?”
-
-“At what you’ve done it—at what you’re doing it—for.”
-
-She may have smiled behind the yashmak as she said, “What difference does
-it make to you?”
-
-“I dare say it doesn’t make any—except that I seem to be the person
-benefited.”
-
-“In time of war the soldier—the man who does the thing—is the person
-benefited.”
-
-“Oh no; there’s the cause.”
-
-“But surely, if we’ve learned anything during the past two years, it’s
-that what the soldier does for the cause can’t compare with what the
-cause does for the soldier.”
-
-I saw my opportunity and was quick to use it. “So that out of what you’ve
-been doing for me even you have got something.”
-
-She turned this neatly. “I’ve got a great deal—out of what I’ve been
-doing for every one. Not that it’s been much. I merely mean that,
-whatever it’s been, it’s brought me in far more than I’ve ever given out.”
-
-The swing of the boat was so abrupt as almost to make her heel over. Up
-and down the deck such passengers as were clinging to nothing were flung
-this way and that, with some laughing and a few involuntary cries. Miss
-Barry having braced me in a corner of the alcove because of my game leg,
-I kept my footing steadily, but the girl herself was thrown square into
-my arms.
-
-Not more than a second later another Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! warned us that
-another shell was on the way; but before we had time to be afraid a soft
-P-ff! told us that this, too, had struck the water. The waterspout, this
-time on the starboard side, not only spattered us with spray, but made
-it clear that only the sharp shifting of the course had saved us from a
-hole in our bow. That within the next few minutes our enemy would get us
-somewhere was a little more than probable.
-
-Then from every cluster of heads came the cry, “Oh, look!”
-
-There she was—a blue-gray streak, only a little darker than the blue-gray
-waters. The change in our course revealed her as she lay on the surface
-to shell us, since she was too far away to send us a torpedo. We forgot
-everything—Regina Barry and I forgot each other—to gaze. My arms relaxed
-their hold on the girl because there was no longer a mind to direct them;
-the girl took command of herself because it was only thus that she could
-observe the most baleful and fascinating monster in the world.
-
-For it was as a monster, baleful and fascinating, that we regarded her.
-She was not a thing planned by men’s brains and built in a shipyard.
-She was an abnormal, unscrupulous, venomous water beast, with a special
-enmity toward man. She had about her the horror of the trackless, the
-deep, the solitary, the lonesome, the devilish. Few of us had ever got
-a glimpse of her before. It was like Saint George’s first sight of the
-dragon that wasted men and cities, and called forth his hatred and his
-sword.
-
-I think that sheer hatred was the cause of our banging away at her with
-our two guns. We could hardly expect to hit her. She must have been out
-of our range, and our only hope was in getting out of hers.
-
-As far as we could judge she was lying still and shelling us at her ease.
-Splash! Splash! Splash! The screeching things went all round us; but by
-some miracle they were only spectacular.
-
-Viewed as a spectacle, there was a terrific beauty in it all. Nature and
-man were raging together, ferociously, magnificently, without conscience,
-without quarter, without remorse. Hell had unsealed its springs even in
-us who stood watchful and inactive. There was a sense of abhorrent glory
-in the knowledge that there were no limits to which we would not go.
-That there were no limits to which our enemy would not go with us was
-stimulating, quickening, like the flicker of the whip to the racer. About
-and above us were all the elements of which man is most accustomed to be
-afraid, but which, now that we were among them, inspired an appalling
-glee.
-
-It was amazing how quickly we got used to it, just as, I am told, a man
-after a night or two gets used to being in the death-house. To be shelled
-on a stormy, lonely ocean came within a few minutes to being a matter
-of course. Had we had time to reflect and look backward, it would have
-seemed strange to think that we had made voyages across the Atlantic in
-which we had not been shelled.
-
-Then all of a sudden there was a noise like that in a house when it is
-struck by lightning. It was as if all creation had burst into sound,
-as if there were nothing anywhere that was not a concomitant of an
-ear-splitting, soul-splitting crash. It was over us; it was round us;
-it was everywhere; it might have been within us. In our own persons we
-seemed to be rent by it.
-
-From the port side a blast of smoke rose and poisoned the dark air. A few
-shrieks, half suppressed by the shriekers, ran the length of the deck,
-and a few male exclamations of astonishment and awe. For the most part,
-however, we stood still and soundless, as I believe we should have held
-ourselves had it proved to be the Judgment Day.
-
-Our immediate impression was that all the aft of the ship had been
-carried away. Had she begun to settle stern foremost on the instant we
-should not have been surprised. We could hardly believe that the long,
-narrow perspective of the deck, with its groups dotting the length of it,
-could remain unshattered and afloat. We were sure the decks below must
-have been blown into air and water.
-
-For the hundredth part of a second the _Assiniboia_ appeared to stop
-still in her course, like a creature with its death-wound. She seemed
-stricken, stunned. But she gave another lurch, another swing to her huge
-person; and when the second shell came on, taking the range of that which
-had struck her, it plowed the waves astern. All seemed to be over in the
-space of between two breaths. By the time we could get our wits together
-sufficiently to ask what had happened she was once more driving onward.
-
-It was splendid. It was sublime. It thrilled one with pride in pluck and
-seamanship. One could have hugged the brave old leviathan by the neck.
-
-A British seaman, running down the deck on some errand, cried, as he
-passed us: “Got the old bucket aft, just above the water-line. But, Lor’!
-she don’t mind it! Didn’t do no ’arm. On’y killed Sammy Smelt, a steerage
-cabin-boy.”
-
-But it was a beginning. Nothing could save us now but speed and the
-captain’s skill. The young officer who had helped to strip the covering
-off No. 5 strolled by us, smoking a cigarette.
-
-“We’re showing her a pretty clean pair of heels,” he said, coolly, by way
-of dealing out encouragement. “Ship’s carpenter’s begun plugging up the
-hole. That won’t hurt us so long as we don’t get another.”
-
-“What about the cabin-boy?” some one called out.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, saying, merely, “Doctor attending to the
-wounded.”
-
-It was strange to be tearing through the seas, with that erratic course
-of the crazed leviathan, when at any second death might strike us from
-the air. I had often been under shell-fire, of course; but on land there
-was generally some dugout, some _abri_, in which one could seek shelter.
-What impressed me here was the vast exposure of it all. We could only
-stand with the heaven over us, ready to take to the boats, if need be, or
-equally ready to be blown into bits like little Sammy Smelt.
-
-Among the people on the deck the quiet waiting which the traditions of
-the race have made second nature continued. We might have been passengers
-gathered at the entrance to a railway track. If a scared look haunted
-some faces, it was not more than might have been occasioned by the
-extreme lateness of a train.
-
-The shells were still splashing, the ship was still driving onward under
-every pound of steam, when I looked again at the girl in the yashmak.
-It must not be understood that I had looked away from her for long. The
-period of our extreme peril did not in reality cover more than a few
-minutes. Like the crisis of a fever, it was slow in coming, but it passed
-quickly, though we needed some time to realize the fact.
-
-But when I looked again at Regina Barry I found her as little disturbed
-as a woman could possibly have been in that special situation. Not to be
-hurled again into my arms, she held now to the hand-rail that runs along
-cabin walls; but she watched me rather than the ocean. I was her charge
-and the ocean was not. The blue-gray streak that had held her attention
-for a while was visible only when the turnings of the ship threw it into
-view; otherwise we had nothing to see on the starboard side except an
-infinitude of billows with curling white crests.
-
-To resume something like the customary attitude of human beings toward
-each other I said, as casually as I could manage, “You came over here
-just after I did, didn’t you?”
-
-Having purposely framed my sentence in just those words, it was some
-satisfaction to get the result I was playing for. It took all the
-aplomb—a rather shy aplomb—of which she was mistress to answer in a way
-that wouldn’t underscore my meaning.
-
-“Possibly; but I don’t remember when you came over.”
-
-Having given the date of my sailing, I added, “And you left with Evelyn a
-little more than three weeks later?”
-
-“Since you know everything, you naturally know that.” She took on the old
-air of being at once smiling and defiant as she asked, “And has the fact
-any special significance?”
-
-“That’s what I want to find out.” Before she could protest that there was
-no such significance I put the question, “How did you come to know her?”
-
-“Is she so terribly difficult to know?”
-
-“Not in the least; only, you’d never seen her in your life at the time
-when”—I gathered all my innermost strength together to bring the words
-out—“at the time when I talked to you last.”
-
-She, too, gathered her innermost strength together, rising to the
-reference gallantly.
-
-“Oh, well, a good many things have happened since then.”
-
-Before going further I was obliged to pause and reckon how much I dared.
-Of the many sensitive points in my history, we were touching on the most
-sensitive. I was fully aware that since the sleeping dog was sleeping
-it might be better to let him lie. Once he was roused, there might be a
-new set of perils to deal with, perils we could avoid by softly stepping
-round them. That Paolo should go one way in space and Francesca another
-seemed to be decreed by inevitable fate; so why interfere with the
-process?
-
-I should probably not have interfered with it had the circumstances not
-raised us above the sphere of our ordinary interests. The roar of the
-wind, the tumult of the sea, the plunging of the ship, the indescribable
-whining of shells, the knowledge of danger—were as the orchestra which
-lifts the duet to emotional planes that dialogue alone could never attain
-to. Though our words might be commonplace, every syllable was charged
-with tones and overtones and undertones of meaning to be seized by
-something more subtle than intelligence. Prudence might have said, “Let
-everything alone,” but that urging of the being which escapes the leash
-of prudence drove me on to speak.
-
-“Do you remember when I talked to you last?”
-
-She answered with the detachment of a witness under compulsion to tell
-the truth. The personal was as far as possible eliminated from her voice.
-
-“Perfectly.”
-
-“We—we seemed to—to break off in the middle of a conversation.”
-
-“Which you never gave me any further opportunity of going on with.”
-
-The statement took my breath away. For some seconds I could only stare
-at her as a truthful man stares when he hears himself given the lie
-direct.
-
-“Did you—did you—want to go on with it?” I managed to stammer at last.
-
-“What do you think?”
-
-“I—I didn’t think that. I waited nearly two hours.”
-
-“And if you’d only waited a few minutes more—”
-
-I leaned down toward her, breaking in on her words with a sense of what I
-might have lost: “Everything would have been different? You were going to
-say that?”
-
-She took time to raise her hands and adjust the yashmak, giving me the
-clue to her reason for wearing it. It was putting on a vizor before
-going into battle. Knowing that she would be thrown into some difficult
-situations, she had taken this method of being as far as possible
-screened against embarrassment.
-
-She was successful in that. Apart from the shifting surface fire of her
-eyes and the slightest possible tremor in her voice I saw no rift in the
-barricade of her composure.
-
-“No; that isn’t what I was going to say. I don’t know how things would
-have been. I suppose they would have been as—as they are now.”
-
-“But we could have talked them over.”
-
-“If you’d waited.”
-
-“I should have waited forever if I’d known.”
-
-“Or if,” she went on, with the same serenity, “you hadn’t disappeared
-next day without leaving an address. I tried to find you—as well as I
-could, that is—without seeming to hunt you down.”
-
-I explained that when I left New York on that last Monday in June, 1914,
-I had not expected to be gone for more than a few weeks—just the time to
-recover from the first effects of the blow I thought her scorn had dealt
-to me.
-
-“It was curious, though,” I went on, “that that name, Gavrilo Prinzip,
-should have hammered itself in on my brain. I recall it now as about the
-only thing I could think of. I didn’t know what it meant, and I was far
-from supposing it the touchstone of human destinies that it afterward
-proved to be; but in some unreasoning way it held me. It was like the
-meaningless catch of a tune with which you can’t go on, till all at once
-you see it finishes in—”
-
-“In a trumpet-call. Yes, I know. You had to follow it. So had I. I don’t
-think there’s much more than that to be said.”
-
-The blue-gray streak was again on the starboard side, but comfortingly
-far astern. Though we were still within her range, we were getting the
-benefit of distance. At the same time some one called our attention to a
-blotch of black smoke, far down on the eastern horizon. A destroyer was
-coming to our aid.
-
-I went back to the point we had partially forsaken.
-
-“How long did you expect me to wait that afternoon?”
-
-She looked down at the deck, answering with a perceptible infusion of the
-bitter in her tone.
-
-“I didn’t fix a time. I wasn’t sitting with my watch in my hand.”
-
-“But I was.”
-
-“Evidently.”
-
-“Why didn’t you come down?”
-
-“I came down as soon as I could.”
-
-“What kept you?”
-
-She raised her eyes for a fleeting glance—lowering them again. At the
-same time her voice sank, too, so that in the fury of sound about us she
-was no more than audible.
-
-“The thing you told me.”
-
-“And that kept you—in what way?”
-
-“In the way of making everything—different.”
-
-“How much does that mean—different?”
-
-“It means a good deal.”
-
-“Can’t you tell me exactly?”
-
-“I can’t tell you exactly; but it was something like this.” She fixed
-her eyes on me steadily. “When they first opened the Subway in New York
-I came up out of a station one winter afternoon just as the lights were
-lit, and instead of going to the right, as I should have done, I turned
-to the left. When I had walked about fifteen minutes I was dazed. Though
-I was in a part of New York I knew perfectly well, I couldn’t recognize
-anything. It was all a confusion of lights. I couldn’t tell which of the
-streets ran north and south, or which were east and west, or what the
-buildings were that I’d been used to seeing all my life. In the end some
-one took me into a drug-store and made me sit down till I had time to
-reorientate myself.”
-
-“But you did it in the end?”
-
-“That time—yes.”
-
-“And this time? The time we’re talking about?”
-
-Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!
-
-Bang!
-
-Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!
-
-Bang!
-
-From the port side there came something like a feeble cheer—a chorus of
-rough male voices and high female screams, timid and yet glad.
-
-A new swing of our crazed leviathan disclosed the reason for this
-wavering, victorious cry. There were two more blobs of smoke on the
-horizon, and from different points on the Irish coast three huge birds
-were flying like messengers from some god. Moreover, the blob of smoke we
-had first seen now had a considerable stretch of the ocean behind her,
-and in front a parting of the spray like two white plumes as she tore in
-our direction.
-
-“She sure is some little ripper!” came a dry Yankee voice in the group
-about life-boat No. 5.
-
-“Thirty-five knots if it’s one.”
-
-“Them ’planes’ll overtake her, though, and be on the spot as soon as she
-is.”
-
-“Gosh! I’d like to see Fritzie then!”
-
-“J’ever see a kingfisher sweep down on a gudgeon?”
-
-“Gee-whiz! Look at Fritzie! Goin’ to submerge!”
-
-And sure enough, as we stared, the blue-gray streak began to sink behind
-the waves, becoming to the imagination even more a giant deep-sea reptile
-after it had gone.
-
-Almost simultaneously our leviathan calmed down, resuming her straight
-course. It was done apparently with the wordless, unexplained
-inconsequence with which a runaway horse will suddenly fall into a
-peaceful trot. There was no stopping to salute the destroyers and ’planes
-that were hastening to our help or to exchange confidences with them as
-to our common enemy. There was neither hail nor farewell as we forged
-again toward the open sea.
-
-Danger being considered past, the groups broke up, intermingling with
-sighs of relief. The Consolatrice and her friend came to exchange a few
-words with us, and Miss Prynne returned from the boat to which she had
-good-naturedly exchanged. While I thanked her for this kindness, as if
-it had been done for myself, I saw Miss Barry trying to slip off.
-
-By stepping out of my corner and assuming a limp lamer than my actual
-disability warranted I was able to intercept her.
-
-“I wonder,” I made bold to ask, “if you could give me a hand back to the
-music-room?”
-
-The yashmak was not so impervious but that I could detect behind it the
-scarlet glimmer of her smile.
-
-“Oh, I think you could get there by yourself. Try.”
-
-“I can manage the deck,” I said, in the tones of a boy feigning an
-indisposition to stay away from school, “but I’m afraid of the steps of
-the companionway.”
-
-“How would you have managed if I hadn’t been here?” she asked, as she
-allowed me to lean ever so lightly on her arm.
-
-The steps of the companionway presenting a more real difficulty than I
-had expected, I could say nothing till with her aid I had lowered myself
-safely down.
-
-Postponing the pleasure of thanking her, I reverted to the topic the last
-attack had interrupted.
-
-“I want to hear about your reorientation. You were able to put the
-streets in their proper place again, and to see New York as it was; but
-in my case—”
-
-She put out her hand with that air which there is no gainsaying.
-
-“I’m rather tired. I think I must go to my cabin and have a rest.” She
-added, however, not very coherently: “The way things happen is in general
-the best way—if we know how to use it.”
-
-Somewhat desperately, because of her determination to go, I burst out,
-“And do you think all this has been the best way?”
-
-“You must see for yourself that it’s been a very good way. We’ve been
-able to do—to do the things we’ve both done.” But the admission in the
-use of the first personal plural pronoun seemed suddenly to alarm her.
-She took refuge again in her need of rest. “I really must be off. If we
-don’t meet again before we leave the boat—”
-
-“Oh, but we shall!”
-
-“I’m very often confined to my cabin.”
-
-“Not when you want to be out of it.”
-
-“Very well, then; I very often don’t leave my cabin.”
-
-I was holding the hand she had extended to say good-by, but she slipped
-it away and was going.
-
-“Then tell me this—just this,” I begged. “How is it that we’re both on
-the same ship? That didn’t happen by accident?”
-
-Whether she refused to answer my question or whether it didn’t reach her
-I couldn’t tell. All I got in response was a long, oblique regard—the
-fleeing farewell look of Beatrice Cenci—as she carried her secrets and
-mysteries away with her.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXI_
-
-
-So my celibacy of the will was threatened. I mean by that that I found
-myself with two main objects of thought instead of one. Having vowed
-myself to a cause, a woman had supervened with that pervasiveness of
-presence with which a perfume fills a room. I might still vow myself to
-the cause, but I shouldn’t serve it as I had meant to, with heart and
-senses free.
-
-Or should I?
-
-The question fundamentally was that. Could I at a time like this divide
-my allegiance as I should be obliged to divide it by falling in love and
-being married? Or ought I, in deference to the work I was to do, suppress
-this old passion and smother the problems and curiosities it had begun to
-rouse in me?
-
-If, in view of the many men who have been good soldiers and equally good
-husbands, this hesitation seems far-fetched to you, I must beg you to
-remember what I have told you already, that my mission, such as it was,
-had become my life. For this the inspiration sprang from what I had seen
-for myself. What I had seen for myself compelled me to believe that the
-world was divided into just two camps—those who fought the Germans and
-those who did not. “He that is not with me is against me,” I was prepared
-to say; except that for the small bordering nations, whom the arch-enemy
-could have crushed as he had crushed Belgium and Serbia before any one
-else could save them, I was ready to make long allowances. I couldn’t
-make these allowances for the United States; and to win the friends
-I valued so highly to joining in the task that seemed to me the most
-pressing before mankind was the work to which I longed to give myself
-every minute of the day.
-
-No consecrated soldier of a holy war had ever been moved by a purer
-singleness of purpose than I when I came on board the _Assiniboia_; and
-now I was already thinking most of something else. As violently—I choose
-the adverb—as if I had never seen this woman’s image grow fainter and
-fainter in my memory I craved to know certain things about her.
-
-I might state those things in this way: Why, in the summer in which I
-joined the army and went across with the first Canadian contingent, did
-she seek the acquaintance of my sister Evelyn and undertake nursing in
-her company? Why did she join my sister Mabel and steal in and out of my
-room when I was blind? Why, since I was blind, did she keep her presence
-unknown to me and swear my sisters to secrecy? Why was she coming back
-on board this boat? Did she really care for me? And if she really cared
-for me, why this air of ever so courteous, ever so gentle constraint the
-minute we were alone and I broached any subject that was personal?
-
-Was she angry? Was she contrite? Was she wounded? Was she scornful? Was
-she proud? Or was she simply subjecting me to one more test, which might
-end again in her being disappointed?
-
-I have to confess that these inquiries already absorbed my soul in such
-a way that I forgot that on which I had been accustomed to meditate
-every hour of my time—the approach I was to make to American citizens
-like Beady Lamont and Ralph Coningsby. Against this weaning away of my
-heart some essential loyalty cried, “Treason!” I was the man who had put
-his hand to the plow and was looking back. If I continued to look back I
-might easily prove unfit for the kingdom of heaven as I conceived of it.
-
-Throughout the next day I was eager to test the effect of these
-counter-inclinations on myself. That I could only do by meeting her. If
-I met her, would she be to me simply what the Consolatrice was to a more
-intimate degree? Or should I find her the brave, aspiring, provocative
-spirit that had led me up the path that had begun to mount from the
-moment when I first saw her—only in the end to let me fall over the edge
-of a precipice? I wanted to see; I wanted to be sure.
-
-But she kept me waiting. She didn’t appear that day. It was a fine day
-for the ocean in November, with a tolerably smooth sea. It was not
-weather, therefore, that confined her to her cabin; it was something
-else. She knew I would be on the watch for her, and she let me have my
-labor for my pains.
-
-It was the kind of advance and recession with which I had least patience.
-On Thursday morning I kept no watch for her. Swearing that she meant no
-more to me than Miss Prynne and that my work in life was too serious to
-allow any woman to interfere with it, I gave myself to the reading of
-books on the war situation as it affected America. If she was playing a
-game, she would learn that it was not one of solitaire. Two could take
-a hand at it, and with equal skill. I prided myself on that skill when
-sometime in the latter part of Thursday afternoon she passed my chair in
-the music-room—the sixth sense told me it was she—and I did not look up
-from Sheering’s Oxford lectures on “The War and World Repentance.”
-
-Though my eye followed the passage, I got little or no sense from it.
-
-“Human effort after human welfare is never drastic enough,” I read. “It
-is never sufficiently radical to accomplish the purpose it tries to carry
-out. Instead of laying its ax at the root of the tree of its ills it is
-content to hack off a few branches. It never gets beyond pruning-work;
-and the most one can say of the results it achieves is that they are
-better than nothing.
-
-“So much, then, one can affirm of the dreams that are now being dreamed,
-in all probability to vanish with waking. They are better than nothing.
-Better than nothing are the aims held up before the Allied nations as
-the citadels they are to capture. The crushing of military despotism
-is better than nothing; the elimination of war is better than nothing;
-the establishment of universal democracy, the founding of a league of
-nations, the formation of a league to enforce peace, the dissemination
-of a world-wide entente, these are all of them better than nothing, even
-though they end in being no more productive of permanent blessing than
-the Hague Conference, which was better than nothing in itself. They are
-probably as effective as anything that man, with his reason, his wisdom,
-his science, his degree of self-control, and his pathetic persistence in
-believing in himself when that belief has so unfailingly been blasted,
-can ever attain to. But, oh, gentlemen, as the prophet said thirty
-centuries ago, ‘This is not the way, neither is this the city.’ You are
-pouring out blood; you are pouring out money; you are giving your sons
-and your daughters to pass through the fire to Moloch; through the fire
-to Moloch unflinchingly they pass; you are tearing the hearts out of your
-own bodies, and you are doing it with a heroism that cannot fail of some
-reward. But this is not the way, neither is this the city. It is better
-than nothing, but it is not the best. You could do it all so much more
-thoroughly, so much more easily. You will accomplish something; there is
-no question about that; but till you take the right way, and attack the
-city of which you must become masters, that great good thing for which
-you are fighting will still be a vision of the future.”
-
-But with the knowledge that this woman had simply passed and let her
-shadow fall upon me I had no heart for Sheering’s impassioned words. I
-got up and followed her.
-
-I found her on deck, far forward, leaning on the rail and watching a
-fiery, angry sunset that inflamed all the western horizon. As she looked
-round and saw me advancing along the deck I detected in her telltale eyes
-the first scared impulse to run away.
-
-But what was she afraid of?
-
-It was the question I asked as soon as I was near enough to speak.
-
-“What makes you think I’m afraid of anything?”
-
-“The way you looked. You see, this queer sort of veil doesn’t protect
-you; it gives you away by throwing all your expression into your eyes.
-There’s an essence that eludes one till it’s concentrated and distilled.”
-
-“I’m sure I didn’t mean—”
-
-“To look like an animal trying to escape? Well, you did.”
-
-“Oh, as to that, I could easily have walked round the deck-house to the
-other side of the ship.”
-
-“If the discourtesy wouldn’t have been too obvious—of course!” But I
-didn’t press the point. There were other admissions to which I had
-an unchivalrous craving to bring her if I could; and so I went on,
-artfully, “It was clever of you to find my state-room on Tuesday—all on
-the spur of the moment like that.”
-
-She contented herself with murmuring, “Yes, wasn’t it?”
-
-“And your own cabin is on another deck.”
-
-“I’m on this deck.”
-
-“So that you hadn’t even seen me going in and out.”
-
-“I’m a nurse—in a way. Nurses have to know more than other passengers or
-they’d be no good on board ship.”
-
-“And do you know every one’s cabin?”
-
-“I know every one’s cabin to whom I can be useful.”
-
-“Is that many?”
-
-“No; not many, unfortunately.” She diverted the attack by saying, “What
-are you asking for?”
-
-“Oh, for nothing,” I answered, carelessly. I added, however, with some
-slight show of intention, “I’ve called it your cleverness, but I really
-mean it as your kindness.”
-
-She decided to take the bull by the horns, shifting her position and
-standing with her back to the rail.
-
-“If you call it kindness that I should have learned the number and
-location of your cabin before we left Liverpool—”
-
-“Oh, you did it then?”
-
-“Yes, I did it then. But if you call it kindness, of course I can’t
-prevent you. I can only assure you it isn’t. I knew you couldn’t get
-about easily—”
-
-“How did you know that?”
-
-“I saw you come on board. Wasn’t that enough?”
-
-“Then let me go farther back and ask how you happened to see me come on
-board. Wasn’t it an extraordinary coincidence that you should have been
-there, right at the head of the gangway?”
-
-“Well, life is full of extraordinary coincidences, isn’t it? And when a
-woman who can do so little sees a wounded man—”
-
-There were other wounded men scattered about the deck. I glanced at them
-as I said, “And have you done that for all the wounded men on board?”
-
-“I’ve done it for all I know.”
-
-“And how many do you know?”
-
-She averted her profile, with an air of having had enough of the subject.
-
-“I wanted you to tell me a minute ago why you were asking me these
-questions, and you said for nothing.” I could see her smile behind the
-chiffon of the yashmak as she went on, “Since that’s your only reason,
-perhaps you won’t mind if I don’t answer you.”
-
-“But if I had a reason for asking, would you tell me then?”
-
-“Wouldn’t it have to depend on the reason?”
-
-“You’re very careful.”
-
-She shot a daring, smiling glance at me as she riposted, “Well, aren’t
-you?” Before I had time to recover from the slight shock that these words
-dealt me she pointed to the horizon. “See, there’s smoke over there. I do
-hope it’s not another U-boat.”
-
-I accepted the diversion—for more reasons than one. Of these the first
-was the shock to which I have alluded. She saw through me. That is,
-she saw I didn’t place her first. How she saw it I could no more tell
-than she could tell how I knew her history of the past two years. But
-the tables were turned and turned in such a way as to make me feel
-ridiculous. A man who is careful with regard to a woman is always
-slightly grotesque.
-
-As my most skilful defense lay in feigning a lack of perception I talked
-about U-boats and the experience of two days before; but I came away from
-her with a feeling of discomfort.
-
-I analyzed the feeling of discomfort as due to the repetition of our
-mutual attitude more than two years previously. Where she came forward I
-drew back. I had always drawn back. I used to suppose that nothing but
-one motive could have driven me to this humiliating course, and now I was
-taking it from another. I was taking it from another, and she knew it.
-The essence of the humiliation lay in that.
-
-Each time I met her on deck she betrayed a hesitation that I found harder
-to bear than contempt. Her very effort to preserve a tone of friendliness
-was a reproach to me. It seemed to say: “You see all I’ve done for you.
-You accept it and give me nothing in return.”
-
-And yet I was obliged to consider that which, were I to let myself be
-nothing but myself, might lie before me in the next few weeks and months.
-I should arrive in New York as a man engaged to be married. As a man
-engaged to be married I should be at once enveloped in that silken net
-of formalities with which women with their consecration to the future
-of the race have invested all that pertains to the preliminaries of
-mating. I had seen for myself that in America that silken net is more
-elaborate than it is elsewhere. In any British community it is spun of
-tissue, fragile, light, easily swept aside should the need arise. In
-America it is solidly constructed of gold cord, and is as often as not
-adorned with gems. In America an engagement leads to something of an
-anti-climax in that, from the human point of view, it is more important
-than a marriage. It is sung by a chorus of matrons and maidens and social
-correspondents of the press in a volume far more resounding than that
-of the nuptial hymn. That a man should marry after he has become engaged
-is considered as much a matter of course as that he should fight after
-he has enlisted; but that he should become engaged is like taking that
-first oath which denotes his willingness to give himself up, to make the
-great renunciation for the sake of something else. More than any single
-or signal act of bravery that comes later, it is the thing that counts.
-I am not quarreling with American social custom; I am only saying that I
-had reasons for being afraid of it.
-
-I should arrive in New York as a man engaged to be married, and as a man
-engaged to be married I should be put through paces as strict and as
-stately as those of the minuet. There would be no escape from it. I might
-be promised in advance an escape from it, but the promise would not be
-kept. I might be promised simplicity, privacy, secrecy, a mere process
-of handfasting before the least noticeable of legal authorities; but all
-would go by the board.
-
-Whatever my future wife and I might say—and my future wife would say it
-only half-heartedly, if as earnestly as that—I should be seized in the
-soft, tender, irresistible embrace of the feminine in American life, the
-element that is far more powerful than any other, and I should have no
-more fight to put up than a new-born infant against a nurse. There would
-be a whole array of mothers and potential mothers to see that I had not.
-There would be Mrs. Barry and Annette van Elstine and Hilda Grace and
-Esther Coningsby and Elsie Coningsby and Mrs. Legrand, not to speak of a
-vast social army behind them, all supported and urged on by the unanimous
-power of the press.
-
-No one of them would allow me to slip from their kindly, overwhelming
-attentions any more than bees would allow a queen. Like a queen bee is
-any man who is engaged to an American girl—or at least he was in the
-days, now so extraordinarily long ago, before America went into the war.
-Since then marriage has become casual, incidental, one of those hasty
-touches given to human life, which, like the possession of money or the
-pursuit of happiness or the leisure to earn a living, are pleasant but
-not vital. But in the America of the end of 1916, the mentally far-away
-America to which I was going back, matrimony was the most momentous
-happening in a life history. From the minute a man became engaged to that
-when he turned away from the altar, he had to give himself up to his
-condition. He was no longer his own. Dinners, lunches, parties, theaters,
-publicity, and the approval of women claimed him; and shrinking was of no
-avail.
-
-To the life after marriage, from this point of view, my mind hardly
-worked forward. I have spoken of men who were good soldiers and equally
-good husbands. Undoubtedly there are hundreds of thousands in the class.
-But I had seen not a little of men who, because they were husbands,
-would gladly not have been soldiers at all. Theirs was not a divided
-allegiance, for they had only one. The body was in the fight, and it did
-wondrously; but the heart and soul and mind and craving were with the
-wife and little ones; and who could blame them?
-
-But all my personal desire was not to be of their number. Had I been
-married before the war I should have been as they; but since I was free
-to espouse the cause which had become mistress of everything I was I
-wanted to espouse it.
-
-I thought I had espoused it. I had considered myself bone of its bone
-and flesh of its flesh. During my months of fighting it had been a
-satisfaction to think of myself as at liberty to make any sacrifice of
-limb or life, and leave no heart to bewail me, no eye to shed a tear, and
-no care to spring up behind me. My family would be content to say, “Poor
-old Frank, he did his duty!” Further than that, I should bring no regret
-to any heart but Lovey’s; and of him I was persuaded that if I went he
-wouldn’t wait long after me. Moreover, I had guarded against any too
-great misfortune overtaking him by providing for him in my will.
-
-I must own, furthermore, to another misgiving: I was not too sure of
-myself from the point of view of the old failing.
-
-Things had happened in the trenches—they had dosed me with brandy,
-whisky, rum, any restorative that came handy, on a number of
-occasions—and there had been something within me as ready to be waked as
-a tiger to the taste of blood. I can say truthfully enough that I had
-never yielded to the desire of my own deliberate act; but I must also say
-truthfully that I was by no means sure that one day I might not do so.
-We had talked often enough, as men with men, of what we called a moral
-moratorium—and the talk haunted me with all manner of suggestions. The
-ban on what is commonly called sin was to be lifted for the period of the
-war; and we who had to deny ourselves so much were not to deny ourselves
-anything that came easily within our grasp. It seemed an alluring
-condition, and one which, without waiting for the license of supreme
-war councils or the permission of the Church, each of us was tempted to
-inaugurate for himself. In a situation in which that which is born of the
-flesh is flauntingly before one’s eyes, and millions of men are thrown
-together as flesh and little more, appetite has its mouth wide open. That
-man was strong indeed who could ignore this yearning of the body; and
-that man was not I.
-
-So again the consciousness of freedom was like a reserve fund to a
-corporation. It was something on which to fall back if everything else
-was swept away. I didn’t want to go to the devil; but if I went no one
-would suffer but myself, as no one would suffer but myself if a German
-sniper were to blow the top off my head. Mind you, I am not saying that
-I came back morally weakened from the war; I only came back with a sense
-that one man’s life or death—one man’s ruin or salvation—was of no more
-account than the fate of a roadside bit of jewel-weed amid the infinite
-seed-time and harvest of the year. I was inured to loss of all kinds
-on a stupendous scale. I had seen thousands blown to pieces beside me,
-and my mind had not turned aside to regret them; thousands would see me
-blown to pieces with the same indifference as to whether I lived or died.
-Callousness as to the life and death of others induces callousness as to
-one’s own; and compared to life and death, what is the control of a mere
-appetite? No; I was not morally weakened; but I was morally benumbed.
-There was a kind of moral moratorium in my consciousness. I repeat that I
-wasn’t practically making use of it; but I was in a period of suspense in
-which I admitted to myself that it might depend on circumstances whether
-I made use of it or not.
-
-And if I did, and if I was married....
-
-From the sheer possibility my mind turned in dismay. To the celibacy
-made urgent by a purpose I added the celibacy necessitated by a curse.
-As the one counseled me not to involve myself with anybody else, so the
-other warned me not to involve anybody else with me. Through warning and
-counsel I had kept myself in something like a state of serenity till now.
-
-It was a state of serenity with just one dominating impulse—to get back
-among the comrades with whom I had already found shelter. Whatever I
-had that could be called a homing instinct was bound for the house in
-Vandiver Street. There had been times when I thought I had outlived that
-phase, times when what seemed like a new and higher companionship, with a
-new and higher place in the world and in men’s esteem, half persuaded me
-that I was so little the waster in fact and the criminal in possibility
-that the Down and Out was no more to me than a sloughed skin to the
-creature that has thrown it off. But I always waked from this pleasant
-fancy to see myself as in essentials the same gaunt, tattered, hungry
-fellow who had come with his buddy to beg a meal and a bed of the Poor
-Brothers of the Order of Pity, who never refused any homeless, besotted
-man. No matter what battles I fought, what medals I won, what banquets I
-was asked to sit down at, my place was among them; and among them I hoped
-to do my work. They were all American citizens, with as much weight,
-when it came to the franchise, as the moneyed potentates of Wall Street.
-As being not only my brethren, but a nucleus of public opinion as well,
-I had had no other vision before me for my return than that of sharing
-their humble refreshments and talk, together with that blind, desperate,
-devoted fraternity which made a city of refuge of the home that had once
-been Miss Smedley’s.
-
-And since coming on board that vision was threatened by another—one
-in which I saw myself moving amid compliments and flowers and polite
-conventions, in all the entangling convolutions of the silken net.
-Whether it would be with or without love was, in my state of mind, beside
-the mark. Love had ceased to be, for the time being, at any rate, the
-ruling factor in a man’s decisions about himself. There was a moratorium
-of love, let there be one of morals or not. “I’ve got to,” had been the
-reply to love made by twenty millions of men all over the world, either
-under compulsion or of their own free will; and women had accepted the
-answer valiantly.
-
-The difficulty in my case sprang of choice. “I’ve got to” wasn’t
-imperative enough. Or if imperative, it was imperative on both sides
-equally.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXII_
-
-
-And then a word was said which, though solving no problems, opened up a
-new line of suggestion.
-
-I have spoken of Regina Barry as another transmigrated soul. I have
-said that I could not tell at a glance in what direction her spirit had
-traveled; nor could I after some days of intercourse. As much as she had
-been frank and open in the other period of our acquaintance, she had now
-become mystery to me—elusive, tantalizing, sealed. By the end of a few
-days I began to perceive that she came near me only, as I might say,
-officially. If there was danger or storm or darkness—we sailed without
-lights—she was within reach of me. She was within reach of me many a time
-if I wanted no more than a book that had fallen or a rug that had been
-left elsewhere on the deck. It was strange how hovering and protective
-her presence could be for the moment of need, and how far withdrawn the
-minute I could get along alone.
-
-And far withdrawn the transmigrated spirit seemed to me at all times. Do
-what I would to traverse the distance, I found her as remote as ever. Do
-what I would to break down her defenses or transcend them, they still
-rose between us, impalpable, impregnable, and all but indiscernible. She
-had traveled away from me as I had traveled away from her; and yet now
-that we met in space there was some indefinable bond between us.
-
-It was in right of that bond that I asked her one day why she was going
-home.
-
-“Oh, for all sorts of reasons.” She added, “One of them is on account of
-father.”
-
-“Isn’t he well?”
-
-“Yes, he’s well enough. That isn’t it.”
-
-As she did not explain, I refrained from asking further, not because I
-didn’t want to know, but because I knew she would tell me.
-
-It was our usual trysting-place, the deck rail, though not now that
-which ran along the side of the ship, but the one across the portion of
-the upper deck toward the bow, allowing us to look down on the pit in
-which the few steerage passengers took the air. They were standing about
-in helpless, idle groups, some ten or twelve oddly clad, oddly hatted
-men, with three or four of their women, and a white staring baby, whose
-fingers, as it hung over its mother’s shoulder, dangled like bits of
-string.
-
-We were in the Gulf Stream, so that the day was comparatively mild. A
-north wind not too violent blew away the possibility of fog and sent an
-occasional shaft of sunshine through the rifts in the great gray clouds.
-The swell left over from the gale of the past few days tossed the ship’s
-nose into the air with a long, slow, rhythmic heave, slightly to port,
-and gave to good sailors like ourselves that pleasant sensation of
-swinging which a bird must get on a tree.
-
-Wind and water were fraught with the nameless peaceful intimations of
-the New World after the turmoil of the Old one. It is difficult to say
-how one seizes them, but they come with the Gulf Stream. I have always
-noticed that half-way over there is a change in the aura, the atmosphere.
-It throws a breath of balsam on the wind, and flashes on the waves that
-gleam which Cabot, Jacques Cartier, and the Pilgrims saw when they
-sighted land.
-
-It is that wonderful sense of going westward which, I suppose, is primal
-to the instinct. Going eastward, one is going back to beginnings, to
-things lived, to things over and done with. Going westward, all is hope.
-It is the onward reach, the upward grasp, the endless striving. It is
-the lifting of the hands, the straining of the power to achieve, the
-yearning of the inner man. The thing that is finished is left behind, and
-the thing to be wrestled with and done is in front of one. The very sun
-goes before one with a splendid gesture of beckoning—on to work, on to
-self-denial, on to triumph and success—and when it sets it sets with a
-promise of a morrow.
-
-We had already begun to feel that; and on my part in a spirit of
-compunction. I was going, as far as lay within my small powers, to turn
-the west back upon the east again, to reverse nature by making the stream
-flow toward its source. I was far from insensible to the pity of it, for
-I had seen the effect on my own country.
-
-I had seen my own country—that baby giant, whose very existence
-as a country antedated but little the year when I was born—I
-had seen it pause in its work, in its play, in its task of
-self-development—listen—shiver—thrill—throw down the ax, the spade, the
-hammer, the pick—go up from the field, the factory, and the mine—and
-offer itself willingly. It was to me as if that was fulfilled which was
-spoken by the prophet:
-
-“I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I send, and who will
-go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me.”
-
-I had seen that first flotilla of thirty-one ships sail down the St.
-Lawrence, out into the ocean, and over to the shores of England, as the
-first great gift of men which the New World had ever made to the Old,
-as some return for all the Old had poured out upon the New. I had seen
-it, for I was on it. We went gaily, as hop-pickers go to a bean-feast.
-We knew it was war, but the word had no meaning for us. What it meant
-we found out at Ypres, at Vimy, at Lens. But when I think of my country
-now I think of her no longer as a baby giant. She has become a girl
-widow—valiant, dry-eyed, high-souled, ready to go on with the interrupted
-work and do bigger work—but a widow all the same.
-
-And the sword that had pierced one heart I was bringing to pierce
-another. I was sorry; but sorrow didn’t keep me, couldn’t keep me from
-being terribly in earnest.
-
-And in on these thoughts Regina Barry broke as if she had been following
-them.
-
-“Look at the waves where the sun catches them. Aren’t they like flashing
-steel? It’s just as if all the drowned hands at the bottom of the sea
-were holding up swords to the people of America, begging them to go and
-fight.”
-
-I looked at her, startled. “You feel that way?”
-
-She looked at me, indignant. “Certainly. How else could I feel?”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t know. Americans feel so many different ways.”
-
-“Because they don’t know. I’m going back”—she gave a light, deprecating
-laugh—“I’m going back to tell them.”
-
-I was still more startled. “Tell whom?”
-
-“Any one I know. Every one knows some one. I don’t mean to say that I’m a
-Joan of Arc; but I shall do what I can.”
-
-“And how shall you begin?”
-
-“I’ll begin with father and with—”
-
-She stopped at the second name, though to me the fact did not become
-significant till afterward.
-
-“That’s what I meant,” she resumed, “when I said I was going back on his
-account.”
-
-“You mean?”
-
-“He doesn’t see why we should be in it. He’s like so many Americans; he
-hasn’t emerged from the eighteen-hundreds. He still thinks of the New
-World as if it was a new creation that had nothing to do with the Old.
-He doesn’t see that there’s only one world and one race of men, wherever
-they are and whatever they do. To him Americans are like souls that get
-over to paradise. They’re safe and can afford to dwell safely. They’re
-no longer concerned with the sorrows and struggles of the people left on
-earth.”
-
-It was to get light on my own way that I asked, “And what are you going
-to say to convince him?”
-
-“I don’t know yet. I shall say what the moment suggests.”
-
-“And you’re sure it will suggest something?”
-
-Her great eyes burned like coals as she turned them on me in protest at
-the question.
-
-“Suggest something? You might as well ask if the air suggests something.
-It suggests that I breathe it; but I don’t have to think of it
-beforehand, when the whole world is full of it.”
-
-“Full of what?”
-
-She considered the question, finding in it all I meant to put there.
-
-“I don’t know,” she answered at last. “That is, I don’t know in any sense
-that would go into a few words. There’s so much of it. The minute you try
-to express it from any one point of view you find you’re inadequate.”
-
-I was still seeking light.
-
-“But when you try to do it from several points of view—correlating them?”
-
-“Even then—” She paused, reflecting, shaking her head as she went on
-again, as if to shake away a consciousness of the impossible. “I don’t
-try. There’s no use in trying. It’s so immense—so far beyond me. It’s
-grown so, too. When it first began I could more or less compass it—or,
-I thought I could. Now it’s become like nature—or God—or any of the
-colossal infinite conceptions—it means different things to different
-minds.”
-
-“That is, we can only take of it what we take of the ocean—each a few
-drops—no one able to take all?”
-
-“Something like that. And we can only give a few drops—just what we’ve
-got the measure to take up—some a little more, some a little less—but no
-one more than a little as compared to the whole. That’s why I’m not going
-to try to explain.”
-
-“Then how are you going to make them understand?”
-
-“I’ll tell them—I’ll do what I can to show them—that the greatest
-movement of all time is going on—and America is taking no national part
-in it. I’ll try to make them see that it isn’t just to avenge the few
-American lives lost through the U-boats, or to free Belgium, or to put
-down autocracy, or to do any one or two or three of the things that have
-been set before us. It isn’t even the whole of them, just taken as so
-many human motives.”
-
-“But you’ll have to tell them what it is, won’t you? It won’t do just to
-put before them what it isn’t.”
-
-“But how can I? How can any one? It would be like trying to tell them
-what nature is. It’s a universal composite, made up of everything; but
-you couldn’t go about the country explaining it in lectures. The nearest
-I could come to it would be in saying that it’s the great dramatic
-conflict between good and evil to which human nature has been working up
-ever since it committed its first sin; but the words in which to do that
-have been so hard worked and are so terribly worn that they’ve become a
-kind of ditty. It seems to me best just to talk to them simply—and let
-them construct the monster out of the bones I lay before them. They’ll
-do it. The public is not very quick, but when it gets going it’s pretty
-instinctive.”
-
-“Oh, then you’re going to tackle the public?”
-
-“I’m going to tackle any one to whom I can get access.”
-
-“You spoke just now of lectures.”
-
-“I’ll speak of anything that will help me to get the message across.
-That’s why I mention father and—” Again she hesitated at a name, going on
-with an elision:—“first of all. They are simply the first I shall be able
-to talk to. As a matter of fact, not many as yet have been over there
-and come back to America—so that there’s a good deal of curiosity still
-unsatisfied—and so one will get a chance. You must have noticed already
-how dearly Americans, especially the women, like to be talked to. We’re
-talked to so much by experts on all subjects that we should burst with
-knowledge if our minds weren’t like those swimming-tanks with fresh water
-running in and out of them all the time.”
-
-“So you’re really going to make it a kind of business?”
-
-She spread her hands apart, palms outward.
-
-“What else can I do? I assure you it isn’t any desire for publicity or
-that sort of thing. I’m just—I’m just driven on. It’s like what some
-one says in the Bible—I’ve taken to reading the Bible lately—it seems
-the only thing big enough in spirit to go with the big times—but some
-one says there: ‘Woe unto me, if I preach not the gospel!’ Well, it’s
-the same way with me. Woe unto me if I don’t do this thing! It’s taken
-possession of me; I can’t do anything else; and so I’m going back—”
-
-I was expressing but one of the host of thoughts that crowded on me as I
-said: “You’ve got the tremendous advantage of being an American. You can
-say what you like. If I were—”
-
-She stood off and surveyed me. “You don’t need to say anything. You speak
-for yourself. One has only to look at you.”
-
-I smiled ruefully. “I know I’m pretty well battered up.”
-
-“Oh, it isn’t that.”
-
-“What is it, then?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. It’s just—it’s just everything. You’re a type. I’m
-not speaking of you personally, but of a lot—hundreds—thousands—I’ve
-seen—young fellows who make me think of some other words in the Bible.”
-
-“What are they?”
-
-“They’re in Isaiah, I think. Everybody knows them.” She recited in a
-smooth, rich voice that gave new beauty to the familiar passage: “‘Surely
-he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: ... He was wounded for
-our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement
-of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. All we
-like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and
-the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all.’” Her voice rose—and
-fell again. “‘He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not
-his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep
-before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth.’” She resumed
-in a colloquial tone: “I’ve seen so much of that, haven’t you? The lamb
-led dumb to the slaughter, and the quiet, wounded man hardly opening his
-mouth for a moan. It’s heartbreaking.”
-
-“And yet you’d bring your own people into it.”
-
-“Because it’s sublime. Because I’ve seen for myself that the people who
-take part in it are raised to levels they never knew it was possible to
-reach. Haven’t you found the same thing for yourself?”
-
-“Oh, I? I’m only—”
-
-“You’re a man—and a young man. You’re a young man who’s been—I can’t
-express it. It’s all in that fact. The people at home will only have to
-look at you to see what language could never put before them. Language
-isn’t equal to it. Imagination isn’t equal to it when the thing is over.
-Don’t you find that? Doesn’t it often seem to you, now that you’re out
-of it, as if it was a dream that had half escaped you? You try to tell
-it—and you can’t. That’s why the people who’ve been there and come back
-so often have nothing to say. That’s why so many of the books—except
-those that contain diaries jotted down on the minute—that are written
-afterward are so often disappointing. It’s like a great secret in every
-man’s soul that he knows and thinks about, and can never get out of him.
-So I shall make no attempt to do more than to tell the little things, the
-small human details—”
-
-You will see that I was following my own train of thought as I broke in,
-“But New York life will get hold of you again.”
-
-“It can’t get hold of me again, because there will be nothing for it to
-catch on by. That’s all over for me. It could no more seize anything I
-am now than you or I”—she pointed to a flock of little birds riding up
-and down on a long, smooth billow—“from the deck of this ship could catch
-one of those Mother Carey’s chickens.”
-
-My sensations were those of a man who has received an extraordinary bit
-of good news, like that of a great artistic triumph or the inheritance of
-a fortune. It was something that went to the foundations of life, bathing
-them in security and peace. As we continued to talk the swing of the boat
-became the lulling of strong arms.
-
-The conflict of which for the past few days my mind had been the
-battle-ground was suddenly appeased. Woman, love, marriage, the more
-comforting elements in life—were no longer in opposition to what had
-become a man’s pressing and sacred duties. There could be a love which
-asked for no moratorium; or rather, there could be a woman with the
-courage of a soldier.
-
-I began to see her as comparable to that crusader’s wife who, disguised
-as a page, followed her lord on his journeys, to share his perils and
-minister to his needs. In a modern girl it was not only romantic; it was
-adorable. That it should have been done for me was beyond my power to
-believe. None but the bravest and most daring spirit would have attempted
-it—none but the heart capable of climbing higher and more adventurously
-still. I had known her for a gallant soul from that midnight minute when
-she pulled aside her hangings and found me lurking in her chamber; but I
-had never made a forecast of the heroisms and fidelities expanding here
-like the beauty from the heart of a rose.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXIII_
-
-
-So we came to that last evening on board, of which I must now tell you.
-It had taken me the intervening time to get used to the new outlook. The
-habit of seeing myself surrounded by a whole stockade of prohibitions
-was too strong to overcome in a flash. I had to let my mind emerge into
-freedom gently, telling myself each day that with a wife like this I
-could serve the cause more devotedly than ever, since she would be
-serving it too.
-
-Of that dedication to a cause I was possibly too much aware. My uniform
-made me aware of it. My game leg and my sightless eye made me aware of
-it. The need of whole peoples, like the French and British and Italian,
-of every man who could fire a gun or ram home a bayonet or speak a
-rousing word—that more than anything else seemed to put a consecration
-upon me of which I was as foolishly and yet as loftily conscious as
-a modern king, accustomed to a bowler hat, when he rides through the
-streets with his crown on.
-
-And on the last evening there was enough of the ecstatic in the air to
-justify this sense of a mission.
-
-The voyage, which had not been without the exciting stimulus of danger,
-was successfully over. The west was actually reached, and the things
-done left behind us. The things to be done were making our pulses beat
-faster and our energies yearn forward. To-morrow with its summons to
-activity was more keenly in our consciousness than to-day. Doctors,
-nurses, returning soldiers, the sparse handful of business men—we were
-already in heart ashore, walking in streets, riding in tram-cars, eating
-in dining-rooms, sleeping in beds, taking part in hard work, and deeming
-these things a privilege. Voices and laughter in the clear, still night,
-and the clicking of heels on the deck, were part of the relief and
-joyousness.
-
-Late in the afternoon we had picked up the Nantucket light-ship, which
-rested like a star on the water. Now the horizon was being strung with
-beads of light, one, two, three, or little clusters at a time, behind
-which we knew that advancing night was lighting myriads of lamps all
-the way to the Pacific. On the Atlantic coast it was already dark, with
-cities and towns ablaze, and villages and farm-houses lit by kindly,
-shimmering windows. In the Middle West it was twilight, with electrics
-spangling the office-buildings here and there, and pale-gold flowers
-strewn over the prairie floors. Beyond the Mississippi it would still be
-day, but day dissolving gorgeously, softly, into sunset and moonrise and
-the everlasting magic of the stars.
-
-As she and I hung over the deck rail side by side we felt ourselves on
-the edge of wonders. The Old World was in need of us, and we were in need
-of the New. To us who were New World born, and who were coming back to
-generous, easy-going welcome after the unspeakable things we had seen,
-the craving for New World brotherhood and vigor was like that of hunger
-or thirst. This much we admitted in so many words—even she.
-
-She was still elusive; she was still mysterious. Though during the past
-few days she had not resisted a certain habit as to the place and hour
-at which we should find ourselves together and had been willing to talk
-freely on any theme connected with the cause, she took flight from a hint
-of the personal, like a bird at an approaching footstep.
-
-Nevertheless, she was so far responsive as to say in answer to some
-question of mine, “My immediate plans—”
-
-I broke in abruptly, “Let me tell you about your immediate plans.”
-
-As the deck was faintly illuminated, since we were again sailing with
-lights, I saw that change in her eyes which comes when a fire on a hearth
-bursts into a conflagration.
-
-Probably my tone and the change in my manner had startled her.
-
-“You? What?” she began, confusedly.
-
-“I’ll tell you what your plans are; but before that let me tell you
-something else.”
-
-She put up her hand. “Wait! Don’t—”
-
-But it was too late to stop me. I couldn’t have stopped myself. I was
-carried on by the impetus that came from my having been so many years
-held back. I was no longer the consecrated servant of a cause. As for
-having been a drunkard and a thief, no shadow of remembrance stayed with
-me. I was simply a man head over heels in love with a woman, and in all
-sorts of stupid, stumbling phrases saying so.
-
-She listened because she couldn’t do anything else without walking
-away; but she listened with a kind of aloofness. With her clasped hands
-resting on the rail and her little, black silhouette held quietly erect,
-she gazed off toward a great white star, which I suppose must have been
-Capella, and heard my tale because she couldn’t stop it.
-
-“Listen,” I went on, leaning on an arm extended along the rail. “I’ll
-tell you your story. I’ve pieced it together and I know what it is. I
-didn’t know it when I came on board. It puzzled me.”
-
-Her lips moved, but there was no turn of her head or stir of her person.
-
-“Please don’t. I’m—I’m not sure that I could bear it.”
-
-“Why shouldn’t I? You’ve done certain things. Let me give you their
-interpretation.”
-
-“If I do—” she began, weakly.
-
-I couldn’t allow her to continue.
-
-“I see now the explanation of so many things that bewildered me at
-first—that made me suffer. That day at Rosyth, for instance, when you
-went in and left me, you didn’t despise or hate me. You may have been
-disillusioned—”
-
-“It isn’t the word,” she murmured, still motionless, and looking off at
-the big white star. “I’d been thinking of you as the kind of man I’d—I’d
-been looking for so long.”
-
-“And you saw I was less so than any of the others.”
-
-“I’m not saying that. But if you think it was easy to tear up all one’s
-conceptions by the roots and plant in new ones—however kindly—all at
-once—”
-
-“Oh no, I don’t! not now. But at that time I didn’t know you. It’s only
-been since coming on board and finding out what you’ve done—”
-
-Curiosity prompted her to glance round at me.
-
-“Then it was only since coming on board?”
-
-“Oh, it was simple enough. It’s silly to keep up the secret. I was
-talking, while we were still in the dock at Liverpool, with that handsome
-Canadian nurse.”
-
-“Miss Ogden. She was matron of the hospital at—”
-
-“She knew who you were. She couldn’t tell me your name, but she said—or
-Miss Prynne said—that you’d come over with Evelyn—that you’d been at
-Taplow with Mabel—”
-
-“I know; the sort of thing that goes round among nurses.”
-
-“And so I put two and two together and formed a theory.”
-
-“You needn’t tell me what it is. Please don’t.”
-
-“But I want to.” I hurried on before she could protest further. “When
-you saw that you’d—you’d hurt me—that day at Rosyth—and that I had
-disappeared—and gone into the army—and away to England—you got into touch
-with Evelyn—”
-
-“I wanted to do something,” she declared, in a tone of self-defense. “I
-couldn’t help it when I knew the need was going to be so great. We didn’t
-see that all at once, because we thought the war was going to be over in
-a very little while. But when we began to realize it wasn’t—”
-
-“Oh, I don’t say you did it all on my account.”
-
-Though this was meant to provoke either admission or denial, she glided
-over it.
-
-“It wasn’t easy to do anything in New York, because we hadn’t got that
-far as yet; and so I naturally went to Canada. When I did so Annette gave
-me a line of introduction to Evelyn.”
-
-“And you told her about me.”
-
-She fell into my trap so far as to say: “I didn’t tell her. I simply let
-her guess.”
-
-“Guess what?”
-
-“All I ever said to her in words was to ask her never to mention my name
-to you.”
-
-“But why?”
-
-“I did the same with Lady Rideover when she took me on at Taplow.”
-
-“Why—again?”
-
-“For the reason that—that if you ever came to find out what I was doing
-you’d misunderstand it; just as I see you—you do.”
-
-“But I don’t. I don’t misunderstand it when I say that in going to my
-sisters you wanted to be—you mustn’t be offended!—you wanted to be near
-me—to watch over me as much as possible.”
-
-“You were the only man I knew at that time who’d taken the actual step of
-going to the war. If there’d been any others—”
-
-“It wouldn’t have mattered if there’d been a hundred. I don’t
-misunderstand it when I say that as soon as you knew I was going home by
-this boat you arranged—”
-
-“To go home by it too,” she forestalled, quickly, “so that you should
-have somebody near you who could get about in the normal way in case
-there was danger. I admit that. It’s perfectly true.” She turned round on
-me with fire in her manner as well as in her eyes. “But what do you think
-I’m going home for?”
-
-I repeated what she had said a few days before:
-
-“You’re going home on account of your father—and to interest him and
-other Americans in American duty as to the war.”
-
-“That’s a reason; it’s the reason I find it easiest to give. But I
-mustn’t hide it from you now that—that I’ve—I’ve another.”
-
-[Illustration: “You’re going home to marry me.” “How can I be going
-home to marry you, when—when I never knew till within half an hour that
-you—that you cared anything about me?”]
-
-I made one of my long mental leaps. I made it as a man might take the one
-chance of life in leaping a crevasse, knowing that there are more chances
-that he will be dashed to pieces in the chasm.
-
-“You’re going home to be married.”
-
-There was a kind of awe in the way she drew off from me.
-
-“You’re extraordinary,” she breathed, faintly. “Miss Ogden didn’t tell
-you that.”
-
-I had not cleared the crevasse. I was struggling desperately on the edge
-of it, while beneath me was the abyss.
-
-“You’re going home to marry me.”
-
-I think she gave a little bitter laugh. At any rate, there was the echo
-of it in her tone, as she said, with sardonic promptness: “How can I be
-going home to marry you, when—when I never knew till within half an hour
-that you—that you cared anything about me?”
-
-I, too, must have laughed, the statement struck me as so absurd.
-
-“What? You never knew—?”
-
-She shook her head with an emphasis almost violent.
-
-“You may have known,” she said, in that voice which, after all, could
-not be called bitter, for the reason that it was reproachful, “but I’d
-come to the conclusion that”—she tried to carry the situation off with
-a second laugh, a laugh that ended as something like a sob—“that you
-didn’t.”
-
-I leaned down toward her, speaking the words right into her face.
-
-“Didn’t care?”
-
-She nodded silently.
-
-“For God’s sake, what made you think that?”
-
-“Oh—everything!”
-
-“Everything? When? How?”
-
-She was doing her best to convey the impression that it didn’t matter.
-
-“Everything—always—in New York—at Atlantic City—there especially! And
-lately—”
-
-“Yes? Lately?”
-
-“Lately—at Taplow.”
-
-“But at Taplow—how? In Heaven’s name—how?”
-
-“Oh, I was in and out of your room.”
-
-“So I understand; but what of that?”
-
-“Nothing; nothing; only—only what I saw.”
-
-“Well, what did you see?”
-
-Instead of answering this question at once she shifted her ground.
-
-“If you cared—as you say—why didn’t you tell some one?”
-
-“Tell some one? Who could I tell?”
-
-“Oh, any one. Lady Rideover, for one. She’d made a promise not to mention
-me; but you hadn’t.”
-
-“But why should I have mentioned you when I never supposed she had any
-notion—”
-
-“But you see that’s it. If you’d cared—so much—you’d have done it—to one
-of your sisters or the other. But you didn’t—not to either; and so they
-got the idea—”
-
-“Yes? What idea did they get? Go on. Tell me.”
-
-I noticed that she was twisting and untwisting her fingers, and that she
-had begun throwing me quick, nervous glances through the half-light.
-
-“It’s no use telling you, because it doesn’t matter. That is, it doesn’t
-matter now. Everything’s—arranged.”
-
-“We’ll talk about that later. I want to know what idea Mabel and Evelyn
-got.”
-
-“They didn’t get it exactly. They were only beginning to get it when I
-made them understand that I was going back to be—Oh, why do you make me
-talk about it? Why do you bring it all up now, when it can’t do any good?”
-
-To get at the facts I was obliged to speak with the severity one uses
-toward a difficult child.
-
-“I want you to tell me what idea Mabel and Evelyn got.”
-
-“Isn’t it perfectly evident what idea they’d get? Any one would get it
-when you—when you never said a word—not the least, little, confidential
-word—and you so ill!—and blind!—and to your own sisters!—and that Miss
-Farley there!”
-
-I passed over the reference to Miss Farley because I couldn’t see what it
-meant. I had enough to do in seizing the new suggestion that had come to
-me.
-
-“They didn’t think—they couldn’t have thought—that there was nothing on
-my side.”
-
-“And everything on mine. That’s precisely the inference they drew. Girls
-do go about, you know, giving people to understand that men—”
-
-“But not girls like you.”
-
-“Yes, girls like me; or sufficiently like me. And so I had—in sheer
-self-respect—to let Lady Rideover see that there was nothing in it of the
-kind of thing she thought, and that I was actually going home to be—”
-
-“But didn’t she see? Didn’t she know? Didn’t everybody see? Didn’t
-everybody know?”
-
-In the two brief sentences that came out with something like a groan she
-threw tremendous emphasis on the first word.
-
-“Nobody knew! Nobody saw!”
-
-There was a similar emphasis on the penultimate word in my response.
-
-“Did you ask them?”
-
-She flashed back at me: “I did—almost. At times like that—if it’s so—some
-one generally knows it from—from the person who’s expecting to be
-brimming over with his secret.” She laughed again, lightly, nervously.
-“But in this instance nobody did.”
-
-“You asked them?”
-
-“Practically. I forgot everything I used to consider pride and—and I
-sounded them.”
-
-“You sounded whom?”
-
-“Oh, the people who knew you best—and who knew me—Annette, Esther
-Coningsby, Ralph—any one to whom I thought you might have betrayed
-yourself by a word. But it was just as with Evelyn and Lady Rideover. You
-had practically not mentioned my name. Hilda Grace told me she tried to
-sound you—that Sunday at Rosyth.”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“I’m only quoting her, mind you. She said she didn’t get”—there was
-a repetition of that nervous laugh—“she said she didn’t get—any
-satisfaction. And so—”
-
-I tried to take a reasonable tone. “But how could I tell you or anybody
-else before I’d confessed to you who I was and where you’d first seen me?”
-
-“Exactly. I quite understand that—now that you’ve said what you’ve said
-to-night. It’s where the past makes us pay—”
-
-“For what I used to be.”
-
-“Oh, you’re not the only one,” she declared, in a curious, offhand tone.
-“It’s for what I used to be, too.”
-
-I found it difficult to follow her. “What you used to be? I don’t
-understand you.”
-
-“You know about me—how I’ve been engaged to one man after another—and
-broken the engagements.”
-
-“Because you were trying to find the right one.”
-
-“It wasn’t only that. I thought of myself; I didn’t think of them. I let
-them offer me everything they had to give—and pretended to accept it—just
-to experiment—to play with—and now—now I’m—I’m caught!”
-
-“Caught—in what way?”
-
-She tossed her hands outward in a little, exasperated gesture.
-
-“I can’t do the same thing again. It wouldn’t be right. It wouldn’t be
-sane.”
-
-“The same thing? Do tell me what you mean.”
-
-“It’s—it’s one of the same men. I’m—I’m caught. It’s what mother—and
-Elsie Coningsby—and other people who could talk to me plainly—told me
-would happen some day. I’m—I’m punished. And I can’t do the same thing
-the second time.”
-
-It was still to escape from the yawning hell into which I felt myself
-going down that I said, stupidly, “Why can’t you?”
-
-“Because I can’t. It’s what I said just now. It wouldn’t be sane. I’ve
-made a kind of history for myself. If I were to do the same thing again
-it wouldn’t merely seem cruel, it would seem crazy.”
-
-“But if you don’t care for him?”
-
-“I do—in a way. He’s been so good and kind and patient and everything!
-And even if I didn’t care for him at all it would be just the same—after
-what I’ve let him think—the second time.”
-
-I could see her reasoning, if reasoning it was, though it was not the
-uppermost thought in my mind. As a matter of fact, I was repeating her
-statement as to “one of the same men.” Which one of them was it? There
-had been three—the one she didn’t trust—the one she couldn’t have lived
-with—and the one who was only very nice. It would make such a difference
-which one it proved to be that I was afraid to ask her.
-
-I burst out, desperately: “Oh, but why did you—let him think it—the
-second time?”
-
-“I don’t know. It happened by degrees—by writing—in letters—and I didn’t
-see how far I was going. It was a kind of reaction.”
-
-“Reaction from what?”
-
-She looked at me wildly. “From you, I think. As far as I remember it
-became definite at Taplow.”
-
-“When you were actually seeing me every day?”
-
-“That was the reason. It was seeing you so cheerful and full of jokes—and
-not missing—not missing any one—nor ever mentioning them—not to a soul.
-It just convinced me of what I’d been sure of before—ever since the time
-at Atlantic City—that you didn’t—that you never had.... And so when he
-suggested it in one of his letters—I don’t know what made me!—but I
-didn’t say it was impossible.”
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“I said, who knows?—or something like that. And then he cabled—but
-I didn’t cable back—I only wrote—trying to say no—but not saying it
-decidedly enough.... And so it’s gone on—he writing and cabling both—and
-I only writing, but letting him think—just little by little—and not
-seeing how far I was being swept along.”
-
-I wanted to be clear as to the facts.
-
-“Then do I understand that you’re engaged to him?”
-
-“I told him I wouldn’t be engaged again—that engagements for me had come
-to be grotesque. I said that if we did it we’d—we’d just go somewhere
-and be married.”
-
-“If you did it? Then it’s possible—”
-
-“No; because he’s expecting it. I’ve allowed him to expect it—just little
-by little, you understand—and not seeing how far I was letting myself
-in.... And now he’s told some people who used to know about it when I
-was engaged to him before—and that binds me because it will get about—so
-that if I were to break it off with him the second time I should be a
-laughing-stock—and quite rightly.”
-
-“Oh, Regina, how could you?”
-
-Taking no note of the fact that for the first time in my life I had
-called her Regina, she answered, simply: “I tell you I don’t know. If I
-do know it was because I was so lonely—and I’m over twenty-six—and feel
-older still—and nobody seemed to care about me but him—and I couldn’t
-bear the idea of going on and never marrying any one at all—which is what
-Elsie Coningsby said would happen to me—and what I’d been half wishing
-for myself—and yet half afraid of.... And you—”
-
-“Yes? What about me?”
-
-“There was a nurse at Taplow, that Miss Farley—”
-
-“Miss Farley! Oh, good God!”
-
-“Well, how did I know? She was very pretty.”
-
-“Could I see whether she was pretty or not?”
-
-“And you were always joking with her and thanking her.”
-
-“Of course I thanked her. What else could I do?”
-
-“You needn’t have kissed her hand. I caught you doing that one day when I
-was tidying up in your room.”
-
-“Did you? Very likely. When a man is as helpless as I was his gratitude
-often becomes maudlin.”
-
-“I don’t know that you need call it that. He simply falls in love with
-the pretty nurse who takes care of him. It was happening all the time
-in the hospitals. But for me—right there in your room—and shut out from
-everything—”
-
-“But that wasn’t my fault. If I’d known you were there—”
-
-“It was your fault at Atlantic City—and afterward—when I’d let you
-see—far more than a girl should ever let any man see.”
-
-“But you know how impossible it was for me then—till I’d told you who I
-was.”
-
-“I know it now. I didn’t know it before half an hour ago. And the time
-when you told me that—that thing—at Rosyth—I had no idea whether or not
-you meant.... And when you blame me for not coming down-stairs quicker
-than I did—”
-
-“I haven’t blamed you, Regina.”
-
-“You can’t imagine what it was to be all at sea not merely as to what you
-felt, but actually as to what you were—and had been. When you pulled the
-pearls out of your pocket—and said you were that man—”
-
-There were two or three minutes during which she stood with face averted,
-and I had to give her time to regain her self-control.
-
-“You see,” she went on, her rich mezzo just noticeably tremulous—“you
-see, I’d always thought about him—a girl naturally would, finding him in
-her room like that—but I’d thought of him as.... And I’d been thinking
-of you, too. I’d been thinking of you as the very opposite of him. He
-was so terrible—so gaunt—so stricken—I see just a little of him in you
-now, after all you’ve suffered.... But you—I don’t know what it was you
-had about you—your brother had it, too—I saw it again when I met him
-at Evelyn’s in Montreal, something a little more than distinguished,
-something faithful and good.”
-
-“Those things are often hang-overs of inheritance that have no
-counterpart in the nature.”
-
-“Well, whatever it was I saw it—and all that year those two types had
-been before my mind. Then when I was told that there were not two—that
-there was only one—it was like asking me to understand that the earth had
-only one pole, and that the North and the South Poles were identical.”
-She surprised me with the question, “Did you ever read _La Dame aux
-Camélias_?”
-
-I said I had, wondering at the connection.
-
-“Don’t you remember how it begins with the exhumation of the body of that
-poor woman six months after she was buried?”
-
-I recalled the fact.
-
-“So that all through the rest of the book, when Marguerite Gautier is at
-the height of her triumphs, if you call them triumphs, you see her as she
-was first shown to you. Well— Oh, don’t you understand? That’s the way I
-had to see—I had to see you!”
-
-I hung my head. “I understand perfectly, Regina—now.”
-
-“There’s so much we’re only beginning to understand now, both on your
-side and on mine.”
-
-“When it’s almost too late—if it isn’t quite.”
-
-Her manner, her voice, both of which had been a little piteous, took on a
-sudden energy.
-
-“Oh, as to that, I’ve been thinking it over—I’ve had to think over so
-much—and I don’t believe the word applies.”
-
-“Doesn’t apply?” I asked, in astonishment. “Why not—when it’s as late as
-it is? It’s just as if Fate had been making us a plaything.”
-
-“I don’t believe that. Life can’t be the sport of disorganized chance. If
-Romeo takes poison ten minutes before Juliet wakes it’s because the years
-behind them led up to the mistake.”
-
-“You mean that we reap only what we sow?”
-
-“And that life is as much a matter of development in a logical sequence
-as the growth of certain plants from certain seeds. It isn’t—it can’t
-be—a mere frenzy of haphazards. Things happen to us in a certain way
-because what we’ve done leaves them no other way.”
-
-“And was there no other way in which this could happen to you and me?”
-
-“Think! Isn’t it the very outcome that might have been expected from what
-we’ve been in the past?”
-
-I stared at her without comprehension.
-
-“Because of your past life,” she went on, “there was something you
-couldn’t tell me; and because I didn’t know it I’ve taken a step which my
-past life doesn’t allow me to retrace. Could anything be neater?”
-
-“And yet you’re fond of saying that the way things happen is the best
-way.”
-
-“It’s the best way if it’s the only way, isn’t it? I should go mad if I
-thought that my life hung on nothing but caprice—whether of luck or fate
-or anything you call God. I can stand my deserts, however hard, if I know
-they’re my deserts.”
-
-“You can stand this?”
-
-“This is not a question of standing; it’s one of working out. Life isn’t
-static; it’s dynamic—those are the right words, aren’t they? It’s always
-unfolding. One thing leads to the next thing; and then there must be
-times when a lot of things that seemed separate are gathered up in one
-immense result. Don’t you think it must be that way?”
-
-I said, stupidly, that I didn’t know.
-
-“Of course you don’t know if you don’t think; but try to think!”
-
-“What good will thinking do when we see how things are?”
-
-“It’ll show us how to make the best of them, won’t it?”
-
-“Is there any best to be made of your marrying anybody else than me? The
-way things happen isn’t necessarily the best way.”
-
-After her hesitating syncopated sentences in dealing with what was more
-directly personal to her life and mine she talked now not so much calmly
-as surely, as of subjects she had long thought out.
-
-“I don’t say the best way absolutely; but the best in view of what we’ve
-made for ourselves. For ourselves you and I have made things hard.
-There’s no question about that. But isn’t it for both of us now to live
-this minute so that the next won’t be any harder?”
-
-There was no argument in this; there was only appeal.
-
-“What,” I asked, “do you mean by that?”
-
-“I suppose I mean that the best way to live this minute is to accept what
-it contains—till it develops into something else—as it will. This isn’t
-final. It’s only a step on the way to—”
-
-“It’s a step on the way to your marrying a man you’re not in love with,
-and my not marrying at all.”
-
-“And as the world is at present, aren’t there worse tragedies than that?”
-
-Irony of which she must have been unaware pricked my dreams of celibate
-consecration to a cause as a pin pricks a bubble.
-
-“So that if I stand still and let you go on—”
-
-She threw me a quick glance. “And aren’t you going to?”
-
-The answer to that question was what in the back of my mind I had been
-trying to work out.
-
-“Wouldn’t it depend,” I said, picking the right words, “on which of
-the three it is? There’s one I couldn’t interfere with—not without
-disregarding gratitude and honor.”
-
-“Do you want me to tell you which?”
-
-But I didn’t—not then. Too much hung on what the knowledge would bring
-me. There were decisions to which I couldn’t force myself at once. In
-saying this I added, “But though I can’t interfere with him without
-disregarding gratitude and honor, I don’t say that I sha’n’t disregard
-them.”
-
-In the clear starlight her eyes had a veiled metallic brightness.
-
-“No?”
-
-“And if I don’t,” I persisted, “what shall you do?”
-
-“What would you expect me to do?”
-
-“I should expect you to back me up.”
-
-“So that we should both be disregarding gratitude and honor?”
-
-“We’ve a right to our happiness.”
-
-“That’s a very old argument, isn’t it?”
-
-“It’s not the less true for being old.”
-
-“Oh no; if it’s true it’s true—anyhow.”
-
-“And it is true. Don’t you know it is?”
-
-She surprised me by saying, as if quite casually, “I don’t suppose that
-in the end it’s the truth or the untruth of the argument that would weigh
-with me.”
-
-My heart gave a thump.
-
-“Then what would weigh with you?”
-
-She was standing with her back to the rail, the great white star behind
-her. As if to emphasize the minute of suspense the engines gradually
-stopped, while the ship rocked gently on the tide. The lights on shore
-were more complex now, lights above lights, lights back of lights, with
-the profusion of seaboard towns even in November. The murmur of voices
-and the click of heels grew expectant as well as joyous.
-
-When she spoke at last it was with breast heaving and eyes downcast. Her
-words came out staccatowise, as if each made its separate effort to keep
-itself back.
-
-“What would weigh with me? I—I don’t know.”
-
-“Does that mean,” I demanded, sharply, “that you might back me up?”
-
-I could barely catch her words.
-
-“It means first of all that—that I’m awfully weak.”
-
-“It isn’t weak, Regina, to—to love.”
-
-“It’s weak for a soldier to make love an excuse for not fighting.”
-
-“But you’re not a soldier.”
-
-“Oh yes, I am; and so are you. We’re all soldiers now—every one in the
-world. We keep telling ourselves—we keep telling one another—that we’re
-fighting for right. It’s our great justification. But what’s the use of
-fighting for public right if we go and do wrong privately?”
-
-“But it isn’t right for you to throw yourself away on a man you don’t
-care for.”
-
-“It’s right for me to stand by my word—what is practically my word—till
-something relieves me from the necessity.”
-
-“And do you think anything ever will?”
-
-“That’s not what I have to consider. If I do what I know I ought to do
-I’ve only to wait—and let the next thing come.”
-
-“And what you know you ought to do—are you going to do it?”
-
-She looked up at me pleadingly, quiveringly, with clasped hands.
-
-“I don’t want to do—to do anything else. Oh, Frank, I hope you won’t make
-me!”
-
-It was not this unexpected collapse that made me tremble; it was not
-this confession; it was the knowledge that I had her in my power. She
-had seemed so far above me—ever since I knew her; she had seemed so
-far beyond me, so strong, so aloof, so ice pure, so inflexibly and
-inaccessibly right! And now she was ready to come to me if I insisted on
-taking her.
-
-But the hungry beast in me was not yet satisfied with her avowals.
-
-“Could I, Regina—could I—make you?”
-
-I once saw in the eyes of a spaniel that knew it was going to be shot the
-beseeching, submissive, helpless look I saw here.
-
-“You know what I’ve been doing, Frank—the last two years—just to be where
-I—where I could—hear about you—occasionally—and see you perhaps—when you
-couldn’t see me.”
-
-I bent down toward her, close, closer, till I almost enveloped her.
-
-“Yes, I know that—now—and—and I’m—I’m going to make you.”
-
-She didn’t answer, but she didn’t withdraw. Perhaps she crept nearer me.
-Certainly she shivered.
-
-The look in her eyes was still helpless, submissive, beseeching; but
-because it grew mortally frightened as well I repeated what I had said as
-softly but as firmly as I could make the words:
-
-“I’m—I’m going to make you.”
-
-There was nothing but the strip of black veiling between her lips and
-mine when a sudden flash that might have come out of heaven threw me back
-with a start.
-
-It was there above us—the great beacon—landlike—homelike—the New
-World—the new work—the new problems to be solved—the new duties toward
-mankind to be hammered home—while thankful voices were murmuring round us:
-
-“Sandy Hook!”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXIV_
-
-
-I never knew the compulsion exercised by organized life till I found it
-settling round me, with an even distribution like that of the weight of
-the atmosphere on the body, paralyzing my will and making it impotent.
-No more than I could throw off the atmosphere could I be free from this
-force for a second.
-
-It began with my arrival on the dock, where Sterling Barry had come to
-meet his daughter. I had seen him often enough before, though I had never
-known him otherwise than in the way called touch-and-go. A ruddy, portly,
-handsome fellow of sixty-odd, with eyes that had passed on their torch to
-his daughter’s, he must in early life have been retiring and diffident,
-for his general approach now had that forced jovial note that verges on
-the boisterous.
-
-“Hello! Hello!” he cried, as he lilted up to where I stood with Lovey
-in the Custom House Section M. “Alive and kicking, what? Couldn’t kill
-you. Tried, didn’t they?” he went on, looking me over. “Not but what it
-might have been worse, of course. Billy Townsend’s son’ll never come back
-at all, poor chap. Fine young fellow, with a bee in his bonnet about
-aviation. Would go—and now you see! Well, we’ve got you back and we’re
-going to keep you. What do you know about that?”
-
-I replied that as things were I was afraid I had no choice but to stay.
-
-“And if you want a job come to me. Some big things doing. Country never
-so prosperous. Lots of business for every one—even for poor old nuts like
-us. Well, so long! Come and see us. Mrs. Barry will want to hear you
-talk. Awfully keen on the war, she is, and that sort of thing. Bit down
-in the mouth now over this Rumania business. Sad slump that, very.”
-
-I said that it only left the more for us to do.
-
-“Got your hands full, what? They do seem to put it over on you, don’t
-they? Ah, well, we won’t see you licked. We’ll keep out of the war as
-war; but you’ve got our sympathy. Watchful waiting—that’s the new ticket,
-you know. Can do a lot with that.”
-
-With his light, dancing step he was waltzing away again when he suddenly
-returned.
-
-“Mrs. Barry’ll have something to tell you,” he said, with a gleam in his
-eye curiously like that in Regina’s. “Perhaps you know it already. Regina
-may have given you the tip, what? People get confidential on board ship.
-Nothing else to do. No fuss and feathers about it. They don’t want that.
-War-time spirit, you know. Just telling a few of our friends. Don’t mind
-saying that Mrs. Barry and I are mighty delighted. Been like our own son
-for years. Sorry when it came to nothing last time; but look at ’em now!”
-He pointed to Section B, where Cantyre was bending over Regina as I had
-bent over her last night. “Can see from here what it means. Get your
-congratulations by and by.”
-
-Of all this the point is that I couldn’t say a word. I couldn’t tell him
-there on the dock that I didn’t mean to let it go any farther, nor did he
-suspect for a second that I had more than an outsider’s interest in the
-romance. I felt awkward and cowardly at remaining dumb, but neither time
-nor place admitted of a protest.
-
-So, too, when a few minutes later Cantyre came over to give me his
-welcome. It was the welcome of old, with a shocked pity in it.
-
-“Didn’t expect to see you so badly mauled,” was his sorrowful comment
-after the first demonstrations. “I knew you were wounded, of course, and
-that you had been blind. Regina wrote me that from Taplow. But I didn’t
-look for your being so—”
-
-“Oh, it’s nothing,” I interposed, in the effort to shut off his sympathy.
-
-Having asked me a few professional questions in reference to the ways in
-which I had been wounded, he said: “Well, now that we’ve got hold of you
-again we mean to feed you up and take care of you. You’re going to be my
-patient, Frank. For the present, at any rate, we’ll be living in the same
-old house, and I shall be able to keep a daily eye on you. Lovey here
-has your apartment as clean as an operating-room. See you there later.
-Just now I’ve got to go back to—to Regina. And by the way”—his habitually
-mournful expression brightened as a lowering day lights up when the sun
-bursts through the masses of drifting cloud—“by the way, I shall have
-something to tell you by and by. The most wonderful thing has happened,
-Frank—something you and I used to talk about before you went abroad.”
-
-He wrung my hand with that way he had of pulling it downward and pulling
-it hard, which betrayed all sorts of raptures breaking in on a spirit
-that had never known common, every-day happiness. His whole face asked
-me to rejoice with him, and, though I couldn’t do that, I couldn’t do
-the other thing.
-
-It was on my lips to say, “You can’t have her because I’m going to take
-her away from you.” But the words died before they were formed. The very
-thought died in my mind. Whatever I did, I shouldn’t be able to do it
-that way; and so I let him go.
-
-“Do you know what he meant, Slim—when he said them things—the doctor?”
-
-This was Lovey’s question as he sat beside me in the taxicab and we drove
-up-town.
-
-As I made no answer, he mumbled, mysteriously: “I do. I ’aven’t valeted
-’im for nothink.”
-
-I still made no answer, and the mumble ceased.
-
-As yet I had noticed him only as the returned traveler notices the
-faithful old dog that greets him by lifting his eyes adoringly and
-wagging his tail. I saw now that the intervening two and a half years had
-aged him. He had grown white and waxy; his thin gray hair was thinner.
-A trembling, like that of a delicately poised leaf on a day when there
-is little wind, shook his hands, and the left corner of his lower lip
-had the pathetic quiver of a child’s when it is about to sag in a great
-weeping.
-
-As I had paid him so little attention on the dock, I picked up the hand
-resting on his knee and pressed it.
-
-He responded with a long, harsh breath which, starting as a sigh of
-comfort, became something inarticulately emotional.
-
-“Oh, Slim! I’ve got ye back, ’aven’t I?”
-
-“Seems like it, Lovey.” I laughed without feeling mirthful.
-
-“Ye look awful, don’t ye?”
-
-“I suppose I do.”
-
-“But it don’t make no difference to me, it don’t. I’d rather ’ave ye all
-chawed up like this than not ’ave ye at all.”
-
-“Thank you, Lovey.”
-
-“Them wars is awful things. Why don’t they stop ’em?” He continued,
-without waiting for an explanation: “It’s all along o’ them blamed
-Germans. The cheek o’ them—to go and fight Englishmen! There was a German
-in the ’at-shop in the Edgware Road used to ’ang round me somethin’
-fierce; and now I believe he wasn’t nothink but a-spyin’ on me. Don’t you
-think he was, Slim?”
-
-“I think very likely.”
-
-“Makes my blood run cold, it does, the times I’ve took ’im into a little
-tea-shop in Great Hatfield Street—and me a-treatin’ on ’im, like. If I
-’adn’t ’ad luck I might be lookin’ like you by this time. Ain’t it awful
-to be one-eyed, sonny?”
-
-“Oh, I’m getting used to it.”
-
-“Used to it till you looks in the glass, I expect. Get a fright when ye
-do that, don’t you? But it’s all right, Slim. It wouldn’t matter to me
-if you was a worse looker than y’are. I wouldn’t turn ye down, neither,
-not if it was for all the doctors in the world. Not but what he’s been
-very attentive to me while you was away. I don’t make no complaint about
-that. Bit finicky about socks and ’andkerchiefs always the same color—and
-ye couldn’t see ’is socks most o’ the time—only when he pulled up his
-trouser leg a-purpose—but a good spender and not pokin’ ’is nose into
-my affairs. I’ll say all that for ’im; but if he was to ask my ’and in
-marriage, like, and I could get you, Slim—all bunged up as y’are now and
-everything!—well, I know what I’d say.”
-
-Too miserable to reject this bit of sympathy, I said, merely,
-“Unfortunately, Lovey, every one may not be of your opinion.”
-
-“I d’n’ know about that,” he protested. “Seems to me everybody would be
-if you could make ’em understand, like.”
-
-There was nothing offensive in this, coming as it did from a deep
-affection, but, as it had gone far enough, I turned my attention to the
-streets.
-
-There was a quality in them not to be apprehended by the sense of sight.
-It defied at first my limited powers of analysis. Something to which I
-was accustomed was not there; and something was there to which I was not
-accustomed.
-
-That to which I was not accustomed struck me soon as shimmering, shining,
-radiant. That it was not an outward radiance goes without saying. New
-York on that November day was as dreary and bleak a port as one could
-easily land at. A leaden sky cloaked the streets in a leaden, lifeless
-atmosphere. The tops of steeples and the roofs of the tall buildings
-were wreathed in a leaden mist. Patches of befouled snow on the ground,
-with the drifts of paper, rags, and refuse to which the New York eye is
-so inured that it doesn’t see them, lent to the side-streets through
-which we clattered an air of being so hopelessly sunk in dirt that it is
-no use trying to be any other way. Drays rumbled, motor-trucks honked,
-ferry-boats shrieked, tram-cars clanked, trains overhead crashed with a
-noise like that of the shell that had struck the _Assiniboia_, while our
-taxicab creaked and squeaked and spluttered like an old man putting on a
-speed he has long outlived. On the pavements a strange, strange motley
-of men and women—Hebrew, Slavic, Mongolian, negro, negroid—carried
-on trades as outlandish as themselves. Here and there an outlandish
-child shivered its way to an outlandish school. Only now and then one
-saw a Caucasian face, either clean, alert, superior, or brutalized and
-repulsive beyond anything to be seen among the yearning, industrious
-aliens.
-
-And yet to me all was lit by an inner light of which I couldn’t at
-first see the lamp. I caught the rays without detecting the source that
-emitted them. In and through and above this squalid New York, with its
-tumult, its filth, its seeming indifference to the individual, there was
-a celestial property born of the kingdom of heaven. It shone in the sky;
-it quivered in the air; it lay restfully on the hoary graveyards nestling
-at the feet of prodigious cubes, like eld at the base of Time. All faces
-glowed with it; all tasks translated it; all the clamor of feet and
-wheels and whistles sang it like a song.
-
-The name of it came to me with a cry of joy and a pang of grief
-simultaneously. It was peace. I was in a country that was not at war.
-
-I had forgotten the experience. I had forgotten the sensation it
-produces. I had forgotten that there was a world in which men and women
-were free to go and come without let or hindrance. And here were people
-doing it. The day’s work claimed them, and nothing beyond the day’s work.
-To earn a living was an end in itself. The living earned, a man could
-enjoy it. The money he made he could spend; the house he built he could
-occupy; the motor he bought he could ride in; the wife he married he
-could abide with; the children he begot he could bring up. He could go
-on in this routine till he sickened and died and was buried in it. There
-was no terrific overruling motive to which all other motives had become
-subsidiary, and into which they merged.
-
-In the countries I had been living in war was the sky overhead and the
-ground beneath the feet. One dreamed it at night, and one woke to it in
-the morning. It made everything its adjunct, every one its slave. Duty,
-wealth, love, devotion, had no other object on which to pour themselves
-out. It commanded, absorbed, monopolized. There was no home it didn’t
-visit, no pocket it didn’t rifle, no face it didn’t haunt, no heart it
-didn’t search and sift and strengthen and wrench upward—the process was
-always a hard, dragging, compulsive one—till the most wilful had become
-submissive and the most selfish had given all. Prayer was war; worship
-was war; art, science, philosophy, sport were war. Nothing else walked in
-the streets or labored in the fields or bought and sold in the shops. It
-was the next Universal after God.
-
-And here, after God, a man was his own Universal. With no standard to
-which everything had to be referred he seemed unutterably care-free.
-Care-free was not a term I should have used of New York, of America, in
-the old days; but it was now the only one that applied. The people I saw
-going by on the sidewalks had nothing but themselves and their families
-to think of. Their only struggle was the struggle for food and shelter.
-Safe people, happy people, dwelling in an Eden out of the reach of cannon
-and gas and bomb!
-
-“I came not to bring peace, but a sword!”
-
-Sacrilegiously, perhaps, I was applying those words to myself as we
-jolted homeward. But I was applying them with a query. I was asking if
-it could possibly be worth while. All at once my mission became unreal,
-fantastic.
-
-To begin with, it was beyond my powers. Among these hundreds of thousands
-of strangers I knew but a handful. Even on that handful I should make no
-impression. I could see at a glance, from the few words I had exchanged
-with people on the dock, that each man’s cup was full. You couldn’t pour
-another drop into it. I had subconsciously taken it for granted that my
-friends would be, as it were, waiting for me; and already it was evident
-that in their minds there would not be a vacant spot. I had not the
-will-power to force myself in on so much hurry and preoccupation.
-
-Then I wasn’t interested in it any more. I had pretentiously thought of
-myself as dedicated to a cause, and now the cause had dissolved into
-nothing on this leaden, overcharged air. It would be ridiculous to wean
-these people away from their work, even if I could play like the Pied
-Piper and have them follow me. I didn’t want to do it. I wanted to marry
-the woman I loved, and settle down quietly, industriously, to spend
-my days in an office and my nights at home, like the countless human
-ants that were running to and fro. My celibacy of the will was gone. My
-consecration was gone. Where these austerities had been there was now
-only that yearning of whatever it is that draws a man toward a woman, and
-I asked nothing but the freedom to enjoy. I was determined to enjoy. The
-resolve came over me with this first glimpse of New York. It came over me
-in a tide of desire which was all the fiercer for its long repression. It
-may have been the demand of the flesh for compensation. That which had
-not merely been denied, but brutalized and broken, rose with the appetite
-of a starving beast.
-
-So, thirdly, I was not fit for any high undertaking. It was not my real
-self that had made these vows; it was a phantasm self evoked by the vast
-emotions of a strife in which the passions raged on a scale that lifted
-the human temporarily out of itself. But now that the strife had been
-left behind, the human fell back into the same old rut.
-
-In the same old rut I found myself. I had reverted to what I had been
-before there was a war at all. My carnal instincts were as strong as
-ever; as strong as ever was my longing for Regina Barry as my wife. It
-was stronger than ever, since I meant to get her by hook or by crook, if
-I couldn’t do it by the methods which colloquially we call straight.
-
-It was, however, the difficulties of hook and crook that oppressed me.
-The straight line was in this case that of least resistance. I grew more
-convinced of it as the day advanced.
-
-There was everything to make my return to the old quarters a moment of
-depression. The quarters themselves, which had seemed palatial after the
-Down and Out, were modest to the point of being squalid. As Cantyre had
-said, Lovey had kept them as clean as an operating-room, but cleanliness
-couldn’t relieve their dingy shabbiness or make up for the absence of
-daylight.
-
-Moreover, Cantyre’s own proximity was trying to me. There was only the
-elbow of a corridor between his rooms and mine. He would resume the old
-chumming habits of running in and out, while I was sharpening a knife to
-stab him in the back.
-
-And in the processes of unpacking Lovey got on my nerves. He got on my
-nerves as a sweet, old, fussy mother gets on those of a wayward son
-during the hours he is compelled to stay at home. Dogging me about from
-one room to another, his affection was like a draught of milk held out
-to a man whose lips are parched for brandy.
-
-It was a relief, therefore, when the telephone rang and Annette van
-Elstine asked me to come and have tea with her. I knew that Annette was
-not craving to see me merely as her cousin; and as my cousin I could have
-waited patiently for the pleasure of seeing her; but with her scent for
-drama and her insatiable curiosity she would raise the issues of which I
-wanted to talk even if I got no good from it.
-
-I found her as little changed as if Time had not passed nor War dropped
-his bomb on the world.
-
-Annette’s smartness, as I have already told you, was difficult to define.
-It was not in looks or dress or manner of living or gifts of intellect.
-If I could ascribe it to a cause I should put it down as authority of
-position combined with the possession of a great many personal secrets.
-She knew your intimate history for the reason that she asked you intimate
-questions. Authority of position enabled her to do this—or at least she
-acted as if it did—with the right of a cross-examiner to probe the truth
-in court. She could convey the impression that her interest in your
-affairs was an honor—as if a queen were to put her royal finger in your
-family pie—so that quite artlessly you unlocked your heart to her. Other
-people’s unlocked hearts were her kingdom, since, as far as I could see,
-she had nothing in her own.
-
-Also, as far as I could see, she wore the same tea-gown I had always seen
-her in; she sat in the same chair in front of the same fire; she had
-before her the same tea equipage; she might have been pouring the same
-tea.
-
-The transition from the necessary questions as to my personal experiences
-and wounds to that of the exact relations between Mrs. Hartlepool and
-Gen. Lord Birkenhead was an easy one. Disappointed that I had spent
-two years at the front and had heard nothing of the delicate situation
-between these distinguished persons, of which an amazing mass of
-contradictory detail had reached certain circles in New York, she turned
-the conversation on what was really the matter in hand.
-
-“So you came over on the same boat as Regina?”
-
-Unable to deny this statement, I admitted its truth. The dusky ripples
-played over Annette’s round features, giving them a somber vivacity.
-
-“Did she tell you anything?”
-
-“Yes; a good many things.”
-
-“Anything special, I mean?”
-
-“Everything she said was special, as far as I can remember.”
-
-She tried another avenue.
-
-“You’ve gone back to your old quarters, haven’t you?”
-
-“Yes; I kept them all the time I was away. Stupid, I suppose; but when I
-left New York I didn’t expect to be gone for more than a few weeks.”
-
-“Stephen Cantyre is in that house, isn’t he?”
-
-“On the same floor with me.”
-
-“You’ll see a great deal of him, won’t you?”
-
-“I did when I was there before.”
-
-“Was he on the dock to meet Regina?”
-
-“He was on the dock, either to meet her or to meet me. As a matter of
-fact, he met us both.”
-
-“Did he say anything about her?”
-
-“Yes; he said he had to go and speak to her.”
-
-“Only to speak to her?”
-
-“What more could he do—right there on the dock?”
-
-“Oh, then you do know?”
-
-“Know what?”
-
-“What do you suppose? Can’t you guess?”
-
-“I didn’t know you wanted me to guess. I thought you meant to tell me.”
-
-“I can’t tell you what I don’t know myself—officially.”
-
-“Do you know it in any other way?”
-
-“I know it by signs and tokens.”
-
-“One can infer a lot from them.”
-
-“That’s just what I’ve done. It wasn’t till I heard that you’d come over
-in the same boat with her—”
-
-The rest of the sentence was conveyed by a look which invited me to go on.
-
-“You thought I might be able to corroborate the signs and tokens?”
-
-“Or contradict them—if it’s not a rude thing to say.”
-
-I wriggled away from the frontal attack. “Why should it be rude?”
-
-“Oh, well, I’m the last person in the world to go poking into other
-people’s business.”
-
-“Exactly.”
-
-“Only people do like to tell me things.”
-
-“I can quite understand that—when they’ve anything to tell.”
-
-“Which is what I thought you might have.”
-
-“How could I have anything to tell when I’ve just spent two years in
-trenches and hospitals?”
-
-“You haven’t been in trenches and hospitals during the last ten days. Oh,
-don’t say anything if you don’t want to. I’m not in the least curious.”
-
-“Of course you’re not. No one would ever think so.”
-
-“I’ve only been—well, just a little afraid.”
-
-“What were you afraid of?”
-
-“Of the situation. I suppose it wasn’t an accident that you took the boat
-that she was on?”
-
-“No, it wasn’t an accident. But what has that to do with it?”
-
-“Just that much—that you did it on purpose.”
-
-“So that you were afraid on my account?”
-
-“No; on hers. You see, she’s been so terribly talked about that now that
-it’s beginning again—”
-
-“Oh, it’s beginning again, is it?”
-
-She said, mysteriously, “Stephen Cantyre is rather a goose, you know.”
-
-“In what way?”
-
-“In the way of dropping hints when he’d much better keep still. He’s so
-crazy about her—”
-
-“It’s a pity for him to be dropping hints if he isn’t sure.”
-
-“Oh, he must be sure enough! After the way she treated him before, he’d
-never expose himself to the same thing the second time. It isn’t that
-he’s not sure. It’s just the way he does it—confiding in every one, but
-only saying that he hopes.”
-
-“If he only hopes, it doesn’t bind any one but himself.”
-
-“It isn’t a question of binding; it’s one of the situation. If she’s let
-him hope—the second time—she’s bound. If it was only the first time—or if
-she hadn’t made such an insane reputation for herself—don’t you see?—the
-whole thing is in that.”
-
-“I should think the whole thing was in whether or not she was in love
-with him.”
-
-“Well, it isn’t. If she was as much in love with somebody else as Juliet
-she couldn’t throw over Stephen Cantyre now. She’d have to be put under
-restraint if she did—shut up in some sort of ward. The community wouldn’t
-stand for it.”
-
-“It might be a nine days’ wonder, of course.”
-
-“It would be one of those nine days’ wonders that last all your life.
-She’d be done for.” She went on in another key. “But, of course, her
-father and mother wouldn’t let her. They’re delighted. He’s very well
-off—and a good fellow, who’ll give her everything she wants.”
-
-“But what good will that do if she doesn’t care for him?”
-
-Her animation went into the eclipse that always came over her when she
-touched the heart of things.
-
-“What makes you think she doesn’t—if it’s not a rude question?”
-
-“The fact that she turned him down before.”
-
-She broke in with that directness which she never hesitated to make use
-of when the time came.
-
-“You don’t think she cares anything about you?”
-
-I considered two or three ways of meeting this, the one I adopted being
-to put on a rather inane smile.
-
-“What if she did?”
-
-“She’d just have to get over it, that’s all. You, too!”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“I needn’t tell you why. You must see for yourself. Or, rather, I’ve told
-you already. There are ways in which an engagement is more important than
-a marriage—any engagement; and when it’s a second engagement to the same
-man—If she’d been married to him, and couldn’t get along, why, no one
-would think the worse of her if she got a divorce and married some one
-else. She would have given him a try; she would have done her best. But
-just to take him up and put him down, and take him up and put him down
-again, without trying him at all—my dear Frank, it isn’t done!”
-
-“But suppose we did it?”
-
-“In that case it might be the world well lost for love—but the world
-would be lost; and you needn’t be under any misconception about it.
-Personally I’d stand by any one through almost anything; I have stood
-by Regina in the past when lots of other women have given her the cold
-shoulder because of her—”
-
-“Call it anything you like. Most of us have other names for it. All I
-want to say now is that I wouldn’t stand by her in this; nor by you,
-either. If you had come to me when you were in your other troubles—three
-or four years ago—you’d have found me just the same as if you’d been
-keeping straight. Any one can go to the bad. There isn’t a family that
-hasn’t some one who’s done it. But this would be the kind of thing—
-Frank, old boy, I’m telling you right now, so that you’ll know where you
-stand with me. I’d have to be the first to cut you both.”
-
-To this there were several retorts I could have made, any of them quite
-crushing to Annette; but I was thinking of the practical difficulties
-before us. The rôle of unscrupulous coquette was the last in which Regina
-would care to appear; that of cad was equally distasteful to me. Had it
-been possible to make one plunge and be over with it, it would have been
-different; as it was, the preliminaries—the facing of all the people who
-would have to be faced—the explaining all the things that would have to
-be explained—couldn’t but be devilish.
-
-I was just beginning, “Why should you assume that we are thinking of any
-such thing—?”
-
-But before I could finish the sentence the door opened gently and a
-maid’s voice announced, “Mrs. Barry.”
-
-Of all the people in the world, this lady was the last I wanted to meet
-at that moment. Knowing how I must have figured in her eyes in the past,
-I was planning for the future to figure in a worse light still. I had
-thrown her kindness back in her face and never given her an explanation.
-She must have known that my seeming flight from Long Island after that
-last Sunday in June, 1914, had left her daughter unhappy; and the reason
-had remained a mystery.
-
-She gave me the first glance as she entered, and only the second to our
-hostess. The awful severity of those who are temperamentally gentle and
-unjudging was in the very coldness of her eye.
-
-She was a charming, delicate, semi-invalid woman who seemed to have been
-spun, like the clothes she wore, out of the least durable materials in
-life. Regina had the same traits, but harder, stronger, and more lasting.
-It was difficult to think of the latter as an invalid; while you couldn’t
-see the mother as anything else.
-
-Prettily old-fashioned, she seemed not to have changed her style of
-dressing since the eighteen-seventies. The small bonnet might have dated
-from the epoch of professional beauties when Mrs. Langtry was a girl.
-The long fur pelisse with loose hanging sleeves was of no period at all.
-I think she wore a train. In her own house she habitually did, and she
-seemed to have just flung on the pelisse and driven down the Avenue in
-her motor.
-
-She greeted me politely, without enthusiasm, but with due regard to
-the fact that I was a wounded hero home from the wars. Talking of the
-invasion of Rumania, she showed herself much more alive to America’s
-international duty than any of the few men I had met since my landing.
-
-“I wish we could get my husband and Stephen to see things that way,”
-she continued, sweetly, over her tea-cup. “They’re so pacifist, both
-of them. My husband feels that we’ve nothing to do with it, and Stephen
-is opposed to war on any ground. You must talk to him, Mr.—or captain,
-isn’t it? Oh, major? You must talk to him, Major Melbury. He’ll listen to
-you.” She turned to Annette. “You know, Annette, I just ran in to share
-our good news with you. Regina and Stephen—they’ve made it up again—and
-they’re so happy!” An oblique glance included me. She was getting the
-satisfaction that women receive from a certain kind of revenge. “Poor
-darling! You don’t know how hard she’s tried, Annette. People haven’t
-understood her. All she’s wanted was to be sure of herself—and now she
-is. She’s really been in love with Stephen all these years, only she
-didn’t know it. That is, she knew it; and yet—But I’m sure you see it.
-You’re one of the few who’ve never been unkind to her. She wanted me to
-tell you. She’ll be so glad to have you know it, too, Major Melbury.
-Perhaps she told you on the boat. I think she said she did. I don’t quite
-remember. There’s been so much to say in the last few hours. There always
-is at such a time, don’t you think?... No; they’re not going to announce
-an engagement. It would only make more talk, after all the talk there’s
-been. One of these days they’ll be married—without saying anything about
-it. And, oh!—I know you’ll be interested, Annette, though it may bore
-Major Melbury—Stephen has bought that very nice house—the Endsleigh
-Jarrotts lived in it for a little while—on Park Avenue near Sixty-sixth
-Street. Ralph Coningsby is going to remodel it for them, and I’m sure it
-will be awfully attractive. That’s where they’ll live.”
-
-It was my opportunity. I could have shouted out there and then and made a
-scene.
-
-Do you think me a coward for not doing it? Do you think me a fool?
-
-All kinds of speeches were hot within me—and I kept them back. More
-correctly, I didn’t keep them back; I simply couldn’t utter them. I
-couldn’t give pain to this sweet lady sipping her tea so contentedly;
-I couldn’t give pain to Annette. Annette was enjoying the situation in
-which we found ourselves; the sweet lady had got compensation for months,
-for years, of wondering and unhappiness in those seemingly artless
-words, “She’s really been in love with Stephen all these years, only she
-didn’t know it.” I knew they were spoken for my benefit. Between the
-lines, between the syllables, they said, “And if you think she was ever
-in love with you you’re wrong.” Whether the sweet lady believed her own
-statements or not made little difference. It would gratify her all her
-life to remember that she had had the chance of making them.
-
-So I came away, following the line of least resistance, because I didn’t
-see what else I could do.
-
-I didn’t see what else I could do when Cantyre came into my bedroom late
-that night.
-
-I knew he would be dining at the Barrys’, and that he would come looking
-me up after his return. To avoid him I had the choice between staying
-out and going to bed. My physical condition kept me from staying out
-very late, and so I took the other alternative. It made no difference,
-however, since he waked Lovey by pounding on the door, and insisted on
-coming in.
-
-Dropping into the arm-chair beside my bed, with no light but that which
-streamed in behind him from the sitting-room, he took me on my weak side
-by beginning to talk about the war.
-
-I have said that my mission had become unreal and fantastic, but that was
-only in relation to my personal fitness for the task. That the war was
-a holy war, to be fought to a holy end, remained the alpha and omega of
-my convictions. And to Cantyre war of any kind was plainly unholy war,
-productive of unholy reactions. What I felt as he talked may best be
-expressed by Lovey’s words next morning when he betrayed the fact that he
-had been listening.
-
-“Didn’t it get yer goat, Slim, the way the doctor went on last night?”
-
-It did get my goat, and I restrained myself only because I had been
-warned in London to be patient with Americans. “You must treat them as
-wise parents treat their sons,” I had been told. “Help them to see for
-themselves—and when they do that you can trust them.” So the best I could
-do was to help Cantyre to see for himself; and to make any headway in
-that I had to pretend to be tolerant.
-
-“No one contends that war is the ideal method for settling human
-difficulties,” I admitted; “but as long as human society stands on
-certain planks in its platform there’ll be no other way.”
-
-“Then isn’t this the time to take another way?”
-
-“No; because you’ve got to change your bases of existence first. You
-can’t change your effects without first changing your causes, any more
-than you can graft an apple on an oak.”
-
-“But even without removing the cause you can still sometimes nip the
-effect.”
-
-“Which is what in the present instance we tried to do, and didn’t succeed
-in. All the trend of education during thirty years has been in the
-direction of eliminating war, while still keeping the principle that
-makes for war as part of the foundation of our life. We created a system
-of international law; we set up a Hague Tribunal; many of us had come to
-the conclusion that no great war could ever again take place; but the law
-by which human beings prefer as yet to live outwitted us and brought war
-upon us whether we would or not. So long as you keep the causes you must
-have the effects.”
-
-“Then let us do away with the causes.”
-
-“Yes! Let us. Only, to do that in time for the present situation we
-should have begun five hundred years ago. You can’t put out the fire the
-ages have kindled as you’d blow out a candle. When you’ve spent centuries
-in preparing your mine, and fixed a time fuse to make it explode, you’ve
-nothing to do but to let it go off. This war wasn’t made overnight. The
-world has been getting ready for it as long as there have been human
-beings to look askance at one another. Now we’ve got it—with all its
-horrors, but also with all its compensations.”
-
-“Compensations for the lives it has ruined?”
-
-“In the lives it has saved—yes. You’ll never get its meaning unless you
-see it as a great regenerative process.”
-
-“Do you mean to tell me that we can only be regenerated by fire and sword
-and rapine?”
-
-“Not at all! We’re regenerated by courage and honor and sacrifice and the
-sense that every man gets—every Tommy, every poilu, every bluejacket—that
-he personally is essential to man’s big fight in his struggle upward.
-It’s one of the queer things of the whole business that out of the
-greatest wrong human beings can inflict on one another—to go to war with
-them—there can come the highest benefits to every individual who gets
-himself ready to receive them. It makes one believe in an intelligence
-compelling the race toward good, however much we may be determined to go
-the other way.”
-
-He tuned his voice to a new key.
-
-“Oh, I’ve never doubted that; and now, old chap, now I—I see it.”
-
-I knew what was coming. It was the great subject that could eclipse even
-that of the war. I had just force to pull the bedclothes up about my
-mouth and mutter a suffocated, “How?”
-
-“What I hinted this morning. It’s all—it’s all come right. I used to
-think it never would, sometimes. And then—don’t laugh, old boy!—but then
-I’d say to myself that God would never have made me feel as I did unless
-He meant something to come of it. Religion keeps telling you to trust;
-and I did trust—on and off.”
-
-Again I had an opportunity; but again such words as rose in me choked
-themselves back in my throat. I could have told him that she was ready
-to come to me if I lifted a finger. I knew I should have to tell him
-sometime, and it occurred to me that it might as well be now. It was the
-words that failed me, not the intention; or if it was the intention, it
-was the intention in any degree that made it compulsory.
-
-I don’t think he noticed that I said nothing, for he went falteringly on:
-
-“It’s a wonderful thing to be happy, Frank. I’ve never been happy before
-in my life. I’m a pusillanimous sort of bloke, and there’s the truth.
-I wasn’t happy at home, or at school, or at college, or in any of the
-hospitals where I worked; and I never made any friends. You must know
-I’ve been queer when I say that women have always looked at me as if I
-was outside of their range. They’ve never made up to me in the way they
-do to most fellows with a bit of money and not deformed. Regina—there!
-I’ve said her name—she was the very first who ever took the trouble to be
-more than just decently civil.”
-
-I managed to stammer the words, “What did she do?”
-
-“Oh, nothing very much—not at first. She seemed to think—she used to
-say it—that I was different from most men. That’s what she appeared to
-be on the lookout for. All the other chaps she knew were so much alike,
-and I—Well, that’s how it began. She wanted the unusual—and I turned up.
-After a while she thought I wasn’t unusual enough—said it in so many
-words—But you know that story. I’ve told you too many times already.”
-
-“And now?”
-
-“She thinks she’ll marry me.”
-
-He brought out the statement in a voice all awe and amazement.
-
-“She only thinks?”
-
-“Oh, she will. She wouldn’t say anything about it if she didn’t mean—”
-
-“And—and you’re going to—to let her?”
-
-“Let her? Why, man, you might as well ask me if I’d let God forgive my
-sins if He said He’d do it.”
-
-“God could forgive your sins and not be any the worse off Himself.”
-
-He sprang forward in his chair, grabbing at the bedclothes.
-
-“Frank, I swear to you it will be the same with her. She’ll never be
-sorry. I’ll never let her. She’ll be like God to me. I’ll make my whole
-life worship and service.”
-
-“If that’s what she wants.”
-
-“It’s what every woman wants, so they say. They just ask to be loved;
-and when you love them enough—” He uttered a little shrill laugh, in
-which there was a touch of the hysterical that was always somewhere about
-him. “God! Frank, it’s wonderful! Even you who know her can’t imagine
-what it means to a lonely bloke like me.”
-
-I pumped myself up to a great effort.
-
-“Suppose”—I had to moisten my lips before going on—“suppose she was to
-play you the same trick she played you before?”
-
-“She wouldn’t.”
-
-In spite of his evident conviction, I pressed the question.
-
-“But if she did?”
-
-He threw off in a tone that seemed careless: “In that case there’d be
-just one thing for me to do. I’d leave her everything I possess—I’m doing
-that as it is—and, well, you can guess the rest. I—I couldn’t go through
-all that again. The first time—well, I just pulled it off; but the
-second—”
-
-It was the old story. They all seemed to have the second time on the
-brain. I, too, was getting it on the brain. It was like a trip-hammer
-pounding in my head.
-
-I forced myself, however, to make some foolish, semi-jovial speech in
-which there was no congratulation, begging him, then, for the love of
-Heaven, to clear out, as I wanted to go to sleep.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXV_
-
-
-No record of the next few weeks exists for me. I suppose I must have
-done things—little things. I must have gone in and out, and eaten my
-meals, and fulfilled Lovey’s orders—for, lacking volition of my own, I
-was entirely at his command. But the recollection of it all has passed
-from me. I remember reading in some one’s reminiscences of prison life
-that the weeks of solitary confinement went by; but the released prisoner
-could not say how. Nothing remained with him, apparently, but a big,
-black blur; and of these first weeks in New York it was all that stayed
-with me.
-
-I know that Christmas came and went, and that I spent the festival at
-Atlantic City. I did this in a wild hope, which I knew was idiotic when I
-formed it. I told Lovey what I was about to do; I knew he, in the course
-of his valeting, which he still kept up, would tell Cantyre; I guessed
-that Cantyre would tell Regina; and I hoped—it never really amounted to
-hoping, I only dreamed—that Regina might find the moment a favorable one
-for slipping away and joining me. Then we should actually do the thing so
-impossible to plan.
-
-But, of course, nothing came of it; and I returned to New York more
-unsatisfied than I had gone away. The sense of being unsatisfied sent me
-at last to Sterling Barry’s door.
-
-You will observe that I had not talked with Regina since our last night
-on board ship. On the morning of landing her quick movements, as
-compared with my slow, lumbering ones, enabled her to elude me. Since
-our landing my will had been positively paralyzed. Those words of hers,
-“Oh, Frank, I hope you won’t make me!” were always in my memory; but the
-very sense that I could use the power held me back from doing it. I meant
-to use it; but as each minute came round when I might have taken a step
-toward that end I seemed to fall backward, like the men who went out with
-swords and staves to take the Christ.
-
-But two days after my return from Atlantic City I came to the conclusion
-that I could wait no longer. I could go and call on her at least. For
-the family it would mean no more than that I had come to offer my
-congratulations. For her—but I could tell that only by being face to face
-with her.
-
-The old manservant recognized me on coming to the door. He was sorry
-that Miss Barry had gone to tea with Miss van Elstine, and was sure his
-mistress would be sorry, too. Moreover, they had all heard of my prowess
-in battle, and were proud of me.
-
-So I drove round in my taxi to Annette’s.
-
-The maid would have ushered me straight up to the library, but I
-preferred to send in my card. As I was being conducted up-stairs a minute
-later I had the privilege of hearing a few words which I am sure Annette
-intended for my ear.
-
-“Well, I don’t mind this once, Regina; but I can’t have it going on....
-Yes, I know it’s an accident; but it’s an accident that mustn’t continue
-to happen. The very fact that he’s my cousin obliges me to be the more
-careful. It wouldn’t be fair to your father and mother if I were to let
-you come here—”
-
-“But, Annette, this once is all I’m asking for.”
-
-“And all I mean to grant.”
-
-I could tell by Annette’s voice that she was retreating to another room,
-so that by the time I entered Regina stood there alone. Before I knew
-what I was doing I held both her hands in mine and was kissing them.
-
-It is an odd fact that on raising my eyes I saw her features for the
-first time since that summer afternoon at Rosyth. On board ship she had
-always worn the yashmak; and on the dock she had been too far away to
-allow of my seeing more than that she was there.
-
-The face I saw now was not like Annette’s, untouched by the passage of
-time and suffering and world agony. You might have said that in its
-shadows and lines and intensities the whole history of the epoch was
-expressed. It was one of those twentieth-century faces—they are women’s
-faces, as a rule—on which the heroic in our time has stamped itself in
-lineaments which neither paint nor marble could reproduce. It flashed on
-me that the transmigrated soul had traveled farther than I had suspected.
-
-I don’t know what we said to each other at first. They were no more
-than broken things, not to be set down by the pen. When I came to the
-consciousness of my actual words I was saying, “I’m going to make you,
-Regina; I’m going to make you.”
-
-She responded like a child who recognizes power, but has no questionings
-as to right and wrong.
-
-“Are you, Frank? How?”
-
-“In any way that suggests itself.” I added, helplessly, “I don’t know
-how.”
-
-“I’ll do whatever you tell me,” she said, simply and submissively.
-
-“Then will you just walk away with me some afternoon—and be
-married—without saying anything to any one?”
-
-“If you say so.”
-
-“When shall we do it?”
-
-“Whenever you like.”
-
-“Next week?”
-
-“If that suits you.”
-
-“Would it suit you?”
-
-She bent her head and was silent. I repeated the question with more
-insistence.
-
-“Would it suit you, Regina?”
-
-“There’s no question of suiting me. I’ve got myself where I can’t be”—she
-smiled, a twitching, nervous smile—“where I can’t be suited.”
-
-“Do you mean that you’d come with me—when you wouldn’t want to?”
-
-“Something like that.”
-
-“Why should you?”
-
-“I’ve told you that. I’ve—I’ve let you see it—in what I’ve been doing for
-the past two years.”
-
-“So that I’m absolutely master?”
-
-“That’s it.”
-
-I turned away from her, walking to the other end of the long room. When I
-came back she was standing as I had left her, humbly, with eyes downcast,
-like a slave-girl put up for sale.
-
-I paused in front of her.
-
-“Do you know that your abandonment of will puts us both in an
-extraordinary position?”
-
-“Yes.” She went on presently, “But I know, too, that where you’re
-concerned my will-power has left me.”
-
-“But that isn’t like you.”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“No, it isn’t. Generally my will is rather strong. But in this case— You
-see—I’d—I’d waited so long—and I’d never believed that you—that you cared
-anything—and now that I know you do—well, it’s simply made me helpless.
-I’ve—I’ve no will at all.”
-
-“So that I must have enough for two?”
-
-“I suppose so.”
-
-“And if I—if I carry you off—and make every one unhappy—and put you in a
-position where you’d be—where you’d be done for—that’s what Annette calls
-it—the responsibility would be all mine?”
-
-“I should never reproach you.”
-
-“In words.”
-
-“Nor in thought—if I could help it.”
-
-“But you mightn’t be able to help it.”
-
-To this there was no reply. I took another turn to the end of the room.
-My freedom of action was terrifying. Since I could do with her what I
-liked, I was afraid to do anything. I came back and said so.
-
-The old Regina woke as she murmured, “If you’re afraid to do anything—do
-nothing.”
-
-“And what would you do?”
-
-“I should let things take their course.”
-
-“Let things take their course—and marry him?”
-
-“If things took their course that way.”
-
-“Do you mean that they mightn’t take their course that way?”
-
-“I’m not married to him yet. There are—there are difficulties.”
-
-I caught her by the arm. “Of what kind?”
-
-“Of opinion chiefly—but of very vital opinion.”
-
-“Do you mean about the war?”
-
-She said with a force like that of a suppressed cry: “He wants me not to
-have anything more to do with it! And I—I can’t stop—not while it’s going
-on. I—I must be doing something. It’s one of the reasons why I could
-marry him—that he’s a doctor—and I could take him over there—where they
-need him so much.”
-
-“And he won’t go?”
-
-“He doesn’t say that exactly; but he doesn’t want to. He thinks it’s all
-wrong—that when it comes to brutality, one side is as bad as the other.”
-
-“Oh, he’ll get over that—if you insist; and then you’ll marry him.”
-
-“Perhaps so—if I haven’t already married you.”
-
-“What makes you think you may have married me?”
-
-“You said you’d make me.”
-
-And in the end, when Annette came back, we left it at that, with
-everything up in the air.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXVI_
-
-
-More weeks followed, of which my record is chiefly in the drama of public
-events.
-
-Vast as these were at the time, they seem even vaster in the retrospect.
-As my memory goes back to them they are like prodigious portents in the
-sky, awful to look at and still more awful to think about. A time will
-come when we shall find it amazing merely to have lived through such
-happenings.
-
-Before the invaders the Rumanian towns were going down like houses built
-of blocks. In her attitude to Rumania, Russia was a mystery—a husband
-who sees his wife fighting for her life and doing hardly anything to
-help her. The rumors, true or false, that reached us might have been
-torn from some stupendous, improbable romance—a feeble Czar, a beautiful
-and traitorous Czarina, a corrupt nobility, an army betrayed, a people
-seething in dreams and furies and ignorance. Washington, having gone so
-far as to ask the Allied nations their peace conditions, had received
-them—restitution, reparation, and future security. Then late in that
-month of January, 1917, there came to people like me an unexpected shock.
-Before the Senate President Wilson delivered the speech of which the tag
-that ran electrically round the world was peace without victory.
-
-I mention these things because they are the only waymarks of a time
-during which my private life seemed to be drearily and hopelessly at a
-standstill. The deadlock of the nations reacted on myself. Mentally I was
-at grips with destiny, but nothing made any progress. I was exactly where
-I had started, as regards Regina, as regards Cantyre, as regards Annette,
-as regards the father and mother Barry. Outwardly I was on friendly terms
-with them all, and on no more than friendly terms with any one.
-
-The Barrys invited me to dinner, and I went. Cantyre made up a theater
-party—he was fond of this form of recreation—and I went to that. Annette
-asked me to a Sunday lunch at which Cantyre and Regina were guests.
-The force of organized life held us together as a cohesive group; the
-operation of conventional good manners kept us to courtesies. That
-any one was happy I do not believe; but life threw its mask even on
-unhappiness.
-
-I got in, of course, an occasional word with Regina, which, nevertheless,
-didn’t help me. As far as I could observe, she lived and moved in a kind
-of hypnotic state, from which nothing I knew how to say could wake her.
-She was always waiting for me to give the word, and I was afraid to give
-it. If there was hypnotism, it affected us both, since I was as deeply in
-the trance as she.
-
-Now and then, however, she came out of it with some brief remark which
-gave me a lead and perhaps made me hope. One such occasion was at the
-theater. Cantyre had not put me next to her, but there was an entr’acte
-when I found his place empty and slipped into it.
-
-“And how are events taking their course?” I asked, with a semblance of
-speaking cheerily.
-
-“I’m waiting to see.”
-
-“Still?”
-
-“Still.”
-
-“And how long is that to go on?”
-
-“Till events have shaped their course in a way that will tell me what to
-do.”
-
-“How shall you know that?”
-
-“How does the twig know when the current takes it from the spot where it
-has been caught and carries it down-stream?”
-
-“Oh, but you’ve got intelligence.”
-
-“Any intelligence I’ve got implores me to keep on waiting.”
-
-“So that you’re not going to be married right away?”
-
-“I shall not be married till I see it’s the obvious thing to do.”
-
-“Not even to me?”
-
-“That’s different. I’ve already told you—”
-
-“That if I give the word— But don’t you see I can’t give it?”
-
-“Exactly. You’re waiting for the sign as much as I am.”
-
-“What sign?”
-
-“We shall recognize it when the time comes.”
-
-“Where will it come from?”
-
-“Right up out of life; I don’t know where, nor how.”
-
-“Who’ll give it to us?”
-
-She had only time, as Cantyre returned to his seat, to send me a long,
-slantwise look, with the underscored words, “You know!”
-
-Another time was in the regrouping of guests, after Annette’s luncheon.
-Finding myself beside her at a window, I asked the plain question, “Are
-you engaged to Cantyre?”
-
-“I’m just where I was when I told you about it on board ship. He hasn’t
-asked me to be more definite.”
-
-“Is he just where he was?”
-
-“I think he is, in that—in that he expects me to marry him.”
-
-“And you leave him under that impression?”
-
-“I don’t know what else to do—till I get the sign.”
-
-“You’re still looking for that?”
-
-“Yes. Aren’t you?”
-
-“Not that I’m aware of.”
-
-“Oh, but you are, whether you’re aware of it or not.”
-
-“And suppose he urges you before the sign comes?”
-
-“I shall still wait.”
-
-“And suppose I urged you?”
-
-“I’d take that as the sign.”
-
-And after the guests went I stayed behind and told the whole story to
-Annette. So long as there were no clandestine meetings under her roof,
-she was as detached and sympathetic and non-committal as a chorus in a
-Greek play.
-
-“Why don’t you give her the sign, if it’s not a rude question?” she
-asked, while a marvelous succession of ripples circled over her duskiness.
-
-“Because I’m afraid to. Think what it would mean to Cantyre, who’s been
-so white with me all these years.”
-
-“As well as to every one concerned, including herself and you. I’m glad
-you’ve enough common sense to feel that. See here, Frank,” she went on,
-kindly, “you’ve got to pull yourself out of this state of mind. It’s
-doing you no good. When you ought to be at work for your country, which
-needs you desperately, you’re sulking over a love-affair. Buck up! Be a
-sport! Be a man! There are lots of nice girls in New York. I’ll find you
-some one.”
-
-But at that I ran away.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXVII_
-
-
-Within a few days I saw the correctness of Annette’s summing up.
-
-A medieval legend tells of an angel being sent to Satan with the message
-that God meant to take from the devil all the temptations with which he
-had seduced mankind. To this Satan resigned himself because he couldn’t
-help it, begging of the angel that he should be left with just one—and
-that the least important. “Which?” asked the angel. “Depression,” said
-Satan. The angel considered the request, found that depression cut but
-slight figure as a sin, and went back to heaven, leaving it behind him.
-“Good!” laughed Satan, as the celestial vision faded out. “In this one
-gift I’ve secured the whole bag of tricks.”
-
-And that is what I was to find.
-
-I was depressed on leaving Europe. I grew more depressed because of the
-experience on board ship. In New York I was still more depressed. There
-was a month in which all things worked together for evil; and then I came
-to the place at which Satan had desired to have me.
-
-I have not said that during all this time I made no attempt to look up
-my old friends at the Down and Out or, beyond an occasional argument
-with Cantyre, to fulfil the mission with which I had been intrusted.
-Ralph Coningsby had come and offered me work, and I had refused it. Even
-the march of public events, with the introduction of lawless submarine
-warfare and the breaking off of diplomatic relations between Germany
-and the United States, hadn’t roused me. I marked the slow rise of the
-impulse toward war in the breasts of the American people, as passionless
-and as irresistible as an incoming tide, but it seemed to have nothing to
-do with me. I was out of it, flung aside by a fate that had made sport of
-me.
-
-I was so far from the current of whatever could be called life that I
-grew apathetic. Though I hadn’t seen Regina for weeks, I sat down under
-the impalpable obstacles between us, making no effort to overcome them.
-I ate and drank and slept and brooded on the futility of living, and let
-the doing so fill my time. Lovey was worried, and dogged me round till
-there were minutes when I could have sprung on him and choked him.
-
-Then came the afternoon when I decided that Satan must have his way.
-
-There is a hotel in New York of which I had many recollections because
-I had frequented its barroom in the days before I went altogether down.
-It is a somewhat expensive-looking barroom, with heavy mahogany, gilded
-cornices, and frescoes of hunting-scenes on the wall. Hanging over the
-bar at any time during the day or night can be seen all the types that
-are commonly known as sporting, from the dashing to the cheap.
-
-They might have been the same as on that day when I turned my back upon
-the place five years previously. They hung in the same attitudes; they
-called for the same drinks; they used the same profanities, though with
-some novelty in the slang. With my limp, my black patch, and my general
-haggardness, I felt like a ghost returning among them.
-
-Timidly I approached a barman at leisure and asked for a cocktail of a
-brand for which I used to have a liking. I carried it off to a table
-placed inconspicuously behind the door leading to and from the hotel.
-Putting it on the table, I stared at its amber reflections.
-
-I had come back to the same old place at last. It was curious; but there
-I was. All my struggling, all my wandering, all my up-hill work, all my
-days and nights in the trenches, all my suffering, all my love—everything
-had combined together to land me just here, where, so to speak, I had
-begun. It was the old story of dragging up the cliff, only to fall over
-the precipice. It seemed to be my fate. There was no escaping it.
-
-I might not take more than that one drink during that afternoon; but I
-knew it would be a beginning. I should come back again; and I should come
-back again after that. Another type of man would do nothing of the kind;
-but I was my own type.
-
-Very deliberately I said good-by to the world I had known for the past
-three years and more. I said good-by to work, to ambition, to salvation,
-to country, to love. Back, far back in my mind I was saying the same
-deliberate good-by to God. I shouldn’t rest now till everything was gone.
-
-The glass was still untasted on the table. I was taking my time. The
-farewells on which I was engaged couldn’t be hurried. The fate in store
-for me would wait.
-
-Then the door behind which I sat began to open. It opened slowly,
-timidly, stealthily, as if the person entering was afraid to come in. The
-action stirred the curiosity, and I watched.
-
-Before I saw a face I saw a hand. Rather, I saw four fingers from the
-knuckles to the nails, as if some one was steadying himself by the sheer
-force of holding on. They were old, thin, twisted fingers, and I knew at
-a glance I had seen them before.
-
-The door continued to open, stealthily, timidly, slowly; and then,
-looking like a spirit rather than a man—a neat, respectable spirit
-wearing a silver star in his buttonhole, with trembling hands and a
-woeful quiver to the corner of his lower lip—Lovey stood in the barroom.
-
-He stood as if he had never been in any such place before. He was like a
-visitant from some other sphere—dazed, diaphanous, unearthly.
-
-He didn’t look at the table behind the door. His gaze was far off. I
-could see it scanning the backs of the hangers across the bar. Then it
-went over the tables one by one, traveling nearer and nearer.
-
-Just before the dim eyes reached me I said: “Hello, Lovey! Come and sit
-down. What’ll you have to drink?”
-
-There seemed to be an interval between hearing my voice and actually
-seeing me—an interval during which a frosty, unnatural color, as if snow
-were suddenly to take fire, flared in his waxlike cheek. But he came to
-the table and dropped into a round-backed chair.
-
-“Oh, Slim!”
-
-Leaning on the table, he covered his face with his hand.
-
-I tried putting up a bluff. “What’s the matter, Lovey? Haven’t got a
-headache, have you?”
-
-He raised those pitiful, dead blue eyes. “No, but I’ve got a ’eartache,
-Slim—a ’eartache I won’t never get over.”
-
-“Why, why—” I began to rally him.
-
-“It’s just what I was afeared of—for days and days I’ve been afeared of
-it. Been a-watchin’ of you, I ’ave.”
-
-Here was another transmigrated soul that had traveled farther than I
-knew. It was in pure curiosity as to the changes wrought in him that I
-said: “I should think you would have been glad, Lovey. When I was here
-before you used to want to have us both go back.”
-
-The extinct eyes were raised on me.
-
-“These times ain’t them times. Everything different. I ’aven’t stayed
-where I was in them days, not any more nor you. Oh, to think, to think!”
-
-“To think what?”
-
-“That you should ’ave come back to this—and me believin’ the war ’ad done
-ye good—lifted you up, like. Not but what you was the best man ever lived
-before the war—”
-
-“Oh no, Lovey. No one knows what I was better than yourself.”
-
-“You was good even then, sonny—even in them awful old days. Goodness
-ain’t just in doin’ certain things; it’s in being certain things. I don’t
-’ardly know what it is; but I can tell it when I see it. And I seen it
-in you, Slim—right from the first. Me and God A’mighty seen it together.
-That’s why He pulled you up out o’ what you was—and made you rich—and
-dressed you in swell clo’es—and sent you to the war—and made you a
-’ero—and stuck you all over with medals—and brought you ’ome again to me.
-And if you’d only waited—”
-
-“Well, if I’d only waited—what?”
-
-“You’d ’a’ got somethink better still. You’d ’a’ got it pretty soon.”
-
-“What should I have got?”
-
-[Illustration: “That you should ’ave come back to this—and me believin’
-the war ’ad done ye good—lifted you up, like. Not but what you was the
-best man ever lived before the war—”]
-
-“I ain’t a-goin’ to tell ye. If you’d come ’ome with me you’d see.”
-Before I could follow up this dark hint he continued: “God A’mighty don’t
-play no tricks on His children. Look at me! All He’s give me. Kep’ me
-well while you was away—and ’elped me to knock off the booze when it was
-mortal ’ard to do it—and pervided me with a good ’ome, thanks to you,
-Slim!—and work—and wages—and a very nice man to work for, all except
-bein’ a bit stuck on ’isself—and let me off washin’ windows, which was
-never a trade for an eddicated man like me—and brought you back to me,
-which was the best thing of all—and just because I waited.”
-
-“What do you mean by waiting?”
-
-“I mean waitin’ for Him. That’s somethink I’ve found out since you went
-away, sonny. It’s a tip as Beady Lamont give me. You’ve got to wait
-patient-like for Him; and if you do He’ll come to you.”
-
-“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
-
-“Of course you don’t. That’s why I’m a-tellin’ of you. It was like this:
-When you went away it was somethink fierce for me—nothink but that empty
-flat—and everythin’ speakin’ to me o’ you, like—yer clo’es and yer boots
-and yer books and yer pipes, and the chairs you used to sit on, and the
-bed you used to sleep in—and everythink like that—till I thought I was
-goin’ crazy. Many’s the time I wanted to come and do just what you’re
-a-doin’ of now—but I’d think o’ the promise I give you before ye went—and
-I’d ’ang on a bit more. And then God A’mighty Hisself come and spoke to
-me, just as He did to Beady Lamont that time he told us about when we was
-in the blue stars.”
-
-“And what did God Almighty say?”
-
-“He come in the middle o’ the night, and woke me up out of a sound sleep—”
-
-“How did you know it was He?”
-
-“Oh, I knowed. Ye couldn’t ’elp knowin’.”
-
-“Did you hear His voice?”
-
-“Ye didn’t ’ave to ’ear. It just went all over ye, like. I sits up in
-bed, and everything was dark and light at the same time, and something
-awful comfortin’ like sweepin’ through and through me. Ye couldn’t
-’ardly say it was ’earin’ or seein’ or feelin’ or nothink. It was just
-understandin’, like—but you knowed it was there.”
-
-“But you haven’t told me what He said.”
-
-“That’s what I’m a-comin’ to. He says: ‘Lovey,’ says He, ‘you’ve put up a
-good fight, and now ye’re over the worst of it. But I’m with ye all the
-time,’ says He; ‘only I can’t give ye everythin’ to oncet. All ye can
-take is what ye’ve made yerself fit to receive,’ says He; ‘because there
-was a good many years in yer life when ye wasn’t fit to receive nothink.
-But just you wait, and you’ll see ’ow good I’ll be to you by degrees,’
-says He. ‘You go on fightin’ in your way, just as that young fella, Slim,
-is fightin’ in his way, and I’ll do you both good, and bring you back to
-each other,’ says He. And, oh, sonny, He’s kep’ His word—all but right up
-till now, when you’ve been goin’ about that sad-like—and not wantin’ to
-be ’ome. And now this!”
-
-“But that’s not God, Lovey; that’s me.”
-
-“I don’t see much difference. The most ways I gets a’old o’ God, as
-you might say, is through the nice things people does for me—and the
-nice people theirselves—especially men—I don’t ’old with women—and more
-particular you, Slim—you that was more to me than my own children ever
-was—than my own life—yes, sonny, than my own life. I ain’t a-goin’ to
-live very long now—”
-
-“What makes you think so?”
-
-“I ’appen to know,” he replied, briefly. “There’s ways you can tell.”
-
-“What ways?”
-
-“Smellin’, for one thing. Ye can smell death just as easy as ye can
-smell flowers, or the fryin’ o’ fish, or any other smell; and it’s a
-sign ye’ll never be mistook in.” His ascetic profile was thrown up, with
-a long sniff through his delicate, quivering nostrils. “I can smell it
-now—just like the smell o’ liquor.” The profile came down, and he went
-on, eagerly: “But what I’m tellin’ you is that if I could die to save
-you from what ye’re beginnin’ to do this day, Slim, I’d do it cheerful.
-I knowed you was bent on it before ye knowed it yerself. I’ve been
-a-watchin’ on ye, and follerin’ you about when ye didn’t see me.”
-
-“How did you know?”
-
-“I can’t tell ye ’ow—not no more than I could tell you I knowed it was
-God. It don’t matter ’ow you know things as long as you know them, does
-it?”
-
-“Perhaps not.”
-
-“I’ve just been a-livin’ in yer skin ever since ye come ’ome, sonny. It
-was as if all yer thoughts passed through my mind, and all yer feelin’s
-through my ’eart. I ain’t much of a ’and at love—that kind of female
-love, I mean—not now, I ain’t; but I know that when ye’re young it kind
-o’ ketches you—”
-
-“Stop, Lovey,” I said, warningly.
-
-“All right, Slim, I’ll stop. I don’t need to go on. All I want to say is
-that you don’t know—you couldn’t know—the fancy I’ve took to you—and I
-used to think that you kind o’ ’ad a fancy for me, like.”
-
-“So I have.”
-
-The mild eyes searched me. There was a violent trembling of the lower lip.
-
-“Do you mean that, Slim?” Before I could answer he added, proudly: “I
-don’t need to ’ave no one sayin’ they’ve got a fancy for me when they
-’aven’t.”
-
-“Oh, but it’s true!”
-
-Two shivering hands were stretched out toward me in dramatic appeal.
-
-“Oh, then leave that there drink alone and come ’ome along o’ me.” His
-eyes fell on the glass. “’Ow many o’ them things ’ave ye ’ad?”
-
-“None yet; this is the first; and I haven’t tasted it.”
-
-He straightened himself up, speaking with what I can only call a kind of
-exaltation.
-
-“Then God A’mighty has sent me to you in time. It’s Him—and except Him
-’tain’t no one nor nothink. Slim, if you puts yer lips to that glass now
-ye’ll be sinnin’ in His face just as much as if it was Him and not me as
-was a-pleadin’ with ye.”
-
-“It isn’t a sin to take a cocktail.”
-
-“Not for every one, I don’t suppose. It wouldn’t be for the doctor;
-and it wouldn’t be for Mr. Coningsby; but ’tis for me, and ’tis for
-you. There’s take-it-and-leave-it people in the world, and there’s
-take-it-and-be-damned; and you and me belongs to the last. Oh, Slim,
-don’t be mad wi’ me! Ain’t ye a silver-star man in the Down and Out?
-Ain’t I yer next friend—yer real next friend, that is—a great deal more
-than that young Pyn, with ’is impotent tongue, what stood up with you?
-Come ’ome along o’ me, and I’ll show you somethin’ good.”
-
-It was the dark hint again.
-
-“What are you driving at, Lovey? What is there at home?”
-
-His reply might have been paraphrased from a writing he had never heard
-of.
-
-“There’s things ahead of you, Slim, different from what you’re expectin’
-of. Wait.”
-
-I confess to being startled. You must see me as in an overwrought
-condition, reacting from the tremendous strain, first of fighting, then
-of blindness, and thirdly of emotional stress. I do not pretend that more
-than any other man who comes back from the jaws of the infernal brazier
-in Flanders I was my normal self. I was easily up and easily down,
-easily excited and easily impressed. The mere cast of Lovey’s two brief
-sentences impressed me.
-
-“What things?” I asked, with that mixture of credulity and rejection with
-which one puts questions to a trance medium.
-
-“I’ll not tell ye; I’ll show ye; only ye must come ’ome.” As if in
-illustration of his words, he added, “Ye must begin to wait right now.”
-
-“But why wait?”
-
-“Because God A’mighty can’t give us everything to oncet. Didn’t I say He
-told me that Hisself? We ain’t fit to receive more’n a little at a time,
-just like babies. That’s another tip as Beady give me. And Mr. Christian
-he p’inted out to me oncet that wait is one of the frequentest words
-in the Bible. See here! Beady writ this for me.” Fumbling in an inside
-pocket, he drew forth a carefully folded bit of paper, saying, as he did
-so: “It was one of the times when I was awful low in my mind because
-you was away. I don’t ’old with them low fellas at the Down and Out—not
-as a reg’lar thing, I don’t—but now and then when I just couldn’t seem
-to get along without you I’d go down to one of the meetin’s. Then oncet
-Beady sits beside me and begins a-kiddin’ o’ me, callin’ me old son and
-everything like that. But by ’n’ by he sees I wasn’t in no such humor,
-and we starts in to talk serious-like. And then—well, I don’t ’ardly know
-’ow I come to let it out—but Beady he sees just ’ow it was with me, and
-he bucks me up and writes me this. He ain’t as bad as you’d think he’d
-be, that Beady. It’s good words out of the Bible, and there’s a reg’lar
-tip in ’em.”
-
-The shaky hands unfolded the bit of foolscap on which was scrawled in a
-laborious script:
-
-“Wait on the Lord; wait, I say, on the Lord.”
-
-Beneath this counsel from one psalm were the verses from another:
-
-“I waited patiently for the Lord; and he inclined unto me, and heard my
-cry. He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay,
-and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings.”
-
-I suppose you will call my impulse by some modern psychological name, and
-for aught I know you may be right. But the words were not without their
-effect on me. They came to me with the mystery of a message emanating
-from the days before Time, and from spheres which have no need of the sun
-to rise or of the moon to give brightness or of the light of any candle.
-That it was carried to me by this tottering old man whom I had known in
-such different conditions only added to the awe.
-
-I struggled to feet that were as shaky as Lovey’s hands, carried my
-little white ticket to the bookkeeper, paid for my drink, which I had
-left untouched, and flinging an “All right, Lovey; I’m your man!” to him,
-hobbled out into the lobby of the hotel.
-
-My immediate sensation was that which you have known when the black cloud
-of troubles that enveloped you on waking has been instantly dispelled on
-your getting out of bed. The troubles may still be there; but you know
-your competence to live and work and deal with them.
-
-What I felt chiefly, I think, was that the old temptation would never
-master me again. I had been face to face with it, and hadn’t submitted to
-its spell. Something had been healed in me; something had been outgrown.
-A simple old man with no eloquence but that of his affection had led me
-as another might be led by a child.
-
-With this sense of release came a sense of energy. I was given back to my
-mission; my mission was given back to me. That which for lack of a more
-humble term I can only call the spirit of consecration took hold of me
-again and made me its own. The aims for which the war was being fought
-were my aims; I had no others. When these objectives were won my life, it
-seemed to me, would be over. It would melt away in that victory as dawn
-into sunrise. It would not be lost; it would only be absorbed—a spark in
-the blaze of noonday.
-
-And as for love—well, after all, there was the moratorium of love. My lot
-in this respect—if it was to be my lot—would be no harder than that of
-millions of other men the wide world over. Love was no longer the first
-of a man’s considerations, not any more than the earning of a living
-could be the first. It might be a higher thing for her—a higher thing for
-me—to give it up.
-
-Turning these things over in my mind and wondering vaguely what might
-be awaiting me at the apartment, I said nothing to Lovey as we trundled
-homeward in a taxicab; nor did Lovey say anything to me.
-
-It was only when we got out of the lift and he had turned the key in our
-own door that he said, with sudden energy: “Slim, I’ll be yer servant
-right down to the very ground.”
-
-“Oh no, you won’t be, Lovey,” I returned, deprecatingly. “We’re fellas
-together. We’re buddies. We’ll be buddies as long as we live.”
-
-He slapped his leg with a cackle that was, as nearly as his old lungs
-could make it, a heartfelt, mirthful laugh.
-
-“There! Didn’t I tell you? That’s what I’ve been a-waitin’ for; and the
-Lord has give it to me at last. He can’t do much more for me now—not till
-He takes me ’ome, like.” He raised his sharp profile and sniffed. “I
-smell it, Slim—a kind o’ stuffy smell it is now—but I ain’t mistook in
-it. And now, Slim,” he went on, triumphantly, as he threw the door open
-and entered before me to turn on the lights—“and now, Slim, what you’re
-a-waitin’ for is—is waitin’ ’ere for you.”
-
-I knew it couldn’t be Regina that Lovey was caging in these overheated
-rooms, since she wouldn’t be sitting in the dark.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXVIII_
-
-
-It was not Regina Barry who was waiting for me, but it was the next best
-thing.
-
-Lovey stood off and pointed to it as it lay, white and oblong, on the
-sitting-room table.
-
-“Give it to me with ’er own ’and,” he said, mysteriously. “Druv up to the
-door and asked the janitor to call me down. Told me to tell you that it
-wouldn’t be at ’alf past four, as she says in the note, but at five, and
-’oped you wouldn’t keep ’er waitin’.”
-
-I held it in my hand, turning it over. I felt sure of what was in it,
-but I didn’t know whether I was sorry or glad. Of course I should be
-glad from one point of view; but the points of view were so many. It
-would be all over now with the mission, for which my enthusiasm had so
-suddenly revived. When we had done this thing we should be discredited
-and ostracized by the people we knew best, and for some time to come.
-
-I stood fingering the thing, feeling as I had felt now and then when we
-had given up a trench or a vantage-point we had been holding against
-odds. Wise as it might be to yield, it was, nevertheless, a pity,
-and only left ground that would have to be regained. There was moral
-strength, too, in the mere fact of holding. Not to hold any longer was a
-sign of weakness, however good the reason.
-
-I broke the seal slowly, saying, as I did so, “Did she say where?”
-
-“No, Slim; she didn’t say nowhere.”
-
-“Only that I was not to keep her waiting.”
-
-He thought again. “Punctual was ’er word.”
-
-She needn’t, however, have said that. Of course I should be punctual. All
-might depend on my being on the spot at the moment when the clock struck.
-I still hesitated at drawing out the sheet. As a matter of fact I was
-wondering if she had received the sign she had talked about, and if so,
-what it was.
-
-After all, it was an unimportant note.
-
- DEAR FRANK,—Mother has allowed me to ask Doctor Feltring—a
- lady—who retreated with the Serbian Army into Albania, to speak
- at our house at half-past four to-morrow afternoon. Will you
- come? We shall all be glad to see you.
-
- Yours,
-
- REGINA.
-
-That was all. I should have felt a certain relief that nothing was
-irrevocably settled had there not been in the envelope another page. On
-it were written the words: “Are you trying the indirect method? If so, I
-think you will find it unwise.”
-
-If I read this once I must have read it twenty times, trying to fathom
-its meaning.
-
-I could only think that she was gently charging me with my apathy. The
-indirect method was the inactive method. I had let weeks go by not only
-without saying the word which she had told me she would obey, but without
-making any attempt to get speech with her.
-
-And yet it seemed to me that any other woman in the world might have
-resented this but Regina. It was a kind of resentment unlike her. She
-was too proud, too intense. Even in the hypnotic state induced by the
-knowledge, after years of doubt, that we cared for each other, she had
-kept her power of resistance. She would come with me if I made her, but
-she hoped I wouldn’t make her. That hope made it difficult for me to
-impose myself on any one at once so willing and so reluctant. Of what,
-from different angles, each of us owed to Cantyre—not to mention any one
-else—she was as sensitively aware as I was.
-
-I could hardly believe, therefore, that she was reproaching me; and yet
-what else did she mean?
-
-I tried to learn that on the following day, but found access to her
-difficult. Since she was hostess to the speaker of the afternoon as well
-as to some sixty or eighty guests, mostly ladies, this was scarcely
-strange. I was limited, therefore, to the two or three seconds during
-which I was placing in her hands a cup of tea. Even then there was a
-subject as to which I more pressingly desired information.
-
-“I see Stephen isn’t here.”
-
-She couldn’t keep out of her eyes what I read as a kind of crossfire,
-expressive of contradictory emotions.
-
-“He wouldn’t come.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“He didn’t like the subject.”
-
-“Because it was medicine?”
-
-“Because it was war.”
-
-“But if this country goes in?”
-
-“He doesn’t believe it will. He thinks the breaking off of our relations
-with Germany will do all for which we can be called on. We’ll never
-fight, he says. Even if we declare war he’s sure it will only be in name.”
-
-I was not so much interested in Cantyre’s opinions as in the way in which
-she would take them.
-
-“And you?”
-
-“Oh, I think he’s only kicking against the pricks. He can’t think like
-that.”
-
-I gave her a look which I tried to make significant. “You mean that he’s
-taking the indirect method?”
-
-She gazed off to the other side of the room. “Oh, that isn’t the indirect
-method.”
-
-“What does the indirect method involve?”
-
-But here Mrs. Endsleigh Jarrott butted in—I have no other term for
-it—with a question, which she asked as if her life depended on the
-answer, “Regina, didn’t you think the action of that English nurse in
-going over the mountains with the band of little Serbian boys the most
-heroic thing you ever heard of?”
-
-So I came away without having learned what it was I was doing, but not
-less determined to find out.
-
-I resolved to try Cantyre. My meetings with him had become not exactly
-rare, but certainly infrequent. I had hardly noticed the decline of our
-intimacy while it was going on; I only came to a sudden realization of it
-when I said to myself I would look in on him that night.
-
-It occurred to me in the first place that I had not looked in on him
-of my own accord since I had come home. I had gone round the elbow of
-the corridor once or twice when he had invited me, but never of my own
-initiative. Then it struck me that it was some time since he himself had
-come knocking at my door.
-
-“Lovey, when was the doctor last in here?”
-
-He was in the “kitchingette” and came to the threshold slowly. When he
-did so there was that scared look on his face I had seen on the previous
-afternoon.
-
-“I don’t rightly know, Slim.”
-
-“Isn’t it more than a week ago?”
-
-He considered. “It might be.”
-
-“Do you know any reason why he doesn’t come?”
-
-He seemed to be defending himself against an accusation.
-
-“Why, Slim! ’Ow sh’d I know?”
-
-“Well, you see him every day—in and out of his room with his boots and
-things.”
-
-“He don’t ’ardly ever speak to me.”
-
-“And don’t you ever speak to him?”
-
-He fidgeted nervously. “Oh, I passes the time o’ day, like, and tells him
-if his pants need pressin’ and little things like that.”
-
-“Does he ever say anything about me?”
-
-“Not lately he don’t.”
-
-“Have you any idea why not?”
-
-“I might ’ave a hidea, Slim; but what’s servants’ gossip, after all?”
-
-As he had me there I dropped the subject, stealing round to Cantyre’s
-quarters about eleven that night.
-
-To my knock, which was timid and self-conscious, he responded with a low
-“Come in” that lacked the heartiness to which he had accustomed me. As
-usual at this hour, he was in an elaborate dressing-gown, and also as
-usual the room was heavy with the scent of flowers. He was not lounging
-in an arm-chair, but sitting at his desk with his back to me, writing
-checks.
-
-“Oh, it’s you!” he said, without turning his head.
-
-“Thought I’d drop in on you.”
-
-He went on writing. “Do you want to sit down?”
-
-“Not if you’re busy.”
-
-“Got some bills to pay.”
-
-“Oh, then I’ll come another time.”
-
-Having gone in for one bit of information, I went out with another.
-Cantyre knew.
-
-I was not only sorry for his knowing, I was surprised at it. During the
-two months we had been in New York both Regina and I had been notably
-discreet. We had been discreet for the reasons that all the strings
-were in our own hands, and it depended solely on ourselves as to which
-we pulled. We alone were the responsible parties. That poor Cantyre
-shouldn’t have to suffer before we knew whether we meant to make him
-suffer or not had been a matter of concern to us both.
-
-If he knew, it was, therefore, not from me; and neither was it from
-Regina. There remained Annette, but she was as safe as ourselves. Further
-than Annette I couldn’t think of any one.
-
-I should have been more absorbed by this question had I not waked to
-new elements in the world drama, as one wakes to a sudden change in
-the weather. My surprise came not from any knowledge of new facts, but
-from the revival of my own faculty for putting two and two together.
-There had been a month in which depression had produced a kind of mental
-hibernation. When at the end of February I emerged from it the New World
-in particular had moved immeasurably far forward.
-
-Now that I came to notice it, I saw a change as perceptible as that in
-the wind in the whole American national position. As silently as the wind
-shifts to a new point of the compass a hundred millions of people had
-shifted their point of view. They were moving it onward day by day, with
-a rapidity of which they themselves were unconscious.
-
-The titanic facts were to the undercurrent of events but as the volcano
-to the fire at the heart of the earth. The heart of all human life being
-now ablaze, there was here and there a stupendous outburst which was but
-a symptom of the raging flame beneath. There was the U-boat blockade of
-Great Britain, endangering all the maritime nations of the world. There
-was the American diplomatic break with Germany. There was the guarding
-of the German ships interned in American ports. There was the torpedoing
-of an American steamer off the Scilly Isles. There was Mr. Wilson’s
-invitation to the neutral nations to join him in the breach with the
-German Emperor. And then on the 26th the President went in person before
-Congress to ask authority to use armed force to protect American rights.
-
-These, I say, were but volcanic incidents. The impressive thing to me was
-the transformation of a people by a process as subtle as enchantment.
-
-Two months earlier they had been neutral, and sitting tight on their
-neutrality. The war was three thousand miles away. It had been brewed in
-the cursed vendettas of nations of some of which the every-day American
-hardly knew the names. It was tragic for those peoples; but they whose
-lives were poisoned by no hereditary venom were not called on to take
-part. Zebulun and Naphtali from sheer geographical position might be
-obliged to hazard their lives to the death; but Asher could abide in his
-ports, and Gilead beyond Jordan. That had been the kind of reasoning I
-heard as late as the time of my arrival.
-
-On my return to New York in November, I found a nation holding its
-judgments and energies in suspense. What by the end of February
-interested me most was the spectacle of this same people urging forward,
-surging upward, striving, straining toward a goal which every one knew it
-would take strength and sacrifice to reach.
-
-Between this approach to war and that of any of the other great powers
-there was this difference: They had taken the inevitable step while in
-the grip of a great stress. They sprang to their arms overnight. They had
-no more choice than a man whose house is on fire as to whether or not he
-will extinguish it. Out of the bed of their luxurious existence they were
-called as if by conflagration. Whether they would lose their lives or
-escape with them was a question they had no time to consider. They went
-up to the top notch of the heroic in an instant, not knowing the danger
-they were facing or the courage they displayed.
-
-Here, on the other hand, was a people who saw everything from a long
-way off. For nearly three years their souls had been sickened with the
-tale of blood. Gilead might abide beyond Jordan and Asher in his ports,
-but no atrocious detail had been spared them. They knew, therefore,
-just what they were doing, exactly what was before them. I can hardly
-say that they made their choice; they grew toward it. They grew toward
-it calmly, deliberately, clear-sightedly; and for this very reason with
-an incomparable bravery. If I were an American citizen instead of the
-American citizen’s blood-brother, I might not say this; I might not have
-been aware of it. In any family the outsider can see that which escapes
-the observation of the daughter or the son. I heard no born American
-comment on this splendid, tranquil, leisurely readjustment of the spirit
-to a new, herculean task; perhaps no born American noticed it; but to
-me as an onlooker, interested and yet detached, it was one of the most
-grandiose movements of an epoch in which the repetition of the grandiose
-bewilders the sense of proportion, as on the first days in the Selkirks
-or the Alps.
-
-It was at this time I heard that Regina was addressing meetings. They
-were women’s club meetings, and I learned from Annette that she was
-speaking with success.
-
-“She seems to have come out of a sort of trance,” Annette observed of
-her, using the word I had used myself. “Ever since she came home she’s
-been like a girl walking in her sleep. Now she’s waked and is like her
-old self.”
-
-Since Annette knew my story, or part of it, I thought it no harm to ask,
-“To what do you attribute it?”
-
-But Annette refused to lend herself to my game.
-
-“I attribute it to her getting over the long strain. It’s natural that
-you people who’ve been over there should be dazed or jumpy or something.
-She’s been dazed.”
-
-“And what do you think I’ve been?”
-
-“Oh, you’ve been the same,” she laughed; “but then, you’re always queer.”
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXIX_
-
-
-The news with regard to Regina acted on me as a twofold stimulus.
-
-In the first place, it sent me back at last to the Down and Out. If
-she had waked, I, too, would wake; and since she was actively pleading
-the great cause, I would do the same. I didn’t go to a meeting, but
-dropped in during a forenoon. The house was even humbler and dingier
-than I remembered it, but as scrupulously neat and clean. In the back
-sitting-room were half a dozen men, all of the type to which I had once
-belonged and with whom I felt a sympathy so overwhelming as to surprise
-myself. Perhaps because I had seen so much of what could be made of human
-material even when it was destined to be no more than cannon fodder in
-the end, I was sorry to see this waste.
-
-With one exception I placed them as all under thirty. They were
-good-looking fellows in the main, who would respond amazingly to drill.
-After that impetus to the inner self, of which the Down and Out had the
-secret, plenty of work, a regular life, food, water, and sleep would
-renew them as the earth is renewed by spring. No missionary ever longed
-to bring a half-dozen promising pagans into the Christian fold more
-ardently than I to see these five or six poor wastrels transformed into
-fighting-men.
-
-For the minute there was no official there but little Spender, whose
-bliss in life was in opening the Down and Out door. Having led me across
-the empty front sitting-room, he said, as I stood in the gap of the
-folding-doors:
-
-“Say, brothers! This is Slim. Come in here four or five years ago, just
-as low down as any of you, and look at him now!”
-
-I did feel enormously tall, in spite of the high studding of the room,
-as well as enormously big in my ample military overcoat. To the six who
-sat in that woeful outward idleness, of which I knew the inner secret
-preoccupation, I must have been an astonishing apparition. Only a very
-commanding presence could summon these men from the desolate land into
-which their spirits were wandering; but for once in my life I did it. All
-eyes were fixed on me; every jaw dropped in a kind of awe.
-
-Knowing the habits and needs of such a stupor, I merely threw off my
-overcoat, entered, and sat down. Any greeting I made was general and
-offhand. Apart from that I sat and said nothing.
-
-I sat and said nothing because I knew it was what they liked. They liked
-the companionship, as babies and dogs like companionship, though their
-aching minds could not have responded to talk. There was no embarrassment
-in this silence, no expectation. It was a stupefied pleasure to them to
-stare at the uniform, to speculate inchoately as to the patch on my eye;
-and that little was enough.
-
-Nobody read; nobody smoked. I neither smoked nor read; I only sat as in a
-Quaker meeting, waiting for the first movement of the spirit.
-
-It came when a husky voice, that seemed to travel from across a gulf,
-said, without any particular reason, “I’m Spud.”
-
-I turned to my right, to see a good-looking, brown-eyed fellow, of
-perhaps twenty-eight, trying to reach me, as it were, with his pathetic,
-despairing gaze.
-
-I knew what was behind this self-introduction. The lost identity was
-trying to find itself; the man who was worthy of something was doing his
-utmost to get out of the abyss by reaching up his hands to the man who
-had got out.
-
-“All right, Spud,” I said, heartily. “Put it there! We’re going to be
-friends.”
-
-Silence for another five minutes was broken when a high voice recited
-in a sort of litany, “I’m Jimmy McKeever, traveler for Grubbe & Oates,
-gents’ furnishers.”
-
-Sharp-faced, wiry, catlike, agile, tough as wire, I could see this fellow
-creeping out into the darkness of No Man’s Land, and creeping back with
-information of the enemy.
-
-I broke in on the litany to say: “Good for you, Jimmy, old boy! Glad to
-know you. Let’s shake hands.”
-
-He sprang from his seat on the outskirts of the group, but before he
-could reach me a great, brawny paw was stretched forward by a blue-eyed
-young Hercules sitting nearer me, which grasped my fingers as if in
-a vise. There was then a scramble of handshaking, each of the bunch
-asserting his claim for recognition, like very small children. The
-older man alone held aloof, sitting by himself, scowling, hard-faced,
-cross-legged, kicking out a big foot with a rapid, nervous rhythm.
-
-It was he who, when the handshaking was over, snarled out the question,
-“What’s the matter with your eye?”
-
-I told them the story of how I lost it.
-
-I told it as simply as I could, while working in a fair share of the
-strong color which I hoped would arrest their attention.
-
-It did. In all my experience of men coming back into life from the state
-which is so expressively known as dead drunk it was the first time I ever
-saw them listen with avidity to any voice but that of the inner man.
-
-What is there about war which speaks with this authority? Where did it
-get its power to go to the hidden man of the heart, that subliminal
-self with which modern speculation has been so busy, and shift him from
-off his age-long base? It is commonly said that, whatever our personal
-vicissitudes, human nature remains the same; but though that may be
-true of the past, I doubt if it will be true of the future. War on the
-scale on which we are waging it has already changed human nature. It has
-changed it as the years change a baby to a boy and a boy to a man. It
-has lifted human nature up, drawn out of it what we never supposed to
-be there, freed it from its slavery to time. It has to a large degree
-reversed the processes of time as it has reversed the usages of sex. We
-have seen youth doing the work of maturity, maturity that of youth, women
-that of men, men that of women. We have seen cowards transformed into
-heroes, rotters into saints, stupid, idiotic ne’er-do-wells into saviors
-of mankind.
-
-We shall never go back again to the helpless conviction that youth must
-grow slowly into age, only to have age decay into ugliness and senility.
-This kind of foolish, useless progress may still go on for an indefinite
-time to come, but we shall work against it as against something contrary
-to the highest possibilities of nature. Since we have thrown off our
-mental shackles in great moments, we shall see that we can do the same
-in small, and, having emerged on a higher plane, we shall stay there.
-Staying there, we shall doubtless go on in time to a higher plane
-still—a plane on which the mighty works that are now wrought in war
-will become feasible in peace. We are not on that plane yet; but if the
-advance of the human race means anything we shall get there. It may take
-a thousand years; it may take more; it may take less; but in the mean
-time we must seize our blessings as we may.
-
-So these fellows listened to my tale as raptly as if a trumpet were
-sounding in their ears. It was like a summons to them to come out of
-stupefaction. They asked questions not only as to my own experiences, but
-as to the causes and purposes of the war in general. I do not affirm that
-they were the most intelligent questions that could be asked; but for men
-in their condition they were astonishing.
-
-That they were not of necessity to be easy converts I could see when the
-old chap sitting apart asked again, in his bitter voice, “Did you ever
-kill a fellow-creetur that had the same right to live as yourself?”
-
-As we discussed that aspect of the subject, too, I found it difficult to
-restrain my audience from the free fight for which at the Down and Out
-there was always an inclination.
-
-I accomplished this, however, and as I rose to go the brawny Hercules
-sidled shyly up to me with the words: “Say! I’m a Canuck. Peterfield,
-Ontario, is where I hail from. Why ain’t I in this here war?”
-
-He was my first recruit. A few weeks later he was in uniform in Montreal.
-My object in telling you about him is to point out the fact that I made
-a beginning, and that from the beginning the sympathy of the City of
-Comrades upheld me. Little by little that movement by which the whole of
-America was being shaken out of its materialism, its provincialism, and
-its mental isolation reached us in Vandiver Street, and we began to see
-that there were subjects of conversation more commanding than that of
-drink. What I may call a war party rose among us, and the sentiment that
-we ought to be in it was expressed.
-
-“We shall be in it when the time comes,” Andrew Christian said to me when
-we were alone for a few minutes after I had been talking with the men
-one day. “One of the great mistakes human impatience makes is in trying
-to hurry the methods by which the divine mind counteracts human errors.
-We forget that it is not for us to know the times or the seasons that
-the Father hath put into His own power. Things that take place in their
-own way generally take place in His. And the overruling force of His
-way, when we let it alone, working simply, naturally, and as a matter of
-course, is one of the extraordinary features of history.”
-
-I was the more impressed by these quiet words for the reason that I saw
-that he, too, was one of the Americans chafing under the long holding
-back of his country. No one I had seen since my return was more changed
-in this respect than he. I had left a man who had but one object in his
-life, the salvation of other men from drink. I found a man marvelously
-broadened, heightened, illumined, almost transfigured by a larger set of
-purposes.
-
-But he spoke so calmly!
-
-“We shall go into this thing the more thoroughly when our people as a
-whole are convinced of its necessity. And for a hundred millions of
-people to be convinced is a matter that takes time. But even there you
-can see how a great purpose is changing them almost against their own
-will. It isn’t many months ago that they elected a President on the
-slogan, ‘He kept us out of war.’ Had it not been for that slogan it’s
-doubtful whether or not he would have been elected. All politics apart,
-we can say that, had he not been elected, it’s doubtful whether any other
-candidate could carry with him a united Congress when we come to the
-moment of decision. Were the President not to have a united Congress,
-behind him, there would be no united people. As it is we’re all forging
-forward together, President, Congress, and people, as surely as winter
-forges forward into spring; and when the minute arrives—”
-
-He broke off with a smile I can only call exalted. With a hasty pressure
-of my hand he was off to some other fellow with some other needful word.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXX_
-
-
-My purpose in telling you all this is to show you why I reacted so
-slightly to Regina’s charge of the indirect method. Though my curiosity
-as to what she meant was keen enough, the pressure of other interests
-allowed it no time to work. This is to say, as soon as I got back
-into the current of great events personal concerns became relatively
-unimportant. They had to wait. One developed the capacity to keep them
-waiting.
-
-But toward the middle of March I met her one day in Fifth Avenue.
-Even from a distance I could see that her step was vigor and her look
-animation. The haunting sadness had fled from her eyes, while the
-generous smile, spontaneous and flashing, had returned to her scarlet
-lips. It was a new Regina because it was the old one.
-
-To me her first exclamation was: “How well you look! You’re almost as you
-were before the war.”
-
-Though I was conscious of a pang at seeing her so far from pining away, I
-endeavored to play up.
-
-“Mayn’t I say the same of you? What’s done it?”
-
-She laughed. “Oh, I don’t know. Work, I suppose—and the knowledge that
-things are marching.”
-
-“I hear you’re very busy.”
-
-“I hear you’re busy, too.”
-
-“People do seem to want to be told things at first hand.”
-
-“I find the same.”
-
-“And so one has to be on the job.”
-
-“There’s nothing like it, is there? It”—she flung me one of her old,
-quick, daring glances—“it fills all the needs. Nothing else becomes
-urgent.”
-
-“You mean that one’s personal affairs—”
-
-“Oh, one has no personal affairs. I remember a man who was in the San
-Francisco earthquake telling me that for forty-eight hours he hardly
-needed to eat or sleep.”
-
-“I’ve seen that doubled and trebled.”
-
-“Of course you have. It simply means that when we get out of ourselves we
-can make supermen of the commonest material.”
-
-I ventured to say: “You look happy, Regina. Are you?”
-
-“Are you?”
-
-I weighed this in order to answer her truthfully.
-
-“If I’m not happy I’m—I’m content—content to be doing something—the least
-little bit—to urge things forward.”
-
-“And I can say the same. If I look well, as you put it, that’s the
-reason. And so long as that’s the reason other things can—wait.” She
-added, quickly: “I must go now or I shall be late. I’m speaking to the
-women at the Mary Chilton Club, and I’m overdue.”
-
-She had actually passed on when I stopped her to say, “What do you mean
-by the indirect method?”
-
-She called back over her shoulder, “Ask Stephen.”
-
-And I asked him that night. Having heard him come into his room between
-eight and nine o’clock, I marched in boldly, bearding him without beating
-about the bush.
-
-“I say, old Stephen, what have you been saying to Regina about me?”
-
-His hat had been thrown on the table; his arms were outstretched in the
-act of taking off his overcoat.
-
-He repeated my question as if he didn’t understand it.
-
-“What have I been saying to Regina about you? Why, nothing—much.”
-
-“Nothing much; that means something. What the deuce do you mean by the
-indirect method?”
-
-“I haven’t spoken of an indirect method.”
-
-“No; but she has!”
-
-“Oh, I see.”
-
-“Then if you see, tell me what it is.”
-
-He finished the arrested act of taking off his coat, after which he
-hung it up in a closet, doing the same with his hat. The minute’s delay
-allowed time for the storm-clouds to gather on his face, and all the
-passions of a gloomy-hearted nature to concentrate in a hot, thundery
-silence.
-
-“Is this a bit of bluff, Frank?”
-
-“Bluff be hanged! I’m ready to speak out frankly.”
-
-The storm-clouds were torn with a flash like a streak of lightning.
-
-“Then why didn’t you come to me like a man instead of sending that
-sneaking old beast—”
-
-“Hold on, Stephen. What sneaking old beast have I sent?”
-
-“He wouldn’t have come unless you had set him on me. You needn’t tell me
-that.”
-
-“What the deuce are you talking about?”
-
-“You know what I’m talking about. There hasn’t been a day since you
-came back that I haven’t had a hint.” He was not a man to whom anger
-came easily; he began to choke, to strangle with the effort to get
-his indignation out. “I’d have given him the toe of my boot long ago
-if—if—if—if”—the words positively shivered on his lips—“if—if—if I hadn’t
-wanted to see how far you’d go; and, by God! I’ve—I’ve had enough of it!”
-
-“Enough of what, Stephen?” I endeavored to ask, quietly.
-
-He knocked his knuckles on the table with a force that almost made them
-bleed.
-
-“My name is Cantyre—do you understand?”
-
-“Yes, I understand. But tell me, what is it you’ve had enough of?”
-
-“I’ve had enough of your damned diplomatic slyness in setting that old
-reptile on me!”
-
-I am not quick tempered. The tolerance born of a too painful knowledge of
-my own shortcomings obliges me to be slow to wrath. But when anger does
-get hold of me it works a change like that of a powerful chemical agent
-suddenly infused into the blood.
-
-I turned and strode out. A few times in the trenches I had been the
-victim of this rage to kill—and I had killed. How many I killed at one
-time or another I now couldn’t tell you. I saw too red to keep the count.
-All I know is that I have stuck my bayonet into heart after heart, and
-have dashed out brains with the butt end of my rifle. It is all red
-before me still—a great splash of blood on the memory.
-
-But I had got the habit. In a rage like this to kill some one had become
-an instinct. I could not have believed that the impulse would have
-pursued me into civil life; but there it was.
-
-Having flung open the door of my apartment, I marched straight for the
-“kitchingette.” Lovey was seated on a stool beside the tiny gas-range,
-polishing one of my boots. The boot was like a boxing-glove on his left
-hand, while he held the brush suspended in his right, looking up at me
-with the piteous appeal of a rabbit pleading for its life.
-
-His weakness held me back from striking him, but it didn’t stem my words.
-
-“Who the devil, you old snake, gave you the right to interfere in my
-affairs?”
-
-He simply looked up at me, the boot on one hand, the brush suspended in
-the other. His lower lip trembled—his arms began to tremble—but he made
-no attempt to defend himself.
-
-“What have you been saying?” I demanded. “Speak, can’t you?”
-
-But he couldn’t. I caught him by the collar and dragged him to his feet.
-
-He had just the strength to stand on them, though his limp hands
-continued to hold the boot and the brush.
-
-“Now are you going to speak? Or shall I kick you out?”
-
-“You’d kick me out, Slim?”
-
-The mildness of his voice maddened me.
-
-“By God, I would!”
-
-The brush and the boot fell with a dull clatter to the floor.
-
-“Then I’d better go.”
-
-He looked about him helplessly till his eyes fell on the old felt hat
-hanging on a peg. I watched him as he took it down and crammed it on his
-head. There was another helpless searching as if he didn’t know what he
-was looking for before he spied an old gnarled stick in a corner. Taking
-that in his hand, he fumbled his way into the living-room.
-
-By the time I had followed him I was beginning to relent. I had not
-really meant to have him go, but I was not ready as yet to call him back.
-What Cantyre must have thought of me, what Regina must have thought of
-me, in egging so poor a creature on to say what I wouldn’t say myself,
-roused me as to a more intense degree I used to be roused on hearing of
-Belgian women treated with the last indignities, and Canadian soldiers
-crucified. Had I stopped to consider I would have seen that Regina didn’t
-believe it, and that Cantyre believed it only as far as it gave an outlet
-to his complicated inward sufferings; but I didn’t stop to consider.
-Perhaps I, too, was seeking an outlet for something repressed. At any
-rate, I let the poor old fellow go.
-
-“What about your things?” I asked, before he had reached the door.
-
-He turned with a certain dignity. “I sha’n’t want no things.” He added,
-however, “Ye do mean me to get out, Slim?”
-
-I didn’t—but I didn’t want to tell him so. Fury had cooled down without
-leaving me ready to retract what I had said. I meant to go after him—when
-he had got as far as the lift—but I meant, too, that he should take those
-few bleeding steps of anguish.
-
-He took them—not to the lift, but out into the vestibule. Then I heard a
-faint moan; then a sound as if something broke; and then a soft tumbling
-to the floor.
-
-When I got out he was lying all in a little huddled, senseless heap, with
-a cut on his forehead where he had struck the key or the door-knob as he
-fell.
-
-It was more than an hour before Cantyre got him back to consciousness;
-but it was early morning before he spoke. We had stayed with him through
-the night, as he had shown all the signs of passing out. His recovery of
-speech somewhere about dawn came as a surprise to us.
-
-To Cantyre I had given but the slightest explanation of the accident,
-being sure, however, that he guessed at what I didn’t say.
-
-“Told him to get to the dickens out of this, and he was taking me at my
-word. Never meant to let him get farther than the lift. Just wanted to
-scare him. Sorry now.”
-
-But Lovey’s account was different.
-
-About seven in the morning there came a streak of wan light down the
-shaft into which the window of his room looked out. Cantyre murmured
-something about going back to his own place for a bath.
-
-“All right,” I agreed, “and you’d better get your breakfast. When you
-come back I can do the same. You will come back, won’t you?”
-
-“Oh, of course! I sha’n’t be gone more than an hour. When he wakes again
-give him another teaspoonful of this; but don’t worry him unless he
-wakes.”
-
-And just then Lovey woke. He woke with a dim smile, as a young child
-wakes. He smiled at Cantyre first, and then, rolling his soft blue eyes
-to the other side of the bed, he smiled at me.
-
-“What’s up, Slim?” he asked, feebly. “I ain’t sick, am I?”
-
-“No, Lovey, old son, you’re not sick; you’ve only had a bit of a fall.”
-
-And then it came back to him.
-
-“Oh yes. I know. Served me right, didn’t it?” Rolling his eyes now toward
-Cantyre, he continued: “I was just a-frightenin’ of Slim, like. Kind o’
-foolish, I was. Said I was goin’ to leave him. Didn’t mean to go no
-farther nor the lift.”
-
-“I didn’t mean to let you go, Lovey,” I groaned, humbly.
-
-“Of course you didn’t! ’Ow ’uld ye get along without me, I’d like to
-know? Didn’t I keep ye straight all them weeks at the Down and Out?”
-
-“You did, Lovey.”
-
-“And ’aven’t I saved ye lots o’ times since?”
-
-“You have, old man.”
-
-“I wouldn’t leave ye, not for nothink, Slim. We’re buddies as long as we
-live, ain’t we? Didn’t ye say that to me yerself?”
-
-“I did, and I’ll say it again.”
-
-“Well then, what’s the use o’ talkin’? You mustn’t mind me, sonny. I may
-get into a bad temper and speak ’arsh to you; but I don’t mean nothink by
-it. I wouldn’t leave ye, not for—”
-
-The voice trailed away, and presently he was asleep or unconscious again,
-I couldn’t be sure which.
-
-Neither could I be sure whether he believed this version of the tale or
-whether he concocted it to comfort me. At any rate, it served its purpose
-in that it eased the situation outwardly, enabling Cantyre and me to face
-each other without too much self-consciousness.
-
-As a matter of fact, self-consciousness had hardly embarrassed us
-through the night. There had been too much to think about and to do.
-The minute I had got Lovey into the living-room and on the couch I had
-run for Cantyre, and he had run back with me. In the stress of watching
-the old man’s struggle between life and death we felt toward our
-personal relations what one feels of an exciting play after returning to
-realities. We were back on the old terms; we called each other Stephen
-and Frank. Only now and then, when for a half-hour there was nothing to
-do but to sit by the bed and watch, did our minds revert to the actual
-between us.
-
-That is, mine reverted to it, and I suppose his did the same. How he
-thought of it I cannot tell you; but to me it seemed infinitely trifling.
-Here was a dying man whose half-lighted spirit was standing on the
-threshold of a fully lighted world. One might have said that the radiance
-of the life on which he was entering already shone in the tenderness that
-began to dawn in the delicate old face. It was a face growing younger, as
-for two or three years it had grown more spiritual. I saw that now and
-did justice to it as something big. It was on the level of big things;
-and love-affairs between men and women were only on the level of the
-small.
-
-And all over the world big things of the same sort were taking place,
-some in the sharp flash of an instant, and some as the slow result of
-years. I had seen so much of it with my own eyes that I could call up
-vision after vision as I sat alone in the gray morning, watching the
-soft, sweet pall settle on the old man’s countenance, while Cantyre took
-his bath.
-
-Queerly, out of the unrecorded, or out of what I didn’t suppose I had
-recorded, there flashed a succession of pictures, all of them of the
-big, the splendid, the worth while. They came inconsequently, without
-connection with each other, without connection that I could see with the
-moment I was living through, beyond the fact that they were all on the
-scale of the big.
-
-There was the recollection of a khaki-clad figure lying face downward
-on a hillside. I approached him from below, catching sight first of the
-soles of the huge boots on which he would never walk again. Coming
-nearer, I saw his arms outstretched above his head and his nails dug into
-the earth. He was bleeding from the ears. But when I bent over him to see
-if he was still alive he said, almost roughly:
-
-“Leave me alone! I can get along all right. Jephson’s over there.”
-
-I left him alone because there was nothing I could do for him, but when
-I went to Jephson he was lying on his back, his knees drawn up, and
-his face twisted into the strangest, most agonized, most heavenly and
-ecstatic smile you can imagine on a human face.
-
-Then there was a young fellow running at the head of his platoon, a slim
-young fellow with flaxen hair and a face like a bright angel’s, who had
-been a crack sprinter at McGill. He was long after my time, of course;
-but I had known his family, and since being in the neighborhood of Ypres
-I had seen him from time to time. He was not made for a soldier, but a
-brave young soldier he had become, surmounting fear, repulsion, and all
-that was hideous to a sensitive soul like his, and establishing those
-relations with his men that are dearer in many ways than ties of blood.
-The picture I retain, and which came back to me now, is of his running
-while his men followed him. It was so common a sight that I would hardly
-have watched it if it had been any one but him. And then, for no reason
-evident to me, just as if it was part of the order of the day, he threw
-up his arms, tottered on a few steps, and went tumbling in the mud, face
-downward.
-
-With the rapidity of a cinema the scene changed to something else I had
-witnessed. It was the day I got my dose of shrapnel in the foot. Lying
-near me was a colonel named Blenkins. Farther off there lay a sergeant
-in his regiment named Day. Day had for Blenkins the kind of admiration
-that often exists between man and officer for which there is no other
-name than worship. Slowly, painfully, dying, the non-com. dragged himself
-over the scarred ground and laid his head on the dying colonel’s heart.
-Painfully, slowly, the dying colonel’s hand stole across the dying
-non-com.’s breast; and in this embrace they slept.
-
-Other memories of the same sort came back to me, disconnected, having no
-reference to Lovey, or Cantyre, or Regina, or the present, beyond the
-fact that they came out of the great life of which comradeship was a
-token and the watchwords rang with generosity.
-
-It was the world of the moment. Such things as I had been recalling had
-happened that very night; they had happened that very morning; they would
-happen through that day, and through the next day and the next—till their
-purpose was accomplished. What that purpose was to be—But that I was to
-learn a little later.
-
-That is to say, a little later I got a light on the outlook which has
-been sufficient for me to walk by; but of it I will tell you when the
-time comes.
-
-For in the mean time the tide was rising. As Lovey lay smiling himself
-into heaven the national spirit was mounting and mounting, quietly,
-tensely, with excitement held in leash till the day of the Lord was very
-near at hand.
-
-All through March events had developed rapidly. On the first day of that
-month the government had revealed Germany’s attempt to stir up Mexico
-and Japan against the United States. A few days later Germany herself
-had admitted the instigation. A few days later still Austria had given
-her approval to unlimited submarine warfare. A few days later still
-Nicholas was deposed in Petrograd. The country was marching; the world
-was marching; the heart was marching. It was difficult for the mind to
-keep up with the immensity of such happenings or to appraise them at
-their value. I do not assert that I so appraised them; I only beg you to
-understand that what I wanted and Cantyre wanted and Regina wanted, each
-of us for himself and herself, became curiously insignificant.
-
-Not that we were working with the same ends in view. By no means!
-Cantyre was still opposed to war as war, and bitterly opposed to war if
-it involved the United States. That he was kicking against the pricks,
-as Regina asserted, I couldn’t see; but that he was feeling the whole
-situation intensely was quite evident.
-
-The result, however, was the same when it came to balancing personal
-interests against the public weal. The public weal might mean one thing
-to him and another thing to me, but to us both it overrode private
-resentment. There was a moratorium of resentment. We might revive it
-again; but for the moment it vanished out of sight.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXXI_
-
-
-So we came to that determining moment when we held our famous patriotic
-meeting at the Down and Out.
-
-I call it famous because it was a new point of departure. In all the
-club’s history there had never been a meeting for any other purpose
-than to screw the courage up to the cutting out of drink. Other
-subjects had been suggested from time to time; but we had stuck to our
-last as specialists. We had not been turned aside for philanthropy,
-for education, for financial benefit, or even for religion in the
-commonly accepted meaning of that word; and the results had been our
-justification. But now the flame at the heart of the earth had caught us,
-and we were all afire.
-
-I mean that we were afire with interest, though the interest was against
-war as well as for it. But for it or against it, it was the one theme of
-our discussion; and with cause.
-
-The tide was rising higher, and the spirit of the nation floating on the
-top. On one of the first days of April the President had asked Congress
-to declare a state of war with the German Empire. Two days later the
-Senate voted that declaration. A few nights after that we got together to
-talk things over at the Down and Out.
-
-It was a crowded meeting, but as you looked round you in advance you
-would have prophesised a dull one. Our fellows came from all over New
-York and the suburbs, washed up, brushed up, and in their Sunday clothes.
-A few were men of education, but mostly we were of the type generally
-classed as hard-working. In age we ran from the seventies down to the
-twenties, with a preponderance of chaps between twenty-five and forty.
-
-What I gathered from remarks before the meeting came to order was a
-dogged submission to leadership.
-
-“If you was to put it up to us guys to decide the whole thing by
-ourselves,” Beady Lamont said to me as we stood together, “we’d vote
-ag’in’ it. Why? Because we’re over here—mindin’ our own business—with
-our kids to take care of—and our business to keep up—and we ain’t got
-no call to interfere in what’s no concern of ours. Them fellows over in
-Europe never could keep still, and they dunno how. But”—he made one of
-his oratorical gestures with his big left hand—“but if the President says
-the word—well, we’re behind him. He’s the country, and when the country
-speaks there’s no Amur’can who ain’t ready to give all.”
-
-Perhaps he had said something similar to Andrew Christian, because it was
-that point of being ready to give all which, when he spoke, Christian
-took as his text.
-
-I am not giving you an account of the whole meeting; I mean only to
-report a little of what Christian said, and its effect upon Cantyre.
-Cantyre had come because Regina had insisted; but he sat with the
-atmosphere of hot, thundery silence wrapping him round.
-
-“To be ready to give all is what the world is summoned to,” Christian
-declared, when he had been asked to say a few words, “and, oh, boys, I
-beg you to believe that it’s time! The call hasn’t come a minute too
-soon, and we sha’n’t be a minute too soon in getting ready to obey it.”
-
-“Some of us ’ain’t got much to give,” a voice came from the back
-sitting-room.
-
-“We’ve all got everything there is, if we only understood it,” Christian
-answered, promptly; “but whatever we have, it’s something we hold dear.”
-
-“If we hold it dear,” another voice objected, “why should we be asked to
-give it up?”
-
-“Because we haven’t known how to use it. Think of all you’ve had in your
-own life, Tom, and what you’ve done with it.”
-
-I didn’t know what Tom had had in his life, but the retort evidently gave
-him something to turn over in his mind.
-
-“There never was a time in the history of the world,” Christian went
-on, “when the abundance of blessing was more lavishly poured out upon
-mankind. In every country in both hemispheres we’ve had the treasures
-of the earth, the sea, and the air positively heaped upon us. Food,
-clothing, comfort, security, speed—have become the commonplaces of
-existence. The children of to-day grow up to a use of trains and motors
-and telephones and airplanes that would have seemed miraculous as short a
-time ago as when I was a lad. The standard of living has been so quickly
-raised that the poor have been living in a luxury unknown to the rich
-of two or three generations ago. The Atlantic has got to be so narrow
-that we count the time of our crossing it by hours. The globe has become
-so small that young people go round it for a honeymoon. People whose
-parents found it difficult to keep one house have two or three, and
-even more. There is money everywhere—private fortunes that would have
-staggered the imagination of Solomon and the Queen of Sheba and Augustus
-and Charlemagne all combined. Amusements are so numerous that they pall
-on us. In lots of the restaurants of New York you can order a meal for
-yourself alone, and feel that neither Napoleon nor Queen Victoria nor the
-Czar could possibly have sat down to a better one.”
-
-“Some could,” one of our objectors declared, with all sorts of
-implications in his tone.
-
-“Oh, I’m not saying there are no inequalities or that there is just
-distribution of all this blessing. In fact, my point is that there is
-not. All I’m asserting is that the blessing is there, and that the very
-windows of heaven have been opened on the world in order to pour it out.”
-
-“I never saw none of it,” a thin, sour fellow put in, laconically.
-
-“But, Juleps, that’s what I’m coming to. The blessing was there, and some
-of us wouldn’t try to get what belonged to us, and others of us collared
-too much, and we treated it very much as children treat pennies in a
-scramble. We did far worse than that. We rifled, we stole, we gobbled,
-we guzzled, we strutted, we bragged; the fellow that was up kicked the
-fellow that was down to keep him down; the fellow that had plenty sneaked
-and twisted and cringed and cadged in order to get more; and we’ve all
-worked together to create the world that’s been hardly fit to live in,
-that every one of us has known. Now, boys, isn’t that so? Speak out
-frankly.”
-
-Since in that crowd there could not be two opinions as to the world being
-hardly fit to live in, there was a general murmur of assent.
-
-“Now wealth is a great good thing; and what I mean by wealth is the
-general storehouse, free to us all, which we call the earth and the
-atmosphere round it. I don’t have to tell you that it’s a storehouse
-crammed in every crack and cranny with the things you and I need for
-our enjoyment. And it isn’t a storehouse such as you and I would fill,
-which has got only what we could put into it; it’s always producing more.
-Production is its law. It’s never idle. It’s incessantly working. The
-more we take out of it the more it yields. I don’t say that we can’t
-exhaust it in spots by taxing it too much; of course we can. Greed will
-exhaust anything, just as it’s exhausting, under our very eyes, our
-forests, our fisheries, and our farms. But in general there’s nothing
-that will respond to good treatment more surely than the earth, nor give
-us back a bigger interest on the labor we put into it.”
-
-“That’s so,” came from some one who had perhaps been a farmer.
-
-“And so,” Christian went on, “we’ve had a world that’s given us
-everything in even greater abundance than we could use. We’ve had food
-to waste; we’ve had clothes for every shade of temperature; we’ve had
-coal for our furnaces, and iron for our buildings, and steel for our
-ships, and gasolene for our automobiles. We’ve had every invention that
-could help us to save time, to save worry, to save labor, to save life.
-Childhood has been made more healthy; old age more vigorous. That a race
-of young men and young women has been growing up among us of whom we can
-say without much exaggeration that humanity is becoming godlike, any one
-can see who goes round our schools and colleges.”
-
-He took a step forward, throwing open his palms in a gesture of demand.
-
-“But, fellows, what good has all this prodigious plenty been doing us?
-Has it made us any better? Have we become any more thankful that we all
-had enough and to spare? Have we been any more eager to see that when
-we had too much the next man had a sufficiency? Have we rejoiced in
-this plenitude as the common delight of every one? Have we seen it as
-the manifestation of the God who expresses Himself in all good things,
-and Who has given us, as one of the apostles says, all things richly to
-enjoy? Has it brought us any nearer Him? Has it given us any increased
-sympathy with Him? Or have we made it minister to our very lowest
-qualities, to our appetites, to our insolence, to our extravagance, to
-our sheer pride that all this was ours, to wallow in, to waste, and to
-despise?
-
-“You know we have done the last. There isn’t a man among us who hasn’t
-done it to a greater or less degree. There is hardly a man in New York
-who hasn’t lived in the lust of the purely material. You may go through
-the world and only find a rarefied creature here and there who hasn’t
-reveled and rioted and been silly and vain and arrogant to the fullest
-extent that he dared.”
-
-The wee bye Daisy was sitting in the front row, looking up at the speaker
-raptly.
-
-“I haven’t, Mr. Christian,” he declared, virtuously.
-
-“Then, Daisy, you’re the rarefied creature I said was an exception.
-Most of us have,” he went on when the roar of laughter subsided. “If we
-haven’t in one way we have in another. And what has been the result?
-Covetousness, hatred, class rivalry, capital and labor bitternesses, war.
-And now we’ve come to a place where by a queer and ironical judgment
-upon us the struggle for possession is going to take from us all that we
-possess.”
-
-He thrust his hands into his trousers pockets and spoke casually,
-confidentially.
-
-“For, boys, that’s what I’m coming to. All the good things we have are
-going to be taken away from us. Since we don’t know how to use them, and
-won’t learn, we’ve got to give them back.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t believe that, Mr. Christian,” a common-sense voice cried out
-in a tone of expostulation.
-
-“Peter, you’ll see. You’ll only have to live a few months longer to find
-yourself like every one else in America, lacking the simple essentials
-you’ve always taken as a matter of course. It isn’t luxuries alone
-that you’ll be called on to give up; it will be the common necessaries
-of every-day life. The great summons is coming to us, not merely from
-our government, not merely from the terrified and stricken nations of
-mankind, but from God above—to give everything back to Him. I don’t
-say that we shall starve or that we shall freeze; but we may easily be
-cold and hungry and driven to a cheese-paring economy we never expected
-to practise. The light will be taken from our lamps, the work from our
-fingers, the money from our pockets. We shall be searched to the very
-soul. There’s nothing we sha’n’t have to surrender. At the very least we
-must give tithes of all that we possess, signifying our willingness to
-give more.”
-
-“Some of us ’ain’t got nothing.”
-
-It was the bitter cry of the dispossessed.
-
-“Yes, Billy; we’ve all got life; and life, too, we shall have to
-offer up. There are some of you chaps sitting here that in all human
-probability will be called on to do it.”
-
-“You won’t, Mr. Christian. You’re too old.”
-
-“I’m too old, Spud, but my two boys are not; and they’re getting ready
-now. Whether it’s harder or easier to let them go rather than for me to
-go myself I leave to any of you guys that have kids.”
-
-“Perhaps it won’t be as bad as what you think.”
-
-“Jimmy, I’m only reasoning from what I see in the world already. When the
-human race is being trodden in the wine-press we in America can’t expect
-to be spared. If any of you want to know what’s happening to the kind of
-world we’ve made for ourselves let him read the eighteenth chapter of the
-book of the Revelation. That chapter might be written of Europe as it is
-at this minute. Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen. The kings of the
-earth stand off from her, crying, Alas! alas! that great city Babylon,
-for in one hour is her judgment come! The merchants of the earth weep and
-mourn over her, for no man buyeth their merchandise any more, saying,
-Alas! alas! that great city, which was clothed in fine linen and purple
-and scarlet, and decked with gold and precious stones and pearls, for in
-one hour so great riches is come to naught. And every shipmaster, and all
-the company in ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by sea, cast dust
-on their heads and cry over her, Alas! alas! that great city wherein were
-made rich all that had ships in the sea by reason of her costliness! for
-in one hour she is made desolate.”
-
-“But that ain’t us.”
-
-“No, Headlights, that’s not us. I agree with you that there’s a
-difference. America is not in the same boat with Europe—not quite—but
-very nearly. Perhaps because our crimes are not so black we’ve been given
-the chance to do what we have to do more of our own free act. From Europe
-what she had has been taken away violently, whether she would or no. We
-have the chance to come before the throne of God and offer it back of
-our own free will. You see the difference! And, oh, boys, I want you to
-do it—”
-
-“It ain’t for us, Mr. Christian, to decide that.”
-
-“Oh yes, it is, Beady! It’s for each of us to offer willingly in his own
-heart. Not just to the government—not just to the country—not just to
-France or Belgium or any other nation that’s in a tight place—but to that
-blessed and heavenly Father Who’s giving us this wonderful chance to put
-everything into His hands again, and get it all back for redistribution.
-Don’t you see? That’s it—the redistribution! A better world has to come
-out of this—a juster world—a happier world—a cleaner world. And in that
-reconstruction we Americans have the chance to take the lead because
-we’re doing it of our own accord. Every other country has some ax to
-grind; but we have none. We’ve none except just to be in the big movement
-of all mankind upward and forward. But the difference between us and
-every other country—unless it’s the British Empire—is that we do it man
-by man, each stepping out of the ranks in his turn as if he was the only
-one and everything depended on his act. It’s up to you, Beady; it’s up to
-me; it’s up to each American singly.”
-
-“Why ain’t it up to every European singly?”
-
-“It is. They’re just beginning to understand that it is. The Englishman,
-the Frenchman, the Italian, they’re beginning to see that the democracy
-we talk so much about isn’t merely a question of the vote—that it isn’t
-primarily a question of the vote at all—it’s one of self-government in
-the widest and yet the most personal sense. The great summons is not to
-mankind in nations; it’s to mankind as individuals. It’s to Tom and Jimmy
-and Peter and Headlights and Daisy and every one who has a name. It’s
-the individual who makes the country, who forms the army, who becomes the
-redemptive element. In proportion as the individual cleanses himself from
-the national sin the national sin is wiped out. So it’s by Englishmen and
-Englishwomen that England will renew itself—”
-
-I think it was my old friend, the Irish hospital attendant, who called
-out, “What’s England’s national sin?”
-
-The question brought the speaker to a halt. He seemed to reflect.
-
-“What’s England’s national sin?” he repeated. “I should say—mind you, I’m
-not sitting in judgment on any one or any people—but we’ve all got to
-clean our stables, even if it takes the labors of Hercules to accomplish
-it—I should say England’s national vice—the vice that’s been eating the
-heart out of her body, and the spirit out of her heart—is sensuality.”
-
-“What’s the matter with France?”
-
-“I’m not an international physician with a specialty for diagnosis,”
-Christian laughed; “but in my opinion France has been corroded through
-and through with sordidness. She’s been too petty, too narrow, too mean,
-too selfish—”
-
-“Say, boss, tell us about my country.”
-
-“You mean, Italy, Tony? Haven’t you got to get rid of your superstition,
-and all the degrading things superstition brings with it? I want you
-to understand that we’re talking of national errors, not of national
-virtues.”
-
-“Have we got a national error in the United States?”
-
-“What do you think, Tapley? Isn’t it as plain as the nose on your face?
-Isn’t it written all over the country, on every page of every newspaper
-you pick up?”
-
-“What? What is it?” came from several voices at once.
-
-“Dishonesty!” he cried, loudly. “We Americans have got our good points,
-but of them honesty is the very smallest. If any one called us a nation
-of sharpers he wouldn’t be very far wrong. Our notion of competition
-is to get the better of the other fellow, by foul means if it can’t be
-done by fair. That’s the case in private life, and when it comes to
-public—well, did you ever hear of anything that we ever undertook as a
-people that didn’t have to be investigated before very long? You can
-hardly read a daily paper in which the investigation of some public
-trust isn’t going on. Dishonesty is stamped deep, deep into the American
-character as it is to-day; and for that very reason, if for no other,
-we’ve got to give everything back. If we don’t it will be taken from us
-by main force; and we’re not of the type to wait for that.”
-
-He seemed to gather himself together. His face, always benignant, began
-to glow with an inward light.
-
-“But, boys, what I want you to understand is that we can make this act of
-offering as a great act of faith. Every good gift and every perfect gift
-cometh down! We can take our good gifts and our perfect gifts and hand
-them up! We can anticipate their being taken from us by giving them. We
-can give them as men who know whence they have been received, and where
-they will be held in trust for us—not grudgingly nor of necessity, as the
-Bible tells us, for God loveth a cheerful giver. Now is the time for us
-to test that love—every man for himself. The appeal is to the individual.
-Give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, shaken
-together, and running over, shall men give into your bosom, according
-to the measure that ye mete. For this giving isn’t to men, it’s to
-God; it isn’t a portion, it’s all; it isn’t limited to material things,
-it includes our love and our life. It’s the great summons; it’s the
-great surrender. And—boys—my dear old boys who’ve been saved from other
-things—we’ve all been saved for this—for something we never expected,
-but which isn’t hard to do when you look at it in the right way—to hand
-ourselves back, in body, mind, and possessions, to Him from whom we came,
-that He may make a new use of us and begin all over again.”
-
-And the first thing I saw when he stopped was Cantyre springing forward
-to grasp him by the hand.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXXII_
-
-
-When I got out the streets were already buzzing with a rumor that no
-extra had as yet proclaimed. The House of Representatives had followed
-the Senate in voting for war, and the President was about to sign the
-declaration.
-
-But I forgot this on arriving at the flat, for Lovey was propped up in
-bed, with his thin nose in the air, making little sniffs.
-
-“I smell it, Slim,” he smiled, as I entered. “Kind of a coffee smell it
-is now, with a dash o’ bacon and heggs.”
-
-“That smell is always round this flat, Lovey,” I said, trying to be
-casual. “It’s all the breakfasts you and I have eaten—”
-
-“Oh no, Slim. You can’t be mistook in this; and besides—” He made a sign
-to the man nurse who for the past week or two Cantyre had sent in from
-one of his hospitals. “You clear out, d’ye ’ear? I want to talk to my
-buddy, private-like.”
-
-The man strolled out to the living-room, whispering to me as he passed:
-“There’s a change in him. I don’t think he’ll last through the night.”
-
-“Come and sit ’ere, sonny,” Lovey commanded as soon as we were alone.
-“I’ve got somethin’ special-like to tell ye. Did ye know,” he went on,
-when I was seated beside the bed, “as I’d seen Lizzy—and she ’adn’t her
-neck broke at all. She was lovely.”
-
-“Where?” I asked, to humor him.
-
-“Right ’ere—right beside that there chair that you’re a-sittin’ in.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“Oh, on and off—pretty near all the time now.”
-
-“You mean that she comes and goes?”
-
-“No; not just comin’ and goin’. She’s—she’s kind o’ ’ere all the time,
-only sometimes I ain’t lookin’.” His face became alight. “There she
-is now—and a great long street be’ind ’er. No, it ain’t a street;
-it’s just all lovely-like, and Lizzy with ’er neck as straight as a
-walkin’-stick—and not a drinkin’-woman no more she don’t look—it’s kind
-o’ beautiful like, Slim, only—only I can’t make ye understand.”
-
-Sighing fretfully over his inability to explain, he lapsed into that
-state of which I never was sure whether it was sleep or unconsciousness.
-
-The coma lasted for a great part of the night. Sending the nurse to lie
-down, I sat and watched, chiefly because I had too much on my mind and
-in my heart to want to go to bed. Every two or three hours Cantyre stole
-in, in his dressing-gown, finding nothing he could do. Once or twice I
-was tempted to ask him what he thought of Christian’s talk, but, fearing
-to break the spell it might have wrought in him, I refrained. He himself
-didn’t mention it, nor did he seem to know that I had observed his
-impulsive, shaking hands.
-
-On one of the occasions when he was with me Lovey opened his eyes
-suddenly, beginning to murmur something we couldn’t understand.
-
-“What is it, old chap?” Cantyre questioned, bending over him and
-listening.
-
-But Lovey was already articulating brokenly. It took two or three
-repetitions, or attempts at repetition, for Cantyre to be in a position
-to interpret.
-
-“What’s he trying to say?” I inquired.
-
-Cantyre pretended to arrange the bottles on the table beside the bed so
-as not to have to look at me.
-
-“He says, or he’s doing his best to say, ‘I didn’t say nothink but what
-was for everybody’s good.’”
-
-It was on my lips to retort, “Perhaps he didn’t.”
-
-I left that, however, for Cantyre, who went back to his rooms without
-comment.
-
-He returned in the small hours of the morning, and once more we sat,
-one on one side of the bed and the other on the other, in what was
-practically silence. All I could say of it was that it had become a
-sympathetic silence. Why it was sympathetic I didn’t know: but the
-unclassified perceptions told me that it was.
-
-When Lovey opened his eyes again it was with the air of not having been
-asleep or otherwise away from us.
-
-“I saved ye, Slim, didn’t I?”
-
-“Yes, Lovey, old man, you did.”
-
-“Kep’ straight so as you would keep straight too?”
-
-“Yes, Lovey.”
-
-“Ye’d never ’a’ done it if it ’adn’t been for me?”
-
-“No, Lovey.”
-
-“And I’d never ’a’ gone away from ye, Slim. I was just a—a-frightenin’ of
-you. I didn’t mean no ’arm at all, I didn’t.”
-
-“I know, Lovey.”
-
-He fixed his glazing eyes upon me as he said, “I told ye my name wasn’t
-Lovey, didn’t I?”
-
-“No, but that doesn’t matter.”
-
-“No, that doesn’t matter now. We’re fellas together, so what’s the
-diff?... I don’t care where we sleeps to-night, so long as you’re there,
-sonny.... Greeley’s Slip is good enough for mine, if I can snuggle up to
-you, like.... Ye don’t mind, do ye?”
-
-I put my arm round his shoulder, raising him.
-
-“No, Lovey, I don’t mind. Just snuggle up.”
-
-“’Old me ’and, sonny.”
-
-I took his hand in mine as his head rested on my shoulder.
-
-He gave a long, restful sigh.
-
-“Lizzy says it’s an awful nice place where she is, and—”
-
-I felt him slipping down in bed; but Cantyre, who knew more of such cases
-than I did, caught him gently round the loins and lowered him.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXXIII_
-
-
-On coming back the next afternoon from selecting the spot for Lovey’s
-grave there was a man in khaki on the train. When I got out at the Grand
-Central I saw another. In Fifth Avenue I saw another and another. They
-seemed to spring out of the ground, giving a new aspect to the streets.
-In the streets that shining thing I had noticed on landing was no longer
-to be seen. Silver peace had faded out, while in its place there was
-coming—coming by degrees—but coming—that spirit of strong resolve which
-is iron and gold.
-
-Or perhaps I had better say that peace had taken refuge in my dingy
-little flat, where Lovey was lying on his bed in his Sunday clothes,
-with hands folded on his breast. Peace was in every line of the fragile
-figure; in the face there was peace satisfied—peace content—gentle,
-abiding, eternal.
-
-Two days later a little company of us stood by his grave while Rufus
-Legrand read the ever-stirring words of the earth to earth. It was the
-old comradeship which Lovey himself would have liked—the fellowship of
-men who had fought the same fight as he, and were hoping to be faithful
-unto death like him—Christian, Straight, little Spender, Beady, Pyn, the
-wee bye Daisy, and one or two others. Cantyre alone had none of the dark
-memories—and yet the bright and blessed memories—that held the rest of us
-together; but Cantyre had his place.
-
-We had driven out side by side in the same motor, as what the undertaker
-called chief mourners. I don’t remember that we uttered a word to each
-other till we got out at the grave.
-
-It was Cantyre who said, then: “I want you to drive back with me, Frank.
-There’s somewhere I should like to take you.”
-
-Reassured by his use of my name, I merely nodded, wondering what he meant.
-
-I didn’t ask, however; nor did I ask when we were back in the motor again
-and on our way to town. I got my first hint as we began to descend the
-long avenue in which Sterling Barry had his house.
-
-As I expected, we stopped at the door. The vacant lot was still vacant,
-and among its dead stalks of burdock and succory April was bringing the
-first shades of soft green. I thought of Lovey, of course; of our tramp
-round Columbus Circle; of my midnight adventure right on this spot. It
-was like going back to another life; it was as this life must have seemed
-to Lovey and his Lizzy reunited in that world where her neck was as
-straight as a walking-stick, and everything was lovely-like.
-
-Cantyre spoke low, as if he could hardly speak at all.
-
-“I asked Regina to be in. She’ll be expecting us.”
-
-And she was. She was expecting us in that kind of agitation which hides
-itself under a pretense of being more than usually cool. In sympathy with
-Lovey’s memory, I suppose, she was dressed in black, which made a foil
-for her vivid lips and eyes. Out of the latter she was unable to keep a
-shade of feverish brightness that belied the nonchalance of her greeting.
-
-She talked about Lovey, about the funeral, about the weather, about the
-declaration of war, about the men in khaki who with such surprising
-promptness had begun to appear in the streets. She talked rapidly,
-anxiously, against time, as it were, and busied herself pouring tea.
-Suspecting, doubtless, that Cantyre had something special to say, she was
-trying to fight him off from it as long as possible.
-
-I had taken a seat; he remained standing, his back to the fire. His look
-was abstracted, thundery, morose.
-
-Right in the middle of what Regina was saying about the seizure of the
-German ships he dropped with the remark, “You two know what Lovey told
-me—what he’s been telling me ever since you both came home.”
-
-Neither of us had a word to say. We could only stare. You could hear the
-mantelpiece clock ticking before he went on again.
-
-“Well, I’m not going to give you up, Regina,” he declared, aggressively,
-then.
-
-One of her hands was on the handle of the teapot; one was in the act of
-taking up a cup. If coloring was ever transmuted into flame, her coloring
-was at that moment. There was a dramatic intensity in her quietness.
-
-“Have I asked you to, Stephen?”
-
-“No; but—”
-
-“Have I?” I demanded.
-
-“No; but—”
-
-“If Lovey did it it was without any knowledge of mine,” I continued. “I
-practically killed him, God forgive me, for doing it!”
-
-“You’re both off the track,” Cantyre broke in. “You don’t know what
-I—what I want to say.”
-
-“Very well, then, Stephen. Tell us,” Regina said, tranquilly.
-
-He spoke stammeringly. “It’s—it’s—just this: This is no
-time—for—for—love.”
-
-We stared again, waiting for him to go on.
-
-“It’s what—what Christian told us two or three nights ago. We’re in a
-world where—where love and marriage are no longer the burning questions.
-They’re too small. Don’t you see?”
-
-We continued to stare, but we agreed with him.
-
-“So—so,” he faltered, “I want you—I want you both—to—to put it all off.”
-
-“The moratorium of love?” I suggested.
-
-“The moratorium of everything,” he took up, “but what—what Christian
-put before us. I see that now more plainly than I ever saw anything in
-my life. We’ve got to give everything up—and get it back—different. We
-shall be different, too—and things that we’re struggling over now will be
-settled for us, I suppose, without our taking them into our own hands at
-all. That’s how I look at it, if you two will agree.”
-
-“I agree, Stephen,” Regina said, with the same tranquillity.
-
-“And I, too, old chap.”
-
-“I’m—I’m going over,” he stumbled on, “with the first medical unit from
-Columbia—”
-
-“Oh, Stephen! How splendid!”
-
-He contradicted her. “No, it isn’t. I’m not doing it from any splendid
-motives whatever. I’m going just to—to try and get out of myself. Don’t
-you see—you two? You must see. I’m—I’m sunk in myself; I’ve never been
-anything else. That’s what’s been the matter with me. That’s why I never
-made any friends. That’s why you, Frank, have never really cared a straw
-about me—in spite of all the ways I’ve made up to you; and why you,
-Regina, can hardly stand me. But, by God! you’re both going to!”
-
-With this flash of excitement I sprang up, laying my hand on his arm.
-
-“We care for you already, old man.”
-
-“That’s not the point. I’ve—I’ve got to care for myself. I’ve got to find
-some sort of self-respect.”
-
-But Regina, too, sprang up, joining us where we stood on the hearth-rug.
-She didn’t touch him; she only stood before him with hands clasped in
-front of her.
-
-“Stephen dear, you’re not doing any more heart-searching than Frank and I
-are doing; or than every true American is doing all through the country.
-What you say Mr. Christian told you the other night is more or less
-consciously in everybody’s soul. We know we’re called to the judgment
-seat; and at the judgment seat we stand. That’s all there is to it.
-Marriage and giving in marriage for people like us must wait. It’s become
-unimportant. There are people—younger than we are for the most part—to
-whom it comes first. But for us, with our experience—each of us—you with
-yours, Frank with his, I with mine—well, we have other work to do. We
-must see this great thing through before we can give our attention to
-ourselves. And we shall see it through, sha’n’t we, by doing as you say?
-We must give everything up—and wait. Then we shall probably find our
-difficulties solved for us. I often think that patience—the power to wait
-and be confident—is the most stupendous force in the world.”
-
-And with few more words than this we left her. I went first, giving them
-a little time alone together. But I hadn’t gone very far before, on
-accidentally turning round, I saw Cantyre coming down the steps.
-
-
-
-
-_CHAPTER XXXIV_
-
-
-It was just a year later that a secret but profound misgiving in my heart
-began to be dispelled.
-
-I call it secret because it was unacknowledged by myself. It would never,
-I believe, have come to me of its own accord; it was suggested from
-without, and even so I didn’t harbor it consciously. It was only with the
-news of Seicheprey, of which the details began to come in toward the end
-of April, 1918, that I knew that in the wheat of my hopes and confidences
-there had been tares of anxiety and fear.
-
-I had seen too many of those strapping, splendid fellows not to be
-confident and hopeful. But I had also read too much of the folly
-of pitting green boys, however magnificently built, against the
-seasoned troops of long campaigns, not to have a lurking dread as to
-the test. I never voiced the question, not even to my own heart; yet
-Satan, the manufacturer of fear, had not failed to formulate it to my
-subconsciousness. What if this noble America, so strong, so generous,
-so ready to respond to that call which Christian had uttered, so eager
-to pour out its all, with both hands, gladly, gaily—what if now,
-before the guns of a ruthless and unconquerable foe, she should meet
-the disaster that would bring her to the dust? What if those beloved
-boys, all sinew and muscle as they were, should go down as I had seen
-my fellow-countrymen go down, in heaps that showed the impotence of
-valor? I had witnessed so much sacrifice—sacrifice by mistake, sacrifice
-by lack of skill, sacrifice by lack of knowledge that could have been
-obtained—that when I looked at these lads my heart sank at moments when
-it should have been most buoyant.
-
-Then came Seicheprey, and I knew.
-
-Then came the Marne, the Ourcq, the Vesle; and I was satisfied.
-
-For the cause had absorbed me again, heart and soul and mind. I was being
-sent all over the country, and sometimes into Canada, to speak for it. In
-this way I came to be in a small town in the Middle West—Mendoza happened
-to be its name—when, picking up a paper, I saw that a hospital had been
-bombed. The next edition reported that two doctors and three or four
-nurses had been killed. The next told us their names. Among the names
-was....
-
-And so he did give his all.
-
-I didn’t write to Regina; Regina didn’t write to me. She was busy, as I
-was busy; but somewhere in the distance and the silence between us there
-was a place where our spirits met.
-
-And when we met in person we still didn’t speak of it. It was too deep,
-too sacred, too complicated and strange to go readily into words. It was
-easier and more natural to talk of something else.
-
-That was at Rosyth, on Long Island, at the end of June. Hearing that I
-had returned to New York for a rest, Hilda Grace asked me down for the
-week-end, just as she had asked me exactly four years before.
-
-On this occasion she made no attempt to sound me; she mentioned Regina
-only to say that she was at the red-and-yellow house on the opposite hill
-for a little rest on her part. By disappearing after lunch on Sunday she
-gave me to understand that I was free.
-
-I went to the old Hornblower house by the way I had taken when I had
-last come away from it—down Mrs. Grace’s steps to the beach—along the
-shore—and up the steps to the lawn where the foxgloves bordered the
-scrub-oak.
-
-I went back to the veranda where I had waited and sat down in one of the
-same chairs. Taking out a cigarette, I lighted it and began to smoke.
-
-Perhaps some one had seen me from a window, for in a little while there
-was the click of high heels on the bare steps of the stairway. Then out
-on the veranda came a figure too little to be tall and too tall to be
-considered little, carrying herself proudly, placing her dainty feet
-daintily, but advancing toward me instead of going away. She was dressed
-in white, with a scarlet band about her waist and another about her
-dashing Panama, of the same shade as her lips. In the opening at the neck
-she wore a string of pearls. Lower down, the opening was fastened by a
-diamond bar-pin. In her hand she carried a gold-mesh purse, which she
-threw carelessly on a table as she passed.
-
-She met me as any hostess meets a man who comes to make a call. We talked
-of the topics of the day, beginning with the weather. From the weather we
-passed to the war, and to all our anxieties and humiliations through the
-spring. We could do this, however, with a ray of cheerfulness, because
-the Château-Thierry salient was beginning to be wiped out.
-
-“But why do things have to happen the way they do?” I asked her. “If
-we’re going to win, why couldn’t we have won from the first? What’s
-the use of all this backing and filling, this losing and taking, and
-relosing and retaking, the same old ground? Oh, I know there are the
-usual explanations as to our not being up to the mark in munitions and
-man power; but I mean what is the explanation from the point of view of
-an All-Powerful and All-Intelligent—?”
-
-“Isn’t it the same explanation that applies to every human life?”
-
-“Well, what’s that?”
-
-“I don’t know that I can tell you,” she smiled, thoughtfully; “but I do
-feel sure that we need our experiences. With minds and natures like ours
-we’re not fitted to go straight and simply from point to point. The long
-way round has to be our short way home, and—and—the way things happen is
-the best way.... Oh, dear, what’s happening?”
-
-It was admirably staged. The slipping of the string of pearls to the
-floor could hardly have been another accident. For me there was but one
-thing to do.
-
-Springing to my feet I stooped and picked the necklet up. Having picked
-it up, I put it in my pocket.
-
-I stood smiling down at her. She sat smiling up at me. There was more in
-that smile than a lifetime of words could have uttered.
-
-But when I was about to pull the pearls out of my pocket again she leaned
-forward and said, huskily: “Don’t, Frank. Keep them.”
-
-I looked at her, puzzled. “Why, Regina?”
-
-“Because some day you—you’ll give them back to me. Till then they’ll be
-yours. They’ll be a symbol—a pledge.”
-
-“Will it be—some day—some day—soon?”
-
-“Not so very soon, Frank. I must still have time to—to think of Stephen.
-I cared for him—in my way.”
-
-“I think of him, too,” I said, shakily. “It seems hard that he should
-have had to give everything, when I’m—I’m getting everything.”
-
-“Oh, death isn’t so terrible—or so significant. There wouldn’t be so much
-of it if it was. I only mean—but I can’t explain to you. We must get a
-little farther on—not only you and I—but our country—our countries—we
-must give still more—we must at least offer all even if it isn’t all
-taken away from us—before it’s given back to us—renewed—purified.”
-
-“And then?”
-
-“Oh, then!”
-
-But the glow in her face said the rest.
-
-
-THE END
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The City of Comrades, by Basil King</div>
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-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The City of Comrades</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Basil King</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 11, 2021 [eBook #64255]</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CITY OF COMRADES ***</div>
-
-<div class="ad">
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Books by</span><br />
-BASIL KING</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>GOING WEST</li>
-<li>THE CITY OF COMRADES</li>
-<li>ABRAHAM’S BOSOM</li>
-<li>THE LIFTED VEIL</li>
-<li>THE SIDE OF THE ANGELS</li>
-<li>THE LETTER OF THE CONTRACT</li>
-<li>THE WAY HOME</li>
-<li>THE WILD OLIVE</li>
-<li>THE INNER SHRINE</li>
-<li>THE STREET CALLED STRAIGHT</li>
-<li>LET NO MAN PUT ASUNDER</li>
-<li>IN THE GARDEN OF CHARITY</li>
-<li>THE STEPS OF HONOR</li>
-<li>THE HIGH HEART</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="smcap">Established 1817</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus1">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her. “Don’t
-make a noise or you’ll frighten my friend. She’s
-nervous already.”</p>
-<p class="caption">(<a href="#Page_32">See p. 32</a>)</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="titlepage larger"><i>The</i><br />
-<span class="larger">CITY OF COMRADES</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-BASIL KING</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><i>Author of</i><br />
-“THE INNER SHRINE” “THE WILD OLIVE”<br />
-“THE WAY HOME” “THE HIGH HEART” ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>I dream’d in a dream, I saw a city invincible to the attacks of the whole of the rest of the earth;</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>I dream’d that was the new City of Friends;</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>Nothing was greater there than the quality of robust love—it led the rest;</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>It was seen every hour in the actions of the men of that city,</i></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><i>And in all their looks and words.</i></div>
- <div class="verse right">—<span class="smcap">Walt Whitman.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/torch.jpg" width="100" height="130" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="titlepage">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS<br />
-<span class="smaller">NEW YORK AND LONDON</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">Copyright, 1919, by Harper &amp; Brothers<br />
-Printed in the United States of America</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="List of illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td><i>“’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her. “Don’t make a
- noise or you’ll frighten my friend. She’s nervous already.”</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg" colspan="2"><a href="#illus1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>“Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls into his pocket
- before?”</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><i>Facing&nbsp;p.</i></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus2"><i>204</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>“You’re going home to marry me.” “How can I be going home to
- marry you, when—when I never knew till within half an hour that
- you—that you cared anything about me?”</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus3"><i>290</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>“That you should ’ave come back to this—and me believin’ the war
- ’ad done ye good—lifted you up, like. Not but what you was the best
- man ever lived before the war—”</i></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#illus4"><i>344</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h1>THE CITY OF COMRADES</h1>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER I</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>In the slow swirl of Columbus Circle, at the southwest
-corner of Central Park, two seedy, sinister individuals
-could hold an exceedingly private conversation without
-drawing attention to themselves. There were others like
-us on the scene, in that month of June, 1913, cast up from
-the obscurest depths of New York. We could revolve
-there for five or ten minutes, in company with other elements
-of the city’s life, to be eliminated by degrees, sucked
-into other currents, forming new combinations or reacting
-to the old ones.</p>
-
-<p>In silence we shuffled along a few paces, though not
-exactly side by side. Lovey was just sufficiently behind
-me to be able to talk confidentially into my ear. My own
-manner was probably that of a man anxious to throw off a
-dogging inferior. Even among us there are social degrees.</p>
-
-<p>“Yer’ll be sorry,” Lovey warned me, reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then,” I jerked back at him over my shoulder;
-“I shall be sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I didn’t know it was a good thing I wouldn’t ’a’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-wanted to take ye in on it—not you, I wouldn’t; and
-dead easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re only a beginner—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not even that.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, ye’re not even that; and this’d larn ye. Just two
-old ladies—lots of money always in the ’ouse—no resistance—no
-weepons nor nothink o’ that kind; and me
-knowin’ every hinch of the ground through workin’ for
-’em two years ago—”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose they recognized you?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it. That’s why I must have a pal. If they’d
-git a look at any one it’d have to be at you. But you
-don’t need to be afraid, never pinched before nor nothink.
-Once yer picter’s in the rogues’ they’ll run ye in if ye so
-much as blow yer nose. You’d just get by as an unknown
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I didn’t get by?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you would, sonny. Ye’re the kind. Just look
-at ye! Slim and easy-movin’ as a snake, y’are. Ye’d go
-through a man’s clothes while he’s got ’em on, and he
-wouldn’t notice ye no more’n a puff of wind. Look at
-yer ’and.”</p>
-
-<p>I held it up and looked at it. A year ago, a month ago,
-I should have studied it with remorse. Now I did it
-stupidly, without emotions or regrets.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long, slim hand, resembling the rest of my person.
-It was strong, however, with big, loosely articulated
-knuckles and muscular thumbs—again resembling the
-rest of my person. At the Beaux Arts, and in an occasional
-architect’s office, it had been spoken of as a “drawing”
-hand; and Lovey was now pointing out its advantages
-for other purposes. I laughed to myself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re too tall,” Lovey went on, in his appraisement.
-“That’s ag’in’ ye. Ye must be a good six foot. But lots
-o’ men are too tall. They gits over it by stoopin’ a bit;
-and when ye stoops it frightens people, especially women.
-They ain’t near as scared of a man that stands straight
-up as they’ll be of one that crouches and wiggles away.
-Kind o’ suggests evil to ’em, like, it does. And these
-two old ladies—”</p>
-
-<p>As we reached the corner of the Park I rounded slowly
-on my tempter. Not that he thought of his offer as
-temptation, any more than I did; it was rather on his
-part a touch of solicitude. He was doing his best for me,
-in return for what he was pleased to take as my kindness
-to him during the past ten days.</p>
-
-<p>He was a small, wizened man, pathetically neat in spite
-of cruel shabbiness. It was the kind of neatness that in
-our world so often differentiates the man who has dropped
-from him who has always been down. The gray suit,
-which was little more than a warp with no woof on it at
-all, was brushed and smoothed and mended. The flannel
-shirt, with turned-down collar, must have been chosen for
-its resistance to the show of dirt. The sky-blue tie might
-have been a more useful selection, but even that had had
-freshness steamed and pressed into it whenever Lovey
-had got the opportunity. Over what didn’t so directly
-meet the eye the coat was tightly buttoned up.</p>
-
-<p>The boots were the weakest point, as they are with all
-of us. They were not noticeably broken, but they were
-wrinkled and squashed and down at the heel. They
-looked as if they had been worn by other men before having
-come to the present possessor; and mine looked the
-same. When I went into offices to apply for work it was
-always my boots that I tried to keep out of sight; but it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-was precisely what the eye of the fellow in command
-seemed determined to search out and judge me by.</p>
-
-<p>You must not think of Lovey as a criminal. He had
-committed petty crimes and he had gone to jail for them;
-but it had only been from the instinct of self-preservation.
-He worked when he got a job; but he never kept a job,
-because his habits always fired him. Then he lived as he
-could, lifting whatever small object came his way—an
-apple from a fruit-stall, a purse a lady had inadvertently
-laid down, a bag in a station, an umbrella forgotten in a
-corner—anything! The pawnshops knew him so well that
-he was afraid to go into them any more—except when he
-was so tired that he wanted to be sent to the Island for a
-month’s rest. In general, he disposed of his booty for a
-few pennies to children, to poverty-stricken mothers of
-families, to pals in the saloons. As long as a few dollars
-lasted he lived, as he himself would have said, honestly.
-When he was driven to it he filched again; but only
-when he was driven to it.</p>
-
-<p>It was ten days now since he had begun following me
-about, somewhat as a stray dog will follow you when you
-have given him a bone and a drink of water. For a year
-and more I had seen him in one or another of the dives I
-hung about. The same faces always turn up there, and
-we get to have the kind of acquaintance, silent, haunted,
-tolerant, that binds together souls in the Inferno. In
-general, it is a great fraternity; but now and then—often
-for reasons no one could fathom—some one is excluded.
-He comes and goes, and the others follow him with resentful
-looks and curses. Occasionally he is kicked out,
-which was what happened to Lovey whenever his weakness
-afforded the excuse.</p>
-
-<p>It was when he was kicked out of Stinson’s that I had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-picked him up. It was after midnight. It was cold.
-The sight of the abject face was too much for me.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along home with me, Lovey,” I had said,
-casually; and he came.</p>
-
-<p>Home was no more than a stifling garret, and Lovey
-slept on the floor like a dog. But in the morning I found
-my shoes cleaned as well as he could clean them without
-brush or blacking, my clothes folded, and the whole
-beastly place in such order as a friendly hand could bring
-to it. Lovey himself was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Twice during the interval he had stolen in in the same
-way and stolen out. He asked no more than a refuge
-and the privilege of sidling timidly up to me with a beseeching
-look in his sodden eyes when we met in bars.
-Once, when by hook or by crook he had got possession of
-a dollar, he insisted on the honor of “buying me a drink.”</p>
-
-<p>On this particular afternoon I had met him by chance
-in the region of Broadway between Forty-second Street
-and Columbus Circle. I can still recall the shy, half-frightened
-pleasure in his face as he saw me advancing
-toward him. He might have been a young girl.</p>
-
-<p>“Got somethin’ awful good, sonny, to let ye in on,”
-were the words with which he stopped me.</p>
-
-<p>I turned round and walked back with him to the Circle,
-and round it.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey,” I said decidedly, when we had got to the
-corner of the Park, “it’s not good enough. I’ve other fish
-to fry.”</p>
-
-<p>A hectic flush stole into the cheeks, which kept a marvelous
-youth and freshness. The thin, delicate features,
-ascetic rather than degraded, sharpened with a frosty
-look of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, just as you think best, sonny,” he said, resignedly.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-He asked, abruptly, however, “When did ye
-have yer last meal?”</p>
-
-<p>“The day before yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“And when d’ye expect to have yer next?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. Sometime; possibly to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly to-night— ’Ow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you I don’t know. Something will happen. If
-it doesn’t—well, I’ll manage.”</p>
-
-<p>He had found an opening.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ye see ye carn’t go on like that? Ye’ve got to
-live.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, I haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that, sonny,” he burst out, tenderly.
-“Ye’ve got to live! Ye must do it—for my sake—now.
-I suppose it’s because we’re—we’re Britishers together.”
-He looked round on the circling crowd of Slavs, Mongolians,
-Greeks, Italians, aliens of all sorts. “We’re different
-from these Yankees, ain’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>Admitting our Anglo-Saxon superiority, I was about to
-say, “Well, so long, Lovey,” and shake him off, when he
-put in, piteously, “I suppose I can come up and lay down
-on yer floor again to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you could, Lovey,” I responded. “But—but
-the fact is I—I haven’t got that place any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fired?”</p>
-
-<p>I nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’ve ye gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nowhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did ye sleep last night?”</p>
-
-<p>I described the exact spot in the lumber-yard near
-Greeley’s Slip. He knew it. He had made use of its
-hospitality himself on warm summer nights such as we
-were having.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ there again to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>I said I didn’t know.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed at me with a kind of timid daring. “You
-wouldn’t be—you wouldn’t be goin’ to the Down and Out
-Club?”</p>
-
-<p>I smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you ask me that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. See you talkin’ to one of those
-fellas oncet. Chap named Pyncheon. Worse than missions
-and ’vangelists, they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever think of going there yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord love ye! I’ve thought of it, yes. But I’ve
-fought it off. Once ye do that ye’re done for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t believe I’m done for—” I began; but
-he interrupted me coaxingly.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, sonny. I’ll go to Greeley’s Slip. Then if
-you’ve nothin’ else on ’and, you come there, too—and
-we’ll be fellas together. But don’t—don’t—go to the
-Down and Out!”</p>
-
-<p>As I walked away from him I had his “fellas together”
-amusingly, and also pathetically, in my heart. Lovey
-was little better than an outcast. I knew him by no name
-but that which some pothouse wag had fixed on him
-derisively. From hints he had dropped I gathered that
-he had had a wife and daughters somewhere in the world,
-and intuitively I got the impression that without being
-a criminal he had been connected with a crime. As to
-his personal history he had never confided to me any of
-the details beyond the fact that in his palmy days he had
-been in a ’at-shop in the Edgware Road. I fancied that
-at some time or another in his career his relatives in London—like
-my own in Canada—had made up a lump sum
-and bidden him begone to the land of reconstruction.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-There he had become what he was—an outcast. There I
-was becoming an outcast likewise. We were “fellas together.”
-I was thirty-one and he was fifty-two. My
-comparative youth helped me, in that I didn’t look older
-than my age; but he might easily have been seventy.</p>
-
-<p>Having got rid of him, I drifted diagonally across the
-Park, but with a certain method in the seeming lack of
-method in taking my direction. Though I had an objective
-point, I didn’t dare to approach it otherwise than by
-a roundabout route. It is probable that no gaze but
-that of the angels was upon me; but to me it seemed
-as if every glance that roved up and down the Park must
-spot my aim.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason I assumed a manner meant to throw
-observation off the scent. I loitered to look at young
-people on horseback or to stare at some specially dashing
-motor-car. I strolled into by-paths and out of them. I
-passed under the noses of policemen in gray-blue uniforms
-and tried to infuse my carriage with the fact which Lovey
-had emphasized, that I had never yet been pinched. I
-had never yet, so far as I knew, done anything to warrant
-pinching; and that I had no intentions beyond those of
-the ordinary law-abiding citizen was what I hoped my
-swagger would convey.</p>
-
-<p>Though I was shabby, I was not sufficiently so to be
-unworthy to take the air. The worst that could be said
-of me was that I was not shabby as the working-man is at
-liberty to be. Mine was the suspicious, telltale shabbiness
-of the gentleman—far more damning than the grime
-and sweat of a chimney-sweep.</p>
-
-<p>Now that I was alone again, I had a return of the sensation
-that had been on me since waking in the morning—that
-I was walking in the air. I felt that I bounced like<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-a bubble every time I stepped. The day before I had
-been giddy; now I was only light. It was as if at any
-minute I might go up. Unconsciously I ground my footsteps
-into the gravel or the grass to keep myself on the
-solid earth.</p>
-
-<p>It was not the first time I had gone without food for
-twenty-four hours, but it was the first time I had done it
-for forty-eight. Moreover, it was the first time I had ever
-been without some prospect of food ahead of me. With a
-meal surely in sight on the following day I could have
-waited for it. More easily I could have waited for a
-drink or two. Drink kept me going longer than food, for
-in spite of the reaction after it the need of it had grown
-more insistent. Had I been offered my choice between
-food and life, on the one hand, and drink and death, on
-the other, I think I should have chosen drink and death.</p>
-
-<p>But now there was no likelihood of either. I had husbanded
-my last pennies after my last meal, to make them
-spin out to as many drinks as possible. I had begged a
-few more drinks, and cadged a few more. But I had come
-to my limit in all these directions. Before I sought the
-shelter of Greeley’s Slip a hint had been given me at
-Stinson’s that I might come in for the compliments showered
-on Lovey ten days previously. Now as I walked in
-the Park the craving inside me was not because I hadn’t
-eaten, but because I hadn’t drunk that day.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three bitter temptations assailed me before I
-reached Fifth Avenue. One was in the form of a pretty
-girl of eight or ten, who came mincing down a flowery
-path, holding a quarter between the thumb and forefinger
-of her left hand. Satan must have sent her. I could
-have snatched the quarter and made my escape, only
-that I lacked the nerve. Then there was a newsboy counting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-his gains on a bench. They were laid out in rows before
-him—pennies, nickels, and dimes. I stood for a
-minute and looked down at him, estimating the ease with
-which I could have stooped and swept them all into my
-palm. He looked up and smiled. The smile didn’t disarm
-me; I was beyond the reach of any such appeal. It
-was again that I didn’t have the nerve. Lastly an old
-woman, a nurse, was dealing out coins to three small children
-that they might make purchases of a blind man selling
-bootlaces and pencils. I could have swiped them all
-as neatly as a croupier pulls in louis d’or with his rake—but
-I was afraid.</p>
-
-<p>These were real temptations, as fierce as any I ever
-faced. By the time I had reached the Avenue I was in a
-cold perspiration, as much from a sense of failure as from
-the effort at resistance. I wondered how I should ever
-carry out the plans I had in mind if I was to balk at such
-little things as this.</p>
-
-<p>The plans I had in mind still kept me from making
-headway as the crow flies. I went far up the Avenue;
-I crossed into Madison Avenue; I went up that again;
-I crossed into Park Avenue. I crossed and recrossed and
-crisscrossed and descended, and at last found myself
-strolling by a house toward which I scarcely dared to
-turn my eyes, feeling that even for looking at it I might
-be arrested.</p>
-
-<p>I slackened my pace so as to verify all the points which
-experts had underscored in my hearing. There was the
-vacant lot which the surrounding buildings rendered so
-dark at night. There was the low, red-brown fence inclosing
-the back premises, over which a limber, long-legged
-fellow like me could leap in a second. There were the
-usual numerous windows—to kitchen, scullery, pantry,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-laundry—of any good-sized American house, some one
-of which was pretty sure to be left unguarded on a summer
-night. There were the neighboring yards, with more
-low fences, offering excellent cover in a get-away, with
-another vacant lot leading out on another street a little
-farther down.</p>
-
-<p>I had so many times strolled by the house as I was doing
-now, and had so many times rehearsed its characteristics,
-that I made the final review with some exactitude before
-passing on my way.</p>
-
-<p>My way was not far. There was nothing to do but to
-go back into the Park. As it was nearly six o’clock, it
-was too late to search for a job that day, and I should
-have had no heart for doing so in any case. I had found
-a job that morning—that of handling big packing-cases in
-a warehouse—but I was too exhausted for the work.
-When in the effort to lift one onto a truck I collapsed and
-nearly fainted, I was told in a choice selection of oaths
-to beat it as no good.</p>
-
-<p>I sat on a bench, therefore, waiting for the dark and
-thinking of the house of which I had just inspected the
-outside. It was not a house picked at random. It was
-one that had possessed an interest for me during all the
-three years I had been in New York. I had, in fact,
-brought a letter of introduction to its owner from the
-man under whom I had worked in Montreal. Chiefly
-through my own carelessness, nothing came of that, but
-I never failed, when I passed this way, to stare at the
-dwelling as one in which I might have had a footing.</p>
-
-<p>The occupant was also a well-known architect in New
-York. In the architects’ offices in which I found employment
-I heard him praised, criticized, condemned. His
-work was good or bad according to the speaker’s point of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-view. I thought it tolerably good, with an over-emphasis
-on ornament.</p>
-
-<p>It was an odd fact that, in starting out on what was
-clear in my mind as a new phase in my career, no other
-house suggested itself as a field of operations. As to this
-one I felt documented, and that was all. I had no sense
-of horror at what I was about to do; no remorse from the
-position from which I had fallen. I suppose my mind
-was too sick for that, and my body too imperatively clamorous.
-I had said to Lovey that I didn’t have to live—but
-I did. I had seen that very morning that I did.
-I had stood at the edge of Greeley’s Slip and watched the
-swirling of the brown-green water with a view to making
-an end of it. One step and I should be out of all this
-misery and disgrace! The world would be rid of me; my
-family would be rid of me; I should be rid of myself,
-which would be best of all. Had I been quite sure as
-to the last point, I think I could have done it. But I
-wasn’t quite sure. I was far from quite sure. I could
-imagine the step over the edge of Greeley’s Slip as a step
-into conditions worse than those I was enduring now;
-and so I had drawn back. I had drawn back and wandered
-up-town, in the hope of securing a job that would
-give me a breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder if you have ever done that? I wonder if you
-have ever gone from dock to station and from station to
-shop and from shop to warehouse, wherever heavy, unskilled
-labor may be in demand, and extra hands are
-treated with a brutality that slaves would kick against,
-in the hope of earning fifty cents? I wonder if in your
-grown-up life you have ever known a minute when fifty
-cents stood for your salvation? I wonder if with fifty
-cents standing for your salvation you ever saw the day<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-when you couldn’t get it? No? Then you will hardly
-understand how natural, how much a matter of course,
-the thing had become which I was resolved to do.</p>
-
-<p>It was no sudden idea. I had been living in the company
-of men who took such feats for granted. Their talk
-had amazed me at first, but I had grown used to it. I
-had grown used to the thing. I had come to find a
-piquancy in the thought of it.</p>
-
-<p>Then Lovey’s suggestions had not been thrown away
-on me. True, he was out for small game, while I, if I
-went in for it, would want something bigger and more
-exciting; but the basic idea was the same. Lovey could
-make a haul and live for weeks on the fruit of it; I might
-do the same and live for months. And if I didn’t pull it off
-successfully, if I was nabbed and sent away—why, then
-there would be some let-up in the struggle which had become
-so infernal. Even if I got a shot through the heart—and
-the tales I heard were full of such accidents—the
-tragedy would not lack its element of relief. It might
-be out of one hell into another—but it would at least
-be out of one.</p>
-
-<p>Not that I hadn’t found a bitter pleasure in the life! I
-had. I found it still. In one of Dostoyevsky’s novels
-an old rake talks of the joys of being in the gutter. Well,
-there are such joys. They are not joys that civilization
-knows or that aspiration would find legitimate; but one
-reaches a point at which it is a satisfaction to be oneself
-at one’s worst. Where all the pretenses with which poor
-human nature covers itself up are cast aside the soul
-can stalk forth nakedly, hideously, and be unashamed.
-In the presence of each other we were always unashamed.
-We could kick over all standards, we could drop all poses,
-we could flout all duties, we could own to all crimes, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-be “fellas together.” As I went lower and lower down it
-became to me a kind of acrid delight, of positively intellectual
-delight, to know that I was herding with the most
-degraded, and that there was no baseness or bestiality
-to which I was not at liberty to submit myself.</p>
-
-<p>If there had never been any reactions from this state
-of mind!—but God!</p>
-
-<p>It was a disadvantage to me that I was not like my
-cronies. I couldn’t open my lips without betraying the
-fact that I belonged to another sphere. Though the
-broken-down man of education is not unknown in the
-underworld, he is comparatively rare. He is comparatively
-rare and under suspicion, like a white swan in a
-flock of black ones. I might be open-handed, ingratiating,
-and absurdly fellow-well-met, but I was always an outsider.
-They would take my drinks, they would return
-me drinks, we would swap stories and experiences with
-all outward show of equality; but no one knew better
-than myself that I was not on a footing with the rest of
-them. Women took to me readily enough, but men were
-always on their guard. Try as I would I never found a
-mate among them, I never made a friend. Therefore,
-now that I was down and out, I had no one of whom to
-ask a good turn, no one who would have done me a good
-turn, but poor, useless old Lovey sneaking in the shade.</p>
-
-<p>I was in a measure between two worlds. I had been
-ejected from one without having forced a way into the
-other. When I say ejected I mean the word. The bitterest
-moment in my life was on that night when my eldest
-brother came to his door in Montreal and gave me fifty
-dollars, with the words:</p>
-
-<p>“And now get out! Don’t let any of us ever see your
-face or hear your name again.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p>As I stumbled down the steps he gave me a kick that
-didn’t reach me and which I had lost the right to resent.
-He himself went back to the dinner-party his wife was
-entertaining inside, and of which the talk and laughter
-reached me as I stood humbly on the door-step. From the
-other side of the street I looked back at the lighted windows.
-It was the last touch of connection with my
-family.</p>
-
-<p>But it had been a kindly, patient family. My father
-was one of the best known and most highly honored among
-Canadian public men. As he had married an American, I
-had a good many cousins in New York, though I had not
-made myself known to any of them since coming there to
-live. I didn’t want them. Had I met one of them in the
-street, I should have passed without speaking; but, as it
-happened, I never met one. I saw their names in the
-papers, and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>My father and mother had had five children, of whom I
-was the fourth. My two brothers were married, prosperous
-and respected—one a lawyer in Montreal, the other
-a banker in Toronto. My elder sister was married to a
-colonel in the British army; the younger one—the only
-member of the family younger than myself—still lived
-at home.</p>
-
-<p>We three sons were all graduates of McGill, in addition
-to which I had been sent to the Beaux Arts in Paris. Out
-of that I had come with some degree of credit; and there
-had been a year in which I was in sight—oh, very distant
-sight!—of the beginning of the fulfilment of my childhood’s
-ambition to revolutionize the art of architecture
-in Canada. But in the second year that vision went
-out; and in the third came the night on my brother
-Jerry’s door-step.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span></p>
-
-<p>I had nothing to complain of. The family had borne
-with me—and borne with me. When we reached the
-time when I was supposed to be earning my own living
-and my father’s allowance came to an end, my mother,
-who had some money of her own, kept it up. She would be
-keeping it up still if she knew where I was—but she didn’t
-know. From the moment of leaving Montreal I decided
-to carry out Jerry’s injunction. They should neither see
-my face nor hear my name again. I didn’t stop to consider
-how cruel this would be to the best mother a man
-ever had—to say nothing of the best father—or rather,
-when I did stop to consider it it seemed to me that I was
-taking the kindest course. I had no confidence in myself
-or in the future. New surroundings and associations
-would not give me a new heart, whatever hopes those who
-wished me well might be building on the change. For a
-new heart I needed something which I hadn’t got and saw
-no means of getting.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER II</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Somewhere about dusk I fell asleep. It was dark
-when I woke up. It was dark and still and sultry, as
-it often is in New York in the middle of June.</p>
-
-<p>The lamps were lit in the Park, and in their glow
-shadowy forms moved stealthily. When they went in
-twos I took them to be lovers; when they went alone I
-put them down as prowlers of the night. I didn’t know
-what they were after, but whatever it might be I was sure
-it was no good.</p>
-
-<p>Not that that mattered to me! I had long been in a
-situation where I couldn’t be particular. When I had
-risen and stretched myself I, too, moved stealthily, dogged
-by a crime I hadn’t yet committed, but of which the guilt
-was already in the air.</p>
-
-<p>As I had nothing by which to tell the time, I was obliged
-to wait till a clock struck. I hoped it was eleven at least,
-but when the sound came over the trees it was only nine.
-Only nine, and I could do nothing before one! Nothing
-before one, and nowhere to go! Nowhere to go, and no
-food to eat, and not a drop to drink! Doubtless I could
-have found water; but water made me sick. With four
-hours to wait, I thought again of the dark river with its
-velvety current, running below Greeley’s Slip.</p>
-
-<p>Aimlessly I drifted toward it—that is, I drifted toward
-Columbus Circle, whence I could drift farther still through
-squalid, fetid, dimly lighted streets down to the water’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-edge. The night was so hot that the thought of the
-plunge began to appeal to me. After all, it would be an
-easy, pleasant way of stepping out.</p>
-
-<p>But I didn’t do it. The unknown beyond the river once
-more drove me back. Besides, the adventure I had
-planned was not without its fascination. I wanted to
-see what it held in store. If it held nothing—well, then,
-Greeley’s Slip would still be accessible in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>So I skulked back into the depths of the Park again.
-Those who went as twos began to disappear, and the lonely
-shadows to steal along more furtively. Now and then one
-of them approached me or hung in the distance suggestively.
-It was not like any of the encounters that take
-place in daylight. It was more as if these dark ghosts
-had floated up from some evil spirit land, into which
-before morning they would float down again.</p>
-
-<p>But twelve o’clock struck at last, and I took midnight
-as a call. It was a call to leave the great human division
-in which I had hitherto been classed, and become a criminal.
-Once I had done this thing, I should never be able
-to go back. The angel with the flaming sword would
-guard that way, and I could never regain even such status
-as that which I was abandoning.</p>
-
-<p>If my head had not been swimming I might at the last
-minute have felt a qualm at that, but my mind had lost
-the faculty of deconcentration. It was fixed on the thing
-before me in such a way that I couldn’t get it off. For
-this reason I went, on leaving the Park, directly to the
-street and number where my thoughts were.</p>
-
-<p>I was surprised by the emptiness and silence of the
-thoroughfares. Not till then had I remembered that at
-this season of the year most of the houses would be closed.
-Closed they were, looking dark and blank and forbidding.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-I happened to know that the house to which I was bound
-was not closed; and though the fact that there were so
-few to pass in the streets rendered me more conspicuous,
-it also made me the less subject to observation.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, there were no observers at all when I approached
-the black spot made by the vacant lot. There was nothing
-but myself and the blackness. Not a light in the house!
-Hardly a light in any of the houses roundabout! Not
-a footfall on the pavements! If ever there was a good
-opportunity to do what I had come for, it was mine.</p>
-
-<p>But I passed. The black spot frightened me. It was
-like a black gulf into which I might sink down. I re-passed.</p>
-
-<p>I went farther up the street and took myself to task.
-It was a repetition of my recoil from the children in the
-afternoon. I must have the nerve—or I must own to myself
-that I hadn’t. If I hadn’t it, then I had no alternative
-but Greeley’s Slip.</p>
-
-<p>I turned in my steps and passed the house again. If
-from the blank windows any one had been looking out
-my actions would have been suspicious. I went far down
-the street, and came back again far up it. Then when I
-had no more power of arguing with myself I suddenly
-found my footsteps crushing the dusty, sun-dried shoots
-of nettle and blue succory. I was in the vacant lot.</p>
-
-<p>All at once fear left me. As well as any old hand in
-the business I seemed to know what lay before me. At
-every second some low-down prompting, sprung from
-nameless depths in my nature, told me what to do.</p>
-
-<p>I noted in the first place how accurate the experts had
-been as to light and shade. The house stood so far up
-on one of the long avenues that the buildings were thinning
-out. So, too, the street lamps. They were no more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-than in the proportion of two to three as compared to
-their numbers half a mile lower down. Just here they
-were so placed that not a ray fell into the three or four
-thousand square feet which had probably never been built
-upon since Manhattan was inhabited. Even the wall of
-the house was windowless on this side, for the reason
-that within a few months some new building would probably
-block the outlook.</p>
-
-<p>Once I had crept close to the wall, I knew I presented
-neither silhouette nor shade to any chance passer-by. I
-could feel my way at leisure, cautiously treading burdock
-and fireweed underfoot. I came to the low wooden fence,
-in which there was a gate for tradesmen, which was possibly
-unlocked; but I didn’t run the risk of a click. With
-my long legs a stride took me over into a small brick-paved
-court.</p>
-
-<p>I paused to reconnoiter. The obscurity here was so
-dense that only my architect’s instincts told me where the
-doors and windows would probably be. I located them
-by degrees. The doors I let alone. The windows I tried,
-first one and then another, but with no success. There
-was probably some simple fastening that I could have
-dealt with had I had a pocket-knife, but the one I had
-carried for years had long since been lying in a pawnshop.
-To reflect I sat down on the cover of a bin that was doubtless
-used for refuse.</p>
-
-<p>A footstep alarmed me. It was heavy, measured, slow.
-With the ease of a snake I was down on my belly, crawling
-toward cover. Cover offered itself in the form of the
-single shrub that the court contained—lilac or syringa—growing
-close against the kitchen wall. Lovey would have
-commended the silence and swiftness with which I slipped
-behind it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span></p>
-
-<p>The footstep receded, slow, measured, heavy. Coming
-to the conclusion that it was a policeman in the Avenue,
-I raised my head. I had no sense of queerness in my
-situation. It seemed as much a matter of course as if
-I had been doing the same sort of thing ever since I was
-born.</p>
-
-<p>There was apparently a providence in all this, for, looking
-up, I spied a window I had not seen before, because it
-was hidden by the shrub. This, if any, would have been
-neglected by the servants when they went to bed.</p>
-
-<p>With scarcely the stirring of a leaf I got on my feet
-again—and, lo! the miracle. The window was actually
-open. I had nothing to do but push it a few inches
-higher, drag myself up and wriggle in. I accomplished
-this without a sound that could be detected twenty feet
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Coming down on my hands and knees, I found myself
-amid the odor of eatables, chiefly that of fruit. I rested a
-minute to get my bearings, which I did by the sense of
-smell. I knew I must be in a sort of pantry. By putting
-out my hands carefully, so as to knock nothing over, I
-perceived that it was little more than a closet with shelves.
-A thrill of excitement passed through me from head to
-foot when my hand rested on an apple.</p>
-
-<p>I ate the apple there and then, kneeling upright, my
-toes bent under me. I ate another and another. Feeling
-cautiously, I discovered a tin box in which there were
-bread and cake. I ate of both. Getting softly on my
-feet, I groped for other things, which proved in the main
-to be no more than tea, coffee, spices, and starch. Then
-my fingers ran over a strawlike surface, and I knew I had
-hold of a demijohn.</p>
-
-<p>Smell told me that it contained sherry, and such knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-of housekeeping as I possessed suggested that it was
-cooking-sherry. I took a long swig of it. Two long
-swigs were enough. It burnt me, and yet it braced me.
-With the food I had eaten I felt literally like a giant
-refreshed with wine.</p>
-
-<p>It occurred to me that this was a point at which I
-might draw back. But the spell of the unknown was upon
-me, and I determined to go at least a little farther. Very,
-very stealthily I opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>I was not in a kitchen, as I expected to find myself,
-but in a servants’ dining-room. I got the dim outlines
-of chairs and what I took to be a dresser or a bookcase.
-Another open door led into a hall.</p>
-
-<p>My knowledge of the planning of houses aided me at
-each step I took. From the hallway I could place the
-kitchen, the laundry, and the back staircase. I knew the
-front hall lay beyond a door which was closed. At the
-foot of the back staircase I stood for some minutes and
-listened. Not a sound came from anywhere in the
-house. The kitchen clock ticked loudly, and presently
-startled me with a gurgle and a chuckle before it struck
-one. After this manifestation I had to wait till my heart
-stopped thumping and my nerves were quieted before
-venturing on the stairs. As the first step creaked, I kept
-close to the wall to get a firmer support for my tread.
-On reaching a landing I could see up into another hall.
-Here I perceived the glimmer or reflection of a light. It
-was a very dim or distant light—but it was a light.</p>
-
-<p>I stood on the landing and waited. If there were people
-moving about I should hear them soon. But all I did
-hear was the heavy breathing of the servants, who were
-sleeping on the topmost floor.</p>
-
-<p>Creeping a little farther up, I discovered that the light<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-was in a bedroom—the first to open from the front hall
-up-stairs. Between the front hall and the back hall the
-door was ajar. That would make things easier for me,
-and I dragged myself noiselessly to the top. I was now
-at the head of the first flight of back stairs, and looking
-into the master’s section of the house. Except for that
-one dim light the house was dark. It was not, however,
-so dark that my architect’s eye couldn’t make a mental
-map quite sufficient for my guidance.</p>
-
-<p>It was clearly a dwelling that had been added to, with
-some rambling characteristics. The first few feet of the
-front hall were on a level with the back hall, after which
-came a flight of three or four steps to a higher plane,
-which ran the rest of the depth of the building to the window
-over the front door. In the faint radiance through
-this window I could discern a high-boy, a bureau, and
-some chairs against the wall. I could see, too, that from
-this higher level one staircase ran down to the front door
-and another up to a third story. What was chiefly of
-moment to me was the fact that the bedroom with the
-light was lower than the rest of this part of the house,
-and somewhat cut off from it.</p>
-
-<p>With movements as quiet as a cat’s I got myself where
-I could peep into the bedroom where the lamp burned.
-It proved to be a small electric lamp with a rose-colored
-shade, standing beside a bed. It was a rose-colored
-room, evidently that of a young lady. But there was no
-young lady there. There was no one.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that surprises me as I record all this is that I
-was so extraordinarily cool. I was cooler in the act than
-I am in the memory of it. I walked into that bedroom
-as calmly as if it had been my own.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pretty room, with the usual notes of photographs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-bibelots, and flowered cretonne which young
-women like. The walls were in a light, cool green set off
-by a few colored reproductions of old Italian masters.
-Over the small white virginal bed was a copy of Fra
-Angelico’s “Annunciation.” Two windows, one of which
-was a bay, were shaded by loosely hanging rose-colored
-silk, and before the bay window the curtains were drawn.
-Diagonally across the corner of this window, but within
-the actual room, stood a simple white writing-desk, with
-a white dressing-table near it, but against the wall. On
-the table lay a gold-mesh purse, in which there was
-money. I slipped it into my pocket, with some satisfaction
-in securing the first fruits of my adventure.</p>
-
-<p>With such booty as this it again occurred to me to be
-on the safe side and to go back by the way I came. I
-was, in fact, looking round me to see if there was any
-other small valuable object I could lift before departing
-when I heard a door open in some distant part of the
-house—and voices.</p>
-
-<p>They were women’s voices, or, rather, as I speedily
-inferred, girls’ voices. By listening intently I drew the
-conclusion that two girls had come out of a room on the
-third floor and were coming down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>It was the minute to make off, and I tried to do so.
-I might have effected my escape had I not been checked
-by the figure of a man looming up suddenly before me.
-He sprang out of nowhere—a tall, slender man, in a dark-blue
-suit, with trousers baggy at the knees, and wearing
-an old golfing-cap. I jumped back from him in terror,
-only to find that it was my own reflection in the pier-glass.
-But the few seconds’ delay lost me my chance to get
-away.</p>
-
-<p>By the time I had tiptoed to the door the voices were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-on the same floor as myself. Two girls were advancing
-along the hall, evidently making their way to this chamber.
-My retreat being cut off, I looked wildly about
-for a place in which to hide myself. In the instants at
-my disposal I could discover nothing more remote than
-the bay window, screened by its loose rose-colored hangings.
-By the time the young ladies were on the threshold
-I was established there, with the silk sections pulled
-together and held tightly in my hand.</p>
-
-<p>The first words I heard were: “But it will seem so
-like a habit. Men will be afraid of you.”</p>
-
-<p>This voice was light, silvery, and staccato. That which
-replied had a deep mezzo quality, without being quite
-contralto.</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t be nearly so much afraid of me,” it said,
-fretfully, “as I am of them. I wish—I wish they’d let
-me alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, they won’t do that—not yet awhile; unless,
-as I say, they see you’re hopeless. Really, dear, when a
-girl breaks a third engagement—”</p>
-
-<p>“They must see that she wouldn’t do it if she didn’t
-have to. Here—this is the hook that always bothers me.”</p>
-
-<p>There were tears in the mezzo voice now, with a hint
-of exasperation that might have been due to the lover
-or the hook, I couldn’t be sure which.</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s what I don’t see—”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t see it because you don’t know Stephen—that
-is, you don’t know him well.”</p>
-
-<p>“But from what I do know of him—”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems very nice. Yes, of course! But, good
-Heavens! Elsie, I want a husband who’s something more
-than very nice!”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet that’s pretty good, as husbands go.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If I can’t reach a higher standard than as husbands
-go I sha’n’t marry any one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which seems to me what’s very likely to happen.”</p>
-
-<p>“So it seems to me.”</p>
-
-<p>The silence that followed was full of soft, swishing
-sounds, which I judged to come from the taking off of
-a dress and the putting on of some sort of negligée. From
-my experience of the habits of girls, as illustrated by my
-sisters and their friends, I supposed that they were lending
-each other services in the processes of undoing. The
-girl with the mezzo voice had gone up to Elsie’s room to
-undo her; Elsie had come down to render similar assistance.
-There is probably a psychological connection between
-this intimate act and confidence, since girls most
-truly bare their hearts to each other when they ought
-to be going to bed.</p>
-
-<p>The mezzo young lady was moving about the room
-when the conversation was taken up again.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand,” Elsie complained, “why you
-should have got engaged to Stephen in the first place.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t, either”—she was quite near me now, and
-threw something that might have been a brooch or a chain
-on the little white desk—“except on the ground that I
-wanted to try him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Try him? What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s an engagement? Isn’t it a kind of experiment?
-You get as near to marriage as you can,
-while still keeping free to draw back. To me it’s been
-like going down to the edge of the water in which you
-can commit suicide, and finding it so cold that you go
-home again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you ever mean to be married at all?” Elsie demanded,
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean to be married till I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Elsie burst out indignantly: “Regina Barry, that’s the
-most pusillanimous thing I ever heard. You might as
-well say you’d never cross the Atlantic unless you were
-sure the ship would reach the other side.”</p>
-
-<p>“My trouble about crossing the Atlantic is in making
-up my mind whether or not I want to go on board. One
-might be willing to risk the second step, but one can’t
-risk the first. Even the hymn that says ‘One step enough
-for me’ implies that at least you know what that’s to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that you balk at marriage in any case.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that I balk at marriage with any of the men
-I’ve been engaged to. I must say that; and I can’t say
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>During another brief silence I surmised that Regina
-Barry had seated herself before the dressing-table and was
-probably doing something to her hair. I wish I could
-say here that in my eavesdropping I experienced a sense
-of shame; but I can’t. Whatever creates a sense of
-shame had been warped in me. The moral transitions
-that had turned me into a burglar had been gradual but
-sure. With the gold-mesh purse in my pocket a burglar
-I had become, and I felt no more repugnance to the business
-than I did to that of the architect. Notwithstanding
-the natural masculine interest these young ladies stirred
-in me, I meant to wait till they had separated—gone to
-bed—and fallen asleep. Then I would slip out from my
-hiding-place, swipe the brooch or the chain that had been
-thrown on the desk, and go.</p>
-
-<p>“What was the matter with the first man?” Elsie began
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know whether it was the matter with him or
-with me. I didn’t trust him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I should say that was the matter with him. And the
-next man?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing. I simply couldn’t have lived with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what’s wrong with Stephen is that he’s no more
-than very nice. I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, you don’t see, dear! There’s a lot more to
-it than all that, only I can’t explain it.” I fancied that
-she wheeled round in her chair and faced her companion.
-“The long and short of it is that I’ve never met the
-man with whom I could keep house. I can fall in love
-with them for a while—I can have them going and coming—I
-can welcome them and say good-by to them—but
-when it’s a question of all welcome and no good-by—well,
-the man’s got to be different from any I’ve
-seen yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll end by not getting any one at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which, from my point of view, don’t you see, won’t
-be an unmixed evil. Having lived happily for twenty-three
-years without a husband, I don’t see why I should
-throw away a perfectly good bone for the most enticing
-shadow that ever was.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe you’re human.” Before there could
-be a retort to this Elsie went on to ask, “How did poor
-Stephen take it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he didn’t go into fits of laughter. He took it
-more or less lying down. If he hadn’t—”</p>
-
-<p>“If he hadn’t—what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. The least little bit of fight on his
-part—or even contempt—”</p>
-
-<p>As this sentence remained unfinished I could hear
-Elsie rise.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m off to bed,” she yawned. “What time do
-you have breakfast?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>There was some little discussion of household arrangements,
-after which they said their good nights.</p>
-
-<p>With Elsie’s departure I began for the first time to
-be uncomfortable. I can’t express myself otherwise than
-to say that as long as she was there I felt I had a chaperon.
-In spite of the fact that I had become a professional
-burglar the idea of being left alone with an innocent young
-lady in her bedroom filled me with dismay.</p>
-
-<p>I was almost on the point of making a bolt for it when
-I heard Elsie call out from the hallway: “Ugh! How dark
-and poky! For mercy’s sake, come up with me!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barry lingered at the dressing-table long enough
-to ask: “Wouldn’t you rather sleep in mother’s room?
-That communicates with this, with only a little passage
-in between. The bed is made up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no,” Elsie’s staccato came back. “I don’t mind
-being up there, and my things are spread out; only it
-seems so creepy to climb all those stairs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>She sprang up. I breathed freely. My sense of propriety
-was saved. The voices were receding along the
-front hall. Once the young ladies had begun to mount
-the stairs I would slip out by the back hall and get off.
-Relaxing my hold on the silk hangings I stepped out cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>My first thought was for the objects I had heard
-thrown down with a rattle on the writing-desk. They
-proved to be a string of small pearls, a diamond pin, and
-some rings of which I made no inspection before sweeping
-them all into my pocket.</p>
-
-<p>I was ready now to steal away, but, to my vexation,
-the incorrigible maidens had begun to talk love-affairs
-again at the foot of the staircase leading up to the third<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-floor. They had also turned on the hall light, so that
-my chances were diminished for getting away unseen.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing, however, that sooner or later they would
-have to go up the next flight, I stood by the writing-desk
-and waited. I was not nervous; I was not alarmed.
-As a matter of fact the success of my undertaking up to
-the present point, together with the action of food and
-wine, combined to make me excited and hilarious. I
-chuckled in advance over the mystification of Miss
-Regina Barry, who would find on returning to her room
-that her rings, her necklet, and her gold-mesh purse had
-melted into the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>In sheer recklessness I was now guilty of a bit of deviltry
-before which I would have hesitated had I had time to
-give it a second thought. On the desk there was a scrap
-of blank paper and a pen. Stooping, I printed in the neat
-block letters I had once been accustomed to inscribe
-below a plan:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>There are men different from those you have seen hitherto. Wait.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This I pinned to the pincushion on the dressing-table,
-beginning at once to creep toward the door, so as to seize
-the first opportunity of slipping down the back stairs.</p>
-
-<p>But again I was frustrated.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all right now,” I heard Elsie say, reassuringly.
-“Don’t come up. Go back and go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barry spoke as she returned along the hall toward
-her room: “The cook sleeps in the next room to you,
-so that if you’re afraid in the night you’ve only to hammer
-on the wall. But you needn’t be. This house is as safe
-as a prison.”</p>
-
-<p>I had barely time to get into the bay window again
-and pull the curtains to.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>Some five minutes followed, during which I heard the
-opening and shutting of drawers and closets and the swish
-and frou-frou of skirts. I began to curse my idiocy
-in fastening that silly bit of writing to the pincushion.
-My only hope lay in the possibility that she would go
-to bed and to sleep without seeing it.</p>
-
-<p>With hearing grown extraordinarily acute I could trace
-every movement she made about the room. Presently I
-knew she had come back to the dressing-table again.
-Pulling up a chair, she sat down before it, to finish, I suppose,
-the arranging of her hair.</p>
-
-<p>For a few seconds there was a silence, during which
-I could hear the thumping of my heart. Then came the
-faint rattling of paper. I knew when she read the thing
-by the slight catch in her breath. I expected more than
-that. I thought she would call out to her friend or
-otherwise give an alarm. If she went to a telephone to
-summon the police I decided to make a dash for it.
-Indeed, I meant to make a dash for it as it was, as soon
-as I knew her next move.</p>
-
-<p>But of all the next moves, the one she made was the
-one I had least counted on. With a sudden tug at the
-hangings she pulled them apart—and I was before her.</p>
-
-<p>I was before her and she was before me. It is this
-latter detail of which I have the most vivid recollection.
-In the matter of time all other recollections of the
-moment seem to come after that and to be subsidiary
-to it.</p>
-
-<p>My immediate impression was of two enormous, wonderful,
-burning eyes, full of amazement. Apart from the
-eyes I hardly saw anything. It was as if the light of a
-dark lantern had been suddenly turned on me and I was
-blinded by the blaze. I was blinded by the blaze and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-shriveled up in it. No words can do justice to my sudden
-sense of being a contemptible, loathsome reptile.</p>
-
-<p>“’Sh!” was the first sound that came from her. She
-raised her hand. “Don’t make a noise or you’ll frighten
-my friend. She’s nervous already.”</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively I pulled off my cap, stepping out of my
-hiding-place into the middle of the room. As I did so
-she recoiled, supporting herself by a hand on the writing-desk.
-Now that the discovery was made, I could see
-her grow pale, while the hand on the desk trembled.</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t be afraid,” I began to whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not afraid,” she whispered back; “but—but
-what are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you,” I returned, with shamefaced quietness.
-“I shall also show you that if you’ll let me go
-without giving an alarm you won’t be sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>Pulling all the things I had stolen out of my pocket,
-I showered them on the dressing-table.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>The smothered exclamation made it plain to me that
-she hadn’t missed the articles.</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask you to verify them?” I went on. “If
-you should find later that something had disappeared,
-I shouldn’t like you to think that I had carried it
-away.”</p>
-
-<p>She made a feint at examining the jewelry, but I could
-see that she was incapable of making anything like a
-count. It was I who insisted on going over the objects
-one by one.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s this,” I said, touching the gold-mesh purse,
-but not picking it up. “I see there’s money in it; but
-it has not been opened. Then there’s this,” I added,
-indicating the pearl necklet; “and this,” which was the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-brooch. “The rings,” I continued, “I don’t know anything
-about. There are three here. That’s all I remember
-seeing; but I didn’t notice in particular.”</p>
-
-<p>She said, in a breathless whisper, “That’s all there
-were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then may I ask if you mean to let me go?”</p>
-
-<p>“How can I stop you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, in two or three ways. You could call your servants,
-or you could ring up the police—”</p>
-
-<p>Her big, burning eyes were fixed on me hypnotically.
-The color began to come back to her cheeks, but she
-trembled still.</p>
-
-<p>“How—how did you get in?”</p>
-
-<p>I explained to her.</p>
-
-<p>“And the only thing I’ve taken,” I went on, “is the
-food I ate and the wine I drank; but if you knew how
-much I needed them—”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you hungry?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t eaten anything for two days, and very little
-for two days before that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’re not—you’re not one of those gentleman
-burglars who do this sort of thing out of bravado?”</p>
-
-<p>“As we see in novels or plays. I don’t think you’ll find
-many of them about. I’m a burglar,” I pursued, “or I—I
-meant to be one—but I’m not a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“You speak like a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unfortunately, a gentleman is not made by speech.
-A gentleman could never be in the predicament in which
-you’ve caught me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, you were a gentleman once.”</p>
-
-<p>“My father was a gentleman—and is.”</p>
-
-<p>“English?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather not tell you. Now that I’ve restored the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-things, if you’ll give me your word that I sha’n’t be
-molested I shall—”</p>
-
-<p>“You sha’n’t be molested, only—”</p>
-
-<p>As she hesitated I insisted, “Only what, may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p>Her manner was a mixture of embarrassment and pity.
-She had not hitherto taken her eyes from me since we
-had begun to speak. Now she let them wander away;
-or, rather, she let them shift away, to return to me swiftly,
-as if she couldn’t trust me without watching me. By
-this time she was trembling so violently, too, that she
-was obliged to grasp the back of a chair to steady herself.
-She was too little to be tall, and yet too tall to
-be considered little. The filmy thing she wore, with its
-long, loose sleeves, gave her some of the appearance
-of an angel, only that no angel ever had this bright,
-almost hectic color in the cheeks, and these scarlet
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it,” she asked, speaking, as we both did, in low
-tones, and rapidly—“was it because you—you had no
-money that you did this?”</p>
-
-<p>I smiled faintly. “That was it exactly; but now—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then won’t you let me give you some?”</p>
-
-<p>I still had enough of the man about me to straighten
-myself up and say: “Thanks, no. It’s very kind of you;
-but—but the reasons which make it impossible for me
-to—to steal it make it equally impossible for me to take
-it as a gift.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why—why was it impossible for you to steal it,
-when you had come here to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it was seeing the owner of it face to face.
-I’d sunk low enough to steal from some one I couldn’t
-visualize—but what’s the use? It’s mere hair-splitting.
-Just let me say that this is my first attempt, and it hasn’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-succeeded. I may do better next time if I can get up
-the nerve.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but there won’t be a next time.”</p>
-
-<p>“That we shall have to see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose”—the mixture of embarrassment and pity
-made it hard for her to speak—“suppose I said I was
-sorry for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t have to say it. I see it. It’s something
-I shall never forget as long as I live.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, since I’m sorry for you, won’t you let
-me—?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I interrupted, firmly. “I’m grateful for your
-pity; I’ll accept that; but I won’t take anything else.”
-I began moving toward the door. “Since you’re good
-enough to let me go, I had better be off; but I can’t do
-it without thanking you.”</p>
-
-<p>For the first time she smiled a little. Even in that dim
-light I could see it was what in normal conditions would
-be commonly called a generous smile, full, frank, and
-kindly. Just now it was little more than a quivering of
-the long scarlet lips. She glanced toward the little heap
-of things on the desk.</p>
-
-<p>“If it comes to that, I have to thank you.”</p>
-
-<p>I raised my hand deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>I had almost reached the threshold when her words
-made me turn.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know who I am?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I do,” was all I could reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, why shouldn’t you come back later—in
-some more usual manner—and let me see if there isn’t
-something I could do for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do for me in what way?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In the way of getting you work—or something.”</p>
-
-<p>My heart had leaped up for a minute, but now it fell.
-Why it should have done either I cannot say, since I
-could be nothing to her but a fool who had tried to be a
-thief, and couldn’t, as we say in our common idiom, get
-away with it.</p>
-
-<p>I thanked her again.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve done a great deal for me as it is,” I added.
-“I couldn’t ask for more.” Somewhat disconnectedly I
-continued, “I think you’re the pluckiest girl I ever saw
-not to have been afraid of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it wasn’t pluck. I saw at once that you wouldn’t
-do me any harm.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“In general. I was surprised. I was excited. In a
-way I was overcome. But I wasn’t afraid of you. If
-you’d been a tramp or a colored man or anything like
-that it would have been different. But one isn’t afraid
-of a—of a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m not a—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, a man who has a gentleman’s traditions.
-You’d better go now,” she whispered, suddenly. “If
-you want to come back as I’ve suggested—any time to-morrow
-forenoon—I’d speak to my father—”</p>
-
-<p>“Not about this?” I whispered, hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not about this. This had better be just between
-ourselves. I shall never say anything to any one about
-it, and I advise you to do the same.” I had made a low
-bow, preparatory to getting out, when she held up the
-scrap of paper she had crumpled in her hand. “Why
-did you write this?”</p>
-
-<p>But I got out of the room without giving a reply.</p>
-
-<p>I was descending the back stairs when I heard a door<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-open on the third floor and Elsie’s voice call out, “Regina,
-are you talking to anybody down there?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a tremor in the mezzo as it replied: “N-no.
-I’m just—I’m just moving about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, for Heaven’s sake go to bed! It’s after two
-o’clock. I never was in a house like this in all my life
-before. It seems to be full of people crawling round
-everywhere. I think I’ll come down to your mother’s
-bed, after all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do,” was the only word I heard as I stole into the
-servants’ dining-room, then into the closet with shelves,
-where I shut the door softly. A few seconds later I was
-out on the cool ground, in the dark, behind the shrub.</p>
-
-<p>I lay there almost breathlessly, not because I was
-unable to get up, but because I couldn’t drag myself away.
-I wanted to go over the happenings of the last hour and
-seal them in my memory. They were both terrible to
-me and beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>I had been there some fifteen minutes when I heard
-the open window above me closed gently and the fastening
-snapped. I knew that again she was near me, though,
-as before, she didn’t suspect my presence. I wondered
-if the chances of life would ever bring us so close to each
-other again.</p>
-
-<p>Above me, where the shrub detached itself a little
-from the wall of the house, I could see the stars. Lying
-on my back, with my head pillowed on the crook of my
-arm, I watched them till it seemed to me they began to
-pale. At the same time I caught a thinning in the texture
-of the darkness. I got up with the silence in which I had
-lain down. Crossing the brick-paved yard and striding
-over the low wall, I was again in the vacant lot.</p>
-
-<p>It was not yet dawn, but it was the dark-gray hour<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-which tells that dawn is coming. I was obliged to take
-more accurate precautions than before, as, crushing the
-tangle of nettle, burdock, fireweed, and blue succory, I
-crept along in the shadow of the house wall to regain the
-empty street.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER III</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The city was beginning to wake. Mysterious carts
-and wagons rumbled along the neighboring avenues.
-From a parallel street came the buzz and clang of a lonely
-early-morning electric car. Running footsteps would
-have startled one if they had not been followed by the
-clinking of peaceful milk-bottles in back yards. Clanking
-off into the distance one heard the tread of solitary
-pedestrians bent on errands that stirred the curiosity.
-Here and there the lurid flames of torches lit up companies
-of gnomelike men digging in the roadways.</p>
-
-<p>Going toward Greeley’s Slip, I skirted the Park, though
-it made the walk longer. Under the dark trees men were
-lying on benches and on the grass, but for reasons I
-couldn’t yet analyze I refused to thrust myself among
-them. A few hours earlier I would have done this without
-thinking, as without fear; but something had happened
-to me that now made any such course impossible.</p>
-
-<p>My immediate need was to get back to poor old Lovey
-and lie down by his side. That again was beyond my
-power to analyze. I suppose it was something like a
-homing instinct, and Lovey was all there was to welcome
-me.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that you, sonny?” he asked, sleepily, as I stooped
-to creep into the cubby-hole which a chance arrangement
-of planks made in a pile of lumber.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glad ye’ve come.”</p>
-
-<p>When I had stretched myself out I felt him snuggle a
-little nearer me.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mind, sonny, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey. It’s all right. Go to sleep again.”</p>
-
-<p>For myself, I could do nothing but lie and watch the
-coming of the dawn. I could see it beating itself into the
-darkness long before there was anything to which one
-could give the name of light. It was like a succession of
-great cosmic throbs, after each of which the veil was a
-little more translucent.</p>
-
-<p>In my nostrils was the sweet, penetrating smell of lumber,
-subtly laden with the memories of the days when I
-was a boy. The Canadian differs from the American
-largely, I think, in the closeness of his forest-and-farm
-associations. Not that the American hasn’t the farm and
-the forest, too, but he has moved farther away from them.
-The mill, the factory, and the office have supplanted them—in
-imagination when not in fact, and in fact when not
-in imagination. If the woods call him he has to go to
-them—for a week, or two, or three at a time; but he comes
-back inevitably to a life in which the woods play little
-part. The Canadian never leaves that life. The primeval
-still enters into his cities and his thoughts. Some day it
-may be different; but as yet he is the son of rivers, lakes,
-and forests. There is always in him a strain of the
-<i>voyageur</i>. The true Canadian never ceases to smell balsam
-or to hear the lapping of water on wild shores.</p>
-
-<p>It was balsam that I smelled now. The lapping of
-water soothed me as the river, too, began to wake. It
-woke with a faint noise of paddle-wheels, followed by a
-bellow like the call of some sea monster to its mate.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-Right below me and close to the slip I heard the measured
-dip of oars. Hoarse calls of men, from deck to deck or
-from deck to dock, had a weird, watchful sound, as though
-the darkness were peopled with Flying Dutchmen. Lights
-glided up and down the river—which itself remained unseen—mostly
-gold lights, but now and then a colored
-one. Chains of lights fringed the New Jersey shore,
-where, far away, sleepless factories threw up dim red
-flares. A rising southeast wind not only hid the stars
-under banks of clouds, but went whistling eerily round
-the corners of the lumber-piles. The scent of pine, and
-all the pungent, nameless odors of the riverside, began to
-be infused with the smell—if it is a smell—of coming rain.</p>
-
-<p>I can best describe myself as in a kind of trance in
-which past and present were merged into one, and in
-which there seemed to be no period when two wonderful,
-burning eyes had not been watching me in pity and amazement.
-As long as I lived I knew they would watch me
-still. In their light I got my life’s significance. In their
-light I saw myself as a boy again, with a boy’s vision of
-the future. The smell of lumber carried me back to our
-old summer home on the banks of the Ottawa, where I
-had had my dreams of what I should do when I was big.
-All boys being patriotic, they were dreams not merely
-of myself, but of my country. It worried me that it was
-not sufficiently on the great world map, that apart from
-its lakes and prairies and cataracts it had no wonders
-to show mankind. As we were a traveling family, I was
-accustomed to wonders in other countries, and easily
-annoyed when one set of cousins in New York and another
-in England took it for granted that we lived in an
-Ultima Thule of snow. I meant to show them the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span></p>
-
-<p>From the beginning my ardors and indignations translated
-themselves into stone. I had seen St. Peter’s in
-one country, St. Paul’s in another, and Chartres and
-châteaux in a third. I had seen New York transforming
-itself under my very eyes—the change began when I was
-in my teens—into a town of prodigious towers which in
-themselves were symbolical. Then I would go home to
-a red-gray city, marvelously placed between river and
-mountain, where any departure from its original French
-austerity was likely to be in the direction of the exuberant,
-the unchastened, the fantastic. All new buildings in
-Canada, as in most of the States, lacked “school.”</p>
-
-<p>“School” was, more or less in secret, the preoccupation
-of my youth—“school” with some such variation from
-traditional classic lines as would create or stimulate the
-indigenous. I had not yet learned what New York was
-to teach me later—that necessity was the mother of art,
-and that pure new styles were formed not by any one’s
-ingenuity or by the caprice of changing taste, but because
-human needs demanded them. Rejecting the art nouveau,
-which later made its permanent home in Germany,
-I combined all the lines in which great buildings had ever
-been designed, from the Doric to the Georgian, in the
-hope of evolving a type which the world would recognize
-as distinctively Canadian, and to which I should give
-my name. In imagination I built castles, cathedrals
-and theaters, homes, hotels and offices. They were
-in the style to be known as Melburyesque, and would
-draw students from all parts of the architectural earth
-to Montreal.</p>
-
-<p>It was not an unworthy dream, and even if I could
-never have worked it out I might have made of it something
-of which not wholly to be ashamed. But as early<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-as before I went to the Beaux Arts the curse of Canada—the
-curse, more or less, of all northern peoples—began
-to be laid upon me. In Paris I had some respite from it,
-but almost as soon as I had hung out my shingle at home
-I was suffering again from its cravings. I will not say
-that I put up no fight, but I put up no fight commensurate
-with the evil I had to face. The result was what
-I have told you, and for which I now had to suffer in my
-soul the most scorching form of recompense.</p>
-
-<p>The point I found it difficult to decide was as to whether
-or not I ever wanted to see Regina Barry again—or
-whether I had it in me to go back and show myself to her
-in the state from which I had fallen more than three years
-before. In the end it was that possibility alone which
-enabled me to endure the real coming of the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>For it came—this new day which out of darkness might
-be bringing me a new life.</p>
-
-<p>As I lay with my face turned toward the west I got
-none of its first glories. Even on a cloudy morning, with
-a spattering of rain, I knew there must be splendors in
-the east, if no more than gray and lusterless splendors.
-Light to a gray world is as magical as hope to a gray
-heart; and as I watched the lamps on the New Jersey
-heights grow wan, while the river unbared its bosom to
-the day, that thing came to me which makes disgrace
-and shame and humiliation and every other ingredient
-of remorse a remedy rather than a poison.</p>
-
-<p>I myself was hardly aware of the fact till Lovey and I
-had crept out of our cubby-hole, because all round us men
-were going to work. Sleepers in the open generally rise
-with daylight, but we had kept longer than usual to our
-refuge because we didn’t want to fare forth into the rain.
-As sooner or later it would come to a choice between<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-going out and being kicked out, we decided to move of
-our own accord.</p>
-
-<p>I must leave to your imagination the curious sensation
-of the down and out in having nothing to do but to get
-up, shake themselves, and walk away. On waking after
-each of these homeless nights it had seemed to me that
-the necessity for undressing to go to bed and dressing
-when one got up in the morning was the primary distinction
-between being a man and being a mere animal.
-Not to have to undress just to dress again reduced one
-to the level of the horse. Stray dogs got up and went
-off to their vague leisure just as Lovey and I were doing.
-Not to wash, not to go to breakfast, not to have a duty
-when washing and breakfasting were done—knocked out
-from under one all the props that civilization had built
-up and deprived one of the right to call oneself a man.</p>
-
-<p>I think it was this last consideration that had most
-weight with me as Lovey and I stood gazing at the multifarious
-activities of the scene. There were men in sight,
-busy with all kinds of occupations. They were like ants;
-they were like bees. They came and went and pulled
-and hauled and hammered and climbed and dug, and
-every man’s eyes seemed bent on his task as if it were
-the only one in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“It means two or three dollars a day to ’em if they
-ain’t,” Lovey grunted, when I had pointed this fact out
-to him. “Don’t suppose they’d work if they didn’t
-’ave to, do ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say they wouldn’t. But my point is that they
-do work. It’s Emerson who says that every man is as
-lazy as he dares to be, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, anybody could say that.”</p>
-
-<p>“And in spite of the fact that they’d rather be lazy,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-they’re all doing something. Look at them. Look at
-them in every direction to which your eyes can turn—droves
-of them, swarms of them, armies of them—every
-one bent on something into which he is putting a piece
-of himself!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they’ve got ’omes or boardin’-’ouses. It’s easy
-enough to git a job when ye can give an address. But
-when ye carn’t—”</p>
-
-<p>We were to test that within a minute or two. Fifteen
-or twenty brownies were digging in a ditch. Of all the
-forms of work in sight it seemed that which demanded the
-least in the way of special training.</p>
-
-<p>Approaching a fiercely mustachioed man of clearly defined
-nationality, I said, “Say, boss, could you give my
-buddy and me a job?”</p>
-
-<p>Rolling toward me a pair of eyes that would have done
-credit to a bandit in an opera, he emitted sounds which
-I can best transcribe as, “Where d’live?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the trouble,” I answered, truthfully. “We
-don’t live anywhere and we should like to.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked us over. “Beat it,” he commanded, nodding
-toward the central quarters of the city.</p>
-
-<p>“But, boss,” I pleaded, “my buddy and I haven’t got
-a quarter between us.”</p>
-
-<p>He pointed with his thumb over his left shoulder.
-“Getta out.”</p>
-
-<p>“We haven’t got a nickel,” I insisted; “we haven’t got
-a cent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cristoforo, ca’ da cop.”</p>
-
-<p>As Cristoforo sprang from the ditch to look for a policeman,
-Lovey and I shuffled off again into the rain.</p>
-
-<p>We stood for a minute at the edge of one of the long,
-sordid avenues where a sordid life was surging up and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-down. Men, women, and children of all races and nearly
-all ranks were hurrying to and fro, each bent on an errand.
-It was the fact that life provided an errand for each of
-them that suddenly struck me as the most wonderful
-thing in creation. There was no one so young or so old,
-no one so ignorant or so alien, that he was not going from
-point to point with a special purpose in view. Among the
-thousands and the tens of thousands who would in the
-course of the morning pass the spot on which we stood,
-there would probably not be one who hadn’t dressed,
-washed, and breakfasted as a return for his daily contribution
-to the common good. Never before and hardly
-ever since did I have such a sense of life’s infinite and
-useful complexity. There was no height to which it
-didn’t go up; there was no depth to which it didn’t go
-down. No one was left out but the absolute wastrel like
-myself, who couldn’t be taken in.</p>
-
-<p>Though it was not a cold day, the steadiness of the
-drizzle chilled me. The dampness of the pavements got
-through the worn soles of my boots, and I suppose it did
-the same with Lovey’s. The lack of food made the old
-man white, and that of drink set him to trembling. The
-fact that he hadn’t shaved for the past day or two gave
-his sodden face a grisly look that was truly appalling.
-Though the pale-blue eyes were extinct, as if the spirit
-in them had been quenched, they were turned toward me
-with the piteous appeal I had sometimes seen in those of
-a blind dog.</p>
-
-<p>It was for me to take the lead, and yet I couldn’t wholly
-see in what direction to take it. While I was pondering,
-Lovey made a variety of suggestions.</p>
-
-<p>“There doesn’t seem to be nothink for it, sonny, but
-to go and repent for a day or two. I ’ate to do it; kind<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-o’ deceivin’ like, it is; but they’ll let us dry ourselves and
-give us a feed if we ’ave a sense of sin.”</p>
-
-<p>I wondered if he had in mind anything better than
-what I had myself.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>He took the negative side first.</p>
-
-<p>“We couldn’t go to the Saviour, because I’ve put it
-over on ’em twice this year already. And the ’Omeless
-Men won’t do nothink for ye onless you make it up in
-menial work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t try either of them,” I said, briefly.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t blame you, sonny, not a bit. Kind o’ makes
-a hypercrite of a man, it does. I ’ate to be a hypercrite,
-only when I carn’t ’elp it.”</p>
-
-<p>He went on to enumerate other agencies for the raising
-of the fallen, of most of which he had tested the hospitality
-during the past few years. I rejected them as
-he named them, one by one. To this rejection Lovey
-subscribed with the unreasoning dislike all outcast men
-feel for the hand stretched down to them from higher up.
-Nothing but starvation would have forced him to any of
-these thresholds; and for me even starvation would not
-work the miracle.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with the Down and Out?” I sprang
-on him, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>He groaned. “Oh, sonny! It’s just—just what I was
-afeared of.”</p>
-
-<p>I turned and looked down into his poor, bleared, suffering
-old face.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because—because—oncet ye try that they’ll—they’ll
-never let ye go.”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose you don’t want them to let you go?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p>He backed away from me. If the dead eyes could
-waken to expression, they did it then.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sonny!” He shook as if palsied. “Ye don’t
-know ’em, my boy. I’ve summered and wintered ’em—by
-lookin’ on. I’ve had pals of my own—”</p>
-
-<p>“And what are they doing now, those pals of your
-own?”</p>
-
-<p>“God knows; I don’t. Yes, I do; some of ’em. I see
-’em round, goin’ to work as reg’lar as reg’lar, and no
-more spunk in ’em than in a goldfish when ye shakes yer
-finger at their bowl.”</p>
-
-<p>Afraid of exciting suspicion by standing still, we began
-drifting with the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there much that you can call spunk in you and me?”</p>
-
-<p>Again he lifted those piteous, drunken eyes. “We’re
-fellas together, ain’t we? We’re buddies. I ’ear ye say
-so yerself when you was speakin’ to that Eyetalian.”</p>
-
-<p>I have to confess that with his inflection something
-warm crept into my cold heart. You have to be as I
-was to know what the merest crumbs of trust and affection
-mean. A dog as stray and homeless as myself might
-have been more to me; but since I had no dog....</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey,” I answered, “we’re buddies, all right.
-But for that very reason don’t you think we ought to try
-to help each other up?”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, to turn to me with hands crossed on his
-breast in a spirit of petition.</p>
-
-<p>“But, sonny, you don’t mean—you carn’t mean—on—on
-the wagon?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean on anything that’ll get us out of this hell of
-a hole.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, if it’s only that, I’ve—I’ve been in tighter
-places than this before—and—and look at me now.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-There’s ways. Ye don’t have to jump at nothink onnat’rel.
-If ye’d only ’ave listened to me yesterday—but
-it ain’t too late even now. What about to-night? Just
-two old ladies—no violence—nothink that’d let you in
-for nothink dishonorable.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>We drifted on again. He spoke in a tone of bitter
-reproach.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’d rather go to the Down and Out! It’ll be the
-down, all right, sonny; but there’ll be no out to it. Ye’ll
-be a prisoner. They’ll keep at ye and at ye till yer soul
-won’t be yer own. Now all these other places ye can put
-it over on ’em. They’re mostly ladies and parsons and
-greenhorns that never ’ad no experience. A little repentance
-and they’ll fall for it every time. Besides”—he
-turned to me with another form of appeal—“ye’re a
-Christian, ain’t ye? A little repentance now and then’ll
-do ye good. It’s like something laid by for a rainy day.
-I’ve tried it, so I know. Ye’re young, sonny. Ye don’t
-understand. And when it’ll tide ye over a time like
-this—they’ll git ye a job, very likely—and ye can backslide
-by and by when it’s safe. Why, it’s all as easy as
-easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t as easy as easy, Lovey, because you say you
-don’t like it yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I like it better than the Down and Out, where they
-won’t let ye backslide no more. Why, I was in at Stinson’s
-one day and there was a chap there—Rollins was his
-name, a plumber—just enj’yin’ of himself like—nothink
-wrong—and come to find out he’d been one of their men.
-Well, what do ye think, sonny? A fellow named Pyncheon
-blew in—awful ’ard drinker for a young ’and, he used to
-be—and he sat down beside Rollins and pled with ’im<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-and plod with ’im, and—well, ye don’t see Rollins round
-Stinson’s no more. I tell ye, sonny, ye carn’t put nothing
-over on ’em. They knows all the tricks and all the
-trade. Give me kind-’earted ladies; give me ministers
-of the gospel; give me the stool o’ repentance two or three
-times a month; but don’t give me fellas that because
-they’ve knocked off the booze theirselves wants every one
-else to knock it off, too, and don’t let it be a free country.”</p>
-
-<p>We came to the corner to which I had been directing
-our seemingly aimless steps. It was a corner where the
-big red and green jars that had once been the symbols
-for medicines within now stood as a sign for soda-water
-and ice-cream.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s go in here.”</p>
-
-<p>Lovey hung back. “What’s the use of that? That
-ain’t no saloon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on and let us try.”</p>
-
-<p>Pushing open the screen door, I made him pass in before
-me. We found ourselves in front of a white counter
-fitted up like a kind of bar. As a bar of any sort was
-better than none, Lovey’s face took on a leaden shade
-of brightness.</p>
-
-<p>In the way of a guardian all we could see at first was
-a white-coated back bent behind the counter. When it
-straightened up it was topped by a friendly, boyish face.</p>
-
-<p>Lovey leaped back, pulling me by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s that very young Pyncheon I was a-tellin’ you
-of,” he whispered, tragically; “him what got Rollins, the
-plumber, out of Stinson’s. Let’s ’ook it, sonny! He
-won’t do us no good.”</p>
-
-<p>But the boyish face had already begun to beam.</p>
-
-<p>“Hel-lo, old sport! Haven’t seen you in a pair of blue
-moons. Put it there!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<p>The welcome was the more disconcerting because in the
-mirror behind Pyncheon I could see myself in contrast to
-his clean, young, manly figure. I have said I was shabby
-without being hideously so, but that was before I had
-slept a fourth night on the bare boards of a lumber-yard,
-to be drenched with rain in the morning. It was also
-before I had gone a fourth morning without shaving, and
-with nothing more thorough in the way of a wash than
-I could steal in a station lavatory. The want of food,
-the want of drink, to say nothing of the unspeakable anguish
-within, had stamped me, moreover, with something
-woebegone and spectral which, now that I saw it reflected
-in the daylight, shook me to the soul.</p>
-
-<p>I never was so timid, apologetic, or shamefaced in my
-life as when I grasped the friendly hand stretched out to
-me across the counter. I had no smile to return to Pyncheon’s.
-I had no courtesies to exchange. Not till that
-minute had I realized that I was outside the system of
-fellowship and manhood, and that even a handshake was
-a condescension.</p>
-
-<p>“Pyn,” I faltered, hoarsely, “I want you to take me to
-the Down and Out. Will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I will!” He glanced at Lovey. “And I’ll take
-old Lovikins, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you be so fresh with your names, young man!”
-Lovey spoke up, tartly. “’Tain’t the first time I’ve seen
-you—”</p>
-
-<p>“And I hope it won’t be the last,” Pyn laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll depend on how polite ye’re able to make yerself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you can count me in on politeness, old sport, so
-long as you come to the Down and Out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go to the Down and Out when I see fit. I ain’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-goin’ to be dragged there by the ’air of the ’ead, as I see
-you drag poor Rollins, the plumber, a month or two
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quit your kiddin’, Lovey. How am I going to drag
-you by the ’air of the ’ead when you’re as bald as a door-knob?
-Say, you fellows,” he went on, pulling one of the
-levers before him, “I’m going to start you off right now
-with a glass of this hot chocolate. The treat’s on me.
-By the time you’ve swallowed it Milligan will be here,
-and I can get off long enough to take you over to Vandiver
-Street.” He dashed in a blob of whipped cream. “Here,
-old son, this is for you; and there’s more where it came
-from.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t come in ’ere for nothink of the kind,” Lovey
-protested. “I didn’t know we was comin’ in ’ere at all.
-You take it, sonny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead, Lovikins,” Mr. Pyncheon insisted. “’E’s
-to ’ave a bigger one,” he mimicked. “Awful good for
-the ’air of the ’ead. ’Ll make it sprout like an apple-tree—I
-beg your pardon, happle-tree—in May.”</p>
-
-<p>Before Pyncheon had finished, the primitive in poor
-Lovey had overcome both pride and reluctance, and the
-glass of chocolate was pretty well drained. The sight of
-his sheer animal avidity warned me not to betray myself.
-While Pyncheon explained to Milligan and made his preparations
-for conducting us, I carried my chocolate to the
-less important part of the shop, given up to the sale of
-tooth-brushes and patent medicines, to consume it at ease
-and with dignity.</p>
-
-<p>Pyncheon having changed to a coat, in the buttonhole
-of which I noticed a little silver star, and a straw hat
-with a faint silver line in the hatband, we were ready to
-depart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go with ye, sonny,” Lovey explained; “but I
-ain’t a-goin’ to stay. No Down and Out for mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t leave me, Lovey?” I begged, as I replaced
-the empty glass on the counter. “I’m looking to
-you to help me to keep straight.”</p>
-
-<p>He edged up to me, laying a shaking hand on my arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if it’s that— But,” he added more cheerfully,
-“we don’t have to stay no longer than we don’t want
-to. There’s no law by which they can keep us ag’in’
-our will, there ain’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey. If we want to go we’ll go—but we’re
-buddies, aren’t we? And we’ll stick by each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, you fellows! Quick march! I’ve only got half
-an hour to get there and back.”</p>
-
-<p>Out in the street, Lovey and I hung behind our guide.
-He was too brisk and smart and clean for us to keep step
-with. Alone we could, as we phrased it, get by. With
-him the contrast called attention to the fact that we
-were broken and homeless men.</p>
-
-<p>“You go ahead, Pyn—” I began.</p>
-
-<p>“Aw, cut that out!” he returned, scornfully. “Wasn’t
-I a worse looker than you, two and a half years ago?
-Old Colonel Straight picked me up from a bench in Madison
-Square—the very bench from which he’d been picked
-up himself—and dragged me down to Vandiver Street
-like a nurse’ll drag a boy that kicks like blazes every
-step of the way.”</p>
-
-<p>As we were now walking three abreast, with Pyn in the
-middle, I asked the question that was most on my mind:</p>
-
-<p>“Was it hard, Pyn—cutting the booze out?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure it was hard! What do you think? You’re not
-on the way to a picnic. For the first two weeks I fought
-like hell. If the other guys hadn’t sat on my head—well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-you and old Lovey wouldn’t have had no glass of hot
-chocolate this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose the first two weeks are the worst.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the best. If you’re really out to put the job
-through you find yourself toughening to it every day.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you mean by being out to put the job through?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wanting to get the durned thing under you so as you
-can stand on it and stamp it down. Booze’ll make two
-kinds of repenters, and I guess you guys stand for both.
-Old Lovey here”—he pinched my companion’s arm—“he’ll
-forsake his bad habits just long enough to get well
-fed up, a clean shirt on his back, and his nerves a bit
-quieted down. But he’ll always be looking forward to the
-day when he’ll be tempted again, and thinking of the good
-time he’ll have when he falls.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’ll mind yer own business, young Pyn—”
-Lovey began, irritably.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there’s another kind,” this experienced reformer
-went on, imperturbably, “what’ll have a reason for cutting
-the blasted thing out, like he’d cut out a cancer or
-anything else that’ll kill him. I’ve always known you
-was that kind, Slim, and I told you so nearly a year
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“I seen ye,” Lovey put in. “Was speakin’ about it
-only yesterday. Knew you was after no good. I warned
-ye, didn’t I, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>Curiosity prompted me to say, “What made you think
-I had a motive for getting over it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks. You can always tell what a man’s made for
-by the kind of looker he is. As a looker you’re some
-swell. Lovikins here, now—”</p>
-
-<p>“If I can’t do as well as the likes o’ you, ye poor little
-snipe of a bartender for babies—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What’ll you bet you can’t?” Pyn asked, good-naturedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t a bettin’ man, but I can show!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you show, and I’ll lay fifty cents against you.
-You’ll be umpire, Slim, and hold the stakes. Is that a
-go?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t ’ave no truck o’ that kind,” Lovey declared,
-loftily. “I’m a doer, I am—when I get a-goin’. I don’t
-brag beforehand—not like some.”</p>
-
-<p>I was still curious, however, about myself.</p>
-
-<p>“And what did you make out of my looks, Pyn?”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped, stood off, and eyed me.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what you’re like now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know I’m not like anything human.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re like a twenty-dollar bill that’s been in every
-pawnshop, and every bar, and every old woman’s stocking,
-and every old bum’s pocket, and is covered with dirt and
-grease and microbes till you wouldn’t hardly hold it in
-your hand; but it’s still a twenty-dollar bill—that’ll buy
-twenty dollars’ worth every time—and whenever you like
-you can get gold for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Pyn,” I returned, humbly, as we went on
-our way again. “That’s the whitest thing that has ever
-been said to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Before we reached Vandiver Street, Pyn had given us
-two bits of information, both of which I was glad to
-receive.</p>
-
-<p>One was entirely personal, being a brief survey of his
-fall and rise. The son of a barber in one of the small
-towns near New York, he had gone to work with a druggist
-on leaving the high school. His type, as he described
-it, had been from the beginning that of the cheap sport.
-Cheap sports had been his companions, and before he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-was twenty-one he had married a pretty manicure girl
-from his father’s establishment. He had married her
-while on a spree, and after the spree had repented. Repenting
-chiefly because he wasn’t earning enough to keep
-a wife, he threw the blame for his mistake on her. When
-a baby came he was annoyed; when a second baby came
-he was desperate; when a third baby promised to appear
-he was overwhelmed. Since the expenses of being a cheap
-sport couldn’t be reduced, he saw no resource but flight
-to New York, leaving his wife to fend for herself and her
-children.</p>
-
-<p>Folly having made of him a hard drinker, remorse made
-of him a harder one. And since no young fellow of twenty-four
-is callous enough to take wife-desertion with an easy
-conscience, my own first talks with him had been filled
-with maudlin references to a kind of guilt I hadn’t at the
-time understood. All I knew was that from bad he had
-gone to worse, and from worse he was on the way to the
-worst of all, when old Colonel Straight rescued him.</p>
-
-<p>The tale of that rescue unfolded some of the history of
-the Down and Out. As to that, Pyn laid the emphasis
-on the fact that the club was not a mission—that is, it
-was not the effort of the safe to help those who are in
-danger; it was the effort of those who are in danger to
-help themselves. Built up on unassisted effort, it was self-respecting.
-No bribes had ever been offered it, and no
-persuasions but such as a man who has got out of hell
-can bring to bear on another who is still frying in the fire.
-Its action being not from the top downward, but from the
-bottom upward, it had a native impulse to expansion.</p>
-
-<p>Its inception had been an accident. Two men who
-had first met as Pyncheon and I had first met had lost
-sight of each other for several years. At a time when each<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-had worked his salvation out they had come together by
-accident on Broadway, and later had by another accident
-become responsible for a third. Finding him one night
-lying on the pavement of a lonely street, they had seemingly
-had no choice but to pick him up and carry him to
-a cheap but friendly hostelry which they knew would not
-refuse him. Here they had kept him till he had sobered
-up and taken the job they found for him. Watching over
-him for months, they finally had the pleasure of restoring
-him to his wife and seeing a broken home put on its feet
-again. This third man, in gratitude for what had been
-done for him, went after a fourth, and the fourth after a
-fifth, and so the chain was flung out. By the time their
-number had increased to some twenty-five or thirty
-Providence offered them a dwelling-place.</p>
-
-<p>The dwelling-place, with the few apparently worthless
-articles it contained, was all the club had ever accepted
-as a gift. Even that might have been declined had it
-not been for the fact that it was going begging. When old
-Miss Smedley died it was found that she had left her
-residence in Vandiver Place as a legacy to St. David’s
-Church, across the way. She had left it, however, as an
-empty residence. As an empty residence it was in a measure
-a white elephant on the hands of a legatee that had
-no immediate use for it.</p>
-
-<p>St. David’s Church, you will remember, was not now
-the fashionable house of prayer it had been in its early
-days. Time was when Vandiver Place was the heart of
-exclusive New York. In the ’forties and ’fifties no section
-of the city had been more select. In the ’sixties and
-’seventies, when Doctor Grace was rector of St. David’s,
-it had become time-honored. In the ’eighties and ’nineties
-the old families began to move up-town and the boarding-houses<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-to creep in; and in the early years of the twentieth
-century the residents ceded the ground entirely to the
-manufacturer of artificial flowers and the tailor of the
-ready-to-wear. In 1911 the line of houses that made it
-a cul-de-sac was torn down and a broad thoroughfare cut
-through a congeries of slums, the whole being named
-Vandiver Street. Vandiver Place was gone; and with it
-went Miss Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>Rufus Legrand, who succeeded Doctor Grace as rector
-of St. David’s, offered Miss Smedley’s house as a home
-for the Down and Out; but it was Beady Lamont, a
-husky furniture-mover and ardent member of the club,
-who suggested this philanthropic opportunity to Rufus
-Legrand.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, reverent, my buddy’s give in at last, on’y I
-haven’t got no place to put him. But, say, reverent,
-there’s that old house I helped to move the sticks out of
-two or three months ago. There’s three beds left in it,
-and a couple of chairs. Me and him could bunk there for
-a few nights, while he got straightened out, and—”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’d have no bedclothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, reverent, we don’t want no bedclothes. Sleepin’
-in the Park’ll learn you how to do without sheets.”</p>
-
-<p>“My daughter, Mrs. Ralph Coningsby, could undoubtedly
-supply you with some.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, reverent, that ain’t our way. We don’t pass the
-buck on no one. What we haven’t got we do without
-till we can pay for it ourselves. But that old house ain’t
-doin’ nothing but sit on its haunches; and if I could just
-get Tiger into the next bed to mine at night—we don’t
-want no bedclothes nor nothing but what we lay down
-in—and take him along with me when I go to work by
-day, so as to keep my search-lights on him, like—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p>Rufus Legrand had already sufficiently weighed the
-proposal.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I don’t see why you shouldn’t sleep in the
-old place as long as you like, Beady, if you can only
-make yourselves comfortable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, reverent, now you’re shouting.”</p>
-
-<p>So another accident settled the fate of Miss Smedley’s
-lifelong home; and before many weeks the Down and
-Out was in full possession.</p>
-
-<p>It was in full possession of the house with the refuse
-the heirs had not considered good enough to take away—three
-iron bedsteads that the servants had used; an equal
-number of humble worn-out mattresses; two tolerably
-solid wooden chairs, three that needed repairs, which
-were speedily given them; some crockery more or less
-chipped and cracked; and a stained steel-engraving of
-Franklin in the <i>salon</i> of Marie Antoinette.</p>
-
-<p>True to its principles, the club accepted neither gifts
-of money nor contributions in kind. Its members were
-all graduates of the school of doing without. To those who
-came there a roof over the head was a luxury, while to
-have a friend to stand by them and care whether they
-went to the devil or not was little short of a miracle.</p>
-
-<p>But by the time Billy Pyncheon had been brought in
-by old Colonel Straight, gratitude, sacrifice, and enthusiasm
-on the part of one or another of the members had
-adequately fitted up this house to which Lovey and I
-were on the way. It had become, too, the one institution
-of which the saloon-keepers of my acquaintance were
-afraid. We were all afraid of it. It had worked so many
-wonders among our pals that we had come to look on it
-as a home of the necromantic. Missions of any kind we
-knew how to cope with; but in the Down and Out there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-was a sort of wizardry that tamed the wildest hearts
-among us, cast out devils, and raised the nearly dead.
-I myself for a year or more—ever since I had seen the
-spell it had wrought on Pyn, for whom from the first
-I had felt a sympathy—had been haunted by the dread
-of it; and here I was at the door.</p>
-
-<p>The door when we got to it was something of a disappointment.
-It was at the head of a flight of old-time
-brownstone steps, and was just like any other door.
-About it was nothing of the magical or cabalistic Lovey
-and I had been half expecting.</p>
-
-<p>More impressive was the neat little man who opened
-to our ring. He was a wan, wistful, smiling little figure
-of sixty-odd, on whom all the ends of the world seemed
-to have come. He was like a man who has been dead
-and buried and has come to life again—but who shows
-he has been dead. If I had to look like that....</p>
-
-<p>But I took comfort in the thought of Pyn. Pyn showed
-nothing. He was like one of the three holy men who
-went through Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace—the smell of
-fire had not passed on him. A heartier, healthier, merrier
-fellow it would have been difficult to find.</p>
-
-<p>He entered now with the air of authority which belongs
-to the member of a club.</p>
-
-<p>“Fellows had their breakfast, Spender?”</p>
-
-<p>Spender was all welcome, of the wistful, yearning kind.</p>
-
-<p>“The men at work is gone; but the guys under restraint
-is still at table.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Christian not here yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never gets here before nine; and it’s not half past
-seven yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Pyn turned to me. “Say, do you want to go in and
-feed, or will you wash up first, or go to bed, or what?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<p>With this large liberty of choice I asked if we could do
-whatever we liked. It was Spender who explained.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the rule for new arrivals, unless they’ve got
-to be put under restraint at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to be put under no restraint,” Lovey
-declared, indignantly.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll be all right,” Spender replied, kindly, “unless
-there’s vermin—”</p>
-
-<p>Lovey jumped.</p>
-
-<p>“See here, now! Don’t you begin no such immodest
-talk to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, there, Lovikins,” Pyn broke in. “Spender
-don’t mean no harm. All sorts have to come to a place
-like this. But when we see a gentleman we treat him like
-a gentleman. All Spender wants to know is this, Is it
-eats for you first, or a bath?”</p>
-
-<p>“And I don’t want no bath,” Lovey declared, proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“Then it’ll be eats. Quick march! I’ve got to beat
-it back to my job.”</p>
-
-<p>Pyn’s introduction of us to those already in the dining-room
-was simple.</p>
-
-<p>“This is Lovey. This is Slim. You guys’ll make ’em
-feel at home.”</p>
-
-<p>Making us feel at home consisted in moving along the
-table so as to give us room. In words there was no response
-to Pyn, who withdrew at once, nor was there more
-than a cursory inspection of us with the eyes. Whatever
-was kindly was in the atmosphere, and that was perceptible.</p>
-
-<p>As we sat before two empty places, one of our new
-companions rose, went to the dresser behind us, and
-brought us each a plate, a spoon, a knife, and a cup and
-saucer. A big man went to the kitchen door and in a
-voice like thunder called out, “Mouse!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p>By the time he had returned to his place a stumpy
-individual with a big red mustache and a limp appeared
-on the threshold. An explanation of the summons was
-given him when a third of our friends pointed at us with a
-spoonful of oatmeal porridge before he put it in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Mouse withdrew into the kitchen, coming back with
-two basins of porridge, which he placed, steaming hot,
-before us. Presently, too, he filled our cups with coffee.
-Bread and butter, sugar and milk, were all on the table.
-The meal went on in silence, except for the smacking of
-lips and the clinking of spoons on the crockeryware.</p>
-
-<p>Of our fellow-guests I can only say that they presented
-different phases of the forlorn. The man next to me was
-sallow, hatchet-faced, narrow-breasted, weak of physique,
-and looked as if he might have been a tailor. His hair
-was a shock of unkempt black curls, and his dark eyes
-the largest and longest and most luminous I ever saw
-in a man. In their nervous glance they made me think
-of a horse’s eyes, especially when he rolled them toward
-me timidly.</p>
-
-<p>Opposite was a sandy, freckled-face type, whom I
-easily diagnosed as a Scotchman. Light hair, light eyebrows,
-and a heavy reddish mustache set off a face scored
-with a few deep wrinkles, and savage like that of a beast
-fretted with a sense of helplessness. The shaking hand
-that passed the bread to me was muscular, freckled, and
-covered with coarse, reddish hairs. I put him down as
-a gardener.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the table was a huge, unwieldy fellow
-who looked as if he had all run to fat, but who, as I afterward
-learned, was a mass of muscle and sinew, like a
-Japanese wrestler. He had bloated cheeks and bloated
-hands, and a voice so big and bass that when he spoke,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-as he did on going to the door to summon Mouse, he almost
-shook the dishes on the dresser. He proved to be,
-too, a pal of Beady Lamont’s, and as a piano-mover by
-profession he frequented Beady’s spheres.</p>
-
-<p>At the big man’s right was a poor little whippersnapper,
-not more than five foot two, who looked as if a puff would
-blow him away; and opposite him a tall, spare, fine-looking
-Irishman, a hospital attendant, whose face would
-have been full of humor had it not been convulsed for
-the time being with a sense of mortal anguish. It was
-he who had brought us our dishes and took pains to see
-that our needs were supplied.</p>
-
-<p>No more than any of the others were we eager for conversation.
-The fact that we were having good warm
-food served in a more or less regular way was enough
-to occupy all that was uppermost in our thoughts. Poor
-Lovey ate as he had drunk the chocolate half an hour
-before, with a greed that was almost terrible. Once
-more I might have done the same had I not taken his
-example as a warning. Not that anything I did would
-have attracted attention in that particular gathering.
-Each man’s gaze was turned inward. His soul’s tragedy
-absorbed him to the exclusion of everything else. Reaction
-from the stupor of excess brought nothing but a
-sense of woe. There was woe on all faces. There would
-have been woe in all thoughts if conscious thought had
-not been outside the range of these drugged and stultified
-faculties.</p>
-
-<p>What was more active than anything else was a blind
-fellow-feeling. They did little things for one another.
-They did little watchful things for Lovey and me. They
-even quarreled over their kindnesses like children eager
-to make themselves useful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You’ll want to know where the barth-room is,” the
-timid tailor said to me as we rose from the table. “I’ll
-show you.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a snarl from the whippersnapper across the
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“Aw, put your lid on, Headlights. How long have
-you been showin’ barth-rooms in this here shebang?”
-He beckoned to me. “You come along o’ me, Slim—”</p>
-
-<p>It was the Irishman who intervened to keep the peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to Daisy now, will you? He’s like a fox-terrier
-that owns the house and grounds and barks at
-every wan who goes by. Look now, Daisy! You take
-this ould gent up to the bath-room on the top floor; and
-you, Headlights, show Slim to the one on the second floor,
-and every wan o’ you’ll have a bite at the cake.”</p>
-
-<p>With this peaceable division of the honors we started
-off.</p>
-
-<p>I must describe the club as very humble. The rooms
-themselves, as was natural with an old New York residence,
-did not lack dignity. Though too narrow for their
-height, they had admirable cornices and some exquisite
-ceiling medallions. It is probable, too, that in days when
-there were no skyscrapers in the neighborhood the house
-was light enough, but now it wore a general air of dimness.
-The furnishings were just what you might have
-expected from the efforts of very poor men in giving of
-their small superfluity. There were plenty of plain
-wooden chairs, and a sufficiency of tables to match them.
-In the two down-stairs sitting-rooms, which must once
-have been Miss Smedley’s front and back drawing-rooms,
-there were benches against the wall. A roll-top desk,
-which I learned was the official seat of Mr. Christian, was
-so placed as to catch the light from Vandiver Street. A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-plain, black, wooden cross between the two front windows,
-and Franklin in the <i>salon</i> of Marie Antoinette in
-the place of honor over a fine old white marble mantelpiece,
-completed the two reception-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>The floor above was given over to the dormitories
-for outsiders, and contained little more than beds. They
-were small iron beds, made up without counterpanes. As
-every man made his own, the result would not have
-passed the inspection of a high-class chambermaid, but
-they satisfied those who lay down in them. Since outsiders
-came in, like Lovey and me, with little or nothing
-in the way of belongings, it was unnecessary to make
-further provision for their wardrobes than could be found
-in the existing closets and shelves. In the front bedroom,
-which I suppose must have been Miss Smedley’s, there
-were nine small beds; in the room back of that there were
-seven; and in a small room over the kitchen, given up
-to the men positively under restraint, there were five.
-Twenty-one outsiders could thus be cared for at a time.</p>
-
-<p>On the third floor were the dormitories for club members—men
-who had kept sober for three months and more,
-and who wore a star of a color denoting the variety of
-their achievements. On this floor, too, was a billiard,
-card, and smoking room, accessible to any one, even to
-outsiders, who had kept sober for three weeks. On the
-top floor of all were a few bedrooms, formerly those of
-Miss Smedley’s servants, reserved for the occasional occupancy
-of such grandees as had preserved their integrity
-for three years and more; and here, too, was the sacred
-place known as “the lounge,” to which none were admitted
-who didn’t wear the gold or silver star representing
-sobriety for at least a year.</p>
-
-<p>The whole was, therefore, a carefully arranged hierarchy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-in which one mounted according to one’s merit.
-Little Spender wore the gold star, indicating a five years’
-fight with the devil; and Mouse, the cook, a blue one,
-which meant that he had been victorious for three months.
-All others in the club when Lovey and I arrived were
-outsiders like ourselves. Outsiders gave their word to
-stay a week, generally for the purpose of sobering up, but
-beyond that nothing was asked of them. At the beginning
-of the second week they could either continue their
-novitiate or go.</p>
-
-<p>This information was given me by Spender as we stood
-on the threshold of the bath-room before I passed in.
-When the tale was ended, however, the Scotchman, who
-had taken little or no part in our reception, pushed by
-me and entered.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be wanting a shave,” he said, in explanation of
-his rudeness. “There are my things”—he got down on
-all-fours to show me a safety razor and a broken cup
-containing a brush and shaving-soap, hidden behind one
-of the legs of the bath-tub—“and you’ll oblige me by putting
-them back. Daisy, the wee bye you saw at the
-table, is doing the same by your chum. I make no doubt
-your own things have been held in your last rooming-house.”</p>
-
-<p>When I had admitted that this was exactly the case
-and had thanked my friends for their courtesies, they
-withdrew, leaving me to my toilet.</p>
-
-<p>After the good meal the bath was a genuine luxury.
-It was a decent bath-room, kept by the men, as all the
-house was kept, in a kind of dingy cleanliness. Cleanliness,
-I found, was not only a principle of the club; it
-was one of the first indications that those who came in
-for shelter gave of a survival of self-respect. Some of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-their efforts in that way were amusing or pathetic, as the
-case might be, but they were always human and touching.</p>
-
-<p>While shaving I had an inspiration that was to have
-some effect on what happened to me afterward. I decided
-to let my mustache grow. As it grew strongly in
-any case, a four days’ absence of the razor had given my
-upper lip a deep walnut tinge, and, should I leave the
-club after the week to which I had tacitly pledged myself
-by coming there at all, I should look different from
-when I entered. To look different was the first of the
-obscure and violent longings of which my heart was full.
-It would be the nearest possible thing to getting away from
-my old self. Not to be the same man at all as the one
-who had exchanged those few strange sentences with
-Regina Barry seemed to be the goal toward which I was
-willing to struggle at any cost of sacrifice.</p>
-
-<p>Having bathed and shaved, I was not an ill-looking
-fellow till it came to putting on my shirt again. Any
-man who has worn a shirt for forty-eight hours in a city
-or on a train knows what a horror it becomes in the exposed
-spots on the chest and about the wrists. I had
-had but one shirt for a week and more—and but the one
-soft collar. You can see already, then, that in spite of
-some success in smartening up my damp and threadbare
-suit I left the bath-room looking abject.</p>
-
-<p>I was not, however, so abject as Lovey when I found
-him again in the front sitting-room down-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>In the back sitting-room our table companions were all
-arranged in a row against the wall. In spite of the fact
-that there were plenty of chairs, they sat huddled together
-on one bench; and though there was tobacco, as there
-were books, papers, and magazines, they sought no occupation.
-When I say that they could have smoked and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-didn’t, the wrench that had been given to their normal
-state of mind will be apparent. Close up to one another
-they pressed, the Scotchman against the piano-mover,
-and the piano-mover against the wee bye Daisy, like
-lovebirds on the perch of a cage or newly captured animals
-too terrified even to snap.</p>
-
-<p>Without comment on any one’s part, Lovey roamed
-the front sitting-room alone.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, sonny,” he began, fretfully, as I entered, “this
-ain’t no place for you and me.”</p>
-
-<p>I tried to buck him up.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, it’s only for a week. We can stand it for
-that long. They’re very civil to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they’re watchin’ of us already like so many
-cats.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, they’re not. They’re only kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want none o’ that sort of kindness. What
-do ye think that two-foot-four of a Daisy says to me
-when ’e offered me the loan of ’is razor? ‘Lovey,’ says
-’e, ‘I’m goin’ to ’elp ye to knock off the booze. It’ll
-be terr’ble hard work for an old man like you.’ ‘To ’ell
-with you!’ says I. ‘Ye ain’t goin’ to ’elp me to do no
-such thing, because knock it off is somethink I don’t
-mean.’ ‘Well, what did you come in ’ere for?’ says ’e.
-‘I come in ’ere,’ I says to ’im, ‘because my buddy come
-in ’ere; and wherever ’e goes I’ll foller ’im.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Then that’s understood, Lovey,” I said, cheerfully.
-“If I go at the end of the week, you go; and if I stay, you
-stay. We’ll be fellas together.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head mournfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If you go at the end of the week, sonny, I go, too;
-but if you stay—well, I don’t know. I’ve been in jails,
-but I ’ain’t never been in no such place as this—nobody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-with no spunk. Look at ’em in there now—nothink but
-a bunch of simps.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t leave me, Lovey?”</p>
-
-<p>The extinct-blue eyes were raised to mine.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sonny; I won’t leave ye—not for ’ardly nothink.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER IV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I don’t know how we got the idea that before we went
-any farther we should be interviewed by Andy Christian,
-but I suppose somebody must have told us. We
-had heard of him, of course. He was, in fact, the master
-wizard whose incantations were wrecking our institutions.
-It was a surprise to us, therefore, to see, about nine
-o’clock, a brisk little elderly man blow in and blow past
-us—the metaphor is the most expressive I can use—with
-hardly more recognition than a nod.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, fellows!” he called out, as he passed through
-the hall and glanced in at Lovey and me in the sitting-room.
-“Hello, boys!” he said, casually, through the
-second door, to the other group, after which he went on
-his way to talk domestic matters with Mouse in the
-kitchen.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed a mild-mannered man to have done all the
-diabolical work we had laid at his door. Neatly dressed
-in a summery black-and-white check, with a panama
-hat, he was like any other of the million business men
-who were on their way to New York offices that morning.
-It was only when he came back from the kitchen and was
-in conference with some of the men in the back parlor
-that I caught in him that look of dead and buried tragedy
-with which I was to grow so familiar in other members
-of the club. Superficially he was clean-shaven, round-featured,
-rubicund, and kindly, with a quirk about the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-lips and a smile in his twinkling gray eyes that seemed
-always about to tell you the newest joke. His manner
-toward Lovey and me, when he came into the front
-sitting-room, was that of having known us all our lives
-and of resuming a conversation that only a few minutes
-before had been broken off.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see! Your name is—?”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at Lovey as though he knew his name
-perfectly well, only that for the second it had slipped his
-memory.</p>
-
-<p>Lovey went forward to the roll-top desk at which Mr.
-Christian had seated himself, and whispered, confidentially,
-“My name is Lovey, Your Honor.”</p>
-
-<p>The quirk about the lips seemed to execute a little caper.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that your first name or your second?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s my only name.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that you have another name, but you don’t
-want to tell it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that if I ’ave another name it ain’t nobody’s
-business but mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The head of the club was now writing in a ledger, his
-eye following the movement of his pen.</p>
-
-<p>“I see that you’re a man of decided opinions.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am—begging Your Honor’s parding,” Lovey declared,
-with dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll help you in the fight you’re going to put
-up.” Before Lovey could protest that he wasn’t going
-to put up no fight the gentle voice went on, “And you
-seem like a respectable man, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m as respectable as anybody else—at ’eart. I
-don’t use bad langwidge, nor keep bad company, nor
-chew, nor spit tobacco juice over nothink, and I keeps
-myself to myself.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span></p>
-
-<p>“All that’ll be a great help to you. What’s been your
-occupation?”</p>
-
-<p>“’atter.”</p>
-
-<p>As our host was less used to the silent “h” than I,
-it became necessary for me to say, “Hatter, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>I suppose it was my voice. Christian looked up quickly,
-studying me with a long, kind, deep regard. Had I
-been walking two thousand years ago on the hills of
-Palestine and met Some One on the road, he might have
-looked at me like that.</p>
-
-<p>The glance fell. Lovey’s interrogation continued.</p>
-
-<p>“And would you like that kind of job again—if we
-could get it for you—ultimately?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want no job, Your Honor. I can look after
-myself. I didn’t come in ’ere of my own free will—nor
-to pass the buck—nor nothink.”</p>
-
-<p>There was an inflection of surprise, perhaps of disapproval
-in the tone.</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t come in here of your own free will? I
-think it’s the first time that’s been said in the history of
-the club. May I ask how it happened?”</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t help thinking that I ought to intervene.</p>
-
-<p>“He came in on my account, sir,” I said, getting up
-and going forward to the desk. “He’s trying to keep me
-straight.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is, he’ll keep straight if you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it, sir, exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>He continued to write, speaking without looking up
-at us.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I can’t think of anything more to your credit,
-Mr.—Mr. Lovey—is that it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want no mister, Your Honor—not now I
-don’t.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
-
-<p>“When a man takes so fine a stand as you’re taking
-toward this young fellow he’s a mister to me. I respect
-him and treat him with respect. I see that we’re meant
-to understand each other and get on together.”</p>
-
-<p>Poor Lovey had nothing to say. The prospect of
-temptation and fall being removed by his own heroism
-rendered him both proud and miserable at once.</p>
-
-<p>When the writing was finished the kind eyes were
-again lifted toward me. Though the inspection was
-so mild, it pierced me through and through. It still
-seemed to cover me as he said: “You needn’t tell me
-your real name if you don’t want to—but in general we
-prefer it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell anything you ask me, sir. My name is Frank
-Melbury.” In order to conceal nothing, I added, “As
-a matter of fact, it’s Francis Worsley Melbury Melbury;
-but I use it in the shortened form I’ve given you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. You’re English?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a Canadian. My father is Sir Edward Melbury,
-of Montreal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Married?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. Single.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you have a profession?”</p>
-
-<p>“Architect.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you worked at that profession here in New
-York?”</p>
-
-<p>I gave him the names of the offices in which from time
-to time I had found employment.</p>
-
-<p>“And would you like to work at it again?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“As a matter of fact, we have a number of architects,
-not exactly in the club, but friendly toward it, and on
-intimate terms with us. I’ll introduce you to some of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-them when—when you get on your feet. How old are
-you? Thirty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-one.”</p>
-
-<p>For some two minutes he went on writing.</p>
-
-<p>“How long since you’ve been drinking?”</p>
-
-<p>“My last drink was three days ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how long since you’ve been actually drunk?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a week.”</p>
-
-<p>“And before that?”</p>
-
-<p>“It was pretty nearly all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a great advantage to you to come to us sober.
-It means that you know what you’re doing and are to
-some extent counting the cost. Men will take any kind
-of vow when they’re”—his glance traveled involuntarily
-to the back room—“when they’re coming off a spree.
-The difficulty is to make them keep their promises when
-they’ve got over the worst of it. In your case—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a motive, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then so much the better.”</p>
-
-<p>I turned to Lovey.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovey, would you mind stepping into the next room?
-There’s something I want to speak about privately.”</p>
-
-<p>“If it’s to let me in for worse, sonny—”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it won’t let you in for anything. It’s only got
-to do with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I don’t pry into no secrets,” he said, as he
-moved away reluctantly; “only, when fellas is buddies
-together—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a confession to make,” I continued, when Lovey
-was out of earshot. “Last night I—”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on! Is it necessary for you to tell me this or
-not?”</p>
-
-<p>I had to reflect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s only necessary in that I want you to know the
-worst of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m not sure that we need to know that. It
-often happens that a man does better in keeping his
-secrets in his own soul and shouldering the full weight
-of their responsibility. Isn’t it enough for us to know
-of you what we see?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I can judge of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then tell me this: What you were going to say—is
-it anything for which you could be arrested?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s nothing for which I shall be arrested.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s an offense against the law?”</p>
-
-<p>I nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“And what renders you immune?”</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that—that the person most concerned has—has
-forgiven it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Man or woman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Woman.”</p>
-
-<p>His eyes wandered along the cornice as he thought the
-matter out. I saw then that they were wonderfully
-clear gray eyes, not so much beautiful as perfect—perfect
-in their finish as to edge and eyelash, but perfect most
-of all because of their expression of benignity.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe I should give that away,” he said, at
-last; “not now, at any rate. If you want to tell me
-later—” He changed the subject abruptly by saying,
-“Is that the only shirt you’ve got?”</p>
-
-<p>I told him I had two or three clean ones in my trunk,
-but that that was held by my last landlord.</p>
-
-<p>“How much did you owe him?”</p>
-
-<p>I produced a soiled and crumpled bill. He looked it
-over.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll send and pay the bill, and get your trunk.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
-
-<p>The generosity almost took my breath away.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but—”</p>
-
-<p>“We should be only advancing the money,” he explained;
-“and we should look to you to pay us back
-when you can. It’s quite a usual procedure with us, because
-it happens in perhaps six of our cases out of ten.
-I don’t have to point out to you,” he continued, with a
-smile, “what I’m always obliged to underscore with
-chaps like those in there, that if you don’t make good
-what we spend on your account the loss comes not on
-well-disposed charitable people who give of their abundance,
-but on poor men who steal from their own penury.
-The very breakfast you ate this morning was paid for
-in the main by fellows who are earning from twelve to
-twenty-five dollars a week, and have families to support
-besides.”</p>
-
-<p>I hung my head, trying to stammer out a promise of
-making good.</p>
-
-<p>“You see those boys in there? There are five of them,
-and two will probably stick to us. That’s about the proportion
-we keep permanently of all who come in. I
-don’t know which two they will be—you never can tell.
-Perhaps it will be the piano-mover and the Scotchman;
-perhaps the man they call Headlights and the Irishman;
-perhaps the little chap and some other one of them.
-But whichever they are they’ll chip in for the sake of
-the new ones we shall reclaim, and take on themselves
-the burden of the work.”</p>
-
-<p>The thought that for the comforts I had enjoyed that
-morning I was dependent on the sacrifice of men who
-had hardly enough for their own children made me redden
-with a shame I think he understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Their generosity is wonderful,” he went on, quietly;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-“and I tell it to a man like you only because you can
-appreciate how wonderful it is. It’s the fact that so
-much heart’s blood goes into this work that makes it so
-living. These fellows love to give. They love to have
-you take the little they can offer. You never had a meal
-at your own father’s table that was laid before you more
-ungrudgingly than the one you ate this morning. The
-men who provide it are doing humble work all over the
-city, all over the country—because we’re scattered pretty
-far and wide. And every stroke of a hammer, and every
-stitch of a needle, and every tap on a typewriter, and
-every thrust of a shovel, and every dig of a pick, and every
-minute of the time by which they scrape together the
-pennies and the quarters and the dollars they send in
-to us is a prayer for you. I suppose you know what
-prayer really is?”</p>
-
-<p>His glance was now that of inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to have you tell me, sir,” I answered, humbly.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it isn’t giving information to a wise and loving
-Father as to what He had better do for us. It’s in trying
-to carry out the law of His being in doing things for
-others. That isn’t all of it, by any means; but it’s a
-starting-point. Spender tells me that that nice fellow
-Pyncheon brought you in. Well, then, every glass of
-soda-water Pyncheon draws is in its way a prayer for
-you, because the boy’s heart is full of you. Prayer is
-action—only it’s kind action.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, sir,” I said, with an effort to control the
-tremor of my voice; “I think I understand you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You yourself will be praying all through this week,
-in your very effort to buck up. You’ll be praying in
-helping that poor man Lovey to do the same. In his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-own purblind way—of course I understand his type and
-what you’re trying to do for him—he’ll be praying, too.
-Prayer is living—only, living in the right way.” He said,
-suddenly, “I suppose you rather dread the week.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I do—rather—sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll tell you what will make it easier—what
-will make it pass quickly and turn it into a splendid
-memory.” He nodded again toward the back room.
-“Chum up with these fellows. You wouldn’t, of course,
-be condescending to them—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s for them to be condescending to me.”</p>
-
-<p>He surprised me by saying: “Perhaps it is. You
-know best. But here we try to get on a broad, simple,
-human footing in which we don’t make comparisons.
-But you get what I mean. The simplest, kindliest approach
-is the best approach. Just make it a point to be
-white with them, as I’m sure they’ve been white with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>I said I had never been more touched in my life than
-by the small kindnesses of the past two hours.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the idea. If you keep on the watch to show
-the same sort of thing it will not only make the time
-pass, but it will brace you up mentally and spiritually.
-You see, they’re only children. Fundamentally you’re
-only a child yourself. We’re all only children, Frank.
-Some one says that women grow up, but that men never
-do. Well, I don’t know about women, but I’ve had a
-good deal to do with men—and I’ve never found anything
-but boys. Now you can spoil boys by too much
-indulgence, but you can’t spoil them by too much
-love.”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped abruptly, because he saw what was happening
-to me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>The next thing I knew was his arm across my shoulders,
-which were shaking as if I was in convulsions.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, old boy,” I heard him whisper in
-my ear. “Just go up to the bath-room and lock the door
-and have it out. It’ll do you good. The fellows in
-there won’t notice you, because lots of them go through
-the same thing themselves.” Still with his arm across
-my shoulders he steered me toward the hall. “There
-you are! You’ll be better when you come down. We’re
-just boys together, and there’s nothing to be ashamed of.
-Only, when you see other fellows come in through the
-week—we have two or three new ones every day—you’ll
-bear with them, won’t you? And help them to
-take a brace.”</p>
-
-<p>He was still patting me tenderly on the back as with
-head bowed and shoulders heaving I began to stumble
-up-stairs.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER V</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My acquaintance with Ralph Coningsby was the
-hinge on which my destiny turned. A hinge is
-a small thing as compared with a door, and so was my
-friendship with Coningsby in proportion to the rest of
-my life; but it became its cardinal point.</p>
-
-<p>I met him first at the meeting of the club at which the
-Scotchman and the piano-mover presented themselves for
-membership. As to the five outsiders whom Lovey and I
-had found on arriving, Christian’s prediction was verified.
-Three went out when their week was over and they had
-got sobered up. Two stayed behind to go on with the
-work of reform. At the end of another week each stood
-up with his next friend, as a bridegroom with his best
-man, and asked to be taken into fellowship.</p>
-
-<p>That was at the great weekly gathering, which took
-place every Saturday night. Among the hundred and
-fifty-odd men who had assembled in the two down-stairs
-sitting-rooms it was not difficult to single out Coningsby,
-since he was the only man I could see in whom there was
-nothing blasted or scorched or tragic. There was another
-there of whom this was true, but I didn’t meet him
-till toward the end of the evening.</p>
-
-<p>I had now been some ten days within the four walls
-of the club, not sobering up, as you know, but trying to
-find myself. The figure of speech is a good one, for the
-real Frank Melbury seemed to have been lost. This other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-self, this self I was anxious to get rid of, had left him in
-some bright and relatively innocent world, while it went
-roaming through a land of sand and thorns. I had distinctly
-the feeling of being in search of my genuine
-identity.</p>
-
-<p>For this I sat through long hours of every day doing
-absolutely nothing—that is, it was absolutely nothing
-so far as the eye could see; but inwardly the spirit was
-busy. I came, too, to understand that that was the
-secret of the long, stupefied forenoons and afternoons on
-the part of my companions. They were stupefied only
-because sight couldn’t follow the activity of their occupation.
-Beyond the senses so easily staggered by strong
-drink there was a man endeavoring to come forth and
-claim his own. In far, subliminal, unexplored regions of
-the personality that man was forever at work. I could
-see him at work. He was at work when the flesh had
-reached the end of its short tether, and reeled back from
-its brief and helpless efforts to enjoy. He was at work
-when the sore and sodden body could do nothing but sit
-in lumbering idleness. He was at work when the glazed
-eye could hardly lift its stare from a spot on the floor.</p>
-
-<p>That was why tobacco no longer afforded solace, nor
-reading distraction, nor an exchange of anecdotes mental
-relaxation. I don’t mean to say that we indulged in none
-of these pastimes, but we indulged in them slightly. On
-the one hand, they were pale in comparison with the
-raw excitement our appetites craved; and on the other,
-they offered nothing to the spirit which was, so to speak,
-aching and clamorous. Apart from the satisfaction we
-got from sure and regular food and sleep, our nearest approach
-to comfort was in a kind of silent, tactual clinging
-together. None of us wanted to be really alone. We<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-could sit for hours without exchanging more than a casual
-word or two, when it frightened us to have no one else
-in the room. The sheer promiscuity of bed against bed
-enabled us to sleep without nightmares.</p>
-
-<p>The task of chumming up had, therefore, been an easy
-one. So little was demanded. When a new-comer had
-been shown the ropes of the house there was not much
-more to do for him. One could only silently help him to
-find his lost identity as one was finding one’s own.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s about all there is to it,” Andrew Christian
-observed when I had said something of the sort to him.
-“You can’t push a man into the kingdom of heaven; he’s
-got to climb up to it of his own accord. There’s no salvation
-except what one works out through one’s own sweat
-and blood.” He gave me one of his quick, semi-humorous
-glances. “I suppose you know what salvation is?”</p>
-
-<p>I replied that I had heard a great deal about it all my
-life, but I was far from sure of what it entailed in either
-effort or accomplishment.</p>
-
-<p>“Salvation is being normal. The intuitive old guys who
-coined language saw that plainly enough when they connected
-the idea with health. Fundamentally health is
-salvation and salvation is health—only perfect health,
-health not only of the body, but of the mind. Did it
-ever strike you that health and holiness and wholeness
-are all one word?”</p>
-
-<p>I said it never had.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s worth thinking about. There’s a lot in it.
-You’ll get a lot out of it. The holy man is not the hermit
-on his knees in the desert, or the saint in colored glass, or
-anything that we make to correspond to them. He’s the
-fellow who’s whole—who’s sound in wind and limb and
-intelligence and sympathy and everything that makes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-power. When we say, ‘O worship the Lord in the beauty
-of holiness,’ we mean, O worship the Lord in the beauty
-of the all-round man, who’s developed in every direction,
-and whose degree of holiness is just in proportion to that
-development.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a big thought, sir,” I said. “I don’t believe
-many people who speak the English language ever get
-hold of it. But how does it happen that one of the two
-words is spelt with a ‘w,’ while the other—”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed, showing two rows of small, regular white
-teeth, as pretty as a girl’s.</p>
-
-<p>“That was another lot of intuitive guys; and a very
-neat trick they played on us. They saw that once the
-Anglo-Saxon, with his fine, big sporting instinct, got hold
-of the idea that holiness meant spreading out and living
-out in all manly directions—and by that I don’t mean
-giving free rein to one’s appetites, of course—but they
-saw that once the idea became plain to us the triumph of
-lust would be lost. So they inserted that little bluffing,
-blinding ‘w,’ which doesn’t belong there at all, to put us
-off the scent; and off the scent we went. Church and
-state and human society have all combined to make holiness
-one of the most anemic, flat-chested words in the
-language, when it’s really a synonym of normality.”</p>
-
-<p>We exchanged these thoughts in the narrow hall of the
-club, as he happened to be passing, and stopped for a few
-words. It was always his way. He never treated us to
-long and formal interviews. From a handclasp and a few
-chance sentences we got the secret of a personality which
-gave out its light and heat like radium, without effort and
-without exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>“What do yer think ’e says to me?” Lovey demanded
-of me one day. “‘Lovey,’ says ’e, ‘yer’ve got a terr’ble<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-responsibility on ye with that young fella, Slim. If you
-go under ’e goes under, and if you keep straight ’e keeps
-straight.’ What do yer think of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re doing an awful lot for me, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>He slapped his leg.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye got that number right, old son. There’s nobody
-else in the world I’d ’a’ done it for. If you ’adn’t taken
-a fancy to me, like, that night, and arsked me to go ’ome
-with you—But, say, Slim,” he went on, confidentially,
-“wouldn’t you like to ’ave a drink?”</p>
-
-<p>Wouldn’t I like to have a drink? There was thirst in
-the very rustle of Lovey’s throat. There was the same
-thirst in my own. It was more than a thirst of the appetite—it
-was a thirst of the being, of whatever had become
-myself. It was one of the moments at which the
-lost identity seemed farther away than ever, and the
-Frank Melbury of the last three years the man in possession.</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t, however, let Lovey see that.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, one gets used to going without drinks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do ye? I don’t. I’d take a drink of ’air-oil if anybody’d
-give me one. I’d take a drink of ink. Anything
-that comes out of a bottle’d be better’n nothink, after
-all this water from a jug.”</p>
-
-<p>During the first few days at the club this was my usual
-state, not of mind, but of sensation. During the next few
-days I passed into a condition that I can best express as
-one of physical resignation. The craving for drink was
-not less insistent, but it was more easily denied. Since I
-couldn’t get it I could do without it, and not want to
-dash my head against a stone. But after the words with
-Andrew Christian I have just recorded I began to feel—oh,
-ever so slightly!—that Nature had a realm of freedom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-and vigor in which there was no need of extraordinary
-stimulants, and of which sunshine, air, and water might
-be taken as the symbols. With the resting of my overexcited
-nerves and the response of a body radically
-healthy to regular sleep and simple food, I began to feel,
-at least at intervals, that water, air, and sunshine were
-the natural elements to thrive on.</p>
-
-<p>My first glance at Ralph Coningsby showed me a man
-who had thriven on them. He was the type to whom
-most of us take at sight—the clean, fresh, Anglo-Saxon
-type, blue-eyed and fair, whom you couldn’t do anything
-but trust.</p>
-
-<p>“God! how I should like to look like that!” I said to
-myself the minute I saw him come in.</p>
-
-<p>I knew by this time that at the big weekly meetings
-there were sometimes friendly visitors whose touch with
-the club was more or less accidental. I had no difficulty
-in putting this man down as one. He entered as if he
-were at any ordinary gathering of friends, with a nod here,
-a handshake there, and a few words with some one else.
-Then for a minute he stood, letting his eyes search the
-room till they rested on me, where I stood in a corner of
-the front sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>There was at once that livening of the glance that
-showed he had found what he was looking for. Making
-his way through the groups that were standing about, he
-came up and offered his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Your name’s Melbury, isn’t it? Mine’s Coningsby.
-I think you must be the same Melbury who went to the
-Beaux Arts in the fall of the year in which I left in the
-spring.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’re that Coningsby? You used to know Bully
-Harris?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Rather! He and I lived together for a year in the
-Rue de Seine.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he and I spent a year in the same house in the
-Rue Bonaparte.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now he’s out in Red Wing, Minnesota, doing very
-well, I hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“The last time I saw him was in London. We dined
-together at the Piccadilly and did a theater.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Tommy Runt? Do you ever hear of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not since he went back to Melbourne; but that chap
-he was always about with—Saunderson, wasn’t it?—he
-was killed in a motor accident near Glasgow.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I heard. Some one told me—Pickman, I think it
-was—an Englishman—but you didn’t know Pickman,
-did you? He left the year I came, which must have been
-three or four years before your time. By the way, why
-don’t we sit down?”</p>
-
-<p>In the process of sitting down I remembered my
-manners.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Coningsby, won’t you let me introduce you to
-my friend, Mr. Lovey?”</p>
-
-<p>Lovey was seated, nursing a knee and looking as
-wretched as a dog to whom no one is paying the customary
-attention. He resented Coningsby’s appearance;
-he resented a kind of talk which put me beyond his reach.</p>
-
-<p>When Coningsby, who seated himself between us, had
-shaken hands and made some kindly observation, Lovey
-replied, peevishly:</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t in ’ere for nothink but to save Slim.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what the boys call me,” I laughed, in explanation.</p>
-
-<p>Coningsby having duly commended this piece of self-sacrifice,
-we went on with the reminiscences with which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-we had begun. It was the most ordinary kind of breaking
-the ice between one man and another; but for me
-the wonder of it was precisely in that fact. You have
-to be down and out to know what it means when some
-one treats you as if you had never been anything but up
-and in. There was not a shade in Coningsby’s manner,
-nor an inflection in his tone, to hint at the fact that we
-hadn’t met at the New Netherlands or any other first-class
-club. It was nothing, you will say, but what any
-gentleman would be impelled to. Quite true! But again
-let me say it, you would have to be in my place to know
-what it means to be face to face with the man who is
-impelled to it.</p>
-
-<p>We stopped talking, of course, when business began,
-Coningsby giving me any necessary explanations in an
-undertone, and pointing out the notables whom I didn’t
-already know by sight.</p>
-
-<p>One of these was Colonel Straight, who with Andrew
-Christian had founded the club. I don’t believe that he
-had ever been a colonel, but he looked like one; neither
-can I swear that his real name was Straight, though it
-suited him. In our world the sobriquet often clings
-closer to us, and fits us more exactly, than anything given
-by inheritance or baptism. Here was a man with a
-figure as straight as an arrow and a glance as straight as
-a sunbeam. What else could his name have been? With
-one leg slightly shorter than the other, as if he had been
-wounded in battle, a magnificent white mustache, a magnificent
-fleece of white hair—he had all the air not only
-of an old soldier, but of an old soldier in high command.</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t think, to look at him,” Coningsby whispered,
-“that he’s only an old salesman for ready-made
-clothes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No; he ought to be at the head of a regiment.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the odd thing I notice about this club is that a
-man’s status and occupation in the world outside seem to
-fall away from him as soon as he passes the door. They
-become irrelevant. The only thing that counts is what he
-is as a man; and even that doesn’t count for everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“What does count for everything?” I asked, in some
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“That he’s a man at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it exactly,” I agreed, heartily. “I hadn’t put
-it to myself in that way; but I see that it’s what I’ve
-been conscious of.”</p>
-
-<p>“As an instance of that you can take the friendship
-between Straight and Christian. From the point of view
-of the outside world they’re of types so diverse that
-you’d say that the difference precluded friendship of any
-kind. You know what Christian is; but the colonel is
-hardly what you’d call a man of education. Without
-being illiterate, he makes elementary grammatical mistakes,
-and unusual ideas floor him. But to say that he
-and Christian are like brothers hardly expresses it.”</p>
-
-<p>I pondered on this as the meeting, with Christian in the
-chair, came to order and the routine of business began.</p>
-
-<p>When it grew uninteresting to people with no share in
-the management of the club I got an opportunity to whisper,
-“You settled in New York?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m with Sterling Barry; the junior of the four partners.”</p>
-
-<p>The reply seemed to strip from me the few rags of
-respectability with which I had been trying to cover
-myself up. Had he gone on to say, “And I saw you
-break into his house and steal his daughter’s trinkets,” I
-should scarcely have felt myself more pitilessly exposed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was perhaps a proof of what the club had done for
-me that I no longer regarded this crime with the same
-sang-froid as when I entered. Even on the morning of
-my first talk with Andrew Christian I could have confessed
-it more or less as I should have owned to a solecism
-in etiquette. During the intervening ten days, however,
-I had so far reverted to my former better self that the
-knowledge that I was the man who had crept into a house
-and begun to rob it filled me with dismay.</p>
-
-<p>I had to pretend that I didn’t want to interrupt the
-conducting of business to conceal the fact that I was
-unable to reply.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve worked in New York, too?” he began again,
-when there was a chance of speaking.</p>
-
-<p>I had by this time so far recovered myself as to be able
-to tell him the names of my various employers. I didn’t
-add that they had fired me one after another because of
-my drinking-spells, since I supposed he would take that
-for granted.</p>
-
-<p>“Ever thought of Barry’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“I brought a letter of introduction to him from McArdle,
-of Montreal; but I never presented it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pity.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, perhaps it was. But you see I didn’t like
-McArdle’s work, though I studied under him. As I was
-afraid of getting into the same old rut, I went to Pritchard.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think of Barry’s things now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I like them—though they’re not so severe as I
-should go in for myself. The modern French is a little
-too florid, and he goes them one better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just my feeling. I should like you to see a bit of
-work I’ve been doing on my own; rather a big order—for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-me, that is—in which I’ve had to be as American as
-the deuce, and yet keep to the best lines.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like to,” I managed to whisper back as we heard
-Christian announce that two new men were now to be
-admitted to the club.</p>
-
-<p>I was interested in the ceremony, having by this time
-got on friendly terms with both the piano-mover and the
-Scotchman, and learned something of their history. With
-necessary divergences the general trend of these tales
-was the same. Both were married men, both had children,
-in both cases “the home was broken up”—the
-phrase had become classic in the club; though in the one
-instance the wife had taken the children to her own people,
-and in the other she was doing her best to support
-them herself.</p>
-
-<p>Their names being called, there was a scraping of chairs,
-after which the two men lumbered forward, each accompanied
-by his next friend. The office of next friend, as I
-came to learn, was one of such responsibility as to put a
-strain on anything like next friendship. The Scotchman’s
-next friend was a barber, who, as part of his return
-for the club’s benefits to himself, had that afternoon cut
-the hair of all of us inmates—nineteen in number; while
-the piano-mover had as his sponsor the famous Beady
-Lamont. The latter pair moved forward like two elephants,
-their tread shaking the floor.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not describe this initiation further than to say
-that everything about it was simple, direct, and impressive.
-The four men being lined in front of Mr.
-Christian’s desk, the spokesman for the authorities was
-old Colonel Straight.</p>
-
-<p>“The difference between this club and every other
-club,” he said, in substance, “is that men goes to other<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span>
-clubs to amuse theirselves, and here they come to fight.
-This club is an army. Any one who joins it joins a corps.
-You two men who wants to come in with us ’ave got to
-remember that up to now you’ve been on your own and
-independent; and now you’ll be entering a company.
-Up to now, if you worked you worked for yourself; if
-you loafed you loafed for yourself; if you was lounge
-lizards you was lounge lizards on your own account and
-no one else’s; and if you got drunk no one but you—leaving
-out your wife and children; though why I leave
-them out God alone knows!—but if you got drunk no
-one but you had to suffer. Now it’s going to be all different.
-You can’t get drunk without hurting us, and
-we can’t get drunk without hurting you. T’other way
-round—every bit of fight we put up helps you, and every
-bit of fight you put up helps us.</p>
-
-<p>“Now there’s lots of things I could say to you this evening;
-but the only one I want to jam right home is this:
-You and us look at this thing from different points of
-view. You come here hoping that we’re going to help
-you to keep straight. That’s all right. So we are; and
-we’ll all be on the job from this night forward. You
-won’t find us taking no vacation, and your next friends
-here’ll worry you like your own consciences. They’ll
-never leave you alone the minute you ain’t safe. You’ll
-hear ’em promise to hunt for you if you go astray, and go
-down into the ditch with you and pull you out. There’ll
-be no dive so deep that they won’t go after you, and no
-kicks and curses that you can give ’em that they won’t
-stand in order to haul you back. That’s all gospel true,
-as you’re going to find out if you go back on your promises.
-But that ain’t the way the rest of us—the hundred and
-fifty of us that you see here to-night—looks at it at all.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-What we see ain’t two men we’re tumbling over each other
-to help; we see two men that’s coming to help us. And,
-oh, men, you’d better believe that we need your help!
-You look round and you see this elegant house—and the
-beds—and the grub—and everything decent and reg’lar—and
-you think how swell we’ve got ourselves fixed. But
-I tell you, men, we’re fighting for our life—the whole hundred
-and fifty of us! And another hundred and fifty that
-ain’t here! And another hundred and fifty that’s scattered
-to the four winds of the earth; we’re fighting for
-our life; we’re fighting with our back against the wall.
-We ain’t out of danger because we’ve been a year or two
-years or five years in the club. We’re never out of danger.
-We need every ounce of support that any one can
-bring to us; and here you fellows come bringing it!
-You’re bringing it, Colin MacPherson, and you’re bringing
-it, Tapley Toms; and there ain’t a guy among us that
-isn’t glad and grateful. If you go back on your own
-better selves you go back on us first of all; and if either
-of you falls, you leave each one of us so much the
-weaker.”</p>
-
-<p>That, with a funny story or two, was the gist of it; but
-delivered in a low, richly vibrating voice, audible in every
-corner of the room and addressed directly and earnestly
-to the two candidates, its effect was not unlike that of
-Whitfield’s dying man preaching to dying men. All the
-scarred, haunted faces, behind each of which there lurked
-memories blacker than those of the madhouse, were
-turned toward the speaker raptly. Knowledge of their
-own hearts and knowledge of his gave the words a power
-and a value beyond anything they carried on the surface.
-The red-hot experience of a hundred and fifty men was
-poured molten into the minute, to give to the promises<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-the two postulants were presently called on to make a
-kind of iron vigor.</p>
-
-<p>Those promises were simple. Colin MacPherson and
-Tapley Toms took the total-abstinence pledge for a week,
-after which they would be asked to renew it for similar
-periods till they felt strong enough to take it for a month.
-They would remain as residents of the club till morally
-re-established, but they would look for work, in which the
-club would assist them, and send at least three-quarters
-of their earnings to their wives. As soon as they were
-strong enough they would set up homes for their families
-again, and try to atone for their failure in the mean time.
-They would do their best to strengthen other members of
-the club, and to live in peace with them. The religious
-question was shelved by asking each man to give his word
-to reconnect himself with the church in which he had
-been brought up.</p>
-
-<p>The promises exacted of the next friends were, as became
-veterans, more severe. They were to be guardians
-of the most zealous activity, and shrink from no insult or
-injury in the exercise of their functions. If their charges
-fell irretrievably away, their brothers in the club would
-be sorry for them, even though the guilt would not be
-laid at their door.</p>
-
-<p>When some twenty or thirty members had renewed
-their vows for a third or fourth or fifth week, as the case
-happened to be, the meeting broke up for refreshments.</p>
-
-<p>It was during this finale to the evening that Coningsby
-brought up a man somewhat of his own type, and yet different.
-He was different in that, though of the same rank
-and age, he was tall and dark, and carried himself with a
-slight stoop of the shoulders. An olive complexion
-touched off with well-rounded black eyebrows and a neat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-black mustache made one take him at first for a foreigner,
-while the dreaminess of the dark eyes was melancholy
-and introspective, if not quite despondent.</p>
-
-<p>“Melbury, I want you to know Doctor Cantyre, who
-holds the honorable office of physician in ordinary to the
-club.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more I was in conversation with a man of antecedents
-similar to my own, and once more the breaking
-of the ice was that between men accustomed to the same
-order of associations. In this case we found them in
-Cantyre’s tourist recollections of Montreal and Quebec,
-and his enjoyment of winter sports.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER VI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There was nothing more than this to the meeting
-that night, but early the next afternoon I was called
-to the telephone. As such a summons was rare in the
-club, I went to the instrument in some trepidation.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello! This is Frank Melbury.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is Doctor Cantyre. You remember that we met
-last evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rather!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m motoring out in my runabout to see a patient who
-lives a few miles up the river, and I want you to come
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>The invitation, which would mean nothing to you but
-a yes or a no, struck me almost speechless. There was
-first the pleasure of it. I have not laid stress on the fact
-that the weather was sickeningly hot, because it didn’t
-enter into our considerations. We were too deeply concerned
-with other things to care much that the house was
-stifling; and yet stifling it was. But more important than
-that was the fact that any one in the world should want
-to show me this courtesy. Remember that I had been beyond
-the reach of courtesies. A drink from some one who
-would expect me to give him a drink in return was the
-utmost I had known in this direction for months, and I
-might say for years.</p>
-
-<p>Is it any wonder that in my reply I stammered and
-stuttered and nearly sobbed?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but, I say, I—I look too beastly for an expedition
-of—of that sort. I’m awfully sorry, but—but I—well,
-you know how it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get out! You’ve got to have the air. I’m your
-doctor. I’m not going to see you cooped up there day
-after day in weather like this. Besides, I’m bringing
-along a couple of dust-coats—the roads will be dusty part
-of the way—and we shall both be covered up. Expect
-me by half past two.”</p>
-
-<p>As he put up the receiver without waiting for further
-protests, there was nothing for me but submission.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been ’ere as long as you ’ave,” Lovey complained
-when I told him of my invitation, “and nobody don’t ask
-me to go hout in no automobiles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but they will.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Them swells’ll take you away, sonny. See if they
-don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not from you, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>He grabbed me by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you promise me that, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey; I promise you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And we’ll go on being buddies, even when the rich
-guys talks to you about all them swell things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey. We’re buddies for life.”</p>
-
-<p>With this Mizpah between us he released my arm and
-I was able to go and make my preparations.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the heat and the fact that on a windless day
-there was no dust to speak of, Cantyre was buttoned up
-in a dust-coat. It would have seemed the last word in
-tact if he hadn’t gone further by pretending to be occupied
-in doing something to the steering-wheel while I
-hid my seedy blue serge in the long linen garment he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-handed me out. As even an old golf-cap can look pretty
-decent, I was really like anybody else by the time I had
-snuggled myself in by his side.</p>
-
-<p>During the first mile or two of the way I could hardly
-listen to Cantyre, to say nothing of making conversation.
-In spasmodic sentences between his spells of attention to
-the traffic he told me of his patient and where she lived;
-but as it was nothing I was obliged to register in my
-mind, I could give myself to the wonder of the occasion,
-in awe at the miracle which had restored me to something
-like my old place in the world at the very moment when
-I seemed farthest away from it. Here I was, with not a
-penny to my name and not two coats to my back, tooling
-along like a gentleman with a gentleman, and as a man
-with his friend. Moreover, here I was with a new revelation,
-a convincing revelation, of something I had long
-since ceased to believe—that in this world there was
-such a thing as active brotherly kindness.</p>
-
-<p>I came out of these thoughts to find that we were following
-the avenue with part of which I had made myself
-so familiar ten days before. I began to ask myself if
-Cantyre had a motive in bringing me this way. The
-houses were thinning out. Vacant lots became frequent.
-I noted the southern limit of my pacings up and down
-on that strange midnight. Cantyre slowed the pace
-perceptibly. My heart thumped. If he accused me of
-anything, I was resolved to confess all.</p>
-
-<p>As we passed one particular vacant lot, a tangle of
-nettle, fireweed, and blue succory, I noticed that Cantyre’s
-gaze roamed round about it, to the neglect of the
-machine. We had slowed down to perhaps ten miles
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know whose house that is?” he asked, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>But I refused to betray myself before it was necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“Whose?” I riposted.</p>
-
-<p>“Sterling Barry, the architect’s.”</p>
-
-<p>The machine almost stopped. He looked the façade
-up and down, saying, as he did so: “It’s closed for the
-season. They left town a few days ago. Barry’s bought
-the old Hornblower place at Rosyth, Long Island.”</p>
-
-<p>To my relief, we sped on again; but I was not long
-in learning the motive behind his interest.</p>
-
-<p>Chiefly for the sake of not seeming dumb, I said, as
-we got into the country, “You and Ralph Coningsby are
-by way of being great friends, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he replied, promptly. “I see him when I go
-to the club; not very often elsewhere. I know his
-sister, Elsie Coningsby, better. Not that I know her
-very well. She happens to be a great friend of—of a—of
-a great friend—or, rather, some one who was a great
-friend—of mine. That’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>So that was it!</p>
-
-<p>I said, after we had spun along some few miles more,
-“Your name is Stephen, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. How did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>I hedged. “Oh, I must have heard some one call you
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s funny. Hardly any one does. They mostly
-say Cantyre—or just doctor.” He added, after a minute
-or two, “You call me Stephen, and I’ll call you Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more the swift march of happenings gave me a
-slight shock.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but we hardly know each other.”</p>
-
-<p>“That would be true if there weren’t friendships that
-outdistance acquaintanceships.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you look at it that way—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s the way it strikes me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, good Heavens! man, think of what—of what
-I am!”</p>
-
-<p>His gaze was fixed on the stretch of road ahead of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that got to do with it? It wouldn’t make
-any difference to me if you were a murderer or a
-thief.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know I’m not?” I couldn’t help asking.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that you’re not; but I say it wouldn’t
-make any difference to me if you were.”</p>
-
-<p>The word I am tempted to use of myself at this unexpected
-offer of good-will is flabbergasted. I am not
-emotional; still less am I sentimental; both in sentiment
-and emotion my tendency is to go slow.</p>
-
-<p>After a brief silence I said: “Look here! Do you go
-round making friends among the riffraff of mankind?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t go round making friends among people of any
-sort. I’m not the friendly type. I know lots of people,
-of course; but—but I don’t get beyond just knowing
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that because you don’t want to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not altogether. I’m a—I’m a lonesome sort of bloke.
-I never was a good mixer; and when you’re not that,
-other fellows instinctively close up their ranks against
-you and shut you out. Not that that matters to me. I
-hardly ever see a lot with whom I should want to get in.
-You’re—you’re an exception.”</p>
-
-<p>“And for Heaven’s sake, why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, for two or three reasons—which I’m not going
-to tell you. One of these days you may find out.”</p>
-
-<p>We left the subject there and sped along in silence.</p>
-
-<p>This, then, was the man Regina Barry had turned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-down; and, notwithstanding his kindness to myself, I
-could understand her doing it. For a high-spirited girl
-such as she evidently was he would have been too melancholy.
-“Very nice” was what she had called him, and
-very nice he was; but he lacked the something thoroughly
-masculine that means more to women than to men.
-Men are used to the eternal-feminine streak in themselves
-and one another; but women put up with it only when
-it is like a flaw in an emerald, noticeable to the expert,
-but to no one else.</p>
-
-<p>I asked him how he came to be what Coningsby called
-physician in ordinary to the club.</p>
-
-<p>“By accident. Rufus Legrand asked me to go over
-and see what I could do for a bad case of D. T.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the rector of the church opposite, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and an awfully good sort. Only parson I know
-who thinks more of God than he does of a church. I
-shouldn’t be surprised if one of these days he got the true
-spirit of religion.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“What they’re doing at the Down and Out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but they skip religion there altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>“They don’t skip religion; they only skip the word—and
-for a reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“What reason?”</p>
-
-<p>“The reason that it’s been so misapplied as to have
-become nearly unintelligible. If you told the men at
-the club that such and such a thing was religion they’d
-most of ’em kick like the deuce; but when they get the
-thing without explanation they take to it every time.
-But you were asking me about my connection with the
-club. It began four years ago, when they first got into
-Miss Smedley’s house. Fellow had the old-fashioned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-horrors—bad. As I’d been making dipsomania a specialty
-Legrand railroaded me in, and there I’ve stayed.”</p>
-
-<p>When we drew up at the gate of an old yellow mansion
-standing in large grounds Cantyre left me in the
-machine while he went in to visit his patient. The blue-green
-hills were just beginning to veil themselves in the
-diaphanous mauve of afternoon, and between them the
-river with its varied life flowed silently and rapidly. It
-was strange to me to remember that a short time ago I
-had been wishing myself under it, and that this very
-water would be washing the oozy, moss-grown piles of
-Greeley’s Slip.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER VII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>No later than that evening my life took still another
-step.</p>
-
-<p>A little before nine, just as I was about to go to bed—our
-hours at the club were early—Ralph Coningsby
-dropped in for a word with me. I happened to be at
-the foot of the stairs in the hall when Spender admitted
-him, and he refused to come farther inside.</p>
-
-<p>“Been dining with my wife’s father and mother over
-the way,” he said, in explanation of his dinner jacket and
-black tie, “and just ran across to say something while
-I was in the neighborhood. You said last night you’d
-come and see the Grace Memorial with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you say so,” I smiled, “I suppose I must have;
-but it’s the first time to my knowledge that I ever heard
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s the bit of work I told you about—the
-thing I’m doing on my own. It’s over here at St. David’s.
-You see, when Charlie Grace died he left a sum of money
-to build and endow this institution in memory of his
-father.”</p>
-
-<p>I smiled again.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I must have heard the name of Charlie Grace,
-but it seems to have slipped my memory. All the same—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you about him to-morrow. I merely want to
-say now that I’ll look in about ten in the morning, and
-take you across the street—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>The difficulty I had had to confront in the afternoon
-was before me again.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know about that, Coningsby. The fact is
-I’m not—Well, hang it all! Can’t you see? I haven’t
-a rag in the world but what I stand up in, and I can’t go
-where I’m likely to run into decent people.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t run into any one but carpenters and
-painters. I’m not going to take no for an answer, old
-chap. Besides, there’s method in this madness, for—now
-don’t buck!—for I’m going to put you on a job.”</p>
-
-<p>I could only stare vacantly.</p>
-
-<p>“On a job?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Grace wants some measurements and specifications
-which she thinks I haven’t given her exactly enough;
-and the first thing to be done is to go over the whole
-blooming place with a foot-rule and a tape-measure; but
-I’ll tell you about that to-morrow, too. For a chap with
-your training it will be office-boy’s work; but as you’re
-doing nothing else for the moment—”</p>
-
-<p>It is needless to say that I hardly slept that night. It
-was not the prospect of work alone that excited me; it
-was that of being gradually drawn into the sphere in
-which I might meet Regina Barry. I was still uncertain
-as to whether I wanted to do that or not. There was no
-hour of the day when I didn’t think of her, and yet it was
-always with a sense of thankfulness that she couldn’t
-know where I was or guess at what had become of me.
-If I could have been granted the privilege of seeing her
-without having her see me I should have jumped at it;
-but the ordeal of her recognition was beyond my strength
-to face. Rather than have her say with her eyes, “You
-were the man who came into my room and tried to rob
-me,” I would have shot myself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<p>And yet I had to admit the fact that this danger was
-in the air. Ralph Coningsby’s sister was the Elsie of
-that tragic night; Cantyre was the Stephen. I was being
-offered work by Sterling Barry’s partner, and might soon
-be doing it for Sterling Barry himself. The fatality that
-brought about these unfoldings might go farther still,
-and before I knew it I might find myself in the precise
-situation that filled me with terror—and yet made me
-shiver with a kind of harsh delight. Before I could sleep
-I had to make a compromise with my courage. I would
-not shoot myself rather than meet her. I would meet
-her first, if it had to be. I would take that one draft of
-the joy I had put forever out of reach—and shoot myself
-afterward.</p>
-
-<p>But in the morning I was more self-confident. Having
-examined myself carefully in the cracked mirror in the
-bath-room, I found that my mustache, which had grown
-tolerably long and thick, changed my appearance not a
-little. Moreover, food, rest, and sobriety had smoothed
-away the unspeakable haggardness that had creased my
-forehead, hardened my mouth, and burnt into my eyes
-that woebegone desolation which I had noticed among
-my companions when I arrived at the club. It is no exaggeration
-to say that I was not only younger by ten
-years, but that I was changed in looks, as a landscape
-is changed when, after being swept by rains, it is bathed
-in sunshine. The one hope I built on all this was that,
-were I to meet Regina Barry face to face, she would not
-recognize me at a first glance, while I could keep her
-from getting a second.</p>
-
-<p>On the way across the street Coningsby told me something
-of Charlie Grace and his memorial. He had been
-the son of a former rector of St. David’s—an important<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-man in the New York of his day, who had outlived his
-usefulness and been asked to resign his parish. The son
-had never forgiven this slight, and the William Grace
-Memorial was intended to avenge it. It had been the
-express desire of the widow, Mrs. Charlie Grace, that he,
-Ralph Coningsby, should have sole charge of the building,
-and the work had been going on since the previous
-autumn. In the coming autumn the house would be
-ready for furnishing. It was for this purpose that Mrs.
-Grace required the exact measurements of each room,
-with the disposition of the wall spaces. During the summer
-she could thus consider what she would have to do
-when the time came in October.</p>
-
-<p>Only a corner of the new building was visible from
-Vandiver Street, the main entrance being on Blankney
-Place, which was a parallel thoroughfare. Standing in
-the middle of the grass-plot in front of the dumpy, spurious
-1840 Gothic rectory, we had the length of the dumpy,
-spurious 1840 Gothic church in front of us. The memorial
-had to be fitted in behind the chancel, on the
-space formerly occupied by a Sunday-school room.
-This space had been enlarged by the purchase of the lot
-in Blankney Place, giving an entry from a more populous
-neighborhood. The purpose of the memorial had
-been more or less dictated by Mrs. Ralph Coningsby,
-who, as Esther Legrand, the rector’s daughter, had from
-her childhood upward worked among the people round
-about and knew their needs. As far as I could gather,
-it was to be a sort of neighborhood club, with parlors,
-reading-rooms, playing-rooms, a dancing-room, a smoking-room,
-a billiard-room, a lecture-room, a gymnasium, baths,
-and so on, and open to those who were properly enrolled,
-of both sexes and all ages. Of the committee in charge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-Mrs. Coningsby was apparently the moving spirit, though
-Mrs. Grace was reserving to herself the pleasure of fitting
-the house up.</p>
-
-<p>Before going inside we discussed the difficulties of harmonizing
-a modern building with the efforts of the early
-nineteenth century, and I had an opportunity to commend
-Coningsby’s judgment. He had kept to the
-brownstone of the church and rectory, and had suggested
-their spirit while working on sober, well-proportioned
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of this I broke off to say: “Look here,
-old chap! I hope you’re not inventing this job of yours
-just for the sake of giving me something to do.”</p>
-
-<p>His frank gaze convinced me.</p>
-
-<p>“Honest, I’m not. Mrs. Grace is particularly anxious
-to have the measurements sent down to her at Rosyth,
-and we’re so short-handed—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then that’s all right. Let’s go in, and you can
-show me what I’m to do.”</p>
-
-<p>As Coningsby had said, it was office-boy’s work, but
-it suited me. It was a matter of getting broken in
-again, and—whether it came by accident or my friend’s
-good-heartedness—an easy job in which there was no
-thinking or responsibility was the most effective means
-that could have been found of nursing me along. At
-the end of a week I was treated to the well-nigh incredible
-wonder of a check.</p>
-
-<p>Early on a Sunday morning I took it to Christian,
-asking that it should be turned in toward my expenses
-at the club.</p>
-
-<p>Having read its amount, he held it in his fingers, twisting
-it and turning it.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, Frank,” he said, after thinking for a minute,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-“the primary object of the club is not to be paid for
-what it spends—though that is an object—it’s to help
-fellows to get on their feet. Of you nineteen chaps who
-are in the house at present twelve are regularly paying
-for their board and lodging, and that pretty well carries
-us along. If there’s a deficit it’s covered by the back
-payments of men who’ve gone out and who are making
-up. So that this isn’t pressing for the minute—”</p>
-
-<p>“But I should like to pay it, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course; but it’s a question of what is most
-urgent. Now this isn’t urgent; we can extend your
-credit; whereas, the first bit of bluff we’ve all got to put
-up when we’re pulling ourselves together is in clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>He asked me how long my present job would go on.
-I said for about three weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“Then keep this check,” he pursued, handing it back
-to me, “till you get as much again. That will be enough
-to turn you out quite smart. Go to Straight, at Bruch
-Brothers—all our fellows go to him—and he’ll advise
-you to the best advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were accompanied by such a smile that I,
-who am not emotional, felt my eyes smart.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER VIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The summer passed with no more than two or three
-other incidents worth the jotting down.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, the day arrived when I had to make
-up my mind either to leave the club or to join it.
-Expecting some opposition from Lovey as to joining it,
-I was surprised to find him take the suggestion complacently.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found out,” he whispered to me, “that yer can
-jine this club—and fall. Yer can fall three times before
-they’ll turn ye out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you wouldn’t want to fall in cold blood.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he muttered, doubtfully, “I ain’t partic’lar
-about the blood. Now my hadvice’d be this: ’Ere we
-are in July. That’s all right; we can jine. Then in
-Haugust we can ’ave a wee little bit of a fall—just two
-or three days like. We can do the same in September;
-and the same in Hoctober. That’ll use up our three times,
-and we can come back under cover for the worst months
-of the winter. We can’t fall no more after that; but in
-the spring we can try somethink else. There’s always
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose I don’t mean to fall?”</p>
-
-<p>He looked hurt.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you can keep straight without me—”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I can’t, Lovey? If I must keep straight and
-need you to help me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p>He clasped his hands against his stomach and drew a
-dismal face.</p>
-
-<p>“That’d be a tight place for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And isn’t there,” I continued, “another point of view?
-Suppose we did what you suggest, do you think it would
-be treating all these nice fellows decently?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you’re going to start out treatin’ people decent—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why shouldn’t we? We can do it—you and I
-together.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew a deep sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“I must say, Slim, yer do beat everythink for puttin’
-things on me.”</p>
-
-<p>But in the end we were both admitted at one of the
-Saturday-evening meetings with, as usual, a large gathering
-of friends, and some bracing words from Straight. Pyn
-stood up with me as next friend, and little Spender did
-the same by Lovey. I have not said that during the ten
-days before I went to work Pyn blew in at the club during
-some minutes of every lunch hour to watch my progress.
-It was he, too, who found Lovey the job of washing windows,
-by which that worthy also had a chance of returning
-to honest ways. Indeed, though I cannot repeat it
-frequently enough, of the many hands stretched out to
-help me upward none was stronger in its grasp than
-that of the kindly keeper of the soda-water fountain to
-whom the club had given a veritable new birth.</p>
-
-<p>Our admission as members had taken place while I
-was still doing the measurements at the memorial. By
-the time they were finished Coningsby had a new proposal.
-As it was the middle of July, he was anxious to take his
-wife and two little children to the country for a month.
-Carpenters, plasterers, painters, and plumbers were still at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-work on the building, and they couldn’t be left without
-oversight. Would I undertake to give that—at a reasonable
-salary?</p>
-
-<p>I had grown familiar with the work by this time, and
-had been able to throw into the furtherance of Coningsby’s
-plans an enthusiasm largely sprung of gratitude.
-In addition I was getting back my self-confidence in proportion
-as I got back my self-respect. The fact, too,
-that in the new summer suit and straw hat to which the
-colonel’s advice had helped me I could go about the
-streets without being ashamed of myself did something
-to restore my natural poise.</p>
-
-<p>I could see that by taking this work I should really be
-helping Coningsby. He needed the rest; his wife and
-babies undoubtedly needed the change. It was not
-easy for a man with so important a piece of work as this
-on hand to get any one satisfactorily to take his place.
-I could accept the offer, then, without the suspicion—which
-any man would hate—that it was being made to
-me from motives of philanthropy. I was really being
-useful—more useful than in taking the measurements for
-Mrs. Grace, which any novice could have done—and
-making a creditable living for the first time in years.</p>
-
-<p>Then, too, I had a great deal of Cantyre’s company.
-He spent most of the summer in town; chiefly because
-of his patients, but partly from a lack of incentive in
-going away. He explained that lack of incentive to me
-during one of the spins in his runabout to which he
-treated me on three or four evenings a week. Now and
-then I worked Lovey off on him for an outing, but he,
-Cantyre, was generally a little peevish after such occasions.
-It was not that he objected to giving Lovey or
-any one else the air; it was that he suspected me of not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-really caring to go out with him. There are always
-men—very good fellows, too—in whom there is this
-strain of the jealousy of school-girls.</p>
-
-<p>On this particular evening I had been kidding him
-about his depression, doing my best to rouse him out of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ll pull round in time,” he said, in his resigned,
-lifeless tone. “If you knew the reason—”</p>
-
-<p>I did know the reason, of course. My conscience never
-ceased to plague me with the fact that, though I could
-return Regina Barry’s trinkets, Cantyre’s secret was a
-theft I couldn’t get rid of. It was, indeed, partly to lead
-him on to confiding it to me of his own accord, so that
-I might know it legitimately, so to speak, that I brought
-the subject up.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it’s about a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>So long a time passed that I thought he was not going
-to respond to this challenge, when he said, “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t she have you?” I asked, bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“She said she would—and changed her mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you were actually engaged?”</p>
-
-<p>“For about a month.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did she— You don’t mind my asking questions,
-do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you won’t mind if I don’t answer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then with that proviso I’ll go on. Did she tell why
-she—why she broke it off?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not—not exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“And haven’t you found out?”</p>
-
-<p>“Elsie Coningsby, she’s her great friend, told me something
-of it. She said there were two kinds of women.
-Some liked to be wooed, and others weren’t satisfied unless
-they were conquered.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you took the wrong method?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<p>“So it seems.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, why don’t you turn round now and take the
-right one?”</p>
-
-<p>His dreamy, melancholy eyes slid toward me.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you see me doing that? I’m the kind of bloke
-that would like a woman to conquer him. If it comes
-to that, there are two kinds of men.”</p>
-
-<p>He had told me so much that I felt it right to give
-him a warning.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you say she’s a friend of Elsie Coningsby’s, I
-mayn’t be able to help finding out who she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I shouldn’t mind that—not with you. As a
-matter of fact, I should like to introduce you to her
-one of these days.”</p>
-
-<p>I broke in more hastily than I intended, “No, no;
-don’t do that—for God’s sake!”</p>
-
-<p>He swung round in amazement. “Why—why, what’s
-the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>I tried to recover myself. “Oh, nothing! Only, you
-must see for yourself that—that after what I’ve been
-through I’m not—not a lady’s man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get out!” was his only observation.</p>
-
-<p>We lapsed into one of our long silences, which was
-broken when we turned back toward town.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Frank,” he said, suddenly, “you can’t
-go on living down there in Vandiver Street. Besides, the
-club will be needing your bed for some one else.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” I said. “I’ve been thinking about it. I
-simply don’t want to move.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>He went on to suggest a small apartment in the bachelor
-house he was living in himself. Now was the time to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-rent, before men began coming back to town. He knew
-of a little suite of three rooms and a bath which ought
-to be within my means. As we passed the house we
-stopped and looked at it. I liked it and promised to
-turn the matter over in my mind.</p>
-
-<p>Next day I broached it to Lovey. The effect was
-what I expected. He grasped me by the arm, looking
-up at me with eyes the more eloquent from the fact that
-they were dead.</p>
-
-<p>“Y’ain’t goin’ to leave me, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t be leaving you, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Y’ain’t goin’ to live in another ’ouse, where I sha’n’t
-be seein’ ye every day?”</p>
-
-<p>“You could get a room near.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Twouldn’t be the same thing—not noway, it wouldn’t
-be. Oh, Slim!”</p>
-
-<p>With a gesture really dramatic he smote his chest with
-his two clenched fists, and drew a long, grating sigh.</p>
-
-<p>We were sitting on our beds, which were side by side
-in one of the dormitories. It was the nearest thing to
-privacy the club-house ever allowed us.</p>
-
-<p>“This’ll be the hend of me; and it’ll be the hend of
-you, Slim, if I ain’t there to watch over you. You’ll
-never keep straight without me, sonny.” He was struck
-with a new idea, and, indeed, I had thought of it myself.
-“Didn’t ye say,” he went on, as he leaned forward
-and tapped my knee, “that in them rooms there was one
-little dark room?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very little and very dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it wouldn’t be too little or too dark for me, Slim,
-not if I could be your valet, like. I could do everythink
-for you, just like a gentleman. My father was a valet,
-and he larned me before he couldn’t larn me nothink<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-else. I could keep your clothes so as you’d never need
-new ones, and I could mend and darn and cook your
-breakfasts—I’m a swell cook—I can bile tea and coffee
-and heggs—many’s the time I’ve done it—”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Lovey,” I interrupted. “It’s a bargain.
-We’re buddies.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Slim; we won’t be buddies no more. We’ll call
-that off. We’ll just be master and man. I’ll know my
-place and I’ll keep it. I sha’n’t call you Slim, nor sonny—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, you must.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No; not after we’ve moved from the club. I’ll call
-you Mr. Melbury and say sir to you; and you must call
-me Lovey, just as if it was my real name.” He added,
-unexpectedly to me: “I suppose ye know it ain’t my
-real name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what does it matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“It only matters like this: I ain’t—I ain’t—” He
-got up in some agitation and went to one of the windows.
-After looking out for a second or two he turned half round
-toward me. “Ye ain’t thinking me any better than I
-am, Slim, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not thinking whether you’re better or worse,
-Lovey. I just like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ve took an awful fancy to you, Slim. Seems
-as if you was my whole family. But—but you’re not,
-sonny. I’ve—I’ve got a family. They’re dead to me
-and I’m dead to them; but they’re my family. Did ye
-know that, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know it, and you needn’t tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I was awful bad, sonny? If I was wuss than
-anythink that’d ever come into your ’ead?”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t talk about that. Perhaps there are things<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-that I could tell you which would show that there’s not
-much difference between us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I ’ope there is, Slim. And she was terr’ble aggravatin’;
-a drinkin’ woman, besides. I didn’t drink then—’ardly
-not at all. It was after I was acquitted I begun
-that. And my two gells—well, bein’ acquitted didn’t
-make no difference to them; they’d seen. Only, they
-didn’t swear that way in their hevidence. They swore
-she fell down the stairs she was found at the bottom of,
-her neck broken; and, bein’ a drinkin’ woman, the jury
-thought—But the two gells knew. And when I was
-let off they didn’t ’ave no more to do with me—so I come
-over ’ere—”</p>
-
-<p>I rose and went to him, laying my hand on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, Lovey. That’s enough. I don’t care who
-you are or what you’ve done, we’ll stick it out together.
-The only thing is that we’ll have to give up the booze.”</p>
-
-<p>“For good and all, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; for good and all.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll be awful ’ard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it will be; but the worst of that is over.”</p>
-
-<p>He seized one of my hands in both of his.</p>
-
-<p>“Slim, if it’s got to be a ch’ice between you and liquor—well,
-I’m danged if—if I won’t”—he made a great resolution—“give
-up the liquor—and so ’elp me!”</p>
-
-<p>So when I moved Lovey moved with me. Washing
-windows having become a lucrative profession, he insisted
-on taking no wages from me and on paying for his
-own food. In the matter of names we agreed on a compromise.
-“Before company,” as he expressed it, I was
-Mr. Melbury and sir; when we were alone together we
-reverted to the habits of Greeley’s Slip and the Down
-and Out, and I became Slim and sonny.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span></p>
-
-<p>I was truly sorry to leave the club, for its simple,
-brotherly ways, wholesome and masculine, if never the
-most refined, had become curiously a part of me. I had
-liked the fellowship with rough men who were perhaps
-all the more human for being rough. For the first time
-in my life I had known something of genuine fraternity.
-I do not affirm that we lived together without disagreements
-or misunderstandings or that there were no minutes
-electric with the tension that makes for an all-round fight.
-But there was always some “wise guy,” as we called him,
-to make peace among us; and on the whole we lived together
-with a mutual courtesy that proved to me once
-for all that it is nothing external which makes a gentleman.
-Finer gentlemen in the essentials of the word I
-never met than some of those who were just struggling
-up from the seemingly bottomless pit.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the summer of 1913 became for me a very happy
-one. There were reserves to that happiness, and there
-were fears; but the optimism most of us bring to the
-day’s work enabled me to face them. Of Regina Barry
-I heard much from my friend Cantyre, and I made what
-I heard suffice me. He was always willing to talk of this
-girl, whom he never named; and little by little I formed
-an image in my heart, which would never be anywhere
-but in my heart as long as I could help it. As long as
-I could help it I should not see her, nor should she see me.
-As to that I was now quite positive. Nothing could be
-gained by my seeing her, while by her seeing me everything
-might be lost.</p>
-
-<p>If everything was lost in one way I was sure it would
-be lost in another. Because I have said little or nothing
-of the fight I was making you must not suppose that I
-was free from the necessity of making it. I was making<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-it every day and hour. There were times when, if I
-hadn’t had Lovey to think of, I should have yielded to
-that suggestion which had come to me as neatly as it
-had come to him of having a little fall. Falls were far
-from unknown among us. They were accepted as an
-unhappy matter of course. Some of our steadiest members
-had made full use of the three times the law of
-the club allowed them before finally settling down. I
-believed that I could exercise this privilege—and come
-back. But not so with Lovey! Once he failed in this
-attempt, I knew he would be gone. As a matter of fact,
-he would have failed at any time after the first week if
-it hadn’t been on my account; so I couldn’t fail on his.
-When I would have done it eagerly, wildly, I was withheld
-by the old-fashioned motto of <i>noblesse oblige</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And yet in proportion as I grew stronger I realized
-more clearly that my future was, as it were, balanced on
-the point of a pin. Once I had met Regina Barry, and her
-eyes had said, “You are the man who stole my gold-mesh
-purse,” I knew it would be all up with me. She
-wouldn’t have to say a word. Her look would bring the
-accusation. Then, if I was weak I should go off and get
-drunk; I should drink till I drank myself to death. If
-I was strong I should shoot myself. There was just one
-thing of which I was sure—I should never face that silent
-charge a second time.</p>
-
-<p>But as the weeks went by and nothing happened I
-began to be confident that nothing would. We reached
-the end of September and I never heard Regina Barry’s
-name. Even Cantyre hadn’t told me that, and didn’t
-suppose that I knew it. I calculated the chances against
-our ever meeting. I built something, too, on the possibility
-that were we to meet she wouldn’t know me again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<p>In this I got encouragement from the fact that one
-day in Fifth Avenue I met my uncle Van Elstine. He
-didn’t know me. He wouldn’t have cut me for anything
-in the world; he was too good-natured and kind; but
-he let his wandering gaze rest on me as on any passing
-stranger, and went on his way. I argued then that time,
-vicissitude, a hard life, and a mustache had worked an
-effective disguise. If my own uncle, who had known me
-all my life, could go by like that, how much more one to
-whom I could be nothing but a sinister shadow seen for
-three or four minutes in a rose-colored gloom.</p>
-
-<p>So I reasoned and became a little comforted. And
-then one day my arguments were put to the test.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite at the end of September. The memorial
-was now so nearly completed that Coningsby, who had
-returned to town, left it almost entirely to my charge.
-A new bit of work at Atlantic City having come his way,
-he was closely absorbed in it. Mrs. Grace had motored
-up once or twice to consult me as to papers, rugs, and
-other details of interior decoration. I found her a grave,
-beautiful woman who gave the impression of nourishing
-something that lasts longer than grief—a deep regret.
-Our intercourse was friendly but impersonal.</p>
-
-<p>Once she was accompanied by a young lady whose
-voice I recognized as they approached the room in which
-I was at work. It was a clear, bell-like, staccato voice,
-whose tones would have made my heart stop still had I
-heard it in heaven. Mrs. Grace entered the room, followed
-by a girl as Anglo-Saxon in type as her brother,
-only with a decision and precision in the manner which
-he had not.</p>
-
-<p>In my confusion I was uncertain as to whether or not
-there was an introduction, but I remember her saying:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-“Oh, Mr. Melbury, Ralph is so indebted to you for all
-the help you’ve given him. He says if it hadn’t been for
-you he wouldn’t have been able to get away from New
-York this summer.”</p>
-
-<p>She, too, regarded me impersonally, as her brother’s
-assistant, and no more. I mean by that that she showed
-none of the interest good people generally display in a
-brand that has been plucked from the burning.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it possible she doesn’t know it?” I asked Cantyre
-the next time I saw him.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she doesn’t. That would be the last
-thing Coningsby would tell her. We never speak of
-these things outside the club. If a fellow likes to do it
-himself—well, that’s his own affair.”</p>
-
-<p>But early in October I came face to face with it all.</p>
-
-<p>I was standing at one of the upper windows, looking
-down into Blankney Place, when I saw a motor drive up
-to the door. I knew it was Mrs. Grace’s motor, having
-seen it a number of times already. When the footman
-held open the door Mrs. Grace herself stepped out, to
-be followed by Miss Coningsby, who in turn was followed
-by....</p>
-
-<p>I strolled away from the window into the interior of
-the house. I was not so much calm as numb. There were
-details about which I had to speak to Mrs. Grace, but
-they all went out of my mind. They went out of my
-mind as matters with which I had no more concern. A
-dying man might feel that way about the earthly things
-he is leaving behind. I was, in fact, not so much like
-a dying man as like a man who in the full flush of vigor
-is told that he must in a few minutes face the firing-squad.</p>
-
-<p>So I stood doing nothing, thinking nothing, while I
-listened to the three voices as they floated up, first from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-the lower floor, then from the stairway, then from the
-floor on which I was waiting in this seeming nervelessness.</p>
-
-<p>They drifted nearer—Mrs. Grace’s gentle tones, Elsie
-Coningsby’s silvery tinkle, and then the rich mezzo,
-which by association of ideas seemed to shed round me a
-rose-colored light.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Grace and Miss Coningsby came in together, the
-one in black, the other in white. Both bade me a friendly,
-impersonal good morning, while Mrs. Grace proceeded
-at once to the question of rugs. Didn’t I think that good
-serviceable American rugs, with some of those nice Oriental
-druggets people used in summer cottages, would be
-better than anything more fragile and expensive?</p>
-
-<p>I made such answers as I could, keeping my eyes on
-the door. Presently she appeared on the threshold, looking
-about with interest and curiosity in her great, dark
-eyes. Of the minute I retain no more than a vision in
-rough green English tweed, with a goldish-greenish motoring-veil
-round the head like a nimbus. She impressed
-me as at once more delicate and more strong than I remembered
-her—eager, alert, independent.</p>
-
-<p>“This is to be the men’s smoking-room,” Miss Coningsby
-explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t you know it?” Miss Barry said, lightly.
-“One of the nicest rooms in the house—I think the very
-nicest. It’s wonderful how well men do themselves,
-isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but in this case it’s Hilda.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your brother first of all. You’ll see. It will be
-the snuggest corner of the whole place, and they won’t
-let a woman look into it.”</p>
-
-<p>She glanced at me—but casually. She glanced again—but
-casually again. As no one introduced me, a greeting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-between us was not called for. But when Mrs.
-Grace finished her questions about the rugs and they
-were passing into the next room, Regina Barry turned
-and looked at me a third time. It was now an inquiring
-look, and significant.</p>
-
-<p>“Elsie, who’s that man?” I heard her say, after she
-had joined her companions.</p>
-
-<p>The reply gave my name.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been helping Ralph all summer. That’s how he
-and Esther were able to get away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now we’re going on to the day nursery—”</p>
-
-<p>But Regina Barry said: “Wait a minute! No; go
-on. I’ll overtake you. I’m—I’m perfectly sure that
-that’s the very man who—” She added, as if forcing
-herself to a determination: “I’m going back to speak to
-him. Tell Hilda I’ll be with her in an instant.”</p>
-
-<p>So I waited, repeating to myself the formula agreed
-on two or three months before, that I would see her first—and
-shoot myself afterward.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER IX</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Haven’t we met before?”</p>
-
-<p>Regina Barry said this as she came into the
-room with her rapid, easy movement and took two or
-three paces toward me, stopping as abruptly as she entered.</p>
-
-<p>I hung my head, crimsoning slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so, though I didn’t recognize you at first.
-I knew I had some association with you, but it was so
-vague—”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I had no idea you were an architect.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You see, meeting you for so short a time—”</p>
-
-<p>“And practically in the dark—”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t remember that. But I had no chance to ask
-anything about you. I only hoped you’d come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I couldn’t have done that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think you’d understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t—considering that I asked you particularly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you asked me particularly, but anything in
-life—or death—would have been easier than to obey
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did I do to frighten you so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing but show me too much mercy.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I didn’t think anything of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of what? Of the crime—or of the forgiveness?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of the crime, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>I stepped back from her in amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t think anything of—”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, no! I’ve often done the same myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You? You’ve often done—”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course! Everybody has—at one time or another
-in their lives. Naturally it doesn’t happen every day—and
-one wouldn’t want it to. One wouldn’t have anything
-left in the house if it did; but once in a way—it’s
-nothing. What astonishes me is that you should have
-thought of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But—but you’ve thought of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well—that’s different. But please don’t suppose
-that I’ve thought of it seriously. It simply happened
-that that evening—” The only sign of embarrassment
-she gave was in grasping the greenish-goldish veil with
-her left hand and pulling it round over her bosom. The
-great eyes, of which the light made one doubtful as to
-the color, glowed feverishly, and the long scarlet lips
-threw at me one of their daring, challenging smiles. “Do
-you want me to be absolutely frank?”</p>
-
-<p>“We began with frankness, didn’t we? Why shouldn’t
-we keep it up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it happened that that evening I’d broken off
-my engagement.”</p>
-
-<p>Not to betray all I had learned by my eavesdropping
-behind the rose-colored hangings, I merely said, “Indeed?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; and so I was a little—well, perhaps a little excited.
-And anything that happened impressed me more
-than it would have done ordinarily. If I’ve thought of
-the way you appeared—and what happened when you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-did—it’s only been because it was part of the hours right
-after—” There was another of those smiles that were
-amusingly apologetic as well as amusingly provocative.
-“You’re—you’re not married, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor engaged?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ever been?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you can’t imagine what it is to have been engaged
-and nearly married—and then to find yourself free
-again. Everything associated with the minute comes to
-be imprinted on your memory. That’s why I’ve thought
-of it, though I didn’t for the minute recognize you as the
-man.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now that you have recognized me—”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you’ll do as I asked you before, and come and
-see us again.” She added, as she was about to turn
-away, “How’s Annette?”</p>
-
-<p>I had been puzzled hitherto; I was now bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean Annette Van Elstine? Did you know she
-was my cousin?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course! Didn’t she bring you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring me?” I stammered. “Bring me—where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, to our house!”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p>“The time we’re talking about—when you upset Mrs.
-Sillinger’s coffee and broke the cup.”</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to say whether I was relieved or not. I
-could only falter, “I—I don’t believe I’m the man.”</p>
-
-<p>She came back two or three steps toward me.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course you’re the man! Isn’t your name
-Melbury?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes—but—but I’m not the only Melbury. Could it
-have been my—my brother, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at me a minute before saying: “Then—then I
-think it must have been—your brother. I remember
-now that Annette did call him Jack.” She continued,
-“But what did you mean when—when you said it was
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t the remotest idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t look at you again, because I’m looking at you
-all the time. You’re most wonderfully like your brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think I am. I met my uncle Van Elstine in
-the street the other day and he didn’t know me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, strangers often see resemblances that escape
-members of a family. All I get by looking at you
-is that I see your brother. He was awfully nice. We
-so—we so wished he’d come back. He—he wasn’t like
-everybody else.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s married now.”</p>
-
-<p>I wonder if I am right in thinking that a slight shadow
-crossed her face. There may have been, too, a forced
-jauntiness in her tone as she said, “Oh, is he?”</p>
-
-<p>I nodded.</p>
-
-<p>She turned away again, but again wheeled half round
-to face me.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now we know what I meant; but what on earth
-did you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>I drew myself up for real inspection.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I must say you seemed inordinately penitent over a
-broken cup, even if Mrs. Sillinger was so cross. She
-said you spilled the coffee all over her dress; but you
-didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes! What a bother! I shall always get you
-mixed up in the future.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not—for his sake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now don’t tease me. Tell me where we met.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I do—”</p>
-
-<p>She brightened, the smile of the scarlet lips growing
-vividly brilliant.</p>
-
-<p>“I know. It was at the Millings’, at Tarrytown.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it was at the Wynfords’, at Old Westbury?
-They always have so many people there—”</p>
-
-<p>“Think again.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good of thinking when, if I could remember
-you, I should do it right away?”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems extraordinary to me that you can have
-forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem very sure of the impression you made on
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ve forgotten all about it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t forgotten the impression; you’ve only
-forgotten me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Mr. Melbury, tell me! Please! I’ve got to run
-off and overtake Mrs. Grace; and I can’t do it unless I
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>You will admit that my duty at this juncture required
-some considering. In the end I said: “I sha’n’t tell you
-to-day. I may do it later. In any case, I’ve given you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-so many tips that you can’t fail to see for yourself what
-they lead to. You’ll probably have recalled by to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall ring you up to-morrow and tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, please don’t do that; and yet, on second thoughts,
-I know that when you’ve remembered you won’t want to.”</p>
-
-<p>She said, while withdrawing again toward the adjoining
-room, “You certainly know how to make a thing
-mysterious.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not making anything mysterious. You’ll see
-that, after it’s all come back to you.”</p>
-
-<p>But, having passed into the next room, she returned
-to the threshold to say: “I know you’re only making fun
-of me. I never met you, because I couldn’t have forgotten
-you. And I couldn’t have forgotten you, because
-you’re so like your brother. But we’ll talk about it all
-some other time.”</p>
-
-<p>The first thing I did was to go to a room where there
-was a full-length mirror fixed to the wall and examine
-myself in the glass. Was it possible that I had changed
-so much in the brief space of four months? The reflection
-told me nothing. In the tall, slim figure in the neat
-gray check I could still see the sinister fellow who had
-slept at Greeley’s Slip and skulked about the Park and
-crept into a house at midnight. The transformation had
-come so imperceptibly that the one image was no more
-vital to me than the other. Inwardly, too, I felt no great
-assurance against a relapse. I was like an insect toiling
-up a slippery perpendicular. Not only was each step
-difficult, but it might in the end land me at the bottom
-where I began. In other words, I had still within me
-the potentialities of the drunkard; and to the drunkard
-all aberrations are possible.</p>
-
-<p>That night I put the question up to Lovey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Lovey, do I look the same as I did four or five months
-ago?”</p>
-
-<p>“You looks just as good to me, sonny.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but suppose you hadn’t seen me in the mean
-while, and had come on me all of a sudden, would you
-know right off that it was me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Slim, if I was blind and deaf and dumb, and couldn’t
-see nothink nor ’ear nothink nor feel nothink, I’d know
-it was you if you come ’arf a mile from where I was.”</p>
-
-<p>Since this intuitiveness was of no help to me, I worked
-round to the subject when, later in the evening, I had gone
-in to smoke a good-night pipe with Cantyre.</p>
-
-<p>He had a neat little corner suite which gave one a
-cheery view of the traffic in Madison Avenue north and
-south by a mere shifting of the eyes. I sat in the projecting
-semicircle that commanded this because, after
-my own outlook into an airshaft, I enjoyed the twinkling
-of the lights. To me the real Ville Lumière is New York.
-It scatters lights with the prodigal richness with which
-the heaven scatters stars. It strings them in long lines;
-it banks them in towering façades; it flings them in handfuls
-up into the darkness; it writes them on the sky.
-Twilight offers you a special beauty because, wherever
-you are in the city, it brings out for you in one window
-or another that first wan, primrose-colored beacon—in
-some ways more beautiful than the evening star. Behind
-the star you don’t know what there is, while behind
-the light there is a palpitating history. Then as
-you look down from some high perch other histories light
-their lamps, till within half an hour the whole town is
-ablaze with them—a light for every life-tale—as in pious
-places there is one for every shrine.</p>
-
-<p>Those who were looking at ours saw nothing but a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-green-shaded lamp, and yet it lit up such bits of drama
-as Cantyre’s and mine. So behind every other shining
-star, in tower or tenement, dwelling-house or hotel, there
-was tragedy, comedy, adventure, farce, or romance, all
-in multifold complexity, while before each human story
-there glowed this tranquil fire.</p>
-
-<p>If I had not been an architect, with a knowledge of
-interior decoration as part of my profession, I might not
-have been worried by the sybaritic note in Cantyre’s
-rooms. Being fond of flowers, he had sheaves of gladioluses
-and chrysanthemums wherever he could stack
-them. Over the tables he threw bits of beautiful old
-brocades, ineffable in color. Framed and glazed, a seventeenth-century
-chasuble embroidered in carnations did
-duty as a fire-screen. Japanese pottery grotesques and
-Barye bronzes jostled one another on the mantelpiece
-and low bookcases, while the latter housed rows of handsome
-volumes bound to suit Cantyre’s special taste and
-stamped with his initials. He himself, stretched in a
-long chair, wore a dressing-gown of an indescribable
-shade of plum faced with an equally indescribable shade
-of blue. The plum socks and blue leather slippers couldn’t
-have been an accident; and as I had dropped in on him
-unexpectedly I knew that all this <i>recherche</i> was not to
-dazzle any one—I could have forgiven that—but for his
-own enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>No one could have been kinder to me than he was—and
-I liked him. I reminded myself that it was none
-of my business if his tastes were fastidious, and that to
-spend his money this way was better than in lounging
-about bar-rooms, as I had done; and yet I could understand
-that a girl like Regina Barry should be impatient
-of these traits in a husband.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<p>I sat, however, with my back to it all, astride of a
-small chair, my pipe in my mouth, looking down on the
-lights and traffic.</p>
-
-<p>Breaking a long silence, I said, as casually as I could
-do it: “I met Sterling Barry’s daughter the other day—Miss
-Regina Barry, her name is, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Vague, restless movements preceded the laconic response,
-“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“She came to the memorial with Mrs. Grace.”</p>
-
-<p>Hearing him strike a match, I knew he was making
-an effort at sang-froid by lighting a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you—did you—think her—pretty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty wouldn’t be the word.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beautiful?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“What then?”</p>
-
-<p>“No word that I know would be adequate. You might
-say fascinating if it hadn’t been vulgarized; and chic
-would be worse.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s tremendously animated—and vivid.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has the most living eyes and mouth I’ve ever
-seen in a human being. I’ve never seen a face so aglow
-with mind, emotion, and color. She’s all flame, but a
-flame like that of the burning bush, afire from a force
-within.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke bitterly. “And people talk about that being
-conquered!”</p>
-
-<p>To lead him further I said, “Has any one talked
-of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“How should I know? You—you’ve never told me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m—I’m telling you now.”</p>
-
-<p>My sympathy was quite genuine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, old boy. I can see—I can see how hard it
-must have gone with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How hard it’s going, Frank. There’s a difference in
-tense. If you knew her better—”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure that I care to know her better; and
-that, old man, isn’t said out of rudeness. I don’t belong
-to her world any more; and I’d rather not try to get
-back into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get out! As a matter of fact I’m going to take
-you to see her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t do that, because she asked me to come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right off the bat like that? The first time she’d ever
-seen you?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t exactly that. She knew my brother Jack;
-and my cousin, Annette van Elstine, is a friend of hers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Annette van Elstine is your cousin? Why didn’t you
-tell me that before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, for reasons. I should think you’d see. Why
-should I claim Annette as a cousin? One of the smartest
-women in New York, I’m told she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“One of the very smartest. She could do anything for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“So there you are! When you think of what I was
-when you first met me—what I am still, really—” It
-seemed to me, however, that I had found my opening,
-so I went on in another vein. “I met Annette’s father
-in the street one day, not long ago, and he went by without
-recognizing me. Have I changed very much—since
-the spring?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should know you anywhere, Frank; but Coningsby
-and Christian were saying last week that they wouldn’t
-take you to be the same man any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did they mean morally—or physically?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they meant in looks. They said they’d never
-seen any one in whom good clothes and a straight life
-had so thoroughly created a new man.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you think my uncle might reasonably—”</p>
-
-<p>“Pass you without recognition? Oh, Lord, yes! Besides,
-your mustache changes you a lot. I’d shave that
-off again if I were you; and you want to get back to your
-old self.”</p>
-
-<p>To end the subject I said merely: “I’m glad to hear
-that I don’t look as I did; because—because I shouldn’t
-like to think that the good old fellow had cut me.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER X</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My problem was now as to how to tell Regina Barry
-who I was; and it would have been more urgent
-had I not felt sure that sooner or later she must guess.
-Indeed, she might have guessed already. I had no
-means of knowing. During the four or five days since
-her visit to the memorial no echo of our meeting had come
-back to me.</p>
-
-<p>But I was not left long in doubt.</p>
-
-<p>The William Grace Memorial was now practically ready
-for furnishing. Mrs. Grace was about to move back to
-town in order to undertake the task. Coningsby and
-I were going through the rooms one day with an eye
-to details that might have been overlooked when he said,
-“Well, there doesn’t seem much more for you to do here,
-does there?”</p>
-
-<p>I replied that as far as any further need of my services
-was concerned I might knock off work there and then—thanking
-him for all his help through the summer.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” he went on, “I should like you to come
-in on this job at Atlantic City if you’d care to. You see,
-you and I understand each other; we speak the same
-language both professionally and socially; and it’s not
-so easy as you might think to pick up a chap of whom
-you can say that. Why not come up to our little place—say
-to-morrow night—and dine with us, and we could
-talk it over? My wife told me to ask you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span></p>
-
-<p>Knowing that Coningsby had been aware of the state
-of my wardrobe a few months earlier, I blushed to the
-roots of my hair as I put the question: “What shall I
-wear? Tails—or a dinner jacket and black tie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a dinner jacket. There’ll be just ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>But when I went I found not only my host and hostess,
-but Regina Barry to make the party square.</p>
-
-<p>The Coningsbys lived on the top floor of an apartment-house
-on the summit of the ridge between the west side
-of the Park and the Hudson. Below them lay a picturesque
-tumble of roofs running down to the river, beyond
-which the abrupt New Jersey heights drew a long
-straight line against the horizon. Sunset and moonset
-were the special beauties of the site, with the swift and
-ceaseless current to add life and mystery to the outlook.</p>
-
-<p>The apartment differed from Cantyre’s in that its
-simplicity would have been bare had it not produced an
-impression of containing just enough. The walls of the
-drawing-room were of a pale-gold ocher against which
-every spot of color told for its full value. On this background
-the green of chairs, the rose of lamp-shades, the
-mahogany of tables, and the satinwood of cabinets pleased
-and rested the eye. There were no pictures in the room
-but a portrait of Mrs. Coningsby, which one of the great
-artists of the day had painted for her as a gift. In its
-richness of copper-colored hair and diaphanous jade-green
-draperies the room got all the decoration it required.</p>
-
-<p>I had heard Regina Barry’s voice on entering, and knew
-that I was up against my fate. That is to say, the revolver
-lay ready in my desk. Knowing that such a meeting
-as this must occur some time, I was in earnest as to
-using the weapon on the day when her eyes accused me.
-As I took off my overcoat and hat and laid them on a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-settle in the hall, I said I should probably do it when I
-went home that night. It would depend on how she
-looked at me.</p>
-
-<p>Meeting me at the door of the drawing-room, Mrs.
-Coningsby was sweet and kindly in her welcome without
-being over-demonstrative. I had heard of her beauty,
-but was not prepared for anything so magnificent. Her
-height, her complexion, her hair, her free movements—were
-those of a goddess. I liked and admired Coningsby;
-but I wondered how even he had caught this Atalanta
-and imprisoned her in a flat on the west side of New York.</p>
-
-<p>“You know Miss Barry, don’t you?” were the words
-with which she directed me toward the end of the room,
-where the other guest was seated in a low arm-chair by
-a corner of the fireplace.</p>
-
-<p>So the supreme moment came. I went the length of
-the room knowing that I was facing it.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose it is instinct that tells women how to avoid
-comparisons with each other by creating contrasts.
-Knowing that in competition with her hostess she would
-have everything to lose, Miss Barry used Mrs. Coningsby
-as a foil. In other words, she had divined the fact that
-her friend would be in black with a spangling of blue-green
-sequins, and so had enhanced her own vividness
-by dressing in a bright rose-red. What she lacked in
-beauty, therefore, she made up in a brilliancy that stood
-out against the pale-gold ocher background with the
-force of a flaming flower.</p>
-
-<p>As I stooped to take the hand she held up languidly
-I tried to search her eyes. They told me nothing. The
-fire in them seemed not exactly to have gone out, but to
-have been hidden behind some veil of film through which
-one could get nothing but a glow. Had she meant to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-baffle me she couldn’t have done it more effectively; but,
-as I learned later, she meant nothing of the kind. Her
-greeting, as far as I could judge of it, was precisely that
-which she would have accorded to any other diner-out.</p>
-
-<p>During the exchange of commonplaces that ensued
-there were two things I noticed with curiosity and uneasiness.
-She wore the string of pearls I had seen once
-before—had had in my pocket, as a matter of fact—and
-the long diamond bar-pin. As to her rings I could not
-be sure, having on the night when I meant to steal them
-noticed nothing but their number. But the pearls and
-the diamonds arrested my attention—and my questionings.
-Was she wearing them on purpose? Was she holding
-them up as silent reminders between her and me?
-Was I to understand from merely looking at them the
-charge her eyes refused to convey?</p>
-
-<p>I had no means of seeking an answer to these questions,
-because Coningsby came in and the process of being welcomed
-had to be gone through again. Moreover, the
-commonplaces which, when carried on <i>à deux</i>, might have
-led to something more personal remained as commonplaces
-and no more when tossed about <i>à quatre</i>.</p>
-
-<p>On our going in to dinner the same tone was maintained,
-and I learned nothing from any interchange of
-looks. There was, in fact, no interchange of looks. Miss
-Barry talked to her right and to her left, but rarely across
-the table. When it became necessary to speak a word
-directly to me she did it with so hasty a glance that it
-might easily not have been a glance at all. The burning
-eyes that had watched me so intently on our first meeting,
-and studied me with so much laughing curiosity on our
-second, kept themselves hidden. Since it was on them
-that I had reckoned to tell me what I was so eager to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-be sure of, I was like a man who hopes to look through a
-window and finds it darkened by curtains.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner, however, I got an opportunity. Coningsby
-and his wife were summoned to the nursery to discuss
-the manifestations of some childish ailment. Miss Barry
-and I being left alone before the fire, I was able to say,
-“Well, have you thought of it?”</p>
-
-<p>Some of the customary vivacity returned to her lips
-and eyes. She had at no time seemed unkindly—only
-absent and rather dreamy. She was rather dreamy still,
-but more on the spot mentally.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought of what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of—of where we first met.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that! I’m sorry to say I’ve been too busy to
-do any searching in my memory. But one of these days
-I must.”</p>
-
-<p>There was no mistaking the sincerity of her tone. She
-had not searched in her memory; she had not considered
-it worth while. Her interest in our meeting at the
-memorial had probably passed before she had driven
-away.</p>
-
-<p>I must plead guilty to feeling piqued. That she should
-be so much in my mind and that I should occupy so small
-a place in hers not only disappointed but annoyed me.
-I said to myself, “Oh, well, if she cares so little there is
-no reason why I should care more.” Aloud I made it:
-“Please don’t bother about it. One of these days the
-recollection will come back to you of its own accord.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I dare say.” She went on without transition,
-“Whom did your brother marry?”</p>
-
-<p>I told her.</p>
-
-<p>“He wasn’t like everybody else,” she pursued. “I
-wonder—I wonder if you are?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t that depend on what you mean by being
-like everybody else? I don’t know that I get your
-standard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, men are so much alike. There’s no more difference
-between them than between so many beans in a
-bottle.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see that. To my mind they’re all distinct from
-one another.”</p>
-
-<p>“In little ways, yes. But when it comes to the big
-ways—”</p>
-
-<p>“What are the big ways?”</p>
-
-<p>She weighed this, a forefinger against a cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“The big ways are those which indicate character,
-aren’t they? While the little ones only make for habits.
-Men differ as to their habits, but in character they’re
-all cut on the same pattern—two or three patterns at
-most.”</p>
-
-<p>“But can’t you say the same of women?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely; only I don’t have to marry a woman.”</p>
-
-<p>Since she had become personal, I ventured to do the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, so it’s a question of marriage!”</p>
-
-<p>“What other question is there when a girl like me is
-twenty-three? One has to decide that tiresome bit of
-business before one can tackle anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>I grew bolder.</p>
-
-<p>“Decide as to whom to marry—or whether or not to
-marry at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I said as to whether or not to marry at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that you’d like advice?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d listen to advice—if you’ve any to give.”</p>
-
-<p>I gathered all my strength together for the most tremendous
-effort of my life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then, I should say this: That there are men in the
-world different from any you’ve ever seen yet. Wait!”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed—an intelligent laugh, full of music, mirth,
-and comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know, that reminds me of something awfully
-strange that happened to me a few months ago? Some
-one else said just those words to me—or, rather, wrote
-them down.”</p>
-
-<p>I pulled my chair so that her eyes rested on me more
-directly.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I can’t tell you. I said I never would—so I
-mustn’t. I should love to—though I never shall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was it—interesting?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thrilling! But there! I’m not going to tell you. I
-shouldn’t have mentioned it if what you say hadn’t
-been so oddly like—”</p>
-
-<p>But Coningsby came back into the room to ask if Miss
-Barry wouldn’t join his wife in the nursery to see little
-Rufus while he was awake. In the mean time he and I
-would retire to his own snuggery and talk business.</p>
-
-<p>While I followed his account of the hotel he was building
-sufficiently to get his ideas and to know what he
-expected of me, I was saying to myself: “She doesn’t
-know me. She doesn’t know me at all. It never occurs
-to her as a possibility that the man who wrote those
-words is the one she is now asked to meet at dinner.
-How am I ever to get the nerve to let her know?”</p>
-
-<p>When I found the opportunity I put the question,
-“Have your wife and Miss Barry any idea about me?”</p>
-
-<p>“About you? You mean about—”</p>
-
-<p>“The Down and Out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! What would be the good of that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The only good would be that—that I shouldn’t be
-sailing under false colors.”</p>
-
-<p>“False colors be hanged! We’ve all got a right to the
-privacy of our private lives. You don’t go nosing into
-any one else’s soul; why should any one else go nosing
-into yours? Why, if I were to tell my wife all I could
-tell her about myself I should be ashamed to come home.”</p>
-
-<p>I knew this argument, and yet when I came to apply
-it to my attitude toward Regina Barry I was not satisfied.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A few days later I was surprised to receive a note
-from Annette van Elstine. It ran:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Frank</span>,—I have just heard that you are in New York—that
-you have been here some time. Why did you never
-come to see me? It was not kind. And didn’t you know that
-your mother has been heartbroken over your disappearance?
-Jerry and Jack knew you were somewhere in this country, but
-they’ve kept your mother in the dark. What does it all mean?
-Come to tea with me—just me—on Friday afternoon at five,
-and tell me all about it.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Your affectionate</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Annette</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>As this was the first bit of connection with my own
-family since Jerry had practically kicked me down his
-steps, I was deeply perturbed by it. I am not without
-natural affection, and yet I seemed to have died to the
-old life as completely as Lovey to that with his daughters.
-I had never forgotten Jerry’s words: “And now get out.
-Don’t let any of us ever see your face or hear your name
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>The very fact that he was justified had roused the foolish
-remnant of my pride.</p>
-
-<p>I had loved my mother; I had reverenced my father;
-though my brothers were indifferent to me, I had felt a
-genuine tenderness for my sisters. But since that night
-on Jerry’s steps it had been to me as if I had put myself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-on one side of a flood and left them on the other, and
-that there was no magic skiff that would carry me back
-whence I came. I cannot say that I grieved for them;
-and it was the last of my thoughts that they would
-grieve for me. I accepted the condition that we were
-dead to each other, and tried to bury memory.</p>
-
-<p>And now came this first stirring of resurrection. It
-hurt me. I didn’t want it. It was like the return of life
-to a frozen limb. Numbness was preferable to anguish.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovey,” I said, as the old man hung about me when
-I was undressing that night, “how would you feel if one
-of your daughters—”</p>
-
-<p>He raised himself from the task of pulling off my
-boots, which to humor him I allowed him to perform,
-and looked at me in terror.</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t—they ain’t after me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no! But suppose they were—wouldn’t you like
-to see them?”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped the boot he held in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Y’ain’t goin’ to ’ave them ’unted up for me, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know anything about them, Lovey. That
-isn’t my point at all. But suppose—just suppose—you
-could see them again; would you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his bald head.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re dead to me. I’m dead to them. If we was
-to see each other now ’twouldn’t be nothink but diggin’
-up a corpse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothink but diggin’ up a corpse,” I repeated to myself
-as I turned east from Fifth Avenue, leaving the brown
-trees of the Park behind me, and took the few steps
-necessary to reach my uncle Van Elstine’s door. He had
-married my mother’s sister, and during the lifetime of
-my aunt the families had been fairly intimate. Of late<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-years they had drifted apart, as families will, though
-touch-and-go relations were still maintained.</p>
-
-<p>I have to admit that while waiting for Annette in the
-library up-stairs I was nervous. I was coming back to
-that family life in which I should have interests, affections,
-cares, responsibilities. For the past three years I
-had had no one to think of but myself; and if in that
-freedom there were heartaches, there were no complexities.</p>
-
-<p>Though it was not yet dark, the curtains were drawn
-and the room was lighted not only by a shaded lamp, but
-by the flicker of a fire. When Annette, wearing a tea-gown,
-appeared at last in the doorway she stood for a
-second to examine me.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Jack!” she exclaimed, then. “I didn’t know
-you were in New York. Have you brought Frank with
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Frank,” I laughed, going forward to offer my
-hand. “I didn’t know Jack and I were so much alike.
-But you’re the second person who has said it within a few
-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s your mustache, I think,” she explained as we
-shook hands. “I never saw you wear one before.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do sit down. They’ll bring tea in a minute. I’m
-so glad to see you. But if it’s not a rude question, tell
-me why you’ve been here all this time and never let me
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult to define the conditions which
-made Annette at the age of thirty-three what Cantyre
-styled one of the smartest women in New York, but the
-minute you saw her you felt that it was so. My uncle
-Van Elstine was only comfortably off; their house was
-not large; though they entertained a good deal, their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-manner of living was not showy. But my aunt Van
-Elstine had established the tradition—some women have
-the art of doing it—that whatever she had and did and
-said was “the thing,” and Annette, as her only child and
-heiress, had kept it up.</p>
-
-<p>As far as I could understand the matter, which had
-been explained to me once or twice, my aunt was exclusive.
-In the rush of the newly come and the rise of
-the newly rich, which marked the last quarter of the
-nineteenth century in New York, she and a few like-minded
-friends had made it their business to pick and
-choose and form what might literally be called an <i>élite</i>.
-By 1913, however, the <i>élite</i> was not only formed but
-founded on a rock as firm as the granite of Manhattan,
-and Annette’s picking and choosing could be on another
-principle. Hers was that more civilized American tendency
-to know every one worth knowing, which is still
-largely confined, so they tell me, to Washington and New
-York. Where her mother had withdrawn Annette went
-forward. Her <i>flair</i> for the important or the soon to be
-important was unerring. Hers was one of the few drawing-rooms
-through which every one interesting, both
-domestic and foreign, was bound at some time to pass.
-Being frankly and unrestrainedly curious, she kept in
-touch with the small as well as with the great, with the
-young as well as with the old, maintaining an enormous
-correspondence, and getting out of her correspondents
-every ounce of entertainment they could yield her. On
-her side she repaid them by often lending them a helping
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>The warmth of her greeting now was due not to the
-fact that I was her cousin, but to her belief that I had
-been up to something. It was always those who had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-been up to something with whom she was most eager to
-come heart to heart. Without temptations of her own,
-as far as I could ever see, she got from the indiscretions
-of others the same sort of pleasure that a scientist finds
-in studying the wrigglings of microbes under a microscope.</p>
-
-<p>Having some inkling of this, I answered her questions
-not untruthfully, but with reservations, saying that I
-had not come to see her because I had been down on my
-luck.</p>
-
-<p>“And how did you come to be down on your luck?”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you guess?”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t look it now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been doing better lately. I’ve made two or
-three friends who’ve given me a hand.” Carrying the
-attack in her direction, I asked, “How did you hear that
-I was in New York?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hilda Grace told me. She said you’d been working
-on that memorial of hers. She thought it awfully strange—you
-won’t think me rude in repeating it?—that a man
-like you should be only in a secondary position.”</p>
-
-<p>“If she knew how glad I was to get that—”</p>
-
-<p>She changed the subject abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“When did you last hear from home?”</p>
-
-<p>I thought it sufficient to say: “Not for a long time. I
-may as well admit that nowadays I never hear from
-home at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“And, if it’s not a rude question, why don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Partly, I suppose, because I don’t write.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I understood from Jack. But, Frank dear, do you
-think it kind?”</p>
-
-<p>I broke in with the question, the answer to which I
-had really come to get, “When did you last see Jack?”</p>
-
-<p>“About eighteen months ago; just before he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-married. He knew you were somewhere about, but he
-wasn’t confidential on the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; he wouldn’t be. Did he seem all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite; and awfully in love with Mary Sweet. What’s
-she like, really?”</p>
-
-<p>I described my new sister-in-law as I remembered her,
-going on to say: “I suppose you gave Jack a good time.
-Did you—did you take him about anywhere?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see. I took him to—where was it? I took
-him to the Wynfords’—and—and—oh, yes!—to the
-Barrys’. And it’s too funny! I really think Regina fell
-in love with him at first sight. For a month or two she
-questioned me about him every time we met. Then all
-of a sudden she stopped. If she was struck by the
-thunderbolt, as the French put it—well, all I can say
-is that it serves her right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Serves her right—what for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the way she’s carried on. It’s disgraceful. Do
-you know her? Her father is an architect, like you.”</p>
-
-<p>Annette’s round, dusky face, which had no beauty but
-a quick, dimpling play of expression, was one that easily
-betrayed her ruling passion of curiosity. It was now so
-alight with anticipation that I tried to be more than ever
-casual.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve—I’ve just met her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Once at the memorial, when she came with Mrs.
-Grace; and a few nights ago I dined with her at the
-Coningsbys’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder she didn’t take you for Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>To this I was not obliged to make a response for the
-reason that, the man having arrived with the tea, Annette
-had to give her attention to the placing of the tray.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span></p>
-
-<p>When I had taken a cup of tea from her hand I created
-a diversion with the question, “What did you mean by
-saying the way she carried on was disgraceful?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, the way she gets engaged and disengaged. It’s
-been three times in as many years, and goodness knows
-how many more experiments—”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose she’s trying to find the right man.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s pretty hard on those she takes up and puts down
-in the process. She’ll get left in the end, you’ll see if
-she doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it better to get left than to marry the wrong
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>“The very day I took Jack to see her she’d broken off
-her engagement to Jim Hunter. I didn’t know it at the
-time. It was two or three days later before it came out.
-If I had known it and told Jack—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t say anything. They were awfully taken
-with each other. But I’m glad he was saved. If he
-hadn’t gone straight back to Montreal he might now be
-in the place of poor Stephen Cantyre.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see a good deal of Cantyre.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Elsie Coningsby.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to have got a good deal of information
-about me all of a sudden.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you’ve dropped right into the little circle
-in which we all know one another with a kind of
-village-like intimacy. New York is really a congeries
-of villages.”</p>
-
-<p>“But any one could see that Cantyre would never
-make a husband for a high-spirited girl like Miss Barry.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<p>“How do you know she’s high-spirited, if it’s not a
-rude question?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, one can tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve seen her only twice. You must have noticed
-her very particularly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve noticed Cantyre very particularly; and just as
-he wouldn’t make her the right kind of husband she
-wouldn’t make him the right kind of wife.”</p>
-
-<p>When Annette said anything in which there was a
-special motive a series of concentric shadows fled over
-her face like ripples from the spot where a stone is thrown
-into a pool.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m glad you don’t like her, if it isn’t a rude
-thing to say.”</p>
-
-<p>“What has my liking her or not liking her got to do
-with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing but the question of your own safety. If
-she notices how much you’re like Jack—”</p>
-
-<p>“If she was going to notice that,” I said, boldly, “she
-would have done it already.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so much the worse for you if she has—unless
-you’re put on your guard.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you mean put on my guard against the danger of
-being Cantyre’s successor in a similar experience—”</p>
-
-<p>“That was my idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can give you all the reassurance you need,
-Annette. In the first place, I’ve got no money—”</p>
-
-<p>The relevance of her interruption did not come to me
-till nearly a year later.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank dear, I must ask you, while I think of it,
-didn’t you know that your mother was very, very ill?”</p>
-
-<p>All the blood in my body seemed to rush back to my
-heart and to stay there. We talked no more of Regina<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span>
-Barry, nor of anything but stark fundamental realities.
-In an instant they became as much the essentials of my
-life as if Regina Barry had never existed. Annette
-showed herself much better informed as to my career than
-she pretended to be, giving me to understand that the
-day on which I disappeared my mother had received a
-kind of death-blow. She was of the type to leave the
-ninety and nine in the wilderness to go after that which
-was lost; and in her inability to do so she had been seized,
-so Annette told me, with a mortal pining away. With
-her decline my father was declining also, and all because
-of me.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been the most awful rotter, Annette,” I groaned,
-as I staggered to my feet. “You know that, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Frank, I do know it. That’s why I’ve been so
-glad to get hold of you at last, and ask you to—to redeem
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Redeem myself by going back?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at me and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but how can I?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My question was answered next evening by Beady
-Lamont.</p>
-
-<p>Greatly to Lovey’s disgust, I made it a point to attend
-every Saturday meeting at the club.</p>
-
-<p>“Them low fellas ain’t fit company for you, Slim,”
-he would protest. “What’s the use of cuttin’ out the
-booze and bein’ rich if you don’t ’old yer ’ead above the
-likes o’ that?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve been awfully white with us, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“They wasn’t no whiter with us than they’d be with
-anybody else; and don’t three out o’ every five give ’em
-the blue Peter?”</p>
-
-<p>But though we had this discussion once a week, he
-always accompanied me to Vandiver Street, showing his
-disapproval when he got there in sitting by himself and
-refusing to respond to advances.</p>
-
-<p>I have to confess that I needed the fellowship of men
-who had been through the same mill as myself, in order
-to keep up the fight. Again let me repeat it, I am giving
-you but a faint idea of the struggle I had to make. No
-evil habit relinquishes its hold easily, and the one to
-which I had given myself over is perhaps the most tenacious
-of all. It would be wearisome if I were to keep
-telling you how near I came at times to courting the
-old disaster, and how close the shave by which I sheered
-away; but I never felt safer than a blind man walking<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-along the edge of a cliff. More than once I tore the blue
-star from my buttonhole, though on each occasion I
-juggled myself into putting it back again. I juggled
-myself as I did on the morning when I gazed at the brown-green
-water flowing beneath Greeley’s Slip. I said that
-what I didn’t do to-day I would still be free to do to-morrow,
-thus tiding myself over the worst minutes, if
-only by a process of postponement.</p>
-
-<p>But among my brothers at the club I heard so many
-tales of heroic resistance that I grew ashamed of my
-periods of weakness. What Pyn and Mouse and the
-Scotchman and the piano-mover and Beady Lamont
-could do, I told myself, I also could do. Moreover, new
-men came in, and more than one of the educated type
-turned to me for help. To a journalist named Edmonds,
-and to an actor named Prince, I stood as next friend,
-and only declined to officiate in the same capacity for
-Headlights, the big-eyed tailor, and the wee bye Daisy,
-when they returned, penitent, on the ground that I
-couldn’t watch over more than two men efficiently.
-With the actor I had no trouble, but twice I had to go
-down to Stinson’s and pull Edmonds out of a drunken
-spell. To keep him out was putting me on all my mettle;
-and in order to maintain my mettle I had to stay out
-myself. My courage was no whit nobler than that of
-the man who would turn tail in the battle if it weren’t
-for shame before his comrades; but there is something
-to be got out of even such valor as that.</p>
-
-<p>And in the club I got it. Perhaps we were all putting
-up a bluff. Perhaps those whom I looked upon as heroes
-were inwardly no more glorious than I. But when the
-fellows whom I patted on the back patted me in their
-turn, I was obliged to live up to their commendation.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-There came, indeed, a time when I couldn’t help seeing
-that in the eyes of new-comers especially I was taken as
-a pillar of the club, and knew that I couldn’t fall without
-bringing down some of the living walls along with
-me. To be strong enough to hold up my portion of the
-weight became once more with me then a question of
-<i>noblesse oblige</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Saturday evening after my talk with Annette
-was a special one. After the actor, the journalist, Headlights,
-and Daisy had renewed their pledge for a week,
-Lovey and I stood up with the Scotchman, the piano-mover,
-and three or four others, and repeated ours for
-a month. It probably seems a simple thing to you;
-but for us who knew what had been our perils during the
-preceding month and the months preceding that, it was
-a solemn undertaking. The first vow of all had been
-relatively easy, since new resolutions have an attraction
-in themselves. The weekly vows that came afterward
-were not so fiercely hard, because they were but weekly.
-When it came to promising for a month—well, I can only
-say that to us a month had the length which it has to a
-child. It seemed to stretch on indefinitely ahead of one.
-The foe, retreating as we pressed forward, was always
-keeping up a rear-guard fight, and we never woke in the
-morning without being aware that we might strike an
-ambush before nightfall. We got so tired of the struggle
-that we often thought of the relief it would be to be
-captured; and many a time the resolution was made that
-when this month was up....</p>
-
-<p>And just at these minutes the chaps who seemed
-stronger would close in about us, or those who seemed
-weaker would make some appeal, and when the critical
-Saturday evening came round we would walk up again,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-impelled by forces beyond our control, and repledge ourselves.</p>
-
-<p>On such occasions there was always some word spoken
-to us by men who had fought longer than we had and
-seen the enemy routed more effectively. That night the
-speaker to the blue-star men was that club benefactor and
-favorite, Beady Lamont. He was a huge mass of muscle,
-turning the scale at three hundred and more. Strength
-was in every movement when he walked and every pose
-when he stood still. To my architect’s eye he planted his
-legs as though they were ancient Egyptian monoliths.
-Comparatively small round the abdomen, his chest was
-like a great drum. His arms—but why give a description?
-Hercules must have been like him, and Goliath
-of Gath, and Charlemagne, and the Giants that were in
-Those Days. They said that in drink he used to be terrible;
-but now his big, jolly face was all a quiver of good-will.</p>
-
-<p>His voice was one of those husky chuckles of which
-the very gurgles make you laugh. To make you laugh
-was his principle function in the club. On this evening
-he began his talk with a string of those amusing, disconnected
-anecdotes which used to be a feature of after-dinner
-speeches, somewhat as a boy will splash about
-in the water before he begins to swim. But when he
-swam it was with vigor.</p>
-
-<p>“And now some of you blue-star guys is probably hittin’
-a question that sooner or later knocks at the nuts
-of most of us chaps that’s trying to make good all over
-again. That’s families. Say, ain’t families the deuce?
-You may run like a hare, or climb like a squirrel, or light
-away like a skeeter—and your family’ll be at your heels.
-It’s somethin’ fierce. You can never get away from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-them; they’ll never let you get away from them. Because”—his
-voice fell to a tone of solemnity—“because
-no matter how fast you sprint, or how high you climb, or
-how graceful you can dodge—you carries your family
-with you. You can no more turn your back on it than
-you can on your own stummick. You may refuse to
-pervide for it, you may treat it cruel, you may leave it
-to look out for itself; but you can never git away from
-knowin’ in your heart that if you’re a bum husband or
-father or son you’re considerable more bum as a man.
-That’s why the family is after us. Can’t shake ’em off!
-Got ’em where they won’t be shook off. God A’mighty
-Hisself put ’em there, and, oh, boys, listen to me and I’ll
-tell you why.”</p>
-
-<p>He made dabs at his wrists as though to turn up his
-sleeves, like a man warming to his work. Taking a step
-or two forward he braced his left hand on his barrel-shaped
-hip, while his gigantic forefinger was pointed
-dramatically toward his audience.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, did any of you married guys ever wish to God
-you was single again? Sure you did! Was any of you
-chaps with two or three little kids to feed ever sorry for
-the day when he heard the first of his young ones cry?
-Surest thing you know! Did any of us with a father and
-a mother, with brothers and sisters, too, very likely, ever
-kick because we hadn’t been born an orphan and an only
-child? You bet your sweet life we did! The drinkin’
-man don’t want no hangers-on. He wants to be free.
-Life ain’t worth a burnt match to him when he’s got other
-people to think of, and a home to keep up, and can’t
-spend every penny on hisself. Some of us here to-night
-has cursed our wives; some of us has beat our children;
-some of us has cut out father and mother as if they’d<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-never done nothin’ for us, and we could cast off from
-’em with no more conscience than a tug’ll cast off from
-a liner.</p>
-
-<p>“But, boys, when God A’mighty put us into this world
-He put us into a family first of all. He gives us kindness
-there, and care, and eddication, and the great big thing
-that fills the whole universe and that we ain’t got no
-other name for only love. As soon as we’d got pretty
-well grown He give us another feeling—one that druv us
-by and by to go and start a family for ourselves. Most
-of us went and started one, and them that haven’t done
-it yet’ll do it before the next few years is out. But,
-boys, what’s it all for? Everything’s got to be for somethin’
-or else it’s just lumberin’ up the ground; and this
-here matter of families is either the worst or the best
-thing you’ll find anywhere on earth. If it’s not the best
-it’s the worst, and it has to be one or t’other.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I stand before you as one who used to think it
-was the worst. I won’t say nothin’ of my father and
-mother. Them things is too sacred to be trotted out.
-But I’ll speak of my wife, because she’s that grateful for
-what’s been done for me—and everything done for me
-has been done twice as much, ten times as much, for her—that
-she’d like me to bring her into whatever I’ve got
-to say. I’ve known the time when I was as crazy to be
-quit of my family as a dog to be rid of the tin can tied to
-his tail. I had a wife, then, and three children; and, O
-my God! but I thought they was a drag! I couldn’t go
-nowhere without thinkin’ I ought to be with ’em, and I
-couldn’t take a drink without knowin’ I had to steal it
-from my little boy and my two little girls. They was the
-p’ison of my life. There was nights when I was reelin’
-home and I used to hope that the house had been burnt<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-down durin’ the day and they buried in the ashes. That’d
-leave me free again. Not to have no home—not to
-have to ante up for no one but myself—was the only thing
-I ever prayed for. And by gum, but my prayer was
-answered! One night I come home and found the house
-empty. My wife had decamped, and left a note that run
-somethin’ like this: ‘Dear Beady,’ says she, ‘I can’t
-stand this life no more,’ says she. ‘If it was only me I
-wouldn’t mind; but I can’t see my children kicked and
-beat and starved and hated, not by no one.’ And then
-she signed her name.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, say, boys, most of you has heard what happened
-to me after that. I sure had one grand time while
-it lasted—and it lasted just about six months. I saw a
-man oncet—we was movin’ a party from Harlem to the
-Bronx—fall down a flight of stairs with a sofa on his back,
-and he sure did get some pace on. Well, my pace was
-just about as quick—and as dead easy as he struck the
-landin’ at the bottom I struck the gutter. Now you
-know the rest of my story, because some of you guys
-has had a hand in it.</p>
-
-<p>“But what I want to tell you is this: That when I begun
-to come to again, as you might say, the first thing I
-wondered about was the wife and the kids. I couldn’t
-get ’em out of my mind, nohow. What did I ever have
-’em for? I asked myself. Why in hell did I ever get married?
-Nobody never druv me into it. I did it of my
-own accord. I went hangin’ after the girl, who had a
-good place in the kitchen department of a big store, and
-I never let her have no peace till she said she’d marry
-me, and did it. Why had I been such a crazy fool?
-There was days and days, sittin’ right in there in that
-back room, when I asked myself that; and at last I got<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-the answer. I’m goin’ to tell it to you now, because
-there’s a lot of you shysters that’s only been a few weeks
-in the club that’s askin’ yourselves that very same thing.
-You’ve got wives and kids, the Lord knows where—scattered
-to the four winds of heaven, for anything you
-know—and you wish you hadn’t. But, say, don’t you
-go on wishin’ no such thing; for I’m goin’ to tell you what
-God A’mighty said to me right there in that back settin’-room.”</p>
-
-<p>He squared himself now, planting his Egyptian monoliths
-with a force which in itself was a kind of eloquence.
-His hands were thrust deep into his trousers pockets
-and his big chest expanded.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Beady,’ God A’mighty says to me, and it was just
-as if I’d heard His voice, ‘if a man don’t have no one
-to think about but hisself he becomes the selfishest of all
-things under the sun. I’m God,’ says He, ‘with nothin’
-to do but enj’y myself; and yet if I didn’t have you and
-the other things I make to care for and think about I
-wouldn’t have nothin’. I’ve just got to have ’em, for
-if I didn’t I’d go crazy. So I make beautiful worlds, and
-grand men, and noble women, and pretty kids, and strong
-animals, and sweet birds to sing, and nice flowers to bloom,
-and everything like that. I don’t make nothin’ ugly nor
-nothin’ bad, nor no sickness nor sufferin’ nor poverty.
-You guys does all that for yourselves, and I don’t take
-no rest day nor night tryin’ to show you how not to.
-Listen to me, Beady,’ says He. ‘Stop thinkin’ about
-yourself and that awful hulk of a body, and what it wants
-to eat and especially to drink. Don’t pay no more attention
-to it than you can help. Say, you’re my son, and
-you’re just like me. What you want is not the booze;
-it’s somethin’ outside yourself to think about. I’ve given<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span>
-you a wife and three fine youngsters. Now get out and
-get after them. Cut out livin’ for yourself and live for
-them. You must lose your life to find it; and the quickest
-way to lose your life is not to think about your beastly
-cravings at all.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, by gum! boys, if I didn’t take God A’mighty
-at His word. I says to myself, I’ll prove this thing or
-bust—and if I was to bust there’d be some explosion.
-When you fellows had kept me here long enough to let
-me be pretty nigh sure of myself I went and looked up
-the wife, and—well, there! I needn’t say no more. Some
-of you dubs has been up to my little place and you know
-that Whatever spoke to me that day in that back room
-is in my little tenement in the Bronx if He ever was anywhere—and
-that brings me at last to my p’int.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m speakin’ to you blue-star men because you’ve
-showed pretty well by this time the stuff you’re made of.
-As long as you was in danger of slippin’ back I wouldn’t
-say this to you at all. But, say, you’ve weathered the
-worst of it, so it’s time for me to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Has any of you a wife? Then go back to her. Have
-you kids? Then go back to ’em. Have you a father
-or a mother? Then for God’s sake let them know that
-you’re doin’ well. Go to ’em—write to ’em—call ’em
-up on the ’phone—send ’em a telegraph—but don’t let
-’em be without the peace o’ mind that’ll come from
-knowin’ that you’re on your two feet. One of the most
-mysterious things in this awful mysterious life is the way
-somebody is always lovin’ somebody. Here in these two
-rooms is a hundred and sixty-three by actual count of the
-seediest and most gol-darned boobs that the country can
-turn out. As we look at each other we can’t help askin’
-if any one in their tarnation senses could care for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-likes of us. And yet for every bloomin’ one of us you can
-foot up to eight or ten that’ll have us in their hearts as
-if we was gold-headed cherubs.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, boys, I’ll tell you somethin’ confidential like,
-and don’t think I’m braggin’. The furniture-movin’ business
-is the grandest one there is. For a man that’s mastered
-it there don’t seem anything in the world left for
-him to learn. He’s ready to command a army or to
-run a ocean liner. But there’s one thing I’ll be hanged
-if even a furniture-mover knows anything about—and
-that’s love. I’ve thought about it and thought about
-it—and it gets me every time. I don’t know what it is,
-or where it comes from, or how they brew the durned
-thing in hearts like yours and mine. All I know is that
-it’s there—and that this old world goes round in it. I’m
-buttin’ into it all the time, and it kind o’ turns me shy
-like. My own little home is so full of it that sometimes
-it makes me choke. If I try to get away from it and
-come down here—well, I’m blest if some bloke don’t
-begin ladlin’ it out to me when he don’t hardly know
-what he’s doin’. The furniture-movin’ business is that
-shiny with it when you know how to see it— But I’ll
-not say no more. You’d laff. You’re laffin’ at me now,
-and I don’t blame you. All I’ve wanted to do is to put
-some of you boys wise. If there’s a blue-star man who
-knows any one in the world that’s fond of him—then
-for Christ’s sake get after ’em! And do it not later
-than to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>And so I did it. Before going to bed I wrote a long
-letter to my father, giving him such details of my history
-during the past three years as I thought he would like
-to know. I hinted that if he or my mother would care
-for a visit from me I could go home for a few days.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then I waited.</p>
-
-<p>In a week I got my reply. It read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Frank</span>,—I am glad to receive your letter, but
-sorry that it should ever have been necessary for you to write
-it. That you should be doing well no one could be more thankful
-for than I. I have given your messages to your mother,
-and she wishes me to send you her love. I consider it my duty
-to add, however, that no messages can withdraw the sword
-you have thrust into her heart—and mine.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Your affectionate father,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Edward Melbury</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After that my work took me to Atlantic City,
-though not before I had had a number of meetings
-with Regina Barry, each of which, with one exception,
-took me by surprise.</p>
-
-<p>The exception was the first. Cantyre urged me so
-strongly to come with him to call on Mrs. Barry and her
-daughter that in the end I yielded.</p>
-
-<p>I found Mrs. Barry a charming invalid lady, keeping
-to the background and allowing her daughter to take all
-the initiative. From her as well as from Regina I got
-the reflex action of their liking for Jack. Mrs. Barry
-had seen him only once, but had preserved the memory
-of the pleasure which the meeting had given her. She
-repeated the statement, which had already grown familiar,
-that she thought Jack different from other men. Perhaps
-he was, though I could never see it. Perhaps she
-thought I was, myself, though she didn’t say so in words.</p>
-
-<p>In any case, the call was followed by an invitation to
-dinner, and not long after that Annette placed me next
-to Miss Barry at lunch. Mrs. Grace did the same, and
-so did Cantyre when he insisted on my joining a party
-he gave at a theater. Two or three other meetings were
-accidental, and if I say that in all of them Miss Barry
-herself made the advances it is only to emphasize my
-nervousness. I had no right to be meeting her; I had
-no business to be allowing her to talk to me and show
-that—well, that she didn’t dislike me. The revolver<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-was still in my desk and I began to ask myself if it wasn’t
-my duty to make use of it. True, she had not accused
-me with her eyes, but she was in some ways doing worse.
-What was to be the end of it?</p>
-
-<p>I welcomed the work at Atlantic City, then, for more
-reasons than one. It took me away from New York;
-it kept me out of danger. Cantyre having confided to
-me the fact that his hopes were not dead, it left the field
-free to him. Never for a moment did he suspect that in
-my heart there was anything that could interfere with
-him; nor did he so much as dream that in hers....</p>
-
-<p>It is curious that in proportion as the craving for drink
-diminished its place was taken by another craving for
-what I knew I couldn’t have. There was every reason
-why I couldn’t have it, why I could never have it. Atlantic
-City offered me, therefore, the readiest means of flight.</p>
-
-<p>When that should be over I was planning a still further
-retirement. Sterling Barry was in California, directing
-the first stages of the erection of a block of university
-buildings in which he took great pride. Coningsby himself
-had suggested that when the Atlantic City job was
-finished there would be an opening for me there if I
-cared to make a bid for it. I did so care, and he promised
-to speak for me. Once I reached the Pacific, I was
-resolved not to come back for years, and perhaps never
-to come back at all.</p>
-
-<p>It is lucky for me that I am temperamentally inclined
-to look forward. The retrospective view in my case
-would very soon have led me back to Greeley’s Slip, but
-I was rarely inclined to dwell on it. Once when I was
-crossing the Atlantic as a small boy our steamer had
-run on the rocks at Cape Clear. To enable us to get off
-her before she slipped back into the water and went down,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-long rope ladders were lowered to us from the top of the
-cliff, and up them we had to climb. This we did in a
-foggy Irish dawn, seeing just the rope rung ahead of us.
-Had we been able to look farther up the face of the cliff
-my mother and sisters would hardly have had the nerve
-for the ascent. As it was, they could see that single
-rung and no more, and so could keep their gaze upward
-without fear.</p>
-
-<p>In the same way I kept my own gaze forward. I tried
-not to look ahead of the day, and at Atlantic City the
-days, even in November, were bearable enough. The
-booming of the long miles of breakers acted on me as a
-sedative. They dulled memory; they dulled pain; at
-the same time they incited me to work as the piercing
-wail of the bagpipes incites the Highlander to fight. I
-got companionship from them and a sense of timelessness.
-In their roll and tumble and crash I could hear the
-<i>poluphoisboio thalasses</i> in which Homer put the sound of
-breakers forever into speech.</p>
-
-<p>So November went by, and a great part of December.
-Christmas was approaching, and I was eager to have it
-over. Not that it mattered to me; but the sense that
-there was a gay companionship in the world from which
-I was excluded got slightly on my nerves. Cantyre, who
-came down to spend a week-end with me whenever he
-could, having to go for that season to his relatives in
-Ohio, I looked for nothing more festal than a merry meal
-with Lovey.</p>
-
-<p>The late afternoon on the day before Christmas Eve
-was both windy and foggy, with a dash of drizzle in the
-air. The men had knocked off working, and as I left
-the half-finished building I stood for a minute to get the
-puffs of wet wind in my face. The lights along the Board<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-Walk were reflected on the wet planks as in a blurred
-mirror. Here and there a pedestrian beat his way against
-the wind, and an occasional rolling-chair—the jinrikisha
-of Atlantic City—disappeared into the aureole of the
-sea-front.</p>
-
-<p>As I came down our rickety temporary steps I became
-aware that a woman’s figure darted out of the shelter
-of a pavilion on the shore edge and walked rapidly across
-toward me. She wore an ulster and a tam-o’-shanter cap,
-and made a gallant little figure in the wind. More than
-that I did not take time to notice, as I had no suspicion
-that she could have anything to do with me.</p>
-
-<p>I was, in fact, turning southward toward the house
-where I was staying when she managed to beat her way
-in front of me.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know me?”</p>
-
-<p>I stopped in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“Why—why, what are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was waiting for you.”</p>
-
-<p>I could think of nothing better to say than, “On an
-evening like this?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t mind that. We arrived only this afternoon.
-You see, my father can’t get back from California,
-and mother wouldn’t spend Christmas in town.
-We’re not going to have any Christmas, and so—”</p>
-
-<p>We struggled across the walk to the pavilion, which,
-though open on all sides, afforded at least an overhead
-protection.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know where to find me?” I asked,
-stupidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ralph Coningsby told me—and the time you would
-be coming out. I—I’ve something—something rather
-special to—to say to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<p>I stood looking down at her. In the wooden ceiling
-above our heads there was an electric light that shed
-its beams through the whirl of mist right into her upturned
-face. There was a piteous quiver in the scarlet lips, and
-to the eyes had returned that mingling of compassion
-and amazement with which she had watched me when I
-pulled out her trinkets and threw them on the desk. It
-was the first time I had seen it since that night.</p>
-
-<p>As I look back we seem to have gazed at each other
-in this way for an immeasurably long while, but I suppose
-it was only for some seconds. I knew why she was
-there. The truth had dawned on her at last, and she had
-come to tell me it wouldn’t make any difference.</p>
-
-<p>But it would.</p>
-
-<p>I had left the revolver in my desk in town; but I reminded
-myself that there was a train between eight and
-nine and that I should have plenty of time to catch it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XIV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>For my own sake, rather than for Regina Barry’s, I
-made an effort to escape from the pitiless pavilion
-light overhead.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll need to go back to your hotel. Sha’n’t we
-walk along? Then you can tell me as we go.”</p>
-
-<p>The tramp through the gale and spray would have
-been exhilarating were it not that confidential things had
-to be thrown out into the tempest. As we left the
-pavilion, however, a voice floated toward me from the
-semi-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>“Chair, boss?”</p>
-
-<p>Another minute and we were seated side by side in the
-odd little vehicle—something between a baby’s perambulator
-and a touring-car—with the leather curtains buttoned
-to protect us, and a view through the wind-shield
-of a long line of lights shining into fog. There was a
-minute of surprise in the fact that, involuntarily expecting
-to go at a heightened speed, we found ourselves literally
-creeping at the snail’s pace which was the customary gait
-of our pusher.</p>
-
-<p>But that was only subconscious. I took note of it without
-taking note of it, to remember it when I pieced the
-circumstances together on returning home. The one thing
-of which I was really aware was that in this curious conveyance
-I was seated at her side, and able, as she sat
-half turned toward me, to look her in the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Now that we were there, she lost some of her self-possession.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span>
-After the months in which I had been afraid
-of her she seemed suddenly to have become afraid of me.
-Crouching back into her corner of the chair, she grew
-small and apologetic.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother made me come. She said some one ought to
-tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>It was like a little cry—the cry of a child confessing
-before it is accused. I could follow her mental action.
-She wanted me to understand that nothing but <i>force
-majeure</i> would have induced her to waylay a man as he
-was coming home from work and take him in a kind
-of ambush.</p>
-
-<p>Having once already talked with her at cross-purposes,
-I was careful to let her state her message before betraying
-my conviction of what it was to be.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s very kind of Mrs. Barry,” I began, vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, she likes you,” she broke in, impulsively.
-“If you had any one belonging to you in this country
-I dare say she—But she’s awfully maternal, mother is;
-and when Annette told her—”</p>
-
-<p>“What did Annette tell her?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it. Oh, Mr. Melbury, I’m so sorry that I
-should be the one to bring the news.”</p>
-
-<p>“If it’s bad news,” I said, encouragingly, “I’d rather
-have you to share it with me than any one else in the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p>She asked, abruptly, “Have you heard anything from
-home—lately?”</p>
-
-<p>I had once more the sensation of the blood rushing
-back to my heart and staying there. All I could do was
-to shake my head.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what Annette thought. We told her she ought
-to write to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span></p>
-
-<p>In my excitement I clutched her by the hand, but I
-think she was hardly aware of the act any more than I.</p>
-
-<p>“But what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s—it’s about your father.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not—he’s not—dead?”</p>
-
-<p>She fell back again into her corner of the chair, withdrawing
-her hand. I, too, fell back into my corner, staring
-out through the wind-shield. Knowing that by not saying
-no she was really saying yes, I was obliged not only
-to get possession of the fact, but to control my sense
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>I may say at once that it was the first sudden shock
-of my life. Every other trial had come to me by degrees—I
-had more or less seen it on the way and had been
-ready to meet it. This was something I had hardly ever
-thought of. That it might happen some time had been
-vaguely in the back of my mind, of course; but I had
-never considered it as an event of the day and hour.
-Now that it had occurred, my mental heavens seemed to
-fall.</p>
-
-<p>I have told you so little of my family life that you hardly
-realize the degree to which my father was its center
-and support. My memory cannot go back to the time
-when he was not an important man, not only in the estimation
-of his children, but in that of the entire country.
-One of the youngest of that group of men who in the
-’sixties and ’seventies took the scattered colonies of Great
-Britain lying north of the border of the United States
-and welded them into a gigantic, prosperous whole, he
-had outlived all but the sturdiest of his contemporaries.
-With Macdonald, Mount Stephen, Strathcona and a few
-others he had had the vision of a new white man’s empire
-stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific and from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-Great Lakes to the Arctic, and through good times and
-evil he had never let it go. That there were evil times as
-well as good ones is a matter of history; but however dark
-the moment, my father was one of those who never lost
-for a fraction of an instant his belief in ultimate success.
-In helping to build up the vast financial system of the
-Canadian Pacific Railway there was no door, in Europe
-or America, where money could be borrowed at which
-he did not knock. There were days when the prospect
-was so hopeless and the treasury so empty that he was
-obliged to pledge everything he possessed, and after
-that to use nothing but his honor and his name. The
-winning out is one of the fairy-tales of the modern
-world. He had begun to reap his reward just as
-my memory of him opens. Of his days of struggle I
-knew only by hearsay. By the time I was five he was
-already a man of considerable wealth, honored throughout
-the Dominion, honored in Great Britain, and one of
-the eight or ten Canadian baronets created by the Queen.</p>
-
-<p>I see him as tall, spare, and vigorous, with thin, clear-cut,
-clean-shaven features, a piercing eye, and a mouth
-that sagged at the corners not from dejection, but from
-determination. Spartan in his own life, he required his
-children to be Spartan in theirs. Though with our added
-means our manner of living increased in dignity, it gained
-little in the way of luxury; and many were the shifts to
-which my brothers and I were pushed to indulge the follies
-of young men.</p>
-
-<p>My brothers did this no more than experimentally, covering
-their tracks and returning to right ways before their
-digressions could be noticed. I was invariably caught,
-coming in for some dramatic moments with my father,
-which increased in tension with the years. I have often<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-wondered what his own youth could have been that he
-had so little mercy on what was at first not much worse
-than high spirits and boisterousness. Though I am far
-from blaming any one but myself for my ultimately
-going wrong, I have sometimes thought that a gentler
-handling might have led me aright when sheer repression
-only made me obstinate. That gentler handling my
-mother would have given me had not my father felt that
-it was weak. This knowledge only added to my perversity,
-the result being a state of continuous rebellion
-on my part and permanent displeasure on his.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re getting in worse and worse with the old man,”
-my brother Jack warned me a few months before I left
-Montreal for good. “I heard him telling mother that if
-you didn’t turn over a new leaf he’d cut you out of his
-will.”</p>
-
-<p>The information that he had so cut me out was the last
-form of appeal he ever made to me. I didn’t believe
-he meant it otherwise than as a bluff—a stroke of the
-pen could have reinstated me; but merely as a bluff it
-angered me. It implied that I might be induced to do
-for money what I hadn’t done for love or duty, and I
-was foolish enough to consider it part of my manhood
-to prove that any one who so judged me was mistaken.
-In that phase of my misguided life there was a kind of
-crazy, Cordelia-like attempt to show my father that it
-was not because of his money that I cared for him—or
-didn’t care for him; but all I succeeded in doing was to
-rouse the resentment of a man who had hardly ever been
-defied.</p>
-
-<p>But I had repented of that kind of bravado long
-before I had repented of anything else. My letter
-to him in October had been quite sincere. To be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-cut out of his will had never meant anything to me
-but the loss of his affection. I was sorry for that loss,
-sorrier than any words I have could tell you. But when
-he wrote to me, in answer to my October letter, I knew
-from his tone that I had definitely killed whatever had
-once existed between him and me, and that all that was
-left for me was to bury it. I had been trying to bury it
-for the past eight weeks, and I do not deny that the effort
-was a bitter one.</p>
-
-<p>You must understand that I had now come in for a
-set of emotions that had not belonged to me before I
-went to the Down and Out. I can explain it only on the
-ground that months of abstinence from anything that
-could inflame the senses or disturb the poise of the mind
-had induced a sanity of judgment to which I had been
-a stranger. In this new light I was really a prodigal
-son—not from any hope of a ring on my hand or the fatted
-calf, but genuinely from affection for the parents I had
-wronged.</p>
-
-<p>To have this impulse to arise and go to my father
-thrown back on itself was the hardest thing in my experience.
-Somehow I had kept the conviction that if
-ever I repented that door would be open to my return.
-It had not really occurred to me that they wouldn’t say
-at home, “It is meet that we should make merry and be
-glad.” That my brothers might refuse to join in the
-chorus was a possibility. That my sister might not be
-over-enthusiastic in doing so I should be able to understand.
-But that my father and mother.... Throughout
-my stay in Atlantic City I had been saying to myself,
-“Well, if I’ve thrust a sword into your hearts, old
-dears, you’ve jolly well thrust one into mine; and so
-we’re quits.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“When did it happen?” was the first question I was
-sufficiently master of myself to ask.</p>
-
-<p>“Annette heard yesterday. I think it was the day
-before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know if—if he’d been ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“He hasn’t been well for a long time, Annette says—not
-for two or three years; but the end was—well, it
-was heart failure. He was in his motor—going home.
-When the car drove up to the door they found him—”</p>
-
-<p>It was the picture thus presented that made me put
-my hand to my forehead and bow my head. I was thinking
-of him seated in his corner of the car, stately, unbending,
-unpardoning, dead. I was thinking of the plight of
-my poor little mother when the man she had for so
-many years worshiped and obeyed was no longer there to
-give her his commands. I was thinking of the commotion
-in the family, of the stir of interest throughout
-the community. A prince and a great man would have
-fallen in Israel, and all our Canadian centers would be
-aquiver with the news. Jerry and Jack would cable to
-my sister in England, as well as to our uncles and aunts
-in that country and in the United States. There were
-cousins and friends who wouldn’t be forgotten. I alone
-was left out.</p>
-
-<p>That was, however, more than I could believe. It
-was more, too, than I was willing to allow Regina Barry
-to suppose.</p>
-
-<p>“There must be a telegram for me at my rooms in New
-York,” I managed to stammer, though I fear my tone
-lacked conviction.</p>
-
-<p>To this she said nothing. She had, in fact, as Cantyre
-informed me later, already ascertained that up to the
-hour of her departure from New York there was none.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span></p>
-
-<p>I talked to Cantyre on the telephone immediately on
-returning to my hotel. He said that, though in my
-rooms there were some odds and ends of mail matter
-which he hadn’t yet forwarded, there was no telegram or
-Canadian letter. Having called up Annette, I got a
-repetition of the meager information Miss Barry had
-given me, though I learned in addition that the funeral
-was to take place on the following day, which would be
-Christmas Eve. Her father had already gone to Montreal
-to take part in the ceremony. The embarrassment
-of her tone in saying she was surprised that I had received
-no announcement told me that she was not surprised.
-It was the last touch to the certainty that I had
-been omitted with intention.</p>
-
-<p>After that, for a time, my grief gave place to rage.
-The punishment was so much greater than the crime that
-my heart cried out against its injustice. Had I stayed
-down in the depths where I was I should have accepted
-it phlegmatically; but having made the effort to rise,
-and made it with some success....</p>
-
-<p>I acquitted my mother and my sister of any share in
-the injury done to me. My mother was the tenderest
-little creature God ever made, but she had always been
-under the domination of my father, and had now come
-under that of her sons. Never having asserted herself,
-she would hardly begin to do it at this date, though she
-might weep her heart out in secret. I knew my sister
-would put in a good word for me, but as the youngest of
-the family and a girl she would easily be overruled.</p>
-
-<p>Jack might be mercifully inclined, but he would do as
-Jerry insisted. Jerry—who as Sir Gerald Melbury would
-now cut a great swath as head of the family—Jerry would
-be my father over again. He would be my father over<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-again, only on a smaller scale. My father was tyrannical
-by instinct; Jerry would be so by imitation. My father
-believed his word to be law because he didn’t know how
-to do anything else; Jerry would believe his word to be
-law in order to be like my father. My father wouldn’t
-forgive me because I had outraged his affections; Jerry
-wouldn’t forgive me because my father hadn’t done it
-first. As far as he could bring it about, my future would
-be locked and sealed with my father’s death, not because
-he, Jerry, would be so shocked at my way of life, but
-because the laws of the Medes and Persians alter not.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing remained for me, then, but to grin and bear
-it, and bide my time. That I had friends of my own was
-to me a source of that kind of consolation which is largely
-pride. Cantyre and the Coningsbys, Regina Barry and
-her mother—came closer to me now than any one with
-whom I had ties of blood. “Our relatives,” George Sand
-writes somewhere, “are the friends given us by Nature;
-our friends are the relatives given us by God.”</p>
-
-<p>As relatives given me by God I regarded Lovey and
-Christian and Colonel Straight and Pyn and Beady
-Lamont and all that band of humble, helpful pals to
-whom I was knit in the bonds of the “robust love” which
-was the atmosphere of brave old Walt Whitman’s City
-of Friends. There was no pose among them, nor condemnation,
-nor severity. Forgiveness was exercised
-there till seventy times seven. They forbore one another
-in love, and endeavored to keep the unity of the spirit in
-the bond of peace to a degree of which Some One would
-have said that He had not found the like, no, not in
-Israel.</p>
-
-<p>My family were all of Israel, and of the strictest sect.
-They fasted twice in the week, so to speak; in theory, if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-not in practice, they gave tithes of all that they possessed;
-they could sincerely thank God that they were not as
-such men as composed the Down and Out; and yet it was
-precisely among those who smote their breasts and didn’t
-dare so much as to lift up their eyes unto heaven that I
-found the sympathy that raised me to my feet and bade
-me be a man. No wonder, then, that that evening I
-kept poor old Lovey near me, that I took him down to
-the café, where there were only men, and made him dine
-with me, and told him of my bereavement.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he, now?” he said, drawing a melancholy face.
-“No one can’t live forever, can they? He’d have been an
-old, aged man, I expect.”</p>
-
-<p>I told him my father’s age.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, well, at that time of life they gits carried off.
-Too bad you didn’t know in time for the funeral. Ye’d
-’ave liked to see him laid away safe underground, wouldn’t
-ye, Slim? I ’ope he was in some good benefit club, like,
-that’ll take care of the expenses of burial. Awful dear,
-coffins is; but I suppose your family has a plot in some
-churchyard.”</p>
-
-<p>When I had assured him that this was the case he continued:
-“And as for goin’ off sudden—well, it’s awful
-’ard on relations when a old, ancient man’ll lay round
-sick and don’t know when ’is time’s come. I’ve knowed
-’em when you’d swear they hung on a-purpose, just to
-spite them as ’ad to take care of ’em. I ’ad a grandfather
-o’ me own—well, you’d think that old man just
-couldn’t die. Ninety, I believe he was, and a wicked
-old thing when he got silly, like. Take the pepper, he
-would, and pour it into the molasses-jug, and everything
-like that. Terr’ble fun he was for us young ones, especially
-one day when he dressed all up in ’is Sunday<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-clothes and went out in the street without ’is pants. I
-don’t suppose yer guv’nor ever did the like o’ that,
-Slim. Don’t seem as if old people on this side ’ad them
-playful ways.”</p>
-
-<p>In this sort of reminiscence the evening went by, and
-in the morning I received a note that did much to comfort
-me. It was no more than the conventional letter
-of condolence from Mrs. Barry, but it was tactfully
-couched.</p>
-
-<p>“A loss like yours,” she wrote, “painful as it is at all
-times, becomes tragically so when the support one finds
-in family ties is too far away to sustain one. I have
-often found in my own experience that loneliness added
-a more poignant element to grief. I wish you would
-remember, dear Mr. Melbury, that you have friends at
-this Christmas-time quite near you. Run in and see us
-whenever you feel the need of a friendly word. We are
-leading a life here absolutely without engagements, and
-you will cheer us up more than we can cheer you. If
-on Christmas Eve you would care to look in between four
-and five you would find us here, and we could give you a
-cup of tea.”</p>
-
-<p>Needless to say all through the day of Christmas Eve
-my thoughts were with the gathering in our house on the
-slopes of Mount Royal. I saw in fancy every detail of
-the lugubrious pomp through which Christians contradict
-their Saviour in his affirmation that there is no death.
-Solemnity, blackness, muffled drums, and long lines of
-men throwing awe into their faces—would smite the heart
-with a sense of the final, the irreparable, the gone and lost.
-Flowers would lend a timid touch of brightness, but they
-would bloom in little more than irony. The roll of many
-wheels, the tramp of many feet, and a funeral service in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-which the triumphant note itself would be turned into a
-dirge, these would be the massive accompaniment to the
-few sobs welling up from hearts in which they would be
-irrepressible. Though shut out in person, in spirit I was
-there, standing in the shrouded room, witnessing my
-mother’s farewell kiss, watching the lid placed on the
-coffin, marching with my brothers, kneeling in the church,
-hearing the clods fall in the grave. At the very moment
-when Mrs. Barry handed me a cup of tea I was saying to
-myself, “Now it is all over, and they are coming back to
-the darkened, empty house.”</p>
-
-<p>I was not cheerful as a companion, and apparently no
-one expected me to be so. We can scarcely be said to
-have talked; we merely kept each other company. It
-was Miss Barry herself who suggested, when we had
-finished tea, that she and I should take a walk.</p>
-
-<p>The weather had grown clear, bright, and windless.
-All along the promenade there was Christmas in the shops
-and in the air. It was not like any Christmas I had ever
-known before, with the blare, the lights, the gay, homeless
-people, and the thundering of breakers under starlight;
-but some essential of the ancient festival was present
-there, and it reached me. It reached me with a yearning
-to have something belonging to me that I could claim
-as my own—something to which I should belong and
-that wouldn’t cast me off—something that would love
-me, something that I should love, with a love different
-from that with which even the City of Friends could supply
-me.</p>
-
-<p>But out on the crowded, starry sea-front we neither
-walked nor talked. We sauntered and kept silent. On
-my side, I had the feeling that there was so much to say
-that I could say nothing; on hers, I divined that there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-was the same. I will not affirm that in view of all the
-circumstances I could be anything but uneasy; and yet
-I was ecstatic. This wonderful creature was beside me,
-comforting me, liking to be with me! But if she knew
-exactly who I was....</p>
-
-<p>I was swept by an intense longing that she should be
-told. It was a longing I was never free from, though
-it didn’t often seize me so imperiously as to-night. It
-seized me the more imperiously owing to the fact that I
-could see her moving farther and farther away from any
-recollection and realization coming through herself. I
-had hoped that both would occur to her without my being
-obliged to say in so many words, “I am the man who
-tried a few months ago to steal your jewelry.”</p>
-
-<p>But if ever the shadow of this suggestion crossed her
-mind, it didn’t cross it now. From the beginning the
-face and figure of that man had been blurred behind the
-memory of my brother Jack. Recent events had fixed
-me, just as she saw me, definitely in conditions in which
-sneak-thieving is unimaginable. I was the son of Sir
-Edward Melbury, Baronet, of Montreal and Ottawa, a
-man who would rank among the notables of the continent.
-Though a son in disfavor, I was still a son, and moreover
-I was exercising an honorable craft with some credit. I
-might propose to her, I might marry her, I might live
-my whole life with her, and the chances were that she
-would never connect me with the man she had seen for
-a few hurried minutes on pulling the rose-colored hangings
-aside.</p>
-
-<p>For this very reason it seemed to me I must tell her
-before our friendship went any further. It was an additional
-reason that I began to think that the information
-would be a shock to her. How I got that impression<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-I can scarcely tell you; the ways in which it was conveyed
-to me were so trifling, so infinitesimal.</p>
-
-<p>For example, I asked her one day what she meant
-by her oft-repeated statement that I was different from
-other men.</p>
-
-<p>“Our men,” she explained, promptly, “have no life
-apart from their businesses and professions. Business
-and profession are stamped all over them. They are in
-their clothes, their faces, the tones of their voices. You’d
-know Ralph Coningsby was an architect, and Stephen
-Cantyre a doctor, and Rufus Legrand a clergyman, the
-minute you heard them speak. Now you wouldn’t know
-what you were. You might be anything—anything a
-gentleman can be, that is. I’ve heard some one say
-that Oxford is a town in a university, and Cambridge a
-university in a town. In just the same way my father,
-for instance, is a man in an architect. You’re an architect
-in a man. With you the man is the bigger. With
-us he’s the smaller. It isn’t merely business before
-pleasure; it’s business before human nature; and somehow
-I’ve a preference for seeing human nature put
-first.”</p>
-
-<p>There was little in this to say what I have just hinted
-at. There was barely sufficient to let me see that she was
-putting me above most of her men acquaintances, in a
-place in which I had no right to be. Though it was as
-far as she ever went, it was far enough to create my
-suspicion and to make me feel that the earliest confession
-would not come too soon.</p>
-
-<p>When we got down to the less frequented end of the
-Board Walk the moment seemed to have arrived. The
-crowd had thinned out to occasional groups of stragglers
-or lovers going two and two. Only here and there one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-came on a shop; only here and there on a hotel. One
-got an opportunity to see the stars, and to hear the ocean
-as something more than a drumbeat to the blare.</p>
-
-<p>By a simultaneous movement we paused by the rail,
-to look down on the dim, white, moving line of breakers.
-It was one of those instants when between two people
-drawn closely to each other something leaps. Had there
-been nothing imperative to keep us apart I should have
-seized her in my arms; she would have nestled there. I
-had distinctly the knowledge that she would have responded
-to anything—and that the initiative was mine.</p>
-
-<p>As a rocket that bursts into cascades of fire suddenly
-goes out, so suddenly the moment passed, leaving us with
-a sense of coldness, primarily due to me.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat desperately I began: “Do you know what
-has made the difficulties between me and my family?”</p>
-
-<p>She was gazing off toward the dark horizon.</p>
-
-<p>“Vaguely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know that for years I gave them a great deal
-of trouble?”</p>
-
-<p>“Vaguely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know that—”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know,” she interrupted, quietly, “that I used
-to have a brother?”</p>
-
-<p>The question so took me by surprise that I answered,
-blankly, “No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I had. He was nearly ten years older than I,
-which would make him about your age. He was—he
-was wild.”</p>
-
-<p>“And is he—is he dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“He shot himself—about five years ago. It was a terrible
-story, and I don’t want to tell it to you. I only
-want to say that my mother feels that if—if father hadn’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-been so hard on him—if he’d played him along gently—he
-might easily have been saved. It’s what Mr. Christian—he’s
-had great experience in that sort of thing—he
-does a wonderful work among men that have gone under—but
-it’s what he used to tell father; only father hadn’t
-nearly so much patience with his own son as he would
-have had with some one else’s, and so— I wonder if
-you can understand that when mother heard that you
-had been—had been—well, a little like my brother—”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. These things get about. It might
-have been Annette.”</p>
-
-<p>“And assuming that I was what you call wild, have
-you any idea how wild I was?”</p>
-
-<p>Her response to this was to say: “I like a man to have
-spirit. The men who always keep on the safe side—”
-She left this sentiment there, to add, less irrelevantly than
-it sounded: “Mother wants you to come and dine with
-us to-morrow evening. It will be Christmas Day, but we
-sha’n’t keep it as Christmas. We don’t have any Christmases
-since—since Tony died. We simply—we simply
-sha’n’t be alone.”</p>
-
-<p>In the turn our talk had taken there was so much
-human need that I found my efforts at confession paralyzed.
-That a family whom I had regarded as enviably
-care-free should be living in the shadow of a great tragedy,
-and nursing a sorrow in which there was this element of
-remorse, was curiously illuminating as a discovery. It
-seemed to cast into other people’s lives the sort of sharp
-revealing ray that a flash of lightning throws on a dark
-road. Here was a girl whom I had thought of hitherto
-as immune from the more sordid varieties of trial; and
-yet she had at least tasted of their cup. It gave me a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-new conception of her. I began to see her not as a flat
-surface or as static like a portrait, but as a living, palpitating
-human being with duties round her and a vista
-of experiences as background.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate inference was that I must assist them
-over Christmas, as they would assist me; and to do that
-I must put off telling Regina Barry where she had seen
-me first.</p>
-
-<p>To be quite free, however, I had to get a kind of permission
-from Lovey. My relations with him had grown
-to be peculiar. He seemed to develop two personalities,
-from the one to the other of which he glided more or less
-unconsciously. Though even in our privacy he refused
-any longer to speak of us as buddies and fellas together,
-he called me Slim and sonny, and referred without hesitation
-to our fraternal past. On my part I found it
-almost consoling, in view of the bluff I was putting up,
-to have some one near me who knew me at my worst.
-Where I had to pretend before others there was no pretense
-at all with him; and so I got the relief that comes
-at any time when one can drop one’s mask.</p>
-
-<p>Here in Atlantic City I was paying all his expenses,
-but no wages. In New York I offered him nothing but
-his room. How he lived I didn’t always know, beyond
-the fact that it was honestly. As to this he was so frank
-that I could have little doubt about it.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s many a good thing I lets go by, Slim, all on
-account o’ you. Washin’ windows ain’t nothink but old
-woman’s work when a man’s been a ’atter. If it wasn’t
-to save you, sonny—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know, Lovey. One of these days I may get
-a chance to make it up to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, as for makin’ it up, so long as you goes on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-with the fancy you took to me that night at Stinson’s,
-like—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I do. You see that, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I see it right enough, Slim. It kind o’ passes
-the buck on me, as you might say. But there! Lord
-love ye, I don’t complain! Ye’re a fine young fella, and
-what I does for you—self-denial ye might call it—I don’t
-grudge. When I sees ye goin’ round like a swell with
-other swells I just says to myself, ‘Lovey, that’s your
-work, old top’; and I feels kind o’ satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p>It was kind o’ satisfied that he showed himself when I
-told him I had been asked to eat my Christmas dinner
-with Mrs. and Miss Barry.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t that grand!” he commented, exultingly. “Ye’ll
-put on them swell togs—”</p>
-
-<p>“But it will leave you alone, Lovey,” I reminded him.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love ye, Slim, I don’t mind that! What’s
-Christmas to me? I don’t pay no attention to all that
-foolishness—except the plum puddin’.”</p>
-
-<p>I felt it right to throw out a warning.</p>
-
-<p>“In your dining-room, Lovey, with all the chauffeurs,
-there’ll be things to drink, very likely.”</p>
-
-<p>He put on his melancholy face.</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t make no difference to me, Slim. The Down
-and Out has got me bound by so many promises, like,
-that I can’t take a sip o’ nothink, not no more than a dead
-man that’s got a bottle in ’is coffin. I’m one that can
-take it or leave it, as I feel inclined.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’re going to try taking it or leaving it to-morrow
-I sha’n’t accept Mrs. Barry’s invitation to dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>The effect was what I had expected.</p>
-
-<p>“You go to the dinner, Slim, my boy, and I’ll let you
-see me ’ittin’ the ’ay before you starts.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But you could hit the hay and get out of bed again.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; because I’ll make you lock the door. I ain’t
-a-goin’ to ’ave ye ’ave no hanxiety on my account.”</p>
-
-<p>So we settled it—not that I was to lock him in, but
-that he was to guarantee me against being anxious; and
-I suppose Christian would say that another bit of victory
-was scored.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A few days later I learned that my father had established
-a small trust fund for my benefit, and that
-the income was to be paid to me quarterly. He had
-thus, after all, recognized me as his son, though not on
-the footing of his other sons. Each of his other sons
-would have— But I won’t go into that. It is enough
-to say that for every dollar I should receive Jerry and
-Jack would have twenty or thirty, and so would my
-sisters. Even in my mother’s life interest I was not
-to have a share when she no longer needed it.</p>
-
-<p>Among the many sins I have to confess, that of being
-specially mercenary is not one. I make this affirmation
-in order that you may not condemn me too severely when
-I say that for days I labored under a sense of outrage.
-Mine was the state of mind common among evil-doers
-who object to paying the penalty of which they have had
-fair warning. My father had told me with his own
-mouth that on account of certain indulgences which I
-had refused to give up he had cut me off altogether. I
-had chosen to take my own way and to brave the consequences;
-and now when the latter proved to be not so
-bad as I had been bidden to expect I was indignant.</p>
-
-<p>When I informed Andrew Christian of the bequest I
-added that I had practically made up my mind to refuse
-it. He gave me that look which always seemed about to
-tell you a good joke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why do you think he left you anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose he wanted to feel that if the worse came
-to the worst I shouldn’t be quite penniless.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why should he want to feel that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, hang it all, sir, when everything is said and
-done I was his son!”</p>
-
-<p>“You were his son, and he—he cared for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“He cared for me to—to that extent.”</p>
-
-<p>“And considering your attitude toward him, could
-you expect him to care for you more?”</p>
-
-<p>I said, unwillingly, “No, I suppose not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could you expect him to care for you as much?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I’d given up thinking he cared for me at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“And this shows he did. In spite of all you made him
-suffer—and, what was probably worse in his eyes, made
-your mother suffer—he loved you still. I know you’re
-not thinking of the money, Frank.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m not; and that’s perfectly sincere.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re thinking of his affection for you; and now
-you’re assured of it. The amount of money he left you
-is secondary. That, and the way in which he left it to
-you, were determined by something else.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at him hard as I said, “And what was that?”</p>
-
-<p>His look as he answered me was frank, straight, and
-fearless.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that he didn’t trust you.” I suppose he
-must have seen how I winced, for he went on at once:
-“That’s about the bitterest pill fellows like us have to
-swallow. In addition to everything else that we bring
-on ourselves we forfeit other people’s confidence. There’s
-the nigger in the woodpile, even when we buck up. Your
-father was fond of you, Frank; but he was afraid that
-if he did for you all he would have done if you’d gone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span>
-straight it would only send you to the devil. Don’t you
-see that?”</p>
-
-<p>With some relief as well as some reluctance I admitted
-that I did.</p>
-
-<p>“It takes years, Frank, old boy, for men who’ve been
-where you and I have been to build up a life which gives
-a reasonable promise of making good. In seven or eight
-months you’ve done splendidly. I don’t know that we’ve
-ever had a fellow in the club whose been more game—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the club that’s been game.”</p>
-
-<p>“True; but you’ve got out of it the best that it can
-give. I’ll say that for you. Only don’t imagine for a
-moment that your fight is over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, sir; I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s perfectly true that if you resist the devil he will
-flee from you; but he can show a marvelous power of
-coming back. Some of your toughest tussles lie ahead.
-Now I’m only reminding you of that to show you that
-your father has perhaps done the very wisest thing for
-you. A large part of your safety lies in the necessity
-for your working. If you weren’t absolutely obliged to
-do it in order to live like a respectable man there’s no
-telling what tide of suppressed temptations might rush
-in and engulf you.”</p>
-
-<p>I nodded slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“I see that. Thank you for pointing it out to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Frank, old fellow, that’s not the chief thing I
-want you to see. What will give you more satisfaction
-than anything else is the knowledge that what has been
-done for you has been done in love. Your father has
-shown his love for you; you show your love for him.
-Accept this gift graciously. Enjoy it and make the best
-of it. Your life with him isn’t over.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>My expression must have been one of inquiry, because
-he went on:</p>
-
-<p>“One of the sublimest and truest things that ever fell
-from a pen is this, ‘Love is of God; and every one that
-love is born of God, and knoweth God.’ It’s almost a
-startling thing to realize that by the sheer act of love
-we’re sons of God and know Him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but what kind of love?” I asked, with some
-incredulity.</p>
-
-<p>“Are there more kinds than one? The kingdom of
-love is like that of minerals or that of vegetation—one in
-essence, though multiform in manifestation. Just as one
-will give us coal and diamonds with much the same ingredients,
-and another the strawberry, the rose, and the
-apple-tree, all closely akin, so love shows itself in a
-million ways, and yet remains always love.”</p>
-
-<p>“And would you say that the love of parents and children,
-the love of husbands and wives, the love of sweethearts,
-and the love of God—”</p>
-
-<p>“—are all fundamentally related? Yes, I would. I
-can’t understand love in any other sense, if it’s to be real
-love. Do you remember how often we’ve talked of the
-spirit there is in the world that throws dust into our
-eyes by creating distinctions and confusions where neither
-confusion nor distinction exists? Well, the same evil imp
-is forever at work to stultify love by trying to take the
-meaning from the word. And when it has stultified love
-it has stultified God, since the one is identical with the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p>I became argumentative.</p>
-
-<p>“But if all love is identical with God, how do you
-account for what would commonly be called a wrong
-love?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There’s no such thing as a wrong love. Men are
-wrong and women are wrong, and they treat love wrongly;
-but love itself is always right. There a distinction
-must be made between love and passion; but it’s easy
-enough to make it. One of these days we’ll take the
-time to talk that over. At present my point is simply
-this—that there’s only one love as there’s only one God,
-and it’s only by understanding the unity of both that we
-get the significance of either. Moreover, the same pen
-that wrote, ‘Every one that loveth is born of God,’ wrote,
-‘He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God.’ You see
-then how magical a thing love is, and why any kind of
-love—remember I’m speaking of love, not of physical
-passion, which is another thing—but you can see how
-any kind of love should work wonders.” He asked, suddenly,
-“Have you written to your mother since your
-father died?”</p>
-
-<p>I said I had not, that I hadn’t supposed a letter from
-me would be welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ask whether it would be welcome or not. Do
-your duty—and let other people take care of theirs. Let
-your mother see that, so far from feeling sore over the
-provision in your father’s will, you take it in the way
-I’ve tried to indicate. It will be an amazing comfort
-to her; and if you want to give your brothers and sisters
-the surprise of their young lives you’ll be doing it.” He
-took my hand and pressed it. “Good-by now, old chap.
-I’ve got to go and see Momma about the meals for to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>He passed on to the kitchen, where a Greek named
-Pappa—nicknamed Momma by the boys—had taken the
-place of Mouse; but he left me with a new outlook.</p>
-
-<p>Following his instructions, I began almost immediately<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-to get some of the reward he promised me. My mother
-wrote to me within a week, timidly but tenderly, and with
-joy at being in touch with me again. A few weeks later
-my sister wrote, affectionately, if with reserve. When my
-birthday came in March, and I was thirty-two, I had
-small presents from them both, and from my two sisters-in-law
-as well. I noticed that all letters, even from my
-mother, were hesitatingly expressed, and in something
-like an undertone of awe. My family, too, felt apparently
-that I had put an abyss between myself and them, and
-that in the effort to recross it there was a suggestion of
-the supernatural. It was as if my father were saying to
-them, “This, thy brother, was dead, and is alive again”—and
-they were experiencing some of the strangeness that
-Mary and Martha must have known when Lazarus came
-back to the house at Bethany.</p>
-
-<p>But that was not my only reward, though of what I
-received in addition I find it difficult to tell you. Indeed,
-I should make no attempt to tell you at all were it not
-so essential to this small record of a human life. All I
-want to say is that that thing came to me as a new revelation
-which is probably an every-day fact to you—that
-by the simple process of loving I could dwell in God, I
-could be aware that God was all round me.</p>
-
-<p>I mean that once I understood that love was God the
-great mystery that had tantalized me all my life was
-solved. All my life I had been tortured by the questions:
-Who is God? What is God? What is my relation
-to Him—or have I any? And now I seemed to have
-found the answer. When I got back to love—the common,
-natural love for my father and mother and sisters—when
-I got back to feeling more gently toward my brothers—I
-began to see—you must forgive me if I seem blatant,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-but that is not my intention—I began to see faintly and
-very inadequately that I was actually in touch with God.</p>
-
-<p>I am far from saying that all my difficulties were overcome.
-Of course they were not. I mean only that that
-divine force of which I had been told the universe was
-full, but which had always seemed apart from me, remote
-from my needs, actually came, in some measure at
-least, within my possession. Just as Beady Lamont found
-the furniture-moving business shiny with it, once he knew
-where to look for it, so I began to see my work as an
-architect. It was as if a golden key had been put into
-my hand which unlocked the richest of life’s secrets.</p>
-
-<p>All at once people whom I had known to be well disposed
-toward me, and whom I had dismissed at that,
-began to translate God to me. Ralph Coningsby, Cantyre,
-Lovey, Christian, Pyn, not to speak of others, were
-like reflectors that threw the rays of the great Central
-Sun straight into my soul. I am not declaring that there
-was no tarnish on the surfaces that caught those beams
-and transmitted them to me—probably there was—but
-light and warmth were poured into me for all that. Not
-that there was a change in their attitude toward me;
-the change was in my point of view, in my capacity for
-seeing. What I had thought of only as human aid I
-now perceived to be the celestial bread and wine; and
-where I had supposed I was living only with men, I
-knew I was walking with God.</p>
-
-<p>And yet there was a love with regard to which I could
-not have this peace of mind. Christian would perhaps
-have ascribed that defect to the fact that there was
-passion in it. My own fear was that, having had its
-inception in a moment of crime, it could never free itself
-from the conditions that gave it birth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>After the Christmas dinner there was a change toward
-me in the bearing of Regina Barry and her mother.
-Without growing colder, they became slightly more formal;
-and that I understood. As they had come so far
-in my direction, it was for me to go some of the distance
-in theirs, and I didn’t.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t because I couldn’t. I was like a man who
-would have been glad to walk if paralysis hadn’t nailed
-him to his seat. As, however, it was emotional paralysis
-and not physical, there was no means by which they could
-become aware of it; nor could I make up my mind to tell
-them.</p>
-
-<p>For quite apart from my damnable secret was the common,
-every-day fact that I had no income sufficient to
-maintain a wife in anything like the comfort to which
-Regina Barry had been accustomed. Though she might
-have accepted what I had to offer, I felt the usual masculine
-scruples as to offering it. This, too, was something
-that couldn’t be explained unless there was some
-urgent need of the explanation; and so when I was mad
-to go forward I had, to my shame and confusion, to hang
-back.</p>
-
-<p>Their retreat was managed with tact and dignity.
-During the week after Christmas I saw them on a number
-of occasions, always by invitation, though I had no
-further talk with Regina Barry alone. Two or three
-times I guessed she would have been willing to go out to
-walk with me, but I didn’t suggest it. As she had proposed
-it once, she could hardly do so a second time,
-and so we sat tamely in a sitting-room. Like that minute
-on Christmas Eve when she would have flown into my
-arms had I opened them, other minutes came and went;
-and I saw my coldness reacting on her visibly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the end of ten days a note told me that they had
-returned to New York, apologizing for the fact that they
-had not had time to bid me good-by. Though seeing
-plainly enough the folly of a correspondence, I wrote in
-response to that note, hoping that a correspondence might
-ensue. But I got no answer. I got nothing. Not so
-much as a message was sent to me on the days when
-Ralph Coningsby came down.</p>
-
-<p>I did not resent this; I only suffered. I suffered the
-more because of supposing that she suffered too. And
-yet when I next saw her I found nothing to support that
-theory.</p>
-
-<p>When I went to New York for a few days in February
-I called, but they were not at home. Having left my
-card, I waited for a message that would name an hour
-when I should find them; but I waited in vain. During
-the four days my visit lasted I heard nothing kindlier
-than what Cantyre repeated, that they were sorry to
-have been out when I came.</p>
-
-<p>As I sent them flowers before leaving the city, a note
-from Mrs. Barry thanked me for them cordially; but
-there was not a syllable in it that gave me an excuse for
-writing in response. Reason told me that it was better
-that it should be so, but reason had ceased to be sufficient
-as a guide.</p>
-
-<p>In March I made an errand that took me to town for
-a week-end, and on the Sunday afternoon I called again
-at the house which had so curiously become the focusing-point
-of my destiny. Miss Barry was at home and receiving.
-I found her with two or three other people,
-and she welcomed me as doubtless she had welcomed
-them. Even when I had outstayed them she betrayed
-none of that matter-of-course intimacy which had marked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-her attitude toward me in December. She seemed to
-have retired behind all sorts of mental fortifications over
-which I couldn’t at first make my way.</p>
-
-<p>When we were seated in the style of Darby and Joan
-at the opposite corners of a slumbering fire she told me
-her father had made one hurried visit from California,
-and that, now that he had returned to the Pacific coast,
-she and her mother were thinking of joining him there.
-Should they do so, they would probably remain till it
-was time to go to Long Island in June. Two or three
-protestations against this absence came to my lips, but
-of course I couldn’t utter them.</p>
-
-<p>I could have sworn that she was saying to herself,
-“You don’t seem to care!” though aloud it became,
-“We’ve never been in California, and we want to see what
-it’s like.”</p>
-
-<p>I seized the opportunity to rejoin, “You’ve a fancy for
-seeing what things are like, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>She took up the challenge instantly. “Why do you
-say that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only because of what you’ve said at different times
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Such as?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to quote. I was thinking of the taste
-you’ve frequently acknowledged for making experiments.”</p>
-
-<p>“Experiments in things—or people?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking of people.”</p>
-
-<p>She marched right into my camp by saying, boldly,
-“Oh, you mean the number of times I’ve—I’ve broken
-engagements?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I mean rather the number of times you’ve
-formed them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever buy a house?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
-
-<p>I replied with some wonder that I had not.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ve bought two—this one and the one at
-Rosyth. But before buying either we rented each for
-a season to see whether or not we liked it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we’ve rented others which we didn’t. So you
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see that experiments are justified. Is that what
-you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“If one is satisfied with anything that comes along, by all
-means take it. But if one only wants what one wants—”</p>
-
-<p>“And you know what you want?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were all fire; her lips had the daring scarlet
-of a poppy.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve never got beyond knowing what I don’t want.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is, you’ve never taken anything up except in
-the long run to throw it down?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your expressions are too harsh. One doesn’t throw
-down everything one doesn’t want. One sets it aside.”</p>
-
-<p>“And would it be discreet to ask why you—why you
-set certain things—and people—aside?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at the fire as if considering.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean—men?”</p>
-
-<p>“To narrow the inquiry down, suppose I say I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“And”—she threw me a swift, daring glance—“and
-marriage?”</p>
-
-<p>“That defines the question still further.”</p>
-
-<p>Her words came as the utterance of long, long thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“One couldn’t marry a man one didn’t trust.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; of course not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor a milksop.”</p>
-
-<p>“You couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor a man who wasn’t a thoroughbred.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Just what do you mean by that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t you know? If not I can’t explain. All I can
-say is that there are things a thoroughbred couldn’t do.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you want me to tell you? You know as
-well as I do. The things that make a man impossible—mean
-things—ignoble things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Criminal things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Criminal things, too, I suppose. I don’t know so
-much about them; but I do see a lot of meanness and
-pettiness and— Oh, well, the sort of lack of the fastidious
-in honor that—that puts a man out of the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you very hard to please?”</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if you don’t find what—what you’re looking for?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall do without it, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if you think you find it—and then discover that,
-after all—”</p>
-
-<p>She shrugged her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I’ve never been absolutely disillusioned
-so far. When disillusion has come to me—as
-it has—I could see it on the way. But if I—I cared for
-some one and found I was deceived in him— But what’s
-the use in talking of it?” she laughed. “Please don’t think
-I’m putting forth a claim to be treated better than the
-average. It’s only when I see the average—”</p>
-
-<p>“The average of men?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, the average of women. When I see what they’re
-willing to take—and marry—and live with—I can only
-say that I find myself very well off as I am.”</p>
-
-<p>This conversation did not make it easier for me to go
-back to the starting-point of our acquaintance; but the
-moment came when I did it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XVI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I did not, however, do it that spring, since the event
-that compelled me at last to the step took up all my
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>It was toward the end of April that I received a telegram
-signed by my sister’s name:</p>
-
-<p>“Mother seriously ill. Wants to see you. Come at
-once.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of my alarm at this summons I saw the opportunity
-of putting up a good front before my relatives.
-Taking Lovey with me as valet, and stopping at the best
-hotel, I presented the appearance of a successful man.</p>
-
-<p>Though anxiety on my mother’s account made my return
-a matter of secondary interest, I could see the surprise
-and relief my apparent prosperity created. My
-brothers had been expecting one of whom they would
-have to be ashamed. Furthermore, they had not been
-too confident as to my attitude with regard to my father’s
-will. Looking for me to contest it, they had suspected
-that behind my acquiescence lay a ruse. When they saw
-that there was none, that I made no complaint, that I
-seemed to have plenty of money, that I traveled with a
-servant, that I had the air of a man of means—a curious
-note of wonder and respect stole into their manner toward
-me. I know that in private they were saying to each
-other that they couldn’t make me out; and I gave them
-no help in doing so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>I gave them no help during all the month I remained
-in Montreal. I arranged with Coningsby to take that
-time, and my little stock of savings was sufficient to finance
-me. Though I was once more putting up a bluff, it was
-a bluff that I felt to be justified; and in the end it found
-its justification.</p>
-
-<p>I have no intention of giving you the details of those
-four weeks of watching beside a bed where the end was
-apparent from the first. Now that I look back upon them,
-I can see that they were not without their element of
-happiness, since to my mother at least it was happiness
-to know that I was beside her. The joy in heaven over
-one sinner that repenteth was on her face from the day
-I appeared, and never left it up to that moment when
-we took our last look at her dear smiling features.</p>
-
-<p>When the lawyer came to read us her will I found,
-to my amazement, that she had left me everything she
-possessed.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that I reaped that which I had sown at
-Andy Christian’s suggestion. Since with a good grace I
-had accepted my father’s will, the rest of the family could
-hardly do otherwise with regard to my mother’s. She
-left a note saying that, had my father lived a few months
-longer, he would have seen that I had re-established myself
-sufficiently to be allowed to share equally with the
-rest of the family in what he had to leave; but, as it was
-too late for that, she was endeavoring to right the seeming
-injustice—which he had not meant as an injustice—as
-far as lay in her power. These words from her pen
-being much more emphatic than any I could remember
-from her lips, my brothers and sisters, whatever they felt
-inwardly, could only give their assent to them.</p>
-
-<p>What my mother possessed included not only the personal<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-estate she had inherited from her father, considerably
-augmented by her husband’s careful management,
-but books, furniture, and jewelry. The books and
-furniture I made over to my sister to remain in the two
-houses, the one in Montreal, the other on the Ottawa.
-Some of the jewelry I gave to her, to my sister in England,
-and to my two sisters-in-law, though keeping the
-bulk for my wife—when I got one.</p>
-
-<p>For I was now in a position to marry. Though my
-mother had had no great wealth, what she left me, together
-with the trust fund established by my father and
-what I earned, would assure me enough to live in at least
-as much comfort as Ralph Coningsby. I could, therefore,
-propose to Regina Barry and feel I could make a
-home for her.</p>
-
-<p>I had again come to the conclusion that if I asked
-her she would accept me. I make no attempt to analyze
-this feeling on her part, because I saw plainly enough
-that it was founded on mistake. That is to say, having
-developed an ideal of the man whom she could marry,
-she had nursed herself into the belief that I came up to
-it, when, as a matter of fact, I did not.</p>
-
-<p>Now I had seen enough of husbands and wives to know
-that in most marriages there is some such illusion as this,
-and that it can be successfully maintained for years.
-When the illusion itself has faded it can live on as the
-illusion of an illusion. By the time there is no illusion
-or shadow of illusion left at all it has ceased in the majority
-of cases to matter. Time has welded what mutual
-distaste might have put asunder, and the married state
-remains undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>I was, therefore, obliged to face the consideration that
-if I married the woman I loved she would probably never<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-discover what I felt it my duty to confess. Was it really,
-then, my duty to confess it? Since no one knew it but
-myself, was it not rather my duty to keep it concealed?
-Other men had secrets from their wives—especially those
-that concerned the days when they were unmarried—and
-all were probably the happier for the secrecy. Even
-Ralph Coningsby, who was the most model husband I
-could think of, had said that if he were to tell his wife
-all he could tell her about himself he would be ashamed
-to go home. There were weeks when I debated these
-questions every day and night, arriving at one conclusion
-by what I may call my rough horse sense, and at another
-by my instinct. Horse sense said, “Marry her and keep
-mum.” Instinct warned, “You can never marry her
-and be safe and happy with such a secret as this to come
-between you.”</p>
-
-<p>Throughout this wavering of opinion I knew that when
-the time came I should act from instinct. It wasn’t merely
-that I wanted to be safe; it was also that, all pros and
-cons apart, there was such a thing as honor. Not even
-to be happy—not even to make the woman I cared for
-happy—could I ignore that.</p>
-
-<p>I am not sure how much Andrew Christian understood
-of the circumstances when, without giving him the facts
-or mentioning a name, I asked his advice. He only said:</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve had some experience, Frank, of the potency
-of love, haven’t you? Well, love has a twin sister—truth.
-In love and truth together there’s a power which, if we
-have the patience to wait for its working out, will solve
-all difficulties and meet all needs.”</p>
-
-<p>My experiences during the past few months having
-given me some reason to believe this, I decided, so far
-as I came actively to a decision, to let it rule my course;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-but in the end the critical moment came by what you
-would probably call an accident.</p>
-
-<p>It was the last Sunday in June. My work in Atlantic
-City being over, Mrs. Grace had asked me to come down
-for the week-end to her little place in Long Island. It
-was not exactly a party, though there were two or three
-other people staying in the house. My chief reason for
-accepting the invitation—as I think it was the chief
-reason for its being given—was that the Barry family
-were in residence on the old Hornblower estate, which
-was the adjoining property.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, Mrs. Grace and her guests were
-all asked to Idlewild, as the late Mrs. Hornblower had
-named her house, to Sunday lunch.</p>
-
-<p>The path from the one dwelling to the other was down
-the gentle slope of Mrs. Grace’s gardens, across a meadow,
-at the other side of which it joined the Idlewild avenue,
-and then up a steep hill to the rambling red-and-yellow
-house. Here one dominated the Sound for a great part
-of the hundred and twenty miles between Montauk Point
-and Brooklyn.</p>
-
-<p>Sauntering idly through the hot summer noon, I found
-myself beside Mrs. Grace, while the rest of the party
-straggled on ahead. As my hostess was not more free
-than other women from the match-making instinct, it
-was natural that she should give to the conversation a
-turn that she knew would not be distasteful to me.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a wonderful girl,” she observed, “with just that
-danger to threaten her that comes from being over-fastidious.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you mean by her being over-fastidious;
-but why is it a danger?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place, because people misunderstand her.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-They’ve ascribed to light-mindedness what has only
-been the thing that literary people call the divine searching
-for perfection.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you know the kind of thing she’d consider
-perfect?”</p>
-
-<p>It was so stupid a question that I couldn’t be surprised
-to see a gleam of quiet mischief in her glance as she replied,
-“From little hints she’s dropped to me, quite confidentially,
-I rather think I do.”</p>
-
-<p>Fair men blush easily, but I tried to ignore the fact
-that I was doing it as I said, “That’s quite a common
-delusion at one stage of the game; but suppose she were
-to find that she was mistaken?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer shelved the question, though she did it
-disconcertingly: “Oh, well, in the case she’s thinking
-of I don’t believe she will.”</p>
-
-<p>I was so eager for data that I pushed the inquiry
-indiscreetly.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you so sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“One can tell. It isn’t a thing one can put into words.
-You know by a kind of intuition.”</p>
-
-<p>“Know what?”</p>
-
-<p>“That a certain kind of person can never have had any
-but a certain kind of standard.” She gave me another
-of those quietly mischievous glances. “I’ll tell you what
-she said to me one day not long ago. She said she’d only
-known one man in her life—known him well, that is—of
-whom she was sure that he was a thoroughbred to the
-core.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you admitted at the beginning that that kind
-of conviction is a danger.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be a danger if her friends couldn’t bear her
-out in believing it to be justified.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>Unable to face any more of this subtle flattery, I was
-obliged to let the subject drop.</p>
-
-<p>The lunch was like any other lunch. As an unimportant
-person at a gathering where every one knew every
-one else more or less intimately, I was to some extent at
-liberty to follow my own thoughts, which were not altogether
-happy ones. For telling what I had to tell, the
-necessity had grown urgent. What was lacking, what had
-always seemed to be lacking, was the positive opportunity.
-This I resolved to seek; but suddenly I found it before
-me.</p>
-
-<p>This was toward the middle of the afternoon, when the
-party had broken up. It had broken up imperceptibly
-by dissolving into groups that strolled about the lawns
-and descended the long flights of steps leading to the
-beach below. As I had not been seated near Miss Barry
-at table, it was no more than civil for me to approach
-her when the party was on the veranda and the lawn.
-Our right to privacy was recognized at once by a withdrawal
-of the rest of the company. It was probably assumed
-that I was to be the fourth in the series of experiments
-of which Jim Hunter and Stephen Cantyre had
-been the second and the third; and, though my fellow-guests
-might be sorry for me, they would not intervene
-to protect me.</p>
-
-<p>Considering it sufficient to make their adieux to Mrs.
-Barry, they left us undisturbed in a nook of one of the
-verandas. Here we were out of sight of any of the
-avenues and pathways to the house, and Mrs. Barry
-was sufficiently in sympathy with our desire to be alone
-not to send any one in search of us. On the lawn robins
-were hopping, and along the edge of shorn grass the last
-foxgloves made upright lines of color against the olive-green<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-scrub-oak. Far down through the trees one caught
-the silvery glinting of water.</p>
-
-<p>The sounds of voices and motor wheels having died
-away, Miss Barry said, languidly: “I think they must be
-all gone. They’ll say I’m terribly rude to keep myself
-out of sight. But it’s lovely here, isn’t it? And this
-is such a cozy spot in which to smoke and have coffee.
-I read here, too, and— Oh, dear, what’s happening?”</p>
-
-<p>It was then that the little accident which was to play
-so large a part in my life occurred. She had leaned forward
-from her wicker chair to set her empty coffee-cup
-on the table. As she did so the string of pearls which
-she wore at the opening of her simple white dress loosened
-itself and slipped like a tiny snake to the floor of the
-veranda. From a corresponding chair on the other side
-of the table I sprang up and stooped. When I raised myself
-with the pearls in my right hand I slipped them into
-my pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Between the fingers of my left hand I held a lighted
-cigar. Bareheaded, I was wearing white flannels and
-tennis shoes. Now that the moment had come, I felt
-extraordinarily cool—as cool as on the night when I had
-slipped this string of pearls into my pocket before. I
-looked down and smiled at her. Leaning back in her
-chair, she looked up and smiled at me.</p>
-
-<p>I shall always see her like that—in white with a slash
-of silk of the red of her lips somewhere about her waist,
-and a ribbon of the same round her dashing Panama hat.
-Her feet in little brown shoes were crossed. With an
-elbow on the arm of her chair, she held a small red
-fan out from her person, though she wasn’t actively
-using it.</p>
-
-<p>“What does that mean?” she asked, idly, at last.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus2">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls into his
-pocket before?”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t it remind you of anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—of nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you ever see any one put these pearls into his
-pocket before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, no!” She added, as if an idea had begun to
-dawn in the back of her memory, “Not in that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I remember. You didn’t see him put them in
-at all. You only saw him take them out.”</p>
-
-<p>The smile remained on her features, but something
-puzzled gave it faint new curves.</p>
-
-<p>“Why—”</p>
-
-<p>“It was like this, wasn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>I drew out the pearls and threw them on the table.</p>
-
-<p>She bent forward slightly, still smiling, like a person
-watching with bewildered intensity a conjurer’s trick.</p>
-
-<p>“Why—”</p>
-
-<p>“Only your gold-mesh purse was with them—and your
-diamond bar-pin—and your rings.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—who, who on earth could have told you?”</p>
-
-<p>I, too, continued to smile, consciously wondering if I
-should be as calm as this in the hour of death.</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t Elsie Coningsby?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. She was in the house, but—”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that?” She uttered a mystified
-laugh. “She <i>was</i> there! It was one of the nights she
-stayed with me when papa and mamma were down here
-superintending some changes before we could move in.
-But I never told her anything about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you—when she was right on the spot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, because.”</p>
-
-<p>The smile disappeared. She stopped looking up at me
-to turn her eyes toward the foxgloves and scrub-oak.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes? Because—what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I promised—that man—I wouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you have made him such a promise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. Just at the time I was—I was
-sorry for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And aren’t you sorry for him still?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at me again with one of her bright
-challenges.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here! Do you know him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me first what I asked you. Aren’t you sorry
-for him still?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say I am. I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you—what did you—think of him at the
-time?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought he was—terrible.”</p>
-
-<p>“Terrible—in what way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I can tell you in what way. It
-was so awful to think that a man who had had some
-advantages should have sunk to that. If he’d been a real
-burglar—I mean a professional criminal—I should have
-been afraid of him; but I shouldn’t have had that sensation
-of something meant for better things that had been
-debased.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t he tell you he was hungry?”</p>
-
-<p>The smile came back—faintly.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to know all about it, don’t you? It’s
-the strangest thing I ever knew. No one in this world
-could have told you but himself. Yes, he did say he
-was hungry; but then, a man who’d been what he must
-have been shouldn’t have got into that condition. He’d
-stolen into our pantry, poor creature, and drunk the
-cooking-wine. He told me that—” Without rising, her
-figure became alert with a new impulse. “Oh, I see!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-You do know him. He was an Englishman. I remember
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>I placed myself fully before her. “No, he wasn’t an
-Englishman.”</p>
-
-<p>“He spoke like one.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I, for the matter of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he was a Canadian. Was he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was a Canadian.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then that accounts for it. But you did puzzle
-me at first. But how did you come to meet him?
-Was it at that Down and Out Club that papa and
-Mr. Christian are so interested in? You go to it,
-too, don’t you? I think Stephen Cantyre said you
-did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I go to it, too.”</p>
-
-<p>She grew pensive, resting her chin on a hand, with
-her elbow on the arm of the chair.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it’s all right; but I never can understand
-how men can be so merciful to one other’s vices. It
-looks as if they recognized the seed of them within themselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably that’s the reason.”</p>
-
-<p>“Women don’t feel like that about one another.”</p>
-
-<p>“They haven’t the same cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope he’s doing better—that man—and picking up
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is.”</p>
-
-<p>She asked, in quite another tone, “You’re not going
-back to New York to-morrow, are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure—yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hilda said she was going to try to persuade you and
-the Grahams to stay till Tuesday. If you can stay,
-mamma and I were planning—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
-
-<p>I put myself directly in front of her, no more than a few
-feet away, my hands in the pockets of my jacket.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me again. Look at me well. Try to recall—”</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, very slowly, she struggled to her feet. The
-color went out of her lips and the light from her eyes
-as she backed away from me in a kind of terror.</p>
-
-<p>“What—what—are you trying to make me—to make
-me understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“Think! How should I know all that I’ve been
-saying if—”</p>
-
-<p>“If the man himself didn’t tell you. But he did.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he didn’t. No one had to tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>She reached the veranda rail, which she clutched with
-one hand, while the other, clenched, was pressed against
-her breast.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I do mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you can’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t I.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because—because it isn’t—it isn’t possible! You”—she
-seemed to be shivering—“you could never have—”</p>
-
-<p>“But I did.”</p>
-
-<p>She gasped brokenly. “You? You?”</p>
-
-<p>I nodded. “Yes—I.”</p>
-
-<p>I tried to tell her, but I suppose I did it badly. Put
-into a few bald words the tale was not merely sordid,
-it was low. I could give it no softening touch, no saving
-grace. It was more beastly than I had ever imagined it.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately she didn’t listen with attention. The
-means were indifferent to her when she knew the end.
-For the minute, at any rate, she saw me not as I stood
-there, clean and in white, but as I had been a year before,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-dirty and in rags. But she saw more than that.
-With every word I uttered she saw the ideal she had
-formed broken into shivers, like a shattered looking-glass.</p>
-
-<p>She interrupted my preposterous story to gasp, “I
-can’t believe it!”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s true.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you mustn’t mind if—if I put you to a test.
-Did you—did you write anything while you were
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I printed something—in the same kind of letters
-you’ve seen at the bottom of architects’ plans.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how did you come to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>I recounted the circumstance, at which she nodded
-her head in verification.</p>
-
-<p>“So that was how you knew the words you repeated
-to me a few months ago?”</p>
-
-<p>“That was how. I said there were men in the world
-different from any you’d seen yet; and I told you to
-wait.”</p>
-
-<p>She made a tremendous effort to become again the
-daring mistress of herself which she generally was. She
-smiled, too, nervously, and with a kind of sickening,
-ghastly whiteness.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny, isn’t it? There are men in the world different
-from any I’d seen before that time. I’ve—I’ve
-waited—and found out.”</p>
-
-<p>Before I could utter a rejoinder to this she said, quite
-courteously, “Will you excuse me?”</p>
-
-<p>I bowed.</p>
-
-<p>With no further explanation she marched down the
-length of the veranda—carrying herself proudly, placing
-her dainty feet daintily, walking with that care which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-people show when they are not certain of their ability
-to walk straight—and entered the house.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t know why she had gone; but I knew the worst
-was over. Though I felt humiliation to the core of the
-heart’s core, I also felt relief.</p>
-
-<p>With a foot dangling, I sat sidewise on the veranda
-rail and waited. Glancing at my watch, I saw it was
-not yet four, and I had lived through years since I had
-climbed the hill at one. My sensations were comparable
-only to those of the man who has been on trial for his
-life and is waiting for the verdict.</p>
-
-<p>I waited nervously, and yet humbly. Now that it
-was all over, it seemed to me that the bitterness of
-death was past. Whatever else I should have to go
-through in life, nothing could equal the past quarter of
-an hour.</p>
-
-<p>The sensations I hadn’t had while making my confession
-began to come to me by degrees. Looking back
-over the chasm I had crossed, I was amazed to think I
-had had the nerve for it. I trembled reminiscently; the
-cold sweat broke out on my forehead. It was terrible
-to think that at that very minute she was in there weighing
-the evidence, against me and in my favor.</p>
-
-<p>Mechanically I relighted the cigar that had gone out.
-Against me and in my favor! I was not blind to the fact
-that in my favor there was something. I had gone down,
-but I had also struggled up again; and you can make
-an appeal for the man who has done that.</p>
-
-<p>She was long in coming back. I glanced at my watch,
-and it was nearly half past four. Her weighing of the
-evidence had taken her half an hour, and it was evidently
-not over yet. Well, juries were often slow in coming to
-a verdict; and doubtless she was balancing the extenuating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-circumstance that I had struggled up against the main
-fact that I had gone down.</p>
-
-<p>What she considered her ideal had during the past few
-weeks been gradually transferring itself from her mind
-to my own. She wouldn’t marry a man she couldn’t
-trust; she wouldn’t marry a man who hadn’t what she
-called spirit; she wouldn’t marry a milksop. But she had
-well-defined—and yet indefinable—conceptions as to how
-far in spirit a man should go, and of the difference between
-being a milksop and a man of honor. She might find it
-hard to admit that the pendulum of human impulse that
-swung far in one direction might swing equally far in the
-other; and therein would lie my danger.</p>
-
-<p>But I must soon know. It was ten minutes of five.
-The jury had been out more than three-quarters of an
-hour.</p>
-
-<p>A new quality was being transmuted into the atmosphere.
-It was as if the lightest, flimsiest veil had
-been flung across the sun. In the distant glinting of the
-sea, which had been silver, there came a tremulous shade
-of gold. The foxgloves bowed themselves like men at
-prayer. The robins betook themselves to the branches.
-From unseen depths of the scrub-oak there was an occasional
-luscious trill, as the time for the singing of birds
-wasn’t over yet.</p>
-
-<p>Round me there was silence. I might have been sitting
-at the door of an empty house. I listened intently for
-the sound of returning footsteps, but none came.</p>
-
-<p>At a quarter past five a chill about the heart began
-to strike me. I had been waiting more than an hour.
-Could it be possible that...?</p>
-
-<p>It would be the last degree of insult. Whatever she
-did, she wouldn’t subject me to that. It would be worse<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-than her glove across the face. It was out of the question.
-I couldn’t bear to think of it. Rather than think of it,
-I went over the probabilities that she would come back
-with the smile of forgiveness. It would doubtless be a
-tearful smile, for tears were surely the cause of her delay.
-When she had controlled them, when she was able to
-speak and bid me be of good comfort, I should hear the
-tap of her high heels coming down the uncarpeted stairway.
-No red Indian ever listened for the tread of a
-maid’s moccasins on forest moss so intently as I for that
-staccato click.</p>
-
-<p>But only the birds rewarded me, and the cries of boys
-who had come to bathe on the beach below. There was
-more gold in the light; more trilling in the branches; a
-more pungent scent from the trees, the flowers, and the
-grass; and that was all.</p>
-
-<p>It was half past five; it was a quarter to six; it was six.</p>
-
-<p>At six o’clock I knew.</p>
-
-<p>My hat was lying on a chair near by. I picked it up—and
-went.</p>
-
-<p>I went, not by the avenue and the path, but down the
-queer, rickety flights of steps that led from one jutting
-rock to another over the face of the cliff, till I reached the
-beach. It was a broad, whitish, sandy beach, with a
-quietly lapping tide almost at the full. Full tide was
-marked a few feet farther up by a long, wavy line of seaweed
-and other jetsam.</p>
-
-<p>It was the delicious hour for bathing. As far as one
-could see in either direction there were heads bobbing
-in the water and people scrambling in and out. Shrill
-cries of women and children, hoarse shouts of men,
-mingled with the piping of birds overhead. Farther out
-than the bathers there were rowboats, and beyond the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-rowboats sails. In the middle of the Sound a steamer
-or two trailed a lazy flag of smoke. Far, far to the south
-and the west a haze like that round a volcano hung
-over New York. I should return there next day to face
-new conditions. I only wished to God that it could be
-that night.</p>
-
-<p>The new conditions were, briefly, three: I could use the
-revolver still lying in my desk; or I could begin to drink
-again; or, like the bull wounded in the ring, I could seek
-shelter in the dumb sympathy of the Down and Out.</p>
-
-<p>The last seemed to me the least attractive. I had
-climbed that hill, and found it led only to a precipice that
-I had fallen over.</p>
-
-<p>Neither did the first possibility charm me especially.
-Apart from the horror of it, it was too brief, too sudden,
-too conclusive. I wanted the gradual, the prolonged.</p>
-
-<p>It was the second course to which my mind turned
-with the nearest approach to satisfaction. Christian had
-told me that some of my severest tussles lay ahead; and
-now I had come to the one in which I should go under.
-In that the flesh at least would get its hour of compensation,
-when all was said and done.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of Mrs. Grace’s steps I paused to recall
-Christian’s words of a few days previously:</p>
-
-<p>“In love and truth together there’s a power which, if
-we have the patience to wait for its working out, will
-solve all difficulties and meet all needs.”</p>
-
-<p>I had tried that—love and truth together!—and at the
-result I could only laugh.</p>
-
-<p>My immediate fear was lest Mrs. Grace and the Grahams
-would be on the veranda, vaguely expecting to offer
-me their congratulations. When half-way up the steps
-I heard voices and knew that they were there. So be it!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-I had faced worse things in my life; and now I could
-face that.</p>
-
-<p>But as I advanced up the lawn I saw them moving
-about and talking with animation. As soon as Mrs.
-Grace caught sight of me she hurried down the steps,
-meeting me as I passed among the flower-beds. She
-held a newspaper marked Extra in her hand, and seemed
-to have forgotten that I had love-affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen this? Colt, the chauffeur, was at the
-station and brought it back. It’s just come down from
-New York.”</p>
-
-<p>Glad of anything that would distract attention from
-myself, I took the paper in my hand and pretended to be
-reading it. All I got was the vague information that
-some one had been assassinated—some man and his morganatic
-wife. What did it matter to me? What did it
-matter to any one? Of all that was printed there, only
-five syllables took possession of my memory—and that
-because they were meaningless, “Gavrilo Prinzip!”</p>
-
-<p>I was repeating them to myself as I handed the paper
-back, and we exchanged comments of which I have no
-recollection. More comments were passed with the
-Grahams, and then, blindly, drunkenly, I made my way
-to my room.</p>
-
-<p>There I found nothing to do less classic than to sit at
-the open window, to look over at the red-and-yellow
-house on the opposite hill. It was my intention to think
-the matter out, but my brain seemed to have stopped working.
-Nothing came to me but those barbaric sounds,
-that kept repeating themselves with a kind of hiss:
-“Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo Prinzip!”</p>
-
-<p>From my stupefied scanning of the paper I hadn’t
-grasped the fact that a name utterly unknown that morning<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span>
-was being flashed round the world at a speed more
-rapid than that of the earth round the sun. Still less did
-I suspect that it was to become in its way the most
-sinister name in history. I kept repeating it only as you
-repeat senseless things in the minutes before you go to
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo Prinzip! Gavrilo Prinzip!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XVII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I came back as Major Melbury, of one of the Canadian
-regiments.</p>
-
-<p>It was in November, 1916, that I was invalided home
-to Canada, lamed and wearing a disfiguring black patch
-over what had been my left eye.</p>
-
-<p>There were other differences of which I can hardly tell
-you in so many words, but which must transpire as I go
-on. Briefly, they summed themselves up in the fact
-that I had gone away one man and I was coming back
-another. My old self had not only been melted down in
-the crucible, but it had been stamped with a new image
-and superscription. It was of a new value and a new
-currency, and, I think I may venture to add, of that
-new coinage minted in the civil strife of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>The day of my sailing from Liverpool was exactly two
-years four months and three weeks from that on which I
-had last seen Regina Barry; and because it was so I must
-tell you at once of an incident that occurred at the minute
-when I stepped on board.</p>
-
-<p>Having come up the long gangway easily enough, I
-found that at the top, where passengers and their friends
-congregate, my difficulties began.</p>
-
-<p>When my left eye had been shot out the right had suffered
-in sympathy, and also from shock to the retina.
-For a while I had been blind. Rest and care in the hospital
-my sister, Mabel Rideover, maintained at Taplow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-had, however, restored the sight of my right eye; and now
-my trouble was only with perspective. People and things
-crowded on one another as they do in the vision of a baby.
-I would dodge that which was far away, and allow myself
-to bump into objects quite near me.</p>
-
-<p>As I stepped on deck I had a minute or two of bewilderment.
-There were so many men more helpless than I
-that whatever care there was to give was naturally bestowed
-on them. Moreover, most of those who thronged
-the top of the gangway had too many anxieties of their
-own to notice that a man who at worst was only half
-blind didn’t know which way to turn.</p>
-
-<p>But I did turn—at a venture. The venture took me
-straight into a woman holding a baby in her arms, whom
-I crushed against the nearest cabin wall. The woman
-protested; the baby screamed. I was about, in the rebound,
-to crash into some other victim when I felt from
-behind me a hand take me by the arm. An almost invisible
-guide began to pilot me through the crowd. All
-I caught sight of was a Canadian nurse’s uniform.</p>
-
-<p>It is one of the results of the war that men, who are
-often reduced to the mere shreds of human nature, grow
-accustomed to being taken care of by women, who remain
-the able-bodied ones.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks,” I laughed, as the light touch pushed me
-along, slightly in advance. “You caught me right in the
-nick of time. I can see pretty well with my good eye,
-only I can’t measure distances. They tell me that will
-come by degrees.”</p>
-
-<p>Even though occupied with other thoughts, I was surprised
-that my rescuer didn’t respond to my civility, for
-another result of the war is the ease with which the men
-and women who have been engaged in it get on terms of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-natural acquaintanceship. When artificial barriers are
-removed, it is extraordinary how quickly we go back to
-primitive human simplicity. Social and sex considerations
-have thus been minimized to a degree which, it
-seems to me, will make it difficult ever to re-establish
-them in their old first place. They say it was an advance
-in civilization when we ceased to see each other as primarily
-males and females and knew we were men and
-women. Possibly the war will lead us a step farther
-still and reveal us as children of one family.</p>
-
-<p>That a nurse shouldn’t have a friendly word for a partly
-incapacitated man struck me, therefore, as odd, though
-my mind would not have dwelt on the circumstance if
-she hadn’t released my arm as abruptly as she had taken
-it. Having helped me to reach a comparatively empty
-quarter of the deck, she had counted, apparently, on the
-slowness and awkwardness of my movements to slip
-away before I could turn round.</p>
-
-<p>When I managed this feat she was already some yards
-down the length of the deck, hurrying back toward the
-crowd from which we had emerged. I saw then that she
-was too little to be tall and too tall to be considered little.
-Moreover, she carried herself proudly, placing her dainty
-feet daintily, and walking with that care which people
-display when they are not certain of their ability to walk
-straight. Reaching one of the entrances, she went in,
-exactly as I had seen a woman pass through a doorway
-two years four months and three weeks before.</p>
-
-<p>I was sure it was she—and yet I told myself it couldn’t
-be. I told myself it couldn’t be, for the reason that I
-had been deceived so frequently before that I had grown
-distrustful of my senses. All through the intervening
-time I had been getting glimpses of a slight figure here,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-of an alert movement there, of the poise of a head, of
-the wave of a hand—that for an instant would make my
-heart stop beating; but in the end it had meant nothing
-but the stirring of old memories. In this case I could
-have been convinced if the coincidence had not put too
-great a strain on all the probabilities.</p>
-
-<p>I was to learn later that there was no coincidence; but
-I must tell my story in its right order.</p>
-
-<p>The right order takes me back to my return to New
-York, after my week-end at Mrs. Grace’s, on the morning
-of June 29, 1914.</p>
-
-<p>During the two or three hours of jogging down the
-length of Long Island in the train I tried to keep out of
-my mind all thoughts but one; having deposited my bags
-at my rooms, I should go to Stinson’s.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to this intention I was clearly aware of
-a threefold blend of reaction.</p>
-
-<p>First, there was the pity of it. I could take a detached
-view of this downfall, just as if I had heard of it in connection
-with Beady Lamont or old Colonel Straight.
-Though I should be only a man dropped in the ranks,
-while they would have been leaders, the grief of my comrades
-over my collapse would be no less sincere.</p>
-
-<p>But by tearing my mind away from that aspect of the
-case I reverted to the satisfaction at being in the gutter,
-of which the memories had never ceased to haunt me. I
-cannot expect to make you, who have always lived on
-the upper levels, understand this temptation; I can only
-tell you that for men who have once been outside the
-moral law there is a recurrent tugging at the senses to
-get there again. I once knew an Englishman who had
-lived in the interior of Australia and had “gone black.”
-On his return to make his home in England he was seized<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-with so consuming a nostalgia for his black wives and
-black children that in the end he went back to them.
-Something like this was the call I was always hearing—the
-call of Circe to go down.</p>
-
-<p>But I knew, too, that there was method in this madness.
-I was deliberately starting out to earn the wages
-of sin; and the wages of sin would be death. I must
-repeat that going to Stinson’s would be no more than
-a slow, convenient process of committing suicide. It
-would be committing suicide in a way for which Regina
-Barry would not have to feel herself responsible, as she
-would were I to use the revolver. Having brought so
-much on her, I was unwilling to bring more, even though
-my heart was hot against her.</p>
-
-<p>My heart was hot against her—and yet I had to admit
-that she had been within her rights. When all was
-said that could be said in my favor, I had deceived her.
-I had let her go on for the best part of a year believing
-me to be what I was not, when during much of the time
-I could see that such a belief was growing perilous to her
-happiness. I had been a coward. I should have said
-from the first moment—the moment when she took me
-for my brother Jack—“I am a crook.” Then all would
-have been open and aboveboard between us; but as it
-was there was only one way out. Any other way—any
-way that would have allowed me to go on living longer
-than the time it would take drink to kill me—would have
-been unbearable.</p>
-
-<p>The checkmate to these musings came when my eyes
-fell upon Lovey. He was at the door of the apartment,
-not only to welcome me, but to give me ocular demonstration
-that he had kept the faith while I had been away.
-It was the first time since the beginning of our association<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-that I had left him for forty-eight hours; and that
-he was on his honor during those two days was no secret
-between us. The radiant triumph of his greeting struck
-into me like a stab.</p>
-
-<p>For Lovey now was almost as completely reconstructed
-as I. I use the qualifying “almost” only because the
-longer standing of his habits and the harder conditions
-of his life had burnt the past more indelibly into him.
-Of either of us one could say, as the Florentines are reported
-to have said of Dante, “There goes a man who has
-been in hell”; but the marks of the experience had been
-laid more brutally on my companion than on me.</p>
-
-<p>Otherwise he showed cheering signs of resuscitation.
-Neat, even at the worst of times, he was now habitually
-scrubbed and shaved, and as elegant as Colonel Straight’s
-establishment could turn him out. He had, in fact, for
-the hours he had free from washing windows, metamorphosed
-himself into the typical, self-respecting English
-valet, with a pride in his work sprung chiefly of devotion.</p>
-
-<p>And for me he made a home. I mean by that that he
-was always there—something living to greet me, to move
-about in the dingy little apartment. As I am too gregarious,
-I may say too affectionate, to live contentedly
-alone, it meant much to me to have some one else within
-the walls I called mine, even if actual companionship
-was limited.</p>
-
-<p>But whatever it was, I was about to destroy it. I could
-scarcely look him in the eyes; I could hardly say a word
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>While unpacking my suit-case he said, timorously,
-“Y’ain’t sick, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>I began to change the suit I had been wearing for one
-that would attract less attention at Stinson’s.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey; I’m all right. I’m just—I’m just going
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>And I went out. I went out without bidding the poor
-old fellow good-by, though I knew it was the last the
-anxious pale-blue eyes would see of me in that phase of
-comradeship. When next we met I should probably be
-drunk, and he would have come to get drunk in my
-company. It would then be a question as to which of
-us would hold out the longer.</p>
-
-<p>And that was the thought that after an hour or two
-turned me back. I could throw my own life away, but I
-couldn’t throw away his. However reckless I might be
-on my own account, I couldn’t be so when I held another
-man’s fate in my hand.</p>
-
-<p>Even so, I didn’t go back at once. Half-way to Stinson’s—I
-was on foot—I came to a sudden halt. It
-was as if the sense of responsibility toward Lovey
-wouldn’t allow me to go any farther. I said to myself
-that I must think the matter out—that I must
-find and would find additional justification for my
-course before going on.</p>
-
-<p>To do that I turned into a chance hotel.</p>
-
-<p>I like the wide hospitality of American hotels, where
-any tired or lonesome wayfarer can enter and sit down.
-I have never been a clubman. Clubs are too elective
-and selective for my affinities; they are too threshed
-and winnowed and refined. I have never in spirit had
-any desire to belong to a chosen few, since not only in
-heart, but in tastes and temperament, I belong to the
-unchosen many. I enjoy, therefore, the freedom and
-promiscuity of the lobby, where every Tom, Dick, and
-Harry has the same right as I.</p>
-
-<p>Annoyed by the fact that a halt had been called in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-errand of self-destruction, I began to ask myself why.
-The only answer that came to me was that this old man,
-this old reprobate, if one chose to call him so, cared for
-me. He had been giving me an affection that prompted
-him to the most vital sacrifice, to the most difficult kind
-of self-control.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly that truth came back to me which
-Andrew Christian had pointed out a few months earlier,
-and which in the mean time had grown dim, that any
-true love is of God.</p>
-
-<p>I was startled. I was awed. In saying these things I
-am trying only to tell you what happened in my inner
-self; and possibly when a man’s inner self has plumbed
-the depths like mine it means more to him to get a bit
-of insight than it does to you who have always been on
-the level. In any case this question rose within me:
-Was it possible that out of this old man, this drunkard,
-this murderer, cast off by his children, cast out by men,
-some feeble stream was welling up toward me from that
-pure and holy fountain that is God? Was it possible that
-this strayed creature had, through what he was giving
-me—me!—been finding his way back to the universal
-heart? If ever a human being had been dwelling in love
-he had been dwelling in it for a year and more; and
-there were the words, distilled out of the consciousness
-of the ages, and written for all time, “He that dwelleth
-in love dwelleth in God.” Was it God that this poor,
-purblind old fellow had all unconsciously been bringing
-me, shedding round us, keeping us straight, making us
-strong, making us prosperous, helping us to fight our
-way upward?</p>
-
-<p>I went back.</p>
-
-<p>But on the way I had another prompting—one that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-took me into the office of a tourist company to consult
-time-tables and buy tickets.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovey,” I said, when I got home, “we must both
-begin packing for all we’re worth. We’re leaving for
-Montreal to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ to see your people, Slim, and stay in that swell
-hotel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not just now, Lovey. Later, perhaps. First of all
-we’re going for a month into the woods north of the
-Ottawa.”</p>
-
-<p>His jaw dropped. “Into the woods?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, old sport. You’ll like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, I won’t, Slim. I never was in no woods in
-my life—except London and New York. There’s one
-thing I never could abide, and that’s trees.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t say that when you’ve seen real trees.
-We’ll shoot and fish and camp out—”</p>
-
-<p>“Camp out? In a tent, like? Oh, I couldn’t, sonny!
-I’d ketch me death!”</p>
-
-<p>“Then if you do we’ll come back; only, we’ve got to
-go now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why have we? It’s awful nice here in New York;
-and I don’t pay no attention to people that says it’s
-too hot.”</p>
-
-<p>I made the appeal which I knew he would not resist.
-Laying my hand on his shoulder, I said: “Because, old
-man, I’m—I’m in trouble. I want to get away where—where
-I sha’n’t see—some one—again—and I need you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t that girl, Slim? She—she haven’t turned
-you down?”</p>
-
-<p>The words took me so much by surprise that I hadn’t
-time to get angry. All I could feel was a foolish, nervous
-kind of coolness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Lovey, what I want you to know I’ll tell you; and at
-present I’m telling you this: I’ve got to get out; I’ve
-got to get out quick; and I need you to buck me up.
-No one can buck me up like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if it’s that!” He would have followed me then
-to places more dreadful than the Canadian woods. “Will
-you take all your suits—or only just them new summer
-things?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XVIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus it happened that when war broke out I was
-deep in the wilderness. For more than a month I
-had had no contact with the outside world, not a letter,
-not a newspaper. I had escaped from New York without
-leaving an address, since Cantyre was absent. I had
-meant to write to him to have my letters forwarded,
-but I never had. Could I have guessed that war was to
-begin and to last so long I might have acted differently;
-but the name of Gavrilo Prinzip was still meaningless.</p>
-
-<p>All sportsmen in my part of Canada know Jack Hiller’s,
-just as frequenters of the Adirondacks know Paul Smith’s.
-From Jack Hiller’s we struck farther in, to the rude camp
-where I had spent many a happy holiday when I was a
-lad. Two guides, an Indian and a half-breed, did the
-heavy work; and some long-forgotten, atavistic sporting
-strain in Lovey allowed him, groaningly and discontentedly,
-to enjoy himself.</p>
-
-<p>But if I expected to find peace I saw I was mistaken.
-The distance I had put between myself and the house
-dominating Long Island Sound was only geographical.
-In spirit I was always back on that veranda, living
-through again the minutes of the long waiting. So the
-solitude was no solitude for me. And then one day the
-half-breed’s canoe shot over the waters of the lake, bringing
-supplies from Jack Hiller’s, with the news that the
-world had gone to war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
-
-<p>I wonder how many hundreds of thousands of men
-and women there are to whom the war came as a blessed
-opportunity to get away from uselessness or heartache.
-Stranded, purposeless, spiritless, futile, tired, empty, with
-something broken in the life or seemingly at an end, they
-suddenly found themselves called on to put forth energies
-they never knew they had, to meet needs they had never
-heard of.</p>
-
-<p>“Son of man, can these dry bones live?” one might
-have been asking oneself a few years previously; and all
-at once there were multitudes, multitudes in the valley
-of decision, energized into newness of being. Among
-them I was only one humble, stupid individual; but the
-summons was like that which came to the dust when it
-was bidden to be Adam and a man.</p>
-
-<p>I have no intention of telling you in detail what happened
-to me between that August morning in 1914 and the
-day I stepped on board the boat at Liverpool more than
-two years later. There is no need. You know the outlines
-of that tale already. My case hardly differed externally
-from any other of the millions of cases you have
-heard about. The machine of war does not vary in its
-working much more than any other machine, except for
-the drama played in each man’s soul.</p>
-
-<p>And of that I can say nothing. I don’t know why—but
-I cannot. Day and night I think of what I saw and
-heard and did in those two years, but some other language
-must be coined before I can begin to speak of it.</p>
-
-<p>In this I am not singular; it is a rule to which I know
-few, if any, exceptions. I have heard returned soldiers
-on the lecture platform, telling part of the truth, and
-nothing but the truth, but never the whole truth nor
-the most vital truth. I have talked with some of them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-when the lectures were over, and a flare in the eye has
-said, “This is for public consumption; but you and I
-know that the realities are not to be put into words.”</p>
-
-<p>One little incident I must give you, however, before I
-revert to what happened on the boat.</p>
-
-<p>Having in that early August made my way to Ottawa
-with Lovey, and decided that I must respond at once to
-the country’s call, I expected a struggle with him, or
-something bitter in the way of protest. But in this I was
-mistaken. He, too, had been thinking the matter over,
-and, hard as it would be for him to see me do it, that quiet
-valor which practically no Englishman is without raised
-him at once to the level of his part.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Slim. It’s yer dooty to go, and mine to
-give ye up. We won’t say no more about that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, Lovey, for making it so easy for me. I’ll
-never forget it as long as I live. Now there’s only one
-thing—”</p>
-
-<p>“If it’s about me goin’ straight, sonny, while ye’re
-away, I’ll swear to God not to look so much as on the
-same side o’ the street as a drop o’ liquor till He brings
-ye back to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I believe He will bring me back, old fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure He’ll bring ye back. Ye’ll be ’ome before Christmas;
-and, Slim, if it isn’t goin’ to cost ye too much
-money, won’t ye ’old on to them rooms so as I can keep
-our little place together, like, and ’ave it all clean and
-nice for you—?”</p>
-
-<p>Having consented to this, I was able to make further
-provision for the old man when Cantyre joined me for a
-day or two in Montreal to bid me good-by. Lovey’s heroism
-was the sort of thing to draw out Cantyre’s sentimental
-vein of approval.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take him and look after him, Frank. He’ll valet
-me till you come back. I’ve always wanted a man to do
-that sort of thing, and only haven’t had one because I
-thought it would look like putting on side. But now that
-he drops down to me out of heaven, as you might say,
-I’ll take him as a souvenir of you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XIX</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>All these interests had seemed far away from me
-during the two and a half years over there; but in
-proportion as I drew near Liverpool that morning they
-reformed themselves in the mists of the near future, as
-old memories come back with certain scents and scenes.
-Not till the damp, smoky haze of the great port was closing
-in round me did I realize that my more active part
-in the vast cosmic episode was at an end, and that I
-had come to the hour I had so often longed for—and was
-going home.</p>
-
-<p>I was going home; and yet, for the minute, at any
-rate, I was not glad. There is always something painful
-in the taking up again of forsaken ties, however much we
-once loved them. It was like a repetition of the effort
-with which I had renewed my relations with my people.
-The actual has a way of seizing us in its tentacles and
-making us feel that it is the only life we ever truly led.
-There was a time when I seemed to forget that I had ever
-been anywhere but in the trenches. During the month
-or two that I was blind I got so used to the condition as
-to find it strange that I had ever seen. And always, in
-face of the fierce intensity of the present, the life in New
-York was remote, shadowy, and dim, as they say the
-life in prison becomes from its very monotony to those
-who look back on it after their release.</p>
-
-<p>What it really amounted to was that during those two<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-years I seemed to have grown in the size of my mental
-conceptions. Having been hurled into an existence gigantic,
-monstrous, in which there were no limits to either the
-devotion or the cruelty of human beings toward one
-another, all other ways of living had grown pale and
-small. If you can imagine yourself swirling through
-space, riding both zephyrs and tempests equally as a
-matter of course, you can understand how tame it would
-seem to be tied down to earth again, to go at nothing
-more stimulating than a walking pace. Otherwise typified,
-a lion that has been in a cage, and after two and a
-half years of free roving in the jungle finds itself returned
-to the cage again, would probably have the same sinking
-of the heart as I when I saw the hulk of the <i>Assiniboia</i>
-loom up before me in the dock.</p>
-
-<p>And then came that odd little incident of the nurse
-to connect me with the past by a new form of excitement.
-I have to confess that it was excitement largely compounded
-of wonder and distress. A dull ache told me
-that sensation was returning to a deadened nerve, and
-that where I had supposed there was paralysis at least
-there was going to be reaction and perhaps a pang.</p>
-
-<p>For by this time I had passed through that process
-which is commonly known as “getting over it.” That
-is, a new self was living a new life on a new plane of
-existence. All that belonged to the period before I went
-to enlist at Ottawa was on the other side of a flood. I
-had not precisely forgotten; I had only died and become
-a transmigrated soul. Whatever was past was past. I
-might suffer from it; I might feel its consequences; but
-I couldn’t live it again. On the other hand, I was living
-vividly in the present. Not so much consciously or by
-word as because I couldn’t help it, I had merged everything<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-I was into one dominating purpose with which, as
-far as I was aware, Regina Barry had nothing to do.
-The aims for which the war was being fought were my
-aims; I had no others. When these objectives were won
-my life, it seemed to me, would be over. It would melt
-away in that victory as dawn into sunrise. It would
-not be lost; it would only be absorbed—a spark in the
-blaze of noonday.</p>
-
-<p>So mentally I was pressing forward. Though I could
-do no more fighting, I had been told that there was still
-work by which I could contribute to the object beside
-which no other object could be taken into consideration.
-I was being sent back for that reason. Not much had
-been told me as yet about what I was to do, but I understood
-that it was to be in connection with American public
-opinion. It will be remembered that at the end of
-1916 the United States was not only not in the war, but
-it was still doubtful as to whether or not she ever would
-be. The hand of a cautious listener being on the pulse
-of a patient people, it was on the beat of that pulse that
-the issue turned.</p>
-
-<p>I understood that, with my acquaintance ranging among
-high and low, I was to do what I could to make the pulse
-a little quicker. I might not be able to do much, but
-we had all learned the value of small individual contributions.
-It was argued that in proportion as the American
-people began to see on which side the balance of righteousness
-dipped, my game leg and my black patch,
-and the haggardness and gauntness and batteredness of
-my whole appearance, would have some appeal. The
-appeal would be the stronger for the fact that I was not
-an Englishman, but a Canadian—blood-brother to the
-man of his own continent, blood-brother to the Briton,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-blood-brother to the Frenchman, blood-son of the great
-ideals fathered by the Anglo-Saxon race, and in which all
-free peoples in the course of two hundred years had been
-made participants—and quick to spring to their defense.
-I was to be, therefore, a kind of unobtrusive, unaccredited
-ambassador to the man in the office and the street, with
-instructions to be inoffensive but persuasive.</p>
-
-<p>And on this mission all my conscious thought was set.
-No hermit in the desert was ever more entirely self-dedicated
-to the saving of his soul than I to the quiet
-preaching of this new crusade among men like Ralph
-Coningsby and Stephen Cantyre and Beady Lamont and
-Headlights and Daisy and Momma and Mouse, and any
-others with whom I should come in contact. In fulfilling
-this task I wanted no one to disturb or distract me; and
-here at the very outset was some one who might do both.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XX</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>After having found my cabin and seen to my belongings
-I hobbled up on deck once more, to verify
-my vision of the Canadian nurse’s uniform. I discovered
-the uniform in two or three instances, but in none that
-corresponded to the figure too little to be tall and too tall
-to be considered little I had watched receding down the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>As for the costume itself, it was not difficult to find
-myself beside one of the ladies who wore it—a beautiful,
-grave woman, of the type of Bouguereau’s Consolatrice,
-who, with hands resting on the deck rail, was looking down
-at the movement on the dock.</p>
-
-<p>“There seem to be a number of nurses going back,” I
-observed, after an introductory word or two.</p>
-
-<p>“There are three in our party—myself and the two
-over there.”</p>
-
-<p>The two over there were two I had already seen,
-neither of them being my pilot of a half-hour previously.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I saw another,” I threw off, casually.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe there is one—an American girl from Lady
-Rideover’s hospital at Taplow.”</p>
-
-<p>As I had just come from Lady Rideover’s hospital at
-Taplow, and Lady Rideover herself was my sister, I suggested,
-without mentioning the relationship, that in this
-speculation there was some mistake.</p>
-
-<p>“She may not have come directly from there,” the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-Consolatrice admitted; “but I know she was with Lady
-Rideover six months ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“But six months ago I was with Lady Rideover
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she was there then.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I should have seen her if she had been.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned slowly round on me, with deep, kind eyes.
-“Would you? You could see all the time?”</p>
-
-<p>I had forgotten that. There had been two months
-when I hadn’t seen at all. Any one might have come
-and gone during that time.</p>
-
-<p>Remarking on the inconvenience of having no list of
-passengers, I asked my companion if she knew the young
-lady’s name.</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I can inquire of my friends. They may
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>Having crossed to speak to the nurses on the other
-side of the deck, she came back without the information.</p>
-
-<p>“But Miss Prynne,” she added, “that’s the short one,
-says that the young lady came over about two years ago
-with Lady Rideover’s sister, Miss Melbury, of Montreal.”</p>
-
-<p>I withdrew to ponder. I had been in continuous if
-desultory communication with my sisters during all my
-time abroad, and no mention of Regina Barry had ever
-escaped either. I had not supposed that they knew one
-another. I couldn’t bring myself to believe that I had
-been under the same roof with her at Taplow and had
-not been aware of it. And here she was on board the ship
-on which I was returning home, and able to come to my
-aid at a minute when I wanted help.</p>
-
-<p>I had often wished that some of my New York correspondents
-would speak of her, but no one ever had. Except
-in the case of Cantyre this was hardly strange, for—apart<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-from Hilda Grace, who never wrote to me—no
-one knew that Regina Barry and I had meant anything
-to each other. If Cantyre had spoken of her, it would
-have been on his own account; but confidential as he
-was in private talk, his letters were never more than a
-few terse lines. So I had rather bitterly imagined her as
-going on with the testing of other men, as she had tested
-Jim Hunter, Cantyre, and me—trying them and finding
-them wanting. In ungenerous moments I went so far as
-to hope that Nemesis might overtake her in some tremendous
-passion in which she herself would be tried and
-tossed aside.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, the second day out before I actually
-came face to face with her. Her absence from the deck
-had been part of the mystery. Having swung into the
-Mersey, we remained there all Sunday night—it was a
-Sunday we had gone on board—and much of Monday.
-Accepting as necessary the secrecy which in war-time
-enshrouds an Atlantic voyage, the passengers had made
-themselves as comfortable as the conditions permitted,
-and taken air and exercise by promenading the decks.
-There could have been no better opportunity for finding
-familiar faces, but, apart from one or two distant acquaintances,
-I saw none. The three nurses’ uniforms I
-had noted already were continually about; but I never
-found the fourth.</p>
-
-<p>And then on Tuesday, after we had lost sight of the
-Irish coast, there was another queer little incident. As I
-could walk but little, I had been reading in the music-room.
-Tired of doing that and eager to continue my
-search for the missing uniform, I had limped to the doorway,
-screened by a heavy portière, leading out toward
-the companionway. But while I stood turning up the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-collar of my overcoat the portière was suddenly pulled
-aside, and we were before each other, with a suggestion
-of a similar occurrence three and a half years before.</p>
-
-<p>The very differences in my appearance—the mustache,
-the patch over my left eye, the military coat—must have
-helped to recall the earlier occasion by the indirect means
-of contrast. As for her, she was what she had seemed to
-me then—two great flaming eyes. They were tired eyes
-now, haunted, tragic perhaps, and I saw later that when
-you caught them off their guard they were pensive, if
-not mournful. They were, indeed, all I could see of her,
-for the rest of her features were hidden by the veil over
-the lower part of the face which women occasionally copy
-from the Turkish lady’s yashmak. A small black cap,
-held by a jade-green pin, and a long, shapeless black
-ulster or coat completed a costume quite unlike the uniform
-for which I had been looking.</p>
-
-<p>I can only describe that encounter as the meeting of
-two transmigrated souls. She had gone as far in her
-direction as I in mine; but I couldn’t tell at a glance in
-what direction she had gone. It was what struck me
-dumb. When Paolo and Francesca met in space they
-had nothing to say to each other except with the eyes.
-In some such case as that we found ourselves. The
-pressure of topics was too great to allow of immediate
-selection. She seemed to wait for me to utter the first
-word, and as I was at a loss she dropped the portière
-behind her, inclined her head, and passed on into the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p>Though it was my place to follow her, I couldn’t, for
-the minute, take so obvious a course. I was not only
-too mystified by what I had heard of her, but too confused
-as to our standing toward each other. I couldn’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-begin with a “How do you do?” as if we had parted on
-the ordinary social terms, while anything more dramatic
-would have been absurd. Hobbling along the deck, I
-took refuge in the smoking-room in order to reflect.</p>
-
-<p>Reflection was not easy. Over its calm fields emotion
-spread like water through a broken dike. For two and a
-half years the emotional had been so stemmed and
-banked and dammed in me that I had thought it under
-control forever. I had had enough to do in giving orders
-or carrying them out. But, now that the repressed had
-broken its bounds again, the tide swept everything away
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>Not that I knew just what I was experiencing; on the
-contrary, I couldn’t have disentangled the element of
-anger from that of curiosity, nor that of curiosity from
-that of joy. All I could say for certain was that never
-in my life had I been so anxious to keep free; never had
-I so much needed concentration and single-mindedness.
-The task to which I had vowed my undivided energy
-and heart demanded a genuine celibacy of the will; and
-now of all the women in the world....</p>
-
-<p>I was working on this train of thought when I became
-aware that people were running along the deck. Glancing
-about me at the same moment, I saw I was alone in
-the smoking-room. A whistle blew, piercingly, alarmingly.
-By the time I had struggled to my feet the ship
-changed her course so sharply as to throw me against
-a chair.</p>
-
-<p>I knew what it was, of course. We had been talking
-of the possibility ever since we left the Mersey. However
-much we tried to keep the mind away from the subject,
-it came back to it, as a mischievous boy makes
-straight for the thing forbidden him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>My first thought was for the girl in the yashmak. I
-must find her, see she had a life-belt, and take her to her
-boat. Before I had scrambled to the door, however, it
-flew open, apparently of its own accord, while a wild
-nor’wester positively blew the young lady in.</p>
-
-<p>It also blew away anything like Paolo-and-Francesca
-sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, here you are!” she exclaimed, breathlessly.
-“I’ve been hunting for you everywhere. They say we’ve
-sighted a periscope. Take this and put it on.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the two life-belts she carried she flung one to me,
-beginning to fasten the other about herself.</p>
-
-<p>“But the one you’ve brought me must belong to some
-one else,” I objected, as I aided her. “I’ve got one of my
-own in my cabin. I’ll just run down—”</p>
-
-<p>She brushed this aside. “No; this is yours. I went
-and got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You—” I began in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a nurse—or a kind of one,” she said, hastily.
-“That’s what I’m here for.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you knew where my cabin was?”</p>
-
-<p>“I found out. Oh, hurry—please!”</p>
-
-<p>She helped me as a medieval lady might have helped
-her lord to buckle on his sword; and presently we were
-out on deck.</p>
-
-<p>As we had twice already drilled in the unsightly things,
-we had lost the sense of the grotesque appearance presented
-by ourselves and our fellow-travelers. Besides,
-we were too eager to descry the periscope to have any
-more thought of ourselves than a wild duck of how it
-looks when skimming away from a sniper. Indeed, it
-was chiefly of a hunted wild duck that our zigzagging
-boat reminded me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was a sullen day, with that scudding of low, gray
-clouds which looks as if the heavens were hastening to some
-Armageddon of their own. The sea had hardly got over
-the swell left by one gale when it was being lashed into
-fury by another. The <i>Assiniboia</i> pitched and rolled and
-tore through the waters like a monster goaded by innumerable
-stings. I should have found it next to impossible
-to struggle along the deck had my protectress
-not stood by and steadied me.</p>
-
-<p>There was a kind of foolish pretense at the chivalrous
-in my tone as I said, “I’ll just see you to your boat
-before going over to mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re in the same boat,” she answered, briefly. “Do
-come along.”</p>
-
-<p>I thought of my forty-eight hours of unfruitful search
-for her.</p>
-
-<p>“But I didn’t see you at Number Seven when we drilled
-yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m there now,” she said, with the same brevity.
-Feeling, apparently, that some explanation was needed,
-she went on: “I’ve—I mean they—they’ve changed
-me. Miss Prynne has let me have—or rather she’s
-taken— That is,” she finished, in confusion, “we’re
-all nurses together—and we’ve—we’ve exchanged.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of some inward observations, I spared her any
-other comment than to say, “How jolly!” as if the exchange
-had been the most matter-of-course thing in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>I spoke just now of riding tempests and zephyrs, and
-something like that it was to plow along at every ounce
-of steam, with cross seas, head seas, seas abeam, and
-seas abaft, as each new zigzag caught them. On the
-roaring of the wind and the plunge and thunder of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-waves one rose into regions of tumultuous play where life
-and death were the stakes. I saw no signs of fear, and
-still less of panic; nor, so far as the eye could read, anything
-more than a sporting excitement. One would have
-said that our peril was accepted as being all in the game,
-part of the day’s work. By the end of 1916 Atlantic
-travelers had come to take the submarine for granted,
-just as the statesmen of Plantagenet and Tudor times
-took the headsman’s block as one of the natural risks
-of going into politics.</p>
-
-<p>But we looked instinctively for a periscope. It is not
-an easy thing for any one to see, and for me it was more
-difficult than for most. I saw none; or I saw a hundred.
-With the imperfect vision of my one eye the crests of the
-billows bristled with moving four-inch pipes; and then
-suddenly all would disappear and I saw nothing but the
-waves curling upward into coronets of foam with veils
-of trailing lace.</p>
-
-<p>Not that I was worse off in this respect than my fellow-travelers.
-As they ran for their boats they would pause,
-take a hurried look at the seas, exclaiming, “There it is!”
-and then, more doubtfully, “No, no!” all in one breath.
-The “No, no!” was generally uttered in a tone of disappointment,
-since to cross the ocean and sight no submarine
-would have been like journeying through Egypt
-and missing the pyramids.</p>
-
-<p>And yet our danger was apparent. Only a fortnight
-before the <i>Kamouraska</i>, sister ship to the <i>Assiniboia</i>, had
-been sent to the bottom in these very waters, with great
-loss of life. Of the tragedy the papers had given us
-realistic pictures that were fresh in all our minds. There
-was a preliminary scene on board not unlike the one we
-were enacting. We saw later a shell bursting on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-deck, somewhere amidships. We saw the passengers and
-crew taking to the boats with shells kicking up geysers
-among them as they tried to get away. We saw the great
-ship sticking as straight up out of the water as a Cleopatra’s
-Needle, before going slowly down. We saw the
-U-boat herself lying on the water like a crocodile, some
-four thousand yards away; we saw Queenstown as a
-morgue. All this was as vividly in our minds as a rehearsal
-to the actors of a play; and yet we were probably
-no more nervous than the company on a first night when
-the curtain is going up.</p>
-
-<p>The word went round that it was the fate of the <i>Kamouraska</i>,
-with the futility of her surrender as a means
-of saving the passengers’ lives, that prompted our captain
-to flight and fight. Our wireless calls were undoubtedly
-going up and down the Irish coast and out into the
-ocean. Within an hour or two, if we could hold out so
-long, destroyers would be rushing to our rescue. We
-had nothing to be terribly afraid of with more than an
-imaginative fear.</p>
-
-<p>That imaginative fear was quickened by the seemingly
-maddened action of our ship. I can best describe her as
-a leviathan gone insane. If insanity were to overtake a
-whale it would probably splash the deep in some such
-frenzy as this—so many angles out of the course one way—then
-a violent heeling over—so many angles out of the
-course another way—anyway, anywhere, anything—to
-get out of that straight, staid line from port to port which
-makes an ocean-going ship a liner. I admit that in this
-wild, erratic dashing there was something that alarmed
-us, and something, too, that made us laugh. It was the
-comic side of madness, in which you can hardly see the
-terrible because of the grotesque.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
-
-<p>By the time we reached life-boat No. 7 there were
-many signs that neither officers nor passengers were going
-to take more chances than they were obliged to. At
-No. 5 on one side of us a young officer was on top, peeling
-off the tarpaulin covering. At No. 9 on the other side
-some of the crew were already mounted, examining supplies
-and oars. At our own boat, cranks were being
-fitted to the davits to swing the boat outward. All along
-the line similar preparations were in progress, while men
-and women—luckily we had no children on board—carrying
-such wraps and hand-bags as they might reasonably
-take, stood in groups, waiting for what was to happen
-next.</p>
-
-<p>Our view of the sea was largely cut off here by the
-bulk of the life-boats, though wherever there was a chink
-there was also a cluster of heads. So many saw periscopes—and
-so many didn’t see them—that it became
-a mild joke. In general we surmised that if a U-boat
-was cruising round us at all she had only been porpoising—sticking
-up her periscope for a second or two to get a
-look round, and withdrawing it before it could be seen by
-any eye not on that very spot.</p>
-
-<p>The girl in the yashmak and I arrived so late on the
-scene that there were no places left by the rail, and we
-were obliged to content ourselves with second-hand information
-as to what was taking place. Our excitement
-had, therefore, a lack of point, like that of the small boy
-behind the line of grown-up people watching a procession.
-We fell back in the end into a kind of alcove, where, being
-partially protected from wind and tumult, we could speak
-to each other without shouting.</p>
-
-<p>I took the opportunity to thank her for her kindness to
-me when I came on board on Sunday; but with my opening<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-words the air of Francesca meeting Paolo in space came
-over her again. I understood her to say that her help
-on Sunday was a little thing, that she would have given
-it to any one.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” I agreed, “you would have given it to
-any one; but in this case you gave it to me. You must
-allow me to thank you before anything happens that
-might—that might make gratitude too late.”</p>
-
-<p>As I think of her now I can see that she was mistress
-of herself in the way that a letter-perfect actress is mistress
-of herself, repeating words that have been learned
-to fit a certain situation. She had foreseen that I would
-say something of the kind; she had foreseen that when I
-did she might be a prey to troublesome emotions; and
-so had fortified herself in advance by a studied set
-of phrases.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so little of a nurse that I should be ashamed not
-to do for a soldier the few small things in my power.”</p>
-
-<p>If she had never made me suffer anything, and if the
-moment had not been one that might conceivably end
-our relations forever, I should probably not have uttered
-the words that came to me next.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it only because I’m a soldier—?”</p>
-
-<p>She interrupted skilfully. “Only because you’re a soldier?
-Isn’t a soldier the most splendid man in the world—especially
-at a time like this?”</p>
-
-<p>Bang!</p>
-
-<p>It was one of our two guns. As a merchantman, not
-built to withstand the concussion of cannon, the <i>Assiniboia</i>
-shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>With an involuntary start my companion caught me
-by the sleeve. The impulse to seize her hand and draw
-it gently within my arm was irresistible. Had I reflected,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-I might not have done this, since my dominant desire
-was to keep stripped and unencumbered for the race.</p>
-
-<p>She allowed me to retain her hand just long enough
-to show that she was not mortally offended, after which
-she gently disengaged herself. To cover the constraint
-that both of us felt I went on to wonder if our shot had
-taken effect. A young man who had gone to find out
-came back with the news that the lookout, having spied
-the pin furrow of the periscope, the shot had been fired
-at a venture. As far as could be observed it had done
-nothing but send up a waterspout.</p>
-
-<p>On receiving this information I went on with our
-interrupted personalities.</p>
-
-<p>“Ever since Sunday I’ve wondered what had become
-of you; but then I’ve been looking for the uniform.”</p>
-
-<p>“I always intended taking that off when I got on board.
-You see, I never was a nurse in any but an amateur sense,
-and so—”</p>
-
-<p>It was my opportunity to spring the surprise I had been
-holding in reserve ever since my talk with the Consolatrice
-in the dock at Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p>“When did you last see Mabel?”</p>
-
-<p>She spoke with a sharp, sudden mezzo cry that might
-have been caused by pain.</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told me what?”</p>
-
-<p>Bang!</p>
-
-<p>It was our second gun, and though the girl in the yashmak
-started again, she did not seize my arm. To hold
-the drama at its instant of suspense, I pretended to be
-more interested in the effect of the shot than in anything
-else in the world, as in other circumstances I should have
-been. I turned to this one and that one, inviting their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-guesses, noting all the while that over Regina Barry’s
-eyes there spread the surface fire that a flaming sunset
-casts on troubled water.</p>
-
-<p>She harked back to the subject as soon as it was clear
-that we had missed our aim again.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Rideover promised me she’d never tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>Her tone having become accusatory, I broke in on it
-with studied nonchalance.</p>
-
-<p>“And she never did. To the best of my recollection
-she never mentioned your name to me. But is there anything
-wrong in my knowing that you and she are friends?”</p>
-
-<p>Color mounted to her brows where the yashmak
-couldn’t conceal it, though she ignored the question.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’m sure it wasn’t your sister Evelyn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t it have been?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because she promised me, too. I should be frightfully
-hurt if I thought she—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll relieve your mind by assuring you that
-she didn’t. But to me the curious thing is that you
-shouldn’t have wanted me to know.”</p>
-
-<p>She ignored this, too, a furrow of perplexity deepening
-between her brows.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t possible that Lady Rideover or Evelyn, without
-telling you in words, should have allowed you to suspect—”</p>
-
-<p>“Not any more than they allowed me to suspect that
-I was being nursed by a houri out of paradise.”</p>
-
-<p>She hastened to make a correction. “Oh, I never acted
-as nurse to you! It was that Miss Farley.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you were at Taplow when I was there, and in
-and out of my room.”</p>
-
-<p>The peculiar light in her eyes, partly of amazement,
-partly of incredulity, reminded me of a poor trapped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-lady I had once seen in the prisoner’s dock while a witness
-recounted the secrets of her life with remarkable exactness
-of detail.</p>
-
-<p>“But you couldn’t see me!” she began, helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I could hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you didn’t hear me. If I went into your room,
-which I didn’t often do—”</p>
-
-<p>I launched a theory that was purely inspiration.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know. If you came into my room you didn’t
-make a sound. You arranged that with Mabel. But
-haven’t you heard that the blind develop an extra
-sense?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as quickly as that—or with that precision.”
-She brightened with a new thought. “If your extra sense
-told you I was there, why didn’t you speak to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I said that I respected your incognita? If
-you didn’t want to speak to me it must have been for a
-reason. I couldn’t ignore that.”</p>
-
-<p>Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!</p>
-
-<p>A shell from the submarine struck the water somewhere
-near us, though all we saw was a column of white spume
-on the port side of the ship, while we were on the starboard.</p>
-
-<p>She ignored even this. Standing erect, with her hands
-in the pockets of her ulster, with no feature to betray her
-but her eyes, she surmised, calmly, “Some of the other
-nurses or one of the patients must have given you a hint.”</p>
-
-<p>“None of them ever pronounced your name in my
-hearing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I give up guessing!” she said, with a touch of
-impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“Which is what I can’t do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what have you to guess at?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span></p>
-
-<p>“At what you’ve done it—at what you’re doing it—for.”</p>
-
-<p>She may have smiled behind the yashmak as she said,
-“What difference does it make to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dare say it doesn’t make any—except that I seem
-to be the person benefited.”</p>
-
-<p>“In time of war the soldier—the man who does the
-thing—is the person benefited.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no; there’s the cause.”</p>
-
-<p>“But surely, if we’ve learned anything during the past
-two years, it’s that what the soldier does for the cause
-can’t compare with what the cause does for the soldier.”</p>
-
-<p>I saw my opportunity and was quick to use it. “So
-that out of what you’ve been doing for me even you have
-got something.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned this neatly. “I’ve got a great deal—out
-of what I’ve been doing for every one. Not that it’s been
-much. I merely mean that, whatever it’s been, it’s
-brought me in far more than I’ve ever given out.”</p>
-
-<p>The swing of the boat was so abrupt as almost to make
-her heel over. Up and down the deck such passengers
-as were clinging to nothing were flung this way and that,
-with some laughing and a few involuntary cries. Miss
-Barry having braced me in a corner of the alcove because
-of my game leg, I kept my footing steadily, but the girl
-herself was thrown square into my arms.</p>
-
-<p>Not more than a second later another Whir-r-r! Z-z-z!
-warned us that another shell was on the way; but before
-we had time to be afraid a soft P-ff! told us that this,
-too, had struck the water. The waterspout, this time on
-the starboard side, not only spattered us with spray, but
-made it clear that only the sharp shifting of the course<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-had saved us from a hole in our bow. That within the
-next few minutes our enemy would get us somewhere was
-a little more than probable.</p>
-
-<p>Then from every cluster of heads came the cry, “Oh,
-look!”</p>
-
-<p>There she was—a blue-gray streak, only a little darker
-than the blue-gray waters. The change in our course
-revealed her as she lay on the surface to shell us, since she
-was too far away to send us a torpedo. We forgot everything—Regina
-Barry and I forgot each other—to gaze.
-My arms relaxed their hold on the girl because there was
-no longer a mind to direct them; the girl took command
-of herself because it was only thus that she could observe
-the most baleful and fascinating monster in the world.</p>
-
-<p>For it was as a monster, baleful and fascinating, that
-we regarded her. She was not a thing planned by men’s
-brains and built in a shipyard. She was an abnormal,
-unscrupulous, venomous water beast, with a special enmity
-toward man. She had about her the horror of the
-trackless, the deep, the solitary, the lonesome, the devilish.
-Few of us had ever got a glimpse of her before. It
-was like Saint George’s first sight of the dragon that
-wasted men and cities, and called forth his hatred and
-his sword.</p>
-
-<p>I think that sheer hatred was the cause of our banging
-away at her with our two guns. We could hardly expect
-to hit her. She must have been out of our range, and our
-only hope was in getting out of hers.</p>
-
-<p>As far as we could judge she was lying still and shelling
-us at her ease. Splash! Splash! Splash! The screeching
-things went all round us; but by some miracle they
-were only spectacular.</p>
-
-<p>Viewed as a spectacle, there was a terrific beauty in it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-all. Nature and man were raging together, ferociously,
-magnificently, without conscience, without quarter, without
-remorse. Hell had unsealed its springs even in us
-who stood watchful and inactive. There was a sense of
-abhorrent glory in the knowledge that there were no
-limits to which we would not go. That there were no
-limits to which our enemy would not go with us was stimulating,
-quickening, like the flicker of the whip to the
-racer. About and above us were all the elements of which
-man is most accustomed to be afraid, but which, now that
-we were among them, inspired an appalling glee.</p>
-
-<p>It was amazing how quickly we got used to it, just as,
-I am told, a man after a night or two gets used to being in
-the death-house. To be shelled on a stormy, lonely ocean
-came within a few minutes to being a matter of course.
-Had we had time to reflect and look backward, it would
-have seemed strange to think that we had made voyages
-across the Atlantic in which we had not been shelled.</p>
-
-<p>Then all of a sudden there was a noise like that in a
-house when it is struck by lightning. It was as if all
-creation had burst into sound, as if there were nothing
-anywhere that was not a concomitant of an ear-splitting,
-soul-splitting crash. It was over us; it was round us;
-it was everywhere; it might have been within us. In
-our own persons we seemed to be rent by it.</p>
-
-<p>From the port side a blast of smoke rose and poisoned
-the dark air. A few shrieks, half suppressed by the
-shriekers, ran the length of the deck, and a few male
-exclamations of astonishment and awe. For the most
-part, however, we stood still and soundless, as I believe
-we should have held ourselves had it proved to be the
-Judgment Day.</p>
-
-<p>Our immediate impression was that all the aft of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-ship had been carried away. Had she begun to settle
-stern foremost on the instant we should not have been
-surprised. We could hardly believe that the long, narrow
-perspective of the deck, with its groups dotting the
-length of it, could remain unshattered and afloat. We
-were sure the decks below must have been blown into
-air and water.</p>
-
-<p>For the hundredth part of a second the <i>Assiniboia</i> appeared
-to stop still in her course, like a creature with its
-death-wound. She seemed stricken, stunned. But she
-gave another lurch, another swing to her huge person;
-and when the second shell came on, taking the range of
-that which had struck her, it plowed the waves astern.
-All seemed to be over in the space of between two breaths.
-By the time we could get our wits together sufficiently to
-ask what had happened she was once more driving
-onward.</p>
-
-<p>It was splendid. It was sublime. It thrilled one with
-pride in pluck and seamanship. One could have hugged
-the brave old leviathan by the neck.</p>
-
-<p>A British seaman, running down the deck on some errand,
-cried, as he passed us: “Got the old bucket aft,
-just above the water-line. But, Lor’! she don’t mind it!
-Didn’t do no ’arm. On’y killed Sammy Smelt, a steerage
-cabin-boy.”</p>
-
-<p>But it was a beginning. Nothing could save us now
-but speed and the captain’s skill. The young officer who
-had helped to strip the covering off No. 5 strolled by us,
-smoking a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re showing her a pretty clean pair of heels,” he
-said, coolly, by way of dealing out encouragement.
-“Ship’s carpenter’s begun plugging up the hole. That
-won’t hurt us so long as we don’t get another.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What about the cabin-boy?” some one called out.</p>
-
-<p>He shrugged his shoulders, saying, merely, “Doctor
-attending to the wounded.”</p>
-
-<p>It was strange to be tearing through the seas, with
-that erratic course of the crazed leviathan, when at any
-second death might strike us from the air. I had often
-been under shell-fire, of course; but on land there was
-generally some dugout, some <i>abri</i>, in which one could
-seek shelter. What impressed me here was the vast
-exposure of it all. We could only stand with the heaven
-over us, ready to take to the boats, if need be, or equally
-ready to be blown into bits like little Sammy Smelt.</p>
-
-<p>Among the people on the deck the quiet waiting which
-the traditions of the race have made second nature continued.
-We might have been passengers gathered at the
-entrance to a railway track. If a scared look haunted
-some faces, it was not more than might have been occasioned
-by the extreme lateness of a train.</p>
-
-<p>The shells were still splashing, the ship was still driving
-onward under every pound of steam, when I looked
-again at the girl in the yashmak. It must not be understood
-that I had looked away from her for long. The
-period of our extreme peril did not in reality cover more
-than a few minutes. Like the crisis of a fever, it was slow
-in coming, but it passed quickly, though we needed some
-time to realize the fact.</p>
-
-<p>But when I looked again at Regina Barry I found her
-as little disturbed as a woman could possibly have been
-in that special situation. Not to be hurled again into
-my arms, she held now to the hand-rail that runs along
-cabin walls; but she watched me rather than the ocean.
-I was her charge and the ocean was not. The blue-gray
-streak that had held her attention for a while was visible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-only when the turnings of the ship threw it into view;
-otherwise we had nothing to see on the starboard side
-except an infinitude of billows with curling white crests.</p>
-
-<p>To resume something like the customary attitude of
-human beings toward each other I said, as casually as I
-could manage, “You came over here just after I did,
-didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Having purposely framed my sentence in just those
-words, it was some satisfaction to get the result I was
-playing for. It took all the aplomb—a rather shy aplomb—of
-which she was mistress to answer in a way that
-wouldn’t underscore my meaning.</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly; but I don’t remember when you came
-over.”</p>
-
-<p>Having given the date of my sailing, I added, “And
-you left with Evelyn a little more than three weeks
-later?”</p>
-
-<p>“Since you know everything, you naturally know
-that.” She took on the old air of being at once smiling
-and defiant as she asked, “And has the fact any special
-significance?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I want to find out.” Before she could
-protest that there was no such significance I put the
-question, “How did you come to know her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is she so terribly difficult to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least; only, you’d never seen her in your
-life at the time when”—I gathered all my innermost
-strength together to bring the words out—“at the time
-when I talked to you last.”</p>
-
-<p>She, too, gathered her innermost strength together,
-rising to the reference gallantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, a good many things have happened since
-then.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before going further I was obliged to pause and reckon
-how much I dared. Of the many sensitive points in my
-history, we were touching on the most sensitive. I was
-fully aware that since the sleeping dog was sleeping it
-might be better to let him lie. Once he was roused, there
-might be a new set of perils to deal with, perils we could
-avoid by softly stepping round them. That Paolo
-should go one way in space and Francesca another seemed
-to be decreed by inevitable fate; so why interfere with
-the process?</p>
-
-<p>I should probably not have interfered with it had the
-circumstances not raised us above the sphere of our ordinary
-interests. The roar of the wind, the tumult of
-the sea, the plunging of the ship, the indescribable whining
-of shells, the knowledge of danger—were as the orchestra
-which lifts the duet to emotional planes that
-dialogue alone could never attain to. Though our words
-might be commonplace, every syllable was charged with
-tones and overtones and undertones of meaning to be
-seized by something more subtle than intelligence. Prudence
-might have said, “Let everything alone,” but that
-urging of the being which escapes the leash of prudence
-drove me on to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember when I talked to you last?”</p>
-
-<p>She answered with the detachment of a witness under
-compulsion to tell the truth. The personal was as far
-as possible eliminated from her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly.”</p>
-
-<p>“We—we seemed to—to break off in the middle of
-a conversation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which you never gave me any further opportunity
-of going on with.”</p>
-
-<p>The statement took my breath away. For some seconds<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-I could only stare at her as a truthful man stares when he
-hears himself given the lie direct.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you—did you—want to go on with it?” I managed
-to stammer at last.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“I—I didn’t think that. I waited nearly two hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if you’d only waited a few minutes more—”</p>
-
-<p>I leaned down toward her, breaking in on her words
-with a sense of what I might have lost: “Everything
-would have been different? You were going to say that?”</p>
-
-<p>She took time to raise her hands and adjust the yashmak,
-giving me the clue to her reason for wearing it.
-It was putting on a vizor before going into battle. Knowing
-that she would be thrown into some difficult situations,
-she had taken this method of being as far as possible
-screened against embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>She was successful in that. Apart from the shifting
-surface fire of her eyes and the slightest possible tremor
-in her voice I saw no rift in the barricade of her composure.</p>
-
-<p>“No; that isn’t what I was going to say. I don’t
-know how things would have been. I suppose they
-would have been as—as they are now.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we could have talked them over.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you’d waited.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should have waited forever if I’d known.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or if,” she went on, with the same serenity, “you
-hadn’t disappeared next day without leaving an address.
-I tried to find you—as well as I could, that is—without
-seeming to hunt you down.”</p>
-
-<p>I explained that when I left New York on that last
-Monday in June, 1914, I had not expected to be gone for
-more than a few weeks—just the time to recover from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-the first effects of the blow I thought her scorn had dealt
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>“It was curious, though,” I went on, “that that name,
-Gavrilo Prinzip, should have hammered itself in on my
-brain. I recall it now as about the only thing I could
-think of. I didn’t know what it meant, and I was far
-from supposing it the touchstone of human destinies that
-it afterward proved to be; but in some unreasoning way
-it held me. It was like the meaningless catch of a tune
-with which you can’t go on, till all at once you see it
-finishes in—”</p>
-
-<p>“In a trumpet-call. Yes, I know. You had to follow
-it. So had I. I don’t think there’s much more than
-that to be said.”</p>
-
-<p>The blue-gray streak was again on the starboard
-side, but comfortingly far astern. Though we were still
-within her range, we were getting the benefit of distance.
-At the same time some one called our attention to a
-blotch of black smoke, far down on the eastern horizon.
-A destroyer was coming to our aid.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to the point we had partially forsaken.</p>
-
-<p>“How long did you expect me to wait that afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked down at the deck, answering with a perceptible
-infusion of the bitter in her tone.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t fix a time. I wasn’t sitting with my watch
-in my hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Evidently.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you come down?”</p>
-
-<p>“I came down as soon as I could.”</p>
-
-<p>“What kept you?”</p>
-
-<p>She raised her eyes for a fleeting glance—lowering
-them again. At the same time her voice sank, too,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-so that in the fury of sound about us she was no more
-than audible.</p>
-
-<p>“The thing you told me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that kept you—in what way?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the way of making everything—different.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much does that mean—different?”</p>
-
-<p>“It means a good deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you tell me exactly?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you exactly; but it was something like
-this.” She fixed her eyes on me steadily. “When they
-first opened the Subway in New York I came up out of
-a station one winter afternoon just as the lights were
-lit, and instead of going to the right, as I should have
-done, I turned to the left. When I had walked about
-fifteen minutes I was dazed. Though I was in a part of
-New York I knew perfectly well, I couldn’t recognize
-anything. It was all a confusion of lights. I couldn’t
-tell which of the streets ran north and south, or which
-were east and west, or what the buildings were that I’d
-been used to seeing all my life. In the end some one took
-me into a drug-store and made me sit down till I had time
-to reorientate myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you did it in the end?”</p>
-
-<p>“That time—yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And this time? The time we’re talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!</p>
-
-<p>Bang!</p>
-
-<p>Whir-r-r! Z-z-z! P-ff!</p>
-
-<p>Bang!</p>
-
-<p>From the port side there came something like a feeble
-cheer—a chorus of rough male voices and high female
-screams, timid and yet glad.</p>
-
-<p>A new swing of our crazed leviathan disclosed the reason<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-for this wavering, victorious cry. There were two more
-blobs of smoke on the horizon, and from different points
-on the Irish coast three huge birds were flying like messengers
-from some god. Moreover, the blob of smoke
-we had first seen now had a considerable stretch of the
-ocean behind her, and in front a parting of the spray
-like two white plumes as she tore in our direction.</p>
-
-<p>“She sure is some little ripper!” came a dry Yankee
-voice in the group about life-boat No. 5.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-five knots if it’s one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Them ’planes’ll overtake her, though, and be on the
-spot as soon as she is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gosh! I’d like to see Fritzie then!”</p>
-
-<p>“J’ever see a kingfisher sweep down on a gudgeon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee-whiz! Look at Fritzie! Goin’ to submerge!”</p>
-
-<p>And sure enough, as we stared, the blue-gray streak
-began to sink behind the waves, becoming to the imagination
-even more a giant deep-sea reptile after it had
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>Almost simultaneously our leviathan calmed down,
-resuming her straight course. It was done apparently
-with the wordless, unexplained inconsequence with which
-a runaway horse will suddenly fall into a peaceful trot.
-There was no stopping to salute the destroyers and ’planes
-that were hastening to our help or to exchange confidences
-with them as to our common enemy. There was
-neither hail nor farewell as we forged again toward the
-open sea.</p>
-
-<p>Danger being considered past, the groups broke up,
-intermingling with sighs of relief. The Consolatrice and
-her friend came to exchange a few words with us, and
-Miss Prynne returned from the boat to which she had
-good-naturedly exchanged. While I thanked her for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-this kindness, as if it had been done for myself, I saw
-Miss Barry trying to slip off.</p>
-
-<p>By stepping out of my corner and assuming a limp
-lamer than my actual disability warranted I was able to
-intercept her.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” I made bold to ask, “if you could give
-me a hand back to the music-room?”</p>
-
-<p>The yashmak was not so impervious but that I could
-detect behind it the scarlet glimmer of her smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I think you could get there by yourself. Try.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can manage the deck,” I said, in the tones of a boy
-feigning an indisposition to stay away from school, “but
-I’m afraid of the steps of the companionway.”</p>
-
-<p>“How would you have managed if I hadn’t been here?”
-she asked, as she allowed me to lean ever so lightly on her
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>The steps of the companionway presenting a more real
-difficulty than I had expected, I could say nothing till
-with her aid I had lowered myself safely down.</p>
-
-<p>Postponing the pleasure of thanking her, I reverted to
-the topic the last attack had interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to hear about your reorientation. You were
-able to put the streets in their proper place again, and to
-see New York as it was; but in my case—”</p>
-
-<p>She put out her hand with that air which there is no
-gainsaying.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m rather tired. I think I must go to my cabin and
-have a rest.” She added, however, not very coherently:
-“The way things happen is in general the best way—if
-we know how to use it.”</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat desperately, because of her determination
-to go, I burst out, “And do you think all this has been
-the best way?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You must see for yourself that it’s been a very good
-way. We’ve been able to do—to do the things we’ve
-both done.” But the admission in the use of the first
-personal plural pronoun seemed suddenly to alarm her.
-She took refuge again in her need of rest. “I really
-must be off. If we don’t meet again before we leave the
-boat—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but we shall!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m very often confined to my cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not when you want to be out of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then; I very often don’t leave my cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>I was holding the hand she had extended to say good-by,
-but she slipped it away and was going.</p>
-
-<p>“Then tell me this—just this,” I begged. “How is it
-that we’re both on the same ship? That didn’t happen
-by accident?”</p>
-
-<p>Whether she refused to answer my question or whether
-it didn’t reach her I couldn’t tell. All I got in response
-was a long, oblique regard—the fleeing farewell look of
-Beatrice Cenci—as she carried her secrets and mysteries
-away with her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So my celibacy of the will was threatened. I mean
-by that that I found myself with two main objects
-of thought instead of one. Having vowed myself to a
-cause, a woman had supervened with that pervasiveness
-of presence with which a perfume fills a room. I might
-still vow myself to the cause, but I shouldn’t serve it as
-I had meant to, with heart and senses free.</p>
-
-<p>Or should I?</p>
-
-<p>The question fundamentally was that. Could I at a
-time like this divide my allegiance as I should be obliged
-to divide it by falling in love and being married? Or
-ought I, in deference to the work I was to do, suppress
-this old passion and smother the problems and curiosities
-it had begun to rouse in me?</p>
-
-<p>If, in view of the many men who have been good soldiers
-and equally good husbands, this hesitation seems
-far-fetched to you, I must beg you to remember what I
-have told you already, that my mission, such as it was,
-had become my life. For this the inspiration sprang
-from what I had seen for myself. What I had seen for
-myself compelled me to believe that the world was divided
-into just two camps—those who fought the Germans
-and those who did not. “He that is not with me
-is against me,” I was prepared to say; except that for the
-small bordering nations, whom the arch-enemy could have
-crushed as he had crushed Belgium and Serbia before any
-one else could save them, I was ready to make long allowances.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-I couldn’t make these allowances for the United
-States; and to win the friends I valued so highly to
-joining in the task that seemed to me the most pressing
-before mankind was the work to which I longed to give
-myself every minute of the day.</p>
-
-<p>No consecrated soldier of a holy war had ever been
-moved by a purer singleness of purpose than I when I
-came on board the <i>Assiniboia</i>; and now I was already
-thinking most of something else. As violently—I choose
-the adverb—as if I had never seen this woman’s image
-grow fainter and fainter in my memory I craved to know
-certain things about her.</p>
-
-<p>I might state those things in this way: Why, in the
-summer in which I joined the army and went across with
-the first Canadian contingent, did she seek the acquaintance
-of my sister Evelyn and undertake nursing in her
-company? Why did she join my sister Mabel and steal
-in and out of my room when I was blind? Why, since
-I was blind, did she keep her presence unknown to me
-and swear my sisters to secrecy? Why was she coming
-back on board this boat? Did she really care for me?
-And if she really cared for me, why this air of ever so
-courteous, ever so gentle constraint the minute we were
-alone and I broached any subject that was personal?</p>
-
-<p>Was she angry? Was she contrite? Was she wounded?
-Was she scornful? Was she proud? Or was she simply
-subjecting me to one more test, which might end again
-in her being disappointed?</p>
-
-<p>I have to confess that these inquiries already absorbed
-my soul in such a way that I forgot that on which I had
-been accustomed to meditate every hour of my time—the
-approach I was to make to American citizens like Beady
-Lamont and Ralph Coningsby. Against this weaning<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-away of my heart some essential loyalty cried, “Treason!”
-I was the man who had put his hand to the plow and was
-looking back. If I continued to look back I might easily
-prove unfit for the kingdom of heaven as I conceived
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the next day I was eager to test the effect
-of these counter-inclinations on myself. That I could
-only do by meeting her. If I met her, would she be to
-me simply what the Consolatrice was to a more intimate
-degree? Or should I find her the brave, aspiring, provocative
-spirit that had led me up the path that had begun
-to mount from the moment when I first saw her—only in
-the end to let me fall over the edge of a precipice? I
-wanted to see; I wanted to be sure.</p>
-
-<p>But she kept me waiting. She didn’t appear that day.
-It was a fine day for the ocean in November, with a
-tolerably smooth sea. It was not weather, therefore,
-that confined her to her cabin; it was something else.
-She knew I would be on the watch for her, and she let
-me have my labor for my pains.</p>
-
-<p>It was the kind of advance and recession with which I
-had least patience. On Thursday morning I kept no
-watch for her. Swearing that she meant no more to me
-than Miss Prynne and that my work in life was too serious
-to allow any woman to interfere with it, I gave myself to
-the reading of books on the war situation as it affected
-America. If she was playing a game, she would learn
-that it was not one of solitaire. Two could take a hand
-at it, and with equal skill. I prided myself on that skill
-when sometime in the latter part of Thursday afternoon
-she passed my chair in the music-room—the sixth sense
-told me it was she—and I did not look up from Sheering’s
-Oxford lectures on “The War and World Repentance.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>Though my eye followed the passage, I got little or no
-sense from it.</p>
-
-<p>“Human effort after human welfare is never drastic
-enough,” I read. “It is never sufficiently radical to accomplish
-the purpose it tries to carry out. Instead of
-laying its ax at the root of the tree of its ills it is content
-to hack off a few branches. It never gets beyond pruning-work;
-and the most one can say of the results it
-achieves is that they are better than nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“So much, then, one can affirm of the dreams that are
-now being dreamed, in all probability to vanish with
-waking. They are better than nothing. Better than
-nothing are the aims held up before the Allied nations as
-the citadels they are to capture. The crushing of military
-despotism is better than nothing; the elimination
-of war is better than nothing; the establishment of universal
-democracy, the founding of a league of nations, the
-formation of a league to enforce peace, the dissemination
-of a world-wide entente, these are all of them better than
-nothing, even though they end in being no more productive
-of permanent blessing than the Hague Conference,
-which was better than nothing in itself. They are probably
-as effective as anything that man, with his reason,
-his wisdom, his science, his degree of self-control, and his
-pathetic persistence in believing in himself when that
-belief has so unfailingly been blasted, can ever attain
-to. But, oh, gentlemen, as the prophet said thirty centuries
-ago, ‘This is not the way, neither is this the city.’
-You are pouring out blood; you are pouring out money;
-you are giving your sons and your daughters to pass
-through the fire to Moloch; through the fire to Moloch
-unflinchingly they pass; you are tearing the hearts out
-of your own bodies, and you are doing it with a heroism<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-that cannot fail of some reward. But this is not the way,
-neither is this the city. It is better than nothing, but it
-is not the best. You could do it all so much more thoroughly,
-so much more easily. You will accomplish something;
-there is no question about that; but till you take
-the right way, and attack the city of which you must
-become masters, that great good thing for which you are
-fighting will still be a vision of the future.”</p>
-
-<p>But with the knowledge that this woman had simply
-passed and let her shadow fall upon me I had no heart
-for Sheering’s impassioned words. I got up and followed
-her.</p>
-
-<p>I found her on deck, far forward, leaning on the rail
-and watching a fiery, angry sunset that inflamed all the
-western horizon. As she looked round and saw me advancing
-along the deck I detected in her telltale eyes the
-first scared impulse to run away.</p>
-
-<p>But what was she afraid of?</p>
-
-<p>It was the question I asked as soon as I was near
-enough to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think I’m afraid of anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“The way you looked. You see, this queer sort of veil
-doesn’t protect you; it gives you away by throwing all
-your expression into your eyes. There’s an essence that
-eludes one till it’s concentrated and distilled.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I didn’t mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“To look like an animal trying to escape? Well, you
-did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, as to that, I could easily have walked round the
-deck-house to the other side of the ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“If the discourtesy wouldn’t have been too obvious—of
-course!” But I didn’t press the point. There were
-other admissions to which I had an unchivalrous craving<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-to bring her if I could; and so I went on, artfully, “It was
-clever of you to find my state-room on Tuesday—all on
-the spur of the moment like that.”</p>
-
-<p>She contented herself with murmuring, “Yes, wasn’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“And your own cabin is on another deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m on this deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you hadn’t even seen me going in and out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m a nurse—in a way. Nurses have to know more
-than other passengers or they’d be no good on board ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you know every one’s cabin?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know every one’s cabin to whom I can be useful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that many?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; not many, unfortunately.” She diverted the
-attack by saying, “What are you asking for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, for nothing,” I answered, carelessly. I added,
-however, with some slight show of intention, “I’ve called
-it your cleverness, but I really mean it as your kindness.”</p>
-
-<p>She decided to take the bull by the horns, shifting her
-position and standing with her back to the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“If you call it kindness that I should have learned the
-number and location of your cabin before we left Liverpool—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you did it then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did it then. But if you call it kindness, of
-course I can’t prevent you. I can only assure you it
-isn’t. I knew you couldn’t get about easily—”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw you come on board. Wasn’t that enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let me go farther back and ask how you happened
-to see me come on board. Wasn’t it an extraordinary
-coincidence that you should have been there,
-right at the head of the gangway?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, life is full of extraordinary coincidences, isn’t
-it? And when a woman who can do so little sees a
-wounded man—”</p>
-
-<p>There were other wounded men scattered about the
-deck. I glanced at them as I said, “And have you done
-that for all the wounded men on board?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve done it for all I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how many do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>She averted her profile, with an air of having had
-enough of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted you to tell me a minute ago why you were
-asking me these questions, and you said for nothing.” I
-could see her smile behind the chiffon of the yashmak as
-she went on, “Since that’s your only reason, perhaps you
-won’t mind if I don’t answer you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if I had a reason for asking, would you tell me
-then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t it have to depend on the reason?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re very careful.”</p>
-
-<p>She shot a daring, smiling glance at me as she riposted,
-“Well, aren’t you?” Before I had time to recover from
-the slight shock that these words dealt me she pointed
-to the horizon. “See, there’s smoke over there. I do
-hope it’s not another U-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>I accepted the diversion—for more reasons than one.
-Of these the first was the shock to which I have alluded.
-She saw through me. That is, she saw I didn’t place her
-first. How she saw it I could no more tell than she
-could tell how I knew her history of the past two years.
-But the tables were turned and turned in such a way as
-to make me feel ridiculous. A man who is careful with
-regard to a woman is always slightly grotesque.</p>
-
-<p>As my most skilful defense lay in feigning a lack of perception<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-I talked about U-boats and the experience of two
-days before; but I came away from her with a feeling of
-discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>I analyzed the feeling of discomfort as due to the repetition
-of our mutual attitude more than two years previously.
-Where she came forward I drew back. I had
-always drawn back. I used to suppose that nothing but
-one motive could have driven me to this humiliating
-course, and now I was taking it from another. I was
-taking it from another, and she knew it. The essence
-of the humiliation lay in that.</p>
-
-<p>Each time I met her on deck she betrayed a hesitation
-that I found harder to bear than contempt. Her very
-effort to preserve a tone of friendliness was a reproach
-to me. It seemed to say: “You see all I’ve done for
-you. You accept it and give me nothing in return.”</p>
-
-<p>And yet I was obliged to consider that which, were I
-to let myself be nothing but myself, might lie before me
-in the next few weeks and months. I should arrive in
-New York as a man engaged to be married. As a man
-engaged to be married I should be at once enveloped in
-that silken net of formalities with which women with
-their consecration to the future of the race have invested
-all that pertains to the preliminaries of mating. I had
-seen for myself that in America that silken net is more
-elaborate than it is elsewhere. In any British community
-it is spun of tissue, fragile, light, easily swept aside should
-the need arise. In America it is solidly constructed of gold
-cord, and is as often as not adorned with gems. In America
-an engagement leads to something of an anti-climax in
-that, from the human point of view, it is more important
-than a marriage. It is sung by a chorus of matrons and
-maidens and social correspondents of the press in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-volume far more resounding than that of the nuptial
-hymn. That a man should marry after he has become
-engaged is considered as much a matter of course as that
-he should fight after he has enlisted; but that he should
-become engaged is like taking that first oath which denotes
-his willingness to give himself up, to make the
-great renunciation for the sake of something else. More
-than any single or signal act of bravery that comes later,
-it is the thing that counts. I am not quarreling with
-American social custom; I am only saying that I had
-reasons for being afraid of it.</p>
-
-<p>I should arrive in New York as a man engaged to be
-married, and as a man engaged to be married I should be
-put through paces as strict and as stately as those of the
-minuet. There would be no escape from it. I might be
-promised in advance an escape from it, but the promise
-would not be kept. I might be promised simplicity,
-privacy, secrecy, a mere process of handfasting before the
-least noticeable of legal authorities; but all would go by
-the board.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever my future wife and I might say—and my
-future wife would say it only half-heartedly, if as earnestly
-as that—I should be seized in the soft, tender, irresistible
-embrace of the feminine in American life, the element
-that is far more powerful than any other, and I
-should have no more fight to put up than a new-born infant
-against a nurse. There would be a whole array of
-mothers and potential mothers to see that I had not.
-There would be Mrs. Barry and Annette van Elstine and
-Hilda Grace and Esther Coningsby and Elsie Coningsby
-and Mrs. Legrand, not to speak of a vast social army
-behind them, all supported and urged on by the unanimous
-power of the press.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span></p>
-
-<p>No one of them would allow me to slip from their
-kindly, overwhelming attentions any more than bees
-would allow a queen. Like a queen bee is any man who
-is engaged to an American girl—or at least he was in the
-days, now so extraordinarily long ago, before America
-went into the war. Since then marriage has become
-casual, incidental, one of those hasty touches given to
-human life, which, like the possession of money or the
-pursuit of happiness or the leisure to earn a living, are
-pleasant but not vital. But in the America of the end
-of 1916, the mentally far-away America to which I was
-going back, matrimony was the most momentous happening
-in a life history. From the minute a man became engaged
-to that when he turned away from the altar, he
-had to give himself up to his condition. He was no
-longer his own. Dinners, lunches, parties, theaters, publicity,
-and the approval of women claimed him; and
-shrinking was of no avail.</p>
-
-<p>To the life after marriage, from this point of view, my
-mind hardly worked forward. I have spoken of men
-who were good soldiers and equally good husbands. Undoubtedly
-there are hundreds of thousands in the class.
-But I had seen not a little of men who, because they were
-husbands, would gladly not have been soldiers at all.
-Theirs was not a divided allegiance, for they had only one.
-The body was in the fight, and it did wondrously; but
-the heart and soul and mind and craving were with the
-wife and little ones; and who could blame them?</p>
-
-<p>But all my personal desire was not to be of their number.
-Had I been married before the war I should have
-been as they; but since I was free to espouse the cause
-which had become mistress of everything I was I wanted
-to espouse it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span></p>
-
-<p>I thought I had espoused it. I had considered myself
-bone of its bone and flesh of its flesh. During my months
-of fighting it had been a satisfaction to think of myself
-as at liberty to make any sacrifice of limb or life, and leave
-no heart to bewail me, no eye to shed a tear, and no care
-to spring up behind me. My family would be content
-to say, “Poor old Frank, he did his duty!” Further than
-that, I should bring no regret to any heart but Lovey’s;
-and of him I was persuaded that if I went he wouldn’t
-wait long after me. Moreover, I had guarded against
-any too great misfortune overtaking him by providing for
-him in my will.</p>
-
-<p>I must own, furthermore, to another misgiving: I was
-not too sure of myself from the point of view of the old
-failing.</p>
-
-<p>Things had happened in the trenches—they had dosed
-me with brandy, whisky, rum, any restorative that came
-handy, on a number of occasions—and there had been
-something within me as ready to be waked as a tiger to
-the taste of blood. I can say truthfully enough that I
-had never yielded to the desire of my own deliberate act;
-but I must also say truthfully that I was by no means
-sure that one day I might not do so. We had talked
-often enough, as men with men, of what we called a moral
-moratorium—and the talk haunted me with all manner
-of suggestions. The ban on what is commonly called sin
-was to be lifted for the period of the war; and we who
-had to deny ourselves so much were not to deny ourselves
-anything that came easily within our grasp. It seemed
-an alluring condition, and one which, without waiting for
-the license of supreme war councils or the permission of the
-Church, each of us was tempted to inaugurate for himself.
-In a situation in which that which is born of the flesh is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-flauntingly before one’s eyes, and millions of men are
-thrown together as flesh and little more, appetite has its
-mouth wide open. That man was strong indeed who
-could ignore this yearning of the body; and that man
-was not I.</p>
-
-<p>So again the consciousness of freedom was like a reserve
-fund to a corporation. It was something on which to fall
-back if everything else was swept away. I didn’t want
-to go to the devil; but if I went no one would suffer but
-myself, as no one would suffer but myself if a German
-sniper were to blow the top off my head. Mind you, I
-am not saying that I came back morally weakened from
-the war; I only came back with a sense that one man’s
-life or death—one man’s ruin or salvation—was of no
-more account than the fate of a roadside bit of jewel-weed
-amid the infinite seed-time and harvest of the year. I
-was inured to loss of all kinds on a stupendous scale. I
-had seen thousands blown to pieces beside me, and my
-mind had not turned aside to regret them; thousands
-would see me blown to pieces with the same indifference
-as to whether I lived or died. Callousness as to the life
-and death of others induces callousness as to one’s own;
-and compared to life and death, what is the control of
-a mere appetite? No; I was not morally weakened; but
-I was morally benumbed. There was a kind of moral
-moratorium in my consciousness. I repeat that I wasn’t
-practically making use of it; but I was in a period of suspense
-in which I admitted to myself that it might depend
-on circumstances whether I made use of it or not.</p>
-
-<p>And if I did, and if I was married....</p>
-
-<p>From the sheer possibility my mind turned in dismay.
-To the celibacy made urgent by a purpose I added the
-celibacy necessitated by a curse. As the one counseled<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-me not to involve myself with anybody else, so the other
-warned me not to involve anybody else with me. Through
-warning and counsel I had kept myself in something like
-a state of serenity till now.</p>
-
-<p>It was a state of serenity with just one dominating impulse—to
-get back among the comrades with whom I
-had already found shelter. Whatever I had that could
-be called a homing instinct was bound for the house in
-Vandiver Street. There had been times when I thought
-I had outlived that phase, times when what seemed like
-a new and higher companionship, with a new and higher
-place in the world and in men’s esteem, half persuaded
-me that I was so little the waster in fact and the criminal
-in possibility that the Down and Out was no more to me
-than a sloughed skin to the creature that has thrown it
-off. But I always waked from this pleasant fancy to see
-myself as in essentials the same gaunt, tattered, hungry
-fellow who had come with his buddy to beg a meal and a
-bed of the Poor Brothers of the Order of Pity, who never
-refused any homeless, besotted man. No matter what
-battles I fought, what medals I won, what banquets I
-was asked to sit down at, my place was among them;
-and among them I hoped to do my work. They were all
-American citizens, with as much weight, when it came to
-the franchise, as the moneyed potentates of Wall Street.
-As being not only my brethren, but a nucleus of public
-opinion as well, I had had no other vision before me for
-my return than that of sharing their humble refreshments
-and talk, together with that blind, desperate, devoted
-fraternity which made a city of refuge of the home that
-had once been Miss Smedley’s.</p>
-
-<p>And since coming on board that vision was threatened
-by another—one in which I saw myself moving amid compliments<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-and flowers and polite conventions, in all the
-entangling convolutions of the silken net. Whether it
-would be with or without love was, in my state of mind,
-beside the mark. Love had ceased to be, for the time
-being, at any rate, the ruling factor in a man’s decisions
-about himself. There was a moratorium of love, let there
-be one of morals or not. “I’ve got to,” had been the
-reply to love made by twenty millions of men all over the
-world, either under compulsion or of their own free will;
-and women had accepted the answer valiantly.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty in my case sprang of choice. “I’ve got
-to” wasn’t imperative enough. Or if imperative, it was
-imperative on both sides equally.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>And then a word was said which, though solving no
-problems, opened up a new line of suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>I have spoken of Regina Barry as another transmigrated
-soul. I have said that I could not tell at a glance in
-what direction her spirit had traveled; nor could I after
-some days of intercourse. As much as she had been frank
-and open in the other period of our acquaintance, she had
-now become mystery to me—elusive, tantalizing, sealed.
-By the end of a few days I began to perceive that she
-came near me only, as I might say, officially. If there
-was danger or storm or darkness—we sailed without lights—she
-was within reach of me. She was within reach of
-me many a time if I wanted no more than a book that had
-fallen or a rug that had been left elsewhere on the deck.
-It was strange how hovering and protective her presence
-could be for the moment of need, and how far withdrawn
-the minute I could get along alone.</p>
-
-<p>And far withdrawn the transmigrated spirit seemed to
-me at all times. Do what I would to traverse the distance,
-I found her as remote as ever. Do what I would
-to break down her defenses or transcend them, they still
-rose between us, impalpable, impregnable, and all but
-indiscernible. She had traveled away from me as I had
-traveled away from her; and yet now that we met in
-space there was some indefinable bond between us.</p>
-
-<p>It was in right of that bond that I asked her one day
-why she was going home.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, for all sorts of reasons.” She added, “One of
-them is on account of father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t he well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he’s well enough. That isn’t it.”</p>
-
-<p>As she did not explain, I refrained from asking further,
-not because I didn’t want to know, but because I knew
-she would tell me.</p>
-
-<p>It was our usual trysting-place, the deck rail, though
-not now that which ran along the side of the ship, but the
-one across the portion of the upper deck toward the bow,
-allowing us to look down on the pit in which the few
-steerage passengers took the air. They were standing
-about in helpless, idle groups, some ten or twelve oddly
-clad, oddly hatted men, with three or four of their women,
-and a white staring baby, whose fingers, as it hung over
-its mother’s shoulder, dangled like bits of string.</p>
-
-<p>We were in the Gulf Stream, so that the day was comparatively
-mild. A north wind not too violent blew away
-the possibility of fog and sent an occasional shaft of sunshine
-through the rifts in the great gray clouds. The
-swell left over from the gale of the past few days tossed
-the ship’s nose into the air with a long, slow, rhythmic
-heave, slightly to port, and gave to good sailors like ourselves
-that pleasant sensation of swinging which a bird
-must get on a tree.</p>
-
-<p>Wind and water were fraught with the nameless peaceful
-intimations of the New World after the turmoil of the
-Old one. It is difficult to say how one seizes them, but
-they come with the Gulf Stream. I have always noticed
-that half-way over there is a change in the aura, the
-atmosphere. It throws a breath of balsam on the wind,
-and flashes on the waves that gleam which Cabot, Jacques
-Cartier, and the Pilgrims saw when they sighted land.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is that wonderful sense of going westward which, I
-suppose, is primal to the instinct. Going eastward, one
-is going back to beginnings, to things lived, to things
-over and done with. Going westward, all is hope. It is
-the onward reach, the upward grasp, the endless striving.
-It is the lifting of the hands, the straining of the power
-to achieve, the yearning of the inner man. The thing
-that is finished is left behind, and the thing to be wrestled
-with and done is in front of one. The very sun goes
-before one with a splendid gesture of beckoning—on to
-work, on to self-denial, on to triumph and success—and
-when it sets it sets with a promise of a morrow.</p>
-
-<p>We had already begun to feel that; and on my part
-in a spirit of compunction. I was going, as far as lay
-within my small powers, to turn the west back upon the
-east again, to reverse nature by making the stream flow
-toward its source. I was far from insensible to the pity
-of it, for I had seen the effect on my own country.</p>
-
-<p>I had seen my own country—that baby giant, whose
-very existence as a country antedated but little the year
-when I was born—I had seen it pause in its work, in its
-play, in its task of self-development—listen—shiver—thrill—throw
-down the ax, the spade, the hammer, the
-pick—go up from the field, the factory, and the mine—and
-offer itself willingly. It was to me as if that was
-fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet:</p>
-
-<p>“I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I
-send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I;
-send me.”</p>
-
-<p>I had seen that first flotilla of thirty-one ships sail down
-the St. Lawrence, out into the ocean, and over to the
-shores of England, as the first great gift of men which
-the New World had ever made to the Old, as some return<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-for all the Old had poured out upon the New. I had
-seen it, for I was on it. We went gaily, as hop-pickers go
-to a bean-feast. We knew it was war, but the word had
-no meaning for us. What it meant we found out at Ypres,
-at Vimy, at Lens. But when I think of my country now
-I think of her no longer as a baby giant. She has become
-a girl widow—valiant, dry-eyed, high-souled, ready to go
-on with the interrupted work and do bigger work—but
-a widow all the same.</p>
-
-<p>And the sword that had pierced one heart I was bringing
-to pierce another. I was sorry; but sorrow didn’t keep
-me, couldn’t keep me from being terribly in earnest.</p>
-
-<p>And in on these thoughts Regina Barry broke as if she
-had been following them.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at the waves where the sun catches them.
-Aren’t they like flashing steel? It’s just as if all the
-drowned hands at the bottom of the sea were holding up
-swords to the people of America, begging them to go and
-fight.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her, startled. “You feel that way?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me, indignant. “Certainly. How else
-could I feel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I didn’t know. Americans feel so many different
-ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because they don’t know. I’m going back”—she gave
-a light, deprecating laugh—“I’m going back to tell
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>I was still more startled. “Tell whom?”</p>
-
-<p>“Any one I know. Every one knows some one. I
-don’t mean to say that I’m a Joan of Arc; but I shall do
-what I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how shall you begin?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll begin with father and with—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span></p>
-
-<p>She stopped at the second name, though to me the fact
-did not become significant till afterward.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I meant,” she resumed, “when I said I
-was going back on his account.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t see why we should be in it. He’s like so
-many Americans; he hasn’t emerged from the eighteen-hundreds.
-He still thinks of the New World as if it was
-a new creation that had nothing to do with the Old. He
-doesn’t see that there’s only one world and one race of
-men, wherever they are and whatever they do. To him
-Americans are like souls that get over to paradise. They’re
-safe and can afford to dwell safely. They’re no longer
-concerned with the sorrows and struggles of the people
-left on earth.”</p>
-
-<p>It was to get light on my own way that I asked, “And
-what are you going to say to convince him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know yet. I shall say what the moment
-suggests.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you’re sure it will suggest something?”</p>
-
-<p>Her great eyes burned like coals as she turned them on
-me in protest at the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Suggest something? You might as well ask if the
-air suggests something. It suggests that I breathe it;
-but I don’t have to think of it beforehand, when the
-whole world is full of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Full of what?”</p>
-
-<p>She considered the question, finding in it all I meant
-to put there.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” she answered at last. “That is, I
-don’t know in any sense that would go into a few words.
-There’s so much of it. The minute you try to express
-it from any one point of view you find you’re inadequate.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
-
-<p>I was still seeking light.</p>
-
-<p>“But when you try to do it from several points of view—correlating
-them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Even then—” She paused, reflecting, shaking her
-head as she went on again, as if to shake away a consciousness
-of the impossible. “I don’t try. There’s no
-use in trying. It’s so immense—so far beyond me. It’s
-grown so, too. When it first began I could more or less
-compass it—or, I thought I could. Now it’s become like
-nature—or God—or any of the colossal infinite conceptions—it
-means different things to different minds.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is, we can only take of it what we take of the
-ocean—each a few drops—no one able to take all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Something like that. And we can only give a few
-drops—just what we’ve got the measure to take up—some
-a little more, some a little less—but no one more
-than a little as compared to the whole. That’s why I’m
-not going to try to explain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then how are you going to make them understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell them—I’ll do what I can to show them—that
-the greatest movement of all time is going on—and
-America is taking no national part in it. I’ll try to make
-them see that it isn’t just to avenge the few American
-lives lost through the U-boats, or to free Belgium, or to
-put down autocracy, or to do any one or two or three of
-the things that have been set before us. It isn’t even
-the whole of them, just taken as so many human motives.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ll have to tell them what it is, won’t you?
-It won’t do just to put before them what it isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how can I? How can any one? It would be
-like trying to tell them what nature is. It’s a universal
-composite, made up of everything; but you couldn’t go<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-about the country explaining it in lectures. The nearest
-I could come to it would be in saying that it’s the great
-dramatic conflict between good and evil to which human
-nature has been working up ever since it committed its
-first sin; but the words in which to do that have been so
-hard worked and are so terribly worn that they’ve become
-a kind of ditty. It seems to me best just to talk
-to them simply—and let them construct the monster out
-of the bones I lay before them. They’ll do it. The public
-is not very quick, but when it gets going it’s pretty
-instinctive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then you’re going to tackle the public?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to tackle any one to whom I can get access.”</p>
-
-<p>“You spoke just now of lectures.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll speak of anything that will help me to get the
-message across. That’s why I mention father and—”
-Again she hesitated at a name, going on with an elision:—“first
-of all. They are simply the first I shall be able to
-talk to. As a matter of fact, not many as yet have been
-over there and come back to America—so that there’s a
-good deal of curiosity still unsatisfied—and so one will
-get a chance. You must have noticed already how dearly
-Americans, especially the women, like to be talked to.
-We’re talked to so much by experts on all subjects that
-we should burst with knowledge if our minds weren’t like
-those swimming-tanks with fresh water running in and
-out of them all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you’re really going to make it a kind of business?”</p>
-
-<p>She spread her hands apart, palms outward.</p>
-
-<p>“What else can I do? I assure you it isn’t any desire
-for publicity or that sort of thing. I’m just—I’m just
-driven on. It’s like what some one says in the Bible—I’ve
-taken to reading the Bible lately—it seems the only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span>
-thing big enough in spirit to go with the big times—but
-some one says there: ‘Woe unto me, if I preach not the
-gospel!’ Well, it’s the same way with me. Woe unto
-me if I don’t do this thing! It’s taken possession of me;
-I can’t do anything else; and so I’m going back—”</p>
-
-<p>I was expressing but one of the host of thoughts that
-crowded on me as I said: “You’ve got the tremendous
-advantage of being an American. You can say what
-you like. If I were—”</p>
-
-<p>She stood off and surveyed me. “You don’t need to
-say anything. You speak for yourself. One has only
-to look at you.”</p>
-
-<p>I smiled ruefully. “I know I’m pretty well battered
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it isn’t that.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. It’s just—it’s just everything.
-You’re a type. I’m not speaking of you personally, but
-of a lot—hundreds—thousands—I’ve seen—young fellows
-who make me think of some other words in the Bible.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are they?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re in Isaiah, I think. Everybody knows them.”
-She recited in a smooth, rich voice that gave new beauty
-to the familiar passage: “‘Surely he hath borne our griefs,
-and carried our sorrows: ... He was wounded for our
-transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the
-chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his
-stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray;
-we have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord
-hath laid on him the iniquity of us all.’” Her voice rose—and
-fell again. “‘He was oppressed, and he was
-afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as
-a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth.’” She resumed in
-a colloquial tone: “I’ve seen so much of that, haven’t
-you? The lamb led dumb to the slaughter, and the
-quiet, wounded man hardly opening his mouth for a
-moan. It’s heartbreaking.”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet you’d bring your own people into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it’s sublime. Because I’ve seen for myself
-that the people who take part in it are raised to levels
-they never knew it was possible to reach. Haven’t you
-found the same thing for yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I? I’m only—”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a man—and a young man. You’re a young
-man who’s been—I can’t express it. It’s all in that fact.
-The people at home will only have to look at you to see
-what language could never put before them. Language
-isn’t equal to it. Imagination isn’t equal to it when the
-thing is over. Don’t you find that? Doesn’t it often
-seem to you, now that you’re out of it, as if it was a dream
-that had half escaped you? You try to tell it—and you
-can’t. That’s why the people who’ve been there and
-come back so often have nothing to say. That’s why so
-many of the books—except those that contain diaries
-jotted down on the minute—that are written afterward
-are so often disappointing. It’s like a great secret in
-every man’s soul that he knows and thinks about, and
-can never get out of him. So I shall make no attempt
-to do more than to tell the little things, the small human
-details—”</p>
-
-<p>You will see that I was following my own train of
-thought as I broke in, “But New York life will get hold
-of you again.”</p>
-
-<p>“It can’t get hold of me again, because there will be
-nothing for it to catch on by. That’s all over for me.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span>
-It could no more seize anything I am now than you or
-I”—she pointed to a flock of little birds riding up and
-down on a long, smooth billow—“from the deck of this
-ship could catch one of those Mother Carey’s chickens.”</p>
-
-<p>My sensations were those of a man who has received
-an extraordinary bit of good news, like that of a great
-artistic triumph or the inheritance of a fortune. It was
-something that went to the foundations of life, bathing
-them in security and peace. As we continued to talk
-the swing of the boat became the lulling of strong arms.</p>
-
-<p>The conflict of which for the past few days my mind
-had been the battle-ground was suddenly appeased.
-Woman, love, marriage, the more comforting elements in
-life—were no longer in opposition to what had become
-a man’s pressing and sacred duties. There could be a love
-which asked for no moratorium; or rather, there could
-be a woman with the courage of a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>I began to see her as comparable to that crusader’s
-wife who, disguised as a page, followed her lord on his
-journeys, to share his perils and minister to his needs.
-In a modern girl it was not only romantic; it was adorable.
-That it should have been done for me was beyond
-my power to believe. None but the bravest and most
-daring spirit would have attempted it—none but the
-heart capable of climbing higher and more adventurously
-still. I had known her for a gallant soul from that midnight
-minute when she pulled aside her hangings and found
-me lurking in her chamber; but I had never made a forecast
-of the heroisms and fidelities expanding here like the
-beauty from the heart of a rose.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So we came to that last evening on board, of which
-I must now tell you. It had taken me the intervening
-time to get used to the new outlook. The habit of
-seeing myself surrounded by a whole stockade of prohibitions
-was too strong to overcome in a flash. I had
-to let my mind emerge into freedom gently, telling myself
-each day that with a wife like this I could serve the cause
-more devotedly than ever, since she would be serving it
-too.</p>
-
-<p>Of that dedication to a cause I was possibly too much
-aware. My uniform made me aware of it. My game leg
-and my sightless eye made me aware of it. The need of
-whole peoples, like the French and British and Italian,
-of every man who could fire a gun or ram home a bayonet
-or speak a rousing word—that more than anything else
-seemed to put a consecration upon me of which I was
-as foolishly and yet as loftily conscious as a modern king,
-accustomed to a bowler hat, when he rides through the
-streets with his crown on.</p>
-
-<p>And on the last evening there was enough of the
-ecstatic in the air to justify this sense of a mission.</p>
-
-<p>The voyage, which had not been without the exciting
-stimulus of danger, was successfully over. The west
-was actually reached, and the things done left behind us.
-The things to be done were making our pulses beat faster
-and our energies yearn forward. To-morrow with its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-summons to activity was more keenly in our consciousness
-than to-day. Doctors, nurses, returning soldiers,
-the sparse handful of business men—we were already in
-heart ashore, walking in streets, riding in tram-cars,
-eating in dining-rooms, sleeping in beds, taking part in
-hard work, and deeming these things a privilege. Voices
-and laughter in the clear, still night, and the clicking of
-heels on the deck, were part of the relief and joyousness.</p>
-
-<p>Late in the afternoon we had picked up the Nantucket
-light-ship, which rested like a star on the water. Now
-the horizon was being strung with beads of light, one, two,
-three, or little clusters at a time, behind which we knew
-that advancing night was lighting myriads of lamps all
-the way to the Pacific. On the Atlantic coast it was already
-dark, with cities and towns ablaze, and villages
-and farm-houses lit by kindly, shimmering windows. In
-the Middle West it was twilight, with electrics spangling
-the office-buildings here and there, and pale-gold flowers
-strewn over the prairie floors. Beyond the Mississippi it
-would still be day, but day dissolving gorgeously, softly,
-into sunset and moonrise and the everlasting magic of the
-stars.</p>
-
-<p>As she and I hung over the deck rail side by side we
-felt ourselves on the edge of wonders. The Old World was
-in need of us, and we were in need of the New. To us
-who were New World born, and who were coming back
-to generous, easy-going welcome after the unspeakable
-things we had seen, the craving for New World brotherhood
-and vigor was like that of hunger or thirst. This
-much we admitted in so many words—even she.</p>
-
-<p>She was still elusive; she was still mysterious. Though
-during the past few days she had not resisted a certain
-habit as to the place and hour at which we should find<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span>
-ourselves together and had been willing to talk freely
-on any theme connected with the cause, she took flight
-from a hint of the personal, like a bird at an approaching
-footstep.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, she was so far responsive as to say in
-answer to some question of mine, “My immediate plans—”</p>
-
-<p>I broke in abruptly, “Let me tell you about your immediate
-plans.”</p>
-
-<p>As the deck was faintly illuminated, since we were
-again sailing with lights, I saw that change in her eyes
-which comes when a fire on a hearth bursts into a conflagration.</p>
-
-<p>Probably my tone and the change in my manner had
-startled her.</p>
-
-<p>“You? What?” she began, confusedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you what your plans are; but before that let
-me tell you something else.”</p>
-
-<p>She put up her hand. “Wait! Don’t—”</p>
-
-<p>But it was too late to stop me. I couldn’t have stopped
-myself. I was carried on by the impetus that came from
-my having been so many years held back. I was no
-longer the consecrated servant of a cause. As for having
-been a drunkard and a thief, no shadow of remembrance
-stayed with me. I was simply a man head over heels in
-love with a woman, and in all sorts of stupid, stumbling
-phrases saying so.</p>
-
-<p>She listened because she couldn’t do anything else
-without walking away; but she listened with a kind of
-aloofness. With her clasped hands resting on the rail and
-her little, black silhouette held quietly erect, she gazed off
-toward a great white star, which I suppose must have
-been Capella, and heard my tale because she couldn’t
-stop it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Listen,” I went on, leaning on an arm extended along
-the rail. “I’ll tell you your story. I’ve pieced it together
-and I know what it is. I didn’t know it when
-I came on board. It puzzled me.”</p>
-
-<p>Her lips moved, but there was no turn of her head or
-stir of her person.</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t. I’m—I’m not sure that I could bear
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t I? You’ve done certain things. Let
-me give you their interpretation.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I do—” she began, weakly.</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t allow her to continue.</p>
-
-<p>“I see now the explanation of so many things that bewildered
-me at first—that made me suffer. That day at
-Rosyth, for instance, when you went in and left me, you
-didn’t despise or hate me. You may have been disillusioned—”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t the word,” she murmured, still motionless,
-and looking off at the big white star. “I’d been thinking
-of you as the kind of man I’d—I’d been looking for so
-long.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you saw I was less so than any of the others.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not saying that. But if you think it was easy
-to tear up all one’s conceptions by the roots and plant
-in new ones—however kindly—all at once—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, I don’t! not now. But at that time I didn’t
-know you. It’s only been since coming on board and
-finding out what you’ve done—”</p>
-
-<p>Curiosity prompted her to glance round at me.</p>
-
-<p>“Then it was only since coming on board?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it was simple enough. It’s silly to keep up the
-secret. I was talking, while we were still in the dock
-at Liverpool, with that handsome Canadian nurse.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Miss Ogden. She was matron of the hospital at—”</p>
-
-<p>“She knew who you were. She couldn’t tell me your
-name, but she said—or Miss Prynne said—that you’d come
-over with Evelyn—that you’d been at Taplow with
-Mabel—”</p>
-
-<p>“I know; the sort of thing that goes round among
-nurses.”</p>
-
-<p>“And so I put two and two together and formed a
-theory.”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t tell me what it is. Please don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I want to.” I hurried on before she could protest
-further. “When you saw that you’d—you’d hurt
-me—that day at Rosyth—and that I had disappeared—and
-gone into the army—and away to England—you got
-into touch with Evelyn—”</p>
-
-<p>“I wanted to do something,” she declared, in a tone
-of self-defense. “I couldn’t help it when I knew the need
-was going to be so great. We didn’t see that all at once,
-because we thought the war was going to be over in a very
-little while. But when we began to realize it wasn’t—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t say you did it all on my account.”</p>
-
-<p>Though this was meant to provoke either admission
-or denial, she glided over it.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t easy to do anything in New York, because
-we hadn’t got that far as yet; and so I naturally went to
-Canada. When I did so Annette gave me a line of
-introduction to Evelyn.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you told her about me.”</p>
-
-<p>She fell into my trap so far as to say: “I didn’t tell her.
-I simply let her guess.”</p>
-
-<p>“Guess what?”</p>
-
-<p>“All I ever said to her in words was to ask her never
-to mention my name to you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did the same with Lady Rideover when she took
-me on at Taplow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why—again?”</p>
-
-<p>“For the reason that—that if you ever came to find
-out what I was doing you’d misunderstand it; just as I
-see you—you do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t. I don’t misunderstand it when I say
-that in going to my sisters you wanted to be—you mustn’t
-be offended!—you wanted to be near me—to watch over
-me as much as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were the only man I knew at that time who’d
-taken the actual step of going to the war. If there’d been
-any others—”</p>
-
-<p>“It wouldn’t have mattered if there’d been a hundred.
-I don’t misunderstand it when I say that as
-soon as you knew I was going home by this boat you
-arranged—”</p>
-
-<p>“To go home by it too,” she forestalled, quickly, “so
-that you should have somebody near you who could get
-about in the normal way in case there was danger. I
-admit that. It’s perfectly true.” She turned round on
-me with fire in her manner as well as in her eyes. “But
-what do you think I’m going home for?”</p>
-
-<p>I repeated what she had said a few days before:</p>
-
-<p>“You’re going home on account of your father—and
-to interest him and other Americans in American duty
-as to the war.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a reason; it’s the reason I find it easiest to
-give. But I mustn’t hide it from you now that—that
-I’ve—I’ve another.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus3">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“You’re going home to marry me.”</p>
-<p class="caption">“How can I be going home to marry you, when—when
-I never knew till within half an hour that you—that
-you cared anything about me?”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span></p>
-
-<p>I made one of my long mental leaps. I made it as a
-man might take the one chance of life in leaping a crevasse,
-knowing that there are more chances that he will be dashed
-to pieces in the chasm.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re going home to be married.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a kind of awe in the way she drew off from
-me.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re extraordinary,” she breathed, faintly. “Miss
-Ogden didn’t tell you that.”</p>
-
-<p>I had not cleared the crevasse. I was struggling desperately
-on the edge of it, while beneath me was the
-abyss.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re going home to marry me.”</p>
-
-<p>I think she gave a little bitter laugh. At any rate,
-there was the echo of it in her tone, as she said, with sardonic
-promptness: “How can I be going home to marry
-you, when—when I never knew till within half an hour
-that you—that you cared anything about me?”</p>
-
-<p>I, too, must have laughed, the statement struck me
-as so absurd.</p>
-
-<p>“What? You never knew—?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head with an emphasis almost violent.</p>
-
-<p>“You may have known,” she said, in that voice which,
-after all, could not be called bitter, for the reason that
-it was reproachful, “but I’d come to the conclusion that”—she
-tried to carry the situation off with a second laugh,
-a laugh that ended as something like a sob—“that you
-didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>I leaned down toward her, speaking the words right
-into her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t care?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded silently.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake, what made you think that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—everything!”</p>
-
-<p>“Everything? When? How?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span></p>
-
-<p>She was doing her best to convey the impression that
-it didn’t matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything—always—in New York—at Atlantic City—there
-especially! And lately—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? Lately?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lately—at Taplow.”</p>
-
-<p>“But at Taplow—how? In Heaven’s name—how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I was in and out of your room.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I understand; but what of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing; nothing; only—only what I saw.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did you see?”</p>
-
-<p>Instead of answering this question at once she shifted
-her ground.</p>
-
-<p>“If you cared—as you say—why didn’t you tell some
-one?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell some one? Who could I tell?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, any one. Lady Rideover, for one. She’d made
-a promise not to mention me; but you hadn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why should I have mentioned you when I never
-supposed she had any notion—”</p>
-
-<p>“But you see that’s it. If you’d cared—so much—you’d
-have done it—to one of your sisters or the other.
-But you didn’t—not to either; and so they got the idea—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? What idea did they get? Go on. Tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>I noticed that she was twisting and untwisting her
-fingers, and that she had begun throwing me quick,
-nervous glances through the half-light.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use telling you, because it doesn’t matter.
-That is, it doesn’t matter now. Everything’s—arranged.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll talk about that later. I want to know what
-idea Mabel and Evelyn got.”</p>
-
-<p>“They didn’t get it exactly. They were only beginning
-to get it when I made them understand that I was going<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-back to be—Oh, why do you make me talk about it?
-Why do you bring it all up now, when it can’t do any
-good?”</p>
-
-<p>To get at the facts I was obliged to speak with the
-severity one uses toward a difficult child.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to tell me what idea Mabel and Evelyn
-got.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it perfectly evident what idea they’d get? Any
-one would get it when you—when you never said a word—not
-the least, little, confidential word—and you so ill!—and
-blind!—and to your own sisters!—and that Miss
-Farley there!”</p>
-
-<p>I passed over the reference to Miss Farley because I
-couldn’t see what it meant. I had enough to do in
-seizing the new suggestion that had come to me.</p>
-
-<p>“They didn’t think—they couldn’t have thought—that
-there was nothing on my side.”</p>
-
-<p>“And everything on mine. That’s precisely the inference
-they drew. Girls do go about, you know, giving
-people to understand that men—”</p>
-
-<p>“But not girls like you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, girls like me; or sufficiently like me. And so I
-had—in sheer self-respect—to let Lady Rideover see that
-there was nothing in it of the kind of thing she thought,
-and that I was actually going home to be—”</p>
-
-<p>“But didn’t she see? Didn’t she know? Didn’t everybody
-see? Didn’t everybody know?”</p>
-
-<p>In the two brief sentences that came out with something
-like a groan she threw tremendous emphasis on the first
-word.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody knew! Nobody saw!”</p>
-
-<p>There was a similar emphasis on the penultimate word
-in my response.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Did you ask them?”</p>
-
-<p>She flashed back at me: “I did—almost. At times like
-that—if it’s so—some one generally knows it from—from
-the person who’s expecting to be brimming over with
-his secret.” She laughed again, lightly, nervously. “But
-in this instance nobody did.”</p>
-
-<p>“You asked them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Practically. I forgot everything I used to consider
-pride and—and I sounded them.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sounded whom?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the people who knew you best—and who knew
-me—Annette, Esther Coningsby, Ralph—any one to
-whom I thought you might have betrayed yourself by a
-word. But it was just as with Evelyn and Lady Rideover.
-You had practically not mentioned my name.
-Hilda Grace told me she tried to sound you—that Sunday
-at Rosyth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m only quoting her, mind you. She said she didn’t
-get”—there was a repetition of that nervous laugh—“she
-said she didn’t get—any satisfaction. And so—”</p>
-
-<p>I tried to take a reasonable tone. “But how could I
-tell you or anybody else before I’d confessed to you who
-I was and where you’d first seen me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. I quite understand that—now that you’ve
-said what you’ve said to-night. It’s where the past makes
-us pay—”</p>
-
-<p>“For what I used to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’re not the only one,” she declared, in a
-curious, offhand tone. “It’s for what I used to be,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>I found it difficult to follow her. “What you used to
-be? I don’t understand you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You know about me—how I’ve been engaged to one
-man after another—and broken the engagements.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you were trying to find the right one.”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t only that. I thought of myself; I didn’t
-think of them. I let them offer me everything they had
-to give—and pretended to accept it—just to experiment—to
-play with—and now—now I’m—I’m caught!”</p>
-
-<p>“Caught—in what way?”</p>
-
-<p>She tossed her hands outward in a little, exasperated
-gesture.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t do the same thing again. It wouldn’t be right.
-It wouldn’t be sane.”</p>
-
-<p>“The same thing? Do tell me what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s—it’s one of the same men. I’m—I’m caught.
-It’s what mother—and Elsie Coningsby—and other people
-who could talk to me plainly—told me would happen
-some day. I’m—I’m punished. And I can’t do the
-same thing the second time.”</p>
-
-<p>It was still to escape from the yawning hell into which
-I felt myself going down that I said, stupidly, “Why can’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I can’t. It’s what I said just now. It
-wouldn’t be sane. I’ve made a kind of history for myself.
-If I were to do the same thing again it wouldn’t
-merely seem cruel, it would seem crazy.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if you don’t care for him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do—in a way. He’s been so good and kind and
-patient and everything! And even if I didn’t care for
-him at all it would be just the same—after what I’ve let
-him think—the second time.”</p>
-
-<p>I could see her reasoning, if reasoning it was, though it
-was not the uppermost thought in my mind. As a
-matter of fact, I was repeating her statement as to “one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-of the same men.” Which one of them was it? There
-had been three—the one she didn’t trust—the one she
-couldn’t have lived with—and the one who was only
-very nice. It would make such a difference which one
-it proved to be that I was afraid to ask her.</p>
-
-<p>I burst out, desperately: “Oh, but why did you—let
-him think it—the second time?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. It happened by degrees—by writing—in
-letters—and I didn’t see how far I was going. It
-was a kind of reaction.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reaction from what?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me wildly. “From you, I think. As far
-as I remember it became definite at Taplow.”</p>
-
-<p>“When you were actually seeing me every day?”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the reason. It was seeing you so cheerful
-and full of jokes—and not missing—not missing any one—nor
-ever mentioning them—not to a soul. It just convinced
-me of what I’d been sure of before—ever since the
-time at Atlantic City—that you didn’t—that you never
-had.... And so when he suggested it in one of his letters—I
-don’t know what made me!—but I didn’t say it was
-impossible.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said, who knows?—or something like that. And
-then he cabled—but I didn’t cable back—I only wrote—trying
-to say no—but not saying it decidedly enough....
-And so it’s gone on—he writing and cabling both—and
-I only writing, but letting him think—just little by little—and
-not seeing how far I was being swept along.”</p>
-
-<p>I wanted to be clear as to the facts.</p>
-
-<p>“Then do I understand that you’re engaged to him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I told him I wouldn’t be engaged again—that engagements
-for me had come to be grotesque. I said that if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-we did it we’d—we’d just go somewhere and be married.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you did it? Then it’s possible—”</p>
-
-<p>“No; because he’s expecting it. I’ve allowed him to
-expect it—just little by little, you understand—and not
-seeing how far I was letting myself in.... And now he’s
-told some people who used to know about it when I was
-engaged to him before—and that binds me because it
-will get about—so that if I were to break it off with him
-the second time I should be a laughing-stock—and quite
-rightly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Regina, how could you?”</p>
-
-<p>Taking no note of the fact that for the first time in
-my life I had called her Regina, she answered, simply:
-“I tell you I don’t know. If I do know it was because
-I was so lonely—and I’m over twenty-six—and feel older
-still—and nobody seemed to care about me but him—and
-I couldn’t bear the idea of going on and never marrying
-any one at all—which is what Elsie Coningsby said
-would happen to me—and what I’d been half wishing for
-myself—and yet half afraid of.... And you—”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? What about me?”</p>
-
-<p>“There was a nurse at Taplow, that Miss Farley—”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Farley! Oh, good God!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, how did I know? She was very pretty.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could I see whether she was pretty or not?”</p>
-
-<p>“And you were always joking with her and thanking
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I thanked her. What else could I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t have kissed her hand. I caught you
-doing that one day when I was tidying up in your room.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you? Very likely. When a man is as helpless
-as I was his gratitude often becomes maudlin.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that you need call it that. He simply
-falls in love with the pretty nurse who takes care of him.
-It was happening all the time in the hospitals. But for
-me—right there in your room—and shut out from everything—”</p>
-
-<p>“But that wasn’t my fault. If I’d known you were
-there—”</p>
-
-<p>“It was your fault at Atlantic City—and afterward—when
-I’d let you see—far more than a girl should ever
-let any man see.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you know how impossible it was for me then—till
-I’d told you who I was.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it now. I didn’t know it before half an hour
-ago. And the time when you told me that—that thing—at
-Rosyth—I had no idea whether or not you meant....
-And when you blame me for not coming down-stairs
-quicker than I did—”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t blamed you, Regina.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t imagine what it was to be all at sea not
-merely as to what you felt, but actually as to what you
-were—and had been. When you pulled the pearls out
-of your pocket—and said you were that man—”</p>
-
-<p>There were two or three minutes during which she
-stood with face averted, and I had to give her time to
-regain her self-control.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” she went on, her rich mezzo just noticeably
-tremulous—“you see, I’d always thought about him—a
-girl naturally would, finding him in her room like that—but
-I’d thought of him as.... And I’d been thinking of
-you, too. I’d been thinking of you as the very opposite
-of him. He was so terrible—so gaunt—so stricken—I
-see just a little of him in you now, after all you’ve suffered....
-But you—I don’t know what it was you had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>
-about you—your brother had it, too—I saw it again
-when I met him at Evelyn’s in Montreal, something a little
-more than distinguished, something faithful and good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Those things are often hang-overs of inheritance that
-have no counterpart in the nature.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, whatever it was I saw it—and all that year those
-two types had been before my mind. Then when I was
-told that there were not two—that there was only one—it
-was like asking me to understand that the earth had
-only one pole, and that the North and the South Poles
-were identical.” She surprised me with the question,
-“Did you ever read <i>La Dame aux Camélias</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>I said I had, wondering at the connection.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you remember how it begins with the exhumation
-of the body of that poor woman six months
-after she was buried?”</p>
-
-<p>I recalled the fact.</p>
-
-<p>“So that all through the rest of the book, when Marguerite
-Gautier is at the height of her triumphs, if you
-call them triumphs, you see her as she was first shown
-to you. Well— Oh, don’t you understand? That’s the
-way I had to see—I had to see you!”</p>
-
-<p>I hung my head. “I understand perfectly, Regina—now.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s so much we’re only beginning to understand
-now, both on your side and on mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“When it’s almost too late—if it isn’t quite.”</p>
-
-<p>Her manner, her voice, both of which had been a little
-piteous, took on a sudden energy.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, as to that, I’ve been thinking it over—I’ve had
-to think over so much—and I don’t believe the word
-applies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t apply?” I asked, in astonishment. “Why<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-not—when it’s as late as it is? It’s just as if Fate had
-been making us a plaything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe that. Life can’t be the sport of disorganized
-chance. If Romeo takes poison ten minutes
-before Juliet wakes it’s because the years behind them
-led up to the mistake.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that we reap only what we sow?”</p>
-
-<p>“And that life is as much a matter of development in
-a logical sequence as the growth of certain plants from
-certain seeds. It isn’t—it can’t be—a mere frenzy of
-haphazards. Things happen to us in a certain way because
-what we’ve done leaves them no other way.”</p>
-
-<p>“And was there no other way in which this could happen
-to you and me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Think! Isn’t it the very outcome that might have
-been expected from what we’ve been in the past?”</p>
-
-<p>I stared at her without comprehension.</p>
-
-<p>“Because of your past life,” she went on, “there was
-something you couldn’t tell me; and because I didn’t
-know it I’ve taken a step which my past life doesn’t allow
-me to retrace. Could anything be neater?”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet you’re fond of saying that the way things
-happen is the best way.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the best way if it’s the only way, isn’t it? I
-should go mad if I thought that my life hung on nothing
-but caprice—whether of luck or fate or anything you call
-God. I can stand my deserts, however hard, if I know
-they’re my deserts.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can stand this?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is not a question of standing; it’s one of working
-out. Life isn’t static; it’s dynamic—those are the right
-words, aren’t they? It’s always unfolding. One thing
-leads to the next thing; and then there must be times<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>
-when a lot of things that seemed separate are gathered
-up in one immense result. Don’t you think it must be
-that way?”</p>
-
-<p>I said, stupidly, that I didn’t know.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you don’t know if you don’t think; but try
-to think!”</p>
-
-<p>“What good will thinking do when we see how things
-are?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll show us how to make the best of them, won’t
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there any best to be made of your marrying anybody
-else than me? The way things happen isn’t necessarily
-the best way.”</p>
-
-<p>After her hesitating syncopated sentences in dealing
-with what was more directly personal to her life and mine
-she talked now not so much calmly as surely, as of subjects
-she had long thought out.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t say the best way absolutely; but the best in
-view of what we’ve made for ourselves. For ourselves you
-and I have made things hard. There’s no question about
-that. But isn’t it for both of us now to live this minute
-so that the next won’t be any harder?”</p>
-
-<p>There was no argument in this; there was only appeal.</p>
-
-<p>“What,” I asked, “do you mean by that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I mean that the best way to live this minute
-is to accept what it contains—till it develops into something
-else—as it will. This isn’t final. It’s only a step
-on the way to—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a step on the way to your marrying a man you’re
-not in love with, and my not marrying at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“And as the world is at present, aren’t there worse
-tragedies than that?”</p>
-
-<p>Irony of which she must have been unaware pricked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-my dreams of celibate consecration to a cause as a pin
-pricks a bubble.</p>
-
-<p>“So that if I stand still and let you go on—”</p>
-
-<p>She threw me a quick glance. “And aren’t you going
-to?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer to that question was what in the back of
-my mind I had been trying to work out.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t it depend,” I said, picking the right words,
-“on which of the three it is? There’s one I couldn’t interfere
-with—not without disregarding gratitude and honor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want me to tell you which?”</p>
-
-<p>But I didn’t—not then. Too much hung on what the
-knowledge would bring me. There were decisions to
-which I couldn’t force myself at once. In saying this I
-added, “But though I can’t interfere with him without
-disregarding gratitude and honor, I don’t say that I
-sha’n’t disregard them.”</p>
-
-<p>In the clear starlight her eyes had a veiled metallic
-brightness.</p>
-
-<p>“No?”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I don’t,” I persisted, “what shall you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you expect me to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should expect you to back me up.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that we should both be disregarding gratitude and
-honor?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve a right to our happiness.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a very old argument, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not the less true for being old.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no; if it’s true it’s true—anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“And it is true. Don’t you know it is?”</p>
-
-<p>She surprised me by saying, as if quite casually, “I
-don’t suppose that in the end it’s the truth or the untruth
-of the argument that would weigh with me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span></p>
-
-<p>My heart gave a thump.</p>
-
-<p>“Then what would weigh with you?”</p>
-
-<p>She was standing with her back to the rail, the
-great white star behind her. As if to emphasize the
-minute of suspense the engines gradually stopped, while
-the ship rocked gently on the tide. The lights on shore
-were more complex now, lights above lights, lights back
-of lights, with the profusion of seaboard towns even in
-November. The murmur of voices and the click of heels
-grew expectant as well as joyous.</p>
-
-<p>When she spoke at last it was with breast heaving and
-eyes downcast. Her words came out staccatowise, as
-if each made its separate effort to keep itself back.</p>
-
-<p>“What would weigh with me? I—I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does that mean,” I demanded, sharply, “that you
-might back me up?”</p>
-
-<p>I could barely catch her words.</p>
-
-<p>“It means first of all that—that I’m awfully weak.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t weak, Regina, to—to love.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s weak for a soldier to make love an excuse for not
-fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’re not a soldier.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, I am; and so are you. We’re all soldiers
-now—every one in the world. We keep telling ourselves—we
-keep telling one another—that we’re fighting for
-right. It’s our great justification. But what’s the use
-of fighting for public right if we go and do wrong privately?”</p>
-
-<p>“But it isn’t right for you to throw yourself away on
-a man you don’t care for.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s right for me to stand by my word—what is practically
-my word—till something relieves me from the
-necessity.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And do you think anything ever will?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not what I have to consider. If I do what
-I know I ought to do I’ve only to wait—and let the next
-thing come.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what you know you ought to do—are you going
-to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at me pleadingly, quiveringly, with
-clasped hands.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to do—to do anything else. Oh, Frank,
-I hope you won’t make me!”</p>
-
-<p>It was not this unexpected collapse that made me
-tremble; it was not this confession; it was the knowledge
-that I had her in my power. She had seemed so far above
-me—ever since I knew her; she had seemed so far beyond
-me, so strong, so aloof, so ice pure, so inflexibly
-and inaccessibly right! And now she was ready to come
-to me if I insisted on taking her.</p>
-
-<p>But the hungry beast in me was not yet satisfied with
-her avowals.</p>
-
-<p>“Could I, Regina—could I—make you?”</p>
-
-<p>I once saw in the eyes of a spaniel that knew it was
-going to be shot the beseeching, submissive, helpless look
-I saw here.</p>
-
-<p>“You know what I’ve been doing, Frank—the last two
-years—just to be where I—where I could—hear about
-you—occasionally—and see you perhaps—when you
-couldn’t see me.”</p>
-
-<p>I bent down toward her, close, closer, till I almost enveloped
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know that—now—and—and I’m—I’m going
-to make you.”</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t answer, but she didn’t withdraw. Perhaps
-she crept nearer me. Certainly she shivered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span></p>
-
-<p>The look in her eyes was still helpless, submissive, beseeching;
-but because it grew mortally frightened as well
-I repeated what I had said as softly but as firmly as I
-could make the words:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m—I’m going to make you.”</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing but the strip of black veiling between
-her lips and mine when a sudden flash that might have
-come out of heaven threw me back with a start.</p>
-
-<p>It was there above us—the great beacon—landlike—homelike—the
-New World—the new work—the new
-problems to be solved—the new duties toward mankind
-to be hammered home—while thankful voices were murmuring
-round us:</p>
-
-<p>“Sandy Hook!”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXIV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I never knew the compulsion exercised by organized
-life till I found it settling round me, with an even distribution
-like that of the weight of the atmosphere on
-the body, paralyzing my will and making it impotent.
-No more than I could throw off the atmosphere could I
-be free from this force for a second.</p>
-
-<p>It began with my arrival on the dock, where Sterling
-Barry had come to meet his daughter. I had seen him
-often enough before, though I had never known him
-otherwise than in the way called touch-and-go. A ruddy,
-portly, handsome fellow of sixty-odd, with eyes that had
-passed on their torch to his daughter’s, he must in early
-life have been retiring and diffident, for his general approach
-now had that forced jovial note that verges on
-the boisterous.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello! Hello!” he cried, as he lilted up to where I
-stood with Lovey in the Custom House Section M.
-“Alive and kicking, what? Couldn’t kill you. Tried,
-didn’t they?” he went on, looking me over. “Not but
-what it might have been worse, of course. Billy Townsend’s
-son’ll never come back at all, poor chap. Fine
-young fellow, with a bee in his bonnet about aviation.
-Would go—and now you see! Well, we’ve got you back
-and we’re going to keep you. What do you know about
-that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span></p>
-
-<p>I replied that as things were I was afraid I had no choice
-but to stay.</p>
-
-<p>“And if you want a job come to me. Some big things
-doing. Country never so prosperous. Lots of business
-for every one—even for poor old nuts like us. Well, so
-long! Come and see us. Mrs. Barry will want to hear
-you talk. Awfully keen on the war, she is, and that sort
-of thing. Bit down in the mouth now over this Rumania
-business. Sad slump that, very.”</p>
-
-<p>I said that it only left the more for us to do.</p>
-
-<p>“Got your hands full, what? They do seem to put it
-over on you, don’t they? Ah, well, we won’t see you
-licked. We’ll keep out of the war as war; but you’ve
-got our sympathy. Watchful waiting—that’s the new
-ticket, you know. Can do a lot with that.”</p>
-
-<p>With his light, dancing step he was waltzing away again
-when he suddenly returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Barry’ll have something to tell you,” he said,
-with a gleam in his eye curiously like that in Regina’s.
-“Perhaps you know it already. Regina may have given
-you the tip, what? People get confidential on board
-ship. Nothing else to do. No fuss and feathers about
-it. They don’t want that. War-time spirit, you know.
-Just telling a few of our friends. Don’t mind saying that
-Mrs. Barry and I are mighty delighted. Been like our
-own son for years. Sorry when it came to nothing last
-time; but look at ’em now!” He pointed to Section B,
-where Cantyre was bending over Regina as I had bent
-over her last night. “Can see from here what it means.
-Get your congratulations by and by.”</p>
-
-<p>Of all this the point is that I couldn’t say a word. I
-couldn’t tell him there on the dock that I didn’t mean to
-let it go any farther, nor did he suspect for a second that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-I had more than an outsider’s interest in the romance. I
-felt awkward and cowardly at remaining dumb, but
-neither time nor place admitted of a protest.</p>
-
-<p>So, too, when a few minutes later Cantyre came over
-to give me his welcome. It was the welcome of old, with
-a shocked pity in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t expect to see you so badly mauled,” was his
-sorrowful comment after the first demonstrations. “I
-knew you were wounded, of course, and that you had
-been blind. Regina wrote me that from Taplow. But
-I didn’t look for your being so—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s nothing,” I interposed, in the effort to shut
-off his sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>Having asked me a few professional questions in reference
-to the ways in which I had been wounded, he said:
-“Well, now that we’ve got hold of you again we mean to
-feed you up and take care of you. You’re going to be
-my patient, Frank. For the present, at any rate, we’ll
-be living in the same old house, and I shall be able
-to keep a daily eye on you. Lovey here has your
-apartment as clean as an operating-room. See you
-there later. Just now I’ve got to go back to—to
-Regina. And by the way”—his habitually mournful
-expression brightened as a lowering day lights up when
-the sun bursts through the masses of drifting cloud—“by
-the way, I shall have something to tell you by and
-by. The most wonderful thing has happened, Frank—something
-you and I used to talk about before you went
-abroad.”</p>
-
-<p>He wrung my hand with that way he had of pulling
-it downward and pulling it hard, which betrayed all sorts
-of raptures breaking in on a spirit that had never known
-common, every-day happiness. His whole face asked me<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-to rejoice with him, and, though I couldn’t do that, I
-couldn’t do the other thing.</p>
-
-<p>It was on my lips to say, “You can’t have her because
-I’m going to take her away from you.” But the words
-died before they were formed. The very thought died in
-my mind. Whatever I did, I shouldn’t be able to do it
-that way; and so I let him go.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what he meant, Slim—when he said
-them things—the doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>This was Lovey’s question as he sat beside me in the
-taxicab and we drove up-town.</p>
-
-<p>As I made no answer, he mumbled, mysteriously: “I
-do. I ’aven’t valeted ’im for nothink.”</p>
-
-<p>I still made no answer, and the mumble ceased.</p>
-
-<p>As yet I had noticed him only as the returned traveler
-notices the faithful old dog that greets him by lifting his
-eyes adoringly and wagging his tail. I saw now that the
-intervening two and a half years had aged him. He had
-grown white and waxy; his thin gray hair was thinner.
-A trembling, like that of a delicately poised leaf on a day
-when there is little wind, shook his hands, and the left
-corner of his lower lip had the pathetic quiver of a child’s
-when it is about to sag in a great weeping.</p>
-
-<p>As I had paid him so little attention on the dock, I
-picked up the hand resting on his knee and pressed it.</p>
-
-<p>He responded with a long, harsh breath which, starting
-as a sigh of comfort, became something inarticulately
-emotional.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Slim! I’ve got ye back, ’aven’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like it, Lovey.” I laughed without feeling
-mirthful.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye look awful, don’t ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But it don’t make no difference to me, it don’t. I’d
-rather ’ave ye all chawed up like this than not ’ave ye
-at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Them wars is awful things. Why don’t they stop
-’em?” He continued, without waiting for an explanation:
-“It’s all along o’ them blamed Germans. The
-cheek o’ them—to go and fight Englishmen! There was
-a German in the ’at-shop in the Edgware Road used to
-’ang round me somethin’ fierce; and now I believe he
-wasn’t nothink but a-spyin’ on me. Don’t you think he
-was, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think very likely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Makes my blood run cold, it does, the times I’ve took
-’im into a little tea-shop in Great Hatfield Street—and
-me a-treatin’ on ’im, like. If I ’adn’t ’ad luck I might
-be lookin’ like you by this time. Ain’t it awful to be one-eyed,
-sonny?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m getting used to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Used to it till you looks in the glass, I expect. Get
-a fright when ye do that, don’t you? But it’s all right,
-Slim. It wouldn’t matter to me if you was a worse looker
-than y’are. I wouldn’t turn ye down, neither, not if it
-was for all the doctors in the world. Not but what he’s
-been very attentive to me while you was away. I don’t
-make no complaint about that. Bit finicky about socks
-and ’andkerchiefs always the same color—and ye couldn’t
-see ’is socks most o’ the time—only when he pulled up
-his trouser leg a-purpose—but a good spender and not
-pokin’ ’is nose into my affairs. I’ll say all that for ’im;
-but if he was to ask my ’and in marriage, like, and I could
-get you, Slim—all bunged up as y’are now and everything!—well,
-I know what I’d say.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span></p>
-
-<p>Too miserable to reject this bit of sympathy, I said,
-merely, “Unfortunately, Lovey, every one may not be
-of your opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“I d’n’ know about that,” he protested. “Seems to
-me everybody would be if you could make ’em understand,
-like.”</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing offensive in this, coming as it did
-from a deep affection, but, as it had gone far enough, I
-turned my attention to the streets.</p>
-
-<p>There was a quality in them not to be apprehended by
-the sense of sight. It defied at first my limited powers
-of analysis. Something to which I was accustomed was
-not there; and something was there to which I was not
-accustomed.</p>
-
-<p>That to which I was not accustomed struck me soon
-as shimmering, shining, radiant. That it was not an
-outward radiance goes without saying. New York on
-that November day was as dreary and bleak a port as
-one could easily land at. A leaden sky cloaked the streets
-in a leaden, lifeless atmosphere. The tops of steeples and
-the roofs of the tall buildings were wreathed in a leaden
-mist. Patches of befouled snow on the ground, with the
-drifts of paper, rags, and refuse to which the New York
-eye is so inured that it doesn’t see them, lent to the side-streets
-through which we clattered an air of being so hopelessly
-sunk in dirt that it is no use trying to be any other
-way. Drays rumbled, motor-trucks honked, ferry-boats
-shrieked, tram-cars clanked, trains overhead crashed with
-a noise like that of the shell that had struck the <i>Assiniboia</i>,
-while our taxicab creaked and squeaked and spluttered
-like an old man putting on a speed he has long outlived.
-On the pavements a strange, strange motley of men and
-women—Hebrew, Slavic, Mongolian, negro, negroid—carried<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-on trades as outlandish as themselves. Here and
-there an outlandish child shivered its way to an outlandish
-school. Only now and then one saw a Caucasian
-face, either clean, alert, superior, or brutalized and repulsive
-beyond anything to be seen among the yearning,
-industrious aliens.</p>
-
-<p>And yet to me all was lit by an inner light of which I
-couldn’t at first see the lamp. I caught the rays without
-detecting the source that emitted them. In and through
-and above this squalid New York, with its tumult, its
-filth, its seeming indifference to the individual, there was
-a celestial property born of the kingdom of heaven. It
-shone in the sky; it quivered in the air; it lay restfully
-on the hoary graveyards nestling at the feet of prodigious
-cubes, like eld at the base of Time. All faces glowed with
-it; all tasks translated it; all the clamor of feet and
-wheels and whistles sang it like a song.</p>
-
-<p>The name of it came to me with a cry of joy and a
-pang of grief simultaneously. It was peace. I was in a
-country that was not at war.</p>
-
-<p>I had forgotten the experience. I had forgotten the
-sensation it produces. I had forgotten that there was
-a world in which men and women were free to go
-and come without let or hindrance. And here were
-people doing it. The day’s work claimed them, and
-nothing beyond the day’s work. To earn a living was
-an end in itself. The living earned, a man could
-enjoy it. The money he made he could spend; the
-house he built he could occupy; the motor he bought
-he could ride in; the wife he married he could abide
-with; the children he begot he could bring up. He
-could go on in this routine till he sickened and died
-and was buried in it. There was no terrific overruling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-motive to which all other motives had become subsidiary,
-and into which they merged.</p>
-
-<p>In the countries I had been living in war was the sky
-overhead and the ground beneath the feet. One dreamed
-it at night, and one woke to it in the morning. It made
-everything its adjunct, every one its slave. Duty,
-wealth, love, devotion, had no other object on which to
-pour themselves out. It commanded, absorbed, monopolized.
-There was no home it didn’t visit, no pocket
-it didn’t rifle, no face it didn’t haunt, no heart it didn’t
-search and sift and strengthen and wrench upward—the
-process was always a hard, dragging, compulsive one—till
-the most wilful had become submissive and the most
-selfish had given all. Prayer was war; worship was
-war; art, science, philosophy, sport were war. Nothing
-else walked in the streets or labored in the fields or
-bought and sold in the shops. It was the next Universal
-after God.</p>
-
-<p>And here, after God, a man was his own Universal.
-With no standard to which everything had to be referred
-he seemed unutterably care-free. Care-free was not a
-term I should have used of New York, of America, in the
-old days; but it was now the only one that applied. The
-people I saw going by on the sidewalks had nothing but
-themselves and their families to think of. Their only
-struggle was the struggle for food and shelter. Safe people,
-happy people, dwelling in an Eden out of the reach
-of cannon and gas and bomb!</p>
-
-<p>“I came not to bring peace, but a sword!”</p>
-
-<p>Sacrilegiously, perhaps, I was applying those words to
-myself as we jolted homeward. But I was applying them
-with a query. I was asking if it could possibly be worth
-while. All at once my mission became unreal, fantastic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span></p>
-
-<p>To begin with, it was beyond my powers. Among these
-hundreds of thousands of strangers I knew but a handful.
-Even on that handful I should make no impression. I
-could see at a glance, from the few words I had exchanged
-with people on the dock, that each man’s cup was full.
-You couldn’t pour another drop into it. I had subconsciously
-taken it for granted that my friends would be,
-as it were, waiting for me; and already it was evident
-that in their minds there would not be a vacant spot. I
-had not the will-power to force myself in on so much hurry
-and preoccupation.</p>
-
-<p>Then I wasn’t interested in it any more. I had pretentiously
-thought of myself as dedicated to a cause, and now
-the cause had dissolved into nothing on this leaden, overcharged
-air. It would be ridiculous to wean these people
-away from their work, even if I could play like the Pied
-Piper and have them follow me. I didn’t want to do it.
-I wanted to marry the woman I loved, and settle down
-quietly, industriously, to spend my days in an office and
-my nights at home, like the countless human ants that
-were running to and fro. My celibacy of the will was
-gone. My consecration was gone. Where these austerities
-had been there was now only that yearning of whatever
-it is that draws a man toward a woman, and I asked
-nothing but the freedom to enjoy. I was determined to
-enjoy. The resolve came over me with this first glimpse
-of New York. It came over me in a tide of desire which
-was all the fiercer for its long repression. It may have
-been the demand of the flesh for compensation. That
-which had not merely been denied, but brutalized and
-broken, rose with the appetite of a starving beast.</p>
-
-<p>So, thirdly, I was not fit for any high undertaking. It
-was not my real self that had made these vows; it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-a phantasm self evoked by the vast emotions of a strife
-in which the passions raged on a scale that lifted the
-human temporarily out of itself. But now that the strife
-had been left behind, the human fell back into the same
-old rut.</p>
-
-<p>In the same old rut I found myself. I had reverted to
-what I had been before there was a war at all. My carnal
-instincts were as strong as ever; as strong as ever was
-my longing for Regina Barry as my wife. It was stronger
-than ever, since I meant to get her by hook or by crook,
-if I couldn’t do it by the methods which colloquially we
-call straight.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, the difficulties of hook and crook that
-oppressed me. The straight line was in this case that of
-least resistance. I grew more convinced of it as the day
-advanced.</p>
-
-<p>There was everything to make my return to the old
-quarters a moment of depression. The quarters themselves,
-which had seemed palatial after the Down and
-Out, were modest to the point of being squalid. As
-Cantyre had said, Lovey had kept them as clean as an
-operating-room, but cleanliness couldn’t relieve their dingy
-shabbiness or make up for the absence of daylight.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, Cantyre’s own proximity was trying to me.
-There was only the elbow of a corridor between his rooms
-and mine. He would resume the old chumming habits
-of running in and out, while I was sharpening a knife to
-stab him in the back.</p>
-
-<p>And in the processes of unpacking Lovey got on my
-nerves. He got on my nerves as a sweet, old, fussy
-mother gets on those of a wayward son during the hours
-he is compelled to stay at home. Dogging me about
-from one room to another, his affection was like a draught<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_316"></a>[316]</span>
-of milk held out to a man whose lips are parched for
-brandy.</p>
-
-<p>It was a relief, therefore, when the telephone rang and
-Annette van Elstine asked me to come and have tea with
-her. I knew that Annette was not craving to see me
-merely as her cousin; and as my cousin I could have
-waited patiently for the pleasure of seeing her; but with
-her scent for drama and her insatiable curiosity she
-would raise the issues of which I wanted to talk even if
-I got no good from it.</p>
-
-<p>I found her as little changed as if Time had not passed
-nor War dropped his bomb on the world.</p>
-
-<p>Annette’s smartness, as I have already told you, was
-difficult to define. It was not in looks or dress or manner
-of living or gifts of intellect. If I could ascribe it to a
-cause I should put it down as authority of position combined
-with the possession of a great many personal secrets.
-She knew your intimate history for the reason that she
-asked you intimate questions. Authority of position
-enabled her to do this—or at least she acted as if it did—with
-the right of a cross-examiner to probe the truth in
-court. She could convey the impression that her interest
-in your affairs was an honor—as if a queen were to
-put her royal finger in your family pie—so that quite
-artlessly you unlocked your heart to her. Other people’s
-unlocked hearts were her kingdom, since, as far as I could
-see, she had nothing in her own.</p>
-
-<p>Also, as far as I could see, she wore the same tea-gown
-I had always seen her in; she sat in the same chair in
-front of the same fire; she had before her the same tea
-equipage; she might have been pouring the same tea.</p>
-
-<p>The transition from the necessary questions as to my
-personal experiences and wounds to that of the exact<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_317"></a>[317]</span>
-relations between Mrs. Hartlepool and Gen. Lord Birkenhead
-was an easy one. Disappointed that I had spent
-two years at the front and had heard nothing of the
-delicate situation between these distinguished persons,
-of which an amazing mass of contradictory detail had
-reached certain circles in New York, she turned the conversation
-on what was really the matter in hand.</p>
-
-<p>“So you came over on the same boat as Regina?”</p>
-
-<p>Unable to deny this statement, I admitted its truth.
-The dusky ripples played over Annette’s round features,
-giving them a somber vivacity.</p>
-
-<p>“Did she tell you anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; a good many things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anything special, I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Everything she said was special, as far as I can remember.”</p>
-
-<p>She tried another avenue.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve gone back to your old quarters, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I kept them all the time I was away. Stupid,
-I suppose; but when I left New York I didn’t expect to
-be gone for more than a few weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stephen Cantyre is in that house, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“On the same floor with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see a great deal of him, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did when I was there before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he on the dock to meet Regina?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was on the dock, either to meet her or to meet me.
-As a matter of fact, he met us both.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did he say anything about her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; he said he had to go and speak to her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only to speak to her?”</p>
-
-<p>“What more could he do—right there on the dock?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then you do know?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_318"></a>[318]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Know what?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you suppose? Can’t you guess?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know you wanted me to guess. I thought
-you meant to tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell you what I don’t know myself—officially.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know it in any other way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it by signs and tokens.”</p>
-
-<p>“One can infer a lot from them.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just what I’ve done. It wasn’t till I heard
-that you’d come over in the same boat with her—”</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the sentence was conveyed by a look which
-invited me to go on.</p>
-
-<p>“You thought I might be able to corroborate the signs
-and tokens?”</p>
-
-<p>“Or contradict them—if it’s not a rude thing to
-say.”</p>
-
-<p>I wriggled away from the frontal attack. “Why should
-it be rude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, I’m the last person in the world to go poking
-into other people’s business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only people do like to tell me things.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can quite understand that—when they’ve anything
-to tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which is what I thought you might have.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could I have anything to tell when I’ve just
-spent two years in trenches and hospitals?”</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t been in trenches and hospitals during
-the last ten days. Oh, don’t say anything if you don’t
-want to. I’m not in the least curious.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you’re not. No one would ever think so.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve only been—well, just a little afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“What were you afraid of?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_319"></a>[319]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Of the situation. I suppose it wasn’t an accident
-that you took the boat that she was on?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it wasn’t an accident. But what has that to
-do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just that much—that you did it on purpose.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you were afraid on my account?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; on hers. You see, she’s been so terribly talked
-about that now that it’s beginning again—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s beginning again, is it?”</p>
-
-<p>She said, mysteriously, “Stephen Cantyre is rather a
-goose, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what way?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the way of dropping hints when he’d much better
-keep still. He’s so crazy about her—”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a pity for him to be dropping hints if he isn’t sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he must be sure enough! After the way she
-treated him before, he’d never expose himself to the
-same thing the second time. It isn’t that he’s not sure.
-It’s just the way he does it—confiding in every one, but
-only saying that he hopes.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he only hopes, it doesn’t bind any one but himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a question of binding; it’s one of the situation.
-If she’s let him hope—the second time—she’s
-bound. If it was only the first time—or if she hadn’t
-made such an insane reputation for herself—don’t you
-see?—the whole thing is in that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think the whole thing was in whether or not
-she was in love with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it isn’t. If she was as much in love with somebody
-else as Juliet she couldn’t throw over Stephen
-Cantyre now. She’d have to be put under restraint if
-she did—shut up in some sort of ward. The community
-wouldn’t stand for it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_320"></a>[320]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It might be a nine days’ wonder, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be one of those nine days’ wonders that last
-all your life. She’d be done for.” She went on in another
-key. “But, of course, her father and mother wouldn’t
-let her. They’re delighted. He’s very well off—and a
-good fellow, who’ll give her everything she wants.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what good will that do if she doesn’t care for
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>Her animation went into the eclipse that always came
-over her when she touched the heart of things.</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think she doesn’t—if it’s not a rude
-question?”</p>
-
-<p>“The fact that she turned him down before.”</p>
-
-<p>She broke in with that directness which she never
-hesitated to make use of when the time came.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t think she cares anything about you?”</p>
-
-<p>I considered two or three ways of meeting this, the
-one I adopted being to put on a rather inane smile.</p>
-
-<p>“What if she did?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’d just have to get over it, that’s all. You, too!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“I needn’t tell you why. You must see for yourself.
-Or, rather, I’ve told you already. There are ways in
-which an engagement is more important than a marriage—any
-engagement; and when it’s a second engagement
-to the same man—If she’d been married to him, and
-couldn’t get along, why, no one would think the worse
-of her if she got a divorce and married some one else.
-She would have given him a try; she would have done
-her best. But just to take him up and put him down, and
-take him up and put him down again, without trying
-him at all—my dear Frank, it isn’t done!”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose we did it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_321"></a>[321]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In that case it might be the world well lost for love—but
-the world would be lost; and you needn’t be under
-any misconception about it. Personally I’d stand by
-any one through almost anything; I have stood by
-Regina in the past when lots of other women have given
-her the cold shoulder because of her—”</p>
-
-<p>“Call it anything you like. Most of us have other
-names for it. All I want to say now is that I wouldn’t
-stand by her in this; nor by you, either. If you had come
-to me when you were in your other troubles—three or
-four years ago—you’d have found me just the same as
-if you’d been keeping straight. Any one can go to the
-bad. There isn’t a family that hasn’t some one who’s
-done it. But this would be the kind of thing— Frank,
-old boy, I’m telling you right now, so that you’ll know
-where you stand with me. I’d have to be the first to
-cut you both.”</p>
-
-<p>To this there were several retorts I could have made,
-any of them quite crushing to Annette; but I was thinking
-of the practical difficulties before us. The rôle of
-unscrupulous coquette was the last in which Regina
-would care to appear; that of cad was equally distasteful
-to me. Had it been possible to make one plunge and be
-over with it, it would have been different; as it was, the
-preliminaries—the facing of all the people who would
-have to be faced—the explaining all the things that would
-have to be explained—couldn’t but be devilish.</p>
-
-<p>I was just beginning, “Why should you assume that
-we are thinking of any such thing—?”</p>
-
-<p>But before I could finish the sentence the door opened
-gently and a maid’s voice announced, “Mrs. Barry.”</p>
-
-<p>Of all the people in the world, this lady was the last
-I wanted to meet at that moment. Knowing how I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_322"></a>[322]</span>
-must have figured in her eyes in the past, I was planning
-for the future to figure in a worse light still. I had
-thrown her kindness back in her face and never given her
-an explanation. She must have known that my seeming
-flight from Long Island after that last Sunday in June,
-1914, had left her daughter unhappy; and the reason had
-remained a mystery.</p>
-
-<p>She gave me the first glance as she entered, and only
-the second to our hostess. The awful severity of those
-who are temperamentally gentle and unjudging was in
-the very coldness of her eye.</p>
-
-<p>She was a charming, delicate, semi-invalid woman who
-seemed to have been spun, like the clothes she wore, out
-of the least durable materials in life. Regina had the
-same traits, but harder, stronger, and more lasting. It
-was difficult to think of the latter as an invalid; while
-you couldn’t see the mother as anything else.</p>
-
-<p>Prettily old-fashioned, she seemed not to have changed
-her style of dressing since the eighteen-seventies. The
-small bonnet might have dated from the epoch of professional
-beauties when Mrs. Langtry was a girl. The
-long fur pelisse with loose hanging sleeves was of no
-period at all. I think she wore a train. In her own
-house she habitually did, and she seemed to have just
-flung on the pelisse and driven down the Avenue in her
-motor.</p>
-
-<p>She greeted me politely, without enthusiasm, but with
-due regard to the fact that I was a wounded hero home
-from the wars. Talking of the invasion of Rumania, she
-showed herself much more alive to America’s international
-duty than any of the few men I had met since my landing.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish we could get my husband and Stephen to see
-things that way,” she continued, sweetly, over her tea-cup.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_323"></a>[323]</span>
-“They’re so pacifist, both of them. My husband
-feels that we’ve nothing to do with it, and Stephen is
-opposed to war on any ground. You must talk to him,
-Mr.—or captain, isn’t it? Oh, major? You must talk
-to him, Major Melbury. He’ll listen to you.” She
-turned to Annette. “You know, Annette, I just ran in to
-share our good news with you. Regina and Stephen—they’ve
-made it up again—and they’re so happy!” An
-oblique glance included me. She was getting the satisfaction
-that women receive from a certain kind of revenge.
-“Poor darling! You don’t know how hard she’s tried,
-Annette. People haven’t understood her. All she’s
-wanted was to be sure of herself—and now she is. She’s
-really been in love with Stephen all these years, only she
-didn’t know it. That is, she knew it; and yet—But
-I’m sure you see it. You’re one of the few who’ve never
-been unkind to her. She wanted me to tell you. She’ll
-be so glad to have you know it, too, Major Melbury.
-Perhaps she told you on the boat. I think she said she
-did. I don’t quite remember. There’s been so much to
-say in the last few hours. There always is at such a
-time, don’t you think?... No; they’re not going to announce
-an engagement. It would only make more talk,
-after all the talk there’s been. One of these days they’ll be
-married—without saying anything about it. And, oh!—I
-know you’ll be interested, Annette, though it may bore
-Major Melbury—Stephen has bought that very nice
-house—the Endsleigh Jarrotts lived in it for a little while—on
-Park Avenue near Sixty-sixth Street. Ralph Coningsby
-is going to remodel it for them, and I’m sure it
-will be awfully attractive. That’s where they’ll live.”</p>
-
-<p>It was my opportunity. I could have shouted out
-there and then and made a scene.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_324"></a>[324]</span></p>
-
-<p>Do you think me a coward for not doing it? Do you
-think me a fool?</p>
-
-<p>All kinds of speeches were hot within me—and I kept
-them back. More correctly, I didn’t keep them back;
-I simply couldn’t utter them. I couldn’t give pain to
-this sweet lady sipping her tea so contentedly; I couldn’t
-give pain to Annette. Annette was enjoying the situation
-in which we found ourselves; the sweet lady had
-got compensation for months, for years, of wondering and
-unhappiness in those seemingly artless words, “She’s
-really been in love with Stephen all these years, only she
-didn’t know it.” I knew they were spoken for my benefit.
-Between the lines, between the syllables, they said,
-“And if you think she was ever in love with you you’re
-wrong.” Whether the sweet lady believed her own
-statements or not made little difference. It would
-gratify her all her life to remember that she had had the
-chance of making them.</p>
-
-<p>So I came away, following the line of least resistance,
-because I didn’t see what else I could do.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t see what else I could do when Cantyre came
-into my bedroom late that night.</p>
-
-<p>I knew he would be dining at the Barrys’, and that he
-would come looking me up after his return. To avoid
-him I had the choice between staying out and going to
-bed. My physical condition kept me from staying out
-very late, and so I took the other alternative. It made
-no difference, however, since he waked Lovey by pounding
-on the door, and insisted on coming in.</p>
-
-<p>Dropping into the arm-chair beside my bed, with no
-light but that which streamed in behind him from the
-sitting-room, he took me on my weak side by beginning
-to talk about the war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_325"></a>[325]</span></p>
-
-<p>I have said that my mission had become unreal and
-fantastic, but that was only in relation to my personal
-fitness for the task. That the war was a holy war, to be
-fought to a holy end, remained the alpha and omega of
-my convictions. And to Cantyre war of any kind was
-plainly unholy war, productive of unholy reactions.
-What I felt as he talked may best be expressed by Lovey’s
-words next morning when he betrayed the fact that he
-had been listening.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t it get yer goat, Slim, the way the doctor
-went on last night?”</p>
-
-<p>It did get my goat, and I restrained myself only because
-I had been warned in London to be patient with Americans.
-“You must treat them as wise parents treat their
-sons,” I had been told. “Help them to see for themselves—and
-when they do that you can trust them.” So the
-best I could do was to help Cantyre to see for himself;
-and to make any headway in that I had to pretend to be
-tolerant.</p>
-
-<p>“No one contends that war is the ideal method for
-settling human difficulties,” I admitted; “but as long as
-human society stands on certain planks in its platform
-there’ll be no other way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then isn’t this the time to take another way?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; because you’ve got to change your bases of
-existence first. You can’t change your effects without
-first changing your causes, any more than you can graft
-an apple on an oak.”</p>
-
-<p>“But even without removing the cause you can still
-sometimes nip the effect.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which is what in the present instance we tried to
-do, and didn’t succeed in. All the trend of education
-during thirty years has been in the direction of eliminating<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_326"></a>[326]</span>
-war, while still keeping the principle that makes for
-war as part of the foundation of our life. We created a
-system of international law; we set up a Hague Tribunal;
-many of us had come to the conclusion that no great
-war could ever again take place; but the law by which
-human beings prefer as yet to live outwitted us and
-brought war upon us whether we would or not. So long
-as you keep the causes you must have the effects.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let us do away with the causes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! Let us. Only, to do that in time for the present
-situation we should have begun five hundred years ago.
-You can’t put out the fire the ages have kindled as you’d
-blow out a candle. When you’ve spent centuries in preparing
-your mine, and fixed a time fuse to make it explode,
-you’ve nothing to do but to let it go off. This
-war wasn’t made overnight. The world has been getting
-ready for it as long as there have been human beings to
-look askance at one another. Now we’ve got it—with
-all its horrors, but also with all its compensations.”</p>
-
-<p>“Compensations for the lives it has ruined?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the lives it has saved—yes. You’ll never get its
-meaning unless you see it as a great regenerative process.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to tell me that we can only be regenerated
-by fire and sword and rapine?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all! We’re regenerated by courage and honor
-and sacrifice and the sense that every man gets—every
-Tommy, every poilu, every bluejacket—that he personally
-is essential to man’s big fight in his struggle upward. It’s
-one of the queer things of the whole business that out of
-the greatest wrong human beings can inflict on one another—to
-go to war with them—there can come the highest
-benefits to every individual who gets himself ready to
-receive them. It makes one believe in an intelligence<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_327"></a>[327]</span>
-compelling the race toward good, however much we may
-be determined to go the other way.”</p>
-
-<p>He tuned his voice to a new key.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve never doubted that; and now, old chap,
-now I—I see it.”</p>
-
-<p>I knew what was coming. It was the great subject
-that could eclipse even that of the war. I had just force
-to pull the bedclothes up about my mouth and mutter
-a suffocated, “How?”</p>
-
-<p>“What I hinted this morning. It’s all—it’s all come
-right. I used to think it never would, sometimes. And
-then—don’t laugh, old boy!—but then I’d say to myself
-that God would never have made me feel as I did unless
-He meant something to come of it. Religion keeps telling
-you to trust; and I did trust—on and off.”</p>
-
-<p>Again I had an opportunity; but again such words as
-rose in me choked themselves back in my throat. I
-could have told him that she was ready to come to me
-if I lifted a finger. I knew I should have to tell him
-sometime, and it occurred to me that it might as well
-be now. It was the words that failed me, not the intention;
-or if it was the intention, it was the intention
-in any degree that made it compulsory.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t think he noticed that I said nothing, for he went
-falteringly on:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a wonderful thing to be happy, Frank. I’ve
-never been happy before in my life. I’m a pusillanimous
-sort of bloke, and there’s the truth. I wasn’t happy at
-home, or at school, or at college, or in any of the hospitals
-where I worked; and I never made any friends.
-You must know I’ve been queer when I say that women
-have always looked at me as if I was outside of their
-range. They’ve never made up to me in the way they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_328"></a>[328]</span>
-do to most fellows with a bit of money and not deformed.
-Regina—there! I’ve said her name—she was the very
-first who ever took the trouble to be more than just
-decently civil.”</p>
-
-<p>I managed to stammer the words, “What did she do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, nothing very much—not at first. She seemed
-to think—she used to say it—that I was different from
-most men. That’s what she appeared to be on the lookout
-for. All the other chaps she knew were so much alike,
-and I—Well, that’s how it began. She wanted the
-unusual—and I turned up. After a while she thought
-I wasn’t unusual enough—said it in so many words—But
-you know that story. I’ve told you too many times
-already.”</p>
-
-<p>“And now?”</p>
-
-<p>“She thinks she’ll marry me.”</p>
-
-<p>He brought out the statement in a voice all awe and
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“She only thinks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she will. She wouldn’t say anything about it if
-she didn’t mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“And—and you’re going to—to let her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let her? Why, man, you might as well ask me if
-I’d let God forgive my sins if He said He’d do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“God could forgive your sins and not be any the worse
-off Himself.”</p>
-
-<p>He sprang forward in his chair, grabbing at the bedclothes.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, I swear to you it will be the same with her.
-She’ll never be sorry. I’ll never let her. She’ll be like
-God to me. I’ll make my whole life worship and service.”</p>
-
-<p>“If that’s what she wants.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what every woman wants, so they say. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_329"></a>[329]</span>
-just ask to be loved; and when you love them enough—”
-He uttered a little shrill laugh, in which there was a
-touch of the hysterical that was always somewhere about
-him. “God! Frank, it’s wonderful! Even you who
-know her can’t imagine what it means to a lonely bloke
-like me.”</p>
-
-<p>I pumped myself up to a great effort.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose”—I had to moisten my lips before going on—“suppose
-she was to play you the same trick she played
-you before?”</p>
-
-<p>“She wouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his evident conviction, I pressed the question.</p>
-
-<p>“But if she did?”</p>
-
-<p>He threw off in a tone that seemed careless: “In that
-case there’d be just one thing for me to do. I’d leave
-her everything I possess—I’m doing that as it is—and,
-well, you can guess the rest. I—I couldn’t go through all
-that again. The first time—well, I just pulled it off;
-but the second—”</p>
-
-<p>It was the old story. They all seemed to have the
-second time on the brain. I, too, was getting it on the
-brain. It was like a trip-hammer pounding in my head.</p>
-
-<p>I forced myself, however, to make some foolish, semi-jovial
-speech in which there was no congratulation, begging
-him, then, for the love of Heaven, to clear out, as I
-wanted to go to sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_330"></a>[330]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>No record of the next few weeks exists for me. I
-suppose I must have done things—little things. I
-must have gone in and out, and eaten my meals, and fulfilled
-Lovey’s orders—for, lacking volition of my own,
-I was entirely at his command. But the recollection of
-it all has passed from me. I remember reading in some
-one’s reminiscences of prison life that the weeks of solitary
-confinement went by; but the released prisoner
-could not say how. Nothing remained with him, apparently,
-but a big, black blur; and of these first weeks
-in New York it was all that stayed with me.</p>
-
-<p>I know that Christmas came and went, and that I
-spent the festival at Atlantic City. I did this in a wild
-hope, which I knew was idiotic when I formed it. I told
-Lovey what I was about to do; I knew he, in the course
-of his valeting, which he still kept up, would tell Cantyre;
-I guessed that Cantyre would tell Regina; and I hoped—it
-never really amounted to hoping, I only dreamed—that
-Regina might find the moment a favorable one for
-slipping away and joining me. Then we should actually
-do the thing so impossible to plan.</p>
-
-<p>But, of course, nothing came of it; and I returned to
-New York more unsatisfied than I had gone away. The
-sense of being unsatisfied sent me at last to Sterling
-Barry’s door.</p>
-
-<p>You will observe that I had not talked with Regina
-since our last night on board ship. On the morning of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_331"></a>[331]</span>
-landing her quick movements, as compared with my slow,
-lumbering ones, enabled her to elude me. Since our
-landing my will had been positively paralyzed. Those
-words of hers, “Oh, Frank, I hope you won’t make me!”
-were always in my memory; but the very sense that I
-could use the power held me back from doing it. I meant
-to use it; but as each minute came round when I might
-have taken a step toward that end I seemed to fall backward,
-like the men who went out with swords and staves
-to take the Christ.</p>
-
-<p>But two days after my return from Atlantic City I came
-to the conclusion that I could wait no longer. I could go
-and call on her at least. For the family it would mean
-no more than that I had come to offer my congratulations.
-For her—but I could tell that only by being face
-to face with her.</p>
-
-<p>The old manservant recognized me on coming to the
-door. He was sorry that Miss Barry had gone to tea
-with Miss van Elstine, and was sure his mistress would
-be sorry, too. Moreover, they had all heard of my
-prowess in battle, and were proud of me.</p>
-
-<p>So I drove round in my taxi to Annette’s.</p>
-
-<p>The maid would have ushered me straight up to the
-library, but I preferred to send in my card. As I was
-being conducted up-stairs a minute later I had the privilege
-of hearing a few words which I am sure Annette intended
-for my ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t mind this once, Regina; but I can’t
-have it going on.... Yes, I know it’s an accident; but
-it’s an accident that mustn’t continue to happen. The
-very fact that he’s my cousin obliges me to be the more
-careful. It wouldn’t be fair to your father and mother
-if I were to let you come here—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_332"></a>[332]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But, Annette, this once is all I’m asking for.”</p>
-
-<p>“And all I mean to grant.”</p>
-
-<p>I could tell by Annette’s voice that she was retreating
-to another room, so that by the time I entered Regina
-stood there alone. Before I knew what I was doing I
-held both her hands in mine and was kissing them.</p>
-
-<p>It is an odd fact that on raising my eyes I saw her
-features for the first time since that summer afternoon
-at Rosyth. On board ship she had always worn the yashmak;
-and on the dock she had been too far away to allow
-of my seeing more than that she was there.</p>
-
-<p>The face I saw now was not like Annette’s, untouched
-by the passage of time and suffering and world agony.
-You might have said that in its shadows and lines and
-intensities the whole history of the epoch was expressed.
-It was one of those twentieth-century faces—they are
-women’s faces, as a rule—on which the heroic in our
-time has stamped itself in lineaments which neither paint
-nor marble could reproduce. It flashed on me that the
-transmigrated soul had traveled farther than I had suspected.</p>
-
-<p>I don’t know what we said to each other at first. They
-were no more than broken things, not to be set down by
-the pen. When I came to the consciousness of my
-actual words I was saying, “I’m going to make you,
-Regina; I’m going to make you.”</p>
-
-<p>She responded like a child who recognizes power, but
-has no questionings as to right and wrong.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you, Frank? How?”</p>
-
-<p>“In any way that suggests itself.” I added, helplessly,
-“I don’t know how.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll do whatever you tell me,” she said, simply and
-submissively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_333"></a>[333]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Then will you just walk away with me some afternoon—and
-be married—without saying anything to any
-one?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you say so.”</p>
-
-<p>“When shall we do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever you like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Next week?”</p>
-
-<p>“If that suits you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would it suit you?”</p>
-
-<p>She bent her head and was silent. I repeated the
-question with more insistence.</p>
-
-<p>“Would it suit you, Regina?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no question of suiting me. I’ve got myself
-where I can’t be”—she smiled, a twitching, nervous smile—“where
-I can’t be suited.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that you’d come with me—when you
-wouldn’t want to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Something like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you that. I’ve—I’ve let you see it—in
-what I’ve been doing for the past two years.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that I’m absolutely master?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it.”</p>
-
-<p>I turned away from her, walking to the other end of
-the long room. When I came back she was standing as
-I had left her, humbly, with eyes downcast, like a slave-girl
-put up for sale.</p>
-
-<p>I paused in front of her.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know that your abandonment of will puts us
-both in an extraordinary position?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.” She went on presently, “But I know, too,
-that where you’re concerned my will-power has left me.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that isn’t like you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_334"></a>[334]</span></p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it isn’t. Generally my will is rather strong.
-But in this case— You see—I’d—I’d waited so long—and
-I’d never believed that you—that you cared anything—and
-now that I know you do—well, it’s simply made me
-helpless. I’ve—I’ve no will at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that I must have enough for two?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I—if I carry you off—and make every one unhappy—and
-put you in a position where you’d be—where
-you’d be done for—that’s what Annette calls it—the
-responsibility would be all mine?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should never reproach you.”</p>
-
-<p>“In words.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor in thought—if I could help it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you mightn’t be able to help it.”</p>
-
-<p>To this there was no reply. I took another turn to
-the end of the room. My freedom of action was terrifying.
-Since I could do with her what I liked, I was afraid to do
-anything. I came back and said so.</p>
-
-<p>The old Regina woke as she murmured, “If you’re
-afraid to do anything—do nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what would you do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should let things take their course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let things take their course—and marry him?”</p>
-
-<p>“If things took their course that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that they mightn’t take their course
-that way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not married to him yet. There are—there are
-difficulties.”</p>
-
-<p>I caught her by the arm. “Of what kind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of opinion chiefly—but of very vital opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean about the war?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_335"></a>[335]</span></p>
-
-<p>She said with a force like that of a suppressed cry:
-“He wants me not to have anything more to do with it!
-And I—I can’t stop—not while it’s going on. I—I must
-be doing something. It’s one of the reasons why I could
-marry him—that he’s a doctor—and I could take him
-over there—where they need him so much.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he won’t go?”</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t say that exactly; but he doesn’t want to.
-He thinks it’s all wrong—that when it comes to brutality,
-one side is as bad as the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’ll get over that—if you insist; and then you’ll
-marry him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps so—if I haven’t already married you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think you may have married me?”</p>
-
-<p>“You said you’d make me.”</p>
-
-<p>And in the end, when Annette came back, we left it
-at that, with everything up in the air.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_336"></a>[336]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXVI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>More weeks followed, of which my record is chiefly
-in the drama of public events.</p>
-
-<p>Vast as these were at the time, they seem even vaster
-in the retrospect. As my memory goes back to them
-they are like prodigious portents in the sky, awful to
-look at and still more awful to think about. A time
-will come when we shall find it amazing merely to have
-lived through such happenings.</p>
-
-<p>Before the invaders the Rumanian towns were going
-down like houses built of blocks. In her attitude to
-Rumania, Russia was a mystery—a husband who sees his
-wife fighting for her life and doing hardly anything to
-help her. The rumors, true or false, that reached us
-might have been torn from some stupendous, improbable
-romance—a feeble Czar, a beautiful and traitorous Czarina,
-a corrupt nobility, an army betrayed, a people seething
-in dreams and furies and ignorance. Washington,
-having gone so far as to ask the Allied nations their peace
-conditions, had received them—restitution, reparation,
-and future security. Then late in that month of January,
-1917, there came to people like me an unexpected shock.
-Before the Senate President Wilson delivered the speech
-of which the tag that ran electrically round the world
-was peace without victory.</p>
-
-<p>I mention these things because they are the only waymarks
-of a time during which my private life seemed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_337"></a>[337]</span>
-to be drearily and hopelessly at a standstill. The deadlock
-of the nations reacted on myself. Mentally I was
-at grips with destiny, but nothing made any progress. I
-was exactly where I had started, as regards Regina, as
-regards Cantyre, as regards Annette, as regards the
-father and mother Barry. Outwardly I was on friendly
-terms with them all, and on no more than friendly terms
-with any one.</p>
-
-<p>The Barrys invited me to dinner, and I went. Cantyre
-made up a theater party—he was fond of this form of
-recreation—and I went to that. Annette asked me to a
-Sunday lunch at which Cantyre and Regina were guests.
-The force of organized life held us together as a cohesive
-group; the operation of conventional good manners kept
-us to courtesies. That any one was happy I do not believe;
-but life threw its mask even on unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p>I got in, of course, an occasional word with Regina,
-which, nevertheless, didn’t help me. As far as I could
-observe, she lived and moved in a kind of hypnotic state,
-from which nothing I knew how to say could wake her.
-She was always waiting for me to give the word, and
-I was afraid to give it. If there was hypnotism, it affected
-us both, since I was as deeply in the trance as she.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then, however, she came out of it with some
-brief remark which gave me a lead and perhaps made me
-hope. One such occasion was at the theater. Cantyre
-had not put me next to her, but there was an entr’acte
-when I found his place empty and slipped into it.</p>
-
-<p>“And how are events taking their course?” I asked,
-with a semblance of speaking cheerily.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m waiting to see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still?”</p>
-
-<p>“Still.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_338"></a>[338]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And how long is that to go on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Till events have shaped their course in a way that
-will tell me what to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“How shall you know that?”</p>
-
-<p>“How does the twig know when the current takes it
-from the spot where it has been caught and carries it
-down-stream?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you’ve got intelligence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Any intelligence I’ve got implores me to keep on
-waiting.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you’re not going to be married right away?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not be married till I see it’s the obvious thing
-to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not even to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s different. I’ve already told you—”</p>
-
-<p>“That if I give the word— But don’t you see I
-can’t give it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. You’re waiting for the sign as much as I
-am.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sign?”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall recognize it when the time comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where will it come from?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right up out of life; I don’t know where, nor how.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’ll give it to us?”</p>
-
-<p>She had only time, as Cantyre returned to his seat,
-to send me a long, slantwise look, with the underscored
-words, “You know!”</p>
-
-<p>Another time was in the regrouping of guests, after
-Annette’s luncheon. Finding myself beside her at a window,
-I asked the plain question, “Are you engaged to
-Cantyre?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m just where I was when I told you about it on
-board ship. He hasn’t asked me to be more definite.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_339"></a>[339]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Is he just where he was?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he is, in that—in that he expects me to marry
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you leave him under that impression?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what else to do—till I get the sign.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re still looking for that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I’m aware of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you are, whether you’re aware of it or not.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose he urges you before the sign comes?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall still wait.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose I urged you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d take that as the sign.”</p>
-
-<p>And after the guests went I stayed behind and told
-the whole story to Annette. So long as there were no
-clandestine meetings under her roof, she was as detached
-and sympathetic and non-committal as a chorus in a
-Greek play.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you give her the sign, if it’s not a rude
-question?” she asked, while a marvelous succession of
-ripples circled over her duskiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I’m afraid to. Think what it would mean to
-Cantyre, who’s been so white with me all these years.”</p>
-
-<p>“As well as to every one concerned, including herself
-and you. I’m glad you’ve enough common sense to feel
-that. See here, Frank,” she went on, kindly, “you’ve
-got to pull yourself out of this state of mind. It’s doing
-you no good. When you ought to be at work for your
-country, which needs you desperately, you’re sulking over
-a love-affair. Buck up! Be a sport! Be a man! There
-are lots of nice girls in New York. I’ll find you some
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>But at that I ran away.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_340"></a>[340]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXVII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Within a few days I saw the correctness of
-Annette’s summing up.</p>
-
-<p>A medieval legend tells of an angel being sent to Satan
-with the message that God meant to take from the devil
-all the temptations with which he had seduced mankind.
-To this Satan resigned himself because he couldn’t
-help it, begging of the angel that he should be left with
-just one—and that the least important. “Which?” asked
-the angel. “Depression,” said Satan. The angel considered
-the request, found that depression cut but slight
-figure as a sin, and went back to heaven, leaving it behind
-him. “Good!” laughed Satan, as the celestial vision
-faded out. “In this one gift I’ve secured the whole bag
-of tricks.”</p>
-
-<p>And that is what I was to find.</p>
-
-<p>I was depressed on leaving Europe. I grew more depressed
-because of the experience on board ship. In
-New York I was still more depressed. There was a
-month in which all things worked together for evil; and
-then I came to the place at which Satan had desired to
-have me.</p>
-
-<p>I have not said that during all this time I made no
-attempt to look up my old friends at the Down and Out
-or, beyond an occasional argument with Cantyre, to fulfil
-the mission with which I had been intrusted. Ralph
-Coningsby had come and offered me work, and I had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_341"></a>[341]</span>
-refused it. Even the march of public events, with the
-introduction of lawless submarine warfare and the breaking
-off of diplomatic relations between Germany and the
-United States, hadn’t roused me. I marked the slow
-rise of the impulse toward war in the breasts of the American
-people, as passionless and as irresistible as an incoming
-tide, but it seemed to have nothing to do with me. I was
-out of it, flung aside by a fate that had made sport of me.</p>
-
-<p>I was so far from the current of whatever could be called
-life that I grew apathetic. Though I hadn’t seen Regina
-for weeks, I sat down under the impalpable obstacles between
-us, making no effort to overcome them. I ate
-and drank and slept and brooded on the futility of living,
-and let the doing so fill my time. Lovey was worried,
-and dogged me round till there were minutes when I
-could have sprung on him and choked him.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the afternoon when I decided that Satan
-must have his way.</p>
-
-<p>There is a hotel in New York of which I had many
-recollections because I had frequented its barroom in the
-days before I went altogether down. It is a somewhat
-expensive-looking barroom, with heavy mahogany, gilded
-cornices, and frescoes of hunting-scenes on the wall.
-Hanging over the bar at any time during the day or night
-can be seen all the types that are commonly known as
-sporting, from the dashing to the cheap.</p>
-
-<p>They might have been the same as on that day when I
-turned my back upon the place five years previously.
-They hung in the same attitudes; they called for the
-same drinks; they used the same profanities, though
-with some novelty in the slang. With my limp, my black
-patch, and my general haggardness, I felt like a ghost
-returning among them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_342"></a>[342]</span></p>
-
-<p>Timidly I approached a barman at leisure and asked
-for a cocktail of a brand for which I used to have a liking.
-I carried it off to a table placed inconspicuously behind
-the door leading to and from the hotel. Putting it on
-the table, I stared at its amber reflections.</p>
-
-<p>I had come back to the same old place at last. It was
-curious; but there I was. All my struggling, all my wandering,
-all my up-hill work, all my days and nights in
-the trenches, all my suffering, all my love—everything
-had combined together to land me just here, where, so
-to speak, I had begun. It was the old story of dragging
-up the cliff, only to fall over the precipice. It seemed
-to be my fate. There was no escaping it.</p>
-
-<p>I might not take more than that one drink during that
-afternoon; but I knew it would be a beginning. I should
-come back again; and I should come back again after
-that. Another type of man would do nothing of the kind;
-but I was my own type.</p>
-
-<p>Very deliberately I said good-by to the world I had
-known for the past three years and more. I said good-by
-to work, to ambition, to salvation, to country, to love.
-Back, far back in my mind I was saying the same deliberate
-good-by to God. I shouldn’t rest now till everything
-was gone.</p>
-
-<p>The glass was still untasted on the table. I was taking
-my time. The farewells on which I was engaged couldn’t
-be hurried. The fate in store for me would wait.</p>
-
-<p>Then the door behind which I sat began to open. It
-opened slowly, timidly, stealthily, as if the person entering
-was afraid to come in. The action stirred the curiosity,
-and I watched.</p>
-
-<p>Before I saw a face I saw a hand. Rather, I saw four
-fingers from the knuckles to the nails, as if some one was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_343"></a>[343]</span>
-steadying himself by the sheer force of holding on. They
-were old, thin, twisted fingers, and I knew at a glance
-I had seen them before.</p>
-
-<p>The door continued to open, stealthily, timidly, slowly;
-and then, looking like a spirit rather than a man—a
-neat, respectable spirit wearing a silver star in his buttonhole,
-with trembling hands and a woeful quiver to
-the corner of his lower lip—Lovey stood in the barroom.</p>
-
-<p>He stood as if he had never been in any such place
-before. He was like a visitant from some other sphere—dazed,
-diaphanous, unearthly.</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t look at the table behind the door. His gaze
-was far off. I could see it scanning the backs of the
-hangers across the bar. Then it went over the tables one
-by one, traveling nearer and nearer.</p>
-
-<p>Just before the dim eyes reached me I said: “Hello,
-Lovey! Come and sit down. What’ll you have to
-drink?”</p>
-
-<p>There seemed to be an interval between hearing my
-voice and actually seeing me—an interval during which
-a frosty, unnatural color, as if snow were suddenly to
-take fire, flared in his waxlike cheek. But he came to the
-table and dropped into a round-backed chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Slim!”</p>
-
-<p>Leaning on the table, he covered his face with his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>I tried putting up a bluff. “What’s the matter,
-Lovey? Haven’t got a headache, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>He raised those pitiful, dead blue eyes. “No, but I’ve
-got a ’eartache, Slim—a ’eartache I won’t never get over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, why—” I began to rally him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just what I was afeared of—for days and days
-I’ve been afeared of it. Been a-watchin’ of you, I ’ave.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_344"></a>[344]</span></p>
-
-<p>Here was another transmigrated soul that had traveled
-farther than I knew. It was in pure curiosity as to the
-changes wrought in him that I said: “I should think you
-would have been glad, Lovey. When I was here before
-you used to want to have us both go back.”</p>
-
-<p>The extinct eyes were raised on me.</p>
-
-<p>“These times ain’t them times. Everything different.
-I ’aven’t stayed where I was in them days, not any
-more nor you. Oh, to think, to think!”</p>
-
-<p>“To think what?”</p>
-
-<p>“That you should ’ave come back to this—and me
-believin’ the war ’ad done ye good—lifted you up, like.
-Not but what you was the best man ever lived before the
-war—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, Lovey. No one knows what I was better than
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“You was good even then, sonny—even in them awful
-old days. Goodness ain’t just in doin’ certain things;
-it’s in being certain things. I don’t ’ardly know what
-it is; but I can tell it when I see it. And I seen it in
-you, Slim—right from the first. Me and God A’mighty
-seen it together. That’s why He pulled you up out o’
-what you was—and made you rich—and dressed you in
-swell clo’es—and sent you to the war—and made you a
-’ero—and stuck you all over with medals—and brought
-you ’ome again to me. And if you’d only waited—”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if I’d only waited—what?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d ’a’ got somethink better still. You’d ’a’ got
-it pretty soon.”</p>
-
-<p>“What should I have got?”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;" id="illus4">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="500" height="650" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“That you should ’ave come back to this—and me believin’
-the war ’ad done ye good—lifted you up, like.
-Not but what you was the best man ever lived before the
-war—”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“I ain’t a-goin’ to tell ye. If you’d come ’ome with
-me you’d see.” Before I could follow up this dark hint
-he continued: “God A’mighty don’t play no tricks on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_345"></a>[345]</span>
-His children. Look at me! All He’s give me. Kep’ me
-well while you was away—and ’elped me to knock off
-the booze when it was mortal ’ard to do it—and pervided
-me with a good ’ome, thanks to you, Slim!—and work—and
-wages—and a very nice man to work for, all except
-bein’ a bit stuck on ’isself—and let me off washin’ windows,
-which was never a trade for an eddicated man like me—and
-brought you back to me, which was the best thing
-of all—and just because I waited.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by waiting?”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean waitin’ for Him. That’s somethink I’ve found
-out since you went away, sonny. It’s a tip as Beady
-Lamont give me. You’ve got to wait patient-like for
-Him; and if you do He’ll come to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you don’t. That’s why I’m a-tellin’ of
-you. It was like this: When you went away it was somethink
-fierce for me—nothink but that empty flat—and
-everythin’ speakin’ to me o’ you, like—yer clo’es and yer
-boots and yer books and yer pipes, and the chairs you
-used to sit on, and the bed you used to sleep in—and
-everythink like that—till I thought I was goin’ crazy.
-Many’s the time I wanted to come and do just what
-you’re a-doin’ of now—but I’d think o’ the promise I
-give you before ye went—and I’d ’ang on a bit more.
-And then God A’mighty Hisself come and spoke to me,
-just as He did to Beady Lamont that time he told us
-about when we was in the blue stars.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what did God Almighty say?”</p>
-
-<p>“He come in the middle o’ the night, and woke me up
-out of a sound sleep—”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know it was He?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I knowed. Ye couldn’t ’elp knowin’.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_346"></a>[346]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear His voice?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye didn’t ’ave to ’ear. It just went all over ye, like.
-I sits up in bed, and everything was dark and light at the
-same time, and something awful comfortin’ like sweepin’
-through and through me. Ye couldn’t ’ardly say it was
-’earin’ or seein’ or feelin’ or nothink. It was just understandin’,
-like—but you knowed it was there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you haven’t told me what He said.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I’m a-comin’ to. He says: ‘Lovey,’ says
-He, ‘you’ve put up a good fight, and now ye’re over the
-worst of it. But I’m with ye all the time,’ says He;
-‘only I can’t give ye everythin’ to oncet. All ye can take
-is what ye’ve made yerself fit to receive,’ says He; ‘because
-there was a good many years in yer life when ye
-wasn’t fit to receive nothink. But just you wait, and
-you’ll see ’ow good I’ll be to you by degrees,’ says He.
-‘You go on fightin’ in your way, just as that young fella,
-Slim, is fightin’ in his way, and I’ll do you both good,
-and bring you back to each other,’ says He. And, oh,
-sonny, He’s kep’ His word—all but right up till now, when
-you’ve been goin’ about that sad-like—and not wantin’
-to be ’ome. And now this!”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s not God, Lovey; that’s me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see much difference. The most ways I gets
-a’old o’ God, as you might say, is through the nice things
-people does for me—and the nice people theirselves—especially
-men—I don’t ’old with women—and more
-particular you, Slim—you that was more to me than my
-own children ever was—than my own life—yes, sonny, than
-my own life. I ain’t a-goin’ to live very long now—”</p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I ’appen to know,” he replied, briefly. “There’s ways
-you can tell.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_347"></a>[347]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What ways?”</p>
-
-<p>“Smellin’, for one thing. Ye can smell death just as
-easy as ye can smell flowers, or the fryin’ o’ fish, or any
-other smell; and it’s a sign ye’ll never be mistook in.”
-His ascetic profile was thrown up, with a long sniff through
-his delicate, quivering nostrils. “I can smell it now—just
-like the smell o’ liquor.” The profile came down,
-and he went on, eagerly: “But what I’m tellin’ you is
-that if I could die to save you from what ye’re beginnin’
-to do this day, Slim, I’d do it cheerful. I knowed you
-was bent on it before ye knowed it yerself. I’ve been
-a-watchin’ on ye, and follerin’ you about when ye didn’t
-see me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell ye ’ow—not no more than I could tell you
-I knowed it was God. It don’t matter ’ow you know
-things as long as you know them, does it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve just been a-livin’ in yer skin ever since ye come
-’ome, sonny. It was as if all yer thoughts passed through
-my mind, and all yer feelin’s through my ’eart. I ain’t
-much of a ’and at love—that kind of female love, I mean—not
-now, I ain’t; but I know that when ye’re young it
-kind o’ ketches you—”</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Lovey,” I said, warningly.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Slim, I’ll stop. I don’t need to go on. All
-I want to say is that you don’t know—you couldn’t know—the
-fancy I’ve took to you—and I used to think that
-you kind o’ ’ad a fancy for me, like.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I have.”</p>
-
-<p>The mild eyes searched me. There was a violent trembling
-of the lower lip.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that, Slim?” Before I could answer he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_348"></a>[348]</span>
-added, proudly: “I don’t need to ’ave no one sayin’
-they’ve got a fancy for me when they ’aven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but it’s true!”</p>
-
-<p>Two shivering hands were stretched out toward me
-in dramatic appeal.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then leave that there drink alone and come
-’ome along o’ me.” His eyes fell on the glass. “’Ow
-many o’ them things ’ave ye ’ad?”</p>
-
-<p>“None yet; this is the first; and I haven’t tasted it.”</p>
-
-<p>He straightened himself up, speaking with what I can
-only call a kind of exaltation.</p>
-
-<p>“Then God A’mighty has sent me to you in time.
-It’s Him—and except Him ’tain’t no one nor nothink.
-Slim, if you puts yer lips to that glass now ye’ll be sinnin’
-in His face just as much as if it was Him and not me as
-was a-pleadin’ with ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a sin to take a cocktail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not for every one, I don’t suppose. It wouldn’t be
-for the doctor; and it wouldn’t be for Mr. Coningsby;
-but ’tis for me, and ’tis for you. There’s take-it-and-leave-it
-people in the world, and there’s take-it-and-be-damned;
-and you and me belongs to the last. Oh, Slim,
-don’t be mad wi’ me! Ain’t ye a silver-star man in the
-Down and Out? Ain’t I yer next friend—yer real next
-friend, that is—a great deal more than that young Pyn,
-with ’is impotent tongue, what stood up with you?
-Come ’ome along o’ me, and I’ll show you somethin’
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the dark hint again.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you driving at, Lovey? What is there at
-home?”</p>
-
-<p>His reply might have been paraphrased from a writing
-he had never heard of.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_349"></a>[349]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There’s things ahead of you, Slim, different from what
-you’re expectin’ of. Wait.”</p>
-
-<p>I confess to being startled. You must see me as in an
-overwrought condition, reacting from the tremendous
-strain, first of fighting, then of blindness, and thirdly of
-emotional stress. I do not pretend that more than any
-other man who comes back from the jaws of the infernal
-brazier in Flanders I was my normal self. I was easily
-up and easily down, easily excited and easily impressed.
-The mere cast of Lovey’s two brief sentences impressed
-me.</p>
-
-<p>“What things?” I asked, with that mixture of credulity
-and rejection with which one puts questions to a trance
-medium.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not tell ye; I’ll show ye; only ye must come
-’ome.” As if in illustration of his words, he added,
-“Ye must begin to wait right now.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why wait?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because God A’mighty can’t give us everything to
-oncet. Didn’t I say He told me that Hisself? We ain’t
-fit to receive more’n a little at a time, just like babies.
-That’s another tip as Beady give me. And Mr. Christian
-he p’inted out to me oncet that wait is one of the frequentest
-words in the Bible. See here! Beady writ this for
-me.” Fumbling in an inside pocket, he drew forth a
-carefully folded bit of paper, saying, as he did so: “It
-was one of the times when I was awful low in my mind
-because you was away. I don’t ’old with them low fellas
-at the Down and Out—not as a reg’lar thing, I don’t—but
-now and then when I just couldn’t seem to get along
-without you I’d go down to one of the meetin’s. Then
-oncet Beady sits beside me and begins a-kiddin’ o’ me,
-callin’ me old son and everything like that. But by ’n’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_350"></a>[350]</span>
-by he sees I wasn’t in no such humor, and we starts in
-to talk serious-like. And then—well, I don’t ’ardly know
-’ow I come to let it out—but Beady he sees just ’ow it was
-with me, and he bucks me up and writes me this. He
-ain’t as bad as you’d think he’d be, that Beady. It’s
-good words out of the Bible, and there’s a reg’lar tip in
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The shaky hands unfolded the bit of foolscap on which
-was scrawled in a laborious script:</p>
-
-<p>“Wait on the Lord; wait, I say, on the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>Beneath this counsel from one psalm were the verses
-from another:</p>
-
-<p>“I waited patiently for the Lord; and he inclined unto
-me, and heard my cry. He brought me up also out of
-an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon
-a rock, and established my goings.”</p>
-
-<p>I suppose you will call my impulse by some modern
-psychological name, and for aught I know you may be
-right. But the words were not without their effect on
-me. They came to me with the mystery of a message
-emanating from the days before Time, and from spheres
-which have no need of the sun to rise or of the moon to
-give brightness or of the light of any candle. That it
-was carried to me by this tottering old man whom I had
-known in such different conditions only added to the awe.</p>
-
-<p>I struggled to feet that were as shaky as Lovey’s hands,
-carried my little white ticket to the bookkeeper, paid for
-my drink, which I had left untouched, and flinging an
-“All right, Lovey; I’m your man!” to him, hobbled out
-into the lobby of the hotel.</p>
-
-<p>My immediate sensation was that which you have
-known when the black cloud of troubles that enveloped
-you on waking has been instantly dispelled on your getting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_351"></a>[351]</span>
-out of bed. The troubles may still be there; but
-you know your competence to live and work and deal
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>What I felt chiefly, I think, was that the old temptation
-would never master me again. I had been face to face
-with it, and hadn’t submitted to its spell. Something
-had been healed in me; something had been outgrown.
-A simple old man with no eloquence but that of his
-affection had led me as another might be led by a
-child.</p>
-
-<p>With this sense of release came a sense of energy. I
-was given back to my mission; my mission was given
-back to me. That which for lack of a more humble term
-I can only call the spirit of consecration took hold of me
-again and made me its own. The aims for which the war
-was being fought were my aims; I had no others. When
-these objectives were won my life, it seemed to me, would
-be over. It would melt away in that victory as dawn
-into sunrise. It would not be lost; it would only be
-absorbed—a spark in the blaze of noonday.</p>
-
-<p>And as for love—well, after all, there was the moratorium
-of love. My lot in this respect—if it was to be
-my lot—would be no harder than that of millions of other
-men the wide world over. Love was no longer the first
-of a man’s considerations, not any more than the earning
-of a living could be the first. It might be a higher
-thing for her—a higher thing for me—to give it up.</p>
-
-<p>Turning these things over in my mind and wondering
-vaguely what might be awaiting me at the apartment,
-I said nothing to Lovey as we trundled homeward in a
-taxicab; nor did Lovey say anything to me.</p>
-
-<p>It was only when we got out of the lift and he had
-turned the key in our own door that he said, with sudden<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_352"></a>[352]</span>
-energy: “Slim, I’ll be yer servant right down to the
-very ground.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, you won’t be, Lovey,” I returned, deprecatingly.
-“We’re fellas together. We’re buddies. We’ll
-be buddies as long as we live.”</p>
-
-<p>He slapped his leg with a cackle that was, as nearly
-as his old lungs could make it, a heartfelt, mirthful laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“There! Didn’t I tell you? That’s what I’ve been
-a-waitin’ for; and the Lord has give it to me at last.
-He can’t do much more for me now—not till He takes
-me ’ome, like.” He raised his sharp profile and sniffed.
-“I smell it, Slim—a kind o’ stuffy smell it is now—but I
-ain’t mistook in it. And now, Slim,” he went on, triumphantly,
-as he threw the door open and entered before
-me to turn on the lights—“and now, Slim, what you’re
-a-waitin’ for is—is waitin’ ’ere for you.”</p>
-
-<p>I knew it couldn’t be Regina that Lovey was caging in
-these overheated rooms, since she wouldn’t be sitting in
-the dark.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_353"></a>[353]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXVIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was not Regina Barry who was waiting for me, but
-it was the next best thing.</p>
-
-<p>Lovey stood off and pointed to it as it lay, white and
-oblong, on the sitting-room table.</p>
-
-<p>“Give it to me with ’er own ’and,” he said, mysteriously.
-“Druv up to the door and asked the janitor to call me
-down. Told me to tell you that it wouldn’t be at ’alf
-past four, as she says in the note, but at five, and ’oped
-you wouldn’t keep ’er waitin’.”</p>
-
-<p>I held it in my hand, turning it over. I felt sure of
-what was in it, but I didn’t know whether I was sorry or
-glad. Of course I should be glad from one point of view;
-but the points of view were so many. It would be all
-over now with the mission, for which my enthusiasm had
-so suddenly revived. When we had done this thing we
-should be discredited and ostracized by the people we
-knew best, and for some time to come.</p>
-
-<p>I stood fingering the thing, feeling as I had felt now
-and then when we had given up a trench or a vantage-point
-we had been holding against odds. Wise as it
-might be to yield, it was, nevertheless, a pity, and only
-left ground that would have to be regained. There was
-moral strength, too, in the mere fact of holding. Not
-to hold any longer was a sign of weakness, however good
-the reason.</p>
-
-<p>I broke the seal slowly, saying, as I did so, “Did she
-say where?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_354"></a>[354]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, Slim; she didn’t say nowhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only that I was not to keep her waiting.”</p>
-
-<p>He thought again. “Punctual was ’er word.”</p>
-
-<p>She needn’t, however, have said that. Of course I
-should be punctual. All might depend on my being on
-the spot at the moment when the clock struck. I still
-hesitated at drawing out the sheet. As a matter of fact
-I was wondering if she had received the sign she had talked
-about, and if so, what it was.</p>
-
-<p>After all, it was an unimportant note.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Frank</span>,—Mother has allowed me to ask Doctor
-Feltring—a lady—who retreated with the Serbian Army into
-Albania, to speak at our house at half-past four to-morrow
-afternoon. Will you come? We shall all be glad to see you.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Regina</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>That was all. I should have felt a certain relief that
-nothing was irrevocably settled had there not been in the
-envelope another page. On it were written the words:
-“Are you trying the indirect method? If so, I think
-you will find it unwise.”</p>
-
-<p>If I read this once I must have read it twenty times,
-trying to fathom its meaning.</p>
-
-<p>I could only think that she was gently charging me
-with my apathy. The indirect method was the inactive
-method. I had let weeks go by not only without saying
-the word which she had told me she would obey, but
-without making any attempt to get speech with her.</p>
-
-<p>And yet it seemed to me that any other woman in the
-world might have resented this but Regina. It was a
-kind of resentment unlike her. She was too proud, too
-intense. Even in the hypnotic state induced by the
-knowledge, after years of doubt, that we cared for each<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_355"></a>[355]</span>
-other, she had kept her power of resistance. She would
-come with me if I made her, but she hoped I wouldn’t
-make her. That hope made it difficult for me to impose
-myself on any one at once so willing and so reluctant.
-Of what, from different angles, each of us owed to Cantyre—not
-to mention any one else—she was as sensitively
-aware as I was.</p>
-
-<p>I could hardly believe, therefore, that she was reproaching
-me; and yet what else did she mean?</p>
-
-<p>I tried to learn that on the following day, but found
-access to her difficult. Since she was hostess to the
-speaker of the afternoon as well as to some sixty or
-eighty guests, mostly ladies, this was scarcely strange.
-I was limited, therefore, to the two or three seconds
-during which I was placing in her hands a cup of tea.
-Even then there was a subject as to which I more pressingly
-desired information.</p>
-
-<p>“I see Stephen isn’t here.”</p>
-
-<p>She couldn’t keep out of her eyes what I read as a kind
-of crossfire, expressive of contradictory emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t like the subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it was medicine?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because it was war.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if this country goes in?”</p>
-
-<p>“He doesn’t believe it will. He thinks the breaking off
-of our relations with Germany will do all for which we
-can be called on. We’ll never fight, he says. Even if we
-declare war he’s sure it will only be in name.”</p>
-
-<p>I was not so much interested in Cantyre’s opinions as
-in the way in which she would take them.</p>
-
-<p>“And you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_356"></a>[356]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I think he’s only kicking against the pricks. He
-can’t think like that.”</p>
-
-<p>I gave her a look which I tried to make significant.
-“You mean that he’s taking the indirect method?”</p>
-
-<p>She gazed off to the other side of the room. “Oh,
-that isn’t the indirect method.”</p>
-
-<p>“What does the indirect method involve?”</p>
-
-<p>But here Mrs. Endsleigh Jarrott butted in—I have no
-other term for it—with a question, which she asked as
-if her life depended on the answer, “Regina, didn’t you
-think the action of that English nurse in going over the
-mountains with the band of little Serbian boys the most
-heroic thing you ever heard of?”</p>
-
-<p>So I came away without having learned what it was I
-was doing, but not less determined to find out.</p>
-
-<p>I resolved to try Cantyre. My meetings with him had
-become not exactly rare, but certainly infrequent. I
-had hardly noticed the decline of our intimacy while it
-was going on; I only came to a sudden realization of it
-when I said to myself I would look in on him that night.</p>
-
-<p>It occurred to me in the first place that I had not
-looked in on him of my own accord since I had come
-home. I had gone round the elbow of the corridor once
-or twice when he had invited me, but never of my own
-initiative. Then it struck me that it was some time
-since he himself had come knocking at my door.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovey, when was the doctor last in here?”</p>
-
-<p>He was in the “kitchingette” and came to the threshold
-slowly. When he did so there was that scared look
-on his face I had seen on the previous afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t rightly know, Slim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it more than a week ago?”</p>
-
-<p>He considered. “It might be.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_357"></a>[357]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Do you know any reason why he doesn’t come?”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be defending himself against an accusation.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Slim! ’Ow sh’d I know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see him every day—in and out of his room
-with his boots and things.”</p>
-
-<p>“He don’t ’ardly ever speak to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t you ever speak to him?”</p>
-
-<p>He fidgeted nervously. “Oh, I passes the time o’ day,
-like, and tells him if his pants need pressin’ and little
-things like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he ever say anything about me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not lately he don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any idea why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“I might ’ave a hidea, Slim; but what’s servants’
-gossip, after all?”</p>
-
-<p>As he had me there I dropped the subject, stealing
-round to Cantyre’s quarters about eleven that night.</p>
-
-<p>To my knock, which was timid and self-conscious, he
-responded with a low “Come in” that lacked the heartiness
-to which he had accustomed me. As usual at this
-hour, he was in an elaborate dressing-gown, and also as
-usual the room was heavy with the scent of flowers. He
-was not lounging in an arm-chair, but sitting at his desk
-with his back to me, writing checks.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s you!” he said, without turning his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought I’d drop in on you.”</p>
-
-<p>He went on writing. “Do you want to sit down?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if you’re busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got some bills to pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then I’ll come another time.”</p>
-
-<p>Having gone in for one bit of information, I went out
-with another. Cantyre knew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_358"></a>[358]</span></p>
-
-<p>I was not only sorry for his knowing, I was surprised
-at it. During the two months we had been in New York
-both Regina and I had been notably discreet. We had
-been discreet for the reasons that all the strings were in
-our own hands, and it depended solely on ourselves as
-to which we pulled. We alone were the responsible
-parties. That poor Cantyre shouldn’t have to suffer
-before we knew whether we meant to make him suffer
-or not had been a matter of concern to us both.</p>
-
-<p>If he knew, it was, therefore, not from me; and neither
-was it from Regina. There remained Annette, but she
-was as safe as ourselves. Further than Annette I couldn’t
-think of any one.</p>
-
-<p>I should have been more absorbed by this question
-had I not waked to new elements in the world drama, as
-one wakes to a sudden change in the weather. My surprise
-came not from any knowledge of new facts, but from
-the revival of my own faculty for putting two and two
-together. There had been a month in which depression
-had produced a kind of mental hibernation. When at
-the end of February I emerged from it the New World in
-particular had moved immeasurably far forward.</p>
-
-<p>Now that I came to notice it, I saw a change as perceptible
-as that in the wind in the whole American
-national position. As silently as the wind shifts to a new
-point of the compass a hundred millions of people had
-shifted their point of view. They were moving it onward
-day by day, with a rapidity of which they themselves
-were unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>The titanic facts were to the undercurrent of events
-but as the volcano to the fire at the heart of the earth.
-The heart of all human life being now ablaze, there was
-here and there a stupendous outburst which was but a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_359"></a>[359]</span>
-symptom of the raging flame beneath. There was the
-U-boat blockade of Great Britain, endangering all the
-maritime nations of the world. There was the American
-diplomatic break with Germany. There was the guarding
-of the German ships interned in American ports.
-There was the torpedoing of an American steamer off
-the Scilly Isles. There was Mr. Wilson’s invitation to
-the neutral nations to join him in the breach with the
-German Emperor. And then on the 26th the President
-went in person before Congress to ask authority to use
-armed force to protect American rights.</p>
-
-<p>These, I say, were but volcanic incidents. The impressive
-thing to me was the transformation of a people
-by a process as subtle as enchantment.</p>
-
-<p>Two months earlier they had been neutral, and sitting
-tight on their neutrality. The war was three thousand
-miles away. It had been brewed in the cursed vendettas
-of nations of some of which the every-day American
-hardly knew the names. It was tragic for those peoples;
-but they whose lives were poisoned by no hereditary
-venom were not called on to take part. Zebulun and
-Naphtali from sheer geographical position might be obliged
-to hazard their lives to the death; but Asher could
-abide in his ports, and Gilead beyond Jordan. That had
-been the kind of reasoning I heard as late as the time of
-my arrival.</p>
-
-<p>On my return to New York in November, I found a
-nation holding its judgments and energies in suspense.
-What by the end of February interested me most was
-the spectacle of this same people urging forward, surging
-upward, striving, straining toward a goal which every
-one knew it would take strength and sacrifice to reach.</p>
-
-<p>Between this approach to war and that of any of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_360"></a>[360]</span>
-other great powers there was this difference: They had
-taken the inevitable step while in the grip of a great
-stress. They sprang to their arms overnight. They had
-no more choice than a man whose house is on fire as to
-whether or not he will extinguish it. Out of the bed of
-their luxurious existence they were called as if by conflagration.
-Whether they would lose their lives or escape
-with them was a question they had no time to
-consider. They went up to the top notch of the heroic
-in an instant, not knowing the danger they were facing
-or the courage they displayed.</p>
-
-<p>Here, on the other hand, was a people who saw everything
-from a long way off. For nearly three years their
-souls had been sickened with the tale of blood. Gilead
-might abide beyond Jordan and Asher in his ports, but
-no atrocious detail had been spared them. They knew,
-therefore, just what they were doing, exactly what was
-before them. I can hardly say that they made their
-choice; they grew toward it. They grew toward it calmly,
-deliberately, clear-sightedly; and for this very reason
-with an incomparable bravery. If I were an American
-citizen instead of the American citizen’s blood-brother,
-I might not say this; I might not have been aware of it.
-In any family the outsider can see that which escapes
-the observation of the daughter or the son. I heard no
-born American comment on this splendid, tranquil, leisurely
-readjustment of the spirit to a new, herculean
-task; perhaps no born American noticed it; but to me
-as an onlooker, interested and yet detached, it was one
-of the most grandiose movements of an epoch in which
-the repetition of the grandiose bewilders the sense of
-proportion, as on the first days in the Selkirks or the
-Alps.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_361"></a>[361]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was at this time I heard that Regina was addressing
-meetings. They were women’s club meetings, and I
-learned from Annette that she was speaking with success.</p>
-
-<p>“She seems to have come out of a sort of trance,”
-Annette observed of her, using the word I had used myself.
-“Ever since she came home she’s been like a girl
-walking in her sleep. Now she’s waked and is like her
-old self.”</p>
-
-<p>Since Annette knew my story, or part of it, I thought
-it no harm to ask, “To what do you attribute it?”</p>
-
-<p>But Annette refused to lend herself to my game.</p>
-
-<p>“I attribute it to her getting over the long strain. It’s
-natural that you people who’ve been over there should
-be dazed or jumpy or something. She’s been dazed.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what do you think I’ve been?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’ve been the same,” she laughed; “but then,
-you’re always queer.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_362"></a>[362]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXIX</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The news with regard to Regina acted on me as a
-twofold stimulus.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, it sent me back at last to the Down
-and Out. If she had waked, I, too, would wake; and
-since she was actively pleading the great cause, I would
-do the same. I didn’t go to a meeting, but dropped in
-during a forenoon. The house was even humbler and
-dingier than I remembered it, but as scrupulously neat
-and clean. In the back sitting-room were half a dozen
-men, all of the type to which I had once belonged and
-with whom I felt a sympathy so overwhelming as to surprise
-myself. Perhaps because I had seen so much of
-what could be made of human material even when it was
-destined to be no more than cannon fodder in the end,
-I was sorry to see this waste.</p>
-
-<p>With one exception I placed them as all under thirty.
-They were good-looking fellows in the main, who would
-respond amazingly to drill. After that impetus to the
-inner self, of which the Down and Out had the secret,
-plenty of work, a regular life, food, water, and sleep
-would renew them as the earth is renewed by spring.
-No missionary ever longed to bring a half-dozen promising
-pagans into the Christian fold more ardently than I to
-see these five or six poor wastrels transformed into fighting-men.</p>
-
-<p>For the minute there was no official there but little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_363"></a>[363]</span>
-Spender, whose bliss in life was in opening the Down and
-Out door. Having led me across the empty front sitting-room,
-he said, as I stood in the gap of the folding-doors:</p>
-
-<p>“Say, brothers! This is Slim. Come in here four or
-five years ago, just as low down as any of you, and look
-at him now!”</p>
-
-<p>I did feel enormously tall, in spite of the high studding
-of the room, as well as enormously big in my ample military
-overcoat. To the six who sat in that woeful outward
-idleness, of which I knew the inner secret preoccupation,
-I must have been an astonishing apparition. Only
-a very commanding presence could summon these men
-from the desolate land into which their spirits were wandering;
-but for once in my life I did it. All eyes were
-fixed on me; every jaw dropped in a kind of awe.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing the habits and needs of such a stupor, I merely
-threw off my overcoat, entered, and sat down. Any
-greeting I made was general and offhand. Apart from
-that I sat and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>I sat and said nothing because I knew it was what they
-liked. They liked the companionship, as babies and
-dogs like companionship, though their aching minds could
-not have responded to talk. There was no embarrassment
-in this silence, no expectation. It was a stupefied
-pleasure to them to stare at the uniform, to speculate
-inchoately as to the patch on my eye; and that little was
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody read; nobody smoked. I neither smoked nor
-read; I only sat as in a Quaker meeting, waiting for the
-first movement of the spirit.</p>
-
-<p>It came when a husky voice, that seemed to travel
-from across a gulf, said, without any particular reason,
-“I’m Spud.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_364"></a>[364]</span></p>
-
-<p>I turned to my right, to see a good-looking, brown-eyed
-fellow, of perhaps twenty-eight, trying to reach me,
-as it were, with his pathetic, despairing gaze.</p>
-
-<p>I knew what was behind this self-introduction. The
-lost identity was trying to find itself; the man who was
-worthy of something was doing his utmost to get out of
-the abyss by reaching up his hands to the man who had
-got out.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, Spud,” I said, heartily. “Put it there!
-We’re going to be friends.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence for another five minutes was broken when a high
-voice recited in a sort of litany, “I’m Jimmy McKeever,
-traveler for Grubbe &amp; Oates, gents’ furnishers.”</p>
-
-<p>Sharp-faced, wiry, catlike, agile, tough as wire, I could
-see this fellow creeping out into the darkness of No Man’s
-Land, and creeping back with information of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>I broke in on the litany to say: “Good for you, Jimmy,
-old boy! Glad to know you. Let’s shake hands.”</p>
-
-<p>He sprang from his seat on the outskirts of the group,
-but before he could reach me a great, brawny paw was
-stretched forward by a blue-eyed young Hercules sitting
-nearer me, which grasped my fingers as if in a vise. There
-was then a scramble of handshaking, each of the bunch
-asserting his claim for recognition, like very small children.
-The older man alone held aloof, sitting by himself,
-scowling, hard-faced, cross-legged, kicking out a big foot
-with a rapid, nervous rhythm.</p>
-
-<p>It was he who, when the handshaking was over, snarled
-out the question, “What’s the matter with your eye?”</p>
-
-<p>I told them the story of how I lost it.</p>
-
-<p>I told it as simply as I could, while working in a fair
-share of the strong color which I hoped would arrest their
-attention.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_365"></a>[365]</span></p>
-
-<p>It did. In all my experience of men coming back into
-life from the state which is so expressively known as dead
-drunk it was the first time I ever saw them listen with
-avidity to any voice but that of the inner man.</p>
-
-<p>What is there about war which speaks with this authority?
-Where did it get its power to go to the hidden
-man of the heart, that subliminal self with which modern
-speculation has been so busy, and shift him from off his
-age-long base? It is commonly said that, whatever our
-personal vicissitudes, human nature remains the same;
-but though that may be true of the past, I doubt if it will
-be true of the future. War on the scale on which we are
-waging it has already changed human nature. It has
-changed it as the years change a baby to a boy and a boy
-to a man. It has lifted human nature up, drawn out of
-it what we never supposed to be there, freed it from its
-slavery to time. It has to a large degree reversed the
-processes of time as it has reversed the usages of sex.
-We have seen youth doing the work of maturity, maturity
-that of youth, women that of men, men that of women.
-We have seen cowards transformed into heroes, rotters
-into saints, stupid, idiotic ne’er-do-wells into saviors of
-mankind.</p>
-
-<p>We shall never go back again to the helpless conviction
-that youth must grow slowly into age, only to have age
-decay into ugliness and senility. This kind of foolish,
-useless progress may still go on for an indefinite time to
-come, but we shall work against it as against something
-contrary to the highest possibilities of nature. Since we
-have thrown off our mental shackles in great moments,
-we shall see that we can do the same in small, and, having
-emerged on a higher plane, we shall stay there.
-Staying there, we shall doubtless go on in time to a higher<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_366"></a>[366]</span>
-plane still—a plane on which the mighty works that are
-now wrought in war will become feasible in peace. We
-are not on that plane yet; but if the advance of the
-human race means anything we shall get there. It may
-take a thousand years; it may take more; it may take
-less; but in the mean time we must seize our blessings as
-we may.</p>
-
-<p>So these fellows listened to my tale as raptly as if a
-trumpet were sounding in their ears. It was like a summons
-to them to come out of stupefaction. They asked
-questions not only as to my own experiences, but as to
-the causes and purposes of the war in general. I do not
-affirm that they were the most intelligent questions that
-could be asked; but for men in their condition they were
-astonishing.</p>
-
-<p>That they were not of necessity to be easy converts I
-could see when the old chap sitting apart asked again, in
-his bitter voice, “Did you ever kill a fellow-creetur that
-had the same right to live as yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>As we discussed that aspect of the subject, too, I found
-it difficult to restrain my audience from the free fight for
-which at the Down and Out there was always an inclination.</p>
-
-<p>I accomplished this, however, and as I rose to go the
-brawny Hercules sidled shyly up to me with the words:
-“Say! I’m a Canuck. Peterfield, Ontario, is where I
-hail from. Why ain’t I in this here war?”</p>
-
-<p>He was my first recruit. A few weeks later he was in
-uniform in Montreal. My object in telling you about
-him is to point out the fact that I made a beginning, and
-that from the beginning the sympathy of the City of
-Comrades upheld me. Little by little that movement
-by which the whole of America was being shaken out of its<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_367"></a>[367]</span>
-materialism, its provincialism, and its mental isolation
-reached us in Vandiver Street, and we began to see that
-there were subjects of conversation more commanding
-than that of drink. What I may call a war party rose
-among us, and the sentiment that we ought to be in it
-was expressed.</p>
-
-<p>“We shall be in it when the time comes,” Andrew
-Christian said to me when we were alone for a few minutes
-after I had been talking with the men one day. “One of
-the great mistakes human impatience makes is in trying
-to hurry the methods by which the divine mind counteracts
-human errors. We forget that it is not for us to
-know the times or the seasons that the Father hath put
-into His own power. Things that take place in their
-own way generally take place in His. And the overruling
-force of His way, when we let it alone, working
-simply, naturally, and as a matter of course, is one of the
-extraordinary features of history.”</p>
-
-<p>I was the more impressed by these quiet words for the
-reason that I saw that he, too, was one of the Americans
-chafing under the long holding back of his country. No
-one I had seen since my return was more changed in this
-respect than he. I had left a man who had but one object
-in his life, the salvation of other men from drink. I
-found a man marvelously broadened, heightened, illumined,
-almost transfigured by a larger set of purposes.</p>
-
-<p>But he spoke so calmly!</p>
-
-<p>“We shall go into this thing the more thoroughly when
-our people as a whole are convinced of its necessity.
-And for a hundred millions of people to be convinced is
-a matter that takes time. But even there you can see
-how a great purpose is changing them almost against
-their own will. It isn’t many months ago that they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_368"></a>[368]</span>
-elected a President on the slogan, ‘He kept us out of
-war.’ Had it not been for that slogan it’s doubtful
-whether or not he would have been elected. All politics
-apart, we can say that, had he not been elected, it’s
-doubtful whether any other candidate could carry with
-him a united Congress when we come to the moment of
-decision. Were the President not to have a united Congress,
-behind him, there would be no united people. As
-it is we’re all forging forward together, President, Congress,
-and people, as surely as winter forges forward into
-spring; and when the minute arrives—”</p>
-
-<p>He broke off with a smile I can only call exalted. With
-a hasty pressure of my hand he was off to some other fellow
-with some other needful word.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_369"></a>[369]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXX</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My purpose in telling you all this is to show you why
-I reacted so slightly to Regina’s charge of the indirect
-method. Though my curiosity as to what she
-meant was keen enough, the pressure of other interests
-allowed it no time to work. This is to say, as soon as I
-got back into the current of great events personal concerns
-became relatively unimportant. They had to wait.
-One developed the capacity to keep them waiting.</p>
-
-<p>But toward the middle of March I met her one day in
-Fifth Avenue. Even from a distance I could see that her
-step was vigor and her look animation. The haunting
-sadness had fled from her eyes, while the generous smile,
-spontaneous and flashing, had returned to her scarlet
-lips. It was a new Regina because it was the old one.</p>
-
-<p>To me her first exclamation was: “How well you look!
-You’re almost as you were before the war.”</p>
-
-<p>Though I was conscious of a pang at seeing her so far
-from pining away, I endeavored to play up.</p>
-
-<p>“Mayn’t I say the same of you? What’s done it?”</p>
-
-<p>She laughed. “Oh, I don’t know. Work, I suppose—and
-the knowledge that things are marching.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hear you’re very busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hear you’re busy, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“People do seem to want to be told things at first
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I find the same.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_370"></a>[370]</span></p>
-
-<p>“And so one has to be on the job.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing like it, is there? It”—she flung me
-one of her old, quick, daring glances—“it fills all the
-needs. Nothing else becomes urgent.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that one’s personal affairs—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, one has no personal affairs. I remember a man
-who was in the San Francisco earthquake telling me
-that for forty-eight hours he hardly needed to eat or
-sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen that doubled and trebled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you have. It simply means that when we
-get out of ourselves we can make supermen of the commonest
-material.”</p>
-
-<p>I ventured to say: “You look happy, Regina. Are
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you?”</p>
-
-<p>I weighed this in order to answer her truthfully.</p>
-
-<p>“If I’m not happy I’m—I’m content—content to be
-doing something—the least little bit—to urge things forward.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I can say the same. If I look well, as you put
-it, that’s the reason. And so long as that’s the reason
-other things can—wait.” She added, quickly: “I must
-go now or I shall be late. I’m speaking to the women at
-the Mary Chilton Club, and I’m overdue.”</p>
-
-<p>She had actually passed on when I stopped her to say,
-“What do you mean by the indirect method?”</p>
-
-<p>She called back over her shoulder, “Ask Stephen.”</p>
-
-<p>And I asked him that night. Having heard him come
-into his room between eight and nine o’clock, I marched
-in boldly, bearding him without beating about the bush.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, old Stephen, what have you been saying to
-Regina about me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_371"></a>[371]</span></p>
-
-<p>His hat had been thrown on the table; his arms were
-outstretched in the act of taking off his overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>He repeated my question as if he didn’t understand it.</p>
-
-<p>“What have I been saying to Regina about you? Why,
-nothing—much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing much; that means something. What the
-deuce do you mean by the indirect method?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t spoken of an indirect method.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but she has!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then if you see, tell me what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>He finished the arrested act of taking off his coat,
-after which he hung it up in a closet, doing the same
-with his hat. The minute’s delay allowed time for the
-storm-clouds to gather on his face, and all the passions
-of a gloomy-hearted nature to concentrate in a hot, thundery
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this a bit of bluff, Frank?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bluff be hanged! I’m ready to speak out frankly.”</p>
-
-<p>The storm-clouds were torn with a flash like a streak
-of lightning.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why didn’t you come to me like a man instead
-of sending that sneaking old beast—”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on, Stephen. What sneaking old beast have I
-sent?”</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t have come unless you had set him on
-me. You needn’t tell me that.”</p>
-
-<p>“What the deuce are you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know what I’m talking about. There hasn’t
-been a day since you came back that I haven’t had a
-hint.” He was not a man to whom anger came easily;
-he began to choke, to strangle with the effort to get his
-indignation out. “I’d have given him the toe of my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_372"></a>[372]</span>
-boot long ago if—if—if—if”—the words positively shivered
-on his lips—“if—if—if I hadn’t wanted to see how
-far you’d go; and, by God! I’ve—I’ve had enough of it!”</p>
-
-<p>“Enough of what, Stephen?” I endeavored to ask,
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p>He knocked his knuckles on the table with a force that
-almost made them bleed.</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Cantyre—do you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I understand. But tell me, what is it you’ve
-had enough of?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had enough of your damned diplomatic slyness in
-setting that old reptile on me!”</p>
-
-<p>I am not quick tempered. The tolerance born of a
-too painful knowledge of my own shortcomings obliges
-me to be slow to wrath. But when anger does get hold
-of me it works a change like that of a powerful chemical
-agent suddenly infused into the blood.</p>
-
-<p>I turned and strode out. A few times in the trenches
-I had been the victim of this rage to kill—and I had
-killed. How many I killed at one time or another I now
-couldn’t tell you. I saw too red to keep the count. All
-I know is that I have stuck my bayonet into heart after
-heart, and have dashed out brains with the butt end of
-my rifle. It is all red before me still—a great splash of
-blood on the memory.</p>
-
-<p>But I had got the habit. In a rage like this to kill
-some one had become an instinct. I could not have believed
-that the impulse would have pursued me into civil
-life; but there it was.</p>
-
-<p>Having flung open the door of my apartment, I marched
-straight for the “kitchingette.” Lovey was seated on a
-stool beside the tiny gas-range, polishing one of my boots.
-The boot was like a boxing-glove on his left hand, while<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_373"></a>[373]</span>
-he held the brush suspended in his right, looking up at
-me with the piteous appeal of a rabbit pleading for its
-life.</p>
-
-<p>His weakness held me back from striking him, but it
-didn’t stem my words.</p>
-
-<p>“Who the devil, you old snake, gave you the right to
-interfere in my affairs?”</p>
-
-<p>He simply looked up at me, the boot on one hand,
-the brush suspended in the other. His lower lip trembled—his
-arms began to tremble—but he made no attempt
-to defend himself.</p>
-
-<p>“What have you been saying?” I demanded. “Speak,
-can’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>But he couldn’t. I caught him by the collar and
-dragged him to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>He had just the strength to stand on them, though his
-limp hands continued to hold the boot and the brush.</p>
-
-<p>“Now are you going to speak? Or shall I kick you
-out?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d kick me out, Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>The mildness of his voice maddened me.</p>
-
-<p>“By God, I would!”</p>
-
-<p>The brush and the boot fell with a dull clatter to the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’d better go.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked about him helplessly till his eyes fell on the
-old felt hat hanging on a peg. I watched him as he took
-it down and crammed it on his head. There was another
-helpless searching as if he didn’t know what he was looking
-for before he spied an old gnarled stick in a corner.
-Taking that in his hand, he fumbled his way into the
-living-room.</p>
-
-<p>By the time I had followed him I was beginning to relent.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_374"></a>[374]</span>
-I had not really meant to have him go, but I was
-not ready as yet to call him back. What Cantyre must
-have thought of me, what Regina must have thought of
-me, in egging so poor a creature on to say what I wouldn’t
-say myself, roused me as to a more intense degree I used
-to be roused on hearing of Belgian women treated with
-the last indignities, and Canadian soldiers crucified. Had
-I stopped to consider I would have seen that Regina didn’t
-believe it, and that Cantyre believed it only as far as
-it gave an outlet to his complicated inward sufferings;
-but I didn’t stop to consider. Perhaps I, too, was seeking
-an outlet for something repressed. At any rate, I
-let the poor old fellow go.</p>
-
-<p>“What about your things?” I asked, before he had
-reached the door.</p>
-
-<p>He turned with a certain dignity. “I sha’n’t want no
-things.” He added, however, “Ye do mean me to get out,
-Slim?”</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t—but I didn’t want to tell him so. Fury had
-cooled down without leaving me ready to retract what
-I had said. I meant to go after him—when he had got
-as far as the lift—but I meant, too, that he should take
-those few bleeding steps of anguish.</p>
-
-<p>He took them—not to the lift, but out into the vestibule.
-Then I heard a faint moan; then a sound as if
-something broke; and then a soft tumbling to the
-floor.</p>
-
-<p>When I got out he was lying all in a little huddled,
-senseless heap, with a cut on his forehead where he had
-struck the key or the door-knob as he fell.</p>
-
-<p>It was more than an hour before Cantyre got him back
-to consciousness; but it was early morning before he
-spoke. We had stayed with him through the night, as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_375"></a>[375]</span>
-he had shown all the signs of passing out. His recovery
-of speech somewhere about dawn came as a
-surprise to us.</p>
-
-<p>To Cantyre I had given but the slightest explanation
-of the accident, being sure, however, that he guessed at
-what I didn’t say.</p>
-
-<p>“Told him to get to the dickens out of this, and he
-was taking me at my word. Never meant to let him get
-farther than the lift. Just wanted to scare him. Sorry
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>But Lovey’s account was different.</p>
-
-<p>About seven in the morning there came a streak of
-wan light down the shaft into which the window of his
-room looked out. Cantyre murmured something about
-going back to his own place for a bath.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” I agreed, “and you’d better get your breakfast.
-When you come back I can do the same. You will
-come back, won’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course! I sha’n’t be gone more than an hour.
-When he wakes again give him another teaspoonful of
-this; but don’t worry him unless he wakes.”</p>
-
-<p>And just then Lovey woke. He woke with a dim smile,
-as a young child wakes. He smiled at Cantyre first, and
-then, rolling his soft blue eyes to the other side of the
-bed, he smiled at me.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up, Slim?” he asked, feebly. “I ain’t sick,
-am I?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey, old son, you’re not sick; you’ve only had
-a bit of a fall.”</p>
-
-<p>And then it came back to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes. I know. Served me right, didn’t it?”
-Rolling his eyes now toward Cantyre, he continued: “I
-was just a-frightenin’ of Slim, like. Kind o’ foolish, I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_376"></a>[376]</span>
-was. Said I was goin’ to leave him. Didn’t mean to go
-no farther nor the lift.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean to let you go, Lovey,” I groaned,
-humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you didn’t! ’Ow ’uld ye get along without
-me, I’d like to know? Didn’t I keep ye straight all them
-weeks at the Down and Out?”</p>
-
-<p>“You did, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“And ’aven’t I saved ye lots o’ times since?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t leave ye, not for nothink, Slim. We’re
-buddies as long as we live, ain’t we? Didn’t ye say that
-to me yerself?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, and I’ll say it again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, what’s the use o’ talkin’? You mustn’t
-mind me, sonny. I may get into a bad temper and speak
-’arsh to you; but I don’t mean nothink by it. I wouldn’t
-leave ye, not for—”</p>
-
-<p>The voice trailed away, and presently he was asleep
-or unconscious again, I couldn’t be sure which.</p>
-
-<p>Neither could I be sure whether he believed this version
-of the tale or whether he concocted it to comfort
-me. At any rate, it served its purpose in that it eased
-the situation outwardly, enabling Cantyre and me to
-face each other without too much self-consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, self-consciousness had hardly embarrassed
-us through the night. There had been too
-much to think about and to do. The minute I had got
-Lovey into the living-room and on the couch I had run
-for Cantyre, and he had run back with me. In the stress
-of watching the old man’s struggle between life and death
-we felt toward our personal relations what one feels of
-an exciting play after returning to realities. We were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_377"></a>[377]</span>
-back on the old terms; we called each other Stephen and
-Frank. Only now and then, when for a half-hour there
-was nothing to do but to sit by the bed and watch, did
-our minds revert to the actual between us.</p>
-
-<p>That is, mine reverted to it, and I suppose his did the
-same. How he thought of it I cannot tell you; but to
-me it seemed infinitely trifling. Here was a dying man
-whose half-lighted spirit was standing on the threshold
-of a fully lighted world. One might have said that the
-radiance of the life on which he was entering already
-shone in the tenderness that began to dawn in the delicate
-old face. It was a face growing younger, as for two or
-three years it had grown more spiritual. I saw that now
-and did justice to it as something big. It was on the
-level of big things; and love-affairs between men and
-women were only on the level of the small.</p>
-
-<p>And all over the world big things of the same sort
-were taking place, some in the sharp flash of an instant,
-and some as the slow result of years. I had seen so much
-of it with my own eyes that I could call up vision after
-vision as I sat alone in the gray morning, watching the
-soft, sweet pall settle on the old man’s countenance, while
-Cantyre took his bath.</p>
-
-<p>Queerly, out of the unrecorded, or out of what I didn’t
-suppose I had recorded, there flashed a succession of pictures,
-all of them of the big, the splendid, the worth while.
-They came inconsequently, without connection with each
-other, without connection that I could see with the moment
-I was living through, beyond the fact that they were
-all on the scale of the big.</p>
-
-<p>There was the recollection of a khaki-clad figure lying
-face downward on a hillside. I approached him from below,
-catching sight first of the soles of the huge boots<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_378"></a>[378]</span>
-on which he would never walk again. Coming nearer, I
-saw his arms outstretched above his head and his nails
-dug into the earth. He was bleeding from the ears. But
-when I bent over him to see if he was still alive he said,
-almost roughly:</p>
-
-<p>“Leave me alone! I can get along all right. Jephson’s
-over there.”</p>
-
-<p>I left him alone because there was nothing I could do
-for him, but when I went to Jephson he was lying on his
-back, his knees drawn up, and his face twisted into the
-strangest, most agonized, most heavenly and ecstatic
-smile you can imagine on a human face.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was a young fellow running at the head of
-his platoon, a slim young fellow with flaxen hair and a
-face like a bright angel’s, who had been a crack sprinter
-at McGill. He was long after my time, of course; but
-I had known his family, and since being in the neighborhood
-of Ypres I had seen him from time to time. He
-was not made for a soldier, but a brave young soldier he
-had become, surmounting fear, repulsion, and all that was
-hideous to a sensitive soul like his, and establishing those
-relations with his men that are dearer in many ways than
-ties of blood. The picture I retain, and which came back
-to me now, is of his running while his men followed him.
-It was so common a sight that I would hardly have
-watched it if it had been any one but him. And then,
-for no reason evident to me, just as if it was part of the
-order of the day, he threw up his arms, tottered on a few
-steps, and went tumbling in the mud, face downward.</p>
-
-<p>With the rapidity of a cinema the scene changed to
-something else I had witnessed. It was the day I got
-my dose of shrapnel in the foot. Lying near me was a
-colonel named Blenkins. Farther off there lay a sergeant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_379"></a>[379]</span>
-in his regiment named Day. Day had for Blenkins
-the kind of admiration that often exists between man
-and officer for which there is no other name than worship.
-Slowly, painfully, dying, the non-com. dragged
-himself over the scarred ground and laid his head on the
-dying colonel’s heart. Painfully, slowly, the dying colonel’s
-hand stole across the dying non-com.’s breast; and
-in this embrace they slept.</p>
-
-<p>Other memories of the same sort came back to me,
-disconnected, having no reference to Lovey, or Cantyre,
-or Regina, or the present, beyond the fact that they
-came out of the great life of which comradeship was a
-token and the watchwords rang with generosity.</p>
-
-<p>It was the world of the moment. Such things as I
-had been recalling had happened that very night; they
-had happened that very morning; they would happen
-through that day, and through the next day and the
-next—till their purpose was accomplished. What that
-purpose was to be—But that I was to learn a little
-later.</p>
-
-<p>That is to say, a little later I got a light on the outlook
-which has been sufficient for me to walk by; but of
-it I will tell you when the time comes.</p>
-
-<p>For in the mean time the tide was rising. As Lovey
-lay smiling himself into heaven the national spirit was
-mounting and mounting, quietly, tensely, with excitement
-held in leash till the day of the Lord was very near
-at hand.</p>
-
-<p>All through March events had developed rapidly. On
-the first day of that month the government had revealed
-Germany’s attempt to stir up Mexico and Japan against
-the United States. A few days later Germany herself
-had admitted the instigation. A few days later still<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_380"></a>[380]</span>
-Austria had given her approval to unlimited submarine
-warfare. A few days later still Nicholas was deposed
-in Petrograd. The country was marching; the world
-was marching; the heart was marching. It was difficult
-for the mind to keep up with the immensity of such happenings
-or to appraise them at their value. I do not
-assert that I so appraised them; I only beg you to understand
-that what I wanted and Cantyre wanted and
-Regina wanted, each of us for himself and herself, became
-curiously insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>Not that we were working with the same ends in view.
-By no means! Cantyre was still opposed to war as war,
-and bitterly opposed to war if it involved the United
-States. That he was kicking against the pricks, as
-Regina asserted, I couldn’t see; but that he was feeling
-the whole situation intensely was quite evident.</p>
-
-<p>The result, however, was the same when it came to
-balancing personal interests against the public weal.
-The public weal might mean one thing to him and another
-thing to me, but to us both it overrode private
-resentment. There was a moratorium of resentment.
-We might revive it again; but for the moment it vanished
-out of sight.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_381"></a>[381]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXXI</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>So we came to that determining moment when we
-held our famous patriotic meeting at the Down and
-Out.</p>
-
-<p>I call it famous because it was a new point of departure.
-In all the club’s history there had never been a
-meeting for any other purpose than to screw the courage
-up to the cutting out of drink. Other subjects had been
-suggested from time to time; but we had stuck to our
-last as specialists. We had not been turned aside for
-philanthropy, for education, for financial benefit, or even
-for religion in the commonly accepted meaning of that
-word; and the results had been our justification. But
-now the flame at the heart of the earth had caught us,
-and we were all afire.</p>
-
-<p>I mean that we were afire with interest, though the
-interest was against war as well as for it. But for it or
-against it, it was the one theme of our discussion; and
-with cause.</p>
-
-<p>The tide was rising higher, and the spirit of the nation
-floating on the top. On one of the first days of April the
-President had asked Congress to declare a state of war
-with the German Empire. Two days later the Senate
-voted that declaration. A few nights after that we got
-together to talk things over at the Down and Out.</p>
-
-<p>It was a crowded meeting, but as you looked round
-you in advance you would have prophesised a dull one.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_382"></a>[382]</span>
-Our fellows came from all over New York and the suburbs,
-washed up, brushed up, and in their Sunday clothes.
-A few were men of education, but mostly we were of the
-type generally classed as hard-working. In age we ran
-from the seventies down to the twenties, with a preponderance
-of chaps between twenty-five and forty.</p>
-
-<p>What I gathered from remarks before the meeting
-came to order was a dogged submission to leadership.</p>
-
-<p>“If you was to put it up to us guys to decide the whole
-thing by ourselves,” Beady Lamont said to me as we stood
-together, “we’d vote ag’in’ it. Why? Because we’re
-over here—mindin’ our own business—with our kids to
-take care of—and our business to keep up—and we ain’t
-got no call to interfere in what’s no concern of ours.
-Them fellows over in Europe never could keep still, and
-they dunno how. But”—he made one of his oratorical
-gestures with his big left hand—“but if the President
-says the word—well, we’re behind him. He’s the country,
-and when the country speaks there’s no Amur’can
-who ain’t ready to give all.”</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps he had said something similar to Andrew
-Christian, because it was that point of being ready to
-give all which, when he spoke, Christian took as his
-text.</p>
-
-<p>I am not giving you an account of the whole meeting;
-I mean only to report a little of what Christian said, and
-its effect upon Cantyre. Cantyre had come because Regina
-had insisted; but he sat with the atmosphere of
-hot, thundery silence wrapping him round.</p>
-
-<p>“To be ready to give all is what the world is summoned
-to,” Christian declared, when he had been asked
-to say a few words, “and, oh, boys, I beg you to believe
-that it’s time! The call hasn’t come a minute too soon,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_383"></a>[383]</span>
-and we sha’n’t be a minute too soon in getting ready to
-obey it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some of us ’ain’t got much to give,” a voice came
-from the back sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve all got everything there is, if we only understood
-it,” Christian answered, promptly; “but whatever
-we have, it’s something we hold dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“If we hold it dear,” another voice objected, “why
-should we be asked to give it up?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because we haven’t known how to use it. Think of
-all you’ve had in your own life, Tom, and what you’ve
-done with it.”</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t know what Tom had had in his life, but the
-retort evidently gave him something to turn over in his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“There never was a time in the history of the world,”
-Christian went on, “when the abundance of blessing
-was more lavishly poured out upon mankind. In every
-country in both hemispheres we’ve had the treasures of
-the earth, the sea, and the air positively heaped upon us.
-Food, clothing, comfort, security, speed—have become
-the commonplaces of existence. The children of to-day
-grow up to a use of trains and motors and telephones and
-airplanes that would have seemed miraculous as short a
-time ago as when I was a lad. The standard of living
-has been so quickly raised that the poor have been living
-in a luxury unknown to the rich of two or three generations
-ago. The Atlantic has got to be so narrow that we
-count the time of our crossing it by hours. The globe
-has become so small that young people go round it for
-a honeymoon. People whose parents found it difficult
-to keep one house have two or three, and even more.
-There is money everywhere—private fortunes that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_384"></a>[384]</span>
-would have staggered the imagination of Solomon and
-the Queen of Sheba and Augustus and Charlemagne all
-combined. Amusements are so numerous that they pall
-on us. In lots of the restaurants of New York you can
-order a meal for yourself alone, and feel that neither
-Napoleon nor Queen Victoria nor the Czar could possibly
-have sat down to a better one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some could,” one of our objectors declared, with all
-sorts of implications in his tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m not saying there are no inequalities or that
-there is just distribution of all this blessing. In fact,
-my point is that there is not. All I’m asserting is that
-the blessing is there, and that the very windows of
-heaven have been opened on the world in order to pour
-it out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never saw none of it,” a thin, sour fellow put in,
-laconically.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Juleps, that’s what I’m coming to. The blessing
-was there, and some of us wouldn’t try to get what
-belonged to us, and others of us collared too much, and
-we treated it very much as children treat pennies in a
-scramble. We did far worse than that. We rifled, we
-stole, we gobbled, we guzzled, we strutted, we bragged;
-the fellow that was up kicked the fellow that was down to
-keep him down; the fellow that had plenty sneaked and
-twisted and cringed and cadged in order to get more;
-and we’ve all worked together to create the world that’s
-been hardly fit to live in, that every one of us has known.
-Now, boys, isn’t that so? Speak out frankly.”</p>
-
-<p>Since in that crowd there could not be two opinions as
-to the world being hardly fit to live in, there was a general
-murmur of assent.</p>
-
-<p>“Now wealth is a great good thing; and what I mean<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_385"></a>[385]</span>
-by wealth is the general storehouse, free to us all, which
-we call the earth and the atmosphere round it. I don’t
-have to tell you that it’s a storehouse crammed in every
-crack and cranny with the things you and I need for our
-enjoyment. And it isn’t a storehouse such as you and I
-would fill, which has got only what we could put into it;
-it’s always producing more. Production is its law. It’s
-never idle. It’s incessantly working. The more we
-take out of it the more it yields. I don’t say that we
-can’t exhaust it in spots by taxing it too much; of course
-we can. Greed will exhaust anything, just as it’s exhausting,
-under our very eyes, our forests, our fisheries, and
-our farms. But in general there’s nothing that will respond
-to good treatment more surely than the earth, nor
-give us back a bigger interest on the labor we put into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” came from some one who had perhaps
-been a farmer.</p>
-
-<p>“And so,” Christian went on, “we’ve had a world
-that’s given us everything in even greater abundance than
-we could use. We’ve had food to waste; we’ve had
-clothes for every shade of temperature; we’ve had coal
-for our furnaces, and iron for our buildings, and steel for
-our ships, and gasolene for our automobiles. We’ve had
-every invention that could help us to save time, to save
-worry, to save labor, to save life. Childhood has been
-made more healthy; old age more vigorous. That a race
-of young men and young women has been growing up
-among us of whom we can say without much exaggeration
-that humanity is becoming godlike, any one can see who
-goes round our schools and colleges.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a step forward, throwing open his palms in a
-gesture of demand.</p>
-
-<p>“But, fellows, what good has all this prodigious plenty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_386"></a>[386]</span>
-been doing us? Has it made us any better? Have we
-become any more thankful that we all had enough and
-to spare? Have we been any more eager to see that when
-we had too much the next man had a sufficiency? Have
-we rejoiced in this plenitude as the common delight of
-every one? Have we seen it as the manifestation of the
-God who expresses Himself in all good things, and Who
-has given us, as one of the apostles says, all things richly
-to enjoy? Has it brought us any nearer Him? Has it
-given us any increased sympathy with Him? Or have
-we made it minister to our very lowest qualities, to our
-appetites, to our insolence, to our extravagance, to our
-sheer pride that all this was ours, to wallow in, to waste,
-and to despise?</p>
-
-<p>“You know we have done the last. There isn’t a man
-among us who hasn’t done it to a greater or less degree.
-There is hardly a man in New York who hasn’t lived in
-the lust of the purely material. You may go through
-the world and only find a rarefied creature here and there
-who hasn’t reveled and rioted and been silly and vain
-and arrogant to the fullest extent that he dared.”</p>
-
-<p>The wee bye Daisy was sitting in the front row, looking
-up at the speaker raptly.</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t, Mr. Christian,” he declared, virtuously.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, Daisy, you’re the rarefied creature I said was
-an exception. Most of us have,” he went on when the
-roar of laughter subsided. “If we haven’t in one way
-we have in another. And what has been the result?
-Covetousness, hatred, class rivalry, capital and labor bitternesses,
-war. And now we’ve come to a place where
-by a queer and ironical judgment upon us the struggle
-for possession is going to take from us all that we possess.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_387"></a>[387]</span></p>
-
-<p>He thrust his hands into his trousers pockets and
-spoke casually, confidentially.</p>
-
-<p>“For, boys, that’s what I’m coming to. All the good
-things we have are going to be taken away from us. Since
-we don’t know how to use them, and won’t learn, we’ve
-got to give them back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t believe that, Mr. Christian,” a common-sense
-voice cried out in a tone of expostulation.</p>
-
-<p>“Peter, you’ll see. You’ll only have to live a few
-months longer to find yourself like every one else in
-America, lacking the simple essentials you’ve always
-taken as a matter of course. It isn’t luxuries alone that
-you’ll be called on to give up; it will be the common
-necessaries of every-day life. The great summons is coming
-to us, not merely from our government, not merely
-from the terrified and stricken nations of mankind, but
-from God above—to give everything back to Him. I don’t
-say that we shall starve or that we shall freeze; but we
-may easily be cold and hungry and driven to a cheese-paring
-economy we never expected to practise. The
-light will be taken from our lamps, the work from our
-fingers, the money from our pockets. We shall be searched
-to the very soul. There’s nothing we sha’n’t have to
-surrender. At the very least we must give tithes of all
-that we possess, signifying our willingness to give more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some of us ’ain’t got nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the bitter cry of the dispossessed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Billy; we’ve all got life; and life, too, we shall
-have to offer up. There are some of you chaps sitting
-here that in all human probability will be called on to
-do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t, Mr. Christian. You’re too old.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m too old, Spud, but my two boys are not; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_388"></a>[388]</span>
-they’re getting ready now. Whether it’s harder or easier
-to let them go rather than for me to go myself I leave to
-any of you guys that have kids.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it won’t be as bad as what you think.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jimmy, I’m only reasoning from what I see in the
-world already. When the human race is being trodden
-in the wine-press we in America can’t expect to be spared.
-If any of you want to know what’s happening to the kind
-of world we’ve made for ourselves let him read the eighteenth
-chapter of the book of the Revelation. That chapter
-might be written of Europe as it is at this minute.
-Babylon the great is fallen, is fallen. The kings of the
-earth stand off from her, crying, Alas! alas! that great
-city Babylon, for in one hour is her judgment come!
-The merchants of the earth weep and mourn over her,
-for no man buyeth their merchandise any more, saying,
-Alas! alas! that great city, which was clothed in fine
-linen and purple and scarlet, and decked with gold and
-precious stones and pearls, for in one hour so great riches
-is come to naught. And every shipmaster, and all the
-company in ships, and sailors, and as many as trade by
-sea, cast dust on their heads and cry over her, Alas! alas!
-that great city wherein were made rich all that had ships
-in the sea by reason of her costliness! for in one hour
-she is made desolate.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that ain’t us.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Headlights, that’s not us. I agree with you
-that there’s a difference. America is not in the same
-boat with Europe—not quite—but very nearly. Perhaps
-because our crimes are not so black we’ve been given
-the chance to do what we have to do more of our own
-free act. From Europe what she had has been taken
-away violently, whether she would or no. We have the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_389"></a>[389]</span>
-chance to come before the throne of God and offer it back
-of our own free will. You see the difference! And, oh,
-boys, I want you to do it—”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t for us, Mr. Christian, to decide that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, it is, Beady! It’s for each of us to offer willingly
-in his own heart. Not just to the government—not
-just to the country—not just to France or Belgium
-or any other nation that’s in a tight place—but to that
-blessed and heavenly Father Who’s giving us this wonderful
-chance to put everything into His hands again,
-and get it all back for redistribution. Don’t you see?
-That’s it—the redistribution! A better world has to
-come out of this—a juster world—a happier world—a
-cleaner world. And in that reconstruction we Americans
-have the chance to take the lead because we’re doing it
-of our own accord. Every other country has some ax to
-grind; but we have none. We’ve none except just to be
-in the big movement of all mankind upward and forward.
-But the difference between us and every other country—unless
-it’s the British Empire—is that we do it man by
-man, each stepping out of the ranks in his turn as if
-he was the only one and everything depended on his act.
-It’s up to you, Beady; it’s up to me; it’s up to each
-American singly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why ain’t it up to every European singly?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is. They’re just beginning to understand that it
-is. The Englishman, the Frenchman, the Italian, they’re
-beginning to see that the democracy we talk so much
-about isn’t merely a question of the vote—that it isn’t
-primarily a question of the vote at all—it’s one of self-government
-in the widest and yet the most personal sense.
-The great summons is not to mankind in nations; it’s to
-mankind as individuals. It’s to Tom and Jimmy and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_390"></a>[390]</span>
-Peter and Headlights and Daisy and every one who has
-a name. It’s the individual who makes the country, who
-forms the army, who becomes the redemptive element.
-In proportion as the individual cleanses himself from the
-national sin the national sin is wiped out. So it’s by
-Englishmen and Englishwomen that England will renew
-itself—”</p>
-
-<p>I think it was my old friend, the Irish hospital attendant,
-who called out, “What’s England’s national sin?”</p>
-
-<p>The question brought the speaker to a halt. He seemed
-to reflect.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s England’s national sin?” he repeated. “I
-should say—mind you, I’m not sitting in judgment on
-any one or any people—but we’ve all got to clean our
-stables, even if it takes the labors of Hercules to accomplish
-it—I should say England’s national vice—the vice
-that’s been eating the heart out of her body, and the
-spirit out of her heart—is sensuality.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with France?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not an international physician with a specialty
-for diagnosis,” Christian laughed; “but in my opinion
-France has been corroded through and through with
-sordidness. She’s been too petty, too narrow, too mean,
-too selfish—”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, boss, tell us about my country.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean, Italy, Tony? Haven’t you got to get rid
-of your superstition, and all the degrading things superstition
-brings with it? I want you to understand that
-we’re talking of national errors, not of national virtues.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have we got a national error in the United States?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think, Tapley? Isn’t it as plain as the
-nose on your face? Isn’t it written all over the country,
-on every page of every newspaper you pick up?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_391"></a>[391]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What? What is it?” came from several voices at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>“Dishonesty!” he cried, loudly. “We Americans have
-got our good points, but of them honesty is the very
-smallest. If any one called us a nation of sharpers he
-wouldn’t be very far wrong. Our notion of competition
-is to get the better of the other fellow, by foul means if
-it can’t be done by fair. That’s the case in private life,
-and when it comes to public—well, did you ever hear of
-anything that we ever undertook as a people that didn’t
-have to be investigated before very long? You can
-hardly read a daily paper in which the investigation of
-some public trust isn’t going on. Dishonesty is stamped
-deep, deep into the American character as it is to-day;
-and for that very reason, if for no other, we’ve got to give
-everything back. If we don’t it will be taken from us
-by main force; and we’re not of the type to wait for that.”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to gather himself together. His face, always
-benignant, began to glow with an inward light.</p>
-
-<p>“But, boys, what I want you to understand is that we
-can make this act of offering as a great act of faith.
-Every good gift and every perfect gift cometh down!
-We can take our good gifts and our perfect gifts and hand
-them up! We can anticipate their being taken from us
-by giving them. We can give them as men who know
-whence they have been received, and where they will be
-held in trust for us—not grudgingly nor of necessity, as
-the Bible tells us, for God loveth a cheerful giver. Now
-is the time for us to test that love—every man for himself.
-The appeal is to the individual. Give, and it shall
-be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, shaken
-together, and running over, shall men give into your
-bosom, according to the measure that ye mete. For this<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_392"></a>[392]</span>
-giving isn’t to men, it’s to God; it isn’t a portion, it’s
-all; it isn’t limited to material things, it includes our
-love and our life. It’s the great summons; it’s the great
-surrender. And—boys—my dear old boys who’ve been
-saved from other things—we’ve all been saved for this—for
-something we never expected, but which isn’t hard
-to do when you look at it in the right way—to hand ourselves
-back, in body, mind, and possessions, to Him from
-whom we came, that He may make a new use of us and
-begin all over again.”</p>
-
-<p>And the first thing I saw when he stopped was Cantyre
-springing forward to grasp him by the hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_393"></a>[393]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXXII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>When I got out the streets were already buzzing
-with a rumor that no extra had as yet proclaimed.
-The House of Representatives had followed the Senate
-in voting for war, and the President was about to sign
-the declaration.</p>
-
-<p>But I forgot this on arriving at the flat, for Lovey was
-propped up in bed, with his thin nose in the air, making
-little sniffs.</p>
-
-<p>“I smell it, Slim,” he smiled, as I entered. “Kind of
-a coffee smell it is now, with a dash o’ bacon and heggs.”</p>
-
-<p>“That smell is always round this flat, Lovey,” I said,
-trying to be casual. “It’s all the breakfasts you and I
-have eaten—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh no, Slim. You can’t be mistook in this; and besides—” He
-made a sign to the man nurse who for the
-past week or two Cantyre had sent in from one of his
-hospitals. “You clear out, d’ye ’ear? I want to talk
-to my buddy, private-like.”</p>
-
-<p>The man strolled out to the living-room, whispering
-to me as he passed: “There’s a change in him. I don’t
-think he’ll last through the night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come and sit ’ere, sonny,” Lovey commanded as
-soon as we were alone. “I’ve got somethin’ special-like
-to tell ye. Did ye know,” he went on, when I was
-seated beside the bed, “as I’d seen Lizzy—and she ’adn’t
-her neck broke at all. She was lovely.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_394"></a>[394]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Where?” I asked, to humor him.</p>
-
-<p>“Right ’ere—right beside that there chair that you’re
-a-sittin’ in.”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, on and off—pretty near all the time now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that she comes and goes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; not just comin’ and goin’. She’s—she’s kind o’
-’ere all the time, only sometimes I ain’t lookin’.” His
-face became alight. “There she is now—and a great
-long street be’ind ’er. No, it ain’t a street; it’s just all
-lovely-like, and Lizzy with ’er neck as straight as a
-walkin’-stick—and not a drinkin’-woman no more she
-don’t look—it’s kind o’ beautiful like, Slim, only—only I
-can’t make ye understand.”</p>
-
-<p>Sighing fretfully over his inability to explain, he lapsed
-into that state of which I never was sure whether it was
-sleep or unconsciousness.</p>
-
-<p>The coma lasted for a great part of the night. Sending
-the nurse to lie down, I sat and watched, chiefly because
-I had too much on my mind and in my heart to want
-to go to bed. Every two or three hours Cantyre stole
-in, in his dressing-gown, finding nothing he could do.
-Once or twice I was tempted to ask him what he thought
-of Christian’s talk, but, fearing to break the spell it
-might have wrought in him, I refrained. He himself
-didn’t mention it, nor did he seem to know that I had
-observed his impulsive, shaking hands.</p>
-
-<p>On one of the occasions when he was with me Lovey
-opened his eyes suddenly, beginning to murmur something
-we couldn’t understand.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, old chap?” Cantyre questioned, bending
-over him and listening.</p>
-
-<p>But Lovey was already articulating brokenly. It took<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_395"></a>[395]</span>
-two or three repetitions, or attempts at repetition, for
-Cantyre to be in a position to interpret.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he trying to say?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>Cantyre pretended to arrange the bottles on the table
-beside the bed so as not to have to look at me.</p>
-
-<p>“He says, or he’s doing his best to say, ‘I didn’t say
-nothink but what was for everybody’s good.’”</p>
-
-<p>It was on my lips to retort, “Perhaps he didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>I left that, however, for Cantyre, who went back to
-his rooms without comment.</p>
-
-<p>He returned in the small hours of the morning, and
-once more we sat, one on one side of the bed and the
-other on the other, in what was practically silence. All
-I could say of it was that it had become a sympathetic
-silence. Why it was sympathetic I didn’t know: but the
-unclassified perceptions told me that it was.</p>
-
-<p>When Lovey opened his eyes again it was with the
-air of not having been asleep or otherwise away from us.</p>
-
-<p>“I saved ye, Slim, didn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey, old man, you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kep’ straight so as you would keep straight too?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’d never ’a’ done it if it ’adn’t been for me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>“And I’d never ’a’ gone away from ye, Slim. I was
-just a—a-frightenin’ of you. I didn’t mean no ’arm at
-all, I didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know, Lovey.”</p>
-
-<p>He fixed his glazing eyes upon me as he said, “I told
-ye my name wasn’t Lovey, didn’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but that doesn’t matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that doesn’t matter now. We’re fellas together,
-so what’s the diff?... I don’t care where we sleeps to-night,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_396"></a>[396]</span>
-so long as you’re there, sonny.... Greeley’s Slip
-is good enough for mine, if I can snuggle up to you,
-like.... Ye don’t mind, do ye?”</p>
-
-<p>I put my arm round his shoulder, raising him.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Lovey, I don’t mind. Just snuggle up.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Old me ’and, sonny.”</p>
-
-<p>I took his hand in mine as his head rested on my
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a long, restful sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Lizzy says it’s an awful nice place where she is, and—”</p>
-
-<p>I felt him slipping down in bed; but Cantyre, who
-knew more of such cases than I did, caught him gently
-round the loins and lowered him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_397"></a>[397]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXXIII</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>On coming back the next afternoon from selecting
-the spot for Lovey’s grave there was a man in khaki
-on the train. When I got out at the Grand Central I saw
-another. In Fifth Avenue I saw another and another.
-They seemed to spring out of the ground, giving a new
-aspect to the streets. In the streets that shining thing
-I had noticed on landing was no longer to be seen. Silver
-peace had faded out, while in its place there was coming—coming
-by degrees—but coming—that spirit of strong
-resolve which is iron and gold.</p>
-
-<p>Or perhaps I had better say that peace had taken
-refuge in my dingy little flat, where Lovey was lying on
-his bed in his Sunday clothes, with hands folded on his
-breast. Peace was in every line of the fragile figure; in
-the face there was peace satisfied—peace content—gentle,
-abiding, eternal.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later a little company of us stood by his
-grave while Rufus Legrand read the ever-stirring words
-of the earth to earth. It was the old comradeship which
-Lovey himself would have liked—the fellowship of men
-who had fought the same fight as he, and were hoping
-to be faithful unto death like him—Christian, Straight,
-little Spender, Beady, Pyn, the wee bye Daisy, and one
-or two others. Cantyre alone had none of the dark
-memories—and yet the bright and blessed memories—that
-held the rest of us together; but Cantyre had his
-place.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_398"></a>[398]</span></p>
-
-<p>We had driven out side by side in the same motor,
-as what the undertaker called chief mourners. I don’t
-remember that we uttered a word to each other till we
-got out at the grave.</p>
-
-<p>It was Cantyre who said, then: “I want you to drive
-back with me, Frank. There’s somewhere I should like
-to take you.”</p>
-
-<p>Reassured by his use of my name, I merely nodded,
-wondering what he meant.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t ask, however; nor did I ask when we were
-back in the motor again and on our way to town. I got
-my first hint as we began to descend the long avenue in
-which Sterling Barry had his house.</p>
-
-<p>As I expected, we stopped at the door. The vacant
-lot was still vacant, and among its dead stalks of burdock
-and succory April was bringing the first shades of soft
-green. I thought of Lovey, of course; of our tramp round
-Columbus Circle; of my midnight adventure right on this
-spot. It was like going back to another life; it was as
-this life must have seemed to Lovey and his Lizzy reunited
-in that world where her neck was as straight as a walking-stick,
-and everything was lovely-like.</p>
-
-<p>Cantyre spoke low, as if he could hardly speak at all.</p>
-
-<p>“I asked Regina to be in. She’ll be expecting us.”</p>
-
-<p>And she was. She was expecting us in that kind of
-agitation which hides itself under a pretense of being
-more than usually cool. In sympathy with Lovey’s
-memory, I suppose, she was dressed in black, which made
-a foil for her vivid lips and eyes. Out of the latter she
-was unable to keep a shade of feverish brightness that
-belied the nonchalance of her greeting.</p>
-
-<p>She talked about Lovey, about the funeral, about the
-weather, about the declaration of war, about the men in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_399"></a>[399]</span>
-khaki who with such surprising promptness had begun
-to appear in the streets. She talked rapidly, anxiously,
-against time, as it were, and busied herself pouring tea.
-Suspecting, doubtless, that Cantyre had something special
-to say, she was trying to fight him off from it as long
-as possible.</p>
-
-<p>I had taken a seat; he remained standing, his back
-to the fire. His look was abstracted, thundery, morose.</p>
-
-<p>Right in the middle of what Regina was saying about
-the seizure of the German ships he dropped with the remark,
-“You two know what Lovey told me—what he’s
-been telling me ever since you both came home.”</p>
-
-<p>Neither of us had a word to say. We could only stare.
-You could hear the mantelpiece clock ticking before
-he went on again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not going to give you up, Regina,” he declared,
-aggressively, then.</p>
-
-<p>One of her hands was on the handle of the teapot;
-one was in the act of taking up a cup. If coloring was
-ever transmuted into flame, her coloring was at that
-moment. There was a dramatic intensity in her quietness.</p>
-
-<p>“Have I asked you to, Stephen?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but—”</p>
-
-<p>“Have I?” I demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“No; but—”</p>
-
-<p>“If Lovey did it it was without any knowledge of
-mine,” I continued. “I practically killed him, God forgive
-me, for doing it!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re both off the track,” Cantyre broke in. “You
-don’t know what I—what I want to say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, then, Stephen. Tell us,” Regina said,
-tranquilly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_400"></a>[400]</span></p>
-
-<p>He spoke stammeringly. “It’s—it’s—just this: This
-is no time—for—for—love.”</p>
-
-<p>We stared again, waiting for him to go on.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what—what Christian told us two or three nights
-ago. We’re in a world where—where love and marriage
-are no longer the burning questions. They’re too small.
-Don’t you see?”</p>
-
-<p>We continued to stare, but we agreed with him.</p>
-
-<p>“So—so,” he faltered, “I want you—I want you both—to—to
-put it all off.”</p>
-
-<p>“The moratorium of love?” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p>“The moratorium of everything,” he took up, “but
-what—what Christian put before us. I see that now
-more plainly than I ever saw anything in my life. We’ve
-got to give everything up—and get it back—different.
-We shall be different, too—and things that we’re struggling
-over now will be settled for us, I suppose, without
-our taking them into our own hands at all. That’s how
-I look at it, if you two will agree.”</p>
-
-<p>“I agree, Stephen,” Regina said, with the same tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>“And I, too, old chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m—I’m going over,” he stumbled on, “with the
-first medical unit from Columbia—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Stephen! How splendid!”</p>
-
-<p>He contradicted her. “No, it isn’t. I’m not doing it
-from any splendid motives whatever. I’m going just to—to
-try and get out of myself. Don’t you see—you
-two? You must see. I’m—I’m sunk in myself; I’ve
-never been anything else. That’s what’s been the matter
-with me. That’s why I never made any friends. That’s
-why you, Frank, have never really cared a straw about
-me—in spite of all the ways I’ve made up to you; and why<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_401"></a>[401]</span>
-you, Regina, can hardly stand me. But, by God! you’re
-both going to!”</p>
-
-<p>With this flash of excitement I sprang up, laying my
-hand on his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“We care for you already, old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not the point. I’ve—I’ve got to care for myself.
-I’ve got to find some sort of self-respect.”</p>
-
-<p>But Regina, too, sprang up, joining us where we stood
-on the hearth-rug. She didn’t touch him; she only stood
-before him with hands clasped in front of her.</p>
-
-<p>“Stephen dear, you’re not doing any more heart-searching
-than Frank and I are doing; or than every true
-American is doing all through the country. What you
-say Mr. Christian told you the other night is more or
-less consciously in everybody’s soul. We know we’re
-called to the judgment seat; and at the judgment seat
-we stand. That’s all there is to it. Marriage and giving
-in marriage for people like us must wait. It’s become unimportant.
-There are people—younger than we are for
-the most part—to whom it comes first. But for us, with
-our experience—each of us—you with yours, Frank with
-his, I with mine—well, we have other work to do. We
-must see this great thing through before we can give our
-attention to ourselves. And we shall see it through,
-sha’n’t we, by doing as you say? We must give everything
-up—and wait. Then we shall probably find our
-difficulties solved for us. I often think that patience—the
-power to wait and be confident—is the most stupendous
-force in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>And with few more words than this we left her. I
-went first, giving them a little time alone together. But
-I hadn’t gone very far before, on accidentally turning
-round, I saw Cantyre coming down the steps.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_402"></a>[402]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><i>CHAPTER XXXIV</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was just a year later that a secret but profound misgiving
-in my heart began to be dispelled.</p>
-
-<p>I call it secret because it was unacknowledged by myself.
-It would never, I believe, have come to me of its
-own accord; it was suggested from without, and even so
-I didn’t harbor it consciously. It was only with the news
-of Seicheprey, of which the details began to come in toward
-the end of April, 1918, that I knew that in the wheat
-of my hopes and confidences there had been tares of
-anxiety and fear.</p>
-
-<p>I had seen too many of those strapping, splendid fellows
-not to be confident and hopeful. But I had also
-read too much of the folly of pitting green boys, however
-magnificently built, against the seasoned troops of
-long campaigns, not to have a lurking dread as to the
-test. I never voiced the question, not even to my own
-heart; yet Satan, the manufacturer of fear, had not failed
-to formulate it to my subconsciousness. What if this
-noble America, so strong, so generous, so ready to respond
-to that call which Christian had uttered, so eager to pour
-out its all, with both hands, gladly, gaily—what if now,
-before the guns of a ruthless and unconquerable foe, she
-should meet the disaster that would bring her to the dust?
-What if those beloved boys, all sinew and muscle as they
-were, should go down as I had seen my fellow-countrymen
-go down, in heaps that showed the impotence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_403"></a>[403]</span>
-valor? I had witnessed so much sacrifice—sacrifice by
-mistake, sacrifice by lack of skill, sacrifice by lack of
-knowledge that could have been obtained—that when I
-looked at these lads my heart sank at moments when it
-should have been most buoyant.</p>
-
-<p>Then came Seicheprey, and I knew.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the Marne, the Ourcq, the Vesle; and I
-was satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>For the cause had absorbed me again, heart and soul
-and mind. I was being sent all over the country, and
-sometimes into Canada, to speak for it. In this way I
-came to be in a small town in the Middle West—Mendoza
-happened to be its name—when, picking up a paper, I
-saw that a hospital had been bombed. The next edition
-reported that two doctors and three or four nurses had
-been killed. The next told us their names. Among the
-names was....</p>
-
-<p>And so he did give his all.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t write to Regina; Regina didn’t write to me.
-She was busy, as I was busy; but somewhere in the distance
-and the silence between us there was a place where
-our spirits met.</p>
-
-<p>And when we met in person we still didn’t speak of it.
-It was too deep, too sacred, too complicated and strange
-to go readily into words. It was easier and more natural
-to talk of something else.</p>
-
-<p>That was at Rosyth, on Long Island, at the end of
-June. Hearing that I had returned to New York for a
-rest, Hilda Grace asked me down for the week-end, just
-as she had asked me exactly four years before.</p>
-
-<p>On this occasion she made no attempt to sound me;
-she mentioned Regina only to say that she was at the
-red-and-yellow house on the opposite hill for a little rest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_404"></a>[404]</span>
-on her part. By disappearing after lunch on Sunday she
-gave me to understand that I was free.</p>
-
-<p>I went to the old Hornblower house by the way I had
-taken when I had last come away from it—down Mrs.
-Grace’s steps to the beach—along the shore—and up the
-steps to the lawn where the foxgloves bordered the scrub-oak.</p>
-
-<p>I went back to the veranda where I had waited and
-sat down in one of the same chairs. Taking out a cigarette,
-I lighted it and began to smoke.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps some one had seen me from a window, for in
-a little while there was the click of high heels on the bare
-steps of the stairway. Then out on the veranda came a
-figure too little to be tall and too tall to be considered
-little, carrying herself proudly, placing her dainty feet
-daintily, but advancing toward me instead of going away.
-She was dressed in white, with a scarlet band about her
-waist and another about her dashing Panama, of the
-same shade as her lips. In the opening at the neck she
-wore a string of pearls. Lower down, the opening was
-fastened by a diamond bar-pin. In her hand she carried
-a gold-mesh purse, which she threw carelessly on a table
-as she passed.</p>
-
-<p>She met me as any hostess meets a man who comes
-to make a call. We talked of the topics of the day,
-beginning with the weather. From the weather we passed
-to the war, and to all our anxieties and humiliations
-through the spring. We could do this, however, with a
-ray of cheerfulness, because the Château-Thierry salient
-was beginning to be wiped out.</p>
-
-<p>“But why do things have to happen the way they do?”
-I asked her. “If we’re going to win, why couldn’t we
-have won from the first? What’s the use of all this backing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_405"></a>[405]</span>
-and filling, this losing and taking, and relosing and
-retaking, the same old ground? Oh, I know there are the
-usual explanations as to our not being up to the mark
-in munitions and man power; but I mean what is the
-explanation from the point of view of an All-Powerful
-and All-Intelligent—?”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it the same explanation that applies to every
-human life?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I can tell you,” she smiled, thoughtfully;
-“but I do feel sure that we need our experiences.
-With minds and natures like ours we’re not fitted to go
-straight and simply from point to point. The long way
-round has to be our short way home, and—and—the
-way things happen is the best way.... Oh, dear, what’s
-happening?”</p>
-
-<p>It was admirably staged. The slipping of the string of
-pearls to the floor could hardly have been another accident.
-For me there was but one thing to do.</p>
-
-<p>Springing to my feet I stooped and picked the necklet
-up. Having picked it up, I put it in my pocket.</p>
-
-<p>I stood smiling down at her. She sat smiling up at
-me. There was more in that smile than a lifetime of
-words could have uttered.</p>
-
-<p>But when I was about to pull the pearls out of my
-pocket again she leaned forward and said, huskily: “Don’t,
-Frank. Keep them.”</p>
-
-<p>I looked at her, puzzled. “Why, Regina?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because some day you—you’ll give them back to
-me. Till then they’ll be yours. They’ll be a symbol—a
-pledge.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will it be—some day—some day—soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not so very soon, Frank. I must still have time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_406"></a>[406]</span>
-to—to think of Stephen. I cared for him—in my
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think of him, too,” I said, shakily. “It seems hard
-that he should have had to give everything, when I’m—I’m
-getting everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, death isn’t so terrible—or so significant. There
-wouldn’t be so much of it if it was. I only mean—but
-I can’t explain to you. We must get a little farther on—not
-only you and I—but our country—our countries—we
-must give still more—we must at least offer all even
-if it isn’t all taken away from us—before it’s given back
-to us—renewed—purified.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then!”</p>
-
-<p>But the glow in her face said the rest.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">THE END</p>
-
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