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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78915 ***
+
+
+
+
+ THERE IS CONFUSION
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ THERE IS CONFUSION
+
+ BY
+
+ JESSIE REDMON FAUSET
+
+
+
+
+ There is confusion worse than death,
+ Trouble on trouble; pain on pain,—
+ TENNYSON.
+
+
+ BONI AND LIVERIGHT
+ PUBLISHERS :: :: NEW YORK
+ 1924
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1924, by
+ BONI & LIVERIGHT, INC.
+
+ -------
+
+ Printed in the United States of America
+
+ First Printing, March, 1924
+ Second Printing, May, 1924
+ Third Printing, August, 1924
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TO MY SISTER
+
+ HELEN FAUSET LANNING
+
+ WHOSE PERSISTENT FAITH HAS MADE ME
+ ASHAMED TO FALTER
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ THERE IS CONFUSION
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+ CHAPTER II
+ CHAPTER III
+ CHAPTER IV
+ CHAPTER V
+ CHAPTER VI
+ CHAPTER VII
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ CHAPTER IX
+ CHAPTER X
+ CHAPTER XI
+ CHAPTER XII
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ CHAPTER XV
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ CHAPTER XX
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ CHAPTER XXV
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+ CHAPTER XXX
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ THERE IS CONFUSION
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I
+
+
+JOANNA’S first consciousness of the close understanding which existed
+between herself and her father dated back to a time when she was very
+young. Her mother, her brothers and her sister had gone to church, and
+Joanna, suffering from some slight childish complaint, had been left
+home. She had climbed upon her father’s knee demanding a story.
+
+“What sort of story?” Joel Marshall asked, willing and anxious to please
+her, for she was his favorite child.
+
+“Story ’bout somebody great, Daddy. Great like I’m going to be when I
+get to be a big girl.”
+
+He stared at her amazed and adoring. She was like a little, living echo
+out of his own forgotten past. Joel Marshall, born a slave and the son
+of a slave in Richmond, Virginia, had felt as a little boy that same
+impulse to greatness.
+
+“As a little tyke,” his mother used to tell her friends, “he was always
+pesterin’ me: ‘Mammy, I’ll be a great man some day, won’t I? Mammy,
+you’re gonna help me to be great?’
+
+“But that was a long time ago, just a year or so after the war,” said
+Mammy, rocking complacently in her comfortable chair. “How wuz I to know
+he’d be a great caterer, feedin’ bank presidents and everything? Once
+you know they had him fix a banquet fur President Grant. Sent all the
+way to Richmond fur ’im. That’s howcome he settled yere in New York;
+yassuh, my son is sure a great man.”
+
+But alas for poor Joel! His idea of greatness and his Mammy’s were
+totally at variance. The kind of greatness he had envisaged had been
+that which gets one before the public eye, which makes one a leader of
+causes, a “man among men.” He loved such phrases! At night the little
+boy in the tiny half-story room in that tiny house in Virginia picked
+out the stories of Napoleon, Lincoln and Garrison, all white men, it is
+true; but Lincoln had been poor and Napoleon unknown and yet they had
+risen to the highest possible state. At least he could rise to
+comparative fame. And when he was older and came to know of Frederick
+Douglass and Toussaint L’Ouverture, he knew if he could but burst his
+bonds he, too, could write his name in glory.
+
+This was no selfish wish. If he wanted to be great he also wanted to do
+honestly and faithfully the things that bring greatness. He was to that
+end dependable and thorough in all that he did, but even as a boy he
+used to feel a sick despair,—he had so much against him. His color, his
+poverty, meant nothing to his ardent heart; those were nature’s
+limitations, placed deliberately about one, he could see dimly, to try
+one’s strength on. But that he should have a father broken and sickened
+by slavery who lingered on and on! That after that father’s death the
+little house should burn down!
+
+He was fifteen when that happened and he and his mother both went to
+work in the service of Harvey Carter, a wealthy Virginian, whose wife
+entertained on a large scale. It was here that Joel learned from an
+expert chef how to cook. His wages were small even for those days, but
+still he contrived to save, for he had set his heart on attending a
+theological seminary. Some day he would be a minister, a man with a
+great name and a healing tongue. These were the dreams he dreamed as he
+basted Mrs. Carter’s chickens or methodically mixed salad dressing.
+
+His mother knew his ideas and loved them with such a fine, albeit
+somewhat uncomprehending passion and belief, that in grateful return he
+made her the one other consideration of his life, weaving unconsciously
+about himself a web of such loyalty and regard for her that he could not
+have broken through it if he would. Her very sympathy defeated his
+purpose. So that when she, too, fell ill on a day with what seemed for
+years an incurable affection, Joel shut his teeth and put his frustrated
+plans behind him.
+
+He drew his small savings from the bank and rented a tiny two and a half
+room shack in the front room of which he opened a restaurant,—really a
+little lunchstand. He was patronized at first only,—and that
+sparingly—by his own people. But gradually the fame of his wonderful
+sandwiches, his inimitable pastries, his pancakes, brought him first
+more black customers, then white ones, then outside orders. In five
+years’ time Joel’s catering became known state wide. He conquered
+poverty and came to know the meaning of comfort. The Grant incident
+created a reputation for him in New York and he was shrewd enough to
+take advantage of it and move there.
+
+Ten years too late old Mrs. Marshall was pronounced cured by the
+doctors. She never understood what her defection had cost her son. His
+material success, his position in the church, in the community at large
+and in the colored business world,—all these things meant “power.” To
+her, her son was already great. Joel did not undertake to explain to her
+that his lack of education would be a bar forever between him and the
+kind of greatness for which his heart had yearned.
+
+It was after he moved to New York and after the death of his mother that
+Joel married. His wife had been a school teacher, and her precision of
+language and exactitude in small matters made Joel think again of the
+education and subsequent greatness which were to have been his. His wife
+was kind and sweet, but fundamentally unambitious, and for a time the
+pleasure of having a home and in contrasting these days of ease with the
+hardships of youth made Joel somewhat resigned to his fate.
+
+“Besides, it’s too late now,” he used to tell himself. “What could I
+be?” So he contented himself with putting by his money, and attending
+church, where he was a steward and really the unacknowledged head.
+
+His first child brought back the old keen longing. It was a boy and
+Joel, bending over the small, warm, brown bundle, felt a gleam of hope.
+He would name it Joel and would instil, or more likely, stimulate the
+ambition which he felt must be already in that tiny brain. But his wife
+wouldn’t hear of the name Joel.
+
+“It’s hard enough for him to be colored,” she said jealously guarding
+her young, “and to call him a stiff old-fashioned name like that would
+finish his bad luck. I am going to name him Alexander.”
+
+Alec, as he was usually called, did not resemble his father in the
+least. He was the average baby and the average boy, interested in
+marbles, in playing hookey, in parachutes, but with no determination to
+be a dark Napoleon or a Frederick Douglass. Two other children, Philip
+and Sylvia, resembled him, and Joel Marshall, now a man of forty, gave
+up his old ideas completely and decided to be a good business man,
+husband and father; not a bad decision if he had but known it.
+
+Then Joanna came; Joanna with a fluff of thick, black hair, and solemn,
+earnest eyes and an infinite capacity for spending long moments in
+thought. “She’s like you, Joel,” Mrs. Marshall said. And because the
+novelty of choosing names for babies had somewhat worn off, she made no
+objection to the name Joanna, which Joel hesitatingly proposed for her.
+“She certainly should have been named for you,” the mother told him a
+month later; “see how she follows you with her eyes. She’d rather watch
+you than eat.”
+
+And indeed from the very beginning Joanna showed her preference for her
+father. The two seemed to have a secret understanding. After the first
+child, Mrs. Marshall had fretted somewhat over the time and strength
+expended in caring for the other little Marshalls, but she never had any
+occasion to worry about Joanna. Joel had his office in his residence,
+and after Joanna was dressed and fed, all she wanted was to lie in her
+carriage and later to ride about on the kiddie-car of that day in her
+father’s office, where she watched him with her solemn eyes.
+
+Joel never forgot the first time she asked him for a story. He was in
+the habit of regaling his youngsters with tales of his early life, of
+himself, of boys who had grown up with him, of ball-games and boyish
+pranks. The three older children had a fine catholicity of taste. “Tell
+us a story,” was all they asked, its subject made no difference to them.
+
+But on that certain Sunday before Joanna was five years old she perched
+herself on her father’s knee and commanded astoundingly:
+
+“Tell me a story, Daddy, ’bout somebody great.”
+
+Joel didn’t know what she meant at first, so far removed was he from the
+thought of his old dream. And yet the question did seem something like
+an echo, faint but recognizable of a longing that had once loomed large
+in his life.
+
+“Great,” he repeated. “How do you mean great, Baby? Tall, great big man,
+like Daddy, hey?” He stood six feet and was broad with it.
+
+Joanna shook a dissenting head. “No, not great that way. I want to hear
+about a man who did things nobody else could do,—maybe he put out a
+fire,” she ended doubtfully, “but I mean something greater than that.”
+
+Joel had her taught to read after that. She was a little frail for
+school, and did not start until later than the other children, though
+she was far the most studious. So she had three or four years of solid
+reading, and always her choice of subject was of some one who had
+overcome obstacles and so stood out beyond his fellows.
+
+At first she thought nothing of color, and it was not until she had gone
+to school and learned something of discrimination that she began to
+ponder.
+
+“Didn’t colored people ever do anything, Daddy?” But Joel was prepared
+for that. He told her himself of Douglass and Vesey and Turner. There
+were great women, too, Harriet Tubman, Phillis Wheatley, Sojourner
+Truth, women who had been slaves, he explained to her, but had won their
+way to fame and freedom through their own efforts.
+
+Joanna had a fine sense of relativity. Young as she was, she could
+understand that the bravery and courage exercised by these slave women
+was a much finer and different thing from that exercised for instance by
+Florence Nightingale. “They were like Joan of Arc,” she thought to
+herself, “Joan, wonderful Joan with the name almost like mine.” Only an
+innate, almost too meticulous sense of honesty had kept her from
+changing her own name to the shorter form.
+
+She used to lie in her bed at night, straight and still with her eyes
+fixed on the stretch of sky visible even from a house in Fifty-ninth
+Street and dream dreams. “I’ll be great, too,” she told herself. “I’m
+not sure how. I can’t be like those wonderful women, Harriet and
+Sojourner, but at least I won’t be ordinary.”
+
+She spoke to her father like a little piping echo from the past, “Daddy,
+you’ll help me to be a great woman, somebody you’ll be proud of?”
+
+Her words made him so happy; they renewed his life. She was so
+completely like himself, and he could help her. “Thank God,” he used to
+murmur over his books that daily showed an increase in his earnings.
+
+He took Joanna everywhere with him. One Easter Sunday a great colored
+singer, a beautiful woman, sang an Easter anthem in his church, lifting
+up a golden voice among the tall white lilies. Afterwards she went home
+with Mr. and Mrs. Marshall and stayed to dinner. Joanna never moved her
+eyes from her during the ride home.
+
+After dinner she stood in front of the singer in the comfortable
+living-room. “I can sing like you,” she said gravely, “and I can
+remember the tune of most of that hymn you sang this morning. Listen.”
+
+And with no further introduction she sang most of the anthem. She was
+only ten then, yet her voice was already free of the shrillness of
+childhood and beginning to assume that liquid golden quality which so
+distinguished it later.
+
+Madame Caldwell gasped. She had won her own laurels through bitter
+experience in various studios, meeting insult, indifference and
+unkindness with an unyielding front, which brought her finally
+consideration, a grudging interest, sometimes a genuine appreciation.
+
+She was well on her way to recognition now. Colored people acclaimed her
+all over the country and she had some local reputation in her home town
+where black and white alike were very proud of her.
+
+“But no daughter of mine,” she used to say bitterly, “if she has the
+voice of an angel shall go through what I have suffered.”
+
+Yet when she heard Joanna sing that Easter Sunday, she seized Joel
+Marshall’s arm. “Get her a teacher, Mr. Marshall. She has a voice in ten
+thousand. Poor child, how you will have to work!”
+
+But Joanna wasn’t listening, her eyes sought her father’s. Both of them
+knew at once that the road to glory was stretching out before her.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II
+
+
+JOANNA was like her father not only so far as ambition was concerned but
+also in her willingness to work. She had a fine serious mind, a little
+slow-moving at first, but working with a splendid precision that helped
+her through many a hard place. Her quality of being able to stick to a
+problem until she was satisfied served in the long run as well as her
+sister Sylvia’s greater quickness and versatility. Eventually, too,
+Joanna’s laboriousness and native exactness produced in her the result
+of an oft-sharpened knife. The method which she applied to one study,
+she remembered to apply to another, and if this failed then she was able
+to make combinations.
+
+Usually she had to have things explained to her from the very beginning,
+either by a teacher or through directions in a book. But to offset this
+slowness she had a good sense of logic, a strong power of concentration,
+and a remarkably retentive and visualizing memory.
+
+Sylvia and she, destined to be such perfect friends in their maturity,
+were not very sympathetic in their childhood. The older girl was
+thoughtless, quick to jump at conclusions, natively witty and strongly
+disinclined toward seriousness. “Joanna makes me sick,” was her constant
+cry, “always thinking of her lessons and how important she’s going to be
+when she’s grown-up. So tiresome, too, wanting to talk about what she’s
+going to do all the time, with no interest in your affairs.”
+
+Which was not quite true, for Joanna was mightily interested in people
+who had a “purpose” in life. Otherwise not at all. This was where she
+differed most from her father. With Joel success and distinction had
+been his dream, his dearest wish. But always he had realized that there
+were other things which might interfere. With Joanna success and
+distinction were an obsession. It never occurred to her that life was
+anything but what a man chose to make it, provided, of course, he did
+choose to make it something. Her brothers’ and Sylvia’s haphazard
+methods were always incomprehensible to her, and this gave her the least
+touch of the “holier than thou” manner.
+
+Her mother insisted on each child’s learning to do housework. Even the
+boys were not exempt from this, indeed they rather liked it. Sylvia made
+no complaint though she occasionally bribed Alec or Philip to do her
+stint for her. Joanna never complained, either, yet she made up her mind
+early that as a woman she would never do this kind of work. Not that she
+despised it, she simply considered it labor lost for a person who like
+herself might be spending her time in more beautiful and more graceful
+activities. Yet in spite of her dislike, she always lingered longest
+over her work, and the room or the silver which she had cleaned always
+looked the best. It is true she never learned to iron especially well,
+but this was about the only thing in which she yielded place to Sylvia.
+
+Sylvia was like a fire-fly in comparison with Joanna’s steady beaconlike
+flood of light. Sylvia dashed about, worked as quickly as she thought
+and produced immediate and usually rather striking results. Sylvia with
+a ribbon, or a piece of lace and a ready needle and thread could give
+the effect of possessing two dresses, whereas she had only the one.
+Sylvia dressed the dolls, hiring Joanna’s remarkable and usually
+disregarded assembly of these so that she might make them new clothes.
+She drove an honest bargain. If Joanna would let her play store with her
+dolls for a week, one of them could keep the new dress which Sylvia
+would have made for her; Joanna’s dolls were usually in Sylvia’s care.
+
+Yet when Joanna did sew or knit, her stitches and pieces bore inspection
+much better than Sylvia’s. By the same token, however, they missed
+Sylvia’s dash.
+
+In one thing only did Joanna show real abandon, that was in dancing.
+Sylvia was as light as thistle-down on her feet, but Joanna was like the
+spirit of dancing. She had grace, the very poetry of motion, and she
+could dance any step however intricate if she saw it once.
+
+“If you want to get Joanna to play,” Maggie Ellersley, Sylvia’s chum and
+school-mate would say impatiently, “you must start some singing or
+dancing game. She wouldn’t play ‘I Spy’ or ‘Pussy wants a corner’ with
+you for worlds.”
+
+Any sort of folk-song or dance, though she did not know them by that
+name, delighted the child. Usually she held herself aloof, but in summer
+down on Fifty-ninth Street Joanna was one with the children in the
+street, singing, dancing, jumping rope in unexpected and fancy ways.
+
+Sylvia’s and Maggie’s and even her brothers’ rougher scoffing affected
+her not at all, not only because she had the calm self-assurance which
+is the first step toward success, but also because of old Joel’s strong
+belief in her.
+
+Joel believed that all things were possible. “Nothing in reason,” he
+used to tell Joanna, “is impossible. Forty years ago I was almost a
+pauper in Richmond. Look at me to-day. I spend more on you in a month,
+Joanna, than my mother and I ever saw in a five-year stretch. One
+hundred years ago and nearly all of us were slaves. See what we are now.
+Ten years ago people would have laughed at the thought of colored people
+on the stage. Look at the bill-boards on Broadway.”
+
+It was in the first part of the century when Williams and Walker, Cole
+and Johnson, Ada Overton and others were at their zenith. Old Joel
+believed them the precursors of greater things. Since Joanna’s gifts
+were those of singing and dancing, he hoped to make her famous the
+country over. Of course he would have preferred a more serious form of
+endowment. But such as it was, it was Joanna’s, and must be developed.
+Joel Marshall believed in using the gifts nearest at hand.
+
+“And don’t think anything about being colored,” he used to say.
+
+“It might be different if you lived in some other part of the country,
+but here in this section it may not interfere much more than being poor,
+or having some slight deformity. I have often noticed,” said Joel, who
+had used his powers of observation to no small advantage, “that having
+some natural drawback often pushes you forward, that is if you’ve got
+anything in you to start with. It might even happen,” he added, launched
+now on his favorite theme, “that your color would add to your success.
+Depend on it if you’ve got something which these white folks haven’t
+got, or can do something better than they can, they’ll call on you fast
+enough and your color will only make you more noticeable.”
+
+Joanna used to listen interestedly. Not that in those early years she
+always understood fully everything her father said, but his talk created
+for her a kind of atmosphere which created in turn a feeling of
+assurance and self-confidence which was really superb.
+
+Another theory of Joel’s which he had worked out for himself, and which
+in no small degree contributed to Joanna’s education was his early
+understanding of the natural rights of men inherent in the mere fact of
+living. He told Joanna that no class of men remained static throughout
+the ages,—he had not used these words, it is true, but he had come
+pretty near it. Somewhere in those early days of his in odd scraps of
+reading he had learned that Greece had once been enslaved; that Russia
+had but recently freed her serfs; that England possessed a submerged
+class.
+
+“All people, all countries, have their ups and downs, Joanna,” he would
+tell her gravely, “and just now it’s our turn to be down, but it will
+soon roll round for our time to be up, or rather we must see to it that
+we do get up. So everyone of us has something to do for the race. Never
+forget that, little girl.”
+
+Joanna was a memorable type in these days. A grave child, brown without
+that peculiar luminosity of appearance which she was to have later on,
+and which Sylvia already possessed. She had a mop of thick black hair
+which was actually heavy, so much so that the back of her head bulged.
+Joanna knew next to nothing at this time of those first aids to colored
+people in this country in the matter of conforming to average
+appearance. If she had known them, it is doubtful if she would have used
+them, for she had the variety of honesty which made her hesitate and
+even dislike to do or adopt anything artificial, no matter how much it
+might improve her general appearance. No hair straighteners, nor even
+curling kids for her.
+
+“Joanna’s ways are so straight, they almost sway back,” Sylvia used to
+say aptly. And indeed Joanna wanted one to see her at her very worst.
+She did not like to take people by surprise. But as her worst included a
+pair of very nice brown eyes, with thick, if somewhat short, and curling
+lashes, an unobtrusive nose, small square hands and exquisite feet, it
+was not hard to look at. She was always intensely susceptible to
+beautiful people and to beautiful things. It was the beauty inherent in
+Joel’s ideals, and in all ideals which really underlie success, that
+most attracted her. And this passion for beauty while informing and
+indeed molding her character, yet by a strange twist influenced
+adversely and warped her sympathies.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III
+
+
+IT was Joanna’s love for beauty that made her consciously see Peter Bye.
+It is true that almost as soon as she saw him she lost sight of him
+again, for the boy did not come up to her requirements which, even at
+the early age at which these two met, were quite crystallized. Joanna
+liked first of all fixity of purpose. The phrase “When I grow up, I’m
+going to be” was constantly on her lips. She got into the habit of
+measuring people, “sizing them up” Joel would have said, in accordance
+with the amount of steadfastness, perseverance and ambition which they
+displayed. She had little time for shiftless or “do-less” persons.
+Sylvia used to say, half angrily, “Joanna, when the bad man gets you, he
+isn’t going to torture you. He’s just going to shut you up with lazy,
+good-for-nothing folks. That will be torture enough for you.”
+
+Peter Bye, in spite of the dark arresting beauty which first drew
+Joanna’s glance to him across the other white and pink faces in the
+crowded schoolroom, was undoubtedly shiftless. “Not lazy,” Joanna said
+to herself, looking at him from under level brows before she dismissed
+him forever from her busy mind. “It’s just that he doesn’t care; he just
+doesn’t want to be anybody.”
+
+She was too young to understand the power of that great force, heredity.
+She had no notion of the part which it played in her own life. Peter was
+the legitimate result of a heredity that had become a tradition, of a
+tradition that had become warped, that had gone astray and had carried
+Peter and Peter Bye’s father along in its general wreckage.
+
+It is impossible to understand the boy’s character without some
+knowledge of the lives of those who had gone before him.
+
+As far back as the last decades of the eighteenth century there had been
+white Byes and black Byes in Philadelphia. The black Byes were known to
+be the chattels of Aaron and Dinah Bye, Quakers, who without reluctance
+had set free their slaves, among them black Joshua Bye, the
+great-grandfather of Peter. This was done in 1780 according to the laws
+of Pennsylvania, which thus allowed the Quakers to salve their
+consciences without offending their thrifty instincts.
+
+Aaron Bye, most people said, was unusually good to his slaves. He had
+something of the patriarchal instinct and liked to think of himself as
+ruler over the destiny of many people, his wife’s, his children’s and
+more completely that of his slaves. Certainly he was very kind to
+Joshua’s mother, Judy. She was a tall, straight, steely, black woman
+with fine inscrutable eyes, a thin-lipped mouth and a large but shapely
+nose. She bore about her a quality of brooding, of mystery, embodying
+the attraction which she exercised for many men, white and black. But
+apparently she knew little of this. Her only weakness, if such it might
+be called, was an inexplicable attachment to the white Bye family. She
+married, a few years before receiving her freedom, a man named Ceazer, a
+proud, surly, handsome individual, who refused to adopt the surname of
+his master; he had belonged to white people named Morton. Since even
+after freedom Judy would not hear to leaving the Bye family, Aaron Bye
+greatly pleased by this loyalty offered the position of coachman to
+Ceazer, which the latter, with his customary surliness, accepted. Later
+he not only threw up his job, but ran away, vanishing finally into
+legend.
+
+His was a strange truculent character; he hated slavery, hated all white
+people, hated particularly the Mortons, hated ineffably Aaron Bye. He
+wanted nothing at his hands. Once he knocked down another Negro who
+referred to him as “Mist’ Bye’s man.” He was no man’s man, he assured
+the stricken narrator, least of all the man of that damn Quaker. His
+enmity went to ridiculous lengths. Aaron Bye taught Joshua how to write
+and gave him a little black testament for a prize. In it he wrote “The
+gift of Aaron Bye.” Joshua, delighted, wrote his own name under the
+inscription and ran and showed it to his mother. She, it turned out, had
+not been watching his making of pothooks without purpose. Underneath her
+boy’s name she fashioned in halting crazy characters her single attempt
+at writing, her own name, Judy Bye. Nothing would serve Joshua then but
+that he must have Ceazer’s name in the book, too. Remembering that his
+father could not write, Joshua wrote out himself with a fine flourish
+“Ceazer Bye” and showed the name to its owner, entreating him to make
+his mark beside it. Ceazer took up the pen in his strong, wiry fingers.
+
+“Which one ob dese did you say were mine?”
+
+Joshua pointed it out, waiting for the cross. Ceazer made a mark, it was
+true, but it was a thick broad line drawn through his name with a fury
+which almost tore the thin page. _He_ was no Bye!
+
+It was not long after this that he disappeared, a strange, brooding,
+intractable figure.
+
+Joshua, although born in slavery, had never known the institution in its
+more hideous aspects. He had been a very little boy when his freedom
+came to him. And Ceazer, old Judy told him, had fought in the
+Revolution! So that Joshua knew more of warfare to set people free than
+of slavery for which war was later to be waged. From him his son Isaiah
+heard almost nothing of the old régime, though there were many vestiges
+of it on all sides. All he knew was that Joshua had kept on working for
+Dinah and Aaron Bye after his emancipation, and that they had given him
+on the occasion of his marriage to Belle Potter a huge Family Bible,
+bound in leather and with an Apocrypha. On the title-page was written in
+a fine old script: _To Joshua and Belle Bye from Aaron and Dinah Bye.
+“By their fruits ye shall know them.”_
+
+For a long time to Isaiah, who used to pore absorbedly as a boy over
+this book with its pictures and long old-fashioned S, this inscription
+savored of vineyards and orchards. The white Byes, as a matter of fact,
+were the possessors of very fine peach-orchards in the neighborhood of
+what is now known as Bryn Mawr, and Isaiah, even as a little fellow, had
+been taken out there to pick peaches.
+
+His father Joshua had spent his life in making those orchards what they
+were; a born agriculturist, he had an uncanny knowledge of planting, of
+grafting, of fertilizing. Many a farmer tried to inveigle him from Aaron
+Bye. But although Joshua’s wages were small, he had inherited his
+mother’s blind, invincible attachment for the Byes. His place was with
+Aaron.
+
+It was young white Meriwether Bye, youngest son of Aaron’s and Dinah’s
+ten children, who told Isaiah what the inscription meant. Joshua had not
+married until he was nearly fifty and his single son, black Isaiah, and
+white Meriwether were boys together. Meriwether used to come to the Bye
+house at Fourth and Coates Streets, which is now Fairmount Avenue, as
+often as Isaiah used to appear at the Bye house at Fourth and Spruce.
+
+Isaiah showed the inscription to Meriwether, “By their fruits ye shall
+know them.”
+
+“Yes,” said young Merry tracing the letters with a fat finger, “that’s
+our family motto.” Isaiah wanted to know what a motto was.
+
+“Something,” Meriwether told him vaguely, “that your whole family goes
+by.” The black boy thought that likely.
+
+“Everybody knows Bye peaches, ain’t that so? ’Cause of that everybody
+knows the Byes.”
+
+Meriwether, though impressed by this logic, didn’t think that that was
+what was meant. A subsequent conversation with his father confirmed his
+opinion.
+
+“It means this, Ziah,” he said one hot July afternoon walking home with
+the colored boy from the brickyard where Isaiah worked, “it means it
+shows the kind of stuff you are. It means—now—you see a bare tree in the
+winter time don’t you, and you don’t know what it is? But you do perhaps
+know an apple blossom when you see it, or a peach blossom. In the spring
+you see that tree covered, let’s say, with apple blossoms. Well, you
+know it’s an apple tree.”
+
+“But what’s that got to do with us?” Isaiah wanted to know. He was
+interested, he could not tell why, but his slow-working mind clung to
+its first idea. “Your father wrote it in the book he gave my father. My
+father hasn’t any fruit trees.”
+
+Isaiah never forgot the answer Meriwether made him in the unconscious
+cruelty of youth. “When it comes to people,” said the young Quaker, “it
+means pretty much the same thing. Now when I grow up, I’m going to be a
+great doctor,” his chest swelled, “but nobody will be surprised. They’ll
+all say, ‘Of course, he’s the son of Aaron Bye, the rich peach-merchant.
+Good stock there,’” he involuntarily mimicked his pompous father; “and
+I’ll be good fruit. That’s the way it always is: good trees, good fruit;
+rich, important people, rich important sons.”
+
+“What’ll I be?” asked Isaiah Bye, grotesquely tragic in his tattered
+clothes, the sweat rolling off his shiny face, so intent was his
+interest.
+
+“Well,” Meriwether countered judicially, “what could you be?” He
+pondered a moment, his own position so secure that he was willing to do
+his best by this serious case. “Your father and your father’s father
+were slaves. ’Course your father’s free now but he’s just a servant.
+He’s not what you’d call his own man. So I s’pose that’s what you’ll be,
+a good servant. Tell you what, Isaiah, you can be my coachman. I’ll be
+good to you. And when you’re grown up,” said Meriwether with more
+imagination than he usually displayed, “I’ll point you out to some
+famous doctor from France and say, ‘His father was a good servant to my
+father, and he’s been a good servant to my father’s son.’ How’ll you
+like that?” Meriwether tapped him fondly if somewhat condescendingly on
+the arm.
+
+“You’ll never,” said Isaiah Bye, drawing back from the familiar touch,
+“you’ll never be able to say that about me.” And he turned and ran down
+the hot street, leaving Meriwether Bye gaping on the sidewalk.
+
+After that his father could never persuade him to enter again the Bye
+house, or the Bye orchards. Fortunately his mother upheld him here.
+“’Tain’t as though he had to work for them old Byes,” she said
+straightening up her already straight shoulders. “He makes just as much
+and more in the brick-yard and in helpin’ Amos White haul.”
+
+“I know that,” Joshua would reply impatiently, “but old Mist’ Aaron
+says—now—he likes to have his own people workin’ roun’ him. And I don’t
+like to disappoint him.”
+
+Belle Bye told Isaiah. “I’m not one of his own people, Ma,” he answered
+stubbornly, “and after that I’m not ever goin’ back.” Belle was rejoiced
+to hear this. She would have been an insurgent in any walk of life.
+Joshua was the genuine peasant type—the type, black or white, which
+believes in a superior class and yields blindly to its mandates. But
+Belle had seen too many changes even in her thirty-five years—she was
+far younger than Joshua—not to know that many things are possible if one
+just has courage.
+
+Isaiah, on being questioned, told his mother with considerable
+reluctance about his conversation with Meriwether. Belle, while
+regretting the breach, understood. She had been glad to have her boy the
+associate of young white Bye. Without expressing it to herself in so
+many words she had realized that association with Meriwether was an
+education for Isaiah. Already he was talking more correctly than other
+colored boys in his group, his manners were good, and though his work
+was of the roughest kind, his vision was broad, he knew there were other
+things.
+
+“I don’t believe,” his mother told him wisely, “that you kin go as fur
+as you dream. Too many things agin you fur that, boy. But you kin die
+much further along the road than when you was born. Never forget that.”
+
+So Isaiah was saved from the initial mistake of aiming too high and of
+coming utterly to smash. Yet he accomplished wonders. Who shall say how
+he increased his slender store of knowledge? How he learned to read wise
+books borrowed and bought as best he might? How he learned geography and
+history that made his heart-beats go wild since it told him of the
+French Revolution and how a whole nation once practically enslaved arose
+to a fuller, richer life?
+
+The inspiration for all this lay in those careless words of young
+Meriwether. Although Isaiah met the young fellow many times after that
+incident, and apparently with friendliness, he never in his heart
+forgave him. Like Ceazer he developed a dislike for white people and
+their ways which developed, however, into a sturdy independence and an
+unyielding pride. No amount of contumely ever made him ashamed of his
+slave ancestry. On the contrary, to measure himself against old Ceazer
+and Judy gave him ground for honest pride. “See what they were and how
+far I’ve gone,” he used to say, pleasantly boastful.
+
+He resented as few sons of freedmen did the assurance with which the
+white Byes took their wealth and position and power. “Hoisted themselves
+on the backs of the black Byes.” He resented especially the ingratitude
+of Aaron Bye to Joshua. For himself he asked nothing; being content to
+fight his own way “through an onfriendly world.”
+
+The white Byes had gone far, but the black Byes having now that greatest
+of all gifts, freedom, would go far, too. They would be leaders of other
+black men.
+
+The upshot of all this was that Isaiah Bye opened a school for colored
+youth down on Vine Street. No name and no figure in colored life in
+Philadelphia was ever better beloved and more revered than his.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ISAIAH did not marry until he was thirty-one, which was an advanced age
+for his times. Even then he had married earlier than his father. Old
+Joshua, who died long before Isaiah’s marriage, had been inordinately
+proud of his one son.
+
+“Jes’ wouldn’t work fer white folks,” Joshua used to say, “that weren’t
+good enough fer him.”
+
+Isaiah and Miriam Sayres Bye had one son. “Meriwether,” Isaiah wrote in
+Aaron and Dinah Bye’s old gift, and under it in a script as fine and
+characteristic as that of the original inscription: “By _his_ fruits
+shall ye know—_me_.” It was a strange but not unnatural bit of pride,
+the same pride which had made him name this squirming bundle of
+potentialities, “Meriwether,—Meriwether Bye,” a boy with the same name
+which old white Aaron Bye’s son had borne and with as good chances. The
+Civil War was on the horizon then and Isaiah Bye, with that calm
+expectation of the unexpected which was his mother’s chiefest legacy,
+was sure that in that grand mêlée all his people would know freedom. So
+black Meriwether Bye, born like himself in freedom, would know nothing
+but that estate when he began to have understanding.
+
+Isaiah had accumulated a little, though how that was possible, no one
+aware of his tiny stipend could guess. It is true he not only taught
+school, but he had outside pupils, ex-slaves, freedmen, men like himself
+born in freedom, but unable through economic pressure to enjoy it except
+in name,—all these crowded his home at night on Vine Street, and sweated
+mightily over primers and pothooks and the abacus. Twenty-five cents an
+hour he charged them, giving each a meticulous care such as would bring
+a modern tutor many dollars. He wrote letters, pamphlets, too, for that
+marvelous organization already well established, the A. M. E. Church.
+His wife had a sister whose husband kept a second-hand shop and from
+this source he earned an occasional dollar. When Meriwether was eight,
+Isaiah owned two houses in Pearl Street, the house in Vine Street, a
+half interest in his brother-in-law’s store and a plot in Mount Olivet
+Cemetery.
+
+From the very beginning Meriwether knew he was to be a great man—a
+doctor, his father had said emphatically. And Meriwether repeated it by
+rote. He was a clever enough child though without his father’s solid
+trait of concentration. But he liked the idea of greatness—that and the
+profession of medicine came to be synonymous with him as it was already
+with his father. Otherwise it is likely that both of them would have
+seen earlier the boy’s inaptitude for the calling thus thrust upon him.
+
+Meriwether went to his father’s school, to Mr. Jonas Howard’s catering
+establishment, which he loved, to Sunday-School and to his Uncle Peter’s
+second-hand store. In any one of these places he was at home. He might
+have made a good teacher, caterer, minister or storekeeper. Yet he
+meandered on, doing absolutely mediocre work, never failing, never
+shining, and always rather purposely waiting the day which should bring
+him to the Medical School.
+
+He was waiting for something else, too, though this Isaiah never
+guessed. He was waiting for some sign of help or recognition from the
+white Byes. His father had told him of the slaveholder’s great debt to
+old Joshua; he had taken him riding past the Bryn Mawr peach orchards.
+“By rights part of them ought to belong to us. But I don’t mind, no
+sir-ee! Let ’em have ’em. See where we are to-day without their help.
+Think of it!”
+
+Meriwether did think of it and did mind it. He learned that he had been
+named after the son of his grandfather’s patron and somehow it seemed
+impossible to him that that mere fact should not result in something
+tangibly advantageous. He lacked the imagination to understand the pride
+which actuated Isaiah to name his boy as he had. The year before
+Meriwether was to enter medical school, Isaiah, fortunately for himself,
+died.
+
+A few months later Miriam died, too. Meriwether was left sole heir to
+the three houses and two or three hundred dollars. He was tired of
+school and not at all displeased with the idea of being his own master.
+He would like a little vacation, he fancied, and a chance to see the
+world. Somebody told him of a good way to do this—why not get a job as
+train porter? The idea pleased him; there was travel, easy money,
+besides his little property in Philadelphia. And afterwards perhaps
+there would be the patron for whom he had been named, Dr. Meriwether Bye
+of Bryn Mawr.
+
+Isaiah’s mother, Belle Bye, used to say, “Things you do expect and
+things you don’t expect are sure to come to pass.” It took Isaiah many
+years to see the reasonableness of this apparently unreasoned statement.
+Certainly one of the things he never expected to come to pass was that
+his boy Meriwether should, first, give up altogether his project of
+studying medicine and, second, that bit by bit, through sickness,
+gambling, and a hitherto unsuspected penchant for sheer laziness, he
+should run through his Philadelphia property, thus wiping away all that
+edifice of respectability and good citizenship which Isaiah Bye had so
+carefully built up.
+
+Colored Philadelphia society is organized as definitely as, and even a
+little more carefully than, Philadelphia white society. One wasn’t “in”
+in those old days unless one were, first, “an old citizen,” and, second,
+unless one were eminently respectable,—almost it might be said
+God-fearing. Meriwether having been born to this estate suffered all the
+inconveniences coming to a member of a group at that time small and
+closely welded. His business was everybody’s business. His Uncle Peter
+had upbraided him for not studying medicine. Jonas Howard, the caterer,
+knew about his first real estate transfer. The young Howards and his
+cousins knew about his gambling and rebuked him admiringly. On one of
+his “runs” Meriwether spent a week in New York. This was in 1889. Not a
+single colored person knew him or cared about him. He rented a room in
+Fifty-third Street and made that his headquarters. Later he rented two
+rooms and married a young seamstress who died in 1891 when her boy was
+born.
+
+Meriwether did do two things after that. First he wrote to Dr.
+Meriwether Bye telling him who he was and implying he would not disdain
+a little aid. It is doubtful if the doctor, who at that time was
+traveling in Europe with his tiny grandson, ever received the letter.
+Second, he took to drink. More than anything else he fell into a deep,
+ineluctable mood of melancholia. Here he was, Meriwether Bye, destined
+to be a great man, a famous physician. Why, he had been a man of
+property once, with money in the bank! And now he was just a poor
+nobody, picking up odd jobs, paying his room rent fearfully from week to
+week, sometimes pawning Isaiah Bye’s chased gold watch.
+
+How he worked it out he himself could not have told. But he saw himself
+a martyr, “driven by fate” from the high eminence of his father’s dreams
+to his own poor realities. Think how he had struggled, sacrificed—he
+believed it—the fun and freedom of youth to come to this! “How,” said
+Meriwether Bye harking back to Sunday-School days, “how are the mighty
+fallen!” And how easily might they have remained mighty.
+
+He named his boy Peter after his Uncle Peter, in whose second-hand shop
+in Philadelphia he had spent delightful hours.
+
+Now see the perversity of human nature. Just as his father Isaiah Bye
+had talked to his son Meriwether about the reward of effort and faithful
+toil, just so Meriwether talked to Peter about the futility of labor and
+ambition. And in particular he talked to him about the ingratitude of
+the white Byes—of all white people.
+
+“It makes no difference, Peter, what you do or how hard you work. The
+rewards of life are only for such or such. You may pour your heart’s
+blood out,”—he had a fine gift of rhetoric—“and still achieve nothing.
+Think of your great-grandfather. Fate favors those whom she chooses.
+Blessed is he who expects nothing, for he shall not be disappointed.”
+
+Or, “Peter, if life has any favors for you, she’ll give them to you
+without your asking for them. The world owes you a living, let it come
+to you, don’t bother going after it.”
+
+How completely his son might be absorbing all this, Meriwether never
+knew, for Peter, vocal enough with his playmates and others, maintained
+an owlish silence when his father thus harangued him.
+
+But his aunt knew. She was a tall, stout, yellow woman, with that
+ineffable look of sadness in her eyes characteristic of a certain type
+of colored people. She was the sister of Peter’s mother, and when
+Peter’s father died, suddenly, inconsequently, she accepted
+uncomplainingly his son along with her other burdens.
+
+Peter was then twelve; extraordinarily handsome, vivid and alert. Miss
+Susan Graves riding home from the cemetery reflected that he might be
+not such a burden after all. Clearly he would soon want to be taking
+care of himself.
+
+“Peter,” she said thoughtfully, “what do you want to do when you grow
+up?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know,” her nephew replied, temporarily removing his gaze
+from the window-pane where it had been glued for twenty minutes. “I’m
+not bothered about that, Aunt Susan. You see the world owes me a
+living.”
+
+She noticed in him then the first fruits of his father’s shiftlessness.
+But far more deeply rooted than that was his deep dislike for white
+people. He did not believe that any of them were kind or just or even
+human. And although he could not himself have told what he wanted from
+the white Byes, if indeed he wanted anything, he grew up with the
+feeling that he and his had been unusually badly treated. His
+grandfather’s connection with white people resulted in pride, his
+father’s in shiftlessness; in Peter it took the form of a constant and
+increasing bitterness.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V
+
+
+IT may seem a cold-blooded thing to say, but the dying of Meriwether Bye
+was about the best thing he could have done for his son, Peter.
+Certainly that was what Miss Susan Graves thought as she viewed rather
+grimly the small and motley collection of belongings which Peter
+transferred to her home in his little express wagon from his father’s
+former landlady, Mrs. Reading. The collection consisted of a well-worn
+extra suit of clothes, another pair of shoes, some underwear in sad need
+of patching, some books chiefly on physiology and anatomy, the Bye
+Family Bible, a little old black testament, and a box of letters. There
+was also a big railroad map which Peter lugged along under his arm and
+from which he stubbornly refused to be parted. Meriwether, in his
+brighter moods, used to refer to his “runs” as “business-trips” and
+would point out to Peter just where he would go on such and such a date.
+The boy learned a lot of geography in this way, and was talking to his
+playmates about Duluth and Jacksonville, Sacramento and Denver, before
+most of them knew that they personally were living in the country’s
+metropolis.
+
+The books on medicine and anatomy had been well thumbed by Peter, too.
+Meriwether had received them from old Isaiah, his father, and had
+carried them around on his runs to impress his co-workers in the Pullman
+service.
+
+Later he got into the habit of reading from them to Peter who always
+listened in the grave silence which he usually reserved for his father’s
+effusions. For some reason the little boy’s brain retained the various
+and amazing things which his father read to him from the dry old books.
+Long before he knew his multiplication tables he knew the names of the
+principal bones of the body and the course of the food. In fact these
+books were his first readers, for Meriwether, more interested in this
+dry stuff, now that it was too late to profit him anything, taught his
+boy how to pronounce the difficult names, so that the latter could read
+to him. Perhaps the poor fellow, dissolute and weak failure though he
+was, thought that some of the old “greatness” might still accrue to him
+by this fiction of studying at medicine.
+
+The Bible was the one thing that Peter knew least about. He looked into
+it once or twice and hitting on Isaiah Bye’s tragically proud
+inscription: “By _his_ fruits ye shall know—_me_,” spelled it out
+laboriously,—he always had trouble in reading script,—and asked his
+father with some natural perplexity what it meant. But Meriwether
+snatched the book away from him with such a black look and took such
+pains to put it out of his reach, that Peter for a long time thought the
+Bible, or at any rate that inscription, must be something decidedly off
+color. He waited until his father had gone on his next “business-trip”
+before investigating again, but finding the book nowhere as exciting as
+his beloved Anatomy, he gave up the puzzle and attributed his father’s
+defection to the inscrutable whims and vagaries of the genus called
+parents. He valued that old Bible the least of all his possessions. That
+was the bitterest day of his life when he found out what it ought to
+mean to him.
+
+Miss Susan, though not an “old Philadelphian” herself, knew something of
+colored Philadelphia’s pride in the possession of family and tradition.
+She would have been glad of course if Meriwether Bye had left Peter some
+money. But of the two she would very much rather have had the Bible with
+its absolute assurance of the former standing and respectability of the
+black Byes. She had a family tradition of her own, for she was a member
+of the Graves family of Gravestown, New Jersey, a clan well known to
+colored people not only in that vicinity, but also throughout
+Pennsylvania.
+
+The story is that two white sisters in the middle of the eighteenth
+century fell in love with two of their father’s black slaves. The
+Negroes may have been African Princes for all any one knows to the
+contrary. Since nothing they could do or say would win their father’s
+consent to such a union, the girls ran away with their lovers, and
+married them, with or without benefit of clergy it is impossible to
+relate. Nature and God alike, instead of being disconcerted at this
+utter contravention of the laws of man, presented each couple with
+numerous children. When these reached mating age, finding themselves out
+of favor with both black and white of their community, the cousins
+solved the problem by marrying each other. The children of each
+generation did the same, whether driven to it by like necessity or not,
+history does not say. But by the time the next brood appeared a
+precedent had been established, and Graves married Graves not only as a
+matter of course, but as a matter of pride. They were able to do this,
+being automatically rendered free by the fact that a white woman had
+married a black man.
+
+Miss Susan Graves had not married for the simple and sufficient reason
+that in her day there were not enough male Graves to go around. She
+would as soon have thought of marrying outside her family as a Spanish
+grandee would have thought of marrying an English cockney. In those days
+the position of old maid had its decided disadvantages—few people if any
+gave her the benefit of the doubt that she might have remained single
+from choice. Yet Miss Susan Graves, in spite of three other offers,
+soared on family pride above all this and made her career that of
+housekeeper for the family of a wealthy merchant on Girard Avenue, in
+Philadelphia. (You must marry a Graves, but obviously you obtained work
+where you could find it.)
+
+There was a younger sister, Alice Graves, not as direct in purpose as
+Susan, yet in some respects curiously strong. She had always considered
+the Graves’ tradition silly: it was so unexciting marrying someone whom
+you had known and seen all your life. What was marriage for if not for a
+change?
+
+When the oldest son of Merchant Sharples of Girard Avenue married and
+went to New York, Susan Graves went along as housekeeper. And thither
+Alice Graves followed shortly to do sewing for that intricate but
+orderly household. Meriwether Bye, who had known both ladies in
+Philadelphia—for Miss Susan Bye was a frequent visitor both at his
+father’s and his Uncle Peter’s house—came to see them in his rare fits
+of loneliness, and between runs courted Alice Graves in Central Park. Of
+course it would have been better if Alice could have married a Graves,
+but Susan resigned herself easily to the matter—for Bye belonged to old
+stock and must, she thought, make good eventually. But she developed a
+strong dislike for him before his death, and took Peter not only for his
+mother’s sake but also to dispel if possible his father’s doubtless
+harmful influence.
+
+Peter was a surprise to his aunt. She found him kind but thoughtless,
+industrious on occasions but unspeakably shiftless, not too proud, not
+very grateful and with no sense of responsibility. His father of course
+spoke there. Yet the boy was indubitably charming, never complained, and
+usually did as he was told. Miss Susan found herself between two
+minds—she had an impulse to work her fingers to the bone and thus spare
+Alice’s beautiful son the tussle with poverty which he must know, and
+again a desire to speak and act forcibly and drive him into an
+acknowledgment of what her loyalty to her sister was leading her to do
+for a homeless, friendless lad. Actually she struck a medium, made him
+keep clean, insisted on his regular attendance at school, took him to
+Sunday-School and Church entertainments and induced him to work on
+Saturdays and holidays by refusing pocket-money to “a boy as big as
+you.”
+
+She could not understand why he chose a job in a butcher’s shop.
+Doubtless Peter hardly knew himself. “I like to watch the man saw the
+bones,” he would have said vaguely. “I can do it, too. I can cut up a
+chicken or a rabbit just as neatly!”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI
+
+
+IT was Joanna who first acquainted Peter with himself. But neither of
+the children knew this at the time. And although Peter came to realize
+it later it was many years before he told her so. For, though he went
+through many changes and though these two came to speak of many things,
+he kept a certain inarticulateness all his lifetime.
+
+Joanna and all the older Marshalls went to a school in West Fifty-second
+Street, one after another like little steps, with Joanna at first quite
+some distance behind. They were known throughout the school. “Those
+Marshall children, you know those colored children that always dress so
+well and as though they had someone to take care of them. Pretty nice
+looking children, too, if only they weren’t colored. Their father is a
+caterer, has that place over there on Fifty-ninth Street. Makes a lot of
+money for a colored man.”
+
+Peter, unlike Joanna, had gone to school, one might almost say, all over
+New York, and nowhere for any great length of time. Meriwether had
+stayed longest at Mrs. Reading’s but as, in later years, he more and
+more went off on his runs without paying his bills, Mrs. Reading
+frequently refused to let Peter leave the house until his father’s
+return.
+
+“For all I know he may be joinin’ his father on the outside and the two
+of them go off together. Then where’d I be? For them few rags that Mr.
+Bye keeps in his room wouldn’t be no good to nobody.”
+
+This enforced truancy was the least of Peter’s troubles. He did not like
+school,—too many white people and consequently, as he saw it, too much
+chance for petty injustice. The result of this was that Peter at twelve,
+possessed it is true of a large assortment of really useful facts,
+lacked the fine precision, if the doubtful usefulness, of Joanna’s
+knowledge at ten. When Miss Susan settled in the Marshalls’ neighborhood
+and brought Peter to the school in Fifty-second Street he was found to
+be lacking and yet curiously in advance. “We’ll try him,” said the
+principal doubtfully, “in the fifth grade. I’ll take him to Miss
+Shanley’s room.”
+
+Miss Shanley was Joanna’s teacher. She greeted Peter without enthusiasm,
+not because he was colored but because he was clearly a problem. Joanna
+spied him immediately. He was too handsome with his brown-red skin, his
+black silky hair that curled alluringly, his dark, almost almond-shaped
+eyes, to escape her notice. But she forgot about him, too, almost
+immediately, for the first time Miss Shanley called on him he failed
+rather ignominiously. Joanna did not like stupid people and thereafter
+to her he simply was not.
+
+On the contrary, Joanna had caught and retained Peter’s attention. She
+was the only other colored person in the room and therefore to him the
+only one worth considering. And though at that time Joanna was still
+rather plain, she already had an air. Everything about her was of an
+exquisite perfection. Her hair was brushed till it shone, her skin
+glowed not only with health but obviously with cleanliness, her shoes
+were brown and shiny, with perfectly level heels. She wore that first
+week a very fine soft sage-green middy suit with a wide buff tie. The
+nails which finished off the rather square-tipped fingers of her small
+square hands, were even and rounded and shining. Peter had seen little
+girls with this perfection and assurance on Chestnut Street in
+Philadelphia and on Fifth Avenue in New York, but they had been white.
+He had not yet envisaged this sort of thing for his own. Perhaps he
+inherited his great-grandfather Joshua’s spiritless acceptance of things
+as they are, and his belief that differences between people were not
+made, but had to be.
+
+Joanna clearly stood for something in the class. Peter noted a little
+enviously the quality of the tone in which Miss Shanley addressed her.
+To other children she said, “Gertrude, can you tell me about the
+Articles of Confederation?” Usually she implied a doubt, which Gertrude
+usually justified. But she was sure of Joanna. The tenseness of her
+attitude might be seen to relax; her mentality prepared momentarily for
+a rest. “Joanna will now tell us,—” she would announce. For Joanna,
+having a purpose and having been drilled by Joel to the effect that
+final perfection is built on small intermediate perfections, got her
+lessons completely and in detail every day.
+
+It was at this time and for many years thereafter characteristic of
+Peter that he, too, wanted to shine, but did not realize that one shone
+only as a result of much mental polishing personally applied. Joanna’s
+assurance, her air of purposefulness, her indifference intrigued him and
+piqued him. He sidled across to the blackboard nearest her—if they were
+both sent to the board—cleaned hers off if she gave him a chance,
+managed to speak a word to her now and then. He even contrived to wait
+for her one day at the Girls’ entrance. Joanna threw him a glance of
+recognition, swept by, returned.
+
+His heart jumped within him.
+
+“If you see my sister Sylvia,—you know her?—tell her not to wait for me.
+I have to go early to my music-lesson. She’ll be right out.”
+
+Sylvia didn’t appear for half an hour and Peter should have been at the
+butcher’s, but he waited. Sylvia and Maggie Ellersley came out laughing
+and glowing. Peter gave the message.
+
+“Thanks,” said Sylvia prettily. Maggie stared after him. She was still
+the least bit bold in those days.
+
+“Ain’t he the best looker you ever saw, Sylvia? Such eyes! Who is he,
+anyway? Not ever Joanna’s beau?”
+
+“Imagine old Joanna with a beau.” Sylvia laughed. “He’s just a new boy
+in her class. He _is_ good looking.”
+
+Some important examinations were to take place shortly and Miss Shanley
+planned extensive reviews. She was a thorough if somewhat unimaginative
+teacher and she meant to have no loose threads. So she devoted two days
+to geography, two more to grammar, another to history, one to the rather
+puzzling consideration of that mysterious study, physiology. Perhaps by
+now the class was a bit fed up with cramming, perhaps the children
+weren’t really interested in physiological processes. Joanna wasn’t, but
+she always got lessons like these doggedly, thinking “Soon we’ll be past
+all this,” or “I’m going to forget this old stuff as soon as I grow up.”
+Poor Miss Shanley was in despair. She could not call on Joanna for
+everything. Pupil after pupil had failed. Her eye roved over the room
+and fell on Peter’s black head.
+
+She sighed. He had not even been a member of the class when she had
+taught this particular physiological phenomenon. “Can’t anyone besides
+Joanna Marshall give me the ‘Course of the Food?’”
+
+Peter raised his hand. “He looks intelligent,” she thought. “Well, Bye
+you may try it.”
+
+“I don’t think I can give it to you the way the others say it,”—the
+children had been reciting by rote, “but I know what happens to the
+food.”
+
+She knew he would fail if he didn’t know it her way, but she let him
+begin.
+
+This was old ground for Peter. “Look, I can draw it. See, you take the
+food in your mouth,” he drew a rough sketch of lips, mouth cavity and
+gullet, “then you must chew it, masticate, I think you said.” He went on
+varying from his own simplified interpretation of Meriwether Bye’s early
+instructions, past difficult names like pancreatic juice and thoracic
+duct, and while he talked he drew, recalling pictures from those old
+anatomies; expounding, flourishing. Miss Shanley stared at him in
+amazement. This jewel, this undiscovered diamond!
+
+“How’d you come to know it, Peter?”
+
+“I read it, I studied it.” He did not say when. “But it’s so easy to
+learn things about the body. It’s yourself.”
+
+She quizzed him then while the other children, Joanna among them, stared
+open-eyed. But he knew all the simple ground which she had already
+covered, and much, much beyond.
+
+“If all the children,” said Miss Shanley, forgetting Peter’s past,
+“would just get their lessons like Peter Bye and Joanna Marshall.”
+
+She had coupled their names together! And after school Joanna was
+waiting for him. He walked up the street with her, pleasantly conscious
+of her interest, her frank admiration.
+
+“How wonderful,” she breathed, “that you should know your physiology
+like that. What are you going to be when you grow up, a doctor?”
+
+“A surgeon,” said Peter forgetting his old formula and expressing a
+resolve which her question had engendered in him just that second. He
+saw himself on the instant, a tall distinguished-looking man, wielding
+scissors and knife with deft nervous fingers. Joanna would be hovering
+somewhere—he was not sure how—in the offing. And she would be looking at
+him with this same admiration.
+
+“My, won’t you have to study?” Joanna could have told an aspirant almost
+to the day and measure the amount of time and effort it would take him
+to become a surgeon, a dentist, a lawyer, an engineer. All these things
+Joel discussed about his table with the intense seriousness which
+colored men feel when they speak of their children’s futures. Alexander
+and Philip were to have their choice of any calling within reason. They
+were seventeen and fifteen now and the house swarmed with college
+catalogues. Schools, terms, degrees of prejudice, fields of
+practice,—Joanna knew them all.
+
+“Yes,” said Peter, “I suppose I will have to study. How did you come to
+know so much—did your father tell you?”
+
+“Why, I get it out of books, of course.” Joanna was highly indignant: “I
+never go to bed without getting my lessons. In fact, all I do is to get
+lessons of some kind—school lessons or music. You know I’m to be a great
+singer.”
+
+“No, I didn’t know that. Perhaps you’ll sing in your choir?”
+
+Then Joanna astonished him. “In my choir—I sing there already! No!
+Everywhere, anywhere, Carnegie Hall and in Boston and London. You see,
+I’m to be famous.”
+
+“But,” Peter objected, “colored people don’t get any chance at that kind
+of thing.”
+
+“Colored people,” Joanna quoted from her extensive reading, “can do
+everything that anybody else can do. They’ve already done it. Some one
+colored person somewhere in the world does as good a job as anyone
+else,—perhaps a better one. They’ve been kings and queens and poets and
+teachers and doctors and everything. I’m going to be the one colored
+person who sings best in these days, and I never, never, never mean to
+let color interfere with anything I _really_ want to do.”
+
+“I dance, too,” she interrupted herself, “and I’ll probably do that
+besides. Not ordinary dancing, you know, but queer beautiful things that
+are different from what we see around here; perhaps I’ll make them up
+myself. You’ll see! They’ll have on the bill-board, ‘Joanna Marshall,
+the famous artist,’—” She was almost dancing along the sidewalk now, her
+eyes and cheeks glowing.
+
+Peter looked at her wistfully. His practical experience and the memory
+of his father inclined him to dubiousness. But her superb assurance
+carried away all his doubts.
+
+“I don’t suppose you’ll ever think of just ordinary people like me?”
+
+“But you’ll be famous, too—you’ll be a wonderful doctor. Do be. I can’t
+stand stupid, common people.”
+
+“You’ll always be able to stand me,” said Peter with a fervor which made
+his statement a vow.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII
+
+
+SYLVIA and Joanna, walking through Sixty-third Street on an errand for
+their mother, came upon groups of children playing games. Italians,
+Jews, colored Americans, white Americans were there disporting
+themselves with more or less abandon, according to their peculiar
+temperament.
+
+“Look,” said Joanna suddenly, catching at Sylvia’s hand. “See those
+children dancing! Wait, I’ve got to see that!”
+
+Out in the middle of the street a band of colored children were dancing
+and acting a game. With no thought of spectators they joined hands, took
+a few steps, separated, spun around, smote hands sharply, and then flung
+them above their heads. One girl stood in the middle, singing too, but
+with an attentive air. Presently she darted forward, seized a member of
+the ring:
+
+ “Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?”
+
+Their voices were treble and sweet, though shrill, and rang with a
+peculiar, piercing quality above the street noises and the sounds of the
+other children’s games. The little players were absorbed, enraptured
+with the spirit of the dance and the abandon of the music. Joanna, too,
+was in a transport. She watched them going through the motions several
+times. Presently she caught all the words:
+
+ “Sissy in the barn, join in the weddin’,
+ Sissy in the barn, join in the weddin’”
+
+The child in the center here chose a partner. The others sang:
+
+ “Sweetest l’il couple I ever did see.
+ Barn! Barn!
+
+They stamped here.
+
+ “Arms all ’round me!
+ Barn!
+
+The two children in the center embraced each other while the rest sang:
+
+ “Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?”
+
+Then the two in the center pointed fingers at each other, shrilling:
+
+ “Stay back, girl, don’t you come near me
+ All them sassy words you say!
+
+Then all:
+
+ “Oh, Barn! Barn!
+ Arms all ’round me!
+ Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?
+ Marry me?”
+
+The last line came as a faint echo.
+
+Joanna rushed forward: “I can play it! Girls let me play it, too!”
+
+The children stared at her a moment, then, with the instinct of
+childhood for a kindred spirit, two of them unclasped hands and took
+Joanna in. She outdid them all in the fervor and grace of her acting.
+Two white settlement workers stopped and looked at her.
+
+“Come on, Joanna,” Sylvia called impatiently.
+
+Joanna came running, a string of the children after her. She bade them
+good-by. “I must go now, but I’m coming back sometime soon, to learn
+some more.” She blew them a kiss, “good-by, oh, good-by!”
+
+She came up to Sylvia flushed and excited. “We’ll play it home, Sylvia!
+Wasn’t it lovely and dear? Oh, I could dance like that forever!” She
+went almost all the entire remaining distance on tip-toe.
+
+Life in Joel Marshall’s house was not always a serious discussion of the
+Marshall children’s future. Like many of the better class of colored
+people, the Marshalls did not meet with the grosser forms of color
+prejudice, because they kept away from the places where it might be
+shown. This was bad from the standpoint of development of civic pride
+and interest. But it had its good results along another line. The
+children took most of their pleasures in their house or in those of
+their friends and devoted their wits and young originality to indoor
+pastimes.
+
+The Marshall house was a great center for this kind of thing, and
+already Friday and Saturday nights were being regularly set apart for
+the children’s amusement and for the reception and entertainment of the
+various young people who dropped in.
+
+Joanna taught her dance. Sylvia and Philip and Alexander were willing
+pupils; Joanna was magnetic when in this kind of mood. By the time Harry
+Portor and Maggie Ellersley arrived, they were all singing and stamping
+and twirling. Peter came in late, held up by the butcher. “Had to go on
+an errand for the grand white folks,” he explained briefly.
+
+“You’ll wear out my carpet to-night for sure,” said Mrs. Marshall, but
+she loved the dancing as much as any of them, and got up and took a
+turn. Joanna taught the tune to Peter, who had a good ear, and he ran
+over to the old-fashioned square piano and rattled it off to a wild
+thumping accompaniment. When Brian Spencer came in, who even in those
+days was pretty sure to be where Sylvia was—the fun was at its height.
+Peter, strumming a haunting, atavistic measure; Joanna, dancing like a
+faun, instructed Maggie Ellersley.
+
+“Now, Maggie, dance up to one of them. All right, take Philip. You point
+your finger at him,—no both of you. Yes, you’re right, Peter. I forgot
+that. See, Phil, Peter’s learned it already. Here I’ll do it by myself;
+all of you stand back.”
+
+She went through an elaborate pantomime, stretching out her hands as
+though clasping a partner on each side. She described an imaginary
+circle for the ring and ran into the midst of it. An imaginary partner
+was before her and she drew him in, pointed a slim, brown finger at him,
+rested both hands on her young hips, pirouetted, sang to him gayly:
+
+“Stand back, boy, don’t you come near me!”
+
+“My,” laughed Brian Spencer, clapping loudly. “Can’t you see it all just
+as plainly? Really, Jan, you ought to go on the stage as an
+impersonator, I don’t believe you could be beat.” He was a tall dark boy
+with fine proud features that looked chiseled. He and Alexander were
+home from college for the Easter vacation.
+
+Maggie Ellersley, as it happened, had been at a matinée the week before.
+“It was vaudeville, Joanna, and there was an actress there who took off
+different people and then she did some Irish folk dances, but she
+couldn’t hold a candle to you. Too bad we’re colored.”
+
+“It’s not going to make any difference to me,” said Joanna determinedly.
+“Mother and father are willing. If I want to go on the stage I’ll get
+there.”
+
+“Joanna has the faith that moves mountains,” laughed Peter. “If anybody
+can make it she can.”
+
+Peter was a regular visitor at the Marshall home now. Ever since that
+day four years before when he had told Joanna of his new-born
+determination to be a surgeon, he had spent all his spare time near her.
+Miss Susan Graves did not like this at first, not that she resented
+Peter’s absence from her so much, but he was a Bye and she did not
+choose to have him associate too much with people whom she did not know.
+It was no part of her plan for Peter to retrograde into the wreck which
+Meriwether had become. She made it her business to meet Mrs. Marshall at
+a church affair.
+
+“I think,” said Miss Graves, eyeing Joanna’s mother with her clear,
+square gaze, “that my boy has spoken to me of you.”
+
+Mrs. Marshall looked puzzled. She thought this was a _Miss_ Graves.
+
+“Peter Bye,” his aunt continued, “he’s my nephew. He often speaks of
+Joanna Marshall.”
+
+“Oh, Peter! Yes, we like to have him at the house. The girls find him
+great fun. So you’re his aunt. You must come to see us, too. Get him to
+bring you.”
+
+Miss Graves came and was impressed enough to let Peter continue, though
+he would have continued without her permission. But Miss Susan, like
+Belle Bye nearly a century ago, recognized atmosphere when she saw it.
+She was poor; Peter was penniless. These were the sort of people her
+nephew ought to know. She liked Joel’s success, his pride, his air of
+being somebody. She estimated rightly the correctness of the
+old-fashioned walnut furniture, the heavy curtains, the kidney table in
+the parlor, the massive silver service and good linen. It is true Sylvia
+changed much of this—except the silver—for cretonnes and wicker chairs
+and gay rugs. But as Miss Susan went to the house only a few times she
+did not know of this.
+
+What she especially liked was the spirit of life, of ambition and
+hopefulness that pulsed in that household. As Miss Graves grew older,
+she began to see that her younger sister had had some pretty good views
+after all, that it did not do to stick to settled views,—“this for me,
+and that quite other thing for you.” The great things of life were for
+the taking, it was true, but the result of deliberate planning. One did
+not simply stumble into success. She had lived too long with “the best
+white people” not to find that out.
+
+Joel knew this, too, she realized. His whole life was devoted to the
+mapping out of his children’s future. His own and Joanna’s high
+enthusiasms had borne fruit. Of late the boys, Philip and Alexander, had
+talked good solid man-talk.
+
+“Colored people will be going big pretty soon. We’ll have to get in it,
+too, Pa.”
+
+Miss Susan decided this was a good place for Peter. Even if she had the
+money to do so, she could not send him to a school where he would meet
+with more inspiration in both precept and actual concrete example.
+Already in the lesser things this association was bearing fruit. Peter
+was too handsome, too graceful, too charming ever to be considered a
+boor. But he had lacked finish, that fine courtliness of manner which
+Miss Susan noted could convert a man of most ordinary appearance into a
+prince. She had marked it among Jacob Sharples’ grandsons. Peter had not
+possessed a knowledge of that delicacy, of that attention to trifles
+which, once gained by a man, gives him passport everywhere. Miss Susan
+had noticed, to her regret, the boy’s tendency to let her carry bundles,
+to look after even the heavier household duties. It had never occurred
+to him if the weather were cold or stormy, to offer to go errands for
+her. And his aunt, practical though she was, shrank from calling his
+attention to these things. She did not want him to think of her as
+exacting a return for her kindness.
+
+Now the Marshall boys were fine gentlemen. Joel had made them so by
+teaching, as well as by his attitude toward their mother and sisters.
+Joanna and Sylvia, particularly Sylvia, helped the boys out with an
+occasional stitch, an occasional sewing on of a button. When Alexander
+was getting ready for college, and was working at nights to help with
+his expenses, Sylvia used to arrange sandwiches and milk for him when he
+came in late. And Joanna had recopied his chemistry and history notes.
+These were only kind trivialities, but the boys treated their sisters
+like queens. Philip was a little like Sylvia, only neither as handsome
+nor as lithe and quick. Alexander—Alec, Sandy, the girls called him
+variously—was slower, like Joanna. Both boys were tall and well set-up.
+The girls used to thrill a little—sisters to them though they were—over
+the very real and thoughtful gallantry of these two young men.
+
+Miss Susan had remarked this quality as soon as she met them. And she
+was beginning now to see its reflection in Peter. And as he had beauty
+and great personal charm to go with it, it distinguished him even more
+than the Marshall boys. She half way suspected a conscious assumption of
+this on his part.
+
+“But if he keeps it up, it will become part of him,” she thought to
+herself, “and then—girls be careful.” She would have been a little
+fearful for Joanna had she not noticed immediately in the young girl
+that indomitable desire for distinction. “Joanna will never fall in love
+with anybody,” she said once to a common friend of herself and the
+Marshalls. “She’ll never be able to take her mind off long enough from
+her high falutin dreams.”
+
+Of course Peter had no conception why his aunt liked him to visit the
+Marshalls. He was only too glad that she didn’t disapprove. He was
+seventeen now and beginning to know himself in some ways pretty well. He
+liked Sandy and Philip and Sylvia Marshall—liked them very well, and
+Joanna! It could hardly be said that he loved her at this time. But he
+knew that what he liked best of all in the world was to be near her, to
+watch her, and to listen to her plans. She had little shadowy gleams in
+her dark thick hair, glints of light that ended abruptly in wavy
+blackness. He would like to touch it. He remembered that he had once
+pulled her hair. He had done it often! But now, though she was only
+fifteen, he did not dare. Yet he often touched Sylvia’s.
+
+The night that Joanna taught them all the barn dance, Peter maneuvered
+until he got Harry Portor at the piano, and said:
+
+“How does that part go, Joanna? Here I am in the center. Then I take you
+in. Then——”
+
+“Put your arms around her,” said Sylvia. “That’s it. Now,——
+
+ Barn! Barn!”
+
+He went home and fairly babbled to his aunt about it. “Joanna is the
+most wonderful!”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+IF Peter was unconscious of the utter desirability of association with
+the young Marshalls, Maggie Ellersley was not. Ever since her childhood
+when she had overheard a conversation between a cousin and her mother,
+she had made up her mind to attach herself to some such family and see
+what came of it.
+
+The cousin and her mother worked together for some wealthy white people.
+Maggie’s mother was a laundress, a spare hard-working woman to whom life
+had meant nothing but poverty and confusion. On Thursdays and Fridays of
+each week she washed and ironed and gossiped with “my cousin Mis’
+Sparrow” who was cook at the house on Madison Avenue. Maggie used to
+come there for dinner and go home with her mother.
+
+“Mis’ Sparrow,” small and spidery, had a perpetual complaint against the
+world. In particular she experienced envy toward those who were better
+off than herself. Her jaundiced disposition may be excused, however,
+when one reflects that hers was a lot which had been hard ever since she
+could remember. She was poor, she was weak, she was ignorant. Add to
+that the fact that she was black in a country where color is a crime and
+you have her “complex.” Some people would say she had really done well
+in one sense with her life. She had attained by her own unaided efforts
+to a comfortable, even if menial, position, where she had heat, light
+and enough to eat. They would ask: Considering her beginnings what more
+could she want? Alas, in that dull soul unknown aspirations stirred,
+amazing questions took form. “Why, why, why?” asked Mis’ Sparrow in her
+own peculiar dialect, “are all the sweetness and light of life showered
+on some and utterly denied to me?”
+
+At present Mis’ Sparrow had fastened a resentful eye on Mrs. Proctor,
+the bride of the son of the “white folks” for whom she worked. Edmonia
+the maid had told her about the newcomer, and over the supper table she
+retailed it to Mrs. Ellersley.
+
+“She wan’t nobuddy. Jes’ a little teeny slip of ole white gal. No money,
+no fambly, no nuthin’.”
+
+“Where’d he meet her then?” asked Mrs. Ellersley, uninterested but
+polite.
+
+“Young Mr. Proctor’s sister met her in boardin’-school, poorest thing
+there,” replied Mis’ Sparrow, wiping a puckered mouth with her apron.
+“’Monia says Miss Dorothy sorry for her and got her a job in her
+father’s office. Mr. Harry was jes’ home f’um college; he saw her, took
+a fancy to her and jes’ married her. Jes’ wouldn’t listen to nobuddy
+a-tall.”
+
+“Don’t it beat all,” pondered Mrs. Ellersley, “how some people have all
+the luck? Now if that kind of thing could just happen to my Maggie.”
+
+Mis’ Sparrow was unmoved by the irrelevant allusion to Maggie. Where
+would she get such a chance?
+
+“’Monia says she don’t even love him. Liked some young travelin’
+salesman she’d known all her life. ’Monia declares she cries about him
+when she’s by herself.”
+
+“What she marry him for then?” asked Maggie Ellersley, aged twelve, and
+an interested listener.
+
+“H’m child, wouldn’t you do anything to get away f’um hard work, an’
+ugly cloes an’ bills? Some w’ite folks has it most as bad as us poor
+colored people. On’y thing is they has more opporchunities.”
+
+Maggie, visualizing the life which she and her mother endured, thought
+she probably would. She thought it again after they had reached the
+tenement in Thirty-fifth Street where the two of them lived. It was the
+famous “Tenderloin” of those days and Maggie’s spirit revolted with a
+revulsion of feeling which never ceased to amaze her mother against the
+sordidness of that place. There were three rooms. The front one looked
+on the street and so was well lighted, but the other two got light only
+from the air-shaft. Mrs. Ellersley, a widow who considered herself
+fortunate to be one, rented the front room out, usually to train-men
+(perhaps some of Meriwether’s acquaintances were among them),
+occasionally to a married couple.
+
+She and Maggie slept and lived in the two wretchedly ventilated rooms,
+in a perpetual gloom penetrated ever so slightly by a flickering blue
+flame. A confusion of clothes, obscene old furniture, boxes, stale
+newspapers was littered about them. For some reason the rooms were
+everlastingly damp, perhaps because, although rain could get down the
+air-shaft, the sunlight never could. The rooms gave Maggie a constantly
+eerie feeling, which in later more fortunate years she was always able
+to recall by the sight of a gas-flame burning low and blue.
+
+They never, in those days, enjoyed a really bright flame. Saving was
+Mrs. Ellersley’s insistent because necessary fetish. Maggie’s tea was
+always weak, and never sweet enough. The bread—baker’s with holes in it,
+yesterday’s, two loaves for five cents—was always stale; the meat
+usually salt and sometimes tainted.
+
+Out of it all Maggie bloomed—a strange word but somehow true. She was
+like a yellow calla lily in the deep cream of her skin, the slim
+straightness of her body. She had a mass of fine, wiry hair which hung
+like a cloud, a mist over two gray eyes. Her lips, in spite of her
+constant malnutrition, persisted unbelievably red. When she met
+excitement those gray eyes darkened and shone, her cheeks flushed a
+little, her small hands fluttered. And she was nearly always excited.
+Something within her frail bosom pulsed in a constant revolt against the
+spirit of things that kept her in these conditions.
+
+“I will not always live like this, Ma—I’ll get out of it some way.”
+
+And her mother, though always scoffing, believed her with a dreary
+hopefulness. “If there’s a way to be found out, Maggie’ll find it.”
+
+Maggie found early that one avenue of escape lay through men. They were
+stronger than women, they made money. They did not give the impression
+of shrinking from spending the last penny lest when that cent was gone
+there should be no more. All the train-men liked her. She could not get
+much order in that abominable home, but she could and did keep herself
+clean and neat. She washed her few garments over night; she wound a
+stray ribbon, from a box of cigars or a box of candy, through her hair.
+Some of the men, young students, “on the road” during their summer
+vacations, used to flirt with her.
+
+“Hurry and grow up, Mag. When I get through school I’ll come back and
+marry you. How’d you like to live in a little house—not like this!—in
+Washington?” Or Wilmington or Savannah as the case might be. “I’d give
+you pretty dresses.”
+
+Poor Maggie. Her calla-lily charm visibly lessened in those days when
+she opened her pretty mouth. She disclosed herself then for what she
+was, a true daughter of the Tenderloin.
+
+“Aw quit your kiddin!”
+
+But she came slowly to realize that here was a way out. If she could
+only grow up—if she were—say—seventeen.
+
+She was persistently frail, else her mother might have put her to work.
+As it was she was sent to school very regularly—to save fuel and gas.
+Evenings she went to the houses where her mother worked and got her
+dinner.
+
+On the night after she had listened to Mis’ Sparrow’s comments about
+young Mrs. Proctor, she sat thoughtful a long time. She had sense enough
+to know that very often these train-men stayed poor. They made pretty
+good money—they did, too, in those days—but not enough to save their
+wives from labor. Maggie did not want to wash and iron, to go through
+the dreary existence which had been her mother’s when her father was
+living; he had run on the road.
+
+Suppose, just suppose, there were some colored men who were fortunate,
+successful, who had enough to eat, who could give their wives help. Her
+mother knew of ministers like that. There were colored doctors and
+lawyers somewhere. Their very titles connoted prosperity.
+
+“Ma,” she spoke out of her brown study, “are there any very rich colored
+men?”
+
+“Not any very rich ones, I don’t think,” Mrs. Ellersley replied
+thoughtfully, “but lots very well off, comfortable, with servants to
+wait on ’em.” She sighed.
+
+“I’m going to meet one,” said Maggie solemnly, and henceforth she
+thought, she dreamed of nothing else.
+
+When she was fourteen young John Howe, who was occupying the front room,
+came down with a spell of typhoid fever. He begged Mrs. Ellersley not to
+send him to the hospital, and it was impossible to get him to his home
+in Oklahoma. He had enough money to see him through, and he put his
+fortunes and his case into her withered hands. All the train-men knew of
+Mrs. Ellersley’s absolute honesty. She did what she could for him, sat
+up long nights, gave him his medicine faithfully, “counted out his
+money.”
+
+But it was Maggie who gave real service. She stayed out of school to
+attend him. The doctor gave her a list of directions which she followed
+with meticulous care. In that shabby house down in that terrible
+district John Howe met with an attention, a devotion from the humble
+woman and her delicate daughter, such as no money could have bought him
+in the seats of the mighty.
+
+John Howe was a Lincoln divinity student, intermittently working his way
+through college. He sat up gaunt and weak in the scratched bed of cheap
+cherry wood and picked with long skeleton fingers at the thin blue and
+white checked coverlet.
+
+“Maggie, you and your mother’ve been mighty good to me. Look here, I’ve
+got to pay you back somehow. After this illness I’ll have to stay out of
+school a year. What do you want?”
+
+Maggie stared at him, her gray eyes going black in the yellow oval of
+her face.
+
+“There’s only one thing I want, Mr. Howe, and you couldn’t give me
+that.”
+
+“I could try. What is it?”
+
+“Oh Mr. Howe, if you could just get us out of this awful place, this
+house, this street! If I could just get to know some decent folks——”
+
+“Well, I don’t see how I could arrange about the folks. Where do you
+want to live, if you go from here? There’re not many places for colored
+folks in New York.”
+
+“There are houses for colored people up in Fifty-third Street, and
+decent folks living in them.”
+
+“But my goodness, Maggie, it costs a fortune to rent one of those
+houses.”
+
+“I know, oh, I know. But if we could just get started. Mother could fill
+the house with roomers. Why there’ve been twelve men here for this room
+since you’ve been sick. The rest of the rooms aren’t much, but mother
+always keeps this room tidy, and we’re honest. They all know that. Never
+missed a penny here, any of them. And they tell their friends about us.
+Lots of times they tell Ma if she only had more room she’d have all the
+roomers she wanted.”
+
+“But you’ve no furniture.”
+
+“We could buy on the instalment plan.” She had her scheme all worked
+out. Clearly she had nursed her project. “Mr. Howe, if you could just
+help us to begin.”
+
+He would, he told her, convinced by her earnestness. “What exactly do
+you want me to do, Maggie?”
+
+She wanted him to make his headquarters with them for the year, and to
+pay as much as he could in advance. It was still early summer. He must
+write and tell other men, who would want rooms, and get a few of them to
+pay in advance, too. “Train-men won’t mind that,” she told him shrewdly,
+“they’ll like to know they have some place to go to when they’ve cleaned
+themselves out at cards, or whatever it is they do. That will pay a
+month’s rent, and leave something, and with what we pay on this—this
+_hole_, we’ll have something to put on the furniture.”
+
+“I guess you’re right,” said Howe, “I’ll speak to your mother about it.”
+
+But that was useless. Mrs. Ellersley was sure of her livelihood, her
+mere existence here, but she was doubtful about a great venture. “Of
+course, for Maggie’s sake I’d like to get away.”
+
+“Oh, Ma, do—do, Ma,” Maggie had pleaded in an ecstasy of longing. “This
+is our one chance. You see if we don’t take this we’ll never get away.”
+
+Fortunately she had Howe to back her. “She’s right, Mrs. Ellersley, and
+this is no place for a young girl to grow up. You can count on me. I’ll
+go look for a house, and see about some furniture. I know plenty of
+fellows would be glad to come.”
+
+Miraculously the scheme worked. It gave Maggie her first insight into
+the workings of life. If you wanted things, you thought and thought
+about them, and when an opportunity offered, there you were with your
+mind made up to jump at it.
+
+Of course they were poor, but at least they were decent. John Howe,
+staying for that year in New York, realizing more and more how truly he
+was indebted to Maggie and her mother, took a proprietary interest. He
+laid the cheap rugs, he set up the cots, three in a room, he did
+mysterious jobs in the bath-room which to Maggie was always so
+marvelous. He bought tools and fixed window-cords which the landlord
+neglected. Maggie darned his socks for him, and he bought some
+wall-paper, cheap but clean and virginal, a soft yellow, and papered her
+square box of a room. A good job he made of it, too. Another roomer at
+his instigation made a dressing table out of a packing box which Mrs.
+Ellersley, re-invigorated, covered with scrim.
+
+Gradually, word of her rooming-house spread among the better class of
+transients. All her lodgers gave her their mending to do, she washed for
+some of them, gave breakfast to a few chosen spirits, and they paid
+willingly and well.
+
+Maggie was in transports. This was something like a home. Of course, she
+had to attend school in the district. Her mother took her as soon as
+matters were settled. She looked fresh and neat in a dark blue serge
+dress trimmed with black braid, the gift of melancholy Mis’ Sparrow who
+in turn had had it from young Mrs. Proctor. The dress was worn, but it
+was whole, and Maggie had tacked a tiny turnover of white lace in the
+high collar.
+
+She was assigned to the eighth grade. There were two of them in the
+school. Her star was in the ascendant, for she was assigned to the one
+of which Sylvia Marshall was a member. She would have fared differently
+if it had been Joanna, for unless she were markedly clever, Joanna, who
+was intellectually a snob, would probably never have seen her. But
+Sylvia spied her at once. She came over to Maggie at recess.
+
+“You’re a new girl, aren’t you? Want me to show you your way around?”
+
+Maggie looked at the pretty girl, charming in a soft dark red cashmere
+dress made with a wide pleated skirt. She had on little patent leather,
+buttoned shoes with cloth tops, and a big red bow perched butterfly
+fashion on her dark head. Joanna wore her hair rather primly back from
+her face, but Sylvia’s was parted and rolled in waves over her ears,
+then it was caught up and confined by the bow. She had a thin gold
+bracelet on one arm. And about her hung the aura of well-being and easy
+self-assurance which marked all the Marshall children.
+
+“I wish you would,” said Maggie.
+
+Sylvia in those days was an ardent worker in Old Zion Sunday School and
+had promised to help in a campaign for more students. She told Maggie
+about it within the next two or three days.
+
+“My mother is going to entertain the new folks whom I get to join. Will
+you join?”
+
+Maggie would and so went to Sylvia’s home as her mother’s guest.
+
+She never forgot that home with its quiet dignity and atmosphere of
+prosperity. The Marshall children were a revelation to her. She had not
+known of colored people like these.
+
+“At last I’m getting to know decent people,” she told her mother.
+
+She had a passion for respectability and decency quite apart from what
+they connoted of comparative ease and comfort, though she coveted these
+latter, too, and meant some day to have them.
+
+“Two months ago,” she thought, “I was still in that horrible house on
+Thirty-fifth Street, and I got away. If that could happen, anything
+could happen.” She lay in her bed at nights in the little yellow room
+and saw visions.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX
+
+
+SHE played her cards with an odd mixture of deliberation and
+spontaneity.
+
+“Maggie adores you, Sylvia,” said Joanna.
+
+“I think she does,” Sylvia replied modestly. “I don’t know why, I’m
+sure. She certainly is nice to me.”
+
+Maggie’s obvious admiration and Sylvia’s naïve acceptance made the way
+easy. It is hard not to be nice to someone who shows plainly that you
+are her ideal, your company her supreme satisfaction. Maggie wore her
+hair like Sylvia’s, she copied when she could her manner of dressing,
+she spent half her time at the Marshall house.
+
+She saw the value of absolute honesty. No need to pose when telling the
+exact truth brought what one wanted without the strain of living up to a
+false position. The Marshalls soon knew of Maggie’s poverty, of the
+quick wit and determination which had brought them from that
+“dump-heap”—Maggie’s word—to the respectable and comfortable if still
+cheap boarding-house. Sylvia used to talk to her mother about it. Mrs.
+Marshall suggested that she hand over to Maggie one or two of her
+perfectly good but discarded dresses.
+
+But Sylvia objected with a very real delicacy. “She goes to the same
+school I go to and to Sunday-School. I wouldn’t want the other children
+to see her in my things, she’d feel so badly.”
+
+Her mother saw the justice of that. “I suppose I have one or two things.
+There’s that old brown Henrietta of mine and the silk poplin. How’ll she
+get them made over though, Sylvia? Now don’t expect me to help.”
+
+“Oh, mamma, you darling! You really are a brick! That poplin is old
+rose, isn’t it? She ought to look lovely in it. I can fix them. You know
+how I love to fix things over and Maggie knows how to sew on the
+machine. If she stayed here three or four days, the rest of this week,
+we could finish them.”
+
+Mrs. Marshall agreed, Maggie’s mother was consulted, Maggie came in an
+ecstasy. Her first sojourn away from home! And what a sojourn! Naturally
+neat though she was, she learned of toilet mysteries, of rites of which
+she had never dreamed. Nightly hair-brushings and the discovery that of
+course each one had her own brush and comb! Frequent washings of both,
+talcum powders! Joanna the ascetic used scentless ones, but Sylvia’s
+were highly fragrant. These Maggie preferred. A bath every night.
+
+“If you don’t mind,” said Sylvia, “I’ll take mine first and then you can
+stay in as long as you like. I hope that pig Joanna hasn’t used up all
+the hot water!”
+
+Delicacies for breakfast, lunch, and dinner! Dinner at six instead of
+the middle of the day! Mrs. Marshall complained of a headache Saturday
+morning and Joanna took her breakfast up to her on a silver tray. Mr.
+Marshall kept box on box of cigars in his den. Sandy and Philip wore
+superlatively blackened shoes.
+
+Maggie looked, listened, stored in her memory. The dresses were a
+success. The rose poplin, being the prettier, was finished first; Sylvia
+had longed so to get her hands on it. Maggie put it on Saturday morning
+and stood in front of the cheval mirror in Mrs. Marshall’s room admiring
+her own and Sylvia’s handiwork, and herself with it.
+
+“It’s too pretty to wear in the house. Oh, don’t let’s have to wait till
+to-morrow. Mamma, couldn’t the boys take us to the matinée? Maggie, have
+you seen Peter Pan?”
+
+Maggie, it transpired, had seen nothing, had never been inside a
+theater.
+
+“What fun!” Sylvia’s native delicacy hit on the right expression. “Fancy
+going to your first matinée. Can you spare us, Mother dear?”
+
+The party could be arranged. Philip and Alexander expressed their
+willingness. Joanna did not care to go, to Maggie’s astonishment, which
+increased when she saw how wonderful the theater was. But there were
+other things. The girl never forgot the thrill that came over her as
+Philip took her arm and led her over dangerous crossings, arranged her
+seat and program for her, took off her coat. He held it during the
+performance and wrinkled it shamelessly. Sylvia scolded him.
+
+“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Phil.”
+
+“It doesn’t matter,” Maggie interposed happily. She was beginning to
+have her good time like other people. Oh, God bless John Howe!
+
+The acquaintanceship progressed. All through the high school the two
+were nearly inseparable. It is true, Maggie sought Sylvia more than
+Sylvia sought her, but on the other hand Maggie’s presence was taken as
+a matter of course by the Marshalls and their friends. Maggie went to
+parties with Sylvia, the two escorted by Brian Spencer and Philip. Often
+she slept at her house after the parties and at Christmas time and
+week-ends. Once, when Mrs. Marshall took Joanna to visit relatives in
+Philadelphia, Maggie stayed with Sylvia a whole month.
+
+In her junior year in the high school she had a long talk with Mr.
+Marshall. Of course they were still poor, the house just kept them in
+comfort. Maggie had become addicted to the wearing of good clothes. Her
+mother was getting older. They needed help from time to time. If Mr.
+Marshall would assist her in getting some work. She was young and strong
+and willing.
+
+“No, no, Mr. Marshall!” she objected as Joel—they were sitting in his
+office—spoke of a loan and reached for his check-book. “Not that! When
+could I ever pay you back? No, I mean work, real work. I could take
+orders, count the silver, look after the napery, pay off the men if
+you’d care to trust me.”
+
+Perhaps a man of another race might have stopped to consider such a
+proposition coming from the lips of a young and dainty girl. He might
+have been suspicious and realized that his younger son was working in
+the business with him just then and the boy and girl would be bound to
+be thrown together. But colored men of old Joel’s type are obsessed with
+the idea of a progressing younger generation. “They must advance,”
+thinks the older man, “I must do all in my power to help them. This is
+my contribution to mine own.”
+
+Joel taught her his simple system of bookkeeping and installed her. She
+proved herself efficient, willing, and—her mother’s teachings spoke
+here—absolutely honest. Her energy and interest were surprising. “You
+might think it was her own business,” said Joel. He had no desire to see
+either her or any of his children become caterers, but he did like to
+see a job well done. Philip was the only one who had evinced any
+interest in the business, and that was only during his last year before
+entering college. He had to make some extra money somehow—both he and
+Sandy had a healthy dislike of burdening their father with their college
+expenses—and since he had to work he preferred to spend his time and
+energy in his father’s interests.
+
+His chief work consisted in directing his father’s various squads of
+waiters. He met them at the house where Joel was catering, started them
+off, checked over necessities, looked after the thousand details which
+lent to Joel’s service the perfection that so justly brought him fame.
+Maggie often accompanied Philip on these trips. Sometimes she went to
+one house and he to another, and he would call for her and take her
+home. She pondered deeply over the possibility of these meetings.
+
+He was usually jolly, unsentimental, almost brotherly. Maggie took care
+to follow his lead. But to her great surprise she was beginning to be
+conscious of a deep affection for him. At first she had only yearned for
+respectability and comfort, and Philip represented such a convenient
+short cut to her heart’s desire. But now things were different.
+
+Sometimes when they came home quite late he would take her arm and the
+two would walk slowly and silently down the strangely quiet streets. A
+curious little sense of intimacy used to brood over them at times like
+these. Philip would laugh a little nervously.
+
+“Awfully jolly being out late like this by ourselves, isn’t it, Maggie?”
+
+She would nod him a smiling yes. “Some day,” she thought, “he must say
+more.”
+
+Her studies, her work and these trips with Philip took up most of her
+time just now. She and Sylvia of course still saw a great deal of each
+other and once in a while went out together. She went to the theater
+still more rarely, or to a church festival with Henderson Neal, one of
+her mother’s boarders. A mysterious tall brown figure of a man, twenty
+years older than Maggie and a thousand years older in experience, he
+caught and not infrequently held her attention. He had lived with them
+two years, paid his bills regularly, asked no questions and vouchsafed
+no explanations.
+
+Maggie wondered what he did. Whatever his occupation, it certainly paid
+him well. More than once she had seen him display without ostentation a
+huge roll of bills, which apparently was static in bulk. His speech was
+often ungrammatical, but so deliberate that one thought he must be
+speaking correctly. He had a rather grand air, and listened to both Mrs.
+Ellersley and her daughter with a somewhat ponderous attention. Maggie
+thought he was rather interesting for such an old man—he must be nearly
+forty! She was a little afraid of him, though, and decided it would be
+rather unpleasant for any one who chanced to make him angry.
+
+Once he met Sylvia and Maggie on the street and offered to take them to
+the matinée. His interest was clearly in Maggie but he politely included
+her friend. Sylvia later told Philip about it.
+
+“I hope you didn’t go,” he replied quickly.
+
+“No, I didn’t, Maggie didn’t, either. But there’s no reason why I
+shouldn’t have. She goes with him sometimes.”
+
+“But that’s different. Maggie’s known different people from any you’ve
+ever known. She can take care of herself.”
+
+“What’s the matter?” Joanna asked, putting her head in the door. “What’s
+old Phil so excited about?”
+
+“You might just as well hear this, too, Jan. I won’t have you and Sylvia
+going about with a man like Henderson Neal. Maggie can go with men that
+my sisters can’t afford to associate with.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X
+
+
+SUNDAY was always an important day in the Marshall household. Its
+importance, it is true, took on a different character as the years sped.
+In the early days Mr. Marshall looked forward to it as the outward and
+visible sign of an inward worth. He was a steward in his church, Old
+Zion, and on Sundays in a long frock coat with a correct collar, a black
+Ascot tie surmounted by a gold horseshoe, he passed the collection box
+from pew to pew. He liked to bend his rather stately iron-gray head in
+recognition of various greetings. He felt he looked the part, as indeed
+he did, of an upright, ambitious, aspiring citizen.
+
+Many a small boy unconsciously stored away a memory of the erect
+wholesome figure as a possible exemplar for future consideration.
+
+His wife found Sunday a rather distracting day. It was eminently
+satisfying, doubtless, to be able to show off such a number of stylish
+costumes. Joel had always been able to have her dress well. There was
+one wine-colored cashmere with a polonaise and bustle which she had
+considered particularly fetching.
+
+“I never put the dress on in the old days,” she said to her girls,
+showing them the truly awe-inspiring picture, “without thinking to
+myself: ‘I certainly am glad I married Joel.’ I always did love fine
+clothes. Sylvia, I think you must have inherited my taste.”
+
+Sylvia groaned. “Oh, no, mamma, I don’t deserve that!”
+
+Clothes, however, had not quite compensated Mrs. Marshall for the
+arduousness otherwise entailed in the observance of the Sabbath. There
+was always company. Joel, a caterer, knew “how it ought to be done.”
+Then there were the four children to dress and get off, and the constant
+oversight of them when they came home to see that they did not break the
+thousand inhibitions which made the day sacred.
+
+“I used to hate it so,” Sandy laughed. “Remember, Phil, how we used to
+try to find those awful sailor collars—I think they’re called Buster
+Browns now—and see if we couldn’t hide them or mark them up before the
+next Sunday? Mother must have had a million of them, for we were never
+able to exhaust her supply.”
+
+“Weren’t you sights!” Sylvia teased. “You were fat, Alec, and your face
+rose large and round over your collar like a full moon. You had two eyes
+set away back from your fat cheeks and you had to bend your head way
+over to look down——”
+
+“And you wore a grayish-brownish-greenery-yallery round straw hat,”
+interposed Joanna.
+
+“Don’t you talk,” Philip jeered at them, “I remember two poke bonnets,
+reddish, with fuzzy stuff sticking up over them.”
+
+“Astrakhan. Yes, I remember,” Sylvia told him. “Weren’t they awful? And
+the deadliness of Sunday afternoon! You boys sitting around knocking
+your feet against the rungs of the chairs. Such glooms!”
+
+“Yes, and you,” said Sandy, assuming a solemn countenance. “Looking
+dejectedly out of the window, your face propped in your hands!”
+
+“Joanna was the only one who got anything out of those Sundays,” Philip
+mused. “I can see her now flat on her tummy reading the life of some
+exemplary female.”
+
+“Notable women of color,” laughed Joanna. “I adored Sunday.”
+
+Certainly no flavor of those past days spoiled the Marshalls’ enjoyment
+in these later years. Rather remarkably the whole family still went to
+church, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall from years of long habit, Sylvia because
+she rather liked to please her mother and because it amused her to have
+Brian Spencer, whom church-going bored to the point of agony, obey her
+wish that he should go. Sandy, now in the real estate business, thought
+it gave him standing in the community.
+
+Philip’s reasons were various. Chiefly he went to church as he went to
+many meetings, because he was interested in seeing groups of colored
+people together. He had a strong desire to sense the social
+consciousness, for he was trying to learn just what stirred mass feeling
+and into what channels it could be directed. A minister of the poorest
+type was an unfailing source of study to him. How would this man sway
+the people? And what would he ask of them once he had them ready to
+listen to his will? Philip always dreamed of a leader who should
+recognize that psychological moment and who would guide a whole race
+forward to the realization of its steadily increasing strength.
+
+He dreamed many dreams sitting crosswise in the far corner of his pew,
+his back partly against the wall, partly against the seat, his lean,
+brown, slightly haggard face bent forward. He had already the somewhat
+remote glance of the thinker, though his firm chin pronounced him no
+less the man of action. Maggie Ellersley, sitting across the church from
+him, watching him a little covertly under her drooping hat brim, used to
+think he looked like a man who would take what he wanted.
+
+“If only he knew _what_ he wanted,” she half sighed.
+
+Joanna was the soloist of the choir these days, sole _raison d’être_ of
+_her_ church-going. Her mezzo voice full and pulsing and gold brought
+throngs to the church every Sunday.
+
+“There is a green hill far away,” she sang, and the puzzled, groping
+congregation turned its sea of black and brown, yellow and white faces
+toward her and knew a sudden peace. Even Philip stopped his restless
+inner queries.
+
+At times like these Peter Bye felt his very heart leap toward her.
+
+Joanna with her cool eyes and steady head cared almost nothing about
+this. She never saw herself in this scene. Always in her mind’s eye she
+was far, far away from the church, in a great hall, in a crowded
+theater. There would be tier on tier of faces rising, rising above her.
+And to-morrow there would be the critics....
+
+The Sundays passed thus week-end to week-end. One of them stood out in
+Joanna’s memory. Philip, a Harvard junior, was home on his summer
+vacation, but he and Sylvia and Sandy had gone to visit their mother’s
+folks in Philadelphia.
+
+Joanna, Brian Spencer, Peter, and Maggie Ellersley stepped out of church
+and walked down the torrid street. It was early June, but the weather
+was that of August.
+
+“Our children are growing up,” said Mrs. Marshall to Mrs. Ellersley,
+lingering a moment in the shady vestibule. “See how tall Joanna and
+Maggie have grown. They were the littlest things!”
+
+Mrs. Ellersley followed the group with a wistful eye. Of late she had
+begun to have some idea of Maggie’s unspoken desires. She wished it were
+Philip instead of Brian walking down the street with her daughter. She
+was very tired, tired enough to die, but she could not, she felt, leave
+Maggie alone, unplaced in the world.
+
+The four young people turned the corner and prepared to separate.
+
+“Brian is coming to the house for dinner,” said Joanna. “You coming,
+Maggie and Peter?”
+
+Maggie had an engagement for the afternoon. Peter refused, too, sulkily,
+to Joanna’s vast satisfaction.
+
+“Jealous,” she thought with some pride. It was an exhibition with which
+she seldom met. Most of the young men of her acquaintance were a little
+afraid of Joanna with her intent and serious air. “High-brow” they
+called her and she knew it, liked it, too, though it had its
+inconveniences.
+
+“Peter’s mad,” she laughed as the two moved off, “because I told him I
+was going to the benefit concert with you, Brian, and so he couldn’t
+come to-night.”
+
+“Sorry if I spoked his wheel,” said Brian, “but you just have to take
+pity on me, Jan, I’m so lonely without Sylvia.”
+
+“Of course. Isn’t it funny that he doesn’t realize that? He thinks you
+are making up to me. As though I would come between you and Sylvia.
+Great chance I’d have.”
+
+“About as much as _I’d_ have, trying to come between you and Peter. Not
+that I know anything about you, Janna. Heaven only knows what you mean
+to do with the boy. But I wouldn’t want to face Peter, if I were aiming
+to be his rival. Wonder what he’ll do when he goes to the University in
+Philadelphia. What’s he going off there for, anyway? Can’t he do just as
+well here?”
+
+“The penalty of being colored,” said Joanna soberly. “He can get much
+better hospital work in Philadelphia. Of course he could take his
+pre-medic work here, but he thinks it best to begin where he plans to
+finish.”
+
+“How long will he be away?”
+
+“Forever and ever, six or seven years, I think. Of course, we both have
+relatives in Philadelphia. His great-uncle Peter, for whom he was named,
+is still there, you know. Peter’s counting on living with him. It will
+save expense.”
+
+“Six or seven years!” said Brian disregarding anything else. “Golly what
+a wait! It would kill any girl but you, Janna.”
+
+“Sylvia didn’t die while you were in Harvard,” Joanna returned meanly.
+
+“Not much she didn’t! But she kept me in the back of her head, I’ll
+swear. While you with your singing and dancing and your wildcat schemes
+of getting on the stage! Better stick to your own Janna, and build up
+colored art.”
+
+“Why, I am,” cried Joanna, astonished. “You don’t think I want to
+forsake—_us_. Not at all. But I want to show _us_ to the world. I am
+colored, of course, but American first. Why shouldn’t I speak to all
+America?”
+
+“H’m, I suppose you’re right. You ought to win out if anyone can. You
+work hard enough, Janna. You’re eighteen now, aren’t you? Well, you’ve
+got a good ways to go. How old is Peter?”
+
+“Twenty. He lost a lot of time when he was little. That’s why he’s so
+late entering college.”
+
+“Well look here, what are you going to do with him?”
+
+“I may not have a chance to do anything with him, Mr. Busybody.”
+
+“Phew, isn’t it hot! Thank goodness here’s the house. Run along and get
+your brother-in-law a long, cold drink.”
+
+He stayed after dinner—they had it on Sundays at three—and talked away
+the rest of the afternoon to Joel in the long dark dining room.
+
+“It’s cool here,” said Joel, handing him a cigar. “Light up and tell me
+how’s Harlem?”
+
+“Great, sir. It’s the place for colored people. Let us get you a house
+up there. Pick you up something fine in One Hundred and Thirty-first
+Street.” Brian, too, had gone into real estate as Alexander’s partner.
+
+Joel rolled his cigar from one side of his mouth to the other. “Don’t
+know but what I might. This neighborhood’s gone down. Let me see your
+house.”
+
+“Yes, sir, I will. Has—er—Sylvia said anything to you about me? I’m
+getting along pretty well now, sir.”
+
+“What should she say? Here Joanna, come take this lovesick boy off my
+hands!”
+
+Joanna came, serene and cool, a little prim in her pale yellow dress and
+soft floppy hat of tan chiffon. She handed Brian his Panama.
+
+“I’m ready, Brian.”
+
+Joel stopped them for a moment, clapped the boy on the shoulder. “It’s
+all right as far as her mother and I are concerned, Brian.”
+
+The two went off and heard a gracious, mellow-voiced woman fill a hall
+with sound that made them forget the heat.
+
+“My collar’s wringing wet, and I never thought of it. Wonderful how
+music can make people forget.”
+
+“Even color,” said Joanna thoughtfully. “Did you see that white woman
+next to me edge away when I sat down? But when she heard me humming
+after it was over, she leaned over and asked me if I knew the words.”
+
+“I wondered what you were talking about. Awfully jolly of you to have
+taken pity on me to-night, Janna dear. You marry Peter and all four of
+us will go to these concerts and sit in the gallery and come home
+praising God from whom all blessings flow.”
+
+“It certainly sounds nice. Only we mustn’t forget Philip. Don’t ring the
+bell, here’s the key.”
+
+He took it. “All right about Philip. Maggie is fond of music, too.”
+
+Joanna, in the act of entering the door, stepped back and faced him
+sharply. “What’s Maggie got to do with it?”
+
+“Well, she and Phil. They’ve always paired off together, haven’t they?
+Just like you and Peter, just like Sylvia and me.”
+
+“She wouldn’t dare,” said Joanna fiercely. “Why, Philip—he’s going to be
+somebody great, wonderful, a Garibaldi, a Toussaint! And Maggie,
+Maggie’s just nobody, Brian. Why, do you know what she’s taking up? Hair
+work, straightening hair, salves and shampoos and curling-irons.”
+
+“Joanna, you’re an utter snob. I always knew you looked down on people
+unless they were following some mad will o’ the wisp. Maggie’s as good
+as any of us. Why look here, she graduated from high school with Sylvia.
+You can’t look down on her.”
+
+“Sylvia’s my sister, thank you. She’s Joel Marshall’s daughter. She has
+background, she knows good music and pictures and worth while people.”
+
+“You talk like a silly book. What’s that got to do with it? And, anyway,
+you can’t stop it now.”
+
+“What’s the reason I can’t?”
+
+“Well, good Lord, it must be as good as settled. Why Maggie thinks—only
+to-day—Oh—here, I’ve said enough. Thanks awfully for a nice evening,
+Jan——”
+
+“What’d she say, Brian?”
+
+“Well, you know we were coming home from church and you and Bye were
+ahead and I said, ‘Look at the lucky pair.’”
+
+“Yes, never mind me. Well, well?”
+
+“And she said, ‘You miss Sylvia, don’t you, Brian?’ ‘You bet,’ I told
+her.
+
+“And she looked at me—you know how Maggie can look—she said, ‘Just like
+I miss Philip, I guess.’”
+
+Joanna grew visibly taller. “You let her say that, Brian Spencer?”
+
+“Well, how could I stop her? Of course she misses Phil. And quit acting
+‘offended pride,’ Joanna. Heavens, doesn’t Sylvia sometimes do sewing?”
+
+“Oh, but that’s different, she creates, she’s an artist——”
+
+“Artist your grandmother! Sleep it off, Janna. Good night.” He went off,
+striding down the quiet street.
+
+Joanna closed the door and crept quietly up to her room. Seated in a
+wicker arm-chair in a stream of gold summer moonlight, she spent a long
+time in deep thought.
+
+Maggie and Philip! Maggie! Of late she and Philip had had many a long
+talk. He’d lean against the mantelpiece—his restless fingers caressing a
+little black statuette:
+
+“Jan, I’ll talk to you, because you’ve always cared about this kind of
+thing. Raise a monument—more-enduring-than-bronze sort of business, you
+know. When I graduate—by the way, I think I’ll be elected Phi Beta Kappa
+next year—I’ve got a scheme, I’ve got a plan that will work all right.
+Father will be proud of me, you’ll see. And you, too, old girl, you’ve
+always been a bright beacon light. You stick to this stage business,
+you’ll win out. There’ll be a twin star constellation. ‘The well known
+Marshalls, Joanna and Philip.’ We’ll make the whole world realize what
+colored people can do. Nothing short of ‘battle, murder or sudden death’
+is to interfere.”
+
+He, too, had been bitten by the desire to make the most of his life. And
+now here was Maggie Ellersley.
+
+“What ambition has she?” Joanna asked herself fiercely, forgetting to
+measure the depth of the abyss of poverty and wretchedness from which
+Maggie had sprung. “She shan’t spoil my brother’s chances.”
+
+Rushing over to her little desk, she pulled out a piece of tan
+stationery and began a note.
+
+“Dear Maggie——”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI
+
+
+PETER had accompanied Maggie as far as the subway station. “You won’t
+mind if I don’t go all the way home with you, Maggie? Fact is, I don’t
+feel so well to-day, so if you’ll excuse me——” His voice trailed
+indeterminately.
+
+Maggie smiled at him nicely. She was oddly happy at this moment. Linking
+her name with Philip’s, as she had, gave her an odd sense of freedom, of
+sureness. “And Brian didn’t seem at all surprised,” she kept thinking to
+herself over and over.
+
+She answered out loud, “That’s all right, Peter. Go home and rest. I’m
+going to be in the house only a minute, anyway.” She looked at him
+meaningly. “I guess both of us have a lot to think of. Good-by.” She
+flashed down the steps, looked back; a second later a slender golden
+hand waved to him from the gloom of the subway.
+
+“Now I don’t know what she meant,” thought Peter, pushing his hat back
+from his hot forehead, and immediately turning to another idea. “I’d
+like to punch that fresh Brian’s head. Oh, Janna, how could you go off
+with him?”
+
+Down in the subway train Maggie sat smiling a little inanely. Of late,
+her feeling for Philip had taken a definite form; she wanted, as always,
+desperately to marry, and to marry well in order to secure for herself
+the decent respectability for which those first arid fourteen years of
+her life had created an almost morbid obsession. But she knew now that
+the one man through whom she wanted to secure that respectability was
+Philip Marshall. She loved him.
+
+“If the way I wanted him at first, dear God, was a sin, you must forgive
+me. Oh, Philip, Philip, have a good time in Philadelphia to-day. I bet
+you’re at a meeting of some kind this minute.” The picture of his
+favorite attitude came before her, and she smiled more broadly.
+
+A white man sitting opposite mistook the smile and leaned forward,
+leering a little. She turned her head quickly, noting as she did so that
+something about his build made her think of Henderson Neal, her mother’s
+roomer.
+
+She was to go motoring with him this afternoon. He had asked her very
+often of late. Usually she spent Sundays with Philip and Sylvia and
+Brian, sometimes with Joanna and Peter. But since the first two were
+away, she might just as well spend the time with Mr. Henderson. He would
+have a nice car, she knew; twice before he had taken herself and her
+mother out. It had really been very nice. She rather fancied he must
+work in a garage, he came riding up to the house so often. She wished a
+little nervously that she hadn’t promised to go, it would be nice to sit
+quietly in her room or in the long, sparsely furnished parlor and think.
+
+Still it was hot, and if there were any air to be got they’d catch it in
+an automobile.
+
+She ran up the subway steps and hurried toward Fifty-third Street.
+Somehow she didn’t care to keep Mr. Neal waiting.
+
+There was still a quarter of an hour before he might be expected. She
+bathed her face, shook out her short, thick hair, twisted it back from
+her forehead. Next she crowned her oval, deep-cream face with a wide
+black hat, whose somberness was repeated in a broad velvet ribbon around
+the waist of her white dress.
+
+But she looked anything but somber as she ran to the door at the whirr
+of the motor.
+
+“Going, Ma,” she called back. Mr. Neal climbed out of the car and helped
+her in.
+
+He didn’t look so old—elderly—to-day, she thought to herself, noting the
+straightness of his flat back and the smooth bronze of his closely
+shaven cheek. Evidently his beard was very strong and this had lent
+hitherto a somewhat heavy cast to his face. But to-day he was shaven to
+the blood. Maggie was used to studying men. It was a legacy from the old
+days, when failure to analyze a prospective roomer’s appearance might
+jeopardize a week’s rent. She noticed Neal’s hands at the wheel,
+powerful and sinewy with broad square finger-tips. He was still
+baffling, but not so bad, she thought.
+
+“Of course, not like Philip, but nice enough to go around with, and this
+is a dandy car.” She looked at him again sideways. He caught her glance.
+
+“Thinkin’ I ain’t so bad maybe, Miss Maggie?”
+
+She blushed, confused, not so much at his catching her eye as at the
+completeness with which he had read her thought.
+
+“You certainly look nice in that suit, Mr. Neal. It’s different from
+what most men wear, isn’t it?”
+
+“Likely as not. I picked it up in London last time I crossed the big
+pond.”
+
+“You’ve been to Europe?” asked Maggie all ears.
+
+“Yes to England, France, Spain, Germany _and_ Italy. They was a time,”
+he said in his deliberately incorrect way, “when I thought I’d stay in
+them parts forever, but I come back. Used to valet for a rich white
+fellow. Took me everywhere with him. Wanted to carry me to Africa
+lion-hunting. But I quit him cold. If you want to hunt lions, go to it.
+Me, I’m a-goin’ t’stay right here.”
+
+He spoke with a heavy emphasis on the last word which lent a curious
+whimsicality to his speech.
+
+“This is the first time you’ve ever talked about yourself, Mr. Neal.
+Tell me some more, it’s mighty interesting.”
+
+He had been everything from a farmer to a chauffeur, he told her,
+confirming her idea that his present occupation was concerned with the
+manipulation of cars.
+
+“And I’ve been a lot of places and I’ve seen a lot of people. But you
+don’t want to hear about me, Miss Maggie. They ain’t nothing in me to
+interest a little lady like you. Now, on the other hand, seems to me,
+you might make real interestin’ talkin’.”
+
+He had a nice smile, Maggie thought.
+
+“There isn’t much to tell,” she smiled back at him. “There’s just my
+mother and me. I’m twenty-one and I’ve been out of school three years. I
+work in the office of Mr. Marshall, the caterer; you know him?”
+
+“Know of him, Miss Maggie, know of him. Son’s a real-estate agent, ain’t
+he?”
+
+“Yes. Well, I’m a sort of overseer-bookkeeper. In my spare time I’m
+taking up a course in hair-dressing. You know there’s a Madame Harkness
+who’s invented a method of softening hair, and of taking the harshness
+out of your folks’ locks.” She laughed at him. “You know I think there’s
+a big future in it. It ought to mean a lot to us. Everybody wants to be
+beautiful, and every woman looks better if her hair is soft and
+manageable.”
+
+“Reckon you don’t need to use no such preparation, Miss Maggie.”
+
+“No, I don’t, fortunately, but I’ll be glad to help those that do. I
+love to see people look nice; like to look nice myself.”
+
+“You sure do, you’re like a little yellow flower, growin’ in that
+house.” He gave her a keen level glance whose boldness was softened by
+his serious manner.
+
+“Let’s stop talking about me,” said Maggie with sudden confusion. “Don’t
+you want to hear about my mother?”
+
+“Well, not as much as about some others.”
+
+“Anyway, she’s been a wonderful mother. My father died when I was about
+eight, and left us nothing. Mother has been hard put to it at times.
+That’s why I want to learn the hair-trade. I want to set up a business
+for myself some day. If I succeed, both mother and I can live on easy
+street.”
+
+“You’d ought to be living there now. A delicate little girl like you’s
+got no business having to worry her pretty head about taking care of
+herself.” He bent on her a long considering look. “There’s many a man
+would be willing to take that job off your hands. I bet I know of one.”
+An odd bashfulness seemed to descend upon him.
+
+“Perhaps he’s going to propose,” thought Maggie innocently enraptured,
+“wouldn’t that be great?” She pictured Sylvia’s surprise when she should
+tell her. His clumsy circumlocution, his heavy deference, delighted her.
+Philip of course was wonderful, but he was inclined, like all the
+Marshalls, to be a little superior. Well, why shouldn’t they be?
+
+She sighed.
+
+Her silence seemed to put an end to his sentimental maunderings, for he
+began to talk about the car, explaining its mechanism. Once, too, he
+turned and swore fluently at a motorist who passed him too closely. At
+the sudden passion which convulsed his face Maggie drew back, a little
+frightened. He noticed it, and immediately ironed out the lines of
+anger.
+
+“You must forgive me, Miss Maggie. It made me so angry to think that
+that fool might have caused an accident which would have injured you.”
+
+She thought with the ignorant pride of a young girl that it would be
+very easy for her to manage him. Shortly after that they turned around
+and came home. Maggie was glad when they reached the house, for she had
+many things to think about. Shutting off the motor, he followed her into
+the hall and they stood there a minute, his powerful dark figure looming
+over her.
+
+She thanked him prettily. “It was very nice of you, Mr. Neal. You’ve
+been most kind to mother and me.” As she sped lightly up the stairs she
+forgot him completely.
+
+Her windows were open and a full moon flooded her room with light. “Oh,
+Philip if I only knew how you felt,” she murmured, getting up and
+leaning out the window, gazing into the still, hot air. The people next
+door were in their back yard; one of their boys was playing an
+accordion. A little thin tinkle of voices floated up to her. How content
+other people seemed!
+
+Her mind was feverish—she had concentrated so on her other desires, a
+decent home, a reasonable education, the means of making a little extra
+money. It seemed to her she couldn’t find the strength to focus the
+flame of her ambition on Philip’s kind but immobile attitude. He was so
+uncomprehending. She turned back to the room again and stretched her
+arms to the shadowy wall.
+
+“If you’d only say one word, Philip. I’d wait forever.” It was the
+uncertainty that sickened her spirit. “Yet,” she thought, growing
+suddenly cold, “suppose I should be made certain—the wrong way. Perhaps
+you’ve met a girl in Philadelphia.”
+
+She determined the suspense was best. “You’ve been my hope so long, if
+you should fail me what would I do? Besides, I love you, Philip.”
+
+She lay half the night, very still and very wakeful in her white iron
+bed. The morning brought back her old sanguineness, she was to have a
+very full day; until early forenoon there was work in Mr. Marshall’s
+office, and in the late afternoon Madame Harkness’ Method of Hair
+Culture claimed her.
+
+She came home, hot and deliciously tired.
+
+“There’s a letter for you,” her mother told her. “Wash your face and eat
+your supper first. I want to get through’s quick as I can. Mis’ Sparrow
+and me, we’re going to a meeting.”
+
+Maggie spied the letter in the gloom of the hall. It was from Sylvia
+probably; her heart hoped it was from Philip. But she put the thought
+away from her as too audacious. “Now just for that,” she told herself
+whimsically, “I won’t let you touch that letter till after supper.”
+Smiling, she washed her face and changed into something cool and old
+that she could lounge in later up in her room, while she read Sylvia’s
+letter.
+
+Supper over, the dishes washed and her mother started in the direction
+of Mis’ Sparrow’s residence, Maggie went for her letter. Even in the
+half gloom she descried with a sudden pang that the superscription was
+unfamiliar. “Not from Philip, not even from Sylvia. Well, why should
+they write me?” she chided herself bravely.
+
+In the waning but clear light in her room she could see plainly that the
+letter must be from a stranger. Yet there was something vaguely familiar
+about the writing after all.
+
+She slit the envelope.
+
+ “Dear Maggie: [the letter ran]
+
+ “You’ll be surprised to get this letter, yet something tells me
+ I should write it. It’s about you and Philip. [‘What’s this?’
+ said Maggie, startled.] I have learned, Maggie, that you are
+ taking Philip’s kindnesses to you too seriously, that perhaps
+ you are thinking of marrying him.
+
+ “I think you ought to know that such an arrangement would not be
+ at all pleasing to our family, nor would it be good for Philip.
+ I’ve often heard my mother say that only people of like position
+ should marry each other, and I hardly think that would be true
+ in the case of you and Philip. Then you must consider the
+ future. My father is very ambitious for us and lately Philip has
+ shown that he means to embark on a real career. You can see that
+ a girl of your lowly aims would only be a hindrance to him.
+ Philip Marshall cannot marry a hair-dresser!”
+
+The childish cruel words ran on:
+
+ “Then, too, I am sure he does not care for you in the way you
+ care for him. Don’t you go around sometimes with a Mr.
+ Henderson, or somebody like that? Sylvia met him somehow and
+ Phil didn’t like it and raised a big fuss. Sylvia told him that
+ you knew him and went out with him and Philip said ‘That’s
+ different. Maggie Ellersley can do things that my sisters
+ mustn’t do.’ That doesn’t sound as though he had any serious
+ feeling for you, does it?
+
+ “I guess this will be sort of hard for you to read, but I
+ believe” [Joanna wrote virtuously] “that some day you will thank
+ me for these words.
+
+ “Wouldn’t it be just as well if you didn’t see him for some time
+ after his return?
+
+ “Yours,
+
+ “JOANNA MARSHALL.”
+
+ “P. S. Papa is thinking of buying a house in One Hundred and
+ Thirty-first Street, in Harlem, you know. So we may move after
+ Sylvia and the others come back from Philadelphia. Papa would
+ still keep his office in Fifty-ninth Street. That puts us pretty
+ far away, so if you shouldn’t come up so often, no one would
+ think anything of it.”
+
+Maggie folded the letter carefully and put it on her mantelpiece. Then,
+fully dressed as she still was, she lay down on her bed.
+
+“You poor idiot,” she thought to herself, “you simpleton, you fool, why
+should the Marshalls want you? They’re rich, respected! Mr. Joel
+Marshall—you see the name at the head of every committee of colored
+citizens, and you are nobody, the daughter of a worthless father, and a
+poor ex-laundress!”
+
+Her mind dwelt briefly on her mother. “Poor Mamma, she expected so much
+of me! Yet if Philip really cared about me, he wouldn’t care a rap if
+they did object.” She remembered then his slighting words.
+
+“I hate him,” she said fiercely, “and Joanna and her everlasting
+ambitions and the pride of all of them. Why, you’re just a beggar to
+them.” She resumed her merciless self-attack.
+
+Presently she began to cry great, scalding tears that burned her cheeks
+and hurt her throat. At eleven o’clock she heard her mother’s step and
+forced herself to an aching quiet. About midnight she realized that her
+head ached, that her throat was so dry and parched that it almost
+rasped.
+
+“To think I should care like this,” she told herself. “Oh, Maggie,
+Maggie, they’re proud, can’t you copy their pride?”
+
+There were some lemons on the table in the dining room, she remembered.
+At least she could ease her tortured throat. Hot though it was she put
+on her felt bedroom slippers, so that her step on the creaking stairs
+might not disturb her mother.
+
+The quiet lower rooms struck her with their awful solemnity, added to
+her woe. She sat there at the dining room table, one hand clutching the
+forgotten lemon, the other flung on the red-checked table cloth, above
+her dark bowed head.
+
+Two conflicts were raging within her. A two-fold stream of
+disappointment overwhelmed. Not only had Philip not made love to her but
+he had despised her, not considered her the peer of his sisters. And how
+was she to mend her precarious fortunes? She was not strong, her mother
+was aging; suppose, before she got on her feet, she should fall back
+into the old hateful abyss. As it was she would never enter Mr.
+Marshall’s office again.
+
+Her shame and despair heavy upon her, she buried her face deeper on her
+arm. Some one seemed to say, “Miss Maggie!”
+
+She imagined it, she knew, but even if it were real she did not want to
+lift that heavy, heavy head.
+
+A powerful but kind hand strove to lift it for her. She looked up then,
+a blinking figure of misery in the flickering gas flame.
+
+“But Miss Maggie, t’aint ever you. Was you asleep or—was you crying?”
+Henderson Neal had come in, and spying the light in the dining room had
+come to investigate.
+
+She blinked at him stupidly.
+
+“Little Miss Maggie, what’s happened to you? You ain’t in trouble?”
+
+“In awful trouble.” Her lips shaped the words stiffly.
+
+His mind, accustomed to the ways of men, jumped to one dread conclusion.
+“You mean some good for nothin’ feller’s took advantage of you?”
+
+She didn’t understand him at first. “What? Oh, that! No, of course not!”
+A spasm of horrible amusement crossed her tightly drawn features. “He—he
+wouldn’t touch me.”
+
+She broke into passionate yet stifled weeping. Her mother must not hear
+her.
+
+Neal’s face twitched. He picked her up in his steely arms, sat down in
+an old cavernous morris chair and held her back against him like a baby.
+
+“Tell me about it, Miss Maggie; some of them tony fellers bothering you
+to marry them?”
+
+The supposition was balm to her spirit, but she had schooled herself to
+honesty. “No, not that—one of them, oh, he never knew—I hoped, oh, Mr.
+Neal, you see I wanted him to like me——”
+
+“And he doesn’t, and he’s been leading you on? The damned skunk. I’d
+like to kill him.”
+
+“Don’t say that. He was just being kind. He’d probably be all right if
+he ever thought about me. You see, it’s his sisters, his sister,” she
+corrected herself, “she doesn’t consider me good enough.”
+
+“Well, what’s she got to do with it? Can’t the feller speak for
+himself?”
+
+“That’s just it, I used to go to see them, they don’t come to see me. If
+the sisters don’t want me, there’s no way I can reach him, particularly
+since he isn’t interested. I had just hoped that if he kept on seeing
+me, some day he would grow to like me.”
+
+Neal was nonplussed. This was a puzzle.
+
+“What are you going to do now?”
+
+“Oh, I don’t know. And I’m losing my job now. I got it through them.”
+
+“I see.” He sat silent, studying her a moment. “Look here, Maggie,
+whyn’t you marry me? I’m old and I’m rough and you see I ain’t no
+book-learnin’. But I can take care of you—you and your mother, too, and
+I can dress you pretty, like you’d ought to be, and with money and fine
+clothes you can do a little lordin’ on your own.”
+
+She hated to offend him. He was so kind. “Mother would never hear of
+it,” she quavered for lack of a better answer.
+
+“You don’t have to let her know about it,” he said, encouraged by her
+failure to refuse him flatly. “I’ll get a license in the morning and
+we’ll slip out after she goes to work. You won’t be sorry. I’ll be kind
+to you Maggie—girl. I’ve always wanted you to give me a chance.” He
+added a cunning afterthought.
+
+“Show these stuck-up friends of yourn, and show ’em quick that you don’t
+have to go beggin’ for favors. There’s others, yes, not a man that comes
+into this house that wouldn’t be proud to marry you.”
+
+She began to toy with the idea. Marriage with Neal was not what she
+wanted, but it represented to her security, a home for herself and her
+mother, freedom from all the little nagging worries that beset the woman
+who fights her own way through the world. Perhaps she had aimed too
+high. This was the sort of person with whom she had grown up; he would
+not, because he could not, look down on her lowliness. On the contrary,
+he would place her on a pedestal.
+
+“I’ll think about it,” she promised him finally.
+
+But he knew if she did not take him now, she would never take him. She
+knew it, too.
+
+He set her gently in the chair, and knelt in front of her, barring her
+escape with his powerful body.
+
+“Listen, Maggie, marry me now, to-morrow. We’ll go to Atlantic City for
+a few weeks, and come back and go to housekeeping. I don’t have to live
+here. I just stayed on, first because it was clean and your mother was
+honest and then because I liked you. I ain’t no lawyer, nor doctor, nor
+in none of the fine positions your friends hold, but I handle a good bit
+of money and I’ll get you everything you want.”
+
+He did have money, she knew that. She supposed she ought to find out
+exactly how he made it. But of course he was honest. And anyway she was
+too tired, too weak to bother. She could feel his strong will impinging
+on her own, beating hers down.
+
+“I’ll do it, Mr. Neal.”
+
+“My name’s Henderson, Maggie. You will, you mean it?”
+
+“Yes, to-morrow. But I ought to let my mother know.”
+
+“Oh, no, she might object—mothers hate to see their daughters leave
+them. But after she sees how well fixed and happy you are, she won’t
+mind.”
+
+“I guess you’re right. I—I don’t see how I can ever pack. I’m so tired.”
+Her figure slacked weakly against the chair.
+
+“You don’t need to. Just wear something dark and quiet. We’ll get
+everything you want in Atlantic City, or maybe Philadelphia.”
+
+“No, no—not in Philadelphia, we won’t stop there now,” she told him
+feverishly.
+
+“All right. Now run up to bed. Kiss me, Maggie.”
+
+She gave him her cold, stiff lips.
+
+“Good girl! To-morrow at ten. You ain’t foolin’ me?”
+
+“Oh, no, Mr. Neal!”
+
+“Henderson’s my name. Good night, little girl.”
+
+Shaking, she got up to her room to lie vacant-eyed across the bed,
+watching the darkness deepen, shade into gray, vanish. The sun came
+bringing a new day, to her a new life.
+
+She wrote her mother a note, then dressed herself carefully in a little
+tan poplin suit, a small brown hat and a white veil. “Brides wear
+veils,” she thought to herself numbly. “Oh, I didn’t think I’d be a
+bride like this!”
+
+Well, it was too late now. At quarter of nine she went down stairs. Her
+mother had left long since. Presently she heard a taxi drive up and
+Neal, heavy but immaculate, got out. He was coming for her. She walked
+stiffly to meet him; they entered the cab together and were whirled
+away.
+
+“This was marriage,” she thought, murmuring some words later to a
+Justice of the Peace. They entered the waiting taxi again and drove to
+the Pennsylvania station. A surprising number of the red-caps seemed to
+know Mr. Neal—her husband. Well, of course, of course why shouldn’t
+they? They walked down the steps past car after car. Neal ushered her
+finally into a drawing-room. She had never dreamed of traveling like
+this. As the train pulled out Neal hailed a passing waiter. “Bring us
+something to eat as soon as possible.”
+
+He sat down beside her, immaculate in a gray suit, gray tie, carefully
+brushed low shoes. His tan overcoat rested in the corner of the seat. He
+put his arms around her.
+
+“Poor, sleepy, frightened Maggie,” he said tenderly.
+
+She burst into sharp, strangling sobs, burying her head against his
+shoulder.
+
+So she left New York, weeping, to return to it one day dry-eyed but with
+a bitterness that was worse than tears.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII
+
+
+“Really, Joanna, you ought to treat me better. You know I’m staying in
+New York just on account of you!”
+
+“How do you want me to treat you, Peter?”
+
+“Oh, hang it all. Why can’t you be nicer to me? When Brian comes to see
+Sylvia she runs to meet him, puts her arms about his neck.”
+
+“But Sylvia and Brian are engaged. You and I are just friends.”
+
+“Just friends! Joanna, have a heart. What do you think I spend all my
+spare time with you for? You know how I feel.”
+
+Joanna raised a slim, protesting hand. “None of that, Peter! You come to
+see me because both of us are interested in the same things. Each of us
+is going to be an artist in different ways. What other girl is there in
+New York who would let you talk to her about the joys of surgery?”
+
+“What other girl would want me to?”
+
+Joanna, looking at the long brown figure lying full length on the grass,
+thought it highly improbable that any other girl would. She had seen
+other girls in the company of Peter, and watched quite without jealousy
+their ways with him. She rather prided herself on her own aloofness from
+such tactics. Of course, some day she might let Peter talk to her about
+things other than work and art, and she might answer him, but at present
+the big things of life must be arranged. Love was an after
+consideration, she felt, and as far as she knew she meant it.
+
+It was a Saturday afternoon in July and the two were in Van Cortlandt
+Park. Peter was to go to school in Philadelphia in the fall, and it was
+important for him to earn as much money as possible for his expenses. He
+might have gone with a group of other boys to one of the watering places
+and worked in a hotel. But that took him too far away from Joanna.
+Ragtime was coming into vogue then, and Peter proved himself an adept at
+it. The butcher shop was of course a thing long since of the past.
+
+“Here’s where I put my gift of strumming to some use,” he laughed to
+Joanna. “You ought to see how glad they were to take me on at that
+cabaret.”
+
+“I hope you won’t learn anything you shouldn’t in that atmosphere,” she
+had answered primly.
+
+“Oh, of course I won’t,” he returned, thinking how amazed she would be
+if she ever looked down from her pinnacle long enough to understand what
+life really was. He would have liked her to see that cabaret with its
+jostling crowds and blaring lights, and the host of noisy good-hearted
+dancing girls. He tried to give her some description of it. But Joanna
+turned away.
+
+“Men and women are like that, just the same,” he protested. “Everybody
+isn’t living on the mountain-tops like you, Janna. I can’t live there of
+my own accord myself. That’s why I haunt you so because you do keep me
+on the heights, dear.” She liked that.
+
+“But just the same,” he resumed, rolling over on the short grass like a
+lithe handsome animal, “all the big things of life smack of the earth.
+Your poet has to eat, or he can’t write poetry. Well, so does the
+commonest laboring-man. The queen has children, in agony, Janna, just
+like the poorest charwoman. And love is the—the driving force for both
+of them.” He mused a little. “Love is the most natural and ordinary
+thing in the world.”
+
+But Joanna didn’t believe that. “Love is a wonderful, rare thing, very
+beautiful, very sweet, but you can do without it.”
+
+“Not much you can’t. Better not try it, Joanna. You have to found your
+life on love, then you can do all these other things.”
+
+“Don’t talk like a silly, Peter. You know perfectly well that for a
+woman love usually means a household of children, the getting of a
+thousand meals, picking up laundry, no time to herself for meditation,
+or reading or——”
+
+“Dancing! That’s through poor management. Marry a man who understands
+you, Janna, and he’ll see that you have time for anything you want.
+Where is such a man? Behold him!” He struck his chest dramatically.
+
+“Peter Bye! How you talk!”
+
+“All right, I’ll choose something else. Tell me why is it that though
+I’ve elected to stay in New York in all this hot weather just to be at
+your side, I see less of you than at any time since I’ve been coming to
+your house.”
+
+“Does seem queer, doesn’t it? It must be because I have so much work to
+do. I am taking extra singing lessons from Brailoff now. And my dancing
+takes up a lot of my time; my classes come at such inconvenient hours,
+7:30 to 10:00 three times a week.”
+
+“That _is_ bad. Funny time to give dancing lessons. Where’d you say you
+took them?”
+
+“At Bertully’s.”
+
+“Bertully’s! That’s in Twenty-ninth Street, isn’t it? How’d you ever
+make it? I didn’t suppose a colored girl got a chance to stick her nose
+in there.”
+
+“She wouldn’t ordinarily. Bertully refused Helena Arnold last year. ‘I’m
+sorry, Mees, but the white Americans like not to study with the brown
+Americans. Vair seely, but so. I am a poor man, I must follow the
+weeshes of my clients!’” Joanna shrugged her shoulders, spread her
+hands.
+
+“You’re a born impersonator, Jan. I can see that little Frenchman now.
+How’d you ever get in, then?”
+
+“Helena and I went back this year and asked if he would take a separate
+class of colored girls, if we got it up for him. He was very decent,
+said he’d be glad to. So we got up a class of eight, he only asked for
+six. Of course, we had to take his hours.”
+
+“Who are in it besides you and Helena?”
+
+“Oh, all our crowd.” She named the daughters of several prominent
+colored men, a physician, a lawyer, a journalist, a real-estate man
+among them. “There’s Gertrude Moseley, Vera and Alice Manning, Elizabeth
+Beckett, Sylvia, Helena, and I.”
+
+“That’s seven.”
+
+“Oh, yes, Sylvia meant to ask Maggie Ellersley.”
+
+“H’m, she had other things in her head without bothering about fancy
+dancing, hadn’t she? Funny how she went off and married without telling
+any of us about it, wasn’t it?”
+
+“Yes,” said Joanna uneasily.
+
+“You’d have thought she’d have let old Phil in on it. I wonder if they
+had a falling out of any kind! Philip seemed rather hard hit when he
+heard the news.”
+
+“Not a bit of it. Why should he be?” Joanna spoke stoutly. But her tone
+belied her convictions. She hadn’t forgotten Philip’s expression the day
+Sylvia had come rushing in with the astounding news:
+
+“What do you think? I just met Mrs. Ellersley. Maggie’s
+married—married—think of it! She ran away with that man at her house,
+that Mr. Neal. And they’re going to live in Philadelphia.”
+
+Philip’s haggard face had turned a trifle more wan, Joanna had thought.
+“Has she written to you, Sylvia?” he asked her quickly.
+
+“Not a word. I can’t imagine why she said nothing to me about it. She
+must have planned it for ages. If that isn’t the funniest!”
+
+Later Joanna heard Philip asking his mother if she were sure she had
+given him all the mail that had come for him while he was in
+Philadelphia. Still later he had announced his intention of teaching
+summer school in South Carolina.
+
+“Fellow whose place I’m going to fill is sick. They’ve been at me a long
+time to come. I think I ought to go, father. It will give me a chance to
+see the South.”
+
+Joanna’s throat constricted a little at the thought of Philip’s look,
+his general listlessness. She wished she hadn’t written that letter.
+Though that couldn’t have brought about the marriage. People don’t
+arrange to be married over night. As Sylvia said, it must have been on
+Maggie’s mind long since. And then, anyway, Philip couldn’t really have
+cared for a girl like Maggie.
+
+“I don’t believe Philip was the least bit interested in Maggie,” she
+voiced her thought to Peter. “Well, anyway, Mr. Bye, that’s why my
+company is so scarce. Goodness, what are you frowning about?”
+
+“Well, I’m mad to think you swallowed that Frenchman’s insult. To think
+of your taking lessons from him after that!”
+
+“But, Peter, he didn’t insult us. He can’t help this stupid prejudice.
+‘In my country, Mademoiselle Maréchal,’—he always calls me that—‘you’d
+be an honor to any class.’ He says I’ve got a great future. That if
+there’s anything that will break down prejudice it will be equality or
+perhaps even superiority on the part of colored people in the arts. And
+I agree with him.”
+
+“But to be set apart like that!”
+
+“What do I care?” asked Joanna, the practical. “You’ve got to take life
+as you find it, Peter. The way I figure it is this. If all I needed to
+get on the stage was the mastery of a difficult step, I’d get there,
+wouldn’t I? For somehow, sometime, I’d learn how to overcome that
+difficulty.”
+
+“You bet you would.”
+
+“Very well, then. Now my problem is how to master, how to get around
+prejudice. It _is_ an awful nuisance; in some parts of this country it
+is more than a nuisance, it’s a veritable menace. Philip says he’s going
+to change all that some day. First, I’m going to get my training up to
+the last notch, then I’m going to watch for an opportunity and squeeze
+in.”
+
+“You’ll never get it.”
+
+“Oh, yes, I will. Some white people are kind, some of them are so truly
+artistic that they’ll put themselves to great trouble for the sake of
+art. Look at Bertully. It works him much harder than it does us to hold
+those extra classes.”
+
+“Bertully’s one man in a thousand. Besides, he’s a foreigner. Where’ll
+you find a white American like that?”
+
+“You blessed pessimist. I know of people like that already. That’s how
+Helena Arnold got to Bertully in the first place. A Miss Sharples—why,
+they’re the people your Aunt Susan works for, aren’t they? Your aunt
+told Miss Sharples about Helena, and Miss Sharples took her, herself, to
+Bertully.”
+
+“That was awfully decent, I must say. Of course, the Sharples are
+Philadelphia Quaker stock. Not that that makes much difference. The
+white Byes were Quakers, and see how they left us stranded, though my
+father told me old black Joshua Bye practically coined them their money.
+Not many people like those Sharples.”
+
+“There doesn’t need to be. The point is there’s _one_. Miss Sharples’
+family, by the way, may have been Quakers, but there’s nothing Quakerish
+about her. Helena says she goes with the Greenwich Village group all the
+time, and for all their craziness, they’ve got some mighty big ideas.”
+
+“Can’t get anything to eat, if you’re colored, down in their dinky old
+restaurants.”
+
+“Awful, isn’t it? Well, we’ll let some other colored person pound away
+at that side of it. Me, I’m going to break into art. The public wants
+novelty, and _I_ want fame. I’ve got to have it, Peter.”
+
+“You talk about going on the stage as though you had a signed contract
+in your hand. How’ll you get the stage-presence?”
+
+“I’m to go on a recital tour next fall among colored people. I’m used to
+singing in the choir. If I can stand before them I can stand before any
+audience in the world.”
+
+“Yes, we are mighty critical.”
+
+“I should say so. Get up, Peter Bye. We’ve got to go home.”
+
+They started on the long trip back.
+
+“But see here, Joanna,” Peter pleaded when they reached the house, “you
+will give me a little more time, won’t you? I don’t have to work in the
+morning, you know. And I don’t work Wednesday nights. Promise me that,
+won’t you?”
+
+“Yes,” said Joanna, her heart warming to his glowing beauty. “We’ll
+remember this summer, Peter, the last before we go off trying our wings
+for further flights.”
+
+That was an enchanted season. Peter used to call for her in the morning,
+and the two would go off exploring. Joanna liked the foreign quarters,
+but she had never cared to stand around too long in those teeming,
+exotic streets. She was too conspicuous, attracted too many inquiring
+glances. With Peter she felt safe to stand for long moments watching the
+children play, to enter queer dark shops, to taste strange messes.
+Sometimes she spoke to the women about their dresses, their headgear.
+One Spanish woman, grown used to the sight of this dark American girl
+and the good-looking boy at her side, took them into her quarters one
+day and showed Joanna how she dressed her hair. Another time she taught
+her an intricate Spanish dance.
+
+“I’m going to do a dance representing all the nations, some day,” Joanna
+told Peter.
+
+They planned for Wednesday nights very carefully at first, but gradually
+as the torrid weather increased, Joanna’s desire for the theater and
+other indoor forms of amusement yielded to the desire to be cool at any
+cost. Central Park claimed them then, and later Morningside, since it
+was just a few moments’ stroll from the Marshalls’ new house.
+
+Morningside was usually crowded. The seats were always taken when they
+arrived.
+
+“I wonder what time the people come,” Joanna murmured. But they didn’t
+mind. The grass, the sloping hillside, was good enough for them. Joanna
+would sit down, her dainty summer dress spread around her, her
+splendidly poised head turned at first so she could see the passers-by.
+She was forever studying types, and eyed them with a grave deliberation.
+
+“You’ll get your head knocked off yet, Joanna,” Peter would remonstrate,
+“staring at people so.”
+
+He liked it better when later on in the evening she turned toward the
+slope of the hill and looked down at the city, laughing in its myriad
+twinkling lights. Her face at that time took on a grave wistfulness
+which he could not analyze. Joanna herself could not define the feeling
+which prompted that expression.
+
+Peter, leaning on his elbow, would lie beside her, his curly black head
+bent toward her, one slender brown hand touching her dress ever so
+lightly. He would have given the world to believe she was thinking about
+him, but he knew she was not. He would have been astounded if he could
+have dreamed of the maze of her thoughts. Joanna was really most human
+at moments like these. Through her mind was floating a series of little
+detached pictures. She saw a glittering stage, Peter, herself, some
+little children. She felt a hazy, nebulous, mystical joy.
+
+Peter adored her at moments like these, but he was afraid of her, too.
+
+One night she astonished him. “Peter,” she said suddenly, “sit up. So.
+I’m tired. I’ve had a hard day. Do you mind if I rest my head on your
+shoulder?”
+
+Would he mind if she offered him a king’s estate?
+
+He was too ecstatic, too—yes—scared, to speak. He sat as she directed,
+he stretched his thin tense arm around her fine young body. He even put
+up one hand and pressed her head closer against his shoulder, touched
+her hair, let his fingers trail ever so lightly over her cheek. Joanna
+in his arms! Joanna!
+
+She felt him trembling. “Am I too heavy, Peter?”
+
+He could hardly articulate, but she heard his ardent “no” and moved
+imperceptibly closer.
+
+His breath stirred her thick, dark hair. He let it caress his chin. Its
+soft heaviness was a revelation to him, a rapture.
+
+She lay so quietly against him he thought she must be asleep. So he
+whispered, “Are you asleep, Joanna?”
+
+“No,” she whispered back, “only very, very tired.”
+
+“Oh, Joanna, Joanna,” he breathed, “be tired forever.”
+
+Somewhere out of the heavenly silence, a girl’s voice, a foreign voice,
+broke into song high and shrill. Russian, Peter thought. It was just a
+snatch, poignant and sweet, that died away leaving a faint lingering
+sadness.
+
+She put her head back then. She opened her dark eyes and looked full
+into his.
+
+Their lips were so near, so near. In a second he had pressed his against
+hers, briefly yet with passion. She sat up and drew a little away from
+him, dazed. But he put his arms around her and held her close. Presently
+they walked home, speechless. When they came to an arc-light, they
+looked at each other’s faces, eager to study and to reveal these new
+selves. Their glances met and clung with a sweet enchantment. Something
+leaped, something fluttered within their hearts, like a fettered,
+struggling wing. And it was beautifully, it was magically, first love!
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+THE vacation sped as vacations will. Peter played in the awful cabaret,
+saved his money and adored Joanna. Joanna practiced trills, danced,
+thought of Peter and allowed him to adore her. As the early September
+days spread their golden haze over Harlem and Morningside Park, she
+actually shivered a little when she realized that when the month was
+over she and Peter would be miles apart.
+
+It is hard to say just how much Joanna cared for Peter at this time.
+Certainly the boy worshipped her. He dreamed wordless dreams of her at
+night sitting in the noisy cabaret. His visit to her was the one
+objective point in his day. When the inexorable moment of separation
+came it cost him actual physical pain to bid her good-by.
+
+Joanna was hardly like that. She had a very real, very ardent feeling
+for Peter. But it was still small, if one may speak of a feeling by
+size. Her love for him was a new experience, a fresh interest in her
+already crowded life, but it had not pushed aside the other interests.
+At nineteen she looked at love as a man of forty might—as “a thing
+apart.” This was due partly to her hard unripeness, partly to her
+deliberate self-training. Joanna had read of too many able women who had
+“counted the world well lost for love,” until it was too late. “Poor,
+silly sheep,” she dubbed them.
+
+She could not, it is true, bundle up her thoughts of Peter and say,
+“I’ll think of you to-morrow at three,” but she did achieve a
+concentration in her work that made it almost impossible for him to
+remain too long in her thoughts. And at nights when he tossed sleepless
+on his bed, dreaming fragrant dreams and seeing golden visions, she was
+sleeping the perfect sleep of healthy weariness.
+
+The last days were hard for her, however, as they were for Peter. For
+Joanna was doomed by her very make-up to a sort of perpetual loneliness.
+Sylvia had her own interests, she had Brian and many, many friends. She
+was the most popular of all the Marshalls. Alec and Joanna had never
+been thrown much together. Philip, once her great confidant, was usually
+away from home. And on his return he was apt to relapse during these
+days into a rapt sadness.
+
+It followed, then, that while Joanna was Peter’s sweetheart, his heart’s
+dear queen, Peter was at once her lover whom she didn’t need very
+much—at least she did not realize that need—and more than that her
+companion and friend whom she needed greatly. The prospect of the days
+stretched long and dreary before her. Even the concert tour, a
+remarkable booking for one so young, did not entirely console her.
+
+The two talked about it on the day before Peter left for Philadelphia.
+They were in Van Cortlandt Park in a little tangled grove. It was noon
+and the September sun streamed down on them making the green wooden
+bench on which they sat pleasantly warm. But the leaves about them were
+going a little sere; in the shade the air felt chill, and the sunshine,
+though warm, was thin and white.
+
+“‘The summer is ended.’” Joanna quoted softly; she sighed. Peter looked
+at her, there were tears in her eyes.
+
+“Dear, beautiful Joanna,” said Peter, and his own beautiful face was
+full of the woe of parting, “how can I leave you to-morrow? Janna, don’t
+send me away, tell me I’m not to go.” He put his arms around her and she
+clung to him.
+
+“Peter, you must go, you must, really. We—we can’t go on like this.
+We’ve got to prepare ourselves while we’re young for the future.”
+
+“Yes,” said Peter and his ardor chilled a little at the touch of her
+cool practicality. But a moment later her light touch rekindled him.
+
+“You love me, Janna? You know I love you?”
+
+“Yes, Peter dear, but we mustn’t say anything more about it.”
+
+“I know, Joanna, I’m not going to worry you any more just now, but
+you’ll let me speak sometime?”
+
+“Yes, oh, yes!”
+
+“Dearest girl! Kiss me, Joanna.”
+
+She touched his lips with a light, lingering kiss. He looked at her, his
+face haggard with his gusty, boyish passion.
+
+“Ah, Joanna, I’ll never forget that kiss.”
+
+Neither would she, her heart told her. It was the first time she had
+ever kissed him.
+
+They walked through the deserted park, their arms frankly about each
+other, like children. The dry grass and brittle leaves crackled beneath
+their feet, the air hung over them like a thin, misty veil. Joanna sang
+a bit from an old Italian song:
+
+ “If from Heaven we could but borrow
+ One day longer of fond affection
+ It would lessen then our sorrow,
+ Give fresh joys for recollection.”
+
+She hummed a line here, then her voice rose again in the thin,
+shimmering air:
+
+ “—The future, dark and lonely!
+ Dearest Loved One, dearest Loved One
+ Parting makes these joys so dear!
+ Ah!—”
+
+“Don’t, Joanna; it’s too sweet. You’ll make me cry.”
+
+“I know it. Oh, Peter, go away and come back great and when you come
+back, speak to me.”
+
+She went with him to the train next morning and to his amazement no less
+than her own, broke down and sobbed into her handkerchief.
+
+He bent over her. “To think of your crying for me, Joanna! Good-by,
+good-by, my sweet. Remember, I’ll be back Christmas.”
+
+He vanished through the gates, was borne out of her vision. A strange
+exaltation possessed him. He was sad, but his sadness was as nothing to
+his joy, his sense of satisfaction. Joanna loved him. She had been
+unusually capricious since that night in Morningside Park. But now he
+was sure of her. He smiled steadily from Manhattan Transfer Station to
+North Philadelphia.
+
+His cousin Louis Boyd met him at Broad Street Station and took him to
+his great-uncle Peter’s in South Eighteenth Street. The old man almost
+cried over him.
+
+“You’re Meriwether’s son, but you’re more like your grandfather, Isaiah.
+He was darker than you, but he held his head high like yours, and you’re
+going to do what he wanted his son to do. It’s good to see you, boy.”
+
+He registered at the University the next day, consulted catalogues, met
+professors, wrote a glowing letter to Joanna. By the end of the week he
+was desperately homesick. He would have gone over to New York if he had
+not been so ashamed, and if he had not been expected to dinner at Louis
+Boyd’s.
+
+“Tell you what’s the matter with you, fellow,” said Louis when Peter had
+told him of his nostalgia, “you want to meet a few girls. We’ll start
+out after dinner.”
+
+Peter did not think this would help much. He wanted Joanna, though he
+said nothing about that to Louis. Astonishingly, however, the cure
+worked.
+
+Louis seemed to know half of colored Philadelphia. “Mighty nice girls in
+this man’s town, I can tell you. They’ll take to you, Peter, because, of
+course, you’re a Bye. Mentioned your name to old Mrs. Viny the other day
+and she told me to be sure to bring you around. She’d like to meet an
+‘old Philadelphian,’ even if he had been living a while in New York.”
+
+The girls deserved the nice things Louis said about them. They were
+pretty, nicely dressed and a shining contrast to the dingy streets and
+old-fashioned houses in which most of them lived. Peter was pleasantly
+struck, too, by the apparent lack of aspiration on the part of most of
+them. They seemed to be pretty well satisfied with being girls. A few
+were able to live home, many sewed, a number of others taught. There was
+no talk of art, of fame, of preparation for the future among them. Peter
+spoke of it to Arabelle Morton, the last girl to whose house Louis took
+him.
+
+“Well, of course we want to get married, and we’re not spoiling our
+chances by being high-brows. Wouldn’t you like to come and play cards
+next Friday night, Mr. Bye? There’ll be just two tables, then afterwards
+we might dance. I’m sure you’d like it.”
+
+Peter thought so, too. He liked Arabelle already and her friendly
+shallowness. He wrote to Joanna:
+
+ “Tell you what, Jan, I think I’m going to like Philly very much.
+ Being Isaiah Bye’s grandson seems to help me no end. They
+ actually consider me an ‘old Philadelphian’ and on the strength
+ of that alone I’ve had four dinner invitations from elderly
+ people to meet other ‘old Philadelphians.’ Some of them old
+ enough, too, I’ll say. However, the dinners are fine and come in
+ very handy for a struggling student. I don’t board at Uncle
+ Peter’s, you see.
+
+ “There’re lots of jolly girls here. Of course, they’re not like
+ yours and Sylvia’s crowd, bent on climbing to the top of a
+ profession—well, Sylvia wasn’t that way so much—but they’re a
+ very nice bunch and they have been most kind to your humble
+ servant....
+
+ “Do you remember that day in the Park? Joanna darling, what are
+ you going to say to me when I come back Christmas?
+
+ “PETER.”
+
+ “N. B. These x’s are kisses.” [There was a long string of them.]
+
+His letters to Joanna reacted to his own advantage. He felt he must be
+able to tell her truthfully of his success in his studies, of his
+ability to fit into this new life. Joanna was interested in him with a
+deep personal interest such as she had never exhibited before, and he
+meant to keep it alive. These were with one exception the most
+wholesome, most formative days of Peter’s life. He had youth, he had
+inspiration, he had the promise of love, with much hard labor to keep
+it.
+
+Many of the colored boys lived in West Philadelphia. They had a
+fraternity, and though according to their laws he could not be taken in
+during his freshman year, it was plain that this honor would be extended
+to him as soon as he became a sophomore. He was pretty well liked, and
+was constantly receiving invitations to spend the night across the
+river. One or two of the boys lived in the dormitories and he was
+frequently offered a chance to see something of this side of college
+life.
+
+But his steadiness surprised himself. He got his meals in a restaurant
+on Woodland Avenue, worked faithfully in the Library between classes,
+and completed the rest of his assignments at night in his Uncle’s
+sitting room. The old fellow loved to see him there. He pictured in
+Peter the restoration of the Bye family in Philadelphia.
+
+To eke out his scanty bank account, he played three nights a week in a
+dance hall at Sixteenth and South Streets. Saturday afternoons he did
+track work. Friday and Sunday he spent at Arabelle Morton’s or at Lawyer
+Talbert’s on Christian Street. This latter and his family consisting of
+two sons and two daughters, were the relatives with whom the Marshalls
+stayed on their visits to Philadelphia. He found them very enjoyable.
+One of the boys was an undertaker but with a disposition far less
+lugubrious than his calling. The other was in the Wharton School of
+Finance at Pennsylvania and was to read law later at Harvard. Both girls
+were young and both were engaged. They were very much in love, but as
+their fiancés were studying medicine at Howard University, they welcomed
+Peter with much acclaim.
+
+Thanks to them and Louis, he was soon enrolled in the social calendar,
+and if he chose to be lonely, it was his own fault.
+
+At Christmas he went back to New York; Joanna met him at the station and
+took him home in her father’s car. Joel was one of the first ten colored
+men in Harlem to possess an automobile. The distance between his house
+and his business rendered it almost a necessity, and he was old enough
+to deserve release from the noise of the subway and the weary climbing
+to the elevated.
+
+Joanna had grown very good-looking, Peter thought. More than that, she
+looked even distinguished. Her purposefulness gave her a quality which
+he had missed in the Philadelphia girls. His ardor had not cooled in the
+least, but he had had to force it into second place. Now it surged
+uppermost in his heart again.
+
+He was glad that he had been in another city, had seen so many other
+girls. It only confirmed his conviction that Joanna was the only woman
+in the world for him. He hoped she possessed the same singleness of
+desire for him.
+
+“There’s lots going on,” Joanna told him, sitting arm in arm with him in
+the car. “Sylvia and Brian are to be married Easter, so mother’s
+formally announcing it now. There’ll be luncheons—not for you I’m
+afraid, Peter. Then our dancing class is giving a benefit for the Pierce
+Day Nursery. There’ll be fancy dancing on the stage, in which your
+humble servant will star. And we’re to have a Christmas tree at our
+house and a house party. I’m asking you now, Peter. Isn’t it great being
+grown up?”
+
+“You bet. Which of these functions comes off first?”
+
+“Sylvia’s engagement party.”
+
+“So she and Spencer are actually going to pull it off. They’ve waited a
+long time, haven’t they?”
+
+“Yes, that’s because Brian insisted on getting a good start before he
+married. Sylvia would have married him the day after they became
+engaged. But I think Brian’s right.”
+
+“They’re both right, but Sylvia’s way is the best. That’s the only
+attitude for anyone to have towards marriage. I’m afraid you lack it, my
+child. You want to begin with a mansion and three cars.”
+
+“You mean thing! I don’t care about money as money one bit and you know
+it. But I do care about success. And a house or a car usually implies
+that. Any girl likes her man to look well in the eyes of other men.”
+
+“This man’s going to look well.” He yearned toward her. “Kiss me,
+sweetheart.”
+
+“Sir, you insult me. People shouldn’t kiss unless they’re engaged.”
+
+“Then be engaged to me, dearest Joanna. Great Scott, are we here?”
+
+Joanna evaded him after that. Christmas was Tuesday, but as he had saved
+his cuts for Saturday classes, he had managed to come away the preceding
+Friday night. On Christmas morning he caught her before daybreak. They
+had arranged to go to an early service in a large Episcopal church where
+Joanna had recently been engaged as a soloist. He was waiting for her in
+the dark hall.
+
+“Good! There you are, Peter. We must fly.”
+
+“Not until you’ve told me you love me.”
+
+“I love you, Peter. Come on.”
+
+“No, sir, put your little arms around my neck. So. Now say, ‘Dear Peter,
+I love you and I’m going to marry you.’”
+
+“Oh, I can’t say that. Let me go, Peter.”
+
+“Not one step.” He held her so close that she had to poise herself
+against him, breathlessly, exquisitely. A clock in the house boomed
+five.
+
+“Peter, ask me to-night.”
+
+“I’m asking you now. Answer me this minute, Joanna. Not one step will we
+stir till you do.” He shook her gently. “Say it, darling.”
+
+She still had her arms around his neck. “Dear Peter,” she began, her
+voice breaking a little, “I love you and I’m going to marry you.”
+
+“You’ve got a smudge on your face,” he told her solemnly.
+
+She burst into hysterical tears at that. “I never thought I’d become
+engaged with a smudge on my face.”
+
+“I know you didn’t. I’ll try to overlook it.” He got down on his knees
+and kissed her hands. “Darling Joanna, I’ll love you always.”
+
+Between them, they wiped away the traces of the smudge and of her tears.
+Then they found their way out, and walked through the dark silent
+streets singing “Joy to the World,” like a pair of Christmas waifs.
+
+The lovers found it hard to see each other. There were too many things
+going on for that. Peter could have found time, but Joanna, he realized
+with a pang, seemed to think of nothing but her dance. When she wasn’t
+at a party, or dressing, she was at a rehearsal. The affair for the Day
+Nursery was to come off New Year’s Eve.
+
+Monsieur Bertully’s seven pupils danced, swayed, pirouetted. Their slim
+silken limbs flashed and twinkled through a series of poses and groups
+until one thought of an animated Greek frieze. At the end the seven
+girls appeared as school children. Joanna as their leader was teaching
+them a game. Peter watched her flashing in a red dress across the stage,
+dancing, leaping, twirling. The orchestra struck up something vaguely
+familiar. Why, it was Joanna’s old dance, “Barn! Barn!”
+
+She swayed, she balanced, she stamped her foot.
+
+ “Stay back, girl, don’t you come near me!”
+
+Miss Sharples was there with a group of Greenwich Village folks, Helena
+Arnold told them afterwards.
+
+Peter had to leave on New Year’s Day. It was bitterly cold and the
+Marshalls had dinner guests, but Joanna went to the station with him.
+She didn’t cry this time, Peter noticed. She didn’t tell him that it was
+because of the pain raging at her heart.
+
+“I’ll have to get used to his leaving me,” she told herself stubbornly.
+“I’ve got it to stand, for years and years. Talking about it won’t do
+any good.”
+
+She had fixed up a box of delicious sandwiches and other goodies for
+him, and there was a little letter in the box. But Peter didn’t know
+that, so in spite of her wan face he felt aggrieved as he stepped on the
+train, for she had barely pressed his hand and her lips were cold.
+
+She cried herself into a headache on her way back.
+
+It was bitter in Philadelphia, too. Peter got off the train at West
+Philadelphia. He would call on some of the boys on Sansom Street.
+
+“They’re all out I think,” the landlady, Mrs. Larrabee, told him. She
+gave him a friendly smile. “You can run up, though, and see.” She was
+right, they were out, but the rooms were warm and comfortable.
+
+“I think I’ll stay up here and thaw out,” he called down.
+
+He sat in a comfortable chair, smoked a cigarette or two, read a few
+pages in a novel. Then he remembered Joanna’s box, and opened it. There
+was the letter on top.
+
+ “Dear Peter,” he read, “isn’t it awful to have to separate this
+ way? I have a secret I was saving for you. I’m to sing in
+ Philadelphia very shortly. Aren’t you glad? I love you, Peter.
+
+ “JAN.”
+
+His spirits went up, up.
+
+“Good-night,” he called to Mrs. Larrabee. “Happy New Year.”
+
+It wasn’t so cold after all, he thought. Anyway, it wouldn’t do him any
+harm to stretch his legs a bit. He’d swing across town through the
+University grounds and take a car on Spruce Street.
+
+The car jolted down over the bridge, turned one corner into a dingy side
+street, then another, slid ponderously into Lombard Street. It stopped
+to let the Twentieth Street car go by. Idly, Peter glanced out of the
+window. On the corner stood a woman, neatly, even carefully dressed.
+Something about her dejected pose made Peter look at her closely. She
+turned just then, and the street light fell full on an old-gold, oval
+face, haggard and disillusioned. Peter saw it was Maggie Ellersley.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+POOR Maggie! How relentlessly and completely had her illusions flown!
+
+She had enjoyed the ride to Atlantic City. Her husband had surrounded
+her with magazines, fruit, candy, even books. She had had a wonderful
+dinner and when they got to Atlantic City, he took her to a very
+respectable, clean boarding-house. It was nice to be protected, she
+realized that. And, when, the day after they were married, he gave her
+seventy-five dollars, and told her to send part of it to her mother, her
+spirits, which had not yet recovered from the shock of the past two
+days, rose considerably.
+
+She thought Mr. Neal remarkably kind and gentle. And he was always
+clean. On the whole, while she was not the least bit in love with him,
+she considered he did pretty well, though she did wish he knew a little
+more about English grammar. His deliberate incorrectness made her
+ashamed of him and because he was so kind to her, this feeling on her
+part made her a little ashamed of herself.
+
+He was the soul of generosity. Besides giving her money, he had taken
+her to two of the best stores, and bought her whatever she wanted. He
+would have liked to buy her a complete outfit, but the prices made her
+demur.
+
+“Wait till we get to New York again. We can do better there.” But she
+did let him buy her a few things: There were a blue silk dress, a white
+satin skirt, two or three smart, delicately tinted blouses, a wonderful
+wrap, light but warm; tan and white shoes and stockings.
+
+Atlantic City was a revelation to her. She had literally never been out
+of New York City, except once to a funeral in Brooklyn in company with
+the lugubrious Mis’ Sparrow. This fairyland by the sea with its colored
+lights, its human kaleidoscope, its boardwalk, its shops! She did not
+know the world held such as these.
+
+But she was more interested in the Atlantic City that lay on the north
+side of Atlantic Avenue. There were many cottages here, a score of
+restaurants, a good drug store, all of them patronized by colored
+people. They were the kind of people Maggie wanted to know, she could
+see that at a glance. In the restaurant which she and her husband most
+frequented, she sat and watched the happy, laughing faces. They were
+like one big family although they came from Washington, Philadelphia,
+and Baltimore. She realized then how completely she had depended on the
+Marshalls and their immediate entourage. Cut off from them, she had no
+way of meeting these people, she possessed no background.
+
+Some of the visitors seemed to know others hailing from the most remote
+places. One woman said, “Oh, there’s Annie Mackinaw, she’s been in San
+Francisco for five years you know, I must speak to her.” Surely, Maggie
+thought, her husband must have met some of these people somewhere. But
+although an occasional man nodded to him, even came up and spoke, not
+one brought over his wife or daughters. The women looked at Maggie, a
+little curiously; once she thought as she passed a large party at a
+table that they stopped talking with that queer suddenness which made
+her sure they were discussing her. They looked at her clothes,
+appraising them, but she could never catch their direct gaze.
+
+She sought to find solace in the theaters, of which she was very fond.
+This was an opportunity, plenty of leisure and a willing companion ready
+and able to take her whenever and wherever she wished. But Atlantic City
+theaters make no secret of their unwillingness to serve colored patrons.
+After being told at the ticket office that there were no more balcony
+seats, only to see them calmly handed out to the next white person in
+line; after enduring an evening in the poorly ventilated gallery with a
+feeling of resentment rankling in her breast; above all after seeing how
+these mischances awoke her husband’s passionate but futile anger, she
+desisted. He had a terrible, devastating temper, which left her
+speechless and cowering even though it was not directed toward her.
+Better do without the theater forever, she thought, than be the cause of
+awakening his savage wrath.
+
+She returned to her survey of the colored visitors. Her husband found
+some friends and went off on mysterious trips with them, from which he
+returned amiable and pleasant and usually with some small gift for her.
+In his absence she sat on the piazza watching happy groups go by, or sat
+alone in the pavilion far down the boardwalk, where the colored people
+bathed. In time she came to know the characteristics of certain groups,
+could even tell from what city they came.
+
+Philadelphians were not as a rule as strikingly dressed as the folks,
+say, from Washington, but they had a better time. They seemed bound by
+some kind of tie, family, perhaps—which made it possible for them to
+group together incongruously but with evident enjoyment. Old women and
+young girls, young girls and elderly men, young men and almost
+middle-aged women, laughed and bathed and gossiped like brothers and
+sisters. These were the hardest to approach; it was impossible to invade
+their solidarity. They made the status of the outsider very clear.
+
+The Baltimore people were somewhat like these, only gayer. They were
+clannish, too, but more willing to let down bars. Clearly they were a
+cross between the Philadelphians and the gay Washingtonians who played
+about in very distinct groups, superb in their fashionable clothes and
+their deep assurance.
+
+Maggie’s landlady introduced her to one girl, a Miss Talbert from
+Philadelphia, who came up on the piazza one day to inquire for a former
+boarder. She was brown, not pretty, rather plainly but well dressed,
+with a beautiful manner. An atmosphere of niceness hung about her.
+
+She acknowledged the introduction pleasantly. “You’re from New York,
+Mrs. Neal—I wonder if you know my cousin Sylvia Marshall?”
+
+Maggie could have jumped for joy. “She’s my best friend.”
+
+Things went a little better, then. Miss Talbert asked her to go in
+bathing, introduced her to a few people, beckoned her over to her table
+at lunch. But she and her party were staying for only three days more,
+and Maggie was almost as badly off as ever when she left.
+
+Her husband took her down to the pavilion the next day, and left her
+there. A sharp-faced old woman wearing a plain sad-colored dress and a
+formidable false front, beckoned to her.
+
+“What does your husband do?” she asked the girl, looking at her over
+sloping glasses.
+
+Maggie, confused, said he was in the motor-business. The old woman
+turned incredulously away.
+
+She determined to ask her husband about his work. But he gave her no
+satisfaction.
+
+“You wouldn’t understand it. Too much explaining to it. I make money
+enough for you, don’t I, girl?” He laid a heavy hand on her frail
+shoulder.
+
+He thought he’d go to Philadelphia to live. “Feller told me of some good
+prospects there. We’ll just room for a while. If we don’t like it, we
+can go back to New York.”
+
+She was satisfied. She didn’t want to return to New York, she realized.
+Her mother could make out with the money which, Neal had assured her,
+she could send regularly. And it made her sick to think of the
+Marshalls.
+
+Without regrets she mounted the train with him one day and went to the
+big, sprawling city. Its size, its long stretches of streets appalled
+her. The awful silence which seemed to descend over the town when she
+got below Walnut Street frightened her. One could be very lonely here,
+no doubt.
+
+The “rooming” of which her husband had spoken proved to mean the second
+floor of a house in South Fifteenth Street. There were three rooms and a
+bath. She liked this because it gave her something to do. She kept them
+clean, arranged and rearranged the charming furniture which Neal gave
+her, and prepared their simple meals.
+
+It was the first time she had had a really attractive setting. And she
+was soothed, bewitched by its effect. Her rather simple plan of life
+contained, it must be remembered, only three ideas,—comfort,
+respectability, and love. This last had been added to her list very
+recently. She would have married Philip any time during the last five
+years without loving him, for the sake of the security which he could
+have brought her. So it is not strange, then, that she and Neal sailed
+their little craft so smoothly. It is true that marriage did not in
+reality prove as interesting and picturesque as she in common with most
+girls had conceived it to be. But marriage was marriage, and she must
+make the best of it. Neal was still kind, almost fatherly, very
+generous, clean, and, as far as she could see, had no bad habits. He
+smoked one cigar after each meal, and almost never drank.
+
+“Can’t afford it in my business,” she heard him say often. His business!
+If only he hadn’t been so mysterious about that. Still it must be all
+right. Men called on him pretty often and he would see them in the
+middle room, which Maggie had turned into a restful living room.
+Certainly he made plenty of money.
+
+She had comfort then and she did not feel the lack of love. Occasionally
+it occurred to her, it would be nice to be performing some of her
+housewifely duties for Philip. She thought he would enjoy doing some of
+them with her. But perhaps that was because he was young. Things seemed
+to change so when one became old,—at least elderly. And she did not
+think Philip would have been out as much as Neal.
+
+Her passion, however, was for respectable company,—for more than that if
+she had but known it. She wanted friends, impeccable young women with
+whom she could talk over things, and exchange patterns and recipes, or
+go to the matinée. Once she met Miss Talbert on Christian Street. The
+girl greeted her kindly but a bit doubtfully, spoke about the weather.
+Then came the query:
+
+“What did you say your husband’s name was, Mrs. Neal?”
+
+“Why Neal, of course, oh, Henderson, Henderson Neal.”
+
+Miss Talbert looked at her a little sadly, exchanged a few more
+banalities, and went on her assured way.
+
+“I did hope she’d ask me to call,” Maggie murmured. “How am I ever to
+get to know anybody in this great town?”
+
+On the floor above her lived a girl and her brother, Annie and Thomas
+Mason. The brother played and the girl sewed and kept house. Once Annie
+got a letter of Neal’s by mistake and brought it down to Maggie. She was
+in her living-room trying to shorten a skirt when Annie tapped.
+
+She stepped to the door. “Oh, come in.”
+
+Miss Mason came in, nothing loth. “I got your husband’s letter by
+mistake. He’s Mr. H. Neal ain’t he?” She held out the letter glancing
+about the room. “You’ve fixed it up real pretty here. The last roomers
+kept the place looking so bad. You going to stay long?”
+
+Maggie didn’t know. She was transported at the sight of the
+pleasant-voiced friendly girl and the North Pennsylvania accent which
+carried with it something very wholesome and grateful.
+
+Miss Mason was frankly curious. “You here alone all day? What do you do
+while your husband’s to work?”
+
+“Oh, clean, and sew and—and nap,” Maggie laughed a little. “Don’t you
+want to come to see me sometime, now, this afternoon?”
+
+Miss Mason thought she “might’s well, your room seems bigger’n mine
+’cause we’ve got a piano and you’ve got a table there. Say, s’pose I was
+to bring my sewing down, and I could help you even off your skirt.”
+
+After that they spent a great deal of time together. They walked in the
+quiet autumn evenings down dingy Fifteenth Street, past the hideousness
+of Washington Avenue, down, down the stretch of unswerving street to
+Tasker or Morris, through to Broad Street which is really Fourteenth.
+They sauntered back arm in arm under young but fading trees, past the
+hurry of flying automobiles, under the soft silver of the street lights.
+Then they turned up Catherine Street, stopped at the bakery for
+ice-cream or a bag of cakes and so to the house to bed.
+
+It was a pleasant, almost a bucolic friendship. Both girls had rather
+simple tastes. Sometimes they went further up Broad Street to the
+theaters, choosing the ones where they met with the least
+discrimination. Once Maggie took Annie to the Academy of Music. They
+stood in line for their seats and Maggie looked at the bill-boards. One
+of them read:
+
+ COMING!
+ THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA
+ MR. HUBERT SANDERSON
+ CONDUCTOR
+ DECEMBER 27TH, 1910
+ MR. THOMAS MORSE
+ WILL PRESENT
+ MISS JOANNA MARSHALL
+ MEZZO-SOPRANO OF NEW YORK
+
+She turned away, a little sick.
+
+Maggie usually paid for their outings. Annie’s brother made a pretty
+fair salary, his sister told Maggie, for he played at private dances for
+wealthy white people in West Philadelphia, Rosemont, Sharon, Chestnut
+Hill and various other suburbs.
+
+“But he don’t give me much ’cause he wants to leave the country for good
+sometime. I keep house for him and he pays for the lodgings and for most
+of our food. I make what little extra I can by taking in plain sewing.
+Your husband’s right open-handed, ain’t he?”
+
+“Yes,” said Maggie heartily. “He’s very generous and very kind.” She
+wanted to change the subject, for Annie was inquisitive—one never knew
+what she’d ask next.
+
+“Funny, ain’t it,” pursued Annie, her mouth full of pins—she was at her
+everlasting sewing, turning up the hem of a bath-robe—“I ain’t never
+seen him yet, no, nor Tom neither.”
+
+“Well, you will. Come and walk up to South Street with me. I want to get
+some postal cards.”
+
+It was an aimless existence, but it had its points. Her mother was
+comfortable, she herself had ease, a husband and a companion.
+
+She went out to market one chilly November morning and came back later
+than she expected. She had scarcely got in before Annie appeared, an
+unusual flush on her yellow, freckled cheeks. Annie had reddish,
+crinkled hair, which she wore brushed stiffly back from her high
+forehead into a hard, ungraceful knob; “rhiny” hair, Maggie knew Sylvia
+and the boys would call it. She could imagine how they would talk about
+Annie in their pleasant, unmalicious way. Joanna would strike her
+attitude and imitate her accent. Annie broke into these reminiscences.
+
+“I been down here two or three times a’ready. Kind o’ rawish like.”
+
+“Yes, I think it’s going to rain. I’ll light the gas-heater and we can
+sit here and thaw out. I enjoy a chilly day if it’s warm inside.”
+
+“Kind o’ that way myself.”
+
+“Oh, you said you’d been here before. Want to see me about anything
+special?”
+
+“Oh, aimed I’d come set with you a spell. Me and Tom—now—we saw your
+husband last night.”
+
+“That so? Where? How’d you guess it was he?”
+
+“Near Bainbridge Street, then we watched him come in here. Why, Tom
+knowed him a’ready. I didn’t know his name was Henderson. I’d heard of
+him before myself.”
+
+Outside a steady soaking rain had begun to fall in the gray somberness
+of the November afternoon. The gas-heater cast a ruddy oblong of light
+on the white ceiling. Maggie, who had been straightening out a paper
+pattern, crossed the room and threw her slight figure on the couch,
+huddling close against the wall. She shivered a little in the luxurious
+warmth.
+
+“Isn’t it grand to be indoors? Where did you ever hear of my husband?”
+
+She was becoming drowsy and did not notice at first that Annie had not
+answered her. When she did, she looked up suddenly to catch the girl’s
+dog-like brown eyes fixed wistfully on hers.
+
+“What’s the matter Annie?”
+
+“Nothing.”
+
+“Oh, but there is. Are you sick? Has Tom been unkind to you?”
+
+“Oh, it isn’t me. It’s you! Oh, Maggie, how could you?”
+
+“What about me? How could I what?”
+
+“Marry him?”
+
+“Marry whom? my husband,—why shouldn’t I?”
+
+“Didn’t you know?”
+
+“For God’s sake speak up, Annie Mason. What is it you know about him?
+Has he got another wife? Is he an escaped convict?”
+
+“He’s a gambler.”
+
+“A what?”
+
+“A gambler. Tom knows him well. And I guess I musta saw him when I was a
+little girl. He used to live up around Stroudsburg. They run him out of
+town.”
+
+“I’ll never believe it.” But in her heart she did. That money—why, of
+course, his long hours, especially at night, his reticence—all this
+combined to make her recognize the truth.
+
+“You poor thing. Of course you don’t want to believe it. That’s what I
+said to Tom. I said, ‘That poor thing, she’s got no notion of it.’”
+
+It was intolerable, such pity! “Where is your brother, Annie?”
+
+“Who, Tom! Prob’ly up stairs, he don’t go out to rehearsal till four.”
+
+“Tell him to come here.”
+
+Annie went out, whimpering a little, twisting her fingers in the folds
+of her white apron. She came back followed by a tall thin young man,
+dark, with kind, soft brown eyes. Maggie noticed that the hair in front
+of his ears was unshaven to form flat side-whiskers. “Siders” the boys
+used to call them. They had teased Sandy about them, for he had affected
+them in his college days.
+
+She was standing by the table holding the envelope of the paper pattern
+in her hand. “Mr. Mason, what’s this you know about my husband?”
+
+“Annie shouldn’t have told you, ma’am,” he said abjectly. “It was none
+of her business.”
+
+“Well, she has. Sit down, please, and tell me all you know.”
+
+“I’d rather stand, thank you, ma’am. Well if I must. Even when I was a
+little boy, Henderson Neal was knowed to be a card-sharp. There wasn’t
+nobody could stand against him. Used to wait for the men on a Saturday
+night, white and colored. He’d meet ’em in the bar and treat, and then
+ask ’em in on a little game. And they’d play, till they was cleaned out.
+Then he’d give ’em another drink, and clap ’em on the back. Perhaps he’d
+hand ’em back a dollar. ‘Better luck next time old man!’ And they’d come
+back the next Saturday night, the poor fools. Some of them blowed their
+brains out, they got so far back in their debts.”
+
+She was tearing the envelope into bits, but her voice was steady.
+“You’re sure of this?”
+
+“My uncle was one of them that killed theirselves. They was a colored
+minister come to Stroudsburg and he run him out of town. Then he crossed
+over to Phillipsburg, then down to Trenton. They made things too hot for
+him there, too. Then he got in with a white saloon-keeper in the mining
+districts in Pennsylvania. Finally things got too hot for him and he
+left the country for a while, was servant to an actor. He come back in
+about five years with another name.”
+
+“An alias,” murmured Annie who read the papers.
+
+“But pretty soon he started out again under his own name. You see he got
+some political protection in New York, and I guess he’s got the same
+here. Most people know about him a’ready. I’m sorry I had to tell you,
+ma’am.”
+
+“Yes, yes, I’m sure. Would—would you mind leaving me now? You, too,
+Annie—please.”
+
+She didn’t lie down and moan and cry as she had done—was it less than
+six months ago?—when she received Joanna’s letter. That was child’s
+trouble compared to this. She had wanted so to be decent, and she was a
+gambler’s wife. God! how funny!
+
+Now she must think, she must think. Oh, what was she to do? Leave him,
+she knew that. But afterwards? She had no money. He had given her her
+very clothes. Her old ones were at her mother’s. Her mother!
+
+“Poor Mamma!” she said again as on a former occasion. “What a hell her
+life’s always been!”
+
+No wonder those people, those men in Atlantic City who knew him didn’t
+introduce their women folks to her.
+
+“I suppose they thought ‘You thief! Dressing that girl on other men’s
+money!’”
+
+Pretty soon he’d be home for dinner. She heard him presently coming up
+the stairs. There! He had stepped on the creaky one. That meant he
+was—now—just outside the door. He stepped in.
+
+“Nice and warm in here.”
+
+She barely allowed him time to take off his overcoat. “Henderson, I know
+how you make your money. You’re a gambler.”
+
+He didn’t deny it. “Who told you that?”
+
+“The nephew of that man, that Mr. Mason (she hazarded the name) who shot
+himself in Stroudsburg.”
+
+“Where’d you see him?”
+
+“What difference does that make? And I’ve been living like a queen off
+stolen money. I want you to know I’m leaving you this instant.”
+
+He caught her by the arm. “Don’t be a fool, Maggie!”
+
+She could see the blood mounting, as his temper rose, shadowing his dark
+face.
+
+“That’s what I’m trying to do—stop being a fool.”
+
+“Where will you go, how can you live? Off my money? You’ve none of your
+own.”
+
+“I’ll make some.”
+
+“I’ll never let you go. I’ll kill you first.” He crushed both slender
+wrists in his brutal hand and she went ashen with pain.
+
+“I wish you would kill me.”
+
+He flung her away from him then and she leaned back against the wall,
+breathing hard.
+
+“I suppose you’ll go back to that man, that fine gentleman that didn’t
+want you.”
+
+“Isn’t it likely he’d want me now? I was a nice girl then, not the wife
+of a gambler.”
+
+He broke down suddenly at that, sank in a chair, buried his head in his
+hands.
+
+“What do you want me to do?”
+
+“I want you to let me go.” Her voice was hard.
+
+He lifted a wretched face. “You wouldn’t stay even if I was to do
+something else—something decent?”
+
+But she couldn’t forgive him for dragging her into this abyss, this
+slough of degradation.
+
+“You couldn’t change now, and anyway I wouldn’t live with you.”
+
+To her amazement he got up, took his hat and coat and started for the
+door.
+
+“I’ll go. You’re not the one to be turned out. You know I pay for these
+rooms a quarter in advance. This here’s the beginning of the second
+quarter. There’s some money in the top bureau drawer.”
+
+“I don’t want the money. Take it with you.” She got it and stuffed a
+handful of bills—yellow ones—in the pocket of his overcoat. “I don’t
+want your rooms, either.”
+
+“You’ll have to keep them. You’ve no money and you’ve no place to go.
+You ain’t got a friend in Philadelphia, and you can’t walk to New York.
+If you walk around the streets long enough, you’ll find there’s worse
+things can happen than being a gambler’s wife.” He straightened up. “If
+you don’t promise me to stay, I’ll tag around after you everywheres you
+go.”
+
+“If I stay—for a while—will you promise me not to come back?”
+
+“I promise.”
+
+“Pooh, the promise of a gambler!” She hated him.
+
+“I’ll show you. Best not to try me too far though, Maggie.”
+
+“Well, are you going?”
+
+He walked out, closing the door very quietly after him. She had not shed
+a tear, she did not now. Instead she sat, with her brow wrinkled, trying
+to recall something.
+
+“Oh, yes,” she sprang up and rushed to the closet, pulling with nervous,
+shaking fingers at the garments hanging there. In the pocket of her
+little poplin suit, the suit in which she was married, she found what
+she was looking for.
+
+It was an oblong business card, slightly soiled around the edges. She
+had come across it in Atlantic City and for some reason had kept it.
+Across the front ran a neat superscription
+
+ MADAME HARKNESS
+ Hair Culturist
+ 270 West 137th Street
+ New York City
+
+Her glance dropped to the left-hand corner. Yes, she was right, there it
+was: Branch offices—Washington, D. C., 1307 U Street, N. W.; Baltimore,
+1816 Druid Hill Avenue; Philadelphia, 2021 South Street.
+
+She sat all night brooding wide eyed over the purring gas-stove. In the
+morning she made herself tidy and walked up to Twentieth and South.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XV
+
+
+SYLVIA was arranging the smallest birthday cake in the world. It bore
+one very small candle and it was for the very small baby who, propped up
+in a high chair, sat and watched the birthday proceedings with round
+solemn eyes. A three-year-old youngster, whose nose just rose above the
+edge of the table, watched, too, with eyes no less round and far more
+interested.
+
+“Look at the darlings!” said Sylvia. “They know just what their mother’s
+doing. Aren’t my children intelligent, Brian?”
+
+“What you mistake for intelligence is hunger, much more likely,” laughed
+her husband. “I’ve seen Roger look that way before when there wasn’t any
+birthday cake, but when there certainly were eats.”
+
+“You watch them,” said Sylvia, “and I’ll see if mother and father are
+ready to come. I had a telegram from Joanna this afternoon, so I know
+she can’t make it.” Her voice floated up to him as she ran down the back
+stairs.
+
+The five years of Sylvia’s married life had brought their changes to the
+Marshall household. Mrs. Marshall had insisted on Sylvia’s and Brian’s
+remaining with them.
+
+“Else we’d be lonely,” she complained, “what with Sandy gone for good,
+and Philip and Joanna everlastingly ‘on the road,’ as they express it.”
+
+Alexander and Helena Arnold, after seeing each other constantly and
+unresponsively for ten years, suddenly fell completely in love on that
+night of the Pierce Day Nursery dance. Sandy proved himself an impulsive
+wooer, for he won Helena’s consent and would have married her before
+Sylvia’s and Brian’s wedding came off.
+
+“Gracious, don’t spoil my thunder,” Sylvia had begged him aghast.
+
+“Well, I’m the oldest,” Sandy had retorted. “It’s really my place to
+marry first.”
+
+Helena, unaware of all this, announced that she wanted to be bridesmaid
+at Sylvia’s wedding, so Alec must wait till after. “Think of all the
+extra clothes I can get. Besides, I couldn’t possibly finish my
+trousseau before.”
+
+The two had married the June following Sylvia’s wedding and had moved
+into a house of their own. The household had hardly become adjusted to
+Alexander’s absence, when Philip started on his long tours which kept
+him away from home a good part of the year.
+
+He had been graduated from Harvard, with honors and with his coveted Phi
+Beta Kappa key. He had come home, happy though not as radiant, Joanna
+thought for one, as in the old days. Then he had evolved his new scheme.
+He proposed that an organization be started among the colored people
+which should reach all over the country.
+
+“White and colored people alike may belong to it,” said Philip, his eyes
+kindling to his vision, “but it is to favor primarily the interests of
+colored people. No, I’m wrong there,” he corrected himself. “It is to
+favor primarily the interests of the country.”
+
+He was speaking to a group of both white and black enthusiasts. “How
+shall we start it?” someone asked.
+
+They all liked the plan. He had his project well mapped out, for he had
+thought of little else for the past three years. There were to be a
+national board and a national office, supported by local boards and
+membership. There would be need of organized publicity; he might suggest
+a magazine or a weekly newspaper. A huge campaign must be got underway,
+an effort at nation-wide support.
+
+“Its objects will be,” he enumerated them on his long brown fingers,
+“the suppression of lynching and peonage, the restoration of the ballot,
+equal schools and a share in civic rights.”
+
+“A large order,” said Barney Kirchner, Philip’s classmate, “but I like
+it. I’ll get my uncle behind it.” Barney was wealthy in his own right,
+but his uncle, an Austrian Jew, had built up an immense fortune which
+had since supported many a notable cause.
+
+The little nucleus worked well. From that meeting grew up all that
+Philip predicted, rather weak and tottering at first, but the five years
+had seen the awakening of a great racial consciousness. There were still
+tremendous possibilities almost untouched.
+
+The organization had a magazine, “The Spur,” of which Philip was editor.
+But he was constantly called to exercise his vision and judgment in the
+field. His observation, his constant scrutiny of his own people helped
+him here, but he was the born organizer in any event.
+
+Joanna, already started on her concert tours, often met him on the
+“road.” Sometimes they were booked at the same place for the same night.
+Each was the other’s supporting attraction.
+
+“Oh, is this Mr. Marshall?” Joanna would gush when he met her train. She
+put an imaginary lorgnette to her eye. “Any relation to the eminent Miss
+Joanna Marshall, the world-famous mezzo?”
+
+“Never heard of her. Haven’t the least idea who she is. Come along,
+Silly. Now, Joanna, do be on time and don’t stop to primp. Mind, I won’t
+wait for you a minute.”
+
+“Not the littlest, teeniest one?” It was hard to say which was prouder
+of the other.
+
+Joanna was in fine feather in those days. She had youth and a certain
+grave beauty which did not strike the observer at first as did Sylvia’s
+or even poor Maggie’s. But it grew on one and remained. Young men,
+though they liked to be seen with a star, were a little afraid of her
+queenliness, her faint condescension. She took herself so seriously! Her
+own folks and Peter often teased her about this, but they adored it in
+her. And she, in turn, adored her little fame, the footlights, the
+adulation. Even the smallest church in the quietest backwoods, with a
+group of patient dark faces peering at her out of the often smoky
+background, had its appeal. At such times, strange to say, she was at
+her best, gave of her finest. She would come on the stage, trailing
+clouds of glory, and lean toward them—a rosy brown vision. In some misty
+colorful robe of Sylvia’s designing, her thick crinkling hair piled high
+on her head as the Spanish woman had taught her, she seemed to say:
+
+“I am no better than you. You are no worse than I. Whatever I am, you,
+in your children, may be. Whatever you are, I in my father have been.”
+
+She was absolutely sincere in her estimation of her art, or of any art.
+It was only in its relation to the other things of life that she lost
+her vision and sense of proportion.
+
+She liked most to go to Philadelphia, where she was in great favor.
+There she had had three great triumphs, once in Association Hall, twice
+at the Academy of Music. Both she and Peter had thrilled when she came
+from the Academy the second time. She sent her flowers and her
+stage-gown home in the car of a friend, while she and Peter were whirled
+in a taxi out to Fairmount Park.
+
+They had driven to the Green Street entrance, and then dismissing the
+cab had walked around the drive, up the steps, in front of the mansion
+and on to Lemon Hill. It was one of those last, warm, almost hot nights
+of Indian Summer. The slopes of the park lay deserted before them, deep
+in velvety shadow, with here and there a gold patch bright as day under
+the watching arc-light.
+
+They sat down on the dry, short grass. “Like that other evening in
+Morningside, long, long ago. How long, Joanna?”
+
+“Oh, ages! How’d I sing, Peter?”
+
+“Divinely. You looked like an angel, Janna. No, not an angel, more like
+a siren in that yellow dress. Where’d you get it, dearest?”
+
+“Yellow nothing! That was orange—deep, deep orange. Sylvia planned it
+out for me. Isn’t she a genius? Through me she certainly is teaching
+these colored people how to dress. We will not wear these conventional
+colors—grays, taupe, beige—poor boy, you don’t know what they are, do
+you? They’re all right for these palefaces. But colored people need
+color, life, vividness.”
+
+“George! I guess you’re right. How’d you come to think of it?”
+
+“I didn’t. It was Sylvia. I started out in a white dress. You should
+have seen me looking like an icebergish angel.”
+
+“You are one, you know Janna.”
+
+“Which? Iceberg or angel?”
+
+“Both. One makes me adore you, the other says ‘hands off’.”
+
+“Not a bad thing, do you think, considering all the men I meet?”
+
+“I hate them. Sure you don’t like any of ’em better than me?”
+
+“No, dear, I like you best.”
+
+“‘No, dear, I like you best’,” he mimicked. “For God’s sake, Jan, can’t
+you say, ‘Peter, I love you always’? Say it.”
+
+She hesitated, sighed a little. “Peter I love you.”
+
+“Why’d you leave off ‘always’?”
+
+“Dear little boy, how can I say it? I do when I think of it. But, Peter,
+I have so much to think about—my tour, my booking, you know, my lessons
+in French and Italian, my dancing. I still keep that up; I’d really
+rather do that than sing. Dancing makes me——”
+
+“Oh, damn the dancing!”
+
+“Why, Peter!” She looked at his flushed face in amazement.
+
+“Hang it all, talking to me about dancing, when I’m talking to you about
+love—_love_, Joanna—and there’s nothing to keep us from getting married.
+Some fellows and girls ball their lives up so they can’t ever get them
+straightened out. But here we are ‘all set’ as the fellows say. And you
+talk to me about dancing! Suppose I were to talk to you about _Materia
+Medica_!”
+
+“I think it would be a good thing if you would.”
+
+He was honestly aggrieved at that.
+
+She leaned over and kissed him. “See how brazen I am. That’s the second
+time I’ve given you a kiss. Oh, Peter, you big baby!”
+
+“Dear Janna, I love you so! Great Scott! aren’t girls funny! You can’t
+guess how hard it is for me to be letting all these stupid years go by.
+Sometimes I’ve half a mind to chuck it all.”
+
+“You’d never get me then.”
+
+“I don’t suppose I would. Well, I have you now.”
+
+“Dear Peter, we must be going home. Cousin Parthenia will rave.”
+
+“Pshaw, she knows you’re with me. Love me, darling?”
+
+“You know I do, you dear, dear boy.”
+
+“Come, sit up on the bench. There, that’s it.” He knelt before her.
+“Know what I’m going to give you to-night?” He felt in his pocket. “Like
+it, Janna?”
+
+He showed her a ring, a tiny gold chased ring, whose facets gleamed like
+diamonds.
+
+“Peter, it’s too beautiful. Oh, I love you for it.”
+
+He slipped it on her finger, got up and sat beside her, kissing her
+little cold hands. She leaned against his shoulder,—he put his arm about
+her. A poignant sweetness seemed to flood in on them out of the solemn,
+mellow night.
+
+Peter was the first to stir. “I must get you home, darling. Oh, Joanna,
+aren’t you too happy? I wonder if we wouldn’t be better off if we were
+resting like this, our arms close about each other, in our grave.”
+
+The inevitable separation came the next day. Joanna was cold, almost
+indifferent. It was the way she had taught herself to endure pain. She
+hated always to leave Peter, particularly if she were returning to New
+York. The excitement of visiting other places healed her loneliness.
+Sometimes she wished she weren’t going to see Peter for these brief
+visits which lacerated her so.
+
+Unfortunately her lover did not understand this. “How can she melt like
+she did last night and then leave me so cool and composed this morning?”
+he wondered, staring dejectedly after the departing express. He had not
+ridden to West Philadelphia with her because he had to be at a hospital
+at Sixteenth Street at one o’clock and it was now noon.
+
+“She used to cry when we separated.” He stood uncertainly a moment on
+the corner of Fifteenth and Market. “Guess I’ll go over to that little
+Automat on Juniper Street and snatch a mouthful. I won’t feel like
+eating after I see Carpenter start in on that slashing. Golly, what a
+steady hand he has.”
+
+He walked through the City Hall Arcade to Juniper Street, crossed in
+front of Wanamaker’s and forced a passage through the teeming little
+by-way.
+
+The Automat was crowded. “Have to eat standing,” he thought, drawing a
+glass of water and seizing a knife and fork. “No, there’s an empty
+table.” He collected his food and began to eat.
+
+Someone put a plate on the table beside him, rested a hand there a
+moment. Peter glanced at it.
+
+“Colored. What a nice hand! Ought to have a peach of a face to match
+that.”
+
+He looked up. “Maggie Ellersley! I had heard you lived here. I thought I
+saw you once, why—four years ago—one New Year’s night on Twentieth
+Street. You’ve been here ever since?”
+
+“Yes, Peter. Oh, it’s so nice to see you!”
+
+“Isn’t it, though! I mean isn’t it great to see somebody from home? I’ve
+just seen Joanna off.”
+
+Her face stiffened at that. But he was busy looking at his watch.
+
+“Ten minutes more! Look here, Maggie, what’d you drop us all that way
+for? How’s your husband?”
+
+She answered his second question. “I haven’t any.”
+
+He glanced at her apologetically, ashamed of his levity. “Is he dead?”
+
+“No,” said Maggie woodenly. “I’ve left him!”
+
+“Oh!” he was embarrassed. “I’m sorry, Maggie. Got to run now. When may I
+see you again?”
+
+His engaging manner brought back the old days. “Peter, you aren’t
+ashamed of me?”
+
+“My dear girl!” He was younger than she and for that reason he adopted a
+paternal air, patting her on the shoulder. “How can you ask that?”
+
+“Would you come to see me to-night, Peter? Come to dinner?”
+
+“Try me. What’s the address?”
+
+She gave it to him. “That’s Fifteenth and Fitzwater.”
+
+“Yes, I know. I’ll see you at six sharp. Until then, Maggie.” He bared
+his curly head and flashed out the side door.
+
+He tapped at her door at six.
+
+“I didn’t hear you ring,” said Maggie. “Come in. This _is_ nice, Peter.”
+
+“I should say so. Jolly little place you’ve got here.” He settled back
+on the couch, stretched out his long legs. “All these years I’ve been
+tramping about Philadelphia, a poor homeless beggar, when I might have
+been coming to see you. How long have you been alone, Maggie?”
+
+“Four and a half years.”
+
+“Four and a half years! Why that’s—look here, how long have you been
+married?”
+
+“Five years last June. I left him almost right away, or rather he left
+me.”
+
+“Deserted you, you mean?”
+
+“No, no, not that. He wanted to stay. I—I couldn’t let him.” She told
+him all about it. “Peter, think of it, I’d married a gambler, a common
+gambler. And I’d wanted so to be decent!” She wept painfully.
+
+He put his arm about her slender shoulders. “There, there now, Maggie.”
+
+“It’s the first time I’ve shed a tear about it. Seeing you, someone out
+of the old happy days, upset me. Sit here, Peter.”
+
+“They were wonderful days, weren’t they? Remember what a bunch we were?
+And now we’re scattered everywhere. Joanna and Philip romping all over
+the country; Sylvia and Brian married; Sandy too, did you know it?”
+
+“Yes, I read of it in the _Amsterdam News_.”
+
+“You and I here. Harry Portor—do you remember him?”
+
+“Ye—es, big square fellow, wore glasses. He used to go skating with us,
+didn’t he?”
+
+“Yes, that’s the fellow. He studied medicine, too, at Harvard. Went to
+Washington as interne in the Freedmen’s Hospital. I haven’t seen him for
+ages. What’d you leave us for so suddenly, Maggie?”
+
+She couldn’t tell _him_, of all people, about Joanna.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know, girls are crazy, I think. Well, I’m not complaining.
+I’m better off than I’ve ever been. That Madame Harkness—you know whom I
+mean?”
+
+“The hair-woman—what about her?”
+
+“She’s made me supervisor of three of her branch stores, here in
+Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D. C. I have my little home
+here, my salary’s good. I make more than enough to live on. My mother
+doesn’t have to do anything if she doesn’t want to. And above all, I’m
+practically free.”
+
+“How do you mean free?”
+
+“I’m suing for a divorce. Lawyer Talbert has my case.”
+
+“Oh, Mrs. Marshall’s cousin. Have you ever seen your—Mr. Neal since he
+left?”
+
+“About once a year. I hadn’t seen him for a long time though, until he
+came here six weeks ago, just before I started divorce proceedings.” Her
+face changed at the thought of it.
+
+“He didn’t threaten you, Maggie?”
+
+“Yes and no. In his way he cares about me, though not as much as for his
+gambling. He’s—he’s got it in his head that I care about somebody else,
+and every now and then he writes me a threatening letter. That’s why he
+came to see me this last time.”
+
+“You oughtn’t to let him in.”
+
+“Oh, I have to. This Mrs. Davis, from whom I rent these rooms, doesn’t
+know there’s any trouble, she thinks he’s a steward on a boat, and I
+never have told her differently. She thinks I’m with him when I go away
+on these trips. Last time he was here, he stayed half the night right on
+that couch. He had a wretched cold, and it was raining!”
+
+“I should think you’d have been afraid.”
+
+“That’s why I let him stay. He’d been harboring such jealous thoughts
+toward me. He—he has an idea that I like another man. And he has a
+terrific temper. You can’t imagine how it smolders and sulks. He wasn’t
+so bad about my sending him away, but since he’s had this suspicion I’ve
+really been afraid. I expect he’ll be really violent some day.”
+
+“Well, Great Scott, won’t my coming to see you be dangerous? I was just
+thinking what good times we’d have.”
+
+“We will. No, you’re all right. He wouldn’t be interested in you after
+he once knew who you were. And there’s Thomas Mason upstairs; he’s not
+bothered about him either, though Tom and his sister are in here all the
+time.”
+
+Peter pushed his chair back. “That was a mighty good dinner, Maggie.
+Mind if I smoke?” He lit a cigarette. “Well, you’ve had hard luck,
+haven’t you? But never mind, it’s bound to break even, sooner or later.
+That’s what I keep saying to myself.”
+
+“You in trouble too, Peter? I’ve been running on so about my affairs.
+Tell me about yours. Studying the way you have to must be an awful
+strain.”
+
+He noticed gratefully how quick and ready was her sympathy. That was
+just it. Studying itself wasn’t so bad, working wasn’t bad. But the
+combination, the struggle to make ends meet, his few social obligations,
+and color!
+
+“Why, it’s awful. I’m on the rack all the time.”
+
+“If you could stop for a year or so and take a little rest, do something
+entirely different.”
+
+He glanced at her, amused but touched. “Joanna ought to hear you say
+that. She’d faint away. She can’t understand anybody’s wanting to let
+up.”
+
+Maggie said with a faint bitterness that you must always be top notch
+for Joanna.
+
+“I should say so. Here, I’ll help you with the dishes. Well,—if you
+really don’t want me.” She washed and wiped so fast that the room seemed
+cleared by magic. It had turned cooler and Maggie lit her little
+gas-stove.
+
+Peter smoked and relapsed into a moody silence, which he broke now and
+then with an account of his struggles. His Uncle Peter had died during
+his third year and the house had been inherited by his daughter, Mrs.
+Boyd. Of course he couldn’t expect anything of her. Her father was only
+his great-uncle, and she had her own children to look after. He had
+moved to Mrs. Larrabee’s in West Philadelphia, with some of his
+fraternity brothers. Somehow his money sped. His books were expensive,
+the cost of his instruments pure robbery.
+
+“I do what playing I can, but I confess I’m up against it,” he ended
+ruefully.
+
+“Lots of the boys do waiting, don’t they?” asked Maggie. “Why don’t you
+do that?”
+
+He just couldn’t, he told her.
+
+“I never could endure standing around ‘grand white folks.’” Both of them
+smiled at the childhood’s phrase. “‘Yes, sir, thank you—Oh, no, sir.’
+Then some lazy white banker, or some fat white woman that never did a
+day’s work in her life, puts a hand in a pocket and offers you a dime.
+God, how I hate it! I did it once at Asbury Park, Phil did, too. We both
+said, ‘Never again!’”
+
+“Where do you play?”
+
+“At different dance-halls. They don’t pay as well here as in New York,
+though. What’s that, Maggie?”
+
+A thin stream of music, played on a violin, floated down to them.
+
+“That’s good fiddling. Is it in this house?”
+
+“Yes. It’s Tom Mason, the man I told you about. The very thing for you!
+He makes barrels of money. Come on, Peter.”
+
+She led him, bewildered, up to the third floor, tapped on a door and was
+admitted to a room much like the one she had just left. A young woman
+with red crinkled hair and a yellow freckled face sat sewing on a white
+apron. The young man who let them in had been putting some resin on his
+bow. Against the wall stood a battered, time-worn piano.
+
+“Hello, Annie,” said Maggie. “Hello, Tom. This is my friend Mr. Bye.
+I’ve brought him up to hear you play.”
+
+“But I can’t, Miss Maggie. I’ve no accompanist.” He turned soft brown
+eyes upon her. “Unless your friend here plays the piano.”
+
+“Well, I do admit to tickling the ivories occasionally,” laughed Peter.
+“Let’s see your score.”
+
+He sat down to the piano, ran his brown limber fingers over the keys,
+and began to play the accompaniment to a typical syncopated melody,
+accenting the time with staccato nods of his well-shaped head.
+
+“Oh, great, that’s great!” cried Tom after a few minutes. “Wait till I
+get my violin.”
+
+Together they made some wonderful sounds. “Play that passage again, will
+you?” Tom pointed it out with his bow.
+
+“That’s the best accompanist you’ve ever had, isn’t it, Tom?” Annie
+asked.
+
+“I should say so. Don’t suppose you’d ever consent to doin’ this sort of
+thing in public, Mr. Bye?”
+
+“That depends on the price and the hours,” said Peter.
+
+Tom told him about himself. He played, had all the work he could do, for
+the wealthy folks of the town and suburbs. The pay was first-rate. Only
+he had never been able to keep a good accompanist.
+
+“They’re so do-less,” he complained. “What’s your regular line?”
+
+Peter explained that he was a student.
+
+Mason liked that. “Then you’d be workin’ because you’d really need the
+fun’s. Nothin’ like having a purpose. Do you think you could go out to
+Sharon Hill with me to-morrow night and play that? There’d be a few
+other odds and ends. Though them white folks don’t let me play nothin’
+much but that, once I get started. You might drop in for an hour
+to-morrow and take a peep at the others. You can do them easy, if you
+can read that.” He pointed to the piece they’d already played.
+
+“Honey-Babe,” declaimed Peter. “Well, Mr. Mason, if we can come to
+terms, I’m your man.”
+
+Mason took him aside then, and whispered a few words.
+
+“All right,” Peter told him, shaking hands. “That listens pretty. See
+you to-morrow, say at four. Good-night folks. You coming too, Maggie?”
+
+Downstairs he stopped at the landing. “Maggie, you jewel! How well
+you’ve managed! No, I won’t come in. You see what was worrying me most
+was my operating set. The price of those little steel knives and forceps
+is going to touch the sky pretty soon. Wow! This confounded war is
+taking everything across seas. Fellow told me to get my order in before
+Christmas even if I didn’t pay for them till next year. But where was I
+going to raise all that money? Now the way looks clearer.”
+
+“I’m so glad, Peter.”
+
+“It’s me that’s glad, Maggie. Best thing in the world for me that I met
+you to-day. Such a piece of fortune! Cheer up, child! Perhaps we’ll
+bring each other luck!”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+THE house on South Fifteenth Street saw Peter often after that. Mason
+could have given him work every night if he had wanted it. As it was he
+gave him enough to cause him to come for rehearsals three and four times
+a week. Usually Peter terminated his practice with a visit to Maggie,
+who got home regularly at five-thirty when she was in town.
+
+She appreciated Peter’s company, for she had been very lonely in this
+big city with its impregnable social fortresses. “It’s a wonder you come
+to see me so often, Peter,” she told him wistfully. “Being a Bye gives
+you the entrance everywhere among the oldest of these ‘old
+Philadelphians.’”
+
+“Yes,” said Peter cheerfully, “but home-folks are best. And then you
+make it so pleasant for me, Maggie. Why, I’ve never eaten in my life
+anything so wonderful as that dinner Sunday. You certainly have the
+knack of making a fellow feel comfortable.”
+
+She was proud to have him there, he was so handsome and charming, but
+much more than that, so clearly a personage. She enjoyed being seen with
+him. He took her out occasionally to the park, to the theaters on Broad
+Street, once to a bazaar given by some fine ladies at the Y. M. C. A. on
+Christian Street. She recognized some of the women as among those whom
+she had seen at Atlantic City. The startled stare of Alice Talbert, who
+happened to be there that evening, afforded her endless satisfaction.
+Maggie realized she spoke to her with a sort of wondering respect.
+
+“Wonder what she thought,” she said to herself. “Well, she can think
+anything she pleases.” She had not forgotten Miss Talbert’s cool
+reception when she called at Lawyer Talbert’s office on the corner of
+Fifteenth and Lombard. Alice was her father’s secretary. She was quite
+remote on seeing Maggie, until she learned that the latter’s business
+was with the lawyer.
+
+Peter was making money these days, real money he told Maggie.
+
+“I’m better off financially than I’ve ever been in my life. Why, I could
+make a real living at this sort of thing. Mason’s got a wonderful
+clientele!” As usual he was lounging in Maggie’s little living-room,
+smoking, watching her move about in her sober house-dress, arranging her
+accounts and orders. She had bought a little typewriter and had learned
+to use it. Peter was surprised to find her so methodical. He realized
+that she would have been a great help to Philip.
+
+He felt a little guilty about coming to Maggie’s so often. “But it’s so
+confoundedly uncomfortable in my room. Of course I could do better now,
+but it’s a lot of trouble to move. It’s way up at the top of the house,
+clean enough, but with just a few sticks of furniture in it, a green
+iron-bed—ugh!—some books and the Bye family Bible. Don’t know why I
+lugged that along with me. I never look in it. Well, so long, Maggie,
+see you to-morrow or next day.”
+
+“All right, Peter. You’re sure you won’t have me fix a cup of cocoa for
+you before you go? You poor, neglected boy! Two buttons off that
+overcoat. Bring it in the next time you come and I’ll put them on for
+you. I’ll find some that will match up here on South Street.” He said he
+could attend to it himself, but she told him no, that wasn’t a man’s
+job.
+
+“You certainly are some girl!” He took her hand in his for a moment.
+“I’ll bring it with bells. Here, turn me out. I’ve got to get up at six
+to-morrow morning. Haven’t put my nose inside of Carter’s classes this
+week. Playing out so late with Mason puts me out of commission, you
+bet.”
+
+“Carter, Carter, that’s the Professor of Surgery, isn’t it?”
+
+“No! no! That’s Davenant. I never miss one of his classes. Eat it up in
+gobs. The old boy’s fond of me. Says I’m his pet carver. Wanted to take
+me to see an operation in a private hospital last week—white of
+course—but Carter interfered. ‘Not the place for Bye, Dr. Davenant,’ he
+said. I hate him with his confounded hypocritical patronage. I’d like to
+chuck him in a minute.”
+
+Her sympathy was instant.
+
+“Well, why don’t you, Peter? After all, your music really is in good
+shape. All this steady practice these long years must count for
+something. Tom says you’re a wonder. He’d like to go into partnership
+with you, I’m sure. He says there’s heaps of money in it.”
+
+“Oodles! Absolutely! But nothing doing, Maggie. Too mediocre for Miss
+Joanna Marshall. But she deserves the best, she’s the best herself,” he
+added in quick loyalty. “Well, that was a false start I made before,
+wasn’t it? I’m really going this time. Mr. Peter Bye, exit this way.”
+
+He walked up to Lombard Street, thinking. “That girl can certainly see
+along with you. Nice to meet some one with a disposition like that. Of
+course I’d rather be a surgeon. But I’m tired of this everlasting
+digging. I’ve been nothing but a slave for nearly seven years. And poor
+as the deuce in the bargain. Good Lord, when I think of all the money I
+might have made out of you!” He looked at his fine slender hands with
+their firm square-tipped fingers.
+
+“Ideal surgeon hands,” Doctor Davenant had told his assistant.
+
+An idea struck Peter. “I wonder what Joanna would say to that!” He
+rushed in the house, seized a piece of paper and a pen and told her
+about it.
+
+ “Of course, Jan, I don’t expect you to marry me if I can’t take
+ care of you. You wouldn’t anyway, you’re not like Sylvia. That’s
+ not a slam, dearest, that’s just a plain statement of facts. But
+ I’m making a lot of money right now—guess how?—with my music,
+ playing for ‘grand white folks’ at all the swell society
+ functions. Of course it takes me out of my classes sometimes,
+ but I don’t care, I’m fed up with all that. I’ve got such a
+ Negro-loving bunch of professors, except my surgical men.
+
+ “What say, Joanna, if I quit this, and we get married and I go
+ about the country with you as your accompanist? That ought to
+ suit you, for I don’t suppose you ever dream of settling down.
+
+ “Did I tell you I met Maggie Ellersley? I see her very often.
+ The fellow I play with lives in the same house she does. In
+ fact, Maggie introduced me to him. She’s been no end kind to me.
+ You’ll be interested to know she’s getting a divorce from that
+ beast she married. See what Philip has to say when you tell him.
+
+ “Mind you write me right away what you think about this.”
+
+The answer came post-haste.
+
+ “What I think about this,” [wrote Joanna, infuriated] “is that I
+ don’t want and won’t have a husband who is just an ordinary
+ strumming accompanist, playing one, two, three, one, two, three.
+ Sometimes, Peter, I think you must be crazy.”
+
+A number of irritable and irritating notes followed on both sides until
+a couple of weeks before Christmas, when both sank into a mutinous
+silence.
+
+What Peter did not understand and what Joanna never knew he needed
+explained to him was that she wanted Peter to be somebody for his own
+sake. She was really paying him a sincere compliment when she told him
+that she did not want an accompanist for a husband. Like many a woman of
+strong and purposeful character, she hated a weak man. It followed then
+that the man who won Joanna must be even stronger, more determined than
+she.
+
+She did not know much about marriage. She had not only the usual
+virginal ignorance of many American girls, she had also a remarkable
+lack of curiosity on the matter. But she knew vaguely that the man was
+supposed to be the head. How could she, Joanna Marshall, ever surrender
+to a man who was less than she in any respect? Her dominating nature
+craved one still more dominant. But neither Peter nor she knew this, she
+least of all. Youth, egotistic though it be, is notably free from this
+kind of introspection.
+
+Since American customs of courtship give the girl largely the upper
+hand, Joanna was instinctively, if unanalytically, using Peter’s love
+for her, and her own desirability, as a whip to goad him on. It was hard
+for her, too, much harder than Peter knew, or than she realized. For she
+was beginning at last to feel the tug of passion at her heart strings.
+It would never have occurred to her to marry Peter before he was in
+their common estimation “on his feet,” she would never have asked it of
+him, she did not expect him to ask it of her. But unconsciously she was
+yearning for the day when the two might join hands and enter the portals
+which lead to the house of life.
+
+Very often she found herself vaguely glad that she had her work. Without
+it, what would she have done? What _did_ girls do while they waited for
+their young men? Heavens, how awful to be sitting around listlessly from
+day to day, waiting, waiting! Anything was better than that, even
+pounding a typewriter in a box of an office. It was this lack of
+interest and purpose on the part of girls which brought about so many
+hasty marriages which terminated in—no, not poverty—mediocrity. Joanna
+hated the word; with her visual mind she saw it embodied in broken
+chairs, cold gravy, dingy linen, sticky children. She would never mind
+poverty half so much; she would contrive somehow to climb out of that.
+But ordinary tame mediocrity!
+
+Besides, colored people had had enough of that. Not for Joanna!
+
+It must not be thought that at this time she had any intention of
+relinquishing her work after marriage. But it was for that reason that
+she wanted Peter to come out of the herd. She saw the two of them
+together, gracious, shining, perfect! She heard whispers:
+
+“That’s Peter Bye, the distinguished surgeon! His wife is unusual, too,
+she was Joanna Marshall. You must have heard of her. Why, she sings all
+over the country!”
+
+And here was Peter offering her the vision of herself, standing
+glorious, resplendent in her stage clothes, while he trailed across to
+the piano, her music portfolio under his arm:
+
+“That’s Peter Bye!”
+
+“Peter Bye? Who’s he?”
+
+“The husband of Joanna Marshall, the artist.”
+
+She would never endure it.
+
+“And I don’t thank Maggie Ellersley the least bit for introducing him to
+this music man, whoever he is,” she told herself after she had read the
+letter. “Tell Philip she’s getting a divorce indeed! How much would any
+decent man be interested in her after that?”
+
+Poor inexperienced Joanna!
+
+Peter’s vagaries were not her only worries. She was undergoing just now
+what she would have termed a really serious disappointment. Her dancing,
+on which she had spent so many years, so much of her father’s and her
+own money, on which she had built so many high hopes, was destined, it
+seemed, to avail her nothing.
+
+She had been so sure. Her art was so perfect, so complete that even
+Bertully, cynic though he was, believed that in her case the American
+stage must let down the bars.
+
+“They have but to see you, Mademoiselle, to _réaliser_ zat you are
+somebody, zat you have ze great gift. And when they see you to danse,
+v’la!” He snapped his thin fingers. Joanna, he told his assistant,
+Madame Céleste, was the best pupil he’d ever had.
+
+“You look at her and she is ze child, so grave, so _sage_. In another
+moment she is like a wild creature, a Bacchante. Onless zey are all
+fools, these _Américains_, they take her up, _hein_ Céleste?”
+
+Madame Céleste nodded a dark, assenting head.
+
+Bertully himself accompanied her. There were three or four managers for
+whom he had done favors.
+
+They went first to a Mr. Abrams, who received Joanna kindly. “I’m sure
+of your ability, my dear girl, and you ought to go. You’re young. I can
+see you could be made into a beauty. With Bertully recommending you as
+he does, you must be a wizard. But the white American public ain’t ready
+for you yet, they won’t have you.”
+
+He looked at her reflectively a few seconds.
+
+“I know the day is coming, but not for some time yet. That don’t console
+you much, does it? I’ve got an idea of my own, if I think I can put it
+over, I’ll send for you.”
+
+“Courage,” said Bertully, helping her into the taxi, “there are some
+others.”
+
+The next manager, David Kohler, was explicit and to the point. “Couldn’t
+make any money out of you. America doesn’t want to see a colored dancer
+in the rôle of a _première danseuse_. How’s that accent, Bertully? She
+wants you to be absurd, grotesque. Of course,” tentatively, “you
+couldn’t consider being corked up—you’re brown but you’re too light as
+you are—and doing a break-down?”
+
+“No,” said Joanna shortly, “I couldn’t. Shall we go, Monsieur?”
+
+By the time they reached the third manager, Joanna for all her natural
+assurance had become a little timid. Bertully’s name had gained them
+almost instant admission to the manager, but it was hard in the short
+wait to listen to the scarcely veiled comments of the office girls and
+the other applicants.
+
+“Say, what do you suppose she is?”
+
+“Must be a South American.”
+
+“She ain’t, she’s a nigger or I don’t know one.”
+
+“Say, she’s got her nerve comin’ here. Think Snyder’ll give her
+anything?”
+
+“Will he? Not a chance!”
+
+Her cheeks were so flushed when she went in that she really was
+beautiful. But Snyder gave her one look, checked himself in the act of
+raising his hat, swung around to the Frenchman.
+
+“This your great find, Bertully?”
+
+“_Mais oui_,” the old man began excitedly.
+
+The other calmly lit a big black cigar.
+
+“You needn’t wait, Miss. Like to oblige you, Bertully, but I couldn’t do
+a thing for you.” He walked across the office, held the door open for
+them, bent over Bertully’s ear. “You’ll ruin your trade teachin’
+niggers, Bertully. Better take my tip.”
+
+They rode down in the elevator in silence. Joanna, scarlet to the ears,
+saw the conjectures written in the eyes of the other passengers as they
+observed her and the Frenchman’s elaborate courtesies. She would take up
+no more of his time, she told him, thanking him for his kindness; she
+would go home now. He understood and beckoned her a taxi, into which he
+helped her with another elaborate display of courtesy, much to the
+interest of several spectators.
+
+“So silly of me to mind this,” Joanna scolded herself. But she did mind
+it. How could it be possible that she, Joanna Marshall, was meeting with
+rebuffs? Not that she was conceited. The point was that she had grown up
+in her own and Joel’s belief,—namely, that honest effort led invariably
+to success. This was probably the first time in her life that she had
+been thwarted. She was like a spoiled child, bewildered and indignant at
+being suddenly brought to book.
+
+The week before Christmas a note came from Peter.
+
+“Of course I’ve been planning as usual to come home, Jan. But we haven’t
+been hitting it off so well lately. Thought I’d better write and see if
+you really wanted me to.”
+
+She wrote him. “Of course I want you.” Heavens, what would Christmas be
+without Peter!
+
+He told her on what train he was arriving and asked her to meet it. She
+might have done so, but her day was as usual very full and she had a
+rehearsal at six—of indefinite length. She would have to cut out
+something. Too bad it had to be meeting Peter. But he surely would come
+up to the house at once.
+
+Her accompanist appeared promptly and they put in a hard two hours.
+Joanna, her ear unconsciously straining for the telephone or the
+doorbell, was not up to her usual mark. Eight o’clock and Peter not here
+and his train in at four! Well, he wasn’t coming then. She plunged into
+hard work. Her father came by the door and watched her, thinking what a
+picture she made in her pretty dress. She had put on one of her old
+stage frocks, for she usually did better work if she created for
+herself, as nearly as possible, the atmosphere of the stage. At
+nine-thirty the accompanist left.
+
+“We went rather slowly at first, but you came out splendidly at the end,
+Miss Marshall. You were a little bit tired, perhaps.”
+
+“That must have been it. Thank you and good-night, Miss Eggleston.”
+
+Still no Peter! “Mean thing, I’ll fix him for that.”
+
+The bell buzzed softly, she could barely hear it. Yes, that was he. She
+heard her father’s voice, “In the back parlor, Bye.”
+
+He came in, came toward her. “Well, Joanna, here’s the wanderer
+returned.” He bent to kiss her.
+
+She turned him a cold cheek, which to her surprise he kissed without
+expostulation.
+
+He crossed the room, sat down and looked at her. “H’m, how stagy we are
+in that get-up!”
+
+He was different somehow, she thought, vaguely hurt by his remark. One
+of her reasons for putting on the dress had been so that she might
+please him. She asked him a question to hide her chagrin.
+
+“Where’ve you been, Peter? I thought your train got in at four?”
+
+“It did, but since you weren’t there to meet me, I supposed you didn’t
+care whether I came late or early, or not at all. I met Vera Manning in
+the station and took her to a movie.”
+
+Her spirits went up at that. This was just pique, sheer pique.
+
+“How lovely for Vera! And now I’ve got to send you home almost right
+away. I’ve had a hard day and I’m dreadfully tired. Tell you what, dear
+boy, come to luncheon to-morrow. We’ll have it together, just we two.”
+
+She thought after he had gone that he had looked at her critically,
+impersonally.
+
+“As though he were contrasting me with some one,” she murmured.
+
+The next day confirmed her impression. Joanna asked him to praise the
+luncheon.
+
+“I fixed it every bit myself.”
+
+“I should think so, so feminine and knickknackish.” His tone said: “I’m
+used to having my taste consulted.”
+
+Joanna did not like the remark, but there was nothing really to be said
+about it. She sprang up lightly, began to clear away.
+
+“Come on, lazy Peter Bye, don’t leave everything for me to do.”
+
+He lounged in his chair. “Oh, come, Joanna, I’m used to being waited on,
+not doing the waiting.”
+
+She stared at him then. “Well, good heavens! What on earth has been
+happening to you in Philadelphia?”
+
+He spoke from a contented reminiscence. “When I have dinner at Maggie
+Neal’s, she’s not everlastingly asking me to do this and do that. ‘Sit
+still, Peter,’ she says, ‘this isn’t a man’s work.’”
+
+“Maggie Neal has her own methods with her men friends. Personally I
+prefer to have mine wait on me.”
+
+He rose to his feet. “Oh, yes, Queen Joanna must be served.”
+
+They finished and went to the parlor. Joanna sang one or two of her
+songs to his accompaniment. The incident rankled, though she wouldn’t
+let herself speak about it.
+
+“But he certainly is changed,” she said to herself in an angry
+bewilderment.
+
+She had to sing in Orange that night and did not intend to return until
+the next morning.
+
+“What do we do to-morrow?” Peter asked.
+
+“Remember you said you wanted to hear _Aïda_? I ’phoned them to reserve
+tickets for us for to-morrow’s matinée. But they have to be called for.
+Better go down there first thing in the morning, Peter.”
+
+He twisted around on the piano stool. “You’ll be down town to-morrow
+morning coming from Orange. Why don’t you stop for them?”
+
+She couldn’t believe her ears. “Peter Bye, you _are_ spoilt,” she
+flamed. “You’re—why you’re absolutely disgusting. We’ll never hear
+_Aïda_ if you depend on my getting the tickets. As long as he was well
+and not busy, there’s no man in the world I’d do it for.”
+
+“Married women do it for their husbands.”
+
+“Sylvia doesn’t do it for Brian. He wouldn’t dream of asking her.
+Besides, that’s different. And, anyway, we’re not married yet. Nor
+likely to be, if we don’t get along any better than this. Whatever’s
+come over you, Peter?”
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. “I think you make a lot of fuss over nothing,
+Joanna. But all right, I’ll get you the tickets. See you at one-thirty?”
+
+She sat a long time in her room after he had gone, her hands and eyes
+busy with her day’s mail, which Sylvia always placed on her writing
+table. But her mind could not take in the written words, it was too full
+of something else.
+
+But Peter, Peter of all men to act like this! Both she and Sylvia had
+always known that Maggie was unexacting. The marvel was, however, that
+Peter should take so quickly to this kind of treatment. Well, she’d just
+have to hold him that much closer to the mark. He’d see that there were
+some girls who knew what was due them.
+
+It was time for her to dress. As she looked into the mirror she voiced
+her real regret. “Two days of the vacation gone, and we’ve done nothing
+but quarrel. To-day he didn’t even ask me for a kiss. Peter, you wretch.
+Just wait till you come to your senses!”
+
+They were a little stiff next day on the way to the matinée, talking
+politely and impersonally about the weather in Philadelphia and New
+York, Joanna’s concert, and Sylvia’s children. Walking up Broadway,
+however, they thawed a little. Joanna as usual was looking trim. She
+wore that winter an extremely trig tobacco-brown suit, with a fur turban
+and a narrow neckpiece of raccoon, the light part setting off the bronze
+distinction of her face. But Peter was superlative. His financial
+success with Tom Mason had made it possible for him to indulge in a new
+outfit which emphasized the distinction of his carriage, set off his
+handsome face. Several people looked at him on the crowded street.
+Joanna herself stole several glances sidewise.
+
+He caught her at it. “Joanna Marshall, if you look at me again like
+that, just once more, mind you, I’ll snatch you up in my arms this
+minute and kiss you.”
+
+“You wouldn’t dare.”
+
+“I dare you to try it. I’d do it no matter how much you kicked and
+struggled. Wouldn’t the people stare?”
+
+Joanna giggled. “Can’t you see the headlines in the papers to-morrow?
+‘Burly Negro Attacks Strapping Negress on Broadway!’”
+
+“Yes, and the small type underneath, ‘An interested crowd gathered about
+a pair of dusky combatants yesterday. A Negro and Negress——’”
+
+Joanna interrupted: “Both of them spelt with a small ‘n,’ remember! Here
+we are at the Opera.”
+
+He caught her hand. “Just because you jockeyed me out of that kiss that
+time, clever Joanna, doesn’t mean that I’m going to do without it
+forever.”
+
+In her heart she loved him. “Oh, Peter, be like this always,” she
+prayed.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+THEY enjoyed the opera and sang snatches of it coming home as they
+walked to the subway. Once in the express train, however, Joanna lapsed
+into sadness.
+
+“I don’t think my voice is as big as that prima donna’s, but those
+dancing girls! I should have been right up there with them! Oh, Peter, I
+believe I’m the least bit discouraged.”
+
+She told him of her trips with Bertully. “I didn’t mind those girls
+calling me ‘nigger.’ That was sheer ill-breeding. Remember what we used
+to say when we were children when they called us names?” She recited it:
+“‘Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me.’
+What I minded was that they couldn’t dream of my being accepted. Thought
+I had a nerve even to ask it.”
+
+She mounted the steps. “Come in, Peter.”
+
+After dinner they sat in the back parlor and Joanna went on with her
+story, Peter listening closely.
+
+“I’m glad you’re telling me about this, Joanna,” he said seriously. “Now
+you’ll understand my case better. You know how I feel about white people
+and their everlasting unfairness. As though the world and all that is in
+it belonged to them! I tell you, Jan, I’m sick of the whole
+business,—college, my everlasting grind, my poverty, this confounded
+prejudice. If I want to get a chance to study a certain case and it’s in
+a white hospital you’d think I’d committed a crime. As though diseases
+picked out different races! I’m a good surgeon, I’ll swear I am, but
+I’ve got so I don’t care whether I get my degree or not. You can’t
+imagine all the petty unfairness about me. Only the other day the barber
+refused to shave me in the college barber-shop. Your own cousin, John
+Talbert, is a Zeta Gamma man if ever there was one—that’s the equivalent
+to Phi Beta Kappa in his school, you know. Do you think he got it? No,
+they black-balled him out.”
+
+Joanna sat silent, stunned by this avalanche. And to think she had
+precipitated it!
+
+“Arabelle Morton’s sister, Selma,” Peter went on morosely, “took her
+Master’s degree last year. The candidates sat in alphabetical order.
+Selma sat in her seat wondering whom the chair on the left of her
+belonged to—it was vacant. At the last moment a girl came in, a Miss
+Nelson, who had been in one or two of her classes. Selma knew she was a
+Southerner. ‘Oh, I just can’t sit there,’ Selma heard her say, not too
+much under her breath. And some friend of hers went to the Professor in
+charge of the exercises and he let her change her place, though it threw
+the whole line out of order.”
+
+He paused, still brooding.
+
+“Another colored girl—can’t think of her name—paid for a seat in one of
+the Seminary rooms. The white girl next to her, apparently a very
+pleasant person, had her books all over her own desk space and this one,
+too. They were the best seats in the room. The colored girl asked her to
+move them. She just looked at her. Then this Miss—Miss Taylor, that was
+her name, took it from one authority to another, finally to the
+professor in charge of the Library. He assigned her another seat. Said
+the girl had been there four years, and that anyway, she—the white
+girl—resented the colored girl’s manner toward her. The damned petty
+injustice!”
+
+“But, Peter,” Joanna argued, “you wouldn’t let that interfere with your
+whole career, change your whole life?”
+
+“Why shouldn’t I? There’re plenty of pleasanter ways to earn a living.
+Why should I take any more of their selfish dog-in-the-manger
+foolishness? I can make all the money I want with Tom Mason. If you
+aren’t satisfied for me to be an accompanist, I could go into
+partnership with him and we could form and place orchestras. It’s a
+perfectly feasible plan, Joanna. Why shouldn’t I pick the job that comes
+handiest, since the world owes me a living?”
+
+He frowned, meditating. “Isn’t it funny, I felt just then as though I’d
+been through all this before. It’s just as though I’d heard myself say
+that very thing some other time. Well, what do you say, Joanna?”
+
+“That I don’t want a coward and a shirker for a husband. As though that
+weren’t the thing those white people—those mean ones—wanted! Not all
+white people are that way. Both of us know it, Peter. And it’s up to us,
+to you and me, Peter Bye, to show them we can stick to our last as well
+as anybody else. If they can take the time to be petty, we can take the
+time to walk past it. Oh, we must fight it when we can, but we mustn’t
+let it hold us back. Buck up, Peter, be a man. You’ve got to be one if
+you’re going to marry me.”
+
+He shrugged his shoulders. “May I light a cigarette?” But she noticed he
+did it with trembling fingers. “Just as you say, Joanna.”
+
+She rose and faced him, this new Peter—this old Peter if she did but
+know it, with the early shiftlessness, the irresoluteness of his father,
+Meriwether Bye, the ancient grudge of his grandfather, Isaiah Bye,
+rearing up, bearing full and perfect fruit in his heart. Both rage and
+despair possessed her, as she saw the beautiful fabric of their future
+felled wantonly to the ground. For the sake of a few narrow pedants!
+
+“Peter, Peter, we’ve got to make our own lives. We can’t let these
+people ruin us.” She felt her knees trembling under her. “We’re both
+tired and beside ourselves. Come and see me to-morrow, will you?”
+
+What should she say to him now, she wondered next day after a long white
+night. And once she had only to raise her finger and he was willing,
+glad to do her bidding. Could it be that after all these years she had
+failed to touch his pride, worse yet that he had no pride? She had been
+longing so for a cessation from all this bickering, so that they might
+have time for a touch of tenderness. But she could not afford that now.
+His love for her was her strongest hold over him. She was sure she could
+bring him back to reason. Perhaps she had been a little severe last
+night, calling him a coward.
+
+“I musn’t lose my temper,” she told herself. Yet that was the very thing
+she did. The matter took such a sudden, such a grotesque turn.
+
+He came in about eleven, his handsome face haggard, his eyes bloodshot.
+She was astounded at his appearance.
+
+“Peter, you look dreadful!”
+
+He glanced over the top of her head at his reflection in the mirror,
+lounged to the sofa, threw himself in the corner of it.
+
+“Guess I’m due to look a fright after staying up all night. Didn’t get
+to bed till five this morning.”
+
+She thought he’d been worrying over their quarrel. “You poor boy, you
+didn’t need to take it that hard.”
+
+He stared at her. “Take what, that hard? Oh, our talk! That didn’t keep
+me awake. I spent the night at ‘Jake’s.’”
+
+“Jake’s” was the cabaret, a cheap one, in which he had played years ago.
+
+She couldn’t understand him. “I thought you had plenty of money without
+playing there.”
+
+“I have. I didn’t play there. I was a visitor like anybody else, like
+Harry Portor; he spent the night there, too. There was a whole gang of
+us.”
+
+Clearly she must get to the bottom of this. While she had been tossing
+sleepless, he had been in a cabaret, dancing with cheap women, laughing,
+drinking perhaps.
+
+“You mean you deliberately went there to have a good time and stayed all
+night? You and Harry Portor and the rest drank, I suppose?”
+
+“I don’t think Portor did. He’s a full-fledged doctor now, though he’s
+hardly any practice yet. But the rest of us did. There’s nothing in
+that, Joanna, fellow’s got to get to know the world.”
+
+Her anger rose, broke. She lost her dignity.
+
+“I suppose Maggie Ellersley taught you that, too.”
+
+“What’s that?” His handsome face lowered. “Say, how’d Maggie Ellersley
+get into this? No, she never taught me anything. But I can tell you
+what, if a fellow were going with her and went during his holidays to
+have a spree at a cabaret she wouldn’t nag him about it, like you nag
+me. Yes, about that and about a thousand other things.”
+
+She turned into ice. “I’ll never nag you again. Here, take this thing!”
+She drew off the little ring. “I don’t want it.”
+
+A pin dropping would have crashed in that silence.
+
+His voice came back to him. “You don’t mean this, Joanna,—you can’t.”
+
+“I do. Here, take it.”
+
+“You—you mean the engagement is broken?” He ignored her outstretched
+hand.
+
+She dropped the ring in his pocket. “I mean I can’t consider a man for a
+husband who throws away his career because of the meanness of a few
+white men. Of a man who sits all night in a low cabaret where every
+loafer in New York can point him out and say, ‘That’s the kind of fellow
+Joanna Marshall goes about with.’”
+
+“Oh, I see, it isn’t for my sweet sake, then!”
+
+She pushed him toward the door. “Go, Peter! Go!”
+
+On New Year’s morning he came back, humble, contrite. “I was a fool,
+Joanna. I must have been mad. Please forgive me.”
+
+“Of course I do, Peter.”
+
+He fumbled in his pocket, held out the ring. “Will you take this back?”
+
+“I can’t do that.”
+
+“When will you?”
+
+“I don’t know if ever.”
+
+There was a long silence. He came over and put his hand on the back of
+her chair, afraid to touch her.
+
+“Joanna, I don’t deserve your love. But you still do love me?”
+
+She nodded slowly.
+
+His face brightened at that. “But you won’t take back the ring?”
+
+“No, Peter, I can’t take back the ring.”
+
+He knelt and kissed her hands.
+
+“Good-by, sweetheart, I must go to Philadelphia to-day. Happy New Year,
+Joanna.”
+
+She let him go then. None of their other partings had ever been like
+this. Safe in her room she cried herself sick. “Oh, Peter,” she murmured
+to herself, “come back like the boy I used to know.” She wished now that
+she had been easier with him.
+
+“And yet if I were, he’d let go entirely. Well, it must come out all
+right.” But her heart was heavy.
+
+The very next day she got a letter. Peter must have written her as soon
+as he arrived in Philadelphia.
+
+“Joanna, I was wrong,” he had written contritely, “I confess I had got
+away somewhat from your manner of thinking, and I suppose I was a little
+sore, too,—your life seems so full. Sometimes I think there is nothing I
+can bring you. But I do love you, Joanna. You must always believe that
+and I think you love me, too. We were meant for each other. I am sure
+life would hold for us the deepest, most irremediable sorrow if we
+separated. Whether we are engaged or not, just tell me that you love me
+still and I can be happy.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+IF she had only answered the letter, then, that very moment!
+
+But she had said to her impulse: “No, I must wait. I can’t let him off
+too easily.” Perhaps, too, there was a little sense of satisfaction at
+having him again at her knees, suing for her favors, but this was
+secondary. Joanna was really sick at heart to think that her beautiful
+dreams of success for both of them might not be realized. She wanted to
+be great herself, but she did not want that greatness to overshadow
+Peter.
+
+Somehow the week slipped by, quickly enough, too. There was always
+plenty to do. Love,—the desire to give it and receive it was tugging
+persistently at the cords of her being, but she had been too long the
+slave of Ambition to listen consciously to that. Yet she found herself
+lying awake nights thinking, thinking, more about Peter than about her
+singing engagements during the New Year, or about her plan to make her
+mightiest efforts just now to enter the dancing world. Yet whatever she
+might ponder by night, she spent all her time and strength by day going
+to see performances, practicing, inventing new steps and new rhythms.
+
+Through Helena Arnold and indirectly through Vera Sharples she obtained
+the promise of an interview with one of the season’s favorites.
+
+“I’ll be able to see you early Thursday evening,” the famous woman
+wrote. “You may expect either a note or a telephone call from me.” At
+one time such a promise would have sent Joanna into the seventh ecstasy,
+without impairing her confidence. But recent discouragements,
+persistent—and for her unusual, phenomena—had rendered her timid. She
+was nervous. Her assurance wavered. She spent the whole day going
+through her repertory. Sometimes she danced like a mænad. Then she
+adopted a slow Greek rhythm, posturing and undulating. She struck
+attitudes before the mirror, standing in one position for long moments.
+
+“For Heaven’s sake,” said Sylvia, putting her head inside the door on
+one of these occasions, “go out and take a walk, Joanna.” She was as
+nervous as her sister.
+
+“Not a bad idea, Sylvia, I believe I will. You can answer the phone.
+Have you seen my brown cape?”
+
+She came back a little after five, refreshed and soothed.
+
+“No phone message,” Sylvia told her, “but here’s a note. What’s she got
+to say, Janna?” She came and looked over her sister’s arm.
+
+“So sorry not to be able to see you to-night,” the noted _artiste_ had
+written. “I’m halfway expecting an old friend of mine and must keep the
+evening free. I shall try to arrange to have you call, just the same,
+not this month I’m afraid, but certainly in February.” She ended with a
+meaningless expression of “good wishes.”
+
+“Mercy,” said Sylvia, “why didn’t she say next year?”
+
+Joanna was bitter. “Or next eternity? Sylvia, I wonder if I’m not a darn
+fool!” She walked upstairs trailing her long brown cape after her.
+
+All her life she had known and seen success. When she was born her
+father was a successful caterer, almost a wealthy man. It is true that
+she had seen her own people hindered, checked on account of color, but
+hardly any of the things she had greatly wanted had been affected for
+that cause. She had had money enough to have her dancing and music
+lessons—the very fact that she had had to take separate and special
+lessons from Bertully meant to her that some special and separate way
+would be arranged whereby she would become a dancer on the stage.
+
+She did not know how to envisage disappointment.
+
+Strangely enough, the defection of the _artiste_ struck home to her more
+keenly than the reception which she had had from the stage-managers. She
+refused Sylvia’s invitation to come back downstairs and spend the
+evening with her and Brian.
+
+“We might go to a movie,” Sylvia had said tentatively. But Joanna had
+only made an impatient gesture of refusal, and walking into her room had
+closed the door very carefully after her.
+
+She did not cry or throw herself across the bed. It might have been
+better for her if she had. Joanna’s creed was that one kept a stiff
+upper lip even to oneself. She had not had many occasions to try out
+that creed.
+
+There she sat, stiffly, on the spindling chair in front of her small
+flat-topped writing desk and brooded over the future which suddenly
+stretched dull, stale, and uninvigorating before her. She would never be
+able to stand it.
+
+The thought of her marriage flashed across her mind.
+
+“And Peter,” she said to herself aloud, “willing to be ordinary and
+second-rate! Where is that letter of his? I might just as well answer it
+now as at any other time.”
+
+In spite of her ugly mood a little wave of tenderness welled up in her
+heart as she read,—“Just tell me that you do love me still,——”
+
+“Oh, Peter, Peter,” she murmured, “if I tell you that you’ll never
+change, never push on. If only you could be strong and let me bring my
+troubles to you.”
+
+It would never do to let him know how completely she was discouraged.
+And equally she could not let him know how dear, weakness and all, he
+was to her. She would make her love conditional. “If you want me to love
+you, Peter,——”
+
+She hated that, but some day they would both be glad of it. She actually
+cried for the two of them as she wrote her stern little fiction:
+
+ “DEAR PETER:
+
+ “No, I don’t love you as you are. The man I marry must be a man
+ worth while like my father or Philip. I couldn’t stand the
+ thought of spending my life with some one ordinary.
+
+ “But I want to love you, Peter. Write me soon and say you are
+ going to get to work in earnest. Happy New Year.
+
+ “Sincerely,
+
+ “JOANNA.”
+
+She read it over and over, totally blind to its supreme egotism. Then
+she sealed it and, sniffling a little—more like a child than like an
+artist—went to bed.
+
+In the morning she awoke with a sense of impending disaster. The phrase
+is trite but so, alas, is disaster. At first, as she lay there, her
+slender brown arms stretched above her tumbled head, she mused to
+herself about it.
+
+“Let’s see why I do feel so rotten? What’s the matter?”
+
+She remembered her engagement with the _artiste_. “But that’s not what’s
+making me sick,” she told herself after a momentary probing of her
+self-consciousness. Then recalling the letter to Peter, she got up and
+walked bare-footed across the room to the desk, shivering a little as
+the chilly January morning air struck at her, billowing her thin
+nightdress. She thought she would read it again, but the envelope was
+sealed. It slipped out of her hand and she ran back to bed again,
+cuddling luxuriously.
+
+“Oh, well!” Afterwards when she rose and closed the windows she promised
+herself: “If I do send it I’ll write him a sweet, sweet letter soon.”
+
+After breakfast she posted it. It fell with a heaviness into the box
+that made her uneasy. “I’ll write him again to-night,” she thought.
+“Poor Peter! He’ll be disappointed, I suppose.”
+
+But the night brought her several offers to sing in Southern schools
+which she thought she might just as well accept. Apparently nothing was
+to come of her dancing. She had about a week in which to get ready.
+
+Just before she left, a little surprised that she had not already heard
+from Peter, she wrote him a long letter, her first long love-letter.
+
+ “Dearest Peter [she began]
+
+ “You can’t think how awfully I want to see you. If you were here
+ to-night I shouldn’t quarrel with you one moment.”
+
+She quoted lines from one of Goethe’s poems.
+
+ “Ein Blick von deinen Augen in die meinen,
+ Ein Kuss von deinem Mund auf meinem Munde:
+
+She hesitated a moment, a little aghast at this disclosure of her
+feelings. “But I might just as well, he deserves it. Dear, dear Peter,
+if I could just see you!”
+
+She ended, smiling shamefacedly at her own abandon——
+
+ “Mein einzig Glück auf Erden ist dein Wille”——
+
+She might have stopped in Philadelphia on her way South, but she
+couldn’t after that letter. In Richmond she received a note from Peter
+which Sylvia had forwarded.
+
+ “My dear Joanna [she was surprised at the formality]
+
+ “I have both your letters. I cannot tell you how surprised I was
+ at receiving the first or how much I cherished the second.
+ Joanna, I would give ten years of my life if you had written the
+ second one first. I am very busy now but I am going to write you
+ a final letter very soon.
+
+ “Sincerely,
+
+ “PETER.”
+
+“‘A final letter,’” she quoted to herself. “What a funny thing to say!
+Oh, Peter! And I wanted, I needed a real letter, a love-letter!” Her
+natural reasonableness helped her. “It’s my own fault. I suppose he
+feels like I feel sometimes, don’t-care-y. But ‘a final letter.’ I
+wonder what he meant!”
+
+But she did not puzzle long. Richmond was appreciative and gay. Some one
+wrote her from Hampton and asked her to do an interpretative dance.
+Partly because of the interest and excitement, partly because she had
+forced herself to do so often, she resolutely put Peter out of her mind.
+
+“He’ll know when I write him again,” she told herself ruefully.
+
+Two weeks, a month passed; she came into her room one day to find a
+bulky letter from Sylvia. “He doesn’t mean it, Joanna, of course, but I
+had to send it.” Thus her sister’s note. Puzzled, she read the
+inclosure, which turned out to be a letter from Peter to Sylvia.
+
+ “DEAR SYLVIA:
+
+ “I am writing to let you know that I am to be married in June.
+ Joanna told me she didn’t love me and so I am going to marry
+ Maggie Neal; she’s crazy about me. Tell Joanna not to bother
+ sending back any of the things I’ve given her.
+
+ “Sincerely,
+
+ “PETER.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+ONE of the mysteries of the ages will be solved with the answer to the
+question: Why do men consider women incalculable? Peter had been hurt by
+Joanna’s indifference again and again, she had refused a dozen times to
+marry him, she had scolded him, teased him, slighted him. Yet she had
+always come back to his eager arms. In spite of this he had been unable
+to see in her attitude at Christmas and in the unkind letter which she
+had written the logical outcome of her earlier acts—all of which by
+enduring he had tacitly indorsed.
+
+He read the letter in a maze of anger and wounded pride. Before he knew
+it he had caught up his cap and started for Maggie’s house. By the time
+the long, yellow, crawling car had jolted him over the uneven reaches of
+Lombard Street and set him down at Fifteenth he was in a fever of
+bitterness, resentment and self-pity. Maggie hardly knew him when he
+entered her little sitting-room.
+
+“Oh, Peter,” she went up to him swiftly, “something awful has happened.”
+
+He showed her the letter, striding up and down the room as she read it.
+
+She lifted her head to say to him: “She doesn’t mean it; you know
+Joanna, always making a mountain out of a molehill.”
+
+Instead she heard herself saying: “How could she possibly write such
+things to you—you’ve always been so kind.”
+
+“Too kind,” he muttered. “I tell you what, Maggie, Joanna’s got no
+heart, she’s all head, all ideas and if you don’t see and act her way,
+she’s got no use for you.”
+
+“I do think she thinks herself a lot better than any one else,” Maggie
+said slowly, remembering Joanna’s letter to her about Philip.
+
+“Well, she is, you know,” he put in unexpectedly. “Oh, Lord, what am I
+going to do without her!”
+
+Genuinely touched, she sat down on the little box-couch beside him and
+slid her arm around his shoulder. “After all, you’ve still got me,
+Peter.”
+
+He looked up at her, feeling the surge of a new idea in his heart. If he
+could only punish Joanna—no not punish exactly, you couldn’t punish her,
+she was always too remote for that—but shock her, let her see, as his
+boyhood’s phrase would have had it, that she was not the only pebble on
+the beach. Besides, what a revenge to cut loose altogether from the
+influence of her ideals and ally himself with one whom she would have
+characterized as having no ideals at all.
+
+Before the thought was even shaped in his brain he was speaking:
+
+“Of course I always have you, Maggie. How—how would you like to spend
+your future with me?”
+
+“What do you mean, Peter?”
+
+“I mean, Joanna’s chucked me. You and I get along famously, you’ve got
+your divorce from Neal. Why not marry me?”
+
+It was plain that though surprised she liked the idea. She saw herself
+suddenly transformed in this inhospitable snobbish city from Maggie
+Neal, alone and _déclassée_, into Mrs. Peter Bye, a model of
+respectability.
+
+That he had no money, no accepted means of making a livelihood she
+understood would mean nothing. He was a Bye and she as his wife could go
+anywhere. She would show Alice Talbert! And afterwards when he got his
+degree!
+
+But because she had once loved Philip she could judge what Peter might
+mean to Joanna. To her credit she hesitated.
+
+“Joanna probably doesn’t mean to let you go, Peter, she’s just angry and
+disappointed. She takes things harder than Sylvia or I. You know she
+really cares about you, and so do you about her.”
+
+But he assured her that he did not. “She’s too exacting. Now there’s one
+thing about you, Maggie—maybe it’s because you’ve already been
+married—you know how to treat a man. Joanna makes you feel as though you
+were in a strait-jacket all the time. I always feel ordinary when I’m
+with you.”
+
+Neither of them noticed the doubtfulness of the compliment. In the end
+she accepted him. After all, she owed nothing to Joanna, who certainly
+had not considered her. How surprised she would be to think that Peter
+could so quickly find solace in her—Maggie’s—arms! And Joanna should
+learn, too, that he could become a success without everlastingly being
+pushed and prodded.
+
+Hard on this thought came another. “Peter, you won’t have to work so
+hard now to get through school. I’ll help you. You know I’m doing very
+well with the hair-work.”
+
+He dismissed the theme airily, one hand on her shoulder, the other
+fumbling for a cigarette.
+
+“Oh, I’m going to give medicine up. I’ll just keep on with Tom and the
+music. Heavens, it’s so nice to know you won’t mind, Maggie. Can’t think
+why I’ve stuck to the old school as long as I have, when here I am all
+set with this nice easy job to my hand. Might as well get along with as
+little trouble as possible. The world owes me a living.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Afterwards, back in his room with the green iron bedstead and the Bye
+Bible, he felt a difference, a sense of let-down-ness. He threw himself
+across the bed and groaned.
+
+“Joanna, how could you?”
+
+She could, that was evident. He was stupefied at the turn in his
+affairs. Five hours ago he had expected some day to be a physician and
+to marry Joanna Marshall. Now it seemed that he was going to be a
+musician and marry Maggie Neal.
+
+“It isn’t true,” he told himself, fiercely. But it was true. There on
+the dresser were some cookies wrapped up in a red and white fringed
+napkin, Maggie’s gift when he left her.
+
+“I made them for you, hoping you would come in. Now you’ll be in often,
+often, won’t you? Oh, Peter, I’ll be good to you. I’ll be as unlike
+Joanna as possible.” He did not want her to be unlike Joanna. In fact,
+he did not want her at all.
+
+He might as well take her, though, for Joanna did not want him. That was
+it, no matter how many women he unaccountably married, Joanna might be
+shocked but she would never really care. Or suppose she did care a
+little while, she would soon forget it with her singing and dancing.
+Still, he supposed he must tell her. He would write her a gay, mocking
+letter. “I hope you’ll be as happy with your art as I feel I shall be
+with Maggie. She suits me perfectly.”
+
+After he had littered his desk and the floor beside it vainly with a
+veritable snow-storm of torn bits of paper, he let his head drop on his
+lean brown hands and went to sleep. Perhaps it would not be exact to say
+he cried himself to sleep, but there were certainly tears that burnt and
+scalded behind his eyelids.
+
+His landlady complained of the torn paper the next morning. “’Tisn’t as
+though you didn’t have a nice waste-paper basket ready and waitin’, Mr.
+Bye.” As she finished speaking she handed him Joanna’s letter containing
+Goethe’s poem. The tenderness, the real love that blazed in the
+beautiful lines overwhelmed him. He could not tell her the truth after a
+letter like that. So he wrote her, postponing but hinting, he fondly
+believed, at the news which he must soon break to her. A month later,
+finding himself still unequal to the task, he wrote to Sylvia.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XX
+
+
+SYLVIA had written. “He doesn’t mean it, of course”——
+
+But Joanna knew better. Even while dumbfounded she stood staring at the
+note, trying to believe there must be some mistake, her heart, her every
+sense was telling her it was too true.
+
+Peter had given her up. He was going to marry Maggie. _He had given her
+up._ That was the important thing. For if he was not to marry her, what
+difference did it make whom he married?
+
+She had never been religious, she had never been dramatic. Rather she
+somewhat despised any emphatically emotional display. “People don’t
+really act that way,” she told herself.
+
+Yet she dropped on her knees beside the pine bedstead in the sparsely
+furnished room. Her hands clutched at the counterpane. She could feel
+her throat constricting. A scalding hotness seared her nostrils, her
+mouth became dry, her eyeballs burned.
+
+“Oh, God! Oh, Peter!” She repeated the two phrases again and again in a
+sick agony.
+
+“God, you couldn’t let it be true. You know I always loved him, I didn’t
+hide it from you. You knew my heart.”
+
+At first she thought she would go to him. Then the fear that he might
+not want to see her, might even refuse to see her, overcame her. That
+humiliation she could never endure.
+
+She sat down and wrote him a long letter, her pen flying over the page
+like something bewitched. It could not move fast enough to empty her
+heart of all she had to tell. If she could only make clear to him that
+she had “chastened” him because she loved him. How patronizing, how
+silly she had been. She said aloud, “How he and Maggie must have laughed
+at me, setting myself up above them and their ideas as though I were
+some goddess! Oh, God, why did you let me do it? You knew what I really
+meant.”
+
+Her tears almost blotted out her words.
+
+The post-office was a mile away but she trudged the distance
+mechanically, seeing nothing, hearing nothing, absorbed and drowned in
+the black sorrow which overwhelmed her.
+
+Peter’s answer, which came in four days, brought no solace. She had
+never dwelt on any pages as she did on those of his last letter. The
+curt, stern phrases both cut her and awakened a new respect for him.
+
+With a sense of responsibility which Joanna had never seen in him
+before, he insisted on honoring the claim which Maggie’s complete and
+unexacting love made upon him. “Even if I wanted to give her up,” he
+wrote in a sort of anguished virtuousness, “I would not, she has been
+too kind to me. But I don’t want to give her up, Joanna. Besides, I’ve
+got to consider the public. She has told several people that we are
+engaged.”
+
+Joanna cried aloud: “If you had only been like this before, ever before,
+only once, I’d have known I couldn’t trifle with you. Oh, Peter, you
+deceived me.” The tears stood, great wells of water about her eyes.
+
+She finished her engagement in the quiet Southern city before an
+audience which wondered vaguely what had happened to make Joanna
+Marshall different. Somehow she packed her trunk, thanked the persistent
+youth who had constituted himself her cavalier, and boarded the Jim Crow
+car. Her cavalier for all his persistence had been unable to obtain for
+her Pullman accommodations. After Washington she fell to wondering what
+it used to be like in other days, less than a year ago, when she would
+be coming up this way, through Baltimore, Wilmington, past Chester,
+secure in the knowledge that Peter would be waiting for her at West
+Philadelphia. He would never be there again! How could she endure it? It
+was not possible that anyone could stand this thing. No wonder people
+“crossed in love”—she dwelt on the phrase distastefully—killed
+themselves. She toyed with the idea. Of course _she_ couldn’t; that sort
+of relief was not for her. In the first place it was cowardly. With her
+usual mental clarity she visualized the colored papers of Harlem. There
+would be notices telling how the “gifted singer, Joanna Marshall,
+daughter of Joel Marshall, died by her own hand——”
+
+Her mind lingered over it, painting in new details, consciously
+withdrawing as far as possible from the real cause of her grief.
+
+As the train slid into the long shed at West Philadelphia she pressed
+her face against the window-pane and strained out into the dusk.
+Sometimes miracles did occur. Perhaps he was there, perhaps none of it
+was true. Her tears crept down the glass, the man behind her watching
+curiously.
+
+Sylvia met her in New York, got her home and finally to bed. Mr. and
+Mrs. Marshall knew nothing of the matter and Sylvia had told even Brian
+very little. The two girls said nothing about Peter directly.
+
+“Help me to get to sleep, Sylvia,” Joanna said suddenly after a rambling
+account of her trip. Her roving eyes and twitching hands had already
+betrayed her need. “Help me to get to sleep or I think I shall go mad.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+JOANNA was in agony. Her life, hitherto a thing of light and laughter
+and pleasant work, became a nightmare of regret and morbid
+introspection. She could not blame herself enough. Nothing that Sylvia
+could say would make her speak unkindly of Peter.
+
+“No, Sylvia, it wasn’t his fault, really, it was all mine. Of course I
+think he was a little stupid not to see that my very interest in him, my
+constant fault-finding grew out of my wish to have him perfect. And I
+wanted him to be perfect because I loved him. But if I had ever dreamed
+how much I was hurting him, I’d never have said a word to him. I’d
+rather have had him exactly as he was, faults and all, than to lose him
+altogether.”
+
+She suffered intensely, too, from wounded pride. “Just think, Sylvia, he
+didn’t, he couldn’t have loved me after all. He just wanted to get
+married. See how easily he turned from me. Oh, if I had known that was
+all he wished, I’d have been different. I’d have been just the kind of
+woman he wanted.”
+
+Her humble sincerity almost made Sylvia cry.
+
+Another girl in Joanna’s place might not have suffered so intensely. But
+Joanna, poor creature, was doomed by her very virtues. That same
+single-mindedness which had made her so engrossed in her art, now proved
+her undoing. Her mind, shocked out of its normal complacence, perceived
+and dwelt on a new aspect of life, an entirely different and undreamed
+of sense of values. For the first time in her life she saw the
+importance of human relationships. What did a knowledge of singing,
+dancing, of any of the arts amount to without people, without parents,
+brothers, sisters, lovers to share one’s failures, one’s triumphs?
+
+She remembered how interested, how faithfully interested all her family
+had been in her small career. Even Brian Spencer, now that her own
+brothers were away, felt responsible for her, shifted engagements to get
+her to the station on time, met trains at ghastly, inconvenient hours of
+the night. And Peter had been her slave, her willing, unquestioning
+slave, eager to accomplish any task no matter how troublesome, for a
+word of appreciation from her.
+
+And without a thought she had taken all this as her due.
+
+She had failed to realize happiness when she saw it. The bird had been
+in her grasp and she had let it go. This was her constant thought. Of
+course, she still had her own people. And she was considerate of them
+now, painfully anxious to show her gratitude. She tried to stammer out
+an apology to Sylvia for her past remissness.
+
+But her sister threw an arm about her and strained her close. “Don’t be
+so thoughtful, so good, Jan. You break my heart. I’d rather have you
+your old thoughtless, impatient self.”
+
+Of course, this expression of gratitude was really only a gesture to
+life, to fate. “If Peter could come back to me now, he’d see how truly I
+cared about him. God, couldn’t you let him come back?” Joanna, who had
+hardly uttered a prayer outside of “Now I lay me,” spent most of her
+thoughts at this time in communion with God—“You Great Power, you great
+force, you whatever it is that rules things.” Walking, riding, any
+action at all mechanical she utilized in concentrating on her “desire to
+have everything come right.”
+
+In the mornings, weak and spent with the wakefulness of her white night,
+she picked up her little slim Bible and read portions of the Psalms. The
+beautiful words not only soothed her but brought with them a wonderment
+at the passion and pain which they revealed. “David, you, too, suffered.
+Help me, help me now.” So intense was her thought that she would hardly
+have been surprised if she had looked up and seen the Psalmist bending
+over her.
+
+She hated the mornings even more than the nights. In spite of her
+wakefulness, she was sure that there were some moments when she lapsed
+into unconsciousness. But the morning brought with it the promise of
+another day of pain, of unprofitable preoccupation. Sometimes after she
+had read her Psalm, despite the fact that she had been tossing, tossing
+on her pillow, she yielded to an overwhelming sense of apathy and lay
+there motionless for hours in the security of her bed.
+
+Her mental agony was so great at times that it seemed almost physical.
+
+Her condition surprised Sylvia greatly. “I never had any idea that Jan
+cared so much for Peter,” she told Brian. She had had to share her
+sister’s secret with him. Joanna’s persistent sleeplessness had led
+Sylvia in her protecting eagerness to pretend to Harry Portor that she
+herself was in need of a sedative and Harry had spoken to Brian about
+it. There had to be explanations.
+
+Brian was not at all surprised at Joanna’s suffering. “A girl like
+Joanna would be bound to feel deeply or not at all. I knew she must have
+really cared for Peter, else she’d have chucked him long ago. Joanna did
+nag at him, but Peter is really the one to blame, for standing for it.
+If he’d given her a piece of his mind now and then she’d have understood
+whom she had to deal with; Joanna thought she could treat him as she
+pleased. Then when he got tired of it he threw up the whole thing
+without any warning, the silly ass.”
+
+“Better not let Joanna hear you call him that,” Sylvia interrupted.
+
+He went on unnoticing. “Of course, what Joanna doesn’t realize is that
+she’s up against the complex of color in Peter’s life. It comes to every
+colored man and every colored woman, too, who has any ambition. Jan will
+feel it herself one day. Peter’s got it worse than most of us because
+he’s got such a terrible ‘mad’ on white people to start with. But every
+colored man feels it sooner or later. It gets in the way of his dreams,
+of his education, of his marriage, of the rearing of his children. The
+time comes when he thinks, ‘I might just as well fall back; there’s no
+use pushing on. A colored man just can’t make any headway in this awful
+country.’ Of course, it’s a fallacy. And if a fellow sticks it out he
+finally gets past it, but not before it has worked considerable
+confusion in his life. To have the ordinary job of living is bad enough,
+but to add to it all the thousand and one difficulties which follow
+simply in the train of being colored—well, all I’ve got to say, Sylvia,
+is we’re some wonderful people to live through it all and keep our
+sanity.”
+
+Sylvia agreed soberly that he was right.
+
+“Now, Peter,” said Brian, warming to his subject, “had a lot of natural
+handicaps, he was poor, he had no sense of responsibility, he was never
+too fond of work unless he had some one to spur him on to it. In
+addition to that he falls in love with a girl who has everything in the
+world which he lacks, especially comparative ease and overwhelming
+ambition. Jan doesn’t see Peter and herself as two ordinary human
+beings, she thinks they have a high destiny to perform and so she drives
+Peter into a course of action which left to himself he would never
+pursue. I’ll bet a month’s salary Peter had no intention of studying
+surgery until he found out he had to do something extraordinary to win
+Joanna. Now, just when each needs the most sympathy from the other, when
+Joanna’s plans are, I suspect, going awry, and when Peter is suffering
+most from his color complex, the two let their frazzled nerves carry
+them into a jangle and bang, Peter flies to the first woman who promises
+to let him take life easy! Maggie doesn’t see life in the large, she’s
+too much taken up with getting what she wants out of her own life.
+Perhaps she’s right.”
+
+“I don’t see how you can say that, Brian.”
+
+“Well, it all depends on one’s viewpoint. Personally, I think Peter will
+get what he deserves if he marries Maggie. She’s the one that astonishes
+me. Of course, if Peter and Jan really are through with each other, he’s
+got a perfect right to marry whom he pleases, but I should think
+Maggie’s old friendship for you two girls would have held her back
+awhile.” A memory stirred vaguely within him. “Or—no, that would really
+be too rotten.”
+
+“What would?”
+
+“Maggie, you know. Remember how suddenly she married Neal? I’ve always
+thought Joanna had something to do with that. Just the Sunday before,
+Maggie had given me a look-in on her feelings for Philip and I happened
+to tell Jan about it. My, how she raved! A few days later Maggie married
+her gambler.”
+
+This was all news to Sylvia.
+
+“Well, I won’t tell Joanna. She’s got enough to bear.”
+
+Joanna was indeed bearing more than Sylvia could guess. She was feeling
+the pull of awakened and unsatisfied passion. It is doubtful if she
+could thus have analyzed it, for she had rather deliberately withheld
+her attention from the basic facts of life. “Plenty of time for that,”
+she had told herself gayly, a little proud perhaps of a virginal
+fastidiousness which kept her ignorant as well as innocent. Yet bit by
+bit she had built up the idea of a shrine into which, not unwillingly,
+she should enter with Peter some day. She had never even vaguely thought
+of any one else as a companion. Her whole concept of love and marriage
+for herself centered about Peter Bye.
+
+And now Peter was gone—and his departure had opened up this sea, this
+bottomless pit of torment. This, this was life. “This is being grown
+up,” she told herself through endless midnight watches.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+TEN months later Tom Mason leaned back against the red plush of the car
+seat and jingled some coins in his pocket.
+
+“Tell you what, Bye, we really are cleaning up. I hadn’t expected
+anything like this run of engagements. Now suppose you beat it along to
+Mrs. Lea’s and find out what special arrangements she wants made for the
+musicians to-night and I’ll go on to Mrs. Lawlor and see about
+to-morrow.”
+
+Peter stared moodily at the flying landscape. “I wish you’d come
+yourself, Mason. I hate to talk to these white people. Their damned
+patronizing airs make me sick.”
+
+“What do you care about their patronizin’? All I’m interested in is
+gettin’ what I can out of them. When I’ve made my pile, if I can’t spend
+it here the way I please, Annie and me can pick up and go to South
+America or France. I hear they treat colored people all right there.”
+
+“‘Treat colored people all right,’” Peter mimicked. “What business has
+any one ‘treating’ us, anyway? The world’s ours as much as it is theirs.
+And I don’t want to leave America. It’s mine, my people helped make it.
+These very orchards we’re passing now used to be the famous Bye
+orchards. My grandfather and great-grandfather helped to cultivate
+them.”
+
+“Is that so? Honest?” Tom showed a sudden respectful interest. “How’d
+they come to lose them?”
+
+“Lose them? They never owned them. The black Byes were slaves of the
+white Byes.”
+
+“Oh, slaves! Oh, you mean they worked in the fields? Well, I guess
+that’s different. Come on, here we are.”
+
+Peter flung himself out of the car after Tom and followed him up a
+tree-lined street. The suburban town stretched calm, peaceful and
+superior about them. Clearly this was the home of the rich and
+well-born. It is true that a few ordinary mortals lived here, but mainly
+to do the bidding of the wealthy. A group of young white girls, passing
+the two men, glanced at them a little curiously.
+
+“Entertainers for the Lea affair,” one of them said, making no effort to
+keep from being overheard.
+
+Peter stopped short. “That’s what I hate,” he said fiercely. “Labeled
+because we’re black.”
+
+“Ain’t you got a grouch, though!” Tom spoke almost admiringly. He told
+his sister afterwards: “Bye’s got this here—now—temper’ment. Never can
+tell how it’s goin’ to take him. Seems different since he started
+keeping company with Maggie, don’t you think so?”
+
+Annie admitted she did.
+
+At present Tom patted Peter on the shoulder, and starting him up the
+driveway which led to Mrs. Lea’s large low white house, went on himself
+to Mrs. Lawlor.
+
+Mrs. Lea received Peter in a small morning-room. She was pretty, a
+genuine blonde, with small delicate features and beautiful fluffy hair.
+But as Peter did not like fair types, his mind simply registered
+“washed-out,” and took no further stock of her looks. What he did notice
+was that she was dressed in a lacey, too transparent floating robe, too
+low in the neck, and too short in the skirt.
+
+“Something she would wear only before some one for whom she cared very
+much, or some one whom she didn’t think worth considering,” he told
+himself, lowering.
+
+Mrs. Lea, leading him into the ballroom beyond, barely glanced at him.
+“See, the musicians are to sit behind those palms and the piano will be
+completely banked with flowers. I’m expecting the decorators every
+moment. Your men will have to get here very early so as to get behind
+all this without being seen. I want the effect of music instead of
+perfume pouring out of the flowers. Do you get the idea—er—what did you
+say your name was?”
+
+“Yes, I understand,” said Peter shortly. “My name is Bye.”
+
+“I meant your first name—Bye—why, that’s the name of a family in Bryn
+Mawr, who used to own half of the land about here. There’re a Dr.
+Meriwether Bye and his grandfather, Dr. Meriwether Bye, living in the
+old Bye house now. Where do you come from?”
+
+“I was born in Philadelphia like my father and grandfather and his
+father before him.”
+
+She stated the obvious conclusion: “Probably your parents belonged to
+the Bryn Mawr Byes.”
+
+“So my father told me,” replied Peter, affecting a composure equal to
+her own. “His name was Meriwether Bye.”
+
+She did not like that. She decided she did not like him either—eyeing
+his straight, fine figure and meeting his unyielding look. These niggers
+with their uppish ways! Besides this one looked, looked—indefinably he
+reminded her of young Meriwether Bye. She spoke to him:
+
+“I don’t want you to leave to-night before I get a chance to point you
+out to young Dr. Bye. He’ll be so interested.” She looked at Peter
+again. Yes, he was intelligent enough to get the full force of what she
+wanted to say. “It’s so in keeping with things that the grandson of the
+man who was slave to his grandfather should be his entertainer
+to-night.”
+
+Peter felt his skin tightening. “I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed. I’m
+a medical student, not an entertainer. I came here for Mr. Mason, who is
+very busy. You may be sure I’ll give him your instructions. Good-day,
+Mrs. Lea.”
+
+He rushed out of the house, down to the station where, without waiting
+for Tom, he boarded the train. Not far from the West Philadelphia depot
+he pushed the bell of a certain house, flung open the unlocked door and
+rushed up a flight of stairs.
+
+In a small room to his left he found the person he was seeking, a short,
+almost black young fellow who lifted a dejected and then an amazed
+countenance toward him.
+
+“Am I seeing things? Where’d you blow in from, Pete? Thought you’d
+chucked us all, the old school and all the rest of it.”
+
+“I haven’t, I’ve been a fool, a damned fool, but I’m back to my senses.
+I’m going back to my classes and I tell you, Ed Morgan, I’ll clean up.
+See here, you’ve got to do me a favor.”
+
+“Name it.”
+
+“You know Mason, Tom Mason on Fifteenth Street? I’ve been playing for
+him. But I can’t stick it any longer. Tom’s all right, but I can’t stand
+his customers. Besides, I’ve got to get back to work. I’m quitting this
+minute—see. But Tom’s got a big dance on, near Bryn Mawr to-night at a
+Mrs.—Mrs. Lea,” he gulped. “Good pay and all that. You can play as well
+as I can, Ed. Easy stuff, you can read it. You got to do it.”
+
+“Do it! Man, lead me to that job. I’m broke, see, stony broke, busted.”
+He turned his pockets inside out. “I was just wondering what I could
+pawn. And I need instruments—Oh, Lord!”
+
+Peter gave him some money. “Take this, you can pay me any time. Only
+rush down to Tom’s and tell him I can’t come. I’m dead—see?—drowned,
+fallen in the Schuylkill. And see here, old fellow, afterwards we’ll
+have a talk. I want everything, everything, mind you, that you can
+remember, every note, every bit of paper that bears on the work of these
+last ten months. And I’ll show them—” he seemed to forget Morgan—“with
+their damned talk of entertainers.” Down the stairs he ran, still
+talking.
+
+“Mad, quite mad,” said little Morgan, staring. “Glad he’s coming back to
+work, though. Now, where’d I put that cap?”
+
+Still at white heat, Peter walked the few short blocks to his boarding
+house. Once inside his room he shut himself in and paced the floor.
+
+“The grandson—that’s me—of the man who was his grandfather’s slave
+should be his—that’s Meriwether Bye, young Dr. Meriwether Bye—should be
+his entertainer, his hired entertainer.
+
+“My grandfather didn’t have a chance, but here I am half a century after
+and I’m still a slave, an entertainer. My grandfather. Let’s see, which
+one of the Byes was that?”
+
+He went to the closet, pushed some books and papers aside and hauled
+down the old Bye Bible. The leaves, streaked and brown, stuck together.
+With clumsy, unaccustomed fingers he turned them, until at last between
+the Old Testament and the Apocrypha he found what he was looking for:
+“Record of Births and Deaths.”
+
+The old, stiff, faded writing with the long German _s_, the work of
+hands long since still, smote him with a sense of worthlessness. These
+people, according to their lights, must have considered themselves
+“people of importance,” else why this careful record of dates?
+
+His lean brown finger traced the lines. “Joshua Bye, born about
+1780”—heavens, that must have been his great-great-grandfather. No,
+maybe he was just a “great,” for the black Byes, he remembered hearing
+his father Meriwether say, lived long and married late.
+
+“Isaiah Bye, born 1830—a child of freedom.” How proud they had been of
+that! Yes, that was his grandfather, he remembered now. And he had made
+a great deal of that freedom. Meriwether had often dwelt with pride on
+Isaiah’s learning, his school, his property, his “half-interest,”
+Meriwether had said grandiloquently, in a bookshop. Peter could hear his
+father talking now.
+
+“A child of freedom”—Peter was that but what had he made of it? He
+wondered what Isaiah in turn had written on the occasion of Meriwether’s
+birth. His finger ran down the page, and found it, stopped.
+
+There it was—“Meriwether,” the inscription read, “by _his_ fruits shall
+ye know—_me_.”
+
+At first Peter thought it was a mistake. Then gradually it dawned on
+him—his fine old grandfather, proud of his achievements, seeing his son
+as a monument to himself, seeing each Bye son doubtless as a monument to
+each Bye father. Poor Isaiah, perhaps happy Isaiah, for having died
+before he realized how worthless, how anything but monumental _his_ son
+had really been, except as a failure. And now he, Peter, was following
+in that son’s footsteps.
+
+He remembered an old daguerreotype of his grandfather that he had seen
+at his great-uncle Peter’s. The face, perfectly black, looked out from
+its faded red-plush frame with that immobile look of dignity which only
+black people can attain. “I have made the most of myself,” the proud old
+face seemed to say. “My father was a slave, but I am a teacher, a leader
+of men. My son shall be a great healer and my son’s son——”
+
+Peter put the open Bible carefully on the table and took out a
+cigarette. But he held it a long time unlighted.
+
+So far as he could remember he had never had any desire to rise, “to be
+somebody,” as Isaiah, he rightly guessed, would have phrased it. He saw
+himself after his mother’s death, a small placid boy, perfectly willing
+to stay out of school. Until he met Joanna. There was his term of
+service in the butcher-shop and himself again perfectly willing to be
+the butcher’s assistant. Until Joanna’s questioning had made him declare
+for surgery. Once in college his whole impulse had been to get away from
+it all, not because he hadn’t liked the work; he adored it, was
+fascinated by it. But the obstacles, prejudice, his very real dislike
+for white people, his poverty, all or any of these had seemed to him
+sufficient cause for dropping his studies and becoming a musician. Not
+an artist, but an entertainer, a player in what might be termed “a
+strolling orchestra,” picking up jobs, receiving tips, going down in the
+servants’ dining room for meals. And when Joanna had objected, he
+thought she was “funny,” “bossy.”
+
+And as soon as he had broken with her, he had given up striving
+altogether. He had been nothing without Joanna. He wondered humbly if
+she had seen something in him which he had not recognized in himself.
+
+How different they had been! After all, Joanna, though she had not had
+to contend with poverty, had had as hard a fight as he. “She’d have been
+on the stage long ago if she’d been white,” he murmured. “And see how
+she takes it!”
+
+Well, he would show her and Isaiah, yes, and Mrs. Lea, too, that there
+was something to him. But chiefly Joanna. Some day he’d go to her and
+say, “Joanna, what I am, you made me.”
+
+His landlady called up to him:
+
+“Telephone for you, Mr. Bye.”
+
+He went downstairs, took down the receiver.
+
+“Hello, this is Mr. Bye, yes, this is Peter. Who’s this speaking,
+please?...
+
+“Oh—oh, yes, of course. Why—why, Maggie!”
+
+He had forgotten all about her!
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+IT had been increasingly easy for him to forget her. When he had first
+broken with Joanna, when he had written her that virtuous letter,
+Maggie’s rooms, Maggie’s arms were a haven. She was always ready to
+listen, always sympathetic. She met his advances half way; if he asked
+for a kiss he got it at once. There was none of Joanna’s half-real,
+half-coquettish withdrawal. No one could accuse Maggie of a lack of
+modesty. Peter would have been the first to fight such an accuser, but
+he found himself half-wishing that she were not quite so easy to
+approach.
+
+Somehow life grew less stimulating. Presently they were settling down
+into the cosy, prosy existence of the long married couple. In the
+afternoons Peter came in—he was usually playing with Tom at night—they
+exchanged a word of greeting. Maggie gave him a dutiful kiss; there
+would be a word or two about the weather, his playing engagements, then
+silence. Presently Peter would say: “Mind if I look over the paper a
+moment, Maggie? I got up late this morning.”
+
+And Maggie’s bright answer: “Oh, of course not, I’ve got my accounts to
+run over.”
+
+Somehow all the easy, “understanding” conversation had vanished. Joanna,
+Maggie had soon learned, was not a welcome topic. And Peter no longer
+went to his classes, so there was no possible theme there. Peter to his
+disgust found himself drawing unwilling contrasts between these seances
+and similar moments spent with Joanna. Had there ever been any silences?
+If there were they were filled with all sorts of tingling thoughts and
+meanings. There was the night when Joanna leaned against him in
+Morningside Park. They had said nothing. But the very air about them was
+pulsing. How long ago all that seemed! Had it ever been true? Why had he
+never felt like that when Maggie, as she frequently did, rested her head
+on his shoulder?
+
+He would shake himself angrily out of his reverie. “Silly ass,” his lips
+formed.
+
+Maggie seeing his lips move would ask him interestedly: “What’s the
+matter, Peter?”
+
+“Nothing at all,” he’d tell her contritely. What should be the matter
+with his dear Maggie so near? Sometimes he put an arm around her
+shoulder. “Look here, I’ve got an hour yet. Like to go out?”
+
+That never failed to please her. She loved to be seen with him. She had
+a very charming, flattering air of deference, of dependence when she was
+out. It was singularly pleasing and yet puzzling to Peter. Joanna now
+was just as likely to cross the street as not, without waiting for a
+guiding hand, a protecting arm. If she had once visited a locality she
+knew quite as much about getting away from it as her escort. But Maggie
+was helpless, dependent. Strange when they were all growing up together
+he would have said she was quite as independent in her way as Joanna,
+and she was decidedly capable in her hair-dressing work. Madame
+Harkness’ business had increased considerably in Philadelphia and
+Baltimore.
+
+Peter had often mused over this.
+
+He had known for some time that he did not love Maggie. But he could not
+tell whether or not she loved him. Certainly she had appeared to at
+first, and certainly even now she clung to him. Her very submissiveness
+would seem to indicate some depth of feeling. He remembered Maggie as
+being anything but yielding in their earlier days, and she had never
+apparently changed one iota in her resentment toward her husband. She
+was making a remarkably good living from her connection with Madame
+Harkness, had bought the house in New York and was contributing to her
+mother. She could not be marrying him to be taken care of.
+
+Of course he knew nothing of her _flair_, her passion for being
+connected with “real” people—for “class” as he would have called it. And
+if he had known this, it would have explained nothing to him, for he
+never thought of himself in this sense. His most frequent source of
+worry consisted in wondering if Maggie realized how lukewarm his feeling
+was for her. Apparently she never suspected it.
+
+Maggie may not have let Peter realize it, but she was completely aware
+that he did not love her. She understood, had always understood, that
+Joanna was the one woman in the world for him. Having loved Joanna once
+there was no possibility of his caring about any one else. She had
+recognized in Peter’s turning to her a manifestation of the state of
+mind which had led her at the time of her marriage to turn to Henderson
+Neal.
+
+Her acceptance of Peter had been almost spontaneous, yet it was governed
+subconsciously by two or three motives. First of all, while she thought
+it extremely probable that Joanna liked, even loved Peter, she did not
+believe that Joanna would ever consider marriage with him as important
+as her art. Therefore she might just as well take him. Then she enjoyed
+the artistic fitness of showing Joanna that a girl whom the latter did
+not consider worthy to marry her brother was deemed worthy to marry her
+lover. And last and most important, Maggie saw through Peter a second
+means of entrance into the society of “real” people. She had glimpsed
+this once through the possibility of marriage with Philip. Instead
+Henderson Neal had closed this entrance to her, she had once believed,
+forever. She must not fail to take advantage of this new avenue.
+
+Already she was beginning to reap its value. Miss Alice Talbert, it is
+true, became colder than ever when Maggie’s engagement to Peter was
+known. She told Arabelle Morton that she considered “Peter done for,
+ruined, if he married that gambler’s wife. Cousin Joanna did well to get
+rid of him.” But Arabelle herself had laughed, had said she wanted to
+meet the girl who had captured “that good-looking Bye boy.” She had come
+to see Maggie, had invited her to the Morton house. Her good-natured
+shallowness, her frank determination not to be a “high-brow” and her
+complete social assurance captivated Maggie. Arabelle was of as
+unimpeachable standing as Miss Talbert, though her choice of friends was
+not so exclusive. Maggie was “taken up” by the young women of Arabelle’s
+set and henceforth her lines were comparatively easy. Still she met with
+an occasional snub from the older women. Mrs. Viny, who turned out to be
+the terrible old lady who had asked her about Mr. Neal in Atlantic City,
+refused grimly to recognize her and gave it as her opinion that “Peter’s
+doings would make Isaiah Bye turn over in his grave—yet. You mark my
+word.”
+
+Her hearers got a vision of the dust and nothingness which, for many
+years, had been Isaiah Bye, slowly shifting its position in the narrow
+quarters of his tomb.
+
+Maggie had her own plans. She did not mean to have Peter following
+forever in Tom Mason’s train. But after they had married she would bring
+about a change. She was sure she could coax him. It would never do to
+let Joanna think, she would tell him, that he could not achieve
+distinction without _her_. And when Peter Bye became Dr. Bye, the famous
+surgeon, Philadelphia would find that Mrs. Peter Bye had a long memory.
+
+Only Peter, who at first had agreed to marry in June, now some months
+later seemed in no haste to marry at all—that was the rub.
+
+When she telephoned him on the day on which he had had his interview
+with Mrs. Lea, she made up her mind to hasten the marriage.
+
+He came to see her the next afternoon full of his scheme of returning to
+his classes. Maggie noticed a difference.
+
+“You look as though you’d inherited a fortune or found a million
+dollars.”
+
+“I have. My senses have come back to me. What do you think, Maggie? I’ve
+chucked all this foolishness with Tom Mason. My, I bet he’s cursing mad.
+I’m getting down to brass tacks; went back to my classes this morning.”
+
+Surprise and something else altered her face.
+
+“What’s the matter, you don’t like it?”
+
+“Yes—of course—only, but Peter, can’t you see how hard all this is for
+me?”
+
+He got up, fiddled with the things on the mantel, turned about and faced
+her, the knuckles straining a little in the hand with which he grasped
+the back of a chair.
+
+“Just what do you mean, Maggie? What’s hard?”
+
+She told him then that his going back to school naturally meant a
+postponement of their marriage. “Oh, Peter, can’t you see I want to be
+safe like other women, with a home and protection? I met Henderson,
+Henderson Neal, uptown Saturday—I didn’t mean to tell you—but he glared
+at me. He made me shiver, I wished you were with me. I’m afraid of him,
+Peter, I’ll never be safe till we’re married.”
+
+His level voice answered her: “I can see to your safety, Maggie; if Neal
+really frightens you, I can have him bound over to keep the peace. But
+we can’t marry now, dear. I want to be able to take care of my—my wife.
+And if I go back to my classes, I’ll need all the money I can lay hands
+on. I’ve lost so much time that I can’t afford to do any outside work.
+I’ll just live on what I’ve made with Mason. But that will leave me
+pretty poor. You see, I’ve got to have five hundred dollars cold for my
+instruments.”
+
+She looked at him speechless, her gray eyes going black in the pale gold
+of her face, her hands submissively folded.
+
+He took out his handkerchief and mopped his forehead. “If you don’t
+mind, Maggie, I think we’d better discuss this later. Suppose we think
+it over for two or three days, and then we’ll settle upon something.”
+His voice, infinitely gentle, infinitely sorry for her, trailed off into
+silence.
+
+She said listlessly: “I think I’ll go to New York for a while. I think
+I’d like to be with my mother.”
+
+He ignored the pathos of this. “That would be fine. How soon do you want
+to go?”
+
+“To-morrow,” she told him. “You needn’t come to the station with me,
+Peter, you’d hardly have time to make it. I won’t take much, so I can
+manage.”
+
+He felt himself a cad for agreeing with her. “It’s too bad I have to go
+now, but I’ve got to read over some notes with Morgan. So this is
+good-by for the present. Aren’t you going to kiss me, Maggie?”
+
+She held up her face for her dutiful kiss.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+JOANNA stood on the steps of the New York Public Library, gazing at the
+paralysis of traffic which at the bidding of an autocratic policeman had
+fallen on the massed ranks of vehicles. Subconsciously she thought of a
+German story, “Germelshausen,” in which all the life of the village
+suddenly ceased, leaving the people statues of flesh and blood. Fifth
+Avenue coming to life again, she fell quite consciously to wondering
+where she could get a good dinner. All about her flashed the lights of
+restaurants, but she was not sure of their reception of colored patrons
+and being in a slightly irritable mood, she wanted consciously to spare
+herself any contact which would be more annoying. She needed more than
+the cup of chocolate and sandwich which she might easily have had at one
+of the two drug stores near by. And of course she could get something
+expensive, but satisfying, in the station which towered not far away.
+But of late the restaurant management in that particular station had
+shown a tendency to place its colored patrons in remote and isolated
+corners.
+
+Joanna had spent the morning shopping. In one of the more exclusive
+stores on Forty-fourth Street she had asked to look at coats. The
+saleswoman had been very pleasant, but she had seated Joanna well in the
+rear of the store quite away from the lighted front windows and the
+mirrors which were so adjusted as to give all possible views of the
+figure.
+
+Joanna had not noticed this at first but when she did she proposed going
+toward the front of the store “where there was more light.”
+
+“Why not come this way?” proposed the still affable saleswoman, pointing
+to the windows in the rear wall which also let in daylight. Yet when
+Joanna without answering had walked on to the front, she offered no
+further comment.
+
+The incident was a slight one, possessing possibly no significance, but
+Joanna had walked out of the store hot and raging, the more so because
+she was not completely sure whether the slight was intentional or not.
+It had not helped her frame of mind to purchase a less becoming coat in
+a department store where she was known and liked by one of the
+salesgirls. Gradually she worked herself into a state of contemptuous
+indifference, but she meant to be careful in selecting a place in which
+to get her dinner. She had to work too hard these days to bring on her
+good spirits, she was not going to have them dissipated by galling if
+petty discriminations.
+
+Well, there was no help for it, she would have to go over to the
+Pennsylvania station at Thirty-third Street. She was sure of pleasant
+treatment there. After this solid afternoon of work in the gloomy
+library, the walk would do her good.
+
+A hand fell on her shoulder, and she turned to find beside her Vera
+Manning, one of the members of her old dancing-class. This surprised
+her, for of late hardly any one of Joanna’s group had seen Vera. The
+report in Harlem was that she was passing for white and had no desire to
+be recognized by her colored acquaintances.
+
+“It’s been ages since I’ve seen you, Joanna,” Vera began confidently. “I
+was sitting in the library waiting for a ‘date’—doesn’t that sound
+awful?—and then all of a sudden I thought, ‘pshaw, I don’t want to be
+bothered!’ Just then you hove on the scene. Where you going?”
+
+“Some place to get a good dinner,” Joanna told her, wondering why she
+looked different from the Vera Manning she used to know. Her clothes
+showed her usual careful, even modish taste, but her face looked
+hard—“reckless”—Joanna suddenly decided; that was the word. She went on
+quickly: “See here, you work somewhere down in this neighborhood, don’t
+you? Where do you suppose I can get something to eat, without walking a
+thousand miles for it?”
+
+Vera frowned thoughtfully. “You see, I’m ‘passing’ just now—I know
+you’ve heard of it—and so I go into any of these places around here, but
+I never see any colored people. Of course you could try the Automat.”
+
+But Joanna didn’t want that.
+
+“Their food’s all right when you feel like eating it, but I want a
+regular dinner—waiter, service, and all the rest of it. Pick out a good
+place for me and I’ll take you to dinner, too. Nothing could be fairer
+than that.”
+
+Vera agreed smilingly that it couldn’t. “There’s a place over on
+Forty-second Street. I remember now I have seen some colored people in
+there and they get decent treatment. We could go there—” she checked
+herself a moment. “Oh, no, I forgot.”
+
+“Forgot what?”
+
+“Look here, Janna, I might as well be frank, we were all of us children
+together—doesn’t it seem ages ago? You know I wouldn’t ever try to fool
+you. But the truth of it is I go to that particular restaurant often
+with the other girls in my office and of course the restaurant people
+think I’m—I’m white. See? I don’t know just what they’d think if they
+saw me with you—some one who definitely showed color—or what might come
+of it. You don’t think I’m a pig, Joanna?”
+
+“I think I’d be a pig if I did think so,” Joanna told her heartily.
+“Come on and take dinner with me over at the Pennsy station. It’ll be
+nice to have a talk.”
+
+The two girls moved down Fortieth Street in the direction of Seventh
+Avenue.
+
+“You’d understand it better if you worked among them—white people you
+know,” Vera told her seriously. “Of course I suppose there must be some
+decent ones, not the high-brow philanthropists and all that crowd, but
+people who have too much breeding, too much innate—well, niceness, I
+guess you’d call it, to make light of folks just because they’re
+different. But that crowd in my office, they never think of being
+courteous to a colored person. If they want the janitor it’s ‘Where’s
+that darky?’ or ‘I saw a coon in the subway this morning wearing a red
+tie, made me think of Jim here,’ always something like that. Of course
+they don’t say it to the man’s face. There’d be a fight if they did.”
+
+“I don’t see how you stand it,” Joanna puzzled. “What put it in your
+head to work with white people, anyhow?”
+
+“Oh, to get away from everybody and everything I’d ever known.” They
+were at the table in the dining-room now and Vera was making criss-cross
+marks with her fork on the white cloth, frowning absorbedly.
+
+“You know, Joanna, I wasn’t like you—not one of us girls was. I was more
+like Sylvia, I wanted a good time, but most of all I wanted, I expected
+to marry. You remember Harley Alexander?”
+
+Joanna did remember him, indeed, a tall personable youth about her own
+color, a companion of Harry Portor, Brian Spencer, and to a less degree
+of her own brother Alec. But what she especially remembered was that he
+had been the constant shadow of Vera Manning.
+
+“Of course I remember him, Vera. He’s a dentist now, isn’t he? Didn’t he
+graduate the same year as Harry Portor?”
+
+“Yes, that’s the fellow. Joanna, we really loved each other, and we
+planned even before he went to college to get married as soon as he came
+out. But as soon as my mother—you know how color-struck she is—realized
+we were in earnest, up she went in the air. None of her children should
+marry a dark man. It only meant unhappiness. If Harley and I should have
+children they’d be brown and would have to be humiliated like all other
+colored children.”
+
+She fell to drawing more designs.
+
+“We had a terrible time. I was completely alone in my fight. Father
+always follows mother’s lead. Brother Tom refused to commit himself.
+Alice is just like mother—she really liked, I’m sure of it, John
+Hamilton, but because he was dark, she let him go for Howard Morris,
+whom I can’t stand. For a long time I managed to keep it from Harley but
+the Christmas of his last year in college, mother told him she didn’t
+favor his attentions to me, and told him why.”
+
+“Goodness,” Joanna breathed, “that must have been awful.”
+
+“Awful! It was unspeakable. And nothing I could say to Harley could
+destroy the effect of what she said. She must have put it up to him as
+to whether he thought he could compensate a wife for the estrangement of
+her family. You know how Harley was. We had always been a remarkably
+united family up to that time. He said: ‘If your mother objected to my
+being poor I could tell her that I could change that, but when it comes
+to my color, I can’t do anything with that and, by God, I wouldn’t if I
+could.’
+
+“So that,” Vera ended wryly, “was the end of my young romance.”
+
+Bit by bit she made Joanna see the picture of her life since her break
+with her lover. Before then she had worked in her father’s office, but
+now she was secretary to one of the heads of a big advertising agency.
+As she was an unusually swift stenographer and had a level head, she was
+getting along famously.
+
+“Of course they think I’m white. There are a lot of young men in the
+office and I flirt with them outrageously. At first I did it only to
+annoy mother, she hated it so. You know, the funny thing is she doesn’t
+like white people any better than I do—she just didn’t want me to marry
+a dark man because, she says, in this country a white skin is such an
+asset.”
+
+“Do you enjoy yourself going about?”
+
+“Yes and no. When I began I did immensely. You can’t imagine—I
+couldn’t—the almost unlimited opportunities that those people have for
+work, for pleasure, for anything. As a white girl I’ve seen sights and
+places, yes, and eaten food that I never even knew about when I used to
+go out with Harley. And then, too, Jan, you can’t imagine the
+blessedness of no longer being uncertain whether you can enter such and
+such a hotel, or of getting a decent berth if you’re going traveling or
+of little things like that, the sudden removal of thousands of
+pin-pricks, not only that, of inconveniences.”
+
+“You must be very happy,” Joanna said wistfully.
+
+“No, I’m not. They aren’t, either. That’s the funny part. Oh, of course
+I suppose nobody is actually happy, but I do think that colored people,
+when they’re let alone long enough to have a good time, know how to
+enjoy themselves better than any other people in the world. It’s a
+gift.”
+
+“I should think you’d drop it all, Vera.”
+
+“I would if it weren’t for the sense of freedom. It’s wonderful to be
+able to do as you like. Sometimes I think I will drop it, then I think:
+‘Oh, pshaw, what difference does it make?’ Without Harley I’m bound to
+be unhappy, anyway, even if I do go back to my own. Since I can’t have
+happiness I might just as well take up my abode where I can have the
+most fun and comfort even though it’s making me—well, no saint, I can
+tell you.” She laughed recklessly. “I wish I were like you, Joanna.”
+
+“What do you mean?”
+
+“Well, you know—here ever since you were little you’ve had Peter Bye
+right at your beck and call—you must have loved him, Jan, he was so
+everlastingly good-looking, and charming, too, we all thought. I
+remember he took me to a movie one Christmas. Then you fussed with him
+or something—some of your high-brow stuff I suppose—and you send him off
+without winking an eyelash. How do you stand it?”
+
+Joanna was cautious. “Of course I have my work. I do miss Peter
+though—sometimes.”
+
+“Sometimes! Girl, you aren’t human. Well, being heartless isn’t bad!
+What do you want to do, go to the ‘Dance of The Nations’ down at the
+District Line Theater?”
+
+But Joanna wanted a chance to think, so on the pretext of having to
+return to the Library, she left Vera. She realized the tragedy of her
+friend’s case, the awful emptiness that had come into her life. Hadn’t
+her own life been affected in the same way?
+
+A bus stopped before her and she mounted it, her thoughts weaving
+mechanically. She did not blame Vera at all for the change in her mode
+of living. In those first few months after Peter had left her she had
+wondered often how she could go on with life. For a long while she had
+existed simply from day to day, paying an exaggerated attention to small
+happenings, making engagements with people whom she had scarcely noticed
+before, doing anything to get away from the weariness of her thoughts.
+Many a night she had spent meditating on some _coup_, some reckless
+expenditure of energy and interest no matter how silly, how scandalous,
+so long as it took her out of herself.
+
+She had even tried flirting, a field hitherto unthought of. As it was
+she had been too kind to Harry Portor; of late she had consciously
+avoided him because she knew only too well what he meant to ask of her
+the next time they were alone. She hated to hurt him but that seemed
+inevitable, for her heart held not the slightest fraction of love for
+him.
+
+Oh, Peter! Peter!
+
+As she rode up Fifth Avenue under the starry reaches of the sky, beneath
+the tender budding of April trees, her desperate longing quickened to a
+sudden resolve. She would write to Maggie—Maggie, who could not possibly
+love Peter. And even if she did, she could not love him as
+she—Joanna—loved him. Why, there had been Philip once, and then
+Henderson Neal!—Whereas Peter had been the only love of her own life.
+
+She would write to Maggie, very clearly, very frankly and she would beg
+her to let him go. It all seemed simple enough. And then she and Peter
+would be happy. She would make him love her again, worship her. And
+“Peter,” she would tell him, “never another unkind word, I’ll be a new
+Joanna, darling.”
+
+Her father’s house, its windows darkened, loomed up before her. Straight
+up to her own room she sped, not stopping to enter Sylvia’s apartments,
+although the sound of laughing voices penetrated to her.
+
+Alone at the little flat-topped desk, she took out pen and paper and
+began the letter—“Dear Maggie”—But that was what she had done years
+ago,—written to Maggie to give up Philip. That was in the unconscious
+selfishness of youth. Now was she to write her again to give up Peter?
+Her courage oozed away, left her helpless. She looked at the pen, put it
+carefully away on the rack, slipped the sheet of paper back in the
+pigeonhole. She might go down to Philadelphia to visit Alice Talbert.
+Yes, she would do that very soon. And then maybe she would see Maggie
+Ellersley—on the street, or even go and call on her. Undoubtedly it was
+better to discuss such personal matters face to face.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+WHILE Joanna was sitting at her desk, Maggie Ellersley some fifty blocks
+away brooded over plans of her own. She had hoped, vainly as it turned
+out, that her absence from Philadelphia would quicken Peter’s need of
+her. His very real regard for her hospitality and kindness had long
+since been evident. She knew that he considered the little apartment on
+South Fifteenth Street his nearest approach to a home in Philadelphia,
+and she had hoped that the loneliness caused by her departure would
+induce him to urge her to come back. But Peter’s letters had not been in
+the least melancholy. Once a week he had written to her regularly during
+the four weeks of her stay in New York, but though he had been kind and
+pleasant, not once had he expressed a desire to see her, or even a
+passing curiosity as to the date of her return.
+
+When she had first come back to New York, she had had a feeling of shame
+and despondency as she thought of her effort in Philadelphia to induce
+Peter to take a definite stand about their wedding. But her stay here
+with her mother had dissipated all that feeling. The prosy,
+uninteresting life which Mrs. Ellersley and Mis’ Sparrow led, the troop
+of commonplace, albeit kindly and dependable roomers made her turn again
+to Peter for a way out. More than ever she was in the same trap in which
+she had found herself years ago when as a little girl she walked home
+with her mother from the dinners which she had eaten in some employer’s
+house. Now, it was true, her surroundings were no longer dirty and she
+was no longer poor—she and her mother had all the money they needed and
+almost all that they wanted. Of lowly stock, Maggie had never cared in
+the least for the possession of riches. But the old loneliness, the old
+sense of unworthiness, of being nobody was strong upon her.
+
+In earlier days she had frequented the Marshalls’ house; plenty of other
+girls had frequented it, too. It was to be presumed that the Marshalls
+from time to time had returned such visits. But somehow she had never
+contrived to be on really intimate terms with those others. They were
+all polite, more than polite, even cordial to Maggie, and yet she knew
+that while moving with that group, she was not of it.
+
+The difficulty had been, had always been, that she had no background.
+
+Other girls’ fathers and mothers were “somebodies.” Alice and Vera
+Manning’s father was a remarkably successful business man, old Joel
+Marshall was as famous in his way, she guessed, as Delmonico. Even Peter
+Bye—as poor almost, she correctly imagined, as she herself in the old
+days—boasted a long, a _bona fide_ ancestry. And, besides, he was a man.
+
+From as far back as she could remember she had had one passion, one
+desire unique in its singleness. And that had been to “be” somebody. And
+long ago she had realized that the only way out for her was marriage
+with a man of distinction. The distinction might consist in a career, in
+family, in business,—it made no difference to her. At first she thought
+she could achieve her desire through Philip—and she had loved him, too.
+
+She dwelt on this a moment. How wonderful such a marriage would have
+been! Loving him as she did she would have let her desire for mere
+respectability sink into second place, discounting the fact that she
+would have gained it anyhow by such a union. But Joanna had interfered,
+and then she had married Henderson Neal, a gambler, a _gambler_ who had
+plunged her further back than ever into the obscurity from which she was
+beginning to emerge.
+
+“What a fool I was to consider Joanna’s letter. Philip might, just
+possibly, have come to like me better—to love me.” She reminded herself
+then, a little spasm of pain twitching across her face, that he had
+never since her marriage, not even since her divorce, made any attempt
+to get in touch with her. “And he could have a thousand times,” she
+whispered to herself.
+
+Now here was Peter. She rose from the couch on which she had been lying
+and walked restlessly, aimlessly around the room. The light from a
+cluster of electric bulbs on the wall struck at and brought out little
+flashes of radiance from the silver butterflies which chased each other
+up and down across the heavy folds of her black silk kimono. Her hair,
+parted in the middle and brushed to a smooth luster, hung in two thick
+short braids one over each shoulder. She caught her lip in her teeth,
+whitening that mysterious redness which was the only note of color in
+the golden oval of her face.
+
+A mirror caught her attention and she stopped before it.
+
+“Oh, Peter, Peter,” she whispered unseeingly to the image in the glass,
+“dear Peter, don’t you see you’re my only chance? You’ve got to help me.
+It isn’t as though Joanna really wanted you, or as though you’d ever go
+back to her.”
+
+Just as Joanna had resolved a few hours ago to cast herself on Maggie’s
+mercy, so Maggie determined to open up her heart to Peter and beg him to
+remove her forever from the distastefulness of this life.
+
+Her mother tapped on the door and came in, followed by Mis’ Sparrow. The
+two of them, great “jiners,” had just returned from one of their
+innumerable lodge meetings.
+
+“It was a great sight, Maggie. You’d ought to have been there. Can’t see
+why you mope so about the house, anyway. Don’t believe you’ve been
+anywhere since you’ve been here this trip—’cept to Madam Harkness’.”
+
+Maggie murmured that she didn’t care to go out, she had come home to
+rest.
+
+“Well, stay in the house all you want, chile. Long’s I got Cousin Jinny
+Sparrow to go around with me I ain’t carin’. Reckon we’ve done our share
+of stayin’ in the house in our time, ain’t we, Jinny?”
+
+Mis’ Sparrow thus addressed admitted she had: “An’ I don’t propose to do
+it no more. Come on, Sallie, I c’n see Maggie’s got somethin’ on her
+mind.”
+
+Maggie protested, but only faintly. She loved and was deeply attached to
+the two thin wrinkled ladies, but they and she had nothing in common.
+They lived a separate life from hers entirely, a life which included
+much attention to churches, strawberry festivals, lodge meetings, bits
+of gossip, funerals, visits to ladies similarly faded and wizened, and a
+sort of shrewd indiscriminate charity. Maggie used to envy them their
+utter and complete absorption in these matters.
+
+“I’m not the one who wants to be to herself, it’s you who want to get
+off and talk over your secrets.” She shook a playful finger. Long after
+they had gone, curled up on her couch, she sat watching, as she used to
+watch in Philadelphia, the gas-heater cast its ruddy glow on the high
+white ceiling.
+
+The morning brought her a momentary shock of pleasure. It was the day
+for Peter’s letter. He had written: “I am coming to see you next week.”
+Her spirits leaped at that. But afterwards he explained; one of his
+classmates had warned him to get his instruments as quickly as possible,
+there was going to be a great demand for steel, so he was coming to New
+York to see about the things he had ordered. “I’m in deadly earnest this
+time, Maggie, and though I don’t like my professors any better than I
+did before, I’m making the most of my return. There’s only one thing
+that would keep me from finishing and that would be war. It seems
+foolish for a colored man to fight for America, but I believe I’d like
+to do it. Only I want to pick up a commission somewhere. Not a chance
+for a colored fellow at Plattsburg, but some of the boys are whispering
+of a training camp for Negro officers at Des Moines. This is still _sub
+rosa_, so don’t mention it.”
+
+Her hopes rose, fell, rose again as she scanned the letter.
+
+“He must make some definite plans about me, if he’s thinking of war.”
+
+The next Thursday saw him striding along Fifty-third Street in the
+direction of Maggie’s house. His nervous glance at his watch justified
+his fear of being late. That was because he had stopped at his Aunt
+Susan’s little apartment to talk over his plans. She was just the same
+as ever—stout, sane, energetic, ready to be fond of Peter. Before the
+afternoon was over she was worshiping him inwardly. For her nephew,
+suddenly conscious of his debt to her and realizing as he climbed the
+stairs to her rooms that here was his only real home, had taken her at
+the door into his arms with a burst of genuinely filial affection. She
+had, as she put it, “scared up” something for him to eat, and the two
+sitting at the little dinner table had entered into a silent
+appreciation of kinship such as lonely Miss Susan had wanted ever since
+her sister’s death. Peter had told her of his break with Joanna. “I
+can’t talk much about that, Aunt Susan—maybe some other time——”
+
+Her kind hand on his steadied him.
+
+“For a while I kept on playing ducks and drakes with my life—that was
+really why Joanna chucked me, you know—but all of a sudden I came to my
+senses, and now I’ve gone back to studying and I’ll be all right yet,
+Aunt Sue. You and I’ll have a nice little house somewhere. You’ll see.”
+He checked himself: “Unless this war intervenes. Of course I’d have to
+go into that. America makes me sick, you know, like I used to make you I
+guess, but darn it all, she is my country. My folks helped make her what
+she is even if they were slaves.”
+
+Aunt Susan beamed on him. “Your great-grandfather fought in the
+Revolution, Peter, and two of your uncles, my brothers, were in the
+Civil War. If you enlist you’ll only be following their example.”
+
+He looked at his watch. “I must go, dear. Do you know, it’s as though I
+had just discovered you to-day.” Her hands were in his and he caught
+them up and kissed them, bending his shapely curly head a little. “If I
+have to go away suddenly, I’ll send you a few of my things, the Bye
+Bible and all that, you know. But you’ll see me again.”
+
+He caught up his hat and ran out.
+
+“That Joanna is a fool and a minx,” said the old lady ungratefully. “I
+hope he didn’t suffer much. It’s a wonder some other girl hasn’t got him
+now.”
+
+Peter had not told her about Maggie. “Not worth while,” he muttered to
+himself, taking the subway steps in four leaps. “Maggie’s got to let me
+off. I’ll ask her, I’ll explain. God, what a cad I feel!” He tugged at
+his collar. “But she’ll be better off. I know she will. Now I wonder why
+she married that Neal fellow instead of waiting to give Philip a
+chance?”
+
+He mused over this sitting in the subway train with his watch in his
+hand. “I shouldn’t have spent so much time with Aunt Susan.” He had
+arranged with Morgan and some other students for a comprehensive review
+at his house that same night. It would never do for him not to show up
+on time, they were all busy fellows.
+
+Everything depended on Maggie.
+
+He rushed out of the subway and came swinging along the street looking
+for her number. As he turned abruptly toward the house he caromed into a
+tall, heavily set man standing idly and yet purposefully at the bottom
+of the steps. Peter rang the bell, conscious as he did so that the man
+had received his apologies only with an odd glare. One last glance over
+his shoulder just before he went in showed the stranger staring fixedly
+at the front door as though to see who opened it.
+
+Mis’ Sparrow let him in. Maggie was in the “settin’ room” at the head of
+the stairs, she told him as she herself went out. He ran up to arrive at
+a landing so dark that he knocked over a chair. The door was only
+slightly open, so he knocked.
+
+“Come in,” Maggie called listlessly. “Oh, is that you, Peter? I’d been
+expecting you all day and then finally gave you up. Was that you
+stumbling on the landing? I’m always at mother to keep the light going
+there. I don’t know why she won’t. Here, I’ll turn it on now.”
+
+But Peter, unwilling to lose more time, begged her not to bother. “Come
+over here and sit down, Maggie. We’ve lots to talk about.”
+
+He hadn’t kissed her, she noticed, observing his nervousness.
+
+“What’s the matter, Peter? You seem so excited.”
+
+“Do I? Well, I’ve had a full day—early breakfast, the trip, and walking
+around downtown—and then visiting Aunt Susan and breaking my neck to get
+here. That’s moving pretty swift, isn’t it?”
+
+To control her own lack of composure she asked him to let her see his
+instruments. “My, aren’t they shiny and pretty and sharp? And each one
+with your name on it? That’s splendid. No chance of having them stolen.”
+
+“No,” he replied absently, taking the little leather case from her hand
+and placing it still open on the table. “No, not a chance. Listen,
+Maggie, I’ve—I’ve got to go pretty soon, must be back in Philadelphia by
+nine o’clock, I—I want to talk to you frankly for a moment or two, about
+ourselves.”
+
+She sat expectantly. “Maggie, I don’t want you to think me a cad—I’m not
+that really—but even if you do think me one I’ve come to ask you to
+release me. We—our affair has been a mistake, I had no business dragging
+you into it. I am sure you don’t love me—why should you love anyone
+who’s trifled with his life as I have? And I—I don’t—you understand,
+Maggie, I have and always shall have the highest regard for you. There’s
+nothing in the world I wouldn’t do for you, for a girl of your fine
+qualities——”
+
+“Except marry her,” she thought.
+
+“But I find—it was unspeakable of me to make the mistake—I find I don’t
+love you, Maggie, as a man should love his—his wife. And that’s a bad
+way to start a marriage, don’t you think?” He thought he read scorn in
+her watching eyes, and hastened to fortify his excuse. “You know, I’ve
+been in love once, I know what it ought to be.”
+
+She said in a level, absolutely emotionless voice, “You want to go back
+to Joanna.”
+
+That name steadied him. “No, not that, Maggie dear. She wouldn’t take me
+back; I’m not worthy of Joanna; she was quite right. I shall probably
+never see her again until we are both quite old. Not a chance for me
+there,” he ended sadly.
+
+Curiously enough, if he had himself dared to think of returning to
+Joanna, if he had told Maggie so, she would have released him instantly.
+It was not part of her plan to interfere with love. But if Peter, who
+would never love any one but Joanna, were to be left drifting for some
+other woman to pick up ten, five years from now, perhaps even
+immediately after the war! He would never be able to do the service for
+any woman in this world that he could do for her.
+
+He misunderstood her silence. “It isn’t as though you cared such a lot
+about me, Maggie. My leaving wouldn’t really mean anything to you.”
+
+“It would mean my death,” she told him. And indeed it did seem to her
+that if he left her alone with nothing in her life but Madame Harkness
+and those two poor old ladies—her mother and Mis’ Sparrow—she would die
+of it. She would die of sheer disappointment at being balked this second
+time of her constant desire.
+
+Peter stared at her in sick astonishment. “You mean it?” he whispered.
+It had never crossed his mind that she cared for him like this.
+Subconsciously he thought, “Suppose this had been Joanna.”
+
+Before Maggie could speak again, someone knocked on the door; one of
+Mrs. Ellersley’s roomers stuck in a tousled head.
+
+“’Scuse me, Miss Maggie, I heard you-all talkin’ in here, en they ain’t
+no one else in the house. Jest wanted to tell you I’m runnin’ down to
+the corner a minute en as I mislaid my key I’m goin’ t’ leave the latch
+up, if you-all don’t mind.”
+
+Maggie stared blankly. “Oh, certainly Mr. Simpson, certainly.”
+
+They heard Mr. Simpson shuffling down the stairs and knew by the sound
+of the slamming door that he had gone out.
+
+What they did not know was that a moment later a tall, heavily built
+man, who had been lounging sidewise against the wall of a neighboring
+house, came forward swiftly and ran up the steps. He tried the door
+gently and finding to his surprise that it yielded, walked in and closed
+it softly behind him. For two weeks, unnoticed, fingering a door-key in
+his pocket, he had kept watch on that house and its inmates, until he
+had become acquainted with the hours of the coming and going of each. He
+knew Maggie was at home in the afternoons; his purpose was to wait for a
+time when all of them should be out but her. One by one he had watched
+them emerge, Mrs. Ellersley and Mis’ Sparrow finally within fifteen
+minutes of each other.
+
+“Those old birds,” he murmured to himself, “they’re just as likely as
+not to join up somewheres and go to one of their protracted meetin’s.”
+
+Gradually the house had emptied itself with the exception of Maggie and
+this tousel-headed Mr. Simpson who usually left later than this. He had
+not seen Bye come out, but thought it likely the visitor had left in the
+quarter of an hour he had spent in the saloon around the corner where he
+had swallowed an unaccustomed dram to fortify his intention.
+
+In the hall he stood blinking a moment in the darkness, then as the
+sound of voices penetrated to him from above he withdrew into the
+obscurity of the narrow oblong parlor. Evidently the fellow had not gone
+yet. There was plenty of time, he could wait.
+
+Upstairs Maggie was pouring out to Peter her great obsession.
+
+“I know I am amazing you, Peter, but I can’t endure this life, this
+utter separation from people who mean something. Take me away from it.
+I’ll be eternally grateful to you.”
+
+“But, good God, Maggie, what can I do? I’m only a penniless student with
+my way to make. We’d be poor for years. And, anyway, where do you get
+the idea that my name carries with it any social asset?”
+
+She murmured something about his long line of ancestors; years ago in
+her presence his Aunt Susan had spoken to Mrs. Marshall about it.
+
+“You know how your name gave you the entrance into the best families in
+Philadelphia.”
+
+He stared at her. Of all the crazy complexes, this was the craziest. It
+was indecent, this situation, agony for both of them. He tried to be
+firm, faltered, was lost.
+
+“You know I think all this is idiotic, Maggie. If you think
+marriage with me would help you because I know the names of my
+great-grandparents—why, it’s absurd, ridiculous. I had a lot of
+foreparents—we all did—but they were nobodies most of them, only
+slaves.”
+
+“That’s what they all were.”
+
+“All who?”
+
+“All the early settlers, weren’t they, the white ones, too, indentured
+servants, outcasts, outlaws, men driven for one reason or other from
+their own countries? But certain ones of them have always stood out,
+attained prominence.”
+
+Overcome by this interpretation of history, he could make no suitable
+answer. He moved over to the little table, picked up his hat.
+
+“Obviously all this will have to be gone over again. If you like I’ll
+send my Aunt Susan to see you, she knows all sorts of people both here
+and in Philadelphia. If you ask her no doubt she’ll manage to make it
+very pleasant for you. I really must go, Maggie. And of course—that is,
+if you insist on it—remember that I shall always be at your service.”
+
+He held her hand a moment, passed out and ran sideways, after the manner
+of men, down the wide staircase.
+
+The front door closed after him.
+
+Maggie walked back through the room. This was her great interview. Peter
+had been here; to prove it there was his box of instruments on the
+table—she ran out in the hall again, perhaps she could catch him, for he
+could hardly have turned the corner.
+
+An iron hand shot out of the darkness of the landing, caught her wrist
+in an agonizing vise. Then some one dragged her back into the room and
+she looked up into the raging somber eyes of Henderson Neal. She had not
+been frightened at first, but the sight of that face with its snarling
+lips and its bloodshot eyes unnerved her. In an instinctive gesture of
+fear she threw up her free hand which held the little case. It slipped
+from her grasp and some of the knives fell on the floor.
+
+Still holding her he stooped and picked one up.
+
+Her self-control ebbed back to her. Somehow she had never been seriously
+afraid of Neal. Her scorn had been too great for that. One does not fear
+what one scorns.
+
+She said to him evenly, “Henderson, let me go.”
+
+But he pulled her closer to him. “I’ll never let you go again. Either
+you’ll come with me, or I’ll——”
+
+“You’ll what?”
+
+“I’ll kill you.” But the thought obviously had just come to him.
+
+“Pooh!” she made a face at him. A trace of her old-time slanginess
+returned: “What’s all the excitement?”
+
+His heavy countenance lowered, darkened. “He actually looks black,” she
+thought to herself.
+
+“You know you can’t fool me, Maggie girl. You had me believing you
+divorced me because I gambled, when what you wanted was to get back to
+that high-brow feller of yours!”
+
+“What high-brow fellow?” She knew he was confusing Peter with Philip,
+but she must engage him in talk until Simpson could return.
+
+“As though you didn’t know. The one who just left here. Are you gonna
+give him up, Maggie?”
+
+“I am not.” Her cool decision drove him beside himself.
+
+“You think I’m foolin’, don’t you? I’ll show you. I know you’re alone in
+the house. I’ll give you just three seconds to tell me you’ll come back
+to me.”
+
+“I’ll let you kill me first.”
+
+She saw him look at the knife, Peter’s knife, which he was still holding
+in his hand. A look of determination settled in his eyes.
+
+Even then she was not frightened. People—the people one knows never do
+that sort of thing.
+
+With a flash-like movement he leaned closer and brought the keen,
+glittering piece of steel down toward her. When she saw he was in
+earnest she threw her arm forward close over her breast. But the knife
+bit down, down into the soft flesh. Bewildered she saw the red blood
+spurting, gushing over her arm, her dress, a soft green dress which she
+had donned for Peter. Now it was turning in spots to a vivid red.
+
+He let go of the arm, looking at her with fascinated gaze. Slowly she
+sank, turned her eyes toward him, saw him drop the knife and rush
+headlong out of the room.
+
+So she was going to die, killed in a brawl with her divorced husband.
+The fires of her life were to go out, extinguished under the waters of
+commonness and degradation. After all, what did it matter? Her thoughts
+took an odd turn as she felt herself slipping, slipping into the
+blackness of what must be death.
+
+“He must have loved me even more than I loved Philip. What a pity that I
+have to die without letting Philip know how dearly I loved him.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+A FEW moments later Mr. Simpson came rushing up the front steps. He
+tried the door gingerly and found to his relief that it was not locked.
+That meant Mrs. Ellersley had not yet returned to chide him for his
+carelessness. Miss Maggie now was different; she would never carry on,
+no matter what a fellow did. It would be just as well for him to stop at
+the room at the head of the stairs and let her know he had returned.
+
+The landing was still dark, but long experience had taught him to
+navigate the troublesome chair. Without mishap he reached the door of
+the sitting-room. Everything was absolutely silent, still he would just
+put his head inside to make sure.
+
+He was concluding there was nobody there when his eye caught something
+protruding from the other side of the table which stood in the center of
+the room. A chair, too, had been overturned, and scattered about on the
+floor were several little bright shiny things. He picked one up, looked
+at the legend on the handle, “Chilled steel, England, Peter Bye.”
+
+The name of the maker evidently. Queer doings here. Half afraid, wholly
+curious, he ventured in further, especially intrigued by that light
+brown object which protruded from beyond the table and which
+looked—though this, he knew, was imagination—like a hand. He bent over
+it, touched it, followed it with eyes and fingers to an arm dripping and
+scarlet with blood and beyond the arm a face golden and immobile. Beyond
+the head lay still another of those small strange objects. Only this was
+neither bright nor shining; it was red, a vivid red and the handle which
+he touched with a shaking finger was sticky.
+
+He sprang backwards, his face ghostly under its brown skin, his eyes
+goggling. This was—Death. “Oh, God! Help! Murder! Police! Miss Maggie!”
+Down the stairs he tore, his hands twisted and fumbled at the locks. The
+door opened to disclose Joanna standing on the door-step about to ring
+the bell.
+
+She looked past him into the dim hall. “Do you know if Miss Ellersley is
+in?”
+
+His eyes widened in horror. “For Christ’s sake, lady, keep out. Don’t go
+in there, she’s dead, pore girl, murdered.”
+
+“Nonsense! Maggie murdered! What do you mean?”
+
+Stammering and shrinking he told her of his ghastly find. “Don’t go in
+there, lady, don’t know nothin’ about it. _I_ don’t mean to.”
+
+She caught his arm. “Here, come on, you must take me to it—to her; she
+can’t be left like this. Be a man.” But for all her brave words her
+knees were shaking.
+
+Unwillingly he led her to the quiet form in the green and red-soaked
+dress. Joanna dropping beside it put her hand on Maggie’s wrist. A faint
+pulse fluttered.
+
+“She’s alive. I must get this dress off her arm and shoulder. Got a
+knife?”
+
+“Ain’t they a million of ’em layin’ around you, lady?”
+
+Shudderingly she turned from the red one. “How queer! How awful! Hand me
+that clean one over there.” Her eye fell, as she took it from him, on
+the handle—“Chilled steel, England, Peter Bye”—rested there stricken.
+
+“Ought to be able to trace the murderer awful quick, don’t you think,
+ma’am? This man Bye would know who he sold them knives to.”
+
+Without answering she cut away the cloth, used her
+handkerchief—worthless for this—to stanch the blood. “Find me a towel,
+there must be one somewhere.” If Peter had done this she must save
+Maggie in order to save him. And if this were Peter’s work—he did not
+love Maggie.
+
+Ashamed of her thought she bent closer. “There’s a bad cut below the
+shoulder but the cut in the arm is worse. Have you a large soft
+handkerchief? Quick, I must stop the bleeding. I can’t manage with this
+stiff towel.” He was off and back in a jiffy with three handkerchiefs,
+immense and happily clean, the testimony of Mrs. Ellersley’s
+supervision.
+
+She twisted one of them. “Now a pencil?” Somewhere out of the past
+floated a memory of Miss Shanley’s direction how to make a tourniquet,
+one of the things Joanna had meant to forget after she grew up.
+Subconscious memories guided her fingers. “Now where’s a bedroom? Help
+me to carry her there.”
+
+She had already dispatched him to a telephone to get, if possible, Harry
+Portor, whose office was in the San Juan district. Puzzled by Mr.
+Simpson’s incoherence, the doctor promised to come at once and soon the
+chug-chug of his little Ford rose above the sounds of the noisy street.
+
+Joanna ran down to let him in, meeting his astonishment as the two
+climbed the stairs with breathless information. Harry praised her
+tourniquet. “Good work, Joanna. Fortunately it’s a clean cut, no
+jaggedness. I suppose he was trying to get at her heart. Where’s the
+knife it was done with?” He busied himself with fresh bandages and
+restoratives.
+
+“I don’t know,” she told him faintly. Why had she not thought of this?
+Now she must keep him out of the sitting-room. Her confusion escaped
+him, but Mr. Simpson hovering in the background had heard the question
+and slipping out returned with the knife.
+
+“Here it is, doc. I was just tellin’ the lady, ought sure to be able to
+catch that ’sassin; man who sold him the knife’s done got his name
+stamped on the handle.”
+
+Harry took it. “H’m, a surgeon’s knife.” He turned it over. “Where’s the
+name? Peter—why look here, Joanna, did you see this?”
+
+“There’s a whole case in the other room, sir.”
+
+“Yes, go get it and bring it to me. What do you suppose this means,
+Joanna?”
+
+She whispered, “Wait till that man goes.”
+
+“All right, I’ll send him off.” He sent the willing Simpson on his
+return with the case, to the druggist.
+
+“Now, Joanna?”
+
+She had her story ready. “I came to see Maggie about—about Peter, Harry.
+One of the girls who works at Madame Harkness, saw Sylvia last night and
+told her Maggie was in town.” This much was true. “So I came to see her.
+Just before I came, it seems, Peter came. She told me about it. I
+couldn’t stand it. And I caught up one of his little knives—he’d left
+his case here—and cut her. I must have been crazy.”
+
+“You must still be crazy to think I’d believe that. You’re not a good
+liar, Joanna. Now tell me the truth, dear. Were you here when he stabbed
+her?”
+
+She stuck to her story. “He didn’t stab her.”
+
+The quiet figure on the bed moved ever so slightly, opened its lips,
+moaned faintly. “What’s the matter with my arm?”
+
+Harry leaned over her. “A bad cut, Maggie! How’d you come to get it?”
+Her attention wandered. “Who’s that standing over there?” Joanna
+retreated further into the shadows. “Who are you? Oh, it hurts me here,
+too.” She laid her hand on her breast.
+
+“I’m the doctor, Harry Portor, you remember me, don’t you?”
+
+He could see her make an effort. “You’re sure Henderson’s not here? It
+would make him angry to see you. Peter was here a little while ago—we’re
+going to be married, you know. That’s why Henderson cut me.” Her voice
+grew stronger. “I thought he had killed me.”
+
+Harry cast Joanna a fleeting look. “Wait down in my car,” his lips
+formed. She slipped down the stairs out of the house.
+
+She sat in the car a long time while the street darkened. She saw Mr.
+Simpson return and hard on his footsteps Mrs. Ellersley. He must have
+told the news just inside the hall, for Joanna heard a shriek cut short
+by the closing door. Presently Harry came running down the steps,
+peering short-sightedly through his thick glasses at her crouching
+figure.
+
+He said briefly, “A bad business, but she’s not in any danger unless
+there’s a breakdown from nervous shock.”
+
+The words were meaningless to her, reviewing Maggie’s statement: “Peter
+was here, we’re going to be married, you know.”
+
+When they got to her house Joanna politely asked him to come in.
+
+“No, but wait a moment. I want to tell you something.” He fiddled with
+the brake a moment. “Joanna, you’ve been avoiding me lately because you
+know I love you and you were afraid I’d ask you to marry me. Don’t avoid
+me any more. I’ve got my answer. When a girl loves a man as you do Peter
+Bye, so much so that she’ll accuse herself for his sake—oh, it makes no
+difference that he was innocent—well, nobody else need think there’s a
+chance for him. But I’m your friend, Joanna, believe that.”
+
+She thanked him sadly. “Good-night, Harry.”
+
+Sylvia sent Roger up to her room to tell her that Miss Vera—Vera—“I
+forget her other name, Aunt Janna,” had called up. She would call again
+the next day.
+
+Joanna thanked him indifferently. “All right, darling, tell Mamma I’ll
+look out for her.”
+
+She thought to herself as he pattered down stairs: “Peter and Maggie,
+here in New York ... I won’t think of them, I’m not going through all
+that sick agony again. I believe I’ll go South to-morrow.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+THE day’s excitement made Joanna sleep soundly, and in the morning she
+awoke strongly refreshed and rested. No gesture that she could make to
+Fate would ever restore Peter. She had been willing to make the greatest
+sacrifice of all—to surrender her pride—and even as she was about to do
+this, absolute evidence was given that her sacrifice was useless. The
+whole affair was over, finished, dead; henceforth Peter was to be in her
+life what other men were to other girls when they spoke of them as “old
+beaux.” That was the way for her to speak of Peter now. She practiced it
+with stiff lips: “Peter Bye, oh, yes, he used to be an old beau of
+mine.”
+
+Her romance would hereafter lie behind her. From this day on she would
+dedicate herself to one interest, which should be the fixed purpose of
+her life; now that she thought of it she would give up the idea of
+dancing, too. Her former lover and her former ambition alike were
+unattainable; they had merely been means of enriching her experience.
+Now she would get down to the business of living; no more sighs, no more
+backward glances. And the first thing she would do would be to offer her
+services as a director of music to a colored school in the South. Many a
+principal before whose school she had sung would extend her a cordial
+welcome. Even though the school year was almost near its close she might
+get a chance to map out arrangements for the work of the following year.
+Her preference would be one of the less-known, poorly endowed schools
+where there would be lots of work.
+
+She lay there and watched the April sun mounting slowly, slowly up the
+walls of her room. From outside rose the myriad sounds of Harlem; a
+huckster calling unintelligibly, some school children on their way to P.
+S. 89, shrilling their Iliad of school affairs; from far away came the
+echo of a spiritual whistled meditatively, almost reverently. Over
+herself crept a sense of peace, of finality, the sort of let-downness
+that comes to one voluntarily relaxing from difficult strain. She had
+not known such a feeling since when as girls she and Sylvia had been
+sent on a vacation trip into the country. The life was lonely for the
+two citified youngsters and they sought solace in taking long
+walks,—“voyages of discovery” Joanna called them. Once after a tramp of
+two or three hours they had come about four o’clock to a little lumpy
+field in whose center stood a cluster of trees. Breathless and weary
+Joanna had scrambled over the wooden bars and had lain down on the short
+stiff stubble in the refreshing shade. All about stretched only sky,
+earth, and in the distance rows of trees rimming their pasture. There
+was nothing, no one in the world but herself and Sylvia. She felt her
+senses lulled by the quiet security into a deep sense of peace.
+
+Now this came back to her and other thoughts, too: their return from the
+country to New York—her mother and Peter were at the station. But she
+would not think of that. She must get up, write letters, explain to her
+father and mother, make arrangements.
+
+Essie, a fixture in the service of the Marshalls, brought her a
+breakfast of rolls and chocolate. Joanna devoured it.
+
+“You don’t look bright, Essie.”
+
+“No’m. Got lots to worry about. Them white folks where my girl Myrtle
+goes to school act so mean all the time, always discouragin’ her.
+‘What’s the good of you comin’ to high school’? they ses. ‘What’re you
+gonna do when you finish?’”
+
+How quickly once she would have rejoined with one of her sweeping
+platitudes which to her were not platitudes because they represented a
+fresh and virile belief: “Don’t let her become discouraged, Essie; just
+have her keep on. Success always comes if you work hard enough for it.”
+But to-day, remembering her plans for the stage and her courtship with
+Peter—both rendered frustrate through this hopeless obstacle of
+color—she could only murmur: “Yes, yes, I know. White people are hard to
+get along with. Better times coming, I hope, Essie.”
+
+After a bath she slipped into a flame-colored dressing gown and sat down
+to her letters. Sylvia coming up noiselessly put her head in the door.
+
+“Not dressed yet, Joanna? She’ll be here soon. It’s 10:30.”
+
+Joanna lifted a startled face. “Who’ll be here?”
+
+“Miss Sharples, Miss Vera Sharples. I sent Roger up to tell you.”
+
+“Yes, he did, but you know how he forgets names. He said ‘Miss Vera’ and
+I thought he meant Vera Manning. Wonder what Miss Sharples wants to see
+me about?”
+
+“One of her pet charities probably. Get a move on. Here, wear your green
+dress.” Joanna, whose thoughts had flown to Peter via Miss Susan Graves
+via Miss Sharples, took the green dress absent-mindedly, then dropped it
+with a shudder. Maggie had worn such a dress yesterday, a soft dull
+green, horribly, fantastically adorned with bright and sticky red.
+
+“No, not that.”
+
+“You _are_ nervous, Joanna. What do you feel like wearing?”
+
+Together they chose a crêpe silk dress of straight and simple lines. The
+bodice as flaming as the dressing gown was long, like a Russian blouse.
+Its end terminated by hem-stitching into a black shallow-pleated skirt.
+A narrow ropelike cord confined the waist.
+
+“Stunning,” Sylvia said, spinning her around. She had designed the
+dress. “If Brian just wouldn’t treat me right we’d run away to Paris,
+Jan, and set up a dressmaking establishment. You should be my manikin.”
+
+A restatement of Roger’s imperfect message revealed the fact that Miss
+Sharples would call at eleven. Sylvia let her in and ran back to tell
+her sister who was outlining her plans to her father and mother in the
+dining room.
+
+“There’s your ‘grand white folks’ Janna. My Heavens, where _do_ you
+suppose she finds her clothes? She hasn’t a bit of color in her face and
+there she’s wearing a stone gray suit and a gray hat with a brown, a
+_brown_ scarf around it. Her hair is as straight as a poker and she
+wears it bobbed.” Sylvia shuddered.
+
+“Oh well, she’s a good sort,” Joanna remonstrated, smiling, “and she
+doesn’t say ‘you people.’”
+
+Strange how realization falls short of anticipation. Joanna was about to
+scale the path which led to her highest ambition, but she had no sense
+of premonition. Instead, she looked at Vera Sharples sitting
+insignificantly and drably in an armchair, her graying bobbed hair
+straggling a bit over her mannish tweed coat, her feet encased in solid
+tan boots. Only her eyes, looking straightforwardly and appraisingly
+from under the unbecoming hat, kept her from being dubbed a “freak.”
+
+Joanna, who had not seen her for some years, thought amusedly as she
+came with swift rhythmic steps down the long room: “It would be fun to
+turn Sylvia loose on her and make her dress worthy of her eyes.”
+
+The two were standing looking at each other now, Miss Vera still
+appraisingly. Then the older woman held out her hand. Joanna had
+neglected to do this, having, like most colored people of her class,
+carefully schooled herself in the matter of repression where white
+people were concerned. However, she took the extended hand and gave it a
+hearty pressure.
+
+“Yes,” said Miss Sharples as though checking up the colored girl’s
+points by a pattern which she carried in her head, “yes, you are the
+one. I was sure I hadn’t confused you with anyone else. I haven’t seen
+you for several years, you know, not since that Christmas when you
+danced for the Day Nursery with Helena Arnold. Do you remember?”
+
+Joanna, slightly nonplussed, nodded yes. As though she could forget that
+Christmas when she had become engaged to Peter!
+
+Miss Sharples, still pursuing some train of thought known only to
+herself, meandered on. “I said, ‘I know there must be somebody who could
+do it,’ and then I thought of you, but I didn’t know your name. So I
+called up Helena and she told me. Do you still dance as divinely as you
+did that night, my dear?”
+
+“Better,” Joanna told her confidently, “although it doesn’t get me
+anywhere. Would you mind telling me what all this is about?”
+
+Her visitor settled herself comfortably in a chair, crossed one leg over
+the other, and took out a cigarette. “Mind if I smoke?” Joanna watched
+her wide-eyed, picturing her father’s surprise if he should happen to
+look in on them.
+
+“It’s a long story. You may or may not know that I am one of the
+directors of the District Line Theater. Lately we’ve been putting on a
+production called ‘The Dance of the Nations’—dances of the nations it
+really should be called. Well, we have one woman to represent France,
+another England, etc.; we aren’t featuring Germany or any of her allies.
+When it came to America we had to have two or three dances represented,
+one for the white element, one for the black and one for the red. Of
+course that made the woman representing America practically a star.
+Well, she’s all right as a white American, or as a red one, but when it
+comes to the colored American, she simply lays down on her job.” Miss
+Sharples’ eloquence drowned her sense of grammar.
+
+“You know,” she went on vigorously, “art to my eye is art, and there’s
+no sense in letting a foolish prejudice interfere with it. This girl
+won’t darken her face and hasn’t a notion, so far as dancing like
+colored people is concerned, beyond the cake-walk. Well, I told my Board
+I didn’t believe that was either adequate or accurate. I’d seen Helena
+Arnold dance, you know, and I’d seen you, and I figured that your way
+was the right way,” she concluded sensibly, “because you were colored.
+Miss Ashby’s contract expires this week and I persuaded the Board to let
+me try to find someone else. What do you think about it?” She paused,
+still regarding Joanna shrewdly.
+
+“You mean,” said Joel Marshall’s daughter, “that you are offering me a
+chance to dance at the District Line Theater?” She thought: “I know this
+isn’t real.”
+
+“Well, yes, if you suit. It would be an experiment. To be frank, my
+dear, some of the directors are doubtful about the success of a colored
+girl on the stage, but if you dance as well as you did five or six years
+ago, I should say there would be no difficulty. Suppose you come with me
+now, there’s a rehearsal at the theater this afternoon. Are you free?”
+
+Was she free? She dashed off to get her wraps and stumbled into Sylvia
+on the second floor. “Isn’t she long-winded? What’d she come to see you
+about?”
+
+Joanna took her by both shoulders and shook her. “About my dancing at
+the District Line Theater in the ‘Dance of the Nations.’ Oh, Sylvia, if
+I’m dreaming, don’t let me wake up.”
+
+Down in Greenwich Village on the south side of Washington Square, Joanna
+found Miss Susan’s “Board.” They were occupying, scattered around, a
+large dilapidated room of magnificent proportions and they were talking
+of art, of dancing with an enthusiasm and accuracy, an amazing precision
+such as Joanna had never heard equaled.
+
+“Valvinov is good, more than good, excellent in her conception of the
+dance and the way she carries it out, but her ankles are too clumsy, it
+makes me sick to look at her legs.” A short, stocky young man seated at
+the piano delivered this dictum. He was very pale, with thick black hair
+which he wore plastered back from a low square forehead. His hair was
+long, Joanna noticed, and ran in unbroken strands from his forehead to
+the top of his coat collar. He spoke absolutely unaccented English, and
+his clothes were sharply American, but he was unlike any American the
+girl had even seen before.
+
+Miss Sharples introduced her briskly. “This is Miss Marshall,” she said
+to the room in general, “the dancer I was telling you of.” Joanna
+inclined her head slightly, but the men all rose and bowed gravely, and
+the two other women in the room—a Miss Rosen and a Miss Phelps as they
+turned out to be—bowed also noncommittally but without hostility.
+
+Evidently the place had frequently been used for rehearsals, for there
+was a narrow platform running across the far end of the room. Here Miss
+Sharples stationed Joanna. “Just to give them an idea of what you can
+do, my dear. There isn’t much space, but I don’t think that will bother
+you.”
+
+“No,” said Joanna confidently, “the thing is the music.” She glanced at
+the pale young man who had spoken about the Russian dancer’s thick
+ankles. “Can you play by ear?”
+
+“I think I could manage it,” he told her seriously. They were all
+serious, as unconscious of self and as tremendously interested as though
+they were assisting at an affair of national moment. Joanna felt the
+atmosphere enveloping, quickening her. She stepped down from the
+platform.
+
+“Well, now listen. I’m supposed to have a ring of children around me. I
+sing and they answer. At first I’ll have to sing both parts, but
+afterwards you can play their answers. See, this is the way it goes.”
+She sat down at the piano, and ran through the melody of “Barn! Barn!”
+singing it in her beautiful, full voice.
+
+“That’s it, that’s got the lilt,” a tall, dark man said to Miss Rosen.
+
+Joanna yielded the piano to the pale young man—Francis—everyone called
+him. He ran over her sketch, filling in with deep, rich chords, while
+she flew back to the little platform.
+
+“Now then, you’ve got it. Ready!
+
+ “Sissy in the barn! Join in the weddin’!”
+
+Her voice rang out, her slender flaming body turned and twinkled, her
+lovely graceful limbs flashed and darted and pirouetted. She was
+everywhere at once, acting the part of leader, of individual children,
+of the whole, singing, stamping circle.
+
+The Board applauded. “Oh, but that’s great, that’s genius,” cried Miss
+Phelps.
+
+“If I could only have some real children,” Joanna suggested, “colored
+children. Are there any around here?”
+
+“About five thousand down there in Minetta Lane,” Francis told her
+gravely. “Want me to get you some?”
+
+“Oh, if you only would.” He and Miss Rosen disappeared and were back in
+fifteen minutes with ten colored children, of every type and shade,
+black and brown and yellow, some with stiff pigtails and others with
+bobbed curling locks. Most of them knew the game already, all of them
+took to Joanna and threw themselves with radiant, eager good nature into
+the spirit of what she was trying to display.
+
+The tall dark man, Mr. Hale, came over to her. “You’re all right, Miss
+Marshall, if you’re willing, we’ll try you. America’s got some foolish
+prejudices, but we’ll try her with a sensation, and you’ll be all of
+that. I’ll leave you with Miss Sharples and Miss Rosen, our secretary,
+to make final arrangements, while Francis and I go out to see what we
+can do about taking on these kids. I suppose you’ll need them.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+THE District Line Theater was jammed every night now. People came from
+all over New York and all its suburbs to see the new dancer—Joanna
+Marshall. Her success and fame were instant. The newspapers featured
+her, the “colyumists” wrote her up, her face appeared with other members
+of the cast, but never alone, on the billboards outside the little
+ramshackle theater. Special writers came to see her, took snapshots of
+herself and of Sylvia which they never published, and speculated on the
+amount of white blood which she had in her veins.
+
+Mr. Hale had taken her on in May. The piece ran all summer with Joanna
+as the great attraction, although not the acknowledged star. Miss Ashby,
+the girl who danced as an Indian and as an American, was that. From the
+first she had resented the colored girl’s success and had held jealously
+to all her rights and privileges. But the public, surprisingly loyal to
+this new and original plaything, never varied in the expression of its
+enjoyment of Joanna. Now that her changed contract was again about to
+expire, Miss Ashby announced her inability to remain with the play.
+
+“I’ve really been violating my principles in staying this long,” she
+told Mr. Hale with meaning.
+
+Even Miss Sharples was overcome at this news. Joanna could be cast
+without any difficulty as an Indian, a wig and grease paint would
+accomplish that. But Joanna could hardly pose as a white American. She
+was too dark.
+
+Sylvia had a suggestion here. “America” was supposed to come on last as
+a regal, symbolic figure, but Miss Ashby had paid more attention to the
+dancing than to the symbolism.
+
+“Why not,” asked Sylvia, “have a mask made for Joanna? She could then be
+made as typically American as anyone could wish and no one need know the
+difference.”
+
+That was the basis on which Mr. Hale worked. On the first night on which
+the new “America” was introduced, an inveterate theater-goer in the
+first row of the orchestra insisted on encoring her. Joanna returned,
+bowed and bowed, was encored.
+
+Somehow the habitué guessed the truth. “Pull off your mask, America,” he
+shouted. The house took it up. “Let’s see your face, America!”
+
+Mr. Hale, Miss Sharples, Francis, Miss Rosen and Miss Phelps held a
+hurried consultation behind the scenes. “There’s nothing to be done,”
+Hale said, “quick, off with your mask, Miss Marshall.” And breathless,
+somewhat with the air of a man bracing himself, he led Joanna again on
+the stage.
+
+There was a moment’s silence, a moment’s tenseness. Then Joanna smiled
+and spoke. “I hardly need to tell you that there is no one in the
+audience more American than I am. My great-grandfather fought in the
+Revolution, my uncle fought in the Civil War and my brother is ‘over
+there’ now.”
+
+Perhaps it would not have succeeded anywhere else but in New York, and
+perhaps not even there but in Greenwich Village, but the tightly packed
+audience took up the applause again and Joanna was a star.
+
+The very next week Mr. Hale moved the production to Broadway.
+
+Joanna found herself becoming a sensation. Through Miss Sharples, who
+was besieged with requests to meet her protégée, she came in contact
+with groups of writers, dramatists, “thinkers,” that vast, friendly,
+changing kaleidoscope of New York dwellers who take their mental life
+seriously. Occasionally, too, she was invited to grace an “occasion,” an
+afternoon at the house of a rich society woman. Once at one of these
+affairs she met Vera Manning, who grinned at her impishly and announced
+to the room that she and Miss Marshall were old friends. They had been
+schoolmates.
+
+“When I was a child,” said Vera impudently, “my mother sent me to public
+school for almost a year. She said she wanted me to be a real democrat.”
+
+She threw Joanna a droll look. When the afternoon was over, Vera asked
+her to go on to tea with her.
+
+Joanna was perfect: “That’s very kind of you, Miss Manning, and I don’t
+know but what I will. There are several things I’d like to interest you
+in. When I think of the illimitable power for good which you white
+people possess——”
+
+Once outside the door the two girls went off into gusts of
+inextinguishable laughter.
+
+Joanna did not like these affairs and soon she adopted the habit of
+refusing such invitations. She preferred Miss Sharples’ artist
+friends—because among them she sensed attempts, more or less tentative
+perhaps, toward reality. True, paradoxically enough it was a reality
+based on art, rather than on living. But the girl was beginning to feel
+the need of something with which to fill her life. Whether her
+disastrous love affair, or the frequent discouragements with which she
+met, had changed or reshaped her vision she did not know. But life, she
+began to realize, was not a matter of sufficient raiment, food, or even
+success. There must be something more filling, more insistent, more
+permeating—the sort of thing that left no room for boredom or
+introspection.
+
+For in spite of her vogue, her unbelievably decided successes, Joanna
+frequently tasted the depths of ennui. She saw life as a ghastly
+skeleton and herself feverishly trying to cover up its bare bones with
+the garish trappings of her art, her lessons, her practice, her
+press-clippings.
+
+Miss Sharples put her up for membership in a club whose members were
+mostly people that “did” something. And Joanna fell in the habit of
+taking her lunch and frequently her dinner, too, at this club, just to
+lose herself in the atmosphere which she found there.
+
+Undoubtedly the contact did her good. Joanna, while lacking Peter’s
+singularly active dislike for white people, was not on the other hand a
+“good mixer.” Following the natural reaction at this time of her racial
+group, she had tended to seek all her ideals among colored people and
+where these were lacking to create them for herself. As a result of this
+attitude, injurious in the long run to both whites and blacks, she was
+hardening into a singularly narrow, even though self-reliant egocentric.
+She had never met in her family with much opposition to her chosen
+career, but then neither with the exception of Joel’s and that of her
+teachers had she met with much coöperation.
+
+Now to her astonishment she found herself in a setting where people,
+without being considered “different,” “high-brow,” “affected,”—and not
+greatly caring if they were—talked, breathed, lived for and submerged
+themselves and others, too, in their calling. She met girls not as old
+as she, who had already “arrived” in their chosen profession;
+incredibly young editors, artists—exponents of new and inexplicable
+schools of drawing,—women with causes,—birth-control, single tax,
+psychiatry,—teachers of dancing, radical high school teachers.
+
+There were men to be met, too, really eminent men, but Joanna was not
+much interested. Following the American idea, she had been too carefully
+trained to care for the company of white men. Between them and herself
+the barrier was too impassable. Besides, it was women who had the real
+difficulties to overcome, disabilities of sex and of tradition.
+
+For a while she was puzzled, a little ashamed when she realized that so
+many of these women had outstripped her so early; some of them were
+poor, some had responsibilities. There were not many of these last. It
+was a long time before the solution occurred to her and when it did the
+result was her first real rebellion against the stupidity of prejudice.
+
+These women had not been compelled to endure her long, heartrending
+struggle against color. Those who had had means had been able to plunge
+immediately into the sea of preparation; they had had their choice of
+teachers; as soon as they were equipped they had been able to approach
+the guardians of literary and artistic portals. Joanna thought of her
+many futile efforts with Bertully and sighed at the pity of it all.
+Sometimes she felt like a battle-scarred veteran among all these
+successful, happy, chattering people, who, no matter how seriously, how
+deeply they took their success, yet never regarded it with the same
+degree of wonder, almost of awe with which she regarded hers.
+
+She realized for the first time how completely colored Americans were
+mere on-lookers at the possibilities of life. She spent a few happy
+months with these people; they made pleasant and stimulating company for
+her; she herself suspected that she had made good “copy” for some of
+them. They were for the most part unconscious of race, not at all
+inclined to patronize, and generous with praise and suggestion. One
+woman, it is true, told Joanna that she had always liked colored people.
+
+“My father would insist on having colored servants. He preferred them.”
+
+Joanna had made an impish reply. “My father employs both white and
+colored servants. But he prefers the colored ones. However, it doesn’t
+make any difference to me.”
+
+Still that had been a rare encounter. Life on the whole smiled on her.
+Yet she was not happy. But is anybody so? she wondered. She had
+forgotten to sorrow for her break with Peter, her life was too full for
+that, even for a new love. Vera Manning’s brother Tom, brought into her
+entourage by the flood of publicity and popularity that engulfed her,
+asked her to marry him. She liked him; found him charming and
+sympathetic, but he was too white and she did not want a marriage which
+would keep the difficulties of color more than ever before her eyes.
+What she did want, she decided, was to be needed, to be useful, to be
+devoting her time, her concentration and her remarkable singlemindedness
+to some worthy visible end. After all, she had worked hard and striven
+tremendously—to be what? A dancer.
+
+“Is this really what you wanted me to be?” she asked her father
+abruptly. They were driving home from the theater, their nightly custom.
+“Is this your idea of real greatness?”
+
+And Joel, his voice half glad, half sorry, told her that he, too, had
+hoped for something different.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+AT first the war presented itself to Peter in a purely personal aspect.
+It was a long time before he envisaged the struggle as a great
+stupendous whole. Boyishly egotistic, he saw it simply as the next big
+moment in the panorama of his life following on his break with Joanna
+and his puzzling relationship with Maggie. And always he saw it in
+relation to the things which were happening to him like a series of
+living pictures against a great impersonal background.
+
+Ignorant of Neal’s attack on Maggie he had returned to Philadelphia,
+completed his work and had gone to Des Moines. He sent his books to his
+Aunt Susan,—all but one little black testament which bore written on the
+fly leaf his father’s and grandfather’s and _his_ father’s names. There
+was another name, too, “Judy Bye.” But Peter could not recall this.
+
+“More ancestors,” he said to himself, thinking ruefully of Maggie. He
+could not bear to think of their last talk: even the thought of his
+forgotten instruments could not induce him to write to her.
+
+In Des Moines he had met Philip. And from that meeting resulted that
+first indelible picture. He had rushed forward to Philip, his hand
+outstretched.
+
+“Marshall! Say, fellow, this is really great!”
+
+He could hear his voice ringing even now. And then Philip’s contemptuous
+rejoinder: “I don’t shake hands with any such damned light of love.”
+
+He thought he must have misunderstood at first. But there was the angry
+scorn in Philip’s eyes and there was his hand hanging clenched by his
+side.
+
+The contemptuous epithet made him flinch. Of course, Philip’s bitterness
+and scorn arose from two sources. Peter had broken off with his sister
+and had taken up with the one girl in whom he had ever shown any
+interest.
+
+“But hang it all,” Peter said to himself in angry bewilderment. “Why
+didn’t he try for Maggie himself, if he wanted her? But no, first he
+lets that gambler win her and then he leaves her to me.”
+
+Here again ignorance was the cause. Philip did not know of Maggie’s
+divorce until she had become engaged to Peter. Joanna had never told him
+and he, considering her first marriage as an answer to his rather
+lackadaisical courtship, had not thought it worth while to make
+inquiries about her. His own liking for Maggie had taken possession of
+him so slowly that he had not realized himself until too late what she
+meant to him.
+
+The result of the encounter was to drive Peter back on himself and to
+confuse his issues more and more. He did not know which way to turn.
+More than ever if Philip loved Maggie, he himself wanted to be freed of
+his obligation. Freedom—that was what he wanted—from obligations, from
+prejudice, from too lofty idealism. It seemed to him as though the last
+two years of his life had been spent in struggling to reconcile ideals.
+First his efforts to win Joanna and then his need to get away from
+Maggie. He went through the motions of the long days of drill and
+preparation, thinking incoherent, unrelated thoughts.
+
+“Poor Maggie, I’ve got her into this. I can’t just chuck her.”
+Responsibility began feebly to awaken within him. “But what does she see
+in me? Yet she’ll die if I leave her. Joanna, you’ve messed up all our
+lives. Oh, damn all women! I hope to God I get killed in France!”
+
+Still in a dream he left Des Moines for Camp Upton and left the camp for
+overseas. He was a good sailor and therefore was free to devote himself
+to men who were less fortunate than himself. On an afternoon he came on
+deck with Harley Alexander. The two had become “buddies” in the camp and
+now on the trip over the long days of inaction were awakening one of
+those strange intensive friendships between two people, in which each
+tries to bare his heart to the utmost before the other. Harley had told
+Peter about his disastrous courtship of Vera Manning and Peter had
+reluctantly, inevitably returned the confidence.
+
+“Well,” said Harley, “I’ll be doggone. I suppose Joanna did use to queen
+it over you, but what’d you go make a door-mat of yourself for? She gave
+you what you were biddin’ for. But now as far as this Miss Ellersley’s
+concerned—I can’t seem to remember her, Peter—she’s got no claim on you
+that I can see. If she’s any sense at all she knows that you came to her
+on sheer impulse. If you don’t love her, don’t you marry her. You’ll
+regret it all your life if you do. Gee, I’m sick of this boat. Don’t you
+s’pose we’re ever really goin’ to get into this man’s war?”
+
+He lurched suddenly and violently against Peter, who dragged him to the
+rail where he became horribly and thoroughly seasick. There he remained,
+spent and helpless. Peter tried to drag him back to a steamer chair, but
+he was too much in a state of collapse to help himself and too heavy for
+Peter to drag across the deck. A white officer, a lieutenant whom Peter
+had noticed infrequently sitting near the door, was standing looking
+gravely on. He came forward.
+
+“Here, let me help you.” Together the two men got Alexander into the
+chair. He was the type with whom any physical indisposition goes hard.
+Peter noticed he was shivering.
+
+“Wait, I’ll get a rug,” he said, starting toward the door. Alexander
+groaned, “Bye, for God’s sake don’t leave me. I’m as weak as a cat.”
+
+“Oh, you’ll be all right,” Peter called back, and left him with the
+white lieutenant standing silently by.
+
+Shortly after his return Harley, declaring himself much better, went
+below to his room. But first he thanked the lieutenant who bowed with
+his pleasantly grave air. Peter, about to sink into the vacant seat,
+looked up and caught the intent glance of the white officer who smiled
+and nodded and came leisurely toward him.
+
+“May I sit beside you a moment?” he asked pleasantly.
+
+“Yes,” Peter replied shortly. He thought: “I know what you make me think
+of. Of myself that first day I put on my uniform. Now why?” It was true
+that while there was no facial resemblance, the two men were built
+almost exactly alike, tall, with broad shoulders, flat backs and lean
+thighs. Peter was at first glance the more comely, his head was more
+shapely and his hair so crisply curling gave him a certain persistent
+boyishness. The other man, a little older and plainer, had nevertheless
+a certain whimsical melancholy about his eyes and mouth which attracted
+Peter.
+
+“I heard your friend call you Bye,” he said still pleasantly. Peter
+nodded briefly. “That’s my name, too. Bye, Meriwether Bye. I was
+wondering where you came from.”
+
+Meriwether Bye! Peter felt his face growing hot as he remembered the
+circumstances in which he had last heard that name. “Dr. Meriwether Bye
+of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, I suppose.”
+
+Meriwether without surprise acknowledged this. “You know of me then. May
+I ask how?”
+
+“I’ve always known of you indirectly,” Peter told him coldly. “My
+great-grandfather spent all his life working for yours—for nothing.
+There was a black Meriwether Bye, my father, named after him, though I’m
+sure,” he added with rude inconsequence, “I can’t imagine why.”
+
+Meriwether looked at him with a sort of gentle understanding. “I’ve
+often wondered about those black Byes,” he said musingly. “My
+grandfather, Dr. Meriwether Bye—he’s an old, old man now—used to tell me
+about them. He was very fond of one of them, Isaiah Bye. Isn’t it
+strange that we, the grandsons of those two men, friends way back in
+those days, should be meeting here on our way to France to fight for our
+country?”
+
+Something, some aching tiger of resentment and dislike, which always
+crouched in Peter ready to spring at the approach of a white man, lay
+down momentarily appeased.
+
+“Friends! Say, that’s the first time I ever heard a white man speak that
+way of the relation between a slave-owner and his slave. You can’t
+guess,” he said abruptly, “how I first heard of you.” And he told
+Meriwether of his experience with Mrs. Lea, while the doctor watched him
+with keen, melancholy eyes.
+
+“I’ll wager you were angry, mad clear through and through. You had a
+right to be. Mrs. Lea,” as he pronounced her name his gentle voice grew
+a little gentler, Peter thought, “didn’t realize what she was saying.
+She’s like many another of us, totally unaware of our shame and your
+merits. I hope this war will teach us something.”
+
+He had a nice way with him. “A regular fellow,” Peter thought, listening
+to his quiet, unaffected disquisition on many subjects. He had been
+literally everywhere, even to Greenland, and had seen all sorts of
+people. He had a theory that while not all individuals were equal, all
+races averaged the same. Some men were bound to be superior.
+
+“And the differences between the races are a matter of relativity,” he
+finished. “I confess my own interest in colored people is very keen.” He
+raised a fine hand to disparage Peter’s slight movement. “Yes, I know
+you are sick of that and the patronage it implies. But I mean it, Bye,
+and when you get back home you must go out to Bryn Mawr and see whether
+or not I have tried to express that interest.”
+
+“I should think,” Peter looked at him squarely, “all things considered,
+you or your family would have shown some interest in us black Byes. You
+are rich men, your family is a powerful one——”
+
+“Was a powerful one,” Meriwether interrupted him. He had flushed a
+little. “I suppose you know that my great-grandfather, Aaron Bye, had
+ten sons. But only four of them had sons and all of them except my
+father died in the Civil War. Isn’t that some compensation? My own
+father died when I was very young and I grew up with his father. He was
+the one who told me about the black Byes and how he when a boy used to
+play about Philadelphia with Isaiah. ‘Proud as Isaiah Bye,’ I’ve heard
+him say. Bye,” said Meriwether earnestly, “I tried my best when I became
+a man to find if there were any of you left in Philadelphia. It seemed
+to me a monstrous thing to have our family and our fortune—for my
+grandfather is still a very rich man—reared on the backs of those other
+Byes.” He struck the table with a vehement hand. “That whole system was
+barbarous.”
+
+“I wish,” Peter told him, “I had known you sooner.” Just to hear this
+expression of penitence seemed to ease the long resentment of the years.
+
+“Without those slaves,” Meriwether resumed, “Aaron Bye would never have
+got on his feet. His father was just a poor farmer, a Quaker, running
+away from England to escape religious persecution. He came over and
+received a grant of land. But he could have done nothing without labor,
+and free labor at that. He and a friend bought a wretched slave between
+them, worked a bit of land, then that old Bye bought out the other man’s
+share of the slave; presently he bought a woman. Ah, it’s a rotten
+story.” Peter saw melancholy like a veil settle upon his finely drawn
+features.
+
+“You really feel it? I didn’t suppose any white man felt like that.
+Well, you needn’t mind about me or about any of the black Byes,” he
+surprised himself by saying. “After all, it isn’t as though we were
+related. It’s just the fortunes of—well, not of war—but of life.”
+
+“No,” Meriwether returned, “we’re not related. Thank God there’s none of
+that unutterable mix-up. I don’t think I could have forgiven those
+Quaker Byes that. But sometimes it seems to me that just because those
+black Byes and thousands of others like them had no claim, that they had
+every claim.”
+
+After that day they met daily; Meriwether expounding, explaining,
+unconsciously teaching; Peter listening and absorbing. “I’m surprised,”
+the young white man said, giving Peter a calculating look, “that you
+were content with being an entertainer.”
+
+Peter flushed and explained. It was only a temporary phase in his life.
+He had been broken-up, crazy. Haltingly he spoke of Joanna and finally
+of Maggie.
+
+Meriwether thought it a bad business. “Stupid of you not to see that the
+first girl had your interest at heart. Why, man, by your own account she
+had brought you out of the butcher-shop to the University. Well, life
+permits these things.” Bit by bit he told Peter of his own love-life. He
+had loved Mrs. Lea for years even before her marriage when they were boy
+and girl together, but her hard, uncomprehending attitude toward “lesser
+peoples” chilled him, really frightened him. He knew he could not live
+with a woman like that.
+
+To Peter’s surprise Meriwether was a fatalist. He had strong
+premonitions and allowed himself to be guided by them. “From the
+outset,” he told Peter, gravely, “I knew that you meant something to me.
+That was why I used to watch you so closely. I used to wonder and
+speculate about you. Something in you made me think of myself. It was as
+though you, all unrelated even racially, represented something which
+might have been a part of myself, as though you,” he said dreamily,
+“were living actively what I was thinking of passively. I have often
+tried to picture my life as a colored man. I think if there had been any
+of that selfish admixture of blood between the white and black Byes and
+I had heard of it, I’d have gone the United States over but what I’d
+have found my relatives, and have claimed them, too, before all the
+world.”
+
+One of Meriwether’s strange fantasies was that he would never return
+from the war. “I knew it when I came away from America. And listen, Bye,
+when I die,” Peter marveled at the sureness of that “when,” “I want you
+after you get back home to go to my grandfather and tell him who you are
+and how you met me. You are to give him this.” He took a little case
+from his pocket in which were the pictures of a man and
+woman,—old-fashioned pictures.
+
+“Your father,” Peter exclaimed involuntarily, “you can see he’s a Bye——”
+
+“And my mother,” Meriwether finished. He drew a locket suspended on a
+thin gold chain from around his neck. “And take this to Mrs. Lea. She
+loves me,” he said very simply. “Here, you might just as well take them
+now.” Peter accepted them reluctantly.
+
+He wished he had a picture of Joanna. Death seemed suddenly very near,
+very possible. He did not care if he died, but he would like Joanna to
+know that he thought of her. But he had nothing to leave for her. Yes,
+there was the Testament. He took it from his inside breast-pocket and
+showed it to Meriwether. Indeed he looked at it closely for the first
+time himself. The two heads so like yet so different bent over the old
+faded script. On the top of the page in a beautiful clear hand was
+written Aaron Bye, then underneath in crazy drunken letters, Judy Bye.
+
+“I can’t guess who she was,” said Peter.
+
+A little below a familiar name appeared, Joshua Bye, and above it,
+evidently written, in the same hand, Ceazer Bye. But through this entry
+a firm black line was drawn, drawn with a pen that dug down into the
+thin paper. After Joshua’s name came the names Isaiah and then
+Meriwether.
+
+“My father,” Peter explained, feeling somehow very near to him. “I guess
+I’d better put my name in, too.” He wrote it in his small compact hand.
+“I wonder who those two were, Judy and Ceazer,” he mused, smiling a
+little at the quaint spelling. “I don’t seem ever to have heard of them;
+I thought we started with Joshua.” But Meriwether professed dimly to
+remember some mention of Judy.
+
+“I’m sure I’ve heard my grandfather mention her name years ago and
+Ceazer’s, too; he was her husband, seems to me. I suppose Aaron Bye gave
+them the Testament.”
+
+The little incident threw them into a deeper intimacy. Meriwether
+professed himself to be as interested in and as bewildered at the
+workings of the color question as Peter himself, though naturally he
+lacked his new friend’s bitterness.
+
+“It is amazing into what confusion slavery threw American life,” he
+said, launched on one of their interminable discussions. “Here America
+was founded for the sake of liberty and the establishment of an asylum
+for all who were oppressed. And no land has more actively engaged in the
+suppression of liberty, or in keeping down those who were already
+oppressed. So that a white boy raised on all sorts of high falutin
+idealism finds himself when he grows up completely at sea. I confess,
+Bye, when I came to realize that all my wealth and all the combination
+of environment and position which has made life hitherto so beautiful
+and perfect, were founded quite specifically on the backs of broken,
+beaten slaves, I got a shock from which I think sometimes I’ll never
+recover. It’s robbed me of happiness forever.”
+
+“I like to hear you acknowledge your indebtedness,” said Peter frankly,
+“but I don’t think you should take on your shoulders the penitence of
+the whole white nation.”
+
+“No, I don’t think I should, either,” Meriwether returned unexpectedly,
+“but that sort of extremeness seems to be inherent in the question of
+color. Either you concern yourself with it violently as the Southerner
+does and so let slip by all the other important issues of life; or you
+are indifferent and callous like the average Northerner and grow
+hardened to all sorts of atrocities; or you steep yourself in it like
+the sentimentalist—that’s my class—and find yourself paralyzed by the
+vastness of the problem.”
+
+He slipped into a familiar mood of melancholy brooding. It was at such a
+time that he spoke to Peter of his willingness, of his absolute
+determination to lose his life in the Great War. For this reason he had
+gone into the ranks instead of the medical corps where he would have
+been comparatively safe. “Don’t think I’m a fanatic, Peter. I see this
+war as the greatest gesture the world has ever made for Freedom. If I
+can give up my life in this cause I shall feel that I have paid my
+debt.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+THE interminable voyage was over and Peter debarked to spend still more
+interminable days at Brest. Dr. Meriwether Bye left immediately for La
+Courtine, where Peter later caught sight of him once more on his way to
+the front. The somewhat exalted mood to which his long and intimate
+talks with Meriwether had raised him vanished completely under the
+strain of the dirt, the racial and national clashes, and above all the
+persistent bad weather of Brest.
+
+This town, the end of Brittany and the furthest western outpost of
+France, always remained in Peter’s memory as a horrible prelude to a
+most horrible war. Brest up to the time that Europe had gone so
+completely and so suddenly insane, had been the typical, stupid,
+monotonous French town with picturesquely irregular pavements, narrow
+tortuous streets, dark, nestling little shops and the inevitable public
+square. Around and about the city to all sides stretched well ordered
+farms.
+
+Then came the march of two million American soldiers across the town and
+the surrounding country. Under their careless feet the farms became mud,
+so that the name Brest recalls to the minds of thousands nothing if not
+a picture of the deepest, slimiest, stickiest mud that the world has
+known. All about were people, people, too many people, French and
+Americans. And finally the relations between the two nations, allies
+though they were, developed from misunderstandings into hot irritations,
+from irritations into clashes. First white Americans and Frenchmen
+clashed; separate restaurants and accommodations had to be arranged.
+Then came the inevitable clash between white and colored Americans;
+petty jealousies and meannesses arose over the courtesies of Frenchwomen
+and the lack of discrimination in the French cafés. The Americans found
+a new and inexplicable irritation in the French colored colonials. Food
+was bad, prices were exorbitant; officers became tyrants. Everyone was
+at once in Brest and constantly about to leave it; real understanding
+and acquaintanceship were impossible.
+
+Peter thought Dante might well have included this place in the
+description of his Inferno. Here were Disease and Death, Mutilation and
+Murder. Stevedores and even soldiers became cattle and beasts of burden.
+Many black men were slaves. The thing from which France was to be
+defended could hardly be worse than this welter of human
+misunderstandings, the clashing of unknown tongues, the cynical
+investigations of the government, the immanence of war and the awful,
+persistent wretchedness of the weather.
+
+The long wait turned into sudden activity and Peter’s outfit was ordered
+to Lathus, thence to La Courtine, one of the large training centers. It
+was at this latter place that he caught sight once more of Meriwether
+Bye. He seemed unusually alert and cheerful, Peter thought, and when the
+two got a chance to speak to each other, this impression was confirmed.
+The young white physician had the look of a man who sees before him a
+speedy deliverance.
+
+“He thinks he’s going to die and chuck this whole infernal business,”
+Peter said to himself. “Wish I could be as sure of getting out of it as
+he is.” Somehow the brief encounter left him more dispirited than ever.
+“Come out of it, ole hoss,” Harley Alexander used to say to him. “What’d
+your ‘grand white’ friend do to you?”
+
+“Oh, you shut up!” Peter barked at him.
+
+His real depression, however, dated back to the time immediately after
+his company had left Brest. The awful condition of things in the seaport
+town was general rather than specific, and for the first time since
+Peter had entered the war he was feeling comparatively calm. His long
+and intimate talks with Meriwether had produced their effect. He had not
+realized that any such man as the young Quaker physician had existed in
+the white world. He had too much sense and too many cruel experiences to
+believe that there were many of Meriwether’s kind to be found in a
+lifetime’s journey, but somehow his long bitterness of the years had
+been assuaged. Henceforth, he told himself, he would try to be more
+generous in his thoughts of white men—perhaps his attitude invited
+trouble which he was usually only too willing to meet halfway.
+
+At Lathus, Harley Alexander met him in the little _place_. “Seems to me
+you’re got up regardless,” Peter had commented. Alexander, one of the
+trimmest men in the regiment, was looking unusually shipshape, almost
+dapper.
+
+The other struck him familiarly across the shoulder. “And that ain’t
+all. Say, fellow, there’s a band concert to-night right here in this
+little old square. I’m goin’ and I’m goin’ to take a lady.”
+
+“Lady! Where’d you get her?”
+
+“Right here. These girls are all right. Not afraid of a dark skin. ‘How
+should we have fear, m’soo,’ one of them says to me, ‘when you fight for
+our _patrie_ and when you are so _beau_?’ ‘_Beau_’ that’s handsome,
+ain’t it? Say this is some country to fight for; got some sense of
+appreciation. Better come along, old scout. There’s a pile of loots
+getting ready to come, each with a French dame in tow.”
+
+“I’ll be there,” Peter told him, laughing. “But count me out with the
+ladies. I can’t get along with the domestic brand and I know I’ll be out
+of luck with the foreign ones.”
+
+Some passing thought wiped the joy of anticipation from Harley’s face.
+“My experience is that these foreign ones are a damn sight less foolish
+than some domestic ones I’ve met. Well, me for the concert.”
+
+But that band concert never came off. At sunset a company of white
+American Southerners marched into Lathus down the main street, past the
+little _place_. There was a sudden uproar.
+
+“Look! Darkies and white women! Come on, fellows, kill the damned
+niggers!”
+
+There was a hasty onslaught in which the colored soldiers even taken by
+surprise gave as good as they took. Between these two groups from the
+same soil there was grimmer, more determined fighting than was seen at
+Verdun. The French civil population stood on the church-steps opposite
+the square and watched with amazement.
+
+“_Nom de dieu!_ Are they crazy, then, these Americans, that they kill
+each other!”
+
+The next day saw Peter’s company on its way to La Courtine, a training
+center, where there were no women. Thence they moved presently to the
+front in the Metz Sector.
+
+The injustice and indignity rendered the colored troupes at Lathus, plus
+the momentary glimpses which he caught of Meriwether and his exaltation,
+plunged Peter into a morass of melancholy and bitter self-communing
+which shut him off as effectually as a smoke-screen from any real
+appreciation of the dangers which surrounded him on the front.
+
+In the midst of all that ineffable danger, that hellish noise, he was
+harassed by the inextricable confusion, the untidiness of his own life.
+God, to get rid of it all! Once he spent forty-eight hours with nine
+other men on the ridge of a hill under fire. The other fellows told
+stories and swapped confidences. But he stayed unmoved through it all,
+impervious alike to the danger and the good man-talk going on about him.
+
+When the call came for a reconnoitering party, he was one of the first
+to step forward. He went out that night into the blackness, the
+hellishness of No Man’s Land. He saw a dark figure rise in front of him,
+heard a guttural sound and the next moment his left arm, drenched with
+blood, hung useless at his side. Raising himself he shot at the legs
+which showed a solid blackness against the thinner surrounding darkness.
+Wriggling on his belly, he pushed forward to where he thought he heard
+sounds, a struggle. “Something doing,” he told himself, “might as well
+get in on that.”
+
+But when he drew near the darkness was so intense that he did not dare
+interfere. Two men, at least, were struggling terribly but he could not
+tell which was which. They were breathing in terrific grunts, so heavily
+that they had not noticed the approach of his smoothly sliding body.
+Suddenly what he had hoped for, happened. A rocket shot up in the air
+flared briefly and showed him the two men. One was Meriwether Bye, the
+other was a German, his hand in the act of throwing a hand grenade.
+
+Peter lurched forward and at that ghastly short range shot the German
+through the stomach. But he was too late, the grenade had left the man’s
+hand. The earth rocked about him, he could see Meriwether fall, a
+toppling darkness in the darkness. He started toward him but his foot
+caught in a depression and he himself fell sideways on his wounded arm.
+There was a moment of exquisite pain and then the darkness grew even
+more dark about him, the silent night more silent.
+
+When he came to, it was still dark, though the day, he felt, rather than
+saw, was approaching. His arm hurt unmercifully. He had never known such
+pain. He raised himself on his one arm, and felt around with his foot.
+Yes, there was a body, he prayed it might not be the German. Crawling
+forward he plunged his hand into blood, a depthless pool of sticky
+blood. Sickened, he drew back and dried it, wiping it on his coat. More
+cautiously, then, he reached out again, searching for the face, yes,
+that was Meriwether’s nose. Those canny finger-tips of his recognized
+the facial structure. His hand came back to Meriwether’s chest. The
+heart was beating faintly and just above it was a hole, with the blood
+gushing, spurting, hot and thick.
+
+He sat upright and wrenching open his tunic tore at his shirt. The stuff
+was hard to tear but it finally gave way under the onslaught of teeth
+and fingers. Faint with the pain of his left arm and the loss of his own
+blood, he set his lips hard, concentrating with all his strength on the
+determination not to lose consciousness again. Finally grunting,
+swearing, almost crying, he got Meriwether’s head against his knee, then
+against his shoulder, and staunched the wound with the harsh, unyielding
+khaki. His canteen was full and he drenched the chilly, helpless face
+with its contents. All this time he was sitting with no support for his
+back and the strain was telling on him.
+
+Against the surrounding gray of the coming morning, southward toward his
+own lines, he caught sight of darker shapes, trees perhaps, perhaps
+men—if he could only get to them! Placing Meriwether’s face upwards he
+caught him about his lean waist, buckling him to his side with an arm of
+steel, and rising to his knees he crawled for what seemed a mile toward
+that persistent blackness. Twice he fell, once he struck his left arm
+against a dead man’s boot. The awful throbbing in his shoulder
+increased. But at last he was there, at last in the shelter of a clump
+of low, stunted trees. With a sob he braced himself against them,
+letting Meriwether’s head and shoulders rest against his knees. The
+blood had begun to spurt again and Meriwether stirred. Peter whispered:
+
+“Bye, for God’s sake, speak to me. This is Peter, Peter Bye, you
+remember?”
+
+The young doctor repeated the name thickly. “Yes, Peter. I know. I’m
+dying.”
+
+“Not yet. Man, it’s almost day, they’ll come to us. Pull yourself
+together. We’ll save you somehow.”
+
+Meriwether whispered, “I’m cold.”
+
+Could he get his coat off? How could he ever pull it off that shattered
+arm? Still he achieved even this, wrapping it around the white man’s
+shivering form, raising that face, gray as the gray day above them, high
+on his chest, cradling him like a baby.
+
+The chill was the chill of death, a horrible death. Meriwether coughed
+and choked; Peter could feel the life struggling within the poor torn
+body. Once the cold lips said: “Peter, you’re a good scout.”
+
+Just before a merciful unconsciousness enveloped him for the last time,
+Meriwether sat upright in the awful agony of death. “Grandfather,” he
+called in a terrible voice, “this is the last of the Byes.”
+
+When the stretcher-bearers found them, Meriwether was lying across
+Peter’s knees, his face turned childwise toward Peter’s breast. The
+colored man’s head had dropped low over the fair one and his black curly
+hair fell forward straight and stringy, caked in the blood which lay in
+a well above Meriwether’s heart.
+
+“Cripes!” said one of the rescue men, “I’ve seen many a sight in this
+war, but none ever give me the turn I got seein’ that smoke’s hair
+dabblin’ in the other fellow’s blood.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+CHAMBÉRY, the capital of Savoy, a town situated toward the south of the
+extreme east of France, has not always been as well known to America as
+its more important neighbors, Grenoble and Lyons. Up to a few years ago
+it was celebrated chiefly because it was the location of the chateau of
+the old dukes of Savoy and the birthplace of Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Now
+it is known to thousands and thousands of Americans because during the
+great War it was metamorphosed into a rest center for colored soldiers.
+
+To the tourist’s mind it might stand out for three reasons: as a city in
+which it is well nigh impossible to get a lost telegram repeated; as a
+place where one may procure at very little expense the most excellent of
+manicures and the most delicious of little cakes. And, thirdly, as the
+scene of a novel by Henri Bordeaux, “La Peur de Vivre,” the story of a
+young girl who, afraid to face the perils of life, forfeited therefore
+its pleasures.
+
+Certainly Alice Du Laurens, the young woman of Bordeaux’ novel, would
+have been no more astonished to find herself in New York than Maggie
+Ellersley, whom she so closely resembled in character, was to find
+herself in Chambéry. The nervous shock which Harry Portor had predicted
+from her encounter with Neal followed only too surely, but for another
+reason. The flesh wound itself had been negligible and she might have
+recovered without the nervous breakdown, had not Mr. Simpson in an agony
+of remorse at the danger to which he had so unwittingly exposed her,
+subjected her again with equally complete unconscious thoroughness to
+another shock. He was always presenting her with flowers, magazines, and
+journals, his eyes silently beseeching her forgiveness. For Maggie had
+never betrayed his share in the disaster and had thus made him her eager
+servitor forever.
+
+Two weeks after the accident he brought her an evening paper. “Just
+picked this up as I come along, Miss Maggie. But there’s some flowers
+comin’ later on.”
+
+She took the folded paper listlessly and let her eyes travel over the
+front sheet. A tiny paragraph leaped at her from the bottom of a column.
+“Negro Leaps In Front Of Subway Train.”
+
+“A Negro, later identified as Henderson Neal, was killed instantly this
+afternoon——”
+
+They found it hard to quiet her. “I killed him,” she moaned to Harry
+Portor, hastily summoned. “His death is as much due to me as though I
+had poisoned him. I did poison his life.”
+
+Portor was at his wits’ end. She was too weak to be sent away from home
+by herself. Her mother could not leave the house, for Maggie’s illness
+had decidedly crippled her resources. And once more they were dependent
+on lodgers for their livelihood.
+
+Once Portor spoke to her of Peter, thinking to comfort her, but the
+allusion only made her worse. “Peter! I was getting ready to ruin his
+life, too. Oh, how awful everything is. If I could only see him again!”
+
+It was all very odd, Harry thought, wondering if Joanna could interpret
+this. The situation was too complex for him to handle.
+
+It was her first cry of penitence, and as she lay there day after day
+reviewing her life she came to understand and to analyze for what it was
+that quality of hers, that tendency to climb to the position she wanted
+over the needs and claims of others. Now that she had no strength, now
+that life stretched around her a dreary procession of sullen, useless
+days, she realized the beauty inherent in life itself, the miracle of
+health and sane nerves, of the ability to make a living, of being
+helpful to others.
+
+“Why, Henderson, even Henderson—if I could have taken him back that
+first time, I might have changed him, got him to work at something
+profitable and interesting. Maybe,” she thought, for the first time
+since her marriage, “we might have had a child. And what difference did
+it make if I didn’t go with those—‘dickties?’ I could have had a nice
+time; I used to have nice times, lovely cosy times with Anna and Tom.”
+
+That brought her to the thought of Peter. “Of course, he didn’t want me.
+And I never loved him. He always did and always will love Joanna.
+Whether he gets her or not, she’s the woman for him. He needs her as I
+need Philip.” She lay quite still then, concentrating, probing her
+inmost spirit. “As I need no one,” she said to herself aloud. “If I ever
+get well again I shall be what I want to be without depending on
+anybody. And I shall always be content.”
+
+Who shall explain the relation between mind and spirit? She grew better
+after that, began to sit up and, joining one of her mother’s myriad
+committees, engaged in the preparation of outfits for the men overseas.
+Very slowly, almost reluctantly her interest in life came creeping back
+with her strength. She grew to be like the little girl she had been
+long, long ago, before her overpowering desire got possession of her.
+But she needed the stimulus of an occupation which would take her out of
+herself.
+
+“If I could find something which would make me forget everything that is
+past, Harry,” she told the young doctor. He had fallen into the habit of
+taking her on his rounds two and three times a week. The air did her
+good and the occasion gave him a chance to study her.
+
+“It will turn up, the right thing always does,” he comforted her. “You
+know you are lots better already.”
+
+“Yes, so much better than you can guess,” she returned, leaving him
+slightly mystified at the peculiar expression with which she was
+regarding him. He would have been more astonished if he could have read
+her thought. “Once,” she said to herself, “I might have tried to make
+him like me, tried to get him to marry me and lift me out of my
+obscurity. My, I’m glad that’s over.”
+
+Once on her return from one of these trips her mother came rushing to
+her. “Guess who’s here, Maggie? But, pshaw, you’d never guess. John
+Howe, do you remember?”
+
+John Howe who had come to her rescue in the early days! “Now you just
+set still,” her mother fussed about her, “and I’ll bring him up. He’s
+the Reverend John Howe now. I’ll bet he’ll do you good.”
+
+Ministers for some reason are either fat or lean. John Howe ran to the
+lean type. He came in looking very much as usual, to stay only “five
+minutes,” he told Mrs. Ellersley.
+
+He stayed five hours and Maggie poured out her heart, her first liking
+for Philip, her marriage, her discovery of her husband’s “profession,”
+her engagement to Peter and her insensate determination to hold on to
+him.
+
+“And then Henderson killed himself. Oh, John, I’ve been a wicked, wicked
+creature.”
+
+“Not as bad as all that, Maggie, but life has been as unkind to you as
+though you had been. That’s the trouble,—whether you burn yourself
+intentionally or not, you get hurt all the same. And it’s all over now,
+you’ve quite decided to let—to break with this Bye fellow?”
+
+“You were right at first. To let him go. Yes.”
+
+“H’m, what do you suppose he’ll do then, go back to this other girl?”
+
+“It sounds so funny to hear you talk of her that way, so slightingly,
+almost,” said Maggie, a little surprised.
+
+“Well, of course, she’s nothing to me. Daresay she’s a nice enough girl,
+though she sounds a bit priggish. Do you think she’ll take him back?”
+
+“Oh, I hardly think so. You see, she’s the only one of us who’s kept on
+and got what she wanted out of life. She’s on the stage, a dancer, the
+success of the season! Peter’s just barely through school, if indeed he
+did get through, and, anyway, he’s still as poor as a church mouse. And
+I’m just Miss Nobody. The thing is—if Peter wants to go to her, he can.”
+
+“And what will you do?”
+
+“I don’t know. I can’t guess. Something I hope very different that will
+take me as completely out of myself as though I had been transposed to a
+fourth dimension. Can’t you think of something, John?”
+
+“I don’t know, I believe I have a sort of idea. Are you pretty strong
+now, Maggie?”
+
+“The Doctor says I’m as strong as I’ll ever be without change of
+interests and surroundings. Let’s hear about your idea.”
+
+“No, that’s enough for to-day. Besides, I’m not sure enough of it.” But
+he came back the next day fortified. The Young Men’s Christian
+Association had decided to send a few colored women workers among the
+colored men at the front. Two had already gone, but more were needed. If
+he could get the position for Maggie it would prove just the change she
+needed. Did she think she could go?
+
+“Me,” Maggie breathed, “go to France! To help the poor boys! Oh, I’d
+love it, John.”
+
+It was the thing for her. Of course, its accomplishment took time and
+much handling of red tape, but it did come to pass and Maggie, leaving
+behind her an apprehensive mother and cousin—for the day of submarines
+was not yet over—set sail for France. She landed at Brest, from Brest
+she went to Paris, where she was summoned to Chambéry to help Mrs.
+Terry, the colored worker, in charge of the leave-center in the Savoyard
+capital.
+
+Maggie was taken out of herself completely. The voyage, the danger, the
+foreign language and new customs went to her head like wine. The need of
+the men overwhelmed and staggered her. They were pathetically proud of
+her—and of Mrs. Terry, too,—glad to be allowed a sight of her bright
+face, to exchange a word. To be permitted to dance with her sent any one
+of them into a delirium of ecstatic pride. They were brave fellows,
+conducting themselves as became soldiers, persistently cheerful in the
+face of the hateful prejudice that followed and flayed them in the very
+act of laying down their lives for their country. For a time the Negro
+soldiers had been permitted to go over to Aix-les-Bains once a week, to
+reap the benefit of the baths, but a white American woman seeing in this
+an approach to “social equality,” contrived to start a protest which
+resulted in a withdrawal of this permission and the black men were
+confined strictly to Chambéry.
+
+A new sense of values came to Maggie, living now in the midst of scenes
+like these. The determinedly cheerful though somewhat cynical attitude
+of “the boys” in such conditions seemed to her the most wonderful thing
+she had ever witnessed. It was as though they said to hostile forces:
+“Oh, yes, we know you’ll do for us in every possible way, slight us,
+cheat us, betray us, but you can’t kill the real life within us, the
+essential us. You may make us distrustful, incredulous, disillusioned,
+but you can’t make us despair or corrode us with bitterness. Call us
+children if you like, but in spite of everything, life _is_ worth
+living, and we mean to live it to the full.”
+
+So many impressions, so many happenings crowded in on Maggie during
+those days that she failed to differentiate between the strange and the
+unusual, the calculable and the unexpected. So that on the night when a
+new detachment of men filed into the canteen and she glanced up to find
+that the tall lieutenant to whom she was handing a cup of cocoa was
+Peter, she did not feel at first astonished. Afterwards it came to her
+that, subconsciously, she had noticed how subdued, how cautious his
+greeting to her had been. His manner toward Mrs. Terry, whom he had
+known slightly in New York, seemed by contrast almost effusive.
+
+“That,” she told herself later, angrily, “was because he didn’t want to
+encourage me. How he dreads me! Poor Peter. I’ll put him at his ease.”
+
+She was to make arrangements the next day for a trip to Lake Bourget. On
+her way to the station she spied Peter sitting, a desolate and lonely
+figure, in the little parkway that ran through the broad street. He did
+not see her advancing and she had a chance to examine him. His face,
+still handsome, was thin and lined and his eyes were hopeless. She held
+out her hand.
+
+He let it drop after a brief pressure.
+
+“I was thinking of you, Maggie.”
+
+“And I of you. How wretched you look, Peter!”
+
+He told her, then, of his wound and of his stay in a hospital in Toul.
+“My arm is all right now. I’ve even been in another engagement. In a
+month at the most, I expect to return to the front again.”
+
+“Do you dread it?”
+
+He looked at her in surprise. “Dread it? My goodness, no. I think I
+prefer war to ordinary living. It is so quick and decisive. Of course,
+there are some tiresome delays. We were held up for six weeks at Brest
+and the transportation overseas was very slow. But I didn’t care, I made
+a fine friend on account of it. I wish I’d met him sooner.” He didn’t
+tell her the name. That, he thought morosely, would only start her off
+again on his social standing. “He was killed,” he ended hastily.
+
+“I’m so sorry. That’s why you’re so dismal.”
+
+“Perhaps, and then, I don’t understand anything more. Life is all a maze
+and I can’t find my way out. I hope I get killed in my next engagement.”
+
+She bit her lip at that. How blind she had been! “Well, I’m going to
+obviate one difficulty for you, Peter. I’ve decided not to
+marry—anybody. I think I want to try life on my own. No, don’t say
+anything. You can’t very well thank me and there’s no use pretending
+you’re sorry. It was a bad business, Peter, and I’m glad it’s over.”
+
+Before he could speak she had left him. His wound and the loss of
+Meriwether, his constant brooding, had wrought in him an habitual
+dejection. But he was conscious of a slight lifting of the pall which
+hung over him, a loosening of the web.
+
+They saw very little of each other in the five or six days before his
+departure. Maggie was rather glad of this. She wanted no reminders to
+spoil her feeling of having begun everything anew with a clean slate.
+Her new-found independence was a source of the greatest joy. Each night
+she mapped out afresh her future life. When she returned to America she
+would start her hair work again, she would inaugurate a chain of Beauty
+Shops. First-class ones. Of her ability to make a good living she had no
+doubt. And she would gather about her, friends, simple kindly people
+whom she liked for themselves: who would seek her company with no
+thought of patronage. She would stand on her two feet, Maggie Ellersley,
+serene, independent, self-reliant. The idea exalted her and she went
+about her work the picture of optimism and happiness.
+
+The boys called her “Sunlight.” They all liked her and she was kind to
+them. Some of them were fine fellows, well educated and successful. It
+was Maggie’s greatest secret triumph that in these particularly
+favorable conditions she felt no impulse to attempt to realize that old
+insistent ambition.
+
+On the utmost peak of the Mont du Nivrolet, which towers east of
+Chambéry, directly opposite the _Chaîne de l’Epine_, gleams an immense
+cross twenty-five meters high, visible from all the surrounding country.
+At sunset it stood out boldly and Maggie, looking at it daily at that
+hour, came to regard it as a sort of luminous symbol of faith. “Oh, God,
+you have brought me peace; perhaps some day I shall know happiness.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+INTO the midst of her new-found content came Philip. At first she could
+hardly believe it. She supposed vaguely that he had enlisted but she was
+and had been out of touch so long with the Marshall family that she knew
+nothing definite of his movements. It had been years and years since she
+had seen him, had in any sense been connected with him. What a long
+stretch of time and events since she had received Joanna’s letter that
+fateful Sunday!
+
+He was very much changed, not only older and graver, but weak,
+physically. He had been wounded twice and had been gassed slightly.
+“I’ve been discharged from the hospital as cured, Maggie, but I’m afraid
+I’ll never be any good again.” He smiled with infinite gentleness.
+“There was so much I wanted to do.” Fortunately his “Leave” had followed
+on his stay in the rest-area at Nice.
+
+He had been in Chambéry for half of his _permission_ then, and the first
+embarrassment attendant on their meeting had worn off. Still, both
+avoided discussion of the old days, glancing away from possible points
+of contact. He seemed to Maggie to be wasting by inches and even Mrs.
+Terry, who had seen many cases of gassed men, thought he had come out of
+the hospital too soon. Maggie, her old love mingled with a new
+tenderness awakening in her, spent as much time with him as she dared.
+She did not want him to be ill, but she adored his weakness, it gave her
+her first chance to wait on him, to mother him, to pay back, instead of
+always taking, something of what the Marshall family had brought into
+her life.
+
+He said to her one day seated in the little parkway, “Why did you leave
+us so abruptly, Maggie? Why did you marry Henderson Neal?”
+
+Peter had asked her the same question years ago and now as then she
+could not answer: “Because of Joanna’s letter.” So she sat silent a
+moment.
+
+“Well, Maggie?”
+
+“Because I was a fool, Philip. I was a silly, silly young girl. Without
+the sense to know what I wanted. Without the patience to wait for it if
+I had known. All young girls are silly, don’t you think? All, that is,
+except Joanna. She always knew what she wanted and see, she’s got it.
+Wonderful Joanna! Do you know, Philip, I think I’ll have a career, too,
+a business one! A chain of Beauty Shops.”
+
+How wonderful to be able to talk like this without false shame to a
+Marshall! How wonderful life was! How beautiful to be experienced!
+
+Philip said rather indifferently:
+
+“I’m not surprised at that. My father always said you had one of the
+clearest heads for business he’d ever seen. I used to be overwhelmed
+myself at your ability to handle people and things. You were always so
+sure of yourself. I remember once telling Sylvia and Joanna that you
+could afford to go about with people that I didn’t care to have them
+meet. Your early experiences rendered you safe. I believe I told them
+that when they were speaking to me of your husband, Mr. Neal. I didn’t
+know he was going to be your husband then, Maggie.”
+
+So that was what Joanna had meant so long ago. Strange how time
+dissolves mysteries. Strange how, after deciding to take life as one
+finds it, life comes fawning to one’s hand.
+
+Several days elapsed before another talk could be managed. Then they met
+in front of the _Statue des Eléphants_. Philip, examining that marvel
+with meticulous care, asked her indirectly about Peter.
+
+“How will you combine the sort of business you contemplate and your
+marriage? Seems to me you’ll have to be away from home a lot. Somehow, I
+don’t picture you as a ‘new woman,’ Maggie.”
+
+So he was interested! And she had done nothing, not one little thing to
+lead up to it. “Oh, God, let me be happy now,” she breathed. “You know I
+meant to play the game straight and I really do love Philip.” Aloud she
+said joyously, “I’m not going to be married, Philip, at least not to
+Peter Bye, if that’s what you’re talking about. That was all a mistake.
+We both realized that.”
+
+She glanced at him, hoping to meet an answering joy in his face, but
+found instead a deepening mournfulness.
+
+“Philip,” she said very gently. “What is it?”
+
+He lifted a haggard face. “Listen, Maggie, I can speak now. I loved you
+long, long ago, when we used to go off on those catering jobs for
+father. Do you remember? But I didn’t know it, I didn’t think about it,
+until you married. Somehow I had always thought there would be time
+enough and that, anyway, matters would adjust themselves. And when I
+heard you’d married that fellow, I was so amazed, thrown off my feet. I
+said to myself, ‘You poor weak fool, of course, she’d prefer a man, a
+real man who, no matter what his character, would have gumption to go
+after the woman he loved.’
+
+“I’d have come to you, but I thought you must love him; I had heard the
+girls mention seeing the two of you together and I concluded it was an
+affair of long standing. To ease myself, to put you completely out of my
+mind, I plunged into this public work; I wouldn’t even mention your
+name. And the first thing I knew you had left Neal and were engaged to
+Bye. I couldn’t understand that, Maggie, since you had grown up with
+Joanna and Peter, but that’s all over now. I cursed Bye out at Des
+Moines, I remember.”
+
+Maggie, reviewing all that had preceded Peter’s departure for Des
+Moines, shivered a little. “Perhaps some day I can tell you all about
+it, Philip. It was mostly my fault.”
+
+“It doesn’t make any difference whose fault it was, Maggie; everything
+is too late now. You don’t suppose I’m going to ask you, a beautiful
+woman, just on the threshold of a successful future, to marry me. My
+dear, I’m a wreck. I may live a year and I may live a half century. But
+I’d always be good for nothing, sitting around, ailing, getting on your
+nerves. I wouldn’t be able even to run your cash register for you,
+Maggie. These gas cases are absolutely unpredictable.”
+
+“I don’t care,” she told him stubbornly. “You haven’t asked me but I’ll
+tell you. I love you, Philip, I always have. And nothing would please me
+more than to nurse you. Why, I love you, my dear. Manage my cash
+register! We’ll get you home and Harry Portor will fix you up and then
+you’ll take up your magazine again. I’ll be your secretary, your
+assistant, your whole force.”
+
+But Philip was adamant. “You don’t know what you’re saying. No, Maggie,
+after I leave here I’ll never see you again. I had my chance to win you
+once and I let you go, threw you into the arms of Neal. That was bad
+enough. But I won’t chain you to an invalid’s chair for life.”
+
+For the first time since she had known him she recognized in him a faint
+bitterness.
+
+“You know, Maggie, I’ve never made any kick about being colored. Rather,
+I looked at it as a life work ready and cut out for a man, for me, and I
+rushed rather joyously into it to do battle. Now as I look back, I think
+I realize for the first time what this awful business of color in
+America does to a man, what it has done for me. If we weren’t so
+persistently persecuted and harassed that we can think, breathe, do
+nothing but consider our great obsession, you and I might have been
+happy long ago. I’d have done as most men of other races do, settled my
+own life and then launched on some high endeavor. But do you know as a
+boy, as a young man, I never consciously let any thought of self come to
+me? I was always so sure that I was going to strike a blow at this
+great, towering monster. And all I’ve done has been to sacrifice myself
+and to sacrifice you. And the ironic joke of it is that in the defense
+of the country which insists on robbing me of my natural joys, I’ve lost
+the strength to keep up even the fight for which I let everything else
+of importance in the world go. I’ve been simply a fool.”
+
+She tried to comfort him. “You’ve been everything that is fine and brave
+and noble, Philip. And don’t think your suffering, as you call it, is
+due only to being colored. Life takes it out of all of us. I have never
+spent five minutes in trying to help our cause. Your unselfishness and
+Joanna’s persistent ambition have always amazed me. I have been a
+selfish, selfish woman, always—looking out for my own personal
+advantage, grasping at everything, everybody—who I thought might make
+life easier for me. You don’t really know me, Philip. I’ve pursued a
+course exactly opposite to yours. And yet I never knew a moment of
+happiness from the time we were all children together until I came here
+to Chambéry to help these boys.” She thought deeply. “Sometimes I think
+no matter how one is born, no matter how one acts, there is something
+out of gear with one somewhere, and that must be changed. Life at its
+best is a grand corrective.
+
+“But now we’ve found ourselves, Philip. You have learned ordinary
+personal consideration and I have learned unselfishness—to a degree. It
+is not too late for us to be happy—together, Philip.”
+
+“How we complement each other,” he mused. His eye fell on his wasted
+hand. “Ah, but, Maggie, it is too late. Everything is too late.”
+
+On the last day of his stay she came to him. “You love me, Philip?” He
+gave a quick assent. “And you know I love you and you still won’t marry
+me?”
+
+“Don’t torture me, Maggie. You’ve no idea what it means to be tied for
+life to a peevish invalid. I—I never expect to see you again, my dear.”
+
+“Then,” she said, and the last tatters of her old obsession, that oldest
+desire of all for sheer decency—fell from her, “then I’ll be your
+mistress, Philip. For no matter where you go I’ll find you and stay with
+you, you’ll never be able to send me away from you. You’ll make me the
+by-word of all New York but I won’t care, Philip, for I love you. Oh,
+Philip, Philip——”
+
+They were in the chapel of the old Dukes of Savoy and the ancient
+caretaker, having stayed away the length of time which Philip’s
+_pourboire_ warranted, came in, but went out again, quietly, smiling.
+
+For Philip had risen and drawn Maggie to him. “You really mean it,
+Maggie, my Maggie! Oh, my little yellow flower, I’ll never let you go.”
+
+She looked at him starry-eyed. “You don’t seem so weak, Philip.”
+
+Outside, the cross on Nivrolet, a luminous symbol of faith, pointed
+steadfastly to heaven.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+THE War was over, the men were coming home. All Harlem was delirious
+with excitement. Everything conceivable must be done for “the boys,” for
+those boys who having fought a double battle in France, one with Germany
+and one with white America, had yet marvelously, incredibly, returned
+safely home. There were all sorts and conditions of black men, Harvard
+graduates and Alabama farmhands. These last had seen Paris before they
+had seen New York and they blessed the War which had given them a chance
+to see the great capital.
+
+There were parties, dances, fêtes, concerts, benefits. Everybody who
+possessed the least discernible “talent” was called upon; Joanna among
+them. She surprised even her most intimate friends by her graciousness.
+Night after night, when the performance was over, she appeared,
+splendid, glowing, symbolic before those huge dark masses in some uptown
+hall. The “boys,” starved for a sight of their own women with their dark
+pervading beauty, went mad over her. She was indeed for them “Miss
+America,” making them forget to-night the ingratitude with which their
+country would meet them to-morrow.
+
+At none of these assemblies did Joanna find what she was looking for—a
+sight of Peter. She had gone at first out of sheer graciousness—a
+willingness to do something for these brave men. But later, there was
+another reason; something happened which led her to expect to see Peter
+at any moment, at any turn. She met Vera Manning.
+
+“Vera, you imp! Telling those people that you had gone to school with me
+to learn democracy; I nearly died! Where’ve you been this long while?
+How wonderful you look! And how different!”
+
+“Oh, Joanna, Joanna, I was coming to see you! First of all I’ve been
+South. I got sick of going about with those white people, so I cast
+about for something to do. You remember they mobbed some colored
+soldiers in Arkansas because they’d worn their uniforms in the street?
+Well, it made me sick, it made me think of—of Harley. So I rushed to a
+newspaper, Barney Kirchner is the manager—wasn’t he one of Philip’s
+friends? And I told them: ‘I’m colored, see, but nobody would guess it;
+send me down there. See if I can’t get a line on those people.’”
+
+“Mercy,” said Joanna, “what an idea!”
+
+“And they sent me. And, oh, Joanna, it was wonderful to see how our
+folks, those colored people, trusted me and shielded me when they found
+I was one of them. And those white bullies, thinking I was one of
+_them_, told me the most blood-curdling, most fiendish tales. I really
+got an investigation started. Mr. Kirchner has taken it up. Oh, Joanna,
+I’m glad I’m colored—there’s something terrible, terrible about white
+people.”
+
+She had seen a side of life which had first amazed, then frightened,
+then incited her. Joanna had never seen her friend like this, so roused
+and quickened, so purposeful. “It was as though at last I had found some
+excuse for being what I am, looking like one race and belonging to
+another. It made me feel like—don’t laugh—like a ministering angel. Oh,
+I hated myself so for having spent all those foolish months, years even,
+away from my own folks when I might have been consecrated to them,
+serving them, helping them, healing them. You can’t understand just how
+I feel, Janna dear. You’ve always had a definite something before you to
+make out of your life. I tell you I feel as though I had found a new
+heaven and a new earth.”
+
+“Wasn’t it awfully dangerous, Vera?”
+
+“Awfully, and funny, too. Exciting! I’ll never be able to get back to
+Little Rock again. They found me out, suspected me. I really had to make
+a quick get-away. Something so rotten happened, I just couldn’t control
+myself.”
+
+She told her friend that she had finished the investigation on hand and
+was quietly preparing to go. It happened that on her last night at the
+hotel where she was staying, the hotel management was approached on the
+subject of having sold liquor to two young white women, the questionable
+guests of three or four white men. Vera, secretly amused to realize that
+she had been staying at such a resort, thought nothing of the
+disturbance until she learned that the colored bell boys were charged
+with aiding and abetting the women in violation of the law.
+
+“So I followed it up, Joanna. And what do you think happened? When the
+case came up for trial, the girls who had been taken up on charges of
+assignation were adjudged not guilty, but the two bell-hops were held
+for serving liquor under orders, and aiding in a crime which this same
+court says never was committed. Isn’t it all too absurd! I made so much
+row about it that they became suspicious. A colored woman whom I had
+never seen before passed me on the street and handed me a note, in which
+she told me that my actions had made ‘them’ highly suspicious of me.
+Some one suggested that perhaps I was a ‘yaller nigger passin’,’ and if
+so I’d better look out. So I got out. Oh, there was plenty of
+excitement, but it was worth it. I’m going to play the same game
+somewhere else, just as soon as I can. Do you know, I’m—I’m almost glad
+that I am forced to devote the rest of my life to it.”
+
+“Forced to devote your life to it,” Joanna repeated, bewildered. “Why,
+what do you mean?”
+
+A subtle change came over Vera’s face. It was almost as though one could
+see her marshaling her inner forces, her spiritual resources. Despair,
+resolve, pride, courage—her friend could descry each in turn. Then she
+laughed her old confident laugh.
+
+“Well, it’s like this, Janna. I’ve had a message—indirectly—from Harley.
+He—” she bit her lip, “he isn’t coming back to America. He managed to
+get his discharge in France and he’s made up his mind to live there.
+Isn’t it great for him? It means he’ll have to start his training all
+over again, but he says he’d rather do that than waste his life bucking
+this color business any more. And there’s all sorts of work for a
+dentist in those little French towns. Just imagine old Harley’s being
+free to come and go as he pleases. No more insults for him, no more
+lynching news. Why, it’ll be life all over for him, won’t it, Jan? And I
+can’t blame him,” she broke off breathlessly, “once I might have thought
+the thing for him to do was to stay with his own folks, but life cheats
+us colored people so. I wish I had understood that earlier. White and
+colored people! No wonder Peter used to rave as he did.” She ended
+astoundingly: “I suppose you and he have made up.”
+
+“Who?” asked Joanna stupidly. “Peter and—and me? Why, I haven’t seen
+him. Why, he’s going to marry Maggie Ellersley!”
+
+“Marry Maggie nothing! Here, here’s an Automat. We’ll be all right in
+here. Miss Maggie Ellersley is going to marry your brother. Didn’t you
+know it?”
+
+“No, but I’m glad of it, glad of it. How’d you know all this, Vera?”
+
+“Peter told me, of course. I’ve seen him. He’s the most perfect darling
+in his uniform! You ought to hear him raving about France, but silent as
+the tomb about the War. He says the colored soldiers were all
+sold—fighting for freedom was a farce so far as they were concerned. But
+France is all right if the white Americans don’t get in too much
+propaganda. I’ve been meaning to write to you, to tell you you’d better
+go over there. No end of chances for you on the French stage. You might
+even get in French opera. Are you sure you haven’t seen Peter, sly
+thing?”
+
+“Of course I’m sure. There was really no reason why I should. Mr. Bye
+and I haven’t seen or heard from each other for three years, now.”
+
+“Mr. Bye! Well, good evening, Miss High and Mighty. If I see him I’ll
+tell him I saw you.”
+
+“You’ll do nothing of the kind. Stop all this raving, Vera, and explain
+to me about Harley. Are you going to France, too?”
+
+Vera looked at her with a too perfect astonishment. “I going? Joanna,
+how did you ever get credit for being so brilliant, you’re really quite
+thick-witted. Don’t you see Harley’s and my ways are going to lie
+separate forever? He is going East and I am going—South.” Her gayety
+forsook her. “Joanna, don’t let me cry in this awful place. I got it out
+of Peter. I made him tell me. He says Harley is bitter and cynical. He
+says, over and over, Peter told me: ‘Look at these little French girls,
+they’re really white and they don’t seem to hate me. And yet a girl of
+my own race hesitates to marry me merely because she looks like white.’”
+She pressed her hand hard against her quivering mouth. “It seems he
+can’t forgive me. Peter told me so I could be prepared for anything I
+might hear. Oh, Janna, this terrible country with its false ideals! So
+you see why I’m glad there’s the South to go to—I’ve got to choose
+between life and death. Even if I should lose my life in Georgia or in
+one of those other terrible places where they lynch women, too, I’ll
+save it, won’t I? I must go. Kiss me good-by, dear Janna.”
+
+She was off in a moment in her pretty, modish costume, leaving Joanna in
+a maze of pity and tenderness for her friend, and of sick bewilderment
+for herself.
+
+Peter was free; he was, presumably, home, and he had not come near her.
+Some of the old pain surged up. She was walking presently along teeming
+Lenox Avenue. Some young girls passing turned and stared. “That’s Joanna
+Marshall. You know, the dancer.” A dark colored girl wearing Russian
+boots and a hat with three feathers sticking up straight, Indian
+fashion, came along. Lenox Avenue stared, pointed, laughed and enjoyed
+itself, Joanna’s admirer with the rest.
+
+This, this was fame—to be shared with any girl who chose to stick
+feathers, Indian fashion, in her hat. An empty thing—different, so
+different from what she had expected it to be. It had not occurred to
+her that it would be the only thing in her life. Probing relentlessly
+into an evasive subconsciousness she evolved the realization that in
+those other days she had expected her singing, her dancing—her success
+in a word—to be the mere integument of her life, the big handsome extra
+wrap to cover her more ordinary dress,—the essential, delightful
+commonplaces of living, the kernel of life, home, children, and adoring
+husband.
+
+This was too much like examining the bones, the skull and skeleton of
+living and then every day tricking it out with the one thing which could
+lend it the semblance of flesh and color, though always with the vivid
+knowledge that death lay hidden beneath.
+
+If her gift were only something useful! Even Vera Manning, a mere
+butterfly, had turned the trick, had used her one specialty, her absence
+of color, to the advantage of her people. But she—of course it did mean
+something to prove to a skeptical world the artistry of a too little
+understood people—but she could do that only in New York. After the
+season closed here she was to have a brief showing in Boston, in
+Philadelphia and in Chicago. Even there, as here, she would have to
+appear in independent theaters. The big theatrical trusts refused her
+absolutely—one had even said frankly: “We’ll try a colored man in a
+white company but we won’t have any colored women.”
+
+Her manager, who liked and respected her, had told her only last week
+that he had nothing in view for her after the brief tour. He felt there
+was money in the South, but the southern newspapers had started to
+editorialize against her already. “A negress,” a Georgia newspaper had
+said, “in the rôle of America. Shameful!”
+
+“We might get a showing among colored patrons, Miss Marshall. But the
+South is in an ugly mood just now. Those hoodlums might break the show
+up. I’d hate to expose you to it. God, what a country!”
+
+It was just possible that she might get a booking in a high-class
+vaudeville house. “And later on we’ll write a play around you. It would
+take mighty little to make a fine actress out of you. That’s a fact,
+Miss Marshall. And after we’ve had a run here we could cross the pond.”
+
+This, this, was her great success. She loved and hated it. But she would
+not have been human if she had not wished for Peter to see her in her
+triumph, empty though it might prove to be.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+PETER had seen her. His first free hours in New York were spent sitting
+segregated in the portion of the balcony set apart for colored people,
+watching Joanna in the “Dance of the Nations.” And the result, of
+course, was to make her seem farther than ever out of his reach. She was
+more wonderful, more mysterious than he had conceived possible. “And why
+you should think she would look at you! What if she did write and tell
+you she didn’t mean it? Look at the letter you sent her in reply. Do you
+suppose a woman like that would stand being thrown down and picked up
+again?”
+
+He was living with his aunt until he could open an office. Fortunately,
+he had saved up his pay and his aunt had used very little of his
+allotment. As soon as possible he would get out his shingle. His first
+impulse on receiving his _congé_ from Maggie had been to come back and
+have at least a talk with Joanna. But after seeing her on the stage he
+rejected that idea completely.
+
+“But I’ll work like fury. I’ll really get ahead. And then I’ll go to her
+and tell her I owe it all to her. And I’ll explain to her, as Meriwether
+Bye said, that all my training and instincts have been against me. And
+then,” he finished to himself lamely, “we’ll always be friends.”
+
+He passed the state-board examinations with a flourish. Then to get an
+office. He thought it best to consult Harry Portor about this. The
+latter in his own office greeted him, he thought, none too cordially,
+ignored his hand.
+
+“Thought I’d look you up, Portor. Gee, what enthusiasm! Nice greeting to
+give a fellow who’s just been making your home safe for democracy.”
+
+“Oh, can that stuff, Bye. What I want to know is this. It’s none of my
+business but I happen to be interested. What are you going to do about
+Maggie Ellersley?”
+
+“Wha-at! Well I’ll be——” Had he been in her train, too? Was this why she
+had given him his freedom? His face clouded.
+
+“You’re right, Harry, it _is_ none of your business. May I ask how you
+horn in on this?”
+
+“Well, if you’ve got to know. I’m, I’m deeply interested in Miss Joanna
+Marshall and—and——”
+
+“Hold on, I thought you were speaking of Miss Ellersley.” Their
+politeness was wonderful.
+
+“Now see here, Bye, tell me, are you going to marry Miss Ellersley?”
+
+“I am not.”
+
+“Well, by God! you dirty cad, what do you mean by getting engaged to one
+woman after another and not having any intention of marrying either?”
+
+Peter controlled his rising anger. “I don’t want to quarrel with you,
+Portor. Miss Ellersley told me in Chambéry that she didn’t want to marry
+me, she’d made a mistake.”
+
+“And Miss Marshall,” said Harry, his face clearing, “have you told her
+yet?”
+
+“No, I haven’t. Miss Marshall found out she’d made a mistake three years
+ago. I don’t make good with the ladies, Portor. And I’d like to know how
+the devil it concerns you?”
+
+“It concerns me,” said Harry miserably, “because I’m pretty sure Joanna
+loves you, and I want you to make her happy, or else get out of the way
+and let me try to do it.” And he told Peter how Joanna, thinking him
+guilty, had yet declared herself Maggie’s assailant.
+
+Peter’s natural surprise at Neal’s attack on Maggie vanished into
+stupefied amazement at the news of Joanna’s generosity. “She did that
+for me? Joanna?”
+
+“Yes,” Portor told him. “Where’re you going, man?”
+
+Peter had snatched up his cap. “You get into that little Ford I saw
+standing out there and drive me up to her house. I can’t drive a Ford.
+Does she still live home?”
+
+“Still with her father and mother. But they’ve moved on One Hundred and
+Thirty-eighth Street. Joanna, I believe, wanted a whole floor for a
+studio, and as Sylvia’s children are growing up, she and her parents got
+out. The kids are always over at Joanna’s, though.”
+
+They were silent after that. Harry let him off at Joanna’s corner.
+“Well, good luck, old man,” he said insincerely.
+
+Sylvia’s boy, Roger, let Peter in. “I know who you are,” said the tall
+lieutenant. “You are Brian Spencer’s son.”
+
+“Yes, I am, but I don’t know you. And you’ll have to tell me your name
+if you want to see my Aunt Joanna. She might not be at home.”
+
+“Yes, that’s what I was afraid of. See here, son, I knew your Aunt
+Joanna before you were born, and I’d like to surprise her. I’ve just got
+back from France. Understand, Buddy? I’ve got a German helmet around to
+my house——”
+
+“Well,” said Roger, shamelessly, “you go right up those stairs; ’s that
+helmet got a plume on it?”
+
+Joanna had been singing Tschaikowsky’s “Longing.” Now she was sitting
+still reading the words over and over:
+
+ Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt,
+ Weiss was ich leide,
+ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
+ Ach! der mich liebt und kennt—
+
+She mused over the last line: “Peter, I’m afraid you never really knew
+me or loved me.”
+
+He called to her softly from the door of the studio, “Joanna”. She
+turned swiftly on the stool and saw him.
+
+“Peter!”
+
+What could they say? Does anyone believe that two people who have loved
+dearly and have been parted can say anything adequate at such moments?
+Certainly all the explanations, the pleas for forgiveness that Joanna
+had meant to utter if they should ever meet again, left her. She only
+sat and held his hand and called his name again and again. But he was
+silent.
+
+Both became terribly self-conscious, indeed, were very near weeping.
+Peter told Joanna long afterwards that he did not dare speak for fear of
+bursting into tears. Peter, who had been in two terrible engagements,
+and had brought back Meriwether Bye from No Man’s Land!
+
+He told Joanna about Meriwether during those first incredibly beatific
+days after they had met again. But Joanna was too astounded at the
+happiness which flooded the very atmosphere about them. Almost as though
+she were taking a deep sea bath in bliss.
+
+“I used to think,” she told him, “even if Peter does come back, we never
+can
+
+ ‘recapture
+ that first fine careless rapture.’”
+
+“I don’t think we have, dear,” he told her wistfully, “for with this
+happiness is the memory of that awful bitterness that lay between us.
+There was nothing like this that first time.”
+
+He persuaded her to go to Philadelphia, to Bryn Mawr in fact. “I’ve got
+to give these pictures and the locket to Dr. Meriwether Bye and to Mrs.
+Lea. I’m so sorry for them. To think we’re alive and have each other——”
+
+“And their Meriwether is dead. Oh, Peter, if it had been you!”
+
+“Yet I used to long for death, Joanna. I used to wish I’d get done in at
+the Front. Did you pray for me?”
+
+“Yes, sometimes. But I didn’t think you’d die. I used to think, though,
+that you’d never come back to me. I didn’t see how Maggie could ever let
+you go. She’s married Philip, you know.”
+
+“Yes, I know. I told Vera, hoping it would get to you.” He mused over
+some mysterious memory. “Well, Maggie certainly is some girl. How’s
+Philip?”
+
+“Better, oh, lots better. He has a fighting chance and it’s all due to
+her. He’s in a sanitarium and she’s with him. She should have married
+him long ago. It’s my fault she didn’t.” And she told him about the
+letter.
+
+“Gosh!” Peter exclaimed inadequately, “don’t you do funny things when
+you’re kids? Well, here we are at Bryn Mawr. You want to wait here in
+the station? I don’t think I’ll be long. If I am I’ll send for you. I
+don’t mind going here myself, but I don’t want you to go in until I know
+how they’re going to treat you.”
+
+“Oh, go along,” laughed Joanna, “I’ve been in a million of their homes.
+Thought you were all over that nonsense.”
+
+He was back in a quarter of an hour, very serious. “The old gentleman is
+ill, got bronchitis and they’re afraid it might turn into flu. So I left
+a message and the pictures and my address. Your address, rather, Joanna
+dear, since I don’t know just when I’m going to move. Now we’ll go to
+Mrs. Lea’s. She’s just the next station up the line.”
+
+They boarded the local. “I wish you could have seen that old butler,
+Janna. He knew my grandfather. And the moment he saw me, he knew I was a
+Bye. Gave me the funniest look. ‘Why,’ he said, ‘you’se the spit of both
+families!’ Funny, isn’t it, Joanna; those two families, the black and
+the white Byes, lived so long together that they developed similar
+characteristics, like husbands and wives, you know. And they say white
+and colored people are fathoms apart! Even I noticed that Meriwether Bye
+and I were built alike. I’m afraid we weren’t much alike spiritually.
+Well, here’s where we hop off again. I’m afraid I’ll be longer this
+time. Mind waiting for me, darling?”
+
+“Never, if you’ll only promise to come back to me,” she whispered.
+
+Nothing had been said as yet about a new engagement. But he kissed her
+in the Sunday quiet of the tiny station and held her close.
+
+When he came back at the end of an hour she could see he was deeply
+stirred.
+
+“Hard on you, wasn’t it, Peter?”
+
+“Yes, and on her, too. Poor little thing. I don’t pretend to understand
+white people, Joanna, but I can’t imagine what Meriwether, that big,
+fine idealist, could have seen in that little ball of fluff.
+Self-centered, narrow and cruel—cruel, Joanna! Oh, such people! Do you
+know what she said?”
+
+“I can’t imagine, Peter.”
+
+“I gave her the locket, and she said with the tears streaming down her
+face, ‘To think that the Lord would let Meriwether Bye be killed and
+would let his nigger live!’”
+
+Joanna fell back against the red plush seat. “She didn’t, she couldn’t!”
+
+“You wouldn’t think so. And then she told me, ‘Go on, tell me every word
+he said.’ And I did, all I could remember. He had said to me one day, ‘I
+love her and she loves me,’ and I told her that and she leaned back and
+moaned—moaned, Janna. I wanted to pick her up in my arms and comfort
+her, and if I had, do you know what would have happened to me——”
+
+“Don’t, Peter.”
+
+“Well, this is Pennsylvania, so probably I’d have got off with
+imprisonment, here, but if it had been in Georgia, and I’d have dared to
+touch her——”
+
+She put her hand over his mouth, “Peter, you shan’t say it.”
+
+“Darling, all the time I was there I was thinking: ‘Suppose this were
+Joanna and I were Harley Alexander, or someone, telling her about Peter
+Bye!’”
+
+They were very sober after that.
+
+At the West Philadelphia station Peter remembered a restaurant on Market
+Street, where he had eaten in his student days. “I guess they’ll still
+accommodate us. Where do you think I’m going to take you after we eat?”
+
+“I can’t imagine, Peter.”
+
+“Out to the Park, darling. I used to dream of this in France, when I was
+in that hospital.”
+
+Philadelphia, since the War, has changed for the worse in her attitude
+toward colored people. But these two contrived to get a decent meal
+after which they set out for the Park. It was October again, mellow and
+beautiful. Joanna, tingling with memories of the past, asked Peter
+nervously to tell her more of Meriwether Bye.
+
+“He was a wonderful man, Joanna, a real, real man and he made me see
+life from an entirely different angle. He said white men in their fight
+for freedom in America had had tremendous physical odds to face and that
+black men had helped them face them. Now it was our turn to fight for
+freedom, only our odds were spiritual and mental obstacles, infinitely
+more difficult because less tangible. ‘And just as you black men helped
+us, Bye,’ he used to say, ‘there’re plenty of white men to help you. You
+don’t know it; for one thing, you’ve shut your mind to us. Oh, you’re
+not to blame, lots of us aren’t to be trusted; most of us, I’m afraid.
+But we’re ignorant and incredulous. Show us what manhood means, Bye.’”
+
+“He must have been wonderful, indeed, Peter.”
+
+“Yes. And yet the queerest chap. You know I told you he had made up his
+mind to die. That was the difference between us. I wanted to, but he had
+made up his mind to it. And he told me: ‘I knew as soon as I saw you on
+the ship that my job was finished, but you would have to carry on.
+You’ll have to finish up my life, Peter.’”
+
+Joanna felt tears in her eyes.
+
+“Darling, he told me something else. He said I was a fool ever to have
+let you go. My dear, I’m going to try to finish up Meriwether Bye’s
+life, to be the man that he would have been. But I can do nothing
+without you, Joanna.” Suddenly they were back in the full tide of their
+love of long ago. He knelt beside her, kissing her hands. “Sweetest
+Joanna, will you take me and make a man out of me? All that is decent in
+me already is your work. Are you going to marry me, Joanna?”
+
+An ineffable solemnity hung around them.
+
+“Tell me, Joanna.”
+
+“Of course, I’ll marry you, Peter. Dear, don’t think I don’t understand
+how hard things have been for you. I was such a stupid, before, when we
+were young. I didn’t allow for the difference in our temperaments. Why,
+nothing in the world is so hard to face as this problem of being colored
+in America. See what it does to us—sends Vera Manning South and Harley
+overseas, away from everybody they’ve ever known, so that they can live
+in—in a sort of bitter peace; forces you to consider giving up your
+wonderful gift as a surgeon to drift into any kind of work; drives me,
+and the critics call me a really great artist, Peter, to consider
+ordinary vaudeville. Oh, it takes courage to fight against it, Peter, to
+keep it from choking us, submerging us. But now that we have love,
+Peter, we have a pattern to guide us out of the confusion. When you left
+me for Maggie, I used to lie awake at night and think of all the sweet
+things I might have said to you. Oh, if you’ve suffered half as much as
+I have, you’ve suffered horribly. I learned that nothing in the world is
+worth as much as love. For people like us, people who can and must
+suffer—_Love_ is our refuge and strength.”
+
+He kissed her reverently. “Yes, thank God, we’ve got Love. That is the
+great compensation. We’ve tried everything else, dear: you, your career;
+and I, my self-indulgence. And we’ve found what we wanted was each
+other. But you’re right, Joanna, it is frightful to see the havoc that
+this queer intangible bugaboo of color works among us. Vera and Harley,
+you and I, aren’t so badly off. We’re intelligent, we can choose our own
+native land and prejudice, or freedom and a strange, untried country. We
+see clearly just what we’re keeping and what we’re letting go. But when
+I think of the millions of Negroes, not as lucky as we—there’s Tom
+Mason, remember the fellow I used to play with in Philadelphia? I heard
+from him this morning. He’s made his pile and he wants to leave the
+country. But his sister can’t and won’t stand the idea of taking up a
+new life with strange people and a new language. ‘Why should I give up
+my country?’ she wails. ‘It _is_ my country even if my skin is black?’”
+
+“‘_Entbehren, sollst du_,’” Joanna quoted softly. “If you’re black in
+America, you have to renounce. But that’s life, too, Peter. You’ve got
+to renounce something—always.”
+
+“Yes, you do. Unless, like Meriwether, you renounce life itself. Of
+course, that is the great burden of being colored in this day. You’ve
+got to make the ordinary renunciations which life demands, and you’ve
+got to make those involved in the clash of color....
+
+“I’m afraid you’ll have to give up your career, dear Joanna——”
+
+“Of course, of course, I know it.”
+
+“For, if there should be children, I want, Oh, Joanna, I hope——”
+
+“You want them to be different from both you and me, Peter.”
+
+“Not so different from you. You were always so brave, so plucky. But,
+Joanna, if they are like me they’ll have so much to fight, and they’ll
+need you to help them.”
+
+“We can do anything together, Peter.”
+
+“And, Joanna, of course you know we will be poor at first——”
+
+She broke out crying then. “Oh, Peter, you won’t ever say again that I’m
+different from Sylvia.”
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+MAGGIE and Philip had returned from the sanitarium to New York, but
+Philip undoubtedly was dying. Peter and Harry Portor were at his bedside
+every day, but not because of their ability to help him. They were
+simply three friends together. Philip never spoke to Peter of the
+incident at Des Moines, though it is probable that he thought of it many
+times, but the young doctor seemed so serenely unaware of any former
+misunderstanding that Philip, with a deep sense of relief, let the whole
+incident slide out of his mind.
+
+Joanna, meanwhile, was experiencing a little private purgatory of
+remorse and grief. As she saw Philip’s joy in Maggie, his complete and
+unbounded satisfaction in her presence, she became more and more
+overwhelmed with the awfulness of that old unconsidered act of hers, the
+sending of the letter which had caused Maggie to marry Henderson Neal.
+Maggie had never told her this, but she was pretty sure that such was
+the case. The mere fact that Maggie had never spoken about it to Peter,
+even in the days of their engagement, led her to suspect that her
+sister-in-law had attached more significance to it than she had cared to
+show. There was only one thing for her, if she was ever to know any
+peace, and that was to confess to Philip.
+
+She went to see him in the late October weather. On the way she had
+passed Morningside Park and the gorgeous autumn sights and colors had
+brought back to her in a sudden heady rush the memories of the old
+days,—partings with Peter, concert tours and meetings with Philip,
+talks, dreams, ambitions, all the activities of her assured, confident,
+determined youth. If she might only relive a few brief scenes—the night
+she had dismissed Peter, the time she had spent in writing that cruel
+letter to Maggie—how different her memories would have been!
+
+Philip was in excellent spirits. He seemed quite reconciled to dying and
+even spoke of it with a cheerfulness and familiarity that never failed
+to bring a rush of tears to Joanna’s eyes, though this she was careful
+to conceal. “Just think of the luck I’m in,” Philip would say, “I never
+expected to come home at all. If Maggie hadn’t found me there in
+Chambéry and taken pity on my lonesomeness, I’d probably be lying in a
+French cemetery this moment with one of those little white crosses
+standing above me. As it is, I’m seeing you all again and I have Maggie.
+She has promised to stay with me always. It’s all right, Joanna, old
+girl, I’ve had a good run for my money and except for Maggie I’m not so
+sorry to chuck it all. Just think, it might have been my luck never to
+have found her again at all.”
+
+He said something like that to Joanna on this afternoon. Sobbing she
+fell on her knees beside the bed. “Oh Philip, if it hadn’t been for me,
+you’d have found her long ago.”
+
+He was suddenly attentive, his eyes bright and keen in his thin
+sharpening face as she told him about the letter. With infinite
+gentleness he let his hand rest on that proud dark head which life had
+taught so hardly to bow.
+
+“Dear Janna, dear little sister, don’t blame yourself one moment. It was
+all my fault. If you’d left a hundred letters unwritten, I should hardly
+have moved any more quickly. In those days I was so taken up with the
+business of being colored! After I’d adjusted that I thought I’d arrange
+my life. Ah, Joanna, that’s our great mistake. We must learn to look out
+for life first, then color and limitations. My being colored didn’t make
+me forget to provide myself with food and raiment. I shouldn’t have
+allowed it to make me forget love.” His grasp on her hand tightened.
+
+“Learn this, Joanna, and tell the rest of our folks. Our battle is a
+hard one and for a long time it will seem to be a losing one, but it
+will never really be that as long as we keep the power of being happy.
+And happiness has to be deliberately sought for, gained; even that
+doesn’t solve the problem, but it does make it easier for us to fight.
+Happiness, love, contentment in our own midst, make it possible for us
+to face those foes without. ‘Happy Warriors,’ that’s the ideal for us.
+Only I realized it too late.”
+
+That was his last long talk with Joanna. Usually he gave all his
+attention to Maggie who was with him always, supplying and anticipating
+his wants and radiating an ineffable peace. Her hand was in his when he
+died.
+
+His father, remembering his intense patriotism as a child, said with a
+touch of bitter pride: “He died for his country.”
+
+“It was what he always wanted to do,” Sylvia said gently. But Joanna
+knew that Philip’s real desire envisaged _living_ for his country—to
+save her from something worse than war.
+
+His death diffused a gentle melancholy over the others. It was the first
+serious rent in the fabric of the Marshall family. Old Joel took to
+indulging in long, deep reveries. Mrs. Marshall, quite dry-eyed, took
+out all of Philip’s baby things, wrapped them up to send away and quite
+suddenly put them back in their places. Her interest in Sylvia’s
+children took on an almost feverish intensity. Sylvia herself and Joanna
+and sometimes Sandy had many talks, wistful with reminiscences.
+
+Maggie alone remained calm and almost cheerful. “Not because she’s
+unfeeling,” Joanna explained to Sylvia, “but because she is so
+satisfied.”
+
+Sylvia raised an eyebrow. “Satisfied and Philip dead?”
+
+“Yes, because so easily he might have died without their ever having
+come together. But they did. Oh, Sylvia, you and Brian have had such a
+simple, easy, jog-trot time of it, you don’t know what it means to have
+your life all broken up like Maggie’s and mine have been, and poor Vera
+Manning’s.”
+
+Whatever the cause, Maggie spent her days serenely. Secure not only in
+the knowledge that she was bulwarked by the Marshall respectability, but
+also by the resolve which she had made before she saw Philip in
+Chambéry, she started on the project of her Beauty Parlors.
+
+She said to Joel who, she knew, admired her ability: “See if you can’t
+make me as great a success in business as you’ve been.” They spent many
+pleasant hours in consultation.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+JOANNA and Peter married and Peter came at Joel’s insistent request to
+live in the One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Street house. It was marvelous
+to see how the two old people renewed themselves in the youth of their
+children. Joel was as proud of Peter as he had been of Joanna. Even Mrs.
+Marshall’s long allegiance to Sylvia wavered a little.
+
+The first child was a boy; “Meriwether,” Peter had named him after young
+Dr. Meriwether Bye. “I’m going to tempt providence,” he said to his
+wife. “I hope he’ll not be the sort of Meriwether that my father was.
+I’ll see to it that he isn’t. He’s going to be all and more than old
+Isaiah Bye ever dreamed of,” and he quoted, to Joanna’s mystification:
+“By _his_ fruits shall ye know _me_.”
+
+The two possessed happiness; but more than happiness they had found
+peace. They were united by the very pain which each had caused the
+other. And the knowledge of how greatly each could suffer created in
+them a sort of whimsical tolerance. There is nothing like humor to speed
+the wheels of life.
+
+Joanna, having come to understand the nothingness of that inordinate
+craving for sheer success, surprised herself by the pleasure which came
+to her out of what she had always considered the ordinary things of
+life. Realizing how nearly she had lost the essentials in grasping after
+the trimmings of existence, she experienced a deep, almost holy joy in
+the routine of the day. To see about her, her husband and parents,
+little Meriwether usually in Joel’s arms, gave her, she confessed almost
+shamefacedly to Sylvia, “thoughts that lay too deep for tears.” She
+rarely regretted leaving the stage and although she sang sometimes in
+churches and concerts and once even went on a brief tour, she almost
+never danced except in the ordinary way.
+
+Still, as her mentality was essentially creative, she found herself more
+and more impelled toward the expression of the intense appreciation of
+living which welled within her. Luckily her training in music offered
+her some outlet. With her slight knowledge of composition she composed
+two little songs and glimpsing future possibilities, she began to study
+that most fascinating of all the sciences—harmony.
+
+The change in Peter was more fundamental than that in Joanna. She at
+least had always had these possibilities of domesticity. Her desire for
+greatness had been a sort of superimposed structure which, having been
+taken off, left her her true self. It was as though her life had
+expanded on the plan of Holmes’ admonition to the Chambered Nautilus:
+
+ Leave thy low vaulted Past—
+ Let each new temple,
+ Nobler than the last,
+ Shut thee from Heaven
+ With a dome more vast
+ Till thou at length art free,—
+
+Joanna was free.
+
+But Peter had had to undergo a complete metamorphosis. He was a
+supersensitive colored man living among hosts of indifferent white
+people. Not only had he to change in every particular his theory of how
+to maintain such a relationship, but indeed he had to decide what sort
+of relationship was worth maintaining. At his father’s death and during
+his young manhood he had been absolutely without a notion of the
+responsibilities which the most average man expects to take upon
+himself. He looked back with a real shame and chagrin to the many favors
+which he had accepted without question from his Aunt Susan.
+
+Joanna, clever Joanna, helped him here. She was not only naturally
+independent, but she was, for all her talent, essentially practical with
+that clearheadedness which artistic people exhibit sometimes in such
+unexpected fashion. Perhaps it is wrong to imply that Joanna had lost
+her ambition. She was still ambitious, only the field of her ambition
+lay without herself. It was Peter now whom she wished to see succeed. If
+his success depended ever so little on his achievement of a sense of
+responsibility, then she meant to develop that sense. To this end, she
+consulted him, she took his advice, she asked him to arrange about the
+few recitals which she undertook. In a thousand little ways she deferred
+to him, and showed him that as a matter of course he was the arbiter of
+her own and her child’s destiny, the _fons et origo_ of authority.
+
+So he grew both in the spirit of racial tolerance and in the spirit of
+responsibility. He wanted to live in America; he wanted to get along
+with his fellow man, but he no longer proposed to let circumstances
+shape his career. No one but himself, not even Joanna, should captain
+his ship. He meant to be a successful surgeon, a responsible husband and
+father, a self-reliant man.
+
+The memory of Meriwether Bye, never far distant, braced him constantly.
+The young physician’s words and ideas had exercised a singleness of
+concentration, of influence over Peter such as a friendship of long
+standing could hardly have hoped to achieve.
+
+For a long time he expected to hear from Meriwether’s grandfather. Then
+as the months and nearly two years rolled by without a sign from Bryn
+Mawr, Peter decided that the old gentleman wished to spare himself the
+pain of learning more of the circumstances surrounding his grandson’s
+death.
+
+Sylvia’s boy, Roger, captivated by his new soldier-uncle, spent most of
+his time at Peter’s house serving in the purely impressionistic capacity
+of office-boy. He came up to the sitting room one summer morning bearing
+a bit of cardboard between his fingers.
+
+“Meriwether Bye,” he pronounced, handing the card to Peter. “Ain’t it
+funny he should have the same name as the kid? But he’s no relation
+because he’s white and as old as the hills.”
+
+“Meriwether’s grandfather!” Peter said in astonishment. “Come on down
+with me, Joanna.”
+
+Together they descended to find an old, old man sitting in an absolutely
+immobile silence in Peter’s office. He rose, a tall, straight, white
+figure and looked at the two young people, still in silence.
+
+“I’m Peter Bye,” the young man said, coming forward. “Won’t you sit
+down? Sit here, Joanna.”
+
+Together they sat in a strange, strained quiet, Joanna watching Peter in
+whom she sensed the rising anew of the antagonism of all the years.
+There they were, she felt, representing the last of the old order and
+the first of the new, since Peter’s generation was the first to escape
+the effect of the ancient régime, and he personally had not completely
+escaped it. How many things this ancient, stately personage who sat
+regarding them with keen though inscrutable eyes could have told them of
+the circumstances which had combined to make the two of them what they
+were! For this old man’s whole life and fortune had been reared on the
+institution of slavery.
+
+Out of the puzzling silence he spoke, in the expressionless, brittle
+tone of extreme old age. “Yes, I know you are a Bye, Isaiah Bye’s
+grandson. And you were with Meriwether at the end. Tell me about it.”
+
+Very solemnly, almost pityingly, Peter began the recital of his brief,
+dream-like acquaintance with Meriwether Bye. “He had quite made up his
+mind beforehand that he was going to die. Perhaps you knew. So, I’m sure
+he was quite reconciled to it; I don’t think you need grieve for him.
+And at the very end I was with him. It turned out that we had been
+fighting just a few yards apart. I think I eased him a little; I’m a
+doctor, too,” said Peter simply. He put his hand in front of his eyes as
+though trying to shut out the vision of the pitiful, needless death.
+“His last words were to you, did I tell you, sir? He sat up suddenly
+against me, his hand on my arm and called out—Oh, I can hear his voice
+now: ‘Grandfather, this is the last of the Byes.’”
+
+They sat again in a deep silence.
+
+“I’m sorry,” Peter continued after a long revery, “that he hadn’t
+married, and had no children. It’s hard on you, sir, you who are now the
+last of the Byes.”
+
+“Yes,” said the old gentleman laconically, “it is. Now, suppose you tell
+me something about yourself.”
+
+But first Peter told him about his father, Meriwether, glossing over the
+dead man’s faults and irresoluteness and dwelling on his ambition. “So
+you see, I had always had the idea of becoming a doctor before me. But
+I’m afraid I should never have realized it if it had not been for my
+wife, here.” He smiled gratefully at Joanna, who smiled back at him with
+a gratitude of another sort. He had uttered no word of complaint nor of
+the difficulties attendant on being a colored man in America. She was
+very proud of him. He was so charming, so handsome, growing daily in
+independence.
+
+“You have a son,” said old Meriwether. “I believe you said you had a
+son, Meriwether? How would you like me to take him and educate him,
+bring him up away from all he’d have to go through in this country, let
+him spend his life in Paris and Vienna. Perhaps he would be a doctor,
+too. When he became a man he could do as he pleased. And probably,
+probably, I say, I should make him my heir.”
+
+Neither Joanna nor Peter had ever thought of wealth. And while neither
+of them envisaged for a second the possibility of parting from little
+Meriwether, they were momentarily stunned at such prospects, Joanna
+especially.
+
+“Why,” asked Peter, his old demon of dislike and suspicion flaring up in
+him, “should you at this late date show interest in a black Bye?”
+
+“Because,” said Meriwether Bye, getting up and beginning to pace the
+floor, “because he _is_ my heir. Because he _is_ the last of the Byes.
+Because when my brave boy called out ‘this is the last of the Byes,’ he
+meant you, not himself. He had no way of knowing it, but he did know it.
+That queer sense in him which warned him he was going to die, probably
+told him.
+
+“You’ve heard of your grandfather Isaiah, the boy that grew up with me?”
+Peter nodded. “Well, his father, black Joshua Bye, was my oldest
+brother; my father—he was Aaron Bye—was his father. Joshua was really
+his oldest child. His mother was Judy Bye, old Judy Bye, whom I’ve seen
+often sitting in Isaiah’s house, her eyes straining, straining into the
+future—perhaps she saw this, who knows?”
+
+“My father,” said Peter in a dangerously level voice, “told me and told
+me often that much of Aaron Bye’s prosperity had been due to the loyalty
+and hard work of Joshua Bye. But he never told me that Aaron was his
+father. And you knew this, have known it——”
+
+“Not while Isaiah and I were boys. Not for many, many years afterwards.
+My father,” the word seemed strange on this old man’s lips, “always
+meant, I think, to do something for his—his son in his will. But he put
+it off and finally just before his death he told my brother Elmer—his
+oldest son by his real wife you know—told him about it. But Elmer was
+all out of sympathy with the idea, and, although he did not tell my
+father so, had no notion of acquainting Joshua either with his real
+parentage or with the fact that he should have been one of Aaron Bye’s
+heirs. Elmer was one of those men with a sharp dislike, amounting to an
+obsession, almost, for Negroes, for all unfortunate people. I’m free
+from it personally.”
+
+“Yet,” said Peter harshly, “your conduct has differed not one whit from
+his. How long have _you_ known this?”
+
+“Since the close of the Civil War. All my brothers had died but Elmer,
+and all _his_ sons were killed in the war. When Elmer was himself about
+to die, he told me. He thought the loss of his sons was a curse upon him
+because he had failed to obey my father’s wishes. He left their carrying
+out to me. I was a young man still. I saw no reason for opening up old
+wounds. Besides, I did not know what had become of Isaiah’s son. Isaiah
+and Joshua were both dead. I could not see that my father had acted
+differently from other slave-holders—it was the custom of the
+country—and at least he did not do as many a white man had done, sell
+his son into deeper and more terrible slavery.... I can see now that
+whatever slavery may have done for other men it has thrown the lives of
+all the Byes into confusion. Think of the farce my father’s religion
+must have become to him ... and I shall never forget Elmer. Sometimes I
+think the shadow of it fell across Meriwether’s life—I meant to tell
+him. I know he would have made restitution. Now I shall do it for him.”
+
+He ceased speaking and looked at Peter curiously, wistfully. “I suppose
+you find it hard to forgive us. I’m afraid I had not thought until very
+recently what this might have meant to you,—to Isaiah.”
+
+Peter ignored this. “If you made my son your heir,” he questioned,
+avoiding Joanna’s startled look, “would you be willing to publish to the
+world that you were doing it because little Meriwether was your blood
+relation—no matter how distant—or would this be the gift of an eccentric
+philanthropist?”
+
+The old man’s face grew a dull red. “Surely it would not be
+necessary—think of my father. What good would it do the boy to know that
+Aaron Bye’s blood flowed in his veins?”
+
+“None,” said Peter triumphantly. He turned to Joanna. “See, dear, there
+is the source of all I used to be. My ingratitude, my inability to adopt
+responsibility, my very irresoluteness come from that strain of white
+Bye blood. But I understand it now, I can fight against it. I’m free,
+Joanna, free.”
+
+He walked over to Meriwether Bye, and the two tall straight men—so
+alike, so different, one young, one very old—gazed for a long time at
+each other.
+
+“I don’t want your gifts,” said Peter gently, “nor does my son want
+them—neither your money nor the acknowledgment of your blood. They come
+too late.” He turned to his wife after Meriwether had left the house.
+“Thank God, Joanna, they have come too late. Perhaps I might have been
+like that.”
+
+Afterwards the memory of the little black testament returned to him. He
+found it and showed it to Joanna. “I’ll bet that old codger Ceazer knew
+that Joshua wasn’t his son and that’s why he scratched his own name out
+of the book. _He_ would have been an ancestor worth having.”
+
+Joanna looked at him proudly. “Peter, you are wonderful! Such a man, a
+great man!”
+
+He sighed a little wistfully. “There spoke the real Joanna. Greatness,
+even in daily living, will always be your creed, I suppose.”
+
+“No,” said Joanna, a shameless apostate, “my creed calls for nothing but
+happiness.”
+
+
+ THE END
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+ Transcriber’s Notes
+
+ Printer’s errors, punctuation, and spelling inaccuracies were silently
+ corrected.
+
+ Variations in hyphenation have been preserved
+
+ For the reader’s convenience, a Table of Contents has been added and is
+ granted to the public domain
+
+ New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+ public domain
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78915 ***
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+ </style>
+ </head>
+
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78915 ***</div>
+
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h1 class='c000'>THERE IS CONFUSION</h1>
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='xxlarge'>THERE IS CONFUSION</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='large'>BY</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='xlarge'>JESSIE REDMON FAUSET</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c003'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>There is confusion worse than death,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Trouble on trouble; pain on pain</i>,—</div>
+ <div class='c004'><span class='sc'>Tennyson.</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div id='BL' class='c005 figcenter id002'>
+<a href='images/bl.jpg'><img src='images/bl.jpg' alt='B&#38;L Logo' class='ig001'></a>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div><em class='gesperrt'>BONI <span class='fss'>AND</span> LIVERIGHT</em></div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>Publishers</span> &#160;&#160;&#160;:: &#160;&#160;&#160;:: &#160;&#160;&#160;<span class='sc'>New York</span></div>
+ <div>1924</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span><i>Copyright, 1924, by</i></div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>Boni &#38; Liveright, Inc.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c006'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><i>Printed in the United States of America</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c007'>
+ <div><i>First Printing, March, 1924</i></div>
+ <div><i>Second Printing, May, 1924</i></div>
+ <div><i>Third Printing, August, 1924</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c008'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span><span class='small'>TO MY SISTER</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='large'>HELEN FAUSET LANNING</span></div>
+ <div class='c001'><span class='small'>WHOSE PERSISTENT FAITH HAS MADE ME</span></div>
+ <div><span class='small'>ASHAMED TO FALTER</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c008'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span><span class='xxlarge'>THERE IS CONFUSION</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>
+ <h2 id='toc' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>TABLE OF CONTENTS</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth100'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap1'>CHAPTER I</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap2'>CHAPTER II</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap3'>CHAPTER III</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap4'>CHAPTER IV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap5'>CHAPTER V</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap6'>CHAPTER VI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap7'>CHAPTER VII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap8'>CHAPTER VIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap9'>CHAPTER IX</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap10'>CHAPTER X</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap11'>CHAPTER XI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap12'>CHAPTER XII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap13'>CHAPTER XIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap14'>CHAPTER XIV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap15'>CHAPTER XV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap16'>CHAPTER XVI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap17'>CHAPTER XVII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap18'>CHAPTER XVIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap19'>CHAPTER XIX</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap20'>CHAPTER XX</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap21'>CHAPTER XXI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap22'>CHAPTER XXII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap23'>CHAPTER XXIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap24'>CHAPTER XXIV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap25'>CHAPTER XXV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap26'>CHAPTER XXVI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap27'>CHAPTER XXVII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap28'>CHAPTER XXVIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap29'>CHAPTER XXIX</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap30'>CHAPTER XXX</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap31'>CHAPTER XXXI</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap32'>CHAPTER XXXII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap33'>CHAPTER XXXIII</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap34'>CHAPTER XXXIV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap35'>CHAPTER XXXV</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td class='c010' colspan='1'><a href='#chap36'>CHAPTER XXXVI</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c008'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span><span class='xxlarge'>THERE IS CONFUSION</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 id='chap1' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER I</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>JOANNA’S first consciousness of the close understanding
+which existed between herself and her father dated back
+to a time when she was very young. Her mother, her
+brothers and her sister had gone to church, and Joanna, suffering
+from some slight childish complaint, had been left home.
+She had climbed upon her father’s knee demanding a story.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“What sort of story?” Joel Marshall asked, willing and
+anxious to please her, for she was his favorite child.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Story ’bout somebody great, Daddy. Great like I’m going
+to be when I get to be a big girl.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He stared at her amazed and adoring. She was like a little,
+living echo out of his own forgotten past. Joel Marshall,
+born a slave and the son of a slave in Richmond, Virginia, had
+felt as a little boy that same impulse to greatness.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“As a little tyke,” his mother used to tell her friends, “he
+was always pesterin’ me: ‘Mammy, I’ll be a great man some
+day, won’t I? Mammy, you’re gonna help me to be great?’</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“But that was a long time ago, just a year or so after the
+war,” said Mammy, rocking complacently in her comfortable
+chair. “How wuz I to know he’d be a great caterer, feedin’
+bank presidents and everything? Once you know they had
+him fix a banquet fur President Grant. Sent all the way to
+Richmond fur ’im. That’s howcome he settled yere in New
+York; yassuh, my son is sure a great man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>But alas for poor Joel! His idea of greatness and his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>Mammy’s were totally at variance. The kind of greatness he
+had envisaged had been that which gets one before the public
+eye, which makes one a leader of causes, a “man among men.”
+He loved such phrases! At night the little boy in the tiny
+half-story room in that tiny house in Virginia picked out the
+stories of Napoleon, Lincoln and Garrison, all white men, it is
+true; but Lincoln had been poor and Napoleon unknown and
+yet they had risen to the highest possible state. At least he
+could rise to comparative fame. And when he was older and
+came to know of Frederick Douglass and Toussaint L’Ouverture,
+he knew if he could but burst his bonds he, too, could
+write his name in glory.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>This was no selfish wish. If he wanted to be great he also
+wanted to do honestly and faithfully the things that bring
+greatness. He was to that end dependable and thorough in
+all that he did, but even as a boy he used to feel a sick
+despair,—he had so much against him. His color, his poverty,
+meant nothing to his ardent heart; those were nature’s limitations,
+placed deliberately about one, he could see dimly, to
+try one’s strength on. But that he should have a father broken
+and sickened by slavery who lingered on and on! That after
+that father’s death the little house should burn down!</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He was fifteen when that happened and he and his mother
+both went to work in the service of Harvey Carter, a wealthy
+Virginian, whose wife entertained on a large scale. It was
+here that Joel learned from an expert chef how to cook. His
+wages were small even for those days, but still he contrived
+to save, for he had set his heart on attending a theological seminary.
+Some day he would be a minister, a man with a great
+name and a healing tongue. These were the dreams he dreamed
+as he basted Mrs. Carter’s chickens or methodically mixed
+salad dressing.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>His mother knew his ideas and loved them with such a fine,
+albeit somewhat uncomprehending passion and belief, that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>in grateful return he made her the one other consideration of
+his life, weaving unconsciously about himself a web of such
+loyalty and regard for her that he could not have broken
+through it if he would. Her very sympathy defeated his purpose.
+So that when she, too, fell ill on a day with what seemed
+for years an incurable affection, Joel shut his teeth and put
+his frustrated plans behind him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He drew his small savings from the bank and rented a tiny
+two and a half room shack in the front room of which he
+opened a restaurant,—really a little lunchstand. He was
+patronized at first only,—and that sparingly—by his own
+people. But gradually the fame of his wonderful sandwiches,
+his inimitable pastries, his pancakes, brought him first more
+black customers, then white ones, then outside orders. In five
+years’ time Joel’s catering became known state wide. He
+conquered poverty and came to know the meaning of comfort.
+The Grant incident created a reputation for him in New York
+and he was shrewd enough to take advantage of it and move
+there.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Ten years too late old Mrs. Marshall was pronounced cured
+by the doctors. She never understood what her defection had
+cost her son. His material success, his position in the church,
+in the community at large and in the colored business world,—all
+these things meant “power.” To her, her son was already
+great. Joel did not undertake to explain to her that his lack
+of education would be a bar forever between him and the kind
+of greatness for which his heart had yearned.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was after he moved to New York and after the death
+of his mother that Joel married. His wife had been a school
+teacher, and her precision of language and exactitude in small
+matters made Joel think again of the education and subsequent
+greatness which were to have been his. His wife was kind
+and sweet, but fundamentally unambitious, and for a time the
+pleasure of having a home and in contrasting these days of ease
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>with the hardships of youth made Joel somewhat resigned to
+his fate.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Besides, it’s too late now,” he used to tell himself. “What
+could I be?” So he contented himself with putting by his
+money, and attending church, where he was a steward and
+really the unacknowledged head.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>His first child brought back the old keen longing. It was a
+boy and Joel, bending over the small, warm, brown bundle,
+felt a gleam of hope. He would name it Joel and would instil,
+or more likely, stimulate the ambition which he felt must be
+already in that tiny brain. But his wife wouldn’t hear of
+the name Joel.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“It’s hard enough for him to be colored,” she said jealously
+guarding her young, “and to call him a stiff old-fashioned
+name like that would finish his bad luck. I am going to name
+him Alexander.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Alec, as he was usually called, did not resemble his father
+in the least. He was the average baby and the average boy,
+interested in marbles, in playing hookey, in parachutes, but
+with no determination to be a dark Napoleon or a Frederick
+Douglass. Two other children, Philip and Sylvia, resembled
+him, and Joel Marshall, now a man of forty, gave up his old
+ideas completely and decided to be a good business man,
+husband and father; not a bad decision if he had but known it.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Then Joanna came; Joanna with a fluff of thick, black hair,
+and solemn, earnest eyes and an infinite capacity for spending
+long moments in thought. “She’s like you, Joel,” Mrs. Marshall
+said. And because the novelty of choosing names for
+babies had somewhat worn off, she made no objection to the
+name Joanna, which Joel hesitatingly proposed for her. “She
+certainly should have been named for you,” the mother told
+him a month later; “see how she follows you with her eyes.
+She’d rather watch you than eat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>And indeed from the very beginning Joanna showed her
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>preference for her father. The two seemed to have a secret
+understanding. After the first child, Mrs. Marshall had
+fretted somewhat over the time and strength expended in
+caring for the other little Marshalls, but she never had any
+occasion to worry about Joanna. Joel had his office in his
+residence, and after Joanna was dressed and fed, all she wanted
+was to lie in her carriage and later to ride about on the kiddie-car
+of that day in her father’s office, where she watched him
+with her solemn eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joel never forgot the first time she asked him for a story.
+He was in the habit of regaling his youngsters with tales of
+his early life, of himself, of boys who had grown up with him,
+of ball-games and boyish pranks. The three older children
+had a fine catholicity of taste. “Tell us a story,” was all they
+asked, its subject made no difference to them.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>But on that certain Sunday before Joanna was five years
+old she perched herself on her father’s knee and commanded
+astoundingly:</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Tell me a story, Daddy, ’bout somebody great.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joel didn’t know what she meant at first, so far removed
+was he from the thought of his old dream. And yet the question
+did seem something like an echo, faint but recognizable
+of a longing that had once loomed large in his life.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Great,” he repeated. “How do you mean great, Baby?
+Tall, great big man, like Daddy, hey?” He stood six feet and
+was broad with it.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna shook a dissenting head. “No, not great that way.
+I want to hear about a man who did things nobody else could
+do,—maybe he put out a fire,” she ended doubtfully, “but I
+mean something greater than that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joel had her taught to read after that. She was a little
+frail for school, and did not start until later than the other
+children, though she was far the most studious. So she had
+three or four years of solid reading, and always her choice of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>subject was of some one who had overcome obstacles and
+so stood out beyond his fellows.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>At first she thought nothing of color, and it was not until
+she had gone to school and learned something of discrimination
+that she began to ponder.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Didn’t colored people ever do anything, Daddy?” But
+Joel was prepared for that. He told her himself of Douglass
+and Vesey and Turner. There were great women, too, Harriet
+Tubman, Phillis Wheatley, Sojourner Truth, women who had
+been slaves, he explained to her, but had won their way to fame
+and freedom through their own efforts.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna had a fine sense of relativity. Young as she was,
+she could understand that the bravery and courage exercised
+by these slave women was a much finer and different thing
+from that exercised for instance by Florence Nightingale.
+“They were like Joan of Arc,” she thought to herself, “Joan,
+wonderful Joan with the name almost like mine.” Only an
+innate, almost too meticulous sense of honesty had kept her
+from changing her own name to the shorter form.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She used to lie in her bed at night, straight and still with
+her eyes fixed on the stretch of sky visible even from a house
+in Fifty-ninth Street and dream dreams. “I’ll be great, too,”
+she told herself. “I’m not sure how. I can’t be like those
+wonderful women, Harriet and Sojourner, but at least I won’t
+be ordinary.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She spoke to her father like a little piping echo from the
+past, “Daddy, you’ll help me to be a great woman, somebody
+you’ll be proud of?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Her words made him so happy; they renewed his life. She
+was so completely like himself, and he could help her. “Thank
+God,” he used to murmur over his books that daily showed
+an increase in his earnings.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He took Joanna everywhere with him. One Easter Sunday
+a great colored singer, a beautiful woman, sang an Easter
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>anthem in his church, lifting up a golden voice among the tall
+white lilies. Afterwards she went home with Mr. and Mrs.
+Marshall and stayed to dinner. Joanna never moved her eyes
+from her during the ride home.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>After dinner she stood in front of the singer in the comfortable
+living-room. “I can sing like you,” she said gravely,
+“and I can remember the tune of most of that hymn you sang
+this morning. Listen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>And with no further introduction she sang most of the
+anthem. She was only ten then, yet her voice was already
+free of the shrillness of childhood and beginning to assume
+that liquid golden quality which so distinguished it later.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Madame Caldwell gasped. She had won her own laurels
+through bitter experience in various studios, meeting insult,
+indifference and unkindness with an unyielding front, which
+brought her finally consideration, a grudging interest, sometimes
+a genuine appreciation.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She was well on her way to recognition now. Colored people
+acclaimed her all over the country and she had some local
+reputation in her home town where black and white alike
+were very proud of her.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“But no daughter of mine,” she used to say bitterly, “if
+she has the voice of an angel shall go through what I have
+suffered.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Yet when she heard Joanna sing that Easter Sunday, she
+seized Joel Marshall’s arm. “Get her a teacher, Mr. Marshall.
+She has a voice in ten thousand. Poor child, how you will
+have to work!”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>But Joanna wasn’t listening, her eyes sought her father’s.
+Both of them knew at once that the road to glory was stretching
+out before her.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>
+ <h2 id='chap2' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER II</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>JOANNA was like her father not only so far as ambition
+was concerned but also in her willingness to work. She
+had a fine serious mind, a little slow-moving at first, but
+working with a splendid precision that helped her through
+many a hard place. Her quality of being able to stick to a
+problem until she was satisfied served in the long run as well
+as her sister Sylvia’s greater quickness and versatility. Eventually,
+too, Joanna’s laboriousness and native exactness produced
+in her the result of an oft-sharpened knife. The method which
+she applied to one study, she remembered to apply to another,
+and if this failed then she was able to make combinations.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Usually she had to have things explained to her from the
+very beginning, either by a teacher or through directions in a
+book. But to offset this slowness she had a good sense of
+logic, a strong power of concentration, and a remarkably retentive
+and visualizing memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Sylvia and she, destined to be such perfect friends in their
+maturity, were not very sympathetic in their childhood. The
+older girl was thoughtless, quick to jump at conclusions,
+natively witty and strongly disinclined toward seriousness.
+“Joanna makes me sick,” was her constant cry, “always
+thinking of her lessons and how important she’s going to be
+when she’s grown-up. So tiresome, too, wanting to talk about
+what she’s going to do all the time, with no interest in your
+affairs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Which was not quite true, for Joanna was mightily interested
+in people who had a “purpose” in life. Otherwise not at all.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>This was where she differed most from her father. With Joel
+success and distinction had been his dream, his dearest wish.
+But always he had realized that there were other things which
+might interfere. With Joanna success and distinction were an
+obsession. It never occurred to her that life was anything but
+what a man chose to make it, provided, of course, he did choose
+to make it something. Her brothers’ and Sylvia’s haphazard
+methods were always incomprehensible to her, and this gave
+her the least touch of the “holier than thou” manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Her mother insisted on each child’s learning to do housework.
+Even the boys were not exempt from this, indeed they
+rather liked it. Sylvia made no complaint though she occasionally
+bribed Alec or Philip to do her stint for her. Joanna
+never complained, either, yet she made up her mind early that
+as a woman she would never do this kind of work. Not that
+she despised it, she simply considered it labor lost for a person
+who like herself might be spending her time in more beautiful
+and more graceful activities. Yet in spite of her dislike, she
+always lingered longest over her work, and the room or the
+silver which she had cleaned always looked the best. It is true
+she never learned to iron especially well, but this was about the
+only thing in which she yielded place to Sylvia.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Sylvia was like a fire-fly in comparison with Joanna’s steady
+beaconlike flood of light. Sylvia dashed about, worked as
+quickly as she thought and produced immediate and usually
+rather striking results. Sylvia with a ribbon, or a piece of
+lace and a ready needle and thread could give the effect of
+possessing two dresses, whereas she had only the one. Sylvia
+dressed the dolls, hiring Joanna’s remarkable and usually disregarded
+assembly of these so that she might make them new
+clothes. She drove an honest bargain. If Joanna would let
+her play store with her dolls for a week, one of them could
+keep the new dress which Sylvia would have made for her;
+Joanna’s dolls were usually in Sylvia’s care.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>Yet when Joanna did sew or knit, her stitches and pieces
+bore inspection much better than Sylvia’s. By the same token,
+however, they missed Sylvia’s dash.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>In one thing only did Joanna show real abandon, that was
+in dancing. Sylvia was as light as thistle-down on her feet,
+but Joanna was like the spirit of dancing. She had grace, the
+very poetry of motion, and she could dance any step however
+intricate if she saw it once.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“If you want to get Joanna to play,” Maggie Ellersley,
+Sylvia’s chum and school-mate would say impatiently, “you
+must start some singing or dancing game. She wouldn’t play
+‘I Spy’ or ‘Pussy wants a corner’ with you for worlds.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Any sort of folk-song or dance, though she did not know
+them by that name, delighted the child. Usually she held herself
+aloof, but in summer down on Fifty-ninth Street Joanna
+was one with the children in the street, singing, dancing, jumping
+rope in unexpected and fancy ways.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Sylvia’s and Maggie’s and even her brothers’ rougher scoffing
+affected her not at all, not only because she had the calm self-assurance
+which is the first step toward success, but also
+because of old Joel’s strong belief in her.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joel believed that all things were possible. “Nothing in
+reason,” he used to tell Joanna, “is impossible. Forty years
+ago I was almost a pauper in Richmond. Look at me to-day.
+I spend more on you in a month, Joanna, than my mother and
+I ever saw in a five-year stretch. One hundred years ago and
+nearly all of us were slaves. See what we are now. Ten years
+ago people would have laughed at the thought of colored
+people on the stage. Look at the bill-boards on Broadway.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was in the first part of the century when Williams and
+Walker, Cole and Johnson, Ada Overton and others were at
+their zenith. Old Joel believed them the precursors of greater
+things. Since Joanna’s gifts were those of singing and dancing,
+he hoped to make her famous the country over. Of course he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>would have preferred a more serious form of endowment. But
+such as it was, it was Joanna’s, and must be developed. Joel
+Marshall believed in using the gifts nearest at hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“And don’t think anything about being colored,” he used
+to say.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“It might be different if you lived in some other part of the
+country, but here in this section it may not interfere much
+more than being poor, or having some slight deformity. I have
+often noticed,” said Joel, who had used his powers of observation
+to no small advantage, “that having some natural drawback
+often pushes you forward, that is if you’ve got anything
+in you to start with. It might even happen,” he added,
+launched now on his favorite theme, “that your color would
+add to your success. Depend on it if you’ve got something
+which these white folks haven’t got, or can do something better
+than they can, they’ll call on you fast enough and your color
+will only make you more noticeable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna used to listen interestedly. Not that in those early
+years she always understood fully everything her father said,
+but his talk created for her a kind of atmosphere which created
+in turn a feeling of assurance and self-confidence which was
+really superb.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Another theory of Joel’s which he had worked out for himself,
+and which in no small degree contributed to Joanna’s
+education was his early understanding of the natural rights of
+men inherent in the mere fact of living. He told Joanna that
+no class of men remained static throughout the ages,—he had
+not used these words, it is true, but he had come pretty near
+it. Somewhere in those early days of his in odd scraps of
+reading he had learned that Greece had once been enslaved;
+that Russia had but recently freed her serfs; that England
+possessed a submerged class.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“All people, all countries, have their ups and downs,
+Joanna,” he would tell her gravely, “and just now it’s our turn
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>to be down, but it will soon roll round for our time to be up,
+or rather we must see to it that we do get up. So everyone
+of us has something to do for the race. Never forget that,
+little girl.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna was a memorable type in these days. A grave child,
+brown without that peculiar luminosity of appearance which
+she was to have later on, and which Sylvia already possessed.
+She had a mop of thick black hair which was actually heavy,
+so much so that the back of her head bulged. Joanna knew
+next to nothing at this time of those first aids to colored people
+in this country in the matter of conforming to average appearance.
+If she had known them, it is doubtful if she would have
+used them, for she had the variety of honesty which made her
+hesitate and even dislike to do or adopt anything artificial,
+no matter how much it might improve her general appearance.
+No hair straighteners, nor even curling kids for her.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Joanna’s ways are so straight, they almost sway back,”
+Sylvia used to say aptly. And indeed Joanna wanted one to
+see her at her very worst. She did not like to take people by
+surprise. But as her worst included a pair of very nice brown
+eyes, with thick, if somewhat short, and curling lashes, an
+unobtrusive nose, small square hands and exquisite feet, it was
+not hard to look at. She was always intensely susceptible to
+beautiful people and to beautiful things. It was the beauty
+inherent in Joel’s ideals, and in all ideals which really underlie
+success, that most attracted her. And this passion for beauty
+while informing and indeed molding her character, yet by a
+strange twist influenced adversely and warped her sympathies.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>
+ <h2 id='chap3' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER III</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>IT was Joanna’s love for beauty that made her consciously
+see Peter Bye. It is true that almost as soon as
+she saw him she lost sight of him again, for the boy did
+not come up to her requirements which, even at the early age
+at which these two met, were quite crystallized. Joanna liked
+first of all fixity of purpose. The phrase “When I grow up,
+I’m going to be” was constantly on her lips. She got into
+the habit of measuring people, “sizing them up” Joel would
+have said, in accordance with the amount of steadfastness,
+perseverance and ambition which they displayed. She had
+little time for shiftless or “do-less” persons. Sylvia used to
+say, half angrily, “Joanna, when the bad man gets you, he isn’t
+going to torture you. He’s just going to shut you up with
+lazy, good-for-nothing folks. That will be torture enough
+for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter Bye, in spite of the dark arresting beauty which first
+drew Joanna’s glance to him across the other white and pink
+faces in the crowded schoolroom, was undoubtedly shiftless.
+“Not lazy,” Joanna said to herself, looking at him from under
+level brows before she dismissed him forever from her busy
+mind. “It’s just that he doesn’t care; he just doesn’t want to
+be anybody.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She was too young to understand the power of that great
+force, heredity. She had no notion of the part which it played
+in her own life. Peter was the legitimate result of a heredity
+that had become a tradition, of a tradition that had become
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>warped, that had gone astray and had carried Peter and Peter
+Bye’s father along in its general wreckage.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It is impossible to understand the boy’s character without
+some knowledge of the lives of those who had gone before
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>As far back as the last decades of the eighteenth century there
+had been white Byes and black Byes in Philadelphia. The
+black Byes were known to be the chattels of Aaron and Dinah
+Bye, Quakers, who without reluctance had set free their slaves,
+among them black Joshua Bye, the great-grandfather of Peter.
+This was done in 1780 according to the laws of Pennsylvania,
+which thus allowed the Quakers to salve their consciences
+without offending their thrifty instincts.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Aaron Bye, most people said, was unusually good to his
+slaves. He had something of the patriarchal instinct and liked
+to think of himself as ruler over the destiny of many people,
+his wife’s, his children’s and more completely that of his slaves.
+Certainly he was very kind to Joshua’s mother, Judy. She
+was a tall, straight, steely, black woman with fine inscrutable
+eyes, a thin-lipped mouth and a large but shapely nose. She
+bore about her a quality of brooding, of mystery, embodying
+the attraction which she exercised for many men, white and
+black. But apparently she knew little of this. Her only weakness,
+if such it might be called, was an inexplicable attachment
+to the white Bye family. She married, a few years before
+receiving her freedom, a man named Ceazer, a proud, surly,
+handsome individual, who refused to adopt the surname of
+his master; he had belonged to white people named Morton.
+Since even after freedom Judy would not hear to leaving the
+Bye family, Aaron Bye greatly pleased by this loyalty offered
+the position of coachman to Ceazer, which the latter, with his
+customary surliness, accepted. Later he not only threw up
+his job, but ran away, vanishing finally into legend.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>His was a strange truculent character; he hated slavery,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>hated all white people, hated particularly the Mortons, hated
+ineffably Aaron Bye. He wanted nothing at his hands. Once
+he knocked down another Negro who referred to him as “Mist’
+Bye’s man.” He was no man’s man, he assured the stricken
+narrator, least of all the man of that damn Quaker. His
+enmity went to ridiculous lengths. Aaron Bye taught Joshua
+how to write and gave him a little black testament for a prize.
+In it he wrote “The gift of Aaron Bye.” Joshua, delighted,
+wrote his own name under the inscription and ran and showed
+it to his mother. She, it turned out, had not been watching his
+making of pothooks without purpose. Underneath her boy’s
+name she fashioned in halting crazy characters her single
+attempt at writing, her own name, Judy Bye. Nothing would
+serve Joshua then but that he must have Ceazer’s name in
+the book, too. Remembering that his father could not write,
+Joshua wrote out himself with a fine flourish “Ceazer Bye”
+and showed the name to its owner, entreating him to make his
+mark beside it. Ceazer took up the pen in his strong, wiry
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Which one ob dese did you say were mine?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joshua pointed it out, waiting for the cross. Ceazer made a
+mark, it was true, but it was a thick broad line drawn through
+his name with a fury which almost tore the thin page. <em>He</em>
+was no Bye!</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was not long after this that he disappeared, a strange,
+brooding, intractable figure.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joshua, although born in slavery, had never known the institution
+in its more hideous aspects. He had been a very little
+boy when his freedom came to him. And Ceazer, old Judy
+told him, had fought in the Revolution! So that Joshua knew
+more of warfare to set people free than of slavery for which
+war was later to be waged. From him his son Isaiah heard
+almost nothing of the old <span lang="fr">régime</span>, though there were many
+vestiges of it on all sides. All he knew was that Joshua had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>kept on working for Dinah and Aaron Bye after his emancipation,
+and that they had given him on the occasion of his
+marriage to Belle Potter a huge Family Bible, bound in leather
+and with an Apocrypha. On the title-page was written in a
+fine old script: <i>To Joshua and Belle Bye from Aaron and
+Dinah Bye. “By their fruits ye shall know them.”</i></p>
+
+<p class='c012'>For a long time to Isaiah, who used to pore absorbedly as a
+boy over this book with its pictures and long old-fashioned S,
+this inscription savored of vineyards and orchards. The white
+Byes, as a matter of fact, were the possessors of very fine
+peach-orchards in the neighborhood of what is now known as
+Bryn Mawr, and Isaiah, even as a little fellow, had been taken
+out there to pick peaches.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>His father Joshua had spent his life in making those orchards
+what they were; a born agriculturist, he had an uncanny
+knowledge of planting, of grafting, of fertilizing. Many a
+farmer tried to inveigle him from Aaron Bye. But although
+Joshua’s wages were small, he had inherited his mother’s blind,
+invincible attachment for the Byes. His place was with Aaron.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was young white Meriwether Bye, youngest son of Aaron’s
+and Dinah’s ten children, who told Isaiah what the inscription
+meant. Joshua had not married until he was nearly fifty and
+his single son, black Isaiah, and white Meriwether were boys
+together. Meriwether used to come to the Bye house at
+Fourth and Coates Streets, which is now Fairmount Avenue, as
+often as Isaiah used to appear at the Bye house at Fourth and
+Spruce.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah showed the inscription to Meriwether, “By their
+fruits ye shall know them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Yes,” said young Merry tracing the letters with a fat
+finger, “that’s our family motto.” Isaiah wanted to know what
+a motto was.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Something,” Meriwether told him vaguely, “that your
+whole family goes by.” The black boy thought that likely.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>“Everybody knows Bye peaches, ain’t that so? ’Cause of
+that everybody knows the Byes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Meriwether, though impressed by this logic, didn’t think that
+that was what was meant. A subsequent conversation with
+his father confirmed his opinion.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“It means this, Ziah,” he said one hot July afternoon walking
+home with the colored boy from the brickyard where Isaiah
+worked, “it means it shows the kind of stuff you are. It
+means—now—you see a bare tree in the winter time don’t you,
+and you don’t know what it is? But you do perhaps know an
+apple blossom when you see it, or a peach blossom. In the
+spring you see that tree covered, let’s say, with apple blossoms.
+Well, you know it’s an apple tree.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“But what’s that got to do with us?” Isaiah wanted to
+know. He was interested, he could not tell why, but his slow-working
+mind clung to its first idea. “Your father wrote it in
+the book he gave my father. My father hasn’t any fruit trees.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah never forgot the answer Meriwether made him in the
+unconscious cruelty of youth. “When it comes to people,”
+said the young Quaker, “it means pretty much the same thing.
+Now when I grow up, I’m going to be a great doctor,” his chest
+swelled, “but nobody will be surprised. They’ll all say, ‘Of
+course, he’s the son of Aaron Bye, the rich peach-merchant.
+Good stock there,’” he involuntarily mimicked his pompous
+father; “and I’ll be good fruit. That’s the way it always is:
+good trees, good fruit; rich, important people, rich important
+sons.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“What’ll I be?” asked Isaiah Bye, grotesquely tragic in his
+tattered clothes, the sweat rolling off his shiny face, so intent
+was his interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Well,” Meriwether countered judicially, “what could you
+be?” He pondered a moment, his own position so secure that
+he was willing to do his best by this serious case. “Your father
+and your father’s father were slaves. ’Course your father’s free
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>now but he’s just a servant. He’s not what you’d call his own
+man. So I s’pose that’s what you’ll be, a good servant. Tell
+you what, Isaiah, you can be my coachman. I’ll be good to
+you. And when you’re grown up,” said Meriwether with more
+imagination than he usually displayed, “I’ll point you out to
+some famous doctor from France and say, ‘His father was a
+good servant to my father, and he’s been a good servant to my
+father’s son.’ How’ll you like that?” Meriwether tapped him
+fondly if somewhat condescendingly on the arm.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“You’ll never,” said Isaiah Bye, drawing back from the
+familiar touch, “you’ll never be able to say that about me.”
+And he turned and ran down the hot street, leaving Meriwether
+Bye gaping on the sidewalk.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>After that his father could never persuade him to enter
+again the Bye house, or the Bye orchards. Fortunately his
+mother upheld him here. “’Tain’t as though he had to work
+for them old Byes,” she said straightening up her already
+straight shoulders. “He makes just as much and more in the
+brick-yard and in helpin’ Amos White haul.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I know that,” Joshua would reply impatiently, “but old
+Mist’ Aaron says—now—he likes to have his own people
+workin’ roun’ him. And I don’t like to disappoint him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Belle Bye told Isaiah. “I’m not one of his own people, Ma,”
+he answered stubbornly, “and after that I’m not ever goin’
+back.” Belle was rejoiced to hear this. She would have been
+an insurgent in any walk of life. Joshua was the genuine peasant
+type—the type, black or white, which believes in a superior
+class and yields blindly to its mandates. But Belle had seen
+too many changes even in her thirty-five years—she was far
+younger than Joshua—not to know that many things are
+possible if one just has courage.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah, on being questioned, told his mother with considerable
+reluctance about his conversation with Meriwether. Belle,
+while regretting the breach, understood. She had been glad to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>have her boy the associate of young white Bye. Without
+expressing it to herself in so many words she had realized that
+association with Meriwether was an education for Isaiah.
+Already he was talking more correctly than other colored boys
+in his group, his manners were good, and though his work
+was of the roughest kind, his vision was broad, he knew there
+were other things.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I don’t believe,” his mother told him wisely, “that you kin
+go as fur as you dream. Too many things agin you fur that,
+boy. But you kin die much further along the road than when
+you was born. Never forget that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>So Isaiah was saved from the initial mistake of aiming too
+high and of coming utterly to smash. Yet he accomplished
+wonders. Who shall say how he increased his slender store of
+knowledge? How he learned to read wise books borrowed and
+bought as best he might? How he learned geography and history
+that made his heart-beats go wild since it told him of the
+French Revolution and how a whole nation once practically
+enslaved arose to a fuller, richer life?</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The inspiration for all this lay in those careless words of
+young Meriwether. Although Isaiah met the young fellow
+many times after that incident, and apparently with friendliness,
+he never in his heart forgave him. Like Ceazer he developed
+a dislike for white people and their ways which developed,
+however, into a sturdy independence and an unyielding pride.
+No amount of contumely ever made him ashamed of his slave
+ancestry. On the contrary, to measure himself against old
+Ceazer and Judy gave him ground for honest pride. “See what
+they were and how far I’ve gone,” he used to say, pleasantly
+boastful.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He resented as few sons of freedmen did the assurance with
+which the white Byes took their wealth and position and
+power. “Hoisted themselves on the backs of the black Byes.”
+He resented especially the ingratitude of Aaron Bye to Joshua.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>For himself he asked nothing; being content to fight his own
+way “through an onfriendly world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The white Byes had gone far, but the black Byes having now
+that greatest of all gifts, freedom, would go far, too. They
+would be leaders of other black men.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The upshot of all this was that Isaiah Bye opened a school
+for colored youth down on Vine Street. No name and no
+figure in colored life in Philadelphia was ever better beloved
+and more revered than his.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
+ <h2 id='chap4' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>ISAIAH did not marry until he was thirty-one, which was
+an advanced age for his times. Even then he had married
+earlier than his father. Old Joshua, who died long before
+Isaiah’s marriage, had been inordinately proud of his one son.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Jes’ wouldn’t work fer white folks,” Joshua used to say,
+“that weren’t good enough fer him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah and Miriam Sayres Bye had one son. “Meriwether,”
+Isaiah wrote in Aaron and Dinah Bye’s old gift, and under it in
+a script as fine and characteristic as that of the original
+inscription: “By <em>his</em> fruits shall ye know—<em>me</em>.” It was a
+strange but not unnatural bit of pride, the same pride which
+had made him name this squirming bundle of potentialities,
+“Meriwether,—Meriwether Bye,” a boy with the same name
+which old white Aaron Bye’s son had borne and with as good
+chances. The Civil War was on the horizon then and Isaiah
+Bye, with that calm expectation of the unexpected which was
+his mother’s chiefest legacy, was sure that in that grand mêlée
+all his people would know freedom. So black Meriwether Bye,
+born like himself in freedom, would know nothing but that
+estate when he began to have understanding.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah had accumulated a little, though how that was possible,
+no one aware of his tiny stipend could guess. It is true
+he not only taught school, but he had outside pupils, ex-slaves,
+freedmen, men like himself born in freedom, but unable through
+economic pressure to enjoy it except in name,—all these
+crowded his home at night on Vine Street, and sweated mightily
+over primers and pothooks and the abacus. Twenty-five
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>cents an hour he charged them, giving each a meticulous care
+such as would bring a modern tutor many dollars. He wrote
+letters, pamphlets, too, for that marvelous organization already
+well established, the A. M. E. Church. His wife had a sister
+whose husband kept a second-hand shop and from this source
+he earned an occasional dollar. When Meriwether was eight,
+Isaiah owned two houses in Pearl Street, the house in Vine
+Street, a half interest in his brother-in-law’s store and a plot
+in Mount Olivet Cemetery.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>From the very beginning Meriwether knew he was to be a
+great man—a doctor, his father had said emphatically. And
+Meriwether repeated it by rote. He was a clever enough child
+though without his father’s solid trait of concentration. But
+he liked the idea of greatness—that and the profession of
+medicine came to be synonymous with him as it was already
+with his father. Otherwise it is likely that both of them would
+have seen earlier the boy’s inaptitude for the calling thus
+thrust upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Meriwether went to his father’s school, to Mr. Jonas Howard’s
+catering establishment, which he loved, to Sunday-School
+and to his Uncle Peter’s second-hand store. In any one of
+these places he was at home. He might have made a good
+teacher, caterer, minister or storekeeper. Yet he meandered
+on, doing absolutely mediocre work, never failing, never shining,
+and always rather purposely waiting the day which should
+bring him to the Medical School.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He was waiting for something else, too, though this Isaiah
+never guessed. He was waiting for some sign of help or recognition
+from the white Byes. His father had told him of the
+slaveholder’s great debt to old Joshua; he had taken him
+riding past the Bryn Mawr peach orchards. “By rights part
+of them ought to belong to us. But I don’t mind, no sir-ee!
+Let ’em have ’em. See where we are to-day without their help.
+Think of it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>Meriwether did think of it and did mind it. He learned
+that he had been named after the son of his grandfather’s
+patron and somehow it seemed impossible to him that that
+mere fact should not result in something tangibly advantageous.
+He lacked the imagination to understand the pride which
+actuated Isaiah to name his boy as he had. The year before
+Meriwether was to enter medical school, Isaiah, fortunately
+for himself, died.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>A few months later Miriam died, too. Meriwether was left
+sole heir to the three houses and two or three hundred dollars.
+He was tired of school and not at all displeased with the idea
+of being his own master. He would like a little vacation, he
+fancied, and a chance to see the world. Somebody told him of
+a good way to do this—why not get a job as train porter?
+The idea pleased him; there was travel, easy money, besides
+his little property in Philadelphia. And afterwards perhaps
+there would be the patron for whom he had been named, Dr.
+Meriwether Bye of Bryn Mawr.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Isaiah’s mother, Belle Bye, used to say, “Things you do
+expect and things you don’t expect are sure to come to pass.”
+It took Isaiah many years to see the reasonableness of this
+apparently unreasoned statement. Certainly one of the things
+he never expected to come to pass was that his boy Meriwether
+should, first, give up altogether his project of studying medicine
+and, second, that bit by bit, through sickness, gambling, and
+a hitherto unsuspected penchant for sheer laziness, he should
+run through his Philadelphia property, thus wiping away all
+that edifice of respectability and good citizenship which Isaiah
+Bye had so carefully built up.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Colored Philadelphia society is organized as definitely as,
+and even a little more carefully than, Philadelphia white
+society. One wasn’t “in” in those old days unless one were,
+first, “an old citizen,” and, second, unless one were eminently
+respectable,—almost it might be said God-fearing. Meriwether
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>having been born to this estate suffered all the inconveniences
+coming to a member of a group at that time small and closely
+welded. His business was everybody’s business. His Uncle
+Peter had upbraided him for not studying medicine. Jonas
+Howard, the caterer, knew about his first real estate transfer.
+The young Howards and his cousins knew about his gambling
+and rebuked him admiringly. On one of his “runs” Meriwether
+spent a week in New York. This was in 1889. Not a
+single colored person knew him or cared about him. He rented
+a room in Fifty-third Street and made that his headquarters.
+Later he rented two rooms and married a young seamstress who
+died in 1891 when her boy was born.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Meriwether did do two things after that. First he wrote
+to Dr. Meriwether Bye telling him who he was and implying he
+would not disdain a little aid. It is doubtful if the doctor,
+who at that time was traveling in Europe with his tiny grandson,
+ever received the letter. Second, he took to drink. More
+than anything else he fell into a deep, ineluctable mood of
+melancholia. Here he was, Meriwether Bye, destined to be a
+great man, a famous physician. Why, he had been a man of
+property once, with money in the bank! And now he was just
+a poor nobody, picking up odd jobs, paying his room rent
+fearfully from week to week, sometimes pawning Isaiah Bye’s
+chased gold watch.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>How he worked it out he himself could not have told. But
+he saw himself a martyr, “driven by fate” from the high eminence
+of his father’s dreams to his own poor realities. Think
+how he had struggled, sacrificed—he believed it—the fun
+and freedom of youth to come to this! “How,” said Meriwether
+Bye harking back to Sunday-School days, “how are
+the mighty fallen!” And how easily might they have remained
+mighty.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>He named his boy Peter after his Uncle Peter, in whose
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>second-hand shop in Philadelphia he had spent delightful
+hours.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Now see the perversity of human nature. Just as his father
+Isaiah Bye had talked to his son Meriwether about the reward
+of effort and faithful toil, just so Meriwether talked to Peter
+about the futility of labor and ambition. And in particular he
+talked to him about the ingratitude of the white Byes—of all
+white people.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“It makes no difference, Peter, what you do or how hard
+you work. The rewards of life are only for such or such.
+You may pour your heart’s blood out,”—he had a fine gift
+of rhetoric—“and still achieve nothing. Think of your great-grandfather.
+Fate favors those whom she chooses. Blessed
+is he who expects nothing, for he shall not be disappointed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Or, “Peter, if life has any favors for you, she’ll give them to
+you without your asking for them. The world owes you a
+living, let it come to you, don’t bother going after it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>How completely his son might be absorbing all this, Meriwether
+never knew, for Peter, vocal enough with his playmates
+and others, maintained an owlish silence when his father thus
+harangued him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>But his aunt knew. She was a tall, stout, yellow woman,
+with that ineffable look of sadness in her eyes characteristic of
+a certain type of colored people. She was the sister of Peter’s
+mother, and when Peter’s father died, suddenly, inconsequently,
+she accepted uncomplainingly his son along with her
+other burdens.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter was then twelve; extraordinarily handsome, vivid and
+alert. Miss Susan Graves riding home from the cemetery
+reflected that he might be not such a burden after all. Clearly
+he would soon want to be taking care of himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Peter,” she said thoughtfully, “what do you want to do
+when you grow up?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Oh, I don’t know,” her nephew replied, temporarily removing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>his gaze from the window-pane where it had been glued
+for twenty minutes. “I’m not bothered about that, Aunt
+Susan. You see the world owes me a living.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She noticed in him then the first fruits of his father’s shiftlessness.
+But far more deeply rooted than that was his deep
+dislike for white people. He did not believe that any of them
+were kind or just or even human. And although he could not
+himself have told what he wanted from the white Byes, if
+indeed he wanted anything, he grew up with the feeling that
+he and his had been unusually badly treated. His grandfather’s
+connection with white people resulted in pride, his
+father’s in shiftlessness; in Peter it took the form of a constant
+and increasing bitterness.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
+ <h2 id='chap5' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER V</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>IT may seem a cold-blooded thing to say, but the dying of
+Meriwether Bye was about the best thing he could have
+done for his son, Peter. Certainly that was what Miss
+Susan Graves thought as she viewed rather grimly the small
+and motley collection of belongings which Peter transferred
+to her home in his little express wagon from his father’s former
+landlady, Mrs. Reading. The collection consisted of a well-worn
+extra suit of clothes, another pair of shoes, some underwear
+in sad need of patching, some books chiefly on physiology
+and anatomy, the Bye Family Bible, a little old black testament,
+and a box of letters. There was also a big railroad map
+which Peter lugged along under his arm and from which he
+stubbornly refused to be parted. Meriwether, in his brighter
+moods, used to refer to his “runs” as “business-trips” and would
+point out to Peter just where he would go on such and such a
+date. The boy learned a lot of geography in this way, and was
+talking to his playmates about Duluth and Jacksonville, Sacramento
+and Denver, before most of them knew that they personally
+were living in the country’s metropolis.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The books on medicine and anatomy had been well thumbed
+by Peter, too. Meriwether had received them from old Isaiah,
+his father, and had carried them around on his runs to impress
+his co-workers in the Pullman service.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Later he got into the habit of reading from them to Peter
+who always listened in the grave silence which he usually
+reserved for his father’s effusions. For some reason the little
+boy’s brain retained the various and amazing things which his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>father read to him from the dry old books. Long before he
+knew his multiplication tables he knew the names of the principal
+bones of the body and the course of the food. In fact
+these books were his first readers, for Meriwether, more interested
+in this dry stuff, now that it was too late to profit him
+anything, taught his boy how to pronounce the difficult names,
+so that the latter could read to him. Perhaps the poor fellow,
+dissolute and weak failure though he was, thought that some
+of the old “greatness” might still accrue to him by this fiction
+of studying at medicine.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The Bible was the one thing that Peter knew least about.
+He looked into it once or twice and hitting on Isaiah Bye’s
+tragically proud inscription: “By <em>his</em> fruits ye shall know—<em>me</em>,”
+spelled it out laboriously,—he always had trouble in reading
+script,—and asked his father with some natural perplexity
+what it meant. But Meriwether snatched the book away from
+him with such a black look and took such pains to put it out
+of his reach, that Peter for a long time thought the Bible, or
+at any rate that inscription, must be something decidedly off
+color. He waited until his father had gone on his next
+“business-trip” before investigating again, but finding the
+book nowhere as exciting as his beloved Anatomy, he gave up
+the puzzle and attributed his father’s defection to the inscrutable
+whims and vagaries of the genus called parents. He
+valued that old Bible the least of all his possessions. That
+was the bitterest day of his life when he found out what it
+ought to mean to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Miss Susan, though not an “old Philadelphian” herself, knew
+something of colored Philadelphia’s pride in the possession of
+family and tradition. She would have been glad of course if
+Meriwether Bye had left Peter some money. But of the two
+she would very much rather have had the Bible with its absolute
+assurance of the former standing and respectability of the
+black Byes. She had a family tradition of her own, for she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>was a member of the Graves family of Gravestown, New Jersey,
+a clan well known to colored people not only in that vicinity,
+but also throughout Pennsylvania.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>The story is that two white sisters in the middle of the
+eighteenth century fell in love with two of their father’s black
+slaves. The Negroes may have been African Princes for all any
+one knows to the contrary. Since nothing they could do or say
+would win their father’s consent to such a union, the girls ran
+away with their lovers, and married them, with or without benefit
+of clergy it is impossible to relate. Nature and God alike,
+instead of being disconcerted at this utter contravention of
+the laws of man, presented each couple with numerous children.
+When these reached mating age, finding themselves out of
+favor with both black and white of their community, the
+cousins solved the problem by marrying each other. The
+children of each generation did the same, whether driven to
+it by like necessity or not, history does not say. But by the
+time the next brood appeared a precedent had been established,
+and Graves married Graves not only as a matter of course, but
+as a matter of pride. They were able to do this, being automatically
+rendered free by the fact that a white woman had
+married a black man.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Miss Susan Graves had not married for the simple and sufficient
+reason that in her day there were not enough male
+Graves to go around. She would as soon have thought of
+marrying outside her family as a Spanish grandee would have
+thought of marrying an English cockney. In those days the
+position of old maid had its decided disadvantages—few people
+if any gave her the benefit of the doubt that she might have
+remained single from choice. Yet Miss Susan Graves, in spite
+of three other offers, soared on family pride above all this and
+made her career that of housekeeper for the family of a
+wealthy merchant on Girard Avenue, in Philadelphia. (You
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>must marry a Graves, but obviously you obtained work where
+you could find it.)</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>There was a younger sister, Alice Graves, not as direct in
+purpose as Susan, yet in some respects curiously strong. She
+had always considered the Graves’ tradition silly: it was so
+unexciting marrying someone whom you had known and seen
+all your life. What was marriage for if not for a change?</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>When the oldest son of Merchant Sharples of Girard Avenue
+married and went to New York, Susan Graves went along as
+housekeeper. And thither Alice Graves followed shortly to
+do sewing for that intricate but orderly household. Meriwether
+Bye, who had known both ladies in Philadelphia—for Miss
+Susan Bye was a frequent visitor both at his father’s and his
+Uncle Peter’s house—came to see them in his rare fits of loneliness,
+and between runs courted Alice Graves in Central Park.
+Of course it would have been better if Alice could have married
+a Graves, but Susan resigned herself easily to the matter—for
+Bye belonged to old stock and must, she thought, make
+good eventually. But she developed a strong dislike for him
+before his death, and took Peter not only for his mother’s
+sake but also to dispel if possible his father’s doubtless harmful
+influence.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter was a surprise to his aunt. She found him kind but
+thoughtless, industrious on occasions but unspeakably shiftless,
+not too proud, not very grateful and with no sense of
+responsibility. His father of course spoke there. Yet the boy
+was indubitably charming, never complained, and usually did
+as he was told. Miss Susan found herself between two minds—she
+had an impulse to work her fingers to the bone and thus
+spare Alice’s beautiful son the tussle with poverty which he
+must know, and again a desire to speak and act forcibly and
+drive him into an acknowledgment of what her loyalty to her
+sister was leading her to do for a homeless, friendless lad.
+Actually she struck a medium, made him keep clean, insisted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>on his regular attendance at school, took him to Sunday-School
+and Church entertainments and induced him to work on Saturdays
+and holidays by refusing pocket-money to “a boy as big
+as you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She could not understand why he chose a job in a butcher’s
+shop. Doubtless Peter hardly knew himself. “I like to watch
+the man saw the bones,” he would have said vaguely. “I can
+do it, too. I can cut up a chicken or a rabbit just as neatly!”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>
+ <h2 id='chap6' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>IT was Joanna who first acquainted Peter with himself.
+But neither of the children knew this at the time. And
+although Peter came to realize it later it was many years
+before he told her so. For, though he went through many
+changes and though these two came to speak of many things,
+he kept a certain inarticulateness all his lifetime.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna and all the older Marshalls went to a school in West
+Fifty-second Street, one after another like little steps, with
+Joanna at first quite some distance behind. They were known
+throughout the school. “Those Marshall children, you know
+those colored children that always dress so well and as though
+they had someone to take care of them. Pretty nice looking
+children, too, if only they weren’t colored. Their father is a
+caterer, has that place over there on Fifty-ninth Street.
+Makes a lot of money for a colored man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter, unlike Joanna, had gone to school, one might almost
+say, all over New York, and nowhere for any great length of
+time. Meriwether had stayed longest at Mrs. Reading’s but
+as, in later years, he more and more went off on his runs
+without paying his bills, Mrs. Reading frequently refused to
+let Peter leave the house until his father’s return.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“For all I know he may be joinin’ his father on the outside
+and the two of them go off together. Then where’d I be? For
+them few rags that Mr. Bye keeps in his room wouldn’t be no
+good to nobody.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>This enforced truancy was the least of Peter’s troubles. He
+did not like school,—too many white people and consequently,
+as he saw it, too much chance for petty injustice. The result
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>of this was that Peter at twelve, possessed it is true of a large
+assortment of really useful facts, lacked the fine precision, if
+the doubtful usefulness, of Joanna’s knowledge at ten. When
+Miss Susan settled in the Marshalls’ neighborhood and brought
+Peter to the school in Fifty-second Street he was found to be
+lacking and yet curiously in advance. “We’ll try him,” said the
+principal doubtfully, “in the fifth grade. I’ll take him to Miss
+Shanley’s room.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Miss Shanley was Joanna’s teacher. She greeted Peter
+without enthusiasm, not because he was colored but because
+he was clearly a problem. Joanna spied him immediately. He
+was too handsome with his brown-red skin, his black silky
+hair that curled alluringly, his dark, almost almond-shaped
+eyes, to escape her notice. But she forgot about him, too,
+almost immediately, for the first time Miss Shanley called on
+him he failed rather ignominiously. Joanna did not like stupid
+people and thereafter to her he simply was not.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>On the contrary, Joanna had caught and retained Peter’s
+attention. She was the only other colored person in the room
+and therefore to him the only one worth considering. And
+though at that time Joanna was still rather plain, she already
+had an air. Everything about her was of an exquisite perfection.
+Her hair was brushed till it shone, her skin glowed not
+only with health but obviously with cleanliness, her shoes
+were brown and shiny, with perfectly level heels. She wore that
+first week a very fine soft sage-green middy suit with a wide
+buff tie. The nails which finished off the rather square-tipped
+fingers of her small square hands, were even and rounded and
+shining. Peter had seen little girls with this perfection and
+assurance on Chestnut Street in Philadelphia and on Fifth
+Avenue in New York, but they had been white. He had not
+yet envisaged this sort of thing for his own. Perhaps he inherited
+his great-grandfather Joshua’s spiritless acceptance of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>things as they are, and his belief that differences between people
+were not made, but had to be.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Joanna clearly stood for something in the class. Peter noted
+a little enviously the quality of the tone in which Miss Shanley
+addressed her. To other children she said, “Gertrude, can you
+tell me about the Articles of Confederation?” Usually she
+implied a doubt, which Gertrude usually justified. But she
+was sure of Joanna. The tenseness of her attitude might be
+seen to relax; her mentality prepared momentarily for a rest.
+“Joanna will now tell us,—” she would announce. For Joanna,
+having a purpose and having been drilled by Joel to the effect
+that final perfection is built on small intermediate perfections,
+got her lessons completely and in detail every day.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was at this time and for many years thereafter characteristic
+of Peter that he, too, wanted to shine, but did not realize
+that one shone only as a result of much mental polishing personally
+applied. Joanna’s assurance, her air of purposefulness,
+her indifference intrigued him and piqued him. He sidled
+across to the blackboard nearest her—if they were both sent
+to the board—cleaned hers off if she gave him a chance, managed
+to speak a word to her now and then. He even contrived
+to wait for her one day at the Girls’ entrance. Joanna threw
+him a glance of recognition, swept by, returned.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>His heart jumped within him.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“If you see my sister Sylvia,—you know her?—tell her not
+to wait for me. I have to go early to my music-lesson. She’ll
+be right out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Sylvia didn’t appear for half an hour and Peter should have
+been at the butcher’s, but he waited. Sylvia and Maggie
+Ellersley came out laughing and glowing. Peter gave the
+message.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Thanks,” said Sylvia prettily. Maggie stared after him.
+She was still the least bit bold in those days.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>“Ain’t he the best looker you ever saw, Sylvia? Such eyes!
+Who is he, anyway? Not ever Joanna’s beau?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Imagine old Joanna with a beau.” Sylvia laughed. “He’s
+just a new boy in her class. He <em>is</em> good looking.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Some important examinations were to take place shortly
+and Miss Shanley planned extensive reviews. She was a thorough
+if somewhat unimaginative teacher and she meant to
+have no loose threads. So she devoted two days to geography,
+two more to grammar, another to history, one to the rather
+puzzling consideration of that mysterious study, physiology.
+Perhaps by now the class was a bit fed up with cramming,
+perhaps the children weren’t really interested in physiological
+processes. Joanna wasn’t, but she always got lessons like these
+doggedly, thinking “Soon we’ll be past all this,” or “I’m
+going to forget this old stuff as soon as I grow up.” Poor
+Miss Shanley was in despair. She could not call on Joanna
+for everything. Pupil after pupil had failed. Her eye roved
+over the room and fell on Peter’s black head.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She sighed. He had not even been a member of the class
+when she had taught this particular physiological phenomenon.
+“Can’t anyone besides Joanna Marshall give me the ‘Course
+of the Food?’”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter raised his hand. “He looks intelligent,” she thought.
+“Well, Bye you may try it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I don’t think I can give it to you the way the others say
+it,”—the children had been reciting by rote, “but I know what
+happens to the food.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She knew he would fail if he didn’t know it her way, but
+she let him begin.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>This was old ground for Peter. “Look, I can draw it. See,
+you take the food in your mouth,” he drew a rough sketch of
+lips, mouth cavity and gullet, “then you must chew it, masticate,
+I think you said.” He went on varying from his own
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>simplified interpretation of Meriwether Bye’s early instructions,
+past difficult names like pancreatic juice and thoracic
+duct, and while he talked he drew, recalling pictures from those
+old anatomies; expounding, flourishing. Miss Shanley stared
+at him in amazement. This jewel, this undiscovered diamond!</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“How’d you come to know it, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I read it, I studied it.” He did not say when. “But it’s
+so easy to learn things about the body. It’s yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She quizzed him then while the other children, Joanna among
+them, stared open-eyed. But he knew all the simple ground
+which she had already covered, and much, much beyond.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“If all the children,” said Miss Shanley, forgetting Peter’s
+past, “would just get their lessons like Peter Bye and Joanna
+Marshall.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>She had coupled their names together! And after school
+Joanna was waiting for him. He walked up the street with
+her, pleasantly conscious of her interest, her frank admiration.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“How wonderful,” she breathed, “that you should know
+your physiology like that. What are you going to be when
+you grow up, a doctor?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“A surgeon,” said Peter forgetting his old formula and expressing
+a resolve which her question had engendered in him
+just that second. He saw himself on the instant, a tall distinguished-looking
+man, wielding scissors and knife with deft
+nervous fingers. Joanna would be hovering somewhere—he
+was not sure how—in the offing. And she would be looking at
+him with this same admiration.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“My, won’t you have to study?” Joanna could have told
+an aspirant almost to the day and measure the amount of
+time and effort it would take him to become a surgeon, a
+dentist, a lawyer, an engineer. All these things Joel discussed
+about his table with the intense seriousness which
+colored men feel when they speak of their children’s futures.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>Alexander and Philip were to have their choice of any calling
+within reason. They were seventeen and fifteen now and the
+house swarmed with college catalogues. Schools, terms, degrees
+of prejudice, fields of practice,—Joanna knew them all.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Yes,” said Peter, “I suppose I will have to study. How
+did you come to know so much—did your father tell you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Why, I get it out of books, of course.” Joanna was highly
+indignant: “I never go to bed without getting my lessons. In
+fact, all I do is to get lessons of some kind—school lessons or
+music. You know I’m to be a great singer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“No, I didn’t know that. Perhaps you’ll sing in your
+choir?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Then Joanna astonished him. “In my choir—I sing there
+already! No! Everywhere, anywhere, Carnegie Hall and in
+Boston and London. You see, I’m to be famous.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“But,” Peter objected, “colored people don’t get any chance
+at that kind of thing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Colored people,” Joanna quoted from her extensive reading,
+“can do everything that anybody else can do. They’ve already
+done it. Some one colored person somewhere in the world
+does as good a job as anyone else,—perhaps a better one.
+They’ve been kings and queens and poets and teachers and
+doctors and everything. I’m going to be the one colored
+person who sings best in these days, and I never, never, never
+mean to let color interfere with anything I <em>really</em> want to do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I dance, too,” she interrupted herself, “and I’ll probably
+do that besides. Not ordinary dancing, you know, but queer
+beautiful things that are different from what we see around
+here; perhaps I’ll make them up myself. You’ll see! They’ll
+have on the bill-board, ‘Joanna Marshall, the famous artist,’—”
+She was almost dancing along the sidewalk now, her eyes
+and cheeks glowing.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Peter looked at her wistfully. His practical experience and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>the memory of his father inclined him to dubiousness. But
+her superb assurance carried away all his doubts.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“I don’t suppose you’ll ever think of just ordinary people
+like me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“But you’ll be famous, too—you’ll be a wonderful doctor.
+Do be. I can’t stand stupid, common people.”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“You’ll always be able to stand me,” said Peter with a fervor
+which made his statement a vow.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>
+ <h2 id='chap7' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c011'>SYLVIA and Joanna, walking through Sixty-third Street
+on an errand for their mother, came upon groups of children
+playing games. Italians, Jews, colored Americans,
+white Americans were there disporting themselves with more or
+less abandon, according to their peculiar temperament.</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Look,” said Joanna suddenly, catching at Sylvia’s hand.
+“See those children dancing! Wait, I’ve got to see that!”</p>
+
+<p class='c012'>Out in the middle of the street a band of colored children
+were dancing and acting a game. With no thought of spectators
+they joined hands, took a few steps, separated, spun
+around, smote hands sharply, and then flung them above their
+heads. One girl stood in the middle, singing too, but with
+an attentive air. Presently she darted forward, seized a
+member of the ring:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Their voices were treble and sweet, though shrill, and rang
+with a peculiar, piercing quality above the street noises and
+the sounds of the other children’s games. The little players
+were absorbed, enraptured with the spirit of the dance and the
+abandon of the music. Joanna, too, was in a transport. She
+watched them going through the motions several times.
+Presently she caught all the words:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Sissy in the barn, join in the weddin’,</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>Sissy in the barn, join in the weddin’</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>The child in the center here chose a partner. The others
+sang:</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c013'>
+ <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>“<i>Sweetest l’il couple I ever did see.</i></div>
+ <div><i>Barn! Barn!</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>They stamped here.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c013'>
+ <div>“<i>Arms all ’round me!</i></div>
+ <div><i>Barn!</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>The two children in the center embraced each other while
+the rest sang:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Then the two in the center pointed fingers at each other,
+shrilling:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Stay back, girl, don’t you come near me</i></div>
+ <div class='line'><i>All them sassy words you say!</i></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Then all:</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c013'>
+ <div>“<i>Oh, Barn! Barn!</i></div>
+ <div><i>Arms all ’round me!</i></div>
+ <div><i>Say, little Missy, won’t you marry me?</i></div>
+ <div><i>Marry me?</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>The last line came as a faint echo.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna rushed forward: “I can play it! Girls let me play
+it, too!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The children stared at her a moment, then, with the instinct
+of childhood for a kindred spirit, two of them unclasped hands
+and took Joanna in. She outdid them all in the fervor and
+grace of her acting. Two white settlement workers stopped
+and looked at her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Come on, Joanna,” Sylvia called impatiently.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna came running, a string of the children after her.
+She bade them good-by. “I must go now, but I’m coming
+back sometime soon, to learn some more.” She blew them a
+kiss, “good-by, oh, good-by!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She came up to Sylvia flushed and excited. “We’ll play it
+home, Sylvia! Wasn’t it lovely and dear? Oh, I could dance
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>like that forever!” She went almost all the entire remaining
+distance on tip-toe.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Life in Joel Marshall’s house was not always a serious discussion
+of the Marshall children’s future. Like many of the
+better class of colored people, the Marshalls did not meet with
+the grosser forms of color prejudice, because they kept away
+from the places where it might be shown. This was bad from
+the standpoint of development of civic pride and interest. But
+it had its good results along another line. The children took
+most of their pleasures in their house or in those of their
+friends and devoted their wits and young originality to indoor
+pastimes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Marshall house was a great center for this kind of thing,
+and already Friday and Saturday nights were being regularly
+set apart for the children’s amusement and for the reception
+and entertainment of the various young people who dropped in.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna taught her dance. Sylvia and Philip and Alexander
+were willing pupils; Joanna was magnetic when in this kind of
+mood. By the time Harry Portor and Maggie Ellersley arrived,
+they were all singing and stamping and twirling. Peter
+came in late, held up by the butcher. “Had to go on an
+errand for the grand white folks,” he explained briefly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll wear out my carpet to-night for sure,” said Mrs.
+Marshall, but she loved the dancing as much as any of them,
+and got up and took a turn. Joanna taught the tune to Peter,
+who had a good ear, and he ran over to the old-fashioned
+square piano and rattled it off to a wild thumping accompaniment.
+When Brian Spencer came in, who even in those days
+was pretty sure to be where Sylvia was—the fun was at its
+height. Peter, strumming a haunting, atavistic measure;
+Joanna, dancing like a faun, instructed Maggie Ellersley.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now, Maggie, dance up to one of them. All right, take
+Philip. You point your finger at him,—no both of you. Yes,
+you’re right, Peter. I forgot that. See, Phil, Peter’s learned
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>it already. Here I’ll do it by myself; all of you stand back.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She went through an elaborate pantomime, stretching out
+her hands as though clasping a partner on each side. She
+described an imaginary circle for the ring and ran into the
+midst of it. An imaginary partner was before her and she
+drew him in, pointed a slim, brown finger at him, rested both
+hands on her young hips, pirouetted, sang to him gayly:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Stand back, boy, don’t you come near me!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My,” laughed Brian Spencer, clapping loudly. “Can’t
+you see it all just as plainly? Really, Jan, you ought to go on
+the stage as an impersonator, I don’t believe you could be
+beat.” He was a tall dark boy with fine proud features that
+looked chiseled. He and Alexander were home from college
+for the Easter vacation.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie Ellersley, as it happened, had been at a matinée the
+week before. “It was vaudeville, Joanna, and there was an
+actress there who took off different people and then she did
+some Irish folk dances, but she couldn’t hold a candle to you.
+Too bad we’re colored.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s not going to make any difference to me,” said Joanna
+determinedly. “Mother and father are willing. If I want to
+go on the stage I’ll get there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna has the faith that moves mountains,” laughed Peter.
+“If anybody can make it she can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter was a regular visitor at the Marshall home now. Ever
+since that day four years before when he had told Joanna
+of his new-born determination to be a surgeon, he had spent
+all his spare time near her. Miss Susan Graves did not like
+this at first, not that she resented Peter’s absence from her
+so much, but he was a Bye and she did not choose to have him
+associate too much with people whom she did not know. It
+was no part of her plan for Peter to retrograde into the wreck
+which Meriwether had become. She made it her business to
+meet Mrs. Marshall at a church affair.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>“I think,” said Miss Graves, eyeing Joanna’s mother with
+her clear, square gaze, “that my boy has spoken to me of you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mrs. Marshall looked puzzled. She thought this was a
+<em>Miss</em> Graves.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter Bye,” his aunt continued, “he’s my nephew. He
+often speaks of Joanna Marshall.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Peter! Yes, we like to have him at the house. The
+girls find him great fun. So you’re his aunt. You must come
+to see us, too. Get him to bring you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Graves came and was impressed enough to let Peter
+continue, though he would have continued without her permission.
+But Miss Susan, like Belle Bye nearly a century ago,
+recognized atmosphere when she saw it. She was poor; Peter
+was penniless. These were the sort of people her nephew
+ought to know. She liked Joel’s success, his pride, his air of
+being somebody. She estimated rightly the correctness of the
+old-fashioned walnut furniture, the heavy curtains, the kidney
+table in the parlor, the massive silver service and good linen.
+It is true Sylvia changed much of this—except the silver—for
+cretonnes and wicker chairs and gay rugs. But as Miss Susan
+went to the house only a few times she did not know of this.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>What she especially liked was the spirit of life, of ambition
+and hopefulness that pulsed in that household. As Miss
+Graves grew older, she began to see that her younger sister
+had had some pretty good views after all, that it did not do to
+stick to settled views,—“this for me, and that quite other
+thing for you.” The great things of life were for the taking,
+it was true, but the result of deliberate planning. One did not
+simply stumble into success. She had lived too long with
+“the best white people” not to find that out.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joel knew this, too, she realized. His whole life was devoted
+to the mapping out of his children’s future. His own and
+Joanna’s high enthusiasms had borne fruit. Of late the boys,
+Philip and Alexander, had talked good solid man-talk.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>“Colored people will be going big pretty soon. We’ll have
+to get in it, too, Pa.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Susan decided this was a good place for Peter. Even
+if she had the money to do so, she could not send him to a
+school where he would meet with more inspiration in both
+precept and actual concrete example. Already in the lesser
+things this association was bearing fruit. Peter was too handsome,
+too graceful, too charming ever to be considered a
+boor. But he had lacked finish, that fine courtliness of manner
+which Miss Susan noted could convert a man of most ordinary
+appearance into a prince. She had marked it among Jacob
+Sharples’ grandsons. Peter had not possessed a knowledge of
+that delicacy, of that attention to trifles which, once gained
+by a man, gives him passport everywhere. Miss Susan had
+noticed, to her regret, the boy’s tendency to let her carry
+bundles, to look after even the heavier household duties. It
+had never occurred to him if the weather were cold or stormy,
+to offer to go errands for her. And his aunt, practical though
+she was, shrank from calling his attention to these things. She
+did not want him to think of her as exacting a return for her
+kindness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now the Marshall boys were fine gentlemen. Joel had
+made them so by teaching, as well as by his attitude toward
+their mother and sisters. Joanna and Sylvia, particularly
+Sylvia, helped the boys out with an occasional stitch, an occasional
+sewing on of a button. When Alexander was getting
+ready for college, and was working at nights to help with his
+expenses, Sylvia used to arrange sandwiches and milk for him
+when he came in late. And Joanna had recopied his chemistry
+and history notes. These were only kind trivialities, but
+the boys treated their sisters like queens. Philip was a little
+like Sylvia, only neither as handsome nor as lithe and quick.
+Alexander—Alec, Sandy, the girls called him variously—was
+slower, like Joanna. Both boys were tall and well set-up.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>The girls used to thrill a little—sisters to them though they
+were—over the very real and thoughtful gallantry of these two
+young men.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Susan had remarked this quality as soon as she met
+them. And she was beginning now to see its reflection in
+Peter. And as he had beauty and great personal charm to
+go with it, it distinguished him even more than the Marshall
+boys. She half way suspected a conscious assumption
+of this on his part.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But if he keeps it up, it will become part of him,” she
+thought to herself, “and then—girls be careful.” She would
+have been a little fearful for Joanna had she not noticed immediately
+in the young girl that indomitable desire for distinction.
+“Joanna will never fall in love with anybody,”
+she said once to a common friend of herself and the Marshalls.
+“She’ll never be able to take her mind off long enough
+from her high falutin dreams.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Of course Peter had no conception why his aunt liked him
+to visit the Marshalls. He was only too glad that she didn’t
+disapprove. He was seventeen now and beginning to know
+himself in some ways pretty well. He liked Sandy and Philip
+and Sylvia Marshall—liked them very well, and Joanna! It
+could hardly be said that he loved her at this time. But he
+knew that what he liked best of all in the world was to be
+near her, to watch her, and to listen to her plans. She had
+little shadowy gleams in her dark thick hair, glints of light
+that ended abruptly in wavy blackness. He would like to
+touch it. He remembered that he had once pulled her hair.
+He had done it often! But now, though she was only fifteen,
+he did not dare. Yet he often touched Sylvia’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The night that Joanna taught them all the barn dance,
+Peter maneuvered until he got Harry Portor at the piano, and
+said:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>“How does that part go, Joanna? Here I am in the center.
+Then I take you in. Then——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Put your arms around her,” said Sylvia. “That’s it.
+Now,——</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><i>Barn! Barn!</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>He went home and fairly babbled to his aunt about it.
+“Joanna is the most wonderful!”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>
+ <h2 id='chap8' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>IF Peter was unconscious of the utter desirability of association
+with the young Marshalls, Maggie Ellersley was
+not. Ever since her childhood when she had overheard
+a conversation between a cousin and her mother, she had made
+up her mind to attach herself to some such family and see
+what came of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The cousin and her mother worked together for some
+wealthy white people. Maggie’s mother was a laundress, a
+spare hard-working woman to whom life had meant nothing
+but poverty and confusion. On Thursdays and Fridays of
+each week she washed and ironed and gossiped with “my
+cousin Mis’ Sparrow” who was cook at the house on Madison
+Avenue. Maggie used to come there for dinner and go home
+with her mother.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mis’ Sparrow,” small and spidery, had a perpetual complaint
+against the world. In particular she experienced envy
+toward those who were better off than herself. Her jaundiced
+disposition may be excused, however, when one reflects that hers
+was a lot which had been hard ever since she could remember.
+She was poor, she was weak, she was ignorant. Add to
+that the fact that she was black in a country where color is a
+crime and you have her “complex.” Some people would say
+she had really done well in one sense with her life. She had
+attained by her own unaided efforts to a comfortable, even
+if menial, position, where she had heat, light and enough
+to eat. They would ask: Considering her beginnings what
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>more could she want? Alas, in that dull soul unknown aspirations
+stirred, amazing questions took form. “Why, why,
+why?” asked Mis’ Sparrow in her own peculiar dialect, “are
+all the sweetness and light of life showered on some and utterly
+denied to me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At present Mis’ Sparrow had fastened a resentful eye on
+Mrs. Proctor, the bride of the son of the “white folks” for
+whom she worked. Edmonia the maid had told her about the
+newcomer, and over the supper table she retailed it to Mrs.
+Ellersley.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She wan’t nobuddy. Jes’ a little teeny slip of ole white gal.
+No money, no fambly, no nuthin’.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Where’d he meet her then?” asked Mrs. Ellersley, uninterested
+but polite.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Young Mr. Proctor’s sister met her in boardin’-school,
+poorest thing there,” replied Mis’ Sparrow, wiping a puckered
+mouth with her apron. “’Monia says Miss Dorothy sorry
+for her and got her a job in her father’s office. Mr. Harry was
+jes’ home f’um college; he saw her, took a fancy to her and
+jes’ married her. Jes’ wouldn’t listen to nobuddy a-tall.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t it beat all,” pondered Mrs. Ellersley, “how some
+people have all the luck? Now if that kind of thing could
+just happen to my Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mis’ Sparrow was unmoved by the irrelevant allusion to
+Maggie. Where would she get such a chance?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“’Monia says she don’t even love him. Liked some young
+travelin’ salesman she’d known all her life. ’Monia declares
+she cries about him when she’s by herself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What she marry him for then?” asked Maggie Ellersley,
+aged twelve, and an interested listener.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“H’m child, wouldn’t you do anything to get away f’um
+hard work, an’ ugly cloes an’ bills? Some w’ite folks has it
+most as bad as us poor colored people. On’y thing is they
+has more opporchunities.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>Maggie, visualizing the life which she and her mother endured,
+thought she probably would. She thought it again after
+they had reached the tenement in Thirty-fifth Street where
+the two of them lived. It was the famous “Tenderloin” of
+those days and Maggie’s spirit revolted with a revulsion of
+feeling which never ceased to amaze her mother against the
+sordidness of that place. There were three rooms. The front
+one looked on the street and so was well lighted, but the other
+two got light only from the air-shaft. Mrs. Ellersley, a widow
+who considered herself fortunate to be one, rented the front
+room out, usually to train-men (perhaps some of Meriwether’s
+acquaintances were among them), occasionally to a married
+couple.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She and Maggie slept and lived in the two wretchedly ventilated
+rooms, in a perpetual gloom penetrated ever so slightly
+by a flickering blue flame. A confusion of clothes, obscene
+old furniture, boxes, stale newspapers was littered about them.
+For some reason the rooms were everlastingly damp, perhaps
+because, although rain could get down the air-shaft, the
+sunlight never could. The rooms gave Maggie a constantly
+eerie feeling, which in later more fortunate years she was
+always able to recall by the sight of a gas-flame burning low
+and blue.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They never, in those days, enjoyed a really bright flame.
+Saving was Mrs. Ellersley’s insistent because necessary fetish.
+Maggie’s tea was always weak, and never sweet enough. The
+bread—baker’s with holes in it, yesterday’s, two loaves for
+five cents—was always stale; the meat usually salt and sometimes
+tainted.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Out of it all Maggie bloomed—a strange word but somehow
+true. She was like a yellow calla lily in the deep cream of
+her skin, the slim straightness of her body. She had a mass
+of fine, wiry hair which hung like a cloud, a mist over two
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>gray eyes. Her lips, in spite of her constant malnutrition,
+persisted unbelievably red. When she met excitement those
+gray eyes darkened and shone, her cheeks flushed a little, her
+small hands fluttered. And she was nearly always excited.
+Something within her frail bosom pulsed in a constant revolt
+against the spirit of things that kept her in these conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I will not always live like this, Ma—I’ll get out of it
+some way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And her mother, though always scoffing, believed her with a
+dreary hopefulness. “If there’s a way to be found out,
+Maggie’ll find it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie found early that one avenue of escape lay through
+men. They were stronger than women, they made money.
+They did not give the impression of shrinking from spending
+the last penny lest when that cent was gone there should be
+no more. All the train-men liked her. She could not get
+much order in that abominable home, but she could and did
+keep herself clean and neat. She washed her few garments
+over night; she wound a stray ribbon, from a box of cigars or
+a box of candy, through her hair. Some of the men, young
+students, “on the road” during their summer vacations, used
+to flirt with her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hurry and grow up, Mag. When I get through school
+I’ll come back and marry you. How’d you like to live in
+a little house—not like this!—in Washington?” Or Wilmington
+or Savannah as the case might be. “I’d give you pretty
+dresses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Poor Maggie. Her calla-lily charm visibly lessened in those
+days when she opened her pretty mouth. She disclosed herself
+then for what she was, a true daughter of the Tenderloin.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Aw quit your kiddin!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But she came slowly to realize that here was a way out.
+If she could only grow up—if she were—say—seventeen.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>She was persistently frail, else her mother might have put
+her to work. As it was she was sent to school very regularly—to
+save fuel and gas. Evenings she went to the houses
+where her mother worked and got her dinner.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>On the night after she had listened to Mis’ Sparrow’s comments
+about young Mrs. Proctor, she sat thoughtful a long
+time. She had sense enough to know that very often these
+train-men stayed poor. They made pretty good money—they
+did, too, in those days—but not enough to save their wives
+from labor. Maggie did not want to wash and iron, to go
+through the dreary existence which had been her mother’s
+when her father was living; he had run on the road.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Suppose, just suppose, there were some colored men who
+were fortunate, successful, who had enough to eat, who could
+give their wives help. Her mother knew of ministers like
+that. There were colored doctors and lawyers somewhere.
+Their very titles connoted prosperity.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ma,” she spoke out of her brown study, “are there any
+very rich colored men?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not any very rich ones, I don’t think,” Mrs. Ellersley
+replied thoughtfully, “but lots very well off, comfortable, with
+servants to wait on ’em.” She sighed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m going to meet one,” said Maggie solemnly, and henceforth
+she thought, she dreamed of nothing else.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When she was fourteen young John Howe, who was occupying
+the front room, came down with a spell of typhoid fever.
+He begged Mrs. Ellersley not to send him to the hospital,
+and it was impossible to get him to his home in Oklahoma.
+He had enough money to see him through, and he put his
+fortunes and his case into her withered hands. All the train-men
+knew of Mrs. Ellersley’s absolute honesty. She did what
+she could for him, sat up long nights, gave him his medicine
+faithfully, “counted out his money.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>But it was Maggie who gave real service. She stayed out
+of school to attend him. The doctor gave her a list of directions
+which she followed with meticulous care. In that
+shabby house down in that terrible district John Howe met
+with an attention, a devotion from the humble woman and
+her delicate daughter, such as no money could have bought
+him in the seats of the mighty.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>John Howe was a Lincoln divinity student, intermittently
+working his way through college. He sat up gaunt and weak
+in the scratched bed of cheap cherry wood and picked with
+long skeleton fingers at the thin blue and white checked
+coverlet.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Maggie, you and your mother’ve been mighty good to me.
+Look here, I’ve got to pay you back somehow. After this
+illness I’ll have to stay out of school a year. What do you
+want?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie stared at him, her gray eyes going black in the
+yellow oval of her face.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There’s only one thing I want, Mr. Howe, and you couldn’t
+give me that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I could try. What is it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh Mr. Howe, if you could just get us out of this awful
+place, this house, this street! If I could just get to know
+some decent folks——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, I don’t see how I could arrange about the folks.
+Where do you want to live, if you go from here? There’re
+not many places for colored folks in New York.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There are houses for colored people up in Fifty-third
+Street, and decent folks living in them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But my goodness, Maggie, it costs a fortune to rent one
+of those houses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I know, oh, I know. But if we could just get started.
+Mother could fill the house with roomers. Why there’ve been
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>twelve men here for this room since you’ve been sick. The
+rest of the rooms aren’t much, but mother always keeps this
+room tidy, and we’re honest. They all know that. Never
+missed a penny here, any of them. And they tell their friends
+about us. Lots of times they tell Ma if she only had more
+room she’d have all the roomers she wanted.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But you’ve no furniture.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We could buy on the instalment plan.” She had her
+scheme all worked out. Clearly she had nursed her project.
+“Mr. Howe, if you could just help us to begin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He would, he told her, convinced by her earnestness. “What
+exactly do you want me to do, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She wanted him to make his headquarters with them for
+the year, and to pay as much as he could in advance. It
+was still early summer. He must write and tell other men,
+who would want rooms, and get a few of them to pay in advance,
+too. “Train-men won’t mind that,” she told him
+shrewdly, “they’ll like to know they have some place to go
+to when they’ve cleaned themselves out at cards, or whatever
+it is they do. That will pay a month’s rent, and leave
+something, and with what we pay on this—this <em>hole</em>, we’ll
+have something to put on the furniture.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I guess you’re right,” said Howe, “I’ll speak to your mother
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But that was useless. Mrs. Ellersley was sure of her livelihood,
+her mere existence here, but she was doubtful about a
+great venture. “Of course, for Maggie’s sake I’d like to get
+away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Ma, do—do, Ma,” Maggie had pleaded in an ecstasy
+of longing. “This is our one chance. You see if we don’t
+take this we’ll never get away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Fortunately she had Howe to back her. “She’s right, Mrs.
+Ellersley, and this is no place for a young girl to grow up.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>You can count on me. I’ll go look for a house, and see about
+some furniture. I know plenty of fellows would be glad to
+come.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miraculously the scheme worked. It gave Maggie her first
+insight into the workings of life. If you wanted things, you
+thought and thought about them, and when an opportunity
+offered, there you were with your mind made up to jump
+at it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Of course they were poor, but at least they were decent.
+John Howe, staying for that year in New York, realizing more
+and more how truly he was indebted to Maggie and her mother,
+took a proprietary interest. He laid the cheap rugs, he set
+up the cots, three in a room, he did mysterious jobs in the
+bath-room which to Maggie was always so marvelous. He
+bought tools and fixed window-cords which the landlord neglected.
+Maggie darned his socks for him, and he bought some
+wall-paper, cheap but clean and virginal, a soft yellow, and
+papered her square box of a room. A good job he made of
+it, too. Another roomer at his instigation made a dressing
+table out of a packing box which Mrs. Ellersley, re-invigorated,
+covered with scrim.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Gradually, word of her rooming-house spread among the
+better class of transients. All her lodgers gave her their
+mending to do, she washed for some of them, gave breakfast
+to a few chosen spirits, and they paid willingly and well.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie was in transports. This was something like a
+home. Of course, she had to attend school in the district.
+Her mother took her as soon as matters were settled. She
+looked fresh and neat in a dark blue serge dress trimmed with
+black braid, the gift of melancholy Mis’ Sparrow who in
+turn had had it from young Mrs. Proctor. The dress was
+worn, but it was whole, and Maggie had tacked a tiny turnover
+of white lace in the high collar.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>She was assigned to the eighth grade. There were two of
+them in the school. Her star was in the ascendant, for she
+was assigned to the one of which Sylvia Marshall was a member.
+She would have fared differently if it had been Joanna,
+for unless she were markedly clever, Joanna, who was intellectually
+a snob, would probably never have seen her. But Sylvia
+spied her at once. She came over to Maggie at recess.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’re a new girl, aren’t you? Want me to show you your
+way around?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie looked at the pretty girl, charming in a soft dark
+red cashmere dress made with a wide pleated skirt. She had
+on little patent leather, buttoned shoes with cloth tops, and
+a big red bow perched butterfly fashion on her dark head.
+Joanna wore her hair rather primly back from her face, but
+Sylvia’s was parted and rolled in waves over her ears, then
+it was caught up and confined by the bow. She had a thin
+gold bracelet on one arm. And about her hung the aura of
+well-being and easy self-assurance which marked all the Marshall
+children.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I wish you would,” said Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia in those days was an ardent worker in Old Zion
+Sunday School and had promised to help in a campaign for
+more students. She told Maggie about it within the next two
+or three days.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My mother is going to entertain the new folks whom I
+get to join. Will you join?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie would and so went to Sylvia’s home as her mother’s
+guest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She never forgot that home with its quiet dignity and atmosphere
+of prosperity. The Marshall children were a revelation
+to her. She had not known of colored people like these.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At last I’m getting to know decent people,” she told her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>She had a passion for respectability and decency quite apart
+from what they connoted of comparative ease and comfort,
+though she coveted these latter, too, and meant some day to
+have them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Two months ago,” she thought, “I was still in that horrible
+house on Thirty-fifth Street, and I got away. If that could
+happen, anything could happen.” She lay in her bed at nights
+in the little yellow room and saw visions.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
+ <h2 id='chap9' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IX</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>SHE played her cards with an odd mixture of deliberation
+and spontaneity.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Maggie adores you, Sylvia,” said Joanna.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think she does,” Sylvia replied modestly. “I don’t know
+why, I’m sure. She certainly is nice to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie’s obvious admiration and Sylvia’s naïve acceptance
+made the way easy. It is hard not to be nice to someone
+who shows plainly that you are her ideal, your company her
+supreme satisfaction. Maggie wore her hair like Sylvia’s,
+she copied when she could her manner of dressing, she spent
+half her time at the Marshall house.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She saw the value of absolute honesty. No need to pose
+when telling the exact truth brought what one wanted without
+the strain of living up to a false position. The Marshalls
+soon knew of Maggie’s poverty, of the quick wit and determination
+which had brought them from that “dump-heap”—Maggie’s
+word—to the respectable and comfortable if still
+cheap boarding-house. Sylvia used to talk to her mother
+about it. Mrs. Marshall suggested that she hand over to
+Maggie one or two of her perfectly good but discarded dresses.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Sylvia objected with a very real delicacy. “She goes
+to the same school I go to and to Sunday-School. I wouldn’t
+want the other children to see her in my things, she’d feel
+so badly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mother saw the justice of that. “I suppose I have
+one or two things. There’s that old brown Henrietta of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>mine and the silk poplin. How’ll she get them made over
+though, Sylvia? Now don’t expect me to help.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, mamma, you darling! You really are a brick! That
+poplin is old rose, isn’t it? She ought to look lovely in it.
+I can fix them. You know how I love to fix things over and
+Maggie knows how to sew on the machine. If she stayed
+here three or four days, the rest of this week, we could finish
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mrs. Marshall agreed, Maggie’s mother was consulted,
+Maggie came in an ecstasy. Her first sojourn away from
+home! And what a sojourn! Naturally neat though she was,
+she learned of toilet mysteries, of rites of which she had never
+dreamed. Nightly hair-brushings and the discovery that of
+course each one had her own brush and comb! Frequent
+washings of both, talcum powders! Joanna the ascetic used
+scentless ones, but Sylvia’s were highly fragrant. These Maggie
+preferred. A bath every night.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If you don’t mind,” said Sylvia, “I’ll take mine first and
+then you can stay in as long as you like. I hope that pig
+Joanna hasn’t used up all the hot water!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Delicacies for breakfast, lunch, and dinner! Dinner at six
+instead of the middle of the day! Mrs. Marshall complained
+of a headache Saturday morning and Joanna took her breakfast
+up to her on a silver tray. Mr. Marshall kept box on
+box of cigars in his den. Sandy and Philip wore superlatively
+blackened shoes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie looked, listened, stored in her memory. The dresses
+were a success. The rose poplin, being the prettier, was finished
+first; Sylvia had longed so to get her hands on it. Maggie
+put it on Saturday morning and stood in front of the
+cheval mirror in Mrs. Marshall’s room admiring her own and
+Sylvia’s handiwork, and herself with it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s too pretty to wear in the house. Oh, don’t let’s have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>to wait till to-morrow. Mamma, couldn’t the boys take us
+to the matinée? Maggie, have you seen Peter Pan?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie, it transpired, had seen nothing, had never been
+inside a theater.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What fun!” Sylvia’s native delicacy hit on the right expression.
+“Fancy going to your first matinée. Can you spare
+us, Mother dear?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The party could be arranged. Philip and Alexander expressed
+their willingness. Joanna did not care to go, to Maggie’s
+astonishment, which increased when she saw how wonderful
+the theater was. But there were other things. The
+girl never forgot the thrill that came over her as Philip took
+her arm and led her over dangerous crossings, arranged her
+seat and program for her, took off her coat. He held it during
+the performance and wrinkled it shamelessly. Sylvia
+scolded him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Phil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It doesn’t matter,” Maggie interposed happily. She was
+beginning to have her good time like other people. Oh, God
+bless John Howe!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The acquaintanceship progressed. All through the high
+school the two were nearly inseparable. It is true, Maggie
+sought Sylvia more than Sylvia sought her, but on the other
+hand Maggie’s presence was taken as a matter of course
+by the Marshalls and their friends. Maggie went to parties
+with Sylvia, the two escorted by Brian Spencer and Philip.
+Often she slept at her house after the parties and at Christmas
+time and week-ends. Once, when Mrs. Marshall took
+Joanna to visit relatives in Philadelphia, Maggie stayed with
+Sylvia a whole month.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In her junior year in the high school she had a long talk
+with Mr. Marshall. Of course they were still poor, the house
+just kept them in comfort. Maggie had become addicted to
+the wearing of good clothes. Her mother was getting older.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>They needed help from time to time. If Mr. Marshall would
+assist her in getting some work. She was young and strong
+and willing.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, no, Mr. Marshall!” she objected as Joel—they were
+sitting in his office—spoke of a loan and reached for his check-book.
+“Not that! When could I ever pay you back? No,
+I mean work, real work. I could take orders, count the silver,
+look after the napery, pay off the men if you’d care to trust
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Perhaps a man of another race might have stopped to
+consider such a proposition coming from the lips of a young
+and dainty girl. He might have been suspicious and realized
+that his younger son was working in the business with him
+just then and the boy and girl would be bound to be thrown
+together. But colored men of old Joel’s type are obsessed with
+the idea of a progressing younger generation. “They must
+advance,” thinks the older man, “I must do all in my power
+to help them. This is my contribution to mine own.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joel taught her his simple system of bookkeeping and installed
+her. She proved herself efficient, willing, and—her
+mother’s teachings spoke here—absolutely honest. Her energy
+and interest were surprising. “You might think it was her
+own business,” said Joel. He had no desire to see either her
+or any of his children become caterers, but he did like to see
+a job well done. Philip was the only one who had evinced
+any interest in the business, and that was only during his
+last year before entering college. He had to make some extra
+money somehow—both he and Sandy had a healthy dislike
+of burdening their father with their college expenses—and
+since he had to work he preferred to spend his time and energy
+in his father’s interests.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His chief work consisted in directing his father’s various
+squads of waiters. He met them at the house where Joel was
+catering, started them off, checked over necessities, looked
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>after the thousand details which lent to Joel’s service the perfection
+that so justly brought him fame. Maggie often accompanied
+Philip on these trips. Sometimes she went to one
+house and he to another, and he would call for her and take
+her home. She pondered deeply over the possibility of these
+meetings.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was usually jolly, unsentimental, almost brotherly.
+Maggie took care to follow his lead. But to her great surprise
+she was beginning to be conscious of a deep affection
+for him. At first she had only yearned for respectability and
+comfort, and Philip represented such a convenient short cut
+to her heart’s desire. But now things were different.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sometimes when they came home quite late he would take
+her arm and the two would walk slowly and silently down
+the strangely quiet streets. A curious little sense of intimacy
+used to brood over them at times like these. Philip would
+laugh a little nervously.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Awfully jolly being out late like this by ourselves, isn’t it,
+Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She would nod him a smiling yes. “Some day,” she thought,
+“he must say more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her studies, her work and these trips with Philip took up
+most of her time just now. She and Sylvia of course still saw
+a great deal of each other and once in a while went out together.
+She went to the theater still more rarely, or to a
+church festival with Henderson Neal, one of her mother’s
+boarders. A mysterious tall brown figure of a man, twenty
+years older than Maggie and a thousand years older in experience,
+he caught and not infrequently held her attention. He
+had lived with them two years, paid his bills regularly, asked no
+questions and vouchsafed no explanations.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie wondered what he did. Whatever his occupation,
+it certainly paid him well. More than once she had seen him
+display without ostentation a huge roll of bills, which apparently
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>was static in bulk. His speech was often ungrammatical,
+but so deliberate that one thought he must be speaking
+correctly. He had a rather grand air, and listened to
+both Mrs. Ellersley and her daughter with a somewhat ponderous
+attention. Maggie thought he was rather interesting for
+such an old man—he must be nearly forty! She was a little
+afraid of him, though, and decided it would be rather unpleasant
+for any one who chanced to make him angry.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Once he met Sylvia and Maggie on the street and offered
+to take them to the matinée. His interest was clearly in
+Maggie but he politely included her friend. Sylvia later told
+Philip about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I hope you didn’t go,” he replied quickly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I didn’t, Maggie didn’t, either. But there’s no reason
+why I shouldn’t have. She goes with him sometimes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But that’s different. Maggie’s known different people from
+any you’ve ever known. She can take care of herself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s the matter?” Joanna asked, putting her head in
+the door. “What’s old Phil so excited about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You might just as well hear this, too, Jan. I won’t have
+you and Sylvia going about with a man like Henderson Neal.
+Maggie can go with men that my sisters can’t afford to associate
+with.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>
+ <h2 id='chap10' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER X</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>SUNDAY was always an important day in the Marshall
+household. Its importance, it is true, took on a different
+character as the years sped. In the early days
+Mr. Marshall looked forward to it as the outward and visible
+sign of an inward worth. He was a steward in his church,
+Old Zion, and on Sundays in a long frock coat with a correct
+collar, a black Ascot tie surmounted by a gold horseshoe, he
+passed the collection box from pew to pew. He liked to bend
+his rather stately iron-gray head in recognition of various
+greetings. He felt he looked the part, as indeed he did, of an
+upright, ambitious, aspiring citizen.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Many a small boy unconsciously stored away a memory of
+the erect wholesome figure as a possible exemplar for future
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His wife found Sunday a rather distracting day. It was
+eminently satisfying, doubtless, to be able to show off such a
+number of stylish costumes. Joel had always been able to
+have her dress well. There was one wine-colored cashmere
+with a polonaise and bustle which she had considered particularly
+fetching.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I never put the dress on in the old days,” she said to her
+girls, showing them the truly awe-inspiring picture, “without
+thinking to myself: ‘I certainly am glad I married Joel.’ I
+always did love fine clothes. Sylvia, I think you must have
+inherited my taste.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia groaned. “Oh, no, mamma, I don’t deserve that!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Clothes, however, had not quite compensated Mrs. Marshall
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>for the arduousness otherwise entailed in the observance of
+the Sabbath. There was always company. Joel, a caterer,
+knew “how it ought to be done.” Then there were the four
+children to dress and get off, and the constant oversight of
+them when they came home to see that they did not break
+the thousand inhibitions which made the day sacred.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I used to hate it so,” Sandy laughed. “Remember, Phil,
+how we used to try to find those awful sailor collars—I think
+they’re called Buster Browns now—and see if we couldn’t
+hide them or mark them up before the next Sunday? Mother
+must have had a million of them, for we were never able to
+exhaust her supply.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Weren’t you sights!” Sylvia teased. “You were fat, Alec,
+and your face rose large and round over your collar like a
+full moon. You had two eyes set away back from your fat
+cheeks and you had to bend your head way over to look
+down——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And you wore a grayish-brownish-greenery-yallery round
+straw hat,” interposed Joanna.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t you talk,” Philip jeered at them, “I remember two
+poke bonnets, reddish, with fuzzy stuff sticking up over
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Astrakhan. Yes, I remember,” Sylvia told him. “Weren’t
+they awful? And the deadliness of Sunday afternoon! You
+boys sitting around knocking your feet against the rungs of
+the chairs. Such glooms!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, and you,” said Sandy, assuming a solemn countenance.
+“Looking dejectedly out of the window, your face propped in
+your hands!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna was the only one who got anything out of those
+Sundays,” Philip mused. “I can see her now flat on her
+tummy reading the life of some exemplary female.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Notable women of color,” laughed Joanna. “I adored
+Sunday.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>Certainly no flavor of those past days spoiled the Marshalls’
+enjoyment in these later years. Rather remarkably
+the whole family still went to church, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall
+from years of long habit, Sylvia because she rather liked to
+please her mother and because it amused her to have Brian
+Spencer, whom church-going bored to the point of agony, obey
+her wish that he should go. Sandy, now in the real estate business,
+thought it gave him standing in the community.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philip’s reasons were various. Chiefly he went to church
+as he went to many meetings, because he was interested in
+seeing groups of colored people together. He had a strong
+desire to sense the social consciousness, for he was trying to
+learn just what stirred mass feeling and into what channels
+it could be directed. A minister of the poorest type was an
+unfailing source of study to him. How would this man sway
+the people? And what would he ask of them once he had
+them ready to listen to his will? Philip always dreamed
+of a leader who should recognize that psychological moment
+and who would guide a whole race forward to the realization
+of its steadily increasing strength.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He dreamed many dreams sitting crosswise in the far corner
+of his pew, his back partly against the wall, partly against
+the seat, his lean, brown, slightly haggard face bent forward.
+He had already the somewhat remote glance of the thinker,
+though his firm chin pronounced him no less the man of
+action. Maggie Ellersley, sitting across the church from him,
+watching him a little covertly under her drooping hat brim,
+used to think he looked like a man who would take what he
+wanted.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If only he knew <em>what</em> he wanted,” she half sighed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was the soloist of the choir these days, sole <i><span lang="fr">raison
+d’être</span></i> of <em>her</em> church-going. Her mezzo voice full and pulsing
+and gold brought throngs to the church every Sunday.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There is a green hill far away,” she sang, and the puzzled,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>groping congregation turned its sea of black and brown, yellow
+and white faces toward her and knew a sudden peace. Even
+Philip stopped his restless inner queries.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At times like these Peter Bye felt his very heart leap toward
+her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna with her cool eyes and steady head cared almost
+nothing about this. She never saw herself in this scene. Always
+in her mind’s eye she was far, far away from the church,
+in a great hall, in a crowded theater. There would be tier on
+tier of faces rising, rising above her. And to-morrow there
+would be the critics....</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Sundays passed thus week-end to week-end. One of
+them stood out in Joanna’s memory. Philip, a Harvard
+junior, was home on his summer vacation, but he and Sylvia
+and Sandy had gone to visit their mother’s folks in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, Brian Spencer, Peter, and Maggie Ellersley stepped
+out of church and walked down the torrid street. It was
+early June, but the weather was that of August.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Our children are growing up,” said Mrs. Marshall to Mrs.
+Ellersley, lingering a moment in the shady vestibule. “See
+how tall Joanna and Maggie have grown. They were the
+littlest things!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mrs. Ellersley followed the group with a wistful eye. Of
+late she had begun to have some idea of Maggie’s unspoken
+desires. She wished it were Philip instead of Brian walking
+down the street with her daughter. She was very tired, tired
+enough to die, but she could not, she felt, leave Maggie alone,
+unplaced in the world.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The four young people turned the corner and prepared to
+separate.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Brian is coming to the house for dinner,” said Joanna.
+“You coming, Maggie and Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>Maggie had an engagement for the afternoon. Peter refused,
+too, sulkily, to Joanna’s vast satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Jealous,” she thought with some pride. It was an exhibition
+with which she seldom met. Most of the young men
+of her acquaintance were a little afraid of Joanna with her
+intent and serious air. “High-brow” they called her and she
+knew it, liked it, too, though it had its inconveniences.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter’s mad,” she laughed as the two moved off, “because
+I told him I was going to the benefit concert with you, Brian,
+and so he couldn’t come to-night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sorry if I spoked his wheel,” said Brian, “but you just
+have to take pity on me, Jan, I’m so lonely without Sylvia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course. Isn’t it funny that he doesn’t realize that? He
+thinks you are making up to me. As though I would come
+between you and Sylvia. Great chance I’d have.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“About as much as <em>I’d</em> have, trying to come between you
+and Peter. Not that I know anything about you, Janna.
+Heaven only knows what you mean to do with the boy. But
+I wouldn’t want to face Peter, if I were aiming to be his rival.
+Wonder what he’ll do when he goes to the University in
+Philadelphia. What’s he going off there for, anyway? Can’t
+he do just as well here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The penalty of being colored,” said Joanna soberly. “He
+can get much better hospital work in Philadelphia. Of course
+he could take his pre-medic work here, but he thinks it best
+to begin where he plans to finish.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How long will he be away?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Forever and ever, six or seven years, I think. Of course,
+we both have relatives in Philadelphia. His great-uncle
+Peter, for whom he was named, is still there, you know.
+Peter’s counting on living with him. It will save expense.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Six or seven years!” said Brian disregarding anything else.
+“Golly what a wait! It would kill any girl but you, Janna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>“Sylvia didn’t die while you were in Harvard,” Joanna returned
+meanly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not much she didn’t! But she kept me in the back of her
+head, I’ll swear. While you with your singing and dancing
+and your wildcat schemes of getting on the stage! Better
+stick to your own Janna, and build up colored art.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why, I am,” cried Joanna, astonished. “You don’t think
+I want to forsake—<em>us</em>. Not at all. But I want to show <em>us</em>
+to the world. I am colored, of course, but American first.
+Why shouldn’t I speak to all America?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“H’m, I suppose you’re right. You ought to win out if anyone
+can. You work hard enough, Janna. You’re eighteen
+now, aren’t you? Well, you’ve got a good ways to go. How
+old is Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Twenty. He lost a lot of time when he was little. That’s
+why he’s so late entering college.”<a id='tn008'></a></p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well look here, what are you going to do with him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I may not have a chance to do anything with him, Mr.
+Busybody.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Phew, isn’t it hot! Thank goodness here’s the house. Run
+along and get your brother-in-law a long, cold drink.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He stayed after dinner—they had it on Sundays at three—and
+talked away the rest of the afternoon to Joel in the long
+dark dining room.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s cool here,” said Joel, handing him a cigar. “Light up
+and tell me how’s Harlem?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Great, sir. It’s the place for colored people. Let us get
+you a house up there. Pick you up something fine in One Hundred
+and Thirty-first Street.” Brian, too, had gone into real
+estate as Alexander’s partner.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joel rolled his cigar from one side of his mouth to the other.
+“Don’t know but what I might. This neighborhood’s gone
+down. Let me see your house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>“Yes, sir, I will. Has—er—Sylvia said anything to you
+about me? I’m getting along pretty well now, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What should she say? Here Joanna, come take this lovesick
+boy off my hands!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna came, serene and cool, a little prim in her pale
+yellow dress and soft floppy hat of tan chiffon. She handed
+Brian his Panama.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m ready, Brian.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joel stopped them for a moment, clapped the boy on the
+shoulder. “It’s all right as far as her mother and I are concerned,
+Brian.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two went off and heard a gracious, mellow-voiced
+woman fill a hall with sound that made them forget the heat.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My collar’s wringing wet, and I never thought of it. Wonderful
+how music can make people forget.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Even color,” said Joanna thoughtfully. “Did you see that
+white woman next to me edge away when I sat down? But
+when she heard me humming after it was over, she leaned over
+and asked me if I knew the words.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I wondered what you were talking about. Awfully jolly
+of you to have taken pity on me to-night, Janna dear. You
+marry Peter and all four of us will go to these concerts and
+sit in the gallery and come home praising God from whom all
+blessings flow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It certainly sounds nice. Only we mustn’t forget Philip.
+Don’t ring the bell, here’s the key.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He took it. “All right about Philip. Maggie is fond of
+music, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, in the act of entering the door, stepped back and
+faced him sharply. “What’s Maggie got to do with it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, she and Phil. They’ve always paired off together,
+haven’t they? Just like you and Peter, just like Sylvia and
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She wouldn’t dare,” said Joanna fiercely. “Why, Philip—he’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>going to be somebody great, wonderful, a Garibaldi, a
+Toussaint! And Maggie, Maggie’s just nobody, Brian. Why,
+do you know what she’s taking up? Hair work, straightening
+hair, salves and shampoos and curling-irons.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna, you’re an utter snob. I always knew you looked
+down on people unless they were following some mad will o’
+the wisp. Maggie’s as good as any of us. Why look here,
+she graduated from high school with Sylvia. You can’t look
+down on her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sylvia’s my sister, thank you. She’s Joel Marshall’s
+daughter. She has background, she knows good music and
+pictures and worth while people.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You talk like a silly book. What’s that got to do with
+it? And, anyway, you can’t stop it now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s the reason I can’t?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, good Lord, it must be as good as settled. Why
+Maggie thinks—only to-day—Oh—here, I’ve said enough.
+Thanks awfully for a nice evening, Jan——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’d she say, Brian?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, you know we were coming home from church and you
+and Bye were ahead and I said, ‘Look at the lucky pair.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, never mind me. Well, well?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And she said, ‘You miss Sylvia, don’t you, Brian?’ ‘You
+bet,’ I told her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And she looked at me—you know how Maggie can look—she
+said, ‘Just like I miss Philip, I guess.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna grew visibly taller. “You let her say that, Brian
+Spencer?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, how could I stop her? Of course she misses Phil.
+And quit acting ‘offended pride,’ Joanna. Heavens, doesn’t
+Sylvia sometimes do sewing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, but that’s different, she creates, she’s an artist——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Artist your grandmother! Sleep it off, Janna. Good
+night.” He went off, striding down the quiet street.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Joanna closed the door and crept quietly up to her room.
+Seated in a wicker arm-chair in a stream of gold summer moonlight,
+she spent a long time in deep thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie and Philip! Maggie! Of late she and Philip had
+had many a long talk. He’d lean against the mantelpiece—his
+restless fingers caressing a little black statuette:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Jan, I’ll talk to you, because you’ve always cared about
+this kind of thing. Raise a monument—more-enduring-than-bronze
+sort of business, you know. When I graduate—by the
+way, I think I’ll be elected Phi Beta Kappa next year—I’ve
+got a scheme, I’ve got a plan that will work all right. Father
+will be proud of me, you’ll see. And you, too, old girl, you’ve
+always been a bright beacon light. You stick to this stage
+business, you’ll win out. There’ll be a twin star constellation.
+‘The well known Marshalls, Joanna and Philip.’ We’ll make
+the whole world realize what colored people can do. Nothing
+short of ‘battle, murder or sudden death’ is to interfere.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He, too, had been bitten by the desire to make the most
+of his life. And now here was Maggie Ellersley.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What ambition has she?” Joanna asked herself fiercely,
+forgetting to measure the depth of the abyss of poverty and
+wretchedness from which Maggie had sprung. “She shan’t
+spoil my brother’s chances.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Rushing over to her little desk, she pulled out a piece of
+tan stationery and began a note.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Maggie——”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>
+ <h2 id='chap11' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>PETER had accompanied Maggie as far as the subway
+station. “You won’t mind if I don’t go all the way
+home with you, Maggie? Fact is, I don’t feel so well
+to-day, so if you’ll excuse me——” His voice trailed indeterminately.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie smiled at him nicely. She was oddly happy at this
+moment. Linking her name with Philip’s, as she had, gave
+her an odd sense of freedom, of sureness. “And Brian didn’t
+seem at all surprised,” she kept thinking to herself over and
+over.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She answered out loud, “That’s all right, Peter. Go home
+and rest. I’m going to be in the house only a minute, anyway.”
+She looked at him meaningly. “I guess both of us
+have a lot to think of. Good-by.” She flashed down the steps,
+looked back; a second later a slender golden hand waved to
+him from the gloom of the subway.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now I don’t know what she meant,” thought Peter, pushing
+his hat back from his hot forehead, and immediately turning
+to another idea. “I’d like to punch that fresh Brian’s
+head. Oh, Janna, how could you go off with him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Down in the subway train Maggie sat smiling a little inanely.
+Of late, her feeling for Philip had taken a definite
+form; she wanted, as always, desperately to marry, and to
+marry well in order to secure for herself the decent respectability
+for which those first arid fourteen years of her life had created
+an almost morbid obsession. But she knew now that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>the one man through whom she wanted to secure that respectability
+was Philip Marshall. She loved him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If the way I wanted him at first, dear God, was a sin, you
+must forgive me. Oh, Philip, Philip, have a good time in
+Philadelphia to-day. I bet you’re at a meeting of some kind
+this minute.” The picture of his favorite attitude came before
+her, and she smiled more broadly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A white man sitting opposite mistook the smile and leaned
+forward, leering a little. She turned her head quickly, noting
+as she did so that something about his build made her think
+of Henderson Neal, her mother’s roomer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was to go motoring with him this afternoon. He had
+asked her very often of late. Usually she spent Sundays with
+Philip and Sylvia and Brian, sometimes with Joanna and Peter.
+But since the first two were away, she might just as well
+spend the time with Mr. Henderson. He would have a nice
+car, she knew; twice before he had taken herself and her mother
+out. It had really been very nice. She rather fancied he
+must work in a garage, he came riding up to the house so
+often. She wished a little nervously that she hadn’t promised
+to go, it would be nice to sit quietly in her room or in the
+long, sparsely furnished parlor and think.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still it was hot, and if there were any air to be got they’d
+catch it in an automobile.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She ran up the subway steps and hurried toward Fifty-third
+Street. Somehow she didn’t care to keep Mr. Neal
+waiting.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There was still a quarter of an hour before he might be
+expected. She bathed her face, shook out her short, thick
+hair, twisted it back from her forehead. Next she crowned
+her oval, deep-cream face with a wide black hat, whose somberness
+was repeated in a broad velvet ribbon around the
+waist of her white dress.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>But she looked anything but somber as she ran to the
+door at the whirr of the motor.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Going, Ma,” she called back. Mr. Neal climbed out of
+the car and helped her in.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He didn’t look so old—elderly—to-day, she thought to herself,
+noting the straightness of his flat back and the smooth
+bronze of his closely shaven cheek. Evidently his beard was
+very strong and this had lent hitherto a somewhat heavy cast
+to his face. But to-day he was shaven to the blood. Maggie
+was used to studying men. It was a legacy from the old
+days, when failure to analyze a prospective roomer’s appearance
+might jeopardize a week’s rent. She noticed Neal’s
+hands at the wheel, powerful and sinewy with broad square
+finger-tips. He was still baffling, but not so bad, she thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course, not like Philip, but nice enough to go around
+with, and this is a dandy car.” She looked at him again
+sideways. He caught her glance.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Thinkin’ I ain’t so bad maybe, Miss Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She blushed, confused, not so much at his catching her eye
+as at the completeness with which he had read her thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You certainly look nice in that suit, Mr. Neal. It’s different
+from what most men wear, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Likely as not. I picked it up in London last time I crossed
+the big pond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ve been to Europe?” asked Maggie all ears.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes to England, France, Spain, Germany <em>and</em> Italy. They
+was a time,” he said in his deliberately incorrect way, “when
+I thought I’d stay in them parts forever, but I come back.
+Used to valet for a rich white fellow. Took me everywhere
+with him. Wanted to carry me to Africa lion-hunting. But
+I quit him cold. If you want to hunt lions, go to it. Me,
+I’m a-goin’ t’stay right here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He spoke with a heavy emphasis on the last word which
+lent a curious whimsicality to his speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>“This is the first time you’ve ever talked about yourself,
+Mr. Neal. Tell me some more, it’s mighty interesting.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had been everything from a farmer to a chauffeur, he
+told her, confirming her idea that his present occupation was
+concerned with the manipulation of cars.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And I’ve been a lot of places and I’ve seen a lot of people.
+But you don’t want to hear about me, Miss Maggie. They
+ain’t nothing in me to interest a little lady like you. Now, on
+the other hand, seems to me, you might make real interestin’
+talkin’.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had a nice smile, Maggie thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There isn’t much to tell,” she smiled back at him. “There’s
+just my mother and me. I’m twenty-one and I’ve been out
+of school three years. I work in the office of Mr. Marshall,
+the caterer; you know him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Know of him, Miss Maggie, know of him. Son’s a real-estate
+agent, ain’t he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes. Well, I’m a sort of overseer-bookkeeper. In my
+spare time I’m taking up a course in hair-dressing. You know
+there’s a Madame Harkness who’s invented a method of softening
+hair, and of taking the harshness out of your folks’
+locks.” She laughed at him. “You know I think there’s a
+big future in it. It ought to mean a lot to us. Everybody
+wants to be beautiful, and every woman looks better if her
+hair is soft and manageable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Reckon you don’t need to use no such preparation, Miss
+Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I don’t, fortunately, but I’ll be glad to help those that
+do. I love to see people look nice; like to look nice myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You sure do, you’re like a little yellow flower, growin’
+in that house.” He gave her a keen level glance whose boldness
+was softened by his serious manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Let’s stop talking about me,” said Maggie with sudden
+confusion. “Don’t you want to hear about my mother?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>“Well, not as much as about some others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Anyway, she’s been a wonderful mother. My father died
+when I was about eight, and left us nothing. Mother has
+been hard put to it at times. That’s why I want to learn the
+hair-trade. I want to set up a business for myself some day.
+If I succeed, both mother and I can live on easy street.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’d ought to be living there now. A delicate little girl
+like you’s got no business having to worry her pretty head
+about taking care of herself.” He bent on her a long considering
+look. “There’s many a man would be willing to
+take that job off your hands. I bet I know of one.” An odd
+bashfulness seemed to descend upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Perhaps he’s going to propose,” thought Maggie innocently
+enraptured, “wouldn’t that be great?” She pictured
+Sylvia’s surprise when she should tell her. His clumsy circumlocution,
+his heavy deference, delighted her. Philip of
+course was wonderful, but he was inclined, like all the Marshalls,
+to be a little superior. Well, why shouldn’t they be?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sighed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her silence seemed to put an end to his sentimental maunderings,
+for he began to talk about the car, explaining its
+mechanism. Once, too, he turned and swore fluently at a
+motorist who passed him too closely. At the sudden passion
+which convulsed his face Maggie drew back, a little frightened.
+He noticed it, and immediately ironed out the lines of anger.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You must forgive me, Miss Maggie. It made me so angry
+to think that that fool might have caused an accident which
+would have injured you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thought with the ignorant pride of a young girl that it
+would be very easy for her to manage him. Shortly after that
+they turned around and came home. Maggie was glad when
+they reached the house, for she had many things to think about.
+Shutting off the motor, he followed her into the hall and they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>stood there a minute, his powerful dark figure looming over
+her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thanked him prettily. “It was very nice of you, Mr.
+Neal. You’ve been most kind to mother and me.” As she
+sped lightly up the stairs she forgot him completely.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her windows were open and a full moon flooded her room
+with light. “Oh, Philip if I only knew how you felt,” she
+murmured, getting up and leaning out the window, gazing
+into the still, hot air. The people next door were in their
+back yard; one of their boys was playing an accordion. A
+little thin tinkle of voices floated up to her. How content
+other people seemed!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mind was feverish—she had concentrated so on her
+other desires, a decent home, a reasonable education, the means
+of making a little extra money. It seemed to her she couldn’t
+find the strength to focus the flame of her ambition on Philip’s
+kind but immobile attitude. He was so uncomprehending.
+She turned back to the room again and stretched her arms
+to the shadowy wall.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If you’d only say one word, Philip. I’d wait forever.”
+It was the uncertainty that sickened her spirit. “Yet,” she
+thought, growing suddenly cold, “suppose I should be made
+certain—the wrong way. Perhaps you’ve met a girl in Philadelphia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She determined the suspense was best. “You’ve been my
+hope so long, if you should fail me what would I do? Besides,
+I love you, Philip.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She lay half the night, very still and very wakeful in her
+white iron bed. The morning brought back her old sanguineness,
+she was to have a very full day; until early forenoon
+there was work in Mr. Marshall’s office, and in the late afternoon
+Madame Harkness’ Method of Hair Culture claimed
+her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She came home, hot and deliciously tired.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>“There’s a letter for you,” her mother told her. “Wash
+your face and eat your supper first. I want to get through’s
+quick as I can. Mis’ Sparrow and me, we’re going to a meeting.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie spied the letter in the gloom of the hall. It was
+from Sylvia probably; her heart hoped it was from Philip.
+But she put the thought away from her as too audacious.
+“Now just for that,” she told herself whimsically, “I won’t
+let you touch that letter till after supper.” Smiling, she
+washed her face and changed into something cool and old
+that she could lounge in later up in her room, while she read
+Sylvia’s letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Supper over, the dishes washed and her mother started in
+the direction of Mis’ Sparrow’s residence, Maggie went for
+her letter. Even in the half gloom she descried with a sudden
+pang that the superscription was unfamiliar. “Not from
+Philip, not even from Sylvia. Well, why should they write
+me?” she chided herself bravely.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In the waning but clear light in her room she could see
+plainly that the letter must be from a stranger. Yet there
+was something vaguely familiar about the writing after all.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She slit the envelope.</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Maggie: [the letter ran]</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll be surprised to get this letter, yet something tells me I
+should write it. It’s about you and Philip. [‘What’s this?’ said
+Maggie, startled.] I have learned, Maggie, that you are taking
+Philip’s kindnesses to you too seriously, that perhaps you are thinking
+of marrying him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think you ought to know that such an arrangement would not
+be at all pleasing to our family, nor would it be good for Philip. I’ve
+often heard my mother say that only people of like position should
+marry each other, and I hardly think that would be true in the case
+of you and Philip. Then you must consider the future. My father
+is very ambitious for us and lately Philip has shown that he means
+to embark on a real career. You can see that a girl of your lowly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>aims would only be a hindrance to him. Philip Marshall cannot
+marry a hair-dresser!”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>The childish cruel words ran on:</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Then, too, I am sure he does not care for you in the way you
+care for him. Don’t you go around sometimes with a Mr. Henderson,
+or somebody like that? Sylvia met him somehow and Phil didn’t
+like it and raised a big fuss. Sylvia told him that you knew him
+and went out with him and Philip said ‘That’s different. Maggie
+Ellersley can do things that my sisters mustn’t do.’ That doesn’t
+sound as though he had any serious feeling for you, does it?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I guess this will be sort of hard for you to read, but I believe”
+[Joanna wrote virtuously] “that some day you will thank me for
+these words.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Wouldn’t it be just as well if you didn’t see him for some time
+after his return?</p>
+
+<div class='c017'>“Yours,</div>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Joanna Marshall</span>.”</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>“P. S.<a id='tn006'></a> Papa is thinking of buying a house in One Hundred and
+Thirty-first Street, in Harlem, you know. So we may move after
+Sylvia and the others come back from Philadelphia. Papa would
+still keep his office in Fifty-ninth Street. That puts us pretty far
+away, so if you shouldn’t come up so often, no one would think anything
+of it.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie folded the letter carefully and put it on her mantelpiece.
+Then, fully dressed as she still was, she lay down on
+her bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You poor idiot,” she thought to herself, “you simpleton,
+you fool, why should the Marshalls want you? They’re rich,
+respected! Mr. Joel Marshall—you see the name at the head
+of every committee of colored citizens, and you are nobody,
+the daughter of a worthless father, and a poor ex-laundress!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mind dwelt briefly on her mother. “Poor Mamma, she
+expected so much of me! Yet if Philip really cared about
+me, he wouldn’t care a rap if they did object.” She remembered
+then his slighting words.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>“I hate him,” she said fiercely, “and Joanna and her everlasting
+ambitions and the pride of all of them. Why, you’re
+just a beggar to them.” She resumed her merciless self-attack.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Presently she began to cry great, scalding tears that burned
+her cheeks and hurt her throat. At eleven o’clock she heard
+her mother’s step and forced herself to an aching quiet. About
+midnight she realized that her head ached, that her throat
+was so dry and parched that it almost rasped.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“To think I should care like this,” she told herself. “Oh,
+Maggie, Maggie, they’re proud, can’t you copy their pride?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There were some lemons on the table in the dining room,
+she remembered. At least she could ease her tortured throat.
+Hot though it was she put on her felt bedroom slippers, so
+that her step on the creaking stairs might not disturb her
+mother.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The quiet lower rooms struck her with their awful solemnity,
+added to her woe. She sat there at the dining room table, one
+hand clutching the forgotten lemon, the other flung on the
+red-checked table cloth, above her dark bowed head.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Two conflicts were raging within her. A two-fold stream
+of disappointment overwhelmed. Not only had Philip not
+made love to her but he had despised her, not considered her
+the peer of his sisters. And how was she to mend her precarious
+fortunes? She was not strong, her mother was aging;
+suppose, before she got on her feet, she should fall back into
+the old hateful abyss. As it was she would never enter Mr.
+Marshall’s office again.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her shame and despair heavy upon her, she buried her face
+deeper on her arm. Some one seemed to say, “Miss Maggie!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She imagined it, she knew, but even if it were real she did
+not want to lift that heavy, heavy head.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A powerful but kind hand strove to lift it for her. She
+looked up then, a blinking figure of misery in the flickering
+gas flame.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>“But Miss Maggie, t’aint ever you. Was you asleep or—was
+you crying?” Henderson Neal had come in, and spying
+the light in the dining room had come to investigate.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She blinked at him stupidly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Little Miss Maggie, what’s happened to you? You ain’t
+in trouble?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“In awful trouble.” Her lips shaped the words stiffly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His mind, accustomed to the ways of men, jumped to one
+dread conclusion. “You mean some good for nothin’ feller’s
+took advantage of you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She didn’t understand him at first. “What? Oh, that!
+No, of course not!” A spasm of horrible amusement crossed
+her tightly drawn features. “He—he wouldn’t touch me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She broke into passionate yet stifled weeping. Her mother
+must not hear her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Neal’s face twitched. He picked her up in his steely arms,
+sat down in an old cavernous morris chair and held her back
+against him like a baby.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell me about it, Miss Maggie; some of them tony fellers
+bothering you to marry them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The supposition was balm to her spirit, but she had schooled
+herself to honesty. “No, not that—one of them, oh, he never
+knew—I hoped, oh, Mr. Neal, you see I wanted him to
+like me——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And he doesn’t, and he’s been leading you on? The
+damned skunk. I’d like to kill him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t say that. He was just being kind. He’d probably
+be all right if he ever thought about me. You see, it’s his
+sisters, his sister,” she corrected herself, “she doesn’t consider
+me good enough.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, what’s she got to do with it? Can’t the feller speak
+for himself?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s just it, I used to go to see them, they don’t come
+to see me. If the sisters don’t want me, there’s no way I can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>reach him, particularly since he isn’t interested. I had just
+hoped that if he kept on seeing me, some day he would grow
+to like me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Neal was nonplussed. This was a puzzle.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What are you going to do now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I don’t know. And I’m losing my job now. I got
+it through them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I see.” He sat silent, studying her a moment. “Look
+here, Maggie, whyn’t you marry me? I’m old and I’m rough
+and you see I ain’t no book-learnin’. But I can take care of
+you—you and your mother, too, and I can dress you pretty,
+like you’d ought to be, and with money and fine clothes you
+can do a little lordin’ on your own.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She hated to offend him. He was so kind. “Mother would
+never hear of it,” she quavered for lack of a better answer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You don’t have to let her know about it,” he said, encouraged
+by her failure to refuse him flatly. “I’ll get a license in
+the morning and we’ll slip out after she goes to work. You
+won’t be sorry. I’ll be kind to you Maggie—girl. I’ve always
+wanted you to give me a chance.” He added a cunning afterthought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Show these stuck-up friends of yourn, and show ’em quick
+that you don’t have to go beggin’ for favors. There’s others,
+yes, not a man that comes into this house that wouldn’t be
+proud to marry you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She began to toy with the idea. Marriage with Neal was
+not what she wanted, but it represented to her security, a home
+for herself and her mother, freedom from all the little nagging
+worries that beset the woman who fights her own way through
+the world. Perhaps she had aimed too high. This was the
+sort of person with whom she had grown up; he would not,
+because he could not, look down on her lowliness. On the
+contrary, he would place her on a pedestal.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll think about it,” she promised him finally.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>But he knew if she did not take him now, she would never
+take him. She knew it, too.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He set her gently in the chair, and knelt in front of her,
+barring her escape with his powerful body.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Listen, Maggie, marry me now, to-morrow. We’ll go to
+Atlantic City for a few weeks, and come back and go to housekeeping.
+I don’t have to live here. I just stayed on, first
+because it was clean and your mother was honest and then
+because I liked you. I ain’t no lawyer, nor doctor, nor in none
+of the fine positions your friends hold, but I handle a good
+bit of money and I’ll get you everything you want.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He did have money, she knew that. She supposed she ought
+to find out exactly how he made it. But of course he was
+honest. And anyway she was too tired, too weak to bother.
+She could feel his strong will impinging on her own, beating
+hers down.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll do it, Mr. Neal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My name’s Henderson, Maggie. You will, you mean it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, to-morrow. But I ought to let my mother know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, no, she might object—mothers hate to see their
+daughters leave them. But after she sees how well fixed and
+happy you are, she won’t mind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I guess you’re right. I—I don’t see how I can ever pack.
+I’m so tired.” Her figure slacked weakly against the chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You don’t need to. Just wear something dark and quiet.
+We’ll get everything you want in Atlantic City, or maybe
+Philadelphia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, no—not in Philadelphia, we won’t stop there now,”
+she told him feverishly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All right. Now run up to bed. Kiss me, Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She gave him her cold, stiff lips.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Good girl! To-morrow at ten. You ain’t foolin’ me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, no, Mr. Neal!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Henderson’s my name. Good night, little girl.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>Shaking, she got up to her room to lie vacant-eyed across
+the bed, watching the darkness deepen, shade into gray, vanish.
+The sun came bringing a new day, to her a new life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She wrote her mother a note, then dressed herself carefully
+in a little tan poplin suit, a small brown hat and a white
+veil. “Brides wear veils,” she thought to herself numbly. “Oh,
+I didn’t think I’d be a bride like this!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Well, it was too late now. At quarter of nine she went down
+stairs. Her mother had left long since. Presently she heard
+a taxi drive up and Neal, heavy but immaculate, got out. He
+was coming for her. She walked stiffly to meet him; they
+entered the cab together and were whirled away.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“This was marriage,” she thought, murmuring some words
+later to a Justice of the Peace. They entered the waiting taxi
+again and drove to the Pennsylvania station. A surprising
+number of the red-caps seemed to know Mr. Neal—her husband.
+Well, of course, of course why shouldn’t they? They
+walked down the steps past car after car. Neal ushered her
+finally into a drawing-room. She had never dreamed of traveling
+like this. As the train pulled out Neal hailed a passing
+waiter. “Bring us something to eat as soon as possible.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sat down beside her, immaculate in a gray suit, gray
+tie, carefully brushed low shoes. His tan overcoat rested in
+the corner of the seat. He put his arms around her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Poor, sleepy, frightened Maggie,” he said tenderly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She burst into sharp, strangling sobs, burying her head
+against his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So she left New York, weeping, to return to it one day dry-eyed
+but with a bitterness that was worse than tears.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
+ <h2 id='chap12' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c016'>“Really, Joanna, you ought to treat me better. You
+know I’m staying in New York just on account of
+you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How do you want me to treat you, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, hang it all. Why can’t you be nicer to me? When
+Brian comes to see Sylvia she runs to meet him, puts her
+arms about his neck.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But Sylvia and Brian are engaged. You and I are just
+friends.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Just friends! Joanna, have a heart. What do you think
+I spend all my spare time with you for? You know how
+I feel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna raised a slim, protesting hand. “None of that,
+Peter! You come to see me because both of us are interested
+in the same things. Each of us is going to be an artist in
+different ways. What other girl is there in New York who
+would let you talk to her about the joys of surgery?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What other girl would want me to?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, looking at the long brown figure lying full length
+on the grass, thought it highly improbable that any other girl
+would. She had seen other girls in the company of Peter, and
+watched quite without jealousy their ways with him. She
+rather prided herself on her own aloofness from such tactics.
+Of course, some day she might let Peter talk to her about
+things other than work and art, and she might answer him, but
+at present the big things of life must be arranged. Love was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>an after consideration, she felt, and as far as she knew she
+meant it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was a Saturday afternoon in July and the two were in
+Van Cortlandt Park. Peter was to go to school in Philadelphia
+in the fall, and it was important for him to earn as
+much money as possible for his expenses. He might have gone
+with a group of other boys to one of the watering places and
+worked in a hotel. But that took him too far away from
+Joanna. Ragtime was coming into vogue then, and Peter
+proved himself an adept at it. The butcher shop was of
+course a thing long since of the past.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Here’s where I put my gift of strumming to some use,” he
+laughed to Joanna. “You ought to see how glad they were
+to take me on at that cabaret.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I hope you won’t learn anything you shouldn’t in that
+atmosphere,” she had answered primly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, of course I won’t,” he returned, thinking how amazed
+she would be if she ever looked down from her pinnacle long
+enough to understand what life really was. He would have
+liked her to see that cabaret with its jostling crowds and
+blaring lights, and the host of noisy good-hearted dancing
+girls. He tried to give her some description of it. But Joanna
+turned away.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Men and women are like that, just the same,” he protested.
+“Everybody isn’t living on the mountain-tops like
+you, Janna. I can’t live there of my own accord myself.
+That’s why I haunt you so because you do keep me on the
+heights, dear.” She liked that.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But just the same,” he resumed, rolling over on the short
+grass like a lithe handsome animal, “all the big things of life
+smack of the earth. Your poet has to eat, or he can’t write
+poetry. Well, so does the commonest laboring-man. The queen
+has children, in agony, Janna, just like the poorest charwoman.
+And love is the—the driving force for both of them.” He
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>mused a little. “Love is the most natural and ordinary thing
+in the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Joanna didn’t believe that. “Love is a wonderful, rare
+thing, very beautiful, very sweet, but you can do without it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not much you can’t. Better not try it, Joanna. You have
+to found your life on love, then you can do all these other
+things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t talk like a silly, Peter. You know perfectly well that
+for a woman love usually means a household of children, the
+getting of a thousand meals, picking up laundry, no time to
+herself for meditation, or reading or——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dancing! That’s through poor management. Marry a
+man who understands you, Janna, and he’ll see that you have
+time for anything you want. Where is such a man? Behold
+him!” He struck his chest dramatically.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter Bye! How you talk!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All right, I’ll choose something else. Tell me why is it
+that though I’ve elected to stay in New York in all this hot
+weather just to be at your side, I see less of you than at any
+time since I’ve been coming to your house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Does seem queer, doesn’t it? It must be because I have
+so much work to do. I am taking extra singing lessons from
+Brailoff now. And my dancing takes up a lot of my time;
+my classes come at such inconvenient hours, 7:30 to 10:00
+three times a week.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That <em>is</em> bad. Funny time to give dancing lessons. Where’d
+you say you took them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At Bertully’s.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Bertully’s! That’s in Twenty-ninth Street, isn’t it? How’d
+you ever make it? I didn’t suppose a colored girl got a chance
+to stick her nose in there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She wouldn’t ordinarily. Bertully refused Helena Arnold
+last year. ‘I’m sorry, Mees, but the white Americans like not
+to study with the brown Americans. Vair seely, but so.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>I am a poor man, I must follow the weeshes of my clients!’”
+Joanna shrugged her shoulders, spread her hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’re a born impersonator, Jan. I can see that little
+Frenchman now. How’d you ever get in, then?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Helena and I went back this year and asked if he would
+take a separate class of colored girls, if we got it up for him.
+He was very decent, said he’d be glad to. So we got up a
+class of eight, he only asked for six. Of course, we had to
+take his hours.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Who are in it besides you and Helena?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, all our crowd.” She named the daughters of several
+prominent colored men, a physician, a lawyer, a journalist, a
+real-estate man among them. “There’s Gertrude Moseley,
+Vera and Alice Manning, Elizabeth Beckett, Sylvia, Helena,
+and I.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s seven.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, yes, Sylvia meant to ask Maggie Ellersley.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“H’m, she had other things in her head without bothering
+about fancy dancing, hadn’t she? Funny how she went off
+and married without telling any of us about it, wasn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said Joanna uneasily.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’d have thought she’d have let old Phil in on it. I
+wonder if they had a falling out of any kind! Philip seemed
+rather hard hit when he heard the news.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not a bit of it. Why should he be?” Joanna spoke stoutly.
+But her tone belied her convictions. She hadn’t forgotten
+Philip’s expression the day Sylvia had come rushing in with
+the astounding news:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do you think? I just met Mrs. Ellersley. Maggie’s
+married—married—think of it! She ran away with that man
+at her house, that Mr. Neal. And they’re going to live in
+Philadelphia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philip’s haggard face had turned a trifle more wan, Joanna
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>had thought. “Has she written to you, Sylvia?” he asked
+her quickly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not a word. I can’t imagine why she said nothing to me
+about it. She must have planned it for ages. If that isn’t
+the funniest!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Later Joanna heard Philip asking his mother if she were
+sure she had given him all the mail that had come for him
+while he was in Philadelphia. Still later he had announced
+his intention of teaching summer school in South Carolina.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Fellow whose place I’m going to fill is sick. They’ve been
+at me a long time to come. I think I ought to go, father. It
+will give me a chance to see the South.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna’s throat constricted a little at the thought of Philip’s
+look, his general listlessness. She wished she hadn’t written
+that letter. Though that couldn’t have brought about the marriage.
+People don’t arrange to be married over night. As
+Sylvia said, it must have been on Maggie’s mind long since.
+And then, anyway, Philip couldn’t really have cared for a
+girl like Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t believe Philip was the least bit interested in Maggie,”
+she voiced her thought to Peter. “Well, anyway, Mr.
+Bye, that’s why my company is so scarce. Goodness, what are
+you frowning about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, I’m mad to think you swallowed that Frenchman’s
+insult. To think of your taking lessons from him after that!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But, Peter, he didn’t insult us. He can’t help this stupid
+prejudice. ‘In my country, Mademoiselle Maréchal,’—he always
+calls me that—‘you’d be an honor to any class.’ He says
+I’ve got a great future. That if there’s anything that will
+break down prejudice it will be equality or perhaps even
+superiority on the part of colored people in the arts. And I
+agree with him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But to be set apart like that!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do I care?” asked Joanna, the practical. “You’ve
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>got to take life as you find it, Peter. The way I figure it is
+this. If all I needed to get on the stage was the mastery of a
+difficult step, I’d get there, wouldn’t I? For somehow, sometime,
+I’d learn how to overcome that difficulty.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You bet you would.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Very well, then. Now my problem is how to master, how
+to get around prejudice. It <em>is</em> an awful nuisance; in some parts
+of this country it is more than a nuisance, it’s a veritable
+menace. Philip says he’s going to change all that some day.
+First, I’m going to get my training up to the last notch, then
+I’m going to watch for an opportunity and squeeze in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll never get it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, yes, I will. Some white people are kind, some of them
+are so truly artistic that they’ll put themselves to great
+trouble for the sake of art. Look at Bertully. It works him
+much harder than it does us to hold those extra classes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Bertully’s one man in a thousand. Besides, he’s a foreigner.
+Where’ll you find a white American like that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You blessed pessimist. I know of people like that already.
+That’s how Helena Arnold got to Bertully in the first place.
+A Miss Sharples—why, they’re the people your Aunt Susan
+works for, aren’t they? Your aunt told Miss Sharples about
+Helena, and Miss Sharples took her, herself, to Bertully.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That was awfully decent, I must say. Of course, the
+Sharples are Philadelphia Quaker stock. Not that that makes
+much difference. The white Byes were Quakers, and see how
+they left us stranded, though my father told me old black
+Joshua Bye practically coined them their money. Not many
+people like those Sharples.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There doesn’t need to be. The point is there’s <em>one</em>. Miss
+Sharples’ family, by the way, may have been Quakers, but
+there’s nothing Quakerish about her. Helena says she goes
+with the Greenwich Village group all the time, and for all
+their craziness, they’ve got some mighty big ideas.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>“Can’t get anything to eat, if you’re colored, down in their
+dinky old restaurants.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Awful, isn’t it? Well, we’ll let some other colored person
+pound away at that side of it. Me, I’m going to break
+into art. The public wants novelty, and <em>I</em> want fame. I’ve
+got to have it, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You talk about going on the stage as though you had a
+signed contract in your hand. How’ll you get the stage-presence?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m to go on a recital tour next fall among colored people.
+I’m used to singing in the choir. If I can stand before them
+I can stand before any audience in the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, we are mighty critical.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should say so. Get up, Peter Bye. We’ve got to go
+home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They started on the long trip back.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But see here, Joanna,” Peter pleaded when they reached
+the house, “you will give me a little more time, won’t you?
+I don’t have to work in the morning, you know. And I don’t
+work Wednesday nights. Promise me that, won’t you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said Joanna, her heart warming to his glowing
+beauty. “We’ll remember this summer, Peter, the last before
+we go off trying our wings for further flights.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That was an enchanted season. Peter used to call for her
+in the morning, and the two would go off exploring. Joanna
+liked the foreign quarters, but she had never cared to stand
+around too long in those teeming, exotic streets. She was
+too conspicuous, attracted too many inquiring glances. With
+Peter she felt safe to stand for long moments watching the
+children play, to enter queer dark shops, to taste strange
+messes. Sometimes she spoke to the women about their
+dresses, their headgear. One Spanish woman, grown used to
+the sight of this dark American girl and the good-looking boy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>at her side, took them into her quarters one day and showed
+Joanna how she dressed her hair. Another time she taught her
+an intricate Spanish dance.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m going to do a dance representing all the nations, some
+day,” Joanna told Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They planned for Wednesday nights very carefully at first,
+but gradually as the torrid weather increased, Joanna’s desire
+for the theater and other indoor forms of amusement yielded
+to the desire to be cool at any cost. Central Park claimed
+them then, and later Morningside, since it was just a few
+moments’ stroll from the Marshalls’ new house.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Morningside was usually crowded. The seats were always
+taken when they arrived.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I wonder what time the people come,” Joanna murmured.
+But they didn’t mind. The grass, the sloping hillside, was
+good enough for them. Joanna would sit down, her dainty
+summer dress spread around her, her splendidly poised head
+turned at first so she could see the passers-by. She was forever
+studying types, and eyed them with a grave deliberation.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll get your head knocked off yet, Joanna,” Peter would
+remonstrate, “staring at people so.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He liked it better when later on in the evening she turned
+toward the slope of the hill and looked down at the city,
+laughing in its myriad twinkling lights. Her face at that
+time took on a grave wistfulness which he could not analyze.
+Joanna herself could not define the feeling which prompted
+that expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter, leaning on his elbow, would lie beside her, his curly
+black head bent toward her, one slender brown hand touching
+her dress ever so lightly. He would have given the world
+to believe she was thinking about him, but he knew she was
+not. He would have been astounded if he could have dreamed
+of the maze of her thoughts. Joanna was really most human
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>at moments like these. Through her mind was floating a
+series of little detached pictures. She saw a glittering stage,
+Peter, herself, some little children. She felt a hazy, nebulous,
+mystical joy.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter adored her at moments like these, but he was afraid
+of her, too.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>One night she astonished him. “Peter,” she said suddenly,
+“sit up. So. I’m tired. I’ve had a hard day. Do you mind
+if I rest my head on your shoulder?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Would he mind if she offered him a king’s estate?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was too ecstatic, too—yes—scared, to speak. He sat
+as she directed, he stretched his thin tense arm around her
+fine young body. He even put up one hand and pressed her
+head closer against his shoulder, touched her hair, let his fingers
+trail ever so lightly over her cheek. Joanna in his arms!
+Joanna!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She felt him trembling. “Am I too heavy, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He could hardly articulate, but she heard his ardent “no”
+and moved imperceptibly closer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His breath stirred her thick, dark hair. He let it caress
+his chin. Its soft heaviness was a revelation to him, a rapture.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She lay so quietly against him he thought she must be
+asleep. So he whispered, “Are you asleep, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” she whispered back, “only very, very tired.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Joanna, Joanna,” he breathed, “be tired forever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Somewhere out of the heavenly silence, a girl’s voice, a
+foreign voice, broke into song high and shrill. Russian, Peter
+thought. It was just a snatch, poignant and sweet, that died
+away leaving a faint lingering sadness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She put her head back then. She opened her dark eyes
+and looked full into his.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Their lips were so near, so near. In a second he had pressed
+his against hers, briefly yet with passion. She sat up and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>drew a little away from him, dazed. But he put his arms
+around her and held her close. Presently they walked home,
+speechless. When they came to an arc-light, they looked at
+each other’s faces, eager to study and to reveal these new
+selves. Their glances met and clung with a sweet enchantment.
+Something leaped, something fluttered within their hearts, like
+a fettered, struggling wing. And it was beautifully, it was
+magically, first love!</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>
+ <h2 id='chap13' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE vacation sped as vacations will. Peter played in
+the awful cabaret, saved his money and adored
+Joanna. Joanna practiced trills, danced, thought of
+Peter and allowed him to adore her. As the early September
+days spread their golden haze over Harlem and Morningside
+Park, she actually shivered a little when she realized that when
+the month was over she and Peter would be miles apart.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It is hard to say just how much Joanna cared for Peter at
+this time. Certainly the boy worshipped her. He dreamed
+wordless dreams of her at night sitting in the noisy cabaret.
+His visit to her was the one objective point in his day. When
+the inexorable moment of separation came it cost him actual
+physical pain to bid her good-by.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was hardly like that. She had a very real, very
+ardent feeling for Peter. But it was still small, if one may
+speak of a feeling by size. Her love for him was a new experience,
+a fresh interest in her already crowded life, but it had
+not pushed aside the other interests. At nineteen she looked
+at love as a man of forty might—as “a thing apart.” This
+was due partly to her hard unripeness, partly to her deliberate
+self-training. Joanna had read of too many able women who
+had “counted the world well lost for love,” until it was too
+late. “Poor, silly sheep,” she dubbed them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She could not, it is true, bundle up her thoughts of Peter
+and say, “I’ll think of you to-morrow at three,” but she did
+achieve a concentration in her work that made it almost impossible
+for him to remain too long in her thoughts. And at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>nights when he tossed sleepless on his bed, dreaming fragrant
+dreams and seeing golden visions, she was sleeping the perfect
+sleep of healthy weariness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The last days were hard for her, however, as they were
+for Peter. For Joanna was doomed by her very make-up to
+a sort of perpetual loneliness. Sylvia had her own interests,
+she had Brian and many, many friends. She was the most
+popular of all the Marshalls. Alec and Joanna had never
+been thrown much together. Philip, once her great confidant,
+was usually away from home. And on his return he was apt
+to relapse during these days into a rapt sadness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It followed, then, that while Joanna was Peter’s sweetheart,
+his heart’s dear queen, Peter was at once her lover whom she
+didn’t need very much—at least she did not realize that need—and
+more than that her companion and friend whom she
+needed greatly. The prospect of the days stretched long and
+dreary before her. Even the concert tour, a remarkable booking
+for one so young, did not entirely console her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two talked about it on the day before Peter left for
+Philadelphia. They were in Van Cortlandt Park in a little
+tangled grove. It was noon and the September sun streamed
+down on them making the green wooden bench on which they
+sat pleasantly warm. But the leaves about them were going
+a little sere; in the shade the air felt chill, and the sunshine,
+though warm, was thin and white.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“‘The summer is ended.’” Joanna quoted softly; she
+sighed. Peter looked at her, there were tears in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear, beautiful Joanna,” said Peter, and his own beautiful
+face was full of the woe of parting, “how can I leave you
+to-morrow? Janna, don’t send me away, tell me I’m not to
+go.” He put his arms around her and she clung to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter, you must go, you must, really. We—we can’t go
+on like this. We’ve got to prepare ourselves while we’re young
+for the future.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>“Yes,” said Peter and his ardor chilled a little at the touch
+of her cool practicality. But a moment later her light touch
+rekindled him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You love me, Janna? You know I love you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, Peter dear, but we mustn’t say anything more
+about it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I know, Joanna, I’m not going to worry you any more
+just now, but you’ll let me speak sometime?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, oh, yes!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dearest girl! Kiss me, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She touched his lips with a light, lingering kiss. He looked
+at her, his face haggard with his gusty, boyish passion.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ah, Joanna, I’ll never forget that kiss.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Neither would she, her heart told her. It was the first time
+she had ever kissed him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They walked through the deserted park, their arms frankly
+about each other, like children. The dry grass and brittle
+leaves crackled beneath their feet, the air hung over them
+like a thin, misty veil. Joanna sang a bit from an old Italian
+song:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“If from Heaven we could but borrow</div>
+ <div class='line'>One day longer of fond affection</div>
+ <div class='line'>It would lessen then our sorrow,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Give fresh joys for recollection.”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>She hummed a line here, then her voice rose again in the
+thin, shimmering air:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“—The future, dark and lonely!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Dearest Loved One, dearest Loved One</div>
+ <div class='line'>Parting makes these joys so dear!</div>
+ <div class='line'>Ah!—”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>“Don’t, Joanna; it’s too sweet. You’ll make me cry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>“I know it. Oh, Peter, go away and come back great and
+when you come back, speak to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She went with him to the train next morning and to his
+amazement no less than her own, broke down and sobbed into
+her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He bent over her. “To think of your crying for me, Joanna!
+Good-by, good-by, my sweet. Remember, I’ll be back
+Christmas.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He vanished through the gates, was borne out of her vision.
+A strange exaltation possessed him. He was sad, but his sadness
+was as nothing to his joy, his sense of satisfaction.
+Joanna loved him. She had been unusually capricious since
+that night in Morningside Park. But now he was sure of her.
+He smiled steadily from Manhattan Transfer Station to North
+Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His cousin Louis Boyd met him at Broad Street Station
+and took him to his great-uncle Peter’s in South Eighteenth
+Street. The old man almost cried over him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’re Meriwether’s son, but you’re more like your grandfather,
+Isaiah. He was darker than you, but he held his head
+high like yours, and you’re going to do what he wanted his
+son to do. It’s good to see you, boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He registered at the University the next day, consulted catalogues,
+met professors, wrote a glowing letter to Joanna. By
+the end of the week he was desperately homesick. He would
+have gone over to New York if he had not been so ashamed,
+and if he had not been expected to dinner at Louis Boyd’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell you what’s the matter with you, fellow,” said Louis
+when Peter had told him of his nostalgia, “you want to meet
+a few girls. We’ll start out after dinner.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter did not think this would help much. He wanted
+Joanna, though he said nothing about that to Louis. Astonishingly,
+however, the cure worked.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Louis seemed to know half of colored Philadelphia. “Mighty
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>nice girls in this man’s town, I can tell you. They’ll take to
+you, Peter, because, of course, you’re a Bye. Mentioned your
+name to old Mrs. Viny the other day and she told me to be
+sure to bring you around. She’d like to meet an ‘old Philadelphian,’
+even if he had been living a while in New York.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The girls deserved the nice things Louis said about them.
+They were pretty, nicely dressed and a shining contrast to
+the dingy streets and old-fashioned houses in which most of
+them lived. Peter was pleasantly struck, too, by the apparent
+lack of aspiration on the part of most of them. They seemed
+to be pretty well satisfied with being girls. A few were able
+to live home, many sewed, a number of others taught. There
+was no talk of art, of fame, of preparation for the future
+among them. Peter spoke of it to Arabelle Morton, the last
+girl to whose house Louis took him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, of course we want to get married, and we’re not
+spoiling our chances by being high-brows. Wouldn’t you like
+to come and play cards next Friday night, Mr. Bye? There’ll
+be just two tables, then afterwards we might dance. I’m sure
+you’d like it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter thought so, too. He liked Arabelle already and her
+friendly shallowness. He wrote to Joanna:</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell you what, Jan, I think I’m going to like Philly very much.
+Being Isaiah Bye’s grandson seems to help me no end. They actually
+consider me an ‘old Philadelphian’ and on the strength of that alone
+I’ve had four dinner invitations from elderly people to meet other
+‘old Philadelphians.’ Some of them old enough, too, I’ll say. However,
+the dinners are fine and come in very handy for a struggling
+student. I don’t board at Uncle Peter’s, you see.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There’re lots of jolly girls here. Of course, they’re not like
+yours and Sylvia’s crowd, bent on climbing to the top of a profession—well,
+Sylvia wasn’t that way so much—but they’re a very nice bunch
+and they have been most kind to your humble servant....</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Do you remember that day in the Park? Joanna darling, what are
+you going to say to me when I come back Christmas?</p>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Peter.</span>”</div>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>“N. B. These x’s are kisses.” [There was a long string of them.]</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>His letters to Joanna reacted to his own advantage. He
+felt he must be able to tell her truthfully of his success in his
+studies, of his ability to fit into this new life. Joanna was
+interested in him with a deep personal interest such as she
+had never exhibited before, and he meant to keep it alive.
+These were with one exception the most wholesome, most
+formative days of Peter’s life. He had youth, he had inspiration,
+he had the promise of love, with much hard labor to
+keep it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Many of the colored boys lived in West Philadelphia. They
+had a fraternity, and though according to their laws he could
+not be taken in during his freshman year, it was plain that
+this honor would be extended to him as soon as he became a
+sophomore. He was pretty well liked, and was constantly
+receiving invitations to spend the night across the river. One
+or two of the boys lived in the dormitories and he was frequently
+offered a chance to see something of this side of
+college life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But his steadiness surprised himself. He got his meals in
+a restaurant on Woodland Avenue, worked faithfully in the
+Library between classes, and completed the rest of his assignments
+at night in his Uncle’s sitting room. The old fellow
+loved to see him there. He pictured in Peter the restoration
+of the Bye family in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>To eke out his scanty bank account, he played three nights
+a week in a dance hall at Sixteenth and South Streets. Saturday
+afternoons he did track work. Friday and Sunday he spent
+at Arabelle Morton’s or at Lawyer Talbert’s on Christian
+Street. This latter and his family consisting of two sons and
+two daughters, were the relatives with whom the Marshalls
+stayed on their visits to Philadelphia. He found them very
+enjoyable. One of the boys was an undertaker but with a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>disposition far less lugubrious than his calling. The other
+was in the Wharton School of Finance at Pennsylvania and
+was to read law later at Harvard. Both girls were young and
+both were engaged. They were very much in love, but as their
+fiancés were studying medicine at Howard University, they
+welcomed Peter with much acclaim.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Thanks to them and Louis, he was soon enrolled in the
+social calendar, and if he chose to be lonely, it was his own
+fault.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At Christmas he went back to New York; Joanna met him
+at the station and took him home in her father’s car. Joel
+was one of the first ten colored men in Harlem to possess an
+automobile. The distance between his house and his business
+rendered it almost a necessity, and he was old enough to
+deserve release from the noise of the subway and the weary
+climbing to the elevated.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna had grown very good-looking, Peter thought. More
+than that, she looked even distinguished. Her purposefulness
+gave her a quality which he had missed in the Philadelphia
+girls. His ardor had not cooled in the least, but he had had
+to force it into second place. Now it surged uppermost in
+his heart again.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was glad that he had been in another city, had seen
+so many other girls. It only confirmed his conviction that
+Joanna was the only woman in the world for him. He hoped
+she possessed the same singleness of desire for him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There’s lots going on,” Joanna told him, sitting arm in
+arm with him in the car. “Sylvia and Brian are to be married
+Easter, so mother’s formally announcing it now. There’ll be
+luncheons—not for you I’m afraid, Peter. Then our dancing
+class is giving a benefit for the Pierce Day Nursery. There’ll
+be fancy dancing on the stage, in which your humble servant
+will star. And we’re to have a Christmas tree at our house
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>and a house party. I’m asking you now, Peter. Isn’t it great
+being grown up?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You bet. Which of these functions comes off first?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sylvia’s engagement party.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So she and Spencer are actually going to pull it off.
+They’ve waited a long time, haven’t they?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, that’s because Brian insisted on getting a good start
+before he married. Sylvia would have married him the day
+after they became engaged. But I think Brian’s right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They’re both right, but Sylvia’s way is the best. That’s
+the only attitude for anyone to have towards marriage. I’m
+afraid you lack it, my child. You want to begin with a
+mansion and three cars.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You mean thing! I don’t care about money as money
+one bit and you know it. But I do care about success. And
+a house or a car usually implies that. Any girl likes her man
+to look well in the eyes of other men.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“This man’s going to look well.” He yearned toward her.
+“Kiss me, sweetheart.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sir, you insult me. People shouldn’t kiss unless they’re
+engaged.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Then be engaged to me, dearest Joanna. Great Scott, are
+we here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna evaded him after that. Christmas was Tuesday,
+but as he had saved his cuts for Saturday classes, he had
+managed to come away the preceding Friday night. On
+Christmas morning he caught her before daybreak. They had
+arranged to go to an early service in a large Episcopal church
+where Joanna had recently been engaged as a soloist. He was
+waiting for her in the dark hall.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Good! There you are, Peter. We must fly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not until you’ve told me you love me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I love you, Peter. Come on.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, sir, put your little arms around my neck. So. Now
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>say, ‘Dear Peter, I love you and I’m going to marry you.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I can’t say that. Let me go, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not one step.” He held her so close that she had to poise
+herself against him, breathlessly, exquisitely. A clock in the
+house boomed five.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter, ask me to-night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m asking you now. Answer me this minute, Joanna.
+Not one step will we stir till you do.” He shook her gently.
+“Say it, darling.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She still had her arms around his neck. “Dear Peter,” she
+began, her voice breaking a little, “I love you and I’m going
+to marry you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ve got a smudge on your face,” he told her solemnly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She burst into hysterical tears at that. “I never thought
+I’d become engaged with a smudge on my face.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I know you didn’t. I’ll try to overlook it.” He got down
+on his knees and kissed her hands. “Darling Joanna, I’ll love
+you always.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Between them, they wiped away the traces of the smudge
+and of her tears. Then they found their way out, and walked
+through the dark silent streets singing “Joy to the World,”
+like a pair of Christmas waifs.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The lovers found it hard to see each other. There were too
+many things going on for that. Peter could have found time,
+but Joanna, he realized with a pang, seemed to think of nothing
+but her dance. When she wasn’t at a party, or dressing, she
+was at a rehearsal. The affair for the Day Nursery was to
+come off New Year’s Eve.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Monsieur Bertully’s seven pupils danced, swayed, pirouetted.
+Their slim silken limbs flashed and twinkled through a series
+of poses and groups until one thought of an animated Greek
+frieze. At the end the seven girls appeared as school children.
+Joanna as their leader was teaching them a game. Peter
+watched her flashing in a red dress across the stage, dancing,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>leaping, twirling. The orchestra struck up something vaguely
+familiar. Why, it was Joanna’s old dance, “Barn! Barn!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She swayed, she balanced, she stamped her foot.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Stay back, girl, don’t you come near me!</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Miss Sharples was there with a group of Greenwich Village
+folks, Helena Arnold told them afterwards.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had to leave on New Year’s Day. It was bitterly
+cold and the Marshalls had dinner guests, but Joanna went
+to the station with him. She didn’t cry this time, Peter
+noticed. She didn’t tell him that it was because of the pain
+raging at her heart.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll have to get used to his leaving me,” she told herself
+stubbornly. “I’ve got it to stand, for years and years. Talking
+about it won’t do any good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had fixed up a box of delicious sandwiches and other
+goodies for him, and there was a little letter in the box. But
+Peter didn’t know that, so in spite of her wan face he felt
+aggrieved as he stepped on the train, for she had barely
+pressed his hand and her lips were cold.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She cried herself into a headache on her way back.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was bitter in Philadelphia, too. Peter got off the train
+at West Philadelphia. He would call on some of the boys
+on Sansom Street.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They’re all out I think,” the landlady, Mrs. Larrabee, told
+him. She gave him a friendly smile. “You can run up,
+though, and see.” She was right, they were out, but the
+rooms were warm and comfortable.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think I’ll stay up here and thaw out,” he called down.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sat in a comfortable chair, smoked a cigarette or two,
+read a few pages in a novel. Then he remembered Joanna’s
+box, and opened it. There was the letter on top.</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span></div>
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Peter,” he read, “isn’t it awful to have to separate this
+way? I have a secret I was saving for you. I’m to sing in Philadelphia
+very shortly. Aren’t you glad? I love you, Peter.</p>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Jan.</span>”</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>His spirits went up, up.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Good-night,” he called to Mrs. Larrabee. “Happy New
+Year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It wasn’t so cold after all, he thought. Anyway, it wouldn’t
+do him any harm to stretch his legs a bit. He’d swing across
+town through the University grounds and take a car on Spruce
+Street.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The car jolted down over the bridge, turned one corner
+into a dingy side street, then another, slid ponderously into
+Lombard Street. It stopped to let the Twentieth Street car
+go by. Idly, Peter glanced out of the window. On the corner
+stood a woman, neatly, even carefully dressed. Something
+about her dejected pose made Peter look at her closely. She
+turned just then, and the street light fell full on an old-gold,
+oval face, haggard and disillusioned. Peter saw it was Maggie
+Ellersley.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>
+ <h2 id='chap14' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>POOR Maggie! How relentlessly and completely had
+her illusions flown!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had enjoyed the ride to Atlantic City. Her husband
+had surrounded her with magazines, fruit, candy, even
+books. She had had a wonderful dinner and when they got to
+Atlantic City, he took her to a very respectable, clean boarding-house.
+It was nice to be protected, she realized that. And,
+when, the day after they were married, he gave her seventy-five
+dollars, and told her to send part of it to her mother, her
+spirits, which had not yet recovered from the shock of the past
+two days, rose considerably.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thought Mr. Neal remarkably kind and gentle. And he
+was always clean. On the whole, while she was not the least bit
+in love with him, she considered he did pretty well, though she
+did wish he knew a little more about English grammar. His
+deliberate incorrectness made her ashamed of him and because
+he was so kind to her, this feeling on her part made her a little
+ashamed of herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was the soul of generosity. Besides giving her money,
+he had taken her to two of the best stores, and bought her
+whatever she wanted. He would have liked to buy her a complete
+outfit, but the prices made her demur.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Wait till we get to New York again. We can do better
+there.” But she did let him buy her a few things: There
+were a blue silk dress, a white satin skirt, two or three smart,
+delicately tinted blouses, a wonderful wrap, light but warm;
+tan and white shoes and stockings.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Atlantic City was a revelation to her. She had literally
+never been out of New York City, except once to a funeral in
+Brooklyn in company with the lugubrious Mis’ Sparrow. This
+fairyland by the sea with its colored lights, its human kaleidoscope,
+its boardwalk, its shops! She did not know the world
+held such as these.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But she was more interested in the Atlantic City that lay
+on the north side of Atlantic Avenue. There were many cottages
+here, a score of restaurants, a good drug store, all of them
+patronized by colored people. They were the kind of people
+Maggie wanted to know, she could see that at a glance. In
+the restaurant which she and her husband most frequented,
+she sat and watched the happy, laughing faces. They were
+like one big family although they came from Washington,
+Philadelphia, and Baltimore. She realized then how completely
+she had depended on the Marshalls and their immediate entourage.
+Cut off from them, she had no way of meeting these
+people, she possessed no background.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Some of the visitors seemed to know others hailing from
+the most remote places. One woman said, “Oh, there’s Annie
+Mackinaw, she’s been in San Francisco for five years you know,
+I must speak to her.” Surely, Maggie thought, her husband
+must have met some of these people somewhere. But although
+an occasional man nodded to him, even came up and spoke,
+not one brought over his wife or daughters. The women looked
+at Maggie, a little curiously; once she thought as she passed
+a large party at a table that they stopped talking with that
+queer suddenness which made her sure they were discussing
+her. They looked at her clothes, appraising them, but she
+could never catch their direct gaze.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sought to find solace in the theaters, of which she was
+very fond. This was an opportunity, plenty of leisure and a
+willing companion ready and able to take her whenever and
+wherever she wished. But Atlantic City theaters make no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>secret of their unwillingness to serve colored patrons. After
+being told at the ticket office that there were no more balcony
+seats, only to see them calmly handed out to the next white
+person in line; after enduring an evening in the poorly ventilated
+gallery with a feeling of resentment rankling in her
+breast; above all after seeing how these mischances awoke
+her husband’s passionate but futile anger, she desisted. He
+had a terrible, devastating temper, which left her speechless
+and cowering even though it was not directed toward her.
+Better do without the theater forever, she thought, than be
+the cause of awakening his savage wrath.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She returned to her survey of the colored visitors. Her
+husband found some friends and went off on mysterious trips
+with them, from which he returned amiable and pleasant and
+usually with some small gift for her. In his absence she sat
+on the piazza watching happy groups go by, or sat alone in
+the pavilion far down the boardwalk, where the colored people
+bathed. In time she came to know the characteristics of certain
+groups, could even tell from what city they came.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philadelphians were not as a rule as strikingly dressed as
+the folks, say, from Washington, but they had a better time.
+They seemed bound by some kind of tie, family, perhaps—which
+made it possible for them to group together incongruously
+but with evident enjoyment. Old women and young
+girls, young girls and elderly men, young men and almost
+middle-aged women, laughed and bathed and gossiped like
+brothers and sisters. These were the hardest to approach; it
+was impossible to invade their solidarity. They made the status
+of the outsider very clear.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Baltimore people were somewhat like these, only gayer.
+They were clannish, too, but more willing to let down bars.
+Clearly they were a cross between the Philadelphians and
+the gay Washingtonians who played about in very distinct
+groups, superb in their fashionable clothes and their deep
+assurance.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>Maggie’s landlady introduced her to one girl, a Miss Talbert
+from Philadelphia, who came up on the piazza one day to
+inquire for a former boarder. She was brown, not pretty,
+rather plainly but well dressed, with a beautiful manner. An
+atmosphere of niceness hung about her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She acknowledged the introduction pleasantly. “You’re
+from New York, Mrs. Neal—I wonder if you know my cousin
+Sylvia Marshall?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie could have jumped for joy. “She’s my best friend.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Things went a little better, then. Miss Talbert asked her
+to go in bathing, introduced her to a few people, beckoned her
+over to her table at lunch. But she and her party were staying
+for only three days more, and Maggie was almost as badly off
+as ever when she left.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her husband took her down to the pavilion the next day, and
+left her there. A sharp-faced old woman wearing a plain sad-colored
+dress and a formidable false front, beckoned to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What does your husband do?” she asked the girl, looking
+at her over sloping glasses.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie, confused, said he was in the motor-business. The
+old woman turned incredulously away.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She determined to ask her husband about his work. But
+he gave her no satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You wouldn’t understand it. Too much explaining to it.
+I make money enough for you, don’t I, girl?” He laid a heavy
+hand on her frail shoulder.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He thought he’d go to Philadelphia to live. “Feller told
+me of some good prospects there. We’ll just room for a while.
+If we don’t like it, we can go back to New York.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was satisfied. She didn’t want to return to New York,
+she realized. Her mother could make out with the money
+which, Neal had assured her, she could send regularly. And it
+made her sick to think of the Marshalls.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Without regrets she mounted the train with him one day
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>and went to the big, sprawling city. Its size, its long stretches
+of streets appalled her. The awful silence which seemed to
+descend over the town when she got below Walnut Street
+frightened her. One could be very lonely here, no doubt.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The “rooming” of which her husband had spoken proved to
+mean the second floor of a house in South Fifteenth Street.
+There were three rooms and a bath. She liked this because it
+gave her something to do. She kept them clean, arranged and
+rearranged the charming furniture which Neal gave her, and
+prepared their simple meals.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was the first time she had had a really attractive setting.
+And she was soothed, bewitched by its effect. Her rather
+simple plan of life contained, it must be remembered, only
+three ideas,—comfort, respectability, and love. This last had
+been added to her list very recently. She would have married
+Philip any time during the last five years without loving him,
+for the sake of the security which he could have brought her.
+So it is not strange, then, that she and Neal sailed their little
+craft so smoothly. It is true that marriage did not in reality
+prove as interesting and picturesque as she in common with
+most girls had conceived it to be. But marriage was marriage,
+and she must make the best of it. Neal was still kind, almost
+fatherly, very generous, clean, and, as far as she could see, had
+no bad habits. He smoked one cigar after each meal, and
+almost never drank.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Can’t afford it in my business,” she heard him say often.
+His business! If only he hadn’t been so mysterious about
+that. Still it must be all right. Men called on him pretty
+often and he would see them in the middle room, which Maggie
+had turned into a restful living room. Certainly he made
+plenty of money.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had comfort then and she did not feel the lack of love.
+Occasionally it occurred to her, it would be nice to be performing
+some of her housewifely duties for Philip. She
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>thought he would enjoy doing some of them with her. But
+perhaps that was because he was young. Things seemed to
+change so when one became old,—at least elderly. And she
+did not think Philip would have been out as much as Neal.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her passion, however, was for respectable company,—for
+more than that if she had but known it. She wanted friends,
+impeccable young women with whom she could talk over
+things, and exchange patterns and recipes, or go to the
+matinée. Once she met Miss Talbert on Christian Street. The
+girl greeted her kindly but a bit doubtfully, spoke about the
+weather. Then came the query:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What did you say your husband’s name was, Mrs. Neal?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why Neal, of course, oh, Henderson, Henderson Neal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Talbert looked at her a little sadly, exchanged a few
+more banalities, and went on her assured way.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I did hope she’d ask me to call,” Maggie murmured. “How
+am I ever to get to know anybody in this great town?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>On the floor above her lived a girl and her brother, Annie
+and Thomas Mason. The brother played and the girl sewed
+and kept house. Once Annie got a letter of Neal’s by mistake
+and brought it down to Maggie. She was in her living-room
+trying to shorten a skirt when Annie tapped.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She stepped to the door. “Oh, come in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Mason came in, nothing loth. “I got your husband’s
+letter by mistake. He’s Mr. H. Neal ain’t he?” She held out
+the letter glancing about the room. “You’ve fixed it up real
+pretty here. The last roomers kept the place looking so bad.
+You going to stay long?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie didn’t know. She was transported at the sight of
+the pleasant-voiced friendly girl and the North Pennsylvania
+accent which carried with it something very wholesome and
+grateful.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Mason was frankly curious. “You here alone all
+day? What do you do while your husband’s to work?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>“Oh, clean, and sew and—and nap,” Maggie laughed a little.
+“Don’t you want to come to see me sometime, now, this afternoon?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Mason thought she “might’s well, your room seems
+bigger’n mine ’cause we’ve got a piano and you’ve got a table
+there. Say, s’pose I was to bring my sewing down, and I could
+help you even off your skirt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After that they spent a great deal of time together. They
+walked in the quiet autumn evenings down dingy Fifteenth
+Street, past the hideousness of Washington Avenue, down,
+down the stretch of unswerving street to Tasker or Morris,
+through to Broad Street which is really Fourteenth. They
+sauntered back arm in arm under young but fading trees,
+past the hurry of flying automobiles, under the soft silver of the
+street lights. Then they turned up Catherine Street, stopped
+at the bakery for ice-cream or a bag of cakes and so to the
+house to bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was a pleasant, almost a bucolic friendship. Both girls
+had rather simple tastes. Sometimes they went further up
+Broad Street to the theaters, choosing the ones where they met
+with the least discrimination. Once Maggie took Annie to
+the Academy of Music. They stood in line for their seats
+and Maggie looked at the bill-boards. One of them read:</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>COMING!</div>
+ <div>THE PHILADELPHIA ORCHESTRA</div>
+ <div>MR. HUBERT SANDERSON</div>
+ <div>CONDUCTOR</div>
+ <div><span class='sc'>DECEMBER 27th, 1910</span></div>
+ <div>MR. THOMAS MORSE</div>
+ <div>WILL PRESENT</div>
+ <div>MISS JOANNA MARSHALL</div>
+ <div>MEZZO-SOPRANO OF NEW YORK</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>She turned away, a little sick.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie usually paid for their outings. Annie’s brother
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>made a pretty fair salary, his sister told Maggie, for he played
+at private dances for wealthy white people in West Philadelphia,
+Rosemont, Sharon, Chestnut Hill and various other
+suburbs.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But he don’t give me much ’cause he wants to leave the
+country for good sometime. I keep house for him and he pays
+for the lodgings and for most of our food. I make what little
+extra I can by taking in plain sewing. Your husband’s right
+open-handed, ain’t he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said Maggie heartily. “He’s very generous and very
+kind.” She wanted to change the subject, for Annie was inquisitive—one
+never knew what she’d ask next.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Funny, ain’t it,” pursued Annie, her mouth full of pins—she
+was at her everlasting sewing, turning up the hem of a
+bath-robe—“I ain’t never seen him yet, no, nor Tom neither.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, you will. Come and walk up to South Street with
+me. I want to get some postal cards.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was an aimless existence, but it had its points. Her mother
+was comfortable, she herself had ease, a husband and a companion.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She went out to market one chilly November morning and
+came back later than she expected. She had scarcely got in
+before Annie appeared, an unusual flush on her yellow, freckled
+cheeks. Annie had reddish, crinkled hair, which she wore
+brushed stiffly back from her high forehead into a hard, ungraceful
+knob; “rhiny” hair, Maggie knew Sylvia and the
+boys would call it. She could imagine how they would talk
+about Annie in their pleasant, unmalicious way. Joanna
+would strike her attitude and imitate her accent. Annie broke
+into these reminiscences.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I been down here two or three times a’ready. Kind o’ rawish
+like.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I think it’s going to rain. I’ll light the gas-heater
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>and we can sit here and thaw out. I enjoy a chilly day if it’s
+warm inside.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Kind o’ that way myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, you said you’d been here before. Want to see me
+about anything special?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, aimed I’d come set with you a spell. Me and Tom—now—we
+saw your husband last night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That so? Where? How’d you guess it was he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Near Bainbridge Street, then we watched him come in here.
+Why, Tom knowed him a’ready. I didn’t know his name was
+Henderson. I’d heard of him before myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Outside a steady soaking rain had begun to fall in the gray
+somberness of the November afternoon. The gas-heater cast
+a ruddy oblong of light on the white ceiling. Maggie, who had
+been straightening out a paper pattern, crossed the room and
+threw her slight figure on the couch, huddling close against
+the wall. She shivered a little in the luxurious warmth.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Isn’t it grand to be indoors? Where did you ever hear of
+my husband?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was becoming drowsy and did not notice at first that
+Annie had not answered her. When she did, she looked up
+suddenly to catch the girl’s dog-like brown eyes fixed wistfully
+on hers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s the matter Annie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Nothing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, but there is. Are you sick? Has Tom been unkind
+to you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, it isn’t me. It’s you! Oh, Maggie, how could you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What about me? How could I what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Marry him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Marry whom? my husband,—why shouldn’t I?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Didn’t you know?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“For God’s sake speak up, Annie Mason. What is it you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>know about him? Has he got another wife? Is he an escaped
+convict?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He’s a gambler.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A gambler. Tom knows him well. And I guess I musta
+saw him when I was a little girl. He used to live up around
+Stroudsburg. They run him out of town.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll never believe it.” But in her heart she did. That
+money—why, of course, his long hours, especially at night,
+his reticence—all this combined to make her recognize the
+truth.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You poor thing. Of course you don’t want to believe it.
+That’s what I said to Tom. I said, ‘That poor thing, she’s
+got no notion of it.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was intolerable, such pity! “Where is your brother,
+Annie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Who, Tom! Prob’ly up stairs, he don’t go out to rehearsal
+till four.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell him to come here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Annie went out, whimpering a little, twisting her fingers in
+the folds of her white apron. She came back followed by a
+tall thin young man, dark, with kind, soft brown eyes. Maggie
+noticed that the hair in front of his ears was unshaven to form
+flat side-whiskers. “Siders” the boys used to call them. They
+had teased Sandy about them, for he had affected them in his
+college days.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was standing by the table holding the envelope of the
+paper pattern in her hand. “Mr. Mason, what’s this you
+know about my husband?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Annie shouldn’t have told you, ma’am,” he said abjectly.
+“It was none of her business.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, she has. Sit down, please, and tell me all you know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’d rather stand, thank you, ma’am. Well if I must. Even
+when I was a little boy, Henderson Neal was knowed to be a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>card-sharp. There wasn’t nobody could stand against him.
+Used to wait for the men on a Saturday night, white and
+colored. He’d meet ’em in the bar and treat, and then ask
+’em in on a little game. And they’d play, till they was cleaned
+out. Then he’d give ’em another drink, and clap ’em on the
+back. Perhaps he’d hand ’em back a dollar. ‘Better luck
+next time old man!’ And they’d come back the next Saturday
+night, the poor fools. Some of them blowed their brains
+out, they got so far back in their debts.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was tearing the envelope into bits, but her voice was
+steady. “You’re sure of this?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My uncle was one of them that killed theirselves. They
+was a colored minister come to Stroudsburg and he run him
+out of town. Then he crossed over to Phillipsburg, then down
+to Trenton. They made things too hot for him there, too.
+Then he got in with a white saloon-keeper in the mining districts
+in Pennsylvania. Finally things got too hot for him
+and he left the country for a while, was servant to an actor.
+He come back in about five years with another name.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“An alias,” murmured Annie who read the papers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But pretty soon he started out again under his own name.
+You see he got some political protection in New York, and I
+guess he’s got the same here. Most people know about him
+a’ready. I’m sorry I had to tell you, ma’am.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, yes, I’m sure. Would—would you mind leaving me
+now? You, too, Annie—please.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She didn’t lie down and moan and cry as she had done—was
+it less than six months ago?—when she received Joanna’s
+letter. That was child’s trouble compared to this. She had
+wanted so to be decent, and she was a gambler’s wife. God!
+how funny!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now she must think, she must think. Oh, what was she
+to do? Leave him, she knew that. But afterwards? She had
+no money. He had given her her very clothes. Her old ones
+were at her mother’s. Her mother!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>“Poor Mamma!” she said again as on a former occasion.
+“What a hell her life’s always been!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>No wonder those people, those men in Atlantic City who
+knew him didn’t introduce their women folks to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I suppose they thought ‘You thief! Dressing that girl on
+other men’s money!’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Pretty soon he’d be home for dinner. She heard him
+presently coming up the stairs. There! He had stepped on the
+creaky one. That meant he was—now—just outside the door.
+He stepped in.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Nice and warm in here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She barely allowed him time to take off his overcoat. “Henderson,
+I know how you make your money. You’re a gambler.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He didn’t deny it. “Who told you that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The nephew of that man, that Mr. Mason (she hazarded
+the name) who shot himself in Stroudsburg.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Where’d you see him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What difference does that make? And I’ve been living
+like a queen off stolen money. I want you to know I’m leaving
+you this instant.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He caught her by the arm. “Don’t be a fool, Maggie!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She could see the blood mounting, as his temper rose,
+shadowing his dark face.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s what I’m trying to do—stop being a fool.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Where will you go, how can you live? Off my money?
+You’ve none of your own.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll make some.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll never let you go. I’ll kill you first.” He crushed
+both slender wrists in his brutal hand and she went ashen
+with pain.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I wish you would kill me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He flung her away from him then and she leaned back
+against the wall, breathing hard.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>“I suppose you’ll go back to that man, that fine gentleman
+that didn’t want you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Isn’t it likely he’d want me now? I was a nice girl then,
+not the wife of a gambler.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He broke down suddenly at that, sank in a chair, buried his
+head in his hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do you want me to do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I want you to let me go.” Her voice was hard.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He lifted a wretched face. “You wouldn’t stay even if I
+was to do something else—something decent?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But she couldn’t forgive him for dragging her into this
+abyss, this slough of degradation.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You couldn’t change now, and anyway I wouldn’t live
+with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>To her amazement he got up, took his hat and coat and
+started for the door.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll go. You’re not the one to be turned out. You know I
+pay for these rooms a quarter in advance. This here’s the
+beginning of the second quarter. There’s some money in the
+top bureau drawer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t want the money. Take it with you.” She got it
+and stuffed a handful of bills—yellow ones—in the pocket
+of his overcoat. “I don’t want your rooms, either.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll have to keep them. You’ve no money and you’ve no
+place to go. You ain’t got a friend in Philadelphia, and you
+can’t walk to New York. If you walk around the streets
+long enough, you’ll find there’s worse things can happen than
+being a gambler’s wife.” He straightened up. “If you don’t
+promise me to stay, I’ll tag around after you everywheres
+you go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If I stay—for a while—will you promise me not to come
+back?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I promise.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Pooh, the promise of a gambler!” She hated him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>“I’ll show you. Best not to try me too far though, Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, are you going?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He walked out, closing the door very quietly after him. She
+had not shed a tear, she did not now. Instead she sat, with
+her brow wrinkled, trying to recall something.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, yes,” she sprang up and rushed to the closet, pulling
+with nervous, shaking fingers at the garments hanging there.
+In the pocket of her little poplin suit, the suit in which she was
+married, she found what she was looking for.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was an oblong business card, slightly soiled around the
+edges. She had come across it in Atlantic City and for some
+reason had kept it. Across the front ran a neat superscription</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>MADAME HARKNESS</div>
+ <div>Hair Culturist</div>
+ <div>270 West 137th Street</div>
+ <div>New York City</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her glance dropped to the left-hand corner. Yes, she was
+right, there it was: Branch offices—Washington, D. C., 1307
+U Street, N. W.; Baltimore, 1816 Druid Hill Avenue; Philadelphia,
+2021 South Street.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sat all night brooding wide eyed over the purring gas-stove.
+In the morning she made herself tidy and walked up
+to Twentieth and South.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>
+ <h2 id='chap15' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>SYLVIA was arranging the smallest birthday cake in the
+world. It bore one very small candle and it was for
+the very small baby who, propped up in a high chair, sat
+and watched the birthday proceedings with round solemn eyes.
+A three-year-old youngster, whose nose just rose above the edge
+of the table, watched, too, with eyes no less round and far more
+interested.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Look at the darlings!” said Sylvia. “They know just what
+their mother’s doing. Aren’t my children intelligent, Brian?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What you mistake for intelligence is hunger, much more
+likely,” laughed her husband. “I’ve seen Roger look that way
+before when there wasn’t any birthday cake, but when there
+certainly were eats.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You watch them,” said Sylvia, “and I’ll see if mother and
+father are ready to come. I had a telegram from Joanna this
+afternoon, so I know she can’t make it.” Her voice floated
+up to him as she ran down the back stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The five years of Sylvia’s married life had brought their
+changes to the Marshall household. Mrs. Marshall had insisted
+on Sylvia’s and Brian’s remaining with them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Else we’d be lonely,” she complained, “what with Sandy
+gone for good, and Philip and Joanna everlastingly ‘on the
+road,’ as they express it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Alexander and Helena Arnold, after seeing each other constantly
+and unresponsively for ten years, suddenly fell
+completely in love on that night of the Pierce Day Nursery
+dance. Sandy proved himself an impulsive wooer, for he won
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>Helena’s consent and would have married her before Sylvia’s
+and Brian’s wedding came off.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Gracious, don’t spoil my thunder,” Sylvia had begged him
+aghast.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, I’m the oldest,” Sandy had retorted. “It’s really my
+place to marry first.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Helena, unaware of all this, announced that she wanted to
+be bridesmaid at Sylvia’s wedding, so Alec must wait till after.
+“Think of all the extra clothes I can get. Besides, I couldn’t
+possibly finish my trousseau before.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two had married the June following Sylvia’s wedding
+and had moved into a house of their own. The household
+had hardly become adjusted to Alexander’s absence, when
+Philip started on his long tours which kept him away from
+home a good part of the year.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had been graduated from Harvard, with honors and
+with his coveted Phi Beta Kappa key. He had come home,
+happy though not as radiant, Joanna thought for one, as in
+the old days. Then he had evolved his new scheme. He proposed
+that an organization be started among the colored
+people which should reach all over the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“White and colored people alike may belong to it,” said
+Philip, his eyes kindling to his vision, “but it is to favor primarily
+the interests of colored people. No, I’m wrong there,”
+he corrected himself. “It is to favor primarily the interests
+of the country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was speaking to a group of both white and black enthusiasts.
+“How shall we start it?” someone asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They all liked the plan. He had his project well mapped
+out, for he had thought of little else for the past three years.
+There were to be a national board and a national office, supported
+by local boards and membership. There would be
+need of organized publicity; he might suggest a magazine or a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>weekly newspaper. A huge campaign must be got underway,
+an effort at nation-wide support.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Its objects will be,” he enumerated them on his long brown
+fingers, “the suppression of lynching and peonage, the restoration
+of the ballot, equal schools and a share in civic rights.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A large order,” said Barney Kirchner, Philip’s classmate,
+“but I like it. I’ll get my uncle behind it.” Barney was
+wealthy in his own right, but his uncle, an Austrian Jew, had
+built up an immense fortune which had since supported many
+a notable cause.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The little nucleus worked well. From that meeting grew
+up all that Philip predicted, rather weak and tottering at first,
+but the five years had seen the awakening of a great racial
+consciousness. There were still tremendous possibilities almost
+untouched.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The organization had a magazine, “The Spur,” of which
+Philip was editor. But he was constantly called to exercise
+his vision and judgment in the field. His observation, his constant
+scrutiny of his own people helped him here, but he was
+the born organizer in any event.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna<a id='tn011'></a>, already started on her concert tours, often met him
+on the “road.” Sometimes they were booked at the same
+place for the same night. Each was the other’s supporting
+attraction.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, is this Mr. Marshall?” Joanna would gush when he
+met her train. She put an imaginary lorgnette to her eye.
+“Any relation to the eminent Miss Joanna Marshall, the world-famous
+mezzo?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Never heard of her. Haven’t the least idea who she is.
+Come along, Silly. Now, Joanna, do be on time and don’t stop
+to primp. Mind, I won’t wait for you a minute.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not the littlest, teeniest one?” It was hard to say which
+was prouder of the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was in fine feather in those days. She had youth
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>and a certain grave beauty which did not strike the observer
+at first as did Sylvia’s or even poor Maggie’s. But it grew on
+one and remained. Young men, though they liked to be seen
+with a star, were a little afraid of her queenliness, her faint
+condescension. She took herself so seriously! Her own folks
+and Peter often teased her about this, but they adored it in
+her. And she, in turn, adored her little fame, the footlights,
+the adulation. Even the smallest church in the quietest backwoods,
+with a group of patient dark faces peering at her out
+of the often smoky background, had its appeal. At such times,
+strange to say, she was at her best, gave of her finest. She
+would come on the stage, trailing clouds of glory, and lean
+toward them—a rosy brown vision. In some misty colorful
+robe of Sylvia’s designing, her thick crinkling hair piled high
+on her head as the Spanish woman had taught her, she
+seemed to say:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I am no better than you. You are no worse than I. Whatever
+I am, you, in your children, may be. Whatever you are,
+I in my father have been.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was absolutely sincere in her estimation of her art, or
+of any art. It was only in its relation to the other things
+of life that she lost her vision and sense of proportion.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She liked most to go to Philadelphia, where she was in great
+favor. There she had had three great triumphs, once in Association
+Hall, twice at the Academy of Music. Both she and
+Peter had thrilled when she came from the Academy the
+second time. She sent her flowers and her stage-gown home
+in the car of a friend, while she and Peter were whirled in a
+taxi out to Fairmount Park.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They had driven to the Green Street entrance, and then
+dismissing the cab had walked around the drive, up the steps,
+in front of the mansion and on to Lemon Hill. It was one of
+those last, warm, almost hot nights of Indian Summer. The
+slopes of the park lay deserted before them, deep in velvety
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>shadow, with here and there a gold patch bright as day under
+the watching arc-light.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They sat down on the dry, short grass. “Like that other
+evening in Morningside, long, long ago. How long, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, ages! How’d I sing, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Divinely. You looked like an angel, Janna. No, not an
+angel, more like a siren in that yellow dress. Where’d you
+get it, dearest?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yellow nothing! That was orange—deep, deep orange.
+Sylvia planned it out for me. Isn’t she a genius? Through
+me she certainly is teaching these colored people how to dress.
+We will not wear these conventional colors—grays, taupe,
+beige—poor boy, you don’t know what they are, do you?
+They’re all right for these palefaces. But colored people need
+color, life, vividness.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“George! I guess you’re right. How’d you come to think
+of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I didn’t. It was Sylvia. I started out in a white dress.
+You should have seen me looking like an icebergish angel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You are one, you know Janna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Which? Iceberg or angel?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Both. One makes me adore you, the other says ‘hands
+off’.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not a bad thing, do you think, considering all the men
+I meet?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I hate them. Sure you don’t like any of ’em better than
+me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, dear, I like you best.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“‘No, dear, I like you best’,” he mimicked. “For God’s
+sake, Jan, can’t you say, ‘Peter, I love you always’? Say it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She hesitated, sighed a little. “Peter I love you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why’d you leave off ‘always’?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear little boy, how can I say it? I do when I think of
+it. But, Peter, I have so much to think about—my tour, my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>booking, you know, my lessons in French and Italian, my
+dancing. I still keep that up; I’d really rather do that than
+sing. Dancing makes me——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, damn the dancing!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why, Peter!” She looked at his flushed face in amazement.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hang it all, talking to me about dancing, when I’m talking
+to you about love—<em>love</em>, Joanna—and there’s nothing to keep
+us from getting married. Some fellows and girls ball their
+lives up so they can’t ever get them straightened out. But
+here we are ‘all set’ as the fellows say. And you talk to me
+about dancing! Suppose I were to talk to you about <i><span lang="la">Materia
+Medica</span></i>!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think it would be a good thing if you would.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was honestly aggrieved at that.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She leaned over and kissed him. “See how brazen I am.
+That’s the second time I’ve given you a kiss. Oh, Peter, you
+big baby!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Janna, I love you so! Great Scott! aren’t girls
+funny! You can’t guess how hard it is for me to be letting
+all these stupid years go by. Sometimes I’ve half a mind to
+chuck it all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’d never get me then.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t suppose I would. Well, I have you now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Peter, we must be going home. Cousin Parthenia
+will rave.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Pshaw, she knows you’re with me. Love me, darling?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know I do, you dear, dear boy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Come, sit up on the bench. There, that’s it.” He knelt
+before her. “Know what I’m going to give you to-night?”
+He felt in his pocket. “Like it, Janna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He showed her a ring, a tiny gold chased ring, whose
+facets gleamed like diamonds.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter, it’s too beautiful. Oh, I love you for it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He slipped it on her finger, got up and sat beside her,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>kissing her little cold hands. She leaned against his shoulder,—he
+put his arm about her. A poignant sweetness seemed to
+flood in on them out of the solemn, mellow night.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter was the first to stir. “I must get you home, darling.
+Oh, Joanna, aren’t you too happy? I wonder if we wouldn’t
+be better off if we were resting like this, our arms close about
+each other, in our grave.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The inevitable separation came the next day. Joanna was
+cold, almost indifferent. It was the way she had taught herself
+to endure pain. She hated always to leave Peter, particularly
+if she were returning to New York. The excitement of
+visiting other places healed her loneliness. Sometimes she
+wished she weren’t going to see Peter for these brief visits
+which lacerated her so.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Unfortunately her lover did not understand this. “How can
+she melt like she did last night and then leave me so cool
+and composed this morning?” he wondered, staring dejectedly
+after the departing express. He had not ridden to West Philadelphia
+with her because he had to be at a hospital at Sixteenth
+Street at one o’clock and it was now noon.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She used to cry when we separated.” He stood uncertainly
+a moment on the corner of Fifteenth and Market.
+“Guess I’ll go over to that little Automat on Juniper Street
+and snatch a mouthful. I won’t feel like eating after I see
+Carpenter start in on that slashing. Golly, what a steady
+hand he has.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He walked through the City Hall Arcade to Juniper Street,
+crossed in front of Wanamaker’s and forced a passage through
+the teeming little by-way.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Automat was crowded. “Have to eat standing,” he
+thought, drawing a glass of water and seizing a knife and
+fork. “No, there’s an empty table.” He collected his food
+and began to eat.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>Someone put a plate on the table beside him, rested a hand
+there a moment. Peter glanced at it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Colored. What a nice hand! Ought to have a peach of
+a face to match that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He looked up. “Maggie Ellersley! I had heard you lived
+here. I thought I saw you once, why—four years ago—one New
+Year’s night on Twentieth Street. You’ve been here ever
+since?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, Peter. Oh, it’s so nice to see you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Isn’t it, though! I mean isn’t it great to see somebody from
+home? I’ve just seen Joanna off.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her face stiffened at that. But he was busy looking at his
+watch.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ten minutes more! Look here, Maggie, what’d you drop
+us all that way for? How’s your husband?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She answered his second question. “I haven’t any.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He glanced at her apologetically, ashamed of his levity.
+“Is he dead?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” said Maggie woodenly. “I’ve left him!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh!” he was embarrassed. “I’m sorry, Maggie. Got to
+run now. When may I see you again?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His engaging manner brought back the old days. “Peter,
+you aren’t ashamed of me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My dear girl!” He was younger than she and for that
+reason he adopted a paternal air, patting her on the shoulder.
+“How can you ask that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Would you come to see me to-night, Peter? Come to
+dinner?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Try me. What’s the address?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She gave it to him. “That’s Fifteenth and Fitzwater.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I know. I’ll see you at six sharp. Until then, Maggie.”
+He bared his curly head and flashed out the side door.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He tapped at her door at six.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>“I didn’t hear you ring,” said Maggie. “Come in. This
+<em>is</em> nice, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should say so. Jolly little place you’ve got here.” He
+settled back on the couch, stretched out his long legs. “All
+these years I’ve been tramping about Philadelphia, a poor
+homeless beggar, when I might have been coming to see you.
+How long have you been alone, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Four and a half years.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Four and a half years! Why that’s—look here, how long
+have you been married?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Five years last June. I left him almost right away, or
+rather he left me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Deserted you, you mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, no, not that. He wanted to stay. I—I couldn’t let
+him.” She told him all about it. “Peter, think of it, I’d married
+a gambler, a common gambler. And I’d wanted so to be
+decent!” She wept painfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He put his arm about her slender shoulders. “There, there
+now, Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s the first time I’ve shed a tear about it. Seeing you,
+someone out of the old happy days, upset me. Sit here, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They were wonderful days, weren’t they? Remember what
+a bunch we were? And now we’re scattered everywhere.
+Joanna and Philip romping all over the country; Sylvia and
+Brian married; Sandy too, did you know it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I read of it in the <i>Amsterdam News</i>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You and I here. Harry Portor—do you remember him?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ye—es, big square fellow, wore glasses. He used to go
+skating with us, didn’t he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, that’s the fellow. He studied medicine, too, at Harvard.
+Went to Washington as interne in the Freedmen’s Hospital.
+I haven’t seen him for ages. What’d you leave us for so
+suddenly, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She couldn’t tell <em>him</em>, of all people, about Joanna.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>“Oh, I don’t know, girls are crazy, I think. Well, I’m not
+complaining. I’m better off than I’ve ever been. That
+Madame Harkness—you know whom I mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The hair-woman—what about her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She’s made me supervisor of three of her branch stores,
+here in Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington, D. C. I
+have my little home here, my salary’s good. I make more than
+enough to live on. My mother doesn’t have to do anything if
+she doesn’t want to. And above all, I’m practically free.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How do you mean free?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m suing for a divorce. Lawyer Talbert has my case.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Mrs. Marshall’s cousin. Have you ever seen your—Mr.
+Neal since he left?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“About once a year. I hadn’t seen him for a long time
+though, until he came here six weeks ago, just before I started
+divorce proceedings.” Her face changed at the thought of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He didn’t threaten you, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes and no. In his way he cares about me, though not as
+much as for his gambling. He’s—he’s got it in his head that
+I care about somebody else, and every now and then he writes
+me a threatening letter. That’s why he came to see me this
+last time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You oughtn’t to let him in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I have to. This Mrs. Davis, from whom I rent these
+rooms, doesn’t know there’s any trouble, she thinks he’s a
+steward on a boat, and I never have told her differently. She
+thinks I’m with him when I go away on these trips. Last
+time he was here, he stayed half the night right on that
+couch. He had a wretched cold, and it was raining!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should think you’d have been afraid.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s why I let him stay. He’d been harboring such
+jealous thoughts toward me. He—he has an idea that I like
+another man. And he has a terrific temper. You can’t imagine
+how it smolders and sulks. He wasn’t so bad about my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>sending him away, but since he’s had this suspicion I’ve really
+been afraid. I expect he’ll be really violent some day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, Great Scott, won’t my coming to see you be
+dangerous? I was just thinking what good times we’d have.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We will. No, you’re all right. He wouldn’t be interested
+in you after he once knew who you were. And there’s Thomas
+Mason upstairs; he’s not bothered about him either, though
+Tom and his sister are in here all the time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter pushed his chair back. “That was a mighty good
+dinner, Maggie. Mind if I smoke?” He lit a cigarette. “Well,
+you’ve had hard luck, haven’t you? But never mind, it’s
+bound to break even, sooner or later. That’s what I keep saying
+to myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You in trouble too, Peter? I’ve been running on so about
+my affairs. Tell me about yours. Studying the way you
+have to must be an awful strain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He noticed gratefully how quick and ready was her sympathy.
+That was just it. Studying itself wasn’t so bad, working
+wasn’t bad. But the combination, the struggle to make
+ends meet, his few social obligations, and color!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why, it’s awful. I’m on the rack all the time.<a id='tn001'></a>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If you could stop for a year or so and take a little rest,
+do something entirely different.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He glanced at her, amused but touched. “Joanna ought to
+hear you say that. She’d faint away. She can’t understand
+anybody’s wanting to let up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie said with a faint bitterness that you must always
+be top notch for Joanna.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should say so. Here, I’ll help you with the dishes. Well,—if
+you really don’t want me.” She washed and wiped so
+fast that the room seemed cleared by magic. It had turned
+cooler and Maggie lit her little gas-stove.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter smoked and relapsed into a moody silence, which he
+broke now and then with an account of his struggles. His
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Uncle Peter had died during his third year and the house
+had been inherited by his daughter, Mrs. Boyd. Of course
+he couldn’t expect anything of her. Her father was only
+his great-uncle, and she had her own children to look after.
+He had moved to Mrs. Larrabee’s in West Philadelphia, with
+some of his fraternity brothers. Somehow his money sped.
+His books were expensive, the cost of his instruments pure
+robbery.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I do what playing I can, but I confess I’m up against it,”
+he ended ruefully.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Lots of the boys do waiting, don’t they?” asked Maggie.
+“Why don’t you do that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He just couldn’t, he told her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I never could endure standing around ‘grand white folks.’”
+Both of them smiled at the childhood’s phrase. “‘Yes, sir,
+thank you—Oh, no, sir.’ Then some lazy white banker, or
+some fat white woman that never did a day’s work in her
+life, puts a hand in a pocket and offers you a dime. God, how
+I hate it! I did it once at Asbury Park, Phil did, too. We
+both said, ‘Never again!’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Where do you play?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“At different dance-halls. They don’t pay as well here as
+in New York, though. What’s that, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A thin stream of music, played on a violin, floated down to
+them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s good fiddling. Is it in this house?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes. It’s Tom Mason, the man I told you about. The
+very thing for you! He makes barrels of money. Come on,
+Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She led him, bewildered, up to the third floor, tapped on a
+door and was admitted to a room much like the one she had
+just left. A young woman with red crinkled hair and a yellow
+freckled face sat sewing on a white apron. The young man
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>who let them in had been putting some resin on his bow.
+Against the wall stood a battered, time-worn piano.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hello, Annie,” said Maggie. “Hello, Tom. This is my
+friend Mr. Bye. I’ve brought him up to hear you play.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But I can’t, Miss Maggie. I’ve no accompanist.” He
+turned soft brown eyes upon her. “Unless your friend here
+plays the piano.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, I do admit to tickling the ivories occasionally,”
+laughed Peter. “Let’s see your score.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sat down to the piano, ran his brown limber fingers over
+the keys, and began to play the accompaniment to a typical
+syncopated melody, accenting the time with staccato nods
+of his well-shaped head.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, great, that’s great!” cried Tom after a few minutes.
+“Wait till I get my violin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Together they made some wonderful sounds. “Play that
+passage again, will you?” Tom pointed it out with his bow.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s the best accompanist you’ve ever had, isn’t it, Tom?”
+Annie asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should say so. Don’t suppose you’d ever consent to
+doin’ this sort of thing in public, Mr. Bye?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That depends on the price and the hours,” said Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Tom told him about himself. He played, had all the work
+he could do, for the wealthy folks of the town and suburbs.
+The pay was first-rate. Only he had never been able to keep
+a good accompanist.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They’re so do-less,” he complained. “What’s your regular
+line?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter explained that he was a student.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mason liked that. “Then you’d be workin’ because you’d
+really need the fun’s. Nothin’ like having a purpose. Do you
+think you could go out to Sharon Hill with me to-morrow
+night and play that? There’d be a few other odds and ends.
+Though them white folks don’t let me play nothin’ much but
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>that, once I get started. You might drop in for an hour to-morrow
+and take a peep at the others. You can do them easy,
+if you can read that.” He pointed to the piece they’d already
+played.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Honey-Babe,” declaimed Peter. “Well, Mr. Mason, if we
+can come to terms, I’m your man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mason took him aside then, and whispered a few words.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All right,” Peter told him, shaking hands. “That listens
+pretty. See you to-morrow, say at four. Good-night folks.
+You coming too, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Downstairs he stopped at the landing. “Maggie, you jewel!
+How well you’ve managed! No, I won’t come in. You see
+what was worrying me most was my operating set. The price
+of those little steel knives and forceps is going to touch the
+sky pretty soon. Wow! This confounded war is taking
+everything across seas. Fellow told me to get my order in
+before Christmas even if I didn’t pay for them till next year.
+But where was I going to raise all that money? Now the way
+looks clearer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m so glad, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s me that’s glad, Maggie. Best thing in the world for me
+that I met you to-day. Such a piece of fortune! Cheer up,
+child! Perhaps we’ll bring each other luck!”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>
+ <h2 id='chap16' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE house on South Fifteenth Street saw Peter often
+after that. Mason could have given him work every
+night if he had wanted it. As it was he gave him
+enough to cause him to come for rehearsals three and four
+times a week. Usually Peter terminated his practice with a
+visit to Maggie, who got home regularly at five-thirty when
+she was in town.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She appreciated Peter’s company, for she had been very
+lonely in this big city with its impregnable social fortresses.
+“It’s a wonder you come to see me so often, Peter,” she told
+him wistfully. “Being a Bye gives you the entrance everywhere
+among the oldest of these ‘old Philadelphians.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said Peter cheerfully, “but home-folks are best. And
+then you make it so pleasant for me, Maggie. Why, I’ve never
+eaten in my life anything so wonderful as that dinner Sunday.
+You certainly have the knack of making a fellow feel comfortable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was proud to have him there, he was so handsome and
+charming, but much more than that, so clearly a personage.
+She enjoyed being seen with him. He took her out occasionally
+to the park, to the theaters on Broad Street, once to a
+bazaar given by some fine ladies at the Y. M. C. A. on Christian
+Street. She recognized some of the women as among those
+whom she had seen at Atlantic City. The startled stare of
+Alice Talbert, who happened to be there that evening, afforded
+her endless satisfaction. Maggie realized she spoke to her
+with a sort of wondering respect.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>“Wonder what she thought,” she said to herself. “Well, she
+can think anything she pleases.” She had not forgotten Miss
+Talbert’s cool reception when she called at Lawyer Talbert’s
+office on the corner of Fifteenth and Lombard. Alice was her
+father’s secretary. She was quite remote on seeing Maggie,
+until she learned that the latter’s business was with the lawyer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter was making money these days, real money he told
+Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m better off financially than I’ve ever been in my life.
+Why, I could make a real living at this sort of thing. Mason’s
+got a wonderful clientele!” As usual he was lounging in
+Maggie’s little living-room, smoking, watching her move about
+in her sober house-dress, arranging her accounts and orders.
+She had bought a little typewriter and had learned to use it.
+Peter was surprised to find her so methodical. He realized
+that she would have been a great help to Philip.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He felt a little guilty about coming to Maggie’s so often.
+“But it’s so confoundedly uncomfortable in my room. Of
+course I could do better now, but it’s a lot of trouble to move.
+It’s way up at the top of the house, clean enough, but with
+just a few sticks of furniture in it, a green iron-bed—ugh!—some
+books and the Bye family Bible. Don’t know why I
+lugged that along with me. I never look in it. Well, so long,
+Maggie, see you to-morrow or next day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All right, Peter. You’re sure you won’t have me fix a cup
+of cocoa for you before you go? You poor, neglected boy!
+Two buttons off that overcoat. Bring it in the next time you
+come and I’ll put them on for you. I’ll find some that will
+match up here on South Street.” He said he could attend to
+it himself, but she told him no, that wasn’t a man’s job.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You certainly are some girl!” He took her hand in his
+for a moment. “I’ll bring it with bells. Here, turn me out.
+I’ve got to get up at six to-morrow morning. Haven’t put my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>nose inside of Carter’s classes this week. Playing out so late
+with Mason puts me out of commission, you bet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Carter, Carter, that’s the Professor of Surgery, isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No! no! That’s Davenant. I never miss one of his
+classes. Eat it up in gobs. The old boy’s fond of me. Says
+I’m his pet carver. Wanted to take me to see an operation
+in a private hospital last week—white of course—but Carter
+interfered. ‘Not the place for Bye, Dr. Davenant,’ he said.
+I hate him with his confounded hypocritical patronage. I’d
+like to chuck him in a minute.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her sympathy was instant.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, why don’t you, Peter? After all, your music really
+is in good shape. All this steady practice these long years
+must count for something. Tom says you’re a wonder. He’d
+like to go into partnership with you, I’m sure. He says there’s
+heaps of money in it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oodles! Absolutely! But nothing doing, Maggie. Too
+mediocre for Miss Joanna Marshall. But she deserves the
+best, she’s the best herself,” he added in quick loyalty. “Well,
+that was a false start I made before, wasn’t it? I’m really
+going this time. Mr. Peter Bye, exit this way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He walked up to Lombard Street, thinking. “That girl can
+certainly see along with you. Nice to meet some one with a
+disposition like that. Of course I’d rather be a surgeon. But
+I’m tired of this everlasting digging. I’ve been nothing but a
+slave for nearly seven years. And poor as the deuce in the
+bargain. Good Lord, when I think of all the money I might
+have made out of you!” He looked at his fine slender hands
+with their firm square-tipped fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ideal surgeon hands,” Doctor Davenant had told his
+assistant.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>An idea struck Peter. “I wonder what Joanna would say to
+that!” He rushed in the house, seized a piece of paper and a
+pen and told her about it.</p>
+
+<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span></div>
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course, Jan, I don’t expect you to marry me if I can’t take
+care of you. You wouldn’t anyway, you’re not like Sylvia. That’s
+not a slam, dearest, that’s just a plain statement of facts. But I’m
+making a lot of money right now—guess how?—with my music,
+playing for ‘grand white folks’ at all the swell society functions. Of
+course it takes me out of my classes sometimes, but I don’t care, I’m
+fed up with all that. I’ve got such a Negro-loving bunch of professors,
+except my surgical men.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What say, Joanna, if I quit this, and we get married and I go
+about the country with you as your accompanist? That ought to
+suit you, for I don’t suppose you ever dream of settling down.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Did I tell you I met Maggie Ellersley? I see her very often.
+The fellow I play with lives in the same house she does. In fact,
+Maggie introduced me to him. She’s been no end kind to me. You’ll
+be interested to know she’s getting a divorce from that beast she
+married. See what Philip has to say when you tell him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mind you write me right away what you think about this.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>The answer came post-haste.</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What I think about this,” [wrote Joanna, infuriated] “is that I
+don’t want and won’t have a husband who is just an ordinary strumming
+accompanist, playing one, two, three, one, two, three. Sometimes,
+Peter, I think you must be crazy.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>A number of irritable and irritating notes followed on both
+sides until a couple of weeks before Christmas, when both sank
+into a mutinous silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>What Peter did not understand and what Joanna never
+knew he needed explained to him was that she wanted Peter to
+be somebody for his own sake. She was really paying him a
+sincere compliment when she told him that she did not want
+an accompanist for a husband. Like many a woman of strong
+and purposeful character, she hated a weak man. It followed
+then that the man who won Joanna must be even stronger,
+more determined than she.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She did not know much about marriage. She had not only
+the usual virginal ignorance of many American girls, she had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>also a remarkable lack of curiosity on the matter. But she
+knew vaguely that the man was supposed to be the head.
+How could she, Joanna Marshall, ever surrender to a man who
+was less than she in any respect? Her dominating nature
+craved one still more dominant. But neither Peter nor she
+knew this, she least of all. Youth, egotistic though it be, is
+notably free from this kind of introspection.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Since American customs of courtship give the girl largely the
+upper hand, Joanna was instinctively, if unanalytically, using
+Peter’s love for her, and her own desirability, as a whip to
+goad him on. It was hard for her, too, much harder than Peter
+knew, or than she realized. For she was beginning at last to
+feel the tug of passion at her heart strings. It would never
+have occurred to her to marry Peter before he was in their
+common estimation “on his feet,” she would never have asked
+it of him, she did not expect him to ask it of her. But unconsciously
+she was yearning for the day when the two might join
+hands and enter the portals which lead to the house of life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Very often she found herself vaguely glad that she had her
+work. Without it, what would she have done? What <em>did</em>
+girls do while they waited for their young men? Heavens,
+how awful to be sitting around listlessly from day to day,
+waiting, waiting! Anything was better than that, even pounding
+a typewriter in a box of an office. It was this lack of interest
+and purpose on the part of girls which brought about so
+many hasty marriages which terminated in—no, not poverty—mediocrity.
+Joanna hated the word; with her visual mind she
+saw it embodied in broken chairs, cold gravy, dingy linen,
+sticky children. She would never mind poverty half so much;
+she would contrive somehow to climb out of that. But ordinary
+tame mediocrity!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Besides, colored people had had enough of that. Not for
+Joanna!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It must not be thought that at this time she had any intention
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>of relinquishing her work after marriage. But it was for
+that reason that she wanted Peter to come out of the herd.
+She saw the two of them together, gracious, shining, perfect!
+She heard whispers:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s Peter Bye, the distinguished surgeon! His wife
+is unusual, too, she was Joanna Marshall. You must have
+heard of her. Why, she sings all over the country!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And here was Peter offering her the vision of herself, standing
+glorious, resplendent in her stage clothes, while he trailed
+across to the piano, her music portfolio under his arm:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s Peter Bye!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter Bye? Who’s he?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The husband of Joanna Marshall, the artist.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She would never endure it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And I don’t thank Maggie Ellersley the least bit for introducing
+him to this music man, whoever he is,” she told herself
+after she had read the letter. “Tell Philip she’s getting a
+divorce indeed! How much would any decent man be interested
+in her after that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Poor inexperienced Joanna!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter’s vagaries were not her only worries. She was undergoing
+just now what she would have termed a really serious
+disappointment. Her dancing, on which she had spent so many
+years, so much of her father’s and her own money, on which
+she had built so many high hopes, was destined, it seemed,
+to avail her nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had been so sure. Her art was so perfect, so complete
+that even Bertully, cynic though he was, believed that in her
+case the American stage must let down the bars.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“They have but to see you, <span lang="fr">Mademoiselle</span>, to <i><span lang="fr">réaliser</span></i> zat
+you are somebody, zat you have ze great gift. And when they
+see you to danse, <span lang="fr">v’la</span>!” He snapped his thin fingers. Joanna,
+he told his assistant, <span lang="fr">Madame Céleste</span>, was the best pupil he’d
+ever had.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>“You look at her and she is ze child, so grave, so <em>sage</em>. In
+another moment she is like a wild creature, a <span lang="fr">Bacchante</span>.
+Onless zey are all fools, these <i><span lang="fr">Américains</span></i>, they take her up, <i><span lang="fr">hein</span></i>
+<span lang="fr">Céleste</span>?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span lang="fr">Madame Céleste</span> nodded a dark, assenting head.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Bertully himself accompanied her. There were three or
+four managers for whom he had done favors.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They went first to a Mr. Abrams, who received Joanna
+kindly. “I’m sure of your ability, my dear girl, and you ought
+to go. You’re young. I can see you could be made into a
+beauty. With Bertully recommending you as he does, you
+must be a wizard. But the white American public ain’t ready
+for you yet, they won’t have you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He looked at her reflectively a few seconds.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I know the day is coming, but not for some time yet.
+That don’t console you much, does it? I’ve got an idea of
+my own, if I think I can put it over, I’ll send for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Courage,” said Bertully, helping her into the taxi, “there
+are some others.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The next manager, David Kohler, was explicit and to the
+point. “Couldn’t make any money out of you. America doesn’t
+want to see a colored dancer in the rôle of a <i><span lang="fr">première danseuse</span></i>.
+How’s that accent, Bertully? She wants you to be absurd,
+grotesque. Of course,” tentatively, “you couldn’t consider being
+corked up—you’re brown but you’re too light as you are—and
+doing a break-down?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” said Joanna shortly, “I couldn’t. Shall we go, Monsieur?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>By the time they reached the third manager, Joanna for all
+her natural assurance had become a little timid. Bertully’s
+name had gained them almost instant admission to the manager,
+but it was hard in the short wait to listen to the scarcely
+veiled comments of the office girls and the other applicants.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Say, what do you suppose she is?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>“Must be a South American.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She ain’t, she’s a nigger or I don’t know one.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Say, she’s got her nerve comin’ here. Think Snyder’ll give
+her anything?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Will he? Not a chance!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her cheeks were so flushed when she went in that she really
+was beautiful. But Snyder gave her one look, checked himself
+in the act of raising his hat, swung around to the Frenchman.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“This your great find, Bertully?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“<i><span lang="fr">Mais oui</span></i>,” the old man began excitedly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The other calmly lit a big black cigar.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You needn’t wait, Miss. Like to oblige you, Bertully,
+but I couldn’t do a thing for you.” He walked across the
+office, held the door open for them, bent over Bertully’s ear.
+“You’ll ruin your trade teachin’ niggers, Bertully. Better take
+my tip.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They rode down in the elevator in silence. Joanna, scarlet
+to the ears, saw the conjectures written in the eyes of the
+other passengers as they observed her and the Frenchman’s
+elaborate courtesies. She would take up no more of his time,
+she told him, thanking him for his kindness; she would go
+home now. He understood and beckoned her a taxi, into which
+he helped her with another elaborate display of courtesy, much
+to the interest of several spectators.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So silly of me to mind this,” Joanna scolded herself.
+But she did mind it. How could it be possible that she,
+Joanna Marshall, was meeting with rebuffs? Not that she
+was conceited. The point was that she had grown up in her
+own and Joel’s belief,—namely, that honest effort led invariably
+to success. This was probably the first time in her life
+that she had been thwarted. She was like a spoiled child,
+bewildered and indignant at being suddenly brought to book.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The week before Christmas a note came from Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course I’ve been planning as usual to come home, Jan.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>But we haven’t been hitting it off so well lately. Thought
+I’d better write and see if you really wanted me to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She wrote him. “Of course I want you.” Heavens, what
+would Christmas be without Peter!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He told her on what train he was arriving and asked her
+to meet it. She might have done so, but her day was as usual
+very full and she had a rehearsal at six—of indefinite length.
+She would have to cut out something. Too bad it had to be
+meeting Peter. But he surely would come up to the house
+at once.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her accompanist appeared promptly and they put in a hard
+two hours. Joanna, her ear unconsciously straining for the
+telephone or the doorbell, was not up to her usual mark.
+Eight o’clock and Peter not here and his train in at four!
+Well, he wasn’t coming then. She plunged into hard work.
+Her father came by the door and watched her, thinking what
+a picture she made in her pretty dress. She had put on one
+of her old stage frocks, for she usually did better work if she
+created for herself, as nearly as possible, the atmosphere of
+the stage. At nine-thirty the accompanist left.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We went rather slowly at first, but you came out splendidly
+at the end, Miss Marshall. You were a little bit tired, perhaps.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That must have been it. Thank you and good-night, Miss
+Eggleston.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still no Peter! “Mean thing, I’ll fix him for that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The bell buzzed softly, she could barely hear it. Yes, that
+was he. She heard her father’s voice, “In the back parlor,
+Bye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He came in, came toward her. “Well, Joanna, here’s the
+wanderer returned.” He bent to kiss her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She turned him a cold cheek, which to her surprise he kissed
+without expostulation.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>He crossed the room, sat down and looked at her. “H’m,
+how stagy we are in that get-up!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was different somehow, she thought, vaguely hurt by
+his remark. One of her reasons for putting on the dress had
+been so that she might please him. She asked him a question
+to hide her chagrin.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Where’ve you been, Peter? I thought your train got in
+at four?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It did, but since you weren’t there to meet me, I supposed
+you didn’t care whether I came late or early, or not at all.
+I met Vera Manning in the station and took her to a movie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her spirits went up at that. This was just pique, sheer
+pique.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How lovely for Vera! And now I’ve got to send you home
+almost right away. I’ve had a hard day and I’m dreadfully
+tired. Tell you what, dear boy, come to luncheon to-morrow.
+We’ll have it together, just we two.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thought after he had gone that he had looked at her
+critically, impersonally.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“As though he were contrasting me with some one,” she
+murmured.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The next day confirmed her impression. Joanna asked him
+to praise the luncheon.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I fixed it every bit myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should think so, so feminine and knickknackish.” His
+tone said: “I’m used to having my taste consulted.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna did not like the remark, but there was nothing really
+to be said about it. She sprang up lightly, began to clear
+away.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Come on, lazy Peter Bye, don’t leave everything for me
+to do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He lounged in his chair. “Oh, come, Joanna, I’m used to
+being waited on, not doing the waiting.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>She stared at him then. “Well, good heavens! What on
+earth has been happening to you in Philadelphia?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He spoke from a contented reminiscence. “When I have
+dinner at Maggie Neal’s, she’s not everlastingly asking me
+to do this and do that. ‘Sit still, Peter,’ she says, ‘this isn’t
+a man’s work.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Maggie Neal has her own methods with her men friends.
+Personally I prefer to have mine wait on me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He rose to his feet. “Oh, yes, Queen Joanna must be
+served.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They finished and went to the parlor. Joanna sang one or
+two of her songs to his accompaniment. The incident rankled,
+though she wouldn’t let herself speak about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But he certainly is changed,” she said to herself in an
+angry bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had to sing in Orange that night and did not intend
+to return until the next morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do we do to-morrow?” Peter asked.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Remember you said you wanted to hear <i>Aïda</i>? I ’phoned
+them to reserve tickets for us for to-morrow’s matinée. But
+they have to be called for. Better go down there first thing
+in the morning, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He twisted around on the piano stool. “You’ll be down
+town to-morrow morning coming from Orange. Why don’t
+you stop for them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She couldn’t believe her ears. “Peter Bye, you <em>are</em> spoilt,”
+she flamed. “You’re—why you’re absolutely disgusting. We’ll
+never hear <i>Aïda</i> if you depend on my getting the tickets.
+As long as he was well and not busy, there’s no man in the
+world I’d do it for.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Married women do it for their husbands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sylvia doesn’t do it for Brian. He wouldn’t dream of
+asking her. Besides, that’s different. And, anyway, we’re
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>not married yet. Nor likely to be, if we don’t get along any
+better than this. Whatever’s come over you, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He shrugged his shoulders. “I think you make a lot of
+fuss over nothing, Joanna. But all right, I’ll get you the
+tickets. See you at one-thirty?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sat a long time in her room after he had gone, her
+hands and eyes busy with her day’s mail, which Sylvia always
+placed on her writing table. But her mind could not take
+in the written words, it was too full of something else.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Peter, Peter of all men to act like this! Both she and
+Sylvia had always known that Maggie was unexacting. The
+marvel was, however, that Peter should take so quickly to
+this kind of treatment. Well, she’d just have to hold him
+that much closer to the mark. He’d see that there were
+some girls who knew what was due them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was time for her to dress. As she looked into the mirror
+she voiced her real regret. “Two days of the vacation gone,
+and we’ve done nothing but quarrel. To-day he didn’t even
+ask me for a kiss. Peter, you wretch. Just wait till you come
+to your senses!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They were a little stiff next day on the way to the matinée,
+talking politely and impersonally about the weather in Philadelphia
+and New York, Joanna’s concert, and Sylvia’s children.
+Walking up Broadway, however, they thawed a little.
+Joanna as usual was looking trim. She wore that winter an
+extremely trig tobacco-brown suit, with a fur turban and a
+narrow neckpiece of raccoon, the light part setting off the
+bronze distinction of her face. But Peter was superlative.
+His financial success with Tom Mason had made it possible
+for him to indulge in a new outfit which emphasized the distinction
+of his carriage, set off his handsome face. Several
+people looked at him on the crowded street. Joanna herself
+stole several glances sidewise.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He caught her at it. “Joanna Marshall, if you look at me
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>again like that, just once more, mind you, I’ll snatch you
+up in my arms this minute and kiss you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You wouldn’t dare.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I dare you to try it. I’d do it no matter how much you
+kicked and struggled. Wouldn’t the people stare?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna giggled. “Can’t you see the headlines in the papers
+to-morrow? ‘Burly Negro Attacks Strapping Negress on
+Broadway!’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, and the small type underneath, ‘An interested crowd
+gathered about a pair of dusky combatants yesterday. A
+Negro and Negress——’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna interrupted: “Both of them spelt with a small ‘n,’
+remember! Here we are at the Opera.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He caught her hand. “Just because you jockeyed me out
+of that kiss that time, clever Joanna, doesn’t mean that I’m
+going to do without it forever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In her heart she loved him. “Oh, Peter, be like this always,”
+she prayed.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>
+ <h2 id='chap17' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THEY enjoyed the opera and sang snatches of it coming
+home as they walked to the subway. Once in the
+express train, however, Joanna lapsed into sadness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t think my voice is as big as that prima donna’s,
+but those dancing girls! I should have been right up there
+with them! Oh, Peter, I believe I’m the least bit discouraged.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She told him of her trips with Bertully. “I didn’t mind
+those girls calling me ‘nigger.’ That was sheer ill-breeding.
+Remember what we used to say when we were children when
+they called us names?” She recited it: “‘Sticks and stones
+may break my bones, but names will never hurt me.’ What
+I minded was that they couldn’t dream of my being accepted.
+Thought I had a nerve even to ask it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She mounted the steps. “Come in, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After dinner they sat in the back parlor and Joanna went
+on with her story, Peter listening closely.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m glad you’re telling me about this, Joanna,” he said
+seriously. “Now you’ll understand my case better. You
+know how I feel about white people and their everlasting unfairness.
+As though the world and all that is<a id='tn014'></a> in it belonged to
+them! I tell you, Jan, I’m sick of the whole business,—college,
+my everlasting grind, my poverty, this confounded prejudice.
+If I want to get a chance to study a certain case and
+it’s in a white hospital you’d think I’d committed a crime.
+As though diseases picked out different races! I’m a good
+surgeon, I’ll swear I am, but I’ve got so I don’t care whether
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>I get my degree or not. You can’t imagine all the petty unfairness
+about me. Only the other day the barber refused
+to shave me in the college barber-shop. Your own cousin,
+John Talbert, is a Zeta Gamma man if ever there was one—that’s
+the equivalent to Phi Beta Kappa in his school, you
+know. Do you think he got it? No, they black-balled him
+out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna sat silent, stunned by this avalanche. And to think
+she had precipitated it!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Arabelle Morton’s sister, Selma,” Peter went on morosely,
+“took her Master’s degree last year. The candidates sat in
+alphabetical order. Selma sat in her seat wondering whom
+the chair on the left of her belonged to—it was vacant. At
+the last moment a girl came in, a Miss Nelson, who had been
+in one or two of her classes. Selma knew she was a Southerner.
+‘Oh, I just can’t sit there,’ Selma heard her say, not
+too much under her breath. And some friend of hers went
+to the Professor in charge of the exercises and he let her change
+her place, though it threw the whole line out of order.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He paused, still brooding.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Another colored girl—can’t think of her name—paid for a
+seat in one of the Seminary rooms. The white girl next to her,
+apparently a very pleasant person, had her books all over her
+own desk space and this one, too. They were the best seats
+in the room. The colored girl asked her to move them. She
+just looked at her. Then this Miss—Miss Taylor, that was
+her name, took it from one authority to another, finally to
+the professor in charge of the Library. He assigned her another
+seat. Said the girl had been there four years, and that
+anyway, she—the white girl—resented the colored girl’s manner
+toward her. The damned petty injustice!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But, Peter,” Joanna argued, “you wouldn’t let that interfere
+with your whole career, change your whole life?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why shouldn’t I? There’re plenty of pleasanter ways to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>earn a living. Why should I take any more of their selfish
+dog-in-the-manger foolishness? I can make all the money
+I want with Tom Mason. If you aren’t satisfied for me to be
+an accompanist, I could go into partnership with him and
+we could form and place orchestras. It’s a perfectly feasible
+plan, Joanna. Why shouldn’t I pick the job that comes handiest,
+since the world owes me a living?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He frowned, meditating. “Isn’t it funny, I felt just then as
+though I’d been through all this before. It’s just as though
+I’d heard myself say that very thing some other time. Well,
+what do you say, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That I don’t want a coward and a shirker for a husband.
+As though that weren’t the thing those white people—those
+mean ones—wanted! Not all white people are that way.
+Both of us know it, Peter. And it’s up to us, to you and
+me, Peter Bye, to show them we can stick to our last as well
+as anybody else. If they can take the time to be petty, we
+can take the time to walk past it. Oh, we must fight it when
+we can, but we mustn’t let it hold us back. Buck up, Peter,
+be a man. You’ve got to be one if you’re going to marry
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He shrugged his shoulders. “May I light a cigarette?”
+But she noticed he did it with trembling fingers. “Just as
+you say, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She rose and faced him, this new Peter—this old Peter if
+she did but know it, with the early shiftlessness, the irresoluteness
+of his father, Meriwether Bye, the ancient grudge of
+his grandfather, Isaiah Bye, rearing up, bearing full and perfect
+fruit in his heart. Both rage and despair possessed her, as
+she saw the beautiful fabric of their future felled wantonly
+to the ground. For the sake of a few narrow pedants!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter, Peter, we’ve got to make our own lives. We can’t
+let these people ruin us.” She felt her knees trembling under
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>her. “We’re both tired and beside ourselves. Come and see
+me to-morrow, will you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>What should she say to him now, she wondered next day
+after a long white night. And once she had only to raise her
+finger and he was willing, glad to do her bidding. Could it
+be that after all these years she had failed to touch his pride,
+worse yet that he had no pride? She had been longing so for
+a cessation from all this bickering, so that they might have
+time for a touch of tenderness. But she could not afford
+that now. His love for her was her strongest hold over
+him. She was sure she could bring him back to reason.
+Perhaps she had been a little severe last night, calling him
+a coward.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I musn’t lose my temper,” she told herself. Yet that was
+the very thing she did. The matter took such a sudden, such
+a grotesque turn.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He came in about eleven, his handsome face haggard, his
+eyes bloodshot. She was astounded at his appearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter, you look dreadful!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He glanced over the top of her head at his reflection in the
+mirror, lounged to the sofa, threw himself in the corner of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Guess I’m due to look a fright after staying up all night.
+Didn’t get to bed till five this morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thought he’d been worrying over their quarrel. “You
+poor boy, you didn’t need to take it that hard.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He stared at her. “Take what, that hard? Oh, our talk!
+That didn’t keep me awake. I spent the night at ‘Jake’s.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Jake’s” was the cabaret, a cheap one, in which he had played
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She couldn’t understand him. “I thought you had plenty
+of money without playing there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I have. I didn’t play there. I was a visitor like anybody
+else, like Harry Portor; he spent the night there, too. There
+was a whole gang of us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>Clearly she must get to the bottom of this. While she had
+been tossing sleepless, he had been in a cabaret, dancing with
+cheap women, laughing, drinking perhaps.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You mean you deliberately went there to have a good time
+and stayed all night? You and Harry Portor and the rest
+drank, I suppose?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t think Portor did. He’s a full-fledged doctor now,
+though he’s hardly any practice yet. But the rest of us did.
+There’s nothing in that, Joanna, fellow’s got to get to know
+the world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her anger rose, broke. She lost her dignity.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I suppose Maggie Ellersley taught you that, too.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s that?” His handsome face lowered. “Say, how’d
+Maggie Ellersley get into this? No, she never taught me
+anything. But I can tell you what, if a fellow were going
+with her and went during his holidays to have a spree at a
+cabaret she wouldn’t nag him about it, like you nag me.
+Yes, about that and about a thousand other things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She turned into ice. “I’ll never nag you again. Here, take
+this thing!” She drew off the little ring. “I don’t want it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A pin dropping would have crashed in that silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His voice came back to him. “You don’t mean this, Joanna,—you
+can’t.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I do. Here, take it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You—you mean the engagement is broken?” He ignored
+her outstretched hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She dropped the ring in his pocket. “I mean I can’t consider
+a man for a husband who throws away his career because
+of the meanness of a few white men. Of a man who
+sits all night in a low cabaret where every loafer in New
+York can point him out and say, ‘That’s the kind of fellow
+Joanna Marshall goes about with.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I see, it isn’t for my sweet sake, then!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>She pushed him toward the door. “Go, Peter! Go!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>On New Year’s morning he came back, humble, contrite.
+“I was a fool, Joanna. I must have been mad. Please forgive
+me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course I do, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He fumbled in his pocket, held out the ring. “Will you take
+this back?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I can’t do that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“When will you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t know if ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There was a long silence. He came over and put his hand
+on the back of her chair, afraid to touch her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna, I don’t deserve your love. But you still do love
+me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She nodded slowly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His face brightened at that. “But you won’t take back the
+ring?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, Peter, I can’t take back the ring.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He knelt and kissed her hands.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Good-by, sweetheart, I must go to Philadelphia to-day.
+Happy New Year, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She let him go then. None of their other partings had ever
+been like this. Safe in her room she cried herself sick. “Oh,
+Peter,” she murmured to herself, “come back like the boy I
+used to know.” She wished now that she had been easier
+with him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And yet if I were, he’d let go entirely. Well, it must come
+out all right.” But her heart was heavy.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The very next day she got a letter. Peter must have written
+her as soon as he arrived in Philadelphia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna, I was wrong,” he had written contritely, “I confess
+I had got away somewhat from your manner of thinking,
+and I suppose I was a little sore, too,—your life seems
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>so full. Sometimes I think there is nothing I can bring you.
+But I do love you, Joanna. You must always believe that
+and I think you love me, too. We were meant for each other.
+I am sure life would hold for us the deepest, most irremediable
+sorrow if we separated. Whether we are engaged or not,
+just tell me that you love me still and I can be happy.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>
+ <h2 id='chap18' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>IF she had only answered the letter, then, that very moment!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But she had said to her impulse: “No, I must wait.
+I can’t let him off too easily.” Perhaps, too, there was a little
+sense of satisfaction at having him again at her knees, suing
+for her favors, but this was secondary. Joanna was really
+sick at heart to think that her beautiful dreams of success for
+both of them might not be realized. She wanted to be great
+herself, but she did not want that greatness to overshadow
+Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Somehow the week slipped by, quickly enough, too. There
+was always plenty to do. Love,—the desire to give it and
+receive it was tugging persistently at the cords of her being,
+but she had been too long the slave of Ambition to listen
+consciously to that. Yet she found herself lying awake nights
+thinking, thinking, more about Peter than about her singing
+engagements during the New Year, or about her plan to make
+her mightiest efforts just now to enter the dancing world.
+Yet whatever she might ponder by night, she spent all her
+time and strength by day going to see performances, practicing,
+inventing new steps and new rhythms.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Through Helena Arnold and indirectly through Vera
+Sharples she obtained the promise of an interview with one
+of the season’s favorites.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll be able to see you early Thursday evening,” the famous
+woman wrote. “You may expect either a note or a telephone
+call from me.” At one time such a promise would have sent
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>Joanna into the seventh ecstasy, without impairing her confidence.
+But recent discouragements, persistent—and for her
+unusual, phenomena—had rendered her timid. She was nervous.
+Her assurance wavered. She spent the whole day going
+through her repertory. Sometimes she danced like a mænad.
+Then she adopted a slow Greek rhythm, posturing and undulating.
+She struck attitudes before the mirror, standing
+in one position for long moments.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“For Heaven’s sake,” said Sylvia, putting her head inside
+the door on one of these occasions, “go out and take a walk,
+Joanna.” She was as nervous as her sister.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not a bad idea, Sylvia, I believe I will. You can answer
+the phone. Have you seen my brown cape?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She came back a little after five, refreshed and soothed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No phone message,” Sylvia told her, “but here’s a note.
+What’s she got to say, Janna?” She came and looked over
+her sister’s arm.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So sorry not to be able to see you to-night,” the noted
+<i><span lang="fr">artiste</span></i> had written. “I’m halfway expecting an old friend of
+mine and must keep the evening free. I shall try to arrange
+to have you call, just the same, not this month I’m afraid,
+but certainly in February.” She ended with a meaningless
+expression of “good wishes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mercy,” said Sylvia, “why didn’t she say next year?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was bitter. “Or next eternity? Sylvia, I wonder
+if I’m not a darn fool!” She walked upstairs trailing her
+long brown cape after her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>All her life she had known and seen success. When she
+was born her father was a successful caterer, almost a wealthy
+man. It is true that she had seen her own people hindered,
+checked on account of color, but hardly any of the things she
+had greatly wanted had been affected for that cause. She had
+had money enough to have her dancing and music lessons—the
+very fact that she had had to take separate and special
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>lessons from Bertully meant to her that some special and
+separate way would be arranged whereby she would become
+a dancer on the stage.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She did not know how to envisage disappointment.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Strangely enough, the defection of the <i><span lang="fr">artiste</span></i> struck home
+to her more keenly than the reception which she had had from
+the stage-managers. She refused Sylvia’s invitation to come
+back downstairs and spend the evening with her and Brian.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We might go to a movie,” Sylvia had said tentatively.
+But Joanna had only made an impatient gesture of refusal,
+and walking into her room had closed the door very carefully
+after her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She did not cry or throw herself across the bed. It might
+have been better for her if she had. Joanna’s creed was that
+one kept a stiff upper lip even to oneself. She had not had
+many occasions to try out that creed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There she sat, stiffly, on the spindling chair in front of her
+small flat-topped writing desk and brooded over the future
+which suddenly stretched dull, stale, and uninvigorating before
+her. She would never be able to stand it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The thought of her marriage flashed across her mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And Peter,” she said to herself aloud, “willing to be ordinary
+and second-rate! Where is that letter of his? I might
+just as well answer it now as at any other time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In spite of her ugly mood a little wave of tenderness welled
+up in her heart as she read,—“Just tell me that you do love
+me still,——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Peter, Peter,” she murmured, “if I tell you that you’ll
+never change, never push on. If only you could be strong
+and let me bring my troubles to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It would never do to let him know how completely she was
+discouraged. And equally she could not let him know how
+dear, weakness and all, he was to her. She would make her
+love conditional. “If you want me to love you, Peter,——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>She hated that, but some day they would both be glad of it.
+She actually cried for the two of them as she wrote her stern
+little fiction:</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“<span class='sc'>Dear Peter</span>:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I don’t love you as you are. The man I marry must be a
+man worth while like my father or Philip. I couldn’t stand the
+thought of spending my life with some one ordinary.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But I want to love you, Peter. Write me soon and say you are
+going to get to work in earnest. Happy New Year.</p>
+
+<div class='c017'>“Sincerely,</div>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Joanna</span>.”</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>She read it over and over, totally blind to its supreme
+egotism. Then she sealed it and, sniffling a little—more like
+a child than like an artist—went to bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In the morning she awoke with a sense of impending disaster.
+The phrase is trite but so, alas, is disaster. At first, as
+she lay there, her slender brown arms stretched above her
+tumbled head, she mused to herself about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Let’s see why I do feel so rotten? What’s the matter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She remembered her engagement with the <i><span lang="fr">artiste</span></i>. “But
+that’s not what’s making me sick,” she told herself after a
+momentary probing of her self-consciousness. Then recalling
+the letter to Peter, she got up and walked bare-footed
+across the room to the desk, shivering a little as the chilly
+January morning air struck at her, billowing her thin nightdress.
+She thought she would read it again, but the envelope
+was sealed. It slipped out of her hand and she ran back to
+bed again, cuddling luxuriously.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, well!” Afterwards when she rose and closed the windows
+she promised herself: “If I do send it I’ll write him a
+sweet, sweet letter soon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After breakfast she posted it. It fell with a heaviness into
+the box that made her uneasy. “I’ll write him again to-night,”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>she thought. “Poor Peter! He’ll be disappointed,
+I suppose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But the night brought her several offers to sing in Southern
+schools which she thought she might just as well accept. Apparently
+nothing was to come of her dancing. She had about
+a week in which to get ready.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Just before she left, a little surprised that she had not
+already heard from Peter, she wrote him a long letter, her
+first long love-letter.</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dearest Peter [she began]</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You can’t think how awfully I want to see you. If you were here
+to-night I shouldn’t quarrel with you one moment.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>She quoted lines from one of Goethe’s poems.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span lang="de">Ein Blick von deinen Augen in die meinen,</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="de">Ein Kuss von deinem Mund auf meinem Munde<a id='tn013'></a>:</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>She hesitated a moment, a little aghast at this disclosure of
+her feelings. “But I might just as well, he deserves it. Dear,
+dear Peter, if I could just see you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She ended, smiling shamefacedly at her own abandon——</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<span lang="de">Mein einzig Glück auf Erden ist dein Wille</span>”——</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>She might have stopped in Philadelphia on her way South,
+but she couldn’t after that letter. In Richmond she received
+a note from Peter which Sylvia had forwarded.</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My dear Joanna [she was surprised at the formality]</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I have both your letters. I cannot tell you how surprised I was
+at receiving the first or how much I cherished the second. Joanna,
+I would give ten years of my life if you had written the second one
+first. I am very busy now but I am going to write you a final letter
+very soon.</p>
+
+<div class='c017'>“Sincerely,</div>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Peter</span>.”</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>“‘A final letter,’” she quoted to herself. “What a funny
+thing to say! Oh, Peter! And I wanted, I needed a real letter,
+a love-letter!” Her natural reasonableness helped her.
+“It’s my own fault. I suppose he feels like I feel sometimes,
+don’t-care-y. But ‘a final letter.’ I wonder what he meant!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But she did not puzzle long. Richmond was appreciative and
+gay. Some one wrote her from Hampton and asked her to
+do an interpretative dance. Partly because of the interest and
+excitement, partly because she had forced herself to do so
+often, she resolutely put Peter out of her mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He’ll know when I write him again,” she told herself ruefully.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Two weeks, a month passed; she came into her room one
+day to find a bulky letter from Sylvia. “He doesn’t mean
+it, Joanna, of course, but I had to send it.” Thus her sister’s
+note. Puzzled, she read the inclosure, which turned out to be
+a letter from Peter to Sylvia.</p>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+
+<p class='c015'>“<span class='sc'>Dear Sylvia</span>:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I am writing to let you know that I am to be married in June.
+Joanna told me she didn’t love me and so I am going to marry Maggie
+Neal; she’s crazy about me. Tell Joanna not to bother sending back
+any of the things I’ve given her.</p>
+
+<div class='c017'>“Sincerely,</div>
+
+<div class='c018'>“<span class='sc'>Peter</span>.”</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>
+ <h2 id='chap19' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIX</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>ONE of the mysteries of the ages will be solved with the
+answer to the question: Why do men consider women
+incalculable? Peter had been hurt by Joanna’s indifference
+again and again, she had refused a dozen times to
+marry him, she had scolded him, teased him, slighted him.
+Yet she had always come back to his eager arms. In spite
+of this he had been unable to see in her attitude at Christmas
+and in the unkind letter which she had written the logical outcome
+of her earlier acts—all of which by enduring he had
+tacitly indorsed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He read the letter in a maze of anger and wounded pride.
+Before he knew it he had caught up his cap and started for
+Maggie’s house. By the time the long, yellow, crawling car
+had jolted him over the uneven reaches of Lombard Street
+and set him down at Fifteenth he was in a fever of bitterness,
+resentment and self-pity. Maggie hardly knew him when he
+entered her little sitting-room.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Peter,” she went up to him swiftly, “something awful
+has happened.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He showed her the letter, striding up and down the room
+as she read it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She lifted her head to say to him: “She doesn’t mean it;
+you know Joanna, always making a mountain out of a molehill.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Instead she heard herself saying: “How could she possibly
+write such things to you—you’ve always been so kind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>“Too kind,” he muttered. “I tell you what, Maggie, Joanna’s
+got no heart, she’s all head, all ideas and if you don’t
+see and act her way, she’s got no use for you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I do think she thinks herself a lot better than any one
+else,” Maggie said slowly, remembering Joanna’s letter to her
+about Philip.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, she is, you know,” he put in unexpectedly. “Oh,
+Lord, what am I going to do without her!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Genuinely touched, she sat down on the little box-couch
+beside him and slid her arm around his shoulder. “After all,
+you’ve still got me, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He looked up at her, feeling the surge of a new idea in his
+heart. If he could only punish Joanna—no not punish exactly,
+you couldn’t punish her, she was always too remote for
+that—but shock her, let her see, as his boyhood’s phrase
+would have had it, that she was not the only pebble on the
+beach. Besides, what a revenge to cut loose altogether from the
+influence of her ideals and ally himself with one whom she
+would have characterized as having no ideals at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Before the thought was even shaped in his brain he was
+speaking:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course I always have you, Maggie. How—how would
+you like to spend your future with me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do you mean, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I mean, Joanna’s chucked me. You and I get along famously,
+you’ve got your divorce from Neal. Why not marry
+me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was plain that though surprised she liked the idea. She
+saw herself suddenly transformed in this inhospitable snobbish
+city from Maggie Neal, alone and <i><span lang="fr">déclassée</span></i>, into Mrs. Peter
+Bye, a model of respectability.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That he had no money, no accepted means of making a
+livelihood she understood would mean nothing. He was a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>Bye and she as his wife could go anywhere. She would show
+Alice Talbert! And afterwards when he got his degree!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But because she had once loved Philip she could judge
+what Peter might mean to Joanna. To her credit she hesitated.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna probably doesn’t mean to let you go, Peter, she’s
+just angry and disappointed. She takes things harder than
+Sylvia or I. You know she really cares about you, and so do
+you about her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But he assured her that he did not. “She’s too exacting.
+Now there’s one thing about you, Maggie—maybe it’s because
+you’ve already been married—you know how to treat a man.
+Joanna makes you feel as though you were in a strait-jacket
+all the time. I always feel ordinary when I’m with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Neither of them noticed the doubtfulness of the compliment.
+In the end she accepted him. After all, she owed nothing to
+Joanna, who certainly had not considered her. How surprised
+she would be to think that Peter could so quickly find solace
+in her—Maggie’s—arms! And Joanna should learn, too, that
+he could become a success without everlastingly being pushed
+and prodded.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Hard on this thought came another. “Peter, you won’t
+have to work so hard now to get through school. I’ll help
+you. You know I’m doing very well with the hair-work.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He dismissed the theme airily, one hand on her shoulder,
+the other fumbling for a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I’m going to give medicine up. I’ll just keep on with
+Tom and the music. Heavens, it’s so nice to know you won’t
+mind, Maggie. Can’t think why I’ve stuck to the old school
+as long as I have, when here I am all set with this nice easy
+job to my hand. Might as well get along with as little trouble
+as possible. The world owes me a living.”</p>
+
+<hr class='c019'>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>Afterwards, back in his room with the green iron bedstead
+and the Bye Bible, he felt a difference, a sense of let-down-ness.
+He threw himself across the bed and groaned.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Joanna, how could you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She could, that was evident. He was stupefied at the turn
+in his affairs. Five hours ago he had expected some day to
+be a physician and to marry Joanna Marshall. Now it seemed
+that he was going to be a musician and marry Maggie Neal.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It isn’t true,” he told himself, fiercely. But it was true.
+There on the dresser were some cookies wrapped up in a red
+and white fringed napkin, Maggie’s gift when he left her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I made them for you, hoping you would come in. Now
+you’ll be in often, often, won’t you? Oh, Peter, I’ll be good
+to you. I’ll be as unlike Joanna as possible.” He did not
+want her to be unlike Joanna. In fact, he did not want her
+at all.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He might as well take her, though, for Joanna did not
+want him. That was it, no matter how many women he unaccountably
+married, Joanna might be shocked but she would
+never really care. Or suppose she did care a little while, she
+would soon forget it with her singing and dancing. Still, he
+supposed he must tell her. He would write her a gay, mocking
+letter. “I hope you’ll be as happy with your art as I feel
+I shall be with Maggie. She suits me perfectly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After he had littered his desk and the floor beside it vainly
+with a veritable snow-storm of torn bits of paper, he let his
+head drop on his lean brown hands and went to sleep. Perhaps
+it would not be exact to say he cried himself to sleep, but
+there were certainly tears that burnt and scalded behind his
+eyelids.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His landlady complained of the torn paper the next morning.
+“’Tisn’t as though you didn’t have a nice waste-paper
+basket ready and waitin’, Mr. Bye.” As she finished speaking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>she handed him Joanna’s letter containing Goethe’s poem.
+The tenderness, the real love that blazed in the beautiful lines
+overwhelmed him. He could not tell her the truth after a letter
+like that. So he wrote her, postponing but hinting, he
+fondly believed, at the news which he must soon break to
+her. A month later, finding himself still unequal to the task,
+he wrote to Sylvia.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>
+ <h2 id='chap20' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XX</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>SYLVIA had written. “He doesn’t mean it, of
+course”——</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Joanna knew better. Even while dumbfounded
+she stood staring at the note, trying to believe there must be
+some mistake, her heart, her every sense was telling her it
+was too true.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had given her up. He was going to marry Maggie.
+<em>He had given her up.</em> That was the important thing. For
+if he was not to marry her, what difference did it make whom
+he married?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had never been religious, she had never been dramatic.
+Rather she somewhat despised any emphatically emotional
+display. “People don’t really act that way,” she told herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Yet she dropped on her knees beside the pine bedstead in
+the sparsely furnished room. Her hands clutched at the
+counterpane. She could feel her throat constricting. A scalding
+hotness seared her nostrils, her mouth became dry, her
+eyeballs burned.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, God! Oh, Peter!” She repeated the two phrases
+again and again in a sick agony.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“God, you couldn’t let it be true. You know I always loved
+him, I didn’t hide it from you. You knew my heart.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At first she thought she would go to him. Then the fear
+that he might not want to see her, might even refuse to see
+her, overcame her. That humiliation she could never endure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sat down and wrote him a long letter, her pen flying
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>over the page like something bewitched. It could not move
+fast enough to empty her heart of all she had to tell. If she
+could only make clear to him that she had “chastened” him
+because she loved him. How patronizing, how silly she had
+been. She said aloud, “How he and Maggie must have laughed
+at me, setting myself up above them and their ideas as though
+I were some goddess! Oh, God, why did you let me do it?
+You knew what I really meant.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her tears almost blotted out her words.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The post-office was a mile away but she trudged the distance
+mechanically, seeing nothing, hearing nothing, absorbed
+and drowned in the black sorrow which overwhelmed her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter’s answer, which came in four days, brought no solace.
+She had never dwelt on any pages as she did on those of his
+last letter. The curt, stern phrases both cut her and awakened
+a new respect for him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>With a sense of responsibility which Joanna had never seen
+in him before, he insisted on honoring the claim which Maggie’s
+complete and unexacting love made upon him. “Even if
+I wanted to give her up,” he wrote in a sort of anguished
+virtuousness, “I would not, she has been too kind to me. But
+I don’t want to give her up, Joanna. Besides, I’ve got to
+consider the public. She has told several people that we are
+engaged.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna cried aloud: “If you had only been like this before,
+ever before, only once, I’d have known I couldn’t trifle
+with you. Oh, Peter, you deceived me.” The tears stood, great
+wells of water about her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She finished her engagement in the quiet Southern city
+before an audience which wondered vaguely what had happened
+to make Joanna Marshall different. Somehow she
+packed her trunk, thanked the persistent youth who had constituted
+himself her cavalier, and boarded the Jim Crow car.
+Her cavalier for all his persistence had been unable to obtain
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>for her Pullman accommodations. After Washington she fell
+to wondering what it used to be like in other days, less than
+a year ago, when she would be coming up this way, through
+Baltimore, Wilmington, past Chester, secure in the knowledge
+that Peter would be waiting for her at West Philadelphia. He
+would never be there again! How could she endure it? It
+was not possible that anyone could stand this thing. No
+wonder people “crossed in love”—she dwelt on the phrase
+distastefully—killed themselves. She toyed with the idea.
+Of course <em>she</em> couldn’t; that sort of relief was not for her.
+In the first place it was cowardly. With her usual mental
+clarity she visualized the colored papers of Harlem. There
+would be notices telling how the “gifted singer, Joanna Marshall,
+daughter of Joel Marshall, died by her own hand——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mind lingered over it, painting in new details, consciously
+withdrawing as far as possible from the real cause
+of her grief.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>As the train slid into the long shed at West Philadelphia
+she pressed her face against the window-pane and strained
+out into the dusk. Sometimes miracles did occur. Perhaps
+he was there, perhaps none of it was true. Her tears crept
+down the glass, the man behind her watching curiously.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia met her in New York, got her home and finally to
+bed. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall knew nothing of the matter and
+Sylvia had told even Brian very little. The two girls said
+nothing about Peter directly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Help me to get to sleep, Sylvia,” Joanna said suddenly
+after a rambling account of her trip. Her roving eyes and
+twitching hands had already betrayed her need. “Help me
+to get to sleep or I think I shall go mad.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>
+ <h2 id='chap21' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>JOANNA was in agony. Her life, hitherto a thing of light
+and laughter and pleasant work, became a nightmare of
+regret and morbid introspection. She could not blame
+herself enough. Nothing that Sylvia could say would make
+her speak unkindly of Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, Sylvia, it wasn’t his fault, really, it was all mine.
+Of course I think he was a little stupid not to see that my
+very interest in him, my constant fault-finding grew out of my
+wish to have him perfect. And I wanted him to be perfect
+because I loved him. But if I had ever dreamed how much
+I was hurting him, I’d never have said a word to him. I’d
+rather have had him exactly as he was, faults and all, than
+to lose him altogether.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She suffered intensely, too, from wounded pride. “Just
+think, Sylvia, he didn’t, he couldn’t have loved me after all.
+He just wanted to get married. See how easily he turned
+from me. Oh, if I had known that was all he wished, I’d have
+been different. I’d have been just the kind of woman he
+wanted.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her humble sincerity almost made Sylvia cry.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Another girl in Joanna’s place might not have suffered so
+intensely. But Joanna, poor creature, was doomed by her
+very virtues. That same single-mindedness which had made
+her so engrossed in her art, now proved her undoing. Her
+mind, shocked out of its normal complacence, perceived and
+dwelt on a new aspect of life, an entirely different and undreamed
+of sense of values. For the first time in her life she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>saw the importance of human relationships. What did a
+knowledge of singing, dancing, of any of the arts amount to
+without people, without parents, brothers, sisters, lovers to
+share one’s failures, one’s triumphs?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She remembered how interested, how faithfully interested
+all her family had been in her small career. Even Brian
+Spencer, now that her own brothers were away, felt responsible
+for her, shifted engagements to get her to the station
+on time, met trains at ghastly, inconvenient hours of the night.
+And Peter had been her slave, her willing, unquestioning slave,
+eager to accomplish any task no matter how troublesome, for
+a word of appreciation from her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And without a thought she had taken all this as her due.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had failed to realize happiness when she saw it. The
+bird had been in her grasp and she had let it go. This was
+her constant thought. Of course, she still had her own people.
+And she was considerate of them now, painfully anxious to
+show her gratitude. She tried to stammer out an apology to
+Sylvia for her past remissness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But her sister threw an arm about her and strained her
+close. “Don’t be so thoughtful, so good, Jan. You break
+my heart. I’d rather have you your old thoughtless, impatient
+self.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Of course, this expression of gratitude was really only a
+gesture to life, to fate. “If Peter could come back to me now,
+he’d see how truly I cared about him. God, couldn’t you
+let him come back?” Joanna, who had hardly uttered a
+prayer outside of “Now I lay me,” spent most of her thoughts
+at this time in communion with God—“You Great Power,
+you great force, you whatever it is that rules things.” Walking,
+riding, any action at all mechanical she utilized in concentrating
+on her “desire to have everything come right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In the mornings, weak and spent with the wakefulness of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>her white night, she picked up her little slim Bible and read
+portions of the Psalms. The beautiful words not only soothed
+her but brought with them a wonderment at the passion and
+pain which they revealed. “David, you, too, suffered. Help
+me, help me now.” So intense was her thought that she
+would hardly have been surprised if she had looked up and
+seen the Psalmist bending over her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She hated the mornings even more than the nights. In
+spite of her wakefulness, she was sure that there were some
+moments when she lapsed into unconsciousness. But the
+morning brought with it the promise of another day of pain,
+of unprofitable preoccupation. Sometimes after she had read
+her Psalm, despite the fact that she had been tossing, tossing
+on her pillow, she yielded to an overwhelming sense of apathy
+and lay there motionless for hours in the security of her bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mental agony was so great at times that it seemed almost
+physical.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her condition surprised Sylvia greatly. “I never had any
+idea that Jan cared so much for Peter,” she told Brian. She
+had had to share her sister’s secret with him. Joanna’s persistent
+sleeplessness had led Sylvia in her protecting eagerness
+to pretend to Harry Portor that she herself was in need of a
+sedative and Harry had spoken to Brian about it. There had
+to be explanations.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Brian was not at all surprised at Joanna’s suffering. “A girl
+like Joanna would be bound to feel deeply or not at all. I
+knew she must have really cared for Peter, else she’d have
+chucked him long ago. Joanna did nag at him, but Peter
+is really the one to blame, for standing for it. If he’d given
+her a piece of his mind now and then she’d have understood
+whom she had to deal with; Joanna thought she could treat
+him as she pleased. Then when he got tired of it he threw
+up the whole thing without any warning, the silly ass.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>“Better not let Joanna hear you call him that,” Sylvia
+interrupted.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He went on unnoticing. “Of course, what Joanna doesn’t
+realize is that she’s up against the complex of color in Peter’s
+life. It comes to every colored man and every colored woman,
+too, who has any ambition. Jan will feel it herself one day.
+Peter’s got it worse than most of us because he’s got such a
+terrible ‘mad’ on white people to start with. But every colored
+man feels it sooner or later. It gets in the way of his dreams,
+of his education, of his marriage, of the rearing of his children.
+The time comes when he thinks, ‘I might just as well
+fall back; there’s no use pushing on. A colored man just
+can’t make any headway in this awful country.’ Of course,
+it’s a fallacy. And if a fellow sticks it out he finally gets
+past it, but not before it has worked considerable confusion
+in his life. To have the ordinary job of living is bad enough,
+but to add to it all the thousand and one difficulties which
+follow simply in the train of being colored—well, all I’ve got
+to say, Sylvia, is we’re some wonderful people to live through
+it all and keep our sanity.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia agreed soberly that he was right.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now, Peter,” said Brian, warming to his subject, “had a
+lot of natural handicaps, he was poor, he had no sense of responsibility,
+he was never too fond of work unless he had
+some one to spur him on to it. In addition to that he falls
+in love with a girl who has everything in the world which he
+lacks, especially comparative ease and overwhelming ambition.
+Jan doesn’t see Peter and herself as two ordinary human beings,
+she thinks they have a high destiny to perform and
+so she drives Peter into a course of action which left to himself
+he would never pursue. I’ll bet a month’s salary Peter
+had no intention of studying surgery until he found out he
+had to do something extraordinary to win Joanna. Now, just
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>when each needs the most sympathy from the other, when
+Joanna’s plans are, I suspect, going awry, and when Peter is
+suffering most from his color complex, the two let their frazzled
+nerves carry them into a jangle and bang, Peter flies to the
+first woman who promises to let him take life easy! Maggie
+doesn’t see life in the large, she’s too much taken up with
+getting what she wants out of her own life. Perhaps she’s
+right.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t see how you can say that, Brian.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, it all depends on one’s viewpoint. Personally, I think
+Peter will get what he deserves if he marries Maggie. She’s
+the one that astonishes me. Of course, if Peter and Jan really
+are through with each other, he’s got a perfect right to marry
+whom he pleases, but I should think Maggie’s old friendship
+for you two girls would have held her back awhile.” A memory
+stirred vaguely within him. “Or—no, that would really
+be too rotten.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What would?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Maggie, you know. Remember how suddenly she married
+Neal? I’ve always thought Joanna had something to do with
+that. Just the Sunday before, Maggie had given me a look-in
+on her feelings for Philip and I happened to tell Jan about it.
+My, how she raved! A few days later Maggie married her
+gambler.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>This was all news to Sylvia.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, I won’t tell Joanna. She’s got enough to bear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was indeed bearing more than Sylvia could guess.
+She was feeling the pull of awakened and unsatisfied passion.
+It is doubtful if she could thus have analyzed it, for she had
+rather deliberately withheld her attention from the basic facts
+of life. “Plenty of time for that,” she had told herself gayly,
+a little proud perhaps of a virginal fastidiousness which kept
+her ignorant as well as innocent. Yet bit by bit she had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>built up the idea of a shrine into which, not unwillingly, she
+should enter with Peter some day. She had never even vaguely
+thought of any one else as a companion. Her whole concept
+of love and marriage for herself centered about Peter Bye.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And now Peter was gone—and his departure had opened
+up this sea, this bottomless pit of torment. This, this was
+life. “This is being grown up,” she told herself through endless
+midnight watches.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>
+ <h2 id='chap22' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>TEN months later Tom Mason leaned back against the
+red plush of the car seat and jingled some coins in
+his pocket.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell you what, Bye, we really are cleaning up. I hadn’t
+expected anything like this run of engagements. Now suppose
+you beat it along to Mrs. Lea’s and find out what special
+arrangements she wants made for the musicians to-night and
+I’ll go on to Mrs. Lawlor and see about to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter stared moodily at the flying landscape. “I wish you’d
+come yourself, Mason. I hate to talk to these white people.
+Their damned patronizing airs make me sick.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do you care about their patronizin’? All I’m interested
+in is gettin’ what I can out of them. When I’ve made
+my pile, if I can’t spend it here the way I please, Annie and
+me can pick up and go to South America or France. I hear
+they treat colored people all right there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“‘Treat colored people all right,’” Peter mimicked. “What
+business has any one ‘treating’ us, anyway? The world’s ours
+as much as it is theirs. And I don’t want to leave America.
+It’s mine, my people helped make it. These very orchards
+we’re passing now used to be the famous Bye orchards. My
+grandfather and great-grandfather helped to cultivate them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Is that so? Honest?” Tom showed a sudden respectful
+interest. “How’d they come to lose them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Lose them? They never owned them. The black Byes
+were slaves of the white Byes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>“Oh, slaves! Oh, you mean they worked in the fields?
+Well, I guess that’s different. Come on, here we are.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter flung himself out of the car after Tom and followed
+him up a tree-lined street. The suburban town stretched calm,
+peaceful and superior about them. Clearly this was the home
+of the rich and well-born. It is true that a few ordinary
+mortals lived here, but mainly to do the bidding of the
+wealthy. A group of young white girls, passing the two men,
+glanced at them a little curiously.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Entertainers for the Lea affair,” one of them said, making
+no effort to keep from being overheard.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter stopped short. “That’s what I hate,” he said fiercely.
+“Labeled because we’re black.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ain’t you got a grouch, though!” Tom spoke almost admiringly.
+He told his sister afterwards: “Bye’s got this here—now—temper’ment.
+Never can tell how it’s goin’ to take him.
+Seems different since he started keeping company with Maggie,
+don’t you think so?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Annie admitted she did.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At present Tom patted Peter on the shoulder, and starting
+him up the driveway which led to Mrs. Lea’s large low white
+house, went on himself to Mrs. Lawlor.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mrs. Lea received Peter in a small morning-room. She was
+pretty, a genuine blonde, with small delicate features and
+beautiful fluffy hair. But as Peter did not like fair types, his
+mind simply registered “washed-out,” and took no further
+stock of her looks. What he did notice was that she was
+dressed in a lacey, too transparent floating robe, too low in
+the neck, and too short in the skirt.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Something she would wear only before some one for whom
+she cared very much, or some one whom she didn’t think worth
+considering,” he told himself, lowering.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mrs. Lea, leading him into the ballroom beyond, barely
+glanced at him. “See, the musicians are to sit behind those
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>palms and the piano will be completely banked with flowers.
+I’m expecting the decorators every moment. Your men will
+have to get here very early so as to get behind all this without
+being seen. I want the effect of music instead of perfume
+pouring out of the flowers. Do you get the idea—er—what
+did you say your name was?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I understand,” said Peter shortly. “My name is Bye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I meant your first name—Bye—why, that’s the name of a
+family in Bryn Mawr, who used to own half of the land about
+here. There’re a Dr. Meriwether Bye and his grandfather, Dr.
+Meriwether Bye, living in the old Bye house now. Where do
+you come from?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I was born in Philadelphia like my father and grandfather
+and his father before him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She stated the obvious conclusion: “Probably your parents
+belonged to the Bryn Mawr Byes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So my father told me,” replied Peter, affecting a composure
+equal to her own. “His name was Meriwether Bye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She did not like that. She decided she did not like him
+either—eyeing his straight, fine figure and meeting his unyielding
+look. These niggers with their uppish ways! Besides
+this one looked, looked—indefinably he reminded her of young
+Meriwether Bye. She spoke to him:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t want you to leave to-night before I get a chance
+to point you out to young Dr. Bye. He’ll be so interested.”
+She looked at Peter again. Yes, he was intelligent enough to
+get the full force of what she wanted to say. “It’s so in keeping
+with things that the grandson of the man who was slave
+to his grandfather should be his entertainer to-night.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter felt his skin tightening. “I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed.
+I’m a medical student, not an entertainer. I came
+here for Mr. Mason, who is very busy. You may be sure I’ll
+give him your instructions. Good-day, Mrs. Lea.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He rushed out of the house, down to the station where,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>without waiting for Tom, he boarded the train. Not far
+from the West Philadelphia depot he pushed the bell of a
+certain house, flung open the unlocked door and rushed up
+a flight of stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In a small room to his left he found the person he was
+seeking, a short, almost black young fellow who lifted a dejected
+and then an amazed countenance toward him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Am I seeing things? Where’d you blow in from, Pete?
+Thought you’d chucked us all, the old school and all the rest
+of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I haven’t, I’ve been a fool, a damned fool, but I’m back
+to my senses. I’m going back to my classes and I tell you,
+Ed Morgan, I’ll clean up. See here, you’ve got to do me a
+favor.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Name it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know Mason, Tom Mason on Fifteenth Street? I’ve
+been playing for him. But I can’t stick it any longer. Tom’s all
+right, but I can’t stand his customers. Besides, I’ve got to get
+back to work. I’m quitting this minute—see. But Tom’s
+got a big dance on, near Bryn Mawr to-night at a Mrs.—Mrs.
+Lea,” he gulped. “Good pay and all that. You can play
+as well as I can, Ed. Easy stuff, you can read it. You got
+to do it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Do it! Man, lead me to that job. I’m broke, see, stony
+broke, busted.” He turned his pockets inside out. “I was
+just wondering what I could pawn. And I need instruments—Oh,
+Lord!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter gave him some money. “Take this, you can pay
+me any time. Only rush down to Tom’s and tell him I can’t
+come. I’m dead—see?—drowned, fallen in the Schuylkill.
+And see here, old fellow, afterwards we’ll have a talk. I want
+everything, everything, mind you, that you can remember,
+every note, every bit of paper that bears on the work of these
+last ten months. And I’ll show them—” he seemed to forget
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Morgan—“with their damned talk of entertainers.” Down
+the stairs he ran, still talking.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mad, quite mad,” said little Morgan, staring. “Glad he’s
+coming back to work, though. Now, where’d I put that cap?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still at white heat, Peter walked the few short blocks to
+his boarding house. Once inside his room he shut himself in
+and paced the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The grandson—that’s me—of the man who was his grandfather’s
+slave should be his—that’s Meriwether Bye, young
+Dr. Meriwether Bye—should be his entertainer, his hired
+entertainer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My grandfather didn’t have a chance, but here I am half
+a century after and I’m still a slave, an entertainer. My
+grandfather. Let’s see, which one of the Byes was that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He went to the closet, pushed some books and papers aside
+and hauled down the old Bye Bible. The leaves, streaked and
+brown, stuck together. With clumsy, unaccustomed fingers
+he turned them, until at last between the Old Testament and
+the Apocrypha<a id='tn007'></a> he found what he was looking for: “Record
+of Births and Deaths.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The old, stiff, faded writing with the long German <em>s</em>, the
+work of hands long since still, smote him with a sense of worthlessness.
+These people, according to their lights, must have
+considered themselves “people of importance,” else why this
+careful record of dates?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His lean brown finger traced the lines. “Joshua Bye, born
+about 1780”—heavens, that must have been his great-great-grandfather.
+No, maybe he was just a “great,” for the black
+Byes, he remembered hearing his father Meriwether say, lived
+long and married late.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Isaiah Bye, born 1830—a child of freedom.” How proud
+they had been of that! Yes, that was his grandfather, he
+remembered now. And he had made a great deal of that
+freedom. Meriwether had often dwelt with pride on Isaiah’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>learning, his school, his property, his “half-interest,” Meriwether
+had said grandiloquently, in a bookshop. Peter could
+hear his father talking now.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A child of freedom”—Peter was that but what had he
+made of it? He wondered what Isaiah in turn had written on
+the occasion of Meriwether’s birth. His finger ran down the
+page, and found it, stopped.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There it was—“Meriwether,” the inscription read, “by <em>his</em>
+fruits shall ye know—<em>me</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At first Peter thought it was a mistake. Then gradually it
+dawned on him—his fine old grandfather, proud of his achievements,
+seeing his son as a monument to himself, seeing each
+Bye son doubtless as a monument to each Bye father. Poor
+Isaiah, perhaps happy Isaiah, for having died before he realized
+how worthless, how anything but monumental <em>his</em> son had
+really been, except as a failure. And now he, Peter, was following
+in that son’s footsteps.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He remembered an old daguerreotype of his grandfather
+that he had seen at his great-uncle Peter’s. The face, perfectly
+black, looked out from its faded red-plush frame with
+that immobile look of dignity which only black people can
+attain. “I have made the most of myself,” the proud old face
+seemed to say. “My father was a slave, but I am a teacher, a
+leader of men. My son shall be a great healer and my son’s
+son——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter put the open Bible carefully on the table and took out
+a cigarette. But he held it a long time unlighted.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So far as he could remember he had never had any desire
+to rise, “to be somebody,” as Isaiah, he rightly guessed, would
+have phrased it. He saw himself after his mother’s death, a
+small placid boy, perfectly willing to stay out of school. Until
+he met Joanna. There was his term of service in the butcher-shop
+and himself again perfectly willing to be the butcher’s
+assistant. Until Joanna’s questioning had made him declare
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>for surgery. Once in college his whole impulse had been to
+get away from it all, not because he hadn’t liked the work; he
+adored it, was fascinated by it. But the obstacles, prejudice,
+his very real dislike for white people, his poverty, all or any
+of these had seemed to him sufficient cause for dropping his
+studies and becoming a musician. Not an artist, but an entertainer,
+a player in what might be termed “a strolling orchestra,”
+picking up jobs, receiving tips, going down in the servants’
+dining room for meals. And when Joanna had objected,
+he thought she was “funny,” “bossy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And as soon as he had broken with her, he had given up
+striving altogether. He had been nothing without Joanna.
+He wondered humbly if she had seen something in him which
+he had not recognized in himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>How different they had been! After all, Joanna, though she
+had not had to contend with poverty, had had as hard a fight
+as he. “She’d have been on the stage long ago if she’d been
+white,” he murmured. “And see how she takes it!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Well, he would show her and Isaiah, yes, and Mrs. Lea,
+too, that there was something to him. But chiefly Joanna.
+Some day he’d go to her and say, “Joanna, what I am, you
+made me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His landlady<a id='tn002'></a> called up to him:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Telephone for you, Mr. Bye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He went downstairs, took down the receiver.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hello, this is Mr. Bye, yes, this is Peter. Who’s this speaking,
+please?...</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh—oh, yes, of course. Why—why, Maggie!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had forgotten all about her!</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>
+ <h2 id='chap23' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>IT had been increasingly easy for him to forget her. When
+he had first broken with Joanna, when he had written her
+that virtuous letter, Maggie’s rooms, Maggie’s arms were
+a haven. She was always ready to listen, always sympathetic.
+She met his advances half way; if he asked for a kiss he got
+it at once. There was none of Joanna’s half-real, half-coquettish
+withdrawal. No one could accuse Maggie of a lack of
+modesty. Peter would have been the first to fight such an
+accuser, but he found himself half-wishing that she were not
+quite so easy to approach.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Somehow life grew less stimulating. Presently they were
+settling down into the cosy, prosy existence of the long married
+couple. In the afternoons Peter came in—he was usually
+playing with Tom at night—they exchanged a word of greeting.
+Maggie gave him a dutiful kiss; there would be a word
+or two about the weather, his playing engagements, then
+silence. Presently Peter would say: “Mind if I look over
+the paper a moment, Maggie? I got up late this morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And Maggie’s bright answer: “Oh, of course not, I’ve got
+my accounts to run over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Somehow all the easy, “understanding” conversation had
+vanished. Joanna, Maggie had soon learned, was not a welcome
+topic. And Peter no longer went to his classes, so
+there was no possible theme there. Peter to his disgust
+found himself drawing unwilling contrasts between these
+seances and similar moments spent with Joanna. Had there
+ever been any silences? If there were they were filled with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>all sorts of tingling thoughts and meanings. There was
+the night when Joanna leaned against him in Morningside Park.
+They had said nothing. But the very air about them was
+pulsing. How long ago all that seemed! Had it ever been
+true? Why had he never felt like that when Maggie, as she
+frequently did, rested her head on his shoulder?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He would shake himself angrily out of his reverie. “Silly
+ass,” his lips formed.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie seeing his lips move would ask him interestedly:
+“What’s the matter, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Nothing at all,” he’d tell her contritely. What should be
+the matter with his dear Maggie so near? Sometimes he put
+an arm around her shoulder. “Look here, I’ve got an hour
+yet. Like to go out?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That never failed to please her. She loved to be seen with
+him. She had a very charming, flattering air of deference, of
+dependence when she was out. It was singularly pleasing and
+yet puzzling to Peter. Joanna now was just as likely to cross
+the street as not, without waiting for a guiding hand, a protecting
+arm. If she had once visited a locality she knew quite
+as much about getting away from it as her escort. But
+Maggie was helpless, dependent. Strange when they were all
+growing up together he would have said she was quite as independent
+in her way as Joanna, and she was decidedly capable
+in her hair-dressing work. Madame Harkness’ business had
+increased considerably in Philadelphia and Baltimore.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had often mused over this.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had known for some time that he did not love Maggie.
+But he could not tell whether or not she loved him. Certainly
+she had appeared to at first, and certainly even now she clung
+to him. Her very submissiveness would seem to indicate some
+depth of feeling. He remembered Maggie as being anything
+but yielding in their earlier days, and she had never apparently
+changed one iota in her resentment toward her husband. She
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>was making a remarkably good living from her connection
+with Madame Harkness, had bought the house in New York
+and was contributing to her mother. She could not be marrying
+him to be taken care of.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Of course he knew nothing of her <em>flair</em>, her passion for being
+connected with “real” people—for “class” as he would have
+called it. And if he had known this, it would have explained
+nothing to him, for he never thought of himself in this sense.
+His most frequent source of worry consisted in wondering if
+Maggie realized how lukewarm his feeling was for her. Apparently
+she never suspected it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie may not have let Peter realize it, but she was completely
+aware that he did not love her. She understood, had
+always understood, that Joanna was the one woman in the
+world for him. Having loved Joanna once there was no possibility
+of his caring about any one else. She had recognized in
+Peter’s turning to her a manifestation of the state of mind
+which had led her at the time of her marriage to turn to
+Henderson Neal.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her acceptance of Peter had been almost spontaneous, yet
+it was governed subconsciously by two or three motives. First
+of all, while she thought it extremely probable that Joanna
+liked, even loved Peter, she did not believe that Joanna would
+ever consider marriage with him as important as her art.
+Therefore she might just as well take him. Then she enjoyed
+the artistic fitness of showing Joanna that a girl whom the
+latter did not consider worthy to marry her brother was deemed
+worthy to marry her lover. And last and most important,
+Maggie saw through Peter a second means of entrance into
+the society of “real” people. She had glimpsed this once
+through the possibility of marriage with Philip. Instead
+Henderson Neal had closed this entrance to her, she had once
+believed, forever. She must not fail to take advantage of this
+new avenue.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Already she was beginning to reap its value. Miss Alice
+Talbert, it is true, became colder than ever when Maggie’s
+engagement to Peter was known. She told Arabelle Morton
+that she considered “Peter done for, ruined, if he married that
+gambler’s wife. Cousin Joanna did well to get rid of him.”
+But Arabelle herself had laughed, had said she wanted to meet
+the girl who had captured “that good-looking Bye boy.” She
+had come to see Maggie, had invited her to the Morton house.
+Her good-natured shallowness, her frank determination not to
+be a “high-brow” and her complete social assurance captivated
+Maggie. Arabelle was of as unimpeachable standing as Miss
+Talbert, though her choice of friends was not so exclusive.
+Maggie was “taken up” by the young women of Arabelle’s
+set and henceforth her lines were comparatively easy. Still
+she met with an occasional snub from the older women. Mrs.
+Viny, who turned out to be the terrible old lady who had asked
+her about Mr. Neal in Atlantic City, refused grimly to recognize
+her and gave it as her opinion that “Peter’s doings would
+make Isaiah Bye turn over in his grave—yet. You mark
+my word.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her hearers got a vision of the dust and nothingness which,
+for many years, had been Isaiah Bye, slowly shifting its position
+in the narrow quarters of his tomb.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie had her own plans. She did not mean to have
+Peter following forever in Tom Mason’s train. But after they
+had married she would bring about a change. She was sure
+she could coax him. It would never do to let Joanna think,
+she would tell him, that he could not achieve distinction without
+<em>her</em>. And when Peter Bye became Dr. Bye, the famous
+surgeon, Philadelphia would find that Mrs. Peter Bye had a
+long memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Only Peter, who at first had agreed to marry in June, now
+some months later seemed in no haste to marry at all—that
+was the rub.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>When she telephoned him on the day on which he had had
+his interview with Mrs. Lea, she made up her mind to hasten
+the marriage.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He came to see her the next afternoon full of his scheme of
+returning to his classes. Maggie noticed a difference.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You look as though you’d inherited a fortune or found a
+million dollars.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I have. My senses have come back to me. What do you
+think, Maggie? I’ve chucked all this foolishness with Tom
+Mason. My, I bet he’s cursing mad. I’m getting down to
+brass tacks; went back to my classes this morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Surprise and something else altered her face.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s the matter, you don’t like it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes—of course—only, but Peter, can’t you see how hard
+all this is for me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He got up, fiddled with the things on the mantel, turned
+about and faced her, the knuckles straining a little in the hand
+with which he grasped the back of a chair.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Just what do you mean, Maggie? What’s hard?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She told him then that his going back to school naturally
+meant a postponement of their marriage. “Oh, Peter, can’t
+you see I want to be safe like other women, with a home and
+protection? I met Henderson, Henderson Neal, uptown Saturday—I
+didn’t mean to tell you—but he glared at me. He
+made me shiver, I wished you were with me. I’m afraid of
+him, Peter, I’ll never be safe till we’re married.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His level voice answered her: “I can see to your safety,
+Maggie; if Neal really frightens you, I can have him bound
+over to keep the peace. But we can’t marry now, dear. I
+want to be able to take care of my—my wife. And if I go
+back to my classes, I’ll need all the money I can lay hands on.
+I’ve lost so much time that I can’t afford to do any outside
+work. I’ll just live on what I’ve made with Mason. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>that will leave me pretty poor. You see, I’ve got to have five
+hundred dollars cold for my instruments.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She looked at him speechless, her gray eyes going black in
+the pale gold of her face, her hands submissively folded.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He took out his handkerchief and mopped his forehead.
+“If you don’t mind, Maggie, I think we’d better discuss this
+later. Suppose we think it over for two or three days, and
+then we’ll settle upon something.” His voice, infinitely gentle,
+infinitely sorry for her, trailed off into silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She said listlessly: “I think I’ll go to New York for a
+while. I think I’d like to be with my mother.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He ignored the pathos of this. “That would be fine. How
+soon do you want to go?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“To-morrow,” she told him. “You needn’t come to the
+station with me, Peter, you’d hardly have time to make it.
+I won’t take much, so I can manage.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He felt himself a cad for agreeing with her. “It’s too bad
+I have to go now, but I’ve got to read over some notes with
+Morgan. So this is good-by for the present. Aren’t you
+going to kiss me, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She held up her face for her dutiful kiss.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
+ <h2 id='chap24' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXIV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>JOANNA stood on the steps of the New York Public Library,
+gazing at the paralysis of traffic which at the
+bidding of an autocratic policeman had fallen on the
+massed ranks of vehicles. Subconsciously she thought of a German
+story, “<span lang="de">Germelshausen</span>,” in which all the life of the village
+suddenly ceased, leaving the people statues of flesh and blood.
+Fifth Avenue coming to life again, she fell quite consciously to
+wondering where she could get a good dinner. All about her
+flashed the lights of restaurants, but she was not sure of their
+reception of colored patrons and being in a slightly irritable
+mood, she wanted consciously to spare herself any contact
+which would be more annoying. She needed more than the
+cup of chocolate and sandwich which she might easily have
+had at one of the two drug stores near by. And of course she
+could get something expensive, but satisfying, in the station
+which towered not far away. But of late the restaurant management
+in that particular station had shown a tendency to
+place its colored patrons in remote and isolated corners.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna had spent the morning shopping. In one of the
+more exclusive stores on Forty-fourth Street she had asked to
+look at coats. The saleswoman had been very pleasant, but she
+had seated Joanna well in the rear of the store quite away
+from the lighted front windows and the mirrors which were
+so adjusted as to give all possible views of the figure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna had not noticed this at first but when she did she
+proposed going toward the front of the store “where there was
+more light.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>“Why not come this way?” proposed the still affable saleswoman,
+pointing to the windows in the rear wall which also
+let in daylight. Yet when Joanna without answering had
+walked on to the front, she offered no further comment.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The incident was a slight one, possessing possibly no significance,
+but Joanna had walked out of the store hot and
+raging, the more so because she was not completely sure
+whether the slight was intentional or not. It had not helped
+her frame of mind to purchase a less becoming coat in a department
+store where she was known and liked by one of the salesgirls.
+Gradually she worked herself into a state of contemptuous
+indifference, but she meant to be careful in selecting a
+place in which to get her dinner. She had to work too hard
+these days to bring on her good spirits, she was not going to
+have them dissipated by galling if petty discriminations.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Well, there was no help for it, she would have to go over
+to the Pennsylvania station at Thirty-third Street. She was
+sure of pleasant treatment there. After this solid afternoon of
+work in the gloomy library, the walk would do her good.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A hand fell on her shoulder, and she turned to find beside
+her Vera Manning, one of the members of her old dancing-class.
+This surprised her, for of late hardly any one of Joanna’s
+group had seen Vera. The report in Harlem was that she
+was passing for white and had no desire to be recognized by
+her colored acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s been ages since I’ve seen you, Joanna,” Vera began
+confidently. “I was sitting in the library waiting for a ‘date’—doesn’t
+that sound awful?—and then all of a sudden I thought,
+‘pshaw, I don’t want to be bothered!’ Just then you hove on
+the scene. Where you going?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Some place to get a good dinner,” Joanna told her, wondering
+why she looked different from the Vera Manning she
+used to know. Her clothes showed her usual careful, even
+modish taste, but her face looked hard—“reckless”—Joanna
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>suddenly decided; that was the word. She went on quickly:
+“See here, you work somewhere down in this neighborhood,
+don’t you? Where do you suppose I can get something to
+eat, without walking a thousand miles for it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Vera frowned thoughtfully. “You see, I’m ‘passing’ just
+now—I know you’ve heard of it—and so I go into any of
+these places around here, but I never see any colored people.
+Of course you could try the Automat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Joanna didn’t want that.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Their food’s all right when you feel like eating it, but I
+want a regular dinner—waiter, service, and all the rest of it.
+Pick out a good place for me and I’ll take you to dinner, too.
+Nothing could be fairer than that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Vera agreed smilingly that it couldn’t. “There’s a place
+over on Forty-second Street. I remember now I have seen some
+colored people in there and they get decent treatment. We
+could go there—” she checked herself a moment. “Oh, no, I
+forgot.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Forgot what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Look here, Janna, I might as well be frank, we were all of
+us children together—doesn’t it seem ages ago? You know I
+wouldn’t ever try to fool you. But the truth of it is I go to
+that particular restaurant often with the other girls in my
+office and of course the restaurant people think I’m—I’m
+white. See? I don’t know just what they’d think if they saw
+me with you—some one who definitely showed color—or what
+might come of it. You don’t think I’m a pig, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think I’d be a pig if I did think so,” Joanna told her
+heartily. “Come on and take dinner with me over at the
+Pennsy station. It’ll be nice to have a talk.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two girls moved down Fortieth Street in the direction of
+Seventh Avenue.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’d understand it better if you worked among them—white
+people you know,” Vera told her seriously. “Of course
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>I suppose there must be some decent ones, not the high-brow
+philanthropists and all that crowd, but people who have too
+much breeding, too much innate—well, niceness, I guess you’d
+call it, to make light of folks just because they’re different.
+But that crowd in my office, they never think of being courteous
+to a colored person. If they want the janitor it’s
+‘Where’s that darky?’ or ‘I saw a coon in the subway this
+morning wearing a red tie, made me think of Jim here,’
+always something like that. Of course they don’t say it to
+the man’s face. There’d be a fight if they did.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t see how you stand it,” Joanna puzzled. “What
+put it in your head to work with white people, anyhow?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, to get away from everybody and everything I’d ever
+known.” They were at the table in the dining-room now and
+Vera was making criss-cross marks with her fork on the white
+cloth, frowning absorbedly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know, Joanna, I wasn’t like you—not one of us girls
+was. I was more like Sylvia, I wanted a good time, but most
+of all I wanted, I expected to marry. You remember Harley
+Alexander?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna did remember him, indeed, a tall personable youth
+about her own color, a companion of Harry Portor, Brian
+Spencer, and to a less degree of her own brother Alec. But
+what she especially remembered was that he had been the
+constant shadow of Vera Manning.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course I remember him, Vera. He’s a dentist now, isn’t
+he? Didn’t he graduate the same year as Harry Portor?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, that’s the fellow. Joanna, we really loved each other,
+and we planned even before he went to college to get married
+as soon as he came out. But as soon as my mother—you
+know how color-struck she is—realized we were in earnest, up
+she went in the air. None of her children should marry a
+dark man. It only meant unhappiness. If Harley and I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>should have children they’d be brown and would have to be
+humiliated like all other colored children.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She fell to drawing more designs.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We had a terrible time. I was completely alone in my
+fight. Father always follows mother’s lead. Brother Tom
+refused to commit himself. Alice is just like mother—she
+really liked, I’m sure of it, John Hamilton, but because he was
+dark, she let him go for Howard Morris, whom I can’t stand.
+For a long time I managed to keep it from Harley but the
+Christmas of his last year in college, mother told him she
+didn’t favor his attentions to me, and told him why.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Goodness,” Joanna breathed, “that must have been awful.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Awful! It was unspeakable. And nothing I could say to
+Harley could destroy the effect of what she said. She must
+have put it up to him as to whether he thought he could compensate
+a wife for the estrangement of her family. You know
+how Harley was. We had always been a remarkably united
+family up to that time. He said: ‘If your mother objected to
+my being poor I could tell her that I could change that, but
+when it comes to my color, I can’t do anything with that and,
+by God, I wouldn’t if I could.’</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So that,” Vera ended wryly, “was the end of my young
+romance.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Bit by bit she made Joanna see the picture of her life since
+her break with her lover. Before then she had worked in her
+father’s office, but now she was secretary to one of the heads
+of a big advertising agency. As she was an unusually swift
+stenographer and had a level head, she was getting along
+famously.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course they think I’m white. There are a lot of young
+men in the office and I flirt with them outrageously. At first
+I did it only to annoy mother, she hated it so. You know,
+the funny thing is she doesn’t like white people any better than
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>I do—she just didn’t want me to marry a dark man because,
+she says, in this country a white skin is such an asset.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Do you enjoy yourself going about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes and no. When I began I did immensely. You can’t
+imagine—I couldn’t—the almost unlimited opportunities that
+those people have for work, for pleasure, for anything. As a
+white girl I’ve seen sights and places, yes, and eaten food that
+I never even knew about when I used to go out with Harley.
+And then, too, Jan, you can’t imagine the blessedness of no
+longer being uncertain whether you can enter such and such
+a hotel, or of getting a decent berth if you’re going traveling
+or of little things like that, the sudden removal of thousands
+of pin-pricks, not only that, of inconveniences.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You must be very happy,” Joanna said wistfully.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I’m not. They aren’t, either. That’s the funny part.
+Oh, of course I suppose nobody is actually happy, but I do
+think that colored people, when they’re let alone long enough
+to have a good time, know how to enjoy themselves better than
+any other people in the world. It’s a gift.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should think you’d drop it all, Vera.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I would if it weren’t for the sense of freedom. It’s wonderful
+to be able to do as you like. Sometimes I think I will
+drop it, then I think: ‘Oh, pshaw, what difference does it
+make?’ Without Harley I’m bound to be unhappy, anyway,
+even if I do go back to my own. Since I can’t have happiness
+I might just as well take up my abode where I can have the
+most fun and comfort even though it’s making me—well, no
+saint, I can tell you.” She laughed recklessly. “I wish I
+were like you, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, you know—here ever since you were little you’ve
+had Peter Bye right at your beck and call—you must have
+loved him, Jan, he was so everlastingly good-looking, and
+charming, too, we all thought. I remember he took me to a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>movie one Christmas. Then you fussed with him or something—some
+of your high-brow stuff I suppose—and you send him
+off without winking an eyelash. How do you stand it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was cautious. “Of course I have my work. I do
+miss Peter though—sometimes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Sometimes! Girl, you aren’t human. Well, being heartless
+isn’t bad! What do you want to do, go to the ‘Dance of
+The Nations’ down at the District Line Theater?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Joanna wanted a chance to think, so on the pretext of
+having to return to the Library, she left Vera. She realized
+the tragedy of her friend’s case, the awful emptiness that had
+come into her life. Hadn’t her own life been affected in the
+same way?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A bus stopped before her and she mounted it, her thoughts
+weaving mechanically. She did not blame Vera at all for the
+change in her mode of living. In those first few months after
+Peter had left her she had wondered often how she could go
+on with life. For a long while she had existed simply from
+day to day, paying an exaggerated attention to small happenings,
+making engagements with people whom she had scarcely
+noticed before, doing anything to get away from the weariness
+of her thoughts. Many a night she had spent meditating on
+some <i>coup</i>, some reckless expenditure of energy and interest
+no matter how silly, how scandalous, so long as it took her
+out of herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had even tried flirting, a field hitherto unthought of.
+As it was she had been too kind to Harry Portor; of late she
+had consciously avoided him because she knew only too well
+what he meant to ask of her the next time they were alone.
+She hated to hurt him but that seemed inevitable, for her heart
+held not the slightest fraction of love for him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Oh, Peter! Peter!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>As she rode up Fifth Avenue under the starry reaches of
+the sky, beneath the tender budding of April trees, her desperate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>longing quickened to a sudden resolve. She would write
+to Maggie—Maggie, who could not possibly love Peter. And
+even if she did, she could not love him as she—Joanna—loved
+him. Why, there had been Philip once, and then Henderson
+Neal!—Whereas Peter had been the only love of her own
+life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She would write to Maggie, very clearly, very frankly and
+she would beg her to let him go. It all seemed simple enough.
+And then she and Peter would be happy. She would make him
+love her again, worship her. And “Peter,” she would tell him,
+“never another unkind word, I’ll be a new Joanna, darling.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her father’s house, its windows darkened, loomed up before
+her. Straight up to her own room she sped, not stopping to
+enter Sylvia’s apartments, although the sound of laughing
+voices penetrated to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Alone at the little flat-topped desk, she took out pen and
+paper and began the letter—“Dear Maggie”—But that was
+what she had done years ago,—written to Maggie to give up
+Philip. That was in the unconscious selfishness of youth. Now
+was she to write her again to give up Peter? Her courage oozed
+away, left her helpless. She looked at the pen, put it carefully
+away on the rack, slipped the sheet of paper back in the
+pigeonhole. She might go down to Philadelphia to visit Alice
+Talbert. Yes, she would do that very soon. And then maybe
+she would see Maggie Ellersley—on the street, or even go and
+call on her. Undoubtedly it was better to discuss such personal
+matters face to face.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>
+ <h2 id='chap25' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>WHILE Joanna was sitting at her desk, Maggie
+Ellersley some fifty blocks away brooded over plans
+of her own. She had hoped, vainly as it turned
+out, that her absence from Philadelphia would quicken Peter’s
+need of her. His very real regard for her hospitality and
+kindness had long since been evident. She knew that he considered
+the little apartment on South Fifteenth Street his
+nearest approach to a home in Philadelphia, and she had
+hoped that the loneliness caused by her departure would induce
+him to urge her to come back. But Peter’s letters had not
+been in the least melancholy. Once a week he had written to
+her regularly during the four weeks of her stay in New York,
+but though he had been kind and pleasant, not once had he
+expressed a desire to see her, or even a passing curiosity as to
+the date of her return.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When she had first come back to New York, she had had a
+feeling of shame and despondency as she thought of her effort
+in Philadelphia to induce Peter to take a definite stand about
+their wedding. But her stay here with her mother had dissipated
+all that feeling. The prosy, uninteresting life which
+Mrs. Ellersley and Mis’ Sparrow led, the troop of commonplace,
+albeit kindly and dependable roomers made her turn
+again to Peter for a way out. More than ever she was in the
+same trap in which she had found herself years ago when as
+a little girl she walked home with her mother from the dinners
+which she had eaten in some employer’s house. Now, it was
+true, her surroundings were no longer dirty and she was no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>longer poor—she and her mother had all the money they
+needed and almost all that they wanted. Of lowly stock,
+Maggie had never cared in the least for the possession of
+riches. But the old loneliness, the old sense of unworthiness,
+of being nobody was strong upon her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In earlier days she had frequented the Marshalls’ house;
+plenty of other girls had frequented it, too. It was to be presumed
+that the Marshalls from time to time had returned such
+visits. But somehow she had never contrived to be on really
+intimate terms with those others. They were all polite, more
+than polite, even cordial to Maggie, and yet she knew that
+while moving with that group, she was not of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The difficulty had been, had always been, that she had no
+background.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Other girls’ fathers and mothers were “somebodies.” Alice
+and Vera Manning’s father was a remarkably successful business
+man, old Joel Marshall was as famous in his way, she
+guessed, as Delmonico. Even Peter Bye—as poor almost, she
+correctly imagined, as she herself in the old days—boasted a
+long, a <i>bona fide</i> ancestry. And, besides, he was a man.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>From as far back as she could remember she had had one
+passion, one desire unique in its singleness. And that had been
+to “be” somebody. And long ago she had realized that the
+only way out for her was marriage with a man of distinction.
+The distinction might consist in a career, in family, in business,—it
+made no difference to her. At first she thought she could
+achieve her desire through Philip—and she had loved him, too.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She dwelt on this a moment. How wonderful such a marriage
+would have been! Loving him as she did she would have
+let her desire for mere respectability sink into second place,
+discounting the fact that she would have gained it anyhow by
+such a union. But Joanna had interfered, and then she had
+married Henderson Neal, a gambler, a <em>gambler</em> who had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>plunged her further back than ever into the obscurity from
+which she was beginning to emerge.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What a fool I was to consider Joanna’s letter. Philip might,
+just possibly, have come to like me better—to love me.” She
+reminded herself then, a little spasm of pain twitching across
+her face, that he had never since her marriage, not even since
+her divorce, made any attempt to get in touch with her. “And
+he could have a thousand times,” she whispered to herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now here was Peter. She rose from the couch on which she
+had been lying and walked restlessly, aimlessly around the
+room. The light from a cluster of electric bulbs on the wall
+struck at and brought out little flashes of radiance from the
+silver butterflies which chased each other up and down across
+the heavy folds of her black silk kimono. Her hair, parted
+in the middle and brushed to a smooth luster, hung in two
+thick short braids one over each shoulder. She caught her
+lip in her teeth, whitening that mysterious redness which was
+the only note of color in the golden oval of her face.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A mirror caught her attention and she stopped before it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Peter, Peter,” she whispered unseeingly to the image in
+the glass, “dear Peter, don’t you see you’re my only chance?
+You’ve got to help me. It isn’t as though Joanna really
+wanted you, or as though you’d ever go back to her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Just as Joanna had resolved a few hours ago to cast herself
+on Maggie’s mercy, so Maggie determined to open up her
+heart to Peter and beg him to remove her forever from the
+distastefulness of this life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her mother tapped on the door and came in, followed by
+Mis’ Sparrow. The two of them, great “jiners,” had just
+returned from one of their innumerable lodge meetings.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It was a great sight, Maggie. You’d ought to have been
+there. Can’t see why you mope so about the house, anyway.
+Don’t believe you’ve been anywhere since you’ve been here
+this trip—’cept to Madam Harkness’.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>Maggie murmured that she didn’t care to go out, she had
+come home to rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, stay in the house all you want, chile. Long’s I
+got Cousin Jinny Sparrow to go around with me I ain’t carin’.
+Reckon we’ve done our share of stayin’ in the house in our
+time, ain’t we, Jinny?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mis’ Sparrow thus addressed admitted she had: “An’ I don’t
+propose to do it no more. Come on, Sallie, I c’n see Maggie’s
+got somethin’ on her mind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie protested, but only faintly. She loved and was
+deeply attached to the two thin wrinkled ladies, but they and
+she had nothing in common. They lived a separate life from
+hers entirely, a life which included much attention to churches,
+strawberry festivals, lodge meetings, bits of gossip, funerals,
+visits to ladies similarly faded and wizened, and a sort of
+shrewd indiscriminate charity. Maggie used to envy them
+their utter and complete absorption in these matters.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m not the one who wants to be to herself, it’s you who
+want to get off and talk over your secrets.” She shook a
+playful finger. Long after they had gone, curled up on her
+couch, she sat watching, as she used to watch in Philadelphia,
+the gas-heater cast its ruddy glow on the high white ceiling.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The morning brought her a momentary shock of pleasure.
+It was the day for Peter’s letter. He had written: “I am coming
+to see you next week.” Her spirits leaped at that. But
+afterwards he explained; one of his classmates had warned
+him to get his instruments as quickly as possible, there was
+going to be a great demand for steel, so he was coming to
+New York to see about the things he had ordered. “I’m in
+deadly earnest this time, Maggie, and though I don’t like my
+professors any better than I did before, I’m making the most
+of my return. There’s only one thing that would keep me
+from finishing and that would be war. It seems foolish for a
+colored man to fight for America, but I believe I’d like to do it.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>Only I want to pick up a commission somewhere. Not a
+chance for a colored fellow at Plattsburg, but some of the
+boys are whispering of a training camp for Negro officers at
+Des Moines. This is still <i>sub rosa</i>, so don’t mention it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her hopes rose, fell, rose again as she scanned the letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He must make some definite plans about me, if he’s thinking
+of war.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The next Thursday saw him striding along Fifty-third Street
+in the direction of Maggie’s house. His nervous glance at his
+watch justified his fear of being late. That was because he
+had stopped at his Aunt Susan’s little apartment to talk over
+his plans. She was just the same as ever—stout, sane, energetic,
+ready to be fond of Peter. Before the afternoon was over she
+was worshiping him inwardly. For her nephew, suddenly conscious
+of his debt to her and realizing as he climbed the stairs
+to her rooms that here was his only real home, had taken her
+at the door into his arms with a burst of genuinely filial affection.
+She had, as she put it, “scared up” something for him to
+eat, and the two sitting at the little dinner table had entered
+into a silent appreciation of kinship such as lonely Miss Susan
+had wanted ever since her sister’s death. Peter had told her
+of his break with Joanna. “I can’t talk much about that, Aunt
+Susan—maybe some other time——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her kind hand on his steadied him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“For a while I kept on playing ducks and drakes with my
+life—that was really why Joanna chucked me, you know—but
+all of a sudden I came to my senses, and now I’ve gone back
+to studying and I’ll be all right yet, Aunt Sue. You and I’ll
+have a nice little house somewhere. You’ll see.” He checked
+himself: “Unless this war intervenes. Of course I’d have to
+go into that. America makes me sick, you know, like I used
+to make you I guess, but darn it all, she is my country. My
+folks helped make her what she is even if they were slaves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Aunt Susan beamed on him. “Your great-grandfather
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>fought in the Revolution, Peter, and two of your uncles, my
+brothers, were in the Civil War. If you enlist you’ll only be
+following their example.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He looked at his watch. “I must go, dear. Do you know,
+it’s as though I had just discovered you to-day.” Her hands
+were in his and he caught them up and kissed them, bending
+his shapely curly head a little. “If I have to go away suddenly,
+I’ll send you a few of my things, the Bye Bible and all
+that, you know. But you’ll see me again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He caught up his hat and ran out.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That Joanna is a fool and a minx,” said the old lady ungratefully.
+“I hope he didn’t suffer much. It’s a wonder some
+other girl hasn’t got him now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had not told her about Maggie. “Not worth while,”
+he muttered to himself, taking the subway steps in four leaps.
+“Maggie’s got to let me off. I’ll ask her, I’ll explain. God,
+what a cad I feel!” He tugged at his collar. “But she’ll be
+better off. I know she will. Now I wonder why she married
+that Neal fellow instead of waiting to give Philip a chance?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He mused over this sitting in the subway train with his
+watch in his hand. “I shouldn’t have spent so much time with
+Aunt Susan.” He had arranged with Morgan and some other
+students for a comprehensive review at his house that same
+night. It would never do for him not to show up on time,
+they were all busy fellows.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Everything depended on Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He rushed out of the subway and came swinging along the
+street looking for her number. As he turned abruptly toward
+the house he caromed into a tall, heavily set man standing idly
+and yet purposefully at the bottom of the steps. Peter rang
+the bell, conscious as he did so that the man had received his
+apologies only with an odd glare. One last glance over his
+shoulder just before he went in showed the stranger staring
+fixedly at the front door as though to see who opened it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>Mis’ Sparrow let him in. Maggie was in the “settin’ room”
+at the head of the stairs, she told him as she herself went out.
+He ran up to arrive at a landing so dark that he knocked over
+a chair. The door was only slightly open, so he knocked.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Come in,” Maggie called listlessly. “Oh, is that you, Peter?
+I’d been expecting you all day and then finally gave you up.
+Was that you stumbling on the landing? I’m always at mother
+to keep the light going there. I don’t know why she won’t.
+Here, I’ll turn it on now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Peter, unwilling to lose more time, begged her not to
+bother. “Come over here and sit down, Maggie. We’ve lots
+to talk about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He hadn’t kissed her, she noticed, observing his nervousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What’s the matter, Peter? You seem so excited.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Do I? Well, I’ve had a full day—early breakfast, the trip,
+and walking around downtown—and then visiting Aunt Susan
+and breaking my neck to get here. That’s moving pretty swift,
+isn’t it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>To control her own lack of composure she asked him to let
+her see his instruments. “My, aren’t they shiny and pretty
+and sharp? And each one with your name on it? That’s
+splendid. No chance of having them stolen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” he replied absently, taking the little leather case from
+her hand and placing it still open on the table. “No, not a
+chance. Listen, Maggie, I’ve—I’ve got to go pretty soon,
+must be back in Philadelphia by nine o’clock, I—I want to
+talk to you frankly for a moment or two, about ourselves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sat expectantly. “Maggie, I don’t want you to think
+me a cad—I’m not that really—but even if you do think me
+one I’ve come to ask you to release me. We—our affair has
+been a mistake, I had no business dragging you into it. I am
+sure you don’t love me—why should you love anyone who’s
+trifled with his life as I have? And I—I don’t—you understand,
+Maggie, I have and always shall have the highest regard
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>for you. There’s nothing in the world I wouldn’t do for you,
+for a girl of your fine qualities——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Except marry her,” she thought.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But I find—it was unspeakable of me to make the mistake—I
+find I don’t love you, Maggie, as a man should love his—his
+wife. And that’s a bad way to start a marriage, don’t you
+think?” He thought he read scorn in her watching eyes, and
+hastened to fortify his excuse. “You know, I’ve been in love
+once, I know what it ought to be.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She said in a level, absolutely emotionless voice, “You want
+to go back to Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That name steadied him. “No, not that, Maggie dear. She
+wouldn’t take me back; I’m not worthy of Joanna; she was
+quite right. I shall probably never see her again until we
+are both quite old. Not a chance for me there,” he ended
+sadly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Curiously enough, if he had himself dared to think of
+returning to Joanna, if he had told Maggie so, she would have
+released him instantly. It was not part of her plan to interfere
+with love. But if Peter, who would never love any one but
+Joanna, were to be left drifting for some other woman to pick
+up ten, five years from now, perhaps even immediately after
+the war! He would never be able to do the service for any
+woman in this world that he could do for her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He misunderstood her silence. “It isn’t as though you cared
+such a lot about me, Maggie. My leaving wouldn’t really mean
+anything to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It would mean my death,” she told him. And indeed it
+did seem to her that if he left her alone with nothing in her
+life but Madame Harkness and those two poor old ladies—her
+mother and Mis’ Sparrow—she would die of it. She would
+die of sheer disappointment at being balked this second time
+of her constant desire.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter stared at her in sick astonishment. “You mean it?”
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>he whispered. It had never crossed his mind that she cared
+for him like this. Subconsciously he thought, “Suppose this
+had been Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Before Maggie could speak again, someone knocked on the
+door; one of Mrs. Ellersley’s roomers stuck in a tousled head.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“’Scuse me, Miss Maggie, I heard you-all talkin’ in here,
+en they ain’t no one else in the house. Jest wanted to tell you
+I’m runnin’ down to the corner a minute en as I mislaid my
+key I’m goin’ t’ leave the latch up, if you-all don’t mind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie stared blankly. “Oh, certainly Mr. Simpson, certainly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They heard Mr. Simpson shuffling down the stairs and knew
+by the sound of the slamming door that he had gone out.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>What they did not know was that a moment later a tall,
+heavily built man, who had been lounging sidewise against the
+wall of a neighboring house, came forward swiftly and ran up
+the steps. He tried the door gently and finding to his surprise
+that it yielded, walked in and closed it softly behind him. For
+two weeks, unnoticed, fingering a door-key in his pocket, he
+had kept watch on that house and its inmates, until he had
+become acquainted with the hours of the coming and going of
+each. He knew Maggie was at home in the afternoons; his
+purpose was to wait for a time when all of them should be out
+but her. One by one he had watched them emerge, Mrs.
+Ellersley and Mis’ Sparrow finally within fifteen minutes of
+each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Those old birds,” he murmured to himself, “they’re just
+as likely as not to join up somewheres and go to one of their
+protracted meetin’s.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Gradually the house had emptied itself with the exception
+of Maggie and this tousel-headed Mr. Simpson who usually
+left later than this. He had not seen Bye come out, but
+thought it likely the visitor had left in the quarter of an hour
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>he had spent in the saloon around the corner where he had
+swallowed an unaccustomed dram to fortify his intention.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In the hall he stood blinking a moment in the darkness, then
+as the sound of voices penetrated to him from above he withdrew
+into the obscurity of the narrow oblong parlor. Evidently
+the fellow had not gone yet. There was plenty of time, he
+could wait.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Upstairs Maggie was pouring out to Peter her great obsession.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I know I am amazing you, Peter, but I can’t endure this
+life, this utter separation from people who mean something.
+Take me away from it. I’ll be eternally grateful to you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But, good God, Maggie, what can I do? I’m only a penniless
+student with my way to make. We’d be poor for years.
+And, anyway, where do you get the idea that my name carries
+with it any social asset?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She murmured something about his long line of ancestors;
+years ago in her presence his Aunt Susan had spoken to Mrs.
+Marshall about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know how your name gave you the entrance into the
+best families in Philadelphia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He stared at her. Of all the crazy complexes, this was the
+craziest. It was indecent, this situation, agony for both of
+them. He tried to be firm, faltered, was lost.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know I think all this is idiotic, Maggie. If you think
+marriage with me would help you because I know the names
+of my great-grandparents—why, it’s absurd, ridiculous. I had
+a lot of foreparents—we all did—but they were nobodies most
+of them, only slaves.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s what they all were.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All who?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All the early settlers, weren’t they, the white ones, too,
+indentured servants, outcasts, outlaws, men driven for one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>reason or other from their own countries? But certain ones
+of them have always stood out, attained prominence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Overcome by this interpretation of history, he could make
+no suitable answer. He moved over to the little table, picked
+up his hat.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Obviously all this will have to be gone over again. If you
+like I’ll send my Aunt Susan to see you, she knows all sorts of
+people both here and in Philadelphia. If you ask her no doubt
+she’ll manage to make it very pleasant for you. I really must
+go, Maggie. And of course—that is, if you insist on it—remember
+that I shall always be at your service.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He held her hand a moment, passed out and ran sideways,
+after the manner of men, down the wide staircase.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The front door closed after him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie walked back through the room. This was her
+great interview. Peter had been here; to prove it there was
+his box of instruments on the table—she ran out in the hall
+again, perhaps she could catch him, for he could hardly have
+turned the corner.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>An iron hand shot out of the darkness of the landing, caught
+her wrist in an agonizing vise. Then some one dragged her
+back into the room and she looked up into the raging somber
+eyes of Henderson Neal. She had not been frightened at first,
+but the sight of that face with its snarling lips and its bloodshot
+eyes unnerved her. In an instinctive gesture of fear she
+threw up her free hand which held the little case. It slipped
+from her grasp and some of the knives fell on the floor.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still holding her he stooped and picked one up.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her self-control ebbed back to her. Somehow she had never
+been seriously afraid of Neal. Her scorn had been too great
+for that. One does not fear what one scorns.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She said to him evenly, “Henderson, let me go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But he pulled her closer to him. “I’ll never let you go
+again. Either you’ll come with me, or I’ll——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>“You’ll what?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll kill you.” But the thought obviously had just come
+to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Pooh!” she made a face at him. A trace of her old-time
+slanginess returned: “What’s all the excitement?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His heavy countenance lowered, darkened. “He actually
+looks black,” she thought to herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know you can’t fool me, Maggie girl. You had me
+believing you divorced me because I gambled, when what you
+wanted was to get back to that high-brow feller of yours!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“What high-brow fellow?” She knew he was confusing
+Peter with Philip, but she must engage him in talk until
+Simpson could return.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“As though you didn’t know. The one who just left here.
+Are you gonna give him up, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I am not.” Her cool decision drove him beside himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You think I’m foolin’, don’t you? I’ll show you. I know
+you’re alone in the house. I’ll give you just three seconds to
+tell me you’ll come back to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll let you kill me first.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She saw him look at the knife, Peter’s knife, which he was
+still holding in his hand. A look of determination settled in
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Even then she was not frightened. People—the people one
+knows never do that sort of thing.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>With a flash-like movement he leaned closer and brought
+the keen, glittering piece of steel down toward her. When
+she saw he was in earnest she threw her arm forward close over
+her breast. But the knife bit down, down into the soft flesh.
+Bewildered she saw the red blood spurting, gushing over her
+arm, her dress, a soft green dress which she had donned for
+Peter. Now it was turning in spots to a vivid red.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He let go of the arm, looking at her with fascinated gaze.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>Slowly she sank, turned her eyes toward him, saw him drop
+the knife and rush headlong out of the room.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So she was going to die, killed in a brawl with her divorced
+husband. The fires of her life were to go out, extinguished
+under the waters of commonness and degradation. After all,
+what did it matter? Her thoughts took an odd turn as she
+felt herself slipping, slipping into the blackness of what must
+be death.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He must have loved me even more than I loved Philip.
+What a pity that I have to die without letting Philip know
+how dearly I loved him.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>
+ <h2 id='chap26' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXVI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>A FEW moments later Mr. Simpson came rushing up the
+front steps. He tried the door gingerly and found to
+his relief that it was not locked. That meant Mrs.
+Ellersley had not yet returned to chide him for his carelessness.
+Miss Maggie now was different; she would never carry
+on, no matter what a fellow did. It would be just as well for
+him to stop at the room at the head of the stairs and let her
+know he had returned.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The landing was still dark, but long experience had taught
+him to navigate the troublesome chair. Without mishap he
+reached the door of the sitting-room. Everything was absolutely
+silent, still he would just put his head inside to make sure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was concluding there was nobody there when his eye
+caught something protruding from the other side of the table
+which stood in the center of the room. A chair, too, had been
+overturned, and scattered about on the floor were several
+little bright shiny things. He picked one up, looked at the
+legend on the handle, “Chilled steel, England, Peter Bye.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The name of the maker evidently. Queer doings here. Half
+afraid, wholly curious, he ventured in further, especially intrigued
+by that light brown object which protruded from
+beyond the table and which looked—though this, he knew, was
+imagination—like a hand. He bent over it, touched it, followed
+it with eyes and fingers to an arm dripping and scarlet
+with blood and beyond the arm a face golden and immobile.
+Beyond the head lay still another of those small strange objects.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>Only this was neither bright nor shining; it was red, a vivid
+red and the handle which he touched with a shaking finger
+was sticky.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sprang backwards, his face ghostly under its brown
+skin, his eyes goggling. This was—Death. “Oh, God! Help!
+Murder! Police! Miss Maggie!” Down the stairs he tore,
+his hands twisted and fumbled at the locks. The door opened
+to disclose Joanna standing on the door-step about to ring the
+bell.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She looked past him into the dim hall. “Do you know if
+Miss Ellersley is in?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His eyes widened in horror. “For Christ’s sake, lady, keep
+out. Don’t go in there, she’s dead, pore girl, murdered.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Nonsense! Maggie murdered! What do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Stammering and shrinking he told her of his ghastly find.
+“Don’t go in there, lady, don’t know nothin’ about it. <em>I</em>
+don’t mean to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She caught his arm. “Here, come on, you must take me to
+it—to her; she can’t be left like this. Be a man.” But for
+all her brave words her knees were shaking.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Unwillingly he led her to the quiet form in the green and
+red-soaked dress. Joanna dropping beside it put her hand
+on Maggie’s wrist. A faint pulse fluttered.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“She’s alive. I must get this dress off her arm and shoulder.
+Got a knife?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ain’t they a million of ’em layin’ around you, lady?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Shudderingly she turned from the red one. “How queer!
+How awful! Hand me that clean one over there.” Her eye
+fell, as she took it from him, on the handle—“Chilled steel,
+England, Peter Bye”—rested there stricken.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Ought to be able to trace the murderer awful quick, don’t
+you think, ma’am? This man Bye would know who he sold
+them knives to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>Without answering she cut away the cloth, used her handkerchief—worthless
+for this—to stanch the blood. “Find me
+a towel, there must be one somewhere.” If Peter had done
+this she must save Maggie in order to save him. And if this
+were Peter’s work—he did not love Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Ashamed of her thought she bent closer. “There’s a bad
+cut below the shoulder but the cut in the arm is worse. Have
+you a large soft handkerchief? Quick, I must stop the bleeding.
+I can’t manage with this stiff towel.” He was off and
+back in a jiffy with three handkerchiefs, immense and happily
+clean, the testimony of Mrs. Ellersley’s supervision.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She twisted one of them. “Now a pencil?” Somewhere out
+of the past floated a memory of Miss Shanley’s direction how
+to make a tourniquet, one of the things Joanna had meant
+to forget after she grew up. Subconscious memories guided
+her fingers. “Now where’s a bedroom? Help me to carry
+her there.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had already dispatched him to a telephone to get, if
+possible, Harry Portor, whose office was in the San Juan district.
+Puzzled by Mr. Simpson’s incoherence, the doctor
+promised to come at once and soon the chug-chug of his little
+Ford rose above the sounds of the noisy street.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna ran down to let him in, meeting his astonishment as
+the two climbed the stairs with breathless information. Harry
+praised her tourniquet. “Good work, Joanna. Fortunately
+it’s a clean cut, no jaggedness. I suppose he was trying to
+get at her heart. Where’s the knife it was done with?” He
+busied himself with fresh bandages and restoratives.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t know,” she told him faintly. Why had she not
+thought of this? Now she must keep him out of the sitting-room.
+Her confusion escaped him, but Mr. Simpson hovering
+in the background had heard the question and slipping out
+returned with the knife.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>“Here it is, doc. I was just tellin’ the lady, ought sure to be
+able to catch that ’sassin; man who sold him the knife’s done
+got his name stamped on the handle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Harry took it. “H’m, a surgeon’s knife.” He turned it
+over. “Where’s the name? Peter—why look here, Joanna,
+did you see this?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There’s a whole case in the other room, sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, go get it and bring it to me. What do you suppose
+this means, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She whispered, “Wait till that man goes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“All right, I’ll send him off.” He sent the willing Simpson
+on his return with the case, to the druggist.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now, Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had her story ready. “I came to see Maggie about—about
+Peter, Harry. One of the girls who works at Madame
+Harkness, saw Sylvia last night and told her Maggie was in
+town.” This much was true. “So I came to see her. Just before
+I came, it seems, Peter came. She told me about it. I
+couldn’t stand it. And I caught up one of his little knives—he’d
+left his case here—and cut her. I must have been crazy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You must still be crazy to think I’d believe that. You’re
+not a good liar, Joanna. Now tell me the truth, dear. Were
+you here when he stabbed her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She stuck to her story. “He didn’t stab her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The quiet figure on the bed moved ever so slightly, opened
+its lips, moaned faintly. “What’s the matter with my arm?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Harry leaned over her. “A bad cut, Maggie! How’d you
+come to get it?” Her attention wandered. “Who’s that standing
+over there?” Joanna retreated further into the shadows.
+“Who are you? Oh, it hurts me here, too.” She laid her hand
+on her breast.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m the doctor, Harry Portor, you remember me, don’t
+you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>He could see her make an effort. “You’re sure Henderson’s
+not here? It would make him angry to see you. Peter was
+here a little while ago—we’re going to be married, you know.
+That’s why Henderson cut me.” Her voice grew stronger. “I
+thought he had killed me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Harry cast Joanna a fleeting look. “Wait down in my
+car,” his lips formed. She slipped down the stairs out of the
+house.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She sat in the car a long time while the street darkened.
+She saw Mr. Simpson return and hard on his footsteps Mrs.
+Ellersley. He must have told the news just inside the hall, for
+Joanna heard a shriek cut short by the closing door. Presently
+Harry came running down the steps, peering short-sightedly
+through his thick glasses at her crouching figure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He said briefly, “A bad business, but she’s not in any danger
+unless there’s a breakdown from nervous shock.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The words were meaningless to her, reviewing Maggie’s
+statement: “Peter was here, we’re going to be married, you
+know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When they got to her house Joanna politely asked him to
+come in.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, but wait a moment. I want to tell you something.”
+He fiddled with the brake a moment. “Joanna, you’ve been
+avoiding me lately because you know I love you and you were
+afraid I’d ask you to marry me. Don’t avoid me any more.
+I’ve got my answer. When a girl loves a man as you do
+Peter Bye, so much so that she’ll accuse herself for his sake—oh,
+it makes no difference that he was innocent—well, nobody
+else need think there’s a chance for him. But I’m your friend,
+Joanna, believe that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thanked him sadly. “Good-night, Harry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia sent Roger up to her room to tell her that Miss Vera—Vera—“I
+forget her other name, Aunt Janna,” had called up.
+She would call again the next day.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>Joanna thanked him indifferently. “All right, darling, tell
+Mamma I’ll look out for her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She thought to herself as he pattered down stairs: “Peter
+and Maggie, here in New York ... I won’t think of them,
+I’m not going through all that sick agony again. I believe I’ll
+go South to-morrow.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>
+ <h2 id='chap27' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXVII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE day’s excitement made Joanna sleep soundly, and
+in the morning she awoke strongly refreshed and
+rested. No gesture that she could make to Fate would
+ever restore Peter. She had been willing to make the greatest
+sacrifice of all—to surrender her pride—and even as she was
+about to do this, absolute evidence was given that her sacrifice
+was useless. The whole affair was over, finished, dead; henceforth
+Peter was to be in her life what other men were to other
+girls when they spoke of them as “old beaux.” That was the
+way for her to speak of Peter now. She practiced it with stiff
+lips: “Peter Bye, oh, yes, he used to be an old beau of mine.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her romance would hereafter lie behind her. From this
+day on she would dedicate herself to one interest, which should
+be the fixed purpose of her life; now that she thought of it
+she would give up the idea of dancing, too. Her former lover
+and her former ambition alike were unattainable; they had
+merely been means of enriching her experience. Now she
+would get down to the business of living; no more sighs, no
+more backward glances. And the first thing she would do
+would be to offer her services as a director of music to a colored
+school in the South. Many a principal before whose school
+she had sung would extend her a cordial welcome. Even
+though the school year was almost near its close she might
+get a chance to map out arrangements for the work of the
+following year. Her preference would be one of the less-known,
+poorly endowed schools where there would be lots of work.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>She lay there and watched the April sun mounting slowly,
+slowly up the walls of her room. From outside rose the myriad
+sounds of Harlem; a huckster calling unintelligibly, some school
+children on their way to P. S. 89, shrilling their Iliad of
+school affairs; from far away came the echo of a spiritual
+whistled meditatively, almost reverently. Over herself crept a
+sense of peace, of finality, the sort of let-downness that comes
+to one voluntarily relaxing from difficult strain. She had not
+known such a feeling since when as girls she and Sylvia had
+been sent on a vacation trip into the country. The life was
+lonely for the two citified youngsters and they sought solace
+in taking long walks,—“voyages of discovery” Joanna called
+them. Once after a tramp of two or three hours they had
+come about four o’clock to a little lumpy field in whose center
+stood a cluster of trees. Breathless and weary Joanna had
+scrambled over the wooden bars and had lain down on the short
+stiff stubble in the refreshing shade. All about stretched only
+sky, earth, and in the distance rows of trees rimming their pasture.
+There was nothing, no one in the world but herself and
+Sylvia. She felt her senses lulled by the quiet security into a
+deep sense of peace.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now this came back to her and other thoughts, too: their
+return from the country to New York—her mother and Peter
+were at the station. But she would not think of that. She
+must get up, write letters, explain to her father and mother,
+make arrangements.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Essie, a fixture in the service of the Marshalls, brought her a
+breakfast of rolls and chocolate. Joanna devoured it.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You don’t look bright, Essie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No’m. Got lots to worry about. Them white folks where
+my girl Myrtle goes to school act so mean all the time, always
+discouragin’ her. ‘What’s the good of you comin’ to high
+school’? they ses. ‘What’re you gonna do when you finish?’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>How quickly once she would have rejoined with one of her
+sweeping platitudes which to her were not platitudes because
+they represented a fresh and virile belief: “Don’t let her
+become discouraged, Essie; just have her keep on. Success
+always comes if you work hard enough for it.” But to-day,
+remembering her plans for the stage and her courtship with
+Peter—both rendered frustrate through this hopeless obstacle
+of color—she could only murmur: “Yes, yes, I know. White
+people are hard to get along with. Better times coming, I
+hope, Essie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After a bath she slipped into a flame-colored dressing gown
+and sat down to her letters. Sylvia coming up noiselessly put
+her head in the door.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not dressed yet, Joanna? She’ll be here soon. It’s 10:30.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna lifted a startled face. “Who’ll be here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Miss Sharples, Miss Vera Sharples. I sent Roger up to
+tell you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, he did, but you know how he forgets names. He said
+‘Miss Vera’ and I thought he meant Vera Manning. Wonder
+what Miss Sharples wants to see me about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“One of her pet charities probably. Get a move on. Here,
+wear your green dress.” Joanna, whose thoughts had flown to
+Peter via Miss Susan Graves via Miss Sharples, took the green
+dress absent-mindedly, then dropped it with a shudder. Maggie
+had worn such a dress yesterday, a soft dull green, horribly,
+fantastically adorned with bright and sticky red.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, not that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You <em>are</em> nervous, Joanna. What do you feel like wearing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Together they chose a crêpe silk dress of straight and
+simple lines. The bodice as flaming as the dressing gown
+was long, like a Russian blouse. Its end terminated by hem-stitching
+into a black shallow-pleated<a id='tn015'></a> skirt. A narrow ropelike
+cord confined the waist.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>“Stunning,” Sylvia said, spinning her around. She had
+designed the dress. “If Brian just wouldn’t treat me right
+we’d run away to Paris, Jan, and set up a dressmaking establishment.
+You should be my manikin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A restatement of Roger’s imperfect message revealed the
+fact that Miss Sharples would call at eleven. Sylvia let her in
+and ran back to tell her sister who was outlining her plans
+to her father and mother in the dining room.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“There’s your ‘grand white folks’ Janna. My Heavens,
+where <em>do</em> you suppose she finds her clothes? She hasn’t a bit
+of color in her face and there she’s wearing a stone gray suit
+and a gray hat with a brown, a <em>brown</em> scarf around it. Her
+hair is as straight as a poker and she wears it bobbed.” Sylvia
+shuddered.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh well, she’s a good sort,” Joanna remonstrated, smiling,
+“and she doesn’t say ‘you people.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Strange how realization falls short of anticipation. Joanna
+was about to scale the path which led to her highest ambition,
+but she had no sense of premonition. Instead, she looked at
+Vera Sharples sitting insignificantly and drably in an armchair,
+her graying bobbed hair straggling a bit over her mannish
+tweed coat, her feet encased in solid tan boots. Only her eyes,
+looking straightforwardly and appraisingly from under the
+unbecoming hat, kept her from being dubbed a “freak.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, who had not seen her for some years, thought
+amusedly as she came with swift rhythmic steps down the
+long room: “It would be fun to turn Sylvia loose on her and
+make her dress worthy of her eyes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two were standing looking at each other now, Miss
+Vera still appraisingly. Then the older woman held out her
+hand. Joanna had neglected to do this, having, like most colored
+people of her class, carefully schooled herself in the
+matter of repression where white people were concerned. However,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>she took the extended hand and gave it a hearty pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said Miss Sharples as though checking up the colored
+girl’s points by a pattern which she carried in her head, “yes,
+you are the one. I was sure I hadn’t confused you with anyone
+else. I haven’t seen you for several years, you know, not
+since that Christmas when you danced for the Day Nursery
+with Helena Arnold. Do you remember?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, slightly nonplussed, nodded yes. As though she
+could forget that Christmas when she had become engaged to
+Peter!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Sharples, still pursuing some train of thought known
+only to herself, meandered on. “I said, ‘I know there must be
+somebody who could do it,’ and then I thought of you, but I
+didn’t know your name. So I called up Helena and she told
+me. Do you still dance as divinely as you did that night, my
+dear?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Better,” Joanna told her confidently, “although it doesn’t
+get me anywhere. Would you mind telling me what all this
+is about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her visitor settled herself comfortably in a chair, crossed
+one leg over the other, and took out a cigarette. “Mind if I
+smoke?” Joanna watched her wide-eyed, picturing her father’s
+surprise if he should happen to look in on them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It’s a long story. You may or may not know that I am
+one of the directors of the District Line Theater. Lately
+we’ve been putting on a production called ‘The Dance of the
+Nations’—dances of the nations it really should be called. Well,
+we have one woman to represent France, another England, etc.;
+we aren’t featuring Germany or any of her allies. When it
+came to America we had to have two or three dances represented,
+one for the white element, one for the black and one for
+the red. Of course that made the woman representing America
+practically a star. Well, she’s all right as a white American,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>or as a red one, but when it comes to the colored American,
+she simply lays down on her job.” Miss Sharples’ eloquence
+drowned her sense of grammar.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know,” she went on vigorously, “art to my eye is art,
+and there’s no sense in letting a foolish prejudice interfere
+with it. This girl won’t darken her face and hasn’t a notion,
+so far as dancing like colored people is concerned, beyond
+the cake-walk. Well, I told my Board I didn’t believe that
+was either adequate or accurate. I’d seen Helena Arnold
+dance, you know, and I’d seen you, and I figured that your
+way was the right way,” she concluded sensibly, “because you
+were colored. Miss Ashby’s contract expires this week and I
+persuaded the Board to let me try to find someone else. What
+do you think about it?” She paused, still regarding Joanna
+shrewdly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You mean,” said Joel Marshall’s daughter, “that you are
+offering me a chance to dance at the District Line Theater?”
+She thought: “I know this isn’t real.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, yes, if you suit. It would be an experiment. To be
+frank, my dear, some of the directors are doubtful about the
+success of a colored girl on the stage, but if you dance as well
+as you did five or six years ago, I should say there would be
+no difficulty. Suppose you come with me now, there’s a rehearsal
+at the theater this afternoon. Are you free?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Was she free? She dashed off to get her wraps and stumbled
+into Sylvia on the second floor. “Isn’t she long-winded?
+What’d she come to see you about?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna took her by both shoulders and shook her. “About
+my dancing at the District Line Theater in the ‘Dance of the
+Nations.’ Oh, Sylvia, if I’m dreaming, don’t let me wake up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Down in Greenwich Village on the south side of Washington
+Square, Joanna found Miss Susan’s “Board.” They were
+occupying, scattered around, a large dilapidated room of magnificent
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>proportions and they were talking of art, of dancing
+with an enthusiasm and accuracy, an amazing precision such
+as Joanna had never heard equaled.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Valvinov is good, more than good, excellent in her conception
+of the dance and the way she carries it out, but her
+ankles are too clumsy, it makes me sick to look at her legs.”
+A short, stocky young man seated at the piano delivered this
+dictum. He was very pale, with thick black hair which he wore
+plastered back from a low square forehead. His hair was
+long, Joanna noticed, and ran in unbroken strands from his
+forehead to the top of his coat collar. He spoke absolutely
+unaccented English, and his clothes were sharply American,
+but he was unlike any American the girl had even seen before.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Miss Sharples introduced her briskly. “This is Miss
+Marshall,” she said to the room in general, “the dancer I was
+telling you of.” Joanna inclined her head slightly, but the
+men all rose and bowed gravely, and the two other women in
+the room—a Miss Rosen and a Miss Phelps as they turned
+out to be—bowed also noncommittally but without hostility.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Evidently the place had frequently been used for rehearsals,
+for there was a narrow platform running across the far end
+of the room. Here Miss Sharples stationed Joanna. “Just
+to give them an idea of what you can do, my dear. There isn’t
+much space, but I don’t think that will bother you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” said Joanna confidently, “the thing is the music.”
+She glanced at the pale young man who had spoken about the
+Russian dancer’s thick ankles. “Can you play by ear?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I think I could manage it,” he told her seriously. They
+were all serious, as unconscious of self and as tremendously
+interested as though they were assisting at an affair of national
+moment. Joanna felt the atmosphere enveloping, quickening
+her. She stepped down from the platform.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, now listen. I’m supposed to have a ring of children
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>around me. I sing and they answer. At first I’ll have to sing
+both parts, but afterwards you can play their answers. See,
+this is the way it goes.” She sat down at the piano, and ran
+through the melody of “Barn! Barn!” singing it in her beautiful,
+full voice.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That’s it, that’s got the lilt,” a tall, dark man said to Miss
+Rosen.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna yielded the piano to the pale young man—Francis—everyone
+called him. He ran over her sketch, filling in with
+deep, rich chords, while she flew back to the little platform.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now then, you’ve got it. Ready!</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“<i>Sissy in the barn! Join in the weddin’!</i>”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Her voice rang out, her slender flaming body turned and
+twinkled, her lovely graceful limbs flashed and darted and
+pirouetted. She was everywhere at once, acting the part of
+leader, of individual children, of the whole, singing, stamping
+circle.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The Board applauded. “Oh, but that’s great, that’s genius,”
+cried Miss Phelps.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If I could only have some real children,” Joanna suggested,
+“colored children. Are there any around here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“About five thousand down there in Minetta Lane,” Francis
+told her gravely. “Want me to get you some?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, if you only would.” He and Miss Rosen disappeared
+and were back in fifteen minutes with ten colored children, of
+every type and shade, black and brown and yellow, some with
+stiff pigtails and others with bobbed curling locks. Most of
+them knew the game already, all of them took to Joanna and
+threw themselves with radiant, eager good nature into the
+spirit of what she was trying to display.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The tall dark man, Mr. Hale, came over to her. “You’re
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>all right, Miss Marshall, if you’re willing, we’ll try you.
+America’s got some foolish prejudices, but we’ll try her with a
+sensation, and you’ll be all of that. I’ll leave you with Miss
+Sharples and Miss Rosen, our secretary, to make final arrangements,
+while Francis and I go out to see what we can do about
+taking on these kids. I suppose you’ll need them.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
+ <h2 id='chap28' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXVIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE District Line Theater was jammed every night
+now. People came from all over New York and all
+its suburbs to see the new dancer—Joanna Marshall.
+Her success and fame were instant. The newspapers featured
+her, the “colyumists” wrote her up, her face appeared with
+other members of the cast, but never alone, on the billboards
+outside the little ramshackle theater. Special writers came to
+see her, took snapshots of herself and of Sylvia which they
+never published, and speculated on the amount of white
+blood which she had in her veins.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mr. Hale had taken her on in May. The piece ran all
+summer with Joanna as the great attraction, although not the
+acknowledged star. Miss Ashby, the girl who danced as an
+Indian and as an American, was that. From the first she had
+resented the colored girl’s success and had held jealously to
+all her rights and privileges. But the public, surprisingly
+loyal to this new and original plaything, never varied in the
+expression of its enjoyment of Joanna. Now that her changed
+contract was again about to expire, Miss Ashby announced
+her inability to remain with the play.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ve really been violating my principles in staying this
+long,” she told Mr. Hale with meaning.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Even Miss Sharples was overcome at this news. Joanna
+could be cast without any difficulty as an Indian, a wig and
+grease paint would accomplish that. But Joanna could hardly
+pose as a white American. She was too dark.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia had a suggestion here. “America” was supposed to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>come on last as a regal, symbolic figure, but Miss Ashby had
+paid more attention to the dancing than to the symbolism.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why not,” asked Sylvia, “have a mask made for Joanna?
+She could then be made as typically American as anyone could
+wish and no one need know the difference.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That was the basis on which Mr. Hale worked. On the
+first night on which the new “America” was introduced, an inveterate
+theater-goer in the first row of the orchestra insisted on
+encoring her. Joanna returned, bowed and bowed, was
+encored.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Somehow the habitué guessed the truth. “Pull off your
+mask, America,” he shouted. The house took it up. “Let’s
+see your face, America!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Mr. Hale, Miss Sharples, Francis, Miss Rosen and Miss
+Phelps held a hurried consultation behind the scenes. “There’s
+nothing to be done,” Hale said, “quick, off with your mask,
+Miss Marshall.” And breathless, somewhat with the air of a
+man bracing himself, he led Joanna again on the stage.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There was a moment’s silence, a moment’s tenseness. Then
+Joanna smiled and spoke. “I hardly need to tell you that
+there is no one in the audience more American than I am.
+My great-grandfather fought in the Revolution, my uncle
+fought in the Civil War and my brother is ‘over there’ now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Perhaps it would not have succeeded anywhere else but in
+New York, and perhaps not even there but in Greenwich Village,
+but the tightly packed audience took up the applause
+again and Joanna was a star.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The very next week Mr. Hale moved the production to
+Broadway.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna found herself becoming a sensation. Through Miss
+Sharples, who was besieged with requests to meet her protégée,
+she came in contact with groups of writers, dramatists,
+“thinkers,” that vast, friendly, changing kaleidoscope of New
+York dwellers who take their mental life seriously. Occasionally,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>too, she was invited to grace an “occasion,” an afternoon
+at the house of a rich society woman. Once at one of
+these affairs she met Vera Manning, who grinned at her
+impishly and announced to the room that she and Miss Marshall
+were old friends. They had been schoolmates.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“When I was a child,” said Vera impudently, “my mother
+sent me to public school for almost a year. She said she
+wanted me to be a real democrat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She threw Joanna a droll look. When the afternoon was
+over, Vera asked her to go on to tea with her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna was perfect: “That’s very kind of you, Miss
+Manning, and I don’t know but what I will. There are several
+things I’d like to interest you in. When I think of the
+illimitable power for good which you white people possess——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Once outside the door the two girls went off into gusts of
+inextinguishable laughter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna did not like these affairs and soon she adopted the
+habit of refusing such invitations. She preferred Miss
+Sharples’ artist friends—because among them she sensed
+attempts, more or less tentative perhaps, toward reality. True,
+paradoxically enough it was a reality based on art, rather than
+on living. But the girl was beginning to feel the need of
+something with which to fill her life. Whether her disastrous
+love affair, or the frequent discouragements with which she
+met, had changed or reshaped her vision she did not know.
+But life, she began to realize, was not a matter of sufficient raiment,
+food, or even success. There must be something more
+filling, more insistent, more permeating—the sort of thing that
+left no room for boredom or introspection.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>For in spite of her vogue, her unbelievably decided successes,
+Joanna frequently tasted the depths of ennui. She
+saw life as a ghastly skeleton and herself feverishly trying to
+cover up its bare bones with the garish trappings of her art,
+her lessons, her practice, her press-clippings.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>Miss Sharples put her up for membership in a club whose
+members were mostly people that “did” something. And
+Joanna fell in the habit of taking her lunch and frequently her
+dinner, too, at this club, just to lose herself in the atmosphere
+which she found there.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Undoubtedly the contact did her good. Joanna, while lacking
+Peter’s singularly active dislike for white people, was not
+on the other hand a “good mixer.” Following the natural reaction
+at this time of her racial group, she had tended to seek
+all her ideals among colored people and where these were lacking
+to create them for herself. As a result of this attitude,
+injurious in the long run to both whites and blacks, she was
+hardening into a singularly narrow, even though self-reliant
+egocentric. She had never met in her family with much opposition
+to her chosen career, but then neither with the exception
+of Joel’s and that of her teachers had she met with much
+coöperation.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Now to her astonishment she found herself in a setting
+where people, without being considered “different,” “high-brow,”
+“affected,”—and not greatly caring if they were—talked,
+breathed, lived for and submerged themselves and
+others, too, in their calling. She met girls not as old as she,
+who had already “arrived” in their chosen profession; incredibly
+young editors, artists—exponents of new and inexplicable
+schools of drawing,—women with causes,—birth-control, single
+tax, psychiatry,—teachers of dancing, radical high school
+teachers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There were men to be met, too, really eminent men, but
+Joanna was not much interested. Following the American
+idea, she had been too carefully trained to care for the company
+of white men. Between them and herself the barrier was
+too impassable. Besides, it was women who had the real
+difficulties to overcome, disabilities of sex and of tradition.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>For a while she was puzzled, a little ashamed when she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>realized that so many of these women had outstripped her so
+early; some of them were poor, some had responsibilities.
+There were not many of these last. It was a long time before
+the solution occurred to her and when it did the result was
+her first real rebellion against the stupidity of prejudice.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>These women had not been compelled to endure her long,
+heartrending struggle against color. Those who had had
+means had been able to plunge immediately into the sea of
+preparation; they had had their choice of teachers; as soon
+as they were equipped they had been able to approach the
+guardians of literary and artistic portals. Joanna thought of
+her many futile efforts with Bertully and sighed at the pity of
+it all. Sometimes she felt like a battle-scarred veteran among
+all these successful, happy, chattering people, who, no matter
+how seriously, how deeply they took their success, yet never
+regarded it with the same degree of wonder, almost of awe
+with which she regarded hers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She realized for the first time how completely colored
+Americans were mere on-lookers at the possibilities of life.
+She spent a few happy months with these people; they made
+pleasant and stimulating company for her; she herself suspected
+that she had made good “copy” for some of them.
+They were for the most part unconscious of race, not at all
+inclined to patronize, and generous with praise and suggestion.
+One woman, it is true, told Joanna that she had always liked
+colored people.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My father would insist on having colored servants. He
+preferred them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna had made an impish reply. “My father employs
+both white and colored servants. But he prefers the colored
+ones. However, it doesn’t make any difference to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still that had been a rare encounter. Life on the whole
+smiled on her. Yet she was not happy. But is anybody so?
+she wondered. She had forgotten to sorrow for her break with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>Peter, her life was too full for that, even for a new love.
+Vera Manning’s brother Tom, brought into her entourage by
+the flood of publicity and popularity that engulfed her, asked
+her to marry him. She liked him; found him charming and
+sympathetic, but he was too white and she did not want a
+marriage which would keep the difficulties of color more than
+ever before her eyes. What she did want, she decided, was to
+be needed, to be useful, to be devoting her time, her concentration
+and her remarkable singlemindedness to some worthy
+visible end. After all, she had worked hard and striven tremendously—to
+be what? A dancer.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Is this really what you wanted me to be?” she asked her
+father abruptly. They were driving home from the theater,
+their nightly custom. “Is this your idea of real greatness?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>And Joel, his voice half glad, half sorry, told her that he, too,
+had hoped for something different.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
+ <h2 id='chap29' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXIX</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>AT first the war presented itself to Peter in a purely
+personal aspect. It was a long time before he envisaged
+the struggle as a great stupendous whole.
+Boyishly egotistic, he saw it simply as the next big moment
+in the panorama of his life following on his break with Joanna
+and his puzzling relationship with Maggie. And always
+he saw it in relation to the things which were happening to
+him like a series of living pictures against a great impersonal
+background.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Ignorant of Neal’s attack on Maggie he had returned to
+Philadelphia, completed his work and had gone to Des Moines.
+He sent his books to his Aunt Susan,—all but one little black
+testament which bore written on the fly leaf his father’s and
+grandfather’s and <em>his</em> father’s names. There was another
+name, too, “Judy Bye.” But Peter could not recall this.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“More ancestors,” he said to himself, thinking ruefully of
+Maggie. He could not bear to think of their last talk: even
+the thought of his forgotten instruments could not induce
+him to write to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In Des Moines he had met Philip. And from that meeting
+resulted that first indelible picture. He had rushed forward to
+Philip, his hand outstretched.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Marshall! Say, fellow, this is really great!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He could hear his voice ringing even now. And then Philip’s
+contemptuous rejoinder: “I don’t shake hands with any such
+damned light of love.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He thought he must have misunderstood at first. But
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>there was the angry scorn in Philip’s eyes and there was his
+hand hanging clenched by his side.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The contemptuous epithet made him flinch. Of course,
+Philip’s bitterness and scorn arose from two sources. Peter
+had broken off with his sister and had taken up with the one
+girl in whom he had ever shown any interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But hang it all,” Peter said to himself in angry bewilderment.
+“Why didn’t he try for Maggie himself, if he wanted
+her? But no, first he lets that gambler win her and then he
+leaves her to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Here again ignorance was the cause. Philip did not know
+of Maggie’s divorce until she had become engaged to Peter.
+Joanna had never told him and he, considering her first marriage
+as an answer to his rather lackadaisical courtship, had
+not thought it worth while to make inquiries about her. His
+own liking for Maggie had taken possession of him so slowly
+that he had not realized himself until too late what she
+meant to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The result of the encounter was to drive Peter back on
+himself and to confuse his issues more and more. He did
+not know which way to turn. More than ever if Philip loved
+Maggie, he himself wanted to be freed of his obligation.
+Freedom—that was what he wanted—from obligations, from
+prejudice, from too lofty idealism. It seemed to him as though
+the last two years of his life had been spent in struggling to
+reconcile ideals. First his efforts to win Joanna and then his
+need to get away from Maggie. He went through the motions
+of the long days of drill and preparation, thinking incoherent,
+unrelated thoughts.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Poor Maggie, I’ve got her into this. I can’t just chuck
+her.” Responsibility began feebly to awaken within him.
+“But what does she see in me? Yet she’ll die if I leave her.
+Joanna, you’ve messed up all our lives. Oh, damn all women!
+I hope to God I get killed in France!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Still in a dream he left Des Moines for Camp Upton and
+left the camp for overseas. He was a good sailor and therefore
+was free to devote himself to men who were less fortunate
+than himself. On an afternoon he came on deck with Harley
+Alexander. The two had become “buddies” in the camp and
+now on the trip over the long days of inaction were awakening
+one of those strange intensive friendships between two
+people, in which each tries to bare his heart to the utmost
+before the other. Harley had told Peter about his disastrous
+courtship of Vera Manning and Peter had reluctantly, inevitably
+returned the confidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well,” said Harley, “I’ll be doggone. I suppose Joanna
+did use to queen it over you, but what’d you go make a
+door-mat of yourself for? She gave you what you were biddin’
+for. But now as far as this Miss Ellersley’s concerned—I
+can’t seem to remember her, Peter—she’s got no claim on you
+that I can see. If she’s any sense at all she knows that you
+came to her on sheer impulse. If you don’t love her, don’t
+you marry her. You’ll regret it all your life if you do. Gee,
+I’m sick of this boat. Don’t you s’pose we’re ever really
+goin’ to get into this man’s war?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He lurched suddenly and violently against Peter, who
+dragged him to the rail where he became horribly and thoroughly
+seasick. There he remained, spent and helpless.
+Peter tried to drag him back to a steamer chair, but he was
+too much in a state of collapse to help himself and too heavy
+for Peter to drag across the deck. A white officer, a lieutenant
+whom Peter had noticed infrequently sitting near the
+door, was standing looking gravely on. He came forward.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Here, let me help you.” Together the two men got Alexander
+into the chair. He was the type with whom any physical
+indisposition goes hard. Peter noticed he was shivering.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Wait, I’ll get a rug,” he said, starting toward the door.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>Alexander groaned, “Bye, for God’s sake don’t leave me.
+I’m as weak as a cat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, you’ll be all right,” Peter called back, and left him
+with the white lieutenant standing silently by.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Shortly after his return Harley, declaring himself much
+better, went below to his room. But first he thanked the
+lieutenant who bowed with his pleasantly grave air. Peter,
+about to sink into the vacant seat, looked up and caught the
+intent glance of the white officer who smiled and nodded and
+came leisurely toward him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“May I sit beside you a moment?” he asked pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” Peter replied shortly. He thought: “I know what
+you make me think of. Of myself that first day I put on my
+uniform. Now why?” It was true that while there was no
+facial resemblance, the two men were built almost exactly
+alike, tall, with broad shoulders, flat backs and lean thighs.
+Peter was at first glance the more comely, his head was more
+shapely and his hair so crisply curling gave him a certain
+persistent boyishness. The other man, a little older and
+plainer, had nevertheless a certain whimsical melancholy about
+his eyes and mouth which attracted Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I heard your friend call you Bye,” he said still pleasantly.
+Peter nodded briefly. “That’s my name, too. Bye, Meriwether
+Bye. I was wondering where you came from.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Meriwether Bye! Peter felt his face growing hot as he remembered
+the circumstances in which he had last heard that
+name. “Dr. Meriwether Bye of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania,
+I suppose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Meriwether without surprise acknowledged this. “You know
+of me then. May I ask how?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ve always known of you indirectly,” Peter told him
+coldly. “My great-grandfather spent all his life working for
+yours—for nothing. There was a black Meriwether Bye, my
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>father, named after him, though I’m sure,” he added with
+rude inconsequence, “I can’t imagine why.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Meriwether looked at him with a sort of gentle understanding.
+“I’ve often wondered about those black Byes,” he said
+musingly. “My grandfather, Dr. Meriwether Bye—he’s an old,
+old man now—used to tell me about them. He was very fond
+of one of them, Isaiah Bye. Isn’t it strange that we, the
+grandsons of those two men, friends way back in those days,
+should be meeting here on our way to France to fight for our
+country?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Something, some aching tiger of resentment and dislike,
+which always crouched in Peter ready to spring at the approach
+of a white man, lay down momentarily appeased.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Friends! Say, that’s the first time I ever heard a white
+man speak that way of the relation between a slave-owner
+and his slave. You can’t guess,” he said abruptly, “how I
+first heard of you.” And he told Meriwether of his experience
+with Mrs. Lea, while the doctor watched him with keen,
+melancholy eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll wager you were angry, mad clear through and through.
+You had a right to be. Mrs. Lea,” as he pronounced her name
+his gentle voice grew a little gentler, Peter thought, “didn’t
+realize what she was saying. She’s like many another of us,
+totally unaware of our shame and your merits. I hope this
+war will teach us something.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had a nice way with him. “A regular fellow,” Peter
+thought, listening to his quiet, unaffected disquisition on many
+subjects. He had been literally everywhere, even to Greenland,
+and had seen all sorts of people. He had a theory that
+while not all individuals were equal, all races averaged the
+same. Some men were bound to be superior.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And the differences between the races are a matter of
+relativity,” he finished. “I confess my own interest in colored
+people is very keen.” He raised a fine hand to disparage
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>Peter’s slight movement. “Yes, I know you are sick of that
+and the patronage it implies. But I mean it, Bye, and when
+you get back home you must go out to Bryn Mawr and see
+whether or not I have tried to express that interest.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I should think,” Peter looked at him squarely, “all things
+considered, you or your family would have shown some interest
+in us black Byes. You are rich men, your family is a
+powerful one——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Was a powerful one,” Meriwether interrupted him. He
+had flushed a little. “I suppose you know that my great-grandfather,
+Aaron Bye, had ten sons. But only four of them
+had sons and all of them except my father died in the Civil
+War. Isn’t that some compensation? My own father died
+when I was very young and I grew up with his father. He
+was the one who told me about the black Byes and how he
+when a boy used to play about Philadelphia with Isaiah.
+‘Proud as Isaiah Bye,’ I’ve heard him say. Bye,” said Meriwether
+earnestly, “I tried my best when I became a man to
+find if there were any of you left in Philadelphia. It seemed
+to me a monstrous thing to have our family and our fortune—for
+my grandfather is still a very rich man—reared on the
+backs of those other Byes.” He struck the table with a vehement
+hand. “That whole system was barbarous.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I wish,” Peter told him, “I had known you sooner.” Just
+to hear this expression of penitence seemed to ease the long
+resentment of the years.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Without those slaves,” Meriwether resumed, “Aaron Bye
+would never have got on his feet. His father was just a poor
+farmer, a Quaker, running away from England to escape religious
+persecution. He came over and received a grant of
+land. But he could have done nothing without labor, and
+free labor at that. He and a friend bought a wretched slave
+between them, worked a bit of land, then that old Bye bought
+out the other man’s share of the slave; presently he bought
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>a woman. Ah, it’s a rotten story.” Peter saw melancholy
+like a veil settle upon his finely drawn features.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You really feel it? I didn’t suppose any white man felt
+like that. Well, you needn’t mind about me or about any
+of the black Byes,” he surprised himself by saying. “After
+all, it isn’t as though we were related. It’s just the fortunes of—well,
+not of war—but of life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” Meriwether returned, “we’re not related. Thank
+God there’s none of that unutterable mix-up. I don’t think
+I could have forgiven those Quaker Byes that. But sometimes
+it seems to me that just because those black Byes and
+thousands of others like them had no claim, that they had
+every claim.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>After that day they met daily; Meriwether expounding,
+explaining, unconsciously teaching; Peter listening and absorbing.
+“I’m surprised,” the young white man said, giving
+Peter a calculating look, “that you were content with being
+an entertainer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter flushed and explained. It was only a temporary
+phase in his life. He had been broken-up, crazy. Haltingly
+he spoke of Joanna and finally of Maggie.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Meriwether thought it a bad business. “Stupid of you
+not to see that the first girl had your interest at heart. Why,
+man, by your own account she had brought you out of the
+butcher-shop to the University. Well, life permits these
+things.” Bit by bit he told Peter of his own love-life. He had
+loved Mrs. Lea for years even before her marriage when they
+were boy and girl together, but her hard, uncomprehending
+attitude toward “lesser peoples” chilled him, really frightened
+him. He knew he could not live with a woman like that.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>To Peter’s surprise Meriwether was a fatalist. He had
+strong premonitions and allowed himself to be guided by them.
+“From the outset,” he told Peter, gravely, “I knew that you
+meant something to me. That was why I used to watch you
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>so closely. I used to wonder and speculate about you. Something
+in you made me think of myself. It was as though
+you, all unrelated even racially, represented something which
+might have been a part of myself, as though you,” he said
+dreamily, “were living actively what I was thinking of passively.
+I have often tried to picture my life as a colored
+man. I think if there had been any of that selfish admixture
+of blood between the white and black Byes and I had heard
+of it, I’d have gone the United States over but what I’d have
+found my relatives, and have claimed them, too, before all the
+world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>One of Meriwether’s strange fantasies was that he would
+never return from the war. “I knew it when I came away
+from America. And listen, Bye, when I die,” Peter marveled
+at the sureness of that “when,” “I want you after you get
+back home to go to my grandfather and tell him who you
+are and how you met me. You are to give him this.” He
+took a little case from his pocket in which were the pictures
+of a man and woman,—old-fashioned pictures.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Your father,” Peter exclaimed involuntarily, “you can see
+he’s a Bye——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And my mother,” Meriwether finished. He drew a locket
+suspended on a thin gold chain from around his neck. “And
+take this to Mrs. Lea. She loves me,” he said very simply.
+“Here, you might just as well take them now.” Peter accepted
+them reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He wished he had a picture of Joanna. Death seemed
+suddenly very near, very possible. He did not care if he
+died, but he would like Joanna to know that he thought of
+her. But he had nothing to leave for her. Yes, there was the
+Testament. He took it from his inside breast-pocket and
+showed it to Meriwether. Indeed he looked at it closely for
+the first time himself. The two heads so like yet so different
+bent over the old faded script. On the top of the page in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>beautiful clear hand was written Aaron Bye, then underneath
+in crazy drunken letters, Judy Bye.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I can’t guess who she was,” said Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A little below a familiar name appeared, Joshua Bye, and
+above it, evidently written, in the same hand, Ceazer Bye.
+But through this entry a firm black line was drawn, drawn
+with a pen that dug down into the thin paper. After Joshua’s
+name came the names Isaiah and then Meriwether.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My father,” Peter explained, feeling somehow very near
+to him. “I guess I’d better put my name in, too.” He wrote
+it in his small compact hand. “I wonder who those two were,
+Judy and Ceazer,” he mused, smiling a little at the quaint
+spelling. “I don’t seem ever to have heard of them; I thought
+we started with Joshua.” But Meriwether professed dimly
+to remember some mention of Judy.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m sure I’ve heard my grandfather mention her name
+years ago and Ceazer’s, too; he was her husband, seems to me.
+I suppose Aaron Bye gave them the Testament.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The little incident threw them into a deeper intimacy.
+Meriwether professed himself to be as interested in and as
+bewildered at the workings of the color question as Peter
+himself, though naturally he lacked his new friend’s bitterness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It is amazing into what confusion slavery threw American
+life,” he said, launched on one of their interminable discussions.
+“Here America was founded for the sake of liberty
+and the establishment of an asylum for all who were oppressed.
+And no land has more actively engaged in the suppression of
+liberty, or in keeping down those who were already oppressed.
+So that a white boy raised on all sorts of high falutin idealism
+finds himself when he grows up completely at sea. I confess,
+Bye, when I came to realize that all my wealth and all
+the combination of environment and position which has made
+life hitherto so beautiful and perfect, were founded quite specifically
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>on the backs of broken, beaten slaves, I got a shock
+from which I think sometimes I’ll never recover. It’s robbed
+me of happiness forever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I like to hear you acknowledge your indebtedness,” said
+Peter frankly, “but I don’t think you should take on your
+shoulders the penitence of the whole white nation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I don’t think I should, either,” Meriwether returned
+unexpectedly, “but that sort of extremeness seems to be inherent
+in the question of color. Either you concern yourself
+with it violently as the Southerner does and so let slip by all
+the other important issues of life; or you are indifferent and
+callous like the average Northerner and grow hardened to all
+sorts of atrocities; or you steep yourself in it like the sentimentalist—that’s
+my class—and find yourself paralyzed by
+the vastness of the problem.<a id='tn003'></a>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He slipped into a familiar mood of melancholy brooding.
+It was at such a time that he spoke to Peter of his willingness,
+of his absolute determination to lose his life in the Great
+War. For this reason he had gone into the ranks instead of
+the medical corps where he would have been comparatively
+safe. “Don’t think I’m a fanatic, Peter. I see this war as
+the greatest gesture the world has ever made for Freedom.
+If I can give up my life in this cause I shall feel that I have
+paid my debt.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>
+ <h2 id='chap30' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXX</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE interminable voyage was over and Peter debarked
+to spend still more interminable days at Brest. Dr.
+Meriwether Bye left immediately for La Courtine,
+where Peter later caught sight of him once more on his way
+to the front. The somewhat exalted mood to which his long
+and intimate talks with Meriwether had raised him vanished
+completely under the strain of the dirt, the racial and national
+clashes, and above all the persistent bad weather of Brest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>This town, the end of Brittany and the furthest western
+outpost of France, always remained in Peter’s memory as a
+horrible prelude to a most horrible war. Brest up to the time
+that Europe had gone so completely and so suddenly insane,
+had been the typical, stupid, monotonous French town with
+picturesquely irregular pavements, narrow tortuous streets,
+dark, nestling little shops and the inevitable public square.
+Around and about the city to all sides stretched well ordered
+farms.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Then came the march of two million American soldiers
+across the town and the surrounding country. Under their
+careless feet the farms became mud, so that the name Brest
+recalls to the minds of thousands nothing if not a picture of
+the deepest, slimiest, stickiest mud that the world has known.
+All about were people, people, too many people, French and
+Americans. And finally the relations between the two nations,
+allies though they were, developed from misunderstandings
+into hot irritations, from irritations into clashes. First white
+Americans and Frenchmen clashed; separate restaurants and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>accommodations had to be arranged. Then came the inevitable
+clash between white and colored Americans; petty jealousies
+and meannesses arose over the courtesies of Frenchwomen
+and the lack of discrimination in the French cafés.
+The Americans found a new and inexplicable irritation in the
+French colored colonials. Food was bad, prices were exorbitant;
+officers became tyrants. Everyone was at once in Brest
+and constantly about to leave it; real understanding and acquaintanceship
+were impossible.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter thought Dante might well have included this place
+in the description of his Inferno. Here were Disease and
+Death, Mutilation and Murder. Stevedores and even soldiers
+became cattle and beasts of burden. Many black men were
+slaves. The thing from which France was to be defended
+could hardly be worse than this welter of human misunderstandings,
+the clashing of unknown tongues, the cynical investigations
+of the government, the immanence of war and the awful,
+persistent wretchedness of the weather.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The long wait turned into sudden activity and Peter’s outfit
+was ordered to Lathus, thence to La Courtine, one of the
+large training centers. It was at this latter place that he caught
+sight once more of Meriwether Bye. He seemed unusually
+alert and cheerful, Peter thought, and when the two got a
+chance to speak to each other, this impression was confirmed.
+The young white physician had the look of a man who sees
+before him a speedy deliverance.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He thinks he’s going to die and chuck this whole infernal
+business,” Peter said to himself. “Wish I could be as sure
+of getting out of it as he is.” Somehow the brief encounter
+left him more dispirited than ever. “Come out of it, ole hoss,”
+Harley Alexander used to say to him. “What’d your ‘grand
+white’ friend do to you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, you shut up!” Peter barked at him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His real depression, however, dated back to the time immediately
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>after his company had left Brest. The awful condition
+of things in the seaport town was general rather than
+specific, and for the first time since Peter had entered the
+war he was feeling comparatively calm. His long and intimate
+talks with Meriwether had produced their effect. He
+had not realized that any such man as the young Quaker
+physician had existed in the white world. He had too much
+sense and too many cruel experiences to believe that there
+were many of Meriwether’s kind to be found in a lifetime’s
+journey, but somehow his long bitterness of the years had been
+assuaged. Henceforth, he told himself, he would try to be
+more generous in his thoughts of white men—perhaps his attitude
+invited trouble which he was usually only too willing
+to meet halfway.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At Lathus, Harley Alexander met him in the little <em>place</em>.
+“Seems to me you’re got up regardless,” Peter had commented.
+Alexander, one of the trimmest men in the regiment, was looking
+unusually shipshape, almost dapper.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The other struck him familiarly across the shoulder. “And
+that ain’t all. Say, fellow, there’s a band concert to-night
+right here in this little old square. I’m goin’ and I’m goin’
+to take a lady.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Lady! Where’d you get her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Right here. These girls are all right. Not afraid of a dark
+skin. ‘How should we have fear, m’soo,’ one of them says
+to me, ‘when you fight for our <i><span lang="fr">patrie</span></i> and when you are so
+<i><span lang="fr">beau</span></i>?’ ‘<i><span lang="fr">Beau</span></i>’ that’s handsome, ain’t it? Say this is some
+country to fight for; got some sense of appreciation. Better
+come along, old scout. There’s a pile of loots getting ready
+to come, each with a French dame in tow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’ll be there,” Peter told him, laughing. “But count me
+out with the ladies. I can’t get along with the domestic brand
+and I know I’ll be out of luck with the foreign ones.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Some passing thought wiped the joy of anticipation from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>Harley’s face. “My experience is that these foreign ones are
+a damn sight less foolish than some domestic ones I’ve met.
+Well, me for the concert.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But that band concert never came off. At sunset a company
+of white American Southerners marched into Lathus
+down the main street, past the little <em>place</em>. There was a sudden
+uproar.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Look! Darkies and white women! Come on, fellows,
+kill the damned niggers!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There was a hasty onslaught in which the colored soldiers
+even taken by surprise gave as good as they took. Between
+these two groups from the same soil there was grimmer, more
+determined fighting than was seen at Verdun. The French
+civil population stood on the church-steps opposite the square
+and watched with amazement.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“<i><span lang="fr">Nom de dieu!</span></i> Are they crazy, then, these Americans, that
+they kill each other!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The next day saw Peter’s company on its way to La Courtine,
+a training center, where there were no women. Thence
+they moved presently to the front in the Metz Sector.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The injustice and indignity rendered the colored troupes<a id='tn016'></a> at
+Lathus, plus the momentary glimpses which he caught of
+Meriwether and his exaltation, plunged Peter into a morass
+of melancholy and bitter self-communing which shut him off
+as effectually as a smoke-screen from any real appreciation of
+the dangers which surrounded him on the front.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>In the midst of all that ineffable danger, that hellish noise,
+he was harassed by the inextricable confusion, the untidiness
+of his own life. God, to get rid of it all! Once he spent
+forty-eight hours with nine other men on the ridge of a hill
+under fire. The other fellows told stories and swapped confidences.
+But he stayed unmoved through it all, impervious
+alike to the danger and the good man-talk going on about
+him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>When the call came for a reconnoitering party, he was one
+of the first to step forward. He went out that night into the
+blackness, the hellishness of No Man’s Land. He saw a dark
+figure rise in front of him, heard a guttural sound and the
+next moment his left arm, drenched with blood, hung useless
+at his side. Raising himself he shot at the legs which showed
+a solid blackness against the thinner surrounding darkness.
+Wriggling on his belly, he pushed forward to where he thought
+he heard sounds, a struggle. “Something doing,” he told himself,
+“might as well get in on that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But when he drew near the darkness was so intense that
+he did not dare interfere. Two men, at least, were struggling
+terribly but he could not tell which was which. They were
+breathing in terrific grunts, so heavily that they had not noticed
+the approach of his smoothly sliding body. Suddenly
+what he had hoped for, happened. A rocket shot up in the
+air flared briefly and showed him the two men. One was
+Meriwether Bye, the other was a German, his hand in the
+act of throwing a hand grenade.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter lurched forward and at that ghastly short range shot
+the German through the stomach. But he was too late, the
+grenade had left the man’s hand. The earth rocked about
+him, he could see Meriwether fall, a toppling darkness in the
+darkness. He started toward him but his foot caught in a
+depression and he himself fell sideways on his wounded arm.
+There was a moment of exquisite pain and then the darkness
+grew even more dark about him, the silent night more silent.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When he came to, it was still dark, though the day, he felt,
+rather than saw, was approaching. His arm hurt unmercifully.
+He had never known such pain. He raised himself
+on his one arm, and felt around with his foot. Yes, there
+was a body, he prayed it might not be the German. Crawling
+forward he plunged his hand into blood, a depthless pool of
+sticky blood. Sickened, he drew back and dried it, wiping it
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>on his coat. More cautiously, then, he reached out again,
+searching for the face, yes, that was Meriwether’s nose. Those
+canny finger-tips of his recognized the facial structure. His
+hand came back to Meriwether’s chest. The heart was beating
+faintly and just above it was a hole, with the blood gushing,
+spurting, hot and thick.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sat upright and wrenching open his tunic tore at his
+shirt. The stuff was hard to tear but it finally gave way under
+the onslaught of teeth and fingers. Faint with the pain of
+his left arm and the loss of his own blood, he set his lips
+hard, concentrating with all his strength on the determination
+not to lose consciousness again. Finally grunting, swearing,
+almost crying, he got Meriwether’s head against his knee, then
+against his shoulder, and staunched the wound with the harsh,
+unyielding khaki. His canteen was full and he drenched the
+chilly, helpless face with its contents. All this time he was
+sitting with no support for his back and the strain was telling
+on him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Against the surrounding gray of the coming morning, southward
+toward his own lines, he caught sight of darker shapes,
+trees perhaps, perhaps men—if he could only get to them!
+Placing Meriwether’s face upwards he caught him about his
+lean waist, buckling him to his side with an arm of steel,
+and rising to his knees he crawled for what seemed a mile
+toward that persistent blackness. Twice he fell, once he struck
+his left arm against a dead man’s boot. The awful throbbing
+in his shoulder increased. But at last he was there, at last in
+the shelter of a clump of low, stunted trees. With a sob he
+braced himself against them, letting Meriwether’s head and
+shoulders rest against his knees. The blood had begun to
+spurt again and Meriwether stirred. Peter whispered:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Bye, for God’s sake, speak to me. This is Peter, Peter
+Bye, you remember?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>The young doctor repeated the name thickly. “Yes, Peter.
+I know. I’m dying.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not yet. Man, it’s almost day, they’ll come to us. Pull
+yourself together. We’ll save you somehow.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Meriwether whispered, “I’m cold.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Could he get his coat off? How could he ever pull it off
+that shattered arm? Still he achieved even this, wrapping it
+around the white man’s shivering form, raising that face, gray
+as the gray day above them, high on his chest, cradling him
+like a baby.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The chill was the chill of death, a horrible death. Meriwether
+coughed and choked; Peter could feel the life struggling
+within the poor torn body. Once the cold lips said:
+“Peter, you’re a good scout.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Just before a merciful unconsciousness enveloped him for
+the last time, Meriwether sat upright in the awful agony of
+death. “Grandfather,” he called in a terrible voice, “this is the
+last of the Byes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When the stretcher-bearers found them, Meriwether was
+lying across Peter’s knees, his face turned childwise toward
+Peter’s breast. The colored man’s head had dropped low
+over the fair one and his black curly hair fell forward straight
+and stringy, caked in the blood which lay in a well above
+Meriwether’s heart.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Cripes!” said one of the rescue men, “I’ve seen many a
+sight in this war, but none ever give me the turn I got seein’
+that smoke’s hair dabblin’ in the other fellow’s blood.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>
+ <h2 id='chap31' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>CHAMBÉRY<a id='tn005'></a>, the capital of Savoy, a town situated
+toward the south of the extreme east of France, has
+not always been as well known to America as its more
+important neighbors, Grenoble and Lyons. Up to a few years
+ago it was celebrated chiefly because it was the location of
+the chateau of the old dukes of Savoy and the birthplace of
+Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Now it is known to thousands and
+thousands of Americans because during the great War it
+was metamorphosed into a rest center for colored soldiers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>To the tourist’s mind it might stand out for three reasons:
+as a city in which it is well nigh impossible to get a lost telegram
+repeated; as a place where one may procure at very little
+expense the most excellent of manicures and the most delicious
+of little cakes. And, thirdly, as the scene of a novel by Henri
+Bordeaux, “La Peur de Vivre,” the story of a young girl who,
+afraid to face the perils of life, forfeited therefore its pleasures.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Certainly Alice Du Laurens, the young woman of Bordeaux’
+novel, would have been no more astonished to find herself in
+New York than Maggie Ellersley, whom she so closely resembled
+in character, was to find herself in Chambéry. The
+nervous shock which Harry Portor had predicted from her
+encounter with Neal followed only too surely, but for another
+reason. The flesh wound itself had been negligible and she
+might have recovered without the nervous breakdown, had not
+Mr. Simpson in an agony of remorse at the danger to which
+he had so unwittingly exposed her, subjected her again with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>equally complete unconscious thoroughness to another shock.
+He was always presenting her with flowers, magazines, and
+journals, his eyes silently beseeching her forgiveness. For
+Maggie had never betrayed his share in the disaster and had
+thus made him her eager servitor forever.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Two weeks after the accident he brought her an evening
+paper. “Just picked this up as I come along, Miss Maggie.
+But there’s some flowers comin’ later on.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She took the folded paper listlessly and let her eyes travel
+over the front sheet. A tiny paragraph leaped at her from
+the bottom of a column. “Negro Leaps In Front Of Subway
+Train.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“A Negro, later identified as Henderson Neal, was killed
+instantly this afternoon——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They found it hard to quiet her. “I killed him,” she
+moaned to Harry Portor, hastily summoned. “His death is as
+much due to me as though I had poisoned him. I did poison
+his life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Portor was at his wits’ end. She was too weak to be sent
+away from home by herself. Her mother could not leave the
+house, for Maggie’s illness had decidedly crippled her resources.
+And once more they were dependent on lodgers for
+their livelihood.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Once Portor spoke to her of Peter, thinking to comfort her,
+but the allusion only made her worse. “Peter! I was getting
+ready to ruin his life, too. Oh, how awful everything is. If
+I could only see him again!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was all very odd, Harry thought, wondering if Joanna
+could interpret this. The situation was too complex for him
+to handle.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was her first cry of penitence, and as she lay there day
+after day reviewing her life she came to understand and to
+analyze for what it was that quality of hers, that tendency to
+climb to the position she wanted over the needs and claims of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>others. Now that she had no strength, now that life stretched
+around her a dreary procession of sullen, useless days, she
+realized the beauty inherent in life itself, the miracle of health
+and sane nerves, of the ability to make a living, of being helpful
+to others.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why, Henderson, even Henderson—if I could have
+taken him back that first time, I might have changed him,
+got him to work at something profitable and interesting.
+Maybe,” she thought, for the first time since her marriage,
+“we might have had a child. And what difference did it make
+if I didn’t go with those—‘dickties?’ I could have had a nice
+time; I used to have nice times, lovely cosy times with Anna
+and Tom.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That brought her to the thought of Peter. “Of course, he
+didn’t want me. And I never loved him. He always did and
+always will love Joanna. Whether he gets her or not, she’s
+the woman for him. He needs her as I need Philip.” She
+lay quite still then, concentrating, probing her inmost spirit.
+“As I need no one,” she said to herself aloud. “If I ever
+get well again I shall be what I want to be without depending
+on anybody. And I shall always be content.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Who shall explain the relation between mind and spirit?
+She grew better after that, began to sit up and, joining one of
+her mother’s myriad committees, engaged in the preparation
+of outfits for the men overseas. Very slowly, almost reluctantly
+her interest in life came creeping back with her strength.
+She grew to be like the little girl she had been long, long ago,
+before her overpowering desire got possession of her. But she
+needed the stimulus of an occupation which would take her
+out of herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“If I could find something which would make me forget
+everything that is past, Harry,” she told the young doctor.
+He had fallen into the habit of taking her on his rounds two
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>and three times a week. The air did her good and the occasion
+gave him a chance to study her.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It will turn up, the right thing always does,” he comforted
+her. “You know you are lots better already.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, so much better than you can guess,” she returned,
+leaving him slightly mystified at the peculiar expression with
+which she was regarding him. He would have been more astonished
+if he could have read her thought. “Once,” she said
+to herself, “I might have tried to make him like me, tried to
+get him to marry me and lift me out of my obscurity. My, I’m
+glad that’s over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Once on her return from one of these trips her mother came
+rushing to her. “Guess who’s here, Maggie? But, pshaw,
+you’d never guess. John Howe, do you remember?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>John Howe who had come to her rescue in the early days!
+“Now you just set still,” her mother fussed about her, “and
+I’ll bring him up. He’s the Reverend John Howe now. I’ll bet
+he’ll do you good.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Ministers for some reason are either fat or lean. John Howe
+ran to the lean type. He came in looking very much as usual,
+to stay only “five minutes,” he told Mrs. Ellersley.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He stayed five hours and Maggie poured out her heart,
+her first liking for Philip, her marriage, her discovery of her
+husband’s “profession,” her engagement to Peter and her insensate
+determination to hold on to him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And then Henderson killed himself. Oh, John, I’ve been
+a wicked, wicked creature.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not as bad as all that, Maggie, but life has been as unkind
+to you as though you had been. That’s the trouble,—whether
+you burn yourself intentionally or not, you get hurt
+all the same. And it’s all over now, you’ve quite decided to
+let—to break with this Bye fellow?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You were right at first. To let him go. Yes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>“H’m, what do you suppose he’ll do then, go back to this
+other girl?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It sounds so funny to hear you talk of her that way, so
+slightingly, almost,” said Maggie, a little surprised.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, of course, she’s nothing to me. Daresay she’s a nice
+enough girl, though she sounds a bit priggish. Do you think
+she’ll take him back?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, I hardly think so. You see, she’s the only one of us
+who’s kept on and got what she wanted out of life. She’s
+on the stage, a dancer, the success of the season! Peter’s just
+barely through school, if indeed he did get through, and,
+anyway, he’s still as poor as a church mouse. And I’m just
+Miss Nobody. The thing is—if Peter wants to go to her, he
+can.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And what will you do?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t know. I can’t guess. Something I hope very different
+that will take me as completely out of myself as though
+I had been transposed to a fourth dimension. Can’t you think
+of something, John?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t know, I believe I have a sort of idea. Are you
+pretty strong now, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“The Doctor says I’m as strong as I’ll ever be without
+change of interests and surroundings. Let’s hear about your
+idea.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, that’s enough for to-day. Besides, I’m not sure enough
+of it.” But he came back the next day fortified. The Young
+Men’s Christian Association had decided to send a few colored
+women workers among the colored men at the front. Two
+had already gone, but more were needed. If he could get
+the position for Maggie it would prove just the change she
+needed. Did she think she could go?</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Me,” Maggie breathed, “go to France! To help the poor
+boys! Oh, I’d love it, John.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was the thing for her. Of course, its accomplishment
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>took time and much handling of red tape, but it did come
+to pass and Maggie, leaving behind her an apprehensive mother
+and cousin—for the day of submarines was not yet over—set
+sail for France. She landed at Brest, from Brest she went to
+Paris, where she was summoned to Chambéry to help Mrs.
+Terry, the colored worker, in charge of the leave-center in the
+Savoyard capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie was taken out of herself completely. The voyage,
+the danger, the foreign language and new customs went to her
+head like wine. The need of the men overwhelmed and staggered
+her. They were pathetically proud of her—and of Mrs.
+Terry, too,—glad to be allowed a sight of her bright face, to
+exchange a word. To be permitted to dance with her sent
+any one of them into a delirium of ecstatic pride. They were
+brave fellows, conducting themselves as became soldiers, persistently
+cheerful in the face of the hateful prejudice that
+followed and flayed them in the very act of laying down their
+lives for their country. For a time the Negro soldiers had
+been permitted to go over to Aix-les-Bains once a week, to
+reap the benefit of the baths, but a white American woman
+seeing in this an approach to “social equality,” contrived to
+start a protest which resulted in a withdrawal of this permission
+and the black men were confined strictly to Chambéry.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A new sense of values came to Maggie, living now in the
+midst of scenes like these. The determinedly cheerful though
+somewhat cynical attitude of “the boys” in such conditions
+seemed to her the most wonderful thing she had ever witnessed.
+It was as though they said to hostile forces: “Oh, yes, we
+know you’ll do for us in every possible way, slight us, cheat
+us, betray us, but you can’t kill the real life within us, the
+essential us. You may make us distrustful, incredulous, disillusioned,
+but you can’t make us despair or corrode us with
+bitterness. Call us children if you like, but in spite of everything,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>life <em>is</em> worth living, and we mean to live it to the full.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So many impressions, so many happenings crowded in on
+Maggie during those days that she failed to differentiate between
+the strange and the unusual, the calculable and the unexpected.
+So that on the night when a new detachment of
+men filed into the canteen and she glanced up to find that the
+tall lieutenant to whom she was handing a cup of cocoa was
+Peter, she did not feel at first astonished. Afterwards it came
+to her that, subconsciously, she had noticed how subdued, how
+cautious his greeting to her had been. His manner toward
+Mrs. Terry, whom he had known slightly in New York, seemed
+by contrast almost effusive.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“That,” she told herself later, angrily, “was because he
+didn’t want to encourage me. How he dreads me! Poor
+Peter. I’ll put him at his ease.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She was to make arrangements the next day for a trip to
+Lake Bourget. On her way to the station she spied Peter sitting,
+a desolate and lonely figure, in the little parkway that
+ran through the broad street. He did not see her advancing
+and she had a chance to examine him. His face, still handsome,
+was thin and lined and his eyes were hopeless. She
+held out her hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He let it drop after a brief pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I was thinking of you, Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And I of you. How wretched you look, Peter!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He told her, then, of his wound and of his stay in a hospital
+in Toul. “My arm is all right now. I’ve even been in another
+engagement. In a month at the most, I expect to return
+to the front again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Do you dread it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He looked at her in surprise. “Dread it? My goodness, no.
+I think I prefer war to ordinary living. It is so quick and
+decisive. Of course, there are some tiresome delays. We
+were held up for six weeks at Brest and the transportation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>overseas was very slow. But I didn’t care, I made a fine
+friend on account of it. I wish I’d met him sooner.” He
+didn’t tell her the name. That, he thought morosely, would
+only start her off again on his social standing. “He was killed,”
+he ended hastily.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m so sorry. That’s why you’re so dismal.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Perhaps, and then, I don’t understand anything more. Life
+is all a maze and I can’t find my way out. I hope I get killed
+in my next engagement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She bit her lip at that. How blind she had been! “Well,
+I’m going to obviate one difficulty for you, Peter. I’ve decided
+not to marry—anybody. I think I want to try life on
+my own. No, don’t say anything. You can’t very well thank
+me and there’s no use pretending you’re sorry. It was a bad
+business, Peter, and I’m glad it’s over.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Before he could speak she had left him. His wound and
+the loss of Meriwether, his constant brooding, had wrought
+in him an habitual dejection. But he was conscious of a
+slight lifting of the pall which hung over him, a loosening of
+the web.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They saw very little of each other in the five or six days
+before his departure. Maggie was rather glad of this. She
+wanted no reminders to spoil her feeling of having begun
+everything anew with a clean slate. Her new-found independence
+was a source of the greatest joy. Each night she
+mapped out afresh her future life. When she returned to
+America she would start her hair work again, she would inaugurate
+a chain of Beauty Shops. First-class ones. Of her
+ability to make a good living she had no doubt. And she
+would gather about her, friends, simple kindly people whom
+she liked for themselves: who would seek her company with
+no thought of patronage. She would stand on her two feet,
+Maggie Ellersley, serene, independent, self-reliant. The idea
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>exalted her and she went about her work the picture of optimism
+and happiness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The boys called her “Sunlight.” They all liked her and
+she was kind to them. Some of them were fine fellows, well
+educated and successful. It was Maggie’s greatest secret triumph
+that in these particularly favorable conditions she felt
+no impulse to attempt to realize that old insistent ambition.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>On the utmost peak of the Mont du Nivrolet, which towers
+east of <span lang="fr">Chambéry</span>, directly opposite the <i><span lang="fr">Chaîne de l’Epine</span></i>,
+gleams an immense cross twenty-five meters high, visible from
+all the surrounding country. At sunset it stood out boldly and
+Maggie, looking at it daily at that hour, came to regard it as
+a sort of luminous symbol of faith. “Oh, God, you have
+brought me peace; perhaps some day I shall know happiness.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>
+ <h2 id='chap32' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>INTO the midst of her new-found content came Philip. At
+first she could hardly believe it. She supposed vaguely
+that he had enlisted but she was and had been out of
+touch so long with the Marshall family that she knew nothing
+definite of his movements. It had been years and years
+since she had seen him, had in any sense been connected with
+him. What a long stretch of time and events since she had
+received Joanna’s letter that fateful Sunday!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was very much changed, not only older and graver, but
+weak, physically. He had been wounded twice and had been
+gassed slightly. “I’ve been discharged from the hospital as
+cured, Maggie, but I’m afraid I’ll never be any good again.”
+He smiled with infinite gentleness. “There was so much I
+wanted to do.” Fortunately his “Leave” had followed on his
+stay in the rest-area at <span lang="fr">Nice</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He had been in <span lang="fr">Chambéry</span> for half of his <em>permission</em> then,
+and the first embarrassment attendant on their meeting had
+worn off. Still, both avoided discussion of the old days, glancing
+away from possible points of contact. He seemed to
+Maggie to be wasting by inches and even Mrs. Terry, who
+had seen many cases of gassed men, thought he had come
+out of the hospital too soon. Maggie, her old love mingled
+with a new tenderness awakening in her, spent as much time
+with him as she dared. She did not want him to be ill, but
+she adored his weakness, it gave her her first chance to wait on
+him, to mother him, to pay back, instead of always taking,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>something of what the Marshall family had brought into
+her life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He said to her one day seated in the little parkway, “Why
+did you leave us so abruptly, Maggie? Why did you marry
+Henderson Neal?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had asked her the same question years ago and now
+as then she could not answer: “Because of Joanna’s letter.”
+So she sat silent a moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, Maggie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Because I was a fool, Philip. I was a silly, silly young
+girl. Without the sense to know what I wanted. Without the
+patience to wait for it if I had known. All young girls are
+silly, don’t you think? All, that is, except Joanna. She always
+knew what she wanted and see, she’s got it. Wonderful
+Joanna! Do you know, Philip, I think I’ll have a career, too,
+a business one! A chain of Beauty Shops.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>How wonderful to be able to talk like this without false
+shame to a Marshall! How wonderful life was! How beautiful
+to be experienced!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philip said rather indifferently:</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m not surprised at that. My father always said you had
+one of the clearest heads for business he’d ever seen. I used
+to be overwhelmed myself at your ability to handle people and
+things. You were always so sure of yourself. I remember
+once telling Sylvia and Joanna that you could afford to go
+about with people that I didn’t care to have them meet.
+Your early experiences rendered you safe. I believe I told
+them that when they were speaking to me of your husband,
+Mr. Neal. I didn’t know he was going to be your husband then,
+Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So that was what Joanna had meant so long ago. Strange
+how time dissolves mysteries. Strange how, after deciding to
+take life as one finds it, life comes fawning to one’s hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Several days elapsed before another talk could be managed.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>Then they met in front of the <i><span lang="fr">Statue des Eléphants</span></i>. Philip,
+examining that marvel with meticulous care, asked her indirectly
+about Peter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How will you combine the sort of business you contemplate
+and your marriage? Seems to me you’ll have to be away
+from home a lot. Somehow, I don’t picture you as a ‘new
+woman,’ Maggie.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So he was interested! And she had done nothing, not
+one little thing to lead up to it. “Oh, God, let me be happy
+now,” she breathed. “You know I meant to play the game
+straight and I really do love Philip.” Aloud she said joyously,
+“I’m not going to be married, Philip, at least not to
+Peter Bye, if that’s what you’re talking about. That was all
+a mistake. We both realized that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She glanced at him, hoping to meet an answering joy in his
+face, but found instead a deepening mournfulness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Philip,” she said very gently. “What is it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He lifted a haggard face. “Listen, Maggie, I can speak now.
+I loved you long, long ago, when we used to go off on those
+catering jobs for father. Do you remember? But I didn’t
+know it, I didn’t think about it, until you married. Somehow
+I had always thought there would be time enough and
+that, anyway, matters would adjust themselves. And when
+I heard you’d married that fellow, I was so amazed, thrown
+off my feet. I said to myself, ‘You poor weak fool, of course,
+she’d prefer a man, a real man who, no matter what his character,
+would have gumption to go after the woman he loved.’</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’d have come to you, but I thought you must love him;
+I had heard the girls mention seeing the two of you together
+and I concluded it was an affair of long standing. To ease
+myself, to put you completely out of my mind, I plunged into
+this public work; I wouldn’t even mention your name. And
+the first thing I knew you had left Neal and were engaged
+to Bye. I couldn’t understand that, Maggie, since you had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>grown up with Joanna and Peter, but that’s all over now.
+I cursed Bye out at Des Moines, I remember.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie, reviewing all that had preceded Peter’s departure
+for Des Moines, shivered a little. “Perhaps some day I can
+tell you all about it, Philip. It was mostly my fault.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It doesn’t make any difference whose fault it was, Maggie;
+everything is too late now. You don’t suppose I’m going
+to ask you, a beautiful woman, just on the threshold of a
+successful future, to marry me. My dear, I’m a wreck. I
+may live a year and I may live a half century. But I’d always
+be good for nothing, sitting around, ailing, getting on
+your nerves. I wouldn’t be able even to run your cash register
+for you, Maggie. These gas cases are absolutely unpredictable.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t care,” she told him stubbornly. “You haven’t
+asked me but I’ll tell you. I love you, Philip, I always have.
+And nothing would please me more than to nurse you. Why,
+I love you, my dear. Manage my cash register! We’ll get
+you home and Harry Portor will fix you up and then you’ll
+take up your magazine again. I’ll be your secretary, your
+assistant, your whole force.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Philip was adamant. “You don’t know what you’re
+saying. No, Maggie, after I leave here I’ll never see you
+again. I had my chance to win you once and I let you go,
+threw you into the arms of Neal. That was bad enough.
+But I won’t chain you to an invalid’s chair for life.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>For the first time since she had known him she recognized
+in him a faint bitterness.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You know, Maggie, I’ve never made any kick about being
+colored. Rather, I looked at it as a life work ready and
+cut out for a man, for me, and I rushed rather joyously into
+it to do battle. Now as I look back, I think I realize for the
+first time what this awful business of color in America does
+to a man, what it has done for me. If we weren’t so persistently
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>persecuted and harassed that we can think, breathe,
+do nothing but consider our great obsession, you and I
+might have been happy long ago. I’d have done as most
+men of other races do, settled my own life and then launched
+on some high endeavor. But do you know as a boy, as a
+young man, I never consciously let any thought of self come
+to me? I was always so sure that I was going to strike a blow
+at this great, towering monster. And all I’ve done has been
+to sacrifice myself and to sacrifice you. And the ironic joke
+of it is that in the defense of the country which insists on
+robbing me of my natural joys, I’ve lost the strength to keep
+up even the fight for which I let everything else of importance
+in the world go. I’ve been simply a fool.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She tried to comfort him. “You’ve been everything that is
+fine and brave and noble, Philip. And don’t think your suffering,
+as you call it, is due only to being colored. Life takes
+it out of all of us. I have never spent five minutes in trying
+to help our cause. Your unselfishness and Joanna’s persistent
+ambition have always amazed me. I have been a selfish,
+selfish woman, always—looking out for my own personal advantage,
+grasping at everything, everybody—who I thought
+might make life easier for me. You don’t really know me,
+Philip. I’ve pursued a course exactly opposite to yours. And
+yet I never knew a moment of happiness from the time we were
+all children together until I came here to Chambéry to help
+these boys.” She thought deeply. “Sometimes I think no
+matter how one is born, no matter how one acts, there is
+something out of gear with one somewhere, and that must
+be changed. Life at its best is a grand corrective.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But now we’ve found ourselves, Philip. You have learned
+ordinary personal consideration and I have learned unselfishness—to
+a degree. It is not too late for us to be happy—together,
+Philip.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“How we complement each other,” he mused. His eye fell
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>on his wasted hand. “Ah, but, Maggie, it is too late. Everything
+is too late.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>On the last day of his stay she came to him. “You love
+me, Philip?” He gave a quick assent. “And you know I
+love you and you still won’t marry me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t torture me, Maggie. You’ve no idea what it means
+to be tied for life to a peevish invalid. I—I never expect to
+see you again, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Then,” she said, and the last tatters of her old obsession,
+that oldest desire of all for sheer decency—fell from her,
+“then I’ll be your mistress, Philip. For no matter where you
+go I’ll find you and stay with you, you’ll never be able to
+send me away from you. You’ll make me the by-word of all
+New York but I won’t care, Philip, for I love you. Oh, Philip,
+Philip——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They were in the chapel of the old Dukes of Savoy and the
+ancient caretaker, having stayed away the length of time which
+Philip’s <i><span lang="fr">pourboire</span></i> warranted, came in, but went out again,
+quietly, smiling.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>For Philip had risen and drawn Maggie to him. “You
+really mean it, Maggie, my Maggie! Oh, my little yellow
+flower, I’ll never let you go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She looked at him starry-eyed. “You don’t seem so weak,
+Philip.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Outside, the cross on <span lang="fr">Nivrolet</span>, a luminous symbol of faith,
+pointed steadfastly to heaven.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>
+ <h2 id='chap33' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXIII</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>THE War was over, the men were coming home. All
+Harlem was delirious with excitement. Everything
+conceivable must be done for “the boys,” for those
+boys who having fought a double battle in France, one with
+Germany and one with white America, had yet marvelously,
+incredibly, returned safely home. There were all sorts and
+conditions of black men, Harvard graduates and Alabama
+farmhands. These last had seen Paris before they had seen
+New York and they blessed the War which had given them
+a chance to see the great capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>There were parties, dances, fêtes, concerts, benefits. Everybody
+who possessed the least discernible “talent” was called
+upon; Joanna among them. She surprised even her most intimate
+friends by her graciousness. Night after night, when
+the performance was over, she appeared, splendid, glowing,
+symbolic before those huge dark masses in some uptown hall.
+The “boys,” starved for a sight of their own women with their
+dark pervading beauty, went mad over her. She was indeed
+for them “Miss America,” making them forget to-night the
+ingratitude with which their country would meet them to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At none of these assemblies did Joanna find what she was
+looking for—a sight of Peter. She had gone at first out of
+sheer graciousness—a willingness to do something for these
+brave men. But later, there was another reason; something
+happened which led her to expect to see Peter at any moment,
+at any turn. She met Vera Manning.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>“Vera, you imp! Telling those people that you had gone
+to school with me to learn democracy; I nearly died! Where’ve
+you been this long while? How wonderful you look! And
+how different!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, Joanna, Joanna, I was coming to see you! First of all
+I’ve been South. I got sick of going about with those white
+people, so I cast about for something to do. You remember
+they mobbed some colored soldiers in Arkansas because they’d
+worn their uniforms in the street? Well, it made me sick, it
+made me think of—of Harley. So I rushed to a newspaper,
+Barney Kirchner is the manager—wasn’t he one of Philip’s
+friends? And I told them: ‘I’m colored, see, but nobody would
+guess it; send me down there. See if I can’t get a line on
+those people.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mercy,” said Joanna, “what an idea!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And they sent me. And, oh, Joanna, it was wonderful to
+see how our folks, those colored people, trusted me and shielded
+me when they found I was one of them. And those white
+bullies, thinking I was one of <em>them</em>, told me the most blood-curdling,
+most fiendish tales. I really got an investigation
+started. Mr. Kirchner has taken it up. Oh, Joanna, I’m glad
+I’m colored—there’s something terrible, terrible about white
+people.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She had seen a side of life which had first amazed, then
+frightened, then incited her. Joanna had never seen her friend
+like this, so roused and quickened, so purposeful. “It was as
+though at last I had found some excuse for being what I am,
+looking like one race and belonging to another. It made me
+feel like—don’t laugh—like a ministering angel. Oh, I hated
+myself so for having spent all those foolish months, years
+even, away from my own folks when I might have been consecrated
+to them, serving them, helping them, healing them.
+You can’t understand just how I feel, Janna dear. You’ve
+always had a definite something before you to make out of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>your life. I tell you I feel as though I had found a new
+heaven and a new earth.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Wasn’t it awfully dangerous, Vera?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Awfully, and funny, too. Exciting! I’ll never be able
+to get back to Little Rock again. They found me out, suspected
+me. I really had to make a quick get-away. Something
+so rotten happened, I just couldn’t control myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She told her friend that she had finished the investigation
+on hand and was quietly preparing to go. It happened that
+on her last night at the hotel where she was staying, the hotel
+management was approached on the subject of having sold
+liquor to two young white women, the questionable guests of
+three or four white men. Vera, secretly amused to realize that
+she had been staying at such a resort, thought nothing of the
+disturbance until she learned that the colored bell boys were
+charged with aiding and abetting the women in violation of
+the law.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“So I followed it up, Joanna. And what do you think
+happened? When the case came up for trial, the girls who
+had been taken up on charges of assignation were adjudged
+not guilty, but the two bell-hops were held for serving liquor
+under orders, and aiding in a crime which this same court
+says never was committed. Isn’t it all too absurd! I made
+so much row about it that they became suspicious. A colored
+woman whom I had never seen before passed me on the street
+and handed me a note, in which she told me that my actions
+had made ‘them’ highly suspicious of me. Some one suggested
+that perhaps I was a ‘yaller nigger passin’,’ and if so
+I’d better look out. So I got out. Oh, there was plenty of
+excitement, but it was worth it. I’m going to play the same
+game somewhere else, just as soon as I can. Do you know,
+I’m—I’m almost glad that I am forced to devote the rest
+of my life to it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>“Forced to devote your life to it,” Joanna repeated, bewildered.
+“Why, what do you mean?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>A subtle change came over Vera’s face. It was almost as
+though one could see her marshaling her inner forces, her
+spiritual resources. Despair, resolve, pride, courage—her
+friend could descry each in turn. Then she laughed her old
+confident laugh.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, it’s like this, Janna. I’ve had a message—indirectly—from
+Harley. He—” she bit her lip, “he isn’t coming back
+to America. He managed to get his discharge in France and
+he’s made up his mind to live there. Isn’t it great for him?
+It means he’ll have to start his training all over again, but he
+says he’d rather do that than waste his life bucking this color
+business any more. And there’s all sorts of work for a dentist
+in those little French towns. Just imagine old Harley’s being
+free to come and go as he pleases. No more insults for him,
+no more lynching news. Why, it’ll be life all over for him,
+won’t it, Jan? And I can’t blame him,” she broke off breathlessly,
+“once I might have thought the thing for him to do was
+to stay with his own folks, but life cheats us colored people so.
+I wish I had understood that earlier. White and colored people!
+No wonder Peter used to rave as he did.” She ended astoundingly:
+“I suppose you and he have made up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Who?” asked Joanna stupidly. “Peter and—and me?
+Why, I haven’t seen him. Why, he’s going to marry Maggie
+Ellersley!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Marry Maggie nothing! Here, here’s an Automat. We’ll
+be all right in here. Miss Maggie Ellersley is going to marry
+your brother. Didn’t you know it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, but I’m glad of it, glad of it. How’d you know all
+this, Vera?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter told me, of course. I’ve seen him. He’s the most
+perfect darling in his uniform! You ought to hear him raving
+about France, but silent as the tomb about the War. He says
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>the colored soldiers were all sold—fighting for freedom was a
+farce so far as they were concerned. But France is all right
+if the white Americans don’t get in too much propaganda. I’ve
+been meaning to write to you, to tell you you’d better go over
+there. No end of chances for you on the French stage. You
+might even get in French opera. Are you sure you haven’t
+seen Peter, sly thing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course I’m sure. There was really no reason why I
+should. Mr. Bye and I haven’t seen or heard from each
+other for three years, now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Mr. Bye! Well, good evening, Miss High and Mighty.
+If I see him I’ll tell him I saw you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ll do nothing of the kind. Stop all this raving, Vera,
+and explain to me about Harley. Are you going to France,
+too?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Vera looked at her with a too perfect astonishment. “I
+going? Joanna, how did you ever get credit for being so
+brilliant, you’re really quite thick-witted. Don’t you see Harley’s
+and my ways are going to lie separate forever? He is
+going East and I am going—South.” Her gayety forsook her.
+“Joanna, don’t let me cry in this awful place. I got it out of
+Peter. I made him tell me. He says Harley is bitter and
+cynical. He says, over and over, Peter told me: ‘Look at
+these little French girls, they’re really white and they don’t
+seem to hate me. And yet a girl of my own race hesitates to
+marry me merely because she looks like white.’<a id='tn004'></a>” She pressed
+her hand hard against her quivering mouth. “It seems he
+can’t forgive me. Peter told me so I could be prepared for
+anything I might hear. Oh, Janna, this terrible country with
+its false ideals! So you see why I’m glad there’s the South
+to go to—I’ve got to choose between life and death. Even if
+I should lose my life in Georgia or in one of those other
+terrible places where they lynch women, too, I’ll save it, won’t
+I? I must go. Kiss me good-by, dear Janna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>She was off in a moment in her pretty, modish costume,
+leaving Joanna in a maze of pity and tenderness for her friend,
+and of sick bewilderment for herself.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter was free; he was, presumably, home, and he had not
+come near her. Some of the old pain surged up. She was
+walking presently along teeming Lenox Avenue. Some young
+girls passing turned and stared. “That’s Joanna Marshall.
+You know, the dancer.” A dark colored girl wearing Russian
+boots and a hat with three feathers sticking up straight, Indian
+fashion, came along. Lenox Avenue stared, pointed, laughed
+and enjoyed itself, Joanna’s admirer with the rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>This, this was fame—to be shared with any girl who chose
+to stick feathers, Indian fashion, in her hat. An empty thing—different,
+so different from what she had expected it to be.
+It had not occurred to her that it would be the only thing in
+her life. Probing relentlessly into an evasive subconsciousness
+she evolved the realization that in those other days she had
+expected her singing, her dancing—her success in a word—to be
+the mere integument of her life, the big handsome extra wrap
+to cover her more ordinary dress,—the essential, delightful
+commonplaces of living, the kernel of life, home, children, and
+adoring husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>This was too much like examining the bones, the skull and
+skeleton of living and then every day tricking it out with
+the one thing which could lend it the semblance of flesh and
+color, though always with the vivid knowledge that death lay
+hidden beneath.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>If her gift were only something useful! Even Vera Manning,
+a mere butterfly, had turned the trick, had used her one
+specialty, her absence of color, to the advantage of her people.
+But she—of course it did mean something to prove to a
+skeptical world the artistry of a too little understood people—but
+she could do that only in New York. After the season
+closed here she was to have a brief showing in Boston, in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>Philadelphia and in Chicago. Even there, as here, she would
+have to appear in independent theaters. The big theatrical
+trusts refused her absolutely—one had even said frankly:
+“We’ll try a colored man in a white company but we won’t
+have any colored women.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Her manager, who liked and respected her, had told her
+only last week that he had nothing in view for her after the
+brief tour. He felt there was money in the South, but the
+southern newspapers had started to editorialize against her
+already. “A negress,” a Georgia newspaper had said, “in the
+rôle of America. Shameful!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We might get a showing among colored patrons, Miss Marshall.
+But the South is in an ugly mood just now. Those
+hoodlums might break the show up. I’d hate to expose you
+to it. God, what a country!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>It was just possible that she might get a booking in a high-class
+vaudeville house. “And later on we’ll write a play around
+you. It would take mighty little to make a fine actress out of
+you. That’s a fact, Miss Marshall. And after we’ve had a
+run here we could cross the pond.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>This, this, was her great success. She loved and hated it.
+But she would not have been human if she had not wished
+for Peter to see her in her triumph, empty though it might
+prove to be.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>
+ <h2 id='chap34' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXIV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>PETER had seen her. His first free hours in New York
+were spent sitting segregated in the portion of the balcony
+set apart for colored people, watching Joanna in
+the “Dance of the Nations.” And the result, of course, was to
+make her seem farther than ever out of his reach. She was
+more wonderful, more mysterious than he had conceived possible.
+“And why you should think she would look at you!
+What if she did write and tell you she didn’t mean it? Look
+at the letter you sent her in reply. Do you suppose a woman
+like that would stand being thrown down and picked up
+again?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was living with his aunt until he could open an office.
+Fortunately, he had saved up his pay and his aunt had used
+very little of his allotment. As soon as possible he would get
+out his shingle. His first impulse on receiving his <i><span lang="fr">congé</span></i> from
+Maggie had been to come back and have at least a talk with
+Joanna. But after seeing her on the stage he rejected that
+idea completely.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“But I’ll work like fury. I’ll really get ahead. And then
+I’ll go to her and tell her I owe it all to her. And I’ll explain
+to her, as Meriwether Bye said, that all my training and instincts
+have been against me. And then,” he finished to himself
+lamely, “we’ll always be friends.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He passed the state-board examinations with a flourish. Then
+to get an office. He thought it best to consult Harry Portor
+about this. The latter in his own office greeted him, he thought,
+none too cordially, ignored his hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>“Thought I’d look you up, Portor. Gee, what enthusiasm!
+Nice greeting to give a fellow who’s just been making your
+home safe for democracy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, can that stuff, Bye. What I want to know is this. It’s
+none of my business but I happen to be interested. What are
+you going to do about Maggie Ellersley?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Wha-at! Well I’ll be——” Had he been in her train, too?
+Was this why she had given him his freedom? His face clouded.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’re right, Harry, it <em>is</em> none of your business. May I ask
+how you horn in on this?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, if you’ve got to know. I’m, I’m deeply interested in
+Miss Joanna Marshall and—and——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hold on, I thought you were speaking of Miss Ellersley.”
+Their politeness was wonderful.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Now see here, Bye, tell me, are you going to marry Miss
+Ellersley?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I am not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, by God! you dirty cad, what do you mean by getting
+engaged to one woman after another and not having any
+intention of marrying either?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter controlled his rising anger. “I don’t want to quarrel
+with you, Portor. Miss Ellersley told me in Chambéry that
+she didn’t want to marry me, she’d made a mistake.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And Miss Marshall,” said Harry, his face clearing, “have
+you told her yet?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No, I haven’t. Miss Marshall found out she’d made a
+mistake three years ago. I don’t make good with the ladies,
+Portor. And I’d like to know how the devil it concerns you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It concerns me,” said Harry miserably, “because I’m pretty
+sure Joanna loves you, and I want you to make her happy, or
+else get out of the way and let me try to do it.” And he told
+Peter how Joanna, thinking him guilty, had yet declared herself
+Maggie’s assailant.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter’s natural surprise at Neal’s attack on Maggie vanished
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>into stupefied amazement at the news of Joanna’s generosity.
+“She did that for me? Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” Portor told him. “Where’re you going, man?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter had snatched up his cap. “You get into that little
+Ford I saw standing out there and drive me up to her house.
+I can’t drive a Ford. Does she still live home?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Still with her father and mother. But they’ve moved on
+One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Street. Joanna, I believe,
+wanted a whole floor for a studio, and as Sylvia’s children are
+growing up, she and her parents got out. The kids are always
+over at Joanna’s, though.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They were silent after that. Harry let him off at Joanna’s
+corner. “Well, good luck, old man,” he said insincerely.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia’s boy, Roger, let Peter in. “I know who you are,” said
+the tall lieutenant. “You are Brian Spencer’s son.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I am, but I don’t know you. And you’ll have to tell
+me your name if you want to see my Aunt Joanna. She might
+not be at home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, that’s what I was afraid of. See here, son, I knew
+your Aunt Joanna before you were born, and I’d like to surprise
+her. I’ve just got back from France. Understand, Buddy?
+I’ve got a German helmet around to my house——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well,” said Roger, shamelessly, “you go right up those
+stairs; ’s that helmet got a plume on it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna had been singing Tschaikowsky’s “Longing.” Now
+she was sitting still reading the words over and over:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="de"><i>Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt,</i></span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="de"><i>Weiss was ich leide,</i></span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="de">.&#160;.&#160;. .&#160;.&#160;. .&#160;.&#160;. .&#160;.&#160;. .&#160;.&#160;.</span></div>
+ <div class='line'><span lang="de"><i>Ach! der mich liebt und kennt</i>—</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>She mused over the last line: “Peter, I’m afraid you never
+really knew me or loved me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>He called to her softly from the door of the studio, “Joanna”.
+She turned swiftly on the stool and saw him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Peter!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>What could they say? Does anyone believe that two people
+who have loved dearly and have been parted can say anything
+adequate at such moments? Certainly all the explanations,
+the pleas for forgiveness that Joanna had meant to utter if
+they should ever meet again, left her. She only sat and held
+his hand and called his name again and again. But he was
+silent.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Both became terribly self-conscious, indeed, were very near
+weeping. Peter told Joanna long afterwards that he did not
+dare speak for fear of bursting into tears. Peter, who had
+been in two terrible engagements, and had brought back Meriwether
+Bye from No Man’s Land!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He told Joanna about Meriwether during those first incredibly
+beatific days after they had met again. But Joanna was
+too astounded at the happiness which flooded the very atmosphere
+about them. Almost as though she were taking a
+deep sea bath in bliss.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I used to think,” she told him, “even if Peter does come
+back, we never can</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in15'>‘recapture</div>
+ <div class='line'>that first fine careless rapture.’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>“I don’t think we have, dear,” he told her wistfully, “for
+with this happiness is the memory of that awful bitterness that
+lay between us. There was nothing like this that first time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He persuaded her to go to Philadelphia, to Bryn Mawr in
+fact. “I’ve got to give these pictures and the locket to Dr.
+Meriwether Bye and to Mrs. Lea. I’m so sorry for them. To
+think we’re alive and have each other——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And their Meriwether is dead. Oh, Peter, if it had been
+you!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>“Yet I used to long for death, Joanna. I used to wish I’d
+get done in at the Front. Did you pray for me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, sometimes. But I didn’t think you’d die. I used to
+think, though, that you’d never come back to me. I didn’t see
+how Maggie could ever let you go. She’s married Philip, you
+know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, I know. I told Vera, hoping it would get to you.” He
+mused over some mysterious memory. “Well, Maggie certainly
+is some girl. How’s Philip?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Better, oh, lots better. He has a fighting chance and it’s
+all due to her. He’s in a sanitarium and she’s with him. She
+should have married him long ago. It’s my fault she didn’t.”
+And she told him about the letter.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Gosh!” Peter exclaimed inadequately, “don’t you do funny
+things when you’re kids? Well, here we are at Bryn Mawr.
+You want to wait here in the station? I don’t think I’ll be
+long. If I am I’ll send for you. I don’t mind going here myself,
+but I don’t want you to go in until I know how they’re
+going to treat you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Oh, go along,” laughed Joanna, “I’ve been in a million of
+their homes. Thought you were all over that nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was back in a quarter of an hour, very serious. “The old
+gentleman is ill, got bronchitis and they’re afraid it might turn
+into flu. So I left a message and the pictures and my address.
+Your address, rather, Joanna dear, since I don’t know just when
+I’m going to move. Now we’ll go to Mrs. Lea’s. She’s just the
+next station up the line.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They boarded the local. “I wish you could have seen that
+old butler, Janna. He knew my grandfather. And the moment
+he saw me, he knew I was a Bye. Gave me the funniest look.
+‘Why,’ he said, ‘you’se the spit of both families!’ Funny, isn’t
+it, Joanna; those two families, the black and the white Byes,
+lived so long together that they developed similar characteristics,
+like husbands and wives, you know. And they say white
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>and colored people are fathoms apart! Even I noticed that
+Meriwether Bye and I were built alike. I’m afraid we weren’t
+much alike spiritually. Well, here’s where we hop off again.
+I’m afraid I’ll be longer this time. Mind waiting for me,
+darling?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Never, if you’ll only promise to come back to me,” she
+whispered.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Nothing had been said as yet about a new engagement. But
+he kissed her in the Sunday quiet of the tiny station and held
+her close.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>When he came back at the end of an hour she could see he
+was deeply stirred.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Hard on you, wasn’t it, Peter?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, and on her, too. Poor little thing. I don’t pretend
+to understand white people, Joanna, but I can’t imagine what
+Meriwether, that big, fine idealist, could have seen in that
+little ball of fluff. Self-centered, narrow and cruel—cruel,
+Joanna! Oh, such people! Do you know what she said?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I can’t imagine, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I gave her the locket, and she said with the tears streaming
+down her face, ‘To think that the Lord would let Meriwether
+Bye be killed and would let his nigger live!’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna fell back against the red plush seat. “She didn’t,
+she couldn’t!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You wouldn’t think so. And then she told me, ‘Go on, tell
+me every word he said.’ And I did, all I could remember. He
+had said to me one day, ‘I love her and she loves me,’ and I
+told her that and she leaned back and moaned—moaned, Janna.
+I wanted to pick her up in my arms and comfort her, and if I
+had, do you know what would have happened to me——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Don’t, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Well, this is Pennsylvania, so probably I’d have got off
+with imprisonment, here, but if it had been in Georgia, and
+I’d have dared to touch her——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>She put her hand over his mouth, “Peter, you shan’t say it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Darling, all the time I was there I was thinking: ‘Suppose
+this were Joanna and I were Harley Alexander, or someone,
+telling her about Peter Bye!’<a id='tn009'></a>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They were very sober after that.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>At the West Philadelphia station Peter remembered a restaurant
+on Market Street, where he had eaten in his student days.
+“I guess they’ll still accommodate us. Where do you think
+I’m going to take you after we eat?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I can’t imagine, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Out to the Park, darling. I used to dream of this in
+France, when I was in that hospital.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philadelphia, since the War, has changed for the worse in
+her attitude toward colored people. But these two contrived
+to get a decent meal after which they set out for the Park. It
+was October again, mellow and beautiful. Joanna, tingling with
+memories of the past, asked Peter nervously to tell her more of
+Meriwether Bye.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He was a wonderful man, Joanna, a real, real man and he
+made me see life from an entirely different angle. He said
+white men in their fight for freedom in America had had
+tremendous physical odds to face and that black men had
+helped them face them. Now it was our turn to fight for
+freedom, only our odds were spiritual and mental obstacles,
+infinitely more difficult because less tangible. ‘And just as you
+black men helped us, Bye,’ he used to say, ‘there’re plenty of
+white men to help you. You don’t know it; for one thing,
+you’ve shut your mind to us. Oh, you’re not to blame, lots
+of us aren’t to be trusted; most of us, I’m afraid. But we’re
+ignorant and incredulous. Show us what manhood means,
+Bye.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“He must have been wonderful, indeed, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes. And yet the queerest chap. You know I told you he
+had made up his mind to die. That was the difference between
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>us. I wanted to, but he had made up his mind to it. And he
+told me: ‘I knew as soon as I saw you on the ship that my job
+was finished, but you would have to carry on. You’ll have
+to finish up my life, Peter.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna felt tears in her eyes.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Darling, he told me something else. He said I was a fool
+ever to have let you go. My dear, I’m going to try to finish
+up Meriwether Bye’s life, to be the man that he would have
+been. But I can do nothing without you, Joanna.” Suddenly
+they were back in the full tide of their love of long ago. He
+knelt beside her, kissing her hands. “Sweetest Joanna, will
+you take me and make a man out of me? All that is decent
+in me already is your work. Are you going to marry me,
+Joanna?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>An ineffable solemnity hung around them.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Tell me, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course, I’ll marry you, Peter. Dear, don’t think I don’t
+understand how hard things have been for you. I was such a
+stupid, before, when we were young. I didn’t allow for the
+difference in our temperaments. Why, nothing in the world
+is so hard to face as this problem of being colored in America.
+See what it does to us—sends Vera Manning South and Harley
+overseas, away from everybody they’ve ever known, so that
+they can live in—in a sort of bitter peace; forces you to consider
+giving up your wonderful gift as a surgeon to drift into
+any kind of work; drives me, and the critics call me a really
+great artist, Peter, to consider ordinary vaudeville. Oh, it
+takes courage to fight against it, Peter, to keep it from choking
+us, submerging us. But now that we have love, Peter, we
+have a pattern to guide us out of the confusion. When you
+left me for Maggie, I used to lie awake at night and think
+of all the sweet things I might have said to you. Oh, if
+you’ve suffered half as much as I have, you’ve suffered horribly.
+I learned that nothing in the world is worth as much
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>as love. For people like us, people who can and must suffer—<em>Love</em>
+is our refuge and strength.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He kissed her reverently. “Yes, thank God, we’ve got Love.
+That is the great compensation. We’ve tried everything else,
+dear: you, your career; and I, my self-indulgence. And we’ve
+found what we wanted was each other. But you’re right,
+Joanna, it is frightful to see the havoc that this queer intangible
+bugaboo of color works among us. Vera and Harley,
+you and I, aren’t so badly off. We’re intelligent, we can choose
+our own native land and prejudice, or freedom and a strange,
+untried country. We see clearly just what we’re keeping and
+what we’re letting go. But when I think of the millions of
+Negroes, not as lucky as we—there’s Tom Mason, remember
+the fellow I used to play with in Philadelphia? I heard from
+him this morning. He’s made his pile and he wants to leave
+the country. But his sister can’t and won’t stand the idea of
+taking up a new life with strange people and a new language.
+‘Why should I give up my country?’ she wails. ‘It <em>is</em> my
+country even if my skin is black?’”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“‘<i><span lang="de">Entbehren, sollst du</span></i>,’” Joanna quoted softly. “If you’re
+black in America, you have to renounce. But that’s life, too,
+Peter. You’ve got to renounce something—always.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, you do. Unless, like Meriwether, you renounce life
+itself. Of course, that is the great burden of being colored in
+this day. You’ve got to make the ordinary renunciations
+which life demands, and you’ve got to make those involved in
+the clash of color....</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m afraid you’ll have to give up your career, dear
+Joanna——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Of course, of course, I know it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“For, if there should be children, I want, Oh, Joanna, I
+hope——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You want them to be different from both you and me,
+Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>“Not so different from you. You were always so brave, so
+plucky. But, Joanna, if they are like me they’ll have so much
+to fight, and they’ll need you to help them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“We can do anything together, Peter.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“And, Joanna, of course you know we will be poor at
+first——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She broke out crying then. “Oh, Peter, you won’t ever
+say again that I’m different from Sylvia.”</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>
+ <h2 id='chap35' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXV</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>MAGGIE and Philip had returned from the sanitarium
+to New York, but Philip undoubtedly was dying.
+Peter and Harry Portor were at his bedside every day,
+but not because of their ability to help him. They were simply
+three friends together. Philip never spoke to Peter of the
+incident at Des Moines, though it is probable that he thought
+of it many times, but the young doctor seemed so serenely unaware
+of any former misunderstanding that Philip, with a deep
+sense of relief, let the whole incident slide out of his mind.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, meanwhile, was experiencing a little private purgatory
+of remorse and grief. As she saw Philip’s joy in Maggie,
+his complete and unbounded satisfaction in her presence, she
+became more and more overwhelmed with the awfulness of that
+old unconsidered act of hers, the sending of the letter which
+had caused Maggie to marry Henderson Neal. Maggie had
+never told her this, but she was pretty sure that such was the
+case. The mere fact that Maggie had never spoken about it
+to Peter, even in the days of their engagement, led her to suspect
+that her sister-in-law had attached more significance to it
+than she had cared to show. There was only one thing for her,
+if she was ever to know any peace, and that was to confess to
+Philip.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She went to see him in the late October weather. On the
+way she had passed Morningside Park and the gorgeous autumn
+sights and colors had brought back to her in a sudden heady
+rush the memories of the old days,—partings with Peter, concert
+tours and meetings with Philip, talks, dreams, ambitions,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>all the activities of her assured, confident, determined youth.
+If she might only relive a few brief scenes—the night she had
+dismissed Peter, the time she had spent in writing that cruel
+letter to Maggie—how different her memories would have
+been!</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Philip was in excellent spirits. He seemed quite reconciled to
+dying and even spoke of it with a cheerfulness and familiarity
+that never failed to bring a rush of tears to Joanna’s eyes,
+though this she was careful to conceal. “Just think of the
+luck I’m in,” Philip would say, “I never expected to come
+home at all. If Maggie hadn’t found me there in Chambéry
+and taken pity on my lonesomeness, I’d probably be lying in a
+French cemetery this moment with one of those little white
+crosses standing above me. As it is, I’m seeing you all again
+and I have Maggie. She has promised to stay with me always.
+It’s all right, Joanna, old girl, I’ve had a good run for my
+money and except for Maggie I’m not so sorry to chuck it all.
+Just think, it might have been my luck never to have found
+her again at all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He said something like that to Joanna on this afternoon.
+Sobbing she fell on her knees beside the bed. “Oh Philip, if
+it hadn’t been for me, you’d have found her long ago.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He was suddenly attentive, his eyes bright and keen in his
+thin sharpening face as she told him about the letter. With
+infinite gentleness he let his hand rest on that proud dark
+head which life had taught so hardly to bow.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Dear Janna, dear little sister, don’t blame yourself one
+moment. It was all my fault. If you’d left a hundred letters
+unwritten, I should hardly have moved any more quickly. In
+those days I was so taken up with the business of being colored!
+After I’d adjusted that I thought I’d arrange my
+life. Ah, Joanna, that’s our great mistake. We must learn
+to look out for life first, then color and limitations. My being
+colored didn’t make me forget to provide myself with food
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>and raiment. I shouldn’t have allowed it to make me forget
+love.” His grasp on her hand tightened.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Learn this, Joanna, and tell the rest of our folks. Our
+battle is a hard one and for a long time it will seem to be
+a losing one, but it will never really be that as long as we
+keep the power of being happy. And happiness has to be
+deliberately sought for, gained; even that doesn’t solve the
+problem, but it does make it easier for us to fight. Happiness,
+love, contentment in our own midst, make it possible for us
+to face those foes without. ‘Happy Warriors,’ that’s the
+ideal for us. Only I realized it too late.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>That was his last long talk with Joanna. Usually he gave
+all his attention to Maggie who was with him always, supplying
+and anticipating his wants and radiating an ineffable peace.
+Her hand was in his when he died.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His father, remembering his intense patriotism as a child,
+said with a touch of bitter pride: “He died for his country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“It was what he always wanted to do,” Sylvia said gently.
+But Joanna knew that Philip’s real desire envisaged <em>living</em> for
+his country—to save her from something worse than war.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>His death diffused a gentle melancholy over the others. It
+was the first serious rent in the fabric of the Marshall family.
+Old Joel took to indulging in long, deep reveries. Mrs. Marshall,
+quite dry-eyed, took out all of Philip’s baby things,
+wrapped them up to send away and quite suddenly put them
+back in their places. Her interest in Sylvia’s children took
+on an almost feverish intensity. Sylvia herself and Joanna
+and sometimes Sandy had many talks, wistful with reminiscences.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Maggie alone remained calm and almost cheerful. “Not
+because she’s unfeeling,” Joanna explained to Sylvia, “but
+because she is so satisfied.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia raised an eyebrow. “Satisfied and Philip dead?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes, because so easily he might have died without their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>ever having come together. But they did. Oh, Sylvia, you
+and Brian have had such a simple, easy, jog-trot time of it,
+you don’t know what it means to have your life all broken
+up like Maggie’s and mine have been, and poor Vera Manning’s.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Whatever the cause, Maggie spent her days serenely. Secure
+not only in the knowledge that she was bulwarked by
+the Marshall respectability, but also by the resolve which she
+had made before she saw Philip in Chambéry, she started
+on the project of her Beauty Parlors.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>She said to Joel who, she knew, admired her ability: “See
+if you can’t make me as great a success in business as you’ve
+been.” They spent many pleasant hours in consultation.</p>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>
+ <h2 id='chap36' class='c009'><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXXVI</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='drop-capa0_2_0_4 c016'>JOANNA and Peter married and Peter came at Joel’s insistent
+request to live in the One Hundred and Thirty-eighth
+Street house. It was marvelous to see how the
+two old people renewed themselves in the youth of their children.
+Joel was as proud of Peter as he had been of Joanna.
+Even Mrs. Marshall’s long allegiance to Sylvia wavered a little.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The first child was a boy; “Meriwether,” Peter had named
+him after young Dr. Meriwether Bye. “I’m going to tempt
+providence,” he said to his wife. “I hope he’ll not be the sort
+of Meriwether that my father was. I’ll see to it that he isn’t.
+He’s going to be all and more than old Isaiah Bye ever dreamed
+of,” and he quoted, to Joanna’s mystification: “By <em>his</em> fruits
+shall ye know <em>me</em>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The two possessed happiness; but more than happiness they
+had found peace. They were united by the very pain which
+each had caused the other. And the knowledge of how greatly
+each could suffer created in them a sort of whimsical tolerance.
+There is nothing like humor to speed the wheels of life.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, having come to understand the nothingness of that
+inordinate craving for sheer success, surprised herself by the
+pleasure which came to her out of what she had always considered
+the ordinary things of life. Realizing how nearly she
+had lost the essentials in grasping after the trimmings of
+existence, she experienced a deep, almost holy joy in the routine
+of the day. To see about her, her husband and parents, little
+Meriwether usually in Joel’s arms, gave her, she confessed
+almost shamefacedly to Sylvia, “thoughts that lay too deep for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>tears.” She rarely regretted leaving the stage and although she
+sang sometimes in churches and concerts and once even went on
+a brief tour, she almost never danced except in the ordinary
+way.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Still, as her mentality was essentially creative, she found herself
+more and more impelled toward the expression of the
+intense appreciation of living which welled within her. Luckily
+her training in music offered her some outlet. With her
+slight knowledge of composition she composed two little songs
+and glimpsing future possibilities, she began to study that
+most fascinating of all the sciences—harmony.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The change in Peter was more fundamental than that in
+Joanna. She at least had always had these possibilities of
+domesticity. Her desire for greatness had been a sort of
+superimposed structure which, having been taken off, left her
+her true self. It was as though her life had expanded on the
+plan of Holmes’ admonition to the Chambered Nautilus:</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c013'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>Leave thy low vaulted Past—</div>
+ <div class='line'>Let each new temple,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Nobler than the last,</div>
+ <div class='line'>Shut thee from Heaven</div>
+ <div class='line'>With a dome more vast</div>
+ <div class='line'>Till thou at length art free,—</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c014'>Joanna was free.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But Peter had had to undergo a complete metamorphosis.
+He was a supersensitive colored man living among hosts of
+indifferent white people. Not only had he to change in every
+particular his theory of how to maintain such a relationship,
+but indeed he had to decide what sort of relationship was worth
+maintaining. At his father’s death and during his young
+manhood he had been absolutely without a notion of the
+responsibilities which the most average man expects to take
+upon himself. He looked back with a real shame and chagrin
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>to the many favors which he had accepted without question
+from his Aunt Susan.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna, clever Joanna, helped him here. She was not only
+naturally independent, but she was, for all her talent, essentially
+practical with that clearheadedness which artistic people exhibit
+sometimes in such unexpected fashion. Perhaps it is
+wrong to imply that Joanna had lost her ambition. She was
+still ambitious, only the field of her ambition lay without herself.
+It was Peter now whom she wished to see succeed. If his
+success depended ever so little on his achievement of a sense
+of responsibility, then she meant to develop that sense. To
+this end, she consulted him, she took his advice, she asked him
+to arrange about the few recitals which she undertook. In
+a thousand little ways she deferred to him, and showed him
+that as a matter of course he was the arbiter of her own and her
+child’s destiny, the <i><span lang="la">fons et origo</span></i> of authority.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>So he grew both in the spirit of racial tolerance and in the
+spirit of responsibility. He wanted to live in America; he
+wanted to get along with his fellow man, but he no longer
+proposed to let circumstances shape his career. No one but
+himself, not even Joanna, should captain his ship. He meant
+to be a successful surgeon, a responsible husband and father, a
+self-reliant man.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>The memory of Meriwether Bye, never far distant, braced
+him constantly. The young physician’s words and ideas had
+exercised a singleness of concentration, of influence over Peter
+such as a friendship of long standing could hardly have hoped
+to achieve.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>For a long time he expected to hear from Meriwether’s
+grandfather. Then as the months and nearly two years rolled
+by without a sign from Bryn Mawr, Peter decided that the
+old gentleman wished to spare himself the pain of learning
+more of the circumstances surrounding his grandson’s death.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sylvia’s boy, Roger, captivated by his new soldier-uncle,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>spent most of his time at Peter’s house serving in the purely
+impressionistic capacity of office-boy. He came up to the
+sitting room one summer morning bearing a bit of cardboard
+between his fingers.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Meriwether Bye,” he pronounced, handing the card to
+Peter. “Ain’t it funny he should have the same name as
+the kid? But he’s no relation because he’s white and as old as
+the hills.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Meriwether’s grandfather!” Peter said in astonishment.
+“Come on down with me, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Together they descended to find an old, old man sitting
+in an absolutely immobile silence in Peter’s office. He rose,
+a tall, straight, white figure and looked at the two young
+people, still in silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m Peter Bye,” the young man said, coming forward.
+“Won’t you sit down? Sit here, Joanna.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Together they sat in a strange, strained quiet, Joanna watching
+Peter in whom she sensed the rising anew of the antagonism
+of all the years. There they were, she felt, representing
+the last of the old order and the first of the new, since Peter’s
+generation was the first to escape the effect of the ancient
+régime, and he personally had not completely escaped it. How
+many things this ancient, stately personage who sat regarding
+them with keen though inscrutable eyes could have told them
+of the circumstances which had combined to make the two
+of them what they were! For this old man’s whole life and
+fortune had been reared on the institution of slavery.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Out of the puzzling silence he spoke, in the expressionless,
+brittle tone of extreme old age. “Yes, I know you are a Bye,
+Isaiah Bye’s grandson. And you were with Meriwether at
+the end. Tell me about it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Very solemnly, almost pityingly, Peter began the recital of
+his brief, dream-like acquaintance with Meriwether Bye. “He
+had quite made up his mind beforehand that he was going
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>to die. Perhaps you knew. So, I’m sure he was quite reconciled
+to it; I don’t think you need grieve for him. And at
+the very end I was with him. It turned out that we had been
+fighting just a few yards apart. I think I eased him a little;
+I’m a doctor, too,” said Peter simply. He put his hand in
+front of his eyes as though trying to shut out the vision of
+the pitiful, needless death. “His last words were to you, did
+I tell you, sir? He sat up suddenly against me, his hand on
+my arm and called out—Oh, I can hear his voice now: ‘Grandfather,
+this is the last of the Byes.’<a id='tn010'></a>”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>They sat again in a deep silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I’m sorry,” Peter continued after a long revery, “that
+he hadn’t married, and had no children. It’s hard on you,
+sir, you who are now the last of the Byes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yes,” said the old gentleman laconically, “it is. Now,
+suppose you tell me something about yourself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>But first Peter told him about his father, Meriwether, glossing
+over the dead man’s faults and irresoluteness and dwelling
+on his ambition. “So you see, I had always had the idea of
+becoming a doctor before me. But I’m afraid I should never
+have realized it if it had not been for my wife, here.” He
+smiled gratefully at Joanna, who smiled back at him with a
+gratitude of another sort. He had uttered no word of complaint
+nor of the difficulties attendant on being a colored man in
+America. She was very proud of him. He was so charming,
+so handsome, growing daily in independence.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You have a son,” said old Meriwether. “I believe you said
+you had a son, Meriwether? How would you like me to take
+him and educate him, bring him up away from all he’d have
+to go through in this country, let him spend his life in Paris
+and Vienna. Perhaps he would be a doctor, too. When he
+became a man he could do as he pleased. And probably,
+probably, I say, I should make him my heir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Neither Joanna nor Peter had ever thought of wealth. And
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>while neither of them envisaged for a second the possibility
+of parting from little Meriwether, they were momentarily
+stunned at such prospects, Joanna especially.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Why,” asked Peter, his old demon of dislike and suspicion
+flaring up in him, “should you at this late date show interest
+in a black Bye?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Because,” said Meriwether Bye, getting up and beginning
+to pace the floor, “because he <em>is</em> my heir. Because he <em>is</em> the
+last of the Byes. Because when my brave boy called out
+‘this is the last of the Byes,’ he meant you, not himself. He
+had no way of knowing it, but he did know it. That queer
+sense in him which warned him he was going to die, probably
+told him.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“You’ve heard of your grandfather Isaiah, the boy that
+grew up with me?” Peter nodded. “Well, his father, black
+Joshua Bye, was my oldest brother; my father—he was Aaron
+Bye—was his father. Joshua was really his oldest child. His
+mother was Judy Bye, old Judy Bye, whom I’ve seen often
+sitting in Isaiah’s house, her eyes straining, straining into the
+future—perhaps she saw this, who knows?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“My father,” said Peter in a dangerously level voice, “told
+me and told me often that much of Aaron Bye’s prosperity
+had been due to the loyalty and hard work of Joshua Bye.
+But he never told me that Aaron was his father. And you
+knew this, have known it——”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Not while Isaiah and I were boys. Not for many, many
+years afterwards. My father,” the word seemed strange on
+this old man’s lips, “always meant, I think, to do something
+for his—his son in his will. But he put it off and finally just
+before his death he told my brother Elmer—his oldest son
+by his real wife you know—told him about it. But Elmer
+was all out of sympathy with the idea, and, although he did not
+tell my father so, had no notion of acquainting Joshua either
+with his real parentage or with the fact that he should have
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>been one of Aaron Bye’s heirs. Elmer was one of those men
+with a sharp dislike, amounting to an obsession, almost, for
+Negroes, for all unfortunate people. I’m free from it personally.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Yet,” said Peter harshly, “your conduct has differed not
+one whit from his. How long have <em>you</em> known this?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“Since the close of the Civil War. All my brothers had died
+but Elmer, and all <em>his</em> sons were killed in the war. When
+Elmer was himself about to die, he told me. He thought the
+loss of his sons was a curse upon him because he had failed
+to obey my father’s wishes. He left their carrying out to me.
+I was a young man still. I saw no reason for opening up old
+wounds. Besides, I did not know what had become of Isaiah’s
+son. Isaiah and Joshua were both dead. I could not see that
+my father had acted differently from other slave-holders—it
+was the custom of the country—and at least he did not do
+as many a white man had done, sell his son into deeper and
+more terrible slavery.... I can see now that whatever slavery
+may have done for other men it has thrown the lives of all
+the Byes into confusion. Think of the farce my father’s
+religion must have become to him ... and I shall never forget
+Elmer. Sometimes I think the shadow of it fell across
+Meriwether’s life—I meant to tell him. I know he would
+have made restitution. Now I shall do it for him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He ceased speaking and looked at Peter curiously, wistfully.
+“I suppose you find it hard to forgive us. I’m afraid I had
+not thought until very recently what this might have meant
+to you,—to Isaiah.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Peter ignored this. “If you made my son your heir,” he
+questioned, avoiding Joanna’s startled look, “would you be
+willing to publish to the world that you were doing it because
+little Meriwether was your blood relation—no matter how
+distant—or would this be the gift of an eccentric philanthropist?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>The old man’s face grew a dull red. “Surely it would not
+be necessary—think of my father. What good would it do
+the boy to know that Aaron Bye’s blood flowed in his veins?”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“None,” said Peter triumphantly. He turned to Joanna.
+“See, dear, there is the source of all I used to be. My ingratitude,
+my inability to adopt responsibility, my very irresoluteness
+come from that strain of white Bye blood. But I
+understand it now, I can fight against it. I’m free, Joanna,
+free.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He walked over to Meriwether Bye, and the two tall straight
+men—so alike, so different, one young, one very old—gazed
+for a long time at each other.</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“I don’t want your gifts,” said Peter gently, “nor does my
+son want them—neither your money nor the acknowledgment
+of your blood. They come too late.” He turned to his wife
+after Meriwether had left the house. “Thank God, Joanna,
+they have come too late. Perhaps I might have been like
+that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Afterwards the memory of the little black testament returned
+to him. He found it and showed it to Joanna. “I’ll bet that
+old codger Ceazer knew that Joshua wasn’t his son and that’s
+why he scratched his own name out of the book. <em>He</em> would
+have been an ancestor worth having.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>Joanna looked at him proudly. “Peter, you are wonderful!
+Such a man, a great man!”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>He sighed a little wistfully. “There spoke the real Joanna.
+Greatness, even in daily living, will always be your creed,
+I suppose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c015'>“No,” said Joanna, a shameless apostate, “my creed calls
+for nothing but happiness.”</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+<div class='nf-center c005'>
+ <div><b>THE END</b></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c001'>
+</div>
+
+<div class='tnote'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c1'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Notes</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1'>
+ <li>Printer’s errors, punctuation, and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
+ </li>
+ <li class='c001'>Variations in hyphenation have been preserved
+ </li>
+ <li class='c001'>For the reader’s convenience, a Table of Contents has been
+ added and is granted to the public domain
+ </li>
+ <li class='c001'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted
+ to the public domain
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78915 ***</div>
+</body>
+<!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57i on 2026-06-21 14:29:00 GMT -->
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+[Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook [#78915](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78915)