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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60885 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60885)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Rewards, by Thomas Beer
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll
-have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using
-this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Fair Rewards
-
-Author: Thomas Beer
-
-Release Date: December 9, 2019 [EBook #60885]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FAIR REWARDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE FAIR
- REWARDS
-
-
-
-
-_NEW BORZOI NOVELS_
-
-_SPRING, 1922_
-
-
- WANDERERS
- _Knut Hamsun_
-
- MEN OF AFFAIRS
- _Roland Pertwee_
-
- THE FAIR REWARDS
- _Thomas Beer_
-
- I WALKED IN ARDEN
- _Jack Crawford_
-
- GUEST THE ONE-EYED
- _Gunnar Gunnarsson_
-
- THE GARDEN PARTY
- _Katherine Mansfield_
-
- THE LONGEST JOURNEY
- _E. M. Forster_
-
- THE SOUL OF A CHILD
- _Edwin Björkman_
-
- CYTHEREA
- _Joseph Hergesheimer_
-
- EXPLORERS OF THE DAWN
- _Mazo de la Roche_
-
- THE WHITE KAMI
- _Edward Alden Jewell_
-
-
-
-
- THE
- FAIR REWARDS
-
- THOMAS BEER
-
- “_Tell arts they have no soundness
- But vary by esteeming
- Tell schools they want profoundness
- And stand too much on seeming_”--
-
- RALEGH
-
- _“Eh, sirs,” says Koshchei, “I contemplate the spectacle
- with appropriate emotions.”_
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- ALFRED·A·KNOPF
- 1922
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
- ALFRED A. KNOPF, INC.
-
- _Published, February, 1922_
-
-
- _Set up and electrotyped by the Vail-Ballou Co., Binghamton, N.Y._
- _Paper furnished by S. D. Warren & Co., Boston, Mass._
- _Printed and bound by the Plimpton Press, Norwood, Mass._
-
-
- MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- To
-
- M. A. A. B.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I MANUFACTURE OF A PERSONAGE, 9
-
- II HE PROGRESSES, 23
-
- III FULL BLOOM, 47
-
- IV PENALTIES, 78
-
- V MARGOT, 104
-
- VI GURDY, 135
-
- VII “TODGERS INTRUDES,” 170
-
- VIII COSMO RAND, 192
-
- IX BUBBLE, 214
-
- X THE IDOLATER, 250
-
- XI THE WALLING, 272
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-Manufacture of a Personage
-
-
-John Carlson began the rehearsals of “Nicoline” in early August of
-1895. For a week he tried to correct the hot labours of the whole,
-large company. He was nervous about this production. His digestion
-interfered. His temper grew explosive. The leading woman was alarmed
-for her gentility. The leading man disliked his part of a cheap rake.
-Carlson abandoned the minor folk to his stage manager, Rothenstein,
-and nursed these two clumsy celebrities toward a certain ease. But his
-stomach suffered. He attended the opening night of “The Prisoner of
-Zenda” at the Lyceum, fainted during the second act and was revived
-with brandy in Mr. Frohman’s office. The brandy gave him fever; he
-spent the six days remaining before “Nicoline” opened, in his bed. Yet
-on a warm Monday night he dressed his gaunt body gorgeously, shaved
-his yellow face, thrust an orchid into his coat and dined at Martin’s
-with young Mr. Fitch who had adapted “Nicoline” from the French.
-Carlson swore in Swedish when agony seized his stomach. Mr. Fitch,
-sipping white Burgundy, observed that it must be pleasant to swear
-incomprehensibly.
-
-“Sure,” said Carlson, shivering, “but what was you sayin’?”
-
-“You’ll feel better by midnight,” Mr. Fitch murmured, “You’ve worried
-too much. This’ll be a hit. It’s been a hit in London and Paris. The
-critics”--the adapter smiled--“won’t dare say anything worse than that
-it’s immoral. And Cora Boyle will make them laugh in the third act, so
-that’ll be safe.”
-
-“Boyle? Who’s she? That black headed gal that plays the street walker,
-y’mean? She’s no good. Had her last winter in Mountain Dew. Common as
-dirt and no more sense than a turnip.”
-
-Mr. Fitch answered in his affable whisper, “Of course she’s common as
-dirt. That’s why I asked you to get her. Why waste time training some
-one to be common when the town’s full of them?”
-
-“But that ain’t actin’, Clyde!”
-
-“It’s quite as good. And,” Mr. Fitch declared, “she’s what the women
-like.”
-
-“You always talk as if women made a show pay!”
-
-“That happens to be just what they do, Mr. Carlson. That’s why Richard
-the Third doesn’t make as much money as Camille or East Lynne. Women
-come to a play to see other women wear clothes they wouldn’t be seen
-in and do things they wouldn’t dream of doing. Please try to eat
-something.”
-
-“You’re all wrong,” Carlson said, chewing a pepsin tablet.
-
-Mr. Fitch shrugged, arranged his moustaches and mentioned a dozen
-actresses whose success was built on the art of enchanting their own
-sex. Carlson had a respect for this playwright’s opinion and while
-the two early acts of “Nicoline” played he saw from his box that
-Cora Boyle’s swagger carried some message to the female part of the
-audience. For her, women laughed loudly. They merely sniffled over the
-well bred woes of the heroine. The heroine’s antics were insupportable.
-The second curtain fell and Carlson descended to the dressing room of
-this unsatisfactory gentlewoman, gave a rasping lecture that scared her
-maid away. He had to help hook her gown and yelled over the powder of
-her advertised shoulders, “If you want that sassy Boyle gal to be the
-hit of the show, go on! You act like you’d lost your last cent on the
-races and had sand in your shoes. Now, you!” A feeling of heated blades
-in his stomach stopped the speech. He heard the stage manager knock on
-the dressing room door. The actress moved weeping past his anguish.
-He leaned on the table and saw his sweating face in the tilted mirror.
-The thin, remote music of the orchestra began behind the curtain. This
-third act was set in the rowdy café of a small French city. If it went
-well, the play was safe, would last out the winter, make him richer. He
-should go up to his box and show himself unperturbed to rival managers
-civilly tranquil in their free seats. But he leaned, looking at his
-wet, bald head with a sick weariness. What was the use of this trade?
-He wore down his years trying to teach silly women and sillier men to
-act. He got nothing from living but stomach trouble and money. The
-money would go to his sister in Stockholm when he died. He had never
-liked his sister, hadn’t seen her in thirty years. He pitied himself so
-extremely that tears wriggled down the spread of seams in his yellow
-face. Life was an iniquity contrived for his torture. Carlson deeply
-enjoyed his woe for five minutes. Then Mr. Fitch came in to urge that
-Cora Boyle be corrected before her present entrance.
-
-“What’s the good, Clyde? She ain’t any sense. She’s a actress, ain’t
-she?”
-
-“She’ll spoil the act if she carries on too much,” said Mr. Fitch and
-at once Carlson thrilled with an automatic anxiety; the act mustn’t
-be spoiled. He hurried up the iron stairs to the platform, wiping
-his face. Cora Boyle was standing ten feet back from the canvas arch
-that was, for the audience, the street door of the Café Printemps. She
-patted the vast sleeves of her gaudy frock and whispered to a fellow in
-blue clothes. Carlson had to pull her from these occupations and gave
-his orders in a hiss.
-
-“Don’t you laugh too loud when Miss Leslie’s tellin’ about her mother
-or talk as loud as you’ve been doin’, neither. This ain’t a camp
-meetin’, hear?”
-
-The black haired girl grinned at him, nodding. She spat out a fold of
-chewing gum and patted her pink sleeves again. She said, “All right,
-boss, but, say, don’t the folks like me, though?”
-
-Fitch chuckled behind the manager. Carlson wouldn’t be bested by an
-impudent hussy who was paid thirty-five dollars a week and didn’t
-earn it. He stared at Cora Boyle, biting his lips and hunting words
-wherewith to blast her. She let him stare unchecked. A false diamond on
-its thin chain glittered and slid when she breathed into the cleft of
-her breasts. She was excellently made and highly perfumed. Her black
-eyes caught a vague point of red from the rim of a jaunty hat that
-slanted its flowers on the mass of her hair. She had rouged her chin to
-offset a wide mouth. Carlson jeered, “Better get somebody to show you
-a good makeup, sister, and quit talkin’ through your nose. You sound
-like you’re out of New Jersey!”
-
-Cora Boyle giggled. She glanced at the fellow in blue and said, “I was
-boardin’ at Fayettesville, New Jersey, all summer. Wasn’t I, Mark?”
-
-The fellow bobbed his head, shuffling his feet. His feet were bare and
-by that sign Carlson knew him for the supposed peasant lad who would
-bring the heroine news of her dear mother’s death at the end of the
-act. Cora Boyle gave this unimportant creature a long, amorous look,
-then told Carlson, “I was boardin’ with Mark’s folks. He--”
-
-“Your cue,” said Mr. Fitch and the girl, with a splendid swagger,
-marched into the lit scene beyond this nervous shadow. Her finery
-shimmered and directly the women outside the hedge of footlights
-laughed. The audience tittered at her first line and Mr. Fitch, a hand
-on his moustache, smiled at Carlson.
-
-“She’s got a voice like a saw,” Carlson snapped and walked down the
-steps. At the bottom a roar halted him. The audience laughed in a
-steady bawl. He grunted but the noise came in repeating volleys every
-time the girl’s shrill speech rose grinding and these bursts had an
-effect of surging water wonderful to hear, soothing his conceit. But as
-he listened a spasm took his stomach. Fitch helped him to a cab and
-the cab delivered Carlson trembling to his valet in 18th Street.
-
-The attack lasted all night and did not wane until twilight of next
-day when Carlson could drink some drugged milk and roll a cigarette.
-He bade his valet bring up the morning papers and was not surprised
-when Fitch preceded the man into the room, walking silently on his trim
-feet, a flower in his blue coat and his white hands full of scribbled
-foolscap.
-
-“I’ve been writing two scenes in the library,” he said, in his usual,
-even whisper, “and I’d like to read them, if you feel well enough.”
-
-“Two scenes?”
-
-“One’s for the first act and one’s for the last. I’d like a full
-rehearsal in the morning, too.”
-
-Carlson lifted himself and slapped the counterpane. He cried, “Now,
-Clyde, listen here! That Boyle gal’s got enough. I expect she hit but
-she’s a sassy little hen. I’m not goin’ to spoil her with--”
-
-“Nom de dieu,” said the playwright, “I didn’t say anything about the
-Boyle girl. No. These scenes are for young Walling. He can come on with
-some flowers for Nicoline in the first act and say something. Then he
-can bring the dogs in at the last, instead of the maid. We might dress
-him as a gamekeeper in the last act. Green coat, corduroy breeches--”
-
-Carlson screamed, “Cord’roy pants? Who the hell you talkin’ about?
-Walling? Who’s Walling?”
-
-Mr. Fitch lit a cigar and selected a paper from the bundle the valet
-held. He bent himself over the back of a cherry velvet chair which
-turned his suit vile purple in the dusk and began to read genially....
-“‘Into the sordid and sensuous atmosphere of this third act there
-came a second of relief when the messenger brought Nicoline news of
-her mother’s death. We too rarely see such acting as Mr. Walling’s
-performance of this petty part. His embarrassed, sympathetic stare at
-Nicoline, his boyish, unaffected speech--’” The playwright laughed and
-took another paper, “That’s William Winter. Here’s this idiot. ‘This
-little episode exactly proves the soundness of Carlson’s method in
-rehearsing a company. I am told that Mark Walling, the young actor who
-plays the rôle, has been drilled by Mr. Carlson as carefully as though
-he were a principal’--I told him that,” Mr. Fitch explained, changing
-papers. “‘One of the best performances in the long list of forty was
-that of Mark Walling as’--”
-
-Carlson lay back dizzy on his pillows and snarled, “What’s it all
-about, for hell’s sake? This feller comes on and gives the gal the
-letter and says the funeral’ll be next day. Well?”
-
-“Well,” said his ally, “I’d just put you in your cab. I was out in
-front, standing. This boy came on. They were still laughing at Cora
-Boyle. The minute Walling spoke, every one shut up. He gave his line
-about the funeral and some women commenced snivelling. Wiped his nose
-on his sleeve. Some more women cried. I thought they’d applaud for a
-minute. He’s in all the papers. Nice voice. It’s his looks mostly.”
-
-“Never noticed him. Where did we get him?”
-
-Mr. Fitch blew some smoke toward the red velvet curtains and chuckled.
-“We didn’t get him. He belongs to Cora Boyle. She brought him to
-Rothenstein at the first rehearsal and asked for a part for him. She
-kidnapped him down in Jersey.”
-
-“She--what?”
-
-“Kidnapped him.” The playwright assumed a high drawl and recited,
-“Cora, she was boardin’ with Mark’s folks down to Fayettesville. Mark,
-he used to speak pieces after supper. Cora, she thought he spoke real
-nice--So she kidnapped him. She mesmerized him--like Trilby--and
-brought him along. She’s got him cooped up at her boarding house. She’s
-married him. He says he thinks acting’s awful easy”--Mr. Fitch again
-drawled, “cause all you gotta do is walk out, an’ speak your piece.
-He’s got a brother name of Joe and his mamma she’s dead and sister
-Sadie she’s married to Eddie something or other. I heard his whole
-family tree. I went to see him this morning. Some one else is likely to
-grab him, you know? He told me his sad story in a pair of blue drawers
-and one sock. He’s scared to death of Cora Boyle.”
-
-“But--can he act?”
-
-The playwright shook his head. “No. He hasn’t any brains. Are you well
-enough to get dressed?”
-
-At half past ten an usher came into the box office where Carlson was
-sitting and summoned the manager to the rear of the house. Fitch stood
-at the throat of an aisle, his pallor made orange by the glow from the
-stage on which Cora Boyle was chaffing the sinful heroine. Amusement
-sped up this lustrous, stirring slope of heads. It was the year of
-Violette Amère among perfumes and the scent rolled back to Carlson with
-the laughter of these ninnies who took Cora Boyle for a good comedian.
-Carlson chafed, but when the lad in blue walked into the light of the
-untinted globes, this laughter flickered down. Fitch whispered, “Hear?”
-and promptly the boy spoke in a husky, middling voice that somehow
-reached Carlson clearly. Close by a woman gurgled, “Sweet!” and Carlson
-felt the warm attention of the crowd, half understood it as the few
-lines drawled on. The boy stood square on his brown, painted feet. His
-flat face was comely. He had dull red, curling hair. As he tramped out
-there was a faint and scattered rumour like the birth of applause, cut
-by the heroine’s shriek.
-
-“You see?” Fitch smiled.
-
-Carlson said, “I ain’t a fool. Tell Rothenstein to call a rehearsal for
-ten in the mornin’, will you.” He then went briskly to hunt down this
-asset. It took some minutes to locate the dressing room Mark Walling
-shared with five other small parts. He found Mark peeled to faded,
-azure cotton underclothes and talking happily to a tall, fair rustic
-who slouched on the wall beside the sink where Mark scrubbed paint from
-his feet with a sponge. Their drawls mixed and shut from them the noise
-of Carlson’s step, so the manager regarded his prize stealthily. Mark
-was a long lad, limber and burly, harmlessly good looking. His nose was
-short. His insteps and arms were thick with muscle. He smiled up at his
-rural friend who said, “But it ain’t a long trip, Bud. So I’ll get your
-papa to come up nex’ week.”
-
-Mark shifted the sponge to his other hand and sighed. The sound touched
-Carlson who hated actors not old enough to court him cleverly. But this
-was a homesick peasant. He listened to Mark’s answer of, “Wish you
-would, Eddie. I ain’t sure papa likes my bein’ here. Even if I do--”
-
-The rustic saw Carlson and mumbled. Mark Walling hopped about on one
-foot and gave a solemn, frightened gulp. Carlson nodded, inquiring,
-“That your brother, sonny?”
-
-“No, sir. Joe’s home. This is Eddie Bernamer. Well, he’s my
-brother-in-law. He’s married with Sadie.”
-
-Eddie Bernamer gave out attenuated sounds, accepting the introduction.
-The manager asked lightly, “How many sisters have you, son?”
-
-“Just Sadie. She’s out lookin’ at the play.”
-
-“And you’ve married Cora Boyle?”
-
-“Well,” said Mark, “that’s so.”
-
-He seemed rather puzzled by the fact, suspended the sponge and said to
-Eddie Bernamer, “She ain’t but two years older’n me, Eddie.”
-
-“I guess Mr. Carlson wants to talk to you, Bud,” his relative muttered,
-“So I’ll go on back and see some more.”
-
-“But you’ll come round an’ wait after the show?” Mark wailed.
-
-“We’ll have to catch the cars, Bud. Well, goo’ bye.”
-
-Mark stood clutching the sponge and sighed a monstrous, woeful
-exhalation after Eddie Bernamer. His grey eyes filled. He was
-hideously homesick, certain that Fayettesville was a better place than
-this cellar that stunk of sweated cloth and greasy paint. And Cora
-hadn’t been strikingly pleased by the news of him in this morning’s
-papers. She was odd. He wiped his nose on a wrist and looked hopelessly
-at Carlson.
-
-“Rather be back on the farm, wouldn’t you?” the gaunt man asked.
-
-Mark sat down on the floor and thought. His thoughts went slowly across
-the track of six weeks. He plodded. For all its demerits this red and
-gold theatre was thrilling. People were jolly, kind enough. The lewd
-stagehands had let him help set a scene tonight. The man who handled
-the lights had shown him how they were turned on and off to make stormy
-waverings. Cora was exciting. Winter at home was plagued by Aunt Edith
-who came out from Trenton to spend the cold months at the farm and who
-lectured Mark’s father on Methodism. And here was this easy, good job.
-If he worked hard it might be that Mr. Carlson--who wasn’t now the
-screaming beast of rehearsals--would let him run the lights instead of
-acting. Mark said, “Well, no. Just as soon stay here, I guess.”
-
-“How old are you, sonny?”
-
-“Goin’ on seventeen, sir.”
-
-“I’ll give you forty a week to stay here,” said Carlson, “Fitch tells
-me you think acting’s pretty easy.”
-
-“I don’t see any trick to acting,” Mark mused, absorbing the offer
-of forty dollars a week, “There ain’t nothin’ to it but speakin’ out
-loud.... Yes, I’d like to stay here.” He wanted to show himself useful
-and got up, pointing to the bulbs clustered on the ceiling in a bed of
-tin, “I should think you’d ought to save money if you had them down
-here by the lookin’ glasses instead of this gas, y’see? The fellers
-don’t get any good of the electric light while they’re puttin’ paint
-on, and--”
-
-“Rehearsal at ten in the morning,” said Carlson, “Good-night.”
-
-Marked gaped at the black and empty door. Then his homesickness swelled
-up and he sighed, squeezing the sponge. His body trembled drearily. He
-lowered his head as does a lonesome calf turned into strange pastures.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-He Progresses
-
-
-“Nicoline” lasted until April, 1896. Mark played the country boy in
-“Mr. Bell” all the next season and, duly coached by Sarah Cowell
-LeMoyne, figured as the young duke in “The Princess of Croy” when
-Carlson imported that disaster in the autumn of 1897. Its failure
-afflicted Mark less than his private griefs. He played for four months
-in Carlson’s Boston stock company. This was penible. He had never been
-so far from his adored family. True, freed of Cora, he could send
-ten or twenty dollars a week to his father but he missed Sundays in
-Fayettesville and the Boston wind gave him chilblains. The friendly
-women of the Stock Company found him shy and here began the legend of
-Mark’s misogyny. He read novels and tramped about Boston, surveyed the
-theatrical setting of Louisburg Square and sidelong admired the ladies
-walking rigidly in sober hats on Commonwealth Avenue. Such persons,
-he mused, would never fling hot curling irons in a husband’s face and
-it wasn’t possible to imagine them smoking cigarettes in bed. But he
-hated Boston and the war was welcome as it honourably pulled him back
-to a New Jersey Infantry regiment.
-
-In June, 1898, he sat on a palmetto trunk in the filthy camp of Tampa
-watching Eddie Bernamer pitch a ball to Joe Walling. Mark had every
-satisfaction in the sight and liked his piebald uniform much more
-than any costume hitherto. The camp pleased him as a problem. There
-would be plays made on the war, of course, and it wouldn’t be easy to
-mount them. These bright trees and the muddle of railroad ties could
-be effected but the theatre lacked lights to send down this parching
-glitter on black mud and strolling men. He sighed for realism. He had
-spent hours in Davidge’s workshop while the grass of “The Princess
-of Croy” was being made. It hadn’t the right sheen. The sunset had
-turned it blue and the sunset was all wrong even though the critics
-had praised it. Mark swung his gaiters and pondered irreproducible
-nature. But it would be nice to counterfeit all this--the glister of
-remote tin roofing, the harsh palms, the listless soldiery. The police
-would object to exactness of course. Brother Joe was pitching the ball
-with great flexures of his bronze, naked chest. Eddie Bernamer swore
-astoundingly when he ripped his undershirt. One couldn’t be so honest
-on the stage or echo the sharp, unreal note of mail call sounding.
-Mark ran off to see if the wayward postal service had brought him a
-letter. There was a roll of newspapers addressed to his brother-in-law
-and Bernamer, a bad reader, turned them over to Mark and Joe. It was
-Joe who found the pencilled paragraph Mark rather expected. He slapped
-Mark’s back and grunted, “Well, so there y’are, Bud.”
-
-Mark read, “The suit for divorce begun by Mark Walling, the well
-known young actor against his wife, Cora Boyle Walling, was concluded
-yesterday. Neither party to the action was present in court. Miss Boyle
-is touring the West with the Jarvis Hope Stock Company. Jarvis Hope is
-named as co-respondent in the case. The action was not defended. Mr.
-Walling is now with the --th N.J. Infantry. The divorced couple were
-married in August, 1895. They have no children.”
-
-“Good riddance to bad rubbish,” said Eddie Bernamer, “and don’t you let
-the next woman looks at you haul you off to a preacher, neither.”
-
-Mark felt dubious. There had never been a divorce in the family. He
-said, “I guess if we’d had a baby, she wouldn’t of--Dunno.... It’s kind
-of too bad.”
-
-His relatives denied it. They had never liked Cora Boyle. She wasn’t
-a lady and her clothes had shocked Sadie’s conservative mind. They
-pointed out that a stable and meritorious woman wouldn’t have seduced
-Mark before marriage. They were glad to see the boy free and were
-puzzled by his mournfulness. He agreed with their judgments. But his
-eyes moistened for all their affectionate pawing. He muttered, “She was
-awful good lookin’,” and sat moody while they indicated advantages.
-He could save his pay, now, and wear respectable, black neckties, as
-a Walling should. He wouldn’t be bullied or have hot curling irons
-flung in his face. He could come home on the Saturday midnight train
-and stay until Monday afternoon. And Joe reasonably assured him that
-women were plentiful. But Mark mourned, in his tangled fashion, the
-collapse of beauty. Cora, he choked, didn’t match her outside. She was
-ruthless, disturbing. She cared nothing for Mark’s pet plan of an ideal
-lighting system for theatres. She had spilled coffee on his smudged,
-laborious chart of a stage to be made in hinged parts. She called his
-sacred family a parcel of mossbacks and left the flat when Sadie and
-Bernamer brought their baby to town for a day. Still, Mark was mournful
-and often missed her for several years. He shuddered from marriage as a
-game more complicated than golf.
-
-He was playing golf in May, 1902, with Ian Gail when the English
-playwright checked his grammar. Mark flushed. The Englishman fooled
-with a putter for a second, considering this colour. He said, “I say,
-old son, d’you mind my giving you some advice?”
-
-“Go ahead.”
-
-“Carlson’s closing the play next week, he tells me. What will you do
-with yourself, all summer?”
-
-“Go home.”
-
-“Where’s that and what’s it like?”
-
-Mark sat down on the green and chattered of the farm, and his family
-with particular mention of his nephew George Dewey Bernamer (born May
-15, 1898) who called himself Gurdy. About Joe Walling’s baby daughter
-Mark wasn’t as yet enthusiastic. He talked with broad lapses into New
-Jersey singsong. His grey eyes dilated. He babbled like an upset pail.
-The lean Englishman didn’t seem bored. Other people--Mrs. LeMoyne, old
-Mrs. Gilbert--had scolded Mark about these explosions. Gail let him
-talk for twenty minutes of warm noon and then said, “Quite right, old
-son. Stick to your people.... You’re a sentimental ass, of course. I
-dare say that’s why you can put up with dinner at Carlson’s in that
-seething mass of red plush.”
-
-“But I like Mr. Carlson. Been mighty good--”
-
-“Of course he’s good to you. And it was good of you to make him mount
-my last act so decently.... For some reason or other you’ve an eye
-for decoration. That’s by the way.--Now, I’ve a female cousin in
-Winchester, a Mrs. Ilden. She writes bad novels that no one reads and
-her husband’s in the Navy. I’m going to write her about you. You run
-across after the play stops. She’ll put you up for a month and you’ll
-pay her--I suggest a hundred pounds.”
-
-“Pay her for what?”
-
-“Her conversation, my boy. She’s quite clever and fearfully learned.
-Shaw likes her. She’s an anarchist and a determinist and all that and
-much older than you. She makes a business of tutoring youngsters who
-need--doing over a bit. You seem to have been reared on Henty and
-Shakespeare. Even Carlson says you need pruning. There’s no use being
-antediluvian even if you are a rising young leading man.... God, how I
-hate the breed! I shouldn’t waste these words on you if you didn’t show
-vagrom gleams of common sense now and then. So I most seriously beg of
-you to go and let Olive--Mrs. Ilden, tutor you for a fortnight.”
-
-Mark was always docile before authority. He asked, “What’ll she do to
-me?”
-
-“She can tell you anything you want to know and explain Winchester. The
-history of Winchester is the history of England,” Gail said, “and, of
-course, that’s the history of the world.”
-
-Thus, in early June, Mark was driven through Winchester and landed at
-the door of a brick house painted plum colour. A grey wall continued
-on either side of the ruddy front and nameless vines waved on the
-coping. Mark’s head ached from a supper at Romano’s the night previous
-but he admired the house and the obvious romance of the curving lane
-stippled with sunshine in plaques of honey. He rang the bell, gave a
-fat parlour-maid his card and waited for Mrs. Ilden in stolid terror.
-The hall had white panels of an approved stage pattern and was dotted
-with photographs. Mark was looking at the face of a bearded man whose
-eyebrows had a diabolic slant when Olive Ilden came in from her garden.
-
-She came in a bad temper, deserting the discussion of Chamberlain’s
-Imperial policy about her tea table. She was prepared for a repetition
-of her last paying pupil, the one son of a Rand millionaire, a cub who
-wore five rubies on one hand and who talked racing at four meals a day.
-Mark unsettled her by his wooden stare and the black decency of his
-dress. His clothes were English. He was always tanned. The scar of Cora
-Boyle’s curling irons lay in a thread along his left jaw. Olive revised
-a theory that Americans were short and looked up at him.
-
-“I’ve some friends at tea,” she said, “Of course, I don’t wish to
-impose tea on a Yankee.”
-
-“I think I’d like some,” Mark said miserably and followed her trailing,
-white skirts down an endless garden. He thought her gown distinctly bad
-and sloppy. She must be older than she looked or she wouldn’t be so
-careless. The girdle was crooked and the gauze across her shoulders was
-too tight. But it was a fine body, tall and proportionate. Her hair was
-a lustreless black. Meanwhile he had to think about this scene of an
-English garden. It phrased itself simply. Wall, rear. Tower of church,
-right background. Two small children playing with a kitten. Tea-table.
-Three ladies. Young man in tweeds. One clergyman.--It was like the
-garden set for the “Princess of Croy.” Mark braced himself, bowed and
-murmured in the manner of Mrs. LeMoyne, leaned on one of the limes in
-the manner of Herbert Kelcey, and drank his tea in the manner of Mr.
-Drew. The minor canon gave him a cigarette and Mark said, “Thanks so
-much.” The youth in tweeds asserted that it was beastly hot for June
-and Mark admitted, “Rather.” He stood sombre against the lime and the
-group was chilled by his chill. Two of the ladies fancied him a poet by
-the red curling of his hair. The guests withdrew. Olive Ilden fiddled
-with a teaspoon and frowned.
-
-“I rather expected you on Tuesday.”
-
-“Had to stay in London. Mr. Carlson wanted me to look at a couple of
-plays he’s thinkin’ of bringing over.”
-
-“Really, I don’t see why you Yankees always import our nonsense. One
-hears of the Pinero rubbish playing for thousands of nights in the
-States. Why?”
-
-“The women like it,” he wildly said, quoting Carlson. “Are those your
-kids?”
-
-“Mine and my husband’s,” Olive laughed and called Joan and Robert
-Ilden from their game with the kitten. Mark played with them in all
-content for half an hour, didn’t glance at Olive, and told her blond
-children about his best nephew, Gurdy Bernamer. The bored infants
-broke his watch chain and their puzzled mother took Mark to walk. She
-led him down through the college and wondered why he paused to stare
-at the cathedral walls where the sunshine was pallid on the weathered
-stone.--He was thinking that bulbs tinted straw colour might get this
-glow against properly painted canvas.--His eyes opened and his drowsy
-gaze pleased the woman. She said, “Do you like it? The cathedral?”
-
-“The tower’s too small,” he said.
-
-“Clever of you. Yes, architects think so. Glad you noticed.”
-
-“Anybody could see that. Is that the Bishop?” he asked, seeing black
-gaiters in motion on a lawn.
-
-“A mere dean. And the birds are rooks. All the best cathedrals have
-rooks about. Shall we go in?”
-
-“I’d just as soon,” he nodded, regretting that the queer shade of the
-elms wasn’t possible on a backdrop.
-
-The interior charmed him. He forgot his headache. His thoughts hopped.
-Church scenes never went well. No way to capture this slow echo for the
-stage. The upper brightness made him raise his eyes. This range of high
-windows where the lights melted together was called a “clerestory.”
-The mingled glory almost frightened him. He saw a white butterfly that
-jigged and wheeled, irreverent, solitary on the far shadows of the
-vault. Mark smiled. Small Gurdy Bernamer named butterflies “bruffles”
-and was probably chasing one, now, across the hot perfume of the
-Fayettesville garden. The fancy made him homesick. He blinked. The
-woman watching him saw crystal wetness point his lashes and hastily
-stated, “This is William de Wykeham’s tomb.”
-
-Mark examined the painted tomb, wished he could sketch the canopy and
-the pygmy monks who pray at the Bishop’s feet. Gurdy Bernamer would
-like the monks and would break them. He rubbed his nose and chuckled.
-
-“I suppose,” Olive said, “that all this seems rather silly to you.
-You’re a practical people.”
-
-“It’s good lookin’. I don’t see how a good lookin’ thing can be silly,
-exactly. I was thinkin’ my kid nephew’d like those monks to play with.
-But he’d bust them.--Isn’t King William Rufus buried here?”
-
-“You’ve been reading a guide book!”
-
-“Oh, no. That’s in history. They lugged him here on a wagon or
-something and buried him. Where’s he plant--buried?”
-
-Mark wished that the dark lady would stop frowning as she steered him
-to the glum, polished tomb in the choir. He must be offensive to her.
-She said, “This is supposed to be the tomb. They’re not sure,” and Mark
-stared at the raised slab of ugly stone with awe. The organ began to
-growl softly in a transept. It was solemn to stand, reflecting on the
-Red King while the organ moaned a marching air. William Rufus had been
-dead so long. History was amazing.... When he had a theatre of his own
-Mark meant to open it with Richard III or with Henry V. Carlson told
-him that no one would ever play Richard III again as Booth had gone
-too high in the part. But the Walling Theatre would be opened with a
-romantic play full of radiant clothes and scenes that would match the
-playhouse itself. The Walling would have a ceiling of dull blue and
-boxes curtained in silk, black as a woman’s hair. The lamps should
-wane in the new manner when the acts began and there would be mirrors
-rimmed in faint silver to gleam in far nooks of the balcony--something
-to shimmer in corners and shadows of his dream.... Mark stared down the
-nave and built his theatre against the grey age of this place until
-Olive sat in a heap of muslin on the tomb of William Rufus.
-
-“One doesn’t have to bother about such an indifferent king. There are
-some more in those tins--I mean caskets--on top of the choir screen.
-Edmund and so on.”
-
-“More kings? But won’t a--a sacristan or something come an’ chase you
-off of here?”
-
-“What do you know about sacristans?”
-
-“Cathedrals always have sacristans in books.”
-
-“I dare say you read quantities of bad novels,” she observed.
-
-“Well, I like Monsieur Beaucaire and Kim better’n anything I’ve
-read lately,” said her bewildering pupil, “Say, who was Pico della
-Mirandola?”
-
-“I don’t think I can talk about the Renascence in Winchester choir,”
-Olive choked and took him away.
-
-Save for the studied clarity of voice he showed no theatrical traits.
-He resented the sign of The Plume of Feathers beside the West Gate
-because “it spoiled the wall.” He asked if the Butter Cross was a well
-and bought several postcards at a shop where the squared panes arrested
-him. Olive made conjectures. She was twenty-six. She had known actors
-in some bulk. This wasn’t an actor, observably. She guided him back
-toward the college and through a swarm of lads in flannels. At these
-Mark looked and sighed.
-
-“Why that sob?”
-
-“Dunno. I s’pose because kids are havin’ such an awful good time and
-don’t know it. I mean--they’ll get married and all that.”
-
-“Are you married?”
-
-Mark said cheerfully, “Divorced.”
-
-“Tell me about it.”
-
-“D--don’t think I’d better, Mrs. Ilden.”
-
-“Is that American?”
-
-“Is--is what?”
-
-“That delicate respect for my sensibilities.”
-
-“Don’t know what you mean exactly. I had to divorce Cor--my wife and
-I’d rather not talk about it.”
-
-Olive felt alarmed. She said, “I’m supposed to tutor you in art and
-ethics and I’m merely trying to get your point of view, you know? Don’t
-look so shocked.”
-
-“I don’t see what my gettin’ divorced has to do with art and ethics....
-Oh, was this man Leighton a better painter’n Whistler?”
-
-His questions ranged from the salary of canons to professional cricket.
-He wore a small and single pearl in his shirt at dinner, sat eating
-chastely and stared at Olive between the candles that made his grey
-eyes black in the brown of his face. The parlour-maid brought him the
-silver bowl of chutney three unnecessary times. He timidly corrected
-Olive’s views on farm labour in the United States with, “I’m afraid
-you’re wrong. I was brought up on a farm.”
-
-“Really? I was wondering.”
-
-“Fayettesville. It’s up in the woods behind Trenton. Say, what’s the
-Primrose League?”
-
-For a week Olive tried to outline this mentality. He plunged from
-subject to subject. Economics wearied him. “What’s it matter what kind
-of a gover’ment you have so long as folks get enough to eat and the
-kids ain’t--don’t have to work?” Religion, he said, was all poppycock.
-His “papa” admired Robert Ingersoll and “What’s it matter whether folks
-have souls or not?”
-
-“You’re a materialist,” she laughed.
-
-“Well, what of it?”
-
-“I’m trying to find out what your ethical standards are. Why don’t you
-cheat at poker?”
-
-“Because it ain’t fair. It’s like stealin’ a man’s wife.”
-
-“Some one stole your wife, didn’t he?”
-
-Mark finally chuckled. “You’d hardly call it stealing. She just walked
-off when she knew I’d--heard about it.”
-
-He blushed, hoping he hadn’t transgressed and hurriedly asked whether
-Bernard Shaw was really a vegetarian. He had no opinion of Shaw’s
-plays but thought “The Devil’s Disciple” a better play than “Magda.”
-“The Sunken Bell” was “pretty near up to Shakespeare.” He was
-worried because “Treasure Island” couldn’t be dramatized and recited
-“Thanatopsis” to the horror of Olive’s children. Olive interrupted the
-recital.
-
-“That’ll be quite enough, thanks! Wherever did you pick up that
-sentimental rot?”
-
-“Just what is bein’ sentimental?” Mark demanded.
-
-“Writing such stuff and liking it when it’s written! I suspect you of
-Tennyson.”
-
-“Never read any. Tried to. Couldn’t, except that Ulysses thing. Let’s
-go take a walk.”
-
-“Too warm, thanks,” said Olive, wanting to see whether this would hold
-him in his basket chair under the limes.
-
-“I’ll be back about tea time,” Mark promised, paused on his way up the
-garden to kiss Bobby Ilden’s fair head as the little boy reminded him
-of Gurdy Bernamer and vanished whistling “The Banks of the Wabash.”
-
-“All his clothes are black,” said young Joan Ilden, “but I was helping
-Edith dust in his room this morning and he has the nicest blue pyjamas.”
-
-“Do go pull Bobby out of the raspberries,” Olive said and fell into a
-sulk which she didn’t define. She lounged in her chair watching the
-light play on the straight bole of a tree behind the emptied place
-where Mark had been sitting.... Rage succeeded the sulk. This was a
-stupid augmentation of her income. Olive disapproved landholding but
-it would be easier every way when Ilden’s uncle died and he came into
-the Suffolk property. Then she would be able to live in London instead
-of flitting there for a breath of diversion. She hoped Mark would go
-to London soon.... He had the mind of a badly schooled stock-broker!
-Olive lifted her portfolio from the table and penciled a note to her
-husband. “I do wish you could slaughter your dear uncle, Jack. Ian
-Gail has sent me a silly Yankee to educate. I hope I have no insular
-prejudice against the harmless, necessary Colonial but this cad--” Then
-she thought. “What am I saying here? I don’t mean it. I’m lying,” and
-tore up the paper.
-
-Mark went swimming in the Itchen and did not come home until seven.
-He dressed in six minutes and found Olive clad in black lace by the
-drawing room mantel of white stone. He said, “Say, I ran into a flock
-of sheep an’ an old feller with a crook. Do they still do that?”
-
-“Do?”
-
-“Crooks. And he had on a blue--what d’you call it?--smock?”
-
-Olive laughed and lifted her arms behind her head.
-
-“Did you think some one was staging a pastoral for your benefit? But
-you didn’t come home to tea and there were some quite amusing people
-here. I kept them as long as I could.”
-
-“Too bad,” said Mark, “I’m sorry.”
-
-“You shouldn’t lie so. You’re not at all sorry. You’re bored when
-people come and you have to play the British gentleman. And there are
-so many other things better worth doing.”
-
-“That’s in Shaw,” Mark guessed, “Clyde Fitch was talkin’ about it. But
-what’s wrong with actin’ like a gentleman?”
-
-“What’s the use? Your manners are quite all right. If you’d talk to
-people and collect ideas.... It’s so much more important to straighten
-out your ideas than to stand and hold a teacup properly. A butler can
-do that. I could train a navvy to do that. And--”
-
-“That’s an awful good looking dress,” he broke in, “Nicest you’ve had
-on since I’ve been here.”
-
-Olive let an arm trail on the mantel where the stone cooled it. “I’m
-talking about your intellect and you talk about my frock.”
-
-“I know something about dresses and I don’t know a thing about
-intellect. You ought to wear dark things because you’ve got such a nice
-sk--complexion.”
-
-“I don’t bother about clothes except when Jack’s at home and I want to
-keep his attention.... You were in Cuba, you said? Did you kill any
-one?”
-
-“Don’t know. Tried to. Why?”
-
-“I was wondering whether you’d mind killing an old duffer in Suffolk.
-He keeps my husband out of twelve hundred a year and a decentish house.
-Would you mind?”
-
-Mark saw this was meant as a joke and laughed, studying her arm which
-gleamed white on the white stone.
-
-“My husband’s uncle. He’s easily eighty and he’s very Tory.”
-
-“Haven’t got any uncles. Got an aunt that’s pretty awful. She’s a
-Methodist.”
-
-He wouldn’t look at her. He still stared at the arm sprawled on the
-mantel and smiled like a child. Olive wanted to hurt him suddenly, to
-rouse him. The glowing stare was too childish. She drawled, “I went
-into your bedroom to see that they’d swept it decently. Are those the
-family portraits on the desk? Who’s the fat girl with the baby?”
-
-“Sadie. My sister. She’s puttin’ on weight. Papa keeps two hired
-girls now and she don’t have to cook. The yellow-headed fellow’s her
-husband--Eddie Bernamer. Awful fine man.”
-
-He beamed at Olive now, doting on Eddie Bernamer’s perfections. Olive
-tried, “And the lad with the very huge pearl in his scarf is your
-brother? And they all live on your father’s farm? And you go down there
-and bore yourself to death over weekends?”
-
-“Don’t bore myself at all. I get all the New York I want weekdays. Fine
-to get out and ride a horse round. Nice house. We built a wing on when
-Joe got married last year.”
-
-The parlour-maid announced dinner. Mark gave Olive his arm and wanted
-to stroke her arm white across the black of his sleeve. He talked of
-his family through the meal and after it, leaning on the piano while
-Olive played. He tortured her with anecdotes of his and Joe’s infancy
-and with the deeds of Gurdy Bernamer. He sighed, reporting that Sadie’s
-oldest girl had died.
-
-“You mean you’re wearing mourning for a six year old child!”
-
-“Of course,” said Mark.
-
-“And then you ask me what a sentimentalist is!” Olive struck a discord
-into the Good Friday Spell and sneered, “I dare say you think life’s so
-full of unpleasantness that it shouldn’t be brought into the theatre!”
-
-“No. I don’t think that, exactly. But I don’t think there’s any
-sense in doin’ a play where you can’t--can’t--well, make it good
-lookin’. These plays where there’s nothin’ but a perfec’ly ordinary
-family havin’ a fight and all that--A show ought to be something
-more.--You get the music in an opera. Carmen’d be a fine hunk of bosh
-if you didn’t have the music and the Spanish clothes. Just a dirty
-yarn!... There’d ought to be somethin’ good lookin’ in a play....
-Nobody believes a play but girls out of High School.... If you can’t
-have poetry like Shakespeare you ought to have something--something
-pretty--I don’t mean pretty--I mean--” Olive stopped the music. Mark
-descended rapidly and went on, “I don’t care about these two cent
-comedies, either.”
-
-“You don’t like comedy?”
-
-“Not much. Truth is, I don’t catch a joke easy. I’ve tried readin’
-Molière but it sounds pretty dry to me. Haven’t tried--Aristophanes?--I
-guess that’s deeper’n I could swim--”
-
-“Rot! You mustn’t let yourself--what is it?--be blinded by the glory of
-great names. Any one who can see the point in Patience can understand
-Aristophanes.... But you haven’t much humour. But you’ve played in
-comedy?”
-
-“Some. I’d just as soon.”
-
-Olive began “Anitra’s Dance” knowing that he liked melodrama and
-watched his eyes brighten, dilating. She said amiably, “A fine
-comedian’s the greatest boon in the world. Women especially. Is it true
-that women who’re good in comedy are usually rather serious off the
-stage?”
-
-“Can’t say--Well, my wife was pretty damn serious!”
-
-His huge sigh made Olive laugh. She asked, “You’ve no children?”
-
-“No. Guess that was the trouble.--Play that Peer Gynt Mornin’ thing.”
-
-“I’ve played enough,” said Olive. “You say Mr. Carlson sent you over to
-look at some plays for him? He must trust your judgment.”
-
-Mark answered happily, “Sure. He says that if I take to a play so’ll
-every one else. He says I’ve got lots of judgment about plays.”
-
-Olive shut the piano and rose. Her face wrinkled off into laughter. She
-said, “You dear thing! I dare say he’s quite right about that. Good
-night.”
-
-She strolled out of the drawing room and Mark could see her passing up
-the long stairs. She moved splendidly against the white panels. One
-wrist caressed the rail. The black gown dragged gently up the rosy
-treads. She vanished slowly into the dark and Mark said, “Golly,” as he
-went to get his hat. He wandered over to the bar of the Black Swan and
-drank cold ale while he meditated.
-
-He mustn’t fall in love. Eddie Bernamer and Joe disapproved of
-affairs with married women. They were right, of course. And nothing
-must interfere with his tutelage. And Ilden was at sea. But this was
-vexatious! He wished she did not stroll so lazily up stairs, across
-gardens. He wished that her hair wasn’t black.--He found himself
-blushing at breakfast when she came in with a yellow garden hat on the
-black of her hair. Now that he’d begun to think of it she looked rather
-like Cora Boyle.
-
-He thought of Cora Boyle again in the garden after luncheon. The
-children had left a green rubber ball on the turf. Mark rolled it about
-with one sole and watched Olive trim a patch of dull blue flowers. His
-place and the ball underfoot recalled something cloudy. He worked to
-evolve a real memory and laughed. Olive quickly glanced up.
-
-“You keep asking about my wife. She was boardin’ with us at the farm.
-First time she ever spoke to me I was kicking a ball around, in the
-garden. This way. I was barefoot. Cora said, ‘Ain’t you too old to go
-barefooted?’ I forget what I said.”
-
-“But with the ball that day you played no more?”
-
-“That sounds like a piece of a play,” said Mark.
-
-“It’s from a comedy,” Olive snapped, “Do get your hat and take a walk.
-I’ll be busy for an hour. Look at the Deanery garden. The Dean’s gone
-to Scotland.”
-
-“Got to write a letter first. Boat from Liverpool tomorrow.”
-
-He mailed a letter to Joe’s wife, born Margaret Healy, tramped down to
-the Close and examined the Dean’s garden. It would make a neat setting,
-the mass of the Cathedral to the left, the foliate house to the right.
-A maid in black and white passed over the grass and reminded him of
-Joe’s wife again by a certain dragging gait. He went into the cathedral
-and studied the Wykeham tomb from all angles. Some tourists hummed in
-the nave; a guide in a frock coat ambled after them descanting thinly
-of dead kings. Mark fell into a genial peace, leaned on a column,
-smiling at the far roof. The feet of the tourists made a small melody
-among the tombs and this seemed to increase. He heard a rapid breath
-and saw Olive with his coat over her arm. She panted, “I’ve packed your
-things. They’re in the cab. At the gates. Hurry. You’ve hardly time to
-get to the station. Do hurry! I’ll telegraph to Liverpool and ask them
-to hold a cabin--stateroom--whatever they call them.--Oh, do hurry!”
-
-“What’s happened?”
-
-“Oh, this!--I didn’t look at the cover--thought it was from Jack--”
-
-Mark snatched the telegram and read, “Joe and Margaret killed wreck
-Trenton come if--” then rolled the paper into his palm. Olive saw his
-eyes swell and gasped, “Who’s Margaret?”
-
-“Joe’s wife. Where’s cab?”
-
-“At the gates. Run.”
-
-He dashed into the sun beyond the open doors then the red hair gleamed
-as he came wheeling back to gulp, “Send you a check from--”
-
-Olive spread her hands out crying, “No! I shan’t take it!” and saw
-him rush off again. The cab made no noise that she could hear. She
-shivered as if a warming fire died suddenly in winter and left her
-cold. Presently she struck a palm on the stone beside her and said,
-“Sentimentalist! Sentimentalist!” while she wept. She made use of Mark,
-though, in her next novel, The Barbarian, which began her success. Mark
-was rather flattered by the picture and glad that he hadn’t insulted
-this clever, wise woman by making love to her. He thought of Olive as
-exalted from the ranks of passionate, clutching females and often wrote
-long, artless letters to her.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-Full Bloom
-
-
-The family council prudently allowed Mark to adopt his brother’s
-orphan, Margaret. He sometimes borrowed Gurdy Bernamer to keep the dark
-child company in his New York flat. By 1905 the borrowing settled into
-a habit. Gurdy provided activity for a French nurse and then for an
-English governess despatched by Olive Ilden. He was a silent, restless
-creature. He disliked motorcars for his own unrevealed reason that
-they resembled the hearses of his uncle’s funeral. He had a prejudice
-against small Margaret because she looked like her dead mother, an
-objectionable person smelling of orange water, and because Mark made
-a fuss over the child. He learned to read newspapers, copying Mark’s
-breakfast occupation, and in September, 1907, noted that Carlson and
-Walling would tonight inaugurate their partnership by the presentation
-of “Red Winter” at their new 45th Street Theatre. “Inaugurate” charmed
-Gurdy. It conveyed an image of Mark and the bony Mr. Carlson doing
-something with a monstrous auger. Mark had for ever stopped acting in
-May, would henceforth “manage.” Curiosity pulled Gurdy from the window
-seat of his playroom in Mark’s new house on 55th Street. He waited for
-a moment when the governess, Miss Converse, was scolding young Margaret
-and wouldn’t see him slide down the hall stairs. He scuttled west,
-then south and navigated Broadway until he reached the mad corner of
-45th Street where a gentleman took him by the collar of his blouse and
-halted him.
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-Gurdy recognized a quiet character who came to luncheons now and then.
-He said, “H’lo, Mr. Frohman,” dutifully and looked about for the
-theatre. The stooping man detained him gravely.
-
-“I thought you weren’t old enough for shows.”
-
-“I’m looking for Mark.”
-
-Mr. Frohman chuckled, leaning on a stick. He said, “He’s in his office.”
-
-“Where’s that?”
-
-Gurdy stared past the pointing stick and saw a cream face of columns
-and windows. He saw the stone above a ring of heads. People were gaping
-at his calm acquaintance as if this plump, tired man was a kicking
-horse. He remembered civility and asked, “How’s your rheumatism?”
-
-“Better,” said Mr. Frohman and limped away.
-
-Gurdy pushed scornfully through the gapers and trotted into the white
-vestibule of the theatre where men were arranging flowers--horseshoes
-of orchids, ugly and damp, roses in all tints, lumps of unknown bloom
-on standards wrapped in silver foil. A redhaired, hatless youth listed
-the cards dangling from these treasures and told Gurdy to go to hell
-when Gurdy asked for his uncle but another man nodded to stairs of
-yellow, slick marble. On the landing Gurdy found a door stencilled
-in gold, “Carlson & Walling.” The door opened into a room hung with
-photographs where Gurdy saw Mark sitting on a table, surrounded by men.
-Mr. Carlson, already sheathed in winter furs, bullied a carpenter who
-corrected the lower shelf of a bookcase. Gurdy stood wondering at the
-furious shades of neckties and the grey hard hats which Miss Converse
-thought vulgar.
-
-“My God,” said Carlson, “Mark, look at that comin’ in!”
-
-Mark groaned. He had a compact with Mrs. Bernamer that the borrowed boy
-shouldn’t enter a theatre until he was twelve. He was tall enough for
-twelve but he was only nine. He stayed in the doorway, studying the red
-walls of the room, his white socks far apart and his hands thrust into
-the pockets of his short, loose breeches. The callers stared at the
-tough legs brown from summer on the farm. The boy’s one patent beauty,
-his soft, pale hair, was hidden by his English sailor cap and his white
-blouse was spotted with ink stains. But the men grinned and chuckled,
-admiringly. Gurdy made no sound when Carlson set him on the top of the
-bookcase but gazed contemptuously at the crowding men and let himself
-be petted.
-
-“When d’you inaugurate, Mark?”
-
-“Eight fifteen, when you’ll be in bed, sonny.”
-
-Gurdy drawled, “I don’t get to bed till quarter of nine and you ought
-to know that by this time.” He frowned, partly closing his dark blue
-eyes, as the men laughed. “What are all those flowers for?”
-
-A man in a corner lifted his white face from a book and whispered,
-“Those are gifts the Greeks brought.” This caused stillness, then
-unpleasing chuckles. Gurdy climbed down from the bookcase and went
-to talk to Mr. Fitch. They talked of French lessons and the vagaries
-of governesses. The other callers complimented Mark on the boy’s
-good looks. The flattery was soothing after the strain of the last
-rehearsal. Mark knew it for flattery. Gurdy’s face was too long,
-his sober mouth too wide and his jaw prematurely square. But the
-compliments were the due of a successful actor turned manager. He sat
-for a little watching Mr. Fitch lazily chat with the boy as though he
-were a grown man. On the playwright’s warning he had lately published
-a careful interview announcing Gurdy and Margot as adopted children
-and his relationship to them. But people still probably reported Gurdy
-an illegitimate son and Margot his daughter by Cora Boyle. Mark sighed
-and took Gurdy down through the flowers to see the cream and gold play
-house where men were squirting perfume from syringes along the red
-aisles, killing the smell of paint. He let Gurdy have a syringe and
-went into the vestibule. The redhaired clerk listing the gifts of other
-managers handed him the card wet from its journey in a ball of pink
-roses.
-
-“Mrs. Cosmo Rand.... Who the devil’s Mrs. Cosmo Rand, Billy?”
-
-The clerk scratched his ear and grinned. “You’d ought to know, sir.”
-
-“But I don’t. Cosmo Rand? Heard of him. Loeffler’s got him in
-something. Who’s she?”
-
-“Miss Cora Boyle,” said the clerk and strolled off to insult a
-messenger bringing in more flowers.
-
-Mark had a curious, disheartening shock. He didn’t bow to Cora Boyle
-on the street. What right had she to send him flowers? It must be a
-passing rudeness. She might remember that he disliked pink roses. Mark
-rested on the ledge of the box office, brooding. But she might mean to
-be pleasant. Her manager, Loeffler, was on bad terms with Carlson.
-This might be a dictated, indirect peace offering. Mark patted the
-florid carved stone of the ledge and thought. Cora’s new play wasn’t
-a success. The reviews had been tart. She might be tired of Loeffler.
-Mark was perplexed but the hunt for motives always wearied him. A
-scarlet petticoat went by outside the vestibule and led off his mind.
-He bade his treasurer telephone for the motor and stood joking with the
-man through the box office window until a flat stop in the noise behind
-him made Mark turn his head. The florists and clerks were motionless,
-regarding the street. A coupé had stopped. A footman was helping a
-woman and a tumult of varied flowers to the sidewalk. She came toward
-the doors gallantly, her face quite hidden in the enormous bouquet but
-the treasurer said, “By gee, I’d know her in hell, by her walk,” and
-chuckled. She tripped on the sill and screamed gaily to Mark, “Au s’
-cours!”
-
-Mark jumped to catch the sheaf of yellow roses. Miss Held waved her
-grey gloves wide and dipped her chin. “Je t’ apporte une gerbe vu que
-t’es toujours bon enfant, Marc Antoine! And ’ow does Beatriz get along
-to teach you French?”
-
-“Pretty fair. Haven’t had much time lately. Thought you’d taken your
-show on the road, Anna?”
-
-“Nex’ week.” Up the staircase some one began to whistle “La Petite
-Tonkinoise.” The little woman vibrated inside the grey case of her lacy
-gown and pursed her lips. “Oh, but I am sick of that tune! Make him
-stop.” The whistler heard and ceased. Miss Held swayed to and fro among
-the flowers, noting cards. She adopted a huge orchid for her waist and
-smiled down at it. A dozen grins woke in the collecting crowd. Mark
-was aware of upholsterers oozing from the theatre. Miss Held hummed
-from gift to gift, murmuring names--“Le Moyne.... ton institutrice....
-Ce bon vieux David.... Nice lilies.” She moved in a succession of
-swift steps that seemed balanced leaps. One of the florist’s girls
-sighed a positive sob of envy. The curving body and the embellished
-eyes kept the crowd still. The soft gloves drooped on the hard lustre
-of the stirring arms. Mark wondered at her cool, sardonic mastery of
-attention. She was bored, unwell and her frock was nothing new. She was
-Anna Held and the people were edging in from the sidewalk to look at
-her.
-
-“Like to see the house, Anna?”
-
-“Oh, no. I very well know what that would be. All red, and gold fishes
-on the ceiling, eh? No. I must go away.” She strolled off toward her
-carriage, chattering sudden French which Mark did not understand. He
-heard an immense discussion surge up in the vestibule as he shut the
-coupé door, walked through it into the theatre where two upholsterers
-were quarrelling over the age of the paragon and where Mark bumped
-against a man in brown who seemed to inspect the gold dolphins of the
-vault.
-
-“Clumsy,” said the man, briskly.
-
-“Didn’t see you, sir.”
-
-“I meant the decoration.” The man flicked a hand at the ceiling and
-the red boxes, “Like Augustin Daly’s first house but much worse.
-We should have passed that. Gilt. It’s the scortum ante mortum in
-architecture.” He jammed a cigarette between the straight lips of his
-flushed face and went on in a rattle of dry syllables. “Some one should
-write a monograph on gold paint and the theatrical temperament. Plush
-and passion. Stigmata.... Sous un balcon doré.... Can you give me a
-match?... Where’s Carlson’s office?” He bustled out of the foyer.
-
-Mark wearily tore Cora Boyle’s card in his tanned fingers and nodded.
-The stranger was right. This new theatre was stale. The gold sparkled
-stupidly. The shades of velvet were afflicting. But Carlson liked it.
-Mark sighed and thought, rather sadly, that his patron’s whole concept
-of the trade was vulgar and outworn like this gaudy expense. Red
-velvet, heavy gold, bright lamps--the trappings of his apprenticeship.
-Old actors told Mark that this was a variant of the first Daly theatre.
-The stranger was right, then. Mark wondered and went upstairs to the
-office but the flushed man was gone.
-
-“That feller Huneker was in tryin’ to get me to hire some orchestra
-leader,” Carlson said.
-
-“But I thought Huneker was a young man,” Mark answered.
-
-Mr. Fitch whispered from his corner, “He hasn’t any particular age.
-What was that riot downstairs, Mark?”
-
-“Anna Held dropped in and left some flowers. She ain’t lookin’ well.”
-
-The playwright closed his magazine and lifted himself from the chair,
-assuming his strange furry hat. “We have just so much vitality. She’s
-losing hers. But if she died tomorrow it would make almost as much
-noise as killing a president. And that’s quite right. Presidents never
-make any one feel sinful. Good night.”
-
-Carlson asked, “You’re comin’ tonight, Clyde.”
-
-“Not feeling right, thanks.”
-
-Mark followed the bent back down the stairs. Fitch was stopped by a
-lounger at the doors, loaned the old fellow ten dollars and passed,
-unobtrusive, along Forty Fifth Street. He went shadowlike in his vivid
-dress. Liking the man, Mark frowned. The exhausted courtesy, the slow
-voice always left him puzzled; it was as though the playwright’s
-prosperity kept within it a dead core of something pained, as if the
-ghost of an old hunger somehow lived on under the coloured superfluity.
-
-Mark’s motor arrived outside. He went to whistle Gurdy up from an
-investigation of the orchestra pit. All the bulbs burned about the
-house. For a second Mark liked the place then the gilt and the mulberry
-hangings bothered him. He chased Gurdy up an aisle to the vestibule.
-The treasurer slipped from the box office to say, “Young Rand just
-called up. I said you wasn’t here.”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“Cora Boyle’s new husband. That English kid.”
-
-Mark shrugged and shoved Gurdy into the dull blue limousine at the
-curb. The motor took him away from the theatre and away from several
-beckoning hands on the sidewalk. His shift to managership had changed
-the fashion of salutes. People now beckoned him with a posture of
-confidential affection and earnestness. They had friends to recommend,
-deep suggestions. Carlson had warned him, “Mind, you’re a kid with a
-pocketful of candy, now. You’ve stopped bein’ just one of the gang.
-Better ride in cabs if you want to get anyplace.” Well, the motor, with
-its adorable slippery blue crust, kept people at a distance. Mark
-wound an arm about Gurdy and pulled himself into a corner of the seat.
-The car was hampered by a dilatory van that lurched ahead of its hood.
-The chauffeur cursed in Canadian French and a messenger boy on the
-van’s tail cursed back, joyously foul, emptily shooting accusations of
-all sins in a sweet, sexless howl that pierced the glass about Mark and
-made him grin, absently amused.
-
-“He’s mad,” said Gurdy, dispassionately.
-
-“No. He’s just talking, son.”
-
-“Huh,” Gurdy grunted, trying to match the words with ordinary
-conversation. This messenger boy was plainly an accomplished fellow.
-The van rolled off over Broadway in a shock of light and dust. Gurdy
-saw “Red Winter” on a poster and asked, “Is this Red Winter a good
-play, Mark?”
-
-“Pretty fair, honey.”
-
-“Well, can I come to it?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Too dirty,” Mark said, then, “All about killin’ folks, son.”
-
-Gurdy argued, “Well, Lohengrin’s all about killing people and Miss
-Converse took me to that and it was in Dutch.”
-
-“German, sonny.”
-
-“I like French better’n German,” Gurdy yawned, waving a leg in the air
-and went on, “I think Broadway’s ugly.”
-
-“You’re right,” said Mark, enchanted by such taste.
-
-Yet Carlson really liked to stroll on Broadway and Cora Boyle had
-often led Mark for dusty hours through this complexity of hesitant,
-garrulous people, along these sidewalks where there was nothing to be
-seen. He rubbed his jaw and thought of Paris, viewed last summer, of
-the long, swooping street at Winchester gilt in an afterglow. Oh, after
-dark Broadway was tolerable! Then the revolving people were shapes of
-no consequence and, with a little mist, these lights were aqueous,
-flotillas of shimmering points on a hovering, uncertain vastness. Now,
-the roadway was a dappled smear of bodies wheeled and bodies shod. The
-sidewalks writhed, unseemly. But Cora Boyle liked it. The pretty, black
-haired dancer just then lodged at Mark’s cost had rooms overlooking the
-new width above Forty Second Street. And she liked that.... And she
-liked the scenery of “Red Winter.” Poor stuff, he thought. He cursed
-scene painters. Charles Frohman had heard of a fellow who’d studied
-the art in Berlin and made astonishing sets. He must telephone Frohman
-and get the man’s name. He was tired. “Red Winter” had tired him.
-The leading woman had a way of saying “California” through her nose
-that had vexed him all week. A poor play. His head was full of jagged
-swift ideas, of memories; Eddie Bernamer milking a young cow against
-a sulphur wall and laughing when Mark tried to sketch him on the fly
-leaf of an algebra; Cora Boyle swaggering into Rector’s in a blue
-dress; Clyde Fitch telling little Margaret that her name was Margot;
-Stanford White shouting with laughter because Mark softened the ch of
-“architecture.” Why hadn’t they given White a billion dollars and let
-him build the whole city into charms of tranquil, columnar symmetry?...
-Gurdy knew that his uncle was oppressed. When Mark thought hard he
-stroked the scar on his jaw. Gurdy wanted to talk, now, and tossed a
-leg over Mark’s black, rocky knee.
-
-“What’re you thinkin’ about, Mark?”
-
-“Just bosh. What’s Margot been doing all day?”
-
-“Havin’ a bellyache.”
-
-That terrified Mark. He sweated suddenly and called through the tube
-bidding the driver hurry. Spinal meningitis, he read, began with
-nausea. But when he ran into the panelled library of his house Margot
-was playing with her largest doll and the angular governess assured
-him, in simple French, that a pill had set things right. Margot lifted
-her black eyes and said, rubbing her stomach, “I was ill, papa,” in
-her leisurely way.
-
-“Ate breakfast too fast,” Gurdy said, in grim displeasure, watching
-Mark double his lean height and begin to cuddle Margot.
-
-Margot stared at her cousin with an aggrieved, brief pout and then
-wound herself into Mark’s lap. The large doll was named Aunt Sadie for
-Mrs. Bernamer. Margot said, “Miss Converse fixed Aunt Sadie’s drawers,
-papa,” and her brown face rippled as she displayed three stitches. Then
-she righted the doll and gazed at Mark devotedly, solemnly, preening
-her starched skirt of pink linen. Pink went with her black hair and
-her tawny skin. Mark touched a roaming mesh of her hair and her face
-rippled once more. Her skin had this amber haze like the water of a
-pool in the pine forest behind the farm. In that pool he had bathed
-with her father through endless afternoons, idling on until other
-boys lagged off and the shadows were ink on the crumbled ocher clay
-of the margin where pink boneset grew. And now Joe was dead and his
-blackhaired wife was dead ... an unskilled cook before marriage, half
-Irish, half Italian, a good, sleepy woman who ate with her knife and
-wore a chaplet blessed for her Roman mother by some Pope. Margot would
-never know them. He kissed her hair. She was this warm bubble enclosed
-in his arms.
-
-“Love me any, sister?”
-
-“’Course,” said Margot.
-
-Gurdy snorted and stalked away. Mark talked to the stiff governess and
-patted Margot. Miss Converse sewed and chatted about Conrad’s novels,
-then getting fashionable. She assented, “Very interesting. Romantic, of
-course. I dare say the colour attracts you.”
-
-“Of course,” said Mark, “and what if they are romantic?”
-
-She had some vague objection. If she bored him, Mark was still grateful
-that she hadn’t tried to marry him. She was necessary to the training
-of the children but her buff, bulky face wasn’t alluring and her gowns
-hurt him by a prevalence of mole embroidery and rumpled lace. She was a
-gentlewoman, wonderfully learned and obliging about his pet airs on the
-piano. Mark talked and wished that he could escape, like Gurdy who went
-to practice handsprings in the white hall and slid downstairs at the
-note of the doorbell.
-
-Gurdy slid along the handrail of black wood so admired by callers and
-jumped for the dining room which had doors of glass coated in blue
-silk. These doors opened into the drawing room which Gurdy despised
-for its furniture all black and silver and its hangings of cloudy
-tapestry, impossibly noiseless when one bounced balls against them.
-Yet people called it a lovely room. And now, peering through a rift
-of the blue silk Gurdy saw the butler turn a visitor into this space
-and the visitor looked about with brown eyes, seeming to admire. Gurdy
-speculated and decided that the slight man was an actor come to talk to
-Mark about a part. His hair curled, his overcoat clung to his middle
-neatly, his white gaiters were unspotted, his pale moustache didn’t
-overhang his little mouth. He was visibly an actor. Gurdy had examined
-many through this spyhole. And like many the fellow went to glance at a
-circular mirror above the cabinet with tiny doors which Miss Converse
-called “Siennese.” As Mark’s feet descended, the man straightened
-himself and began a smile. Gurdy listened to the jar of his high voice
-against Mark’s fuller drawl.
-
-“Mr. Rand?”
-
-“Yes. Don’t think we’ve ever met. Daresay you know who I am and all
-that?”
-
-“Yes,” said Mark.
-
-Gurdy noted the long pause. He held that actors were a talkative lot.
-Mr. Rand worked with his moustache an indefinite time before he spoke
-again.
-
-“My wife sent me along--I’m a sort of ambassador, you know?... Matter
-of business, entirely.”
-
-Mark said, “I see,” wondering how old the man was. The moustache had an
-appearance of soft youth. He smiled, wanting Cora’s third husband to be
-at ease, and nodded to a chair.
-
-“Oh, thanks no. Mrs. Rand wants to know if you’d mind meeting her. At
-her hotel, for instance?”
-
-“I don’t mind at all,” Mark lied, “Glad to. Any time.”
-
-“Then she may let you know? Thanks ever so. Good luck to your play
-tonight,” said the young man and walked out gracefully.
-
-Gurdy came through the glass doors and asked, “Who’s he?” Mark lifted
-the pliant, hard body in the air. He fancied that Gurdy must feel
-something odd, here.
-
-“How old would you say he was, darling?”
-
-“Dunno. Who’s Mrs. Rand?”
-
-“An actress.”
-
-“Put me down,” said Gurdy, “My pants are comin’ off.”
-
-Mark breathed comfortably, helped the boy on his knee tighten the white
-trousers and passed into dotage. Eddie Bernamer and Joe Walling had
-begotten these bodies. The fact mattered nothing. Mark was a father.
-He had possession. When things went wrong he could come home to gloat
-over Margot and Gurdy. He promised, “I shan’t be busy now for a week.
-We’ll ride in the Park and feed the squirrels, sonny.”
-
-“All right. Say, Mark, you’re all thin.--There’s the doorbell,
-again.--Oh, say, a lady telephoned s’noon. Her name was Miss Monroe and
-she wanted you to call her up.”
-
-“I like her nerve!”
-
-Gurdy jumped at this loud snort of his uncle.
-
-“Who’s she?”
-
-“She’s an actress,” Mark stammered, hoping the boy wouldn’t go on, and
-Carlson came in, his yellow face splotched as though he’d been walking
-fast.
-
-“That Rand squirt been here?” he yelled at Mark.
-
-“Yes. Why?”
-
-“I passed him. What’s he want?”
-
-“Me to meet her.”
-
-“You goin’ to?”
-
-“Guess I better, Mr. Carlson.”
-
-Carlson jabbed Gurdy’s stomach with his cane and panted, “I can tell
-you what she wants and don’t you listen to it, neither. She’s had a
-fight with Billy Loeffler. He won’t put this whelp she married in her
-comp’ny. I bet she quits Loeffler. Her show’s no good, anyhow. Well, I
-won’t take her on. She’s a second rater. She’s an onion. I won’t have
-her for nothin’. Don’t you get sentymental about Cora Boyle any more,
-son!”
-
-“You needn’t worry,” said Mark, patting Gurdy’s ear.
-
-Gurdy sat up and inquired, “Is that the Cora Boyle grandpapa says was
-a loose footed heifer?” So Carlson broke into screaming mirth. Mark
-flushed and mumbled, sent the boy away and scowled respectfully at his
-partner. Sometimes Carlson’s crude amusement stung him.
-
-“For God’s sake don’t talk of her in front of the kids, sir!”
-
-“All right, son. Goin’ to let Gurdy come to the show tonight?”
-
-“Not much!”
-
-The old man lounged into a chair and jeered at his fosterling. Mark’s
-horror diverted him. He yapped, “Still think it’s a dirty show, do you?”
-
-“Yes.... Oh, dunno! If there was anything to the slop but that second
-act, I wouldn’t care. Nothing but Sappho over again. Old as the hills.”
-
-“What’s new in the show business, son?”
-
-“The Merry Widow is,” Mark laughed, “and you wouldn’t buy it. Savage
-is bringing it in week after next. They were playing the music at
-Rector’s last night.--Look here, the set for the last act’s all wrong,
-still. Those green curtains--”
-
-“You and your sets! God,” said Carlson, “you’d ought to’ve been a scene
-painter!”
-
-“I wish I could be, for about one week!” Mark let a grievance loose,
-slapping his leg. “These people make me sick! You tell them you want
-something new and they trot out some sketch of a room that every one’s
-seen for twenty years. They never think of--”
-
-“You ain’t ever satisfied! You act like scenery made a show--”
-
-Mark sighed, “Well, we’re not giving the public its moneysworth with
-this piece. The scenery’s--mediocre.--Come up and see Margot.”
-
-The old man poked Margot’s doll with a shaking thumb and called her
-Maggie to see her scowl, like Mark. The little girl’s solemn vanity
-delighted him. He was also delighted by Gurdy who became an embodied
-sneer when Mark fondled Margot. The boy watched Mark kiss this female
-nuisance then walked haughtily out of the library and set to work
-banging the piano in the upper playroom.
-
-“All you need’s a wife and a mother-in-law and you’d have a happy
-home,” Carlson said when Mark let him out of the front door.
-
-“Think I haven’t?”
-
-“I suppose you have. Ain’t any truth in this that you’re goin’ to marry
-that Monroe gal?”
-
-“No. I gave her a ring, last week. I suppose she’s been airing it.”
-
-“Sure.--You big calf,” the old man said with gloom, “you always act
-so kind of surprised when one of ’em brags of you. You ain’t but
-twenty-nine and you’re a fine lookin’ jackass. Of course, she’ll show
-off her solytaire! A gal’s as vain as a man, any day. One of ’em’ll
-get you married, yet.--Yell at that cab, son. My legs are mighty
-tired.--See you at eight sharp. Now, mind, I won’t have nothin’ to say
-to Cora Boyle.”
-
-Mark waited until the opening night of “The Merry Widow” for more news
-of Cora Boyle. She deserted her manager, Loeffler, while “Red Winter”
-was in the first week of its run at the 45th Street Theatre. Mark
-saw her lunching in the Knickerbocker grill with her young husband
-and a critic who always touted her as the successor of Ada Rehan. A
-busybody assured Mark that Cosmo Rand was twenty. Cora was thirty
-one. All three of her husbands, then, were younger. The oddity of
-theatrical marriage still alarmed Mark. In Fayettesville it was a fixed
-convention that girls should be younger than their husbands. But she
-was luscious to see at the “Merry Widow” opening. Mark thought how well
-she looked, hung above the crowd in the green lined box. She found
-novel fashions of massing her hair. That night it rose in a black
-peak sustained by silver combs. She kept a yellow cloak slung across
-one bare shoulder concealing her gown. Against the gentle green of
-her background appeared three men. Rand wore a single eye-glass that
-sparkled dully when the outer lights were low. Through the music and
-the applause Mark was conscious of the box and of Cora’s red feathered
-fan. Her second husband, a thin Jewish comedian, went up to shake hands
-in an entr’acte. Women behind Mark giggled wildly. He wandered into
-the bronze lobby where men were already whistling the slow melody of
-“Velia.” He was chaffed by an Irish actor manager born in Chicago whose
-accent was a triumph of maintained vowels.
-
-“An’ why don’t you go shake hands with Cora, bhoy?”
-
-“Shut up, Terry. Come have a drink?”
-
-He steered his friend to a new bar. The Irishman was rather drunk but
-vastly genial. He maundered, “A fool Cora was to let go of you, bhoy.
-They’re tellin’ me you’ve made money in the stockmarket, too.”
-
-“A little,” Mark admitted.
-
-“I’ve had no luck that way. Well, a fool Cora was.--And how’s it feel
-bein’ a manager, lad?”
-
-“Fine.”
-
-The Irishman looked at Mark sidelong over his glass, then up at the
-gold stars of the ceiling.
-
-“Ho!--Yes, it’s a fine feelin’.--Well, wait until you’ve put on a
-couple of frosts, bhoy! And have to go hat in your hand huntin’ a
-backer. You lend money, easy.--You’ll see all the barflies that’ve had
-their ten and their twenty off you time and again--You’ll see ’em run
-when they see you comin’. Well, here tonight and hell tomorrow.--So
-Cora’s quit Billy Loeffler, has she? The dhear man! May his children
-all be acrobats! ’Twas Gus Daly taught the scut every trick he knows.
-The Napoleon of Broadway! I mind Loeffler runnin’ err’nds for Daly in
-eighty five.--Well, you wanted to be a manager and here you are and
-here’s luck.--It’s a fine game--the finest there is--and, mind you,
-I’ve been a practicin’ bhurglar and a plumber. Drink up.”
-
-They drank and returned to the green theatre, resonant with the prelude
-of the next act. Mark was struggling in the half lit thresh of men
-strolling toward their seats when Cosmo Rand halted him.
-
-“You’d not mind coming to supper in our rooms at the Knickbocker?”
-
-Mark accepted. The scene of the Maxim revel was lost to him while he
-wondered what Cora wanted. He wouldn’t engage her. Carlson’s prejudice
-was probably valid. The old man swore that she was worthless outside
-light comedy. Yet she had good notices in all her parts. She was
-famous for clothes. She signed recommendations for silks and unguents.
-She had made a dressmaker popular among actresses. She had played in a
-failure in London whence came legends of a passionate Duke. The Duke’s
-passion might be invented, like other legends. He mused. The flowing
-waltz music made him melancholy. What sort of woman was Cora, nowadays?
-Every one changed. He, himself, had changed. He was getting callous to
-ready amities, explosions of mean jealousy. He knew nothing of Cora,
-really. She might be a different person, better tempered, less frank.
-Women were incomprehensible, anyhow. He would never understand them,
-doubted that anyone did and sighed. He walked to Cora’s hotel with a
-feeling of great dignity. She had mauled him badly, abused him, lied to
-him and now she was seeking peace. Then, rising in the lift, he knew
-that this dignity had a hollow heart; he was afraid of Cora Boyle.
-
-“This is awfully good of you,” she said, shaking hands. Then she
-rested one arm on the shelf filled with flowers and smiled slowly,
-theatrically, kicking her rosy train into the right swath about her
-feet. Mark felt the display as a boast of her body. She resumed,
-“There’s really no sense in our looking at each other over a fence, is
-there?”
-
-His face, seen in a mirror among the flowers, cheered Mark to a grin.
-He looked impassive and bland. He drawled, “No sense at all,” and
-stepped back. But she confused him. He had to speak. He said, “That’s a
-stunning frock.”
-
-“You always did notice clothes, didn’t you? Cosmo, do give Mr. Walling
-a drink.”
-
-Her voice had rounded and came crisply with an English hint. But it was
-not music. It jangled badly against Rand’s level, “What’ll you have,
-sir?” from the table where there were bottles and plates of sandwiches.
-Mark considered this boy as they talked of “The Merry Widow.” He saw
-man’s beauty inexpertly enough. Young Rand was handsome in the fragile,
-groomed manner of an English illustration. His chin was pointed. His
-eyes seemed brown. His curls lay in even bands. He had neither length
-nor strength. But he talked sensibly, rather shrewdly.
-
-“There’ll be a deal of money lost bringing over Viennese pieces, of
-course. This thing’s one in a thousand. Quite charming.”
-
-Mark asked, “You’ve not been over here long?”
-
-“I?” Rand laughed, “Lord, yes. I’m a Canadian. Born in Iowa, as a
-matter of fact. I’ve been a good deal in England, of course.--Oh, I was
-at your new piece the other night. Red Winter, I mean. How very nicely
-you’ve mounted it. I really felt beastly cold in that second act. The
-snow’s so good.”
-
-Mark bowed, selecting a sandwich. The critics had praised the snow
-scene. Rand might truly admire it. If the snow hadn’t satisfied Mark it
-had pleased every one else. He lost himself in thoughts of snow. Cora
-trailed her rose gown to the table and poured water into a glass of
-pale wine. A broad bracelet on her wrist clicked against the glass. She
-said, “You and Carlson own all the rights to Red Winter, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Are you going to send it to London?”
-
-He laughed and put down his glass. “London? What for? It’d last just
-about one week!”
-
-Cora smiled over a shoulder, retiring to the shelf of flowers.
-
-“It would do better than that, Mark. I’ve played in London.”
-
-“I’ve never played there but I’ve been there enough to know better.
-California Gold Rush! They don’t know there was such a thing!”
-
-“Oh, I say,” said Rand.
-
-Cora sipped some watered wine. The light shot through the glass and
-made a pear of glow on her throat. She was motionless, drinking. She
-became a shape set separate from the world in a momentary gleam. He
-knew that she was acting. Then she said sharply, “I’ll buy the English
-rights if you and Carlson’ll make me a decent figure.”
-
-“Oh, look here! You’d lose. I was talking to Ian Gail about it, last
-night. It wouldn’t make a cent in England. They wouldn’t know what it’s
-all about. And--it’s such a rotten play! There’s nothing in it!”
-
-She asked, looking at him, “Can I have it?” and her flat voice took
-fire in the question, achieved music. She must want the poor play
-badly. Rand’s pink nails were lined along his moustache, hiding its
-silk. The room fell silent.
-
-“Oh, sure,” Mark said, “You can have it, Cora. I’ll see Mr. Carlson in
-the morning.... But damned if I can make out what there is in the play.”
-
-“It’s not the sort of thing you like, I know. But I’m sick of comedy
-and that’s all I’m ever offered, here. And I’m sick of New York. Well,
-make me an offer of the English rights--Only--I’m no bank, Mark.” She
-swaggered to the piano and tamely played a few bars of the Merry Widow
-waltz. She hadn’t Olive Ilden’s grace, so seated, and the rose gown
-seemed sallow against the black of the piano. She had finished her
-scene. Mark saw the familiar stir of her throat as she hid a yawn. He
-promised to hurry the business of the English rights to the melodrama
-and took his leave.
-
-What had he feared? He tried to think, in the corridor. Recapture,
-perhaps, by this woman who wasn’t, after all, half as wicked as others.
-Her new elegance hadn’t moved him. The stage did refine people! Cora
-had the full air of celebrity. She was now controlled, vainer. She
-might still be a shrew. He saddened, ringing for the lift, and thought
-of Cosmo Rand’s future if “Red Winter” failed in London. The elevator
-deposited a page with a silver bucket and this went clinking to Cora’s
-door. Rand and she would drink champagne. Mark sank pondering to the
-lounge and stopped to buy a cigar, there. It was almost one o’clock.
-Many of the lights had been turned out. The threaded marble lost sheen
-in the smoky gloom. Parties ebbed from the supper room and a wedge
-of dressed men waved to Mark. A candy merchant in the lead bawled
-to him and Mark went to be introduced to an English actress on the
-millionaire’s arm. She swayed, gracious and tipsy, involved in a cloak
-of jet velvet, her voice murmurous as brushed harp strings emerging
-from the pallor of her face above the browning gardenias on the cloak.
-She asked, “Like this wrap? Makes me feel like a very big black
-cigar--I should have a very broad red and gold band.” The men pressed
-about her fame sniggered, respecting this lovely myth. She was assigned
-in legend to the desire of princes. The candy merchant grinned,
-cuddling her hand on his waistcoat. She tapped the brass edge of the
-turning door with a gardenia stem and smiled at Mark’s silk hat, then
-at the millionaire. “Am I talking too loud, cherished one?”
-
-“Shout your head off,” the candy merchant said, “It’s a free country.”
-
-“Oh, only the bond are free,” she proclaimed. She told Mark, “Bond
-Street’s getting frightfully shabby. Max Beerbohm says--I do look
-rather like a very big black cigar, don’t I?--Do stop pulling my arm,
-you dear, fat thing!”
-
-“The car’s here, honey.”
-
-“How dear of the car! We’re going to sup somewhere, aren’t we? Oh, no,
-to bed.--Like a very big, black cigar--”
-
-She was drawn through the brazen doors away from Mark. The men pushed
-after her avidly. She went tottering to the great motor, was engulfed.
-Mark blinked in the waning smell of gardenias, waited for the motor to
-be gone and walked into the street. He saw rain falling. There was no
-taxicab in sight along the street. From the west an orange palpitation
-flooded this darker way. Steam from a clamorous drill blew north about
-the white tower of the Times building. Wet cabs jerked north and south
-along the gleam of rails. The higher lights were gone. The rain dropped
-from an upper purple and rapped the crown of his hat as Mark strolled
-to the corner. Some one began to talk to him before he reached
-Broadway. Mark glanced at this beggar carelessly and paused to dig in a
-pocket for change. The shivering voice continued.
-
-“... ain’t like I’d come bothering you before. I ain’t that kind. But
-you’ve got comp’nies on the road and honest, Walling, I’m as good as
-ever I was. You’ve mebbe heard that I’m taking dope. Not so. Some
-of that bunch at Bill Loeffler’s office have been puttin’ that out.
-Honest--”
-
-Three white capped young sailors blundered past, all laughing, and
-jarred the shadowy body away from Mark. The man came shuffling back and
-clung to Mark’s sleeve, his face lavender in the rainy light above a
-shapeless overcoat. He whispered on, “Honest, some of the things that
-bunch at Loeffler’s place say about you and Carlson! But I ain’t takin’
-nothing, Walling. Had a run of bad luck. I’m on the rocks. But you’ve
-seen me run a show. You know I can handle a comp’ny--”
-
-“The light’s so bad,” said Mark, “and your collar--I’m not just sure
-who--”
-
-The man gave a whimpering laugh. “Oh, I thought you was actin’ kind
-of chilly to an old pal. I’m Jim Rothenstein. You know? I was stage
-manager for Carlson back when you was playin’ the kid in Nicoline. You
-know. I gave you your job. Cora Boyle she brought you in to me and
-asked if there wasn’t a little part--Honest, I ain’t takin’ dope. That
-bunch--”
-
-Mark gulped, “Of course you’re not.” Some harsh drug escaped from the
-man’s rags. This was nightmare. Mark found a bill and held it out,
-backing from the shadow. “Come round to my office some day and I’ll see
-what--”
-
-A hansom rolled to the curb and the driver raised his whip. Mark ran to
-shelter, crying his address. The grey horse moved toward Broadway. Mark
-shoved up the trap and shouted to the driver, “No! Go up Fifth Avenue!”
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-Penalties
-
-
-Cora Boyle played “Red Winter” in London for two years. She began her
-run in May of 1908 with a popular English male star as her hero. He
-presently retired from the company and Cosmo Rand replaced him. Olive
-Ilden wrote an opinion to Mark from her new house in Chelsea: “It
-seems to me that your one time wife is a competent second rate actress.
-She--or someone near her--must have intelligence. She has perfectly
-applied our musical comedy manner to melodrama. She is languid and
-rude to the audience and is enormously, successful, naturally. Ambrose
-Russell is painting her. If you knew London you would understand that
-to have Ambrose Russell paint one implies entire success. He alternates
-Gaiety girls and Duchesses and has acquired a trick of wonderful
-vulgarity. I met Miss Boyle at his studio on Sunday. We talked about
-you and she rather gushed. Her infantile husband stood by and said
-Rawther at intervals like an automatic figure on a clock. A pretty
-thing.... Of course I prefer London to Winchester. Ecclesiastical
-society is only amusing in Trollope. My husband got our house from a
-retired Admiral and it has a garden. I have fallen in love with him--my
-husband, not the Admiral. He has written a book of Naval tales on the
-sly and to my horror they are quite good. Having scorned him as a mere
-gentleman all these years it upsets me to have to consider him as an
-artist. I hear from Ian Gail that your plays all make quantities of
-money because they are utter rubbish in lovely settings and that your
-house is an upholsterer’s paradise. Very bad for the children who are
-probably spoiled beyond hope or help.”
-
-Mark wrote four pages of denial and received: “Nonsense! Of course
-you do not have courtesans to lunch but leading ladies come and swoon
-on your drawing room floor and the children are pointed out in your
-Central Park as Mark Walling’s brats. Your parasites fawn on them.
-Their world is made up of expensive motors, sweets and an adoring idiot
-as God. The little boy reads theatrical reviews over his porridge and
-the little girl probably does not know that she is a mammal and liable
-to death, spanking or lessons. They live in a treacle well.... Your one
-time wife has taken a house near me and her pictures, eating breakfast
-in bed with a Pom on the pillow, adorn the Sketch. I danced with her
-husband last night.”
-
-Cora Boyle’s photographs in the London Weeklies made old Carlson sneer.
-He lounged in Mark’s library and derided: “A fine figger and a pair
-of black eyes. Actress? Sure. She makes pictures of herself. And what
-the hell else do folks want, huh? Just that. They want pictures. You
-say they want fine scenery and new ideas about lights and all? Bosh,
-son! They want to see a good lookin’ gal in good clothes--and not much
-clothes--with all the lights in the house jammed on her. Act? Make ’em
-cry a little and they think it’s actin’. Margot’ll be the boss actress
-of the United States when she’s twenty--Come here, Maggie, and tell me
-how old you are.”
-
-“Seven and a half,” said Margot, “and I don’t want to be an actress.”
-
-“Huh. Why not?”
-
-“Aunt Sadie says actresses aren’t nice,” Margot informed him.
-
-Carlson wrinkled his yellow face and chuckled out, “Ask Mark what he
-thinks of ’em, sister.”
-
-She turned her eyes up to Mark gravely and smiled. She was unlike her
-father, most like her mother. Mark bent and lifted her in the air,
-kissed her bare knees and put her hair aside from the little ears,
-faintly red, delightfully chilled for his mouth from a walk in the
-Park. She said, on his shoulder, “Oo, that’s a new stickpin, papa!”
-
-“Diamonds get ’em all,” Carlson nodded.
-
-“It’s a sapphire,” said Mark.
-
-“Nice,” Margot approved and Mark felt glorified. Children were
-certainly a relief after the arid nonchalance of women who took money,
-jewels or good rôles and asked for more donations over the house
-telephone. Margot played with the sapphire square a moment and then
-scrambled down from Mark’s shoulder to his knee where she sat admiring
-him while he wrote checks. He smiled at her now and then, let her blot
-signatures and kissed her hands when she did so.
-
-“You’d spoil a trick elephant,” Carlson muttered, “Ain’t Gurdy old
-enough to go to school?”
-
-“He started in at Doctor Cary’s last week. They’ve got him learning
-Latin and French, right off.”
-
-“What’s Doctor Cary’s?”
-
-“It’s a school in Sixtieth Street.”
-
-“Hump,” said Carlson, “Private School? Well, you’re right. Public
-schools teach hogwash. They got to. They teach hogs. But why didn’t you
-send him to one these schools out of town while you were at it? Get him
-out of New York.”
-
-“My G--glory,” Mark cried, “He’s only nine!”
-
-Margot corrected, “Ten, papa. He was ten in May.” Then she told
-Carlson, “Papa’d just die if Gurdy went away to school. He told Miss
-Converse.” She slid from his knee and curtsied to Carlson with, “I must
-take my French lesson, now. So, good afternoon.” She was gone out of
-the room before Mark could kiss her again. She was always within reach
-of kisses and her warmth, curled on his lap was something consolatory
-when he did send Gurdy away to Saint Andrew’s School in September 1910.
-Villay, his broker, and his lawyer advised the step. Olive Ilden wrote
-to him: “I am glad you have done the right thing. God knows I am no
-cryer up of the Public School System. But a Public School (I forget
-what you call private kennels for rich cubs in the States) is the only
-thing for the boy, in your situation. Ian Gail tells me that Gurdy
-is rather clever. I can imagine nothing worse than to be the son by
-adoption of a theatrical manager and a day scholar at a small New York
-school. But I know how miserable you are. Every one has sentimental
-accretions. I dislike seeing old women run down by motors, myself. No,
-I know how badly you feel, just now. But these be the fair rewards of
-them that love, you know? My own son is, of course, as the archangels.
-I hear through his Housemaster at Harrow that he smokes cigarettes and
-bets on all the races.”
-
-Mark tried to take Gurdy’s absence with a fine philosophy. His broker
-and his lawyer assured him that Saint Andrew’s was the best school in
-the country. But the red, Georgian buildings spread on the New England
-meadow and the impersonal stateliness of the lean Headmaster seemed a
-cold nest for Gurdy. He missed the boy with a dry and aching pain that
-wasn’t curable by work on five new plays, Margot’s plump warmth on
-his knee or contrived, brief intoxication. All his usual enchantments
-failed. He wore out the phonograph plates of the Danse Macabre and
-the Peer Gynt “Sunrise.” He worried wretchedly and the disasters of
-October and November hardly balanced his interior trouble. Two, the
-more expensive two of the five Carlson and Walling productions failed.
-Carlson cheerfully indicated the shrinkage of applicants for jobs,
-hopeful playwrights and performers in the office above the 45th Street
-Theatre. Mark regretted twenty thousand dollars spent for shares in the
-Terriss Pictograph Company. Yet young Terriss was a keen fellow and
-Carlson thought something might come of motion pictures after a while.
-His friends sighed about Mark that the “show business was a gamble” and
-on visits to the farm Mark tried to be gay. A Military Academy had been
-built in Fayettesville on a stony field owned by Eddie Bernamer, the
-only heritage from Bernamer’s Norwegian father. Gurdy’s brothers were
-transferred to this polished school and Mark was soothed, in thinking
-that he’d made his own people grandees. He wished that he could ape the
-composure of the Bernamers and said so on a visit near Christmas time.
-
-“But, great Cæsar,” Bernamer blinked, kicking balled snow from a
-boot-heel, “this Saint Andrew’s is a good school ain’t it, even if it
-is up by Boston? The buildin’s are fire proof, ain’t they? Gurdy can’t
-git out at night and raise Ned? Then what’s got into you?”
-
-“Oh, but--my God, Eddie!... I miss him.”
-
-“You’re a fool,” said his brother-in-law, staring at Mark, “You’re
-doin’ the right thing by the boy. You always do the right thing--like
-you done it by us. Sadie and me’ve got seven kids and I love ’em
-all.... They got to grow up. Stop bein’ a fool.... You don’t look well.
-Thin’s a rail. Business bad?”
-
-“We lost about forty-five thousand in two months.”
-
-“That countin’ in the thousand you gave Sadie for her birthday?”
-
-“No--Lord, no!”
-
-Bernamer looked about the increased, wide farm and the tin roofed
-garage where Mark’s blue motor stood pompous beside the cheap family
-machine. He drawled, “Well, you’ve sunk about twenty-five thousand
-right here, bud. You let up on us. Save your money and set up that
-theatre of your own you want so. And I’m makin’ some money on the side.”
-
-“How?”
-
-The farmer grinned.
-
-“That no good Healy boy--Margot’s mamma’s cousin, come soft soapin’
-round for a loan last summer. He and another feller have a kind of
-music hall place in Trenton. A couple of girls that sing and one of
-those movin’ picsher machines. They wanted five hundred to put in more
-chairs. I fixed it I’d get a tenth the profit and they’ve been sendin’
-me twenty-five and thirty dollars a week ever since--and prob’ly
-cheatin’ the eye teeth out of me. Dunno what folks go to the place
-for--but they do.”
-
-“Funny,” said Mark.
-
-A bugle blew in the grey bulk of the Military Academy. Boys came
-threading out across the flat snow between ice girt tree trunks. A
-triple rank formed below the quivering height of the flagpole where
-the wind afflicted the banner. The minute shimmer of brass on the blue
-uniforms thrilled Mark. The flag rippled down in folds of a momentary
-beauty. He sighed and turned back to the pink papered living room where
-Gurdy’s small, fat legged sisters were clotted around Margot’s rosy
-velvet on a leather lounge. Old Walling smoked a sickening cheroot
-and smiled at all this prettiness. Margot’s black hair was curled
-expansively by the damp air. She sat regally, telling her country
-cousins of Mastin’s shop where Mark bought her clothes. She kissed
-every one good-bye when Mark’s driver steered the car to the door and
-told Eddie Bernamer how well his furred moleskin jacket suited him. In
-the limousine she stretched her bright pumps on the footwarmer beside
-Mark’s feet and said, “Oh, you’ve some colour, now, papa!”
-
-“Have I? Cold air. D’you know you say na-ow and ca-ow, daughter, just
-like you lived on the farm the year ’round?”
-
-Margot gave her queer, chiming chuckle which was like muffled Chinese
-bells. “Do I?”
-
-“Pure New Jersey, honey. I used to. Mrs. Le Moyne used to guy me about
-it when I was a kid.”
-
-“Miss Converse says ‘guy’ is slang,” Margot murmured.
-
-“So it is, sister. We ought to go to England some summer pretty soon
-and let Miss Converse visit her folks.”
-
-“I’d love to.... I’ve never been abroad,” she said, gravely stating it
-as though Mark mightn’t know, “And every one goes abroad, don’t they?”
-
-“And what would you do abroad?”
-
-She considered one pump and fretted the silver buckle with the other
-heel. “I’d see people, papa.”
-
-“What people, sis?”
-
-“Oh,” she said, “every one!”
-
-It set him thinking that she lived pent in his house with her stiff,
-alien governess. She was infinitely safe, so, but she might be bored;
-he recalled hot and stagnant evenings on the farm when his mind had
-floated free of the porch steps and his father’s drawl into a paradise
-of black haired nymphs and illustrious warriors dressed from the
-engravings of the Centennial Shakespeare. Perhaps she should go to
-school? He consulted the governess, was surprised by her agreement,
-began to ask questions about schools for small girls.
-
-“Miss Thorne’s,” said his broker, Villay, “She’ll really be taught
-something there.... Miss Thorne was my wife’s governess. I’ll see if I
-can manage....”
-
-“Manage what?”
-
-The broker clicked his cigarette case open, shut it and laughed, “You
-know what I mean, Walling.”
-
-“No, I don’t.”
-
-“It was one thing getting Gurdy into Saint Andrew’s. The Headmaster’s a
-broad minded man.... My dear boy, you’re Walling--Walling, of Carlson
-and Walling and you used to be a matinée idol.... I don’t like hurting
-your feelings.”
-
-“You mean you’ll have to go down on your knees to this Miss Thorne to
-get her to take Margot?”
-
-The broker said, “Not exactly down on my knees, Walling. I’ll have
-it managed. The school’s a corporation and my wife owns some stock.”
-Mark groaned and was driven uptown thinking sourly of New York. Things
-like this made Socialists, he fancied, and looked with sympathy at an
-orator on a box in Union Square. But Gurdy was arriving by the five
-o’clock train at the Grand Central Station and the lush swirl of the
-crowd on Fifth Avenue cured Mark’s spleen. Snow fluttered in planes
-of brief opal from the depth of assorted cornices above the exciting
-lights. A scarlet car crossed his at Thirty Fourth Street and bore
-a rigid, revealed woman in emerald velvet, like a figure of pride
-in a luminous shell. Her machine moved with his up the slope. Mark
-examined her happily. She chewed gum with the least movement of her
-white and vermilion cheeks. He despised her and felt strong against
-the pyramidal society in which Walling, of Carlson and Walling, was
-disdained. A cocktail in the Manhattan bar helped. The yellow place
-was full of undergraduates bustling away from Harvard and Yale. The
-consciousness of dull trim boots and the black, perpetual decency of
-his dress raised Mark high out of this herd. At least he knew better
-than to smoke cigarettes with gold tips and the oblique, racy colours
-of neckties had no meaning for him beyond gaudiness. He strolled to
-the clapboards and icy labyrinthine bewilderment of the station, found
-the right gate and beheld uncountable ladies gathered together with
-children in leather gaiters, chauffeurs at attention smoking furtively.
-Here, he knew, was good breeding collected to take charge of its sons.
-The cocktail struggled for a moment with cold air. Mark retired to the
-rough wooden wall and watched this crowd. The mingling voices never
-reached plangency. The small girls and boys stirred like low flowers in
-a field of dark, human stalks. Colours, this winter, were sombre. The
-women walked with restraint, with tiny gestures that revealed nothing,
-with smiles to each other that meant nothing. He had a feeling of
-deft performance and a young fellow at the wall beside Mark chuckled,
-lighting a cigarette.
-
-“A lot of rich dames waitin’ for their kids from some goddam school up
-in Boston, see?”
-
-Mark nodded. The young fellow gave the grouped women another stare and
-crossed the tight knees of his sailor’s breeches. The nostrils of his
-shapely, short nose shook a trifle. He tilted his flat cap further
-over an ear and winked comradely at Mark, “Wonder who the kids’ fathers
-are, huh? A lot of rich dames....” He spat and added, “Well, you can’t
-blame ’em so much. Their husban’s are all keepin’ these chorus girls.
-But it’s too much money, that’s what. If they’d got to work some and
-cook an’ all they wouldn’t have time for this society stuff. It’s too
-much money. If they’d got to cook their meals they wouldn’t have time
-for carryin’ on with all these artists an’ actors an’ things--” He
-broke off to snap at a girl who came hurrying from a telephone booth,
-“Say, what in hell? Makin’ another date?”
-
-“Honest, I was just phonin’ mamma,” the girl said.
-
-“You took a time!--Phonin’ her what?” He scowled, dominating the girl,
-“Huh?”
-
-The girl argued, “I’d got to tell her sump’n, ain’t I, Jimmy? I told
-her I was goin’ to a show with a gerl fren’--”
-
-“Some friend,” said the sailor, laughed at himself and tramped off with
-his girl under an arm. The girl’s cheap suit of beryl cloth shook out a
-scent of cinnamon. Mark sighed; she was young and pretty and shouldn’t
-lie to her mother about men. But perhaps her mother was bad tempered,
-illiberal. Perhaps the flat was crowded with a preposterous family and
-exuded this slim thing often, hoping a fragment of pleasure. A man
-couldn’t be critical. Mark went to meet Gurdy and immediately forgot
-all discomforts in seeing that the boy had grown an inch, that the
-lashes about his dark blue eyes were blackening, in hearing him admit
-that he was glad to be at home again.
-
-Gurdy’s schoolmates had sisters at Miss Thorne’s, it seemed, and Mark
-waited, fretting, through the Christmas holidays until his broker wrote
-that Miss Thorne would be pleased to have Margot as a pupil. Miss
-Converse, the governess, asked Mark bluntly how he had managed this
-matter.
-
-“You Americans are extraordinary,” she said, “You’re so--so essentially
-undemocratic. It’s shocking. But we must get Margot some decent frocks
-directly.”
-
-The bill for Margot’s massed Christmas clothes lay on his desk. Mark
-started, protesting, “But--”
-
-“I’ve been meaning to talk of this for some time,” said the governess.
-
-“Her clothes?”
-
-“Her clothes.--My people were quite rich, you know, and I had things
-from Paris but really--O, really, Mr. Walling, you mustn’t let her have
-every pretty frock she sees! I must say you’ve more taste than most
-women--quite remarkable. But what will there be left for the child when
-she comes out?”
-
-He wanted to answer that no frock devised of man could make Miss
-Converse other than a bulky, angular female but gave his meek consent
-to authority. He resented the dull serges and linens of Margot’s
-school dress and Sunday became precious because he saw her in all
-glory, flounced in rose and sapphire. She was a miracle; she deserved
-brilliancies of toned silk to set off the pale brown of her skin, the
-crisp thickness of her hair. But in June on the _Cedric_ he heard one
-woman say to another, “Positively indecent. Like a doll,” when he
-walked the decks with Margot and the other woman’s, “But she’s quite
-lovely,” didn’t assuage that tart summary of Margot’s costume. An
-elderly actress told him, “My dear boy, you mustn’t overdo the child’s
-clothes,” and a fat lady from Detroit came gurgling to ask where he
-bought things for Margot. He knew this creature to be the wife of a
-motor king and looked down at her thoughtfully.
-
-“I suppose you have daughters, yourself?”
-
-“Yes, three. All of them married. But they still come to me for
-advice.--Mastin’s? I thought so. Thank you so much.”
-
-He watched her purple linen frock ruck up in lumps as her fat knees
-bent over the brass sill of a door and pitied her daughters. He was
-playing poker in the smoke room when Gurdy slid into the couch beside
-him and sat silently observing the game. The boy was lately thirteen
-and gaunt. His silence coated an emotion that Mark felt, disturbing
-as the chill of an audience on an opening night. Gurdy was angry. The
-milky skin below his lips twitched and wrinkled. The luncheon bugle
-blew. The game stopped and, when the other players rose, Mark could
-turn to him. “Was that fat woman in tortoise shell glasses talkin’ to
-you?” The boy demanded.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, it was a bet. I was reading in the parlour place. It was a bet.
-One of the women bet you got Margot’s things in New York and the rest
-of ’em said Paris. And that fat hog--” Gurdy’s voice broke--“said she
-didn’t mind slumming. So she went off and talked to you. They all
-s-said that Margot looked like a poster.”
-
-This was horrible. Mark saw some likeness between Margot’s pink
-splendour and the new posters clever people made for him. He must be
-wrong. He uncertainly fingered the pile of poker chips and asked Gurdy,
-“D’you think sister’s--too dressed up?”
-
-Gurdy loosed a sob that slapped Mark’s face with its misery and dashed
-his hand into the piled chips. He said, “D-don’t give a dam’ what they
-say about her. I hate hearin’ them talk about you that way!”
-
-Mark waited until the nervous sobs slacked. Then he asked, “Do they
-ever talk about me at your school, sonny?”
-
-“No. Oh, one of the masters asked me why you didn’t put on some play.
-Is there a play called the Cherry Orchard?”
-
-“Russian. It wouldn’t run a week.” Mark piled up the chips and said, “I
-may be all wrong--Anyhow, don’t you bother, son ... God bless you.”
-
-Olive Ilden gave him her view while Margot and Gurdy explored the
-garden that opened from her Chelsea drawing room. She sat painting her
-lips with a perfumed stick of deep red and mimicked his drawl, “No,
-her things ar-r-ren’t too bright, old man. She isn’t too much dressed
-up. It’s merely that this thin faced time of ours isn’t dressed up to
-her. She’s Della Robbia and we’re--Whistler. It’s burgherdom. Prudence.
-It’s the nineteenth century. It’s the tupenny ha’penny belief that
-dullness is respectable. Hasn’t she some Italian blood? Now Joan--my
-wretched daughter--simply revels in dowdiness. She’s only happy in a
-jersey or Girl Guides rubbish. She’s at Cheltenham, mixing with the
-British flapper. When she’s at home she drives me into painting my face
-and putting dyed attire on my head. If I had to live with Margot I
-shouldn’t wear anything gayer than taupe.”
-
-He stared out at Margot whose pink frock revolved above her gleaming
-silver buckles on the crushed shell of the walk. Olive saw his face
-light, attaining for the second a holy glow. It was a window in the
-wall of dark night. He looked and doted. The woman wondered at him. He
-had all the breathless beauty of a child facing its dearest toy. His
-grey eyes dilated. In her own eyes she felt the dry threat of tears and
-said, “Old man, I’m sorry for you.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because you’re such a dear and because you’re a pariah. I don’t
-know that all this garden party petting is good for our player folk
-but--over in your wilderness--no one seems to investigate the stage
-except professors and the police. It must be sickening.... What’ll
-become of Margot when she’s grown up?”
-
-It had begun to worry him on the _Cedric_. He loosely thought that her
-friends from Miss Thorne’s school would be kind to her. Wouldn’t they?
-He said, “She’s only ten, Olive,” and sat brooding. It wasn’t fair.
-Smart society, the decorous women of small gestures, hadn’t any use
-for him. He looked at Olive who wrote letters to him and called him
-old man. She wrote books. She knew all the world. She had been to the
-king’s court and laughed about it. He went to shelter in her strange
-kindness and sighed, “It isn’t fair. She ought to have--she ought to go
-anywhere she wants to.”
-
-“She probably will if there’s anything in eyelashes,” said Olive, “and
-Gurdy will go anywhere he wants to, by the shape of his jaw. I’ve been
-dissecting American society with horrific interest. It seems to have
-reached a lower level than British! You haven’t even an intelligent
-Bohemia.”
-
-“There ain’t many literary people,” Mark reflected, “and they mostly
-seem to live in Philadelphia and Indiana, anyhow. Or over here. What’s
-a man to do? I can’t--”
-
-“You can’t do anything. Whistle the children in. There’s a one man
-show. Stage settings. Italian. I haven’t seen them and you should.” She
-threw the stick of paint away and set about cheering him. She liked
-him, muddled in his trade, labouring after beauty, unaware of his own
-odd sweetness. She gave up the last weeks of the season, guiding him
-about London, watching him glow when Margot wanted a scarf of orange
-silk in Liberty’s, when Gurdy demonstrated his Latin, not badly, before
-a tomb in Saint Paul’s. Margot was the obvious idol, something to be
-petted and dressed. But the child had a rich attraction of her own,
-graces of placid curves, a quiet loveliness that missed stupidity.
-
-“You don’t like Margot,” Olive told Gurdy in a waste of the British
-Museum.
-
-The boy lied, “Of course I do,” in his cracked voice but Olive took
-that as the product of good schooling, like his easy performance of
-airs on the piano. He was jealous of Margot and showed it so often that
-the woman wondered why Mark didn’t see. But this wasn’t the usual boy.
-
-“You let him read anything he likes,” she scolded Mark.
-
-“Sure. Where’s the harm? I haven’t got the Contes Drolatiques at the
-house or any of those things. Aunt Edith used to make me read the Book
-of Kings when I was a kid. Oh, Gurd knows that babies don’t come by
-express,” said Mark, “He’s lived in the country, too much.”
-
-“I thought the American peasantry entirely compounded of the Puritan
-virtues, old man.”
-
-“You missed your guess, then. You read a lot of American novels, Olive.
-Some day or other some writer’s goin’ to come along and write up an
-American country town like it is. The police will probably suppress
-the book.... My father and Gurdy’s mamma are sort of scared because
-I’ve got the kid at a rich school. You mustn’t believe all the stuff
-you see in the American magazines and papers about the wicked rich,
-Olive. I’ve met some of the rich roués at suppers and so on. Put any
-of ’em alongside some of the hired men and clerks and things that were
-in my regiment in Cuba--or alongside Tommy Grover that’s blacksmith
-at Fayettesville and they’d look like Sunday School teachers. I sort
-of wish the poor folks in the United States’d leave off yawping about
-the wicked rich and look after their own backyards a while! No, I
-don’t take any stock in this country virtue thing. The only girl in
-Fayettesville that ever run off with a wicked drummer had morals
-that’d scare a chorus girl stiff. Who’s the fellow that hangs ’round
-the stage door of a musical show? Nine times out of ten he’s a kid
-from the country that’s won twenty dollars at poker. Who’s the fellow
-that--well--seduces the poor working girl? Once in a hundred it’s a
-rich whelp in a dinner jacket. Rest of the time it’s the boy in the
-next flat. When I was acting and used to get mash notes from fool
-women, were they from women on Fifth Avenue or Park Avenue? Not much!
-Stenographers and ladies in Harlem that had husbands travelling a good
-deal. You believe in talking about these kind of things out loud and I
-expect you’re right.”
-
-“Gurdy’s not handsome,” said Olive, “but he’s attractive--charming
-eyes--and women are going to like him a goodish bit, bye and bye. And
-man is fire. What moral precepts are you going to--”
-
-“Just what my father told me. I’m going to tell him that he mustn’t
-make love to a married woman and that he mustn’t fool after an innocent
-girl unless he means matrimony--but God knows it’s getting pretty hard
-to tell what an innocent girl is, these days! Nine tenths of ’em dress
-like cocottes.”
-
-“Old man, where did you pick up that very decent French accent?” Olive
-saw his blush slide fleetly from his collar to the red hair and added,
-“I hope it was honestly come by. You’re a good deal of a Puritan for a
-sensualist.”
-
-“Oh ... I am a sensualist, I guess. But, I ain’t a hog.”
-
-Olive said, “No, that’s quite true, my son. There’s nothing porcine
-about you. My brother has a house this season and he’s giving a dance
-tonight. There might be some pretty frocks.”
-
-“Didn’t know you had a brother!”
-
-“Sir Gerald Shelmardine of Shelmardine Cross, Hampshire. He’s rather
-dreary. Will you come?”
-
-She took him to several evening parties and his wooden coldness
-before a crowd was enchanting. It occurred to her that individuals
-wearied the man. He eyed pretty women, striking gowns, studied the
-decoration of ball-rooms. He confessed, “I’ll never see any of them
-again and shouldn’t remember them if I did. My memory for people’s no
-good--unless they’re interestin’ to look at. My god, look at that girl
-in purple. Her dressmaker ought to be hung! Skirt’s crooked all across
-the front.” He gave the girl in purple his rare frown then asked,
-“Well, where’s some place in France, on the seashore, where I can take
-the kids until August?”
-
-She recommended Royan and had from him a letter describing Margot’s
-success among the ladies of a quiet hotel. His letters of 1912 and 1913
-were full of Margot. Snapshots of the child dropped often from the
-thick blue envelopes. When he sent his thin book, “Modern Scenery” in
-the autumn of 1913 it was dedicated, “To my Daughter.” The bald prose
-was correct, the photographs and plates were well selected. Mark wrote:
-“Gurdy went over it with a fine tooth comb to see if the grammar was
-O. K. Mr. Carlson is not well and we have four plays to bring in by
-December. Spoke at a lunch of a ladies’ dramatic society yesterday.
-Forgot where I was and said Hell in the middle of it. They did not
-mind. Things seem to be changing a lot. I am pretty worried about one
-of our plays.”
-
-Olive saw in the New York _Herald_ some discussion of this play and a
-furious reference to it on the editorial page, signed by a clergyman.
-This was at Christmas time when she was entertaining her tiresome
-brother at Ilden’s house in Suffolk. She folded the newspaper away,
-meaning to explore the business. She forgot the accident in the hurry
-of her attempt to reach a Scotch country house where her daughter Joan
-died of pneumonia on New Year’s Day. The shock sent Olive into grey
-seclusion. Her husband was on the China station with his cruiser.
-She suddenly found herself worrying over the health of her son, then
-in the Fifth Form at Harrow, so took a cottage in Harrow village and
-there reflected on the nastiness of death while she wrote her next
-novel. The cottage was singularly dismal and the daughters of the next
-dwelling were pretty girls of thirteen and fourteen, with fair hair.
-“Sentimental analogy is the bane of life,” she wrote to her husband,
-“I went to town yesterday for some gloves and saw the posters of
-Peter Pan on a hoarding in Baker Street. Joan liked it so. So I went
-to the theatre and squandered five sovereigns in stalls and gave the
-tickets to these wretched girls who would infinitely prefer a cinema,
-naturally. However I managed to laugh on Saturday. The news had just
-reached Mark Walling by way of Ian Gail who is in the States trying to
-sell his worst and newest play. Mark cabled me a hundred words quite
-incoherent and mostly inappropriate.”
-
-Three days later Olive came in from a walk and Mark opened the door of
-the stupid cottage. When she drew her hands away from his stooped face
-they were hot and wet.
-
-“But, my dear boy,” she said, presently, “what blessing brought you
-over? In the middle of your season, too.”
-
-“I’m in trouble. See anything in the papers about the Mayor stoppin’
-a play we put on?--I don’t blame the Mayor, for a minute. Mr. Carlson
-wanted it.... Well, it was stopped and some of the newspapers took it
-up. And then Mr. Carlson had a sort of stroke. His mind’s all right
-but his legs are paralyzed. Won’t ever walk again.” His voice drummed
-suddenly as if it might break into a sob. He passed his fingers over
-the red hair and went on, “I’ve got him up at my house.”
-
-“Of course,” said Olive.
-
-“Sure. The doctors say he’ll last four or five years, maybe.--Say
-you’ve always said we’re a nation of prudes. Look at this,” and he
-dragged from a black pocket a note on formal paper. Olive read: “The
-Thorne School, Madison Avenue and Sixty Sixth Street. December 28th,
-1913. My dear Mr. Walling, Will you be so good as to call upon me when
-it is possible in order to discuss Margaret’s future attendance. It
-seems kindest to warn you that several parents have suggested that--”
-
-“What is this nonsense?” Olive asked, “What’s the child been doing?”
-
-“Doing? Nothin’! It’s this damned play!”
-
-“You mean that there were women who seriously asked this Miss Thorne
-to have Margot withdrawn because you’d produced a risqué farce? But
-that’s--”
-
-His wrath reached a piteous climax in, “Oh, damn women, anyhow!... Well
-I took her out. My broker could have fixed the thing up. What’s the
-use? Well, I brought her over with me. She’s at the Ritz. What’s the
-best girls’ school in England?”
-
-Olive said, “Oh, I’ll take her,” saw him smile and began to weep.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-Margot
-
-
-Gurdy Bernamer kept his twentieth birthday in a trench. The next week
-his regiment was withdrawn from the line to a dull village where Gurdy
-was taking a warm bath in a zinc tub behind the Mairie when a German
-aeroplane crossed above and lifted his attention from a Red Cross
-copy of “The Brook Kerith” which he read while he soaked. He dropped
-the dialectics of George Moore and watched, then saw the whitewashed
-wall of the yard bend in slowly, its cracks blackening. He spent a
-month in hospital getting the best of the wandering, deep wound that
-began at his right hip and ended in his armpit. He wrote to Mark, “I
-kept trying to remember a quotation from Twain’s Tramp Abroad. ‘Not
-by war’s shock or war’s shaft. Shot with a rock on a raft.’ They dug
-a piece of zinc out of me. I feel fairly well. Mrs. Tilford Arbuthnot
-has the Y. M. C. A. cafeteria in Bordeaux. Her brother was with me at
-Saint Andrew’s. She brings me novels and things. I think she has a
-secret passion for you. She says you were a great actor. My nurse also
-thinks you were. Her name is Zippah Coe and she looks it. She says the
-immorality of French women is too awful for words. She is coming to
-take my temperature.” The temperature displeased the nurse and Gurdy
-passed into a daze. The wet hemlocks beyond the window sometimes turned
-cerise, inexcusably. Pneumonia succeeded his influenza.
-
-Through all this lapse he meditated and drew toward a belief that
-life was a series of meaningless illusions, many painful. He expanded
-“All the world’s a stage.” Suicide wasn’t universal as some of the
-players acquired a thrilling interest in their parts, rose to be
-directors--Wilsons, Northcliffes, Millerands. It was satisfactory to
-know this at twenty. His education was complete in its departments
-passional, athletic and philosophical. Saint Andrew’s school. Two and a
-half years of Yale in smart company. The miscellany of his regiment. He
-must certainly begin maturity as a critic. He lay composing an essay on
-the illusory value of passion in a loop of paradoxes which vanished as
-his pulse improved. Then he was conscious that a surgeon took interest
-in him. Orderlies came from the hospital adjutant inquiring. Gurdy sat
-up, read the papers and accepted five thousand francs in mauve and blue
-bills from a bank agent. It seemed that Mark had run him to earth by
-cabling. Soon he was uniformed again and given orders that assigned him
-to duty in a Paris military bureau. There Gurdy found Mark’s broker,
-decorated as a Major.
-
-“Of course, I got you up here,” said Major Villay. “Why not?”
-
-“But--” With recovery Gurdy had shed some sense of illusions. He stood
-thinking of his regiment rather sourly, rather sadly.
-
-The broker-major grunted, “Rot, Gurdy. You’re all Mark’s got--Son, and
-all that. Dare say Margot’ll marry some Englishman. Anyhow, it’s all
-over. Bulgaria’s on the skids. Mark thinks too much of you.”
-
-Gurdy was subtly pleased. He stood thinking of Mark fondly, with
-annotations in contempt. Mark was nothing but a big blunderer among
-the arts, a man who couldn’t see the strength of Russian drama or
-disillusioned comedy, who didn’t admire Granville Barker’s plays. But
-if Margot stayed in England Gurdy could steer his uncle toward proper
-productions. Mark meant well, very well. He had done some fine things,
-had a feeling for vesture, anyhow.
-
-“I see the Celebrities people have bought the Terriss Pictograph,” said
-Major Villay, “Exchange of stock. Funny. Mark hates the movies so and
-he makes twenty thousand a year out of them. And the movie people gave
-him fifteen thousand for that rotten Gail play. Here, take this stuff
-and translate it. I can probably get you a pass over to London if you
-want to see Margot.”
-
-Gurdy didn’t want to see her. His last view of Margot had been in the
-stress of her removal from Miss Thorne’s school. Mark had gone five
-times to England on visits of a month, reported her beautiful, witty,
-petted by Mrs. Ilden, by Mrs. Ilden’s friends. But he wrote her a
-note dutifully and got an answer in three lines. “Glad you are out of
-the silly mess. Try to run over. Frightfully rushed catching a train
-for Devon. More later.” He was not offended. He thought that Margot
-disliked him as he disliked her. He threw the note into the waste
-basket and went on translating French political comments into English.
-
-The Armistice broke on the third week of this employment. The bureau
-became a negation of labour. Gurdy roamed contentedly about the
-feverish, foolish city with various friends--young officers, sergeant
-majors on agreeable posts. He was tall, still pallid from sunless
-convalescence. His uniform happened to fit a long, loosely moving body
-and he liked dancing. He equably observed male diversion with his
-dark blue eyes and was often diverted. This might be the collapse
-of known society, the beginning of a hygienic and hardworked future.
-This churning of illusions might bring something fresh. Men might
-turn to new programs of stupidity, exhausting the old. He danced and
-was courted. He wrote to Mark, choosing words: “There will be plays
-about this, I suppose. I do not think any one will believe it fifty
-years from now. It is an upheaval of cheap pleasure. I keep thinking
-how Carlson calls people hogs.” He hesitated, continued: “I do not
-know that there is an excuse for all of it. Some of the Americans
-make bigger hogs of themselves than is necessary.” Then he destroyed
-the letter. After all, Mark was your typical patriot. He took America
-seriously, the American soldier seriously, the American Red Cross had
-profited by his sentiment. There was no point in hurting Mark. Gurdy
-wrote a gay tale of driving through Paris in a vegetable cart with a
-drunken Australian colonel and went to dine at Luca’s.
-
-From Luca’s his party retired to the Opera Comique, stopped to drink
-champagne in the bar and stayed there until it wasn’t worth while to
-hear the last act. “And,” said a youth from San Francisco, “we can go
-to Ariana Joyce’s. She’s giving a party.”
-
-“But she’s dead,” Gurdy objected.
-
-“Damn healthy corpse! Come ahead and see if she’s dead!”
-
-They floated in a taxicab along Paris. The machine slipped from the
-lavender rush of some broad street up a slope and Gurdy stumbled into a
-brilliance of laughing people where his guide pushed him toward a green
-dais and hissed, “She won’t know you from Adam. Tell her you’re from
-Chicago.”
-
-Her rounded beauty had come to death under much fat. She lolled in
-a red chair waving a peacock fan. Gurdy’s friend kissed the arm she
-thrust out and told her, “You look awfully well, Miss Joyce.”
-
-The dancer nodded, beaming down at her painted feet in their sandals
-of blue leather. Through her nose she said, “Feelin’ fine,” then in
-throaty refinement, “Do get Choute Aurec to dance. She’s so difficult
-now she’s had a success. So very difficult--Rodin used to say--” Her
-empty and tired stare centred on Gurdy. With a vague dignity she asked,
-“Do I know you?”
-
-“Corporal Bernamer’s from Chicago,” the guide said.
-
-Miss Joyce planted a thumb under her chin and drawled, “De mon pays!”
-then her eyes rolled away. She reached for a silver cup on a table and
-forgot her guests. Looking back, Gurdy saw her famous head thrown back
-and, for a moment, comely as she drank.
-
-“Bakst,” said his friend, jerking a hand about to show the walls of
-grey paint where strange beasts cavorted among spiked trees, above the
-mixed and coloured motion of the crowd. An American was playing ragtime
-at the gold piano, in a clot of women. Choute Aurec was teaching a
-British aviator some new dance. Beyond, a mass of women and officers
-surrounded a lean shape on a divan. They gazed, gaped, craned at the
-young man. His decorations twinkled in the glow. His blue chest stirred
-when he spoke and his teeth flashed. Gurdy’s companion murmured, “They
-say he’s got ten times more sense than most prize-fighters.... I think
-that thin man’s Bernstein--the one with a dinner jacket. You get drinks
-in the next room. Oh, there’s Alixe!”
-
-He ran off. Gurdy slid through the mingling harlots and warriors
-into the next, cooler room, fringed with men drinking champagne. An
-American colonel glared at him over a glass, shifted the glare back to
-a handsome ensign who had penned a blond girl in a corner. Gurdy found
-a tray covered with sandwiches and ate one, pondering. He wondered
-whether the ensign would go on trying to kiss the girl if he knew
-that she had been, last month, on trial for the technical murder of
-an octogenarian general. Well, morals were illusory, too. Some one
-slapped his shoulder. He saw Ian Gail. The playwright was dressed as a
-British captain. “Intelligence,” he said, “I’m too old and adipose for
-anything else. And we shouldn’t be here, should we? A poisonous place.”
-
-“Funny mixture.”
-
-“Pride,” said Gail, “The poor woman can’t stand being neglected so she
-gives these atrocious parties. But it’s nice running into you, old
-son. I’d a letter from Mark yesterday. He told me you were here and I
-was coming to look you up tomorrow in any case. I’m just from London.
-Olive Ilden and Margot are hoping you’ll get leave to come over for
-Christmas. Can’t you?”
-
-“I don’t quite see how I can, sir.”
-
-“But do try. I think you’d cheer Olive up. Margot’s a jolly little
-thing but frightfully busy celebrating the peace. How decent of Mark
-to let her stay with Olive! I fancied he’d take her back to the States
-directly the war began.”
-
-“Submarines,” Gurdy said, “But why does Mrs. Ilden need cheering up,
-sir? She used to be an awfully cheerful sort of person.”
-
-“Oh,” said Gail, “her boy--Bobby.”
-
-“I hadn’t heard he--”
-
-“Fell a year ago. Do try to run over.... How pretty Margot is!”
-
-Gurdy ate another sandwich, correcting champagne. There would be long
-illusions after this war. Grudges, idealized memories of trivial folk.
-But he was sorry for Olive Ilden. He said, “I’ll try to get over.
-I’ll--”
-
-Choute Aurec ran through the doorway, yelped, “Ariane va danser,
-messieurs, dames!” and darted out again.
-
-“What did that incontinent little brute say?” Gail asked.
-
-“I think Miss Joyce is going to dance,” said Gurdy.
-
-“It’s disgusting,” the Englishman snorted, “Some cad always flatters
-her into dancing and the poor woman falls on her face. Don’t go.”
-
-The doorway filled with watchers. Women giggled. Some one played
-slowly the first bars of the Volga Barge song. There was an applausive
-murmur--then a thud. “She’s fallen,” said Gail and suddenly Gurdy
-remembered that this was an American, that he had seen her dance to the
-jammed ecstasy of the Metropolitan. The women in the doorway squealed
-their amusement. The crowd parted and he saw the green gauze wrapping
-her limp body as two Frenchmen carried her back to her throne. The
-crowd applauded, now.
-
-“Swine,” said Gail.
-
-Gurdy summoned up his philosophy and shrugged. The young prize-fighter
-came through the press and snapped to a civilian, “Je me sauve,
-Etienne!”
-
-“Mais--”
-
-“C’est nauséabonde! Elle était artiste, vois tu? Allons; je file!”
-
-“The boy’s right,” said the playwright, “Sickening. Come along.” They
-passed through the beginning of a dance in the great chamber and down
-the stairs into an alley where motors were lined. In a taxicab Gail
-concluded, “End of an artist.”
-
-Gurdy thought this sententious but a queer oppression filled him. It
-was hideous that any one should finish as a butt with a prize-fighter
-for apologist. Of course, life was nothing but a meaningless spectacle.
-Money, something to drink, a dancing floor drew this crowd together.
-The fat dancer was rather funny, if one looked it all over. Mark could
-contrive the whole effect on a stage if he wanted.
-
-“Mark writes that he’s almost decided to build his theatre in West
-Forty Seventh.”
-
-“I wish he’d hurry,” said Gurdy, “He’s been planning the Walling
-for years. Funny. He told Mr. Frohman all about it just before the
-_Lusitania_.”
-
-“Poor Frohman,” the Englishman murmured, “Awfully decent to me.”
-
-There should be a certain decency, a cool restraint in life, the
-philosopher mused. He thought of this next morning when Choute Aurec
-telephoned hopefully for a loan of a thousand francs. By noon he had
-discovered that he was flatly homesick for Mark and thought of Margot
-in London as the nearest familiar creature. The bureau permitted his
-departure. He crossed a still Channel and made his way to London
-in the company of an earnest Red Cross girl from Omaha who wanted
-Fontainebleau turned into a reform school for rescued Parisian street
-walkers. She had a General for uncle and Gurdy feared that she would be
-able to forward her plan to the French government.
-
-“D’you really feel that we’ve any business telling the French what to
-do with their own homes?”
-
-“But Fontainebleau could be made into a real home, Corpril!”
-
-“So could Mount Vernon.”
-
-“It’s too small. Fontainebleau’s so huge. All those rooms.”
-
-“You don’t think that it’s any use just letting it stay beautiful?”
-
-“But it isn’t really beautiful,” the young woman retorted, “It’s so
-much of it Renaissance, you know?”
-
-He was still hating this vacuity when the taxicab left him at Mrs.
-Ilden’s house in Chelsea. The butler told him that “Lady Ilden” was not
-at home and guided him through grey halls to a bedroom. Gurdy washed,
-tried to recall Ilden’s rank in the British navy and the name of
-Olive’s last novel. He strolled downstairs and met Margot in the lower
-hall without knowing it. He saw a slim person in stark yellow reading
-a letter and was startled when the girl said, “Good God, they didn’t
-tell me you’d got here! Come and help me stick this holly about in the
-library.”
-
-She thrust a bowl filled with small sprays of holly into his hands and
-frowned between the wings of her black, bobbed hair. He remembered her
-plump. She was slender. She still wore glittering pumps with silver
-buckles. When she chuckled it was in the former chime. She exclaimed,
-“Of course! Uncle Eddie was born in Norway, wasn’t he?”
-
-“I think dad was born in the steerage, coming over,” Gurdy said.
-
-“You’re not at all American, anyhow,” she announced, “and that’s a
-relief. I’m quite mad about Scandinavians. Only sensible people in
-Europe. Come along. There’s a rehearsal in half a minute and--”
-
-“Rehearsal?”
-
-“Charity show. Barge along. This way.”
-
-He grinned and followed her into the long library where she tossed bits
-of holly to and fro on the shelves. She said, “Cosmo Rand’s rehearsing
-us. Better not tell that to dad. He mightn’t like it.”
-
-“Who’s Cosmo?”
-
-“Cora Boyle’s husband. They’re playing here. Don’t get shocked about
-it.”
-
-“Don’t see anything to get shocked about. So Cora Boyle’s over here
-again? What’s she playing?”
-
-“A silly melodrama. She’s at the Diana. Saw her the other night. She’s
-getting fat. Ought to be a law against fat women wearing old rose.”
-
-“You’ve lost some weight,” Gurdy said.
-
-“Work, old thing, work! Sewing shirts for snipers. Dancing with
-convalescents.--It’s beastly you’ve got so tall. I hate looking up at
-men.”
-
-Gurdy laughed down at her and asked, “When did Mrs. Ilden get to be
-Lady Ilden?”
-
-“Jutland. It’s just the Bath, not a baronetcy. Olive’s at church.”
-
-“I thought she was agnostic?”
-
-Margot said gently, “It takes them that way, rather often. She’s been
-to church a goodish bit ever since Bobby--”
-
-“Oh, yes. Young Ilden was killed.--What sort of person was he?”
-
-“One of the silent, strong Empire builders--but nice about it....
-Olive’s aged, rather.” She planted the last holly spray on the lap
-of a gilt Buddha then smiled at Gurdy across a yellow shoulder, “I’d
-forgotten how blue your eyes are. Almost violet. Goes with your hair.
-Very effective.... Your chin’s still too big.... Oh, a letter from Dad
-this morning. He was thinking of running over. But Carlson’s worse....
-D’you know, it’d be a noble deed to poison Carlson. There he is stuck
-in the house. Why don’t useless people like that dry up and blow away?”
-
-“I don’t think he’s useless,” Gurdy argued, “He makes Mark put on a
-comedy now and then. He swears better than any one I know. And you
-ought to be grateful to him. If Mark hadn’t had him for company you’d
-probably have been hauled home long ago.”
-
-Margot opened a Russian, lead box on a table and lit a cigarette. She
-said, “Don’t think so. Dad’s never made the slightest sign of hauling
-me home. Especially after Mr. Frohman.... Ugh! I almost had nervous
-prostration, when I heard Dad had sailed after the _Lusitania_!” Her
-lids fell and shook the astonishing lashes against the pale brown of
-her cheeks. Then she chuckled, “The joke is, I’d as soon have gone
-home long ago. I’m mad about Olive, of course. And I’ve had all sorts
-of a good time. But I’d rather be home.... How’s your mother?” He
-was answering when the butler barked names from the doorway. Margot
-whispered, “Run. The rehearsal. Go hide in the drawing room. These are
-all bores.”
-
-He passed out through a group of men and girls, encountered a Colonel
-of the British General Staff in the hall and was cordially halted. He
-stood discussing military shoes with this dignitary as Olive Ilden let
-herself into the hall. Gurdy recalled her slim and tall. Now that he
-looked down, she seemed stout, no longer handsome but the deep voice
-remained charming as it rose from her black veils. She led him off into
-the drawing room and said, at once, “Margot’s pretty, isn’t she?”
-
-“Yes. Mark’s been raving about her but I thought--”
-
-“You thought he was idealizing, after his customary manner? He sent me
-a picture of you, so I’m not surprised. Don’t sit in that chair. It’s
-for pygmies.... I want to talk about Margot and it’s likely we won’t
-have another chance. You two don’t write each other letters. Had you
-heard from Mark that she wants to play?”
-
-“Play?”
-
-“Be an actress. I thought I’d better warn you,” Olive laughed, “I
-don’t know when it started. I know Mark wouldn’t like it. Otherwise
-the child’s the delight of my life.” She sank into a couch and asked,
-“Now, what are these diplomatic idiots doing in Paris? I don’t like the
-look of things.”
-
-“Arranging for another war.”
-
-“I do hope they’ll arrange it for twenty years from date. I’ll be past
-sixty then and I won’t care. I’ll be able to sit and grin at the women
-who’re going through what--Only, of course, I shouldn’t grin. I’m a
-true blue Briton of the old breed when it comes to an emotion. I simply
-can’t enjoy an emotion when it’s my emotion.... Had you ever thought
-that that’s why bad plays and cinema rubbish are so popular? It’s the
-unreality of the passions.... I dare say that’s why I’ve just been to
-church.... Perhaps that’s why Margot wants to go on the stage. She’s
-never had an emotion worth shedding a tear for. Well, how’s Mark?”
-
-“Putting on three plays after Christmas and thinks they’re all winners.”
-
-She drew her hands over her eyes and murmured, “Mark’s extraordinary.
-Endless enthusiasm. Like a kiddy with a box of water colours. I suppose
-it’s belief. He really believes in his job.... I once thought he
-needed education.... If he’d been educated, he couldn’t have believed
-so hard.... There has to be something childish to get along in the
-theatre.... If he were worldly wise he’d have known half these plays
-were rubbish and the rest not very good.... But I’m not sure what a
-good play is, Gurdy. Tell me. You’re young, so you should know.”
-
-He flushed, then laughed and asked what play Margot and her friends
-rehearsed. The loud, spaced voices came across the hall. He felt an
-unruly curiosity stir.
-
-“It’s a one act thing of Ronny Dufford’s--Colonel the Honourable Ronald
-Dufford. Quite a pal of Margot’s. That was he talking to you in the
-hall just now--the Brass Hat. What are you laughing at?”
-
-“Wondering what would happen to an American General Staff man if
-he wrote plays.... Dufford? Mark put a thing of his on in nineteen
-sixteen. It failed.”
-
-“His things are rather thin. He’s been nice to Margot, though. He took
-her about when I was in mourning--He’s a good sort. Forty eight or
-so. I dare say he lectured Margot on the greatness of Empire and the
-sacredness of the House of Lords. It didn’t hurt her. She hears enough
-about the sacredness of the plain people, in the studios.”
-
-“I thought you were an anti-imperialist and an anarchist?”
-
-The tired woman laughed, “So I am.... It was tremendous fun being all
-the right things when I was young and anarchists were rather few. I
-expect you’re a cubist and a communist and agnostic and don’t believe
-in marriage. So many of them don’t. Then they get married to prove the
-soundness of their theory and get hurt; then they’re annoyed because
-they’re hurt and get interested in being married. Most amusing to
-watch.... The world’s got past me and I’m frightened by it.--We had
-such a good time railing at the Victorians and repression. And now all
-the clever young things tell their emotions to cab drivers and invent
-emotions if they haven’t any.--All the gestures have changed and I
-feel--You look rather like Mark. You know he was stopping at Winchester
-when he heard Margot’s father’d been killed. I tried to shock him.
-He.... Oh, do go and watch them rehearse, Gurdy!... I’ve just come from
-church.... The music’s made me silly. I don’t know what I’m saying....”
-The artifice smashed into a sob. Gurdy swung and hurried across the
-hall. Certainly, the woman’s illusion of pain was notably real.
-
-He sat smoking on a window seat of the library and tried to follow
-the rehearsal at the other end of the wide room. The men and girls
-strode about talking loudly. A slender man in grey broke the chatter
-from time to time and gave directions in a level, pleasing voice. This
-must be Cosmo Rand, the husband of Cora Boyle. Gurdy looked at him
-with interested scorn but the amateurs took his orders in docile peace
-and only Margot answered him from a deep green chair, “Rot, Cossy! I’m
-supposed to be lost in thought, aren’t I? Then I shan’t look interested
-when Stella giggles. Go on, Stella.”
-
-Gurdy became intent on her posture in the dark chair. She was smoking
-and her hair appeared through the vapour like solid, carved substance.
-She seemed fixed, a black and yellow figure on the green. A vaporous
-halo rose in the lamplight above her head. He stirred when she spoke
-again, shifting, and a silver buckle sent a spark of light flitting
-across the rug. He remembered that she had Italian blood from her
-grandmother. She looked Italian. Mark was right. She was beautiful in
-no common fashion. The other girls vibrating against the shelves were
-mere bodies, gurgling voices.--The butler stole down the room and spoke
-to Cosmo Rand who, in turn, spoke aloud.
-
-“I say, Margot, Cora’s brought the motor around. Might I have her in?
-Chilly and she’s been feeling rather seedy.”
-
-A tall woman in black velvet entered as if this were a stage and
-reposed herself in a chair. Gurdy had never seen Cora Boyle perform.
-She was familiar from pictures when she drew up a veil across an
-obvious beauty of profile and wide eyes. Presently she commenced a
-cigarette and the motion of lighting it was admirably effected. An
-expanding, heavy scent of maltreated tobacco welled from the burning
-roll between her fingers. The line of her brows was prolonged downward
-with paint. The whole mask was tinted to a false and gleaming pallor.
-Grey furs were arranged about the robustness of her upper body. She was
-older than Mark, Gurdy’s father said. She must be passing forty. She
-should be weary of tight slippers. A glance stopped Gurdy’s meditation.
-He looked away at Margot’s effortless stroll along the imagined
-footlights. Cora Boyle spoke to him in a flat and pinched whisper.
-
-“Isn’t your name Bernamer?” He bowed. She came to sit with him on the
-window seat and dusted ash from her cigarette into the Chinese bowl.
-Her eyes explored his face with a civil amusement. “You look awfully
-like your father. You startled me. Let me see.... You and Miss Walling
-live with Mark, don’t you? Sweet, isn’t she? And how is Mark? I’ve
-played over here so long that I’ve rawther lost touch. Mr. Carlson’s
-still alive?”
-
-“Oh, yes. He’s bedridden, you know? Lives with Mark.”
-
-She inhaled smoke, nodding.
-
-“That’s so characteristic of Mark, isn’t it? But of course, Carlson was
-kind to him. The dear old man’s bark was much worse than his bite. Good
-heavens how frightened I was of him! I see that Mark acted in a couple
-of Red Cross shows? I expect that all his old matinée girls turned out
-and cried for joy.... But I do think that Mark was something more than
-a flapper’s dream of heaven. Still, he must like management better.
-He never thought more of acting than that it was a job, did he?” She
-sighed, “One has to think more of it than that to get on.”
-
-Gurdy wished that this woman didn’t embarrass him, resenting her
-perfumed cigarette and the real, frail loveliness of her hands. The
-embarrassment ended. Rand told the amateurs that they weren’t half bad
-and departed with his wife, a trim, boyish figure behind her velvet
-bulk. Colonel Dufford implored the grouped players to learn their
-lines. Margot was much kissed by the other girls, dismissed them and
-came in a sort of dance step to ask Gurdy what he thought of her acting.
-
-“Couldn’t hear you. I had to talk to Miss Boyle. Ugly voice she has.
-Are people really crazy about her here?”
-
-Margot frowned and pursed her lips, tapping a cigarette on a nail.
-“Oh, she has a following. They don’t dither about her as they do over
-Elsie whatsername and some of the other Americans. Dull, isn’t she?”
-
-“Very. She made a point of talking about Mark.--Lady Ilden’s all broken
-up, isn’t she?”
-
-“She’s too repressed,” Margot explained. “Tried not to show it when
-Bobby fell and so she’s been showing it ever since. And Sir John’s been
-at sea constantly and that’s a strain. He’s in Paris, now.--You don’t
-show your feelings at all, do you? I was watching you talk to the Boyle
-and you beamed very nicely. And you must have been bored. One of those
-rather sticky women. Come and play pool. There’s an American table.”
-
-He played pool and stolidly listened to her ripple of comments. She
-had a natural disrespect for the American army that flashed up. “The
-men did all they could, I dare say, but, my God, Gurdy, what thugs the
-officers were! Some of them turned up at a garden party where the King
-dropped in and he went to speak to one. The thing was cleaning its
-nails in a corner and it shook hands with its pocket knife in the other
-hand. I fainted and Ronny Dufford lugged me home in a taxi. I say, do
-let me have St. Ledger Grant do a pastel of you. Dad would love it and
-St. Ledger needs ten pounds as badly as any one in Cheyne Walk.”
-
-“Who’s Sillijer?”
-
-“Artist. Poor bloke who got patriotic and lost a leg in the Dardanelles
-mess. Serve him right and so on but he’s ghastly poor.”
-
-“You a pacifist?”
-
-“Rather!”
-
-“That’s why you like the Scandinavians? Because they stayed out?”
-
-“Right. I forgive you though because you’re young and simple and your
-legs are rather jolly in those things.” She twisted her head to stare
-at his leggings and the black hair rose, settled back into its carved
-composure below the strong, shaded lamp. The clear red of her lips
-parted as she laughed, “Not a blush? Made the world safe for democracy
-and aren’t proud of it? How did your friends get through? That rather
-sweet lad who used to come to lunch when you were at school? Lacy--?”
-
-“Lacy Martin. Lost a leg.”
-
-She frowned. “Doesn’t matter so much for a chap like that with billions
-but--the artists. I must have St. Ledger do you. We’ll go there
-tomorrow. I had Cosmo--Rand have himself done.”
-
-Gurdy made a shot and said, “Rand’s a much prettier subject than I’d
-be.”
-
-“Don’t get coy, my lad! You’re rather imposing and you know it.--Like
-to meet Gilbert Chesterton? You used to read his junk. I can have you
-taken there. Never met him, myself.”
-
-“No thanks.--What’s that bell?”
-
-“Dress for dinner. You can’t. I must.--I say, you’re altogether
-different from what I thought you’d be.”
-
-“What did you think?”
-
-“I couldn’t possibly tell you but I’m damned glad you’re not. The
-butler can make cocktails. Dad taught him in nineteen seventeen.”
-
-The butler brought him an evil mixture. Gurdy emptied it into the
-fireplace and leaned on the pool table wondering what Margot had
-expected. It didn’t matter, of course. Yet she might recall him as a
-sixteen year old schoolboy much absorbed in polevaults and stiff with
-conceit for some acquirements in English letters. How people changed
-and how foolish it was to be surprised at change! Sophomoric. Mark
-really knew a pretty woman when he saw one. A man of genuine taste
-outside the selection of plays.--She must know London expertly. She
-must have a sense of spectacle. She must meet all conditions with this
-liberal, successful woman as a guide. If she wanted a pastel made for
-Mark she should have it. Gurdy dusted chalk from his leggings, evenly
-taped about the long strength of his calves, strolled into the drawing
-room and played the languid movement of the Faun’s Afternoon. Illusory
-or not there was always beauty in the blended exterior of things. A
-man should turn from the inner crassness to soothe himself with the
-fair investiture, with the drift of delicate motions that went in
-colour and music.--Olive thought him like Mark as she came in. She was
-worried because Gail had written of meeting the boy on Montmartre.
-
-“You’ve been enjoying Paris?”
-
-“More or less. It’s a holy show, just now. I don’t suppose the
-barkeepers--and other parasites--will ever have such a chance again.”
-
-“I hope you’ve not been in too much mischief. Ian Gail wrote me that he
-met you in some horrid hole or other.”
-
-“A party at Ariana Joyce’s. I wasn’t doing any more harm there than the
-rest of the Allied armies. But it was pretty odious.” The memory jarred
-into the present satisfaction. He halted his long fingers on the keys
-and Margot came rustling in, her gown of sheer black muslin painted
-with yellow flowers and gold combs in her hair.
-
-“Were you playing L’Après Midi?--And he’s only twenty, Olive! Most
-Americans don’t rise to respectable music until they’ve lost all their
-money and have to come and live over here. Any nails in your shoes,
-Gurdy? We’re going to a dance.”
-
-“Where?” asked Olive.
-
-“Something for war widows at Mrs. Rossiter-Rossiter-Rossiter’s--that
-fat woman from Victoria. I promised some one or other I’d come. We’ll
-go in time for supper.”
-
-The charity dance seemed less fevered than dances in Paris. There were
-ranks of matrons about the walls of a dull, long room. At midnight
-Margot rescued him from a girl who was using him as an introduction to
-American economics and found a single table in the supper hall. Here
-the batter of ill played ragtime was endurable and the supping folk
-entertained him.
-
-“The country’s so ghastly with houses shut and no servants that most
-people have stuck to town,” Margot said, refusing wine. “Lot of
-eminences here. Who’re you looking at?”
-
-“The dark girl in pink. She’s familiar.”
-
-“She should be. She has a press agent in New York. Lady Selene Tucker.
-She’s going to marry that man who looks like a Lewis Baumer picture in
-Punch as soon as every one’s in town again and she can get Westminster
-Abbey and he can get his mother shipped to New Zealand, or somewhere.
-His mother will drink too much and then tell lies about Queen Victoria.
-She’s rather quaint. She sues for libel every time any one writes a
-novel with a dissolute peeress in it. Frightfully self-conscious. Don’t
-people who insist on telling you how depraved they are make you rather
-ill? They always seem to think they’ve made such a good job of it. And
-I could think of much worse things to do.--How nice your hair is! Like
-Uncle Eddie’s.”
-
-“Thanks. Who’s the skinny woman with the pearls?”
-
-Margot put aside the palm branch that shadowed her chin and frowned.
-“It looks like my namesake, Mrs. Asquith, from this angle.--No, it’s
-Lady Flint. Oh, look at the big brute in mauve. Lovely, isn’t she?”
-
-He looked at the shapely, fair woman without interest. The round of
-Margot’s forearm took his eyes back.
-
-“Lovely? Why?”
-
-“So glad you don’t think so. One gets so sick of hearing women gurgled
-about as wonders. I think it was Salisbury who said she was the most
-beautiful woman alive. And she goes right on, you know? Once you get
-fixed here as frightfully beautiful or witty you can die of old age
-before they stop saying so. Such a fraud! It’s just what dad says about
-all the managers and stars in New York being myths. All those legends
-about his being a woman hater and--who’s the man who’s supposed to
-never hire a chorus girl until he’s seen her au naturel? Such piffle!”
-
-“But they like being myths,” Gurdy laughed.
-
-“Oh, every one does, of course. Some one started a yarn about me--don’t
-tell dad this--that I was the daughter of some frightfully rich
-American banker and that my mother was a Spanish dancer. Olive was wild
-with rage. But it was rather fun.--I say, I’m sick of this, Gurdy. Do
-make dad order me home.” She lit a cigarette, let her lashes drop and
-ignored a man who bowed, passing. Gurdy thought this was Cosmo Rand
-and said so. Margot shrugged. “He rehearses us every day. Decent sort.
-People like him.--But do make dad have me come home.”
-
-Gurdy pondered. Mark now knew a few gentlewomen, the wives of authors
-and critics. He had mannerly friends outside the theatre, had drilled
-smart war theatricals. The girl could move beyond this wedge of
-certainty wherever she chose. But Gurdy said, “You might not like New
-York.”
-
-“But I want to see it! It’s hardly pleasant seeing dad about once every
-year for two weeks or so. I happen to love him. You mean I shan’t be
-recognized as a human being by the fat ladies in the Social Register?
-That’ll hardly break my heart, you know? The world is so full of a
-number--Is that God save the--”
-
-The supping people rose in a vast puff of smoke from abandoned
-cigarettes. Officers stiffened. The outer orchestra jangled the old
-tune badly. The sleek gowns showed a ripple of bending knees. The
-prince went nodding down the room toward an inner door with a tiny
-clink of bright spurs as his staff followed him.
-
-“They say he’s going to the States. I should like to be there to see
-the women make fools of themselves. And Grandfather’ll be so furious
-because every one’ll talk about a damned Britisher.--Finish your
-coffee. I want to dance again.”
-
-She danced with a smooth, lazy rhythm and Gurdy felt a brusque jealousy
-of all the men who danced with her, after him. He was angry because
-he so soon liked her, against reason. It was folly to let himself
-be netted by a girl who showed no signs of courting him. He watched
-her spin, her black skirt spreading, with Cosmo Rand. The man danced
-gracefully, without swagger. He might be amusing, like many actors.
-Gurdy pulled his philosophy together and talked about Mark’s plan of
-the Walling Theatre while they drove home.
-
-“Dad’s wanted a shop of his own so long,” she sighed, “And it’ll be
-quite charming. He does understand colours! Wish he wouldn’t wear black
-all the time.... I always feel fearfully moral at two in the morning.
-I’m going to lecture you.”
-
-“What about?”
-
-“You’re so damned chilly. You always were, of course. Don’t you like
-anything?”
-
-They came to the Ilden house before he could answer and Margot didn’t
-repeat the question all the week he stayed in London. They were
-seldom alone. Lady Ilden seemed to want the girl near her. There
-were incessant callers. Men plainly flocked after the dark girl. Her
-frankness added something to the wearisome chaff of teatime and theatre
-parties, to the dazing slang of the young officers. Gurdy speculated
-from corners, edged in at random dances. But his blood had caught a
-fresh pulsation. He felt a trail of mockery in the artifice of Lady
-Ilden’s talk as if the tired woman observed him falling into love and
-found it humorous. She said once, “I was afraid you’d grown up too
-fast. And you’ve not,” but he let the chance of an argument slide by
-his preoccupation with the visible flutter of Margot’s hands pinning a
-tear in her yellow frock. His resistance weakened although he hunted
-repugnances, tried to shiver when the girl swore.
-
-“Profanity’s a sign of poor imagination,” he told her.
-
-“The hell you say,” said Margot. “Haven’t turned out on the heavy
-side, have you, Gurdy? I bar serious souls. War shaken you to the
-foundations? Cheeryo! You’ll get over it.” And she walked upstairs
-singing,
-
- “There ayn’t a goin’ to be no wa-ah,
- Now we’ve got a king like good King Hedward,
- There ayn’t a goin’ to be no wa-ah.
- ’E ’ates that sort of fing,
- Muvvers, don’t worry,
- Now we’ve got a king like Hedward,
- Peace wiv ’onor is ’is motter,
- So, God sive the king!”
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-Gurdy
-
-
-In mid March the lease of the ground in West 47th Street was brought to
-Mark’s office. He signed it and gave the attorney his check. A wrecking
-company was busy with the destruction of the cheap hotel that stood
-where the Walling Theatre would stand complete in November. The notary
-and witnesses withdrew. Mark sat drumming his fingers on his desk,
-trying to rejoice. Irritations worked in him; Carlson would be the only
-audience of his joy; the ground was bought with money made too largely
-in moving pictures. He was so close upon the fact grown from his dream
-that it frightened him. The Walling was real, at last. He should bubble
-with pleasure and couldn’t. He sighed and strolled over to West 45th
-Street where he watched the final act of “Redemption” for the sake of
-the dive scene, got his usual happy shudder from this massed, intricate
-shadow and the faces suddenly projected into the vicious light. He must
-have such scenes at the Walling. He must find somewhere a play made of
-scenes, many and diverse, changing from splendour to dark vaults. Why,
-this was the secret of the abominable movies! They jerked an audience
-out of one tedious place into a dozen. He walked toward Fifth Avenue,
-thinking, roused because the streets seemed more speckled with olive
-cloth. Some transport had disgorged soldiers freshly into the city
-tired of gaping at them. Mark enjoyed their tan in the crowded pace of
-Fifth Avenue where women showed powder as moist paste on their cheeks
-in a warmth like that of May. A motion picture star detained him at
-a crossing and haughtily leaned from her red, low car demanding the
-rights of a play for her company. Mark couldn’t follow the permutations
-of these women. She had been a chorus girl one met at suppers. Now she
-was superb in her vulgar furs with a handsome young Jew beside her and
-a wolfish dog chained on the flying seat. Mark got himself away and
-came home to the panelled library where Carlson was stretched under
-three quilts on his wheeled chair gossiping with an old comedian about
-the merits of Ada Rehan. Soon the elderly caller left. Mark took his
-chair by Carlson and wondered what he would do if his patron died
-before Gurdy got back. Carlson couldn’t last much longer, the doctors
-said, but his mind was active. He yapped, “I’ve got a hunch, sonny.”
-
-“Go on.”
-
-“You’re goin’ to see Gurdy pretty dam’ quick. I had a nap before
-Ferguson came in. Dreamed about the kid.”
-
-“He’d have cabled if he’d sailed,” Mark said, “No, he’s still stuck
-in the mud at Saint Nazaire. By God, it’s enough to make a man vomit,
-reading about those damned embarkation camps! And he ain’t an officer.
-They say the enlisted men don’t even get enough to eat!” He suddenly
-fumed.
-
-“Well, don’t cry about it, you big calf,” said Carlson, “Honest to
-God, I never saw a feller that can cry like you do! You cried like a
-hose-pipe when the kid got shot--and from all I hear it wasn’t nothin’
-but a scratch on his belly. And I used to spend hours trying to teach
-you to shed one tear when you was actin’! You was the punkest matiny
-idol ever drew breath of life!”
-
-Mark chuckled, “I suppose I was,” then a hand slid down over his
-shoulder and an olive cuff followed it. Mark’s heart jumped. He dropped
-his head back against Gurdy’s side and began to weep idiotically as he
-had sworn to himself that he wouldn’t. Old Carlson surveyed the end of
-the trick delightedly. He privately cursed Gurdy for standing still and
-pale when it was clearly the right thing to make a fuss. The cub was
-too cool.
-
-“Son, son,” said Mark.
-
-Gurdy hoped that the man would not repeat that illogical word in his
-husky, drumming voice. The repetition brought the illusion of joy too
-close. He chewed his lip and wriggled, gave in and stooped over Mark.
-He got out, “Here, I’ve not had any lunch, Mark,” and that turned Mark
-into mad action, sent him racing downstairs to find the butler.
-
-“Why the hell didn’t you kiss him?” Carlson snarled.
-
-“I’m twenty--”
-
-“You’re a hog,” the old man meditated. His eyes twinkled. He sneered,
-“Well, wipe your eyes. Here’s a handkerchief if you ain’t got one.”
-He relished the boy’s blush, watched him blink and went on, “Now,
-don’t tell Mark about all the women you ruined, neither. He prob’ly
-thinks you been a saint. And don’t go spillin’ any of this talk about
-goin’ to work on your own like some of these whelps do. Mark’s got a
-three thousand dollar car comin’ for you and he’s goin’ to pay you
-a hundred a week to set in the office and look wise. And don’t tell
-him you didn’t win the war, too. He knows you did. Christ, it was bad
-enough when I’d got to listen to how Margot was runnin’ the Red Cross
-in London! After you went off I come pretty near callin’ up the express
-company and havin’ myself shipped to Stockholm! The big calf! Chewin’
-the paint off the walls every time he heard there’d been fightin’!
-Sentymental lunatic! Your papa and mamma’ve got three times more sense
-about you. Get out of here. I got to make up sleep.” He shut his eyes.
-Two tears ran and were lost in the sharp wrinkles of his face. Gurdy
-gulped and walked downstairs, abashed by the sheer weight of idolatry.
-
-Mark was twisting the cork out of a champagne bottle in the dining
-room. At once he said, “They’ll have some eggs up right away, sonny.”
-
-“My God but you’re thin, Mark!”
-
-“No exercise. Haven’t had time to play golf. Now, we’d better get the
-car and run down to Fayettes--”
-
-“I talked to mother from Camp Merritt. Be in Camp Dix tomorrow. I’ll
-see them there. They can motor over. Only twelve miles. Heard from
-Margot lately?”
-
-His uncle beamed saying, “Says she wants to come home, son. I’ve got to
-talk to you about that. What d’you think?”
-
-Gurdy said quickly, “Let her come, Mark. The fact is, I think she’s
-bored. You haven’t seen her since last year? She’s got a gang of men
-trailing after her and she isn’t a flirt. Chelsea’s full of bright
-young painters and things. They all come and camp on the doormat.
-Lady Ilden’s a sort of fairy godmother, of course.” He lapsed into a
-sudden state of mind about Margot, fondling his glass of champagne.
-Untrimmed discourse on women had amused his first days in the army.
-But the week’s return in the jammed transport had sickened him with
-the stuffy talk of prospective and retrospective desire. It had been
-musky, stifling. He wondered how women, if they guessed, would value
-that broad commentary. And how men lied about women! The precisian was
-annoyed to a snort and Mark filled his glass again, smiling.
-
-Of course, having seen her, the boy wanted Margot home. Mark said, “She
-wrote me you’d turned out better looking than she thought. Knew she’d
-think so. And Olive was pleased to death with you, of course. How’s
-your side feel?--My God, what are those fools doing to the eggs!”
-
-He rushed into the pantry. Rank pleasure swelled in Gurdy. There was no
-use doing anything with the incurable, proud man who drove him back to
-Camp Merritt at dusk with two bottles of champagne hidden in his motor
-coat, invited confessions and beamed constantly.
-
-“Only don’t act like you’d ever kissed a woman in front of your mother,
-son. Country folks. Shock her to death. You any taller? I’ll call up
-Sanford about some clothes for you. Good night, sonny. You go straight
-to the farm when you’re discharged. I’ll be down Sunday.”
-
-An illusion of happiness beset Gurdy. He stood in the green street of
-the half empty camp staring after the motor, the wine bottles wrapped
-in paper under his arm. It was astonishing how foolish Mark was, to
-be sure. But wine or emotion warmed the chill air about Gurdy like
-the pour of a hot shower. If Mark wanted to be an ass over him, it
-couldn’t be helped. He kept thinking of his foolish worshipper in the
-transfer to the sandy discomfort of Camp Dix. There the Bernamers
-appeared in a large motor with grandfather Walling furred and mittened
-in the back seat. The illusion of happiness deepened into a sensuous
-bath, although his mother had contracted more fat and his sisters were
-too brawny for real charm. Gurdy struggled for righteous detachment
-while his brothers candidly goggled their admiration and his father
-examined the purple scar that passed dramatically up Gurdy’s milky
-skin. He found himself blinking and got drunk on the second bottle of
-champagne when his family left. But it seemed wiser to surrender to the
-flood of affectionate nonsense for a time. It was even convenient that
-Mark should send a tailor down to Fayettesville with clothes rapidly
-confected. On Sunday Mark arrived with a small car lettered G.B. in
-blue on its panel.
-
-“Just the blue Gurdy’s eyes are,” Mrs. Bernamer drawled.
-
-Gurdy understood that maternal feeling was a rather shocking symbol
-on the charts of analysts and that Mark probably doted on him for
-some trivial resemblance unconsciously held and engrossed. But it was
-pleasant, being a symbol. He drove Mark down into Trenton and talked of
-Margot while they drank bad American Benedictine in a seedy hotel.
-
-“I don’t know whether she’s very clever or simply sensible,” he said,
-achieving detachment by way of Benedictine. “Anyhow, most cleverness
-is just common sense--perception.” His eyes darkened. Mark thought in
-lush comfort that Gurdy would marry the girl. Gurdy had friends among
-the right sort of people. Poor Carlson would die pretty soon. Gurdy and
-Margot would live at the house, which were best adorned freshly. The
-Benedictine gave out. They drove into the twisted lanes behind Trenton
-and Gurdy talked levelly of France. “Damned humiliating to get laid
-out by a hunk of zinc off a bathtub. Margot joshed me about it....
-Paris was perfectly astonishing! American privates giving parties for
-British admirals and stealing their women.--I ran into a Y. M. C. A.
-girl who wanted to have Fontainebleau made into a reform school. Margot
-says she found one that wanted to have George turn Windsor Castle into
-a hospital for the A. E. F.... You mustn’t mind Margot swearing. All
-the flappers seem to.--Oh, I met Cora Boyle.”
-
-“How’s she looking?”
-
-“Handsome.” Gurdy thought for a second and then inquired. “What did
-you--”
-
-Mark comprehended the stop. He said, “She was the first woman ever took
-any notice of me.--Why, I suppose she was a kind of ideal. I mean, I
-liked that kind of looks. Lord knows what she married me for. Wonder,
-is that Rand kid still married to her? Is? I guess she’s settled down
-in London for keeps. Well, I want you to look at the plans of the
-Walling, son. They’ve made me a model. Tell me if you see anything
-wrong.”
-
-He simmered with joy when Gurdy approved the whole plan except the
-shape of the boxes. The boy ran back and forth between Fayettesville
-and the city in his car, asked seemly young men to dine in Fifty Fifth
-Street, read plays and wandered with Mark to costumers. People stared
-at him in the restaurants where Mark took him to lunch. His tranquil
-height and his ease drew glances. His intolerant comments on the motley
-of opening nights made Mark choke. Sometimes, though, Mark found the
-boy’s eyes turned on him with surprise.
-
-“You seem to hang out in Greenwich village a lot, Mark.”
-
-“I kind of like it. Don’t understand some of the talk. The show
-business is changing, sonny. It’s changed a lot since nineteen
-fourteen. If you’d told me five years back that a piece like Redemption
-could have a run I’d have laughed my head off. Or that you could mount
-a play like Jones has fixed up this thing at the Plymouth--all low
-lights and--what d’you call it?--impressionist scenery.... The game’s
-changed.--Oh, the big money makers’ll always be hogwash, Gurdy! Don’t
-bet any other way. I ain’t such a fool as to think that Heaven’s opened
-because you can put on a piece with a sad ending and some--well,
-philosophy to it and have it make a little cash. No such luck. Only
-it’s got so now that when some big, fat wench in a lot of duds starts
-throwin’ his pearls back at the man that’s keepin’ her in the third
-act--why, there’s a lot of folks out front that say, Oh, hell, and go
-home. Of course, there’s a lot more that think it’s slick.--Lord, I’d
-like to put on ‘Measure for Measure’ when we open the Walling!--You
-could make that look like something.--I’ve got to find something _good_
-to open with. This kid Steve O’Mara’s sending me up a play about a thug
-that gets wrecked down in Cuba and steals a plantation. Ten scenes
-to it, he says. One of ’em’s a lot of niggers havin’ a Voodoo party.
-Sounds fine. I picked _him_ up down in Greenwich village.”
-
-“I should think all those half married ladies and near anarchists would
-shock you to death.”
-
-“Bosh, brother. I don’t like ’em enough to get shocked at ’em. What’s
-there to get shocked at? They think so and so and I think the other
-way. If you took to preaching dynamite I’d be pretty worried--like I
-would if your mamma bobbed her hair and ran off with a tenor. I’m not
-an old maid just because I’m in the show business.” He lit a cigarette
-and added. “Fifty per cent of theatrical managers are old maids.”
-
-“Just what do you mean?”
-
-“Why, they are. This way. They get used to a run of plots and they
-can’t see outside that. For instance, here’s a dramatist--forgotten his
-name--was trying to sell a piece last year. I couldn’t use it but I
-thought it was pretty good so I sent him over to Loeffler with a note.
-Next day, Loeffler called me up and said I ought to be hung for the
-sake of public morals. This play knocked round the offices and every
-one thought it was awful. Why? The hero’s a chauffeur that’s tired of
-working, so he marries a rich old woman. It’s something that happens
-every other day in the papers. There ain’t a week that some fifty year
-old actress doesn’t marry a kid step dancer but they all carried on as
-if this fellow’d written a play where every one came on the stage stark
-naked and danced the hoochy coochee. It wasn’t a nice idea but where’s
-it worse than nine tenths these bedroom things or as bad?”
-
-“Why wouldn’t you use it, Mark?”
-
-“Oh, hell, there wasn’t but one scene and that was an interior!”
-
-Gurdy asked, “Mark, wouldn’t you like it if the playwrights would go
-back to the Elizabethan idea--I mean thirty or forty scenes to a play?”
-
-“Certainly,” said Mark, “and those bucks were right.” He sat for a
-little silent, scrawling his desk blotter with a pencil, then shyly
-laughed, “Supposing some one made a play out of my married life? What
-you’d call the important episodes happened all over God’s earth. Cora
-got me on a farm in Fayettesville, N. J., married in Hoboken. Started
-quarreling in Martin’s café. Caught her kissing a fellow at Longbranch.
-Never saw him before or since. Owned up she’d lived with three or four
-men in our flat--twentieth Street, New York. Big scene. God, how sick
-that made me! I was at tea at Mrs. LeMoyne’s when Frank Worthing got me
-off in a corner and told me about her and Jarvis Hope. I was sittin’
-in the bath tub when she chucked her curling irons at me and said she
-was through. That’s the way things go. Shakespeare was right. Crazy?
-No.--Come in.” His secretary brought Mark a thick manuscript lettered
-“Captain Salvador: Stephen O’Mara.” and withdrew. Mark went on, “But my
-married life wouldn’t make much of a show--green kid from the country
-and a--a Cora Boyle. Pretty ordinary.” He reflected, “But I don’t
-know. It’s always going to be pretty tragic for a kid to find out he’s
-married a girl thinkin’ she was pure--as pure as folks are, anyhow--and
-finds she hadn’t been. Wasn’t her fault, of course. Started acting when
-she was fourteen. Awful jolt, though. She lied about it, too. She was
-the damnedest liar! I hate liars. Well run along and play squash or
-something, sonny. I want to see what O’Mara’s handed me.”
-
-He bought the rights to “Captain Salvador” two hours later. Gurdy was
-willing to rejoice with him after he read the Cuban tragedy. Carlson
-yapped, “The women’ll hate it, Mark. Where’s your clothes?”
-
-“Bosh,” said Mark, “there weren’t any women’s clothes in Ervine’s ‘John
-Ferguson’ and the women ate it alive!”
-
-“But that fellow Ervine’s an Englishman, you big calf! You ain’t going
-to open the Walling with a sad piece by an American where there ain’t
-any duds for the women to gawp at! You’re off your head. Ain’t I told
-you a million times that the New York woman won’t swallow a home grown
-show that’s tragic unless it’s all dressed up? Stop him, Gurdy!”
-
-“It’s a damned good play, sir,” said Gurdy.
-
-He thought it high fortune that Mark should find anything so adroit
-and moving for the Walling’s first play. Some of the critics believed
-in O’Mara’s talent. Several artists in scenery were asked to submit
-designs. The pressmen began a scattering campaign of notes on O’Mara
-and hints about the play. A procession of comely young women declined
-the best female part as “unsympathetic.”
-
-“That means no clothes to it,” Carlson sniffed.
-
-“But they’re fools,” Gurdy insisted, “It’s a good acting part.”
-
-“My God,” the old man screamed, “don’t you know that no woman wants
-a part where she can’t show her shape off and wear pearls! And these
-hens that got looks don’t have to act any more. They go to California
-and get in the movies. You talk like actresses were human beings! Women
-don’t act unless they ain’t good lookin’ or’ve got brains. You’ll have
-to go a long ways if you want a good lookin’ wench for that part. God,
-you keep talkin’ like actin’ was some kind of an art! It ain’t. It’s a
-game for grown up kids that they get paid for. An actor that’s got any
-brains never gets to be more’n some one smart in comedy. A tragedian’s
-nothin’ but a hunk of mush inside his head. Catch a girl that’ll act
-tragical when she can sit on a sofa in a Paris gown and have some
-goop make eyes at her!--And Mark’ll have a fine time at rehearsals
-makin’ any leadin’ man wear a stubble beard and eat with his knife,
-like in this play. Art!” and the old man fell asleep snorting. Yet his
-bedroom behind the panelled library was dotted with photographs of dead
-actors and actresses. Sometimes his dry voice trailed into a sort of
-tenderness when he spoke of James Lewis or Augustin Daly.
-
-“Softhearted as an egg,” said Mark, hesitated and resumed, “He’s got
-fifty thousand apiece for you and Margot in his will, sonny. Rest of it
-goes to his sister’s children in Sweden.--What’s this you were saying
-about running out to Chicago?”
-
-“I’d rather like to. Lacy Martin--remember him? I roomed with him
-freshman year at college--Lacy lost his leg in France. He’s rather
-blue. His mother wrote me that she’d like me to come out. I thought I
-would.”
-
-“Well.--I thought I’d surprise you with it. Got a cable from Olive
-Ilden Thursday. Margot sailed Friday. Ought to land day after
-tomorrow.” He saw the orange level of Gurdy’s cocktail flicker. Then
-the boy set it down and brooded. Mark made his face stolid to watch
-this. The butler served fish and retired without noise to his pantry.
-The tapestry of Chinese flowers behind Gurdy’s chair stirred in the
-May wind. The boy was immobile, fair and trim in his chair. He seemed
-strangely handsome--a long, easy lounging gentleman who hated sharp
-emotions.
-
-“Really think I’d better go out to Lake Forest, Mark. I more or less
-promised I would. I shan’t be gone more than a--couple of weeks.”
-
-Triumph dragged a chuckle from Mark. He covered it with, “Oh, sure!
-If Lacy’s got the blues, run ahead out and cheer him up.” The boy was
-in full flight from love, of course, and didn’t want to admit it.
-Mark doted on him, drawled, “Got all the money you’ll need?” and was
-pleased by Gurdy’s confession that he needed a good deal. He gave
-the boy errands about Chicago to aid the retreat. “There’s a girl
-named Marryatt playing at the La Salle. Some of them think she’s got
-distinction. And poke around and see if you can rake up a scenery man.
-Take the directions for Captain Salvador along. If you find any one
-that ain’t just copying Bobby Jones or Gordon Craig make him send me
-sketches. And there’s this poet on a newspaper--he’s named something
-like Sandwich--no, Sanbridge. See if he’s got a play up his sleeve.
-O’Mara was talking about him.”
-
-He saw Gurdy off for Chicago, the next noon, then set about making
-lists of successive luncheons for Margot. This return must be an
-ample revenge for her waygoing. She wasn’t, now, the small girl whose
-presence in Miss Thorne’s school had frightened matrons. She was some
-one protected by his celebrity and trained by Olive Ilden. He must
-contrive her content until she married Gurdy. She was democratic--Olive
-had seen to that. Mark had watched her chaff a knot of convalescent
-soldiers in Hyde Park. She wouldn’t care that one of his best friends
-had risen toward management from the rank of a burlesque dancer, that
-another had been an undertaker in Ohio. She wouldn’t mind things like
-that. He marshalled the cleverest of the critics and the young women
-who dealt in publicity. Gurdy would bring proper men to call, when he
-came back from his flight. The expanse of her future opened like an
-unfurling robe of exquisite colours. She strolled in Mark’s mind most
-visibly. He hummed, inspecting his house.
-
-“Yes,” Carlson sneered, “she’s been footloose amongst a pack of dukes
-and things and you think she’s going to like bein’ mixed up with a lot
-of--”
-
-“She won’t mind,” said Mark.
-
-She seemed to mind nothing. She landed on the twentieth of that cool
-May, kissed Mark on the nose and told him she had three cases of
-champagne in the hold. The customs inspectors were dazzled stumbling
-among her trunks. A file of other voyagers came to shake hands. A great
-hostess kissed the girl, smiled at Mark and said gently that she hoped
-Mr. Walling would bring Margot to luncheon next fall.
-
-“She’s quite nice,” Margot assured him in the motor, “She probably kept
-your photograph with a bunch of violets in a jar in front of it when
-you were a matinée--Oh, how you hate that word! How nice your nose is!
-Where on earth’s Gurdy?--Lake Forest? Oh, that’s where all the Chicago
-pig kings live, isn’t it? They have chateaux and moats and exclude--But
-it’s rather rotten he isn’t here. I’ve a couple of awful French novels
-for him. He speaks such rather remarkable French. I can’t make the
-right J sounds. He’s such a stately animal. I was awfully frightened of
-him in London. Such a ghastly crossing!”
-
-“Why, honey?”
-
-She stared at him with wide black eyes and said more slowly, “How
-nicely you say things like that.--You’re really awfully glad I’m back,
-aren’t you?”
-
-Mark choked, “Here’s Times Square.”
-
-She shrugged and leaned back on the blue cushions. “Horrible! But the
-theatre district in London’s worse, really. The Walling’ll be on a side
-street, won’t it? I’d loathe seeing Walling in electric bulbs along
-here. Be rather as though you were running about naked. Did I write you
-about Ronny Dufford’s new play? Been a most tremendous success. You
-should bring it over. That’s the Astor, isn’t it? What colour’s the
-Walling to be inside? Blue? Rather dark blue? And swear to me that you
-won’t have Russian decorations!”
-
-“I swear, daughter.”
-
-“You old saint,” said Margot, “and you’re still the best looking man in
-the known world!”
-
-Her lips had a curious, untinted brilliance as though the blood might
-burst from them. Dizzy Mark told himself that she wasn’t the most
-beautiful of women. Her brown face was like his face and her father’s
-face, too flat. Her hands weren’t small, either, but she wore no rings.
-Her gown was dark and her tam o’shanter of black velvet was inseparable
-from her hair in the mist of his eyes. Silver buckles swayed and
-twinkled when her gleaming feet moved about his house and she smiled in
-a veil of cigarette smoke.
-
-“You’ve simply natural good taste, dad. Born, not made. Don’t think I’m
-keen on that Venice glass in the dining room. Too heavy. Where does
-Gurdy sleep?--I snore, you know?”
-
-“I don’t believe it. He sleeps on the top floor where the old playroom
-was.”
-
-She threw her head back to laugh and said, “Where he used to make such
-sickening noises on the piano when he thought you were petting me too
-much? He’s a dear. It wouldn’t be eugenics for me to marry him, would
-it?”
-
-“See that, Mark?” Carlson squealed, “She ain’t been ten minutes in the
-country and she’s huntin’ a husband? That’s gratitude!”
-
-“Oh, you,” said Margot, spinning on a heel, “If you were ninety seven
-years younger I’d marry you myself.”
-
-She teased the old man relentlessly. She teased Mark before his guests
-at the first luncheon. Her variations appalled the man. She seemed
-to know all the printable gossip of New York. She spoke to older
-women with a charming patience, played absurd English songs to amuse
-Mark’s pet critic and got the smallest of the managers in a loud good
-temper by agreeing with his debatable views on stage lighting. Most
-of these, his friends, had forgotten that she was Mark’s niece. Their
-compliments were made as on a daughter. He felt the swift spread of a
-ripple; editors of fashion monthlies telephoned to ask for photographs;
-the chief of a Sunday supplement wanted her views on the American Red
-Cross; a portrait painter came calling.
-
-“Silly ass,” said Margot, “I met him in Devonshire. I hate being
-painted. You’ve never had a portrait done? Dreary. One has to sit and
-smirk.” She went fluttering a yellow frock up the library to find an
-ash tray, came back smoking a cigarette, neared Mark’s chair then
-veered off to pat Carlson’s jaw.
-
-“You used to set like a kitchen stove in one spot for an hour at a
-time,” Carlson said, “Now you’re all over the place.”
-
-“One has to move about in England to keep warm. Dad, I wrote Ronny
-Dufford to send you a copy of his play. Ronny’s land poor, you know?
-It’s made mountains of money but I don’t think he’s half out of debt,
-yet. Such a nice idiot. He liked Gurdy such a lot. What the deuce an’
-all is Gurdy doing in Chicago? Bargin’ about with the pigstickers?”
-
-She shed her mixture of slangs when his broker’s wife came to luncheon.
-Mark didn’t think it affected that she mainly talked of titled folk
-to the smart, reticent woman. Mrs. Villay invited her to Southampton
-before leaving. Margot shook her hair free of two silver combs and
-shrugged as the front door shut. “I suspect her of being a ferocious
-snob. Sweet enough, though. Fancy she doesn’t read anything but Benson
-and the late Mrs. Ward.--Oh, no, Mrs. Ward isn’t late, is she? Simply
-lamented.”
-
-Mark laughed, “Let’s go talk to Mr. Carlson.”
-
-“You always call him Mister. Just why, darling?”
-
-“Well, he’s forty years older than me, sister. And he made me. He--”
-
-“Tosh! You made yourself! Let’s walk over and see how the Walling’s
-getting on.”
-
-He wallowed in this warm enchantment for ten days. Margot dismissed
-herself to Fayettesville on the first breath of heat. He went down to
-see her established in the gaping adoration of the family. He thought
-it hard on the Bernamer girls. He had hinted boarding school for these
-virgins but the Bernamers, trained by moving pictures, were wary. Yet
-Margot was clearly born to captivate women. He wrote to Gurdy at Lake
-Forest: “It was nice to see her tone herself down for your grandfather
-and your mother. I told her she had better not smoke except with your
-dad in the cowbarn. You kept telling me I must not be shocked. What is
-there to get shocked at? Young girls are not as prissy as they were
-when I was a pup.--Hell of a row coming on with the actors. We are
-trying to keep things quiet but it looks like a strike. But some of the
-men still think an actor is a cross between a mule and a hog. Letter
-from Olive Ilden says she is going to Japan pretty soon and will come
-this way. I see in the London news that Cora Boyle has signed up with
-the Celebrities and is coming over to be filmed as Camille or The Queen
-of Sheba. You are wrong about ‘Heartbreak House.’ It is a conversation,
-not a play. I wish Shaw would do something like Cæsar and Cleopatra
-again. They start work on the sets for Captain Salvador next week at
-the studio. Shall have two sets made for the Voodoo scene and try both
-on the road before we open the Walling.”
-
-Gurdy reflected that it was time to come home. Then he put it off.
-Lake Forest was pleasant. He was fond of his host. It was prudent to
-test the pull of this feeling for Margot. The thing augmented now that
-he couldn’t talk of her. A strict detachment from passion was silly,
-after all. But he was annoyed with himself as the passage of any tall
-and blackhaired woman across a lawn would interrupt the motion of his
-blood. He set his brain tasks, meditated the girl at Fayettesville,
-hoped that she wouldn’t singe the acute American skin of his young
-brothers by comments on the national arms. His sisters had probably
-made their own experiments with cigarettes. They were sensible lasses,
-anyhow, if given to endless gush about moving pictures. His young
-host’s sisters, amiable, blond girls were much the same thing, rarified
-by trips to Europe, suave frocks and some weak topics in the cerebral
-change. They held Dunsany a fascinating dramatist and thought there was
-something to be said for communism. Chicago puzzled him with its summer
-negligence and the candour of its wealth, with the air of stressed
-vice in the Loop restaurants and the sudden change from metropolis
-to a country town within the city limits. It seemed absurd that the
-listless, polished wife of a hundred million dollars should return from
-Long Island to give a dance in honor of a travelling English poet held
-lowly in Chelsea, described by Olive Ilden as a derivative angleworm.
-At this dance he heard of Margot from an unknown woman with whom he
-waltzed.
-
-“I saw you in London, last winter.”
-
-“I was there. Funny I don’t remember--”
-
-“You were in uniform with Margot Walling and Lady Ilden. At a play.
-Margot was wearing one of her yellow frocks. I was the other side of
-the gangway. I wondered about you, rather. Margot always snubs me. I’m
-a countess of sorts and it always interests me when Americans snub
-me.--Let’s get something to drink. I don’t dance well and you must be
-in torments--What’s your name?”
-
-She was a lank, tired creature in a rowdy gown sewn with false pearls
-that hissed theatrically as she slumped into a chair on the lit
-terrace.
-
-“Cousin, eh?--Well, Margot amuses me. She’s the genuine aristocrat,
-you know? Take what you want and to hell with the rest. Pity so few
-Americans catch the idea. Imagine any continental woman coming a
-thousand miles to give a dance for a cheapjack penny poet like this
-sweep. Afraid he won’t mention her in his travel book, I dare say.
-Run and get me a drink. Something mild.” A youth at the buffet told
-him this was the Countess of Flint. She sipped wine cup, refused a
-cigarette and asked, “Where did you go to school? Saint Andrew’s? My
-brothers did Groton. Beautiful training wasted on the desert air.
-That’s the trouble with the American game. Did you ever think how much
-good it would have done the beastly country to have had about four
-generations of a hard and fast aristocracy--plenty of money, no morals,
-quantities of manner? It’s simply a waste of time and money to train
-lads and then turn them loose in a herd of rich women all afraid of
-their dressmakers. What a zero the average American woman is!”
-
-“Hush,” he said, “That’s treason! You’ll be shot at sunrise!”
-
-“Unsalted porridge. Utter vacuum. Not a vacuum either because she’s a
-bully, usually. And a prude.--Is Margot going to marry Ronny Dufford?”
-
-Gurdy jumped, inescapably startled. He said, “Colonel Dufford? The
-General Staff man who writes plays? I’m sure I don’t know.”
-
-“It wouldn’t be a bad thing. Ronny’s all right--the gentleman Bohemian
-touch and I dare say she has money.” The lank woman coughed, went on,
-“She’ll take on an Englishman in any case, though.”
-
-“She’s in New York.”
-
-“Oh, she’ll get fed with that directly and trot home.” The woman
-locked her gaunt arms behind her careless hair and yawned at the
-amber moon above the clipped pines. “New York’s frightful! Stuffed
-middle westerners squatting in hotels trying to look smart. Place is
-absolutely run by women. Getting more respectable every time I go
-through. Haven’t had any patience with New York since the Stanford
-White murder. Imagine all the bloods running to cover and swearing
-they’d never even met White because he’d been shot in a mess about a
-woman! Imagine it! I always bought Harding Davis’s books after that
-because he had the sand to get up and say he liked White, in print.
-But that’s Egyptian history.” She began to cough fearfully. The pearls
-clattered on her gown.
-
-“You’ve taken cold.”
-
-“No. Cigarettes. Are you married?”
-
-“Good lord, no. Only been twenty-one a couple of weeks.”
-
-“How odd that must be! Twenty-one a couple of weeks ago. And you went
-to France and got shot. Singular child!”
-
-“Why singular?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve been amusing myself at Saranac--at a house party, with a
-social register and an army list. A war where eighty per cent. of the
-educated men--I mean the smart universities--the bloods under thirty
-all went and hid themselves. It’s not pretty.”
-
-“Aren’t you exag--”
-
-“Not in the least. I had fifty American officers convalescing at my
-husband’s place in Kent and half of them were freight clerks from Iowa.
-What can you expect when the American woman brings her son up to be
-a coward and his father makes him a thief? And naturally the women
-despise the men. Who on earth wants an American husband?”
-
-“They seem to find wives, somehow.”
-
-She coughed, rising, “Oh, travel’s expensive.” Then she gestured to
-the orange oblongs of the ballroom windows. “D’you think any one of
-those women would hesitate a minute between being the next lady of the
-White House or the mistress of the Prince of Wales? Of course not! Give
-Margot my love. Good-bye. Too chilly out here.” She rattled away.
-
-Gurdy dropped into the chair and stared after her. He should tabulate
-this woman at once with her romantic illusions of aristocracy and
-patriotism. Margot supervened and seemed to move across the moony
-stones of the terrace. He thought frantically of Colonel Dufford. He
-thought solidly of marriage for ten minutes. Beyond doubt he was in
-love with Margot. He stirred in the chair, repeating maxims. Passion
-wasn’t durable. He might tire of her. He argued against emotion and
-blinked at the gold lamps on the bastard French face of this house. He
-was too young to select sensibly, didn’t want to be sensible, suddenly.
-His pulse rose. He marvelled at love. In the morning he announced his
-present departure. At noon he had a special delivery letter from his
-youngest brother, Edward Bernamer, Junior, a placid boy of thirteen
-interested in stamp collecting. The scrawl was the worse for that
-complacency.
-
-“Dear Gurd, For the love of Mike come on home and help take care of
-Margot E. Walling. She has got mamma and the girls all up in the air.
-Grandfather is getting ready to shoot her. I heard him talking to dad
-about writing Uncle Mark to take her away. I sort of like her. Eggs and
-Jim think she is hell.”
-
-Gurdy came whirling east to New York and found Mark at the 45th Street
-Theatre, humming over the model for a scene of “Captain Salvador.”
-But plainly Mark knew nothing of any fissure in the sacred group at
-Fayettesville. He was busy rehearsing a comedy, had been to the farm
-only once. In any event Mark mustn’t be hurt. Gurdy took breath and
-delicately put forth, “I want you to do something damned extravagant,
-Mark.”
-
-“Easy, sonny. Just got the estimate for the mirrors at the Walling. Not
-more than ten thousand, please!”
-
-“Not as bad as that. Get a cottage on Long Island for July and August.
-The farm’s all right for Margot for a while. But grandfather goes to
-bed at nine. The kids play rags on the phonograph all afternoon. It
-gets tiresome after a while. I--”
-
-“Oh, son,” said Mark, “I’m not so thickheaded I can’t see that
-sister’ll get bored down there.” He beamed, thinking Gurdy superb in
-grey tweeds, his white skin overlayed with pale tan. “No, I expect
-I’d get bored with the cows and chickens if I was there enough.--And
-we ought to have some kind of a country place of our own.--There’s
-some friend of Arthur Hopkins has a place on Long Island he wants to
-let.--Olive Ilden’ll be here in July and we ought to have a cottage
-somewhere. I don’t think your dad and Olive’d have much to talk over.”
-Mark grinned. Gurdy laughed, curling on a corner of the desk, approving
-the man’s common shrewdness. Mark patted his palms together. “Look,
-you pike on down to the farm. Margot’s got your car there. You fetch
-her up in the morning and you two go look at this cottage. I’ll ’phone
-Hopkins and find where it is. Oh, here’s this piece Margot’s friend
-Dufford’s sent over. I hear it’s doing a fair business in London but
-nothing to brag of. Read it and see what you think. Get going, son. You
-can catch the three o’clock for Trenton.”
-
-Gurdy strove with this fragility in neat prose all the way to Trenton.
-It had to do with a climber domiciled by mistake in the house of
-a stodgy young Earl. It was wordy and tedious. The name, “Todgers
-Intrudes,” made him grunt. He laughed occasionally at the tinkling
-echoes of Wilde and Maugham. It might be passable in London where
-the lethal jokes on “Dora” and “Brass Hats” would be understood. He
-diligently tried to be just to Colonel Dufford’s art which served
-to keep his pulse down and his mind remote from the approaching
-discomfort. Margot wasn’t perfect. She had upset the family. It was
-best to get her quickly away from Fayettesville. He hired a battered
-car at Trenton. The Fayettesville Military Academy was closing for the
-summer, by all signs. Lads bustled toward the station towing parents
-and gaudy sisters in the beginning of sunset. He overtook his three
-brothers idling home toward the farm and gave them a lift. No one spoke
-of Margot directly. Edward, his correspondent, smiled sideways at
-Gurdy and drawled, “Must have been having a damn good time in Chicago,
-Gurd,” but nothing else was said. The car panted into the stone walled
-dooryard. His grandfather waved a linen clad arm at Gurdy from the
-padded chair on the veranda. His sisters accepted the usual candy and
-hid a motion picture magazine from him, giggling. Mrs. Bernamer was at
-a funeral in Trenton. Gurdy found Bernamer in the dairy yard studying a
-calf. It was always easy to be frank with the saturnine, long farmer.
-His father didn’t suffer from illusions. They sat on the frame of the
-water tower and lit cigarettes, before speech.
-
-“How’s Margot been behaving, dad?”
-
-“You sweet on her, son?”
-
-“I like her. How’s she been acting?”
-
-Bernamer pulled his belt tight and lifted his hard face toward the
-sky. Gurdy felt the mute courtesy of his pause. The man had a natural
-scorn of tumult. He lived silently and, perhaps, thought much. He said,
-“This is just as much Mark’s place as it is ours. He’s the best feller
-livin’. We all know that. And she’s Joe’s daughter.” Something boiled
-up in his blue eyes. He cried, “What in hell! You’re as good as she
-is, ain’t you? You can come home and act like we wasn’t mud underfoot!
-Who the hell’s she?” His wrath slid into laughter. He pulled his belt
-tighter and winked at Gurdy. “It’s kind of funny hearin’ her cuss,
-though.”
-
-“She over does that, a little. Just what’s the trouble, dad?”
-
-“I can’t tell you, son. She’s sand in the cream. It ain’t her smokin’.
-I miss my guess if the girls ain’t tried that.--She kind of puts me
-in mind of that Boyle wench Mark married. She’s got the old man all
-worried. Your mamma’s scared to death of her. So’s the girls.--She
-ain’t so damned polite it hurts her any.... Say, I wouldn’t hurt Mark’s
-feelings for the world--And I notice she don’t carry on so high and
-mighty when Mark’s here, neither.--Ain’t there some place else she
-could go?”
-
-Gurdy had a second of futile rage that divided itself between Margot
-and his family. This wasn’t within remedy. She had absorbed the
-attitudes, the impatience of worlds exterior to the flat peace of the
-farm. He grinned at his father.
-
-“Yes. I’m going to take her off. Mark’s got more sense than you think,
-dad.”
-
-“Sure. Mark’s got plenty of sense when he ain’t dead cracked over a
-thing. Don’t tell him I’ve been squalling. Mebbe that Englishwoman
-spoiled her, lettin’ her gallivant too much. Mebbe it’s her father
-comin’ out in her. Between us, Joe was tougher’n most boys. You’ll
-likely find her down in the orchard smokin’ her head off. It’s all kind
-of funny ... and then it ain’t.”
-
-She wasn’t smoking. She sat with a novel spread on her yellow lap and
-the bole of an apple tree behind her head. There was a shattered plate
-of ruddy glow about her. The pose had the prettiness of a drowsy child.
-She was, her lover thought, a bragging child, lonesome for cleverness,
-annoyed by stolidity. In the vast green of the orchard she seemed
-small. He whistled. She rose, her hair for a moment floating, then
-laughed and threw the book away.
-
-“Thank God, that’s you! I thought it was one of--O, any one!”
-
-There was a shrill, unknown jerk in her voice. She came running and
-took his arm.
-
-“Tell me something about civilization--quick! You don’t want to talk
-about the fil-lums do you? Or whether Jane Rupp’s going to marry that
-Coe feller or--”
-
-“Bored?”
-
-“Oh--to death! How do you stand it? How do you stand it?... I knew
-they’d be common but I didn’t think they’d be such bloody--”
-
-“Look out,” said Gurdy.
-
-But the girl’s red lips had retracted. She was shivering. She had lost
-her charm of posture. She cried, “Oh, yes! They’re our people and all
-the rest of that tosh! I’m not a hypocrite. It’s a stable! A stable!”
-Her breath choked her. She gasped, “Get me out of here! I’m used to
-what you call real people!”
-
-She loosed his sleeve and patted her hair. But some inner spring shook
-her. Scarlet streaks appeared in her face. She babbled, “He must be
-mad! Of course he’s sentimental about them--about the place--the old
-place--It’s the way he is about Carlson! My God, why should he think I
-can stand it!”
-
-Something hummed in Gurdy’s head. His hands heated. He stood
-shuffling a foot in the grass and looked from her at the green
-intricate branches. He must keep cool. He whispered, “Can’t you find
-anything--well, funny in it?”
-
-“It’s all funny rather the way an old dress is!--Why should he think I
-could stay here? Three weeks! Of course, he hasn’t any breed--”
-
-“Shut up,” said Gurdy, “That’ll be all! We were born here. Mark took us
-and had us dressed and looked after--trained. I’m not going to laugh
-at them. I can’t.--I’ll be damned if I’ll hear you laugh at Mark. Yes,
-he’s sentimental! If he wasn’t, d’you think he’d have bothered about
-taking care of you--of us? The family’s sacred to him. He loves them.
-He’s that kind.--Stop laughing!”
-
-He hated her. There was no beauty left. Her face had shrivelled in this
-fire. She was swiftly and horribly like an angry trull. She said,
-“Sentimentalist! You’re a damned milk and sugar sentimentalist like--”
-
-“Ah,” said Gurdy, “that’s out of some book!... All right. Mark’s going
-to take a place on Long Island. We’ll go up in the morning.”
-
-He tramped off. The orchard became a whirl of green flame that seared
-then left him cold. He was tired. His body felt like stone, heavy and
-dead. The illusion of desire was gone out of Gurdy.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-Todgers Intrudes
-
-
-Olive Ilden was detained and surrendered her mid July sailing. Her
-brother died. This did not grieve her; they had been on strained terms.
-But she was unwilling to offend his daughters. Offence had grown
-hateful with years. The personal matter flung to and fro among critics
-wearied her. It wasn’t amusing to hear that an elderly novelist was “a
-doddering relic of the Victorian era.” She envisaged the man’s pain.
-Thus, she bore the formalities of her brother’s passing and so missed
-three liners. About her, London recaptured something of its tireless
-motion. She wished for Margot and the youth Margot had kept parading
-through the quiet house. She hoped that the girl’s frankness never
-shocked Mark and puzzled again over the rise of that frankness. In
-her first two English years the child had been sedate, almost solemn,
-reading a great deal and talking primly. Then her conversation had
-risen to a rattle. It must be rattling mightily in New York which
-Olive still fancied a place of cheerful freedom. Letters recorded
-the change from Fayettesville to a cottage on the Long Island shore:
-“Cottage was frightful but dad behaved quite as if he was mounting a
-play in a hurry. We drove from shop to shop and all the stuff came
-roaring along in motor trucks. I went to Southampton and camped with
-a rather nice woman, Mrs. Corliss Stannard, who picked me up coming
-across. It was dull as Westminster Abbey as every one kept cursing
-the Prohibition amendment. But dad had the cottage--(fourteen rooms
-and four baths)--all decorated by the time I got back. Some decentish
-friends of Gurdy live near here. The men are all Goths and the women
-are fearfully stiff but a broker proposed last night at a dance and I
-felt rather silly, as he has just been divorced two days and I hardly
-knew his name. But dad has bought an option to ‘Todgers Intrudes.’”
-Then, “Dad very busy in town. The actors are threatening a strike.
-Gurdy pretends that he does not like ‘Todgers Intrudes.’ For a man who
-did a smart school and who knows his way about Gurdy is rather heavy.
-Rather decent lunch today. Dad brought down one of the other managers
-who talks through his nose and is a duck. He taught me how to do a
-soft shoe step.” And later, “Dad very émotionné about a tragedy he is
-putting on in the autumn. It is rather thrilling. He means to open The
-Walling with it. Gurdy does not fancy ‘Todgers Intrudes.’ He thinks
-himself a Bolshevik or something and I dare say the county family
-business in it annoys him.”
-
-Immediately after this, while the letter was fresh in mind Olive met
-Ronald Dufford on Regent Street. He took her congratulations on the
-American sale of his play with a dubious air, swung his stick and said,
-“Thanks. Fancy Margot made her guv’nor take it on. Between ourselves it
-hasn’t more than just paid. You’re going to the States, aren’t you?”
-
-“Next week. Yes, I think Margot had her father buy the play, Ronny.
-It’s my sad duty to warn him that it hasn’t been what the Yankees call
-a three bagger--whatever that means.”
-
-The playwright grinned amiably, saying, “Rather wish you would. My
-things haven’t done well in the States. I’m not so keen on being known
-as a blight, out there. Walling’s paid me two hundred pounds, no less,
-for American rights. Charitable lad he must be!--I say, I hear that
-Cossy Rand’s gone over to play for him.”
-
-“Who’s Cossy Rand?”
-
-“Cora Boyle’s little husband. Nice thing. You’ve met him? He rehearsed
-us for that thing of mine at Christmas. A thin beggar with--”
-
-“Of course. I’ve even danced with him but he passed out of the other
-eye.”
-
-“But isn’t it rather odd for Walling to take on his ex-wife’s
-present husband? Bit unusual? You’ve always told me that Walling’s a
-conservative sort.”
-
-“Why shouldn’t Walling take him on, Ronny? The man’s rather good, isn’t
-he?”
-
-“Fairish. Frightfully stiff. He played the Earl in ‘Todgers’ while Ealy
-was fluing.--What I meant was that it seems odd Walling should cable
-him to come over. But I’ll be awfully bucked if old ‘Todgers’ gets
-along in the States. ’Tisn’t Shaw, you know?”
-
-Olive was lightly vexed with Margot. The girl was irresponsible when
-she wanted something for a friend. But the trait was commendable; Olive
-still ranked personal loyalty higher than most static virtues. But
-“Todgers Intrudes” was a dreary business. She spoke of it to Mark when
-he met her at the New York pier. The idolator chuckled.
-
-“The actors have struck. I hope Margot’ll forget about the thing before
-the strike’s over. She likes Dufford? Well, that’s all the excuse she
-needed. She isn’t--”
-
-“Are you letting her stamp on your face, old man?”
-
-“It don’t hurt. She don’t weigh a heap. She says Dufford’s poor.”
-
-His eyes were dancing. He wore a yellow flower in his coat and patted
-Olive’s arm as he steered her to the lustrous blue car. “We’ll go up to
-my house for lunch. Mr. Carlson’s crazy to see you. Mustn’t mind if he
-curses at you. We’ll go on down to the shore after lunch. Where’s Sir
-John, m’lady?”
-
-“Malta. Shall I see Gurdy? The nicest child!”
-
-“Ain’t he? I’ve got him reading plays.” Mark soared into eulogies, came
-down to state, “This is Broadway,” as the car plunged over the tracks
-between two drays.
-
-“If that’s Broadway,” Olive considered, “I quite understand why
-half of New York lives in Paris. I do want to see Fifth Avenue. The
-sky-scrapers disappointed me but Arnold Bennett says Fifth Avenue’s
-really dynamic.” A moment after when the car faced the greasy slope of
-asphalt she said, “Bennett’s mad.”
-
-Mark sighed, “It’s an ugly town. But this street’s nice at sunset,
-in winter. It turns a kind of purple.... It was bully when the women
-wore violets. They don’t wear real flowers any more.--You used to
-smell violets everywhere. Violets and furs and cigar smoke. I used to
-like it.” His eyes sparkled on the revocation. He smiled at the foul
-asphalt and the drooping flags of shops where the windows gave out a
-torturing gleam.
-
-“You great boy,” said Olive.
-
-“Boy? Be forty-one the second of November.--Oh, awful sorry about your
-brother, Olive.”
-
-“I’m not. Gerald was null and void. I never even discovered where he
-found the energy to marry and beget daughters. Margot’s lived more at
-the age of eighteen than Gerald had at fifty. I don’t suppose that you
-can understand how I can slang my own family.”
-
-“Oh, sure. Because my folks are all nice it don’t follow I think every
-one ought to be crazy about theirs. Did he have a son?”
-
-“No. The land goes to our cousin--Shelmardine of Potterhanworth--that
-idiot his wife pushed into Peerage. She was one of the managing
-Colthursts. Loathsome woman. Her son’s a V.C. though.--Oh, this
-improves!” The car passed Forty Fifth Street. Olive gazed ahead,
-cheered by the statelier tone of the white avenue. Mark wondered how
-a woman who had lost both children could yet smile at the dignity of
-Saint Patrick’s and again at the homesick bewilderment of her maid
-getting down before his house.
-
-Old Carlson bobbed his head to this lady, abandoning his ancient fancy
-that she had been Mark’s mistress. He studied her grey hair and the
-worn, sharp line of her face. Then he cackled that she was to blame
-for turning Margot into a “sassy turnip.”
-
-“My dealings with turnips have always been conducted through a cook.
-Has she been shocking you?”
-
-“Ma’am,” said Carlson, “You can’t shock me. I was in the show business
-from eighteen sixty-nine to nineteen fourteen. I lugged a spear in the
-‘Black Crook’ and I was a gladyator when the Police arrested McCullough
-for playin’ Spartacus in his bare legs. No, Margot can’t shock me any
-more’n a kitten.” He rolled a cigarette shakily, spilling tobacco on
-his cerise quilt. Olive held a match for him. He coughed, “But you’d
-ought of seen her ballyrag Mark into buyin’ this English piece--What
-the hell do you call it, Mark?”
-
-“Todgers Intrudes.”
-
-“That’s a name for you! Gurdy don’t like it. I say it’s hogwash.
-Maggie, she set on a table smokin’ her cheroot and just made the big
-calf buy it.... She did, Mark. So don’t stand there lookin’ like
-Charlie Thorne in ‘Camille’!”
-
-Mark was stirring with laughter at the old man’s venom. He said, “I
-told Olive Margot made me buy it.”
-
-“Oh,” Olive said, “if you let Margot run your affairs you’ll have
-strange creatures from darkest Chelsea mounting all your plays and
-flappers who’ve acted twice in a charity show playing Monna Vanna. She
-made my poor husband buy a cubist portrait of Winston Churchill some
-pal of hers painted. When he found it was meant to be Churchill he took
-to his bed.”
-
-“Mr. Hopkins, Mr. Williams,” said the butler against Mark’s swift, “Ask
-’em to go to the drawing room. ’Xcuse me, Olive. Got to go talk strike
-a minute.”
-
-She looked about the sinless library with its severe panels and blue
-rug then at Mark’s patron--an exhumed Pharaoh, his yellow hawk face and
-bloodless hands motionless, the cigarette smoking in a corner of his
-mouth. He had just the pathos of oncoming death. He squeaked, “Mark’s
-busy as a pup with fleas. Actors strikin’! The lazy hounds! It’s enough
-to make Gus Daly turn in his grave!”
-
-“You’ve no sympathy with them?”
-
-“Not a speck! The show business is war and war’s hell. Here’s this
-Boyle onion Mark was married to, Bill Loeffler sends for her to come
-back from England and get a thousand a week to play in a French piece.
-Pays her passage. Then what? Minute she sets foot on land she grabs a
-movie contract and pikes off to California. She’s a hot baby, she is!
-Actors!”
-
-“I hear that Mark’s engaged her husband.”
-
-“That slimjim sissy from Ioway? Not much!”
-
-“Is Rand an American?”
-
-“He-ell, yes! He’s old Quincy Rand’s Son that used to run the Opera
-House in Des Moines. He run off with a stock comp’ny that played
-Montreal and got to talkin’ English. I told Margot that and she was mad
-enough to bust.--Say, you British are cracked, lettin’ a pack of actors
-loose in your houses like they was human--” He fell asleep. The nurse
-came to take the cigarette from his lips. Olive strolled off to examine
-the shelves packed tightly with books. Here was the medley of Mark’s
-brain--volumes of Whyte Melville mingled with unknown American novels,
-folios on decoration, collected prints from the European galleries. A
-copy of “Capital” surprised her but she found Gurdy’s signature dated,
-“Yale College, November, 1916,” on the first page. Gurdy came up the
-white stairway and saw the black gown with relief. Lady Ilden could be
-a buffer between Margot and himself. There would be less need of visits
-to the seashore house. He led the Englishwoman into the broad hall.
-
-“Something odd has just happened, Gurdy.”
-
-“Mr. Carlson swear at you?”
-
-“Before, not at. But he tells me that Mark did not send for Cosmo Rand
-to act in something over here whereas Ronny Dufford most distinctly
-told me that Mark did. It interested me because Mark’s so coy about his
-old wife and it seemed queer that he’d cable for her husband.”
-
-“I expect Rand’s lying a little, for advertisement. No, Mark didn’t
-send for him. He never engages people to come from England. Has Rand
-come over? According to Margot he’s such an idol in London that it’d
-take an act of Parliament to get him away. Miss Boyle’s here. We saw
-her at lunch in the Algonquin and she patronized Mark for a minute.
-Didn’t Rand play some part in this ‘Todgers Intrudes’ piffle in London?”
-
-“Which reminds me,” said Olive, “Margot made Mark take that? Is she
-making him cover her with emeralds and give masked balls?”
-
-Gurdy said honestly, “No, not at all. We’ve had some house
-parties--some friends of mine and some of the reviewers and so on. She
-seems to be amusing herself.”
-
-“And she hasn’t shocked Mark?”
-
-“Why should she?” Gurdy laughed, leaning on the white handrail, “she
-doesn’t do any of the things he dislikes seeing women do. She doesn’t
-drink anything, for instance, and she doesn’t paint. When did she go in
-for pacifism--not that I’ve any objection to it.”
-
-“That was a way of helping me out when my boy fell, I think. She raged
-about the war as a sort of outlet for me. Really, she enjoyed the
-war tremendously. As most girls did. Is she still raving about the
-slaughter of the artist?”
-
-“The slaughter of actors. Some Englishman--an actor--said that too many
-actors slacked and she lit on him. He mentioned half a dozen--can’t
-remember them.--You told me in London that she wanted to act?”
-
-“Yes. Has she been teasing Mark--”
-
-“No. But I think she could.”
-
-“My dear boy, I’ve seen her in amateur things twice and she was
-appalling! Vivacity isn’t ability. Of course she has a full equipment
-in the way of looks.--You mustn’t get dazzled over Margot, Gurdy.” His
-face was blank. Olive chanced a probe. “I forbid you to fall in love
-with her, either. You’re cousins and it’s not healthy.”
-
-“I’m not thinking of it,” said Gurdy, red, and so convinced Olive that
-he was deep in love. But the dying blush left him grave. He stood
-listening to the slow drawl of Mark’s voice below them and wondering
-what tone would overtake its husky music if Margot should turn on the
-worshipper, screaming and hateful. He wondered at himself, too. His
-passion had blown out. It had no ash, no regret. He was free of anger,
-even, and he had done the girl mental justice. He didn’t want her back.
-
-
-“You look rather done up, old man.”
-
-“War nerves. We’ve all got them. And I’m reading plays and some of them
-make me howl. Such awful junk! ‘Don’t, don’t look at me like that. I’m
-a good woman, and you have taken from me the only thing I had to love
-in the whole world.’ That sort of stuff. And the plays for reform are
-as bad as the ones against it. I don’t know why people always lose
-their sense of humour when they start talking economics!”
-
-“Old man, when you’ve lived to be forty you’ll find out that only one
-person in a thousand can resist a sentimentalism on their side of the
-question. And it’s almost always a sentimentalist who writes plays on
-economics. But you do look seedy. Are you coming to the country with us
-after luncheon?”
-
-“No.”
-
-But he drove with Mark and Olive to the half finished front of The
-Walling in West 47th Street. Mark pointed out the design of Doric
-columns and bare tablets. Olive guessed at a simple richness and stared
-after Mark when he walked through groups of hot, noisy workmen into
-the shadow of his own creation. His black height disappeared among the
-girders and the dust of lime.
-
-“Did it all himself,” said Gurdy. “The architects just followed what
-he wanted done.--You called him a kid with a box of paints. You should
-see him fuss over a stage setting!--D’you know--my father’s an awfully
-observant man. He was talking about Mark the other day. Dad says that
-when Mark was a kid he used to draw all the time. And they’ve got some
-pictures he drew in old school books and things. They’re not bad. Dad
-says that before Mark married Cora Boyle and came to New York they all
-thought he was going to turn out an artist.”
-
-“Is it true that his whole success is because he decorates plays so
-well?”
-
-“No. The truth is, he’s an awfully good business man. And I’ve seen
-enough of the theatre to see that some of the managers and producers
-aren’t any good at business. They mess about and talk and--He’s coming
-back.”
-
-She saw Gurdy’s eyes centre on Mark with a queer, tense look. The boy
-stood on the filthy pavement studying the theatre as the car drove east.
-
-“Crazy about the place,” said Mark, brushing his sleeve, “I do think
-people will like it, Olive. Won’t be so dark that they can’t read a
-program or so light the women’ll have to wear extra paint.--My God, I’m
-glad Margot don’t daub herself up! Well, she don’t have to. And I’m
-glad she don’t want to act.”
-
-“Why?” Olive asked, “You were an actor. You live entirely surrounded
-by actors. It’s an ancient and honourable calling--much more so than
-the law or the army.”
-
-Mark rubbed his short nose and grinned.
-
-“I’m just prejudiced. I suppose it’s because I used to hear how
-tough actresses were when I was a kid. And because Cora Boyle made a
-doormat of me. Ain’t it true we never get over the way we’re brought
-up?--That’s what Gurdy calls a platitude, I guess.”
-
-“Gurdy’s horridly mature for twenty-one, Mark.”
-
-“Thunder,” said Mark, “He was always grown up and he’s knocked around a
-lot for his age. Enough to make anybody mature!--And he’s in love with
-sister up to his neck. You should have seen him take a runnin’ jump and
-start for Chicago the minute he heard she was landing! Simply hopped
-the next train and flew! Stayed out there a month, pretty nearly.
-Brings his friends down over Sundays and then sits and watches them
-wobble round Margot like a cat watching a fat mouse. Love’s awful hard
-on these dignified kids, Olive.”
-
-“You want them married?” she murmured.
-
-“Of course.--I know I’m silly about the kids but I don’t see where
-Margot’ll get any one much better. Don’t start lecturin’ me and say
-that there’s ten million eight hundred thousand and twenty-two better
-boys loose around than Gurdy. You’d be talking at a stone wall. Waste
-of breath. And he’s sensible about her too. A kid in love ordinarily
-wouldn’t argue about anything the way he did about this play of Colonel
-Duffords. They had a regular cat fight and Gurdy’s right. It’s a pretty
-poor show.--This is the East river.”
-
-The car moved diligently through the heat. Olive thought that Gurdy
-had belied his outer calm by his flight to Chicago. But it was hard to
-think of anything save the thick air. Mark’s tanned face was damp and
-he fanned Olive steadily. They swung past a procession of vans where
-the drivers lolled in torn undershirts. The rancorous sun on the houses
-of unfamiliar shingle dizzied her. She saw strange trees in the country
-as the suburbs thinned and the blistered paint of billboards showed
-strange wares for sale.
-
-“Movie plant over there,” said Mark, “Like to be movied for one of
-the current event weeklies? Lady Olive Ilden, the celebrated British
-authoress?”
-
-“Horrors! Drinking tea with a Pom in my lap. Never!--Good heavens,
-Mark, is it like this summer after summer? Why don’t people simply go
-naked?”
-
-“Margot does her best. If her grandmother Walling could see her
-bathsuit she’d rise from the tomb.”
-
-“How long has your mother been dead, old man?”
-
-“Since I was eight--no, nine.”
-
-“Do you look like her?”
-
-“No. Joe--Margot’s dad--looked something like her. His hair was nearly
-black and he had brown eyes. She was nice. Used to take her hair down
-and let me play with it. Black.” He smiled, did not speak for minutes
-and then talked of Gurdy again, “He’s mighty nice to his father and
-mother. Eddie and Sadie are scared he’ll marry an actress on account
-of his bein’ in my office. Gurdy was teasin’ them last week--They
-came up to do some shopping. Said he’d got hold of a yellow headed
-stomach dancer. Called her some crazy French name.--My lord, haven’t
-things changed on the stage since we were kids! I remember when Ruth
-Saint Denis was doing her Hindoo dances first and people were kind of
-shocked. I dropped in one afternoon and the place was packed full of
-women. Heard this drawly kind of voice behind me and looked round. It
-was Mark Twain and Mr. Howells. Ruth did a dance without much on and
-the women all gabbled like fury. But they all applauded a lot. Mr.
-Howells was sort of bored. He said, ‘What are they making that fuss
-for, Sam?’ ‘Oh,’ old Clemens said, ‘they’re hoping the next dance’ll be
-dirtier so they can feel like Christians.’ My God, he was a wonder to
-look at!--Ever think how much good looks do help a man along?”
-
-“I can’t think unless you fan me, Mark. My brain’s boiling. How many
-more miles to a bath?”
-
-“Twenty.”
-
-“I’ve always been fond of you,” said Olive, “but I never realized what
-a brave man you were! You _work_ in this furnace? Fan me!”
-
-The cottage stood on a slope of presentable lawn that ended in a pebbly
-shore. The motor rushed through a fir plantation, reached the Georgian
-portico and Olive gladly smelled salt wind rising from the water fading
-in sunset.
-
-“There she is,” said Mark and whistled to a shape, black and tan
-against the sound, poised at the lip of a whitewashed pier. Margot
-came running and some men in bathsuits stared, deserted. The girl
-raced in a shimmer that reddened her legs to copper. Olive wondered if
-anything so alive, so gay existed elsewhere on this barbarous shore
-crushed by summer. Mark saw them happy, wiped his silly eyes and went
-down to chat in guarded grammar with the three young men from across
-the shallow bay. Inevitable that youngsters should come swimming and
-these were likeable fellows. Gurdy vouched for them. They slid soon
-like piebald seals into the water and swam off in a flurry of spray and
-bronze arms. Delicate wakes of fine bubbling spread on the surface.
-The wet heads grew small in this wide space of beryl. Again he watched
-irreproducible beauty.... It was right that the best makers of scenes
-wouldn’t paint the sea on back-drops. Let the people fancy it there
-below the vacancy of some open window. He must have the Cuban seas
-suggested thus in ‘Captain Salvador.’ He wished that Margot didn’t
-dislike the tragedy. Perhaps its stiff denial of lasting love afflicted
-her. It afflicted Mark. And yet the poet was right. The passion in the
-play would be a fleet, hot thing, engrossing for a week, a month and
-then stale for ever. Lust went so. He nodded and picked up Margot’s
-black and yellow bath wrap, a foolish, lovely cape in which she looked
-like an Arab. Then she called to him and he walked back to where she
-sat on the tiled steps reading a letter.
-
-“Olive brought me a note from Doris Arbuthnot. Lives in Devonshire.
-She’s a dear ... rather like aunt Sadie but not quite so hefty. All the
-Wacks have come home from France, now, and they won’t work. They sit
-about and talk to the heroes about France. Doris owns gobs of land and
-she’s having a poky time.--What are you laughing at?”
-
-“Your hair, sister.”
-
-She passed her hands over the sponge of black down and shrugged,
-“Sorry I had it bobbed. All the typists do, over here. Olive’s
-frightfully done up. Gone to bathe.”
-
-“Glad to have her, ain’t you?”
-
-“Ra--ther!--Oh, Cosmo Rand called up.”
-
-“What the--deuce did he want?”
-
-“Ronny Dufford gave him a heap of notes about ‘Todgers Intrudes.’
-I told him he’d best leave them at your office.--Shall you start
-rehearsing ‘Todgers’ as soon as the strike’s over?”
-
-She sneezed, the efflorescence of her hair flapping. Mark tossed the
-wrap about her, kissed her ear and sat down on the steps. He said,
-“Don’t know, daughter. Fact is, this piece of Dufford’s hasn’t played
-to big business in London. I’ve got a report on it. Gurdy don’t think--”
-
-“Oh, Gurdy! He simply can’t like a play unless it’s about the long
-suffering proletariat or Russia!--Why didn’t he come down?”
-
-“Got a party with some men.”
-
-“And I wanted the brute to show me putting tomorrow! D’you put well? Of
-course you do!--Oh, I know ‘Todgers’ isn’t a new Man and Superman, of
-course. But it’s witty and it isn’t commonplace--don’t laugh.”
-
-Mark marshalled words, lighting a cigarette. “Honey, that’s just the
-trouble with the thing. It is commonplace. It’s all about nothing.
-And it’s too blamed English. You and Gurd seem to think it’s the
-bounden duty of every one to know all the latest English slang off
-Piccadilly--or wherever they make slang up. It ain’t so. We’ll have
-to have some of this piece translated as it is. Suppose you were a
-stenographer going to the play? You wouldn’t have been abroad. You
-wouldn’t know an Earl beats a Baron. You wouldn’t know that Chelsea’s
-a big sister to Greenwich village and the slang’d bore you to death.
-There’s that three speech joke about Gippies and Chokers in the second
-act. I expect that raised a laugh in London. How many folks in the
-house here would know it meant cigarettes? I didn’t till you told me.
-Now in London with Ealy playing the Earl--he did, didn’t he?--Well,
-with a smart man like that to play the Earl, the thing might go pretty
-well. If I had some one like that--”
-
-Margot yawned, “Why not try Cosmo Rand? He played the Earl in London
-while Ealy was having the flu and had very good notices. He was awfully
-good in the scene where he rows with his wife. The poor devil’s had a
-good deal of practice, they say. Cora Boyle leads him a dog’s life.
-Ronny Dufford tells me that she’s horribly jealous. Mr. Rand’s had a
-success on his own, you know? He’s not her leading man any more.--She
-doesn’t like his getting ahead of her.--Now what are you laughing at?”
-
-“The leopard don’t change her spots,” said Mark.
-
-“Poor dad!”
-
-“Oh, well,” he said in a luxury of amusement, “She wasn’t raised right.
-Her folks were circus people. I guess you couldn’t imagine how tough
-the old style circus people were if you worked all night at it. This
-Rand’s a nice fellow, is he?”
-
-“Very pleasant. He rehearsed a lot of us in a show and we were all
-rather rotten and he was very patient.--I do wish Gurdy had come
-down!--We shan’t have four for bridge. Might have Olive’s maid play.
-She’s dreadfully grand, you know? She’s the Presidentess of the Chelsea
-Lady Helpers Association. Used to be in the scullery at Windsor and
-Queen Alexandra spoke to her once. I’m rather afraid of her.”
-
-“Is there any one you are afraid of, sister?”
-
-She rose, the yellow and black gown moulding in, and gave her muffled,
-slow chuckle, patting the step with a sole. “Don’t know. Gurdy, when
-he’s grouchy. I must go dress.--Oh, I had whitewine cup made for
-dinner. That’s what you like when it’s hot, isn’t it? Do put on a white
-suit for dinner, dad. Makes your hair so red. God be with you till we
-meet again.”
-
-She wandered over the white and red tiles of the portico, leaving a
-trail of damp, iridescent prints in the last glitter of the sun. She
-hummed some air he did not know and this hung in his ear like the
-pulse of a muted violin when she herself was gone. The man sat dreaming
-until the night about him was dull blue and the wind died. He sat in
-warm felicity, guarding the silent house until the rose spark of the
-light across the bay began to turn and a silver, mighty star flared
-high on the darker blue of heaven.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-Cosmo Rand
-
-
-On Saturday Gurdy brought down three young men who hadn’t met Margot.
-He busily noted the chemistry of passion as two of his friends became
-maniacal by Sunday morning. Against the worn composure of Lady Ilden,
-the girl had the value of a gem on dim velvet. The third young man
-wanted to talk Irish politics to the Englishwoman who evaded him and
-retired to write a letter in her bedroom above the lawn.
-
-She wrote to her husband at Malta: “I had always thought that Margot’s
-success in London was due to her exotic quality. But she seems quite as
-successful on her native heath. This leads me to the general platitude
-that boys are the same the world over. I am a success here, too. Many
-callers, mostly female, in huge motor cars. The American woman seems
-to consider frocks a substitute for manners and conversation. Mark is
-anxious that Margot should marry Gurdy Bernamer and Gurdy is plainly
-willing. It would be suitable enough. The boy has smart friends and
-will inherit £10,000 from old Mr. Carlson. Margot can float herself
-in local society no doubt. She is now playing tennis with two young
-brokers and a 22 year old journalist whose father owns half of some
-State. I have mailed you a strange work, ‘Jurgen’ by some unheard of
-person. Do not let any of the more moral midshipmen read it.” She
-stopped, seeing Gurdy saunter across the lawn toward the beach and
-pursued him to where he curled on the sand. “You frighten me,” she
-said, taking her eyes from the scar that showed its upper reach above
-his bathshirt, “you lie about two thirds naked in this sun and then
-tell me it’s a cool day.--But I want to be documented in American
-fiction. I’ve read five novels since Wednesday. It seems to be
-established that all your millionaires are conscious villains and all
-your poor are martyrs except a select group known as gangsters. That’s
-thrilling when the reviewers so loudly insist that your authors flatter
-the rich.”
-
-“Some of them do,” Gurdy said, lifting his legs in the hot air.
-
-In a bathsuit he lost his civilized seeming, was heroic, sprawled on
-the sand. Olive told him: “You’re one of those victims of modernity,
-old son. You belong to thirteen forty. Green tights and a dark tunic
-trimmed with white fur. Legs are legs, aren’t they?”
-
-“Heredity’s funny,” he said, “I look exactly like my father.”
-
-“Margot’s Uncle Eddie? She talks of him a good deal and of your mother.
-I was rather afraid her metropolitan airs and graces would shock your
-people but she seems to have had a jolly time down there--New Jersey’s
-down from here, isn’t it? She enjoyed herself.--Metropolitan airs and
-graces!--That’s a quotation from something. Sounds like the _Manchester
-Guardian_.--Should I like your people?”
-
-“You might. Grandfather’s an atheist. Dad’s a good deal of a cynic.
-They’re awfully nice small town people. My sisters all wish they were
-movie stars and my kid brothers think that a fighting marine is the
-greatest work of God.”
-
-“And Margot says they all think you’re the last and best incarnation of
-Siegfried. I should like to see them.”
-
-Gurdy shuddered. Grandfather Walling and Mrs. Bernamer held Lady
-Ilden responsible for the ruin of Margot as a relative. He imagined
-her artifice and her ease faced by the horrified family--a group of
-frightened colts stumbling off from a strange farmhand. He poured
-sand over his arm and lied, “You’d scare them. Mark’s always talked
-about you as though you were the Encyclopædia Brittanica on two legs.
-You might be interested, though.--I say, Mark’s decided that he will
-produce ‘Todgers Intrudes.’ Thinks he’ll have Cosmo Rand play the Earl.
-Can Rand really act?”
-
-“Oh,--well enough for that sort of tosh. He’s handsome and he has a
-pleasant voice. But it’s rather silly of Mark to force such a poor play
-on the public because Margot wants Ronny Dufford out of debt. But he’s
-so intoxicated with Margot just now that he’d do murders for her. Why
-didn’t he come down for the week-end?”
-
-Gurdy got up and yawned, “Oh, his treasurer’s wife ran off with a
-man last Wednesday--while he was down here. He’s trying to patch it
-up.--You know, he isn’t at all cynical, Lady Ilden. He’s very easily
-upset by things like that.”
-
-“I suppose he likes his treasurer? Then why shouldn’t he be upset? The
-treasurer can’t be enjoying the affair.--I wonder if you appreciate
-Mark’s noble strain, Gurdy? I think I must send you a copy of the
-letter he wrote me after he’d packed you off to school. I showed it
-to my husband who has all the susceptibility of the Nelson monument
-and he almost shed tears. It took something more than mere snobbery
-or a desire for your future gratitude to make Mark send you away.
-It horribly hurt him. If paternal affection’s a disease the man’s a
-walking hospital!--There’s the luncheon bell.”
-
-Gurdy ran into the water and furiously swam. Unless Lady Ilden was
-making amiable phrases Margot had lied to her about the family at
-Fayettesville. It was natural that she should tell Mark how she’d
-enjoyed the farm. That was prudent kindness, no worse than his own
-gratitudes when Mark gave him sapphire scarf-pins and fresh silver
-cigarette cases that he didn’t need or want. But Margot shouldn’t
-lie to Lady Ilden. Gurdy avoided the next week-end and went to
-Fayettesville where his family worried because Mark was losing money
-through the actors’ strike.
-
-“And he’ll need all he can lay hands on with Margot to look after,”
-said Mrs. Bernamer, rocking her weight in a chair on the veranda, “It
-ain’t sensible for him to--to bow down and worship that child like he
-does. Oh, she’s pretty enough!”
-
-“Get out,” Bernamer commented, “He’d be foolish about her if she’d got
-to wear spectacles and was bowlegged. Gimme a cigarette, Gurd. How
-near’s the Walling finished?”
-
-“Two thirds, Dad.--Grandfather, you’ll have to come up and sit in a box
-the opening night.”
-
-The beautiful old man blinked and drawled, “I wouldn’t go up to N’York
-to see Daniel Bandmann play ‘Hamlet’--if he was alive. How’s old Mr.
-Carlson get on?”
-
-Gurdy often found the contrast between his grandfather and Carlson
-diverting. The dying manager, a cynic, wanted Heaven in all the
-decorations of the Apocalypse. The old peasant lazily insisted that
-death would end him. He got some hidden pleasure from the thought of
-utter passage. Gurdy found this content stupendous. The farmer had
-never been two hundred miles from his dull acreage and yet was ready
-to be done with his known universe while Carlson wanted eternity. He
-cackled when the striking actors made peace and ordered wreaths sent to
-the more stubborn managers. His bitter tongue rattled.
-
-“Why don’t more writers write for the theatre, Gurdy? Ever been in
-Billy Loeffler’s office? Five thousand bootlickers and hussies squatted
-all over the place. I sent that fellow Moody that wrote the ‘Great
-Divide’ to see Loeffler. Had to set in the office with a bunch of song
-carpenters from tin pan alley and a couple of tarts while Loeffler was
-prob’ly talkin’ to some old souse he’d knew in Salt Lake City. And then
-Loeffler looks at the play and asks is there a soobrette part in it
-for some tomtit his brother was keepin’! A writer’s got a thin skin,
-ain’t he? Here Mark gets mad because this writer Mencken says managers
-are a bunch of hogs. Well, ain’t they? Four or five ain’t. Sure,
-they’re hogs. Human beings. Hogs. Same as the rest of mankind. Good
-thing Christ died to save us.” He contemplated redemption through the
-cigarette smoke. His Irish nurse crossed herself in a corner. Carlson
-went on, “Say, that feller Russell Mark’s got drillin’ that English
-comedy is all right. Was in to see me, yesterday. Good head. Knows his
-job. Says this Rand pinhead is raisin’ Cain at rehearsals. Better drop
-in there and see what goes on. Mark’s so busy with that Cuban play he
-ain’t got time.”
-
-Rehearsals of “Todgers Intrudes” went on at a small theatre below
-Forty Second Street. Gurdy drifted into the warm place and watched the
-director, Russell, working. On the bare stage five people progressed
-from point to point of the tepid comedy. Russell, a stooped, bald man
-of thirty-five, sat near the orchestra pit. Gurdy had watched the
-rehearsal ten minutes before Russell spoke. “Don’t cross, there, Miss
-Marryatt. Stand still.” Then, “still, please, Mr. Rand.” On the stage
-Cosmo Rand gave the director a stare, shrugged and strolled toward
-the cockney comedian, the intrusive Todgers of the plot. Russell said
-nothing until a long speech finished, then, “You’re all rushing about
-like cooties. Go back to Miss Marryatt’s entrance and take all your
-lines just as you stand after she’s sat down. Dora isn’t pronounced
-Durrer, Mr. Hughes.” Gurdy was thinking of the long patience needed in
-this trade when Russell spoke sharply, “Mr. Rand, will you please stand
-still!”
-
-“My God,” said Rand, “must I keep telling you that I played this part
-in--”
-
-“Will you be so good as to stand still?”
-
-Rand continued his lines. Gurdy walked down and slipped into a chair
-beside the director, aware that the players stiffened as soon as they
-saw Mark’s nephew. The handsome Miss Marryatt began to act. Cosmo Rand
-sent out his speeches with a pleasant briskness. Russell murmured,
-“Glad you happened in, Bernamer. This was getting beyond me. School
-children,” and the act ended.
-
-“Three o’clock, please,” said the director. The small company trickled
-out of the theatre. Russell lit his pipe and stretched, grinning.
-“Rand’s very capable and a nice fellow enough but he’s difficult. Fine
-looking, isn’t he? Come to lunch with me.”
-
-It was startling to be taken into an engineer’s club for the meal.
-Russell explained, “I was an engineer. It’s not so different from
-stage directing. You sometimes get very much the same material. I’ve
-often wanted some dynamite or a pickax at rehearsals. Nice that you
-floated in just now. I’ve a curiosity about this piece. Does Mr.
-Walling see money in it? I don’t.”
-
-“He thinks it may go,” said Gurdy.
-
-“It won’t. It’s sewed up in a crape. If you had a young John Drew and a
-couple of raving beauties playing it might run six weeks. And Dufford
-hasn’t any standing among the cerebrals. We might try to brighten the
-thing with some references to the Nourritures Terrestres or Freud. It’s
-a moron. Prenatal influence. Mr. Walling tells me we’re to open in
-Washington, too. My jinx! I went down there to offer up my life for the
-country and got stuck in the Q.M.C. supervising crates of tomatoes. Did
-you ever argue with a wholesale grocer about crates? It’s worse than
-staging a revue.”
-
-“That’s a dreadful thing to say!”
-
-Russell broke a roll in his pointed fingers and shook his head. “No....
-The revue’s a very high form of comedy when it’s handled right. It gets
-clean away with common sense, for one thing. And it hasn’t a plot.
-I hate plots unless they’re good plots. That’s why this miserable
-‘Todgers’ thing affects me so badly. I hoped Mr. Walling would let me
-help him with ‘Captain Salvador.’ But it’s his baby.”
-
-“Is Rand giving you as much trouble as that every day?”
-
-“Trouble? My dear man, you’ve never rehearsed a woman star who had
-ideas about her art! Rand’s merely rather annoying, not troublesome.
-He’s got no brains so his idea is to imitate the man who played the
-part in London. And he’s never learned how to show all his looks,
-either. But very few Americans know how.”
-
-Gurdy liked the director and spent several afternoons at the
-rehearsals. Cosmo Rand fretted him. The slight man was obdurate. He
-raced about the stage until Russell checked him. His legs, sheathed
-always in grey tweed, seemed fluid. The leading woman had an attack of
-tonsilitis and halted proceedings. It was during this lapse that Gurdy
-encountered Cosmo Rand in a hotel lounge and nodded. The actor stopped
-him, deferentially, “I say, I’m afraid poor Russell’s sick to death of
-me. I’m giving him a bit of trouble.” Gurdy found no answer. The actor
-fooled with his grey hat, rubbed his vivid nails on a cuff, corrected
-his moustache and said, “The fact is--I do most sincerely think that
-Russell’s wrong to drop all the English stage directions. Couldn’t
-you--suggest that Mr. Walling drop in to watch sometime when Miss
-Marryatt’s better and we’re rehearsing again?”
-
-His soft, round bronze eyes were anxious. He spoke timidly, the rosy
-fingernails in a row on his lower lip. He was something frail and
-graceful, a figure from a journal of fashions. Gurdy wondered whether
-Cora Boyle ever assaulted her poor mate and smiled.
-
-“Mr. Walling has a good deal of confidence in Russell’s judgment, Mr.
-Rand. But I’ll speak to him if you like.”
-
-“I’d be most awf’ly grateful if you would, Mr. Bernamer. The play’s
-such a jolly thing and one would like to see it do well. Ronny
-Dufford’s rather a dear friend and--so very broke, you know?”
-
-The rosy, trim creature seemed truly worried. Meeting Russell at the
-45th Street office the next day, Gurdy told him that Rand’s heart was
-breaking. The director grimaced, patting his bald forehead.
-
-“The little tyke’s worrying for fear he won’t get good notices. And if
-this rubbish should fluke into a success he’ll be made into a star.
-Have you ever observed the passion of the American public for second
-rate acting? Especially if it happens to have a slight foreign accent?
-Modjeska, Bandmann, Nazimova?--Well, Miss Marryatt’s all right again.
-We’ll rehearse some more tomorrow. Come and look on.”
-
-Mark had gone to Fayettesville for a few days. Gurdy attended the
-morning rehearsal of “Todgers Intrudes.” Cosmo Rand trotted about the
-stage determinedly and Russell turned on Gurdy with a groan of, “This
-is beyond me. I’m getting ready to do murder. He’s throwing the whole
-thing out of key. I shall have to get your uncle to squash him.”
-
-“I’m beginning to see why Mr. Carlson loathes actors so,” Gurdy
-whispered.
-
-“Oh, Holy Moses,” the director mourned, “look at him!--Slower, please,
-Mr. Rand!--It’ll be awkward if I get Mr. Walling to squash him,
-Bernamer. You never can tell how these walking egoisms will break
-out. He may run about town saying that Mr. Walling’s oppressing him
-cruelly.--My God, he’ll be crawling up the scene in a minute!”
-
-On the stage, Rand had excited himself to a circular movement about a
-large divan in the centre. He had somehow the look of a single racer
-coming home ahead of the other runners. The men and women standing
-still suggested a sparse audience for this athletic feat. It was
-ludicrous. Worse, Mark would never scold Cora Boyle’s husband. Gurdy
-took a resolve. Margot had made Mark waste time with this silly play.
-She had proposed Rand for the part. She should help. He hurried to the
-station and reached the cottage in mid afternoon. A warm October wind
-made the fir trees whistle. He found Margot in a silk sweater of dull
-rose putting a tennis ball about the dry lawn. She smiled, tilting the
-golfstick across a shoulder, and swayed her slim body back to look up
-at Gurdy.
-
-“Dad just telephoned from the farm, old son. Wanted to know if you were
-here. It was something about ‘Captain Salvador’.”
-
-“Oh, yes. I was hunting a tom tom for the Voodoo scene. He doesn’t like
-the one they’re using. Doesn’t thud loudly enough.--Can I talk to you
-about ‘Todgers Intrudes’ without having a fight?”
-
-“Of course you can.”
-
-“All right. It’s going very badly. Mr. Russell, the director, has a
-free for all row with Mr. Rand every day. Rand acts like the last of a
-ballet. He’s putting everything back. He’s out of the picture all the
-time. Word of honour, Margot, the play hasn’t nine lives. It’s thin.
-It’ll take a lot of work to make it go. Russell’s one of the best
-directors going and he knows what he’s doing. Rand simply runs all over
-the stage like that clown at the Hippodrome.”
-
-“That’s rather the way it was played in London. Of course, that’s no
-excuse. Have dad scold Rand.”
-
-“Be pretty awkward for Mark--scolding Cora Boyle’s husband.”
-
-Margot said, “What utter tosh!”
-
-“No, it’s not. Mark’s old fashioned--sensitive about things like that.
-And Rand might take it as spite. Cora Boyle’s back from California,
-Russell tells me. She’s a fearful liar. If she hears that Mark jumped
-on her husband she’ll tell all her friends that Mark’s simply a swine.
-You don’t know how gossip travels and gets--distorted. Once last May
-Mark said that he didn’t like a gown that some woman was wearing in
-a play we’d been to the night before. He said that at lunch in the
-Claridge. Next day the woman’s husband came into the office and wanted
-to thrash Mark. By the time the story got to him it had swelled up like
-a balloon. This fellow had got it that Mark said his wife looked like a
-streetwalker and acted like one.--It’s all very awkward. Couldn’t you--”
-
-“Oh, look here! Because I suggested Cossy Rand for the Earl I’m not
-going to drynurse him!--I think you’re frightfully hypersensitive about
-his being married to Cora Boyle. They’re hardly ever together. It’s
-taking a theatrical menage as seriously as--”
-
-“Oh, for heaven’s sake,” Gurdy broke in, watching the red streaks mount
-her face, “I’m sorry! Let’s drop it. You know Rand. I thought you
-might write him a line and tell him to calm down. That was all. Mark’s
-working himself sick over ‘Captain Salvador’ and that’s an important
-production. Every one’s interested in it. Some of the critics have
-read it and think it’s the best American play in years. After all, you
-got Mark into this ‘Todgers’ thing. He’s doing it to please you. He’ll
-worry if he has to--”
-
-Margot laughed, whipped the ball away neatly with one foot and tossed
-her hair back. She said, “I’ll write Rand, of course. Of course I don’t
-want ‘Todgers’ to get a black eye. I’ll send him a note and tell him to
-carry on. Perhaps he’s rather opinionated. Where’s he stopping?”
-
-“The Knickerbocker.”
-
-She yawned, “I’ll write him, then. Staying for dinner?” She turned and
-roamed off in her swaying fashion. Directly, a motor swung about the
-house. One of the neighbours had come to take the girl driving. She
-waved to Gurdy and disappeared. He resented the waving of the brown
-hand. It was impossible not to resent her kind mentions of his mother
-and sisters before Lady Ilden and Mark.
-
-He resented, too, the airy changes from tart rage to suavity. Their
-talks became a tedious, uncertain duet with one performer unwilling.
-Gurdy strolled into the cottage and Olive Ilden looked up from a novel.
-
-“What have you been quarrelling with Margot about?” she asked.
-
-“Not quarrelling.”
-
-“Nonsense. I could see you through the doors. You were quarrelling and
-she began it. Tell me.”
-
-She closed the book and regarded him, not smiling, from her wicker
-chair. There was an odd alarm in her eyes under which hollows showed.
-The negligent trail of her black gown was dusted with cigarette ash.
-Gurdy stared, upset.
-
-“We weren’t quarrelling. Cosmo Rand’s making an ass of himself at the
-rehearsals. She rather planted him on Mark. Mark’s so sensitive about
-Cora Boyle that Russell--the man who’s rehearsing ‘Todgers’--and I
-don’t want to worry Mark with the mess. I wanted Margot to write Rand
-a note and tell him to buck up. He’s holding the rehearsals back. Here
-it’s almost the first of November. Mark’s got a theatre in Washington
-for a couple of weeks from now and the play isn’t half ready.”
-
-Olive tapped a cigarette holder on the walnut, Dutch table and looked
-at the floor. Then she raised her eyes and smiled, spoke without
-artifice.
-
-“I shan’t let her write to Rand, Gurdy. She’s too much interested in
-him. I don’t like it. She cabled him to come over here as soon as she’d
-bullied Mark into buying the rights to ‘Todgers Intrudes.’ The little
-idiot thinks him a great actor. I’m sure I don’t know why. I don’t at
-all like this. I only found it out yesterday. Mark wouldn’t like it.
-The man’s married and if he happens to tell people Margot sent for
-him--I quite understand theatrical gossip, Gurdy. Mark’s a great person
-and it would make quite a story. And of course there are rats who don’t
-like Mark.”
-
-“How did you find this out, Lady--”
-
-“In the silliest way. I was talking about Ronny Dufford and Margot
-began to argue that this wretched play is really good. She rather lost
-her temper. She told me you’d tried to persuade Mark not to produce
-the thing to spite her. I--” Olive laughed unhappily, “I hadn’t the
-faintest idea that you’d quarrelled. You’re rather too cool, old man.
-I’ve been teasing you all this time fancying that you were wildly in
-love with the child and it seems that you’re at odds.--Oh, It’s all
-utter nonsense, of course! But I don’t like it. It’s a pose. She rather
-prides herself on being unconventional. And the silliest part of it is
-that she feels she’s done Mark a favour.”
-
-“She’s probably cost him about fifteen thousand dollars,” said Gurdy.
-
-This was antique, this tale of a handsome, dapper actor and a girl gone
-moonstruck over his pink face. Gurdy grunted, “We can’t tell Mark this.
-He’d be upset. It’s idiotic.”
-
-Olive laughed, “Oh, you mustn’t get excited over it, Gurdy. The play
-will fail and she’ll drop Rand. It’s a gesture, you see? The clever
-girl doing the unconventional thing.” She became comfortable, then
-artificial. “You mustn’t take Margot at her own valuation, dear. She’s
-the moment--the melodramatic moment. What’s that American slang? She’s
-no--no ball of fire! She admires people easily and drops them easily.
-She’s eighteen. She was quite lost in adoration of the Countess of
-Flint two years ago and then the poor woman did something the child
-didn’t like--wore the wrong frock, probably--and that was all over.
-The poor lady died in Colorado yesterday.--That means consumption,
-doesn’t it? I read the notice to Margot at breakfast and she said,
-‘Really.’ Rand flattered her about her acting, I fancy, and she thinks
-he’s remarkable in return for the compliment. Every normal female
-gets mushy--I’m quite Americanized--over an actor at eighteen. When
-I was eighteen I wrote a five act tragedy and sent it to--Merciful
-Heaven--I’ve forgotten who he was! Beerbohm Tree, probably. But I
-must congratulate you on your attitude. You had a frightful row at
-Fayettesville. She said, herself, that she was to blame. She hurt you.
-And you’ve not shown it in the least.”
-
-“It didn’t amount to much.--But, Mark wouldn’t like this business. And
-of course some people don’t like him. They’d be ready to talk if they
-thought she was flirting with--”
-
-“But she isn’t! If she was I’d drag her off to Japan with me. She’s
-hardly spoken to the man except at those rehearsals last winter. It’ll
-die a swift death when the play fails, old man. We’ve no use for
-failures at eighteen.”
-
-Olive laughed, repeated the prophecy in a dozen turning phrases and
-drove with Gurdy to the station after dinner. But she was oppressed.
-She could imagine Mark’s bewilderment clearly. He found Rand a somewhat
-comic person, a frail young poser towed after the robust beauty of
-his wife, perhaps bullied. The car brought Olive back to the white
-portico of the cottage and she found Margot distracting a middle aged
-sugar broker. It was time for bed when the addled man’s car puffed
-away. Margot yawned and mounted the brown stairs in a flutter of
-marigold skirts. The living-room fell still. Olive settled at a table
-and commenced a letter to Ilden. “I shall not start for Japan for
-some time. Margot is behaving rather queerly. Having fancied that I
-could follow the eccentric curves of her mind I am much annoyed to
-find that I can not. This cottage will be closed next week. Heaven
-knows what will become of the furniture unless Mark should use it in
-a play. I have a curiosity to see the opening of his new theatre. He
-is working frantically over the play for its opening. Gurdy Bernamer
-tells me that a New York first night is like nothing else on earth for
-bounderishness. He says that awful and obscene creatures come creeping
-from nowhere and flap about in free seats and that all the cinema
-queens appear covered with rubies. It--”
-
-The telephone on the table clicked but did not ring. Olive glared at
-the instrument. She abominated the telephone since it had brought
-her news of her son’s death. She finished her letter and climbed the
-stairs, aching for bed after a nervous day. Then she heard Margot
-talking behind the closed door of her room. The girl hadn’t a maid.
-Olive’s own maid was visible in her chamber at the end of the corridor.
-Olive passed on. She came back on impulse and heard “All right,
-Cossy. Carry on. ’By--ee.” Then the small clatter of Margot’s bedside
-telephone set on the glass of a table. Olive opened the door and saw
-the girl subsiding into the mass of her pillows.
-
-“I’ve just blown Cosmo Rand up properly, Olive.”
-
-“I wondered why you were talking.”
-
-Margot yawned, “Gurdy asked me to write him. I’d rather talk. His dear
-wife’s back from California and his voice sounded as though they’d been
-throwing supper dishes at each other. He didn’t seem pleased.”
-
-“My dear, I don’t see why Mr. Rand should be pleased to be lectured on
-his art over the telephone at midnight!”
-
-“It’s rather cheeky, isn’t it? But Gurdy made such a point of it. And
-all I could say was that he mustn’t be too difficult at rehearsals.
-But that’s all I could have said in a note. It seems to me that it’s
-distinctly dad’s business. But Gurdy’s such an everlasting old woman
-about dad! And I am rather responsible for bringing ‘Todgers’ over.
-Dare say I ought to help out, if I can.”
-
-Olive slung a dart carelessly, asking, “What’s Rand’s real name, dear?”
-
-“Rand.”
-
-“I meant the Cosmo. That’s not an American name at all.”
-
-“Don’t know, I’m sure. I don’t like it, anyhow. But it might be his
-own. He’s from some town in Iowa and they name children fearful things
-like Eliander and Jerusha, out there.” She chuckled, slipping a tawny
-shoulder in and out of her robe. Her face rippled, “I really think
-Cosmo’s a rather ghastly name. Sounds like a patent soup. Wonder why
-they named dad Mark? Gurdy’s real name’s George.” She yawned, “I
-suppose all actors get rather opinionated.”
-
-“As they’re mostly rank egotists,” said Olive and closed the door.
-
-Perplexity remained in her strongly wrestling with the desire for
-sleep. She lay composing a letter to Cosmo Rand--“As your position
-toward Mr. Walling is delicate and you are under obligations to Miss
-Walling may I suggest that you maintain a purely formal relation
-toward--” It wouldn’t do. Words to a shadow. She knew nothing of the
-man. He was a graceful figure at parties in London, considerably
-hunted by smart women for Sunday night dinners before the war. If the
-comedy failed and Mark dismissed him Rand might make an ill-tempered
-use of such a letter. Olive shrugged off the idea lay wondering why a
-pleasant voice and a head of curly hair seen across footlights should
-convince Margot that here was a great actor. It was disappointing.
-Olive had thought Margot steeled against crazes. The girl had a general
-appreciation of the arts as seen about London. Olive faintly sighed.
-But the pleasing man might embody some fancy or other, fulfil some
-buried wish. We go groping and stumbling among fancies, the woman
-thought, and see nothing very clearly. She consoled herself with the
-platitude and went to sleep.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-Bubble
-
-
-“Todgers Intrudes” now went smoothly. Mark came to one of the last
-rehearsals, approved Russell’s method but, as they walked up Broadway,
-told Gurdy that this was a “lousy” play. All plays were just then
-nonsense beside “Captain Salvador.” Mark’s absorption seemed to
-exclude even Margot of whom the idolator once gently complained. The
-dark goddess had returned to town, been a week at the Fifty Fifth
-Street house and was sitting with Olive at the rear of the 45th Street
-Theatre. Her voice reached Mark clearly where he stood assembling the
-picture for a scene, a leg swung over the rail of the orchestra pit.
-
-“She don’t seem so much interested in ‘Salvador,’ Gurd. Why’s that?”
-
-“Rather heavy for her, perhaps.”
-
-Mark rubbed his nose and accepted wisdom. A girl of eighteen mightn’t
-care for this tale of shipwrecked ruffians, frantic negroes, moonlit
-death. And what innocent girl of eighteen could know or believe that
-men got tired of women? Gurdy understood and was helpful, had found
-a wailing negro song for the shipboard scene of the first act. Mark
-beamed at Gurdy, then turned to the stage and patiently corrected
-the six negro actors timid among the white folk of the big company,
-pathetic in sapphire and sage green suits.
-
-“You boys in a circle ’round the table, left. Keep looking at Mr.
-Leslie.”
-
-He picked spots for the grouping. His brown fingers pointed. He named
-attitudes, dropping his lids as he built the picture with glances at
-the water colour sketch in his hand. An intricate chatter began on the
-stage. Gurdy slipped up the aisle and joined Olive under the balcony.
-
-“How careful he is,” she whispered, “like a ballet master.”
-
-Gurdy nodded, “No one’ll move without being told to. The whole thing’s
-planned. He’s going to run the lights himself in Boston, next Monday.”
-
-“You’ll go up there with him? He looks dreadfully thin.” His black
-height made a centre against the footlights. His mastery of this
-human paint was impressive, admirable. He visibly laboured, silent,
-listening. She asked, “Would he work as hard over an ordinary,
-commercial play?”
-
-“No. Oh, he’d work hard but not as hard as this.”
-
-Margot glanced across Olive, then at her watch. She said, “Let’s clear
-out, Olive. Teatime.”
-
-“I’d much rather stay here. Fascinating.”
-
-“But you told Mrs. Marlett Smith you’d come.”
-
-Olive sighed and gathered her furs. It was important that Margot should
-go to this tea at the Marlett Smith house. Mrs. Marlett Smith was a
-liberal, amusing woman who had met Mark by way of some playwright and
-had called on Olive at the seaside cottage. They left the theatre and
-Gurdy came to open the door of the blue car. To him Margot suddenly
-spoke, “How will dad open this silly thing in Boston, Monday night and
-get to Washington by Tuesday night to open ‘Todgers’?”
-
-“We’ll be there,” he said and closed the door.
-
-Olive looked back at his colourless dress, his shapely head and
-vanishing grave face with a frank wistfulness. “I don’t see why you
-should make such a point of annoying Gurdy. And why call this play
-silly when it’s so plainly good?... I’ve carefully refrained from
-asking you why you quarrelled with Gurdy. He behaves charmingly to you
-and keeps the peace.”
-
-“Paying him back for being nasty about ‘Todgers Intrudes.’”
-
-“But he’s not been nasty. He’s very sensibly given his opinion that
-it’s feeble. As it is.--The man’s taking us down Broadway. Loathsome
-sewer!”
-
-The motor slowly passed toward Forty Second Street and across that
-jam. Olive saw lean and stolid Englishmen stalking in the harsh, dusty
-November wind that blew women along in the whirling similitude of
-rotted flowers. Margot got notice, here. There was a jerk of male heads
-from the curb. Empty faces turned to the girl’s brilliance in rose
-cloth. A tanned sailor flapped his white cap. Yet in the Marlett Smith
-library on Park Avenue Margot was prettily discreet for half an hour
-below Chinese panels, among gayer frocks where she lost colour, merged
-in a fluctuation of dress. On the way home her restraint snapped into a
-“Damn!”
-
-“Very stiff,” said Olive, “One reads about the American informality.
-Tea at Sandringham is giddy beside this. But Mrs. Marlett Smith’s
-clever. Who were those twins in black velvet who so violently kissed
-you?”
-
-“The Vaneens. Ambrosine and Gretchen. Knew them at school. They come
-out in December.--But what maddens me is this everlasting jabber
-about France! Some of those girls know Gurdy. Their brothers were at
-Saint Andrew’s with him. He seems to have made himself frightfully
-conspicuous about Paris.--No, I’m bored with Gurdy. If dad tries to
-make me marry him I’ll take poison and die to slow music. Such tosh! He
-made a gesture of enlisting--”
-
-“You’re being silly,” Olive said, coldly hurt, “and I’m sick of the
-word, gesture. Pray, was the gesture of third rate artists and actors
-who wouldn’t leave their work anything madly glorious? I can understand
-a man conscious of great talent preferring to stick to his last. And I
-can understand a complete refusal to mix in the--abominable business.
-But I’ve no patience with dreary little wasters who shouted for blood
-and then took acetanilid to cheat the doctors. As for Gurdy’s military
-career he’s very quiet about it. I dislike this venom against Gurdy.”
-
-Margot chuckled, “Perhaps I’m jealous,” and got down before the house.
-She opened the door with her latchkey and they entered a flow of minor
-music from the drawing room. Gurdy was playing. Mark leaned on the
-curve of the piano and his brown hands were deeply reflected in the
-black pool of its top.
-
-“Listen to this, Olive. Nigger song Gurdy raked up for ‘Captain
-Salvador.’ Sing it, sonny. Don’t run off, Margot. Listen.” He caught
-the girl to him, held her cheek against his chin. A scent of mild
-sandal and cigarettes ebbed from the black hair into his nostrils. He
-was tired after the tense rehearsal and chilled from half an hour in
-the cold of the Walling. This moving warmth and scent was luxury. Mark
-shut his eyes. Gurdy chanted in plausible barytone.
-
- “Life is like a mountain railway,
- From the cradle to the grave.
- Keep yoh hand upon the throttle
- An’ yoh eyes--upon--the--rail....”
-
-It would sound splendidly in the dim forecastle of the first scene. It
-would float and die under the blue vault of the Walling. He had just
-seen the lights turned on a recession of faint silver rims in the dull
-cloud of that ceiling. He was still drugged by the sight. His theatre
-was like a desirable body promised to his arms. Gurdy played again the
-slow air in curious variations, flutters of notes. Mark opened his eyes
-to watch the slide of the long fingers on the keys. Olive was smiling.
-
-“Delightful. Very moral, too. Sound advice. How well you play, Gurdy!”
-
-“Always did,” said Mark, “He could play like a streak when he was ten.
-Come along up and have a fight with Mr. Carlson, daughter.”
-
-Olive let Margot’s voice melt into the old man’s cackle above. Gurdy
-said, “We went to the Walling after rehearsal, Lady Ilden. Honestly,
-it’s a corker. The ceiling’s nearly finished. Theatres don’t last,
-worse luck. But there’s nothing like it in the city. Mark’s worked like
-a pup over it.--How was your tea?”
-
-“Very decent. Varieties of women, there. Almost no men. A débutante
-told me she admired Walt Whitman more than most English poets and was
-rather positive that he was English. I can’t understand the American
-tabu on Whitman.”
-
-“Immoral.”
-
-“But--good heavens!--I fascinated two elderly girls by telling them
-I knew Swinburne. Swinburne was lewd. Poor Whitman was merely rather
-frank.”
-
-“But Algie was a foreigner,” Gurdy laughed, “so it was all right.
-Margot have a good time?”
-
-Olive asked, “What were you and Margot rowing about in the library last
-night? I could hear her voice getting acid.”
-
-Gurdy commenced a waltz and said, “We weren’t rowing. Mark asked me
-whether Cosmo Rand was in the British army. He wasn’t and I said so.
-She seemed to think I was sniffing at Rand and blew me up a little.
-That was all. We made peace. I rather like Rand, you know, now that
-he’s stopped making an ass of himself at rehearsals. Russell and I had
-lunch with him today. He talks well. He knows a lot about painting,
-for instance. These actors who’ve been all over the landscape and
-don’t think they’re better than Richard Mansfield--pretty interesting.
-There’s not much to Rand but he isn’t a--a walking egotism.”
-
-Olive laughed, “Come back to Margot. She’s pointedly offensive to you
-and rather assertive about it. I hope you’ll go on being patient and
-try to remember how young she is. You’re very mature for twenty-one.
-You never bray. I brayed very wildly at Margot’s age. I horribly recall
-telling Henry Arthur Jones how to improve his plays and one of my
-saddest memories is of telling a nice Monsieur Thibault what a poor
-novel Thaïs was. He quite agreed with me. I didn’t know he was Anatole
-France until he left the room. I’ve all the patience going with youth.
-You’re almost too mature.”
-
-“Don’t know about being mature,” said Gurdy, “I’m not, probably. But
-every other book you read is all about youth--golden youth--youth
-always finds a way--ferment. Get pretty tired of it. Makes me want to
-be forty-nine. And some of the poets make me sick. Hammering their
-chests and saying, Yow! I’m young!... Not their fault. I’m not proud of
-being six foot one. Runs in the family.”
-
-“That’s a very cool bit of conversation, old man. You’ve taken me away
-from Margot twice, very tactfully, so I’ll drop it. Play some Debussy.
-His music reminds me of a very handsome man with too much scent on his
-coat. Can’t approve of it. Rather like it.”
-
-He evaded discussions of Margot until Sunday night when he went with
-Mark to Boston for the opening of “Captain Salvador” there. On Monday
-night he sat, a spy, in the middle of the large audience. A critic
-had come from New York to see this play before it should reach the
-metropolitan shoals. Gurdy saw the slender, sharp face intent. The ten
-scenes of the Cuban romance passed without a hitch before the placid
-Bostonians. Mark was directing the lights that raised peaks of gloom
-on the walls, sent shimmerings along the moonlit beach where the hero
-squatted in a purple shadow. About him Gurdy heard appropriate murmurs.
-A fat woman whimpered her objection to the half naked celebrants of
-the Voodoo scene. An old man complained that this was unlike life. Two
-smart matrons chatted happily about a Harvard cabal against some friend
-while “Captain Salvador” effected his wooing. A thin boy in spectacles
-wailed an argument that true art wasn’t possible in a capitalistic
-nation. A girl giggled every time the sailors of the story swore and
-almost whinnied when the word, “strumpet” rattled over the lights. But
-this herd redeemed itself in heavy applause. The thin boy wailed a
-blanket assent to the merits of the plot and the setting, “After all,
-Walling’s Irish and he studied under Reinhardt in Berlin. The Kelts
-have some feeling for values.” Still the fat woman thought, loudly,
-that the play didn’t prove anything and Gurdy decided that one of his
-future satires must be named, The Kingdom of Swine. He found Mark in
-high delight behind the scenes, snapping directions to his manager,
-his leading man and the electrician in the New Jersey singsong. “Have
-the tomtom some louder for the Voodoo, Ike. Bill, you send all the
-notices special delivery to the Willard in Washington. Mr. O’Mara’s in
-Hayti if the _Transcript_ wants an interview. Beach scene blue enough,
-Gurdy? All right, Ed, I told you it was. Now, Leslie, take your fall
-at the end quieter, a little. You’re all right, the rest of it. Come
-along, Gurdy. Taxi’s waiting.” In the taxi, he cried, “Damn this lousy
-‘Todgers’ thing, son! I want to stay here. People liked it, huh?”
-
-“They did.--Oh, you’re Irish and you learned all your business from
-Reinhardt.”
-
-“Sure! Blame, it on Europe!--My God, didn’t the tomtom business go like
-a breeze?--Oh, this ‘Todgers’ thing’ll be too bad. Tell you, I’ll play
-it in Washington and Philadelphia. Baltimore, if it don’t just roll on
-its belly and die. Sorry if Margot gets sore.--She and Olive went to
-Washington s’afternoon, didn’t they, huh?--Was the ship scene light
-enough, sonny?”
-
-He sat in their stateroom on the train, his eyes still black with
-excitement and drank watered brandy. He dreamed of “Captain Salvador’s”
-first night at the Walling and tremors of applause mounting to the blue
-vault of that perfected ceiling. He was so tired that he struggled,
-undressing.
-
-“Mark, you’re thin as a bean! Nothing but some muscles and skin.”
-
-Mark flexed his arms, beamed up at the tall boy’s anxiety and rolled
-into his berth. The mussed red hair disappeared under a pillow. Gurdy
-smoked and stared humbly.... This was surely half of an artist,
-laborious, patient, contriving beauty. The man had this strange
-perception of the lovely thing. He should do better and better. If his
-trade was that of the booth, the sale of charming sensualities, he
-raised it by his passion. He begot fondness. He created. Gurdy tucked
-the blankets over the blue silk pyjamas and planned a long talk on the
-purpose of the theatre for the morning, then wondered what that purpose
-was and put the lecture off. They fled all morning down the land and
-came to Washington in time for late lunch with Russell at the Shoreham
-where Mark halted to look at a pretty, dark woman in the suave, grey
-lounge smelling of flowers, fell behind Gurdy and Russell, found
-himself suddenly lifting his hat to Cora Boyle. She wore a cloak banded
-with black fur and a gold hat too young for her paint. Mark smiled,
-rather sorry for the blown coarseness of her chin, asked how she liked
-California and heard her flat voice crackle.
-
-“A nightmare! All these girls who were absolutely no one last week in
-ten thousand dollar cars! No, I’m glad they brought me east. I’m taking
-three days off to see Cosmo start this. Tells me it plays here the rest
-of the week, then Philadelphia.--When are you bringing it into New
-York?”
-
-He shifted a little and said, “Can’t say, Cora. Hard to get a house in
-New York, right now. This thing I’ve got at the Forty Fifth Street is
-doin’ big business. Todgers’ll be on the road two weeks, anyhow, before
-I decide what’ll become of it--”
-
-“What are you opening the Walling with?”
-
-“‘Captain Salvador.’ Opened in Boston last night. Best play I’ve ever
-touched! Say, remind me to send you seats when it opens the Walling.”
-
-“That’s dear of you.--But couldn’t you get one of the small houses
-for Cosmo? The Princess or the Punch and Judy? Intimate comedy. Cosmo
-really does better in a small house. And--” she smiled--“you could take
-a bigger one after a month or so.”
-
-He had an awed second of wonder. She’d been almost thirty years on the
-stage and she thought “Todgers Intrudes” a good play! He began to say,
-“But, do you think this will--” Then two men charged up to shake hands
-with the actress. Mark scuttled down the stairs toward the grill. If
-she was quarrelling with Rand her manner didn’t show it. “Cosmo really
-does better in a small house.” He joined Russell and Gurdy at their
-table, puzzled and said, “Say, if she’s fighting with Rand it’s funny
-she’d come down to see him open this flapdoodle.”
-
-“Habit,” Russell shrugged, “They’ve been married twelve years. But are
-they fighting? I had breakfast with them this morning and she almost
-crucified herself because his tea wasn’t right.”
-
-Mark wondered why Margot thought that Rand and the woman quarrelled.
-But he shed the wonder. He liked Washington especially as the pale city
-showed itself now in a vapour where the abiding leaves seemed glazed in
-their red and yellow along the streets. Olive knew people here. There
-was a tea with a British attaché. Margot’s rose cloth suit gleamed
-about the dancing floor of the restaurant. Gurdy had friends who were
-produced, fell subject to Margot and came between the acts that night
-to lean over the girl’s chair in the box of the big theatre. “Todgers
-Intrudes” went its placid course. Rand gave, Mark fancied, an excellent
-imitation of an English conservative. The packed house laughed at the
-right points. Margot’s face rippled so eagerly that Mark wanted to kiss
-it and covertly held her hand below the rail. Why, this was the pretty,
-gentle sort of nonsense eighteen years would relish! A pity it had no
-staying wit. A pity this fragile, polished man she so admired wasn’t a
-real comedian. Mark looked at Gurdy’s stolid boredom and the fine chest
-hidden by the dinner jacket beyond Olive’s bare shoulders. It might be
-as well to let Gurdy tell Margot the play wouldn’t do for New York.
-Mark shrank from that. Gurdy could put the thing much better in his
-cool, bred fashion.--Here and there men were leaving the theatre with
-an air of final retirement. In the opposite box there was a waving of
-feathers. How well Cora Boyle could use a fan!--A youngster with curly
-orange hair slipped into his box as the second curtain fell. Gurdy
-introduced young Theodore Jannan to Olive and Margot, then to Mark. Mr.
-Jannan had come over from Philadelphia to do something in Washington.
-This play--the Jannan heir bit off a “rotten”--was advertised as coming
-to Philadelphia next week.
-
-“Opens there Monday,” said Mark.
-
-“My mother’s giving a baby dance for my sister. Couldn’t you bring Miss
-Walling, Gurdy? Monday night.”
-
-How smoothly Margot said she’d like to come to a dance at Mrs. Apsley
-Jannan’s house in Philadelphia! The nonsense of social position! An
-illusion. A little training, a little charm, good clothes.--A Healy,
-one of Margot’s cousins, had risen to be a foreman in one of the Jannan
-steel mills.--Gurdy had played football with this pleasant lad at Saint
-Andrew’s school. Who on earth would ever know or care that Margot and
-Gurdy were born on a farm? The last curtain fell. Margot wanted to
-dance. Russell came to join the party. They went to a restaurant and
-found a table at the edge of the oval floor. Margot’s yellow frock
-was swept off into the florid seething on Gurdy’s arm. Russell poured
-brandy neatly into the coffee pot and shrugged to Mark.
-
-“Bad sign. Fifteen or twenty men left in the second act. We’ll
-have a vile time in Philadelphia, Lady Ilden. It’s a queer town on
-plays.--There come the Rands.”
-
-A headwaiter lifted a “Reserved” sign from a table across the floor.
-Cora Boyle and her husband appeared in the light threaded by cigarette
-smoke. The actress draped a green and black skirt carelessly, refused
-to dance with a British officer in a trim pantomime, bowed slowly
-to Mark who was taken with fright. She’d want to talk about this
-drivelling play and before her slight, quiet husband. He slipped a bill
-under the edge of Russell’s plate.
-
-“Bring Olive back to the hotel will you Russell? I’m all in. ’Night,
-Olive.”
-
-His retreat through the smoky tables was comic. Russell fingered his
-chin. Olive ended by laughing, “He’s ridiculously timid about her.”
-
-The director patted his bald forehead and drank some coffee. He said,
-“It happens that he’s got some reason. Miss Boyle’s bad tempered and an
-inveterate liar. She’s fond of her husband and she seems to think this
-comedy will have a New York run. Mr. Walling means to let it die on the
-road, naturally. She won’t like that. She’ll talk. Her voice will be
-loud all up and down Broadway.”
-
-“But--surely he’s callous to that sort of thing?”
-
-“Do you see anything callous about him? I don’t.” The director nodded
-to the floating of Margot’s skirt. “This is the first time I’ve ever
-directed a play put on to please a débutante, Lady Ilden.--No, Mr.
-Walling seems mighty sensitive to gossip.--And Cora Boyle’s in a strong
-position. She’s a woman--obviously--and she can make a good yarn.
-Spite, and so on. She’s quite capable of giving out interviews on the
-subject. She can’t hurt Mr. Walling but she might cause any quantity
-of gossip,--which he couldn’t very well answer. She can play the woman
-wronged, you see?”
-
-“What a nation of woman worshippers you are!”
-
-“Were,” said Russell, “We’re getting over it.”
-
-“I don’t see any signs of it.”
-
-Russell said, “You can’t send two million men into countries where
-women--well, admit that they’re human, not goddesses, anyhow, without
-getting a reaction. My wife’s a lawyer. She helped a young fellow--an
-ex-soldier--out of some trouble the other day and he told her she was
-almost as nice as a foreigner--Ten years ago if Cora Boyle had wanted
-to have a fight with Mr. Walling she could have taken the line that he
-was jealous of Rand and she’d have found newspapers that would print
-front page columns about it. She’d get about two paragraphs now.--But
-she probably has better sense. Beastly handsome, isn’t she?”
-
-“Very--brutta bestia bella. Gurdy tells me she’s paid a thousand
-dollars a day to play Camille for the cinema. Why?”
-
-“Oh ... she’s the kind of thing a lot of respectable middle aged women
-adore, I think.--Look at them.”
-
-There were many women in the rim of tables. They stared at the flaring
-green and black gown, at the exhibited bawdry of gold wrought calves,
-at the feathers of the waving, profuse fan. There was an attitude of
-furtive adventure in the turn of heads. They stared, disapproved,
-perhaps envied.
-
-“‘Some men in this, some that, their pleasure take, but every woman is
-at heart a rake,’” Olive quoted.
-
-The director laughed, “You’re right.--And I often think that the movie
-queens take the place of an aristocracy in this country. Something
-very fast and bold for the women to stare at. Now Rand, there, is the
-ideal aristocrat--in appearance, anyhow, don’t you think? And nobody’s
-looking at him. I wonder if Miss Walling would dance with me?”
-
-He relieved Gurdy close to the Rand table. When the boy joined Olive
-she asked, “Mr. Russell isn’t a typical stage director, is he?... I
-thought not. One of the new school in your theatre? A well educated
-man?... Rather entertaining.”
-
-“He writes a little. Been an engineer. Stage directors are weird. One
-of them used to be an Egyptologist.--I say, help me keep Mark here the
-rest of the week, will you? He’s dead tired. Did he run when he saw
-Cora Boyle coming?”
-
-“Yes. He seems positively afraid of her!”
-
-Gurdy said, “He is afraid of her. Great Scott, he was only sixteen when
-he married her and dad says he was--pretty blooming innocent. Mark’s
-all full of moral conventions, Lady Ilden. Ever noticed that?”
-
-“When you were in pinafores, my child! I always thought he’d shed some
-of his Puritan fancies. He doesn’t.”
-
-“Grandfather’s awfully strict, even if he is an atheist. And mother
-... isn’t what you’d call reckless. They brought him up. And he still
-thinks their ... well, moral standards are just about right.--I’m the
-same way. Got it pounded into me at school that bad grammar and loud
-clothes were immoral. Don’t suppose I’ll get over that.--Mark says he’s
-never flirted with a married woman in his life.”
-
-Olive yawned, “I don’t suppose that he has, consciously. Oh, to be
-sure, I can understand why Mark would think of Miss Boyle as the
-Scarlet Woman. The Puritan upbringing.--We never quite get over early
-influences, Gurdy. I always find myself bristling a bit over dropped
-H’s even when a famous novelist does the dropping.--Mark prophesies bad
-reviews for the play, in the morning. Do leave word to have the papers
-sent up to me. I’m so sleepy I shall forget about it.--Thank heaven,
-Margot’s stopped dancing.”
-
-In their double bedroom at the New Willard Margot talked jauntily of
-“Todgers Intrudes,” until Olive fell asleep wondering why the girl
-should interpret amiable laughter as the shout of success. In the
-morning two newspapers arrived with breakfast. The critics praised
-the acting and both sniffed at the play. Olive read the columns over
-her tea. Both critics dealt kindly with Rand. One thought his manner
-resembled that of Cyril Maude, the other said that he imitated George
-Arliss. Margot came trailing a green robe from the bathtub and stood
-pressed against the brass bedfoot reading the comments. The sun
-redoubled on her silver girdle and the numerous polychrome tassels of
-the foolish, charming drapery inside which her body stirred before
-she cried, “How American! Thin! It’s no thinner than that rot dad has
-running at the Forty Fifth Street!”
-
-“My darling Margot, that’s thin American comedy. It’s something
-national, comprehensible. As for ‘Todgers,’ why--why should you expect
-a pack of American war office clerks and provincials to care whether
-a Baron precedes an Earl or no? I can’t help being surprised that
-so many of them seemed to know what it was all about! The play is
-thin--horribly thin. I’m sure it did well at home on account of Maurice
-Ealy’s following. The critics say rather nice things about Rand, all
-things considered.... Well, were you impressed with him last night? Do
-you still think he’s a fine actor?”
-
-Margot tilted her face toward the ceiling and the sun made a visard
-across her narrowed eyes. She twisted the silver girdle between her
-hands and stood silent. Olive felt the final barrier between creatures,
-suddenly and keenly. She had lived in intimacy with the girl for five
-years. Here was a strange mind revolving under the black, carven hair
-and the mask of sun.
-
-“No, I didn’t think him very good, last night. Nervous.--And perhaps
-the play did seem rather thin.... But it’ll do better in New York. More
-civilized people, there.”
-
-Olive lifted her breakfast tray to the bedside table and thought. Then
-her patience snapped, before the girl’s sunny and motionless certitude.
-She said, “New York! Do you think Mark will risk bringing this poor
-ghost of a thing to New York? Hardly! He told me last night it will be
-played in Philadelphia and Baltimore, then he’ll discard it.--You’re
-silly, dearest! The play’s wretched and Rand’s no better than a hundred
-other young leading men I’ve seen. He appeals to you for some reason or
-other. He seems very, very feeble to me. He has no virility, no--”
-
-The silver girdle broke between the tawny hands. Margot’s face rippled.
-She said loudly, “This is all Gurdy! He doesn’t like the play! He’s
-made dad dislike it. He--”
-
-Olive cut in, “I shan’t listen to that! That’s mere ill temper and
-untrue. The play is a waste of Mark’s time and of his money.--Between
-your very exaggerated loyalty to Ronny Dufford and your liking for
-this doll of an actor you’ve probably cost Mark three or four thousand
-pounds. He produced this play entirely to please you. Don’t tease him
-any farther. Don’t try to make him bring this nonsense to New York.
-You’ve a dreadful power over Mark. Don’t trade on it! You’re behaving
-like a spoiled child. You disappoint me!”
-
-The black eyes widened. Margot pushed herself back from the bed with
-both hands, staring. She said, “I--I dare say.... Sorry.”
-
-“You should be!... He’s done everything he can to keep you amused. He
-isn’t a millionaire. You’ve been treated like a mistress of extravagant
-tastes, not like a daughter! There is such a thing as gratitude. He’s
-humoured you in regard to this silly play and in regard to Rand. Gurdy
-and Mr. Russell tell me that Cora Boyle can make herself a disgusting
-nuisance now that the play’s a failure. You’ve pushed Mark into this
-very bad bargain. Don’t make it worse by whimpering, now, and don’t--”
-
-“Oh, please!”
-
-“Then please bite on the bullet and let’s hear no more of this. When
-Mark tells you he’ll drop the play, don’t tease him.”
-
-Margot said, “Poor Ronny Dufford! I thought--”
-
-“I’m sorry Ronny’s broke. It’s the destiny of younger sons whose
-fathers had a taste for baccarat. I shall start for Japan as soon as
-I’ve seen the Walling opened. I shan’t go in a very easy frame of mind
-if I feel that you’ve constituted yourself a charitable committee of
-one with Mark as treasurer.”
-
-Olive laughed. Margot said, “Yes, m’lady,” and made a curtsey, then
-fluttered off to telephone for breakfast, began to chuckle and the
-delicate chime of that mirth was soothing, after the rasp of Olive’s
-tirade. The girl seemed unresentful. Olive had never so seriously
-scolded her. Now she thought that she should talk to Mark about
-his folly. This idolatry was delightful to watch but unhealthy, a
-temptation to Margot. The girl had other pets in London. There was
-an amateur actress constantly wobbling on the edge of professional
-engagements. Two or three of the young painters experimented in stage
-setting. She deliberated and listed these artists to Mark while they
-were driving about the broad city in a hired victoria.
-
-“All nice children and hopeless dabblers, old man. Beware of them or
-you’ll have the house filled with immigrants. Rand’s a giant beside any
-of them.”
-
-“The little man ain’t so bad. Guess I’ll put him in as leading man for
-a woman in a Scotch play I’m going to work on after Christmas. That’ll
-shut Cora Boyle up. He’ll do, all right. I’ll offer him the part when I
-tell him ‘Todgers’ goes to Cain’s.”
-
-“To--where?”
-
-“It’s a warehouse in New York where dead plays go--the scenery,
-I mean.” Mark pointed to a full wreath of steam floating above
-the Pan American building, “Watch it go. No wind. Ought to last a
-minute.--Busted,” he sighed, as the lovely cream melted. “But I ain’t
-sorry this happened, Olive. Teach her she don’t know so much about the
-show business. ‘Todgers’ll’ make a little money here because the town’s
-packed full. But I’m afraid Philadelphia’ll be its Waterloo. Well,
-the Boston _Transcript_ had three columns on ‘Captain Salvador.’ It’s
-in the biggest theatre in Boston and they had standing room only last
-night. Gurdy got a wire from a kid he knows in Harvard that a couple of
-professors came out of the woods and told their classes to go see the
-thing.”
-
-His talk came turning back to “Captain Salvador” for the rest of the
-week. He was bodily listless after the strain of the Boston production.
-Gurdy forced him to play golf and tramp the spread city when Olive and
-Margot were at teas in the British colony. Russell often walked and
-every night dined with them, examining Margot with his sharp hazel eyes
-so that Gurdy fancied the man exhaling her essence with his cigarette
-smoke. He sat with Gurdy on Monday afternoon in the smoking car on the
-road to Philadelphia and observed, “Miss Walling’s very much interested
-in ‘Todgers.’ How will she take the blow when it fails, here? It’ll be
-a flat failure, tonight, Gurdy. See if it isn’t.”
-
-“Margot and I are going to a dance. We shan’t see it flop.”
-
-“It’ll flop very flat and hard. I’m a Philadelphian. You should warn
-Miss Walling.”
-
-Mark startled Gurdy by warning Margot during tea in the small suite of
-the Philadelphia hotel while she stood at the tin voiced piano rattling
-tunes with one hand. Mark said nervously, “Now, sister, if ‘Todgers’
-is a fluke here--why, I can’t waste time and cash fooling with it any
-longer.” He coughed and finished, “I’ll send your friend Dufford a
-check and--amen.”
-
-“You’re an old duck,” said Margot, “and I’ll be good. Shan’t ever try
-to choose another play for you--never, never, never.” She tinkled the
-negro song from “Captain Salvador” tapping one foot so that the silver
-buckle sparkled. “Wish I could sing.... Life is like a--what’s good old
-life like, Gurdy?”
-
-“Like a mountain railway.”
-
-“That a simile or a metaphor?--I say, I must get scrubbed. Six o’clock.”
-
-She passed Gurdy, leaving the room. He saw her teeth white against the
-red translucency of her lower lip and carmine streaks rising in her
-face, but her door shut slowly.
-
-“Took it like a Trojan,” Mark proudly said, “Guess the Washington
-papers opened her eyes some. Well, let’s go see if Russell’s
-downstairs, Gurd. He’s got a room on this floor. Gad, Olive, I wish we
-were goin’ to a dance tonight instead of this--junk.”
-
-“Margot should wear something very smart for this dance, shouldn’t
-she?” Olive asked. “The Jannans are the mighty of earth, aren’t they?”
-
-“Old family. Steel mills,” Gurdy explained.
-
-“I’ve met some of them in Scotland. Wasn’t there a Miss Jannan who
-did something extraordinary? I remember a row in the New York papers.
-Didn’t she--”
-
-Mark laughed, “Ran off with a married man. They’ve got a couple of
-kids, too.”
-
-“Doesn’t that domestic touch redeem the performance, Mark?”
-
-Mark chuckled and drawled, “Now, here! You make out you’re a wild eyed
-radical and so on. Suppose some girl that ought to know better came and
-lived next you in Chelsea with a married man. Ask her to dinner?”
-
-“I cheerfully would if I thought her worth knowing, gentle Puritan!
-If I thought she was simply a sloppy, uncontrolled sentimentalist I
-should no more bother myself than I would to meet a society preacher or
-some hero of the Russian ballet who’s paid a hundred guineas a night
-to exhibit his abdominal surface in the name of art.... Six o’clock. I
-should tub, myself. I’ve several cinders on my spine. Run along, both
-of you.”
-
-Mark said on the way to the elevators, “Olive’s a wonder, ain’t she,
-bud? Don’t know why but she always puts me in mind of your dad. Calm
-and cool.--Oh, say, tomorrow’s your mamma’s birthday!”
-
-“It is. And I’m going up to the farm, after lunch. ‘Todgers Intrudes’
-has got me--”
-
-“Shut up,” said Mark, seeing Cosmo Rand ringing the button for the
-elevator. He beamed at the actor and asked in the car, “Mrs. Rand went
-back to New York?”
-
-“Yes. Just been talking to her by ’phone. They started the film of
-‘Camille’ today. Very trying, she said. They’ve some promoted cowboy
-playing Armand.--I say, I’ve some quite decent gin in my flask. We
-might have a cocktail.”
-
-Gurdy thought how clever the man was to wear grey, increasing his
-height and embellishing his rosy skin. He understood dress expertly. At
-the Jannan dance, toward midnight, a girl told him that she’d just come
-from a “simply idiotic play” but praised Rand’s appearance. “Englishmen
-do turn themselves out so well.”
-
-The dance was supported by sparkling Moselle and Gurdy didn’t have
-to perform with Margot. She found friends. He was summoned to be
-introduced to a young Mrs. Calder who at once invited him to dine
-the next evening. Gurdy excused himself on the score of his mother’s
-birthday. As they drove away from the emptying house Margot explained,
-“Peggy Calder’s nice. She was in the Red Cross in London. You’re really
-going up to the farm?”
-
-“Certainly.”
-
-She said nothing, restless in her dark cloak for a time then chattered
-about the Jannan grandeur. She enjoyed spectacles. The great suburban
-house and the green ballroom pleased her. “But you people drink too
-much, you know? Mrs. Jannan’s a second wife, isn’t she? Rather pretty.
-Heavens, what a long way back to the hotel!”
-
-“You’re tired.”
-
-“Frightfully. And blue.... Can’t you make dad try ‘Todgers’ in New
-York, Gurdy?” Directly and with a sharp motion she added, “No. That’s
-utterly silly. I’ve no business asking it.... But I do feel--And yet I
-don’t know the New York taste--You really think it wouldn’t do?”
-
-“I really don’t, Margot. And you can’t get a theatre for love, blood or
-money. They’re even trying to buy theatres to bring plays into. Mark
-would have to run the play on the road for weeks--months, perhaps,
-before he could get a theatre.”
-
-She dropped the matter, spoke of the dance again and at the hotel
-hurried up the corridor to her rooms. Mark sat up as Gurdy slid into
-the other bed of his chamber and passed a hand across his throat, “Oh,
-son, what an evening! ‘Todgers’ to the boneyard! Crape on the door!”
-
-“Fizzled? People were knocking it at the Jannan’s.”
-
-“Awful! Every one coughed. I will say Rand worked hard. No, it’s dead.
-I’ll let it run tomorrow night and then close it.--Stick with me
-tomorrow. I’ll have to break the bad news to Rand.”
-
-He broke the news to Rand just as Gurdy was leaving to take the train
-for Trenton, after lunch. The actor strolled up to them beside the
-door, a grey furred coat over his arm and his bronze eyes patently
-anxious.
-
-“Going away, Bernamer?”
-
-“The country.”
-
-“Decent day for it.... I say, Walling, they weren’t nice to us in the
-papers.”
-
-Gurdy saw Mark begin to act. The voice deepened to its kindest drawl.
-Mark said, “Just called up the theatre. Only sold two hundred seats for
-tonight and its almost three, now. That’s too bad.”
-
-Rand passed the polished nails along the soft moustache. The sun of the
-door sent true gold into his hair. He murmured, “Shocking bad, eh? We
-play Baltimore, next week, don’t we?”
-
-“No,” said Mark, easily, “It’s too thin. I’ll close it tonight.--Now,
-I’m putting on a piece called the ‘Last Warrior.’ English. Start
-rehearsals after Christmas. Good part for you in that. Marion Hart’s
-the lead. Know her? Nice to play with and a damned good play.”
-
-“Oh--thanks awfully.--Yes, I know Miss Hart.--Thanks very much, sir....
-You shan’t risk bringing ‘Todgers’ to New York?”
-
-“No. I’m sorry. You’ve worked mighty hard and I like your work. You’ll
-be a lot better off in this other play.... ‘Todgers’ is too thin, Rand.
-Might have done five or six years back.”
-
-The actor nodded. “Dare say you’re right, sir. Bit of a bubble, really.
-And awfully good of you to want me for this other thing. Be delighted
-to try.... Yes, this was rather bubblish:--Anyhow, this lets me out of
-Baltimore. I do hate that town. Well, thanks ever so. Better luck next
-time, let’s hope.”
-
-He walked off, grey into the duller grey of the columned lounge. Mark
-nodded after him. “Took it damned well, Gurdy. He’ll be all right in
-this other show and Cora can’t say I haven’t been decent to him. Well,
-hustle along. Got that whiskey for your dad? Give ’em my love.--Look at
-that pink car, for lordsake! Vulgarity on four wheels, huh?--So long,
-sonny.”
-
-Gurdy was glad that Rand hadn’t whined. This was a feeble, tame fellow
-without much attraction beyond his handsome face. Perhaps it was for
-this mannerly tameness that Margot liked him. Perhaps that fable of
-women liking the masterly male was faulty. Margot liked to domineer.
-She had bullied Rand a trifle at the rehearsal in London. Perhaps
-Cora Boyle liked the tame little creature for some such reason. Gurdy
-dismissed him and the theatre. There was vexing sadness in the
-collapse of even so poor a play. Russell and the actors had worked.
-It came to nothing. Bubble! Expensive, futile, unheroic evanescence.
-Margot’s fault. He mustn’t let Mark do such a thing again. The girl
-must confine her restless self to dances and clothes. She had looked
-very well at the Jannan party. She had smartness, instant magnetism.
-She was still asleep and would dine with her acquaintance, Mrs. Calder,
-tonight. Gurdy yawned as Trenton foully spouted its industry toward
-the sky. Bernamer was waiting with the car at the station, gave him a
-crushing hug and told him that he looked like hell.
-
-“Danced all night.”
-
-“I see you did in the _Ledger_. Among those present at the Apsley
-Jannan’s party. Your mamma’s all upset about it. Saw a movie of
-a millionaire party with naked hussies ridin’ ostriches in the
-conserv’tory. She thinks Margot’s led you astray. How’s this ‘Tod’ play
-done?”
-
-“It’s all done, dad. Closes tonight.”
-
-Bernamer sent the car through Trenton and cursed Margot astoundingly.
-“Ten or twelve thousand dollars! The little skunk! Cure Mark of
-listening to her. Say, he still wanting you to marry her, bud?”
-
-“Afraid he is, dad.”
-
-“Sure. Next best he could do to marryin’ her himself. Funny boy. Likes
-her ’cause she’s pretty. Black hair.--This English woman’s blackheaded,
-ain’t she?... Well, you sic’ some feller onto Margot and get her off
-Mark’s hands. If you fell in love with her again, your mamma’d puff up
-and bust.”
-
-“Again?”
-
-Bernamer gave him a blue stare and winked, wrinkling his nose. His
-weathered face creased into a snort. “Sure, you were losin’ sleep over
-her ’fore she got back from England.”
-
-“Not now, daddy.” Gurdy wondered about the absolute death of his
-passion. His father, who so seldom saw him, knew it was done. Mark saw
-him daily, talked to him of Margot urgently and saw nothing.
-
-“Well,” said Bernamer, “Mark’s awful fond of you. And you ain’t bad,
-reelly. Don’t you get married until you catch one you can stand for
-steady diet. Oh, your mamma’s gone on a vegetable diet and lost four
-pounds in two weeks. Ed’s got a boil on his neck--bad, too, poor pup.
-Jim done an algebra problem right yesterday and made a touchdown
-Saturday. He’s got his head swelled a mile.”
-
-The man’s tolerant dealing with his family impressed Gurdy. Here was a
-controlled and level affection, not Mark’s worship. It was a healthier
-thing. He watched his father’s amiable scorn while Mrs. Bernamer and
-the whole household fussed variously over young Edward’s inflamed
-neck after supper. The boil was central in the talk of the red living
-room. Grandfather Walling tried to think of some ancient remedy and
-fell asleep pondering. The two bigger lads hovered and chuckled over
-the eruption. The sisters neglected some swains who came calling. Mrs.
-Bernamer sat mending the grey breeches of the military uniform Edward
-wasn’t wearing. The boil maintained itself over gossip of the village,
-the Military Academy and female questions about the Jannan dance. At
-ten Bernamer said, “Go to bed, all of you. Got to talk business to
-Gurdy.” The family kissed Gurdy and departed. Grandfather Walling’s
-snore roamed tenderly down into the stillness. Bernamer got out the
-chessboard and uncorked a bottle of vicious pear cider. They smoked and
-played the endless game. At twelve the telephone bell shore off his
-father’s sentences. Gurdy clapped a palm on the jangling at his elbow
-and picked up the instrument. Olive Ilden spoke in her most artificial,
-clearest voice.
-
-“We’re in New York, dear. The doctor telephoned about eight and we came
-up directly. I think you’d best come, Gurdy.”
-
-“Mr. Carlson?”
-
-“Yes. He’ll be gone in a few hours. Mark’s so distressed and--the old
-man asked for you.”
-
-Bernamer said, “No train until three thirty, son.”
-
-“I’ll get there as fast, as I can,” Gurdy told her, “Margot there?”
-
-“No. She’d gone to dine with her friend--Mrs. Calder--and Mark didn’t
-want her here. I’ll tell Mark you’re coming, then. Good-bye.”
-
-Gurdy rang off. His father nodded, “Mark’ll miss the old feller. Been
-mighty good to him. Funny old man. Always liked him. Poor Mark! Well,
-you say this Englishwoman’s sensible. That’s some help.”
-
-Gurdy was glad of Olive’s sanity, wished that the thought of this death
-didn’t make his heart thump for a little. His father would drive him
-into Trenton at two. They played chess again. Bernamer made sandwiches
-of beef and thick bread. The red walls clouded with cigarette smoke. It
-was two when the bell again rang.
-
-“Dead, prob’ly,” said Bernamer.
-
-The operator asked for Gurdy. There was a shrill wrangling of women
-behind which a man spoke loudly and savagely. His impatience cracked
-through the buzzing. It wasn’t Mark when the man spoke clearly at last.
-
-
-“This is Russell, Gurdy. Can you hear? You must come here at once.”
-
-“To Philadelphia? What’s happened? Mr. Carlson’s dying and--”
-
-“I know. And I can’t bother Walling. You must come here as fast as you
-can. Can you speak German?... I’ll try to talk French; then.”
-
-After a moment Gurdy said, “All right. I’ll come as fast as I can. Get
-hold of the hotel manager. Money--”
-
-“The detective’s got a check. That’s all right. Hurry up, though.”
-
-Gurdy found himself standing and dropped the telephone. It brushed the
-chessmen in a clattering volley to the floor. His father’s blue eyes
-bit through the smoke.
-
-“When’s a train to Philadelphia, dad?”
-
-“That damn fool girl gone and got herself into--”
-
-“This actor!... Of course she has! Of course! Oh, hell! In her room!
-When’s there a train to Philadelphia?”
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-The Idolater
-
-
-Olive left the telephone table and strolled across the bright library
-to the fire. The sussuration of dragged silk behind her moving gown
-gave her a queer discomfort; there had been no time to change in the
-rush; it seemed improper to attend a death-bed in evening dress. And
-she was intrusive, here, and helpless. Mark’s pain was calm. He would
-suffer later, at the end of these hours or minutes. The bored, plump
-doctor came into the library, closed the door and lit a cigarette,
-joining Olive at the warm hearth.
-
-“He was asking for Miss Walling, just now.”
-
-“Ah? She’s in Philadelphia. She was dining with some friends at the
-Ritz, there, so we left her.”
-
-The doctor said, “Very sensible,” and blew a smoke ring. Under its
-dissolution his eyes admired Olive’s shoulders then, the pastel of
-Gurdy in a black frame on the mantel.
-
-“Tell me,” Olive asked, “how--how far is he conscious?”
-
-“It would be interesting to know. In these collapses we’re not
-sure. His conscious mind probably asserts itself, now and then. The
-unconscious--I really can’t say. Still, before you and Mr. Walling
-came he spoke in Swedish several times. And that’s the unconscious. He
-forgot his Swedish years ago. Been in this country ever since eighteen
-sixty-eight. But he spoke Swedish quite correctly and very fast. I’m a
-Swede. It surprised me.”
-
-“Indeed,” said Olive and shivered before his science, cool, weary, not
-much interested.
-
-The doctor looked at his watch, murmured, “Twelve thirty,” and tossed
-his cigarette in the fire. He observed, “But the old gentleman’s in
-no pain. The reversion’s very interesting. He was talking to some
-one about Augustin Daly. Very interesting.” The clipped, brisk voice
-denied the least interest. The doctor went from the library as Olive
-heard wheels halt outside. This couldn’t be Gurdy. She looked through a
-window and recognized her maid paying a taxicab driver. The black and
-yellow taxicab trembled behind a car entirely black and windowless; the
-undertaker awaited Carlson’s body. Olive drew the curtains across the
-glass, shook herself and went down to speak with her maid.
-
-“Margot hadn’t come back from her dinner when you came away, Lane?”
-
-“No, m’lady. Such a noosance getting the luggage to the station, down
-there.... Might I have some tea in your pantry, Mr. Collins?” the woman
-asked Mark’s butler as Olive turned away. These two would sit in the
-butler’s pantry drinking tea and discussing deaths. Olive went up the
-soft stairs and into Carlson’s bedroom behind the library. She entered
-an immutable group. The two nurses sat in a corner. The doctor examined
-one of the framed, old photographs that pallidly gleamed on the walls
-made brown by the lowered light. Mark stood with his hands clutching
-the white bedfoot. His black seemed to rise supernatural from the
-floor. He was taller, thinner. He glared at the stretched length of his
-patron. To Olive the dying man appeared more like an exhumed Pharaoh
-than ever. The yellow head was unchanged. She had a dizzy, picturesque
-fancy that his eyes might open, that he might speak in some unknown,
-sonorous dialect of the Nile. As she dropped a hand beside Mark’s
-fingers on the rail the old man spoke without breath in a sound of torn
-fabric yet with an airy, human amusement. “All right, Mister Caz’nove.
-Don’t git flustered. I’ll tell Miss Morris.”
-
-Mark writhed. The plastron of his shirt crackled. He gripped Olive’s
-arm and drew her from the room. In the hall he panted, “Augustin
-Daly’s prompter--a Frenchman--I guess he meant Clara Morris.” But in
-the cooler hall, away from the insufferable bed, he was ashamed. This
-was bad behaviour, unmanly, ridiculous. He smiled timidly at Olive who
-suddenly put her hands on his face and kissed him.
-
-“I talked to Gurdy. He’ll be here as soon as he can, dear.”
-
-“Thanks. Got to go back.” Mark sighed, “You go to bed, though.”
-
-“No.”
-
-Mark didn’t want her to go to bed. He smiled and went back to his
-watch. Odious time passed. The smell of cigarettes crept from the
-walls and the furniture. Carlson had smoked many thousands here. One
-of the nurses clicked a string of beads. The tiny cross was silver and
-lustrous as it swung. The beads seemed amethyst. What good did the
-woman think she was doing? But she had liked Carlson. She was praying
-for his soul and Carlson thought he had a soul. Let her pray. The
-amethyst flicker soothed Mark, took his eyes from the bed. The voice
-surprised him with his name.
-
-“Mark.”
-
-“Yessir.”
-
-“It’s a poor house. Rain....”
-
-Mark’s throat was full of dry fire. He gripped the rail, waiting. But
-the voice did not come again. After four the doctor nodded. One nurse
-yawned. The Irishwoman fell gently on her knees under the large, signed
-photograph of Ada Rehan in the frilled, insolent dress of Lady Teazle.
-Olive led Mark quickly from the room into the library. He pressed his
-hands on his eyes. He wouldn’t cry over this. Carlson had too often
-called him a crybaby, a big calf.
-
-“Dear Mark.”
-
-“Oh ... can’t be helped.--God, I did want him to see the Walling! Won’t
-be any funeral. Body goes straight to Sweden.... He’s left Gurdy and
-Margot some money.... Awful kindhearted.... Lot of old down and out
-actors’d come here. Gave ’em money. Awful kind to me.... No reason.”
-His husky speech made a chant for his old friend. Olive’s eyes filled.
-He was childish in his woe, charming. She wished that he’d weep so she
-could fondle the red hair on her shoulder. This would hurt his pleasure
-in the new theatre and the splendid play. The butler came in after the
-heavy, descending motion of men on the stairs was over and the dull
-wheels had rolled off from the curb. He brought a small, gold capped
-bottle and two glasses on his tray.
-
-“Doctor Lundquist said to bring this up, sir.”
-
-The champagne whispered delicately in the glasses and washed down the
-muffling, dry taste from Mark’s tongue. He smiled at Olive and said,
-“Dunno what I’d have done without you bein’ here.” What a brave woman!
-Her daughter had died swiftly of pneumonia before Olive could reach
-her. Her son had been blown to pieces.
-
-“I’m glad Gurdy didn’t get here,” she said, “He’s seen quite enough of
-death and he was fond of Mr. Carlson.”
-
-“Of course. Fonder than Margot was. Bein’ a man, though, he never
-showed it so much.”
-
-Olive hoped that Margot would never tell him how she disliked the old
-man’s coarseness, his manifold derisions. She said, “But go to bed,
-Mark. You really should. These things strain one.”
-
-“Awful. They packed me off to Aunt Edith’s when mamma died. First time
-I ever saw any one I liked.... Frohman was drowned. Clyde Fitch died in
-France. Good night, Olive.”
-
-He wished she would kiss him again and watched her pass up to her
-rooms. Then he went to bed, without thinking, and slept. He slept
-soundly and woke slowly into warm, luxurious sun that mottled the blue
-quilt. He said, “Hello, brother,” to Gurdy who leaned on the dresser
-between the windows, solemn and grieved in a dark suit, his pale hair
-ruffled and gay with light. Gurdy must be cheered up. “Well, you
-missed it. He didn’t have a pain. When did you get here?”
-
-“A while ago. I--dad’s here.”
-
-“Eddie? Well, that’s good of him.”
-
-Bernamer came about the bed and dropped a hand on Mark’s chest. He said
-nothing, but grinned and sat down. His seemly clothes and cropped head
-made him amazingly like Gurdy. Mark beamed at both of them. “Had your
-breakfast?”
-
-“Hell, yes,” said Bernamer, “Had two. Got some coffee in Philadelphia
-and then Lady Ilden made us eat somethin’ when we got here.”
-
-Mark swung out of bed and ordered Gurdy, “Tell ’em to bring me up some
-coffee in the library, sonny. Oh, Margot ain’t got here?”
-
-“Yes, she’s here,” said Gurdy and quickly left the room.
-
-The sun filled his showerbath. Mark cheered further, babbled to his
-brother-in-law while he shaved and wondered what Bernamer had talked
-about to Olive at breakfast.
-
-“Oh, we just talked,” said the farmer, curtly, “Nice kind of woman.”
-
-He leaned in the door of the bathroom and rolled a cigarette in his
-big, shapely hands. Now that he had five hired men his hands were
-softer and not so thick. A fine, quiet man, full of sense.
-
-“Awful good of you to come up, Eddie. I ain’t makin’ a fool of myself.
-The old man was eighty. It’s a wonder he lasted as long.”
-
-“Better get some coffee in you, bud. You look run down.”
-
-“Been workin’ like a horse, Eddie.”
-
-Mark knotted his tie, took Bernamer’s arm and hugged it a little,
-walking into the library. Olive dropped a newspaper and told him he
-looked “gorgeous” in a weary voice, then poured coffee into his cup on
-the low stand by a large chair close to the fire. She was smoking. The
-vapour didn’t hide yellowish hollows about her eyes.
-
-“No, I didn’t sleep well, old man. Rather fagged.”
-
-“We waked you up pretty early,” said Bernamer, “Sit down, bud, and
-drink your coffee.”
-
-Mark lounged in the deep chair. Bernamer asked Olive if she had liked
-Washington but stood patting Mark’s shoulder and rather troubled the
-drinking of coffee. Gurdy came down the blue rug with some mail.
-
-“Look and see if there’s anything important, sonny. Probably ain’t....
-Hello, sister!”
-
-Margot roamed down the library in a black dress. But she paused yards
-from his stretched hand and frowned incomprehensibly. Gurdy turned at
-the desk with a letter against his grey coat. Margot said, “I suppose
-Gurdy’s told you.”
-
-Gurdy thrust his jaw up toward the ceiling. Olive rose with a flat,
-rasping “Margot” and Bernamer hissed, his fingers tight on Mark’s
-shoulder. Mark set down his coffee cup and looked at them all.
-
-“Oh, no one’s said anything?” Margot put a knee on a small chair and
-stroked the velvet back. “Well, we’d better get it over. I was turned
-out of the hotel in Philadelphia last--”
-
-“Shut up,” said Bernamer, “Shut your mouth!”
-
-She went on, staring at Mark, “I’m going to marry him as soon as he
-can get a divorce, dad.... No use trying to lie about it. I belong to
-Cosmo and--and that’s all.” She passed a hand over her mouth. Then her
-bright slippers twinkled as she walked out of the room. Mark blinked
-after her. Something had happened. He looked up at Bernamer whose face
-was rocky, meaningless. Gurdy ran to Mark and spoke in gasps, beating a
-fist on his hip.
-
-“Russell called me at the farm about two--Dad went down with me.--We
-talked to the manager--We bribed him.--Russell gave the hotel detective
-a check for a thousand dollars--”
-
-“I guess they’ll keep their mouths shut,” said Bernamer, “Told
-’em they’d each get another check in six months if we didn’t hear
-nothin’.--Now it ain’t so bad, bud. Margot says this feller can get a
-divorce from Cora Boyle--He was gone and we didn’t see him. It might be
-worse.”
-
-“Stop hittin’ your leg, Gurd. You’ll hurt yourself,” said Mark.
-
-He rose and began to walk up and down the tiles of the hearth. One of
-his hands patted the front of his coat. His face was empty. He seemed
-wonderfully thin. Olive watched him in terror of a cry. Gurdy and his
-father drew off against the shelves of still books. Bernamer commenced
-rolling a cigarette. After a while Mark said, “It’s the way I was
-brought up, Olive.”
-
-“Oh, Mark, try to--to see her point of view. She loved him. She sees
-something we don’t--It’s--”
-
-“Sure. That’s so.--Oh, you’re right.”
-
-He walked on, aware of them watching, helpless. Things passed and
-turned in his head. He was being silly, old-fashioned. Ought to collect
-himself. Ought to do something for Gurdy who wouldn’t have her, now.
-Get the boy something to do. Get his mind off it. “Call the office,
-sonny. Tell them to close ‘Todgers Intrudes.’ Give the company two
-weeks’ pay. Have Hamlin write checks--Didn’t try to thrash this Rand,
-did you?”
-
-“We didn’t see him. He’d gone.”
-
-“That’s good. Call the office.”
-
-The boy went to the telephone, far off on its desk and began to talk
-evenly. Mark stumbled over to Bernamer and mumbled, “Keep him busy.
-Awful jolt for him, Eddie. Takes it fine.”
-
-“He ain’t in love with her, bud.”
-
-“Yes, he is.”
-
-“Set down, bud. Better drink--”
-
-“No.--Ain’t been any saint, myself. Girls are different.--Maybe he’s a
-nice fellow.--Took it nice about the play being closed.--I’m all right,
-Olive. Sort of a shock.”
-
-He walked on. Then he was too tired to walk and Bernamer made him sit
-in the chair by the hearth. He stared at the blue rug and it seemed
-to clear his head. He became immobile, watching a white thread. The
-world centred on this wriggle of white on the blue down. He lapsed into
-dullness, knowing that Gurdy stood close to him. He should think of
-things to say, consolations. The boy must be in tortures. He was dull,
-empty.
-
-Bernamer beckoned Olive. They went out of the library and the farmer
-shut the door without jarring the silver handle. Olive found herself
-dizzy. She said, “You have something to--”
-
-“Let’s get downstairs where I can smoke. You’re sick. This is as bad on
-you--”
-
-He helped her downstairs into the drawing room and was gone, came back
-with water in which she tasted brandy. The big man lit his cigarette
-and spoke in a drawl like Mark’s but heavier.
-
-“I don’t understand this business. The little fool says she’s been in
-love with this feller a long time--a couple of years. He ain’t made
-love to her ’til last night. Well?”
-
-“I don’t understand it any more than do you. I’m--horrified. I knew she
-admired his acting. He’s handsome. Very handsome.”
-
-The man nodded and his blue eyes were gentle on her. He drawled, “Why
-the hell didn’t he stay and face the music? The manager told him to get
-out. Mr. Russell says he just packed up and left.--I can’t make this
-out. Margot had Mr. Russell waked up because she hadn’t any money to
-come home with.”
-
-“I must talk to her.... Why did we leave her there?”
-
-“You thought she’d got sense enough to know better. It ain’t your
-fault. I got to go home because I don’t want the family to know about
-this. But there’s something damn funny in it.--Will you please get it
-out of Mark’s head that Gurdy’s in love with that girl? Make him feel
-better.”
-
-“I’ll do all I can.”
-
-He said in scorn, “She ain’t worth fussin’ with,” and held the door
-open. Olive shivered, passing the library where there was no sound.
-She climbed to Margot’s room and found the girl sitting on the edge of
-the sunny bed, still, smiling.
-
-“You must be very tired, darling.”
-
-The red lips a little parted. Margot said, “Oh ... no,” in a soft
-whisper. The faint noise died in the sun like the passage of a moth.
-Olive stood fixed before the sleek tranquillity of the black hair
-and the contented face. The restless stirring was gone. She smiled
-in beautiful contentment. The gold cord which was the girdle of this
-velvet gown hung brilliant and rich about the straight body. The sunny
-room made a shell of colour for the figure. The hair had a dazzling
-margin against the windows. She was untroubled, happy.
-
-Olive dragged at her own girdle, biting her lips. She asked, “Where is
-Mr. Rand, dear?”
-
-“He was coming to New York today,” Margot said in the same voice.
-She lifted an end of the trailing gold, then let it fall. She seemed
-asleep, lost in a visible dream. But she roused and spoke, “He’s loved
-me ever so long, Olive. I didn’t know....” and was still again. Olive
-choked before this happiness, turned and went down the stairs. There
-was no use in artifice, reasoning. Mark must accept what was done.
-His good sense would come back, the shock would ease into regret. His
-convention was outraged, of course. It was dreadful to see him in
-pain. Olive thrust back her own pain, a vast and weary disappointment.
-This wasn’t the man for the girl. This was senseless. She entered the
-library and Mark raised his face from the long stare at the floor,
-dreading Margot.
-
-“Oh,” he said, “it ain’t your fault, Olive. Don’t cry.--I’m bein’ a
-fool.”
-
-He rose and walked again, began a circular tramp about the room. He
-passed through a whispering tunnel, completely black. He was marching
-in the dark and knew that Olive and Gurdy watched him, that Bernamer
-came into the room with his hat in a hand. Yet he walked in blackness.
-He would go mad of this! She had lied to him. She had thrown herself
-to a married man. Well, girls did that. Things were changing. People
-did queer things. He was jealous for Gurdy, that was the trouble. He
-had wanted her married to Gurdy. She had said such good things of
-Gurdy.--All this time she’d been lying. She was in love with this pink,
-married actor.--The talk would roll among the restaurants, in the
-offices. People would laugh. Awful names! All the other noises would
-slacken and fail in this whispering. They would sneer when the Walling
-opened.--She couldn’t care anything for him or she wouldn’t have lied.
-Gurdy didn’t lie. Mark tore himself out of the black whispering and
-went to take Gurdy’s sleeve.
-
-“Don’t you mind, sonny. She--she’d ought to have told you she liked
-this--”
-
-“Oh, Mark, I don’t care about her.”
-
-“All right to say that--but don’t you mind.”
-
-Bernamer came across the room and took Mark in his arms. He said, “Now,
-bud, don’t upset yourself. I got to go home. The fam’ly don’t know
-nothin’. I shan’t say a word.--What you do is this. Get hold of Cora
-Boyle and give her money to let this feller divorce her, see? That’ll
-save talk and trouble.”
-
-“That’s right, Eddie. Yes, good idea.”
-
-Bernamer hugged him and left the room. Mark’s head cleared. There was
-no black tunnel. Eddie was right. He must make the best of this. It
-could be hushed up. Women like Cora needed money for clothes. He nodded
-to Gurdy, “You’ll never be any smarter than your dad, son. Ain’t he a
-nice fellow, Olive?”
-
-“Of course, dear.”
-
-“And I’m bein’ a fool. I know it. Only there’s lots of men that feel
-like I do about these kind of things.--One o’clock.--You and Gurdy have
-some lunch.”
-
-Olive said, “Mark, would you like to talk to her?”
-
-He cried, “No!--I--might say something. You folks go have lunch.” They
-went away and at once he wanted them back, walked the floor with
-his hands clenched. He was afraid that Margot might come in, now. He
-dreaded seeing her. He wished her out of the house and away. The wish
-bit him. He had been fooled. He had to love her, help her. Couldn’t she
-go away? To the farm, where no one knew and--But they might find out.
-They would shrink from her as bad. They weren’t knowing and tolerant
-like Bernamer. He mustn’t stop loving her or let her see that he was
-hurt. Nothing eased him. The afternoon lagged along. Gurdy played the
-piano downstairs. Gurdy and Olive drifted in, out, consoling him. It
-was sunset. A van full of boxes went slowly past the house and the
-shadows on the pine were amethyst. Some friend of Gurdy’s came calling
-in a yellow, low car that turned ochre as the light failed. Its lamps
-made ovals on the street as it drove away.--He mustn’t let this sour
-the boy.--In the darker room the whispering began again. It might be
-the blood in his ears. Gurdy brought him up dinner and white wine.
-Olive came afterwards and tried to make him eat, lit all the soft
-lamps. He drank some wine and smoked a cigarette.
-
-“Gurdy takes it well, doesn’t he?”
-
-“Perhaps he didn’t care as much as you think, Mark.”
-
-Mark laughed, “Awful cool outside. No, he’s bein’ brave to--cheer me
-up. And I feel better, honest.... My God, Olive, if that woman wants to
-make a scandal!”
-
-“Don’t think of it, Mark.”
-
-He was tired of thinking. He said, “I’ll try not to,” and smiled at
-Gurdy coming in. But he now thought of Cora Boyle.--Perhaps she liked
-Rand, wouldn’t give him up. He examined the rosy face, the trim grey
-suits. Yellow haired. Perhaps these dark women liked yellow haired men
-best. He was afraid of Cora. She could lie to her friends and make
-things worse. He stared at a lamp a long time and his mind fell dull
-again.
-
-“Mark, it’s after ten. Go to bed,” said Olive, “Please, old man.”
-
-“You folks go.--Not sleepy.”
-
-They left him. He was lonely. He sat by the hearth and lit a cigarette.
-Above him there was a slow noise of Gurdy strolling about, getting
-undressed. The ripple of little sounds kept Mark company, then deserted
-him. Mark shuddered in the peace of the lit room. Something worse would
-happen. What? He must save Gurdy more pain. The boy was too young for
-this. Mark’s throat ached suddenly and he began to weep, spent in his
-chair. The lamps of the room swelled like luminous pearls melting and
-through the mist came Gurdy in white pyjamas that flapped.
-
-“Oh, for God’s sake, Mark! Bed!”
-
-“I’m scared,” said Mark, gulping, “Gurd, I’m scared of Cora. Suppose
-she likes him? Suppose she won’t let go of him? She’s bad tempered,
-sonny. You don’t know her.--It’s the talk--the talk. People ain’t as
-broad minded as you and Olive think. The women, especially.--And she’s
-a young girl.... It ain’t like she was one of these women that’ve been
-divorced three or four times.... If Cora makes a fuss--”
-
-Gurdy pulled him up out of the chair and gently shook him. “You must
-come to bed.”
-
-“All right.--Making a fool of myself.... Only, you’re in love with her.
-It’s hard on you.”
-
-“I’m not in love with her, Mark!”
-
-Mark thought this a splendid sort of lie but he shivered. “Somethin’
-else might happen. I feel.... Come and get me in bed, son.”
-
-He became limply ashamed of himself. Gurdy helped him to strip and he
-found the boy buttoning his jacket for him as he sat on the edge of
-his bed. He watched the long, wiry fingers at work on the buttons and
-the holes of the blue silk. The cold linen of the pillow caressed his
-neck. He smiled, wanting Gurdy to stay there until he fell asleep. The
-doorbell rang with a steady and ripping insistence.
-
-“Damn,” said Gurdy and went into the hall where the cold air mounting
-from the opened door chilled his bare feet. The butler ascended like a
-shadow on the white wainscot.
-
-“A Mr. Fuller, sir.”
-
-“He can’t see Mr. Walling. He’s asleep.”
-
-“He says he must see Mr. Walling, Mr. Gurdy.” The butler held out
-his salver. Gurdy read the card, Henry Fuller. Fuller and Marcovicz,
-Attorneys at Law. Under the engraving was pencilled, “For Miss Boyle.”
-
-Gurdy walked down the stairs into the drawing room. A burly man in a
-furred coat was standing by the Siennese cabinet running a thumb over
-the smooth panel of its little door. The light made his grey hair
-glisten slickly. He turned a broad, pleasing face on Gurdy and nodded.
-
-“Sorry to get ’round here so late at night. Pretty important I should
-see Mr. Walling right away.”
-
-“That’s absolutely impossible. He’s ill and in bed. I’m--”
-
-“Oh ... you’re his nephew, ain’t you? Mister--Bernamer?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The man nodded and undid his coat. He wore a dinner jacket with a
-fluted shirt. Gay stones were blue in the soft pleats of the bosom.
-He stated, “I’m from Miss Boyle--legal representative. You tell Mr.
-Walling that Miss Boyle’s willing to not bring an action against Miss
-Walling--Understand what I mean?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-The lawyer continued his air of genial discretion, getting a paper
-from some pocket. “Miss Boyle’s willing to overlook this business in
-Philadelphia and not sue her husban’ or Miss Walling provided that
-this play’s brought into New York by New Year’s Day and Mr. Rand is
-featured--name in electric lights and so on. Soon as the play’s opened
-in New York she’ll live with her husban’ again. Condonation, see? And--”
-
-“Blackmail,” said Gurdy.
-
-The genial man went on, “I’ve got a memorandum, here. All Mr. Walling’s
-got to do is sign it. I’ll read it. N’York City, November eighteenth,
-nineteen hundred nineteen. My dear Miss Boyle, In pursuance of our
-agreement I promise you that ‘Todgers Intrudes’ will be presented in
-New York City before January first, nineteen twenty and that Mr. Rand
-will be featured in the usual manner. Yours very truly.--All he has to
-do is to put his name to that and there you are.”
-
-Gurdy hated this fellow. He rubbed a foot on the carpet and sighed,
-then asked, “What’s the good of this? It’s a bad play. It’ll fail. Why
-does Miss Boyle want this?”
-
-“Don’t ask me. Yes, I hear it’s a bum show. I guess she wants her
-husban’ featured. I don’t know.”
-
-“If Mark--if Mr. Walling won’t sign this?”
-
-“Then Miss Boyle’ll bring her action in the morning. There’s no
-defence, either, Mr. Bernamer. Miss Boyle’s got a written statement
-from Mr. Rand and testimony from his valet.”
-
-Gurdy was sick, now. An unconquerable tremor made the muscles of his
-back rigid. It was a trap. Margot was caught in a trap. He said,
-“Blackmail.”
-
-“No. Miss Boyle’s foregoin’ a legal right to bring her action. She
-ain’t askin’ a cent of money. There’s lots of ladies wouldn’t be so
-easy to settle with. Better see what Mr. Walling says, hadn’t you?”
-
-For a second Gurdy stood hopeless. Then he said, “It’s a dirty trick,”
-and took the paper. But he should keep cool. He smiled and inquired,
-“You say you’ve got a written statement from Mr. Rand--”
-
-“Got a copy with me. Like to read it?”
-
-Gurdy glanced at the transparent typed sheet. He shook his head and
-walked up stairs. Mark picked up the note as Gurdy dropped it on the
-blue quilt, read it frowning. Then he flushed and his mouth contracted
-hideously. He whispered, “Old trick! Happens all the time. I ought to
-have known what’d happen.... Gimme a pen, sonny.” He signed his full
-name, Mark Henderson Walling. There couldn’t be any more pain, after
-this. He shut his eyes and fell through warm darkness. He could not
-sleep but he must rest. He slept.
-
-When Gurdy came back into the bedroom, Mark was slowly breathing, sound
-asleep. The boy made the place dark and went up to his own room. In the
-upper black of the hall some one caught his arm. Olive followed him and
-shut the door. She had cast a black fur cloak over her night dress and
-her grey hair was loose. She looked at the boy without a word, leaning
-on the door.
-
-“Blackmail. She sent her lawyer. She’s got a confession from Rand.
-Mark’s signed an agreement. He’ll bring that play into New York and
-she’ll live with Rand as soon as it opens.”
-
-“Ah!... Oh, the cad!... Oh, Gurdy, take care of Mark!”
-
-She walked down the hall. Gurdy followed her and heard her pity crash
-into miserable sobs behind her door. He stood listening for a while
-then raised his arm and pressed it against his mouth.
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-The Walling
-
-
-On Saturday afternoon, Olive and Margot started for Seattle. Gurdy
-drove with them to the station and Margot spoke to him for the first
-time since the journey from Philadelphia. She said, “What theatre will
-dad bring ‘Todgers’ into?”
-
-“I don’t know. It’ll be hard to find one.”
-
-She murmured, “It ought to be a great success,” and Gurdy admired her
-stubborn air. She sat stiffly in a suit of yellow cloth and walked
-stiffly down the great stairs of the station, gathering eyes, moved
-ahead of Olive and himself to the coach and stood in the vestibule,
-motionless, uninterested when Olive drew Gurdy away to the edge of the
-concrete and raised her veil.
-
-“Mark need never see the child again unless--”
-
-“Oh, he’ll be all right,” Gurdy decided, “but it’s been an awful jolt.”
-
-The Englishwoman put a hand to her mouth which shivered.
-
-“Awful.... Oh, I don’t know, Gurdy!”
-
-“Don’t know what, Lady Ilden?”
-
-“I don’t know that he’s right in sacrificing himself.... I don’t know
-that he’s wrong. Chivalry.... I can’t understand how two people can be
-such beasts as this woman and her husband.... Deliberate torture....
-Isn’t it revenge?”
-
-Gurdy didn’t answer but asked, “You’ll go on from Japan to--”
-
-“South Africa. I’ve some friends at Capetown.... She’s that brutal age,
-when it doesn’t matter if we get what we want.... Oh, my dear boy, this
-is hideous! It’s revenge!”
-
-“I don’t think so,” he said, “I saw Russell at the office this morning.
-‘Todgers’ doesn’t open in Baltimore until Monday. He says that Rand
-talked to him in Philadelphia before this happened and wanted Russell
-to persuade Mark to risk bringing the play to New York and that was
-after Mark had told him he wouldn’t bring it in. Russell thinks
-she--Cora Boyle--is simply crazy over Rand. Russell’s seen a good deal
-of them. He says Rand talked to her by ’phone from Philadelphia on
-Tuesday. She may have put him up to this. I don’t think it’s revenge.
-She’s got nothing to revenge. Mark’s always been decent to her.”
-
-Olive smiled and then whispered, “Do take care of Mark.” A porter came
-bawling, “All aboard,” and groups broke up along the train. Margot
-swung and vanished into the coach. Olive said, “She’s stunned. She
-won’t realize she’s been a beast to Mark for a while.” Gurdy mumbled
-something about points of view. The tired woman cut him short with,
-“Rot, old man! She didn’t play fair. She lied. Do take care of Mark.
-Good-bye.”
-
-Gurdy walked away and a clerk from Mark’s office brushed by him with a
-papered load of yellow roses. The boy turned and saw Olive take these
-against her black furs. She stood graciously thanking the clerk for
-a moment, smiling. Then she stepped into the vestibule and the train
-stirred. Gurdy walked on. The colossal motion of the crowd in the
-brilliant station was a relief and a band hammered out some military
-march by a Red Cross booth. His spirit lifted; the strained waiting
-of three days was done; Margot was gone; Gurdy wouldn’t have to watch
-Mark’s piteous effort at normality. He found his uncle alone in the
-office at the 45th Street Theatre, studying a model for a scene and
-swiftly Mark asked, “I sent Jim with some--”
-
-“He got there.”
-
-Mark sighed and rubbed his hair. Everything confused him. He hoped
-Olive would forgive him for not coming to the station. That had been
-cowardly. He said, “Ought to have gone along, son.... Afraid I’d say
-something I shouldn’t. I shouldn’t have let you do it alone. This is
-worse on you than it is on me. I--”
-
-“Mark, on my honour, I’m not in love with Margot!”
-
-He lied so nobly that Mark wondered at him and brought out a thin
-chuckle. “You’re a card, son!... If I didn’t know better I’d almost
-believe you.... Well, take a look at this set. That left wall looks
-kind of dark to me. It’s ox blood and it might light up with spots on
-it. What d’you think?”
-
-Callers interfered. Gurdy went down the stairs into the lobby packed
-with women who came out from the matinée. All these decorated bodies
-flowed left and right about a dull blue placard announcing, “Early
-in December The Walling Theatre will open with ‘Captain Salvador’ by
-Stephen O’Mara,” and some women paused, drawing on gloves, fussing with
-veils. A slim and black haired girl stared boldly at Gurdy, passing
-him. She wasn’t like Margot but he hated her for an instant and then
-stalked up Sixth Avenue where the lights of restaurants roused in the
-dusk and the crowd of Saturday evening brayed. In ten cool blocks Gurdy
-captured his philosophy, held it firmly; Mark was unreasonably hurt--in
-fact, Mark was an old-fashioned, unphilosophic fellow who hadn’t
-progressed, was still a country boy in essence, hadn’t even gained the
-inferior cynicism of his trade and friends. He was letting himself be
-bullied by Cora Boyle on an antique concept. Why should he let himself
-be laughed at and lose money for this immaterial thing? Gurdy succeeded
-in getting angry at Mark and tramped about the blue library preparing a
-lecture, saw a glove of Margot’s on a table and tossed it into a waste
-basket. He could imagine Mark shedding tears over that empty glove and
-its presence in the copper basket fretted Gurdy. He plucked it forth
-and flung it into the fire of cedar logs where it made a satisfactory
-hiss, blackening. It must have been perfumed. A scent floated out of
-the fire. Gurdy grinned over the symbol and poked the remnant which
-crumbled and was nothing. He stood reducing Margot’s importance to
-logical ash and so intently that he jumped when the butler told him
-that Russell was downstairs. The director strolled in and looked about
-the room before speaking.
-
-“Nice walls,” he said, “Well, Gurdy, I’ve just seen Miss Boyle.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“At her hotel.--I’m mixed up in this and I thought I might help Mr.
-Walling out. So I went to see her and had a talk. It didn’t come to
-anything.” He sat down in Mark’s fireside chair, stooped his head and
-brooded, “I’d a sneaking idea that this game was a sort of revenge.
-Walling’s been good to her--done things for her. That might rankle.
-Well, I pointed out that ‘Todgers’ is a waste of time. I did my best to
-make her see that. It was funny.... She sat on a lounge and rocked a
-cushion as if it were a baby--in her arms--Has she ever had a child?”
-
-“I think not.”
-
-“And she’s ten or eleven years older than Rand.... It’s no good. She
-thinks he’s great in this play and she thinks it’ll run all winter
-in New York. And there we are, Bernamer. She’s set on the thing. Mr.
-Walling had better get it over as soon as he can. If he doesn’t, she’ll
-be ugly. I’m mighty sorry.”
-
-Gurdy blazed up in a mixture of wrath and impatience, “Oh, it’s all
-such damned rot! Mark’s one of the best producers in the country and he
-shouldn’t do this!... He should tell her to go to hell. It’s blackmail!
-I’m going to tell him--”
-
-After a moment Russell asked, “What?” and laughed kindly. Gurdy
-shrugged and flinched before the laughter. The man was right. Mark
-would go through with the beastly deal, wouldn’t consider risking
-Margot’s name. There was no use in argument. He snapped, “Chivalry!”
-
-“And you wouldn’t do it?”
-
-“No,” said Gurdy, “No! It’s too thick. It is ironical. And he can’t
-tell any one. Everyone’ll think he thinks this is a good play--worth
-doing. The critics’ll jump all over him. They’ll--”
-
-“The other proposition being that Miss Walling will lose her
-reputation? She’s a young girl and not very clever or very
-sophisticated, to judge by her talk. She’s read the smart novels, of
-course. Quotes them a good deal.... You say you wouldn’t do this for
-her? The world being as it is? Tell it to the fish, Bernamer!” Gurdy
-felt weak before the cool, genial voice. Russell lit a pipe and went
-on, “I feel the way you do. Only the world’s full of shorn lambs and
-the wind’s damned cold.... Can you come to a show tonight?”
-
-“Lord, no,” said Gurdy, “I’ve got to stay with Mark. He’s got to have
-some one with him. Needs taking care of--”
-
-Russell said, “To be sure,” with another laugh and went away. He sent
-Gurdy the notices from the Baltimore papers after “Todgers Intrudes”
-began its week there and with them a note: “Miss Boyle came down for
-the opening. She is still sure this is a great play. Maternal feeling.
-Rand seems nervous and loses his lines a good deal. He is probably
-ashamed of himself. His English accent peels off now and then and he
-talks flat Middle West American,” but the same mail brought a letter
-from Olive Ilden, written at Denver, and this maddened Gurdy, as last
-proof of Margot’s inconsequence.
-
-“Dear Gurdy, The reaction has started. She is now certain that Rand
-planned the whole filthy trick. She is so angry that there is nothing
-left unsaid. He is a cheap bounder and a slacker etc. An actor can not
-be anything else, she says. Everything is Mark’s fault or mine for
-leaving her alone in Philadelphia. Do try to pity her a little, old
-man. She has made a fearful fool of herself and knows it. The whole
-thing is still horrible to me. I wish Mark had more humour or more
-cold blood. Anything to help him through. I keep trying to remember a
-quotation from Webster I threw at his head once. ‘These be the fair
-rewards of those that love.’ It may be from Shakespeare. Did you try to
-argue him out of making the production in New York? That would be your
-logical attitude. But do take care of him.”
-
-Gurdy tore the note up and went to pull on his riding clothes. The
-frost had melted. Mark wanted a ride in the warm park. The boy thought
-proudly that Mark hadn’t complained. He seemed quietly busy, arranging
-advertisements for “Captain Salvador” which toured New England after
-its week of Boston. Rumours of a triumph crept ahead of the play. Its
-success, its investiture of light and colour would soothe Mark while
-he still needed soothing. Gurdy rattled downstairs and Mark laughed at
-him, “You look mighty well in ridin’ things, son!”
-
-“So do you,” said Gurdy, in all honesty, and watched Mark beam,
-settling his boots, the fit of his black coat. They rode into the empty
-Park. Mark talked about horses and then about Gurdy’s brothers. One of
-them wanted to be a soldier.
-
-“You did that with your scar and all,” Mark said.
-
-“Funny how easy a kid gets an ambition. Only thirteen. He’ll get over
-it.”
-
-“What did you want to be when you were thirteen, sonny?”
-
-Gurdy strove to remember. He had probably wanted to be a theatrical
-manager. He said, “I wanted to be a barber when I was nine or ten, I
-remember that. And then I wanted to be an aviator--and now I want to
-write plays....”
-
-“Hurry and write me a good one, brother.”
-
-Then Mark was silent. They cantered along in the creamy sunlight. A
-great lady of artistic tastes reducing her weight bowed jerkily to
-Mark from her burdened gelding and called, “Can you bring Miss Walling
-to luncheon Sunday?” Gurdy saw Mark’s mouth twist. It needed courage
-to call so easily back, “She’s gone to Japan.” But a hundred yards
-afterward Mark reined in and stared at the sun, his face tormented.
-
-“Sonny, I may have to open the Walling with ‘Todgers Intrudes’.”
-
-“No!”
-
-“Fact. I can’t take a chance with Cora gettin’ nasty. I can’t risk it.
-And I can’t get a house for love or money. I tried to buy the show out
-of the Princess last night. There ain’t a house empty.... I may have to
-use the Walling--open it with this--this--” He slashed his crop though
-the air, was ashamed of himself and sat chewing a lip. Gurdy could keep
-his emotions so well covered just as he now hid and nobly lied about
-his heartbreak over Margot. Mark’s sense of hurt swelled and broke out,
-“Oh, women are hell! If they want a thing they’ll do anything to get
-it! They--they scare me, Gurd! When they want a thing!... And look how
-she treated you!”
-
-“Oh, Mark, honestly, I wasn’t in love with her!”
-
-Mark knew better but Gurdy’s brave mendacity cheered him. He grinned
-and rode on. He must think of ways to make Gurdy forget the girl. When
-they reached the house he telephoned the gayest folk he could find
-and summoned them to a luncheon. He worked in a fever, keeping Gurdy
-busy with new plays, ritual lunches at the Algonquin and motor trips
-to country inns where they hadn’t been with Margot who somehow wavered
-in Mark’s mind. He began to lose an immediate, answering picture of
-her. It was hard to recall her phrases of later time. Things she had
-said and poses of her childhood rose more clearly. She merged in his
-perplexed hunt for a theatre. When he found, on the first of December,
-that he couldn’t rent or beg a playhouse for “Todgers Intrudes”
-he hated Margot for an hour and tramped his library in a sweat of
-loathing. He must defame the Walling with this nonsense, finish his
-bargain by dishonouring himself and his dream, for the Walling was not
-altogether real. He roamed the shell where workmen were covering the
-naked chairs with dull blue, in a haze. The smell of banana oil and
-turpentine made him dizzy. The silver and black boxes seemed vaporous
-like the mist of the ceiling when the lamps were tried on its surface.
-He had moments of sheer glory through which came burning the thought
-of Cora Boyle and Margot, in this queer alliance. His offices were
-transferred to broad rooms by the white landing of the wide stairs in
-the Walling. There was an alcove for Gurdy’s desk and here Mark told
-him suddenly, “Goin’ to bring ‘Todgers’ in here next week, son.”
-
-Gurdy paled, leaned on the new desk and flexed his hands on his fair
-head. He said, “Oh, no!”
-
-“Got to, son. I’ve tried all I know.”
-
-The boy babbled, “Don’t do it!... Oh, damn it! You’ve been working for
-this place for years and--It’s not worth it! Look here, let me go talk
-to this damned woman!”
-
-“No. I’ve got some pride left, son. You shan’t go near her. You go down
-to the farm and stay with the folks.”
-
-Gurdy wanted nothing more. All the pressmen and underlings were puzzled
-by Mark’s maintenance of the English comedy on the road. It was not
-making money. The theatrical weeklies had warned New York how bad was
-“Todgers Intrudes.” Gurdy drove his motor down to Fayettesville on
-Saturday, had a fit of shame and hurried back on Sunday. On the face
-of the Walling the dead electric bulbs told the news, “Mark Walling
-Presents Todgers Intrudes With Cosmo Rand” and Mark’s treasurer came
-out of the white doors to expostulate.
-
-“I don’t get this. Your uncle’s playin’ for a dead loss, Mr. Bernamer.
-It’s no damn good.”
-
-“Where is he?”
-
-“Went up to New Haven yesterday. ‘Captain Salvador’ played there last
-night. Say, what’s the idea? This ‘Todgers’ ain’t done a thing but eat
-up money. Every one knows it’s a frost!” The man worried openly.
-
-There could be no explanation, Gurdy saw. The critics would jeer.
-Mark’s friends would chaff him. The boy patted his wheel and asked,
-“What night does it open?”
-
-“Wednesday, like ‘Captain Salvador’ was to. Honest, Mr. Bernamer, this
-is hell!”
-
-Gurdy drove off to a restaurant for dinner and here a critic stopped
-him on the sill to ask whether Mark had gone “quite, quite mad?” Monday
-was barren anguish, watching Mark’s face. “Captain Salvador” would play
-in Hartford and Providence all week. On Tuesday there was a rehearsal
-of “Todgers Intrudes” and Gurdy found a black motor initialed C. B.
-when he came to the Walling. Workmen were polishing the brass of the
-outer doors and the programs for tomorrow night were ready. Everything
-was ready for the sick farce. On Wednesday morning Mark ate breakfast
-with heroic grins and talked of playing golf in the afternoon. But he
-hadn’t slept well. His eyes were flecked with red. Bone showed under
-his cheeks. His black had an air of candid mourning.
-
-“The best joke’d be if the damned thing made a hit,” he said.
-
-“I think that would be a little too ironical,” Gurdy snapped.
-
-“This is what you’d call ironical, ain’t it? Well, I’m going down to
-the office for a minute. Don’t come. Send for the horses and we’ll go
-riding about eleven.”
-
-He walked to the Walling, was halted a dozen times and found the
-antechamber full of people. Some had appointments. He sat talking
-for an hour and then started downstairs. But he saw Cosmo Rand on the
-white floor of the vestibule, slim in a grey furred coat, reading a
-newspaper. The blue walls of the stair seemed to press Mark’s head.
-He turned back into the office and sent for his house manager. When
-the man came Mark said, “I’m not going to be here tonight, Billy. Tell
-anybody that asks I’m sick as a dog and couldn’t come.”
-
-“All right. Say, sir, would you mind telling me just why--”
-
-Mark beamed across the desk and lied, “Why, this fellow Dufford that
-wrote this is a friend of mine and he’s poor as a churchmouse. I
-thought I’d take a chance.”
-
-The manager shuffled and blurted, “It’s a damn poor chance.”
-
-“Mighty poor, Billy. Well, the show business is a gamble, anyhow.”
-
-Rand was gone from the vestibule. Mark walked seething over Broadway
-and into Sixth Avenue. He must think of something to do, tonight. He
-couldn’t sit at home. The flags on the Hippodrome wagged to him. He
-went there and bought two seats. The tickets stayed unmentioned in his
-pocket all the deadly afternoon. At six he said shyly to Gurdy, “Think
-you want to see this tonight, son?”
-
-“Might as well, sir.”
-
-The “sir” pleased Mark. It rang respectfully. He stammered, “I got a
-couple of seats for the show at the Hippodrome and--”
-
-“That’s good,” Gurdy said, “We needn’t dress, then.”
-
-But Mark sat haunted in the vast theatre, watching the stage. He had
-deserted his own, run from disaster. The Walling revenged itself. He
-saw the misty ceiling wane as lights lowered and the remote rims of
-silver mirrors fade in the corners of the gallery. The glow from the
-stage would show the massed shoulders of women in the black boxes. Cora
-Boyle would be sitting in the righthand box. She might wear a yellow
-gown. He would risk seeing that to be mixed in his dream. It was the
-best theatre of the city, of the world. He blinked at the monstrous
-evolutions of this chorus, peered at Gurdy and saw the boy sit moodily,
-knee over knee, listless from grieving, his arms locked. The time
-ticked on Mark’s wrist--The critics would be filing into the white
-vestibule where men must admire the dull blue panels of clear enamel,
-the simple, grooved ceiling and the hidden lamps. The yellow smoke
-room would be full. He wanted to be there in the face of derision.
-A dry aching shook Mark. It was like the past time when Gurdy first
-went to school or when Margot had gone to England; the Walling was
-his child. He had desired it beyond any woman. He adored it out of
-his wretchedness. He pressed his shoulder against Gurdy for the sake
-of warmth and Gurdy grinned loyally at him. There was no one so kind
-as Gurdy who began to tell silly tales when they came home and sat on
-Mark’s bed smoking cigarettes. In the morning the boy brought up the
-papers and said gruffly, “Not as bad as I thought--”
-
-“Oh, get out! I bet they’re fierce,” Mark laughed, “Read me some.”
-
-Gurdy dropped the damp sheets on the quilt, glared at them and dashed
-his hand against the foot of the bed. He cried, “I don’t give a d-damn
-what they say about the play! They’ve no right to talk about you like
-that!”
-
-Immense warmth flooded Mark. He sat up and said, “Sure they have. For
-all they know I thought this thing was fine.... God bless you, son!” He
-wanted to do something for Gurdy directly. “Say, for heaven’s sake,
-brother, those clothes are too thin for winter. We’ll run down and
-order you some. And let’s go down to the farm. I ain’t seen dad and
-your mother in a dog’s age.--And hell, this ain’t so bad, Gurdy. The
-thing’ll dry up and blow away. We’ll bring ‘Captain Salvador’ in. I’ve
-had worse luck on a rabbit hunt.”
-
-But at Fayettesville where his father asked why Margot hadn’t come
-to say good-bye, Mark was still plagued by visionary glimpses of the
-Walling, half-filled by yawning folk, the black boxes empty. The flat
-country was deep in moist snow. Snow had to be considered. Audiences
-laughed nowadays at the best paper flakes. He talked to Gurdy about it
-on Saturday morning.
-
-“Pale blue canvas with the whitest light you can get jammed on it. That
-might work.”
-
-“Mark, if you couldn’t have scenery for a play would you--”
-
-Mark scoffed, “What’s a play without scenery?--Hey, look at the red
-car.... No, it’s a motor-bike.”
-
-A lad on a red motorcycle whipped in a bright streak up the lane and
-through a snow ball battle of Gurdy’s brothers. He had a telegram for
-Mark from the house manager of the Walling: “No sale for next week.
-Miss Boyle requests play be withdrawn. Instruct.”
-
-“Got her bellyfull,” Mark said and scribbled a return message ordering
-“Todgers Intrudes” withdrawn then another to the manager of “Captain
-Salvador” in Providence. He told Gurdy, “Now, she can’t say a thing.
-Well, let’s get back to town, son. We’ll have a lot to do, bringing
-‘Salvador’ in next Wednesday.”
-
-His motor carried them swiftly up New Jersey. Gurdy lounged and
-chattered beside Mark who couldn’t feel triumphant though he tried.
-The drive had been made so often with Margot and now he saw the child
-in all clarity, her bright pumps and the silver buckles she so liked
-stretched on the warmer close to his feet. Her older beauty flickered
-and faded like some intervening mist. Pain stabbed and jarred him. The
-snow of the upland gave out. Rain began. When they reached Broadway its
-lights were violet and wistful in the swirl above umbrellas.
-
-“God, what an ugly town,” said Gurdy.
-
-“Ain’t it? Don’t know what people that like something pretty’d do if it
-weren’t for the shows--and the damned movies.”
-
-They dined in a restaurant and another manager chaffed Mark about
-“Todgers Intrudes” leaning drunk on the table.
-
-“And I hear it goes to the storehouse?”
-
-“Yes ... but the show business is a gamble, Bill.”
-
-“Ain’t it? Say, have you seen this hunk of nothin’ I’ve got up to my
-place? Have you seen it? God, go up and take a look at it! I get a
-bellyache every time I go near it. Turnin’ them away, though. Well,
-here today and hell tomorrow.”
-
-His treasurer came to meet Mark in the glittering vestibule where a
-few men smoked forlornly against the blue panels. Mark glanced at the
-slip showing the receipts and laughed, commenced talking of “Captain
-Salvador.” His force gathered about him. Gurdy strolled away. A petty
-laughter rattled out of the doors and Gurdy passed in. The lit stage
-showed him a sprinkle of heads on the sweep of the seats. There was no
-one in the boxes. Two ushers were rolling dice by the white arch of the
-smokeroom. A couple of women left the poor audience and hurried by the
-boy dejectedly. He walked out through the vestibule where more men were
-collecting around Mark’s height and the swift happiness of his face
-as he talked of next week. Gurdy marched along the proud front of the
-theatre and turned into the alley that led from street to street. One
-bulb shone above the stage door and sent down a glistening coat for the
-large black motor standing there. Gurdy kept close to the other wall.
-There was a woman smoking in the limousine. The spark made a heart
-inside the shadow. Gurdy stared and was eaten by rage against her. He
-stood staring.
-
-The stage door opened. The few performers began to leave. They moved
-up or down the alley to join the bright motion of the glowing streets
-outside. Their feet stirred the pools of rain on the pavement. Their
-voices ebbed and tinkled in the lofty alley. At last a slim man in
-a grey coat ran from the door and jumped into the black motor which
-moved, now, and slid away, jolted into the southward street. Gurdy was
-moving, too, when other lights woke high on the brick wall. An iron
-shutter grated, opening, and men appeared in the fissure. They bellowed
-down to the old doorkeeper, “Ain’t them guys from Cain’s got here, yet?”
-
-“They ain’t to come ’til eleven fifteen.”
-
-“Hell, it’s after!”
-
-The stage hands cursed merrily. One of them mimicked Rand’s English
-accent to much applause. Then the great drays from the storehouse came
-grinding along the alley in a steam as the horses snorted. The stage
-hands and carters swore at each other. The vast screens were slung and
-handed down. The fleet quality of this failure bit Gurdy. He leaned
-dreary on the wall and saw Mark standing close to him, face raised to
-the lights, an odd small grin twisting his mouth. Mark did not move or
-speak.
-
-He was thinking confusedly of many things. It was hard to think at all.
-One of the stage hands whistled a waltz that people liked. The melody
-caught at Mark’s mind and drew it away from the moment, forward and
-back. He hunted justice. Things went wrong. People weren’t kind. Next
-week the new play would glitter and people would applaud. Gurdy might
-come to write plays, the best possible plays. He watched the wreck
-melt. People would forget this. It would sink into shadow. No one would
-understand but they would forget. It was trivial in his long success.
-It horribly hurt him. He had been fooled in love. It was laughable.
-Things happened so. One must go on and forget about them. One of the
-horses neighed and stamped. A blue spark jetted up from the pavement,
-above a pool.
-
-“Here goes nothin’,” a stage hand yelled, letting down the last screen.
-The iron shutter closed over the laughter. The carters whined and the
-drays were backed down the alley. The rain fell silently between Mark
-the red of the wall making it purple--a wonderful colour. The guiding
-lights went out. Mark sighed and took Gurdy’s arm. They walked together
-toward the gleaming crowd of the street. Yet feeling this warmth beside
-him Mark walked without much pain.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
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-
- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Rewards, by Thomas Beer
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Rewards, by Thomas Beer
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-Title: The Fair Rewards
-
-Author: Thomas Beer
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-Release Date: December 9, 2019 [EBook #60885]
-
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-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_insidecoverdeco.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<h1>THE FAIR<br />
-REWARDS</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<p class="center"><i>NEW BORZOI NOVELS</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>SPRING, 1922</i></p>
-
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Wanderers</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Knut Hamsun</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Men of Affairs</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Roland Pertwee</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">The Fair Rewards</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Thomas Beer</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">I Walked in Arden</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Jack Crawford</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Guest the One-Eyed</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Gunnar Gunnarsson</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">The Garden Party</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Katherine Mansfield</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">The Longest Journey</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>E. M. Forster</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">The Soul of a Child</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Edwin Bjrkman</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Cytherea</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Joseph Hergesheimer</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">Explorers of the Dawn</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Mazo de la Roche</i></div>
-
-<div class="verse"><span class="smcap">The White Kami</span></div>
-<div class="indent"><i>Edward Alden Jewell</i></div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_title.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xxxlarge">THE<br />
-FAIR REWARDS</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="xxlarge"><span class="orange">THOMAS BEER</span></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse"><b>&#8220;<i>Tell arts they have no soundness</i></b></div>
-<div class="indent2"><b><i>But vary by esteeming</i></b></div>
-<div class="verse"><b><i>Tell schools they want profoundness</i></b></div>
-<div class="indent2"><b><i>And stand too much on seeming</i>&#8221;&mdash;</b></div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verseright"><b><span class="smcap">Ralegh</span></b></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>&#8220;Eh, sirs,&#8221; says Koshchei, &#8220;I contemplate the spectacle<br />
-with appropriate emotions.&#8221;</i></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_titlelogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">NEW YORK</span><br />
-<span class="xxlarge"><span class="orange">ALFREDAKNOPF</span></span><br />
-<span class="xlarge">1922</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY<br />
-ALFRED A. KNOPF, <span class="smcap">Inc.</span><br />
-<br />
-<i>Published, February, 1922</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-<i>Set up and electrotyped by the Vail-Ballou Co., Binghamton, N.Y.</i><br />
-<i>Paper furnished by S. D. Warren &amp; Co., Boston, Mass.</i><br />
-<i>Printed and bound by the Plimpton Press, Norwood, Mass.</i><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="xxlarge">To<br />
-<br />
-M. A. A. B.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2></div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I</td><td> <span class="smcap">Manufacture of a Personage</span>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II</td><td> <span class="smcap">He Progresses</span>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III</td><td> <span class="smcap">Full Bloom</span>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV</td><td> <span class="smcap">Penalties</span>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V</td><td> <span class="smcap">Margot</span>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI</td><td> <span class="smcap">Gurdy</span>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII</td><td> &#8220;<span class="smcap">Todgers Intrudes</span>,&#8221; <a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII</td><td> <span class="smcap">Cosmo Rand</span>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX</td><td> <span class="smcap">Bubble</span>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Idolater</span>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Walling</span>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">I<br />
-
-Manufacture of a Personage</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">JOHN CARLSON began the rehearsals of
-&#8220;Nicoline&#8221; in early August of 1895. For
-a week he tried to correct the hot labours
-of the whole, large company. He was nervous
-about this production. His digestion interfered.
-His temper grew explosive. The leading woman
-was alarmed for her gentility. The leading man
-disliked his part of a cheap rake. Carlson
-abandoned the minor folk to his stage manager,
-Rothenstein, and nursed these two clumsy celebrities
-toward a certain ease. But his stomach
-suffered. He attended the opening night of
-&#8220;The Prisoner of Zenda&#8221; at the Lyceum, fainted
-during the second act and was revived with
-brandy in Mr. Frohman&#8217;s office. The brandy
-gave him fever; he spent the six days remaining
-before &#8220;Nicoline&#8221; opened, in his bed. Yet on a
-warm Monday night he dressed his gaunt body
-gorgeously, shaved his yellow face, thrust an
-orchid into his coat and dined at Martin&#8217;s with
-young Mr. Fitch who had adapted &#8220;Nicoline&#8221;
-from the French. Carlson swore in Swedish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-when agony seized his stomach. Mr. Fitch, sipping
-white Burgundy, observed that it must be
-pleasant to swear incomprehensibly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure,&#8221; said Carlson, shivering, &#8220;but what was
-you sayin&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll feel better by midnight,&#8221; Mr. Fitch
-murmured, &#8220;You&#8217;ve worried too much. This&#8217;ll
-be a hit. It&#8217;s been a hit in London and Paris.
-The critics&#8221;&mdash;the adapter smiled&mdash;&#8220;won&#8217;t dare
-say anything worse than that it&#8217;s immoral. And
-Cora Boyle will make them laugh in the third act,
-so that&#8217;ll be safe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Boyle? Who&#8217;s she? That black headed gal
-that plays the street walker, y&#8217;mean? She&#8217;s no
-good. Had her last winter in Mountain Dew.
-Common as dirt and no more sense than a
-turnip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Fitch answered in his affable whisper, &#8220;Of
-course she&#8217;s common as dirt. That&#8217;s why I
-asked you to get her. Why waste time training
-some one to be common when the town&#8217;s full of
-them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that ain&#8217;t actin&#8217;, Clyde!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s quite as good. And,&#8221; Mr. Fitch declared,
-&#8220;she&#8217;s what the women like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You always talk as if women made a show
-pay!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That happens to be just what they do, Mr.
-Carlson. That&#8217;s why Richard the Third doesn&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-make as much money as Camille or East Lynne.
-Women come to a play to see other women wear
-clothes they wouldn&#8217;t be seen in and do things
-they wouldn&#8217;t dream of doing. Please try to eat
-something.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re all wrong,&#8221; Carlson said, chewing a
-pepsin tablet.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Fitch shrugged, arranged his moustaches
-and mentioned a dozen actresses whose success
-was built on the art of enchanting their own sex.
-Carlson had a respect for this playwright&#8217;s
-opinion and while the two early acts of &#8220;Nicoline&#8221;
-played he saw from his box that Cora Boyle&#8217;s
-swagger carried some message to the female part
-of the audience. For her, women laughed loudly.
-They merely sniffled over the well bred woes of
-the heroine. The heroine&#8217;s antics were insupportable.
-The second curtain fell and Carlson descended
-to the dressing room of this unsatisfactory
-gentlewoman, gave a rasping lecture that scared
-her maid away. He had to help hook her gown
-and yelled over the powder of her advertised
-shoulders, &#8220;If you want that sassy Boyle gal to be
-the hit of the show, go on! You act like you&#8217;d
-lost your last cent on the races and had sand in
-your shoes. Now, you!&#8221; A feeling of heated
-blades in his stomach stopped the speech. He
-heard the stage manager knock on the dressing
-room door. The actress moved weeping past his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-anguish. He leaned on the table and saw his
-sweating face in the tilted mirror. The thin,
-remote music of the orchestra began behind the
-curtain. This third act was set in the rowdy caf
-of a small French city. If it went well, the play
-was safe, would last out the winter, make him
-richer. He should go up to his box and show
-himself unperturbed to rival managers civilly
-tranquil in their free seats. But he leaned, looking
-at his wet, bald head with a sick weariness.
-What was the use of this trade? He wore down
-his years trying to teach silly women and sillier
-men to act. He got nothing from living but
-stomach trouble and money. The money would
-go to his sister in Stockholm when he died. He
-had never liked his sister, hadn&#8217;t seen her in thirty
-years. He pitied himself so extremely that tears
-wriggled down the spread of seams in his yellow
-face. Life was an iniquity contrived for his torture.
-Carlson deeply enjoyed his woe for five
-minutes. Then Mr. Fitch came in to urge that
-Cora Boyle be corrected before her present entrance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the good, Clyde? She ain&#8217;t any sense.
-She&#8217;s a actress, ain&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;ll spoil the act if she carries on too much,&#8221;
-said Mr. Fitch and at once Carlson thrilled with
-an automatic anxiety; the act mustn&#8217;t be spoiled.
-He hurried up the iron stairs to the platform,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-wiping his face. Cora Boyle was standing ten
-feet back from the canvas arch that was, for the
-audience, the street door of the Caf Printemps.
-She patted the vast sleeves of her gaudy frock
-and whispered to a fellow in blue clothes. Carlson
-had to pull her from these occupations and
-gave his orders in a hiss.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you laugh too loud when Miss Leslie&#8217;s
-tellin&#8217; about her mother or talk as loud as you&#8217;ve
-been doin&#8217;, neither. This ain&#8217;t a camp meetin&#8217;,
-hear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The black haired girl grinned at him, nodding.
-She spat out a fold of chewing gum and patted
-her pink sleeves again. She said, &#8220;All right,
-boss, but, say, don&#8217;t the folks like me, though?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fitch chuckled behind the manager. Carlson
-wouldn&#8217;t be bested by an impudent hussy who was
-paid thirty-five dollars a week and didn&#8217;t earn it.
-He stared at Cora Boyle, biting his lips and hunting
-words wherewith to blast her. She let him
-stare unchecked. A false diamond on its thin
-chain glittered and slid when she breathed into
-the cleft of her breasts. She was excellently
-made and highly perfumed. Her black eyes
-caught a vague point of red from the rim of a
-jaunty hat that slanted its flowers on the mass
-of her hair. She had rouged her chin to offset
-a wide mouth. Carlson jeered, &#8220;Better get somebody
-to show you a good makeup, sister, and quit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-talkin&#8217; through your nose. You sound like
-you&#8217;re out of New Jersey!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Cora Boyle giggled. She glanced at the fellow
-in blue and said, &#8220;I was boardin&#8217; at Fayettesville,
-New Jersey, all summer. Wasn&#8217;t I, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The fellow bobbed his head, shuffling his feet.
-His feet were bare and by that sign Carlson knew
-him for the supposed peasant lad who would
-bring the heroine news of her dear mother&#8217;s death
-at the end of the act. Cora Boyle gave this unimportant
-creature a long, amorous look, then
-told Carlson, &#8220;I was boardin&#8217; with Mark&#8217;s
-folks. He&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your cue,&#8221; said Mr. Fitch and the girl, with
-a splendid swagger, marched into the lit scene
-beyond this nervous shadow. Her finery shimmered
-and directly the women outside the hedge
-of footlights laughed. The audience tittered at
-her first line and Mr. Fitch, a hand on his
-moustache, smiled at Carlson.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s got a voice like a saw,&#8221; Carlson
-snapped and walked down the steps. At the
-bottom a roar halted him. The audience
-laughed in a steady bawl. He grunted but the
-noise came in repeating volleys every time the
-girl&#8217;s shrill speech rose grinding and these bursts
-had an effect of surging water wonderful to hear,
-soothing his conceit. But as he listened a spasm
-took his stomach. Fitch helped him to a cab<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-and the cab delivered Carlson trembling to his
-valet in 18th Street.</p>
-
-<p>The attack lasted all night and did not wane
-until twilight of next day when Carlson could
-drink some drugged milk and roll a cigarette.
-He bade his valet bring up the morning papers
-and was not surprised when Fitch preceded the
-man into the room, walking silently on his trim
-feet, a flower in his blue coat and his white hands
-full of scribbled foolscap.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been writing two scenes in the library,&#8221;
-he said, in his usual, even whisper, &#8220;and I&#8217;d like
-to read them, if you feel well enough.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two scenes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One&#8217;s for the first act and one&#8217;s for the last.
-I&#8217;d like a full rehearsal in the morning, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carlson lifted himself and slapped the counterpane.
-He cried, &#8220;Now, Clyde, listen here!
-That Boyle gal&#8217;s got enough. I expect she hit
-but she&#8217;s a sassy little hen. I&#8217;m not goin&#8217; to spoil
-her with&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nom de dieu,&#8221; said the playwright, &#8220;I didn&#8217;t
-say anything about the Boyle girl. No. These
-scenes are for young Walling. He can come on
-with some flowers for Nicoline in the first act and
-say something. Then he can bring the dogs in
-at the last, instead of the maid. We might dress
-him as a gamekeeper in the last act. Green coat,
-corduroy breeches&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>Carlson screamed, &#8220;Cord&#8217;roy pants? Who
-the hell you talkin&#8217; about? Walling? Who&#8217;s
-Walling?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Fitch lit a cigar and selected a paper from
-the bundle the valet held. He bent himself over
-the back of a cherry velvet chair which turned
-his suit vile purple in the dusk and began to read
-genially.... &#8220;&#8216;Into the sordid and sensuous
-atmosphere of this third act there came a second
-of relief when the messenger brought Nicoline
-news of her mother&#8217;s death. We too rarely see
-such acting as Mr. Walling&#8217;s performance of this
-petty part. His embarrassed, sympathetic stare
-at Nicoline, his boyish, unaffected speech&mdash;&#8217;&#8221;
-The playwright laughed and took another paper,
-&#8220;That&#8217;s William Winter. Here&#8217;s this idiot.
-&#8216;This little episode exactly proves the soundness of
-Carlson&#8217;s method in rehearsing a company. I am
-told that Mark Walling, the young actor who
-plays the rle, has been drilled by Mr. Carlson
-as carefully as though he were a principal&#8217;&mdash;I
-told him that,&#8221; Mr. Fitch explained, changing
-papers. &#8220;&#8216;One of the best performances in the
-long list of forty was that of Mark Walling as&#8217;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carlson lay back dizzy on his pillows and
-snarled, &#8220;What&#8217;s it all about, for hell&#8217;s sake?
-This feller comes on and gives the gal the letter
-and says the funeral&#8217;ll be next day. Well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said his ally, &#8220;I&#8217;d just put you in your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-cab. I was out in front, standing. This boy
-came on. They were still laughing at Cora
-Boyle. The minute Walling spoke, every one
-shut up. He gave his line about the funeral and
-some women commenced snivelling. Wiped his
-nose on his sleeve. Some more women cried. I
-thought they&#8217;d applaud for a minute. He&#8217;s in
-all the papers. Nice voice. It&#8217;s his looks
-mostly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never noticed him. Where did we get
-him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Fitch blew some smoke toward the red
-velvet curtains and chuckled. &#8220;We didn&#8217;t get
-him. He belongs to Cora Boyle. She brought
-him to Rothenstein at the first rehearsal and
-asked for a part for him. She kidnapped him
-down in Jersey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&mdash;what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Kidnapped him.&#8221; The playwright assumed
-a high drawl and recited, &#8220;Cora, she was boardin&#8217;
-with Mark&#8217;s folks down to Fayettesville. Mark,
-he used to speak pieces after supper. Cora, she
-thought he spoke real nice&mdash;So she kidnapped
-him. She mesmerized him&mdash;like Trilby&mdash;and
-brought him along. She&#8217;s got him cooped up at
-her boarding house. She&#8217;s married him. He
-says he thinks acting&#8217;s awful easy&#8221;&mdash;Mr. Fitch
-again drawled, &#8220;cause all you gotta do is walk
-out, an&#8217; speak your piece. He&#8217;s got a brother<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-name of Joe and his mamma she&#8217;s dead and sister
-Sadie she&#8217;s married to Eddie something or other.
-I heard his whole family tree. I went to see him
-this morning. Some one else is likely to grab
-him, you know? He told me his sad story in a
-pair of blue drawers and one sock. He&#8217;s scared
-to death of Cora Boyle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But&mdash;can he act?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The playwright shook his head. &#8220;No. He
-hasn&#8217;t any brains. Are you well enough to get
-dressed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At half past ten an usher came into the box
-office where Carlson was sitting and summoned
-the manager to the rear of the house. Fitch
-stood at the throat of an aisle, his pallor made
-orange by the glow from the stage on which Cora
-Boyle was chaffing the sinful heroine. Amusement
-sped up this lustrous, stirring slope of heads.
-It was the year of Violette Amre among perfumes
-and the scent rolled back to Carlson with
-the laughter of these ninnies who took Cora
-Boyle for a good comedian. Carlson chafed,
-but when the lad in blue walked into the light
-of the untinted globes, this laughter flickered
-down. Fitch whispered, &#8220;Hear?&#8221; and promptly
-the boy spoke in a husky, middling voice that
-somehow reached Carlson clearly. Close by a
-woman gurgled, &#8220;Sweet!&#8221; and Carlson felt the
-warm attention of the crowd, half understood it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-as the few lines drawled on. The boy stood
-square on his brown, painted feet. His flat face
-was comely. He had dull red, curling hair. As
-he tramped out there was a faint and scattered
-rumour like the birth of applause, cut by the
-heroine&#8217;s shriek.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You see?&#8221; Fitch smiled.</p>
-
-<p>Carlson said, &#8220;I ain&#8217;t a fool. Tell Rothenstein
-to call a rehearsal for ten in the mornin&#8217;,
-will you.&#8221; He then went briskly to hunt down
-this asset. It took some minutes to locate the
-dressing room Mark Walling shared with five
-other small parts. He found Mark peeled to
-faded, azure cotton underclothes and talking
-happily to a tall, fair rustic who slouched on the
-wall beside the sink where Mark scrubbed paint
-from his feet with a sponge. Their drawls
-mixed and shut from them the noise of Carlson&#8217;s
-step, so the manager regarded his prize stealthily.
-Mark was a long lad, limber and burly, harmlessly
-good looking. His nose was short. His
-insteps and arms were thick with muscle. He
-smiled up at his rural friend who said, &#8220;But it
-ain&#8217;t a long trip, Bud. So I&#8217;ll get your papa to
-come up nex&#8217; week.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark shifted the sponge to his other hand
-and sighed. The sound touched Carlson who
-hated actors not old enough to court him cleverly.
-But this was a homesick peasant. He listened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-to Mark&#8217;s answer of, &#8220;Wish you would, Eddie.
-I ain&#8217;t sure papa likes my bein&#8217; here. Even if I
-do&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The rustic saw Carlson and mumbled. Mark
-Walling hopped about on one foot and gave
-a solemn, frightened gulp. Carlson nodded,
-inquiring, &#8220;That your brother, sonny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, sir. Joe&#8217;s home. This is Eddie Bernamer.
-Well, he&#8217;s my brother-in-law. He&#8217;s
-married with Sadie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Eddie Bernamer gave out attenuated sounds,
-accepting the introduction. The manager asked
-lightly, &#8220;How many sisters have you, son?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just Sadie. She&#8217;s out lookin&#8217; at the play.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you&#8217;ve married Cora Boyle?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;that&#8217;s so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He seemed rather puzzled by the fact,
-suspended the sponge and said to Eddie Bernamer,
-&#8220;She ain&#8217;t but two years older&#8217;n me,
-Eddie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess Mr. Carlson wants to talk to you,
-Bud,&#8221; his relative muttered, &#8220;So I&#8217;ll go on back
-and see some more.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;ll come round an&#8217; wait after the
-show?&#8221; Mark wailed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll have to catch the cars, Bud. Well,
-goo&#8217; bye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark stood clutching the sponge and sighed
-a monstrous, woeful exhalation after Eddie Bernamer.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-His grey eyes filled. He was hideously
-homesick, certain that Fayettesville was a better
-place than this cellar that stunk of sweated cloth
-and greasy paint. And Cora hadn&#8217;t been strikingly
-pleased by the news of him in this morning&#8217;s
-papers. She was odd. He wiped his nose on a
-wrist and looked hopelessly at Carlson.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather be back on the farm, wouldn&#8217;t you?&#8221;
-the gaunt man asked.</p>
-
-<p>Mark sat down on the floor and thought. His
-thoughts went slowly across the track of six
-weeks. He plodded. For all its demerits this
-red and gold theatre was thrilling. People were
-jolly, kind enough. The lewd stagehands had
-let him help set a scene tonight. The man who
-handled the lights had shown him how they were
-turned on and off to make stormy waverings.
-Cora was exciting. Winter at home was plagued
-by Aunt Edith who came out from Trenton to
-spend the cold months at the farm and who
-lectured Mark&#8217;s father on Methodism. And
-here was this easy, good job. If he worked hard
-it might be that Mr. Carlson&mdash;who wasn&#8217;t now
-the screaming beast of rehearsals&mdash;would let him
-run the lights instead of acting. Mark said,
-&#8220;Well, no. Just as soon stay here, I guess.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How old are you, sonny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Goin&#8217; on seventeen, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll give you forty a week to stay here,&#8221; said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-Carlson, &#8220;Fitch tells me you think acting&#8217;s pretty
-easy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see any trick to acting,&#8221; Mark mused,
-absorbing the offer of forty dollars a week,
-&#8220;There ain&#8217;t nothin&#8217; to it but speakin&#8217; out loud....
-Yes, I&#8217;d like to stay here.&#8221; He wanted to
-show himself useful and got up, pointing to the
-bulbs clustered on the ceiling in a bed of tin, &#8220;I
-should think you&#8217;d ought to save money if you
-had them down here by the lookin&#8217; glasses instead
-of this gas, y&#8217;see? The fellers don&#8217;t get any
-good of the electric light while they&#8217;re puttin&#8217;
-paint on, and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rehearsal at ten in the morning,&#8221; said Carlson,
-&#8220;Good-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Marked gaped at the black and empty door.
-Then his homesickness swelled up and he sighed,
-squeezing the sponge. His body trembled
-drearily. He lowered his head as does a lonesome
-calf turned into strange pastures.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">II<br />
-
-He Progresses</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">&#8220;NICOLINE&#8221; lasted until April, 1896.
-Mark played the country boy in &#8220;Mr.
-Bell&#8221; all the next season and, duly
-coached by Sarah Cowell LeMoyne, figured
-as the young duke in &#8220;The Princess of Croy&#8221;
-when Carlson imported that disaster in the
-autumn of 1897. Its failure afflicted Mark less
-than his private griefs. He played for four
-months in Carlson&#8217;s Boston stock company.
-This was penible. He had never been so far
-from his adored family. True, freed of Cora,
-he could send ten or twenty dollars a week to his
-father but he missed Sundays in Fayettesville and
-the Boston wind gave him chilblains. The
-friendly women of the Stock Company found
-him shy and here began the legend of Mark&#8217;s
-misogyny. He read novels and tramped about
-Boston, surveyed the theatrical setting of Louisburg
-Square and sidelong admired the ladies
-walking rigidly in sober hats on Commonwealth
-Avenue. Such persons, he mused, would never
-fling hot curling irons in a husband&#8217;s face and it
-wasn&#8217;t possible to imagine them smoking cigarettes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-in bed. But he hated Boston and the war
-was welcome as it honourably pulled him back to
-a New Jersey Infantry regiment.</p>
-
-<p>In June, 1898, he sat on a palmetto trunk in the
-filthy camp of Tampa watching Eddie Bernamer
-pitch a ball to Joe Walling. Mark had every
-satisfaction in the sight and liked his piebald
-uniform much more than any costume hitherto.
-The camp pleased him as a problem. There
-would be plays made on the war, of course, and it
-wouldn&#8217;t be easy to mount them. These bright
-trees and the muddle of railroad ties could be
-effected but the theatre lacked lights to send down
-this parching glitter on black mud and strolling
-men. He sighed for realism. He had spent
-hours in Davidge&#8217;s workshop while the grass of
-&#8220;The Princess of Croy&#8221; was being made. It
-hadn&#8217;t the right sheen. The sunset had turned
-it blue and the sunset was all wrong even though
-the critics had praised it. Mark swung his
-gaiters and pondered irreproducible nature. But
-it would be nice to counterfeit all this&mdash;the glister
-of remote tin roofing, the harsh palms, the listless
-soldiery. The police would object to exactness
-of course. Brother Joe was pitching the ball
-with great flexures of his bronze, naked chest.
-Eddie Bernamer swore astoundingly when he
-ripped his undershirt. One couldn&#8217;t be so honest
-on the stage or echo the sharp, unreal note of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-mail call sounding. Mark ran off to see if the
-wayward postal service had brought him a letter.
-There was a roll of newspapers addressed to his
-brother-in-law and Bernamer, a bad reader,
-turned them over to Mark and Joe. It was Joe
-who found the pencilled paragraph Mark rather
-expected. He slapped Mark&#8217;s back and grunted,
-&#8220;Well, so there y&#8217;are, Bud.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark read, &#8220;The suit for divorce begun by
-Mark Walling, the well known young actor
-against his wife, Cora Boyle Walling, was concluded
-yesterday. Neither party to the action
-was present in court. Miss Boyle is touring the
-West with the Jarvis Hope Stock Company. Jarvis
-Hope is named as co-respondent in the case.
-The action was not defended. Mr. Walling is
-now with the &mdash;th N.J. Infantry. The divorced
-couple were married in August, 1895. They
-have no children.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good riddance to bad rubbish,&#8221; said Eddie
-Bernamer, &#8220;and don&#8217;t you let the next woman
-looks at you haul you off to a preacher, neither.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark felt dubious. There had never been a
-divorce in the family. He said, &#8220;I guess if we&#8217;d
-had a baby, she wouldn&#8217;t of&mdash;Dunno.... It&#8217;s
-kind of too bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His relatives denied it. They had never liked
-Cora Boyle. She wasn&#8217;t a lady and her clothes
-had shocked Sadie&#8217;s conservative mind. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-pointed out that a stable and meritorious woman
-wouldn&#8217;t have seduced Mark before marriage.
-They were glad to see the boy free and were puzzled
-by his mournfulness. He agreed with their
-judgments. But his eyes moistened for all their
-affectionate pawing. He muttered, &#8220;She was
-awful good lookin&#8217;,&#8221; and sat moody while they
-indicated advantages. He could save his pay,
-now, and wear respectable, black neckties, as a
-Walling should. He wouldn&#8217;t be bullied or have
-hot curling irons flung in his face. He could
-come home on the Saturday midnight train and
-stay until Monday afternoon. And Joe reasonably
-assured him that women were plentiful.
-But Mark mourned, in his tangled fashion, the
-collapse of beauty. Cora, he choked, didn&#8217;t
-match her outside. She was ruthless, disturbing.
-She cared nothing for Mark&#8217;s pet plan of an
-ideal lighting system for theatres. She had
-spilled coffee on his smudged, laborious chart of a
-stage to be made in hinged parts. She called his
-sacred family a parcel of mossbacks and left the
-flat when Sadie and Bernamer brought their
-baby to town for a day. Still, Mark was mournful
-and often missed her for several years. He
-shuddered from marriage as a game more complicated
-than golf.</p>
-
-<p>He was playing golf in May, 1902, with Ian
-Gail when the English playwright checked his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-grammar. Mark flushed. The Englishman
-fooled with a putter for a second, considering
-this colour. He said, &#8220;I say, old son, d&#8217;you mind
-my giving you some advice?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go ahead.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Carlson&#8217;s closing the play next week, he tells
-me. What will you do with yourself, all summer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s that and what&#8217;s it like?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark sat down on the green and chattered of
-the farm, and his family with particular mention
-of his nephew George Dewey Bernamer (born
-May 15, 1898) who called himself Gurdy.
-About Joe Walling&#8217;s baby daughter Mark wasn&#8217;t
-as yet enthusiastic. He talked with broad lapses
-into New Jersey singsong. His grey eyes dilated.
-He babbled like an upset pail. The lean
-Englishman didn&#8217;t seem bored. Other people&mdash;Mrs.
-LeMoyne, old Mrs. Gilbert&mdash;had scolded
-Mark about these explosions. Gail let him talk
-for twenty minutes of warm noon and then said,
-&#8220;Quite right, old son. Stick to your people....
-You&#8217;re a sentimental ass, of course. I dare say
-that&#8217;s why you can put up with dinner at Carlson&#8217;s
-in that seething mass of red plush.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I like Mr. Carlson. Been mighty good&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course he&#8217;s good to you. And it was
-good of you to make him mount my last act so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-decently.... For some reason or other you&#8217;ve
-an eye for decoration. That&#8217;s by the way.&mdash;Now,
-I&#8217;ve a female cousin in Winchester, a Mrs.
-Ilden. She writes bad novels that no one reads
-and her husband&#8217;s in the Navy. I&#8217;m going to
-write her about you. You run across after the
-play stops. She&#8217;ll put you up for a month and
-you&#8217;ll pay her&mdash;I suggest a hundred pounds.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pay her for what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Her conversation, my boy. She&#8217;s quite clever
-and fearfully learned. Shaw likes her. She&#8217;s
-an anarchist and a determinist and all that and
-much older than you. She makes a business of
-tutoring youngsters who need&mdash;doing over a bit.
-You seem to have been reared on Henty and
-Shakespeare. Even Carlson says you need pruning.
-There&#8217;s no use being antediluvian even if
-you are a rising young leading man.... God,
-how I hate the breed! I shouldn&#8217;t waste these
-words on you if you didn&#8217;t show vagrom gleams
-of common sense now and then. So I most
-seriously beg of you to go and let Olive&mdash;Mrs.
-Ilden, tutor you for a fortnight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark was always docile before authority. He
-asked, &#8220;What&#8217;ll she do to me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She can tell you anything you want to know
-and explain Winchester. The history of Winchester
-is the history of England,&#8221; Gail said,
-&#8220;and, of course, that&#8217;s the history of the world.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>Thus, in early June, Mark was driven through
-Winchester and landed at the door of a brick
-house painted plum colour. A grey wall continued
-on either side of the ruddy front and nameless
-vines waved on the coping. Mark&#8217;s head
-ached from a supper at Romano&#8217;s the night
-previous but he admired the house and the
-obvious romance of the curving lane stippled with
-sunshine in plaques of honey. He rang the bell,
-gave a fat parlour-maid his card and waited for
-Mrs. Ilden in stolid terror. The hall had white
-panels of an approved stage pattern and was
-dotted with photographs. Mark was looking at
-the face of a bearded man whose eyebrows had a
-diabolic slant when Olive Ilden came in from her
-garden.</p>
-
-<p>She came in a bad temper, deserting the discussion
-of Chamberlain&#8217;s Imperial policy about
-her tea table. She was prepared for a repetition
-of her last paying pupil, the one son of a Rand
-millionaire, a cub who wore five rubies on one
-hand and who talked racing at four meals a day.
-Mark unsettled her by his wooden stare and the
-black decency of his dress. His clothes were
-English. He was always tanned. The scar of
-Cora Boyle&#8217;s curling irons lay in a thread along
-his left jaw. Olive revised a theory that Americans
-were short and looked up at him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve some friends at tea,&#8221; she said, &#8220;Of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-course, I don&#8217;t wish to impose tea on a Yankee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;d like some,&#8221; Mark said miserably
-and followed her trailing, white skirts down an
-endless garden. He thought her gown distinctly
-bad and sloppy. She must be older than she
-looked or she wouldn&#8217;t be so careless. The
-girdle was crooked and the gauze across her
-shoulders was too tight. But it was a fine body,
-tall and proportionate. Her hair was a lustreless
-black. Meanwhile he had to think about
-this scene of an English garden. It phrased itself
-simply. Wall, rear. Tower of church,
-right background. Two small children playing
-with a kitten. Tea-table. Three ladies.
-Young man in tweeds. One clergyman.&mdash;It was
-like the garden set for the &#8220;Princess of Croy.&#8221;
-Mark braced himself, bowed and murmured in
-the manner of Mrs. LeMoyne, leaned on one
-of the limes in the manner of Herbert Kelcey, and
-drank his tea in the manner of Mr. Drew. The
-minor canon gave him a cigarette and Mark
-said, &#8220;Thanks so much.&#8221; The youth in tweeds
-asserted that it was beastly hot for June and
-Mark admitted, &#8220;Rather.&#8221; He stood sombre
-against the lime and the group was chilled by his
-chill. Two of the ladies fancied him a poet by
-the red curling of his hair. The guests withdrew.
-Olive Ilden fiddled with a teaspoon and frowned.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>&#8220;I rather expected you on Tuesday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Had to stay in London. Mr. Carlson
-wanted me to look at a couple of plays he&#8217;s thinkin&#8217;
-of bringing over.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really, I don&#8217;t see why you Yankees always
-import our nonsense. One hears of the Pinero
-rubbish playing for thousands of nights in the
-States. Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The women like it,&#8221; he wildly said, quoting
-Carlson. &#8220;Are those your kids?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mine and my husband&#8217;s,&#8221; Olive laughed and
-called Joan and Robert Ilden from their game
-with the kitten. Mark played with them in all
-content for half an hour, didn&#8217;t glance at Olive,
-and told her blond children about his best nephew,
-Gurdy Bernamer. The bored infants broke his
-watch chain and their puzzled mother took Mark
-to walk. She led him down through the college
-and wondered why he paused to stare at the
-cathedral walls where the sunshine was pallid on
-the weathered stone.&mdash;He was thinking that bulbs
-tinted straw colour might get this glow against
-properly painted canvas.&mdash;His eyes opened and his
-drowsy gaze pleased the woman. She said, &#8220;Do
-you like it? The cathedral?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The tower&#8217;s too small,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Clever of you. Yes, architects think so.
-Glad you noticed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anybody could see that. Is that the Bishop?&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-he asked, seeing black gaiters in motion on a lawn.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A mere dean. And the birds are rooks.
-All the best cathedrals have rooks about. Shall
-we go in?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d just as soon,&#8221; he nodded, regretting that
-the queer shade of the elms wasn&#8217;t possible on a
-backdrop.</p>
-
-<p>The interior charmed him. He forgot his
-headache. His thoughts hopped. Church scenes
-never went well. No way to capture this slow
-echo for the stage. The upper brightness made
-him raise his eyes. This range of high windows
-where the lights melted together was called
-a &#8220;clerestory.&#8221; The mingled glory almost
-frightened him. He saw a white butterfly that
-jigged and wheeled, irreverent, solitary on the
-far shadows of the vault. Mark smiled. Small
-Gurdy Bernamer named butterflies &#8220;bruffles&#8221; and
-was probably chasing one, now, across the hot
-perfume of the Fayettesville garden. The fancy
-made him homesick. He blinked. The woman
-watching him saw crystal wetness point his lashes
-and hastily stated, &#8220;This is William de Wykeham&#8217;s
-tomb.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark examined the painted tomb, wished he
-could sketch the canopy and the pygmy monks
-who pray at the Bishop&#8217;s feet. Gurdy Bernamer
-would like the monks and would break them.
-He rubbed his nose and chuckled.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>&#8220;I suppose,&#8221; Olive said, &#8220;that all this seems
-rather silly to you. You&#8217;re a practical people.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s good lookin&#8217;. I don&#8217;t see how a good
-lookin&#8217; thing can be silly, exactly. I was thinkin&#8217;
-my kid nephew&#8217;d like those monks to play with.
-But he&#8217;d bust them.&mdash;Isn&#8217;t King William Rufus
-buried here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been reading a guide book!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no. That&#8217;s in history. They lugged
-him here on a wagon or something and buried
-him. Where&#8217;s he plant&mdash;buried?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark wished that the dark lady would stop
-frowning as she steered him to the glum, polished
-tomb in the choir. He must be offensive to her.
-She said, &#8220;This is supposed to be the tomb.
-They&#8217;re not sure,&#8221; and Mark stared at the raised
-slab of ugly stone with awe. The organ began
-to growl softly in a transept. It was solemn to
-stand, reflecting on the Red King while the organ
-moaned a marching air. William Rufus had
-been dead so long. History was amazing....
-When he had a theatre of his own Mark meant
-to open it with Richard III or with Henry V.
-Carlson told him that no one would ever play
-Richard III again as Booth had gone too high
-in the part. But the Walling Theatre would be
-opened with a romantic play full of radiant
-clothes and scenes that would match the playhouse
-itself. The Walling would have a ceiling of dull<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-blue and boxes curtained in silk, black as a
-woman&#8217;s hair. The lamps should wane in the
-new manner when the acts began and there would
-be mirrors rimmed in faint silver to gleam in far
-nooks of the balcony&mdash;something to shimmer in
-corners and shadows of his dream.... Mark
-stared down the nave and built his theatre against
-the grey age of this place until Olive sat in a heap
-of muslin on the tomb of William Rufus.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One doesn&#8217;t have to bother about such an
-indifferent king. There are some more in those
-tins&mdash;I mean caskets&mdash;on top of the choir screen.
-Edmund and so on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More kings? But won&#8217;t a&mdash;a sacristan or
-something come an&#8217; chase you off of here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What do you know about sacristans?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cathedrals always have sacristans in books.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare say you read quantities of bad novels,&#8221;
-she observed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, I like Monsieur Beaucaire and Kim
-better&#8217;n anything I&#8217;ve read lately,&#8221; said her bewildering
-pupil, &#8220;Say, who was Pico della Mirandola?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think I can talk about the Renascence
-in Winchester choir,&#8221; Olive choked and took him
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Save for the studied clarity of voice he showed
-no theatrical traits. He resented the sign of The
-Plume of Feathers beside the West Gate because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-&#8220;it spoiled the wall.&#8221; He asked if the Butter
-Cross was a well and bought several postcards
-at a shop where the squared panes arrested him.
-Olive made conjectures. She was twenty-six.
-She had known actors in some bulk. This wasn&#8217;t
-an actor, observably. She guided him back
-toward the college and through a swarm of lads in
-flannels. At these Mark looked and sighed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why that sob?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dunno. I s&#8217;pose because kids are havin&#8217; such
-an awful good time and don&#8217;t know it. I mean&mdash;they&#8217;ll
-get married and all that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark said cheerfully, &#8220;Divorced.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;D&mdash;don&#8217;t think I&#8217;d better, Mrs. Ilden.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is that American?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is&mdash;is what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That delicate respect for my sensibilities.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know what you mean exactly. I had
-to divorce Cor&mdash;my wife and I&#8217;d rather not talk
-about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive felt alarmed. She said, &#8220;I&#8217;m supposed
-to tutor you in art and ethics and I&#8217;m merely trying
-to get your point of view, you know? Don&#8217;t
-look so shocked.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see what my gettin&#8217; divorced has to
-do with art and ethics.... Oh, was this man
-Leighton a better painter&#8217;n Whistler?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>His questions ranged from the salary of canons
-to professional cricket. He wore a small and
-single pearl in his shirt at dinner, sat eating
-chastely and stared at Olive between the candles
-that made his grey eyes black in the brown of his
-face. The parlour-maid brought him the silver
-bowl of chutney three unnecessary times. He
-timidly corrected Olive&#8217;s views on farm labour in
-the United States with, &#8220;I&#8217;m afraid you&#8217;re wrong.
-I was brought up on a farm.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really? I was wondering.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fayettesville. It&#8217;s up in the woods behind
-Trenton. Say, what&#8217;s the Primrose League?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a week Olive tried to outline this mentality.
-He plunged from subject to subject. Economics
-wearied him. &#8220;What&#8217;s it matter what kind of
-a gover&#8217;ment you have so long as folks get enough
-to eat and the kids ain&#8217;t&mdash;don&#8217;t have to work?&#8221;
-Religion, he said, was all poppycock. His
-&#8220;papa&#8221; admired Robert Ingersoll and &#8220;What&#8217;s
-it matter whether folks have souls or not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a materialist,&#8221; she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, what of it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m trying to find out what your ethical
-standards are. Why don&#8217;t you cheat at poker?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because it ain&#8217;t fair. It&#8217;s like stealin&#8217; a man&#8217;s
-wife.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some one stole your wife, didn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark finally chuckled. &#8220;You&#8217;d hardly call it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-stealing. She just walked off when she knew I&#8217;d&mdash;heard
-about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He blushed, hoping he hadn&#8217;t transgressed and
-hurriedly asked whether Bernard Shaw was really
-a vegetarian. He had no opinion of Shaw&#8217;s plays
-but thought &#8220;The Devil&#8217;s Disciple&#8221; a better play
-than &#8220;Magda.&#8221; &#8220;The Sunken Bell&#8221; was &#8220;pretty
-near up to Shakespeare.&#8221; He was worried
-because &#8220;Treasure Island&#8221; couldn&#8217;t be dramatized
-and recited &#8220;Thanatopsis&#8221; to the horror of
-Olive&#8217;s children. Olive interrupted the recital.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;ll be quite enough, thanks! Wherever
-did you pick up that sentimental rot?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just what is bein&#8217; sentimental?&#8221; Mark
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Writing such stuff and liking it when it&#8217;s
-written! I suspect you of Tennyson.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Never read any. Tried to. Couldn&#8217;t, except
-that Ulysses thing. Let&#8217;s go take a walk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Too warm, thanks,&#8221; said Olive, wanting to
-see whether this would hold him in his basket
-chair under the limes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll be back about tea time,&#8221; Mark promised,
-paused on his way up the garden to kiss Bobby
-Ilden&#8217;s fair head as the little boy reminded him of
-Gurdy Bernamer and vanished whistling &#8220;The
-Banks of the Wabash.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All his clothes are black,&#8221; said young Joan
-Ilden, &#8220;but I was helping Edith dust in his room<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-this morning and he has the nicest blue pyjamas.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do go pull Bobby out of the raspberries,&#8221;
-Olive said and fell into a sulk which she didn&#8217;t
-define. She lounged in her chair watching the
-light play on the straight bole of a tree behind the
-emptied place where Mark had been sitting....
-Rage succeeded the sulk. This was a stupid
-augmentation of her income. Olive disapproved
-landholding but it would be easier every way
-when Ilden&#8217;s uncle died and he came into the
-Suffolk property. Then she would be able to live
-in London instead of flitting there for a breath
-of diversion. She hoped Mark would go to
-London soon.... He had the mind of a badly
-schooled stock-broker! Olive lifted her portfolio
-from the table and penciled a note to her
-husband. &#8220;I do wish you could slaughter your
-dear uncle, Jack. Ian Gail has sent me a silly
-Yankee to educate. I hope I have no insular
-prejudice against the harmless, necessary Colonial
-but this cad&mdash;&#8221; Then she thought. &#8220;What am
-I saying here? I don&#8217;t mean it. I&#8217;m lying,&#8221; and
-tore up the paper.</p>
-
-<p>Mark went swimming in the Itchen and did not
-come home until seven. He dressed in six
-minutes and found Olive clad in black lace by the
-drawing room mantel of white stone. He said,
-&#8220;Say, I ran into a flock of sheep an&#8217; an old feller
-with a crook. Do they still do that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>&#8220;Do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Crooks. And he had on a blue&mdash;what d&#8217;you
-call it?&mdash;smock?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive laughed and lifted her arms behind her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you think some one was staging a pastoral
-for your benefit? But you didn&#8217;t come home to
-tea and there were some quite amusing people
-here. I kept them as long as I could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Too bad,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;I&#8217;m sorry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You shouldn&#8217;t lie so. You&#8217;re not at all sorry.
-You&#8217;re bored when people come and you have to
-play the British gentleman. And there are so
-many other things better worth doing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s in Shaw,&#8221; Mark guessed, &#8220;Clyde Fitch
-was talkin&#8217; about it. But what&#8217;s wrong with
-actin&#8217; like a gentleman?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the use? Your manners are quite
-all right. If you&#8217;d talk to people and collect
-ideas.... It&#8217;s so much more important to
-straighten out your ideas than to stand and hold a
-teacup properly. A butler can do that. I could
-train a navvy to do that. And&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s an awful good looking dress,&#8221; he broke
-in, &#8220;Nicest you&#8217;ve had on since I&#8217;ve been here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive let an arm trail on the mantel where the
-stone cooled it. &#8220;I&#8217;m talking about your intellect
-and you talk about my frock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know something about dresses and I don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-know a thing about intellect. You ought to wear
-dark things because you&#8217;ve got such a nice sk&mdash;complexion.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t bother about clothes except when
-Jack&#8217;s at home and I want to keep his attention....
-You were in Cuba, you said? Did you kill
-any one?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know. Tried to. Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was wondering whether you&#8217;d mind killing an
-old duffer in Suffolk. He keeps my husband out
-of twelve hundred a year and a decentish house.
-Would you mind?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark saw this was meant as a joke and laughed,
-studying her arm which gleamed white on the
-white stone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My husband&#8217;s uncle. He&#8217;s easily eighty and
-he&#8217;s very Tory.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Haven&#8217;t got any uncles. Got an aunt that&#8217;s
-pretty awful. She&#8217;s a Methodist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He wouldn&#8217;t look at her. He still stared at
-the arm sprawled on the mantel and smiled like a
-child. Olive wanted to hurt him suddenly, to
-rouse him. The glowing stare was too childish.
-She drawled, &#8220;I went into your bedroom to see
-that they&#8217;d swept it decently. Are those the
-family portraits on the desk? Who&#8217;s the fat girl
-with the baby?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sadie. My sister. She&#8217;s puttin&#8217; on weight.
-Papa keeps two hired girls now and she don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-have to cook. The yellow-headed fellow&#8217;s her
-husband&mdash;Eddie Bernamer. Awful fine man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He beamed at Olive now, doting on Eddie Bernamer&#8217;s
-perfections. Olive tried, &#8220;And the lad
-with the very huge pearl in his scarf is your
-brother? And they all live on your father&#8217;s
-farm? And you go down there and bore yourself
-to death over weekends?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t bore myself at all. I get all the New
-York I want weekdays. Fine to get out and ride
-a horse round. Nice house. We built a wing on
-when Joe got married last year.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The parlour-maid announced dinner. Mark
-gave Olive his arm and wanted to stroke her arm
-white across the black of his sleeve. He talked of
-his family through the meal and after it, leaning
-on the piano while Olive played. He tortured her
-with anecdotes of his and Joe&#8217;s infancy and with
-the deeds of Gurdy Bernamer. He sighed,
-reporting that Sadie&#8217;s oldest girl had died.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean you&#8217;re wearing mourning for a six
-year old child!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And then you ask me what a sentimentalist
-is!&#8221; Olive struck a discord into the Good Friday
-Spell and sneered, &#8220;I dare say you think life&#8217;s so
-full of unpleasantness that it shouldn&#8217;t be brought
-into the theatre!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. I don&#8217;t think that, exactly. But I don&#8217;t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-think there&#8217;s any sense in doin&#8217; a play where you
-can&#8217;t&mdash;can&#8217;t&mdash;well, make it good lookin&#8217;. These
-plays where there&#8217;s nothin&#8217; but a perfec&#8217;ly ordinary
-family havin&#8217; a fight and all that&mdash;A show ought
-to be something more.&mdash;You get the music in an
-opera. Carmen&#8217;d be a fine hunk of bosh if you
-didn&#8217;t have the music and the Spanish clothes.
-Just a dirty yarn!... There&#8217;d ought to be
-somethin&#8217; good lookin&#8217; in a play.... Nobody
-believes a play but girls out of High School....
-If you can&#8217;t have poetry like Shakespeare you
-ought to have something&mdash;something pretty&mdash;I
-don&#8217;t mean pretty&mdash;I mean&mdash;&#8221; Olive stopped
-the music. Mark descended rapidly and went on,
-&#8220;I don&#8217;t care about these two cent comedies,
-either.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t like comedy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much. Truth is, I don&#8217;t catch a
-joke easy. I&#8217;ve tried readin&#8217; Molire but it
-sounds pretty dry to me. Haven&#8217;t tried&mdash;Aristophanes?&mdash;I
-guess that&#8217;s deeper&#8217;n I could swim&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rot! You mustn&#8217;t let yourself&mdash;what is it?&mdash;be
-blinded by the glory of great names. Any
-one who can see the point in Patience can understand
-Aristophanes.... But you haven&#8217;t much
-humour. But you&#8217;ve played in comedy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some. I&#8217;d just as soon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive began &#8220;Anitra&#8217;s Dance&#8221; knowing that he
-liked melodrama and watched his eyes brighten,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-dilating. She said amiably, &#8220;A fine comedian&#8217;s
-the greatest boon in the world. Women
-especially. Is it true that women who&#8217;re good in
-comedy are usually rather serious off the stage?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t say&mdash;Well, my wife was pretty damn
-serious!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His huge sigh made Olive laugh. She asked,
-&#8220;You&#8217;ve no children?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Guess that was the trouble.&mdash;Play that
-Peer Gynt Mornin&#8217; thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve played enough,&#8221; said Olive. &#8220;You say
-Mr. Carlson sent you over to look at some plays
-for him? He must trust your judgment.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark answered happily, &#8220;Sure. He says that
-if I take to a play so&#8217;ll every one else. He says
-I&#8217;ve got lots of judgment about plays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive shut the piano and rose. Her face
-wrinkled off into laughter. She said, &#8220;You dear
-thing! I dare say he&#8217;s quite right about that.
-Good night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She strolled out of the drawing room and
-Mark could see her passing up the long stairs.
-She moved splendidly against the white panels.
-One wrist caressed the rail. The black gown
-dragged gently up the rosy treads. She vanished
-slowly into the dark and Mark said, &#8220;Golly,&#8221; as
-he went to get his hat. He wandered over to the
-bar of the Black Swan and drank cold ale while
-he meditated.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>He mustn&#8217;t fall in love. Eddie Bernamer and
-Joe disapproved of affairs with married women.
-They were right, of course. And nothing must
-interfere with his tutelage. And Ilden was at
-sea. But this was vexatious! He wished she did
-not stroll so lazily up stairs, across gardens. He
-wished that her hair wasn&#8217;t black.&mdash;He found
-himself blushing at breakfast when she came in
-with a yellow garden hat on the black of her hair.
-Now that he&#8217;d begun to think of it she looked
-rather like Cora Boyle.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of Cora Boyle again in the garden
-after luncheon. The children had left a green
-rubber ball on the turf. Mark rolled it about
-with one sole and watched Olive trim a patch of
-dull blue flowers. His place and the ball underfoot
-recalled something cloudy. He worked to
-evolve a real memory and laughed. Olive
-quickly glanced up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You keep asking about my wife. She was
-boardin&#8217; with us at the farm. First time she ever
-spoke to me I was kicking a ball around, in the
-garden. This way. I was barefoot. Cora said,
-&#8216;Ain&#8217;t you too old to go barefooted?&#8217; I forget
-what I said.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But with the ball that day you played no
-more?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That sounds like a piece of a play,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s from a comedy,&#8221; Olive snapped, &#8220;Do get<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-your hat and take a walk. I&#8217;ll be busy for an
-hour. Look at the Deanery garden. The
-Dean&#8217;s gone to Scotland.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got to write a letter first. Boat from Liverpool
-tomorrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He mailed a letter to Joe&#8217;s wife, born Margaret
-Healy, tramped down to the Close and examined
-the Dean&#8217;s garden. It would make a neat setting,
-the mass of the Cathedral to the left, the foliate
-house to the right. A maid in black and white
-passed over the grass and reminded him of Joe&#8217;s
-wife again by a certain dragging gait. He went
-into the cathedral and studied the Wykeham tomb
-from all angles. Some tourists hummed in the
-nave; a guide in a frock coat ambled after them
-descanting thinly of dead kings. Mark fell into
-a genial peace, leaned on a column, smiling at the
-far roof. The feet of the tourists made a small
-melody among the tombs and this seemed to
-increase. He heard a rapid breath and saw Olive
-with his coat over her arm. She panted, &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-packed your things. They&#8217;re in the cab. At the
-gates. Hurry. You&#8217;ve hardly time to get to the
-station. Do hurry! I&#8217;ll telegraph to Liverpool
-and ask them to hold a cabin&mdash;stateroom&mdash;whatever
-they call them.&mdash;Oh, do hurry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s happened?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, this!&mdash;I didn&#8217;t look at the cover&mdash;thought
-it was from Jack&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>Mark snatched the telegram and read, &#8220;Joe
-and Margaret killed wreck Trenton come if&mdash;&#8221;
-then rolled the paper into his palm. Olive saw
-his eyes swell and gasped, &#8220;Who&#8217;s Margaret?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Joe&#8217;s wife. Where&#8217;s cab?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At the gates. Run.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He dashed into the sun beyond the open doors
-then the red hair gleamed as he came wheeling
-back to gulp, &#8220;Send you a check from&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive spread her hands out crying, &#8220;No! I
-shan&#8217;t take it!&#8221; and saw him rush off again. The
-cab made no noise that she could hear. She
-shivered as if a warming fire died suddenly in
-winter and left her cold. Presently she struck
-a palm on the stone beside her and said,
-&#8220;Sentimentalist! Sentimentalist!&#8221; while she wept.
-She made use of Mark, though, in her next novel,
-The Barbarian, which began her success. Mark
-was rather flattered by the picture and glad that
-he hadn&#8217;t insulted this clever, wise woman by
-making love to her. He thought of Olive as exalted
-from the ranks of passionate, clutching females
-and often wrote long, artless letters to her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">III<br />
-
-Full Bloom</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">THE family council prudently allowed
-Mark to adopt his brother&#8217;s orphan,
-Margaret. He sometimes borrowed
-Gurdy Bernamer to keep the dark child company
-in his New York flat. By 1905 the borrowing
-settled into a habit. Gurdy provided activity for
-a French nurse and then for an English governess
-despatched by Olive Ilden. He was a silent, restless
-creature. He disliked motorcars for his
-own unrevealed reason that they resembled the
-hearses of his uncle&#8217;s funeral. He had a prejudice
-against small Margaret because she looked
-like her dead mother, an objectionable person
-smelling of orange water, and because Mark made
-a fuss over the child. He learned to read newspapers,
-copying Mark&#8217;s breakfast occupation, and
-in September, 1907, noted that Carlson and Walling
-would tonight inaugurate their partnership
-by the presentation of &#8220;Red Winter&#8221; at their new
-45th Street Theatre. &#8220;Inaugurate&#8221; charmed
-Gurdy. It conveyed an image of Mark and the
-bony Mr. Carlson doing something with a monstrous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-auger. Mark had for ever stopped acting
-in May, would henceforth &#8220;manage.&#8221; Curiosity
-pulled Gurdy from the window seat of his playroom
-in Mark&#8217;s new house on 55th Street. He
-waited for a moment when the governess, Miss
-Converse, was scolding young Margaret and
-wouldn&#8217;t see him slide down the hall stairs. He
-scuttled west, then south and navigated Broadway
-until he reached the mad corner of 45th Street
-where a gentleman took him by the collar of his
-blouse and halted him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where are you going?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy recognized a quiet character who came
-to luncheons now and then. He said, &#8220;H&#8217;lo, Mr.
-Frohman,&#8221; dutifully and looked about for the
-theatre. The stooping man detained him gravely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you weren&#8217;t old enough for shows.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m looking for Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frohman chuckled, leaning on a stick.
-He said, &#8220;He&#8217;s in his office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy stared past the pointing stick and saw a
-cream face of columns and windows. He saw
-the stone above a ring of heads. People were
-gaping at his calm acquaintance as if this plump,
-tired man was a kicking horse. He remembered
-civility and asked, &#8220;How&#8217;s your rheumatism?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better,&#8221; said Mr. Frohman and limped away.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy pushed scornfully through the gapers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-and trotted into the white vestibule of the theatre
-where men were arranging flowers&mdash;horseshoes of
-orchids, ugly and damp, roses in all tints, lumps
-of unknown bloom on standards wrapped in silver
-foil. A redhaired, hatless youth listed the cards
-dangling from these treasures and told Gurdy to
-go to hell when Gurdy asked for his uncle but
-another man nodded to stairs of yellow, slick
-marble. On the landing Gurdy found a door
-stencilled in gold, &#8220;Carlson &amp; Walling.&#8221; The
-door opened into a room hung with photographs
-where Gurdy saw Mark sitting on a table, surrounded
-by men. Mr. Carlson, already sheathed
-in winter furs, bullied a carpenter who corrected
-the lower shelf of a bookcase. Gurdy stood
-wondering at the furious shades of neckties and
-the grey hard hats which Miss Converse thought
-vulgar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My God,&#8221; said Carlson, &#8220;Mark, look at that
-comin&#8217; in!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark groaned. He had a compact with Mrs.
-Bernamer that the borrowed boy shouldn&#8217;t enter
-a theatre until he was twelve. He was tall
-enough for twelve but he was only nine. He
-stayed in the doorway, studying the red walls
-of the room, his white socks far apart and his
-hands thrust into the pockets of his short, loose
-breeches. The callers stared at the tough legs
-brown from summer on the farm. The boy&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-one patent beauty, his soft, pale hair, was hidden
-by his English sailor cap and his white blouse was
-spotted with ink stains. But the men grinned and
-chuckled, admiringly. Gurdy made no sound
-when Carlson set him on the top of the bookcase
-but gazed contemptuously at the crowding men
-and let himself be petted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When d&#8217;you inaugurate, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Eight fifteen, when you&#8217;ll be in bed, sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy drawled, &#8220;I don&#8217;t get to bed till quarter
-of nine and you ought to know that by this time.&#8221;
-He frowned, partly closing his dark blue eyes, as
-the men laughed. &#8220;What are all those flowers
-for?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A man in a corner lifted his white face from
-a book and whispered, &#8220;Those are gifts the
-Greeks brought.&#8221; This caused stillness, then unpleasing
-chuckles. Gurdy climbed down from the
-bookcase and went to talk to Mr. Fitch. They
-talked of French lessons and the vagaries of
-governesses. The other callers complimented
-Mark on the boy&#8217;s good looks. The flattery was
-soothing after the strain of the last rehearsal.
-Mark knew it for flattery. Gurdy&#8217;s face was too
-long, his sober mouth too wide and his jaw prematurely
-square. But the compliments were the
-due of a successful actor turned manager. He
-sat for a little watching Mr. Fitch lazily
-chat with the boy as though he were a grown man.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-On the playwright&#8217;s warning he had lately
-published a careful interview announcing Gurdy
-and Margot as adopted children and his relationship
-to them. But people still probably reported
-Gurdy an illegitimate son and Margot his
-daughter by Cora Boyle. Mark sighed and took
-Gurdy down through the flowers to see the cream
-and gold play house where men were squirting
-perfume from syringes along the red aisles, killing
-the smell of paint. He let Gurdy have a
-syringe and went into the vestibule. The redhaired
-clerk listing the gifts of other managers
-handed him the card wet from its journey in a ball
-of pink roses.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mrs. Cosmo Rand.... Who the devil&#8217;s
-Mrs. Cosmo Rand, Billy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The clerk scratched his ear and grinned.
-&#8220;You&#8217;d ought to know, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I don&#8217;t. Cosmo Rand? Heard of him.
-Loeffler&#8217;s got him in something. Who&#8217;s she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Cora Boyle,&#8221; said the clerk and strolled
-off to insult a messenger bringing in more flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Mark had a curious, disheartening shock. He
-didn&#8217;t bow to Cora Boyle on the street. What
-right had she to send him flowers? It must be
-a passing rudeness. She might remember that he
-disliked pink roses. Mark rested on the ledge of
-the box office, brooding. But she might mean to
-be pleasant. Her manager, Loeffler, was on bad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-terms with Carlson. This might be a dictated,
-indirect peace offering. Mark patted the florid
-carved stone of the ledge and thought. Cora&#8217;s
-new play wasn&#8217;t a success. The reviews had been
-tart. She might be tired of Loeffler. Mark was
-perplexed but the hunt for motives always
-wearied him. A scarlet petticoat went by outside
-the vestibule and led off his mind. He bade his
-treasurer telephone for the motor and stood
-joking with the man through the box office window
-until a flat stop in the noise behind him made
-Mark turn his head. The florists and clerks were
-motionless, regarding the street. A coup had
-stopped. A footman was helping a woman and
-a tumult of varied flowers to the sidewalk. She
-came toward the doors gallantly, her face quite
-hidden in the enormous bouquet but the treasurer
-said, &#8220;By gee, I&#8217;d know her in hell, by her walk,&#8221;
-and chuckled. She tripped on the sill and
-screamed gaily to Mark, &#8220;Au s&#8217; cours!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark jumped to catch the sheaf of yellow roses.
-Miss Held waved her grey gloves wide and
-dipped her chin. &#8220;Je t&#8217; apporte une gerbe vu que
-t&#8217;es toujours bon enfant, Marc Antoine! And &#8217;ow
-does Beatriz get along to teach you French?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pretty fair. Haven&#8217;t had much time lately.
-Thought you&#8217;d taken your show on the road,
-Anna?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nex&#8217; week.&#8221; Up the staircase some one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-began to whistle &#8220;La Petite Tonkinoise.&#8221; The
-little woman vibrated inside the grey case of her
-lacy gown and pursed her lips. &#8220;Oh, but I am
-sick of that tune! Make him stop.&#8221; The
-whistler heard and ceased. Miss Held swayed to
-and fro among the flowers, noting cards. She
-adopted a huge orchid for her waist and smiled
-down at it. A dozen grins woke in the collecting
-crowd. Mark was aware of upholsterers oozing
-from the theatre. Miss Held hummed from
-gift to gift, murmuring names&mdash;&#8220;Le Moyne....
-ton institutrice.... Ce bon vieux David....
-Nice lilies.&#8221; She moved in a succession of
-swift steps that seemed balanced leaps. One of
-the florist&#8217;s girls sighed a positive sob of envy.
-The curving body and the embellished eyes kept
-the crowd still. The soft gloves drooped on the
-hard lustre of the stirring arms. Mark wondered
-at her cool, sardonic mastery of attention. She
-was bored, unwell and her frock was nothing new.
-She was Anna Held and the people were edging
-in from the sidewalk to look at her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like to see the house, Anna?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no. I very well know what that would
-be. All red, and gold fishes on the ceiling, eh?
-No. I must go away.&#8221; She strolled off toward
-her carriage, chattering sudden French which
-Mark did not understand. He heard an immense
-discussion surge up in the vestibule as he shut the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-coup door, walked through it into the theatre
-where two upholsterers were quarrelling over the
-age of the paragon and where Mark bumped
-against a man in brown who seemed to inspect
-the gold dolphins of the vault.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Clumsy,&#8221; said the man, briskly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t see you, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I meant the decoration.&#8221; The man flicked
-a hand at the ceiling and the red boxes, &#8220;Like
-Augustin Daly&#8217;s first house but much worse. We
-should have passed that. Gilt. It&#8217;s the scortum
-ante mortum in architecture.&#8221; He jammed a
-cigarette between the straight lips of his flushed
-face and went on in a rattle of dry syllables.
-&#8220;Some one should write a monograph on gold
-paint and the theatrical temperament. Plush
-and passion. Stigmata.... Sous un balcon
-dor.... Can you give me a match?...
-Where&#8217;s Carlson&#8217;s office?&#8221; He bustled out of the
-foyer.</p>
-
-<p>Mark wearily tore Cora Boyle&#8217;s card in his
-tanned fingers and nodded. The stranger was
-right. This new theatre was stale. The gold
-sparkled stupidly. The shades of velvet were
-afflicting. But Carlson liked it. Mark sighed
-and thought, rather sadly, that his patron&#8217;s whole
-concept of the trade was vulgar and outworn like
-this gaudy expense. Red velvet, heavy gold,
-bright lamps&mdash;the trappings of his apprenticeship.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-Old actors told Mark that this was a variant of
-the first Daly theatre. The stranger was right,
-then. Mark wondered and went upstairs to the
-office but the flushed man was gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That feller Huneker was in tryin&#8217; to get me to
-hire some orchestra leader,&#8221; Carlson said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I thought Huneker was a young man,&#8221;
-Mark answered.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Fitch whispered from his corner, &#8220;He
-hasn&#8217;t any particular age. What was that riot
-downstairs, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Anna Held dropped in and left some flowers.
-She ain&#8217;t lookin&#8217; well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The playwright closed his magazine and lifted
-himself from the chair, assuming his strange furry
-hat. &#8220;We have just so much vitality. She&#8217;s
-losing hers. But if she died tomorrow it would
-make almost as much noise as killing a president.
-And that&#8217;s quite right. Presidents never make
-any one feel sinful. Good night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carlson asked, &#8220;You&#8217;re comin&#8217; tonight, Clyde.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not feeling right, thanks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark followed the bent back down the stairs.
-Fitch was stopped by a lounger at the doors,
-loaned the old fellow ten dollars and passed, unobtrusive,
-along Forty Fifth Street. He went
-shadowlike in his vivid dress. Liking the man,
-Mark frowned. The exhausted courtesy, the
-slow voice always left him puzzled; it was as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-though the playwright&#8217;s prosperity kept within
-it a dead core of something pained, as if the ghost
-of an old hunger somehow lived on under the
-coloured superfluity.</p>
-
-<p>Mark&#8217;s motor arrived outside. He went to
-whistle Gurdy up from an investigation of the
-orchestra pit. All the bulbs burned about the
-house. For a second Mark liked the place then
-the gilt and the mulberry hangings bothered him.
-He chased Gurdy up an aisle to the vestibule.
-The treasurer slipped from the box office to say,
-&#8220;Young Rand just called up. I said you wasn&#8217;t
-here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cora Boyle&#8217;s new husband. That English
-kid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark shrugged and shoved Gurdy into the dull
-blue limousine at the curb. The motor took him
-away from the theatre and away from several
-beckoning hands on the sidewalk. His shift to
-managership had changed the fashion of salutes.
-People now beckoned him with a posture of confidential
-affection and earnestness. They had
-friends to recommend, deep suggestions. Carlson
-had warned him, &#8220;Mind, you&#8217;re a kid with a
-pocketful of candy, now. You&#8217;ve stopped bein&#8217;
-just one of the gang. Better ride in cabs if you
-want to get anyplace.&#8221; Well, the motor, with its
-adorable slippery blue crust, kept people at a distance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-Mark wound an arm about Gurdy and
-pulled himself into a corner of the seat. The car
-was hampered by a dilatory van that lurched
-ahead of its hood. The chauffeur cursed in Canadian
-French and a messenger boy on the van&#8217;s
-tail cursed back, joyously foul, emptily shooting
-accusations of all sins in a sweet, sexless howl that
-pierced the glass about Mark and made him grin,
-absently amused.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s mad,&#8221; said Gurdy, dispassionately.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. He&#8217;s just talking, son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Huh,&#8221; Gurdy grunted, trying to match the
-words with ordinary conversation. This messenger
-boy was plainly an accomplished fellow.
-The van rolled off over Broadway in a shock of
-light and dust. Gurdy saw &#8220;Red Winter&#8221; on a
-poster and asked, &#8220;Is this Red Winter a good
-play, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pretty fair, honey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, can I come to it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Too dirty,&#8221; Mark said, then, &#8220;All about killin&#8217;
-folks, son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy argued, &#8220;Well, Lohengrin&#8217;s all about
-killing people and Miss Converse took me to that
-and it was in Dutch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;German, sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like French better&#8217;n German,&#8221; Gurdy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-yawned, waving a leg in the air and went on, &#8220;I
-think Broadway&#8217;s ugly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re right,&#8221; said Mark, enchanted by such
-taste.</p>
-
-<p>Yet Carlson really liked to stroll on Broadway
-and Cora Boyle had often led Mark for dusty
-hours through this complexity of hesitant, garrulous
-people, along these sidewalks where there
-was nothing to be seen. He rubbed his jaw and
-thought of Paris, viewed last summer, of the long,
-swooping street at Winchester gilt in an afterglow.
-Oh, after dark Broadway was tolerable!
-Then the revolving people were shapes of no
-consequence and, with a little mist, these lights
-were aqueous, flotillas of shimmering points on
-a hovering, uncertain vastness. Now, the roadway
-was a dappled smear of bodies wheeled and
-bodies shod. The sidewalks writhed, unseemly.
-But Cora Boyle liked it. The pretty, black
-haired dancer just then lodged at Mark&#8217;s cost
-had rooms overlooking the new width above
-Forty Second Street. And she liked that....
-And she liked the scenery of &#8220;Red Winter.&#8221;
-Poor stuff, he thought. He cursed scene painters.
-Charles Frohman had heard of a fellow who&#8217;d
-studied the art in Berlin and made astonishing
-sets. He must telephone Frohman and get the
-man&#8217;s name. He was tired. &#8220;Red Winter&#8221; had
-tired him. The leading woman had a way of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-saying &#8220;California&#8221; through her nose that had
-vexed him all week. A poor play. His head was
-full of jagged swift ideas, of memories; Eddie
-Bernamer milking a young cow against a sulphur
-wall and laughing when Mark tried to sketch him
-on the fly leaf of an algebra; Cora Boyle swaggering
-into Rector&#8217;s in a blue dress; Clyde Fitch
-telling little Margaret that her name was Margot;
-Stanford White shouting with laughter because
-Mark softened the ch of &#8220;architecture.&#8221;
-Why hadn&#8217;t they given White a billion dollars
-and let him build the whole city into charms of
-tranquil, columnar symmetry?... Gurdy knew
-that his uncle was oppressed. When Mark
-thought hard he stroked the scar on his jaw.
-Gurdy wanted to talk, now, and tossed a leg over
-Mark&#8217;s black, rocky knee.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;re you thinkin&#8217; about, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just bosh. What&#8217;s Margot been doing all
-day?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Havin&#8217; a bellyache.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>That terrified Mark. He sweated suddenly
-and called through the tube bidding the driver
-hurry. Spinal meningitis, he read, began with
-nausea. But when he ran into the panelled
-library of his house Margot was playing with her
-largest doll and the angular governess assured
-him, in simple French, that a pill had set things
-right. Margot lifted her black eyes and said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-rubbing her stomach, &#8220;I was ill, papa,&#8221; in her
-leisurely way.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ate breakfast too fast,&#8221; Gurdy said, in grim
-displeasure, watching Mark double his lean height
-and begin to cuddle Margot.</p>
-
-<p>Margot stared at her cousin with an aggrieved,
-brief pout and then wound herself into Mark&#8217;s
-lap. The large doll was named Aunt Sadie for
-Mrs. Bernamer. Margot said, &#8220;Miss Converse
-fixed Aunt Sadie&#8217;s drawers, papa,&#8221; and her brown
-face rippled as she displayed three stitches.
-Then she righted the doll and gazed at Mark
-devotedly, solemnly, preening her starched skirt
-of pink linen. Pink went with her black hair and
-her tawny skin. Mark touched a roaming mesh
-of her hair and her face rippled once more. Her
-skin had this amber haze like the water of a pool
-in the pine forest behind the farm. In that pool
-he had bathed with her father through endless
-afternoons, idling on until other boys lagged off
-and the shadows were ink on the crumbled ocher
-clay of the margin where pink boneset grew.
-And now Joe was dead and his blackhaired wife
-was dead ... an unskilled cook before marriage,
-half Irish, half Italian, a good, sleepy
-woman who ate with her knife and wore a chaplet
-blessed for her Roman mother by some Pope.
-Margot would never know them. He kissed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-hair. She was this warm bubble enclosed in his
-arms.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Love me any, sister?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Course,&#8221; said Margot.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy snorted and stalked away. Mark
-talked to the stiff governess and patted Margot.
-Miss Converse sewed and chatted about Conrad&#8217;s
-novels, then getting fashionable. She assented,
-&#8220;Very interesting. Romantic, of course. I dare
-say the colour attracts you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;and what if they are
-romantic?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had some vague objection. If she bored
-him, Mark was still grateful that she hadn&#8217;t tried
-to marry him. She was necessary to the training
-of the children but her buff, bulky face wasn&#8217;t
-alluring and her gowns hurt him by a prevalence
-of mole embroidery and rumpled lace. She was
-a gentlewoman, wonderfully learned and obliging
-about his pet airs on the piano. Mark talked
-and wished that he could escape, like Gurdy who
-went to practice handsprings in the white hall and
-slid downstairs at the note of the doorbell.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy slid along the handrail of black wood
-so admired by callers and jumped for the dining
-room which had doors of glass coated in blue
-silk. These doors opened into the drawing room
-which Gurdy despised for its furniture all black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-and silver and its hangings of cloudy tapestry,
-impossibly noiseless when one bounced balls
-against them. Yet people called it a lovely room.
-And now, peering through a rift of the blue silk
-Gurdy saw the butler turn a visitor into this
-space and the visitor looked about with brown
-eyes, seeming to admire. Gurdy speculated and
-decided that the slight man was an actor come to
-talk to Mark about a part. His hair curled, his
-overcoat clung to his middle neatly, his white
-gaiters were unspotted, his pale moustache didn&#8217;t
-overhang his little mouth. He was visibly an
-actor. Gurdy had examined many through this
-spyhole. And like many the fellow went to
-glance at a circular mirror above the cabinet with
-tiny doors which Miss Converse called &#8220;Siennese.&#8221;
-As Mark&#8217;s feet descended, the man
-straightened himself and began a smile. Gurdy
-listened to the jar of his high voice against Mark&#8217;s
-fuller drawl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Rand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Don&#8217;t think we&#8217;ve ever met. Daresay
-you know who I am and all that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy noted the long pause. He held that
-actors were a talkative lot. Mr. Rand worked
-with his moustache an indefinite time before he
-spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My wife sent me along&mdash;I&#8217;m a sort of ambassador,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-you know?... Matter of business,
-entirely.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark said, &#8220;I see,&#8221; wondering how old the
-man was. The moustache had an appearance
-of soft youth. He smiled, wanting Cora&#8217;s third
-husband to be at ease, and nodded to a chair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, thanks no. Mrs. Rand wants to know if
-you&#8217;d mind meeting her. At her hotel, for instance?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t mind at all,&#8221; Mark lied, &#8220;Glad to.
-Any time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then she may let you know? Thanks ever
-so. Good luck to your play tonight,&#8221; said the
-young man and walked out gracefully.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy came through the glass doors and asked,
-&#8220;Who&#8217;s he?&#8221; Mark lifted the pliant, hard body
-in the air. He fancied that Gurdy must feel
-something odd, here.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How old would you say he was, darling?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dunno. Who&#8217;s Mrs. Rand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An actress.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Put me down,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;My pants are
-comin&#8217; off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark breathed comfortably, helped the boy on
-his knee tighten the white trousers and passed into
-dotage. Eddie Bernamer and Joe Walling had
-begotten these bodies. The fact mattered nothing.
-Mark was a father. He had possession.
-When things went wrong he could come home to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-gloat over Margot and Gurdy. He promised,
-&#8220;I shan&#8217;t be busy now for a week. We&#8217;ll ride
-in the Park and feed the squirrels, sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. Say, Mark, you&#8217;re all thin.&mdash;There&#8217;s
-the doorbell, again.&mdash;Oh, say, a lady
-telephoned s&#8217;noon. Her name was Miss Monroe
-and she wanted you to call her up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like her nerve!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy jumped at this loud snort of his uncle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s an actress,&#8221; Mark stammered, hoping
-the boy wouldn&#8217;t go on, and Carlson came in, his
-yellow face splotched as though he&#8217;d been walking
-fast.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That Rand squirt been here?&#8221; he yelled at
-Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I passed him. What&#8217;s he want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Me to meet her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You goin&#8217; to?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Guess I better, Mr. Carlson.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Carlson jabbed Gurdy&#8217;s stomach with his cane
-and panted, &#8220;I can tell you what she wants and
-don&#8217;t you listen to it, neither. She&#8217;s had a fight
-with Billy Loeffler. He won&#8217;t put this whelp she
-married in her comp&#8217;ny. I bet she quits Loeffler.
-Her show&#8217;s no good, anyhow. Well, I won&#8217;t
-take her on. She&#8217;s a second rater. She&#8217;s an
-onion. I won&#8217;t have her for nothin&#8217;. Don&#8217;t you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-get sentymental about Cora Boyle any more, son!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You needn&#8217;t worry,&#8221; said Mark, patting
-Gurdy&#8217;s ear.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy sat up and inquired, &#8220;Is that the Cora
-Boyle grandpapa says was a loose footed heifer?&#8221;
-So Carlson broke into screaming mirth. Mark
-flushed and mumbled, sent the boy away and
-scowled respectfully at his partner. Sometimes
-Carlson&#8217;s crude amusement stung him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake don&#8217;t talk of her in front of
-the kids, sir!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right, son. Goin&#8217; to let Gurdy come to
-the show tonight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not much!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man lounged into a chair and jeered at
-his fosterling. Mark&#8217;s horror diverted him.
-He yapped, &#8220;Still think it&#8217;s a dirty show, do
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.... Oh, dunno! If there was anything
-to the slop but that second act, I wouldn&#8217;t
-care. Nothing but Sappho over again. Old as
-the hills.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s new in the show business, son?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Merry Widow is,&#8221; Mark laughed, &#8220;and
-you wouldn&#8217;t buy it. Savage is bringing it in
-week after next. They were playing the music
-at Rector&#8217;s last night.&mdash;Look here, the set for
-the last act&#8217;s all wrong, still. Those green
-curtains&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>&#8220;You and your sets! God,&#8221; said Carlson,
-&#8220;you&#8217;d ought to&#8217;ve been a scene painter!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish I could be, for about one week!&#8221;
-Mark let a grievance loose, slapping his leg.
-&#8220;These people make me sick! You tell them you
-want something new and they trot out some
-sketch of a room that every one&#8217;s seen for twenty
-years. They never think of&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You ain&#8217;t ever satisfied! You act like
-scenery made a show&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark sighed, &#8220;Well, we&#8217;re not giving the
-public its moneysworth with this piece. The
-scenery&#8217;s&mdash;mediocre.&mdash;Come up and see Margot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man poked Margot&#8217;s doll with a shaking
-thumb and called her Maggie to see her scowl,
-like Mark. The little girl&#8217;s solemn vanity
-delighted him. He was also delighted by Gurdy
-who became an embodied sneer when Mark
-fondled Margot. The boy watched Mark kiss
-this female nuisance then walked haughtily out
-of the library and set to work banging the piano
-in the upper playroom.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All you need&#8217;s a wife and a mother-in-law and
-you&#8217;d have a happy home,&#8221; Carlson said when
-Mark let him out of the front door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Think I haven&#8217;t?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you have. Ain&#8217;t any truth in this
-that you&#8217;re goin&#8217; to marry that Monroe gal?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>&#8220;No. I gave her a ring, last week. I suppose
-she&#8217;s been airing it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure.&mdash;You big calf,&#8221; the old man said with
-gloom, &#8220;you always act so kind of surprised when
-one of &#8217;em brags of you. You ain&#8217;t but twenty-nine
-and you&#8217;re a fine lookin&#8217; jackass. Of course,
-she&#8217;ll show off her solytaire! A gal&#8217;s as vain as
-a man, any day. One of &#8217;em&#8217;ll get you married,
-yet.&mdash;Yell at that cab, son. My legs are mighty
-tired.&mdash;See you at eight sharp. Now, mind, I
-won&#8217;t have nothin&#8217; to say to Cora Boyle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark waited until the opening night of &#8220;The
-Merry Widow&#8221; for more news of Cora Boyle.
-She deserted her manager, Loeffler, while &#8220;Red
-Winter&#8221; was in the first week of its run at the
-45th Street Theatre. Mark saw her lunching in
-the Knickerbocker grill with her young husband
-and a critic who always touted her as the successor
-of Ada Rehan. A busybody assured Mark that
-Cosmo Rand was twenty. Cora was thirty one.
-All three of her husbands, then, were younger.
-The oddity of theatrical marriage still alarmed
-Mark. In Fayettesville it was a fixed convention
-that girls should be younger than their husbands.
-But she was luscious to see at the &#8220;Merry Widow&#8221;
-opening. Mark thought how well she looked,
-hung above the crowd in the green lined box.
-She found novel fashions of massing her hair.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-That night it rose in a black peak sustained by
-silver combs. She kept a yellow cloak slung
-across one bare shoulder concealing her gown.
-Against the gentle green of her background appeared
-three men. Rand wore a single eye-glass
-that sparkled dully when the outer lights were
-low. Through the music and the applause Mark
-was conscious of the box and of Cora&#8217;s red
-feathered fan. Her second husband, a thin
-Jewish comedian, went up to shake hands in an
-entr&#8217;acte. Women behind Mark giggled wildly.
-He wandered into the bronze lobby where men
-were already whistling the slow melody of
-&#8220;Velia.&#8221; He was chaffed by an Irish actor
-manager born in Chicago whose accent was a
-triumph of maintained vowels.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An&#8217; why don&#8217;t you go shake hands with Cora,
-bhoy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shut up, Terry. Come have a drink?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He steered his friend to a new bar. The Irishman
-was rather drunk but vastly genial. He
-maundered, &#8220;A fool Cora was to let go of you,
-bhoy. They&#8217;re tellin&#8217; me you&#8217;ve made money in
-the stockmarket, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A little,&#8221; Mark admitted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve had no luck that way. Well, a fool Cora
-was.&mdash;And how&#8217;s it feel bein&#8217; a manager, lad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Irishman looked at Mark sidelong over his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-glass, then up at the gold stars of the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ho!&mdash;Yes, it&#8217;s a fine feelin&#8217;.&mdash;Well, wait until
-you&#8217;ve put on a couple of frosts, bhoy! And have
-to go hat in your hand huntin&#8217; a backer. You lend
-money, easy.&mdash;You&#8217;ll see all the barflies that&#8217;ve
-had their ten and their twenty off you time and
-again&mdash;You&#8217;ll see &#8217;em run when they see you
-comin&#8217;. Well, here tonight and hell tomorrow.&mdash;So
-Cora&#8217;s quit Billy Loeffler, has she? The dhear
-man! May his children all be acrobats! &#8217;Twas
-Gus Daly taught the scut every trick he knows.
-The Napoleon of Broadway! I mind Loeffler
-runnin&#8217; err&#8217;nds for Daly in eighty five.&mdash;Well, you
-wanted to be a manager and here you are and
-here&#8217;s luck.&mdash;It&#8217;s a fine game&mdash;the finest there
-is&mdash;and, mind you, I&#8217;ve been a practicin&#8217; bhurglar
-and a plumber. Drink up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They drank and returned to the green theatre,
-resonant with the prelude of the next act. Mark
-was struggling in the half lit thresh of men strolling
-toward their seats when Cosmo Rand halted
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d not mind coming to supper in our rooms
-at the Knickbocker?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark accepted. The scene of the Maxim revel
-was lost to him while he wondered what Cora
-wanted. He wouldn&#8217;t engage her. Carlson&#8217;s
-prejudice was probably valid. The old man swore
-that she was worthless outside light comedy. Yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-she had good notices in all her parts. She was
-famous for clothes. She signed recommendations
-for silks and unguents. She had made a
-dressmaker popular among actresses. She had
-played in a failure in London whence came legends
-of a passionate Duke. The Duke&#8217;s passion might
-be invented, like other legends. He mused.
-The flowing waltz music made him melancholy.
-What sort of woman was Cora, nowadays?
-Every one changed. He, himself, had changed.
-He was getting callous to ready amities, explosions
-of mean jealousy. He knew nothing of Cora,
-really. She might be a different person, better
-tempered, less frank. Women were incomprehensible,
-anyhow. He would never understand
-them, doubted that anyone did and sighed. He
-walked to Cora&#8217;s hotel with a feeling of great
-dignity. She had mauled him badly, abused him,
-lied to him and now she was seeking peace.
-Then, rising in the lift, he knew that this dignity
-had a hollow heart; he was afraid of Cora Boyle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is awfully good of you,&#8221; she said, shaking
-hands. Then she rested one arm on the
-shelf filled with flowers and smiled slowly,
-theatrically, kicking her rosy train into the right
-swath about her feet. Mark felt the display as a
-boast of her body. She resumed, &#8220;There&#8217;s really
-no sense in our looking at each other over a fence,
-is there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>His face, seen in a mirror among the flowers,
-cheered Mark to a grin. He looked impassive
-and bland. He drawled, &#8220;No sense at all,&#8221; and
-stepped back. But she confused him. He had
-to speak. He said, &#8220;That&#8217;s a stunning frock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You always did notice clothes, didn&#8217;t you?
-Cosmo, do give Mr. Walling a drink.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her voice had rounded and came crisply with
-an English hint. But it was not music. It
-jangled badly against Rand&#8217;s level, &#8220;What&#8217;ll you
-have, sir?&#8221; from the table where there were
-bottles and plates of sandwiches. Mark considered
-this boy as they talked of &#8220;The Merry
-Widow.&#8221; He saw man&#8217;s beauty inexpertly
-enough. Young Rand was handsome in the
-fragile, groomed manner of an English illustration.
-His chin was pointed. His eyes seemed
-brown. His curls lay in even bands. He had
-neither length nor strength. But he talked
-sensibly, rather shrewdly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;ll be a deal of money lost bringing
-over Viennese pieces, of course. This thing&#8217;s one
-in a thousand. Quite charming.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark asked, &#8220;You&#8217;ve not been over here long?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; Rand laughed, &#8220;Lord, yes. I&#8217;m a
-Canadian. Born in Iowa, as a matter of fact.
-I&#8217;ve been a good deal in England, of course.&mdash;Oh,
-I was at your new piece the other night. Red
-Winter, I mean. How very nicely you&#8217;ve<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-mounted it. I really felt beastly cold in that
-second act. The snow&#8217;s so good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark bowed, selecting a sandwich. The critics
-had praised the snow scene. Rand might truly
-admire it. If the snow hadn&#8217;t satisfied Mark it
-had pleased every one else. He lost himself in
-thoughts of snow. Cora trailed her rose gown
-to the table and poured water into a glass of pale
-wine. A broad bracelet on her wrist clicked
-against the glass. She said, &#8220;You and Carlson
-own all the rights to Red Winter, don&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you going to send it to London?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He laughed and put down his glass. &#8220;London?
-What for? It&#8217;d last just about one week!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Cora smiled over a shoulder, retiring to the
-shelf of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It would do better than that, Mark. I&#8217;ve
-played in London.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve never played there but I&#8217;ve been there
-enough to know better. California Gold Rush!
-They don&#8217;t know there was such a thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I say,&#8221; said Rand.</p>
-
-<p>Cora sipped some watered wine. The light
-shot through the glass and made a pear of glow
-on her throat. She was motionless, drinking. She
-became a shape set separate from the world in a
-momentary gleam. He knew that she was acting.
-Then she said sharply, &#8220;I&#8217;ll buy the English rights<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-if you and Carlson&#8217;ll make me a decent figure.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, look here! You&#8217;d lose. I was talking
-to Ian Gail about it, last night. It wouldn&#8217;t
-make a cent in England. They wouldn&#8217;t know
-what it&#8217;s all about. And&mdash;it&#8217;s such a rotten play!
-There&#8217;s nothing in it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She asked, looking at him, &#8220;Can I have it?&#8221;
-and her flat voice took fire in the question, achieved
-music. She must want the poor play badly.
-Rand&#8217;s pink nails were lined along his moustache,
-hiding its silk. The room fell silent.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, sure,&#8221; Mark said, &#8220;You can have it, Cora.
-I&#8217;ll see Mr. Carlson in the morning.... But
-damned if I can make out what there is in the
-play.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s not the sort of thing you like, I know.
-But I&#8217;m sick of comedy and that&#8217;s all I&#8217;m ever
-offered, here. And I&#8217;m sick of New York.
-Well, make me an offer of the English rights&mdash;Only&mdash;I&#8217;m
-no bank, Mark.&#8221; She swaggered to
-the piano and tamely played a few bars of the
-Merry Widow waltz. She hadn&#8217;t Olive Ilden&#8217;s
-grace, so seated, and the rose gown seemed sallow
-against the black of the piano. She had finished
-her scene. Mark saw the familiar stir of her
-throat as she hid a yawn. He promised to hurry
-the business of the English rights to the melodrama
-and took his leave.</p>
-
-<p>What had he feared? He tried to think, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-the corridor. Recapture, perhaps, by this woman
-who wasn&#8217;t, after all, half as wicked as others.
-Her new elegance hadn&#8217;t moved him. The stage
-did refine people! Cora had the full air of
-celebrity. She was now controlled, vainer. She
-might still be a shrew. He saddened, ringing for
-the lift, and thought of Cosmo Rand&#8217;s future if
-&#8220;Red Winter&#8221; failed in London. The elevator
-deposited a page with a silver bucket and this went
-clinking to Cora&#8217;s door. Rand and she would
-drink champagne. Mark sank pondering to the
-lounge and stopped to buy a cigar, there. It was
-almost one o&#8217;clock. Many of the lights had been
-turned out. The threaded marble lost sheen in
-the smoky gloom. Parties ebbed from the
-supper room and a wedge of dressed men waved
-to Mark. A candy merchant in the lead bawled
-to him and Mark went to be introduced to an
-English actress on the millionaire&#8217;s arm. She
-swayed, gracious and tipsy, involved in a cloak of
-jet velvet, her voice murmurous as brushed harp
-strings emerging from the pallor of her face above
-the browning gardenias on the cloak. She asked,
-&#8220;Like this wrap? Makes me feel like a very big
-black cigar&mdash;I should have a very broad red and
-gold band.&#8221; The men pressed about her fame
-sniggered, respecting this lovely myth. She was
-assigned in legend to the desire of princes. The
-candy merchant grinned, cuddling her hand on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-his waistcoat. She tapped the brass edge of the
-turning door with a gardenia stem and smiled
-at Mark&#8217;s silk hat, then at the millionaire. &#8220;Am
-I talking too loud, cherished one?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shout your head off,&#8221; the candy merchant
-said, &#8220;It&#8217;s a free country.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, only the bond are free,&#8221; she proclaimed.
-She told Mark, &#8220;Bond Street&#8217;s getting frightfully
-shabby. Max Beerbohm says&mdash;I do look rather
-like a very big black cigar, don&#8217;t I?&mdash;Do stop
-pulling my arm, you dear, fat thing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The car&#8217;s here, honey.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How dear of the car! We&#8217;re going to sup
-somewhere, aren&#8217;t we? Oh, no, to bed.&mdash;Like
-a very big, black cigar&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was drawn through the brazen doors away
-from Mark. The men pushed after her avidly.
-She went tottering to the great motor, was engulfed.
-Mark blinked in the waning smell of
-gardenias, waited for the motor to be gone and
-walked into the street. He saw rain falling.
-There was no taxicab in sight along the street.
-From the west an orange palpitation flooded this
-darker way. Steam from a clamorous drill blew
-north about the white tower of the Times building.
-Wet cabs jerked north and south along the
-gleam of rails. The higher lights were gone.
-The rain dropped from an upper purple and
-rapped the crown of his hat as Mark strolled to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-the corner. Some one began to talk to him before
-he reached Broadway. Mark glanced at this
-beggar carelessly and paused to dig in a pocket
-for change. The shivering voice continued.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;... ain&#8217;t like I&#8217;d come bothering you before.
-I ain&#8217;t that kind. But you&#8217;ve got comp&#8217;nies on
-the road and honest, Walling, I&#8217;m as good as ever
-I was. You&#8217;ve mebbe heard that I&#8217;m taking dope.
-Not so. Some of that bunch at Bill Loeffler&#8217;s
-office have been puttin&#8217; that out. Honest&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Three white capped young sailors blundered
-past, all laughing, and jarred the shadowy body
-away from Mark. The man came shuffling back
-and clung to Mark&#8217;s sleeve, his face lavender in
-the rainy light above a shapeless overcoat. He
-whispered on, &#8220;Honest, some of the things that
-bunch at Loeffler&#8217;s place say about you and Carlson!
-But I ain&#8217;t takin&#8217; nothing, Walling. Had
-a run of bad luck. I&#8217;m on the rocks. But you&#8217;ve
-seen me run a show. You know I can handle a
-comp&#8217;ny&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The light&#8217;s so bad,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;and your
-collar&mdash;I&#8217;m not just sure who&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man gave a whimpering laugh. &#8220;Oh, I
-thought you was actin&#8217; kind of chilly to an old
-pal. I&#8217;m Jim Rothenstein. You know? I was
-stage manager for Carlson back when you was
-playin&#8217; the kid in Nicoline. You know. I gave
-you your job. Cora Boyle she brought you in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-to me and asked if there wasn&#8217;t a little part&mdash;Honest,
-I ain&#8217;t takin&#8217; dope. That bunch&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark gulped, &#8220;Of course you&#8217;re not.&#8221; Some
-harsh drug escaped from the man&#8217;s rags. This
-was nightmare. Mark found a bill and held it
-out, backing from the shadow. &#8220;Come round to
-my office some day and I&#8217;ll see what&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A hansom rolled to the curb and the driver
-raised his whip. Mark ran to shelter, crying his
-address. The grey horse moved toward Broadway.
-Mark shoved up the trap and shouted to
-the driver, &#8220;No! Go up Fifth Avenue!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">IV<br />
-
-Penalties</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">CORA BOYLE played &#8220;Red Winter&#8221; in
-London for two years. She began her
-run in May of 1908 with a popular
-English male star as her hero. He presently retired
-from the company and Cosmo Rand replaced
-him. Olive Ilden wrote an opinion to Mark from
-her new house in Chelsea: &#8220;It seems to me that
-your one time wife is a competent second rate
-actress. She&mdash;or someone near her&mdash;must have
-intelligence. She has perfectly applied our
-musical comedy manner to melodrama. She is
-languid and rude to the audience and is enormously,
-successful, naturally. Ambrose Russell is
-painting her. If you knew London you would
-understand that to have Ambrose Russell paint
-one implies entire success. He alternates Gaiety
-girls and Duchesses and has acquired a trick of
-wonderful vulgarity. I met Miss Boyle at his
-studio on Sunday. We talked about you and she
-rather gushed. Her infantile husband stood by
-and said Rawther at intervals like an automatic
-figure on a clock. A pretty thing.... Of
-course I prefer London to Winchester. Ecclesiastical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-society is only amusing in Trollope. My
-husband got our house from a retired Admiral
-and it has a garden. I have fallen in love with
-him&mdash;my husband, not the Admiral. He has
-written a book of Naval tales on the sly and to
-my horror they are quite good. Having scorned
-him as a mere gentleman all these years it upsets
-me to have to consider him as an artist. I hear
-from Ian Gail that your plays all make quantities
-of money because they are utter rubbish in lovely
-settings and that your house is an upholsterer&#8217;s
-paradise. Very bad for the children who are
-probably spoiled beyond hope or help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark wrote four pages of denial and received:
-&#8220;Nonsense! Of course you do not have
-courtesans to lunch but leading ladies come and
-swoon on your drawing room floor and the
-children are pointed out in your Central Park as
-Mark Walling&#8217;s brats. Your parasites fawn on
-them. Their world is made up of expensive
-motors, sweets and an adoring idiot as God. The
-little boy reads theatrical reviews over his porridge
-and the little girl probably does not know
-that she is a mammal and liable to death, spanking
-or lessons. They live in a treacle well....
-Your one time wife has taken a house near me and
-her pictures, eating breakfast in bed with a Pom
-on the pillow, adorn the Sketch. I danced with
-her husband last night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>Cora Boyle&#8217;s photographs in the London
-Weeklies made old Carlson sneer. He lounged
-in Mark&#8217;s library and derided: &#8220;A fine figger and
-a pair of black eyes. Actress? Sure. She
-makes pictures of herself. And what the hell else
-do folks want, huh? Just that. They want
-pictures. You say they want fine scenery and new
-ideas about lights and all? Bosh, son! They
-want to see a good lookin&#8217; gal in good clothes&mdash;and
-not much clothes&mdash;with all the lights in the
-house jammed on her. Act? Make &#8217;em cry a
-little and they think it&#8217;s actin&#8217;. Margot&#8217;ll be the
-boss actress of the United States when she&#8217;s
-twenty&mdash;Come here, Maggie, and tell me how old
-you are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Seven and a half,&#8221; said Margot, &#8220;and I don&#8217;t
-want to be an actress.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Huh. Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aunt Sadie says actresses aren&#8217;t nice,&#8221; Margot
-informed him.</p>
-
-<p>Carlson wrinkled his yellow face and chuckled
-out, &#8220;Ask Mark what he thinks of &#8217;em, sister.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She turned her eyes up to Mark gravely and
-smiled. She was unlike her father, most like her
-mother. Mark bent and lifted her in the air,
-kissed her bare knees and put her hair aside from
-the little ears, faintly red, delightfully chilled
-for his mouth from a walk in the Park. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-said, on his shoulder, &#8220;Oo, that&#8217;s a new stickpin,
-papa!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Diamonds get &#8217;em all,&#8221; Carlson nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a sapphire,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nice,&#8221; Margot approved and Mark felt
-glorified. Children were certainly a relief after
-the arid nonchalance of women who took money,
-jewels or good rles and asked for more donations
-over the house telephone. Margot played
-with the sapphire square a moment and then
-scrambled down from Mark&#8217;s shoulder to his knee
-where she sat admiring him while he wrote checks.
-He smiled at her now and then, let her blot
-signatures and kissed her hands when she did so.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d spoil a trick elephant,&#8221; Carlson muttered,
-&#8220;Ain&#8217;t Gurdy old enough to go to school?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He started in at Doctor Cary&#8217;s last week.
-They&#8217;ve got him learning Latin and French, right
-off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s Doctor Cary&#8217;s?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a school in Sixtieth Street.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hump,&#8221; said Carlson, &#8220;Private School?
-Well, you&#8217;re right. Public schools teach hogwash.
-They got to. They teach hogs. But
-why didn&#8217;t you send him to one these schools out
-of town while you were at it? Get him out of
-New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My G&mdash;glory,&#8221; Mark cried, &#8220;He&#8217;s only nine!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>Margot corrected, &#8220;Ten, papa. He was ten
-in May.&#8221; Then she told Carlson, &#8220;Papa&#8217;d just
-die if Gurdy went away to school. He told Miss
-Converse.&#8221; She slid from his knee and curtsied
-to Carlson with, &#8220;I must take my French lesson,
-now. So, good afternoon.&#8221; She was gone
-out of the room before Mark could kiss her again.
-She was always within reach of kisses and her
-warmth, curled on his lap was something consolatory
-when he did send Gurdy away to Saint
-Andrew&#8217;s School in September 1910. Villay, his
-broker, and his lawyer advised the step. Olive
-Ilden wrote to him: &#8220;I am glad you have done the
-right thing. God knows I am no cryer up of the
-Public School System. But a Public School (I
-forget what you call private kennels for rich cubs
-in the States) is the only thing for the boy, in
-your situation. Ian Gail tells me that Gurdy is
-rather clever. I can imagine nothing worse than
-to be the son by adoption of a theatrical manager
-and a day scholar at a small New York school.
-But I know how miserable you are. Every one
-has sentimental accretions. I dislike seeing old
-women run down by motors, myself. No, I know
-how badly you feel, just now. But these be the
-fair rewards of them that love, you know? My
-own son is, of course, as the archangels. I hear
-through his Housemaster at Harrow that he
-smokes cigarettes and bets on all the races.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>Mark tried to take Gurdy&#8217;s absence with a fine
-philosophy. His broker and his lawyer assured
-him that Saint Andrew&#8217;s was the best school in the
-country. But the red, Georgian buildings spread
-on the New England meadow and the impersonal
-stateliness of the lean Headmaster seemed a cold
-nest for Gurdy. He missed the boy with a dry
-and aching pain that wasn&#8217;t curable by work on
-five new plays, Margot&#8217;s plump warmth on his
-knee or contrived, brief intoxication. All his
-usual enchantments failed. He wore out the
-phonograph plates of the Danse Macabre and
-the Peer Gynt &#8220;Sunrise.&#8221; He worried wretchedly
-and the disasters of October and November
-hardly balanced his interior trouble. Two, the
-more expensive two of the five Carlson and
-Walling productions failed. Carlson cheerfully
-indicated the shrinkage of applicants for jobs,
-hopeful playwrights and performers in the office
-above the 45th Street Theatre. Mark regretted
-twenty thousand dollars spent for shares in the
-Terriss Pictograph Company. Yet young Terriss
-was a keen fellow and Carlson thought something
-might come of motion pictures after a while.
-His friends sighed about Mark that the &#8220;show
-business was a gamble&#8221; and on visits to the farm
-Mark tried to be gay. A Military Academy had
-been built in Fayettesville on a stony field owned
-by Eddie Bernamer, the only heritage from Bernamer&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-Norwegian father. Gurdy&#8217;s brothers
-were transferred to this polished school and Mark
-was soothed, in thinking that he&#8217;d made his own
-people grandees. He wished that he could ape
-the composure of the Bernamers and said so on a
-visit near Christmas time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, great Csar,&#8221; Bernamer blinked, kicking
-balled snow from a boot-heel, &#8220;this Saint
-Andrew&#8217;s is a good school ain&#8217;t it, even if it is
-up by Boston? The buildin&#8217;s are fire proof, ain&#8217;t
-they? Gurdy can&#8217;t git out at night and raise
-Ned? Then what&#8217;s got into you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, but&mdash;my God, Eddie!... I miss him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a fool,&#8221; said his brother-in-law, staring
-at Mark, &#8220;You&#8217;re doin&#8217; the right thing by the boy.
-You always do the right thing&mdash;like you done it
-by us. Sadie and me&#8217;ve got seven kids and I love
-&#8217;em all.... They got to grow up. Stop bein&#8217;
-a fool.... You don&#8217;t look well. Thin&#8217;s a
-rail. Business bad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We lost about forty-five thousand in two
-months.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That countin&#8217; in the thousand you gave Sadie
-for her birthday?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No&mdash;Lord, no!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer looked about the increased, wide
-farm and the tin roofed garage where Mark&#8217;s
-blue motor stood pompous beside the cheap family
-machine. He drawled, &#8220;Well, you&#8217;ve sunk about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-twenty-five thousand right here, bud. You let
-up on us. Save your money and set up that
-theatre of your own you want so. And I&#8217;m
-makin&#8217; some money on the side.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The farmer grinned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That no good Healy boy&mdash;Margot&#8217;s mamma&#8217;s
-cousin, come soft soapin&#8217; round for a loan last
-summer. He and another feller have a kind of
-music hall place in Trenton. A couple of girls
-that sing and one of those movin&#8217; picsher
-machines. They wanted five hundred to put in
-more chairs. I fixed it I&#8217;d get a tenth the profit
-and they&#8217;ve been sendin&#8217; me twenty-five and thirty
-dollars a week ever since&mdash;and prob&#8217;ly cheatin&#8217;
-the eye teeth out of me. Dunno what folks go
-to the place for&mdash;but they do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Funny,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>A bugle blew in the grey bulk of the Military
-Academy. Boys came threading out across the
-flat snow between ice girt tree trunks. A triple
-rank formed below the quivering height of the
-flagpole where the wind afflicted the banner.
-The minute shimmer of brass on the blue uniforms
-thrilled Mark. The flag rippled down in folds
-of a momentary beauty. He sighed and turned
-back to the pink papered living room where
-Gurdy&#8217;s small, fat legged sisters were clotted
-around Margot&#8217;s rosy velvet on a leather lounge.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-Old Walling smoked a sickening cheroot and
-smiled at all this prettiness. Margot&#8217;s black
-hair was curled expansively by the damp air. She
-sat regally, telling her country cousins of Mastin&#8217;s
-shop where Mark bought her clothes. She
-kissed every one good-bye when Mark&#8217;s driver
-steered the car to the door and told Eddie Bernamer
-how well his furred moleskin jacket suited
-him. In the limousine she stretched her bright
-pumps on the footwarmer beside Mark&#8217;s feet
-and said, &#8220;Oh, you&#8217;ve some colour, now, papa!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have I? Cold air. D&#8217;you know you say
-na-ow and ca-ow, daughter, just like you lived on
-the farm the year &#8217;round?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot gave her queer, chiming chuckle which
-was like muffled Chinese bells. &#8220;Do I?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pure New Jersey, honey. I used to. Mrs.
-Le Moyne used to guy me about it when I was a
-kid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Converse says &#8216;guy&#8217; is slang,&#8221; Margot
-murmured.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So it is, sister. We ought to go to England
-some summer pretty soon and let Miss Converse
-visit her folks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d love to.... I&#8217;ve never been abroad,&#8221; she
-said, gravely stating it as though Mark mightn&#8217;t
-know, &#8220;And every one goes abroad, don&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what would you do abroad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She considered one pump and fretted the silver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-buckle with the other heel. &#8220;I&#8217;d see people,
-papa.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What people, sis?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; she said, &#8220;every one!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It set him thinking that she lived pent in
-his house with her stiff, alien governess. She was
-infinitely safe, so, but she might be bored; he
-recalled hot and stagnant evenings on the farm
-when his mind had floated free of the porch
-steps and his father&#8217;s drawl into a paradise of
-black haired nymphs and illustrious warriors
-dressed from the engravings of the Centennial
-Shakespeare. Perhaps she should go to school?
-He consulted the governess, was surprised by her
-agreement, began to ask questions about schools
-for small girls.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Miss Thorne&#8217;s,&#8221; said his broker, Villay,
-&#8220;She&#8217;ll really be taught something there....
-Miss Thorne was my wife&#8217;s governess. I&#8217;ll see
-if I can manage....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Manage what?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The broker clicked his cigarette case open, shut
-it and laughed, &#8220;You know what I mean,
-Walling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It was one thing getting Gurdy into Saint
-Andrew&#8217;s. The Headmaster&#8217;s a broad minded
-man.... My dear boy, you&#8217;re Walling&mdash;Walling,
-of Carlson and Walling and you used to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-a matine idol.... I don&#8217;t like hurting your
-feelings.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean you&#8217;ll have to go down on your
-knees to this Miss Thorne to get her to take
-Margot?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The broker said, &#8220;Not exactly down on my
-knees, Walling. I&#8217;ll have it managed. The
-school&#8217;s a corporation and my wife owns some
-stock.&#8221; Mark groaned and was driven uptown
-thinking sourly of New York. Things like this
-made Socialists, he fancied, and looked with
-sympathy at an orator on a box in Union Square.
-But Gurdy was arriving by the five o&#8217;clock train
-at the Grand Central Station and the lush swirl
-of the crowd on Fifth Avenue cured Mark&#8217;s
-spleen. Snow fluttered in planes of brief opal
-from the depth of assorted cornices above the
-exciting lights. A scarlet car crossed his at
-Thirty Fourth Street and bore a rigid, revealed
-woman in emerald velvet, like a figure of pride
-in a luminous shell. Her machine moved with
-his up the slope. Mark examined her happily.
-She chewed gum with the least movement of her
-white and vermilion cheeks. He despised her
-and felt strong against the pyramidal society in
-which Walling, of Carlson and Walling, was disdained.
-A cocktail in the Manhattan bar helped.
-The yellow place was full of undergraduates bustling
-away from Harvard and Yale. The consciousness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-of dull trim boots and the black, perpetual
-decency of his dress raised Mark high out
-of this herd. At least he knew better than to
-smoke cigarettes with gold tips and the oblique,
-racy colours of neckties had no meaning for him
-beyond gaudiness. He strolled to the clapboards
-and icy labyrinthine bewilderment of the station,
-found the right gate and beheld uncountable
-ladies gathered together with children in leather
-gaiters, chauffeurs at attention smoking furtively.
-Here, he knew, was good breeding collected to
-take charge of its sons. The cocktail struggled
-for a moment with cold air. Mark retired to the
-rough wooden wall and watched this crowd. The
-mingling voices never reached plangency. The
-small girls and boys stirred like low flowers in
-a field of dark, human stalks. Colours, this
-winter, were sombre. The women walked with
-restraint, with tiny gestures that revealed nothing,
-with smiles to each other that meant nothing.
-He had a feeling of deft performance and a
-young fellow at the wall beside Mark chuckled,
-lighting a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A lot of rich dames waitin&#8217; for their kids
-from some goddam school up in Boston, see?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark nodded. The young fellow gave the
-grouped women another stare and crossed the
-tight knees of his sailor&#8217;s breeches. The nostrils
-of his shapely, short nose shook a trifle. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-tilted his flat cap further over an ear and winked
-comradely at Mark, &#8220;Wonder who the kids&#8217;
-fathers are, huh? A lot of rich dames....&#8221;
-He spat and added, &#8220;Well, you can&#8217;t blame &#8217;em so
-much. Their husban&#8217;s are all keepin&#8217; these chorus
-girls. But it&#8217;s too much money, that&#8217;s what.
-If they&#8217;d got to work some and cook an&#8217; all they
-wouldn&#8217;t have time for this society stuff. It&#8217;s too
-much money. If they&#8217;d got to cook their meals
-they wouldn&#8217;t have time for carryin&#8217; on with
-all these artists an&#8217; actors an&#8217; things&mdash;&#8221; He
-broke off to snap at a girl who came hurrying
-from a telephone booth, &#8220;Say, what in hell?
-Makin&#8217; another date?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Honest, I was just phonin&#8217; mamma,&#8221; the girl
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You took a time!&mdash;Phonin&#8217; her what?&#8221; He
-scowled, dominating the girl, &#8220;Huh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The girl argued, &#8220;I&#8217;d got to tell her sump&#8217;n,
-ain&#8217;t I, Jimmy? I told her I was goin&#8217; to a show
-with a gerl fren&#8217;&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some friend,&#8221; said the sailor, laughed at
-himself and tramped off with his girl under an
-arm. The girl&#8217;s cheap suit of beryl cloth shook
-out a scent of cinnamon. Mark sighed; she was
-young and pretty and shouldn&#8217;t lie to her mother
-about men. But perhaps her mother was bad
-tempered, illiberal. Perhaps the flat was crowded
-with a preposterous family and exuded this slim<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-thing often, hoping a fragment of pleasure. A
-man couldn&#8217;t be critical. Mark went to meet
-Gurdy and immediately forgot all discomforts
-in seeing that the boy had grown an inch, that the
-lashes about his dark blue eyes were blackening,
-in hearing him admit that he was glad to be at
-home again.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy&#8217;s schoolmates had sisters at Miss
-Thorne&#8217;s, it seemed, and Mark waited, fretting,
-through the Christmas holidays until his broker
-wrote that Miss Thorne would be pleased to have
-Margot as a pupil. Miss Converse, the governess,
-asked Mark bluntly how he had managed
-this matter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You Americans are extraordinary,&#8221; she said,
-&#8220;You&#8217;re so&mdash;so essentially undemocratic. It&#8217;s
-shocking. But we must get Margot some decent
-frocks directly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The bill for Margot&#8217;s massed Christmas clothes
-lay on his desk. Mark started, protesting,
-&#8220;But&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been meaning to talk of this for some
-time,&#8221; said the governess.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Her clothes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Her clothes.&mdash;My people were quite rich,
-you know, and I had things from Paris but really&mdash;O,
-really, Mr. Walling, you mustn&#8217;t let her
-have every pretty frock she sees! I must say
-you&#8217;ve more taste than most women&mdash;quite remarkable.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-But what will there be left for the
-child when she comes out?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He wanted to answer that no frock devised
-of man could make Miss Converse other than a
-bulky, angular female but gave his meek consent
-to authority. He resented the dull serges and
-linens of Margot&#8217;s school dress and Sunday became
-precious because he saw her in all glory,
-flounced in rose and sapphire. She was a miracle;
-she deserved brilliancies of toned silk to set off
-the pale brown of her skin, the crisp thickness
-of her hair. But in June on the <i>Cedric</i> he
-heard one woman say to another, &#8220;Positively indecent.
-Like a doll,&#8221; when he walked the decks
-with Margot and the other woman&#8217;s, &#8220;But she&#8217;s
-quite lovely,&#8221; didn&#8217;t assuage that tart summary of
-Margot&#8217;s costume. An elderly actress told him,
-&#8220;My dear boy, you mustn&#8217;t overdo the child&#8217;s
-clothes,&#8221; and a fat lady from Detroit came gurgling
-to ask where he bought things for Margot.
-He knew this creature to be the wife of a motor
-king and looked down at her thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose you have daughters, yourself?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, three. All of them married. But they
-still come to me for advice.&mdash;Mastin&#8217;s? I
-thought so. Thank you so much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He watched her purple linen frock ruck up
-in lumps as her fat knees bent over the brass
-sill of a door and pitied her daughters. He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-playing poker in the smoke room when Gurdy
-slid into the couch beside him and sat silently
-observing the game. The boy was lately thirteen
-and gaunt. His silence coated an emotion that
-Mark felt, disturbing as the chill of an audience
-on an opening night. Gurdy was angry. The
-milky skin below his lips twitched and wrinkled.
-The luncheon bugle blew. The game stopped
-and, when the other players rose, Mark could
-turn to him. &#8220;Was that fat woman in tortoise
-shell glasses talkin&#8217; to you?&#8221; The boy demanded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, it was a bet. I was reading in the
-parlour place. It was a bet. One of the women
-bet you got Margot&#8217;s things in New York and
-the rest of &#8217;em said Paris. And that fat hog&mdash;&#8221;
-Gurdy&#8217;s voice broke&mdash;&#8220;said she didn&#8217;t mind
-slumming. So she went off and talked to you.
-They all s-said that Margot looked like a
-poster.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>This was horrible. Mark saw some likeness
-between Margot&#8217;s pink splendour and the new
-posters clever people made for him. He must be
-wrong. He uncertainly fingered the pile of poker
-chips and asked Gurdy, &#8220;D&#8217;you think sister&#8217;s&mdash;too
-dressed up?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy loosed a sob that slapped Mark&#8217;s face
-with its misery and dashed his hand into the piled
-chips. He said, &#8220;D-don&#8217;t give a dam&#8217; what they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-say about her. I hate hearin&#8217; them talk about
-you that way!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark waited until the nervous sobs slacked.
-Then he asked, &#8220;Do they ever talk about me at
-your school, sonny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Oh, one of the masters asked me why
-you didn&#8217;t put on some play. Is there a play
-called the Cherry Orchard?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Russian. It wouldn&#8217;t run a week.&#8221; Mark
-piled up the chips and said, &#8220;I may be all wrong&mdash;Anyhow,
-don&#8217;t you bother, son ... God bless
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive Ilden gave him her view while Margot
-and Gurdy explored the garden that opened from
-her Chelsea drawing room. She sat painting her
-lips with a perfumed stick of deep red and mimicked
-his drawl, &#8220;No, her things ar-r-ren&#8217;t too
-bright, old man. She isn&#8217;t too much dressed up.
-It&#8217;s merely that this thin faced time of ours isn&#8217;t
-dressed up to her. She&#8217;s Della Robbia and we&#8217;re&mdash;Whistler.
-It&#8217;s burgherdom. Prudence. It&#8217;s
-the nineteenth century. It&#8217;s the tupenny ha&#8217;penny
-belief that dullness is respectable. Hasn&#8217;t
-she some Italian blood? Now Joan&mdash;my
-wretched daughter&mdash;simply revels in dowdiness.
-She&#8217;s only happy in a jersey or Girl Guides rubbish.
-She&#8217;s at Cheltenham, mixing with the British
-flapper. When she&#8217;s at home she drives me
-into painting my face and putting dyed attire on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-my head. If I had to live with Margot I
-shouldn&#8217;t wear anything gayer than taupe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He stared out at Margot whose pink frock revolved
-above her gleaming silver buckles on the
-crushed shell of the walk. Olive saw his face
-light, attaining for the second a holy glow. It
-was a window in the wall of dark night. He
-looked and doted. The woman wondered at him.
-He had all the breathless beauty of a child facing
-its dearest toy. His grey eyes dilated. In her
-own eyes she felt the dry threat of tears and
-said, &#8220;Old man, I&#8217;m sorry for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Because you&#8217;re such a dear and because you&#8217;re
-a pariah. I don&#8217;t know that all this garden party
-petting is good for our player folk but&mdash;over in
-your wilderness&mdash;no one seems to investigate the
-stage except professors and the police. It must
-be sickening.... What&#8217;ll become of Margot
-when she&#8217;s grown up?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It had begun to worry him on the <i>Cedric</i>. He
-loosely thought that her friends from Miss
-Thorne&#8217;s school would be kind to her. Wouldn&#8217;t
-they? He said, &#8220;She&#8217;s only ten, Olive,&#8221; and
-sat brooding. It wasn&#8217;t fair. Smart society, the
-decorous women of small gestures, hadn&#8217;t any
-use for him. He looked at Olive who wrote
-letters to him and called him old man. She wrote
-books. She knew all the world. She had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-to the king&#8217;s court and laughed about it. He
-went to shelter in her strange kindness and sighed,
-&#8220;It isn&#8217;t fair. She ought to have&mdash;she ought to
-go anywhere she wants to.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She probably will if there&#8217;s anything in eyelashes,&#8221;
-said Olive, &#8220;and Gurdy will go anywhere
-he wants to, by the shape of his jaw. I&#8217;ve been
-dissecting American society with horrific interest.
-It seems to have reached a lower level than British!
-You haven&#8217;t even an intelligent Bohemia.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There ain&#8217;t many literary people,&#8221; Mark reflected,
-&#8220;and they mostly seem to live in Philadelphia
-and Indiana, anyhow. Or over here.
-What&#8217;s a man to do? I can&#8217;t&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You can&#8217;t do anything. Whistle the children
-in. There&#8217;s a one man show. Stage settings.
-Italian. I haven&#8217;t seen them and you should.&#8221;
-She threw the stick of paint away and set about
-cheering him. She liked him, muddled in his
-trade, labouring after beauty, unaware of his own
-odd sweetness. She gave up the last weeks of the
-season, guiding him about London, watching him
-glow when Margot wanted a scarf of orange silk
-in Liberty&#8217;s, when Gurdy demonstrated his Latin,
-not badly, before a tomb in Saint Paul&#8217;s. Margot
-was the obvious idol, something to be petted
-and dressed. But the child had a rich attraction
-of her own, graces of placid curves, a quiet loveliness
-that missed stupidity.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>&#8220;You don&#8217;t like Margot,&#8221; Olive told Gurdy in
-a waste of the British Museum.</p>
-
-<p>The boy lied, &#8220;Of course I do,&#8221; in his cracked
-voice but Olive took that as the product of good
-schooling, like his easy performance of airs on
-the piano. He was jealous of Margot and
-showed it so often that the woman wondered
-why Mark didn&#8217;t see. But this wasn&#8217;t the usual
-boy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You let him read anything he likes,&#8221; she
-scolded Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure. Where&#8217;s the harm? I haven&#8217;t got the
-Contes Drolatiques at the house or any of those
-things. Aunt Edith used to make me read the
-Book of Kings when I was a kid. Oh, Gurd
-knows that babies don&#8217;t come by express,&#8221; said
-Mark, &#8220;He&#8217;s lived in the country, too much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought the American peasantry entirely
-compounded of the Puritan virtues, old man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You missed your guess, then. You read a lot
-of American novels, Olive. Some day or other
-some writer&#8217;s goin&#8217; to come along and write up
-an American country town like it is. The police
-will probably suppress the book.... My father
-and Gurdy&#8217;s mamma are sort of scared because
-I&#8217;ve got the kid at a rich school. You mustn&#8217;t
-believe all the stuff you see in the American magazines
-and papers about the wicked rich, Olive.
-I&#8217;ve met some of the rich rous at suppers and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-so on. Put any of &#8217;em alongside some of the
-hired men and clerks and things that were in my
-regiment in Cuba&mdash;or alongside Tommy Grover
-that&#8217;s blacksmith at Fayettesville and they&#8217;d look
-like Sunday School teachers. I sort of wish the
-poor folks in the United States&#8217;d leave off yawping
-about the wicked rich and look after their
-own backyards a while! No, I don&#8217;t take any
-stock in this country virtue thing. The only girl
-in Fayettesville that ever run off with a wicked
-drummer had morals that&#8217;d scare a chorus girl
-stiff. Who&#8217;s the fellow that hangs &#8217;round the
-stage door of a musical show? Nine times out
-of ten he&#8217;s a kid from the country that&#8217;s won
-twenty dollars at poker. Who&#8217;s the fellow that&mdash;well&mdash;seduces
-the poor working girl? Once
-in a hundred it&#8217;s a rich whelp in a dinner jacket.
-Rest of the time it&#8217;s the boy in the next flat.
-When I was acting and used to get mash notes
-from fool women, were they from women on
-Fifth Avenue or Park Avenue? Not much!
-Stenographers and ladies in Harlem that had
-husbands travelling a good deal. You believe in
-talking about these kind of things out loud and I
-expect you&#8217;re right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gurdy&#8217;s not handsome,&#8221; said Olive, &#8220;but he&#8217;s
-attractive&mdash;charming eyes&mdash;and women are going
-to like him a goodish bit, bye and bye. And man
-is fire. What moral precepts are you going to&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>&#8220;Just what my father told me. I&#8217;m going to
-tell him that he mustn&#8217;t make love to a married
-woman and that he mustn&#8217;t fool after an innocent
-girl unless he means matrimony&mdash;but God knows
-it&#8217;s getting pretty hard to tell what an innocent
-girl is, these days! Nine tenths of &#8217;em dress like
-cocottes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Old man, where did you pick up that very decent
-French accent?&#8221; Olive saw his blush slide
-fleetly from his collar to the red hair and added,
-&#8220;I hope it was honestly come by. You&#8217;re a good
-deal of a Puritan for a sensualist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh ... I am a sensualist, I guess. But, I
-ain&#8217;t a hog.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive said, &#8220;No, that&#8217;s quite true, my son.
-There&#8217;s nothing porcine about you. My brother
-has a house this season and he&#8217;s giving a dance
-tonight. There might be some pretty frocks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t know you had a brother!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sir Gerald Shelmardine of Shelmardine Cross,
-Hampshire. He&#8217;s rather dreary. Will you
-come?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She took him to several evening parties and
-his wooden coldness before a crowd was enchanting.
-It occurred to her that individuals wearied
-the man. He eyed pretty women, striking gowns,
-studied the decoration of ball-rooms. He confessed,
-&#8220;I&#8217;ll never see any of them again and
-shouldn&#8217;t remember them if I did. My memory<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-for people&#8217;s no good&mdash;unless they&#8217;re interestin&#8217;
-to look at. My god, look at that girl in purple.
-Her dressmaker ought to be hung! Skirt&#8217;s
-crooked all across the front.&#8221; He gave the girl
-in purple his rare frown then asked, &#8220;Well,
-where&#8217;s some place in France, on the seashore,
-where I can take the kids until August?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She recommended Royan and had from him a
-letter describing Margot&#8217;s success among the
-ladies of a quiet hotel. His letters of 1912 and
-1913 were full of Margot. Snapshots of the
-child dropped often from the thick blue envelopes.
-When he sent his thin book, &#8220;Modern Scenery&#8221;
-in the autumn of 1913 it was dedicated, &#8220;To my
-Daughter.&#8221; The bald prose was correct, the
-photographs and plates were well selected. Mark
-wrote: &#8220;Gurdy went over it with a fine tooth
-comb to see if the grammar was O. K. Mr.
-Carlson is not well and we have four plays to
-bring in by December. Spoke at a lunch of a
-ladies&#8217; dramatic society yesterday. Forgot where
-I was and said Hell in the middle of it. They
-did not mind. Things seem to be changing a lot.
-I am pretty worried about one of our plays.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive saw in the New York <i>Herald</i> some discussion
-of this play and a furious reference to it
-on the editorial page, signed by a clergyman.
-This was at Christmas time when she was entertaining
-her tiresome brother at Ilden&#8217;s house in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-Suffolk. She folded the newspaper away, meaning
-to explore the business. She forgot the accident
-in the hurry of her attempt to reach a
-Scotch country house where her daughter Joan
-died of pneumonia on New Year&#8217;s Day. The
-shock sent Olive into grey seclusion. Her husband
-was on the China station with his cruiser.
-She suddenly found herself worrying over the
-health of her son, then in the Fifth Form at Harrow,
-so took a cottage in Harrow village and
-there reflected on the nastiness of death while
-she wrote her next novel. The cottage was singularly
-dismal and the daughters of the next dwelling
-were pretty girls of thirteen and fourteen,
-with fair hair. &#8220;Sentimental analogy is the bane
-of life,&#8221; she wrote to her husband, &#8220;I went to
-town yesterday for some gloves and saw the posters
-of Peter Pan on a hoarding in Baker Street.
-Joan liked it so. So I went to the theatre and
-squandered five sovereigns in stalls and gave the
-tickets to these wretched girls who would infinitely
-prefer a cinema, naturally. However I managed
-to laugh on Saturday. The news had just reached
-Mark Walling by way of Ian Gail who is in the
-States trying to sell his worst and newest play.
-Mark cabled me a hundred words quite incoherent
-and mostly inappropriate.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Three days later Olive came in from a walk
-and Mark opened the door of the stupid cottage.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-When she drew her hands away from his stooped
-face they were hot and wet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, my dear boy,&#8221; she said, presently, &#8220;what
-blessing brought you over? In the middle of
-your season, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m in trouble. See anything in the papers
-about the Mayor stoppin&#8217; a play we put on?&mdash;I
-don&#8217;t blame the Mayor, for a minute. Mr. Carlson
-wanted it.... Well, it was stopped and
-some of the newspapers took it up. And then
-Mr. Carlson had a sort of stroke. His mind&#8217;s
-all right but his legs are paralyzed. Won&#8217;t ever
-walk again.&#8221; His voice drummed suddenly as
-if it might break into a sob. He passed his
-fingers over the red hair and went on, &#8220;I&#8217;ve got
-him up at my house.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; said Olive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure. The doctors say he&#8217;ll last four or five
-years, maybe.&mdash;Say you&#8217;ve always said we&#8217;re a nation
-of prudes. Look at this,&#8221; and he dragged
-from a black pocket a note on formal paper.
-Olive read: &#8220;The Thorne School, Madison
-Avenue and Sixty Sixth Street. December 28th,
-1913. My dear Mr. Walling, Will you be so
-good as to call upon me when it is possible in order
-to discuss Margaret&#8217;s future attendance. It
-seems kindest to warn you that several parents
-have suggested that&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>&#8220;What is this nonsense?&#8221; Olive asked, &#8220;What&#8217;s
-the child been doing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Doing? Nothin&#8217;! It&#8217;s this damned play!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You mean that there were women who seriously
-asked this Miss Thorne to have Margot
-withdrawn because you&#8217;d produced a risqu farce?
-But that&#8217;s&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His wrath reached a piteous climax in, &#8220;Oh,
-damn women, anyhow!... Well I took her
-out. My broker could have fixed the thing up.
-What&#8217;s the use? Well, I brought her over with
-me. She&#8217;s at the Ritz. What&#8217;s the best girls&#8217;
-school in England?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive said, &#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ll take her,&#8221; saw him smile
-and began to weep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">V<br />
-
-Margot</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">GURDY BERNAMER kept his twentieth
-birthday in a trench. The next
-week his regiment was withdrawn from
-the line to a dull village where Gurdy was taking
-a warm bath in a zinc tub behind the Mairie when
-a German aeroplane crossed above and lifted his
-attention from a Red Cross copy of &#8220;The Brook
-Kerith&#8221; which he read while he soaked. He
-dropped the dialectics of George Moore and
-watched, then saw the whitewashed wall of the
-yard bend in slowly, its cracks blackening. He
-spent a month in hospital getting the best of the
-wandering, deep wound that began at his right
-hip and ended in his armpit. He wrote to Mark,
-&#8220;I kept trying to remember a quotation from
-Twain&#8217;s Tramp Abroad. &#8216;Not by war&#8217;s shock or
-war&#8217;s shaft. Shot with a rock on a raft.&#8217; They
-dug a piece of zinc out of me. I feel fairly
-well. Mrs. Tilford Arbuthnot has the Y. M. C.
-A. cafeteria in Bordeaux. Her brother was with
-me at Saint Andrew&#8217;s. She brings me novels and
-things. I think she has a secret passion for you.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-She says you were a great actor. My nurse also
-thinks you were. Her name is Zippah Coe and
-she looks it. She says the immorality of French
-women is too awful for words. She is coming
-to take my temperature.&#8221; The temperature displeased
-the nurse and Gurdy passed into a daze.
-The wet hemlocks beyond the window sometimes
-turned cerise, inexcusably. Pneumonia succeeded
-his influenza.</p>
-
-<p>Through all this lapse he meditated and drew
-toward a belief that life was a series of meaningless
-illusions, many painful. He expanded &#8220;All
-the world&#8217;s a stage.&#8221; Suicide wasn&#8217;t universal
-as some of the players acquired a thrilling interest
-in their parts, rose to be directors&mdash;Wilsons,
-Northcliffes, Millerands. It was satisfactory to
-know this at twenty. His education was complete
-in its departments passional, athletic and philosophical.
-Saint Andrew&#8217;s school. Two and a
-half years of Yale in smart company. The miscellany
-of his regiment. He must certainly begin
-maturity as a critic. He lay composing an essay
-on the illusory value of passion in a loop of paradoxes
-which vanished as his pulse improved.
-Then he was conscious that a surgeon took interest
-in him. Orderlies came from the hospital
-adjutant inquiring. Gurdy sat up, read the
-papers and accepted five thousand francs in mauve
-and blue bills from a bank agent. It seemed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-that Mark had run him to earth by cabling. Soon
-he was uniformed again and given orders that
-assigned him to duty in a Paris military bureau.
-There Gurdy found Mark&#8217;s broker, decorated
-as a Major.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, I got you up here,&#8221; said Major
-Villay. &#8220;Why not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But&mdash;&#8221; With recovery Gurdy had shed some
-sense of illusions. He stood thinking of his regiment
-rather sourly, rather sadly.</p>
-
-<p>The broker-major grunted, &#8220;Rot, Gurdy.
-You&#8217;re all Mark&#8217;s got&mdash;Son, and all that. Dare
-say Margot&#8217;ll marry some Englishman. Anyhow,
-it&#8217;s all over. Bulgaria&#8217;s on the skids.
-Mark thinks too much of you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy was subtly pleased. He stood thinking
-of Mark fondly, with annotations in contempt.
-Mark was nothing but a big blunderer among
-the arts, a man who couldn&#8217;t see the strength of
-Russian drama or disillusioned comedy, who
-didn&#8217;t admire Granville Barker&#8217;s plays. But if
-Margot stayed in England Gurdy could steer his
-uncle toward proper productions. Mark meant
-well, very well. He had done some fine things,
-had a feeling for vesture, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see the Celebrities people have bought the
-Terriss Pictograph,&#8221; said Major Villay, &#8220;Exchange
-of stock. Funny. Mark hates the
-movies so and he makes twenty thousand a year<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-out of them. And the movie people gave him
-fifteen thousand for that rotten Gail play. Here,
-take this stuff and translate it. I can probably
-get you a pass over to London if you want to see
-Margot.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy didn&#8217;t want to see her. His last view
-of Margot had been in the stress of her removal
-from Miss Thorne&#8217;s school. Mark had gone
-five times to England on visits of a month, reported
-her beautiful, witty, petted by Mrs. Ilden,
-by Mrs. Ilden&#8217;s friends. But he wrote her a
-note dutifully and got an answer in three lines.
-&#8220;Glad you are out of the silly mess. Try to run
-over. Frightfully rushed catching a train for
-Devon. More later.&#8221; He was not offended.
-He thought that Margot disliked him as he disliked
-her. He threw the note into the waste
-basket and went on translating French political
-comments into English.</p>
-
-<p>The Armistice broke on the third week of
-this employment. The bureau became a negation
-of labour. Gurdy roamed contentedly about the
-feverish, foolish city with various friends&mdash;young
-officers, sergeant majors on agreeable posts. He
-was tall, still pallid from sunless convalescence.
-His uniform happened to fit a long, loosely moving
-body and he liked dancing. He equably observed
-male diversion with his dark blue eyes
-and was often diverted. This might be the collapse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-of known society, the beginning of a hygienic
-and hardworked future. This churning of
-illusions might bring something fresh. Men
-might turn to new programs of stupidity, exhausting
-the old. He danced and was courted.
-He wrote to Mark, choosing words: &#8220;There
-will be plays about this, I suppose. I do not
-think any one will believe it fifty years from now.
-It is an upheaval of cheap pleasure. I keep
-thinking how Carlson calls people hogs.&#8221; He
-hesitated, continued: &#8220;I do not know that there
-is an excuse for all of it. Some of the Americans
-make bigger hogs of themselves than is necessary.&#8221;
-Then he destroyed the letter. After
-all, Mark was your typical patriot. He took
-America seriously, the American soldier seriously,
-the American Red Cross had profited by his sentiment.
-There was no point in hurting Mark.
-Gurdy wrote a gay tale of driving through Paris
-in a vegetable cart with a drunken Australian
-colonel and went to dine at Luca&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>From Luca&#8217;s his party retired to the Opera
-Comique, stopped to drink champagne in the bar
-and stayed there until it wasn&#8217;t worth while to
-hear the last act. &#8220;And,&#8221; said a youth from San
-Francisco, &#8220;we can go to Ariana Joyce&#8217;s. She&#8217;s
-giving a party.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But she&#8217;s dead,&#8221; Gurdy objected.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>&#8220;Damn healthy corpse! Come ahead and see
-if she&#8217;s dead!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They floated in a taxicab along Paris. The
-machine slipped from the lavender rush of some
-broad street up a slope and Gurdy stumbled into
-a brilliance of laughing people where his guide
-pushed him toward a green dais and hissed, &#8220;She
-won&#8217;t know you from Adam. Tell her you&#8217;re
-from Chicago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her rounded beauty had come to death under
-much fat. She lolled in a red chair waving a
-peacock fan. Gurdy&#8217;s friend kissed the arm she
-thrust out and told her, &#8220;You look awfully well,
-Miss Joyce.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The dancer nodded, beaming down at her
-painted feet in their sandals of blue leather.
-Through her nose she said, &#8220;Feelin&#8217; fine,&#8221; then
-in throaty refinement, &#8220;Do get Choute Aurec to
-dance. She&#8217;s so difficult now she&#8217;s had a success.
-So very difficult&mdash;Rodin used to say&mdash;&#8221; Her
-empty and tired stare centred on Gurdy. With
-a vague dignity she asked, &#8220;Do I know you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Corporal Bernamer&#8217;s from Chicago,&#8221; the
-guide said.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Joyce planted a thumb under her chin
-and drawled, &#8220;De mon pays!&#8221; then her eyes
-rolled away. She reached for a silver cup on a
-table and forgot her guests. Looking back,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-Gurdy saw her famous head thrown back and, for
-a moment, comely as she drank.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bakst,&#8221; said his friend, jerking a hand about
-to show the walls of grey paint where strange
-beasts cavorted among spiked trees, above the
-mixed and coloured motion of the crowd. An
-American was playing ragtime at the gold piano,
-in a clot of women. Choute Aurec was teaching
-a British aviator some new dance. Beyond, a
-mass of women and officers surrounded a lean
-shape on a divan. They gazed, gaped, craned at
-the young man. His decorations twinkled in the
-glow. His blue chest stirred when he spoke and
-his teeth flashed. Gurdy&#8217;s companion murmured,
-&#8220;They say he&#8217;s got ten times more sense than
-most prize-fighters.... I think that thin man&#8217;s
-Bernstein&mdash;the one with a dinner jacket. You get
-drinks in the next room. Oh, there&#8217;s Alixe!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He ran off. Gurdy slid through the mingling
-harlots and warriors into the next, cooler room,
-fringed with men drinking champagne. An
-American colonel glared at him over a glass,
-shifted the glare back to a handsome ensign who
-had penned a blond girl in a corner. Gurdy
-found a tray covered with sandwiches and ate one,
-pondering. He wondered whether the ensign
-would go on trying to kiss the girl if he knew that
-she had been, last month, on trial for the technical
-murder of an octogenarian general. Well,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-morals were illusory, too. Some one slapped his
-shoulder. He saw Ian Gail. The playwright
-was dressed as a British captain. &#8220;Intelligence,&#8221;
-he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m too old and adipose for anything
-else. And we shouldn&#8217;t be here, should we? A
-poisonous place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Funny mixture.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pride,&#8221; said Gail, &#8220;The poor woman can&#8217;t
-stand being neglected so she gives these atrocious
-parties. But it&#8217;s nice running into you, old son.
-I&#8217;d a letter from Mark yesterday. He told me
-you were here and I was coming to look you up
-tomorrow in any case. I&#8217;m just from London.
-Olive Ilden and Margot are hoping you&#8217;ll get
-leave to come over for Christmas. Can&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t quite see how I can, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But do try. I think you&#8217;d cheer Olive up.
-Margot&#8217;s a jolly little thing but frightfully busy
-celebrating the peace. How decent of Mark to
-let her stay with Olive! I fancied he&#8217;d take her
-back to the States directly the war began.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Submarines,&#8221; Gurdy said, &#8220;But why does Mrs.
-Ilden need cheering up, sir? She used to be an
-awfully cheerful sort of person.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; said Gail, &#8220;her boy&mdash;Bobby.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hadn&#8217;t heard he&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fell a year ago. Do try to run over....
-How pretty Margot is!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy ate another sandwich, correcting champagne.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-There would be long illusions after this
-war. Grudges, idealized memories of trivial
-folk. But he was sorry for Olive Ilden. He
-said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll try to get over. I&#8217;ll&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Choute Aurec ran through the doorway, yelped,
-&#8220;Ariane va danser, messieurs, dames!&#8221; and
-darted out again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did that incontinent little brute say?&#8221;
-Gail asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think Miss Joyce is going to dance,&#8221; said
-Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s disgusting,&#8221; the Englishman snorted,
-&#8220;Some cad always flatters her into dancing and the
-poor woman falls on her face. Don&#8217;t go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The doorway filled with watchers. Women
-giggled. Some one played slowly the first bars of
-the Volga Barge song. There was an applausive
-murmur&mdash;then a thud. &#8220;She&#8217;s fallen,&#8221; said Gail
-and suddenly Gurdy remembered that this was an
-American, that he had seen her dance to the
-jammed ecstasy of the Metropolitan. The
-women in the doorway squealed their amusement.
-The crowd parted and he saw the green gauze
-wrapping her limp body as two Frenchmen
-carried her back to her throne. The crowd
-applauded, now.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Swine,&#8221; said Gail.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy summoned up his philosophy and
-shrugged. The young prize-fighter came through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-the press and snapped to a civilian, &#8220;Je me sauve,
-Etienne!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mais&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;C&#8217;est nausabonde! Elle tait artiste, vois
-tu? Allons; je file!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The boy&#8217;s right,&#8221; said the playwright, &#8220;Sickening.
-Come along.&#8221; They passed through the
-beginning of a dance in the great chamber and
-down the stairs into an alley where motors were
-lined. In a taxicab Gail concluded, &#8220;End of an
-artist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy thought this sententious but a queer
-oppression filled him. It was hideous that any
-one should finish as a butt with a prize-fighter for
-apologist. Of course, life was nothing but a
-meaningless spectacle. Money, something to
-drink, a dancing floor drew this crowd together.
-The fat dancer was rather funny, if one looked it
-all over. Mark could contrive the whole effect on
-a stage if he wanted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark writes that he&#8217;s almost decided to build
-his theatre in West Forty Seventh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wish he&#8217;d hurry,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;He&#8217;s been
-planning the Walling for years. Funny. He
-told Mr. Frohman all about it just before the
-<i>Lusitania</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor Frohman,&#8221; the Englishman murmured,
-&#8220;Awfully decent to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There should be a certain decency, a cool<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-restraint in life, the philosopher mused. He
-thought of this next morning when Choute Aurec
-telephoned hopefully for a loan of a thousand
-francs. By noon he had discovered that he was
-flatly homesick for Mark and thought of Margot
-in London as the nearest familiar creature. The
-bureau permitted his departure. He crossed a
-still Channel and made his way to London in
-the company of an earnest Red Cross girl from
-Omaha who wanted Fontainebleau turned into
-a reform school for rescued Parisian street walkers.
-She had a General for uncle and Gurdy
-feared that she would be able to forward her plan
-to the French government.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;D&#8217;you really feel that we&#8217;ve any business telling
-the French what to do with their own homes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Fontainebleau could be made into a real
-home, Corpril!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So could Mount Vernon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s too small. Fontainebleau&#8217;s so huge.
-All those rooms.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t think that it&#8217;s any use just letting
-it stay beautiful?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But it isn&#8217;t really beautiful,&#8221; the young woman
-retorted, &#8220;It&#8217;s so much of it Renaissance, you
-know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was still hating this vacuity when the taxicab
-left him at Mrs. Ilden&#8217;s house in Chelsea.
-The butler told him that &#8220;Lady Ilden&#8221; was not at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-home and guided him through grey halls to a
-bedroom. Gurdy washed, tried to recall Ilden&#8217;s
-rank in the British navy and the name of
-Olive&#8217;s last novel. He strolled downstairs and
-met Margot in the lower hall without knowing
-it. He saw a slim person in stark yellow reading
-a letter and was startled when the girl said,
-&#8220;Good God, they didn&#8217;t tell me you&#8217;d got here!
-Come and help me stick this holly about in the
-library.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She thrust a bowl filled with small sprays of
-holly into his hands and frowned between the
-wings of her black, bobbed hair. He remembered
-her plump. She was slender. She still
-wore glittering pumps with silver buckles. When
-she chuckled it was in the former chime. She exclaimed,
-&#8220;Of course! Uncle Eddie was born in
-Norway, wasn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think dad was born in the steerage, coming
-over,&#8221; Gurdy said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re not at all American, anyhow,&#8221; she
-announced, &#8220;and that&#8217;s a relief. I&#8217;m quite mad
-about Scandinavians. Only sensible people in
-Europe. Come along. There&#8217;s a rehearsal in
-half a minute and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rehearsal?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Charity show. Barge along. This way.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He grinned and followed her into the long
-library where she tossed bits of holly to and fro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-on the shelves. She said, &#8220;Cosmo Rand&#8217;s rehearsing
-us. Better not tell that to dad. He
-mightn&#8217;t like it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s Cosmo?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cora Boyle&#8217;s husband. They&#8217;re playing here.
-Don&#8217;t get shocked about it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t see anything to get shocked about. So
-Cora Boyle&#8217;s over here again? What&#8217;s she playing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A silly melodrama. She&#8217;s at the Diana. Saw
-her the other night. She&#8217;s getting fat. Ought
-to be a law against fat women wearing old rose.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve lost some weight,&#8221; Gurdy said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Work, old thing, work! Sewing shirts
-for snipers. Dancing with convalescents.&mdash;It&#8217;s
-beastly you&#8217;ve got so tall. I hate looking up at
-men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy laughed down at her and asked, &#8220;When
-did Mrs. Ilden get to be Lady Ilden?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Jutland. It&#8217;s just the Bath, not a baronetcy.
-Olive&#8217;s at church.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought she was agnostic?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot said gently, &#8220;It takes them that way,
-rather often. She&#8217;s been to church a goodish bit
-ever since Bobby&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes. Young Ilden was killed.&mdash;What
-sort of person was he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One of the silent, strong Empire builders&mdash;but
-nice about it.... Olive&#8217;s aged, rather.&#8221; She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-planted the last holly spray on the lap of a gilt
-Buddha then smiled at Gurdy across a yellow
-shoulder, &#8220;I&#8217;d forgotten how blue your eyes are.
-Almost violet. Goes with your hair. Very effective....
-Your chin&#8217;s still too big.... Oh,
-a letter from Dad this morning. He was thinking
-of running over. But Carlson&#8217;s worse....
-D&#8217;you know, it&#8217;d be a noble deed to poison Carlson.
-There he is stuck in the house. Why
-don&#8217;t useless people like that dry up and blow
-away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s useless,&#8221; Gurdy argued,
-&#8220;He makes Mark put on a comedy now and then.
-He swears better than any one I know. And
-you ought to be grateful to him. If Mark
-hadn&#8217;t had him for company you&#8217;d probably have
-been hauled home long ago.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot opened a Russian, lead box on a table
-and lit a cigarette. She said, &#8220;Don&#8217;t think so.
-Dad&#8217;s never made the slightest sign of hauling
-me home. Especially after Mr. Frohman....
-Ugh! I almost had nervous prostration, when
-I heard Dad had sailed after the <i>Lusitania</i>!&#8221;
-Her lids fell and shook the astonishing lashes
-against the pale brown of her cheeks. Then
-she chuckled, &#8220;The joke is, I&#8217;d as soon have gone
-home long ago. I&#8217;m mad about Olive, of course.
-And I&#8217;ve had all sorts of a good time. But I&#8217;d
-rather be home.... How&#8217;s your mother?&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-He was answering when the butler barked names
-from the doorway. Margot whispered, &#8220;Run.
-The rehearsal. Go hide in the drawing room.
-These are all bores.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He passed out through a group of men and
-girls, encountered a Colonel of the British General
-Staff in the hall and was cordially halted.
-He stood discussing military shoes with this dignitary
-as Olive Ilden let herself into the hall.
-Gurdy recalled her slim and tall. Now that he
-looked down, she seemed stout, no longer handsome
-but the deep voice remained charming as
-it rose from her black veils. She led him off into
-the drawing room and said, at once, &#8220;Margot&#8217;s
-pretty, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Mark&#8217;s been raving about her but I
-thought&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You thought he was idealizing, after his customary
-manner? He sent me a picture of you,
-so I&#8217;m not surprised. Don&#8217;t sit in that chair. It&#8217;s
-for pygmies.... I want to talk about Margot
-and it&#8217;s likely we won&#8217;t have another chance. You
-two don&#8217;t write each other letters. Had you
-heard from Mark that she wants to play?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Play?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be an actress. I thought I&#8217;d better warn
-you,&#8221; Olive laughed, &#8220;I don&#8217;t know when it
-started. I know Mark wouldn&#8217;t like it. Otherwise
-the child&#8217;s the delight of my life.&#8221; She sank<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-into a couch and asked, &#8220;Now, what are these diplomatic
-idiots doing in Paris? I don&#8217;t like the
-look of things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Arranging for another war.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do hope they&#8217;ll arrange it for twenty years
-from date. I&#8217;ll be past sixty then and I won&#8217;t
-care. I&#8217;ll be able to sit and grin at the women
-who&#8217;re going through what&mdash;Only, of course, I
-shouldn&#8217;t grin. I&#8217;m a true blue Briton of the old
-breed when it comes to an emotion. I simply
-can&#8217;t enjoy an emotion when it&#8217;s my emotion....
-Had you ever thought that that&#8217;s why bad plays
-and cinema rubbish are so popular? It&#8217;s the unreality
-of the passions.... I dare say that&#8217;s why
-I&#8217;ve just been to church.... Perhaps that&#8217;s why
-Margot wants to go on the stage. She&#8217;s never
-had an emotion worth shedding a tear for. Well,
-how&#8217;s Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Putting on three plays after Christmas and
-thinks they&#8217;re all winners.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She drew her hands over her eyes and murmured,
-&#8220;Mark&#8217;s extraordinary. Endless enthusiasm.
-Like a kiddy with a box of water
-colours. I suppose it&#8217;s belief. He really believes
-in his job.... I once thought he needed education....
-If he&#8217;d been educated, he couldn&#8217;t
-have believed so hard.... There has to be something
-childish to get along in the theatre....
-If he were worldly wise he&#8217;d have known half<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-these plays were rubbish and the rest not very
-good.... But I&#8217;m not sure what a good play
-is, Gurdy. Tell me. You&#8217;re young, so you
-should know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He flushed, then laughed and asked what play
-Margot and her friends rehearsed. The loud,
-spaced voices came across the hall. He felt an
-unruly curiosity stir.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a one act thing of Ronny Dufford&#8217;s&mdash;Colonel
-the Honourable Ronald Dufford. Quite a
-pal of Margot&#8217;s. That was he talking to you
-in the hall just now&mdash;the Brass Hat. What are
-you laughing at?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wondering what would happen to an American
-General Staff man if he wrote plays....
-Dufford? Mark put a thing of his on in nineteen
-sixteen. It failed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;His things are rather thin. He&#8217;s been nice
-to Margot, though. He took her about when I
-was in mourning&mdash;He&#8217;s a good sort. Forty
-eight or so. I dare say he lectured Margot on
-the greatness of Empire and the sacredness of the
-House of Lords. It didn&#8217;t hurt her. She hears
-enough about the sacredness of the plain people,
-in the studios.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I thought you were an anti-imperialist and an
-anarchist?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The tired woman laughed, &#8220;So I am.... It
-was tremendous fun being all the right things<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-when I was young and anarchists were rather few.
-I expect you&#8217;re a cubist and a communist and agnostic
-and don&#8217;t believe in marriage. So many of
-them don&#8217;t. Then they get married to prove the
-soundness of their theory and get hurt; then
-they&#8217;re annoyed because they&#8217;re hurt and get interested
-in being married. Most amusing to
-watch.... The world&#8217;s got past me and I&#8217;m
-frightened by it.&mdash;We had such a good time railing
-at the Victorians and repression. And now
-all the clever young things tell their emotions to
-cab drivers and invent emotions if they haven&#8217;t
-any.&mdash;All the gestures have changed and I feel&mdash;You
-look rather like Mark. You know he was
-stopping at Winchester when he heard Margot&#8217;s
-father&#8217;d been killed. I tried to shock him.
-He.... Oh, do go and watch them rehearse,
-Gurdy!... I&#8217;ve just come from church....
-The music&#8217;s made me silly. I don&#8217;t know what
-I&#8217;m saying....&#8221; The artifice smashed into a
-sob. Gurdy swung and hurried across the hall.
-Certainly, the woman&#8217;s illusion of pain was
-notably real.</p>
-
-<p>He sat smoking on a window seat of the library
-and tried to follow the rehearsal at the other end
-of the wide room. The men and girls strode
-about talking loudly. A slender man in grey
-broke the chatter from time to time and gave
-directions in a level, pleasing voice. This must<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-be Cosmo Rand, the husband of Cora Boyle.
-Gurdy looked at him with interested scorn but the
-amateurs took his orders in docile peace and only
-Margot answered him from a deep green chair,
-&#8220;Rot, Cossy! I&#8217;m supposed to be lost in thought,
-aren&#8217;t I? Then I shan&#8217;t look interested when
-Stella giggles. Go on, Stella.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy became intent on her posture in the dark
-chair. She was smoking and her hair appeared
-through the vapour like solid, carved substance.
-She seemed fixed, a black and yellow figure on the
-green. A vaporous halo rose in the lamplight
-above her head. He stirred when she spoke
-again, shifting, and a silver buckle sent a spark of
-light flitting across the rug. He remembered
-that she had Italian blood from her grandmother.
-She looked Italian. Mark was right. She was
-beautiful in no common fashion. The other girls
-vibrating against the shelves were mere bodies,
-gurgling voices.&mdash;The butler stole down the room
-and spoke to Cosmo Rand who, in turn, spoke
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I say, Margot, Cora&#8217;s brought the motor
-around. Might I have her in? Chilly and she&#8217;s
-been feeling rather seedy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A tall woman in black velvet entered as if this
-were a stage and reposed herself in a chair.
-Gurdy had never seen Cora Boyle perform. She
-was familiar from pictures when she drew up a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-veil across an obvious beauty of profile and wide
-eyes. Presently she commenced a cigarette and
-the motion of lighting it was admirably effected.
-An expanding, heavy scent of maltreated tobacco
-welled from the burning roll between her fingers.
-The line of her brows was prolonged downward
-with paint. The whole mask was tinted to a
-false and gleaming pallor. Grey furs were arranged
-about the robustness of her upper body.
-She was older than Mark, Gurdy&#8217;s father said.
-She must be passing forty. She should be weary
-of tight slippers. A glance stopped Gurdy&#8217;s
-meditation. He looked away at Margot&#8217;s effortless
-stroll along the imagined footlights. Cora
-Boyle spoke to him in a flat and pinched whisper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Isn&#8217;t your name Bernamer?&#8221; He bowed.
-She came to sit with him on the window seat and
-dusted ash from her cigarette into the Chinese
-bowl. Her eyes explored his face with a civil
-amusement. &#8220;You look awfully like your father.
-You startled me. Let me see.... You and
-Miss Walling live with Mark, don&#8217;t you? Sweet,
-isn&#8217;t she? And how is Mark? I&#8217;ve played over
-here so long that I&#8217;ve rawther lost touch. Mr.
-Carlson&#8217;s still alive?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes. He&#8217;s bedridden, you know? Lives
-with Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She inhaled smoke, nodding.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so characteristic of Mark, isn&#8217;t it?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-But of course, Carlson was kind to him. The
-dear old man&#8217;s bark was much worse than his
-bite. Good heavens how frightened I was of
-him! I see that Mark acted in a couple of Red
-Cross shows? I expect that all his old matine
-girls turned out and cried for joy.... But I do
-think that Mark was something more than a
-flapper&#8217;s dream of heaven. Still, he must like
-management better. He never thought more of
-acting than that it was a job, did he?&#8221; She
-sighed, &#8220;One has to think more of it than that
-to get on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy wished that this woman didn&#8217;t embarrass
-him, resenting her perfumed cigarette and
-the real, frail loveliness of her hands. The embarrassment
-ended. Rand told the amateurs
-that they weren&#8217;t half bad and departed with his
-wife, a trim, boyish figure behind her velvet bulk.
-Colonel Dufford implored the grouped players to
-learn their lines. Margot was much kissed by
-the other girls, dismissed them and came in a sort
-of dance step to ask Gurdy what he thought of
-her acting.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Couldn&#8217;t hear you. I had to talk to Miss
-Boyle. Ugly voice she has. Are people really
-crazy about her here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot frowned and pursed her lips, tapping a
-cigarette on a nail. &#8220;Oh, she has a following.
-They don&#8217;t dither about her as they do over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-Elsie whatsername and some of the other Americans.
-Dull, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very. She made a point of talking about
-Mark.&mdash;Lady Ilden&#8217;s all broken up, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s too repressed,&#8221; Margot explained.
-&#8220;Tried not to show it when Bobby fell and so
-she&#8217;s been showing it ever since. And Sir John&#8217;s
-been at sea constantly and that&#8217;s a strain. He&#8217;s
-in Paris, now.&mdash;You don&#8217;t show your feelings at
-all, do you? I was watching you talk to the
-Boyle and you beamed very nicely. And you
-must have been bored. One of those rather
-sticky women. Come and play pool. There&#8217;s
-an American table.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He played pool and stolidly listened to her ripple
-of comments. She had a natural disrespect
-for the American army that flashed up. &#8220;The
-men did all they could, I dare say, but, my God,
-Gurdy, what thugs the officers were! Some of
-them turned up at a garden party where the King
-dropped in and he went to speak to one. The
-thing was cleaning its nails in a corner and it
-shook hands with its pocket knife in the other
-hand. I fainted and Ronny Dufford lugged me
-home in a taxi. I say, do let me have St. Ledger
-Grant do a pastel of you. Dad would love it and
-St. Ledger needs ten pounds as badly as any one in
-Cheyne Walk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s Sillijer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>&#8220;Artist. Poor bloke who got patriotic and
-lost a leg in the Dardanelles mess. Serve him
-right and so on but he&#8217;s ghastly poor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You a pacifist?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s why you like the Scandinavians? Because
-they stayed out?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Right. I forgive you though because you&#8217;re
-young and simple and your legs are rather jolly in
-those things.&#8221; She twisted her head to stare at
-his leggings and the black hair rose, settled back
-into its carved composure below the strong,
-shaded lamp. The clear red of her lips parted as
-she laughed, &#8220;Not a blush? Made the world
-safe for democracy and aren&#8217;t proud of it? How
-did your friends get through? That rather
-sweet lad who used to come to lunch when you
-were at school? Lacy&mdash;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lacy Martin. Lost a leg.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She frowned. &#8220;Doesn&#8217;t matter so much for a
-chap like that with billions but&mdash;the artists. I
-must have St. Ledger do you. We&#8217;ll go there tomorrow.
-I had Cosmo&mdash;Rand have himself
-done.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy made a shot and said, &#8220;Rand&#8217;s a much
-prettier subject than I&#8217;d be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t get coy, my lad! You&#8217;re rather imposing
-and you know it.&mdash;Like to meet Gilbert
-Chesterton? You used to read his junk. I can<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-have you taken there. Never met him, myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No thanks.&mdash;What&#8217;s that bell?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dress for dinner. You can&#8217;t. I must.&mdash;I
-say, you&#8217;re altogether different from what I
-thought you&#8217;d be.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t possibly tell you but I&#8217;m damned
-glad you&#8217;re not. The butler can make cocktails.
-Dad taught him in nineteen seventeen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The butler brought him an evil mixture.
-Gurdy emptied it into the fireplace and leaned on
-the pool table wondering what Margot had expected.
-It didn&#8217;t matter, of course. Yet she
-might recall him as a sixteen year old schoolboy
-much absorbed in polevaults and stiff with conceit
-for some acquirements in English letters. How
-people changed and how foolish it was to be surprised
-at change! Sophomoric. Mark really
-knew a pretty woman when he saw one. A man
-of genuine taste outside the selection of plays.&mdash;She
-must know London expertly. She must have
-a sense of spectacle. She must meet all conditions
-with this liberal, successful woman as a
-guide. If she wanted a pastel made for Mark
-she should have it. Gurdy dusted chalk from his
-leggings, evenly taped about the long strength of
-his calves, strolled into the drawing room and
-played the languid movement of the Faun&#8217;s Afternoon.
-Illusory or not there was always beauty in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-the blended exterior of things. A man should
-turn from the inner crassness to soothe himself
-with the fair investiture, with the drift of delicate
-motions that went in colour and music.&mdash;Olive
-thought him like Mark as she came in. She was
-worried because Gail had written of meeting the
-boy on Montmartre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve been enjoying Paris?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;More or less. It&#8217;s a holy show, just now. I
-don&#8217;t suppose the barkeepers&mdash;and other parasites&mdash;will
-ever have such a chance again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hope you&#8217;ve not been in too much mischief.
-Ian Gail wrote me that he met you in some horrid
-hole or other.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A party at Ariana Joyce&#8217;s. I wasn&#8217;t doing
-any more harm there than the rest of the Allied
-armies. But it was pretty odious.&#8221; The memory
-jarred into the present satisfaction. He
-halted his long fingers on the keys and Margot
-came rustling in, her gown of sheer black muslin
-painted with yellow flowers and gold combs in her
-hair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Were you playing L&#8217;Aprs Midi?&mdash;And
-he&#8217;s only twenty, Olive! Most Americans don&#8217;t
-rise to respectable music until they&#8217;ve lost all
-their money and have to come and live over
-here. Any nails in your shoes, Gurdy? We&#8217;re
-going to a dance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221; asked Olive.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>&#8220;Something for war widows at Mrs. Rossiter-Rossiter-Rossiter&#8217;s&mdash;that
-fat woman from Victoria.
-I promised some one or other I&#8217;d come.
-We&#8217;ll go in time for supper.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The charity dance seemed less fevered than
-dances in Paris. There were ranks of matrons
-about the walls of a dull, long room. At midnight
-Margot rescued him from a girl who was
-using him as an introduction to American economics
-and found a single table in the supper
-hall. Here the batter of ill played ragtime was
-endurable and the supping folk entertained him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The country&#8217;s so ghastly with houses shut
-and no servants that most people have stuck to
-town,&#8221; Margot said, refusing wine. &#8220;Lot of
-eminences here. Who&#8217;re you looking at?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The dark girl in pink. She&#8217;s familiar.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She should be. She has a press agent in
-New York. Lady Selene Tucker. She&#8217;s going
-to marry that man who looks like a Lewis Baumer
-picture in Punch as soon as every one&#8217;s in
-town again and she can get Westminster Abbey
-and he can get his mother shipped to New Zealand,
-or somewhere. His mother will drink too
-much and then tell lies about Queen Victoria.
-She&#8217;s rather quaint. She sues for libel every
-time any one writes a novel with a dissolute
-peeress in it. Frightfully self-conscious. Don&#8217;t
-people who insist on telling you how depraved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-they are make you rather ill? They always
-seem to think they&#8217;ve made such a good job of it.
-And I could think of much worse things to do.&mdash;How
-nice your hair is! Like Uncle Eddie&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks. Who&#8217;s the skinny woman with the
-pearls?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot put aside the palm branch that shadowed
-her chin and frowned. &#8220;It looks like my
-namesake, Mrs. Asquith, from this angle.&mdash;No,
-it&#8217;s Lady Flint. Oh, look at the big brute in
-mauve. Lovely, isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the shapely, fair woman without
-interest. The round of Margot&#8217;s forearm
-took his eyes back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lovely? Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So glad you don&#8217;t think so. One gets so sick
-of hearing women gurgled about as wonders. I
-think it was Salisbury who said she was the most
-beautiful woman alive. And she goes right on,
-you know? Once you get fixed here as frightfully
-beautiful or witty you can die of old age
-before they stop saying so. Such a fraud!
-It&#8217;s just what dad says about all the managers
-and stars in New York being myths. All those
-legends about his being a woman hater and&mdash;who&#8217;s
-the man who&#8217;s supposed to never hire a
-chorus girl until he&#8217;s seen her au naturel? Such
-piffle!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But they like being myths,&#8221; Gurdy laughed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>&#8220;Oh, every one does, of course. Some one
-started a yarn about me&mdash;don&#8217;t tell dad this&mdash;that
-I was the daughter of some frightfully rich
-American banker and that my mother was a
-Spanish dancer. Olive was wild with rage.
-But it was rather fun.&mdash;I say, I&#8217;m sick of this,
-Gurdy. Do make dad order me home.&#8221; She
-lit a cigarette, let her lashes drop and ignored a
-man who bowed, passing. Gurdy thought this
-was Cosmo Rand and said so. Margot
-shrugged. &#8220;He rehearses us every day. Decent
-sort. People like him.&mdash;But do make dad
-have me come home.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy pondered. Mark now knew a few
-gentlewomen, the wives of authors and critics.
-He had mannerly friends outside the theatre,
-had drilled smart war theatricals. The girl
-could move beyond this wedge of certainty
-wherever she chose. But Gurdy said, &#8220;You
-might not like New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But I want to see it! It&#8217;s hardly pleasant seeing
-dad about once every year for two weeks or
-so. I happen to love him. You mean I shan&#8217;t be
-recognized as a human being by the fat ladies in
-the Social Register? That&#8217;ll hardly break my
-heart, you know? The world is so full of a
-number&mdash;Is that God save the&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The supping people rose in a vast puff of
-smoke from abandoned cigarettes. Officers stiffened.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-The outer orchestra jangled the old
-tune badly. The sleek gowns showed a ripple
-of bending knees. The prince went nodding
-down the room toward an inner door with a tiny
-clink of bright spurs as his staff followed him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They say he&#8217;s going to the States. I should
-like to be there to see the women make fools of
-themselves. And Grandfather&#8217;ll be so furious
-because every one&#8217;ll talk about a damned Britisher.&mdash;Finish
-your coffee. I want to dance
-again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She danced with a smooth, lazy rhythm and
-Gurdy felt a brusque jealousy of all the men
-who danced with her, after him. He was angry
-because he so soon liked her, against reason. It
-was folly to let himself be netted by a girl who
-showed no signs of courting him. He watched
-her spin, her black skirt spreading, with Cosmo
-Rand. The man danced gracefully, without
-swagger. He might be amusing, like many actors.
-Gurdy pulled his philosophy together and
-talked about Mark&#8217;s plan of the Walling
-Theatre while they drove home.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dad&#8217;s wanted a shop of his own so long,&#8221;
-she sighed, &#8220;And it&#8217;ll be quite charming. He
-does understand colours! Wish he wouldn&#8217;t
-wear black all the time.... I always feel fearfully
-moral at two in the morning. I&#8217;m going to
-lecture you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>&#8220;What about?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re so damned chilly. You always were,
-of course. Don&#8217;t you like anything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They came to the Ilden house before he could
-answer and Margot didn&#8217;t repeat the question
-all the week he stayed in London. They were
-seldom alone. Lady Ilden seemed to want the
-girl near her. There were incessant callers.
-Men plainly flocked after the dark girl. Her
-frankness added something to the wearisome
-chaff of teatime and theatre parties, to the dazing
-slang of the young officers. Gurdy speculated
-from corners, edged in at random dances.
-But his blood had caught a fresh pulsation. He
-felt a trail of mockery in the artifice of Lady
-Ilden&#8217;s talk as if the tired woman observed him
-falling into love and found it humorous. She
-said once, &#8220;I was afraid you&#8217;d grown up too fast.
-And you&#8217;ve not,&#8221; but he let the chance of an
-argument slide by his preoccupation with the
-visible flutter of Margot&#8217;s hands pinning a tear
-in her yellow frock. His resistance weakened
-although he hunted repugnances, tried to shiver
-when the girl swore.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Profanity&#8217;s a sign of poor imagination,&#8221; he
-told her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The hell you say,&#8221; said Margot. &#8220;Haven&#8217;t
-turned out on the heavy side, have you, Gurdy?
-I bar serious souls. War shaken you to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-foundations? Cheeryo! You&#8217;ll get over it.&#8221;
-And she walked upstairs singing,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">&#8220;There ayn&#8217;t a goin&#8217; to be no wa-ah,</div>
-<div class="indent">Now we&#8217;ve got a king like good King Hedward,</div>
-<div class="verse">There ayn&#8217;t a goin&#8217; to be no wa-ah.</div>
-<div class="indent">&#8217;E &#8217;ates that sort of fing,</div>
-<div class="verse">Muvvers, don&#8217;t worry,</div>
-<div class="indent">Now we&#8217;ve got a king like Hedward,</div>
-<div class="verse">Peace wiv &#8217;onor is &#8217;is motter,</div>
-<div class="indent">So, God sive the king!&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">VI<br />
-
-Gurdy</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">IN mid March the lease of the ground in West
-47th Street was brought to Mark&#8217;s office.
-He signed it and gave the attorney his check.
-A wrecking company was busy with the destruction
-of the cheap hotel that stood where the Walling
-Theatre would stand complete in November.
-The notary and witnesses withdrew. Mark sat
-drumming his fingers on his desk, trying to rejoice.
-Irritations worked in him; Carlson would be the
-only audience of his joy; the ground was bought
-with money made too largely in moving pictures.
-He was so close upon the fact grown from his
-dream that it frightened him. The Walling was
-real, at last. He should bubble with pleasure and
-couldn&#8217;t. He sighed and strolled over to West
-45th Street where he watched the final act of &#8220;Redemption&#8221;
-for the sake of the dive scene, got his
-usual happy shudder from this massed, intricate
-shadow and the faces suddenly projected into the
-vicious light. He must have such scenes at the
-Walling. He must find somewhere a play made
-of scenes, many and diverse, changing from splendour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-to dark vaults. Why, this was the secret of
-the abominable movies! They jerked an audience
-out of one tedious place into a dozen. He
-walked toward Fifth Avenue, thinking, roused because
-the streets seemed more speckled with olive
-cloth. Some transport had disgorged soldiers
-freshly into the city tired of gaping at them.
-Mark enjoyed their tan in the crowded pace of
-Fifth Avenue where women showed powder as
-moist paste on their cheeks in a warmth like that
-of May. A motion picture star detained him at
-a crossing and haughtily leaned from her red, low
-car demanding the rights of a play for her company.
-Mark couldn&#8217;t follow the permutations
-of these women. She had been a chorus girl one
-met at suppers. Now she was superb in her vulgar
-furs with a handsome young Jew beside her
-and a wolfish dog chained on the flying seat.
-Mark got himself away and came home to the
-panelled library where Carlson was stretched under
-three quilts on his wheeled chair gossiping
-with an old comedian about the merits of Ada Rehan.
-Soon the elderly caller left. Mark took
-his chair by Carlson and wondered what he would
-do if his patron died before Gurdy got back.
-Carlson couldn&#8217;t last much longer, the doctors
-said, but his mind was active. He yapped, &#8220;I&#8217;ve
-got a hunch, sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>&#8220;You&#8217;re goin&#8217; to see Gurdy pretty dam&#8217; quick.
-I had a nap before Ferguson came in. Dreamed
-about the kid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;d have cabled if he&#8217;d sailed,&#8221; Mark said,
-&#8220;No, he&#8217;s still stuck in the mud at Saint Nazaire.
-By God, it&#8217;s enough to make a man vomit, reading
-about those damned embarkation camps!
-And he ain&#8217;t an officer. They say the enlisted
-men don&#8217;t even get enough to eat!&#8221; He suddenly
-fumed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well, don&#8217;t cry about it, you big calf,&#8221; said
-Carlson, &#8220;Honest to God, I never saw a feller
-that can cry like you do! You cried like a hose-pipe
-when the kid got shot&mdash;and from all I hear
-it wasn&#8217;t nothin&#8217; but a scratch on his belly. And
-I used to spend hours trying to teach you to shed
-one tear when you was actin&#8217;! You was the
-punkest matiny idol ever drew breath of life!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark chuckled, &#8220;I suppose I was,&#8221; then a hand
-slid down over his shoulder and an olive cuff
-followed it. Mark&#8217;s heart jumped. He dropped
-his head back against Gurdy&#8217;s side and began
-to weep idiotically as he had sworn to himself that
-he wouldn&#8217;t. Old Carlson surveyed the end of
-the trick delightedly. He privately cursed Gurdy
-for standing still and pale when it was clearly the
-right thing to make a fuss. The cub was too
-cool.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Son, son,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>Gurdy hoped that the man would not repeat
-that illogical word in his husky, drumming voice.
-The repetition brought the illusion of joy too
-close. He chewed his lip and wriggled, gave in
-and stooped over Mark. He got out, &#8220;Here,
-I&#8217;ve not had any lunch, Mark,&#8221; and that turned
-Mark into mad action, sent him racing downstairs
-to find the butler.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why the hell didn&#8217;t you kiss him?&#8221; Carlson
-snarled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m twenty&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re a hog,&#8221; the old man meditated. His
-eyes twinkled. He sneered, &#8220;Well, wipe your
-eyes. Here&#8217;s a handkerchief if you ain&#8217;t got
-one.&#8221; He relished the boy&#8217;s blush, watched him
-blink and went on, &#8220;Now, don&#8217;t tell Mark about
-all the women you ruined, neither. He prob&#8217;ly
-thinks you been a saint. And don&#8217;t go spillin&#8217;
-any of this talk about goin&#8217; to work on your own
-like some of these whelps do. Mark&#8217;s got a three
-thousand dollar car comin&#8217; for you and he&#8217;s goin&#8217;
-to pay you a hundred a week to set in the office
-and look wise. And don&#8217;t tell him you didn&#8217;t win
-the war, too. He knows you did. Christ, it was
-bad enough when I&#8217;d got to listen to how Margot
-was runnin&#8217; the Red Cross in London! After
-you went off I come pretty near callin&#8217; up the express
-company and havin&#8217; myself shipped to
-Stockholm! The big calf! Chewin&#8217; the paint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-off the walls every time he heard there&#8217;d been
-fightin&#8217;! Sentymental lunatic! Your papa and
-mamma&#8217;ve got three times more sense about you.
-Get out of here. I got to make up sleep.&#8221;
-He shut his eyes. Two tears ran and were lost in
-the sharp wrinkles of his face. Gurdy gulped
-and walked downstairs, abashed by the sheer
-weight of idolatry.</p>
-
-<p>Mark was twisting the cork out of a champagne
-bottle in the dining room. At once he
-said, &#8220;They&#8217;ll have some eggs up right away,
-sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My God but you&#8217;re thin, Mark!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No exercise. Haven&#8217;t had time to play golf.
-Now, we&#8217;d better get the car and run down to
-Fayettes&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I talked to mother from Camp Merritt. Be
-in Camp Dix tomorrow. I&#8217;ll see them there.
-They can motor over. Only twelve miles.
-Heard from Margot lately?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His uncle beamed saying, &#8220;Says she wants to
-come home, son. I&#8217;ve got to talk to you about
-that. What d&#8217;you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy said quickly, &#8220;Let her come, Mark.
-The fact is, I think she&#8217;s bored. You haven&#8217;t
-seen her since last year? She&#8217;s got a gang of men
-trailing after her and she isn&#8217;t a flirt. Chelsea&#8217;s
-full of bright young painters and things. They
-all come and camp on the doormat. Lady Ilden&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-a sort of fairy godmother, of course.&#8221; He
-lapsed into a sudden state of mind about Margot,
-fondling his glass of champagne. Untrimmed
-discourse on women had amused his first days in
-the army. But the week&#8217;s return in the jammed
-transport had sickened him with the stuffy talk of
-prospective and retrospective desire. It had been
-musky, stifling. He wondered how women, if
-they guessed, would value that broad commentary.
-And how men lied about women! The
-precisian was annoyed to a snort and Mark filled
-his glass again, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, having seen her, the boy wanted
-Margot home. Mark said, &#8220;She wrote me you&#8217;d
-turned out better looking than she thought.
-Knew she&#8217;d think so. And Olive was pleased to
-death with you, of course. How&#8217;s your side
-feel?&mdash;My God, what are those fools doing to
-the eggs!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He rushed into the pantry. Rank pleasure
-swelled in Gurdy. There was no use doing anything
-with the incurable, proud man who drove
-him back to Camp Merritt at dusk with two
-bottles of champagne hidden in his motor coat, invited
-confessions and beamed constantly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only don&#8217;t act like you&#8217;d ever kissed a woman
-in front of your mother, son. Country folks.
-Shock her to death. You any taller? I&#8217;ll call up
-Sanford about some clothes for you. Good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-night, sonny. You go straight to the farm when
-you&#8217;re discharged. I&#8217;ll be down Sunday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>An illusion of happiness beset Gurdy. He
-stood in the green street of the half empty camp
-staring after the motor, the wine bottles wrapped
-in paper under his arm. It was astonishing how
-foolish Mark was, to be sure. But wine or emotion
-warmed the chill air about Gurdy like the
-pour of a hot shower. If Mark wanted to be an
-ass over him, it couldn&#8217;t be helped. He kept
-thinking of his foolish worshipper in the transfer
-to the sandy discomfort of Camp Dix. There the
-Bernamers appeared in a large motor with grandfather
-Walling furred and mittened in the back
-seat. The illusion of happiness deepened into a
-sensuous bath, although his mother had contracted
-more fat and his sisters were too brawny
-for real charm. Gurdy struggled for righteous
-detachment while his brothers candidly goggled
-their admiration and his father examined the purple
-scar that passed dramatically up Gurdy&#8217;s
-milky skin. He found himself blinking and got
-drunk on the second bottle of champagne when his
-family left. But it seemed wiser to surrender to
-the flood of affectionate nonsense for a time. It
-was even convenient that Mark should send a
-tailor down to Fayettesville with clothes rapidly
-confected. On Sunday Mark arrived with a
-small car lettered G.B. in blue on its panel.</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>&#8220;Just the blue Gurdy&#8217;s eyes are,&#8221; Mrs. Bernamer
-drawled.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy understood that maternal feeling was a
-rather shocking symbol on the charts of analysts
-and that Mark probably doted on him for some
-trivial resemblance unconsciously held and engrossed.
-But it was pleasant, being a symbol.
-He drove Mark down into Trenton and talked of
-Margot while they drank bad American Benedictine
-in a seedy hotel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know whether she&#8217;s very clever or simply
-sensible,&#8221; he said, achieving detachment by
-way of Benedictine. &#8220;Anyhow, most cleverness
-is just common sense&mdash;perception.&#8221; His eyes
-darkened. Mark thought in lush comfort that
-Gurdy would marry the girl. Gurdy had friends
-among the right sort of people. Poor Carlson
-would die pretty soon. Gurdy and Margot would
-live at the house, which were best adorned freshly.
-The Benedictine gave out. They drove into the
-twisted lanes behind Trenton and Gurdy talked
-levelly of France. &#8220;Damned humiliating to get
-laid out by a hunk of zinc off a bathtub. Margot
-joshed me about it.... Paris was perfectly
-astonishing! American privates giving parties
-for British admirals and stealing their women.&mdash;I
-ran into a Y. M. C. A. girl who wanted to have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-Fontainebleau made into a reform school. Margot
-says she found one that wanted to have
-George turn Windsor Castle into a hospital for
-the A. E. F.... You mustn&#8217;t mind Margot
-swearing. All the flappers seem to.&mdash;Oh, I met
-Cora Boyle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How&#8217;s she looking?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Handsome.&#8221; Gurdy thought for a second and
-then inquired. &#8220;What did you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark comprehended the stop. He said, &#8220;She
-was the first woman ever took any notice of me.&mdash;Why,
-I suppose she was a kind of ideal. I mean,
-I liked that kind of looks. Lord knows what she
-married me for. Wonder, is that Rand kid still
-married to her? Is? I guess she&#8217;s settled down
-in London for keeps. Well, I want you to look
-at the plans of the Walling, son. They&#8217;ve made
-me a model. Tell me if you see anything
-wrong.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He simmered with joy when Gurdy approved
-the whole plan except the shape of the boxes.
-The boy ran back and forth between Fayettesville
-and the city in his car, asked seemly young men to
-dine in Fifty Fifth Street, read plays and wandered
-with Mark to costumers. People stared at
-him in the restaurants where Mark took him to
-lunch. His tranquil height and his ease drew
-glances. His intolerant comments on the motley
-of opening nights made Mark choke. Sometimes,
-though, Mark found the boy&#8217;s eyes turned
-on him with surprise.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>&#8220;You seem to hang out in Greenwich village a
-lot, Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I kind of like it. Don&#8217;t understand some of
-the talk. The show business is changing, sonny.
-It&#8217;s changed a lot since nineteen fourteen. If
-you&#8217;d told me five years back that a piece like Redemption
-could have a run I&#8217;d have laughed my
-head off. Or that you could mount a play like
-Jones has fixed up this thing at the Plymouth&mdash;all
-low lights and&mdash;what d&#8217;you call it?&mdash;impressionist
-scenery.... The game&#8217;s changed.&mdash;Oh, the
-big money makers&#8217;ll always be hogwash, Gurdy!
-Don&#8217;t bet any other way. I ain&#8217;t such a fool
-as to think that Heaven&#8217;s opened because you can
-put on a piece with a sad ending and some&mdash;well,
-philosophy to it and have it make a little cash.
-No such luck. Only it&#8217;s got so now that when
-some big, fat wench in a lot of duds starts
-throwin&#8217; his pearls back at the man that&#8217;s keepin&#8217;
-her in the third act&mdash;why, there&#8217;s a lot of folks
-out front that say, Oh, hell, and go home. Of
-course, there&#8217;s a lot more that think it&#8217;s slick.&mdash;Lord,
-I&#8217;d like to put on &#8216;Measure for Measure&#8217;
-when we open the Walling!&mdash;You could make
-that look like something.&mdash;I&#8217;ve got to find something
-<i>good</i> to open with. This kid Steve
-O&#8217;Mara&#8217;s sending me up a play about a thug
-that gets wrecked down in Cuba and steals a plantation.
-Ten scenes to it, he says. One of &#8217;em&#8217;s a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-lot of niggers havin&#8217; a Voodoo party. Sounds
-fine. I picked <i>him</i> up down in Greenwich village.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I should think all those half married ladies
-and near anarchists would shock you to death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bosh, brother. I don&#8217;t like &#8217;em enough to
-get shocked at &#8217;em. What&#8217;s there to get shocked
-at? They think so and so and I think the other
-way. If you took to preaching dynamite I&#8217;d be
-pretty worried&mdash;like I would if your mamma
-bobbed her hair and ran off with a tenor. I&#8217;m
-not an old maid just because I&#8217;m in the show business.&#8221;
-He lit a cigarette and added. &#8220;Fifty
-per cent of theatrical managers are old maids.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Just what do you mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, they are. This way. They get used
-to a run of plots and they can&#8217;t see outside that.
-For instance, here&#8217;s a dramatist&mdash;forgotten his
-name&mdash;was trying to sell a piece last year. I
-couldn&#8217;t use it but I thought it was pretty good
-so I sent him over to Loeffler with a note. Next
-day, Loeffler called me up and said I ought to be
-hung for the sake of public morals. This play
-knocked round the offices and every one thought it
-was awful. Why? The hero&#8217;s a chauffeur
-that&#8217;s tired of working, so he marries a rich old
-woman. It&#8217;s something that happens every
-other day in the papers. There ain&#8217;t a week
-that some fifty year old actress doesn&#8217;t marry a
-kid step dancer but they all carried on as if this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-fellow&#8217;d written a play where every one came on
-the stage stark naked and danced the hoochy coochee.
-It wasn&#8217;t a nice idea but where&#8217;s it worse
-than nine tenths these bedroom things or as bad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why wouldn&#8217;t you use it, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, hell, there wasn&#8217;t but one scene and that
-was an interior!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy asked, &#8220;Mark, wouldn&#8217;t you like it if the
-playwrights would go back to the Elizabethan
-idea&mdash;I mean thirty or forty scenes to a play?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;and those bucks were
-right.&#8221; He sat for a little silent, scrawling his
-desk blotter with a pencil, then shyly laughed,
-&#8220;Supposing some one made a play out of my married
-life? What you&#8217;d call the important episodes
-happened all over God&#8217;s earth. Cora got
-me on a farm in Fayettesville, N. J., married in
-Hoboken. Started quarreling in Martin&#8217;s caf.
-Caught her kissing a fellow at Longbranch.
-Never saw him before or since. Owned up she&#8217;d
-lived with three or four men in our flat&mdash;twentieth
-Street, New York. Big scene. God, how
-sick that made me! I was at tea at Mrs. LeMoyne&#8217;s
-when Frank Worthing got me off in a
-corner and told me about her and Jarvis Hope.
-I was sittin&#8217; in the bath tub when she chucked her
-curling irons at me and said she was through.
-That&#8217;s the way things go. Shakespeare was right.
-Crazy? No.&mdash;Come in.&#8221; His secretary brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-Mark a thick manuscript lettered &#8220;Captain Salvador:
-Stephen O&#8217;Mara.&#8221; and withdrew. Mark
-went on, &#8220;But my married life wouldn&#8217;t make
-much of a show&mdash;green kid from the country and
-a&mdash;a Cora Boyle. Pretty ordinary.&#8221; He reflected,
-&#8220;But I don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;s always going to
-be pretty tragic for a kid to find out he&#8217;s married
-a girl thinkin&#8217; she was pure&mdash;as pure as folks are,
-anyhow&mdash;and finds she hadn&#8217;t been. Wasn&#8217;t her
-fault, of course. Started acting when she was
-fourteen. Awful jolt, though. She lied about
-it, too. She was the damnedest liar! I hate
-liars. Well run along and play squash or something,
-sonny. I want to see what O&#8217;Mara&#8217;s
-handed me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He bought the rights to &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221;
-two hours later. Gurdy was willing to rejoice
-with him after he read the Cuban tragedy. Carlson
-yapped, &#8220;The women&#8217;ll hate it, Mark.
-Where&#8217;s your clothes?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bosh,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;there weren&#8217;t any women&#8217;s
-clothes in Ervine&#8217;s &#8216;John Ferguson&#8217; and
-the women ate it alive!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But that fellow Ervine&#8217;s an Englishman, you
-big calf! You ain&#8217;t going to open the Walling
-with a sad piece by an American where there ain&#8217;t
-any duds for the women to gawp at! You&#8217;re off
-your head. Ain&#8217;t I told you a million times that
-the New York woman won&#8217;t swallow a home<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-grown show that&#8217;s tragic unless it&#8217;s all dressed
-up? Stop him, Gurdy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a damned good play, sir,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>He thought it high fortune that Mark should
-find anything so adroit and moving for the Walling&#8217;s
-first play. Some of the critics believed in
-O&#8217;Mara&#8217;s talent. Several artists in scenery were
-asked to submit designs. The pressmen began a
-scattering campaign of notes on O&#8217;Mara and
-hints about the play. A procession of comely
-young women declined the best female part as
-&#8220;unsympathetic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That means no clothes to it,&#8221; Carlson sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But they&#8217;re fools,&#8221; Gurdy insisted, &#8220;It&#8217;s a
-good acting part.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My God,&#8221; the old man screamed, &#8220;don&#8217;t you
-know that no woman wants a part where she can&#8217;t
-show her shape off and wear pearls! And these
-hens that got looks don&#8217;t have to act any more.
-They go to California and get in the movies.
-You talk like actresses were human beings!
-Women don&#8217;t act unless they ain&#8217;t good lookin&#8217;
-or&#8217;ve got brains. You&#8217;ll have to go a long ways
-if you want a good lookin&#8217; wench for that part.
-God, you keep talkin&#8217; like actin&#8217; was some kind of
-an art! It ain&#8217;t. It&#8217;s a game for grown up kids
-that they get paid for. An actor that&#8217;s got any
-brains never gets to be more&#8217;n some one smart in
-comedy. A tragedian&#8217;s nothin&#8217; but a hunk of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-mush inside his head. Catch a girl that&#8217;ll act
-tragical when she can sit on a sofa in a Paris gown
-and have some goop make eyes at her!&mdash;And
-Mark&#8217;ll have a fine time at rehearsals makin&#8217; any
-leadin&#8217; man wear a stubble beard and eat with his
-knife, like in this play. Art!&#8221; and the old man
-fell asleep snorting. Yet his bedroom behind the
-panelled library was dotted with photographs of
-dead actors and actresses. Sometimes his dry
-voice trailed into a sort of tenderness when he
-spoke of James Lewis or Augustin Daly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Softhearted as an egg,&#8221; said Mark, hesitated
-and resumed, &#8220;He&#8217;s got fifty thousand
-apiece for you and Margot in his will, sonny.
-Rest of it goes to his sister&#8217;s children in Sweden.&mdash;What&#8217;s
-this you were saying about running out
-to Chicago?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d rather like to. Lacy Martin&mdash;remember
-him? I roomed with him freshman year at college&mdash;Lacy
-lost his leg in France. He&#8217;s rather
-blue. His mother wrote me that she&#8217;d like me
-to come out. I thought I would.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well.&mdash;I thought I&#8217;d surprise you with it.
-Got a cable from Olive Ilden Thursday. Margot
-sailed Friday. Ought to land day after tomorrow.&#8221;
-He saw the orange level of Gurdy&#8217;s
-cocktail flicker. Then the boy set it down and
-brooded. Mark made his face stolid to watch
-this. The butler served fish and retired without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-noise to his pantry. The tapestry of Chinese
-flowers behind Gurdy&#8217;s chair stirred in the May
-wind. The boy was immobile, fair and trim in
-his chair. He seemed strangely handsome&mdash;a
-long, easy lounging gentleman who hated sharp
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Really think I&#8217;d better go out to Lake Forest,
-Mark. I more or less promised I would. I
-shan&#8217;t be gone more than a&mdash;couple of weeks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Triumph dragged a chuckle from Mark. He
-covered it with, &#8220;Oh, sure! If Lacy&#8217;s got the
-blues, run ahead out and cheer him up.&#8221; The
-boy was in full flight from love, of course, and
-didn&#8217;t want to admit it. Mark doted on him,
-drawled, &#8220;Got all the money you&#8217;ll need?&#8221; and
-was pleased by Gurdy&#8217;s confession that he needed
-a good deal. He gave the boy errands about
-Chicago to aid the retreat. &#8220;There&#8217;s a girl
-named Marryatt playing at the La Salle. Some
-of them think she&#8217;s got distinction. And poke
-around and see if you can rake up a scenery man.
-Take the directions for Captain Salvador along.
-If you find any one that ain&#8217;t just copying Bobby
-Jones or Gordon Craig make him send me
-sketches. And there&#8217;s this poet on a newspaper&mdash;he&#8217;s
-named something like Sandwich&mdash;no, Sanbridge.
-See if he&#8217;s got a play up his sleeve.
-O&#8217;Mara was talking about him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He saw Gurdy off for Chicago, the next noon,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-then set about making lists of successive luncheons
-for Margot. This return must be an ample revenge
-for her waygoing. She wasn&#8217;t, now, the
-small girl whose presence in Miss Thorne&#8217;s school
-had frightened matrons. She was some one protected
-by his celebrity and trained by Olive Ilden.
-He must contrive her content until she married
-Gurdy. She was democratic&mdash;Olive had seen to
-that. Mark had watched her chaff a knot of convalescent
-soldiers in Hyde Park. She wouldn&#8217;t
-care that one of his best friends had risen toward
-management from the rank of a burlesque dancer,
-that another had been an undertaker in Ohio.
-She wouldn&#8217;t mind things like that. He marshalled
-the cleverest of the critics and the young
-women who dealt in publicity. Gurdy would
-bring proper men to call, when he came back from
-his flight. The expanse of her future opened
-like an unfurling robe of exquisite colours. She
-strolled in Mark&#8217;s mind most visibly. He
-hummed, inspecting his house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; Carlson sneered, &#8220;she&#8217;s been footloose
-amongst a pack of dukes and things and you think
-she&#8217;s going to like bein&#8217; mixed up with a lot of&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She won&#8217;t mind,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to mind nothing. She landed on
-the twentieth of that cool May, kissed Mark on
-the nose and told him she had three cases of
-champagne in the hold. The customs inspectors<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-were dazzled stumbling among her trunks.
-A file of other voyagers came to shake hands. A
-great hostess kissed the girl, smiled at Mark and
-said gently that she hoped Mr. Walling would
-bring Margot to luncheon next fall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s quite nice,&#8221; Margot assured him in the
-motor, &#8220;She probably kept your photograph with
-a bunch of violets in a jar in front of it when you
-were a matine&mdash;Oh, how you hate that word!
-How nice your nose is! Where on earth&#8217;s
-Gurdy?&mdash;Lake Forest? Oh, that&#8217;s where all the
-Chicago pig kings live, isn&#8217;t it? They have chateaux
-and moats and exclude&mdash;But it&#8217;s rather rotten
-he isn&#8217;t here. I&#8217;ve a couple of awful French
-novels for him. He speaks such rather remarkable
-French. I can&#8217;t make the right J sounds.
-He&#8217;s such a stately animal. I was awfully
-frightened of him in London. Such a ghastly
-crossing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why, honey?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She stared at him with wide black eyes and said
-more slowly, &#8220;How nicely you say things like that.&mdash;You&#8217;re
-really awfully glad I&#8217;m back, aren&#8217;t
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark choked, &#8220;Here&#8217;s Times Square.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shrugged and leaned back on the blue cushions.
-&#8220;Horrible! But the theatre district in
-London&#8217;s worse, really. The Walling&#8217;ll be on a
-side street, won&#8217;t it? I&#8217;d loathe seeing Walling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-in electric bulbs along here. Be rather as though
-you were running about naked. Did I write you
-about Ronny Dufford&#8217;s new play? Been a most
-tremendous success. You should bring it over.
-That&#8217;s the Astor, isn&#8217;t it? What colour&#8217;s the
-Walling to be inside? Blue? Rather dark
-blue? And swear to me that you won&#8217;t have
-Russian decorations!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I swear, daughter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You old saint,&#8221; said Margot, &#8220;and you&#8217;re still
-the best looking man in the known world!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her lips had a curious, untinted brilliance as
-though the blood might burst from them. Dizzy
-Mark told himself that she wasn&#8217;t the most beautiful
-of women. Her brown face was like his face
-and her father&#8217;s face, too flat. Her hands
-weren&#8217;t small, either, but she wore no rings. Her
-gown was dark and her tam o&#8217;shanter of black
-velvet was inseparable from her hair in the mist
-of his eyes. Silver buckles swayed and twinkled
-when her gleaming feet moved about his house
-and she smiled in a veil of cigarette smoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve simply natural good taste, dad.
-Born, not made. Don&#8217;t think I&#8217;m keen on that
-Venice glass in the dining room. Too heavy.
-Where does Gurdy sleep?&mdash;I snore, you know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t believe it. He sleeps on the top floor
-where the old playroom was.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She threw her head back to laugh and said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-&#8220;Where he used to make such sickening noises on
-the piano when he thought you were petting me
-too much? He&#8217;s a dear. It wouldn&#8217;t be eugenics
-for me to marry him, would it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;See that, Mark?&#8221; Carlson squealed, &#8220;She
-ain&#8217;t been ten minutes in the country and she&#8217;s
-huntin&#8217; a husband? That&#8217;s gratitude!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, you,&#8221; said Margot, spinning on a heel,
-&#8220;If you were ninety seven years younger I&#8217;d
-marry you myself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She teased the old man relentlessly. She
-teased Mark before his guests at the first luncheon.
-Her variations appalled the man. She
-seemed to know all the printable gossip of New
-York. She spoke to older women with a charming
-patience, played absurd English songs to
-amuse Mark&#8217;s pet critic and got the smallest of
-the managers in a loud good temper by agreeing
-with his debatable views on stage lighting. Most
-of these, his friends, had forgotten that she was
-Mark&#8217;s niece. Their compliments were made as
-on a daughter. He felt the swift spread of a
-ripple; editors of fashion monthlies telephoned to
-ask for photographs; the chief of a Sunday supplement
-wanted her views on the American Red
-Cross; a portrait painter came calling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Silly ass,&#8221; said Margot, &#8220;I met him in Devonshire.
-I hate being painted. You&#8217;ve never had
-a portrait done? Dreary. One has to sit and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-smirk.&#8221; She went fluttering a yellow frock up the
-library to find an ash tray, came back smoking a
-cigarette, neared Mark&#8217;s chair then veered off to
-pat Carlson&#8217;s jaw.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You used to set like a kitchen stove in one
-spot for an hour at a time,&#8221; Carlson said, &#8220;Now
-you&#8217;re all over the place.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;One has to move about in England to keep
-warm. Dad, I wrote Ronny Dufford to send
-you a copy of his play. Ronny&#8217;s land poor, you
-know? It&#8217;s made mountains of money but I
-don&#8217;t think he&#8217;s half out of debt, yet. Such a nice
-idiot. He liked Gurdy such a lot. What the
-deuce an&#8217; all is Gurdy doing in Chicago? Bargin&#8217;
-about with the pigstickers?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She shed her mixture of slangs when his
-broker&#8217;s wife came to luncheon. Mark didn&#8217;t
-think it affected that she mainly talked of titled
-folk to the smart, reticent woman. Mrs. Villay
-invited her to Southampton before leaving.
-Margot shook her hair free of two silver combs
-and shrugged as the front door shut. &#8220;I suspect
-her of being a ferocious snob. Sweet enough,
-though. Fancy she doesn&#8217;t read anything but
-Benson and the late Mrs. Ward.&mdash;Oh, no, Mrs.
-Ward isn&#8217;t late, is she? Simply lamented.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark laughed, &#8220;Let&#8217;s go talk to Mr. Carlson.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You always call him Mister. Just why, darling?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>&#8220;Well, he&#8217;s forty years older than me, sister.
-And he made me. He&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tosh! You made yourself! Let&#8217;s walk
-over and see how the Walling&#8217;s getting on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He wallowed in this warm enchantment for ten
-days. Margot dismissed herself to Fayettesville
-on the first breath of heat. He went down to see
-her established in the gaping adoration of the
-family. He thought it hard on the Bernamer
-girls. He had hinted boarding school for these
-virgins but the Bernamers, trained by moving pictures,
-were wary. Yet Margot was clearly born
-to captivate women. He wrote to Gurdy at Lake
-Forest: &#8220;It was nice to see her tone herself
-down for your grandfather and your mother. I
-told her she had better not smoke except with
-your dad in the cowbarn. You kept telling me I
-must not be shocked. What is there to get
-shocked at? Young girls are not as prissy as
-they were when I was a pup.&mdash;Hell of a row coming
-on with the actors. We are trying to keep
-things quiet but it looks like a strike. But some
-of the men still think an actor is a cross between
-a mule and a hog. Letter from Olive Ilden says
-she is going to Japan pretty soon and will come
-this way. I see in the London news that Cora
-Boyle has signed up with the Celebrities and is
-coming over to be filmed as Camille or The Queen
-of Sheba. You are wrong about &#8216;Heartbreak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-House.&#8217; It is a conversation, not a play. I wish
-Shaw would do something like Csar and Cleopatra again.
-They start work on the sets for
-Captain Salvador next week at the studio. Shall
-have two sets made for the Voodoo scene and try
-both on the road before we open the Walling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy reflected that it was time to come home.
-Then he put it off. Lake Forest was pleasant.
-He was fond of his host. It was prudent to test
-the pull of this feeling for Margot. The thing
-augmented now that he couldn&#8217;t talk of her. A
-strict detachment from passion was silly, after all.
-But he was annoyed with himself as the passage
-of any tall and blackhaired woman across a lawn
-would interrupt the motion of his blood. He set
-his brain tasks, meditated the girl at Fayettesville,
-hoped that she wouldn&#8217;t singe the acute
-American skin of his young brothers by comments
-on the national arms. His sisters had probably
-made their own experiments with cigarettes.
-They were sensible lasses, anyhow, if given to
-endless gush about moving pictures. His young
-host&#8217;s sisters, amiable, blond girls were much the
-same thing, rarified by trips to Europe, suave
-frocks and some weak topics in the cerebral
-change. They held Dunsany a fascinating dramatist
-and thought there was something to be said
-for communism. Chicago puzzled him with its
-summer negligence and the candour of its wealth,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-with the air of stressed vice in the Loop restaurants
-and the sudden change from metropolis to a
-country town within the city limits. It seemed
-absurd that the listless, polished wife of a hundred
-million dollars should return from Long
-Island to give a dance in honor of a travelling
-English poet held lowly in Chelsea, described by
-Olive Ilden as a derivative angleworm. At this
-dance he heard of Margot from an unknown
-woman with whom he waltzed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I saw you in London, last winter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I was there. Funny I don&#8217;t remember&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You were in uniform with Margot Walling
-and Lady Ilden. At a play. Margot was wearing
-one of her yellow frocks. I was the other
-side of the gangway. I wondered about you,
-rather. Margot always snubs me. I&#8217;m a countess
-of sorts and it always interests me when
-Americans snub me.&mdash;Let&#8217;s get something to
-drink. I don&#8217;t dance well and you must be in
-torments&mdash;What&#8217;s your name?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She was a lank, tired creature in a rowdy gown
-sewn with false pearls that hissed theatrically as
-she slumped into a chair on the lit terrace.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cousin, eh?&mdash;Well, Margot amuses me.
-She&#8217;s the genuine aristocrat, you know? Take
-what you want and to hell with the rest. Pity so
-few Americans catch the idea. Imagine any continental
-woman coming a thousand miles to give a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-dance for a cheapjack penny poet like this sweep.
-Afraid he won&#8217;t mention her in his travel book,
-I dare say. Run and get me a drink. Something
-mild.&#8221; A youth at the buffet told him this was
-the Countess of Flint. She sipped wine cup, refused
-a cigarette and asked, &#8220;Where did you go
-to school? Saint Andrew&#8217;s? My brothers did
-Groton. Beautiful training wasted on the desert
-air. That&#8217;s the trouble with the American game.
-Did you ever think how much good it would have
-done the beastly country to have had about four
-generations of a hard and fast aristocracy&mdash;plenty
-of money, no morals, quantities of manner? It&#8217;s
-simply a waste of time and money to train lads
-and then turn them loose in a herd of rich women
-all afraid of their dressmakers. What a zero the
-average American woman is!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hush,&#8221; he said, &#8220;That&#8217;s treason! You&#8217;ll be
-shot at sunrise!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Unsalted porridge. Utter vacuum. Not a
-vacuum either because she&#8217;s a bully, usually. And
-a prude.&mdash;Is Margot going to marry Ronny
-Dufford?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy jumped, inescapably startled. He said,
-&#8220;Colonel Dufford? The General Staff man who
-writes plays? I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It wouldn&#8217;t be a bad thing. Ronny&#8217;s all right&mdash;the
-gentleman Bohemian touch and I dare say
-she has money.&#8221; The lank woman coughed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-went on, &#8220;She&#8217;ll take on an Englishman in any
-case, though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s in New York.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, she&#8217;ll get fed with that directly and trot
-home.&#8221; The woman locked her gaunt arms behind
-her careless hair and yawned at the amber
-moon above the clipped pines. &#8220;New York&#8217;s
-frightful! Stuffed middle westerners squatting
-in hotels trying to look smart. Place is absolutely
-run by women. Getting more respectable
-every time I go through. Haven&#8217;t had any patience
-with New York since the Stanford White
-murder. Imagine all the bloods running to cover
-and swearing they&#8217;d never even met White because
-he&#8217;d been shot in a mess about a woman!
-Imagine it! I always bought Harding Davis&#8217;s
-books after that because he had the sand to get up
-and say he liked White, in print. But that&#8217;s
-Egyptian history.&#8221; She began to cough fearfully.
-The pearls clattered on her gown.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve taken cold.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Cigarettes. Are you married?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good lord, no. Only been twenty-one a
-couple of weeks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How odd that must be! Twenty-one a couple
-of weeks ago. And you went to France and got
-shot. Singular child!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why singular?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, I&#8217;ve been amusing myself at Saranac&mdash;at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-a house party, with a social register and an army
-list. A war where eighty per cent. of the educated
-men&mdash;I mean the smart universities&mdash;the
-bloods under thirty all went and hid themselves.
-It&#8217;s not pretty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t you exag&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not in the least. I had fifty American officers
-convalescing at my husband&#8217;s place in Kent
-and half of them were freight clerks from Iowa.
-What can you expect when the American woman
-brings her son up to be a coward and his father
-makes him a thief? And naturally the women
-despise the men. Who on earth wants an American
-husband?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They seem to find wives, somehow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She coughed, rising, &#8220;Oh, travel&#8217;s expensive.&#8221;
-Then she gestured to the orange oblongs of the
-ballroom windows. &#8220;D&#8217;you think any one of those
-women would hesitate a minute between being the
-next lady of the White House or the mistress of
-the Prince of Wales? Of course not! Give
-Margot my love. Good-bye. Too chilly out
-here.&#8221; She rattled away.</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy dropped into the chair and stared after
-her. He should tabulate this woman at once
-with her romantic illusions of aristocracy and
-patriotism. Margot supervened and seemed to
-move across the moony stones of the terrace.
-He thought frantically of Colonel Dufford. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-thought solidly of marriage for ten minutes.
-Beyond doubt he was in love with Margot. He
-stirred in the chair, repeating maxims. Passion
-wasn&#8217;t durable. He might tire of her. He argued
-against emotion and blinked at the gold
-lamps on the bastard French face of this house.
-He was too young to select sensibly, didn&#8217;t want
-to be sensible, suddenly. His pulse rose. He marvelled
-at love. In the morning he announced his
-present departure. At noon he had a special delivery
-letter from his youngest brother, Edward
-Bernamer, Junior, a placid boy of thirteen interested
-in stamp collecting. The scrawl was the
-worse for that complacency.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear Gurd, For the love of Mike come on
-home and help take care of Margot E. Walling.
-She has got mamma and the girls all up in the air.
-Grandfather is getting ready to shoot her. I
-heard him talking to dad about writing Uncle
-Mark to take her away. I sort of like her.
-Eggs and Jim think she is hell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy came whirling east to New York and
-found Mark at the 45th Street Theatre, humming
-over the model for a scene of &#8220;Captain Salvador.&#8221;
-But plainly Mark knew nothing of any
-fissure in the sacred group at Fayettesville. He
-was busy rehearsing a comedy, had been to the
-farm only once. In any event Mark mustn&#8217;t be
-hurt. Gurdy took breath and delicately put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-forth, &#8220;I want you to do something damned extravagant,
-Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Easy, sonny. Just got the estimate for the
-mirrors at the Walling. Not more than ten
-thousand, please!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not as bad as that. Get a cottage on Long
-Island for July and August. The farm&#8217;s all
-right for Margot for a while. But grandfather
-goes to bed at nine. The kids play rags on the
-phonograph all afternoon. It gets tiresome
-after a while. I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, son,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;I&#8217;m not so thickheaded
-I can&#8217;t see that sister&#8217;ll get bored down there.&#8221;
-He beamed, thinking Gurdy superb in grey
-tweeds, his white skin overlayed with pale tan.
-&#8220;No, I expect I&#8217;d get bored with the cows and
-chickens if I was there enough.&mdash;And we ought to
-have some kind of a country place of our own.&mdash;There&#8217;s
-some friend of Arthur Hopkins has a
-place on Long Island he wants to let.&mdash;Olive
-Ilden&#8217;ll be here in July and we ought to have a
-cottage somewhere. I don&#8217;t think your dad and
-Olive&#8217;d have much to talk over.&#8221; Mark grinned.
-Gurdy laughed, curling on a corner of the desk,
-approving the man&#8217;s common shrewdness. Mark
-patted his palms together. &#8220;Look, you pike on
-down to the farm. Margot&#8217;s got your car there.
-You fetch her up in the morning and you two go
-look at this cottage. I&#8217;ll &#8217;phone Hopkins and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-find where it is. Oh, here&#8217;s this piece Margot&#8217;s
-friend Dufford&#8217;s sent over. I hear it&#8217;s doing a
-fair business in London but nothing to brag of.
-Read it and see what you think. Get going, son.
-You can catch the three o&#8217;clock for Trenton.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy strove with this fragility in neat prose
-all the way to Trenton. It had to do with a
-climber domiciled by mistake in the house of a
-stodgy young Earl. It was wordy and tedious.
-The name, &#8220;Todgers Intrudes,&#8221; made him grunt.
-He laughed occasionally at the tinkling echoes of
-Wilde and Maugham. It might be passable in
-London where the lethal jokes on &#8220;Dora&#8221; and
-&#8220;Brass Hats&#8221; would be understood. He diligently
-tried to be just to Colonel Dufford&#8217;s art
-which served to keep his pulse down and his mind
-remote from the approaching discomfort. Margot
-wasn&#8217;t perfect. She had upset the family.
-It was best to get her quickly away from Fayettesville.
-He hired a battered car at Trenton. The
-Fayettesville Military Academy was closing for
-the summer, by all signs. Lads bustled toward
-the station towing parents and gaudy sisters in
-the beginning of sunset. He overtook his three
-brothers idling home toward the farm and gave
-them a lift. No one spoke of Margot directly.
-Edward, his correspondent, smiled sideways at
-Gurdy and drawled, &#8220;Must have been having a
-damn good time in Chicago, Gurd,&#8221; but nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-else was said. The car panted into the stone
-walled dooryard. His grandfather waved a
-linen clad arm at Gurdy from the padded chair
-on the veranda. His sisters accepted the usual
-candy and hid a motion picture magazine from
-him, giggling. Mrs. Bernamer was at a funeral
-in Trenton. Gurdy found Bernamer in the dairy
-yard studying a calf. It was always easy to be
-frank with the saturnine, long farmer. His
-father didn&#8217;t suffer from illusions. They sat on
-the frame of the water tower and lit cigarettes,
-before speech.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How&#8217;s Margot been behaving, dad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You sweet on her, son?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I like her. How&#8217;s she been acting?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer pulled his belt tight and lifted his
-hard face toward the sky. Gurdy felt the mute
-courtesy of his pause. The man had a natural
-scorn of tumult. He lived silently and, perhaps,
-thought much. He said, &#8220;This is just as much
-Mark&#8217;s place as it is ours. He&#8217;s the best feller
-livin&#8217;. We all know that. And she&#8217;s Joe&#8217;s
-daughter.&#8221; Something boiled up in his blue eyes.
-He cried, &#8220;What in hell! You&#8217;re as good as she
-is, ain&#8217;t you? You can come home and act like
-we wasn&#8217;t mud underfoot! Who the hell&#8217;s she?&#8221;
-His wrath slid into laughter. He pulled his belt
-tighter and winked at Gurdy. &#8220;It&#8217;s kind of
-funny hearin&#8217; her cuss, though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>&#8220;She over does that, a little. Just what&#8217;s the
-trouble, dad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t tell you, son. She&#8217;s sand in the cream.
-It ain&#8217;t her smokin&#8217;. I miss my guess if the girls
-ain&#8217;t tried that.&mdash;She kind of puts me in mind of
-that Boyle wench Mark married. She&#8217;s got the
-old man all worried. Your mamma&#8217;s scared to
-death of her. So&#8217;s the girls.&mdash;She ain&#8217;t so
-damned polite it hurts her any.... Say, I
-wouldn&#8217;t hurt Mark&#8217;s feelings for the world&mdash;And
-I notice she don&#8217;t carry on so high and
-mighty when Mark&#8217;s here, neither.&mdash;Ain&#8217;t there
-some place else she could go?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy had a second of futile rage that divided
-itself between Margot and his family. This
-wasn&#8217;t within remedy. She had absorbed the
-attitudes, the impatience of worlds exterior to the
-flat peace of the farm. He grinned at his father.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. I&#8217;m going to take her off. Mark&#8217;s got
-more sense than you think, dad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure. Mark&#8217;s got plenty of sense when he
-ain&#8217;t dead cracked over a thing. Don&#8217;t tell him
-I&#8217;ve been squalling. Mebbe that Englishwoman
-spoiled her, lettin&#8217; her gallivant too much.
-Mebbe it&#8217;s her father comin&#8217; out in her. Between
-us, Joe was tougher&#8217;n most boys. You&#8217;ll
-likely find her down in the orchard smokin&#8217; her
-head off. It&#8217;s all kind of funny ... and then it
-ain&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>She wasn&#8217;t smoking. She sat with a novel
-spread on her yellow lap and the bole of an apple
-tree behind her head. There was a shattered
-plate of ruddy glow about her. The pose had
-the prettiness of a drowsy child. She was, her
-lover thought, a bragging child, lonesome for
-cleverness, annoyed by stolidity. In the vast
-green of the orchard she seemed small. He whistled.
-She rose, her hair for a moment floating,
-then laughed and threw the book away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank God, that&#8217;s you! I thought it was
-one of&mdash;O, any one!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a shrill, unknown jerk in her voice.
-She came running and took his arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me something about civilization&mdash;quick!
-You don&#8217;t want to talk about the fil-lums do you?
-Or whether Jane Rupp&#8217;s going to marry that Coe
-feller or&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bored?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;to death! How do you stand it?
-How do you stand it?... I knew they&#8217;d be
-common but I didn&#8217;t think they&#8217;d be such
-bloody&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look out,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>But the girl&#8217;s red lips had retracted. She was
-shivering. She had lost her charm of posture.
-She cried, &#8220;Oh, yes! They&#8217;re our people and all
-the rest of that tosh! I&#8217;m not a hypocrite. It&#8217;s
-a stable! A stable!&#8221; Her breath choked her.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-She gasped, &#8220;Get me out of here! I&#8217;m used to
-what you call real people!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She loosed his sleeve and patted her hair. But
-some inner spring shook her. Scarlet streaks appeared
-in her face. She babbled, &#8220;He must be
-mad! Of course he&#8217;s sentimental about them&mdash;about
-the place&mdash;the old place&mdash;It&#8217;s the way he is
-about Carlson! My God, why should he think I
-can stand it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Something hummed in Gurdy&#8217;s head. His
-hands heated. He stood shuffling a foot in the
-grass and looked from her at the green intricate
-branches. He must keep cool. He whispered,
-&#8220;Can&#8217;t you find anything&mdash;well, funny in it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all funny rather the way an old dress is!&mdash;Why
-should he think I could stay here?
-Three weeks! Of course, he hasn&#8217;t any breed&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shut up,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;That&#8217;ll be all! We
-were born here. Mark took us and had us
-dressed and looked after&mdash;trained. I&#8217;m not going
-to laugh at them. I can&#8217;t.&mdash;I&#8217;ll be damned
-if I&#8217;ll hear you laugh at Mark. Yes, he&#8217;s sentimental!
-If he wasn&#8217;t, d&#8217;you think he&#8217;d have
-bothered about taking care of you&mdash;of us? The
-family&#8217;s sacred to him. He loves them. He&#8217;s
-that kind.&mdash;Stop laughing!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He hated her. There was no beauty left.
-Her face had shrivelled in this fire. She was
-swiftly and horribly like an angry trull. She said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-&#8220;Sentimentalist! You&#8217;re a damned milk and
-sugar sentimentalist like&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;that&#8217;s out of some book!...
-All right. Mark&#8217;s going to take a place on
-Long Island. We&#8217;ll go up in the morning.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He tramped off. The orchard became a whirl
-of green flame that seared then left him cold.
-He was tired. His body felt like stone, heavy
-and dead. The illusion of desire was gone out of
-Gurdy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">VII<br />
-
-Todgers Intrudes</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OLIVE ILDEN was detained and surrendered
-her mid July sailing. Her brother
-died. This did not grieve her; they had
-been on strained terms. But she was unwilling to
-offend his daughters. Offence had grown hateful
-with years. The personal matter flung to and fro
-among critics wearied her. It wasn&#8217;t amusing to
-hear that an elderly novelist was &#8220;a doddering
-relic of the Victorian era.&#8221; She envisaged the
-man&#8217;s pain. Thus, she bore the formalities
-of her brother&#8217;s passing and so missed three
-liners. About her, London recaptured something
-of its tireless motion. She wished for Margot
-and the youth Margot had kept parading through
-the quiet house. She hoped that the girl&#8217;s frankness
-never shocked Mark and puzzled again over
-the rise of that frankness. In her first two English
-years the child had been sedate, almost solemn,
-reading a great deal and talking primly. Then
-her conversation had risen to a rattle. It must be
-rattling mightily in New York which Olive still
-fancied a place of cheerful freedom. Letters recorded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-the change from Fayettesville to a cottage
-on the Long Island shore: &#8220;Cottage was frightful
-but dad behaved quite as if he was mounting a
-play in a hurry. We drove from shop to shop and
-all the stuff came roaring along in motor trucks.
-I went to Southampton and camped with a rather
-nice woman, Mrs. Corliss Stannard, who picked
-me up coming across. It was dull as Westminster
-Abbey as every one kept cursing the Prohibition
-amendment. But dad had the cottage&mdash;(fourteen
-rooms and four baths)&mdash;all decorated by the
-time I got back. Some decentish friends of Gurdy
-live near here. The men are all Goths and the
-women are fearfully stiff but a broker proposed
-last night at a dance and I felt rather silly, as he
-has just been divorced two days and I hardly
-knew his name. But dad has bought an option
-to &#8216;Todgers Intrudes.&#8217;&#8221; Then, &#8220;Dad very busy
-in town. The actors are threatening a strike.
-Gurdy pretends that he does not like &#8216;Todgers Intrudes.&#8217;
-For a man who did a smart school and
-who knows his way about Gurdy is rather heavy.
-Rather decent lunch today. Dad brought down
-one of the other managers who talks through his
-nose and is a duck. He taught me how to do a
-soft shoe step.&#8221; And later, &#8220;Dad very motionn
-about a tragedy he is putting on in the autumn.
-It is rather thrilling. He means to open
-The Walling with it. Gurdy does not fancy &#8216;Todgers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-Intrudes.&#8217; He thinks himself a Bolshevik or
-something and I dare say the county family business
-in it annoys him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after this, while the letter was
-fresh in mind Olive met Ronald Dufford on Regent
-Street. He took her congratulations on the
-American sale of his play with a dubious air,
-swung his stick and said, &#8220;Thanks. Fancy Margot
-made her guv&#8217;nor take it on. Between ourselves
-it hasn&#8217;t more than just paid. You&#8217;re going
-to the States, aren&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Next week. Yes, I think Margot had her
-father buy the play, Ronny. It&#8217;s my sad duty to
-warn him that it hasn&#8217;t been what the Yankees
-call a three bagger&mdash;whatever that means.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The playwright grinned amiably, saying,
-&#8220;Rather wish you would. My things haven&#8217;t
-done well in the States. I&#8217;m not so keen on being
-known as a blight, out there. Walling&#8217;s
-paid me two hundred pounds, no less, for American
-rights. Charitable lad he must be!&mdash;I say,
-I hear that Cossy Rand&#8217;s gone over to play for
-him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s Cossy Rand?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cora Boyle&#8217;s little husband. Nice thing.
-You&#8217;ve met him? He rehearsed us for that
-thing of mine at Christmas. A thin beggar
-with&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>&#8220;Of course. I&#8217;ve even danced with him but he
-passed out of the other eye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But isn&#8217;t it rather odd for Walling to take on
-his ex-wife&#8217;s present husband? Bit unusual?
-You&#8217;ve always told me that Walling&#8217;s a conservative
-sort.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why shouldn&#8217;t Walling take him on, Ronny?
-The man&#8217;s rather good, isn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fairish. Frightfully stiff. He played the
-Earl in &#8216;Todgers&#8217; while Ealy was fluing.&mdash;What
-I meant was that it seems odd Walling should
-cable him to come over. But I&#8217;ll be awfully
-bucked if old &#8216;Todgers&#8217; gets along in the States.
-&#8217;Tisn&#8217;t Shaw, you know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive was lightly vexed with Margot. The
-girl was irresponsible when she wanted something
-for a friend. But the trait was commendable;
-Olive still ranked personal loyalty higher than
-most static virtues. But &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221; was
-a dreary business. She spoke of it to Mark when
-he met her at the New York pier. The idolator
-chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The actors have struck. I hope Margot&#8217;ll
-forget about the thing before the strike&#8217;s over.
-She likes Dufford? Well, that&#8217;s all the excuse
-she needed. She isn&#8217;t&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Are you letting her stamp on your face, old
-man?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>&#8220;It don&#8217;t hurt. She don&#8217;t weigh a heap. She
-says Dufford&#8217;s poor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His eyes were dancing. He wore a yellow
-flower in his coat and patted Olive&#8217;s arm as he
-steered her to the lustrous blue car. &#8220;We&#8217;ll go
-up to my house for lunch. Mr. Carlson&#8217;s crazy to
-see you. Mustn&#8217;t mind if he curses at you. We&#8217;ll
-go on down to the shore after lunch. Where&#8217;s
-Sir John, m&#8217;lady?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Malta. Shall I see Gurdy? The nicest
-child!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t he? I&#8217;ve got him reading plays.&#8221; Mark
-soared into eulogies, came down to state, &#8220;This
-is Broadway,&#8221; as the car plunged over the tracks
-between two drays.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If that&#8217;s Broadway,&#8221; Olive considered, &#8220;I
-quite understand why half of New York lives in
-Paris. I do want to see Fifth Avenue. The sky-scrapers
-disappointed me but Arnold Bennett says
-Fifth Avenue&#8217;s really dynamic.&#8221; A moment after
-when the car faced the greasy slope of asphalt she
-said, &#8220;Bennett&#8217;s mad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark sighed, &#8220;It&#8217;s an ugly town. But this
-street&#8217;s nice at sunset, in winter. It turns a kind of
-purple.... It was bully when the women wore
-violets. They don&#8217;t wear real flowers any more.&mdash;You
-used to smell violets everywhere. Violets
-and furs and cigar smoke. I used to like it.&#8221;
-His eyes sparkled on the revocation. He smiled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-at the foul asphalt and the drooping flags of
-shops where the windows gave out a torturing
-gleam.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You great boy,&#8221; said Olive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Boy? Be forty-one the second of November.&mdash;Oh,
-awful sorry about your brother, Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not. Gerald was null and void. I never
-even discovered where he found the energy to
-marry and beget daughters. Margot&#8217;s lived more
-at the age of eighteen than Gerald had at fifty.
-I don&#8217;t suppose that you can understand how I can
-slang my own family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, sure. Because my folks are all nice it
-don&#8217;t follow I think every one ought to be crazy
-about theirs. Did he have a son?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. The land goes to our cousin&mdash;Shelmardine
-of Potterhanworth&mdash;that idiot his wife
-pushed into Peerage. She was one of the managing
-Colthursts. Loathsome woman. Her son&#8217;s
-a V.C. though.&mdash;Oh, this improves!&#8221; The car
-passed Forty Fifth Street. Olive gazed ahead,
-cheered by the statelier tone of the white avenue.
-Mark wondered how a woman who had lost both
-children could yet smile at the dignity of Saint
-Patrick&#8217;s and again at the homesick bewilderment
-of her maid getting down before his house.</p>
-
-<p>Old Carlson bobbed his head to this lady, abandoning
-his ancient fancy that she had been Mark&#8217;s
-mistress. He studied her grey hair and the worn,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-sharp line of her face. Then he cackled that she
-was to blame for turning Margot into a &#8220;sassy
-turnip.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dealings with turnips have always been
-conducted through a cook. Has she been shocking
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ma&#8217;am,&#8221; said Carlson, &#8220;You can&#8217;t shock me.
-I was in the show business from eighteen sixty-nine
-to nineteen fourteen. I lugged a spear in
-the &#8216;Black Crook&#8217; and I was a gladyator when the
-Police arrested McCullough for playin&#8217; Spartacus
-in his bare legs. No, Margot can&#8217;t shock me any
-more&#8217;n a kitten.&#8221; He rolled a cigarette shakily,
-spilling tobacco on his cerise quilt. Olive held a
-match for him. He coughed, &#8220;But you&#8217;d ought
-of seen her ballyrag Mark into buyin&#8217; this English
-piece&mdash;What the hell do you call it, Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Todgers Intrudes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a name for you! Gurdy don&#8217;t like it.
-I say it&#8217;s hogwash. Maggie, she set on a table
-smokin&#8217; her cheroot and just made the big calf
-buy it.... She did, Mark. So don&#8217;t stand
-there lookin&#8217; like Charlie Thorne in &#8216;Camille&#8217;!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark was stirring with laughter at the old
-man&#8217;s venom. He said, &#8220;I told Olive Margot
-made me buy it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; Olive said, &#8220;if you let Margot run your
-affairs you&#8217;ll have strange creatures from darkest
-Chelsea mounting all your plays and flappers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-who&#8217;ve acted twice in a charity show playing
-Monna Vanna. She made my poor husband buy
-a cubist portrait of Winston Churchill some pal of
-hers painted. When he found it was meant to be
-Churchill he took to his bed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Hopkins, Mr. Williams,&#8221; said the butler
-against Mark&#8217;s swift, &#8220;Ask &#8217;em to go to the drawing
-room. &#8217;Xcuse me, Olive. Got to go talk
-strike a minute.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She looked about the sinless library with its
-severe panels and blue rug then at Mark&#8217;s patron&mdash;an
-exhumed Pharaoh, his yellow hawk face and
-bloodless hands motionless, the cigarette smoking
-in a corner of his mouth. He had just the pathos
-of oncoming death. He squeaked, &#8220;Mark&#8217;s busy
-as a pup with fleas. Actors strikin&#8217;! The lazy
-hounds! It&#8217;s enough to make Gus Daly turn in
-his grave!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve no sympathy with them?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not a speck! The show business is war and
-war&#8217;s hell. Here&#8217;s this Boyle onion Mark was
-married to, Bill Loeffler sends for her to come
-back from England and get a thousand a week to
-play in a French piece. Pays her passage. Then
-what? Minute she sets foot on land she grabs
-a movie contract and pikes off to California.
-She&#8217;s a hot baby, she is! Actors!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hear that Mark&#8217;s engaged her husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That slimjim sissy from Ioway? Not much!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>&#8220;Is Rand an American?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He-ell, yes! He&#8217;s old Quincy Rand&#8217;s Son
-that used to run the Opera House in Des Moines.
-He run off with a stock comp&#8217;ny that played Montreal
-and got to talkin&#8217; English. I told Margot
-that and she was mad enough to bust.&mdash;Say, you
-British are cracked, lettin&#8217; a pack of actors loose
-in your houses like they was human&mdash;&#8221; He fell
-asleep. The nurse came to take the cigarette
-from his lips. Olive strolled off to examine the
-shelves packed tightly with books. Here was the
-medley of Mark&#8217;s brain&mdash;volumes of Whyte
-Melville mingled with unknown American novels,
-folios on decoration, collected prints from the
-European galleries. A copy of &#8220;Capital&#8221; surprised
-her but she found Gurdy&#8217;s signature dated,
-&#8220;Yale College, November, 1916,&#8221; on the first
-page. Gurdy came up the white stairway and
-saw the black gown with relief. Lady Ilden
-could be a buffer between Margot and himself.
-There would be less need of visits to the seashore
-house. He led the Englishwoman into the broad
-hall.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Something odd has just happened, Gurdy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Carlson swear at you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Before, not at. But he tells me that Mark
-did not send for Cosmo Rand to act in something
-over here whereas Ronny Dufford most distinctly
-told me that Mark did. It interested me because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-Mark&#8217;s so coy about his old wife and it seemed
-queer that he&#8217;d cable for her husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I expect Rand&#8217;s lying a little, for advertisement.
-No, Mark didn&#8217;t send for him. He
-never engages people to come from England.
-Has Rand come over? According to Margot
-he&#8217;s such an idol in London that it&#8217;d take an act
-of Parliament to get him away. Miss Boyle&#8217;s
-here. We saw her at lunch in the Algonquin and
-she patronized Mark for a minute. Didn&#8217;t Rand
-play some part in this &#8216;Todgers Intrudes&#8217; piffle
-in London?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Which reminds me,&#8221; said Olive, &#8220;Margot
-made Mark take that? Is she making him cover
-her with emeralds and give masked balls?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy said honestly, &#8220;No, not at all. We&#8217;ve
-had some house parties&mdash;some friends of mine
-and some of the reviewers and so on. She seems
-to be amusing herself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she hasn&#8217;t shocked Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why should she?&#8221; Gurdy laughed, leaning on
-the white handrail, &#8220;she doesn&#8217;t do any of the
-things he dislikes seeing women do. She doesn&#8217;t
-drink anything, for instance, and she doesn&#8217;t
-paint. When did she go in for pacifism&mdash;not
-that I&#8217;ve any objection to it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That was a way of helping me out when my
-boy fell, I think. She raged about the war as a
-sort of outlet for me. Really, she enjoyed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-war tremendously. As most girls did. Is she still
-raving about the slaughter of the artist?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The slaughter of actors. Some Englishman&mdash;an
-actor&mdash;said that too many actors slacked
-and she lit on him. He mentioned half
-a dozen&mdash;can&#8217;t remember them.&mdash;You told me in
-London that she wanted to act?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Has she been teasing Mark&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. But I think she could.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear boy, I&#8217;ve seen her in amateur things
-twice and she was appalling! Vivacity isn&#8217;t
-ability. Of course she has a full equipment in the
-way of looks.&mdash;You mustn&#8217;t get dazzled over
-Margot, Gurdy.&#8221; His face was blank. Olive
-chanced a probe. &#8220;I forbid you to fall in love
-with her, either. You&#8217;re cousins and it&#8217;s not
-healthy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not thinking of it,&#8221; said Gurdy, red, and
-so convinced Olive that he was deep in love. But
-the dying blush left him grave. He stood listening
-to the slow drawl of Mark&#8217;s voice below them
-and wondering what tone would overtake its
-husky music if Margot should turn on the worshipper,
-screaming and hateful. He wondered at
-himself, too. His passion had blown out. It
-had no ash, no regret. He was free of anger,
-even, and he had done the girl mental justice.
-He didn&#8217;t want her back.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You look rather done up, old man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>&#8220;War nerves. We&#8217;ve all got them. And I&#8217;m
-reading plays and some of them make me howl.
-Such awful junk! &#8216;Don&#8217;t, don&#8217;t look at me like
-that. I&#8217;m a good woman, and you have taken
-from me the only thing I had to love in the whole
-world.&#8217; That sort of stuff. And the plays for reform
-are as bad as the ones against it. I don&#8217;t
-know why people always lose their sense of
-humour when they start talking economics!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Old man, when you&#8217;ve lived to be forty you&#8217;ll
-find out that only one person in a thousand can
-resist a sentimentalism on their side of the
-question. And it&#8217;s almost always a sentimentalist
-who writes plays on economics. But you do look
-seedy. Are you coming to the country with us
-after luncheon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But he drove with Mark and Olive to the half
-finished front of The Walling in West 47th
-Street. Mark pointed out the design of Doric
-columns and bare tablets. Olive guessed at a
-simple richness and stared after Mark when he
-walked through groups of hot, noisy workmen
-into the shadow of his own creation. His black
-height disappeared among the girders and the
-dust of lime.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did it all himself,&#8221; said Gurdy. &#8220;The architects
-just followed what he wanted done.&mdash;You
-called him a kid with a box of paints. You<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-should see him fuss over a stage setting!&mdash;D&#8217;you
-know&mdash;my father&#8217;s an awfully observant man.
-He was talking about Mark the other day. Dad
-says that when Mark was a kid he used to draw
-all the time. And they&#8217;ve got some pictures he
-drew in old school books and things. They&#8217;re
-not bad. Dad says that before Mark married
-Cora Boyle and came to New York they all
-thought he was going to turn out an artist.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is it true that his whole success is because he
-decorates plays so well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. The truth is, he&#8217;s an awfully good business
-man. And I&#8217;ve seen enough of the theatre
-to see that some of the managers and producers
-aren&#8217;t any good at business. They mess about
-and talk and&mdash;He&#8217;s coming back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She saw Gurdy&#8217;s eyes centre on Mark with a
-queer, tense look. The boy stood on the filthy
-pavement studying the theatre as the car drove
-east.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Crazy about the place,&#8221; said Mark, brushing
-his sleeve, &#8220;I do think people will like it, Olive.
-Won&#8217;t be so dark that they can&#8217;t read a program
-or so light the women&#8217;ll have to wear extra paint.&mdash;My
-God, I&#8217;m glad Margot don&#8217;t daub herself
-up! Well, she don&#8217;t have to. And I&#8217;m glad
-she don&#8217;t want to act.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why?&#8221; Olive asked, &#8220;You were an actor.
-You live entirely surrounded by actors. It&#8217;s an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-ancient and honourable calling&mdash;much more so
-than the law or the army.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark rubbed his short nose and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m just prejudiced. I suppose it&#8217;s because I
-used to hear how tough actresses were when I was
-a kid. And because Cora Boyle made a doormat
-of me. Ain&#8217;t it true we never get over the way
-we&#8217;re brought up?&mdash;That&#8217;s what Gurdy calls
-a platitude, I guess.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gurdy&#8217;s horridly mature for twenty-one,
-Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thunder,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;He was always grown
-up and he&#8217;s knocked around a lot for his age.
-Enough to make anybody mature!&mdash;And he&#8217;s in
-love with sister up to his neck. You should have
-seen him take a runnin&#8217; jump and start for Chicago
-the minute he heard she was landing!
-Simply hopped the next train and flew! Stayed
-out there a month, pretty nearly. Brings his
-friends down over Sundays and then sits and
-watches them wobble round Margot like a cat
-watching a fat mouse. Love&#8217;s awful hard on
-these dignified kids, Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You want them married?&#8221; she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course.&mdash;I know I&#8217;m silly about the kids
-but I don&#8217;t see where Margot&#8217;ll get any one much
-better. Don&#8217;t start lecturin&#8217; me and say that
-there&#8217;s ten million eight hundred thousand
-and twenty-two better boys loose around than<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-Gurdy. You&#8217;d be talking at a stone wall. Waste
-of breath. And he&#8217;s sensible about her too.
-A kid in love ordinarily wouldn&#8217;t argue about anything
-the way he did about this play of Colonel
-Duffords. They had a regular cat fight and
-Gurdy&#8217;s right. It&#8217;s a pretty poor show.&mdash;This is
-the East river.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The car moved diligently through the heat.
-Olive thought that Gurdy had belied his outer
-calm by his flight to Chicago. But it was hard to
-think of anything save the thick air. Mark&#8217;s
-tanned face was damp and he fanned Olive steadily.
-They swung past a procession of vans where
-the drivers lolled in torn undershirts. The rancorous
-sun on the houses of unfamiliar shingle
-dizzied her. She saw strange trees in the country
-as the suburbs thinned and the blistered paint of
-billboards showed strange wares for sale.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Movie plant over there,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;Like to
-be movied for one of the current event weeklies?
-Lady Olive Ilden, the celebrated British authoress?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Horrors! Drinking tea with a Pom in my
-lap. Never!&mdash;Good heavens, Mark, is it like this
-summer after summer? Why don&#8217;t people
-simply go naked?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot does her best. If her grandmother
-Walling could see her bathsuit she&#8217;d rise from the
-tomb.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>&#8220;How long has your mother been dead, old
-man?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Since I was eight&mdash;no, nine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you look like her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Joe&mdash;Margot&#8217;s dad&mdash;looked something
-like her. His hair was nearly black and he had
-brown eyes. She was nice. Used to take her hair
-down and let me play with it. Black.&#8221; He
-smiled, did not speak for minutes and then talked
-of Gurdy again, &#8220;He&#8217;s mighty nice to his father
-and mother. Eddie and Sadie are scared he&#8217;ll
-marry an actress on account of his bein&#8217; in my
-office. Gurdy was teasin&#8217; them last week&mdash;They
-came up to do some shopping. Said he&#8217;d got hold
-of a yellow headed stomach dancer. Called her
-some crazy French name.&mdash;My lord, haven&#8217;t
-things changed on the stage since we were kids!
-I remember when Ruth Saint Denis was doing her
-Hindoo dances first and people were kind of
-shocked. I dropped in one afternoon and the
-place was packed full of women. Heard this
-drawly kind of voice behind me and looked round.
-It was Mark Twain and Mr. Howells. Ruth did
-a dance without much on and the women all gabbled
-like fury. But they all applauded a lot. Mr.
-Howells was sort of bored. He said, &#8216;What are
-they making that fuss for, Sam?&#8217; &#8216;Oh,&#8217; old
-Clemens said, &#8216;they&#8217;re hoping the next dance&#8217;ll
-be dirtier so they can feel like Christians.&#8217; My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-God, he was a wonder to look at!&mdash;Ever think
-how much good looks do help a man along?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t think unless you fan me, Mark. My
-brain&#8217;s boiling. How many more miles to a
-bath?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Twenty.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve always been fond of you,&#8221; said Olive,
-&#8220;but I never realized what a brave man you were!
-You <i>work</i> in this furnace? Fan me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The cottage stood on a slope of presentable
-lawn that ended in a pebbly shore. The motor
-rushed through a fir plantation, reached the
-Georgian portico and Olive gladly smelled salt
-wind rising from the water fading in sunset.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There she is,&#8221; said Mark and whistled to a
-shape, black and tan against the sound, poised at
-the lip of a whitewashed pier. Margot came
-running and some men in bathsuits stared,
-deserted. The girl raced in a shimmer that reddened
-her legs to copper. Olive wondered if anything
-so alive, so gay existed elsewhere on this
-barbarous shore crushed by summer. Mark saw
-them happy, wiped his silly eyes and went down
-to chat in guarded grammar with the three young
-men from across the shallow bay. Inevitable
-that youngsters should come swimming and these
-were likeable fellows. Gurdy vouched for them.
-They slid soon like piebald seals into the water
-and swam off in a flurry of spray and bronze<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-arms. Delicate wakes of fine bubbling spread
-on the surface. The wet heads grew small in this
-wide space of beryl. Again he watched irreproducible
-beauty.... It was right that the best
-makers of scenes wouldn&#8217;t paint the sea on back-drops.
-Let the people fancy it there below the
-vacancy of some open window. He must have
-the Cuban seas suggested thus in &#8216;Captain Salvador.&#8217;
-He wished that Margot didn&#8217;t dislike the
-tragedy. Perhaps its stiff denial of lasting love
-afflicted her. It afflicted Mark. And yet the
-poet was right. The passion in the play would be
-a fleet, hot thing, engrossing for a week, a month
-and then stale for ever. Lust went so. He nodded
-and picked up Margot&#8217;s black and yellow
-bath wrap, a foolish, lovely cape in which she
-looked like an Arab. Then she called to him and
-he walked back to where she sat on the tiled steps
-reading a letter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Olive brought me a note from Doris Arbuthnot.
-Lives in Devonshire. She&#8217;s a dear ... rather
-like aunt Sadie but not quite so hefty. All
-the Wacks have come home from France, now,
-and they won&#8217;t work. They sit about and talk to
-the heroes about France. Doris owns gobs of
-land and she&#8217;s having a poky time.&mdash;What are
-you laughing at?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your hair, sister.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She passed her hands over the sponge of black<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-down and shrugged, &#8220;Sorry I had it bobbed.
-All the typists do, over here. Olive&#8217;s frightfully
-done up. Gone to bathe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Glad to have her, ain&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ra&mdash;ther!&mdash;Oh, Cosmo Rand called up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What the&mdash;deuce did he want?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ronny Dufford gave him a heap of notes
-about &#8216;Todgers Intrudes.&#8217; I told him he&#8217;d best
-leave them at your office.&mdash;Shall you start rehearsing
-&#8216;Todgers&#8217; as soon as the strike&#8217;s over?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She sneezed, the efflorescence of her hair flapping.
-Mark tossed the wrap about her, kissed
-her ear and sat down on the steps. He said,
-&#8220;Don&#8217;t know, daughter. Fact is, this piece of
-Dufford&#8217;s hasn&#8217;t played to big business in London.
-I&#8217;ve got a report on it. Gurdy don&#8217;t think&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Gurdy! He simply can&#8217;t like a play unless
-it&#8217;s about the long suffering proletariat or
-Russia!&mdash;Why didn&#8217;t he come down?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got a party with some men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I wanted the brute to show me putting
-tomorrow! D&#8217;you put well? Of course you do!&mdash;Oh,
-I know &#8216;Todgers&#8217; isn&#8217;t a new Man and
-Superman, of course. But it&#8217;s witty and it isn&#8217;t
-commonplace&mdash;don&#8217;t laugh.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark marshalled words, lighting a cigarette.
-&#8220;Honey, that&#8217;s just the trouble with the thing.
-It is commonplace. It&#8217;s all about nothing. And
-it&#8217;s too blamed English. You and Gurd seem to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-think it&#8217;s the bounden duty of every one to know
-all the latest English slang off Piccadilly&mdash;or
-wherever they make slang up. It ain&#8217;t so. We&#8217;ll
-have to have some of this piece translated as it is.
-Suppose you were a stenographer going to the
-play? You wouldn&#8217;t have been abroad. You
-wouldn&#8217;t know an Earl beats a Baron. You
-wouldn&#8217;t know that Chelsea&#8217;s a big sister to
-Greenwich village and the slang&#8217;d bore you to
-death. There&#8217;s that three speech joke about
-Gippies and Chokers in the second act. I expect
-that raised a laugh in London. How many folks
-in the house here would know it meant cigarettes?
-I didn&#8217;t till you told me. Now in London with
-Ealy playing the Earl&mdash;he did, didn&#8217;t he?&mdash;Well,
-with a smart man like that to play the Earl, the
-thing might go pretty well. If I had some one
-like that&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot yawned, &#8220;Why not try Cosmo Rand?
-He played the Earl in London while Ealy was
-having the flu and had very good notices. He
-was awfully good in the scene where he rows with
-his wife. The poor devil&#8217;s had a good deal of
-practice, they say. Cora Boyle leads him a dog&#8217;s
-life. Ronny Dufford tells me that she&#8217;s horribly
-jealous. Mr. Rand&#8217;s had a success on his own,
-you know? He&#8217;s not her leading man any more.&mdash;She
-doesn&#8217;t like his getting ahead of her.&mdash;Now
-what are you laughing at?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>&#8220;The leopard don&#8217;t change her spots,&#8221; said
-Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Poor dad!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, well,&#8221; he said in a luxury of amusement,
-&#8220;She wasn&#8217;t raised right. Her folks were circus
-people. I guess you couldn&#8217;t imagine how tough
-the old style circus people were if you worked all
-night at it. This Rand&#8217;s a nice fellow, is he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very pleasant. He rehearsed a lot of us in a
-show and we were all rather rotten and he was
-very patient.&mdash;I do wish Gurdy had come down!&mdash;We
-shan&#8217;t have four for bridge. Might have
-Olive&#8217;s maid play. She&#8217;s dreadfully grand, you
-know? She&#8217;s the Presidentess of the Chelsea
-Lady Helpers Association. Used to be in the
-scullery at Windsor and Queen Alexandra spoke
-to her once. I&#8217;m rather afraid of her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is there any one you are afraid of, sister?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She rose, the yellow and black gown moulding
-in, and gave her muffled, slow chuckle, patting the
-step with a sole. &#8220;Don&#8217;t know. Gurdy, when
-he&#8217;s grouchy. I must go dress.&mdash;Oh, I had
-whitewine cup made for dinner. That&#8217;s what
-you like when it&#8217;s hot, isn&#8217;t it? Do put on a
-white suit for dinner, dad. Makes your hair so
-red. God be with you till we meet again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She wandered over the white and red tiles of
-the portico, leaving a trail of damp, iridescent
-prints in the last glitter of the sun. She hummed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-some air he did not know and this hung in his ear
-like the pulse of a muted violin when she herself
-was gone. The man sat dreaming until the night
-about him was dull blue and the wind died. He
-sat in warm felicity, guarding the silent house
-until the rose spark of the light across the bay
-began to turn and a silver, mighty star flared high
-on the darker blue of heaven.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">VIII<br />
-
-Cosmo Rand</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON Saturday Gurdy brought down three
-young men who hadn&#8217;t met Margot.
-He busily noted the chemistry of passion
-as two of his friends became maniacal by Sunday
-morning. Against the worn composure of Lady
-Ilden, the girl had the value of a gem on dim
-velvet. The third young man wanted to talk
-Irish politics to the Englishwoman who evaded
-him and retired to write a letter in her bedroom
-above the lawn.</p>
-
-<p>She wrote to her husband at Malta: &#8220;I had
-always thought that Margot&#8217;s success in London
-was due to her exotic quality. But she seems
-quite as successful on her native heath. This
-leads me to the general platitude that boys are the
-same the world over. I am a success here, too.
-Many callers, mostly female, in huge motor cars.
-The American woman seems to consider frocks a
-substitute for manners and conversation. Mark
-is anxious that Margot should marry Gurdy Bernamer
-and Gurdy is plainly willing. It would
-be suitable enough. The boy has smart friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-and will inherit 10,000 from old Mr. Carlson.
-Margot can float herself in local society no
-doubt. She is now playing tennis with two young
-brokers and a 22 year old journalist whose father
-owns half of some State. I have mailed you a
-strange work, &#8216;Jurgen&#8217; by some unheard of
-person. Do not let any of the more moral midshipmen
-read it.&#8221; She stopped, seeing Gurdy
-saunter across the lawn toward the beach and pursued
-him to where he curled on the sand. &#8220;You
-frighten me,&#8221; she said, taking her eyes from the
-scar that showed its upper reach above his
-bathshirt, &#8220;you lie about two thirds naked in
-this sun and then tell me it&#8217;s a cool day.&mdash;But I
-want to be documented in American fiction.
-I&#8217;ve read five novels since Wednesday. It seems
-to be established that all your millionaires are
-conscious villains and all your poor are martyrs
-except a select group known as gangsters. That&#8217;s
-thrilling when the reviewers so loudly insist that
-your authors flatter the rich.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Some of them do,&#8221; Gurdy said, lifting his
-legs in the hot air.</p>
-
-<p>In a bathsuit he lost his civilized seeming, was
-heroic, sprawled on the sand. Olive told him:
-&#8220;You&#8217;re one of those victims of modernity, old
-son. You belong to thirteen forty. Green
-tights and a dark tunic trimmed with white fur.
-Legs are legs, aren&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>&#8220;Heredity&#8217;s funny,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I look exactly
-like my father.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot&#8217;s Uncle Eddie? She talks of him a
-good deal and of your mother. I was rather
-afraid her metropolitan airs and graces would
-shock your people but she seems to have had a
-jolly time down there&mdash;New Jersey&#8217;s down from
-here, isn&#8217;t it? She enjoyed herself.&mdash;Metropolitan
-airs and graces!&mdash;That&#8217;s a quotation from
-something. Sounds like the <i>Manchester Guardian</i>.&mdash;Should
-I like your people?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You might. Grandfather&#8217;s an atheist.
-Dad&#8217;s a good deal of a cynic. They&#8217;re awfully
-nice small town people. My sisters all wish they
-were movie stars and my kid brothers think that
-a fighting marine is the greatest work of God.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And Margot says they all think you&#8217;re the
-last and best incarnation of Siegfried. I should
-like to see them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy shuddered. Grandfather Walling and
-Mrs. Bernamer held Lady Ilden responsible for
-the ruin of Margot as a relative. He imagined
-her artifice and her ease faced by the horrified
-family&mdash;a group of frightened colts stumbling
-off from a strange farmhand. He poured sand
-over his arm and lied, &#8220;You&#8217;d scare them.
-Mark&#8217;s always talked about you as though you
-were the Encyclopdia Brittanica on two legs.
-You might be interested, though.&mdash;I say, Mark&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-decided that he will produce &#8216;Todgers Intrudes.&#8217;
-Thinks he&#8217;ll have Cosmo Rand play the Earl.
-Can Rand really act?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&mdash;well enough for that sort of tosh.
-He&#8217;s handsome and he has a pleasant voice.
-But it&#8217;s rather silly of Mark to force such a poor
-play on the public because Margot wants Ronny
-Dufford out of debt. But he&#8217;s so intoxicated
-with Margot just now that he&#8217;d do murders for
-her. Why didn&#8217;t he come down for the week-end?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy got up and yawned, &#8220;Oh, his treasurer&#8217;s
-wife ran off with a man last Wednesday&mdash;while
-he was down here. He&#8217;s trying to patch it up.&mdash;You
-know, he isn&#8217;t at all cynical, Lady Ilden.
-He&#8217;s very easily upset by things like that.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I suppose he likes his treasurer? Then why
-shouldn&#8217;t he be upset? The treasurer can&#8217;t be enjoying
-the affair.&mdash;I wonder if you appreciate
-Mark&#8217;s noble strain, Gurdy? I think I must
-send you a copy of the letter he wrote me after
-he&#8217;d packed you off to school. I showed it to my
-husband who has all the susceptibility of the
-Nelson monument and he almost shed tears. It
-took something more than mere snobbery or a desire
-for your future gratitude to make Mark send
-you away. It horribly hurt him. If paternal
-affection&#8217;s a disease the man&#8217;s a walking hospital!&mdash;There&#8217;s
-the luncheon bell.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>Gurdy ran into the water and furiously swam.
-Unless Lady Ilden was making amiable phrases
-Margot had lied to her about the family at
-Fayettesville. It was natural that she should
-tell Mark how she&#8217;d enjoyed the farm. That
-was prudent kindness, no worse than his own
-gratitudes when Mark gave him sapphire scarf-pins
-and fresh silver cigarette cases that he didn&#8217;t
-need or want. But Margot shouldn&#8217;t lie to Lady
-Ilden. Gurdy avoided the next week-end and
-went to Fayettesville where his family worried
-because Mark was losing money through the
-actors&#8217; strike.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And he&#8217;ll need all he can lay hands on with
-Margot to look after,&#8221; said Mrs. Bernamer,
-rocking her weight in a chair on the veranda,
-&#8220;It ain&#8217;t sensible for him to&mdash;to bow down and
-worship that child like he does. Oh, she&#8217;s
-pretty enough!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Get out,&#8221; Bernamer commented, &#8220;He&#8217;d be
-foolish about her if she&#8217;d got to wear spectacles
-and was bowlegged. Gimme a cigarette, Gurd.
-How near&#8217;s the Walling finished?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Two thirds, Dad.&mdash;Grandfather, you&#8217;ll have
-to come up and sit in a box the opening night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful old man blinked and drawled,
-&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t go up to N&#8217;York to see Daniel
-Bandmann play &#8216;Hamlet&#8217;&mdash;if he was alive.
-How&#8217;s old Mr. Carlson get on?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>Gurdy often found the contrast between his
-grandfather and Carlson diverting. The dying
-manager, a cynic, wanted Heaven in all the decorations
-of the Apocalypse. The old peasant
-lazily insisted that death would end him. He got
-some hidden pleasure from the thought of utter
-passage. Gurdy found this content stupendous.
-The farmer had never been two hundred miles
-from his dull acreage and yet was ready to be
-done with his known universe while Carlson
-wanted eternity. He cackled when the striking
-actors made peace and ordered wreaths sent to
-the more stubborn managers. His bitter tongue
-rattled.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Why don&#8217;t more writers write for the theatre,
-Gurdy? Ever been in Billy Loeffler&#8217;s office?
-Five thousand bootlickers and hussies squatted
-all over the place. I sent that fellow Moody that
-wrote the &#8216;Great Divide&#8217; to see Loeffler. Had to
-set in the office with a bunch of song carpenters
-from tin pan alley and a couple of tarts while
-Loeffler was prob&#8217;ly talkin&#8217; to some old souse
-he&#8217;d knew in Salt Lake City. And then Loeffler
-looks at the play and asks is there a soobrette part
-in it for some tomtit his brother was keepin&#8217;! A
-writer&#8217;s got a thin skin, ain&#8217;t he? Here Mark
-gets mad because this writer Mencken says
-managers are a bunch of hogs. Well, ain&#8217;t they?
-Four or five ain&#8217;t. Sure, they&#8217;re hogs. Human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-beings. Hogs. Same as the rest of mankind.
-Good thing Christ died to save us.&#8221; He contemplated
-redemption through the cigarette smoke.
-His Irish nurse crossed herself in a corner.
-Carlson went on, &#8220;Say, that feller Russell Mark&#8217;s
-got drillin&#8217; that English comedy is all right.
-Was in to see me, yesterday. Good head.
-Knows his job. Says this Rand pinhead is raisin&#8217;
-Cain at rehearsals. Better drop in there and see
-what goes on. Mark&#8217;s so busy with that Cuban
-play he ain&#8217;t got time.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rehearsals of &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221; went on at a
-small theatre below Forty Second Street. Gurdy
-drifted into the warm place and watched the
-director, Russell, working. On the bare stage
-five people progressed from point to point of the
-tepid comedy. Russell, a stooped, bald man of
-thirty-five, sat near the orchestra pit. Gurdy had
-watched the rehearsal ten minutes before Russell
-spoke. &#8220;Don&#8217;t cross, there, Miss Marryatt.
-Stand still.&#8221; Then, &#8220;still, please, Mr. Rand.&#8221;
-On the stage Cosmo Rand gave the director a
-stare, shrugged and strolled toward the cockney
-comedian, the intrusive Todgers of the plot.
-Russell said nothing until a long speech finished,
-then, &#8220;You&#8217;re all rushing about like cooties. Go
-back to Miss Marryatt&#8217;s entrance and take all
-your lines just as you stand after she&#8217;s sat down.
-Dora isn&#8217;t pronounced Durrer, Mr. Hughes.&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-Gurdy was thinking of the long patience needed
-in this trade when Russell spoke sharply, &#8220;Mr.
-Rand, will you please stand still!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My God,&#8221; said Rand, &#8220;must I keep telling you
-that I played this part in&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will you be so good as to stand still?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rand continued his lines. Gurdy walked down
-and slipped into a chair beside the director, aware
-that the players stiffened as soon as they saw
-Mark&#8217;s nephew. The handsome Miss Marryatt
-began to act. Cosmo Rand sent out his speeches
-with a pleasant briskness. Russell murmured,
-&#8220;Glad you happened in, Bernamer. This was
-getting beyond me. School children,&#8221; and the
-act ended.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Three o&#8217;clock, please,&#8221; said the director.
-The small company trickled out of the theatre.
-Russell lit his pipe and stretched, grinning.
-&#8220;Rand&#8217;s very capable and a nice fellow enough
-but he&#8217;s difficult. Fine looking, isn&#8217;t he? Come
-to lunch with me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was startling to be taken into an engineer&#8217;s
-club for the meal. Russell explained, &#8220;I was an
-engineer. It&#8217;s not so different from stage directing.
-You sometimes get very much the same
-material. I&#8217;ve often wanted some dynamite or a
-pickax at rehearsals. Nice that you floated in
-just now. I&#8217;ve a curiosity about this piece.
-Does Mr. Walling see money in it? I don&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>&#8220;He thinks it may go,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It won&#8217;t. It&#8217;s sewed up in a crape. If you
-had a young John Drew and a couple of raving
-beauties playing it might run six weeks. And
-Dufford hasn&#8217;t any standing among the cerebrals.
-We might try to brighten the thing with some
-references to the Nourritures Terrestres or
-Freud. It&#8217;s a moron. Prenatal influence. Mr.
-Walling tells me we&#8217;re to open in Washington,
-too. My jinx! I went down there to offer up
-my life for the country and got stuck in the
-Q.M.C. supervising crates of tomatoes. Did
-you ever argue with a wholesale grocer about
-crates? It&#8217;s worse than staging a revue.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a dreadful thing to say!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Russell broke a roll in his pointed fingers and
-shook his head. &#8220;No.... The revue&#8217;s a very
-high form of comedy when it&#8217;s handled right.
-It gets clean away with common sense, for one
-thing. And it hasn&#8217;t a plot. I hate plots unless
-they&#8217;re good plots. That&#8217;s why this miserable
-&#8216;Todgers&#8217; thing affects me so badly. I hoped Mr.
-Walling would let me help him with &#8216;Captain
-Salvador.&#8217; But it&#8217;s his baby.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Is Rand giving you as much trouble as that
-every day?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Trouble? My dear man, you&#8217;ve never rehearsed
-a woman star who had ideas about her
-art! Rand&#8217;s merely rather annoying, not troublesome.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-He&#8217;s got no brains so his idea is to imitate
-the man who played the part in London. And
-he&#8217;s never learned how to show all his looks,
-either. But very few Americans know how.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy liked the director and spent several
-afternoons at the rehearsals. Cosmo Rand fretted
-him. The slight man was obdurate. He
-raced about the stage until Russell checked him.
-His legs, sheathed always in grey tweed, seemed
-fluid. The leading woman had an attack of tonsilitis
-and halted proceedings. It was during this
-lapse that Gurdy encountered Cosmo Rand in a
-hotel lounge and nodded. The actor stopped
-him, deferentially, &#8220;I say, I&#8217;m afraid poor
-Russell&#8217;s sick to death of me. I&#8217;m giving him a
-bit of trouble.&#8221; Gurdy found no answer. The
-actor fooled with his grey hat, rubbed his vivid
-nails on a cuff, corrected his moustache and said,
-&#8220;The fact is&mdash;I do most sincerely think that
-Russell&#8217;s wrong to drop all the English stage
-directions. Couldn&#8217;t you&mdash;suggest that Mr.
-Walling drop in to watch sometime when Miss
-Marryatt&#8217;s better and we&#8217;re rehearsing again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His soft, round bronze eyes were anxious. He
-spoke timidly, the rosy fingernails in a row on his
-lower lip. He was something frail and graceful,
-a figure from a journal of fashions. Gurdy
-wondered whether Cora Boyle ever assaulted her
-poor mate and smiled.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>&#8220;Mr. Walling has a good deal of confidence in
-Russell&#8217;s judgment, Mr. Rand. But I&#8217;ll speak
-to him if you like.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d be most awf&#8217;ly grateful if you would, Mr.
-Bernamer. The play&#8217;s such a jolly thing and one
-would like to see it do well. Ronny Dufford&#8217;s
-rather a dear friend and&mdash;so very broke, you
-know?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The rosy, trim creature seemed truly worried.
-Meeting Russell at the 45th Street office the next
-day, Gurdy told him that Rand&#8217;s heart was breaking.
-The director grimaced, patting his bald
-forehead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The little tyke&#8217;s worrying for fear he won&#8217;t
-get good notices. And if this rubbish should
-fluke into a success he&#8217;ll be made into a star.
-Have you ever observed the passion of the American
-public for second rate acting? Especially if
-it happens to have a slight foreign accent? Modjeska,
-Bandmann, Nazimova?&mdash;Well, Miss Marryatt&#8217;s
-all right again. We&#8217;ll rehearse some more
-tomorrow. Come and look on.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark had gone to Fayettesville for a few days.
-Gurdy attended the morning rehearsal of &#8220;Todgers
-Intrudes.&#8221; Cosmo Rand trotted about the
-stage determinedly and Russell turned on Gurdy
-with a groan of, &#8220;This is beyond me. I&#8217;m getting
-ready to do murder. He&#8217;s throwing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-whole thing out of key. I shall have to get your
-uncle to squash him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m beginning to see why Mr. Carlson loathes
-actors so,&#8221; Gurdy whispered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Holy Moses,&#8221; the director mourned,
-&#8220;look at him!&mdash;Slower, please, Mr. Rand!&mdash;It&#8217;ll
-be awkward if I get Mr. Walling to squash him,
-Bernamer. You never can tell how these walking
-egoisms will break out. He may run about town
-saying that Mr. Walling&#8217;s oppressing him cruelly.&mdash;My
-God, he&#8217;ll be crawling up the scene in a minute!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>On the stage, Rand had excited himself to a
-circular movement about a large divan in the
-centre. He had somehow the look of a single
-racer coming home ahead of the other runners.
-The men and women standing still suggested a
-sparse audience for this athletic feat. It was
-ludicrous. Worse, Mark would never scold Cora
-Boyle&#8217;s husband. Gurdy took a resolve. Margot
-had made Mark waste time with this silly
-play. She had proposed Rand for the part. She
-should help. He hurried to the station and
-reached the cottage in mid afternoon. A warm
-October wind made the fir trees whistle. He
-found Margot in a silk sweater of dull rose putting
-a tennis ball about the dry lawn. She
-smiled, tilting the golfstick across a shoulder,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-and swayed her slim body back to look up at
-Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dad just telephoned from the farm, old son.
-Wanted to know if you were here. It was something
-about &#8216;Captain Salvador&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, yes. I was hunting a tom tom for the
-Voodoo scene. He doesn&#8217;t like the one they&#8217;re
-using. Doesn&#8217;t thud loudly enough.&mdash;Can I talk
-to you about &#8216;Todgers Intrudes&#8217; without having
-a fight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course you can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. It&#8217;s going very badly. Mr.
-Russell, the director, has a free for all row with
-Mr. Rand every day. Rand acts like the last of
-a ballet. He&#8217;s putting everything back. He&#8217;s
-out of the picture all the time. Word of honour,
-Margot, the play hasn&#8217;t nine lives. It&#8217;s thin.
-It&#8217;ll take a lot of work to make it go. Russell&#8217;s
-one of the best directors going and he knows what
-he&#8217;s doing. Rand simply runs all over the stage
-like that clown at the Hippodrome.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s rather the way it was played in London.
-Of course, that&#8217;s no excuse. Have dad
-scold Rand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be pretty awkward for Mark&mdash;scolding Cora
-Boyle&#8217;s husband.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot said, &#8220;What utter tosh!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, it&#8217;s not. Mark&#8217;s old fashioned&mdash;sensitive
-about things like that. And Rand might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-take it as spite. Cora Boyle&#8217;s back from California,
-Russell tells me. She&#8217;s a fearful liar.
-If she hears that Mark jumped on her husband
-she&#8217;ll tell all her friends that Mark&#8217;s simply a
-swine. You don&#8217;t know how gossip travels and
-gets&mdash;distorted. Once last May Mark said that
-he didn&#8217;t like a gown that some woman was wearing
-in a play we&#8217;d been to the night before. He
-said that at lunch in the Claridge. Next day
-the woman&#8217;s husband came into the office and
-wanted to thrash Mark. By the time the story
-got to him it had swelled up like a balloon. This
-fellow had got it that Mark said his wife looked
-like a streetwalker and acted like one.&mdash;It&#8217;s all
-very awkward. Couldn&#8217;t you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, look here! Because I suggested Cossy
-Rand for the Earl I&#8217;m not going to drynurse him!&mdash;I
-think you&#8217;re frightfully hypersensitive about
-his being married to Cora Boyle. They&#8217;re hardly
-ever together. It&#8217;s taking a theatrical menage
-as seriously as&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, for heaven&#8217;s sake,&#8221; Gurdy broke in,
-watching the red streaks mount her face, &#8220;I&#8217;m
-sorry! Let&#8217;s drop it. You know Rand. I
-thought you might write him a line and tell him
-to calm down. That was all. Mark&#8217;s working
-himself sick over &#8216;Captain Salvador&#8217; and that&#8217;s
-an important production. Every one&#8217;s interested
-in it. Some of the critics have read it and think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-it&#8217;s the best American play in years. After all,
-you got Mark into this &#8216;Todgers&#8217; thing. He&#8217;s doing
-it to please you. He&#8217;ll worry if he has to&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot laughed, whipped the ball away neatly
-with one foot and tossed her hair back. She
-said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll write Rand, of course. Of course I
-don&#8217;t want &#8216;Todgers&#8217; to get a black eye. I&#8217;ll
-send him a note and tell him to carry on. Perhaps
-he&#8217;s rather opinionated. Where&#8217;s he stopping?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Knickerbocker.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She yawned, &#8220;I&#8217;ll write him, then. Staying
-for dinner?&#8221; She turned and roamed off in her
-swaying fashion. Directly, a motor swung about
-the house. One of the neighbours had come to
-take the girl driving. She waved to Gurdy and
-disappeared. He resented the waving of the
-brown hand. It was impossible not to resent her
-kind mentions of his mother and sisters before
-Lady Ilden and Mark.</p>
-
-<p>He resented, too, the airy changes from tart
-rage to suavity. Their talks became a tedious,
-uncertain duet with one performer unwilling.
-Gurdy strolled into the cottage and Olive Ilden
-looked up from a novel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What have you been quarrelling with Margot
-about?&#8221; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not quarrelling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nonsense. I could see you through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-doors. You were quarrelling and she began it.
-Tell me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She closed the book and regarded him, not
-smiling, from her wicker chair. There was an
-odd alarm in her eyes under which hollows
-showed. The negligent trail of her black gown
-was dusted with cigarette ash. Gurdy stared,
-upset.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We weren&#8217;t quarrelling. Cosmo Rand&#8217;s making
-an ass of himself at the rehearsals. She
-rather planted him on Mark. Mark&#8217;s so sensitive
-about Cora Boyle that Russell&mdash;the man
-who&#8217;s rehearsing &#8216;Todgers&#8217;&mdash;and I don&#8217;t want
-to worry Mark with the mess. I wanted Margot
-to write Rand a note and tell him to buck up.
-He&#8217;s holding the rehearsals back. Here it&#8217;s
-almost the first of November. Mark&#8217;s got a
-theatre in Washington for a couple of weeks from
-now and the play isn&#8217;t half ready.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive tapped a cigarette holder on the walnut,
-Dutch table and looked at the floor. Then she
-raised her eyes and smiled, spoke without artifice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I shan&#8217;t let her write to Rand, Gurdy. She&#8217;s
-too much interested in him. I don&#8217;t like it. She
-cabled him to come over here as soon as she&#8217;d
-bullied Mark into buying the rights to &#8216;Todgers
-Intrudes.&#8217; The little idiot thinks him a great
-actor. I&#8217;m sure I don&#8217;t know why. I don&#8217;t at
-all like this. I only found it out yesterday.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-Mark wouldn&#8217;t like it. The man&#8217;s married and
-if he happens to tell people Margot sent for him&mdash;I
-quite understand theatrical gossip, Gurdy.
-Mark&#8217;s a great person and it would make quite a
-story. And of course there are rats who don&#8217;t
-like Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How did you find this out, Lady&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the silliest way. I was talking about
-Ronny Dufford and Margot began to argue that
-this wretched play is really good. She rather
-lost her temper. She told me you&#8217;d tried to persuade
-Mark not to produce the thing to spite her.
-I&mdash;&#8221; Olive laughed unhappily, &#8220;I hadn&#8217;t the
-faintest idea that you&#8217;d quarrelled. You&#8217;re
-rather too cool, old man. I&#8217;ve been teasing you
-all this time fancying that you were wildly in love
-with the child and it seems that you&#8217;re at odds.&mdash;Oh,
-It&#8217;s all utter nonsense, of course! But I
-don&#8217;t like it. It&#8217;s a pose. She rather prides herself
-on being unconventional. And the silliest
-part of it is that she feels she&#8217;s done Mark a
-favour.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s probably cost him about fifteen thousand
-dollars,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>This was antique, this tale of a handsome,
-dapper actor and a girl gone moonstruck over his
-pink face. Gurdy grunted, &#8220;We can&#8217;t tell Mark
-this. He&#8217;d be upset. It&#8217;s idiotic.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive laughed, &#8220;Oh, you mustn&#8217;t get excited<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-over it, Gurdy. The play will fail and she&#8217;ll
-drop Rand. It&#8217;s a gesture, you see? The clever
-girl doing the unconventional thing.&#8221; She became
-comfortable, then artificial. &#8220;You mustn&#8217;t take
-Margot at her own valuation, dear. She&#8217;s the
-moment&mdash;the melodramatic moment. What&#8217;s
-that American slang? She&#8217;s no&mdash;no ball of fire!
-She admires people easily and drops them easily.
-She&#8217;s eighteen. She was quite lost in adoration
-of the Countess of Flint two years ago and then
-the poor woman did something the child didn&#8217;t
-like&mdash;wore the wrong frock, probably&mdash;and that
-was all over. The poor lady died in Colorado
-yesterday.&mdash;That means consumption, doesn&#8217;t it?
-I read the notice to Margot at breakfast and she
-said, &#8216;Really.&#8217; Rand flattered her about her acting,
-I fancy, and she thinks he&#8217;s remarkable in
-return for the compliment. Every normal female
-gets mushy&mdash;I&#8217;m quite Americanized&mdash;over
-an actor at eighteen. When I was eighteen I
-wrote a five act tragedy and sent it to&mdash;Merciful
-Heaven&mdash;I&#8217;ve forgotten who he was! Beerbohm
-Tree, probably. But I must congratulate you on
-your attitude. You had a frightful row at Fayettesville.
-She said, herself, that she was to
-blame. She hurt you. And you&#8217;ve not shown it
-in the least.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It didn&#8217;t amount to much.&mdash;But, Mark
-wouldn&#8217;t like this business. And of course some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-people don&#8217;t like him. They&#8217;d be ready to talk
-if they thought she was flirting with&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But she isn&#8217;t! If she was I&#8217;d drag her off to
-Japan with me. She&#8217;s hardly spoken to the man
-except at those rehearsals last winter. It&#8217;ll die
-a swift death when the play fails, old man.
-We&#8217;ve no use for failures at eighteen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive laughed, repeated the prophecy in a
-dozen turning phrases and drove with Gurdy to
-the station after dinner. But she was oppressed.
-She could imagine Mark&#8217;s bewilderment clearly.
-He found Rand a somewhat comic person, a frail
-young poser towed after the robust beauty of his
-wife, perhaps bullied. The car brought Olive
-back to the white portico of the cottage and she
-found Margot distracting a middle aged sugar
-broker. It was time for bed when the addled
-man&#8217;s car puffed away. Margot yawned and
-mounted the brown stairs in a flutter of marigold
-skirts. The living-room fell still. Olive settled
-at a table and commenced a letter to Ilden. &#8220;I
-shall not start for Japan for some time. Margot
-is behaving rather queerly. Having fancied
-that I could follow the eccentric curves of her
-mind I am much annoyed to find that I can not.
-This cottage will be closed next week. Heaven
-knows what will become of the furniture unless
-Mark should use it in a play. I have a curiosity<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-to see the opening of his new theatre. He is
-working frantically over the play for its opening.
-Gurdy Bernamer tells me that a New York first
-night is like nothing else on earth for bounderishness.
-He says that awful and obscene creatures
-come creeping from nowhere and flap about in
-free seats and that all the cinema queens appear
-covered with rubies. It&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The telephone on the table clicked but did not
-ring. Olive glared at the instrument. She
-abominated the telephone since it had brought
-her news of her son&#8217;s death. She finished her
-letter and climbed the stairs, aching for bed after
-a nervous day. Then she heard Margot talking
-behind the closed door of her room. The girl
-hadn&#8217;t a maid. Olive&#8217;s own maid was visible in
-her chamber at the end of the corridor. Olive
-passed on. She came back on impulse and heard
-&#8220;All right, Cossy. Carry on. &#8217;By&mdash;ee.&#8221; Then
-the small clatter of Margot&#8217;s bedside telephone
-set on the glass of a table. Olive opened the
-door and saw the girl subsiding into the mass of
-her pillows.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve just blown Cosmo Rand up properly,
-Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I wondered why you were talking.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot yawned, &#8220;Gurdy asked me to write
-him. I&#8217;d rather talk. His dear wife&#8217;s back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-from California and his voice sounded as though
-they&#8217;d been throwing supper dishes at each other.
-He didn&#8217;t seem pleased.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My dear, I don&#8217;t see why Mr. Rand should
-be pleased to be lectured on his art over the telephone
-at midnight!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s rather cheeky, isn&#8217;t it? But Gurdy made
-such a point of it. And all I could say was that
-he mustn&#8217;t be too difficult at rehearsals. But
-that&#8217;s all I could have said in a note. It seems to
-me that it&#8217;s distinctly dad&#8217;s business. But
-Gurdy&#8217;s such an everlasting old woman about
-dad! And I am rather responsible for bringing
-&#8216;Todgers&#8217; over. Dare say I ought to help out, if
-I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive slung a dart carelessly, asking, &#8220;What&#8217;s
-Rand&#8217;s real name, dear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I meant the Cosmo. That&#8217;s not an American
-name at all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know, I&#8217;m sure. I don&#8217;t like it, anyhow.
-But it might be his own. He&#8217;s from some
-town in Iowa and they name children fearful
-things like Eliander and Jerusha, out there.&#8221;
-She chuckled, slipping a tawny shoulder in and out
-of her robe. Her face rippled, &#8220;I really think
-Cosmo&#8217;s a rather ghastly name. Sounds like a
-patent soup. Wonder why they named dad
-Mark? Gurdy&#8217;s real name&#8217;s George.&#8221; She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-yawned, &#8220;I suppose all actors get rather opinionated.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;As they&#8217;re mostly rank egotists,&#8221; said Olive
-and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>Perplexity remained in her strongly wrestling
-with the desire for sleep. She lay composing a
-letter to Cosmo Rand&mdash;&#8220;As your position toward
-Mr. Walling is delicate and you are under obligations
-to Miss Walling may I suggest that you
-maintain a purely formal relation toward&mdash;&#8221; It
-wouldn&#8217;t do. Words to a shadow. She knew
-nothing of the man. He was a graceful figure at
-parties in London, considerably hunted by smart
-women for Sunday night dinners before the war.
-If the comedy failed and Mark dismissed him
-Rand might make an ill-tempered use of such a
-letter. Olive shrugged off the idea lay wondering
-why a pleasant voice and a head of curly hair
-seen across footlights should convince Margot
-that here was a great actor. It was disappointing.
-Olive had thought Margot steeled against
-crazes. The girl had a general appreciation of
-the arts as seen about London. Olive faintly
-sighed. But the pleasing man might embody
-some fancy or other, fulfil some buried wish. We
-go groping and stumbling among fancies, the
-woman thought, and see nothing very clearly.
-She consoled herself with the platitude and went
-to sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">IX<br />
-
-Bubble</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">&#8220;TODGERS INTRUDES&#8221; now went
-smoothly. Mark came to one of the
-last rehearsals, approved Russell&#8217;s
-method but, as they walked up Broadway, told
-Gurdy that this was a &#8220;lousy&#8221; play. All plays
-were just then nonsense beside &#8220;Captain Salvador.&#8221;
-Mark&#8217;s absorption seemed to exclude even
-Margot of whom the idolator once gently complained.
-The dark goddess had returned to
-town, been a week at the Fifty Fifth Street house
-and was sitting with Olive at the rear of the 45th
-Street Theatre. Her voice reached Mark clearly
-where he stood assembling the picture for a scene,
-a leg swung over the rail of the orchestra pit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She don&#8217;t seem so much interested in &#8216;Salvador,&#8217;
-Gurd. Why&#8217;s that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Rather heavy for her, perhaps.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark rubbed his nose and accepted wisdom.
-A girl of eighteen mightn&#8217;t care for this tale of
-shipwrecked ruffians, frantic negroes, moonlit
-death. And what innocent girl of eighteen could
-know or believe that men got tired of women?
-Gurdy understood and was helpful, had found a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-wailing negro song for the shipboard scene of the
-first act. Mark beamed at Gurdy, then turned to
-the stage and patiently corrected the six negro
-actors timid among the white folk of the big company,
-pathetic in sapphire and sage green suits.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You boys in a circle &#8217;round the table, left.
-Keep looking at Mr. Leslie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He picked spots for the grouping. His brown
-fingers pointed. He named attitudes, dropping
-his lids as he built the picture with glances at the
-water colour sketch in his hand. An intricate
-chatter began on the stage. Gurdy slipped up
-the aisle and joined Olive under the balcony.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How careful he is,&#8221; she whispered, &#8220;like
-a ballet master.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy nodded, &#8220;No one&#8217;ll move without being
-told to. The whole thing&#8217;s planned. He&#8217;s going
-to run the lights himself in Boston, next Monday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll go up there with him? He looks
-dreadfully thin.&#8221; His black height made a centre
-against the footlights. His mastery of this
-human paint was impressive, admirable. He
-visibly laboured, silent, listening. She asked,
-&#8220;Would he work as hard over an ordinary, commercial
-play?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Oh, he&#8217;d work hard but not as hard as
-this.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot glanced across Olive, then at her watch.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-She said, &#8220;Let&#8217;s clear out, Olive. Teatime.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d much rather stay here. Fascinating.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But you told Mrs. Marlett Smith you&#8217;d
-come.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive sighed and gathered her furs. It was
-important that Margot should go to this tea at
-the Marlett Smith house. Mrs. Marlett Smith
-was a liberal, amusing woman who had met
-Mark by way of some playwright and had called
-on Olive at the seaside cottage. They left the
-theatre and Gurdy came to open the door of the
-blue car. To him Margot suddenly spoke,
-&#8220;How will dad open this silly thing in Boston,
-Monday night and get to Washington by Tuesday
-night to open &#8216;Todgers&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll be there,&#8221; he said and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>Olive looked back at his colourless dress, his
-shapely head and vanishing grave face with a
-frank wistfulness. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see why you should
-make such a point of annoying Gurdy. And why
-call this play silly when it&#8217;s so plainly good?...
-I&#8217;ve carefully refrained from asking you why you
-quarrelled with Gurdy. He behaves charmingly
-to you and keeps the peace.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Paying him back for being nasty about &#8216;Todgers
-Intrudes.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But he&#8217;s not been nasty. He&#8217;s very sensibly
-given his opinion that it&#8217;s feeble. As it is.&mdash;The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-man&#8217;s taking us down Broadway. Loathsome
-sewer!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The motor slowly passed toward Forty Second
-Street and across that jam. Olive saw lean and
-stolid Englishmen stalking in the harsh, dusty
-November wind that blew women along in the
-whirling similitude of rotted flowers. Margot
-got notice, here. There was a jerk of male heads
-from the curb. Empty faces turned to the girl&#8217;s
-brilliance in rose cloth. A tanned sailor flapped
-his white cap. Yet in the Marlett Smith library
-on Park Avenue Margot was prettily discreet for
-half an hour below Chinese panels, among gayer
-frocks where she lost colour, merged in a fluctuation
-of dress. On the way home her restraint
-snapped into a &#8220;Damn!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very stiff,&#8221; said Olive, &#8220;One reads about the
-American informality. Tea at Sandringham is
-giddy beside this. But Mrs. Marlett Smith&#8217;s
-clever. Who were those twins in black velvet
-who so violently kissed you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Vaneens. Ambrosine and Gretchen.
-Knew them at school. They come out in
-December.&mdash;But what maddens me is this
-everlasting jabber about France! Some of those
-girls know Gurdy. Their brothers were at Saint
-Andrew&#8217;s with him. He seems to have made
-himself frightfully conspicuous about Paris.&mdash;No,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-I&#8217;m bored with Gurdy. If dad tries to
-make me marry him I&#8217;ll take poison and die to
-slow music. Such tosh! He made a gesture of
-enlisting&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re being silly,&#8221; Olive said, coldly hurt,
-&#8220;and I&#8217;m sick of the word, gesture. Pray, was
-the gesture of third rate artists and actors
-who wouldn&#8217;t leave their work anything madly
-glorious? I can understand a man conscious of
-great talent preferring to stick to his last. And
-I can understand a complete refusal to mix in the&mdash;abominable
-business. But I&#8217;ve no patience
-with dreary little wasters who shouted for blood
-and then took acetanilid to cheat the doctors.
-As for Gurdy&#8217;s military career he&#8217;s very quiet
-about it. I dislike this venom against Gurdy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot chuckled, &#8220;Perhaps I&#8217;m jealous,&#8221; and
-got down before the house. She opened the door
-with her latchkey and they entered a flow of minor
-music from the drawing room. Gurdy was playing.
-Mark leaned on the curve of the piano and
-his brown hands were deeply reflected in the
-black pool of its top.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen to this, Olive. Nigger song Gurdy
-raked up for &#8216;Captain Salvador.&#8217; Sing it, sonny.
-Don&#8217;t run off, Margot. Listen.&#8221; He caught
-the girl to him, held her cheek against his chin.
-A scent of mild sandal and cigarettes ebbed from
-the black hair into his nostrils. He was tired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-after the tense rehearsal and chilled from half
-an hour in the cold of the Walling. This moving
-warmth and scent was luxury. Mark shut his
-eyes. Gurdy chanted in plausible barytone.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">&#8220;Life is like a mountain railway,</div>
-<div class="verse">From the cradle to the grave.</div>
-<div class="verse">Keep yoh hand upon the throttle</div>
-<div class="verse">An&#8217; yoh eyes&mdash;upon&mdash;the&mdash;rail....&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It would sound splendidly in the dim forecastle
-of the first scene. It would float and die
-under the blue vault of the Walling. He had just
-seen the lights turned on a recession of faint silver
-rims in the dull cloud of that ceiling. He was
-still drugged by the sight. His theatre was like a
-desirable body promised to his arms. Gurdy
-played again the slow air in curious variations,
-flutters of notes. Mark opened his eyes to
-watch the slide of the long fingers on the keys.
-Olive was smiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Delightful. Very moral, too. Sound advice.
-How well you play, Gurdy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Always did,&#8221; said Mark, &#8220;He could play like
-a streak when he was ten. Come along up and
-have a fight with Mr. Carlson, daughter.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive let Margot&#8217;s voice melt into the old
-man&#8217;s cackle above. Gurdy said, &#8220;We went to
-the Walling after rehearsal, Lady Ilden. Honestly,
-it&#8217;s a corker. The ceiling&#8217;s nearly finished.
-Theatres don&#8217;t last, worse luck. But there&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-nothing like it in the city. Mark&#8217;s worked like a
-pup over it.&mdash;How was your tea?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very decent. Varieties of women, there.
-Almost no men. A dbutante told me she admired
-Walt Whitman more than most English
-poets and was rather positive that he was English.
-I can&#8217;t understand the American tabu on Whitman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Immoral.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But&mdash;good heavens!&mdash;I fascinated two elderly
-girls by telling them I knew Swinburne.
-Swinburne was lewd. Poor Whitman was merely
-rather frank.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Algie was a foreigner,&#8221; Gurdy laughed,
-&#8220;so it was all right. Margot have a good time?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive asked, &#8220;What were you and Margot
-rowing about in the library last night? I could
-hear her voice getting acid.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy commenced a waltz and said, &#8220;We
-weren&#8217;t rowing. Mark asked me whether Cosmo
-Rand was in the British army. He wasn&#8217;t and
-I said so. She seemed to think I was sniffing at
-Rand and blew me up a little. That was all.
-We made peace. I rather like Rand, you know,
-now that he&#8217;s stopped making an ass of himself
-at rehearsals. Russell and I had lunch with him
-today. He talks well. He knows a lot about
-painting, for instance. These actors who&#8217;ve been
-all over the landscape and don&#8217;t think they&#8217;re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-better than Richard Mansfield&mdash;pretty interesting.
-There&#8217;s not much to Rand but he isn&#8217;t a&mdash;a
-walking egotism.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive laughed, &#8220;Come back to Margot. She&#8217;s
-pointedly offensive to you and rather assertive
-about it. I hope you&#8217;ll go on being patient and
-try to remember how young she is. You&#8217;re very
-mature for twenty-one. You never bray. I
-brayed very wildly at Margot&#8217;s age. I horribly
-recall telling Henry Arthur Jones how to improve
-his plays and one of my saddest memories is of
-telling a nice Monsieur Thibault what a poor
-novel Thas was. He quite agreed with me.
-I didn&#8217;t know he was Anatole France until he left
-the room. I&#8217;ve all the patience going with youth.
-You&#8217;re almost too mature.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know about being mature,&#8221; said Gurdy,
-&#8220;I&#8217;m not, probably. But every other book you
-read is all about youth&mdash;golden youth&mdash;youth
-always finds a way&mdash;ferment. Get pretty tired
-of it. Makes me want to be forty-nine. And
-some of the poets make me sick. Hammering
-their chests and saying, Yow! I&#8217;m young!...
-Not their fault. I&#8217;m not proud of being
-six foot one. Runs in the family.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s a very cool bit of conversation, old
-man. You&#8217;ve taken me away from Margot
-twice, very tactfully, so I&#8217;ll drop it. Play some
-Debussy. His music reminds me of a very handsome<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-man with too much scent on his coat. Can&#8217;t
-approve of it. Rather like it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He evaded discussions of Margot until
-Sunday night when he went with Mark to Boston
-for the opening of &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; there.
-On Monday night he sat, a spy, in the middle
-of the large audience. A critic had come from
-New York to see this play before it should reach
-the metropolitan shoals. Gurdy saw the slender,
-sharp face intent. The ten scenes of the Cuban
-romance passed without a hitch before the placid
-Bostonians. Mark was directing the lights that
-raised peaks of gloom on the walls, sent shimmerings
-along the moonlit beach where the hero
-squatted in a purple shadow. About him Gurdy
-heard appropriate murmurs. A fat woman whimpered
-her objection to the half naked celebrants
-of the Voodoo scene. An old man complained
-that this was unlike life. Two smart matrons
-chatted happily about a Harvard cabal against
-some friend while &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; effected his
-wooing. A thin boy in spectacles wailed an
-argument that true art wasn&#8217;t possible in a capitalistic
-nation. A girl giggled every time the
-sailors of the story swore and almost whinnied
-when the word, &#8220;strumpet&#8221; rattled over the lights.
-But this herd redeemed itself in heavy applause.
-The thin boy wailed a blanket assent to the merits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-of the plot and the setting, &#8220;After all, Walling&#8217;s
-Irish and he studied under Reinhardt in Berlin.
-The Kelts have some feeling for values.&#8221; Still
-the fat woman thought, loudly, that the play
-didn&#8217;t prove anything and Gurdy decided that
-one of his future satires must be named, The
-Kingdom of Swine. He found Mark in high delight
-behind the scenes, snapping directions to his
-manager, his leading man and the electrician in
-the New Jersey singsong. &#8220;Have the tomtom
-some louder for the Voodoo, Ike. Bill, you send
-all the notices special delivery to the Willard in
-Washington. Mr. O&#8217;Mara&#8217;s in Hayti if the
-<i>Transcript</i> wants an interview. Beach scene
-blue enough, Gurdy? All right, Ed, I told you it
-was. Now, Leslie, take your fall at the end
-quieter, a little. You&#8217;re all right, the rest of it.
-Come along, Gurdy. Taxi&#8217;s waiting.&#8221; In the
-taxi, he cried, &#8220;Damn this lousy &#8216;Todgers&#8217; thing,
-son! I want to stay here. People liked it,
-huh?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They did.&mdash;Oh, you&#8217;re Irish and you learned
-all your business from Reinhardt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure! Blame, it on Europe!&mdash;My God,
-didn&#8217;t the tomtom business go like a breeze?&mdash;Oh,
-this &#8216;Todgers&#8217; thing&#8217;ll be too bad. Tell
-you, I&#8217;ll play it in Washington and Philadelphia.
-Baltimore, if it don&#8217;t just roll on its belly and die.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-Sorry if Margot gets sore.&mdash;She and Olive went
-to Washington s&#8217;afternoon, didn&#8217;t they, huh?&mdash;Was
-the ship scene light enough, sonny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He sat in their stateroom on the train, his eyes
-still black with excitement and drank watered
-brandy. He dreamed of &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8217;s&#8221;
-first night at the Walling and tremors of applause
-mounting to the blue vault of that perfected
-ceiling. He was so tired that he struggled, undressing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark, you&#8217;re thin as a bean! Nothing but
-some muscles and skin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark flexed his arms, beamed up at the tall
-boy&#8217;s anxiety and rolled into his berth. The
-mussed red hair disappeared under a pillow.
-Gurdy smoked and stared humbly.... This
-was surely half of an artist, laborious, patient,
-contriving beauty. The man had this strange
-perception of the lovely thing. He should do
-better and better. If his trade was that of the
-booth, the sale of charming sensualities, he raised
-it by his passion. He begot fondness. He created.
-Gurdy tucked the blankets over the blue
-silk pyjamas and planned a long talk on the purpose
-of the theatre for the morning, then wondered
-what that purpose was and put the lecture
-off. They fled all morning down the land and
-came to Washington in time for late lunch with
-Russell at the Shoreham where Mark halted to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-look at a pretty, dark woman in the suave, grey
-lounge smelling of flowers, fell behind Gurdy and
-Russell, found himself suddenly lifting his hat to
-Cora Boyle. She wore a cloak banded with
-black fur and a gold hat too young for her paint.
-Mark smiled, rather sorry for the blown coarseness
-of her chin, asked how she liked California
-and heard her flat voice crackle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A nightmare! All these girls who were absolutely
-no one last week in ten thousand dollar
-cars! No, I&#8217;m glad they brought me east. I&#8217;m
-taking three days off to see Cosmo start this.
-Tells me it plays here the rest of the week, then
-Philadelphia.&mdash;When are you bringing it into
-New York?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He shifted a little and said, &#8220;Can&#8217;t say, Cora.
-Hard to get a house in New York, right now.
-This thing I&#8217;ve got at the Forty Fifth Street is
-doin&#8217; big business. Todgers&#8217;ll be on the road
-two weeks, anyhow, before I decide what&#8217;ll become
-of it&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What are you opening the Walling with?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Captain Salvador.&#8217; Opened in Boston last
-night. Best play I&#8217;ve ever touched! Say, remind
-me to send you seats when it opens the
-Walling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s dear of you.&mdash;But couldn&#8217;t you get one
-of the small houses for Cosmo? The Princess or
-the Punch and Judy? Intimate comedy. Cosmo<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-really does better in a small house. And&mdash;&#8221; she
-smiled&mdash;&#8220;you could take a bigger one after a
-month or so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had an awed second of wonder. She&#8217;d
-been almost thirty years on the stage and she
-thought &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221; a good play! He
-began to say, &#8220;But, do you think this will&mdash;&#8221;
-Then two men charged up to shake hands with the
-actress. Mark scuttled down the stairs toward
-the grill. If she was quarrelling with Rand her
-manner didn&#8217;t show it. &#8220;Cosmo really does
-better in a small house.&#8221; He joined Russell and
-Gurdy at their table, puzzled and said, &#8220;Say, if
-she&#8217;s fighting with Rand it&#8217;s funny she&#8217;d come
-down to see him open this flapdoodle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Habit,&#8221; Russell shrugged, &#8220;They&#8217;ve been
-married twelve years. But are they fighting?
-I had breakfast with them this morning and she
-almost crucified herself because his tea wasn&#8217;t
-right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark wondered why Margot thought that
-Rand and the woman quarrelled. But he shed
-the wonder. He liked Washington especially
-as the pale city showed itself now in a vapour
-where the abiding leaves seemed glazed in their
-red and yellow along the streets. Olive knew
-people here. There was a tea with a British
-attach. Margot&#8217;s rose cloth suit gleamed about<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-the dancing floor of the restaurant. Gurdy had
-friends who were produced, fell subject to Margot
-and came between the acts that night to lean
-over the girl&#8217;s chair in the box of the big theatre.
-&#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221; went its placid course.
-Rand gave, Mark fancied, an excellent imitation
-of an English conservative. The packed house
-laughed at the right points. Margot&#8217;s face rippled
-so eagerly that Mark wanted to kiss it and
-covertly held her hand below the rail. Why, this
-was the pretty, gentle sort of nonsense eighteen
-years would relish! A pity it had no staying
-wit. A pity this fragile, polished man she so admired
-wasn&#8217;t a real comedian. Mark looked at
-Gurdy&#8217;s stolid boredom and the fine chest hidden
-by the dinner jacket beyond Olive&#8217;s bare shoulders.
-It might be as well to let Gurdy tell Margot
-the play wouldn&#8217;t do for New York. Mark
-shrank from that. Gurdy could put the thing
-much better in his cool, bred fashion.&mdash;Here
-and there men were leaving the theatre with an
-air of final retirement. In the opposite box there
-was a waving of feathers. How well Cora Boyle
-could use a fan!&mdash;A youngster with curly orange
-hair slipped into his box as the second curtain fell.
-Gurdy introduced young Theodore Jannan to
-Olive and Margot, then to Mark. Mr. Jannan
-had come over from Philadelphia to do something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-in Washington. This play&mdash;the Jannan heir bit
-off a &#8220;rotten&#8221;&mdash;was advertised as coming to
-Philadelphia next week.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Opens there Monday,&#8221; said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My mother&#8217;s giving a baby dance for my sister.
-Couldn&#8217;t you bring Miss Walling, Gurdy?
-Monday night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>How smoothly Margot said she&#8217;d like to come
-to a dance at Mrs. Apsley Jannan&#8217;s house in Philadelphia!
-The nonsense of social position! An
-illusion. A little training, a little charm, good
-clothes.&mdash;A Healy, one of Margot&#8217;s cousins, had
-risen to be a foreman in one of the Jannan steel
-mills.&mdash;Gurdy had played football with this pleasant
-lad at Saint Andrew&#8217;s school. Who on earth
-would ever know or care that Margot and Gurdy
-were born on a farm? The last curtain fell.
-Margot wanted to dance. Russell came to join
-the party. They went to a restaurant and found
-a table at the edge of the oval floor. Margot&#8217;s
-yellow frock was swept off into the florid seething
-on Gurdy&#8217;s arm. Russell poured brandy neatly into
-the coffee pot and shrugged to Mark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bad sign. Fifteen or twenty men left in the
-second act. We&#8217;ll have a vile time in Philadelphia,
-Lady Ilden. It&#8217;s a queer town on plays.&mdash;There
-come the Rands.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A headwaiter lifted a &#8220;Reserved&#8221; sign from a
-table across the floor. Cora Boyle and her husband<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-appeared in the light threaded by cigarette
-smoke. The actress draped a green and black
-skirt carelessly, refused to dance with a British
-officer in a trim pantomime, bowed slowly to
-Mark who was taken with fright. She&#8217;d want to
-talk about this drivelling play and before her
-slight, quiet husband. He slipped a bill under
-the edge of Russell&#8217;s plate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Bring Olive back to the hotel will you
-Russell? I&#8217;m all in. &#8217;Night, Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His retreat through the smoky tables was
-comic. Russell fingered his chin. Olive ended
-by laughing, &#8220;He&#8217;s ridiculously timid about her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The director patted his bald forehead and
-drank some coffee. He said, &#8220;It happens that
-he&#8217;s got some reason. Miss Boyle&#8217;s bad tempered
-and an inveterate liar. She&#8217;s fond of her
-husband and she seems to think this comedy will
-have a New York run. Mr. Walling means to
-let it die on the road, naturally. She won&#8217;t like
-that. She&#8217;ll talk. Her voice will be loud all up
-and down Broadway.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But&mdash;surely he&#8217;s callous to that sort of
-thing?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do you see anything callous about him? I
-don&#8217;t.&#8221; The director nodded to the floating of
-Margot&#8217;s skirt. &#8220;This is the first time I&#8217;ve ever
-directed a play put on to please a dbutante,
-Lady Ilden.&mdash;No, Mr. Walling seems mighty sensitive<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-to gossip.&mdash;And Cora Boyle&#8217;s in a strong
-position. She&#8217;s a woman&mdash;obviously&mdash;and she
-can make a good yarn. Spite, and so on. She&#8217;s
-quite capable of giving out interviews on the subject.
-She can&#8217;t hurt Mr. Walling but she might
-cause any quantity of gossip,&mdash;which he couldn&#8217;t
-very well answer. She can play the woman
-wronged, you see?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What a nation of woman worshippers you
-are!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Were,&#8221; said Russell, &#8220;We&#8217;re getting over it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see any signs of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Russell said, &#8220;You can&#8217;t send two million men
-into countries where women&mdash;well, admit that
-they&#8217;re human, not goddesses, anyhow, without
-getting a reaction. My wife&#8217;s a lawyer. She
-helped a young fellow&mdash;an ex-soldier&mdash;out of
-some trouble the other day and he told her she
-was almost as nice as a foreigner&mdash;Ten years ago
-if Cora Boyle had wanted to have a fight with
-Mr. Walling she could have taken the line that he
-was jealous of Rand and she&#8217;d have found newspapers
-that would print front page columns about
-it. She&#8217;d get about two paragraphs now.&mdash;But
-she probably has better sense. Beastly handsome,
-isn&#8217;t she?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Very&mdash;brutta bestia bella. Gurdy tells me
-she&#8217;s paid a thousand dollars a day to play Camille
-for the cinema. Why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>&#8220;Oh ... she&#8217;s the kind of thing a lot of
-respectable middle aged women adore, I think.&mdash;Look
-at them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There were many women in the rim of tables.
-They stared at the flaring green and black gown,
-at the exhibited bawdry of gold wrought calves,
-at the feathers of the waving, profuse fan.
-There was an attitude of furtive adventure in the
-turn of heads. They stared, disapproved,
-perhaps envied.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8216;Some men in this, some that, their pleasure
-take, but every woman is at heart a rake,&#8217;&#8221; Olive
-quoted.</p>
-
-<p>The director laughed, &#8220;You&#8217;re right.&mdash;And I
-often think that the movie queens take the place
-of an aristocracy in this country. Something very
-fast and bold for the women to stare at. Now
-Rand, there, is the ideal aristocrat&mdash;in appearance,
-anyhow, don&#8217;t you think? And nobody&#8217;s
-looking at him. I wonder if Miss Walling would
-dance with me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He relieved Gurdy close to the Rand table.
-When the boy joined Olive she asked, &#8220;Mr.
-Russell isn&#8217;t a typical stage director, is he?...
-I thought not. One of the new school in your
-theatre? A well educated man?... Rather
-entertaining.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He writes a little. Been an engineer. Stage
-directors are weird. One of them used to be an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-Egyptologist.&mdash;I say, help me keep Mark here the
-rest of the week, will you? He&#8217;s dead tired.
-Did he run when he saw Cora Boyle coming?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. He seems positively afraid of her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy said, &#8220;He is afraid of her. Great Scott,
-he was only sixteen when he married her and dad
-says he was&mdash;pretty blooming innocent. Mark&#8217;s
-all full of moral conventions, Lady Ilden. Ever
-noticed that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When you were in pinafores, my child! I
-always thought he&#8217;d shed some of his Puritan
-fancies. He doesn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Grandfather&#8217;s awfully strict, even if he is an
-atheist. And mother ... isn&#8217;t what you&#8217;d call
-reckless. They brought him up. And he still
-thinks their ... well, moral standards are just
-about right.&mdash;I&#8217;m the same way. Got it pounded
-into me at school that bad grammar and loud
-clothes were immoral. Don&#8217;t suppose I&#8217;ll get
-over that.&mdash;Mark says he&#8217;s never flirted with a
-married woman in his life.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive yawned, &#8220;I don&#8217;t suppose that he has,
-consciously. Oh, to be sure, I can understand
-why Mark would think of Miss Boyle as the Scarlet
-Woman. The Puritan upbringing.&mdash;We
-never quite get over early influences, Gurdy. I
-always find myself bristling a bit over dropped
-H&#8217;s even when a famous novelist does the dropping.&mdash;Mark
-prophesies bad reviews for the play,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-in the morning. Do leave word to have the
-papers sent up to me. I&#8217;m so sleepy I shall forget
-about it.&mdash;Thank heaven, Margot&#8217;s stopped
-dancing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In their double bedroom at the New Willard
-Margot talked jauntily of &#8220;Todgers Intrudes,&#8221;
-until Olive fell asleep wondering why the girl
-should interpret amiable laughter as the shout of
-success. In the morning two newspapers arrived
-with breakfast. The critics praised the acting
-and both sniffed at the play. Olive read the
-columns over her tea. Both critics dealt kindly
-with Rand. One thought his manner resembled
-that of Cyril Maude, the other said that
-he imitated George Arliss. Margot came
-trailing a green robe from the bathtub and stood
-pressed against the brass bedfoot reading the
-comments. The sun redoubled on her silver girdle
-and the numerous polychrome tassels of the
-foolish, charming drapery inside which her
-body stirred before she cried, &#8220;How American!
-Thin! It&#8217;s no thinner than that rot dad has
-running at the Forty Fifth Street!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My darling Margot, that&#8217;s thin American
-comedy. It&#8217;s something national, comprehensible.
-As for &#8216;Todgers,&#8217; why&mdash;why should you
-expect a pack of American war office clerks and
-provincials to care whether a Baron precedes an
-Earl or no? I can&#8217;t help being surprised that so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-many of them seemed to know what it was all
-about! The play is thin&mdash;horribly thin. I&#8217;m
-sure it did well at home on account of Maurice
-Ealy&#8217;s following. The critics say rather nice
-things about Rand, all things considered....
-Well, were you impressed with him last night?
-Do you still think he&#8217;s a fine actor?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot tilted her face toward the ceiling and
-the sun made a visard across her narrowed eyes.
-She twisted the silver girdle between her hands
-and stood silent. Olive felt the final barrier between
-creatures, suddenly and keenly. She had
-lived in intimacy with the girl for five years.
-Here was a strange mind revolving under the
-black, carven hair and the mask of sun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I didn&#8217;t think him very good, last night.
-Nervous.&mdash;And perhaps the play did seem rather
-thin.... But it&#8217;ll do better in New York.
-More civilized people, there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive lifted her breakfast tray to the bedside
-table and thought. Then her patience snapped,
-before the girl&#8217;s sunny and motionless certitude.
-She said, &#8220;New York! Do you think Mark
-will risk bringing this poor ghost of a thing to
-New York? Hardly! He told me last night
-it will be played in Philadelphia and Baltimore,
-then he&#8217;ll discard it.&mdash;You&#8217;re silly, dearest!
-The play&#8217;s wretched and Rand&#8217;s no better than
-a hundred other young leading men I&#8217;ve seen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-He appeals to you for some reason or other.
-He seems very, very feeble to me. He has no
-virility, no&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The silver girdle broke between the tawny
-hands. Margot&#8217;s face rippled. She said loudly,
-&#8220;This is all Gurdy! He doesn&#8217;t like the play!
-He&#8217;s made dad dislike it. He&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive cut in, &#8220;I shan&#8217;t listen to that! That&#8217;s
-mere ill temper and untrue. The play is a waste
-of Mark&#8217;s time and of his money.&mdash;Between your
-very exaggerated loyalty to Ronny Dufford and
-your liking for this doll of an actor you&#8217;ve probably
-cost Mark three or four thousand pounds.
-He produced this play entirely to please you.
-Don&#8217;t tease him any farther. Don&#8217;t try to make
-him bring this nonsense to New York. You&#8217;ve a
-dreadful power over Mark. Don&#8217;t trade on it!
-You&#8217;re behaving like a spoiled child. You disappoint
-me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The black eyes widened. Margot pushed herself
-back from the bed with both hands, staring.
-She said, &#8220;I&mdash;I dare say.... Sorry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You should be!... He&#8217;s done everything
-he can to keep you amused. He isn&#8217;t a millionaire.
-You&#8217;ve been treated like a mistress of
-extravagant tastes, not like a daughter! There
-is such a thing as gratitude. He&#8217;s humoured you
-in regard to this silly play and in regard to Rand.
-Gurdy and Mr. Russell tell me that Cora Boyle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-can make herself a disgusting nuisance now that
-the play&#8217;s a failure. You&#8217;ve pushed Mark into
-this very bad bargain. Don&#8217;t make it worse by
-whimpering, now, and don&#8217;t&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, please!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then please bite on the bullet and let&#8217;s hear
-no more of this. When Mark tells you he&#8217;ll
-drop the play, don&#8217;t tease him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot said, &#8220;Poor Ronny Dufford! I
-thought&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sorry Ronny&#8217;s broke. It&#8217;s the destiny of
-younger sons whose fathers had a taste for baccarat.
-I shall start for Japan as soon as I&#8217;ve
-seen the Walling opened. I shan&#8217;t go in a very
-easy frame of mind if I feel that you&#8217;ve constituted
-yourself a charitable committee of one
-with Mark as treasurer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive laughed. Margot said, &#8220;Yes, m&#8217;lady,&#8221;
-and made a curtsey, then fluttered off to telephone
-for breakfast, began to chuckle and the
-delicate chime of that mirth was soothing, after
-the rasp of Olive&#8217;s tirade. The girl seemed unresentful.
-Olive had never so seriously scolded
-her. Now she thought that she should talk to
-Mark about his folly. This idolatry was delightful
-to watch but unhealthy, a temptation to
-Margot. The girl had other pets in London.
-There was an amateur actress constantly wobbling
-on the edge of professional engagements. Two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-or three of the young painters experimented in
-stage setting. She deliberated and listed these
-artists to Mark while they were driving about
-the broad city in a hired victoria.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All nice children and hopeless dabblers, old
-man. Beware of them or you&#8217;ll have the house
-filled with immigrants. Rand&#8217;s a giant beside
-any of them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The little man ain&#8217;t so bad. Guess I&#8217;ll put
-him in as leading man for a woman in a Scotch
-play I&#8217;m going to work on after Christmas.
-That&#8217;ll shut Cora Boyle up. He&#8217;ll do, all right.
-I&#8217;ll offer him the part when I tell him &#8216;Todgers&#8217;
-goes to Cain&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To&mdash;where?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a warehouse in New York where dead
-plays go&mdash;the scenery, I mean.&#8221; Mark pointed
-to a full wreath of steam floating above the Pan
-American building, &#8220;Watch it go. No wind.
-Ought to last a minute.&mdash;Busted,&#8221; he sighed, as
-the lovely cream melted. &#8220;But I ain&#8217;t sorry this
-happened, Olive. Teach her she don&#8217;t know so
-much about the show business. &#8216;Todgers&#8217;ll&#8217;
-make a little money here because the town&#8217;s
-packed full. But I&#8217;m afraid Philadelphia&#8217;ll be
-its Waterloo. Well, the Boston <i>Transcript</i> had
-three columns on &#8216;Captain Salvador.&#8217; It&#8217;s in the
-biggest theatre in Boston and they had standing
-room only last night. Gurdy got a wire from a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-kid he knows in Harvard that a couple of professors
-came out of the woods and told their classes
-to go see the thing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His talk came turning back to &#8220;Captain
-Salvador&#8221; for the rest of the week. He was
-bodily listless after the strain of the Boston production.
-Gurdy forced him to play golf and
-tramp the spread city when Olive and Margot
-were at teas in the British colony. Russell often
-walked and every night dined with them, examining
-Margot with his sharp hazel eyes so that
-Gurdy fancied the man exhaling her essence with
-his cigarette smoke. He sat with Gurdy on Monday
-afternoon in the smoking car on the road to
-Philadelphia and observed, &#8220;Miss Walling&#8217;s very
-much interested in &#8216;Todgers.&#8217; How will she take
-the blow when it fails, here? It&#8217;ll be a flat failure,
-tonight, Gurdy. See if it isn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot and I are going to a dance. We
-shan&#8217;t see it flop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;ll flop very flat and hard. I&#8217;m a Philadelphian.
-You should warn Miss Walling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark startled Gurdy by warning Margot during
-tea in the small suite of the Philadelphia
-hotel while she stood at the tin voiced piano rattling
-tunes with one hand. Mark said nervously,
-&#8220;Now, sister, if &#8216;Todgers&#8217; is a fluke here&mdash;why, I
-can&#8217;t waste time and cash fooling with it any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-longer.&#8221; He coughed and finished, &#8220;I&#8217;ll send
-your friend Dufford a check and&mdash;amen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re an old duck,&#8221; said Margot, &#8220;and I&#8217;ll
-be good. Shan&#8217;t ever try to choose another play
-for you&mdash;never, never, never.&#8221; She tinkled the
-negro song from &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; tapping one
-foot so that the silver buckle sparkled. &#8220;Wish
-I could sing.... Life is like a&mdash;what&#8217;s good old
-life like, Gurdy?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like a mountain railway.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That a simile or a metaphor?&mdash;I say, I must
-get scrubbed. Six o&#8217;clock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She passed Gurdy, leaving the room. He saw
-her teeth white against the red translucency of her
-lower lip and carmine streaks rising in her face,
-but her door shut slowly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Took it like a Trojan,&#8221; Mark proudly said,
-&#8220;Guess the Washington papers opened her eyes
-some. Well, let&#8217;s go see if Russell&#8217;s downstairs,
-Gurd. He&#8217;s got a room on this floor. Gad,
-Olive, I wish we were goin&#8217; to a dance tonight
-instead of this&mdash;junk.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot should wear something very smart for
-this dance, shouldn&#8217;t she?&#8221; Olive asked. &#8220;The
-Jannans are the mighty of earth, aren&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Old family. Steel mills,&#8221; Gurdy explained.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve met some of them in Scotland. Wasn&#8217;t
-there a Miss Jannan who did something extraordinary?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-I remember a row in the New York
-papers. Didn&#8217;t she&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark laughed, &#8220;Ran off with a married man.
-They&#8217;ve got a couple of kids, too.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Doesn&#8217;t that domestic touch redeem the performance,
-Mark?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark chuckled and drawled, &#8220;Now, here!
-You make out you&#8217;re a wild eyed radical and so
-on. Suppose some girl that ought to know better
-came and lived next you in Chelsea with a married
-man. Ask her to dinner?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I cheerfully would if I thought her worth
-knowing, gentle Puritan! If I thought she was
-simply a sloppy, uncontrolled sentimentalist I
-should no more bother myself than I would to
-meet a society preacher or some hero of the
-Russian ballet who&#8217;s paid a hundred guineas a
-night to exhibit his abdominal surface in the name
-of art.... Six o&#8217;clock. I should tub, myself.
-I&#8217;ve several cinders on my spine. Run along,
-both of you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark said on the way to the elevators, &#8220;Olive&#8217;s
-a wonder, ain&#8217;t she, bud? Don&#8217;t know why but
-she always puts me in mind of your dad. Calm
-and cool.&mdash;Oh, say, tomorrow&#8217;s your mamma&#8217;s
-birthday!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is. And I&#8217;m going up to the farm, after
-lunch. &#8216;Todgers Intrudes&#8217; has got me&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shut up,&#8221; said Mark, seeing Cosmo Rand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-ringing the button for the elevator. He beamed
-at the actor and asked in the car, &#8220;Mrs. Rand
-went back to New York?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. Just been talking to her by &#8217;phone.
-They started the film of &#8216;Camille&#8217; today. Very
-trying, she said. They&#8217;ve some promoted cowboy
-playing Armand.&mdash;I say, I&#8217;ve some quite decent
-gin in my flask. We might have a cocktail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy thought how clever the man was to wear
-grey, increasing his height and embellishing his
-rosy skin. He understood dress expertly. At
-the Jannan dance, toward midnight, a girl told
-him that she&#8217;d just come from a &#8220;simply idiotic
-play&#8221; but praised Rand&#8217;s appearance. &#8220;Englishmen
-do turn themselves out so well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The dance was supported by sparkling Moselle
-and Gurdy didn&#8217;t have to perform with Margot.
-She found friends. He was summoned to be introduced
-to a young Mrs. Calder who at once invited
-him to dine the next evening. Gurdy excused
-himself on the score of his mother&#8217;s birthday.
-As they drove away from the emptying
-house Margot explained, &#8220;Peggy Calder&#8217;s nice.
-She was in the Red Cross in London. You&#8217;re
-really going up to the farm?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Certainly.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She said nothing, restless in her dark cloak for
-a time then chattered about the Jannan grandeur.
-She enjoyed spectacles. The great suburban<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-house and the green ballroom pleased her. &#8220;But
-you people drink too much, you know? Mrs.
-Jannan&#8217;s a second wife, isn&#8217;t she? Rather pretty.
-Heavens, what a long way back to the hotel!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re tired.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Frightfully. And blue.... Can&#8217;t you make
-dad try &#8216;Todgers&#8217; in New York, Gurdy?&#8221;
-Directly and with a sharp motion she added, &#8220;No.
-That&#8217;s utterly silly. I&#8217;ve no business asking
-it.... But I do feel&mdash;And yet I don&#8217;t know the
-New York taste&mdash;You really think it wouldn&#8217;t
-do?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I really don&#8217;t, Margot. And you can&#8217;t get a
-theatre for love, blood or money. They&#8217;re
-even trying to buy theatres to bring plays into.
-Mark would have to run the play on the road for
-weeks&mdash;months, perhaps, before he could get a
-theatre.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She dropped the matter, spoke of the dance
-again and at the hotel hurried up the corridor to
-her rooms. Mark sat up as Gurdy slid into the
-other bed of his chamber and passed a hand across
-his throat, &#8220;Oh, son, what an evening! &#8216;Todgers&#8217;
-to the boneyard! Crape on the door!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fizzled? People were knocking it at the
-Jannan&#8217;s.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Awful! Every one coughed. I will say Rand
-worked hard. No, it&#8217;s dead. I&#8217;ll let it run tomorrow
-night and then close it.&mdash;Stick with me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-tomorrow. I&#8217;ll have to break the bad news to
-Rand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He broke the news to Rand just as Gurdy was
-leaving to take the train for Trenton, after lunch.
-The actor strolled up to them beside the door,
-a grey furred coat over his arm and his bronze
-eyes patently anxious.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Going away, Bernamer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The country.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Decent day for it.... I say, Walling, they
-weren&#8217;t nice to us in the papers.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy saw Mark begin to act. The voice
-deepened to its kindest drawl. Mark said, &#8220;Just
-called up the theatre. Only sold two hundred
-seats for tonight and its almost three, now.
-That&#8217;s too bad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rand passed the polished nails along the soft
-moustache. The sun of the door sent true gold
-into his hair. He murmured, &#8220;Shocking bad,
-eh? We play Baltimore, next week, don&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Mark, easily, &#8220;It&#8217;s too thin. I&#8217;ll
-close it tonight.&mdash;Now, I&#8217;m putting on a piece
-called the &#8216;Last Warrior.&#8217; English. Start rehearsals
-after Christmas. Good part for you in
-that. Marion Hart&#8217;s the lead. Know her?
-Nice to play with and a damned good play.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh&mdash;thanks awfully.&mdash;Yes, I know Miss
-Hart.&mdash;Thanks very much, sir.... You shan&#8217;t
-risk bringing &#8216;Todgers&#8217; to New York?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>&#8220;No. I&#8217;m sorry. You&#8217;ve worked mighty
-hard and I like your work. You&#8217;ll be a lot better
-off in this other play.... &#8216;Todgers&#8217; is too thin,
-Rand. Might have done five or six years back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The actor nodded. &#8220;Dare say you&#8217;re right,
-sir. Bit of a bubble, really. And awfully good
-of you to want me for this other thing. Be delighted
-to try.... Yes, this was rather bubblish:&mdash;Anyhow,
-this lets me out of Baltimore.
-I do hate that town. Well, thanks ever so.
-Better luck next time, let&#8217;s hope.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He walked off, grey into the duller grey of the
-columned lounge. Mark nodded after him.
-&#8220;Took it damned well, Gurdy. He&#8217;ll be all right
-in this other show and Cora can&#8217;t say I haven&#8217;t
-been decent to him. Well, hustle along. Got
-that whiskey for your dad? Give &#8217;em my love.&mdash;Look
-at that pink car, for lordsake! Vulgarity
-on four wheels, huh?&mdash;So long, sonny.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy was glad that Rand hadn&#8217;t whined. This
-was a feeble, tame fellow without much attraction
-beyond his handsome face. Perhaps it was for
-this mannerly tameness that Margot liked him.
-Perhaps that fable of women liking the masterly
-male was faulty. Margot liked to domineer.
-She had bullied Rand a trifle at the rehearsal in
-London. Perhaps Cora Boyle liked the tame
-little creature for some such reason. Gurdy
-dismissed him and the theatre. There was vexing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-sadness in the collapse of even so poor a
-play. Russell and the actors had worked. It
-came to nothing. Bubble! Expensive, futile,
-unheroic evanescence. Margot&#8217;s fault. He
-mustn&#8217;t let Mark do such a thing again. The
-girl must confine her restless self to dances and
-clothes. She had looked very well at the Jannan
-party. She had smartness, instant magnetism.
-She was still asleep and would dine with her
-acquaintance, Mrs. Calder, tonight. Gurdy
-yawned as Trenton foully spouted its industry
-toward the sky. Bernamer was waiting with the
-car at the station, gave him a crushing hug and
-told him that he looked like hell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Danced all night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I see you did in the <i>Ledger</i>. Among those
-present at the Apsley Jannan&#8217;s party. Your
-mamma&#8217;s all upset about it. Saw a movie of a
-millionaire party with naked hussies ridin&#8217;
-ostriches in the conserv&#8217;tory. She thinks Margot&#8217;s
-led you astray. How&#8217;s this &#8216;Tod&#8217; play
-done?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all done, dad. Closes tonight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer sent the car through Trenton and
-cursed Margot astoundingly. &#8220;Ten or twelve
-thousand dollars! The little skunk! Cure Mark
-of listening to her. Say, he still wanting you to
-marry her, bud?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Afraid he is, dad.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>&#8220;Sure. Next best he could do to marryin&#8217; her
-himself. Funny boy. Likes her &#8217;cause she&#8217;s
-pretty. Black hair.&mdash;This English woman&#8217;s
-blackheaded, ain&#8217;t she?... Well, you sic&#8217; some
-feller onto Margot and get her off Mark&#8217;s hands.
-If you fell in love with her again, your mamma&#8217;d
-puff up and bust.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Again?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer gave him a blue stare and winked,
-wrinkling his nose. His weathered face creased
-into a snort. &#8220;Sure, you were losin&#8217; sleep over
-her &#8217;fore she got back from England.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not now, daddy.&#8221; Gurdy wondered about
-the absolute death of his passion. His father,
-who so seldom saw him, knew it was done. Mark
-saw him daily, talked to him of Margot urgently
-and saw nothing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well,&#8221; said Bernamer, &#8220;Mark&#8217;s awful fond of
-you. And you ain&#8217;t bad, reelly. Don&#8217;t you get
-married until you catch one you can stand for
-steady diet. Oh, your mamma&#8217;s gone on a vegetable
-diet and lost four pounds in two weeks.
-Ed&#8217;s got a boil on his neck&mdash;bad, too, poor pup.
-Jim done an algebra problem right yesterday and
-made a touchdown Saturday. He&#8217;s got his head
-swelled a mile.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man&#8217;s tolerant dealing with his family impressed
-Gurdy. Here was a controlled and level
-affection, not Mark&#8217;s worship. It was a healthier<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-thing. He watched his father&#8217;s amiable scorn
-while Mrs. Bernamer and the whole household
-fussed variously over young Edward&#8217;s inflamed
-neck after supper. The boil was central in the
-talk of the red living room. Grandfather
-Walling tried to think of some ancient remedy
-and fell asleep pondering. The two bigger lads
-hovered and chuckled over the eruption. The
-sisters neglected some swains who came calling.
-Mrs. Bernamer sat mending the grey breeches of
-the military uniform Edward wasn&#8217;t wearing.
-The boil maintained itself over gossip of the village,
-the Military Academy and female questions
-about the Jannan dance. At ten Bernamer said,
-&#8220;Go to bed, all of you. Got to talk business to
-Gurdy.&#8221; The family kissed Gurdy and departed.
-Grandfather Walling&#8217;s snore roamed tenderly
-down into the stillness. Bernamer got out the
-chessboard and uncorked a bottle of vicious pear
-cider. They smoked and played the endless
-game. At twelve the telephone bell shore off
-his father&#8217;s sentences. Gurdy clapped a palm on
-the jangling at his elbow and picked up the instrument.
-Olive Ilden spoke in her most artificial,
-clearest voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re in New York, dear. The doctor telephoned
-about eight and we came up directly. I
-think you&#8217;d best come, Gurdy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mr. Carlson?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>&#8220;Yes. He&#8217;ll be gone in a few hours. Mark&#8217;s
-so distressed and&mdash;the old man asked for you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer said, &#8220;No train until three thirty,
-son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll get there as fast, as I can,&#8221; Gurdy told her,
-&#8220;Margot there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. She&#8217;d gone to dine with her friend&mdash;Mrs.
-Calder&mdash;and Mark didn&#8217;t want her here.
-I&#8217;ll tell Mark you&#8217;re coming, then. Good-bye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy rang off. His father nodded, &#8220;Mark&#8217;ll
-miss the old feller. Been mighty good to him.
-Funny old man. Always liked him. Poor
-Mark! Well, you say this Englishwoman&#8217;s sensible.
-That&#8217;s some help.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy was glad of Olive&#8217;s sanity, wished that
-the thought of this death didn&#8217;t make his heart
-thump for a little. His father would drive him
-into Trenton at two. They played chess again.
-Bernamer made sandwiches of beef and thick
-bread. The red walls clouded with cigarette
-smoke. It was two when the bell again rang.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dead, prob&#8217;ly,&#8221; said Bernamer.</p>
-
-<p>The operator asked for Gurdy. There was a
-shrill wrangling of women behind which a man
-spoke loudly and savagely. His impatience
-cracked through the buzzing. It wasn&#8217;t Mark
-when the man spoke clearly at last.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is Russell, Gurdy. Can you hear? You
-must come here at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>&#8220;To Philadelphia? What&#8217;s happened? Mr.
-Carlson&#8217;s dying and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know. And I can&#8217;t bother Walling. You
-must come here as fast as you can. Can you
-speak German?... I&#8217;ll try to talk French;
-then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After a moment Gurdy said, &#8220;All right. I&#8217;ll
-come as fast as I can. Get hold of the hotel manager.
-Money&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The detective&#8217;s got a check. That&#8217;s all right.
-Hurry up, though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy found himself standing and dropped
-the telephone. It brushed the chessmen in a
-clattering volley to the floor. His father&#8217;s blue
-eyes bit through the smoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When&#8217;s a train to Philadelphia, dad?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That damn fool girl gone and got herself
-into&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This actor!... Of course she has! Of
-course! Oh, hell! In her room! When&#8217;s
-there a train to Philadelphia?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">X<br />
-
-The Idolater</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">OLIVE left the telephone table and strolled
-across the bright library to the fire. The
-sussuration of dragged silk behind her
-moving gown gave her a queer discomfort;
-there had been no time to change in the rush; it
-seemed improper to attend a death-bed in evening
-dress. And she was intrusive, here, and helpless.
-Mark&#8217;s pain was calm. He would suffer later,
-at the end of these hours or minutes. The
-bored, plump doctor came into the library, closed
-the door and lit a cigarette, joining Olive at the
-warm hearth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was asking for Miss Walling, just now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah? She&#8217;s in Philadelphia. She was dining
-with some friends at the Ritz, there, so we left
-her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The doctor said, &#8220;Very sensible,&#8221; and blew a
-smoke ring. Under its dissolution his eyes admired
-Olive&#8217;s shoulders then, the pastel of Gurdy
-in a black frame on the mantel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me,&#8221; Olive asked, &#8220;how&mdash;how far is he
-conscious?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>&#8220;It would be interesting to know. In these
-collapses we&#8217;re not sure. His conscious mind
-probably asserts itself, now and then. The unconscious&mdash;I
-really can&#8217;t say. Still, before you
-and Mr. Walling came he spoke in Swedish several
-times. And that&#8217;s the unconscious. He forgot
-his Swedish years ago. Been in this country
-ever since eighteen sixty-eight. But he spoke
-Swedish quite correctly and very fast. I&#8217;m a
-Swede. It surprised me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Indeed,&#8221; said Olive and shivered before his
-science, cool, weary, not much interested.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor looked at his watch, murmured,
-&#8220;Twelve thirty,&#8221; and tossed his cigarette in the
-fire. He observed, &#8220;But the old gentleman&#8217;s in
-no pain. The reversion&#8217;s very interesting. He
-was talking to some one about Augustin Daly.
-Very interesting.&#8221; The clipped, brisk voice denied
-the least interest. The doctor went from
-the library as Olive heard wheels halt outside.
-This couldn&#8217;t be Gurdy. She looked through a
-window and recognized her maid paying a taxicab
-driver. The black and yellow taxicab trembled
-behind a car entirely black and windowless;
-the undertaker awaited Carlson&#8217;s body. Olive
-drew the curtains across the glass, shook herself
-and went down to speak with her maid.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Margot hadn&#8217;t come back from her dinner
-when you came away, Lane?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>&#8220;No, m&#8217;lady. Such a noosance getting the
-luggage to the station, down there.... Might
-I have some tea in your pantry, Mr. Collins?&#8221;
-the woman asked Mark&#8217;s butler as Olive turned
-away. These two would sit in the butler&#8217;s pantry
-drinking tea and discussing deaths. Olive went
-up the soft stairs and into Carlson&#8217;s bedroom behind
-the library. She entered an immutable
-group. The two nurses sat in a corner. The
-doctor examined one of the framed, old photographs
-that pallidly gleamed on the walls made
-brown by the lowered light. Mark stood with
-his hands clutching the white bedfoot. His black
-seemed to rise supernatural from the floor. He
-was taller, thinner. He glared at the stretched
-length of his patron. To Olive the dying man
-appeared more like an exhumed Pharaoh than
-ever. The yellow head was unchanged. She
-had a dizzy, picturesque fancy that his eyes might
-open, that he might speak in some unknown, sonorous
-dialect of the Nile. As she dropped a
-hand beside Mark&#8217;s fingers on the rail the old man
-spoke without breath in a sound of torn fabric
-yet with an airy, human amusement. &#8220;All right,
-Mister Caz&#8217;nove. Don&#8217;t git flustered. I&#8217;ll tell
-Miss Morris.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark writhed. The plastron of his shirt
-crackled. He gripped Olive&#8217;s arm and drew her
-from the room. In the hall he panted, &#8220;Augustin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-Daly&#8217;s prompter&mdash;a Frenchman&mdash;I guess he
-meant Clara Morris.&#8221; But in the cooler hall,
-away from the insufferable bed, he was ashamed.
-This was bad behaviour, unmanly, ridiculous. He
-smiled timidly at Olive who suddenly put her
-hands on his face and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I talked to Gurdy. He&#8217;ll be here as soon as
-he can, dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks. Got to go back.&#8221; Mark sighed,
-&#8220;You go to bed, though.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark didn&#8217;t want her to go to bed. He smiled
-and went back to his watch. Odious time passed.
-The smell of cigarettes crept from the walls and
-the furniture. Carlson had smoked many thousands
-here. One of the nurses clicked a string of
-beads. The tiny cross was silver and lustrous
-as it swung. The beads seemed amethyst.
-What good did the woman think she was doing?
-But she had liked Carlson. She was praying for
-his soul and Carlson thought he had a soul.
-Let her pray. The amethyst flicker soothed
-Mark, took his eyes from the bed. The voice
-surprised him with his name.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yessir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a poor house. Rain....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark&#8217;s throat was full of dry fire. He
-gripped the rail, waiting. But the voice did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-come again. After four the doctor nodded.
-One nurse yawned. The Irishwoman fell gently
-on her knees under the large, signed photograph
-of Ada Rehan in the frilled, insolent dress of
-Lady Teazle. Olive led Mark quickly from the
-room into the library. He pressed his hands on
-his eyes. He wouldn&#8217;t cry over this. Carlson
-had too often called him a crybaby, a big calf.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh ... can&#8217;t be helped.&mdash;God, I did want
-him to see the Walling! Won&#8217;t be any funeral.
-Body goes straight to Sweden.... He&#8217;s left
-Gurdy and Margot some money.... Awful
-kindhearted.... Lot of old down and out actors&#8217;d
-come here. Gave &#8217;em money. Awful kind
-to me.... No reason.&#8221; His husky speech
-made a chant for his old friend. Olive&#8217;s eyes
-filled. He was childish in his woe, charming.
-She wished that he&#8217;d weep so she could fondle the
-red hair on her shoulder. This would hurt his
-pleasure in the new theatre and the splendid play.
-The butler came in after the heavy, descending
-motion of men on the stairs was over and the
-dull wheels had rolled off from the curb. He
-brought a small, gold capped bottle and two
-glasses on his tray.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Doctor Lundquist said to bring this up, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The champagne whispered delicately in the
-glasses and washed down the muffling, dry taste<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-from Mark&#8217;s tongue. He smiled at Olive and
-said, &#8220;Dunno what I&#8217;d have done without you
-bein&#8217; here.&#8221; What a brave woman! Her
-daughter had died swiftly of pneumonia before
-Olive could reach her. Her son had been blown
-to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad Gurdy didn&#8217;t get here,&#8221; she said,
-&#8220;He&#8217;s seen quite enough of death and he was fond
-of Mr. Carlson.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course. Fonder than Margot was. Bein&#8217;
-a man, though, he never showed it so much.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive hoped that Margot would never tell him
-how she disliked the old man&#8217;s coarseness, his
-manifold derisions. She said, &#8220;But go to bed,
-Mark. You really should. These things strain
-one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Awful. They packed me off to Aunt Edith&#8217;s
-when mamma died. First time I ever saw any
-one I liked.... Frohman was drowned.
-Clyde Fitch died in France. Good night, Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He wished she would kiss him again and
-watched her pass up to her rooms. Then he
-went to bed, without thinking, and slept. He
-slept soundly and woke slowly into warm, luxurious
-sun that mottled the blue quilt. He said,
-&#8220;Hello, brother,&#8221; to Gurdy who leaned on the
-dresser between the windows, solemn and grieved
-in a dark suit, his pale hair ruffled and gay with
-light. Gurdy must be cheered up. &#8220;Well, you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-missed it. He didn&#8217;t have a pain. When did
-you get here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A while ago. I&mdash;dad&#8217;s here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Eddie? Well, that&#8217;s good of him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer came about the bed and dropped a
-hand on Mark&#8217;s chest. He said nothing, but
-grinned and sat down. His seemly clothes and
-cropped head made him amazingly like Gurdy.
-Mark beamed at both of them. &#8220;Had your
-breakfast?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hell, yes,&#8221; said Bernamer, &#8220;Had two. Got
-some coffee in Philadelphia and then Lady Ilden
-made us eat somethin&#8217; when we got here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark swung out of bed and ordered Gurdy,
-&#8220;Tell &#8217;em to bring me up some coffee in the
-library, sonny. Oh, Margot ain&#8217;t got here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, she&#8217;s here,&#8221; said Gurdy and quickly left
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>The sun filled his showerbath. Mark cheered
-further, babbled to his brother-in-law while he
-shaved and wondered what Bernamer had talked
-about to Olive at breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, we just talked,&#8221; said the farmer, curtly,
-&#8220;Nice kind of woman.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He leaned in the door of the bathroom and
-rolled a cigarette in his big, shapely hands. Now
-that he had five hired men his hands were softer
-and not so thick. A fine, quiet man, full of sense.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Awful good of you to come up, Eddie. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-ain&#8217;t makin&#8217; a fool of myself. The old man was
-eighty. It&#8217;s a wonder he lasted as long.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Better get some coffee in you, bud. You look
-run down.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Been workin&#8217; like a horse, Eddie.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark knotted his tie, took Bernamer&#8217;s arm
-and hugged it a little, walking into the library.
-Olive dropped a newspaper and told him he
-looked &#8220;gorgeous&#8221; in a weary voice, then poured
-coffee into his cup on the low stand by a large
-chair close to the fire. She was smoking. The
-vapour didn&#8217;t hide yellowish hollows about her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, I didn&#8217;t sleep well, old man. Rather
-fagged.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We waked you up pretty early,&#8221; said Bernamer,
-&#8220;Sit down, bud, and drink your coffee.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark lounged in the deep chair. Bernamer
-asked Olive if she had liked Washington but stood
-patting Mark&#8217;s shoulder and rather troubled the
-drinking of coffee. Gurdy came down the blue
-rug with some mail.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look and see if there&#8217;s anything important,
-sonny. Probably ain&#8217;t.... Hello, sister!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Margot roamed down the library in a black
-dress. But she paused yards from his stretched
-hand and frowned incomprehensibly. Gurdy
-turned at the desk with a letter against his grey<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-coat. Margot said, &#8220;I suppose Gurdy&#8217;s told
-you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy thrust his jaw up toward the ceiling.
-Olive rose with a flat, rasping &#8220;Margot&#8221; and
-Bernamer hissed, his fingers tight on Mark&#8217;s
-shoulder. Mark set down his coffee cup and
-looked at them all.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, no one&#8217;s said anything?&#8221; Margot put a
-knee on a small chair and stroked the velvet back.
-&#8220;Well, we&#8217;d better get it over. I was turned
-out of the hotel in Philadelphia last&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Shut up,&#8221; said Bernamer, &#8220;Shut your mouth!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She went on, staring at Mark, &#8220;I&#8217;m going to
-marry him as soon as he can get a divorce,
-dad.... No use trying to lie about it. I belong
-to Cosmo and&mdash;and that&#8217;s all.&#8221; She passed a
-hand over her mouth. Then her bright slippers
-twinkled as she walked out of the room. Mark
-blinked after her. Something had happened.
-He looked up at Bernamer whose face was rocky,
-meaningless. Gurdy ran to Mark and spoke in
-gasps, beating a fist on his hip.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Russell called me at the farm about two&mdash;Dad
-went down with me.&mdash;We talked to the manager&mdash;We
-bribed him.&mdash;Russell gave the hotel
-detective a check for a thousand dollars&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I guess they&#8217;ll keep their mouths shut,&#8221; said
-Bernamer, &#8220;Told &#8217;em they&#8217;d each get another
-check in six months if we didn&#8217;t hear nothin&#8217;.&mdash;Now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-it ain&#8217;t so bad, bud. Margot says this
-feller can get a divorce from Cora Boyle&mdash;He was
-gone and we didn&#8217;t see him. It might be worse.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stop hittin&#8217; your leg, Gurd. You&#8217;ll hurt yourself,&#8221;
-said Mark.</p>
-
-<p>He rose and began to walk up and down the
-tiles of the hearth. One of his hands patted the
-front of his coat. His face was empty. He
-seemed wonderfully thin. Olive watched him in
-terror of a cry. Gurdy and his father drew off
-against the shelves of still books. Bernamer commenced
-rolling a cigarette. After a while Mark
-said, &#8220;It&#8217;s the way I was brought up, Olive.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Mark, try to&mdash;to see her point of view.
-She loved him. She sees something we don&#8217;t&mdash;It&#8217;s&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sure. That&#8217;s so.&mdash;Oh, you&#8217;re right.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He walked on, aware of them watching, helpless.
-Things passed and turned in his head. He
-was being silly, old-fashioned. Ought to collect
-himself. Ought to do something for Gurdy who
-wouldn&#8217;t have her, now. Get the boy something
-to do. Get his mind off it. &#8220;Call the office,
-sonny. Tell them to close &#8216;Todgers Intrudes.&#8217;
-Give the company two weeks&#8217; pay. Have Hamlin
-write checks&mdash;Didn&#8217;t try to thrash this Rand, did
-you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We didn&#8217;t see him. He&#8217;d gone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s good. Call the office.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>The boy went to the telephone, far off on its
-desk and began to talk evenly. Mark stumbled
-over to Bernamer and mumbled, &#8220;Keep him busy.
-Awful jolt for him, Eddie. Takes it fine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He ain&#8217;t in love with her, bud.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes, he is.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Set down, bud. Better drink&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No.&mdash;Ain&#8217;t been any saint, myself. Girls are
-different.&mdash;Maybe he&#8217;s a nice fellow.&mdash;Took it
-nice about the play being closed.&mdash;I&#8217;m all right,
-Olive. Sort of a shock.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He walked on. Then he was too tired to walk
-and Bernamer made him sit in the chair by the
-hearth. He stared at the blue rug and it seemed
-to clear his head. He became immobile, watching
-a white thread. The world centred on this
-wriggle of white on the blue down. He lapsed
-into dullness, knowing that Gurdy stood close to
-him. He should think of things to say, consolations.
-The boy must be in tortures. He was
-dull, empty.</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer beckoned Olive. They went out of
-the library and the farmer shut the door without
-jarring the silver handle. Olive found herself
-dizzy. She said, &#8220;You have something to&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let&#8217;s get downstairs where I can smoke.
-You&#8217;re sick. This is as bad on you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He helped her downstairs into the drawing
-room and was gone, came back with water in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-which she tasted brandy. The big man lit his cigarette
-and spoke in a drawl like Mark&#8217;s but heavier.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand this business. The little
-fool says she&#8217;s been in love with this feller a long
-time&mdash;a couple of years. He ain&#8217;t made love to
-her &#8217;til last night. Well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t understand it any more than do you.
-I&#8217;m&mdash;horrified. I knew she admired his acting.
-He&#8217;s handsome. Very handsome.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man nodded and his blue eyes were gentle
-on her. He drawled, &#8220;Why the hell didn&#8217;t he
-stay and face the music? The manager told him
-to get out. Mr. Russell says he just packed up
-and left.&mdash;I can&#8217;t make this out. Margot had
-Mr. Russell waked up because she hadn&#8217;t any
-money to come home with.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must talk to her.... Why did we leave
-her there?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You thought she&#8217;d got sense enough to know
-better. It ain&#8217;t your fault. I got to go home
-because I don&#8217;t want the family to know about this.
-But there&#8217;s something damn funny in it.&mdash;Will
-you please get it out of Mark&#8217;s head that Gurdy&#8217;s
-in love with that girl? Make him feel better.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do all I can.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He said in scorn, &#8220;She ain&#8217;t worth fussin&#8217; with,&#8221;
-and held the door open. Olive shivered, passing
-the library where there was no sound. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-climbed to Margot&#8217;s room and found the girl sitting
-on the edge of the sunny bed, still, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must be very tired, darling.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The red lips a little parted. Margot said,
-&#8220;Oh ... no,&#8221; in a soft whisper. The faint noise
-died in the sun like the passage of a moth. Olive
-stood fixed before the sleek tranquillity of the
-black hair and the contented face. The restless
-stirring was gone. She smiled in beautiful contentment.
-The gold cord which was the girdle
-of this velvet gown hung brilliant and rich about
-the straight body. The sunny room made a shell
-of colour for the figure. The hair had a dazzling
-margin against the windows. She was untroubled,
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>Olive dragged at her own girdle, biting her lips.
-She asked, &#8220;Where is Mr. Rand, dear?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was coming to New York today,&#8221; Margot
-said in the same voice. She lifted an end of the
-trailing gold, then let it fall. She seemed asleep,
-lost in a visible dream. But she roused and
-spoke, &#8220;He&#8217;s loved me ever so long, Olive. I
-didn&#8217;t know....&#8221; and was still again. Olive
-choked before this happiness, turned and went
-down the stairs. There was no use in artifice,
-reasoning. Mark must accept what was done.
-His good sense would come back, the shock would
-ease into regret. His convention was outraged,
-of course. It was dreadful to see him in pain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-Olive thrust back her own pain, a vast and weary
-disappointment. This wasn&#8217;t the man for the
-girl. This was senseless. She entered the library
-and Mark raised his face from the long stare at
-the floor, dreading Margot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh,&#8221; he said, &#8220;it ain&#8217;t your fault, Olive.
-Don&#8217;t cry.&mdash;I&#8217;m bein&#8217; a fool.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He rose and walked again, began a circular
-tramp about the room. He passed through a
-whispering tunnel, completely black. He was
-marching in the dark and knew that Olive and
-Gurdy watched him, that Bernamer came into the
-room with his hat in a hand. Yet he walked in
-blackness. He would go mad of this! She had
-lied to him. She had thrown herself to a married
-man. Well, girls did that. Things were changing.
-People did queer things. He was jealous
-for Gurdy, that was the trouble. He had wanted
-her married to Gurdy. She had said such good
-things of Gurdy.&mdash;All this time she&#8217;d been lying.
-She was in love with this pink, married actor.&mdash;The
-talk would roll among the restaurants, in
-the offices. People would laugh. Awful names!
-All the other noises would slacken and fail in this
-whispering. They would sneer when the Walling
-opened.&mdash;She couldn&#8217;t care anything for him or
-she wouldn&#8217;t have lied. Gurdy didn&#8217;t lie. Mark
-tore himself out of the black whispering and went
-to take Gurdy&#8217;s sleeve.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>&#8220;Don&#8217;t you mind, sonny. She&mdash;she&#8217;d ought
-to have told you she liked this&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Mark, I don&#8217;t care about her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right to say that&mdash;but don&#8217;t you mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer came across the room and took Mark
-in his arms. He said, &#8220;Now, bud, don&#8217;t upset
-yourself. I got to go home. The fam&#8217;ly don&#8217;t
-know nothin&#8217;. I shan&#8217;t say a word.&mdash;What you
-do is this. Get hold of Cora Boyle and give her
-money to let this feller divorce her, see? That&#8217;ll
-save talk and trouble.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s right, Eddie. Yes, good idea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bernamer hugged him and left the room.
-Mark&#8217;s head cleared. There was no black tunnel.
-Eddie was right. He must make the best of this.
-It could be hushed up. Women like Cora needed
-money for clothes. He nodded to Gurdy, &#8220;You&#8217;ll
-never be any smarter than your dad, son. Ain&#8217;t
-he a nice fellow, Olive?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Of course, dear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;m bein&#8217; a fool. I know it. Only
-there&#8217;s lots of men that feel like I do about these
-kind of things.&mdash;One o&#8217;clock.&mdash;You and Gurdy
-have some lunch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive said, &#8220;Mark, would you like to talk to
-her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He cried, &#8220;No!&mdash;I&mdash;might say something.
-You folks go have lunch.&#8221; They went away and
-at once he wanted them back, walked the floor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-with his hands clenched. He was afraid that
-Margot might come in, now. He dreaded seeing
-her. He wished her out of the house and away.
-The wish bit him. He had been fooled. He had
-to love her, help her. Couldn&#8217;t she go away?
-To the farm, where no one knew and&mdash;But they
-might find out. They would shrink from her as
-bad. They weren&#8217;t knowing and tolerant like
-Bernamer. He mustn&#8217;t stop loving her or let her
-see that he was hurt. Nothing eased him. The
-afternoon lagged along. Gurdy played the piano
-downstairs. Gurdy and Olive drifted in, out,
-consoling him. It was sunset. A van full of
-boxes went slowly past the house and the shadows
-on the pine were amethyst. Some friend of
-Gurdy&#8217;s came calling in a yellow, low car that
-turned ochre as the light failed. Its lamps made
-ovals on the street as it drove away.&mdash;He mustn&#8217;t
-let this sour the boy.&mdash;In the darker room the
-whispering began again. It might be the blood
-in his ears. Gurdy brought him up dinner and
-white wine. Olive came afterwards and tried to
-make him eat, lit all the soft lamps. He drank
-some wine and smoked a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gurdy takes it well, doesn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Perhaps he didn&#8217;t care as much as you think,
-Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark laughed, &#8220;Awful cool outside. No, he&#8217;s
-bein&#8217; brave to&mdash;cheer me up. And I feel better,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-honest.... My God, Olive, if that woman
-wants to make a scandal!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t think of it, Mark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He was tired of thinking. He said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll try
-not to,&#8221; and smiled at Gurdy coming in. But he
-now thought of Cora Boyle.&mdash;Perhaps she liked
-Rand, wouldn&#8217;t give him up. He examined the
-rosy face, the trim grey suits. Yellow haired.
-Perhaps these dark women liked yellow haired
-men best. He was afraid of Cora. She
-could lie to her friends and make things worse.
-He stared at a lamp a long time and his mind
-fell dull again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark, it&#8217;s after ten. Go to bed,&#8221; said Olive,
-&#8220;Please, old man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You folks go.&mdash;Not sleepy.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They left him. He was lonely. He sat by
-the hearth and lit a cigarette. Above him there
-was a slow noise of Gurdy strolling about, getting
-undressed. The ripple of little sounds kept
-Mark company, then deserted him. Mark shuddered
-in the peace of the lit room. Something
-worse would happen. What? He must save
-Gurdy more pain. The boy was too young for
-this. Mark&#8217;s throat ached suddenly and he
-began to weep, spent in his chair. The lamps
-of the room swelled like luminous pearls melting
-and through the mist came Gurdy in white
-pyjamas that flapped.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>&#8220;Oh, for God&#8217;s sake, Mark! Bed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m scared,&#8221; said Mark, gulping, &#8220;Gurd, I&#8217;m
-scared of Cora. Suppose she likes him? Suppose
-she won&#8217;t let go of him? She&#8217;s bad tempered,
-sonny. You don&#8217;t know her.&mdash;It&#8217;s the talk&mdash;the
-talk. People ain&#8217;t as broad minded as you
-and Olive think. The women, especially.&mdash;And
-she&#8217;s a young girl.... It ain&#8217;t like she was one
-of these women that&#8217;ve been divorced three or
-four times.... If Cora makes a fuss&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy pulled him up out of the chair and gently
-shook him. &#8220;You must come to bed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right.&mdash;Making a fool of myself....
-Only, you&#8217;re in love with her. It&#8217;s hard on you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m not in love with her, Mark!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark thought this a splendid sort of lie but he
-shivered. &#8220;Somethin&#8217; else might happen. I
-feel.... Come and get me in bed, son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He became limply ashamed of himself. Gurdy
-helped him to strip and he found the boy buttoning
-his jacket for him as he sat on the edge
-of his bed. He watched the long, wiry fingers
-at work on the buttons and the holes of the blue
-silk. The cold linen of the pillow caressed his
-neck. He smiled, wanting Gurdy to stay there
-until he fell asleep. The doorbell rang with a
-steady and ripping insistence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Damn,&#8221; said Gurdy and went into the hall
-where the cold air mounting from the opened<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-door chilled his bare feet. The butler ascended
-like a shadow on the white wainscot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A Mr. Fuller, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He can&#8217;t see Mr. Walling. He&#8217;s asleep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He says he must see Mr. Walling, Mr.
-Gurdy.&#8221; The butler held out his salver. Gurdy
-read the card, Henry Fuller. Fuller and Marcovicz,
-Attorneys at Law. Under the engraving
-was pencilled, &#8220;For Miss Boyle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy walked down the stairs into the drawing
-room. A burly man in a furred coat was standing
-by the Siennese cabinet running a thumb over
-the smooth panel of its little door. The light
-made his grey hair glisten slickly. He turned a
-broad, pleasing face on Gurdy and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sorry to get &#8217;round here so late at night.
-Pretty important I should see Mr. Walling
-right away.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s absolutely impossible. He&#8217;s ill and in
-bed. I&#8217;m&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh ... you&#8217;re his nephew, ain&#8217;t you?
-Mister&mdash;Bernamer?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The man nodded and undid his coat. He wore
-a dinner jacket with a fluted shirt. Gay stones
-were blue in the soft pleats of the bosom. He
-stated, &#8220;I&#8217;m from Miss Boyle&mdash;legal representative.
-You tell Mr. Walling that Miss Boyle&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-willing to not bring an action against Miss Walling&mdash;Understand
-what I mean?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer continued his air of genial discretion,
-getting a paper from some pocket. &#8220;Miss
-Boyle&#8217;s willing to overlook this business in Philadelphia
-and not sue her husban&#8217; or Miss Walling
-provided that this play&#8217;s brought into New York
-by New Year&#8217;s Day and Mr. Rand is featured&mdash;name
-in electric lights and so on. Soon as the
-play&#8217;s opened in New York she&#8217;ll live with her
-husban&#8217; again. Condonation, see? And&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Blackmail,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>The genial man went on, &#8220;I&#8217;ve got a memorandum,
-here. All Mr. Walling&#8217;s got to do is sign
-it. I&#8217;ll read it. N&#8217;York City, November eighteenth,
-nineteen hundred nineteen. My dear
-Miss Boyle, In pursuance of our agreement I
-promise you that &#8216;Todgers Intrudes&#8217; will be
-presented in New York City before January first,
-nineteen twenty and that Mr. Rand will be featured
-in the usual manner. Yours very truly.&mdash;All
-he has to do is to put his name to that and
-there you are.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy hated this fellow. He rubbed a foot
-on the carpet and sighed, then asked, &#8220;What&#8217;s the
-good of this? It&#8217;s a bad play. It&#8217;ll fail. Why
-does Miss Boyle want this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>&#8220;Don&#8217;t ask me. Yes, I hear it&#8217;s a bum show.
-I guess she wants her husban&#8217; featured. I don&#8217;t
-know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If Mark&mdash;if Mr. Walling won&#8217;t sign this?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then Miss Boyle&#8217;ll bring her action in the
-morning. There&#8217;s no defence, either, Mr. Bernamer.
-Miss Boyle&#8217;s got a written statement
-from Mr. Rand and testimony from his valet.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy was sick, now. An unconquerable
-tremor made the muscles of his back rigid. It
-was a trap. Margot was caught in a trap. He
-said, &#8220;Blackmail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. Miss Boyle&#8217;s foregoin&#8217; a legal right to
-bring her action. She ain&#8217;t askin&#8217; a cent of
-money. There&#8217;s lots of ladies wouldn&#8217;t be so
-easy to settle with. Better see what Mr. Walling
-says, hadn&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a second Gurdy stood hopeless. Then he
-said, &#8220;It&#8217;s a dirty trick,&#8221; and took the paper.
-But he should keep cool. He smiled and inquired,
-&#8220;You say you&#8217;ve got a written statement from
-Mr. Rand&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got a copy with me. Like to read it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy glanced at the transparent typed sheet.
-He shook his head and walked up stairs. Mark
-picked up the note as Gurdy dropped it on the
-blue quilt, read it frowning. Then he flushed
-and his mouth contracted hideously. He whispered,
-&#8220;Old trick! Happens all the time. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-ought to have known what&#8217;d happen....
-Gimme a pen, sonny.&#8221; He signed his full name,
-Mark Henderson Walling. There couldn&#8217;t be
-any more pain, after this. He shut his eyes and
-fell through warm darkness. He could not sleep
-but he must rest. He slept.</p>
-
-<p>When Gurdy came back into the bedroom,
-Mark was slowly breathing, sound asleep. The
-boy made the place dark and went up to his own
-room. In the upper black of the hall some one
-caught his arm. Olive followed him and shut the
-door. She had cast a black fur cloak over her
-night dress and her grey hair was loose. She
-looked at the boy without a word, leaning on the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Blackmail. She sent her lawyer. She&#8217;s got
-a confession from Rand. Mark&#8217;s signed an
-agreement. He&#8217;ll bring that play into New York
-and she&#8217;ll live with Rand as soon as it opens.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah!... Oh, the cad!... Oh, Gurdy,
-take care of Mark!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She walked down the hall. Gurdy followed
-her and heard her pity crash into miserable sobs
-behind her door. He stood listening for a while
-then raised his arm and pressed it against his
-mouth.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">XI<br />
-
-The Walling</h2></div>
-
-
-<p class="drop-cap">ON Saturday afternoon, Olive and Margot
-started for Seattle. Gurdy drove with
-them to the station and Margot spoke
-to him for the first time since the journey from
-Philadelphia. She said, &#8220;What theatre will dad
-bring &#8216;Todgers&#8217; into?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know. It&#8217;ll be hard to find one.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She murmured, &#8220;It ought to be a great success,&#8221;
-and Gurdy admired her stubborn air. She sat
-stiffly in a suit of yellow cloth and walked stiffly
-down the great stairs of the station, gathering
-eyes, moved ahead of Olive and himself to the
-coach and stood in the vestibule, motionless,
-uninterested when Olive drew Gurdy away to the
-edge of the concrete and raised her veil.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark need never see the child again unless&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, he&#8217;ll be all right,&#8221; Gurdy decided, &#8220;but
-it&#8217;s been an awful jolt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Englishwoman put a hand to her mouth
-which shivered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Awful.... Oh, I don&#8217;t know, Gurdy!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t know what, Lady Ilden?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know that he&#8217;s right in sacrificing himself....
-I don&#8217;t know that he&#8217;s wrong. Chivalry....
-I can&#8217;t understand how two people
-can be such beasts as this woman and her
-husband.... Deliberate torture.... Isn&#8217;t it
-revenge?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy didn&#8217;t answer but asked, &#8220;You&#8217;ll go on
-from Japan to&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;South Africa. I&#8217;ve some friends at Capetown....
-She&#8217;s that brutal age, when it doesn&#8217;t
-matter if we get what we want.... Oh, my dear
-boy, this is hideous! It&#8217;s revenge!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I saw Russell at
-the office this morning. &#8216;Todgers&#8217; doesn&#8217;t open
-in Baltimore until Monday. He says that Rand
-talked to him in Philadelphia before this happened
-and wanted Russell to persuade Mark to risk
-bringing the play to New York and that was after
-Mark had told him he wouldn&#8217;t bring it in.
-Russell thinks she&mdash;Cora Boyle&mdash;is simply crazy
-over Rand. Russell&#8217;s seen a good deal of them.
-He says Rand talked to her by &#8217;phone from
-Philadelphia on Tuesday. She may have put
-him up to this. I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s revenge. She&#8217;s
-got nothing to revenge. Mark&#8217;s always been
-decent to her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Olive smiled and then whispered, &#8220;Do take care
-of Mark.&#8221; A porter came bawling, &#8220;All
-aboard,&#8221; and groups broke up along the train.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-Margot swung and vanished into the coach.
-Olive said, &#8220;She&#8217;s stunned. She won&#8217;t realize
-she&#8217;s been a beast to Mark for a while.&#8221; Gurdy
-mumbled something about points of view. The
-tired woman cut him short with, &#8220;Rot, old man!
-She didn&#8217;t play fair. She lied. Do take care of
-Mark. Good-bye.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy walked away and a clerk from Mark&#8217;s
-office brushed by him with a papered load of
-yellow roses. The boy turned and saw Olive
-take these against her black furs. She stood
-graciously thanking the clerk for a moment, smiling.
-Then she stepped into the vestibule and the
-train stirred. Gurdy walked on. The colossal
-motion of the crowd in the brilliant station was a
-relief and a band hammered out some military
-march by a Red Cross booth. His spirit lifted;
-the strained waiting of three days was done; Margot
-was gone; Gurdy wouldn&#8217;t have to watch
-Mark&#8217;s piteous effort at normality. He found
-his uncle alone in the office at the 45th Street
-Theatre, studying a model for a scene and swiftly
-Mark asked, &#8220;I sent Jim with some&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He got there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark sighed and rubbed his hair. Everything
-confused him. He hoped Olive would forgive
-him for not coming to the station. That had
-been cowardly. He said, &#8220;Ought to have gone
-along, son.... Afraid I&#8217;d say something I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-shouldn&#8217;t. I shouldn&#8217;t have let you do it alone.
-This is worse on you than it is on me. I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark, on my honour, I&#8217;m not in love with
-Margot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He lied so nobly that Mark wondered at him
-and brought out a thin chuckle. &#8220;You&#8217;re a card,
-son!... If I didn&#8217;t know better I&#8217;d almost believe
-you.... Well, take a look at this set.
-That left wall looks kind of dark to me. It&#8217;s ox
-blood and it might light up with spots on it.
-What d&#8217;you think?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Callers interfered. Gurdy went down the
-stairs into the lobby packed with women who came
-out from the matine. All these decorated bodies
-flowed left and right about a dull blue placard
-announcing, &#8220;Early in December The Walling
-Theatre will open with &#8216;Captain Salvador&#8217; by
-Stephen O&#8217;Mara,&#8221; and some women paused, drawing
-on gloves, fussing with veils. A slim and
-black haired girl stared boldly at Gurdy, passing
-him. She wasn&#8217;t like Margot but he hated her
-for an instant and then stalked up Sixth Avenue
-where the lights of restaurants roused in the dusk
-and the crowd of Saturday evening brayed. In
-ten cool blocks Gurdy captured his philosophy,
-held it firmly; Mark was unreasonably hurt&mdash;in
-fact, Mark was an old-fashioned, unphilosophic
-fellow who hadn&#8217;t progressed, was still a country
-boy in essence, hadn&#8217;t even gained the inferior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-cynicism of his trade and friends. He was letting
-himself be bullied by Cora Boyle on an antique
-concept. Why should he let himself be laughed
-at and lose money for this immaterial thing?
-Gurdy succeeded in getting angry at Mark and
-tramped about the blue library preparing a lecture,
-saw a glove of Margot&#8217;s on a table and
-tossed it into a waste basket. He could imagine
-Mark shedding tears over that empty glove and
-its presence in the copper basket fretted Gurdy.
-He plucked it forth and flung it into the fire of
-cedar logs where it made a satisfactory hiss,
-blackening. It must have been perfumed. A
-scent floated out of the fire. Gurdy grinned over
-the symbol and poked the remnant which crumbled
-and was nothing. He stood reducing Margot&#8217;s
-importance to logical ash and so intently that he
-jumped when the butler told him that Russell was
-downstairs. The director strolled in and looked
-about the room before speaking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nice walls,&#8221; he said, &#8220;Well, Gurdy, I&#8217;ve just
-seen Miss Boyle.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At her hotel.&mdash;I&#8217;m mixed up in this and I
-thought I might help Mr. Walling out. So I
-went to see her and had a talk. It didn&#8217;t come
-to anything.&#8221; He sat down in Mark&#8217;s fireside
-chair, stooped his head and brooded, &#8220;I&#8217;d a sneaking
-idea that this game was a sort of revenge.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-Walling&#8217;s been good to her&mdash;done things for her.
-That might rankle. Well, I pointed out that
-&#8216;Todgers&#8217; is a waste of time. I did my best to
-make her see that. It was funny.... She sat
-on a lounge and rocked a cushion as if it were a
-baby&mdash;in her arms&mdash;Has she ever had a child?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think not.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And she&#8217;s ten or eleven years older than
-Rand.... It&#8217;s no good. She thinks he&#8217;s great
-in this play and she thinks it&#8217;ll run all winter in
-New York. And there we are, Bernamer. She&#8217;s
-set on the thing. Mr. Walling had better get it
-over as soon as he can. If he doesn&#8217;t, she&#8217;ll be
-ugly. I&#8217;m mighty sorry.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy blazed up in a mixture of wrath and impatience,
-&#8220;Oh, it&#8217;s all such damned rot! Mark&#8217;s
-one of the best producers in the country and he
-shouldn&#8217;t do this!... He should tell her to go
-to hell. It&#8217;s blackmail! I&#8217;m going to tell
-him&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>After a moment Russell asked, &#8220;What?&#8221; and
-laughed kindly. Gurdy shrugged and flinched
-before the laughter. The man was right. Mark
-would go through with the beastly deal, wouldn&#8217;t
-consider risking Margot&#8217;s name. There was no
-use in argument. He snapped, &#8220;Chivalry!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And you wouldn&#8217;t do it?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;No! It&#8217;s too thick. It
-is ironical. And he can&#8217;t tell any one. Everyone&#8217;ll<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-think he thinks this is a good play&mdash;worth
-doing. The critics&#8217;ll jump all over him.
-They&#8217;ll&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The other proposition being that Miss Walling
-will lose her reputation? She&#8217;s a young girl
-and not very clever or very sophisticated, to judge
-by her talk. She&#8217;s read the smart novels, of
-course. Quotes them a good deal.... You say
-you wouldn&#8217;t do this for her? The world being
-as it is? Tell it to the fish, Bernamer!&#8221; Gurdy
-felt weak before the cool, genial voice. Russell
-lit a pipe and went on, &#8220;I feel the way you do.
-Only the world&#8217;s full of shorn lambs and the
-wind&#8217;s damned cold.... Can you come to a
-show tonight?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lord, no,&#8221; said Gurdy, &#8220;I&#8217;ve got to stay with
-Mark. He&#8217;s got to have some one with him.
-Needs taking care of&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Russell said, &#8220;To be sure,&#8221; with another laugh
-and went away. He sent Gurdy the notices from
-the Baltimore papers after &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221;
-began its week there and with them a note:
-&#8220;Miss Boyle came down for the opening. She
-is still sure this is a great play. Maternal feeling.
-Rand seems nervous and loses his lines a good
-deal. He is probably ashamed of himself. His
-English accent peels off now and then and he talks
-flat Middle West American,&#8221; but the same mail
-brought a letter from Olive Ilden, written at Denver,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-and this maddened Gurdy, as last proof of
-Margot&#8217;s inconsequence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Dear Gurdy, The reaction has started. She
-is now certain that Rand planned the whole filthy
-trick. She is so angry that there is nothing left
-unsaid. He is a cheap bounder and a slacker etc.
-An actor can not be anything else, she says.
-Everything is Mark&#8217;s fault or mine for leaving
-her alone in Philadelphia. Do try to pity her a
-little, old man. She has made a fearful fool of
-herself and knows it. The whole thing is still
-horrible to me. I wish Mark had more humour
-or more cold blood. Anything to help him
-through. I keep trying to remember a quotation
-from Webster I threw at his head once. &#8216;These
-be the fair rewards of those that love.&#8217; It may
-be from Shakespeare. Did you try to argue him
-out of making the production in New York?
-That would be your logical attitude. But do take
-care of him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy tore the note up and went to pull on his
-riding clothes. The frost had melted. Mark
-wanted a ride in the warm park. The boy
-thought proudly that Mark hadn&#8217;t complained.
-He seemed quietly busy, arranging advertisements
-for &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; which toured New
-England after its week of Boston. Rumours of
-a triumph crept ahead of the play. Its success,
-its investiture of light and colour would soothe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-Mark while he still needed soothing. Gurdy
-rattled downstairs and Mark laughed at him,
-&#8220;You look mighty well in ridin&#8217; things, son!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;So do you,&#8221; said Gurdy, in all honesty, and
-watched Mark beam, settling his boots, the fit of
-his black coat. They rode into the empty Park.
-Mark talked about horses and then about Gurdy&#8217;s
-brothers. One of them wanted to be a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You did that with your scar and all,&#8221; Mark
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Funny how easy a kid gets an ambition. Only
-thirteen. He&#8217;ll get over it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What did you want to be when you were thirteen,
-sonny?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy strove to remember. He had probably
-wanted to be a theatrical manager. He said,
-&#8220;I wanted to be a barber when I was nine or ten,
-I remember that. And then I wanted to be an
-aviator&mdash;and now I want to write plays....&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hurry and write me a good one, brother.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then Mark was silent. They cantered along
-in the creamy sunlight. A great lady of artistic
-tastes reducing her weight bowed jerkily to Mark
-from her burdened gelding and called, &#8220;Can you
-bring Miss Walling to luncheon Sunday?&#8221;
-Gurdy saw Mark&#8217;s mouth twist. It needed courage
-to call so easily back, &#8220;She&#8217;s gone to Japan.&#8221;
-But a hundred yards afterward Mark reined in
-and stared at the sun, his face tormented.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>&#8220;Sonny, I may have to open the Walling with
-&#8216;Todgers Intrudes&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fact. I can&#8217;t take a chance with Cora gettin&#8217;
-nasty. I can&#8217;t risk it. And I can&#8217;t get a house
-for love or money. I tried to buy the show out of
-the Princess last night. There ain&#8217;t a house empty....
-I may have to use the Walling&mdash;open it
-with this&mdash;this&mdash;&#8221; He slashed his crop though
-the air, was ashamed of himself and sat chewing
-a lip. Gurdy could keep his emotions so well
-covered just as he now hid and nobly lied about
-his heartbreak over Margot. Mark&#8217;s sense of
-hurt swelled and broke out, &#8220;Oh, women are hell!
-If they want a thing they&#8217;ll do anything to get it!
-They&mdash;they scare me, Gurd! When they want
-a thing!... And look how she treated you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, Mark, honestly, I wasn&#8217;t in love with
-her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark knew better but Gurdy&#8217;s brave mendacity
-cheered him. He grinned and rode on. He
-must think of ways to make Gurdy forget the girl.
-When they reached the house he telephoned the
-gayest folk he could find and summoned them to a
-luncheon. He worked in a fever, keeping Gurdy
-busy with new plays, ritual lunches at the Algonquin
-and motor trips to country inns where they
-hadn&#8217;t been with Margot who somehow wavered
-in Mark&#8217;s mind. He began to lose an immediate,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-answering picture of her. It was hard to recall
-her phrases of later time. Things she had said
-and poses of her childhood rose more clearly.
-She merged in his perplexed hunt for a theatre.
-When he found, on the first of December, that
-he couldn&#8217;t rent or beg a playhouse for &#8220;Todgers
-Intrudes&#8221; he hated Margot for an hour and
-tramped his library in a sweat of loathing. He
-must defame the Walling with this nonsense, finish
-his bargain by dishonouring himself and his
-dream, for the Walling was not altogether real.
-He roamed the shell where workmen were covering
-the naked chairs with dull blue, in a haze.
-The smell of banana oil and turpentine made him
-dizzy. The silver and black boxes seemed vaporous
-like the mist of the ceiling when the lamps
-were tried on its surface. He had moments of
-sheer glory through which came burning the
-thought of Cora Boyle and Margot, in this queer
-alliance. His offices were transferred to broad
-rooms by the white landing of the wide stairs in
-the Walling. There was an alcove for Gurdy&#8217;s
-desk and here Mark told him suddenly, &#8220;Goin&#8217;
-to bring &#8216;Todgers&#8217; in here next week, son.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy paled, leaned on the new desk and flexed
-his hands on his fair head. He said, &#8220;Oh, no!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got to, son. I&#8217;ve tried all I know.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The boy babbled, &#8220;Don&#8217;t do it!... Oh,
-damn it! You&#8217;ve been working for this place for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-years and&mdash;It&#8217;s not worth it! Look here, let me
-go talk to this damned woman!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No. I&#8217;ve got some pride left, son. You
-shan&#8217;t go near her. You go down to the farm
-and stay with the folks.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy wanted nothing more. All the pressmen
-and underlings were puzzled by Mark&#8217;s maintenance
-of the English comedy on the road. It
-was not making money. The theatrical weeklies
-had warned New York how bad was &#8220;Todgers
-Intrudes.&#8221; Gurdy drove his motor down to
-Fayettesville on Saturday, had a fit of shame and
-hurried back on Sunday. On the face of the
-Walling the dead electric bulbs told the news,
-&#8220;Mark Walling Presents Todgers Intrudes With
-Cosmo Rand&#8221; and Mark&#8217;s treasurer came out of
-the white doors to expostulate.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t get this. Your uncle&#8217;s playin&#8217; for a
-dead loss, Mr. Bernamer. It&#8217;s no damn good.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Where is he?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Went up to New Haven yesterday. &#8216;Captain
-Salvador&#8217; played there last night. Say,
-what&#8217;s the idea? This &#8216;Todgers&#8217; ain&#8217;t done a
-thing but eat up money. Every one knows it&#8217;s a
-frost!&#8221; The man worried openly.</p>
-
-<p>There could be no explanation, Gurdy saw.
-The critics would jeer. Mark&#8217;s friends would
-chaff him. The boy patted his wheel and asked,
-&#8220;What night does it open?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>&#8220;Wednesday, like &#8216;Captain Salvador&#8217; was to.
-Honest, Mr. Bernamer, this is hell!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy drove off to a restaurant for dinner and
-here a critic stopped him on the sill to ask
-whether Mark had gone &#8220;quite, quite mad?&#8221;
-Monday was barren anguish, watching Mark&#8217;s
-face. &#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; would play in Hartford
-and Providence all week. On Tuesday
-there was a rehearsal of &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221; and
-Gurdy found a black motor initialed C. B. when
-he came to the Walling. Workmen were polishing
-the brass of the outer doors and the programs
-for tomorrow night were ready. Everything
-was ready for the sick farce. On Wednesday
-morning Mark ate breakfast with heroic grins
-and talked of playing golf in the afternoon.
-But he hadn&#8217;t slept well. His eyes were flecked
-with red. Bone showed under his cheeks. His
-black had an air of candid mourning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The best joke&#8217;d be if the damned thing made
-a hit,&#8221; he said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think that would be a little too ironical,&#8221;
-Gurdy snapped.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is what you&#8217;d call ironical, ain&#8217;t it?
-Well, I&#8217;m going down to the office for a minute.
-Don&#8217;t come. Send for the horses and we&#8217;ll go
-riding about eleven.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He walked to the Walling, was halted a dozen
-times and found the antechamber full of people.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-Some had appointments. He sat talking for an
-hour and then started downstairs. But he saw
-Cosmo Rand on the white floor of the vestibule,
-slim in a grey furred coat, reading a newspaper.
-The blue walls of the stair seemed to press Mark&#8217;s
-head. He turned back into the office and sent
-for his house manager. When the man came
-Mark said, &#8220;I&#8217;m not going to be here tonight,
-Billy. Tell anybody that asks I&#8217;m sick as a dog
-and couldn&#8217;t come.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All right. Say, sir, would you mind telling
-me just why&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark beamed across the desk and lied, &#8220;Why,
-this fellow Dufford that wrote this is a friend of
-mine and he&#8217;s poor as a churchmouse. I thought
-I&#8217;d take a chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The manager shuffled and blurted, &#8220;It&#8217;s a damn
-poor chance.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mighty poor, Billy. Well, the show business
-is a gamble, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Rand was gone from the vestibule. Mark
-walked seething over Broadway and into Sixth
-Avenue. He must think of something to do, tonight.
-He couldn&#8217;t sit at home. The flags on
-the Hippodrome wagged to him. He went there
-and bought two seats. The tickets stayed unmentioned
-in his pocket all the deadly afternoon.
-At six he said shyly to Gurdy, &#8220;Think you want
-to see this tonight, son?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>&#8220;Might as well, sir.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The &#8220;sir&#8221; pleased Mark. It rang respectfully.
-He stammered, &#8220;I got a couple of seats for the
-show at the Hippodrome and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s good,&#8221; Gurdy said, &#8220;We needn&#8217;t dress,
-then.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But Mark sat haunted in the vast theatre,
-watching the stage. He had deserted his own,
-run from disaster. The Walling revenged itself.
-He saw the misty ceiling wane as lights lowered
-and the remote rims of silver mirrors fade in the
-corners of the gallery. The glow from the stage
-would show the massed shoulders of women in
-the black boxes. Cora Boyle would be sitting
-in the righthand box. She might wear a yellow
-gown. He would risk seeing that to be mixed
-in his dream. It was the best theatre of the city,
-of the world. He blinked at the monstrous
-evolutions of this chorus, peered at Gurdy and
-saw the boy sit moodily, knee over knee, listless
-from grieving, his arms locked. The time ticked
-on Mark&#8217;s wrist&mdash;The critics would be filing into
-the white vestibule where men must admire the
-dull blue panels of clear enamel, the simple,
-grooved ceiling and the hidden lamps. The
-yellow smoke room would be full. He wanted
-to be there in the face of derision. A dry aching
-shook Mark. It was like the past time when
-Gurdy first went to school or when Margot had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-gone to England; the Walling was his child.
-He had desired it beyond any woman. He
-adored it out of his wretchedness. He pressed
-his shoulder against Gurdy for the sake of
-warmth and Gurdy grinned loyally at him. There
-was no one so kind as Gurdy who began to tell
-silly tales when they came home and sat on
-Mark&#8217;s bed smoking cigarettes. In the morning
-the boy brought up the papers and said gruffly,
-&#8220;Not as bad as I thought&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Oh, get out! I bet they&#8217;re fierce,&#8221; Mark
-laughed, &#8220;Read me some.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Gurdy dropped the damp sheets on the quilt,
-glared at them and dashed his hand against the
-foot of the bed. He cried, &#8220;I don&#8217;t give a
-d-damn what they say about the play! They&#8217;ve
-no right to talk about you like that!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Immense warmth flooded Mark. He sat up
-and said, &#8220;Sure they have. For all they know I
-thought this thing was fine.... God bless you,
-son!&#8221; He wanted to do something for Gurdy
-directly. &#8220;Say, for heaven&#8217;s sake, brother, those
-clothes are too thin for winter. We&#8217;ll run down
-and order you some. And let&#8217;s go down to the
-farm. I ain&#8217;t seen dad and your mother in a
-dog&#8217;s age.&mdash;And hell, this ain&#8217;t so bad, Gurdy.
-The thing&#8217;ll dry up and blow away. We&#8217;ll bring
-&#8216;Captain Salvador&#8217; in. I&#8217;ve had worse luck on a
-rabbit hunt.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>But at Fayettesville where his father asked
-why Margot hadn&#8217;t come to say good-bye, Mark
-was still plagued by visionary glimpses of the
-Walling, half-filled by yawning folk, the black
-boxes empty. The flat country was deep in moist
-snow. Snow had to be considered. Audiences
-laughed nowadays at the best paper flakes. He
-talked to Gurdy about it on Saturday morning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pale blue canvas with the whitest light you
-can get jammed on it. That might work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mark, if you couldn&#8217;t have scenery for a play
-would you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Mark scoffed, &#8220;What&#8217;s a play without scenery?&mdash;Hey,
-look at the red car.... No, it&#8217;s a motor-bike.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A lad on a red motorcycle whipped in a bright
-streak up the lane and through a snow ball battle
-of Gurdy&#8217;s brothers. He had a telegram for
-Mark from the house manager of the Walling:
-&#8220;No sale for next week. Miss Boyle requests
-play be withdrawn. Instruct.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Got her bellyfull,&#8221; Mark said and scribbled
-a return message ordering &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221;
-withdrawn then another to the manager of
-&#8220;Captain Salvador&#8221; in Providence. He told
-Gurdy, &#8220;Now, she can&#8217;t say a thing. Well, let&#8217;s
-get back to town, son. We&#8217;ll have a lot to do,
-bringing &#8216;Salvador&#8217; in next Wednesday.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His motor carried them swiftly up New Jersey.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-Gurdy lounged and chattered beside Mark who
-couldn&#8217;t feel triumphant though he tried. The
-drive had been made so often with Margot and
-now he saw the child in all clarity, her bright
-pumps and the silver buckles she so liked stretched
-on the warmer close to his feet. Her older
-beauty flickered and faded like some intervening
-mist. Pain stabbed and jarred him. The snow
-of the upland gave out. Rain began. When
-they reached Broadway its lights were violet and
-wistful in the swirl above umbrellas.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;God, what an ugly town,&#8221; said Gurdy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t it? Don&#8217;t know what people that like
-something pretty&#8217;d do if it weren&#8217;t for the shows&mdash;and
-the damned movies.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They dined in a restaurant and another manager
-chaffed Mark about &#8220;Todgers Intrudes&#8221;
-leaning drunk on the table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And I hear it goes to the storehouse?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes ... but the show business is a gamble,
-Bill.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t it? Say, have you seen this hunk of
-nothin&#8217; I&#8217;ve got up to my place? Have you seen
-it? God, go up and take a look at it! I get a
-bellyache every time I go near it. Turnin&#8217; them
-away, though. Well, here today and hell tomorrow.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His treasurer came to meet Mark in the glittering
-vestibule where a few men smoked forlornly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-against the blue panels. Mark glanced at the
-slip showing the receipts and laughed, commenced
-talking of &#8220;Captain Salvador.&#8221; His force gathered
-about him. Gurdy strolled away. A petty
-laughter rattled out of the doors and Gurdy
-passed in. The lit stage showed him a sprinkle
-of heads on the sweep of the seats. There was no
-one in the boxes. Two ushers were rolling dice
-by the white arch of the smokeroom. A couple
-of women left the poor audience and hurried by
-the boy dejectedly. He walked out through the
-vestibule where more men were collecting around
-Mark&#8217;s height and the swift happiness of his face
-as he talked of next week. Gurdy marched
-along the proud front of the theatre and turned
-into the alley that led from street to street. One
-bulb shone above the stage door and sent down
-a glistening coat for the large black motor standing
-there. Gurdy kept close to the other wall.
-There was a woman smoking in the limousine.
-The spark made a heart inside the shadow.
-Gurdy stared and was eaten by rage against her.
-He stood staring.</p>
-
-<p>The stage door opened. The few performers
-began to leave. They moved up or down the
-alley to join the bright motion of the glowing
-streets outside. Their feet stirred the pools of
-rain on the pavement. Their voices ebbed and
-tinkled in the lofty alley. At last a slim man in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-a grey coat ran from the door and jumped into the
-black motor which moved, now, and slid away,
-jolted into the southward street. Gurdy was
-moving, too, when other lights woke high on the
-brick wall. An iron shutter grated, opening, and
-men appeared in the fissure. They bellowed
-down to the old doorkeeper, &#8220;Ain&#8217;t them guys
-from Cain&#8217;s got here, yet?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They ain&#8217;t to come &#8217;til eleven fifteen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hell, it&#8217;s after!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The stage hands cursed merrily. One of them
-mimicked Rand&#8217;s English accent to much
-applause. Then the great drays from the storehouse
-came grinding along the alley in a steam
-as the horses snorted. The stage hands and
-carters swore at each other. The vast screens
-were slung and handed down. The fleet quality
-of this failure bit Gurdy. He leaned dreary on
-the wall and saw Mark standing close to him,
-face raised to the lights, an odd small grin twisting
-his mouth. Mark did not move or speak.</p>
-
-<p>He was thinking confusedly of many things.
-It was hard to think at all. One of the stage
-hands whistled a waltz that people liked. The
-melody caught at Mark&#8217;s mind and drew it away
-from the moment, forward and back. He
-hunted justice. Things went wrong. People
-weren&#8217;t kind. Next week the new play would
-glitter and people would applaud. Gurdy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-might come to write plays, the best possible plays.
-He watched the wreck melt. People would forget
-this. It would sink into shadow. No one
-would understand but they would forget. It was
-trivial in his long success. It horribly hurt him.
-He had been fooled in love. It was laughable.
-Things happened so. One must go on and forget
-about them. One of the horses neighed and
-stamped. A blue spark jetted up from the pavement,
-above a pool.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here goes nothin&#8217;,&#8221; a stage hand yelled, letting
-down the last screen. The iron shutter closed
-over the laughter. The carters whined and the
-drays were backed down the alley. The rain fell
-silently between Mark the red of the wall making
-it purple&mdash;a wonderful colour. The guiding
-lights went out. Mark sighed and took Gurdy&#8217;s
-arm. They walked together toward the gleaming
-crowd of the street. Yet feeling this warmth
-beside him Mark walked without much pain.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fair Rewards, by Thomas Beer
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