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Language: English
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BERTRAM COPE'S YEAR ***
CONTENTS
3. Cope Is "Entertained"
4. Cope Is Considered
AFTERWORD
1
I think, then, that Bertram Cope, when he began to intrigue the little
group which dwelt among the quadruple avenues of elms that led to the
campus in Churchton, was but about twenty-four,--certainly not a day
more than twenty-five. If twenty-eight is the ideal age, the best is
all the better for being just a little ahead.
"Known me?" returned Cope, promptly enough. "Why, you haven't known me
because I haven't been here to _be_ known." He spoke in a ringing,
resonant voice, returning her unabashed pressure with a hearty good
will and blazing down upon her through his clear blue eyes with a high
degree of self-possession, even of insouciance. And he explained, with
a liberal exhibition of perfect teeth, that for the two years following
his graduation he had been teaching literature at a small college in
Wisconsin and that he had lately come back to Alma Mater for another
bout: "I'm after that degree," he concluded.
"Haven't been here?" she returned. "But you _have_ been here; you must
have been here for years--for four, anyhow. So why haven't we...?" she
began again.
Cope bowed and smiled and stepped toward the tea-table. His head once
turned, the smile took on a wry twist. He was no squire of dames, no
frequenter of afternoon receptions. Why the deuce had he come to this
one? Why had he yielded so readily to the urgings of the professor of
mathematics?--himself urged in turn, perhaps, by a wife for whose
little affair one extra man at the opening of the fall season counted,
and counted hugely. Why must he now expose himself to the boundless
aplomb and momentum of this woman of forty-odd who was finding
amusement in treating him as a "college boy"? "Boy" indeed she had
actually called him: well, perhaps his present position made all this
possible. He was not yet out in the world on his own. In the background
of "down state" was a father with a purse in his pocket and a hand to
open the purse. Though the purse was small and the hand reluctant, he
must partly depend on both for another year. If he were only in
business--if he were only a broker or even a salesman--he should not
find himself treated with such blunt informality and condescension as a
youth. If, within the University itself, he were but a real member of
the faculty, with an assured position and an assured salary, he should
not have to lie open to the unceremonious hectorings of the socially
confident, the "placed."
He regained his smile on the way across the room, and the young
creature behind the samovar, who had had a moment's fear that she must
deal with Severity, found that a beaming Affability--though personally
unticketed in her memory--was, after all, her happier allotment. In her
reaction she took it all as a personal compliment. She could not know,
of course, that it was but a piece of calculated expressiveness, fitted
to a 'particular social function and doubly overdone as the wearer's
own reaction from the sprouting indignation of the moment before. She
hoped that her hair, under his sweeping advance, was blowing across her
forehead as lightly and carelessly as it ought to, and that his taste
in marquise rings might be substantially the same as hers. She faced
the Quite Unknown, and asked it sweetly, "One lump or two?"
"The dickens! How do _I_ know?" he thought. "An extra one on the
saucer, please," he said aloud, with his natural resonance but slightly
hushed. And his blue eyes, clear and rather cold and hard, blazed down,
in turn, on her.
"Never mind sense. If there is cake, I want it. Tell Amy to put it on a
plate."
"Amy?"
"Your Amy?"
Cope lapsed back into his frown and recrossed the room. The girl behind
the samovar felt that her hair was unbecoming, after all, and that her
ring, borrowed for the occasion, was in bad taste. Cope turned back
with his plate of cake and his fork. Well, he had been promoted from a
"boy" to a "fellow"; but must he continue a kind of methodical dog-trot
through a sublimated butler's pantry?
As they sat there together,--she plying him with questions and he,
restored to good humor, replying or parrying with an unembarrassed
exuberance,--a man who stood just within the curtained doorway and
flicked a small graying moustache with the point of his forefinger took
in the scene with a studious regard. Every small educational community
has its scholar _manqué_--its haunter of academic shades or its
intermittent dabbler in their charms; and Basil Randolph held that role
in Churchton. No alumnus himself, he viewed, year after year, the
passing procession of undergraduates who possessed in their young
present so much that he had left behind or had never had at all, and
who were walking, potentially, toward a promising future in which he
could take no share. Most of these had been commonplace young fellows
enough--noisy, philistine, glaringly cursory and inconsiderate toward
their elders; but a few of them--one now and then, at long
intervals--he would have enjoyed knowing, and knowing intimately. On
these infrequent occasions would come a union of frankness, comeliness
and _élan_, and the rudiments of good manners. But no one in all the
long-drawn procession had stopped to look at him a second time. And now
he was turning gray; he was tragically threatened with what might in
time become a paunch. His kind heart, his forthreaching nature, went
for naught; and the young men let him, walk under the elms and the
scrub-oaks neglected. If they had any interest beyond their egos, their
fraternities, and (conceivably) their studies, that interest dribbled
away on the quadrangle that housed the girl students. "If they only
realized how much a friendly hand, extended to them from middle life,
might do for their futures...!" he would sometimes sigh. But the
youthful egoists, ignoring him still, faced their respective futures,
however uncertain, with much more confidence than he, backed by
whatever assurances and accumulations he enjoyed, could face his own.
A gap had come in her chat with Cope. He had told her all he had been
asked to tell--or all he meant to tell: at any rate he had been given
abundant opportunity to expatiate upon a young man's darling
subject--himself. Either she now had enough fixed points for securing
the periphery of his circle or else she preferred to leave some portion
of his area (now ascertained approximately) within a poetic penumbra.
Or perhaps she wished some other middle-aged connoisseur to share her
admiration and confirm her judgment. At all events----
"Now you are going to be rewarded," said the lady, broadly generous.
"You are going to meet Mr. Cope. You are going to meet Mr.----" She
paused. "Do you know,"--turning to the young man,--"I haven't your
first name?"
"Never!"
"Because that would be too exactly right. I might have guessed and
guessed----!"
"You hear, Mr. Randolph? You are to meet Mr. Bertram Cope."
Cope, who had risen and had left any embarrassment consequent upon the
short delay to Basil Randolph himself, shot out a hand and summoned a
ready smile. Within his cuff was a hint for the construction of his
fore-arm: it was lean and sinewy, clear-skinned, and with strong power
for emphasis on the other's rather short, well-fleshed fingers. And as
he gripped, he beamed; beamed just as warmly, or just as coldly--at all
events, just as speciously--as he had beamed before: for on a social
occasion one must slightly heighten good will,--all the more so if one
be somewhat unaccustomed and even somewhat reluctant.
"I don't consider myself tall," he replied. "Five foot nine and a
half," he proceeded ingenuously, "is hardly tall."
"But really, sir," rejoined Cope kindly, "I shouldn't call you short.
What is an inch or two?"
"You incorrigible! I hope I'm not so short as that! Sit down, again; we
must be more on a level. And you, Mr. Randolph, may stand and look down
on us both. I'm sure you have been doing so, anyway, for the past ten
minutes!"
Soberly. For the young man had slipped in that "sir." And he had been
so kindly about Randolph's five foot seven and a bit over. And he had
shown himself so damnably tender toward a man fairly advanced within
the shadow of the fifties--a man who, if not an acknowledged outcast
from the joys of life, would soon be lagging superfluous on their rim.
"Never mind, Amy," she said. "Don't pity him, and don't scorn him. He's
really quite self-possessed and quite chatty. Or"--suddenly to Cope
himself--"have you shown us already your whole box of tricks?"
"Why, what's all this about?" said the questioning glance of Amy. If
there was any offense at all, on anybody's part, it lay in making too
much of too little.
"Never mind, anyway," said Amy, still without cognomen and connections;
"I can starve with perfect convenience. Or I can find a mouthful
somewhere, later."
"Has everybody...?"
And there let us leave them--our little group, our cast of characters:
"everybody--almost," save one. Or two. Or three.
"This is much nicer," she would say. Nicer than what, she did not
always make clear.
Yes, the house was nearly three-quarters of a mile to the west of the
campus, but it was twice as far as if it had been north or south.
Trains and trolleys, intent on serving the interests of the great
majority, took their own courses and gave her guests no aid. If the
evening turned cold or blustery or brought a driving rain she would say:
"You can't go out in this. You must stay all night. We have room and to
spare."
If she wanted anybody to stay very much, she would even add: "I can't
think of your walking toward the lake with such a gale in your
face,"--regardless of the fact that the lake wind was the rarest of
them all and that in nine cases out of ten the rain or snow would be
not in people's faces but at their backs.
If she didn't want anybody to stay, she simply ordered out the car and
bundled him off. The delay in the offer of the car sometimes induced a
young man to remain. Tasteful pajamas and the promise of a suitably
early breakfast assured him that he had made no mistake.
Cope's first call was made, not on a tempestuous evening in the winter
time, but on a quiet Sunday afternoon toward the end of September. The
day was sunny and the streets were full of strollers moving along
decorously beneath the elms, maples and catalpas.
"Drop in some Sunday about five," Medora Phillips had said to him, "and
have tea. The girls will be glad to meet you."
"The girls"? Who were they, and how many? He supposed he could account
for one of them, at least; but the others?
"You find me alone, after all," was her greeting. "The girls are out
walking--with each other, or their beaux, or whatever. Come in here."
She led him into a spacious room cluttered with lambrequins, stringy
portieres, grilles, scroll-work, bric-a-brac....
"The fine weather has been too much for them," she proceeded. "I was
relying on them to entertain you."
"Of course you are." Her expression and inflection indicated to him
that he had been caught up in the cogs of a sizable machine, and that
he was to be put through it. Everybody who came was entertained--or
helped entertain others. Entertainment, in fact, was the one object of
the establishment.
"You have met Amy. But there are Hortense and Carolyn."
"Amy plays? Pardon me for calling her Amy, but you have never given me
the rest of her name."
"Well, that was careless, if true. Her name is Amy Leffingwell; and
Hortense's name is----"
"Stop, please. Pay it out gradually. My poor head can hold only what it
can. Names without people to attach them to...."
"So Miss Leffingwell plays?" He flared out his blue-white smile. "Let
me learn my lesson page by page."
"Yes, she plays," returned Medora Phillips briefly. "Guess what," she
continued presently, half placated.
They were again side by side on a sofa, each with an elbow on its back
and the elbows near together. Nor was Medora Phillips, though plump, at
all the graceless, dumpy little body she sometimes taxed herself with
being.
"Piano!"
"What's wrong?"
"Be serious."
"Don't be grotesque." She drew her dark eyebrows into protest. "What a
sight!--a delicate young girl playing a trombone!"
"A harp needs an express wagon. Though of course it is pretty for the
arms."
"Of course. And that's probably the very first thing you thought of.
Why not have mentioned it?"
"Oh, surely. And a sandwich. And another. And a slice of layer cake,
with a fork. And another cup of tea. And a macaroon or two----"
"Am I a glutton?"
They were still side by side on the sofa. Both were cross--kneed, and
the tip of her russet boot almost grazed that of his Oxford tie. He did
not notice: he was already arranging the first paragraph of a letter to
a friend in Winnebago, Wisconsin. "Dear Arthur: I called,--as I said I
was going to. She is a scrapper. She goes at you hammer and
tongs--pretending to quarrel as a means of entertaining you..."
Medora Phillips removed her elbow from the back of the sofa, and began
to prod up her cushions. "How about your work?" she asked. "What are
you doing?"
He came back. "Oh, I'm boning. Some things still to make up. I'm
digging in the poetry of Gower--the 'moral Gower'."
"Not--lately."
"They are all old--five hundred years and more. He was a pal of
Chaucer's."
She gave him an indignant glance. "So that's it? You're laying traps
for me? You don't like me! You don't respect me!"
One of the recalcitrant cushions fell to the floor. They bumped heads
in trying to pick it up.
"Traps!" he said. "Never in the world! Don't think it! Why, Gower is
just a necessary old bore. Nobody's supposed to know much about
him--except instructors and their hapless students."
He added one more sentence to his letter to "Arthur": "She pushes you
pretty hard. A little of it goes a good way..."
"Oh, if _that's_ the case..." she said. "How about your thesis?" she
went on swiftly. "What are you going to write about?"
"Not at all--once more. I should like to take a year and spend it among
the manor-houses of Warwickshire. But I suppose nobody would stake me
to that."
"I don't know what you have in mind; some wild goose chase, probably. I
expect your friends would like it better if you spent your time right
here."
"Anybody has luck who can form the right circle. Stay where you are. A
circle formed here would do you much more good than a temporary one
four thousand miles away."
Voices were heard in the front yard. "There they come, now," Mrs.
Phillips said. She rose, and one more of the wayward cushions went to
the floor. It lay there unregarded,--a sign that a promising
tête-à-tête was, for the time being, over.
_COPE IS "ENTERTAINED"_
Mrs. Phillips stepped to the front door to meet the half dozen young
people who were cheerily coming up the walk. Cope, looking at the
fallen cushions with an unseeing eye, remained within the drawing-room
door to compose a further paragraph for the behoof of his correspondent
in Wisconsin:
Only one of the sophomores--if the young men were really of that
objectionable tribe--came indoors with the young ladies. The
others--either engaged elsewhere or consciously unworthy--went away
after a moment or two on the front steps. Perhaps they did not feel
"encouraged." And in fact Mrs. Phillips looked back toward Cope with
the effect of communicating the idea that she had enough men for
to-day. She even conveyed to him the notion that he had made the others
superfluous. But--
"Now, Amy, before you really stop, do play that last little thing. The
dear child," she said to Cope in a lower tone, "composed it herself and
dedicated it to me."
The last little thing was a kind of "meditation," written very simply
and performed quite seriously and unaffectedly. And it gave, of course,
a good chance for the arms.
"There!" said Mrs. Phillips, at its close. "Isn't it too sweet? And it
inspired Carolyn too. She wrote a poem after hearing it."
The poem consisted of some six or seven brief stanzas. Its title was
read, formally, by the writer; and, quite as formally, the dedication
which intervened between title and first stanza,--a dedication to
"Medora Townsend Phillips."
"Of course," said Cope to himself. And as the reading went on, he ran
his eyes over the dusky, darkening walls. He knew what he expected to
find.
Just as he found it the sophomore standing between the big padded chair
and the book-case spatted his hands three times. The poem was over, the
patroness duly celebrated. Cope spatted a little too, but kept his eye
on one of the walls.
"Of course she did," said Cope under his breath. He transferred an
obligatory glance from the canvas to the expectant artist. But--
"It's getting almost too dark to see it," said his hostess, and
suddenly pressed a button. This brought into play a row of electric
bulbs near the top edge of the frame and into full prominence the dark
plumpness of the subject. He looked back again from the painter (who
also had black hair and eyes) to her work.
The youth hastened to get into action. Cope went on with his letter to
"Arthur":
"Then, sing--do. There's the open piano. Can you play your own
accompaniments?"
"Very well."
The room was now in dusk, save for the bulbs which made the portrait
shine forth like a wayside shrine. Roddy, the possible sophomore,
helped a maid find places for the cups and saucers; and the three
girls, still formed in a careful group about the sofa, silently waited.
"Of course you realize that this is not such a very large room," said
Mrs. Phillips.
"Meaning....?"
"Meaning, then, that I am not to raise the roof nor jar the china. I'll
try not to."
Nor did he. He sang with care rather than with volume, with discretion
rather than with abandon. The "simple accompaniments" went off with but
a slight hitch or two, yet the "resonant voice" was somehow, somewhere
lost. Possibly Cope gave too great heed to his hostess' caution; but it
seemed as if a voice essentially promising had slipped through some
teacher's none too competent hands, or--what was quite as serious--as
if some temperamental brake were operating to prevent the complete
expression of the singer's nature. Lassen, Grieg, Rubinstein--all these
were carried through rather cautiously, perhaps a little mechanically;
and there was a silence. Hortense broke it.
"Parnassus, yes. And finally comes Apollo." She reached over and
murmured to Mrs. Phillips: "None too skillful on the lyre, and none too
strong in the lungs...."
"Possibly," Cope said, turning his back on the keyboard. "I sang in the
University choir for a year or two."
"In gown and mortar-board? 'Come, Holy Spirit,' and all that?"
"Of course," she said. "I remember now. But I never saw you before
without your mortar-board. That changes the forehead. Yes, you're
yourself," she went on, adding to her previous pleasure the further
pleasure of recognition. "You've earned your tea," she added.
"Hortense," she said over her shoulder to the dark girl behind the
sofa, "will you--? No; I'll pour, myself."
She slid into her place at table and got things to going. There was an
interval which Cope might have employed in praising the artistic
aptitudes of this variously gifted household, but he found no
appropriate word to say,--or at least uttered none. And none of the
three girls made any further comment on his own performance.
Mrs. Phillips accompanied him, on his way out, as far as the hall. She
looked up at him questioningly.
"You don't like my poor girls," she said. "You don't find them clever;
you don't find them interesting."
"On the contrary," he rejoined, "I have spent a delightful hour." Must
he go on and confess that he had developed no particular dexterity in
dealing with the younger members of the opposite sex?
"No, you don't care for them one bit," she insisted. She tried to look
rebuking, reproachful; yet some shade of expression conveyed to him a
hint that her protest was by no means sincere: if he really didn't, it
was no loss--it was even a possible gain.
"It's you who don't care for me," he returned. "I'm _vieux jeu_."
"Nonsense," she rejoined. "If you have a slight past, that only makes
you the more atmospheric. Be sure you come again soon, and put in a
little more work on the foreground."
Cope, on his way eastward, in the early evening, passed near the
trolley tracks, the Greek lunch-counter, without a thought; he was
continuing his letter to "Dear Arthur":
"I think," he wrote, with his mind's finger, "that you might as well
come down. I miss you--even more than I thought I should. The term is
young, and you can enter for Spanish, or Psychology, or something.
There's nothing for you up there. The bishop can spare you. Your father
will be reasonable. We can easily arrange some suitable quarters..."
And we await a reply from "Dear Arthur"--the fifth and last of our
little group. But no; there are two or three others--as you have just
seen.
_COPE IS CONSIDERED_
A few days after the mathematical tea, Basil Randolph was taking a
sedate walk among the exotic elms and the indigenous oaks of the
campus; he was on his way to the office of the University registrar. He
felt interested in Bertram Cope and meant to consult the authorities.
That is to say, he intended to consult the written and printed data
provided by the authorities,--not to make verbal inquiries of any of
the college officials themselves. He was, after all, sufficiently in
the academic tradition to prefer the consultation of records as against
the employment of _viva voce_ methods; and he saw no reason why his new
interest should be widely communicated to other individuals. There was
an annual register; there was an album of loose sheets kept up by the
members of the faculty; and there was a card-catalogue, he remembered,
in half a dozen little drawers. All this ought to remove any necessity
of putting questions by word of mouth.
The young clerk behind the broad counter annoyed him by no offer of
aid, but left him to browse for himself. First, the printed register.
This was crowded with professors--full, head, associate, assistant;
there were even two or three professors emeritus. And each department
had its tale of instructors. But no mention of a Bertram Cope. Of
course not; this volume, it occurred to him presently, represented the
state of things during the previous scholastic year.
"You are not finding what you want?" asked the clerk at last. The
search was delaying other inquirers.
"He has been slow. But his page will be in place by tomorrow. If you
want his address...."
"Yes?"
"--I think I can give it to you." The youth retired behind a screen.
"There," he said, returning with a bit of pencilling on a scrap of
paper.
Randolph thanked him, folded up the paper, and put it in his pocket. A
mere bit of ordinary clerkly writing; no character, no allure. Well,
the actual chirography of the absentee would be made manifest before
long. What was it like? Should he himself ever have a specimen of it in
a letter or a note?
There were lighted windows in the front and at the side. Which of these
was Cope's, and what was the boy doing? Was he deep in black-letter, or
was he selecting a necktie preliminary to some evening diversion
outside? Or had he put out his light--several windows were dark--and
already taken the train into town for some concert or theatre?
He threw away his cigarette and strolled on to his own quarters. These
were but ten minutes away. In his neighborhood, too, people owned their
homes and were unlikely to hurry you out on a month's notice. You could
be sure of being able to stay on; and Randolph, in fact, had stayed on,
with a suitable family, for three or four years.
And it was felt by others too that, in the lack of any wide
opportunity, he had done rather well. Churchton itself was no nest of
antiquities; in 1840 it had consisted merely of a log tavern on the
Green Bay road, and the first white child born within its limits had
died but recently. Nor was the Big Town just across the "Indian
Boundary" much older. It had "antique shops," true; but one's best
chances were got through mousing among the small scattered troups of
foreigners (variegated they were) who had lately been coming in
pell-mell, bringing their household knick-knacks with them. There was a
Ghetto, there was a Little Italy, there were bits of Bulgaria, Bohemia,
Armenia, if one had tired of dubious Louis Quinze and Empire. In an
atmosphere of general newness a thing did not need to be very old to be
an antique.
The least old of all things in Randolph's world were the students who
flooded Churchton. There were two or three thousand of them, and
hundreds of new ones came with every September. Sometimes he felt
prompted to "collect" them, as contrasts to his older curios. They were
fully as interesting, in their way, as brasswork and leatherwork, those
products of peasant natures and peasant hands. But these youths ran
past one's eye, ran through one's fingers. They were not static, not
even stable. They were restless birds of passage who fidgeted through
their years, and even through the days of which the years were made:
intent on their own affairs and their own companions; thankless for
small favors and kind attentions--even unconscious of them; soaking up
goodwill and friendly offices in a fashion too damnably
taken-for-granted ... You gave them an evening among your books, with
discreet things to drink, to smoke, to play at, or you offered them a
good dinner at some good hotel; and you never saw them after ... They
said "Yes, sir," or "Yep;" but whether they pained you by being too
respectful or rasped you by being too rowdyish, it all came to the
same: they had little use for you; they readily forgot and quickly
dropped you.
"I wonder whether instructors are a shade better," queried Basil
Randolph. "Or when do sense and gratitude and savoir-faire begin?"
A few days later he had returned to the loose-leaf faculty. Cope's page
was now in place, with full particulars in his own hand: his interest
was "English Literature," it appeared. "H'm! nothing very special in
that," commented Randolph. But Cope's penmanship attracted him. It was
open and easy: "He never gave _his_ instructor any trouble in reading
his themes." Yet the hand was rather boyish. Was it formed or unformed?
"I am no expert," confessed Randolph. He put Cope's writing on a middle
ground and let it go at that.
He recalled the lighted windows and wondered near which one of them the
same hand filled note-books and corrected students' papers.
Medora, among her grilles and lambrequins, was only too willing to talk
about young Cope.
"Oh," thought Randolph, "one of the cool boys, and one of the
self-sufficing. Probably a bit of an ascetic at bottom, with good
capacity for self-control and self-direction. Not at all an
uninteresting type," he summed it up. "An ebullient Puritan?" he asked
aloud.
"And, judging from the family name, and from their taste at
christenings, I should say there might be some slant toward England
itself. A nomenclature not without distinction. 'Bertram'; rather nice,
eh? And there is a sister who teaches in one of the schools, I
understand; and her name is Rosalind, or Rosalys. Think of that! I
gather that the father is in some business," she concluded.
"I see."
The talk languished. Basil Randolph had learned most that he wanted to
know, and had learned it without asking too many direct questions. He
began to pick at the fussy fringe on the arm of his chair and to cast
an empty eye on the other fussy things that filled the room. The two
had exhausted long ago all the old subjects, and he did not care to
show an eagerness--still less, a continuing eagerness--for this new
one: much could be picked up by indirection, even by waiting.
Medora felt him as distrait. "Do you want to go up and see Joe for a
little while before you leave us?"
"Oh, come! I'm sure we've had a good enough little chat. Aren't you a
bit restless yourself?"
"Well, run along. I've heard his chair rolling about up there for the
last half hour."
Randolph took the stairs to the second floor, and presently his
footfalls were heard on the bare treads that led from the second to the
third. At the top landing he paused and looked in through the open door
of the picture-gallery.
Over the varnished oak floor of this roomy apartment a middle-aged man
who wore a green shade above his eyes was propelling himself in a
wheeled chair. Thus did Joseph Foster cover the space where the younger
and more fortunate sometimes danced, and thus did he move among works
of art which, even on the brightest days, he could barely see.
"Well, yourself is enough. It's good to have a man about the place once
in a while. Once in a while, I said. It gets tiresome, hearing all
those girls slithering and chattering through the halls." He put his
bony hands back on the rims of his wheels. "Where have you been all
this time?"
"Oh, you know I come when I can." Randolph ran his eye over the walls
of the big empty room. The pictures were all in place--landscapes,
figure-pieces, what not; everything as familiar as the form of words he
had just employed to meet an oft repeated query implying indifference
and neglect.
"Oh, things are bright and pleasant enough." Through the wide window
there appeared, half a mile away, the square twin towers of the
University library, reminiscent of Oxford and Ely. Round them lesser
towers and gables, scholastic in their gray stone, rose above the trees
of the campus. Beyond all these a level line of watery blue ran for
miles and provided an eventless horizon. A bright and pleasant enough
sight indeed, but nothing for Joe Foster.
"Well, let me by," he said, "and we'll get along to my own room." The
resonant bigness of the "gallery" was far removed from the intimate and
the sociable.
To the side of this bare place, with its canvases which had become
rather démodé--or at least had long ceased to interest--lay two
bed-chambers: Foster's own, and one adjoining, which was classed as a
spare room. It was sometimes given over to visiting luminaries of
lesser magnitudes. Real celebrities--those of national or international
fame--were entertained in a sumptuous suite on the floor below. Casual
young bachelors, who sometimes happened along, were lodged above and
were expected to adjust themselves, as regarded the bathroom, to the
use and wont of the occupant adjoining.
Foster's own room was a cramped omnium gatherum, cluttered with the
paraphernalia of daily living. It was somewhat disordered and
untidy--the chamber of a man who could never see clearly how things
were, or be completely sure just what he was about.
"To-day?"
"Not exactly to-day. I've got some other things to think about."
"Such as?"
"But another day has come. A new light has risen. I haven't seen it,
but I've heard it. I've heard it sing."
"Well, as I say, the light rose, shone, and sang. I didn't see it--I
never see anybody. But his voice came up here quite distinctly. It
seemed good to have a man in the house. Those everlasting girls--I hope
he wasn't bothering to sing for _them_."
"With passion?"
"An icicle? No wonder the young ladies don't quite fancy him."
"On the contrary. For certain purposes it might be a very good way."
"'On the contrary,' if you like; since frost may perform the effects of
fire. Medora herself is beginning to see him as a tall, white candle,
burning in some niche or at some shrine. Sir Galahad--or something of
that sort."
"Poor fellow! They'd better leave him to his studies and his students.
He has his own way to make, I presume, and will need all his energies
to get ahead. For, as some one has said, 'There are no tea-houses on
the road to Parnassus.' Neither do tea-fights boost a man toward the
Porch or Academe."
"I won't say that. But it was at a tea that I met him. A trigonometry
tea at little Mrs. Ryder's."
"You've seen him then. You have the advantage of me. What's he like?"
"Oh, he has points in his favor. He has looks; a trim figure, even if
spare; well-squared shoulders; and manners with a breezy, original
tang. The kind of young fellow that people are likely enough to like."
"Well, there you rather get me. He called me 'sir,' with a touch of
deference; yet somehow I felt as if I were standing too close to an
electric fan."
"Yes, even when they indulge a show of deference, they contrive to blow
our gray hairs about our wrinkled temples."
"Don't talk about gray hairs. You have none; and mine are not always
seen at first glance."
"Twenty-four or twenty-five."
"Well, they can make us seem either younger or older. That rests with
ourselves. It's all in how we take them, I expect."
"Yes. We're lucky, in this day and generation, if they take us at all."
"You may be right," assented Randolph ruefully. "Yet there are gleams
of hope. The more thoughtful among them have a kind of condescending
pity to bestow----"
"They can find uses for us. One of the faculty was telling me how he
tried to give two or three of his juniors an outing at his cottage over
in Michigan. Everything he gave they took for granted. And if anything
was lacking they took--exceptions. Monopolized the boats; ignored the
dinner-hour.... Sometimes I think that even the thoughtless are
thoughtful in their own way and use us, if we happen to have lands and
substance, purely as practical conveniences. I've been almost glad to
think that I possess none myself."
"Don't stay here and talk like that. This is one of my blue days."
"I wish I had brought a novelette. Sure you don't want to hear a little
more about the Countess of Castlemaine and the rascalities of the Navy
Office?"
"No; some other time, when I feel a bit more robust. It isn't every day
that the mind can digest such a period with comfort."
"I hope not. But when you go down, stop for Medora a minute and see if
she hasn't got something to say."
She laid some knitting on the drawing-room table and came out into the
hall.
"Well, I've asked and asked the girls not to be quite so gay and
chattery in the upper halls."
"I have an idea that a given number of girls make more noise in a house
than the same number of young fellows. I know that they do in
boarding-houses and rooming-houses, and I believe it's so as between
sororities and fraternities. Put a noise-gauge in the main hall of the
Alpha-Alpha house and another in the main hall of the Beta-Beta house,
and the girls would run the score above the boys every time. If ever I
build a sorority house, it will be for the Delta-Iota-Nus, and a statue
of the great goddess DIN herself shall stand just within the entrance."
"Go ahead. A few remarks from me won't stop the course of your
hospitality. Neither would a few orations. Neither would a few
deliberative bodies assembled for a month of sessions, with every
member talking from nine till six."
"This one was to be a young people's dinner. I was going to invite you."
"Why not?"
"Puzzled? Awed?"
"Is he coming?"
"I trust so."
"Oh, hush!"
"How many are you expecting to have? You know I don't enjoy large
parties."
"Thursday, then," she said, with a definitive hand on the knob of the
door.
Randolph went down the front walk with a slight stir of elation--a
feeling that had come to be an infrequent visitor enough. He hoped that
the company would be not only predominantly youthful, but exclusively
so--aside from the hostess and himself. And even she often had her
young days and her young spots. It would doubtless be clamorous; yet
clamor, understood and prepared for, might be met with composure.
Cope pushed away the last of the themes and put the cork back in the
red-ink bottle. Here was a witless girl who seemed to think that
Herrick and Cowper were contemporaries. The last sense to develop in
the Western void was apparently the sense of chronology--unless,
indeed, it were a sense for the shades of difference which served to
distinguish between one age and another and provided the raw material
that made chronology a matter of consequence at all.
"If there were only one more," muttered Cope, looking at the pile of
sheets under the gas-globe, "I should probably learn that Chaucer
derived from Beaumont and Fletcher."
He looked across to the other chair, with its broken spindles and
obfuscated varnish. With things as he wanted them, his correspondent
would be sitting there and letter-writing would be unnecessary.
He glanced across toward the pile of corrected themes. He felt that not
everybody was "called," as a matter of course, to write English, and he
stubbornly nourished the belief that toiling over others' imperfections
was more of a job than boards of trustees always realized.
"Of course," he presently resumed, "things are rather changed from what
they were before. I find more in the way of social opportunities and
greater interest shown by the middle-aged. It is no disadvantage to
cultivate people who have their own homes; the lunch-rooms round the
fountain-square are numerous enough, but not so good as they might be.
And I don't know but that an instructor may lose caste by eating among
a miscellany of undergraduates. Anyhow, it's no plan to pursue for
long."
"One very good house has lately been opened to me," he continued. "I
dined there last Thursday evening. It's really quite a mansion--a great
many large rooms: picture-gallery, ballroom, and all that; and the
dinner itself was very handsomely done. You know my theory,--a theory
rather forced upon me, in truth, by circumstances,--that the best way
to enjoy a good meal is to have had a string of poor ones. Well, since
coming back, and with no permanent arrangements made, I have had plenty
of chance for getting into position to appreciate the really
first-class. There was a color-scheme in pale pink--ribbons of that
color, pink icing on the cakes, and so on. The same thing could be
done, and done charmingly, in light green--with pistache ice-cream. Of
course the candle-shades were pink too."
His eye wandered toward a small triangular closet, made off from the
room by a flimsy and faded calico-print curtain.
"I had my dress-suit cleaned and pressed, but the lapels of the coat
came out rather shiny, and I thought it better to hire one for the
occasion. There was no trouble about a fit--I have standardized
shoulders, as you know.
"Of course I miss you all the time, and I assuredly missed you just
here. If it is really true, as you write, that you are holding your
summer gains and weigh twelve pounds more than you did at the end of
June, and if you are thinking of getting a new suit, please bear in
mind that my own won't last much longer. I have the chance, now, to go
out a good deal and to meet influential, worth-while people. In the
circumstances I ask you not to bant. One rather spare man in a pair of
men is enough.
"My hostess, a Mrs. Phillips, I met at a tea during my first week. This
tea was given by a lady in the mathematical department, and she and her
husband were at the dinner. They are people in the early or middle
thirties, I judge, and were probably put in as a connecting link
between the two sections of the party. Mrs. Phillips herself is a rich
widow of forty-odd--forty-five or six, possibly,--though I am not the
very best judge in such matters: no need to tell you that, on such a
point, my eye and my general sense are none too acute. The only other
middle-aged (or elderly) person present was a Mr. Randolph, who is
perhaps fifty, or a little beyond, yet who appears to have his younger
moments. There were some girls, and there were two young men in
business in the city--neighbors and not connected with the University
at all. 'For which relief,' etc.,--since it _is_ a bit benumbing to
move in academic circles exclusively;--I should hate to feel that a
really professorial manner was stealing over me. Well, everybody was
lively and gay, except at first Ryder (he's the math. man); but even he
limbered up finally. Mrs. Phillips herself has a great deal of action
and vivacity--seemed hardly more than thirty. Well, I could be pretty
gay too with a lot of money behind me; and I think that, for another
year or so, I can contrive to be gay without it. But after that....
"I wish you had been there instead of Ryder. If you are really going to
be twenty-seven in November--as I figure it--you might yourself have
served as a connecting link between youth and age. No, no; I take it
back; I didn't mean it. I wouldn't have you seem older for anything,
and you know it.
"There were three girls. They all live in the house itself, forming a
little court: Mrs. P. seems to need young life and young attentions. So
not one of them had to be taken home--there's usually _that_ to do, you
know. Not that it would have mattered much, as the distances would have
been short and the night was clear starlight. But they could all stay
where they were, and I walked home in quite different company."
Cope threw back his Oriental table-cover once more and drew out a few
additional sheets of paper.
"The third girl--if you want to hear any more about them--seems to be a
secretary. Think of having the run of a house where a social secretary
is required! I'm sure she sends out the invitations and keeps the
engagement-book. Besides all that, she writes poetry--she is the
minstrel of the court. She does verses about her chatelaine--is quite
the mistress of self-respecting adulation. _She_ would know the
difference between Herrick and Cowper!"...
"It's half past ten, but I think I'll run on for a few moments longer.
If I don't finish, I can wind up to-morrow.--Mr. Randolph sat opposite
me. He looked at me a lot and gave attention to whatever I
said--whether said to him, or to my neighbors right and left, or to the
whole table. I didn't feel him especially clever, but easy and
pleasant--and friendly. Also a little shy--even after we had gone up to
the ball-room. I'm afraid that made me more talkative than ever; you
know how shyness in another man makes me all the more confident and
rackety. Be sure that voice of mine rang out! But not in song. There
was a piano up stairs, of course, and that led to a little dancing.
Different people took turns in playing. I danced--once--with each of
the three girls, and twice with my hostess; then I let Ryder and the
two young business-men do the rest. Randolph danced once with Mrs.
Phillips, and that ended it for him. My own dancing, as you know, is
nothing to brag of: I think the young ladies were quite satisfied with
the little I did. I'm sure _I_ was. You also know my views on round
dances. Why dancing should be done exclusively by couples arranged
strictly on the basis of contrasted sexes...! I think of the good old
days of the Renaissance in Italy, when women, if they wanted to dance,
just got up and danced--alone, or, if they didn't want to dance alone,
danced together. I like to see soldiers or sailors dance in pairs, as a
straightforward outlet for superfluous physical energy. Also, peasants
in a ring--about a Maypole or something. Also, I very much like square
dances and reels. There were enough that night for a quadrille, with
somebody for the piano and even somebody to 'call off,'--but whoever
sees a quadrille in these days? However, I mustn't burn any more gas on
this topic.
"I sat out several dances between Mrs. Phillips and Mr. Randolph. He
thought he had done enough for her, and she thought I had done enough
for them all. And one of the young business-men did enough for that
springy, still-young Mrs. Ryder. Once, indeed, Mrs. Phillips asked me
if I wouldn't like to try a third dance with her (she goes at it with a
good deal of old-time vivacity and vim); but I told her she must know
by this time that I was something of a bungler. 'I wouldn't quite say
that,' she returned, smiling; but we continued to sit there side by
side on a sort of bench built against the wall, and she seemed as well
pleased to have it that way as the other. She did, however, speak about
a little singing. I told her that she must have found me something of a
bungler there, too, and reminded her that I couldn't play the
accompaniments of my best songs at all. Arthur, my dear boy, I depend
on _you_ for that, and you must come down here and do it. No singing,
then. But Mrs. Phillips was not quite satisfied. Wouldn't I recite
something? Heavens! Well, of course I know lots of poems--_c'est mon
metier_. I repeated one. Then other volunteers were called upon--it was
entertaining with a vengeance! The young ladies had to chip in
also--though they, of course, were prepared to. And one of the young
business-men did some clever juggling; and Mrs. Ryder sang a little
French ballade; and Mr. Randolph--poor man!--was suddenly routed out of
his placidity, and responded as well as he could with one or two little
stories, not very pointed and not very well told. But I judge he makes
no great claim to being a _raconteur_--he was merely paying an
unexpected tax as gracefully as he could.
"Well, as I was saying, the man in the wheeled chair came in. Of course
he hadn't been down to dinner--I think I saw a tray for him carried
along the hall. As he was working his way through the door, I suppose I
must have been talking and laughing at my loudest; and that big, bare
room, done in hard wood, made me seem noisier still. He sort of stopped
and twitched, and appeared to shrink back in his chair: I presume my
tones went straight through the poor twisted invalid's head. He must
have fancied me (from the racket I was making) as a sort of
free-and-easy Hercules (which is not quite the case), if not as the
whole football squad rolled into one. Whether he really saw me, then or
thereafter, I don't know; he wore a sort of green shade over his eyes.
Of course I met him in due form. I tried not to give his poor hand too
much of a wring (another of my bad habits); but he took all I gave and
even seemed to hang on for a little more. He sat quietly to one side
for a while, and I tried not to act the bull of Bashan again. Anyhow,
he didn't start a second time. Presently he pulled out rather
unceremoniously: the two young business-men had begun a sort of
burlesque fandango, and their feet were pretty noisy on the bare floor.
He started off after looking toward the piano and then toward me; and
Mrs. Phillips glanced about as if to hint that any display of surprise
or of indulgence would be misplaced. Poor chap!--well, I'm glad he
didn't see me dancing.
"We broke up about eleven, and Mr. Randolph suggested that, as we lived
in the same general direction, we might walk homeward together. Great
heaven! it's eleven--and five after--now! Enough, in all conscience,
for to-night. You shall have the rest to-morrow."
An evening or two later Cope again corked his red ink and uncorked his
black.
"As I have said, Mr. Randolph and I walked home together. He stopped
for a moment in front of his place. Another large, handsome house. He
told me he had the use of his quarters as long as his landlord's lease
ran, and asked me to come round some time and see how he was fixed.
Then he said suddenly that the evening was fine and the night young and
that he would walk on with me to _my_ quarters, if I didn't mind. Of
course I didn't--he seemed so friendly and pleasant; but I let him
learn for himself that I was far from being lodged in any architectural
monument. Well, we went on for the necessary ten minutes, and he didn't
seem at all put out by the mediocre aspect of the house where I have
put up. He sort of took it all for granted--as if he knew about it
already. In fact, on the way from his place to mine, I no more led him
(as I sense it now) than he led me. He hesitated at no corner or
crossing. 'I am an old Churchtonian,' he said incidentally--as if he
knew everything and everybody. He also mentioned, just as incidentally,
that he had a brother-in-law on our board of trustees. Of course I
promised to go round and see him. I presume that I shall drop in on him
some time or other. Come down here, and you shall have one more house
of call.
The delay in the posting of this appeal soon brought from Winnebago a
letter outside the usual course of correspondence. It was on a fresh
sheet and under a new date-line that Cope continued. After a page of
generalities and of attention to particular points in the letter from
Wisconsin, Cope took up his own line of thought.
"I had meant, of course, to look in on him within a few days,--no great
hurry about it. But on Sunday evening he wrote and asked if he might
not call round on me instead. My name is not in the telephone-book;
neither, as I found out, was his. So I used up a sheet of paper, an
envelope, and a stamp--just such as I am now using on you--to tell him
that he might indeed. I put in the 'indeed' for cordiality, hoping he
wouldn't think I had slighted _his_ invitation. On Monday evening he
came round--I must have reached him by the late afternoon delivery.
Need I say that he had to take this poor place as he found it? But
there was no sign of the once-over--no tendency to inventory or
appraise. He sat down beside me on the couch just as if he had no
notion that it was a bed (and a rather rocky one, at that), and talked
about my row of books, and about music and plays, and about his own
collection of curios--all in a quiet, contained way, yet intent on me
if not on my outfit. Well, it's pleasant to be considered for what you
are rather than for what you have (or for what few poor sticks your
landlady may have); and I rather liked his being here. Certainly he was
a change from my students, who sometimes seem to exclude better timber.
"He asked me about Freeford, and I didn't realize until I was on my way
back that he had assumed my home town just as he had assumed my
lodging. Well, all right; I never resent a friendly interest. He sat in
a less-easy chair and blew his smoke-rings and wondered if I had been a
small-town boy. 'I'm one, too,' he said; '--at least Churchton, forty
years--at least Churchton, thirty years ago, was not all it is to-day.
It has always had its own special tone, of course; but in my young--in
my younger days it was just a large country village. Fewer of us went
into town to make money, or to spend it.'...
"And then he asked me to go into town, one evening soon, and help him
spend some. He suggested it rather shyly; _à tâtons_, I will
say--though French is not my business. He offered a dinner at a
restaurant, and the theatre afterwards. Did I accept? Indeed I did.
Think, Arthur! after all the movies and restaurants round the elms and
the fountain (tho' you don't know them yet)! I will say, too, that his
cigarettes were rather better than my own....
"I suppose he is fully fifty; but he has his young days, I can see.
Certainly his age doesn't obtrude,--doesn't bother me at all, though he
sometimes seems conscious of it himself. He wears eye-glasses part of
the time,--for dignity, I presume. He had them on when I came in, but
they disappeared almost at once, and I saw them no more.
"Of course I don't, Arthur,--as you very well know. I picked out the
first line of 'Annabel Lee' by arranging the necessary groupings among
the odd mixture of black and red letters he exhibited, and told him I
didn't believe that Bacon wrote Shakespeare--nor that Shakespeare did
either. 'Who did, then?' he naturally asked. I told him that I would
grant, at the start and for a few seasons, a group of young noblemen
and young gentlemen; but that some one of them (supposing there to have
been more than that one) soon distanced all the rest and presently
became the edifice before which the manager from Stratford was only the
facade. He--this 'someone'--was a noble and a man of wide reach both in
his natural endowments and in his acquired culture. But he couldn't dip
openly into the London cesspool; he had his own quality to safeguard
against the contamination of a new and none too highly-regarded trade.
'I don't care for your shillings,' he said to Shaxper, 'nor for the
printed plays afterward; but I do value your front and your footing and
the services they can render me on my way to self-expression.' He was
an earl, or something such, with a country-seat in Warwick, or on the
borders of Gloucestershire; 'and if I only had a year and the money to
make a journey among the manor-houses of mid-England,' I said, 'and to
dig for a while in their muniment-rooms....' Well, you get the idea,
all right enough.
"He came across and sat on the arm of the big easy-chair. 'If you went
over there and discovered all that, the English scholars would never
forgive you.' As of course they wouldn't: look at the recent Shaxper
discoveries by Americans in London! 'And wouldn't that be a rather
sensational thesis,' he went on, 'from a staid candidate for an M.A.,
or a Ph.D., or a Litt.D., or whatever it is you're after?' It would, of
a verity; and why shouldn't it be? 'Don't go over there,' he ended with
a smile, as he dropped his hand on my shoulder; 'your friends would
rather have you here.' 'Never fear!' I returned; 'I can't possibly
manage it. I shall just do something on "The Disjunctive Conjunctions
in 'Paradise Lost,'" and let it go at that!'
"He got up to reach for the ash-receiver. 'They tell me,' he said,
'that a degree isn't much in itself--just an _étape_ on the journey to
a better professional standing.' 'Yes,' said I, '--and to better
professional rewards. It means so many more hundreds of dollars a year
in pay.' But you know all about that, too.
"I'm glad your dramatic club is getting forward so well with the
rehearsals for its first drive of the season; glad too that, this time
at least, they have given you a good part. Tell me all about it before
the big stars in town begin to dim your people in my eyes--and in your
own; and don't let them cast you for the next performance in January.
You will be here by then.
"Yours,
"B.L.C."
Two or three days later, Randolph met Medora Phillips in front of the
bank. This was a neat and solemn little edifice opposite the elms and
the fountain; it was neighbored by dry-goods stores, the offices of
renting agencies, and the restaurants where the unfraternized
undergraduates took their daily chances. Through its door passed
tradesmen's clerks with deposits, and young housewives with babies in
perambulators, and students with their small financial problems, and
members of the faculty about to cash large or small checks. Mrs.
Phillips had come across from the dry-goods store to pick up her
monthly sheaf of vouchers,--it was the third of October.
"Don't you want to come in for a minute?" she asked Randolph. "Then you
can walk on with me to the stationer's. Carolyn tells me that our last
batch of invitations reduced us to nothing. How did _your_ dinner go?"
Randolph followed her into the cool marble interior. "Oh, in town, you
mean? Quite well, I think. I'm sure my young man took a good honest
appetite with him!"
"Yes, he rose to the food. But not to the drinks. I took him, after
all, to my club. I innocently suggested cocktails; but, no. He
declined--in a deft but straightforward way. Country principles.
Small-town morals. He made me feel like a--well, like a corrupter of
youth."
"You didn't mind, though,--of course you didn't. You liked it. Wasn't
it noble! Wasn't it charming! So glad that _we_ had nothing but
Apollinaris and birch beer! Still, it would have been a pleasure to
hear him refuse."
The receiving-teller gave her her vouchers. She put them in her handbag
and somehow got round a perambulator, and the two went out on the
street.
"And how did your 'show' go?" she continued. "That's about as much as
we can call the drama in these days."
"'Old'--you are not to use that word. Come, don't say that he--that he
venerated you!"
"Oh, not at all. During the six hours we were together--train, club,
theatre, and train again--he never once called me 'sir'; he never once
employed our clumsy, repellent Anglo-Saxon mode of address, 'mister';
in fact, he never employed any mode of address at all. He got round it
quite cleverly,--on system, as I soon began to perceive; and not for a
moment did he forget that the system was in operation. He used,
straight through, a sort of generalized manner--I might have been
anywhere between twenty and sixty-five."
They were now in front of the stationer's show-window, and there were
few people in the quiet thoroughfare to jostle them.
Medora smiled.
"How clever; how charming!" she said. "Leaving you altogether free to
pick your own age. I hope you didn't go beyond thirty-five. You must
have been quite charming in your early thirties."
"That's kind of you, I'm sure; but I don't believe that I was ever
'charming' at _any_ age. I think you've used that word once too often.
I was a quiet, studious lad, with nice notions, but possibly something
of a prig. I was less 'charming' than correct. The young ladies had the
greatest confidence in me,--not one of them was ever 'afraid'."
"No. And I'm still single, as you're advised. And I'm not sure that the
young gentlemen cared much more for me. If I had had a little more
'gimp' and _verve_, I might have equalled the particular young
gentleman of whom we have been discoursing. But...."
"I was quite as coolly correct as I apprehend him to be; and if I could
only have contrived to compass the charming, as well, who knows
what----?"
He threw a finger through the wide pane of glass. "Is that the sort of
thing you are after? Those boxes of pale gray are rather good."
"I never buy from the show-window. Come in, and help me choose."
"Him?"
"Bertram Cope."
"Why, I've given him six hours within two or three days. And now you're
asking me to give him sixteen."
"Sixteen--or more. But you're not giving them to him. You're giving
them to all of us. You're giving them to me. The day is likely to be
fine and settled, and I'd recommend your catching the 8:30 train. I
shall have my full load in the car. And more, if I have to take along
Helga. Try to reach us by one, or a quarter past."
Mrs. Phillips had lately taken on a house among the sand dunes beyond
the state line. This singular region had recently acquired so wide a
reputation for utter neglect and desolation that--despite its distance
from town, whether in miles or in hours--no one could quite afford to
ignore it. Picnics, pageants, encampments and excursions all united in
proclaiming its remoteness, its silence, its vacuity. Along the rim of
ragged slopes which put a term to the hundreds of miles of water that
spread from the north, people tramped, bathed, canoed, motored and
week-ended. Within a few seasons Duneland had acquired as great a
reputation for "prahlerische Dunkelheit"--for ostentatious
obscurity--as ever was enjoyed even by Schiller's Wallenstein. "Lovers
of Nature" and "Friends of the Landscape" moved through its distant and
inaccessible purlieus in squads and cohorts. Everybody had to spend
there at least one Sunday in the summer season. There were enthusiasts
whose interest ran from March to November. There were fanatics who
insisted on trips thitherward in January. And there were one or two
super-fanatics--ranking ahead even of the fishermen and the
sand-diggers--who clung to that weird and changing region the whole
year through.
Medora Phillips' house was several miles beyond the worst of the
hurly-burly. There were no tents in sight, even in August. Nor was the
honk of the motor-horn heard even during the most tumultuous Sundays.
The spot was harder to reach than most others along the twenty miles of
nicked and ragged brim which helped enclose the wide blue area of the
Big Water, but was better worth while when you got there. Her little
tract lay beyond the more prosaic reaches that were furnished chiefly
in the light green of deciduous trees; it was part of a long stretch
thickly set for miles with the dark and sombre green of pines. Our
nature-lover had taken, the year before, a neglected and dilapidated
old farmhouse and had made it into what her friends and habitues liked
to call a bungalow. The house had been put up--in the rustic spirit
which ignores all considerations of landscape and outlook--behind a
well-treed dune which allowed but the merest glimpse of the lake;
however, a walk of six or eight minutes led down to the beach, and in
the late afternoon the sun came with grand effect across the gilded
water and through the tall pine-trunks which bordered the zig-zag path.
Medora had added a sleeping porch, a dining-porch and a lean-to for the
car; and she entertained there through the summer lavishly, even if
intermittently and casually.
"No place in the world like it!" she would declare enthusiastically to
the yet inexperienced and therefore the still unconverted. "The spring
arrives weeks ahead of our spring in town, and the fall lingers on for
weeks after. Come to our shore, where the fauna and flora of the whole
country meet in one. All the wild birds pass in their migrations; and
the flowers!" Then she would expatiate on the trailing arbutus in
April, and the vast sheets of pale blue lupines in early June, and the
yellow, sunlike blossoms of the prickly-pear in July, and the red
glories of painter's-brush and bittersweet and sumach in September. "No
wonder," she would say, "that they have to distribute handbills on the
excursion-trains asking people to leave the flowers alone!"
"How shocking!" Cope had cried, with his resonant laugh, when this
phase of the situation was brought to his attention. "Are the
automobile people any better?"
Randolph had told him of some of the other drawbacks involved in the
excursion. "It's a long way to go, even when you pass up the trolley
and make a single big bolt by train. And it leads through an industrial
region that is mighty unprepossessing--little beauty until almost the
end. And even when you get there, it may all seem a slight and simple
affair for the time and trouble taken--unless you really like Nature.
And lastly," he said, with a sidelong glance at Cope, "you may find
yourself, as the day wears on, getting a little too much of my company."
"Oh, I hope that doesn't mean," returned Cope, with another ingenuous
unchaining of his native resonance, "that you are afraid of getting a
little too much of mine! I'm fond of novelty, and nobody can frighten
me."
"If that's the case, let's get away as early in the day as we can.
Breakfasts, of course, are late in every household on Sunday. So let's
meet at the Maroon-and-Purple Tavern at seven-thirty, and make a flying
start at eight."
Sunday morning came clear and calm and warm to the town,--a belated
September day, or possibly an early intimation of Indian summer,--and
it promised to be even more delightful in the favored region toward
which our friends were journeying. After they had cleared many miles of
foundries and railroad crossings, and had paralleled for a last
half-hour a distant succession of sandhills, wooded or glistening
white, they were set down at a small group of farmhouses, with a varied
walk of five miles before them. Half a mile through a shaded country
lane; another half-mile along a path that led across low, damp ground
through thickets of hazel and brier; a third half-mile over a light
soil, increasingly sandy, beneath oaks and lindens and pines which
cloaked the outlines of the slopes ahead; and finally a great mound of
pure sand that slanted up into a blue sky and made its own horizon.
"We've taken things easy," said Randolph, who had been that way before,
"and I hope we have enough breath left for our job. There it lies,
right in front of us."
"No favor asked here," declared Cope. He gave a sly, sidewise glance,
as if to ask how the other might stand as to leg-muscles and wind.
"Up we go," said Randolph.
After some moments of scrambling and panting our two travelers gained
the divide. Below them sloped a great amphitheatre of sand, falling in
irregular gradations; and at the foot of all lay the lake, calmly
azure, with its horizon, whether near or far for it was almost
impossible to say--mystically vague. On either hand rose other hills of
sand, set with sparse pines and covered, in patches, with growths of
wild grape, the fruit half ripened. Within the amphitheatre, at various
levels, rose grimly a few stumps and shreds of cedars long dead and
long indifferent to the future ravages of the enemy. The whole scene
was, to-day, plausibly gentle and inert. It was indeed a bridal of
earth and sky, with the self-contained approval of the blue deep and no
counter-assertion from any demon wind.
"So far, so good," said Randolph, taking off his hat, wiping his
forehead, and breathing just a little harder than he liked. "The rest
of our course is plain: down those slopes, and then a couple of miles
along the shore. Easy walking, that; a mere promenade on a boulevard."
Cope stood on the height, and tossed his bare head like a tireless
young colt. The sun fell bright on his mane of yellow hair. He took in
a deep breath. "It's good!" he declared. "It's great! And the water
looks better yet. Shall we make it in a rush?"
He began to plunge down the long, broken sand-slope. Each step was
worth ten. Randolph followed--with judgment. He would not seem young
enough to be a competitor, nor yet old enough to be a drag. On the
shore he wiped and panted a little more--but not to the point of
embarrassment, and still less to the point of mortification. After all,
he was keeping up pretty well.
At the bottom Cope, with his shoes full of sand, turned round and
looked up the slope down which his companion was coming. He waved his
arms. "It's almost as fine from here!" he cried.
The beach, once gained, was in sight both ways for miles. Not a human
habitation was visible, nor a human being. Two or three gulls flew a
little out from shore, and the tracks of a sandpiper led from the wet
shingle to the first fringe of sandgrass higher up.
"Miles behind," replied Randolph. "We haven't come this long distance
to meet them after all. Besides," he continued, looking at his watch,
"this is not the time of day for them. At twelve-fifteen people are not
strolling or tramping; they're thinking of their dinner. We have a full
hour or more for making less than two easy miles before we reach
_ours_."
The beach, at its edge, was firm, and they strolled on for half a mile
and cooled off as they went. The air was mild; the noonday sun was
warm; both of them had taken off their coats.
They sat down under a clump of basswoods, the only trees beyond the
foot of the sand-slope, and looked at the water.
"Well, the air seems warm enough. After all, the air and the sun are
about the best part of a swim. Do you want to go in?"
Cope rose, walked to the edge of the water, and put in a finger or two.
"Well, it might be warmer; but, as I say...."
"We could try a ten-minute dip. That would get us to our dinner in good
time and in good trim."
"Only, you'll have to do most of the swimming," said Randolph. "My few
small feats are all accomplished pretty close to shore."
"Never mind. Company's the thing. A fellow finds it rather slow, going
in alone."
Cope whisked off his clothes with incredible rapidity and piled
them--or flung them--under the basswoods: the suddenly resuscitated
technique of the small-town lad who could take avail of any pond or any
quiet stretch of river on the spur of the moment. He waded in quickly
up to his waist, and then took an intrepid header. His lithe young legs
and arms threw themselves about hither and yon. After a moment or two
he got on his feet and made his way back across a yard of fine shingle
to the sand itself. He was sputtering and gasping, and the long yellow
hair, which usually lay in a flat clean sweep from forehead to occiput,
now sprawled in a grotesque pattern round his temples.
"B-r-r! It _is_ cold, sure enough. But jump in. The air will be all
right. I'll be back with you in a moment."
Randolph advanced to the edge, and felt in turn. It _was_ cold. But he
meant to manage it here, just as he had managed with the sand-slopes.
Two heads bobbed on the water where but one had bobbed before.
Ceremonially, at least, the rite was complete.
"It's never so cold the second time," declared Cope encouragingly. "One
dip doesn't make a swim, any more than one swallow--"
He flashed his soles in the sunlight and was once again immersed,
gulping, in a maelstrom of his own making.
"Twice, to oblige you," said Randolph. "But no more. I'll leave the
rest to the sun and the air."
Cope, out again, ran up and down the sands for a hundred feet or so. "I
know something better than this," he declared presently. He threw
himself down and rolled himself in the abundance of fine, dry, clean
sand.
"You're welcome to it," said Randolph, laughing; "but how are you going
to get it off? By another dip? Certainly not by the slow process of
time. We have some moments to spare, but hardly enough for that.
Meanwhile...."
"Thanks," said Cope: "the right thing done for Polynices. Yes, I shall
take one final dip and dry myself on my handkerchief."
"I shall dry by the other process, and so shall be able to spare you
mine."
"That's time enough, and to spare. I wonder whom we're going to meet."
"There's a 'usual crowd': the three young ladies, commonly; one or two
young men who understand how to tinker the oil-stove--which usually
needs it--and how to prime the pump. They once asked me to do these
things; but I've discovered that younger men enjoy it more than I do,
so I let them do it. Besides these, a number of miscellaneous people,
perhaps, who come out by trolley or in their own cars."
"The young ladies always come?" asked Cope, brushing the sand from his
chest.
"Well, I hope there'll be enough fellows to look after the stove and
the pump--and them. I'm not much good at that last."
"No?"
"Of course, there is no more reason for assuming that every man will
make a good lover than that every woman will make a good mother or a
good housekeeper."
"Or that every adult male will make a good citizen, desiring the
general welfare and bestirring himself to contribute his own share to
it. I don't feel that I'm an especially creditable one."
"So it runs. We ground our general life on theories, and then the facts
come up and slap us in the face." Randolph rose and relieved the
basswood of the first garments. "Are you about ready for that final
dip?"
Cope made his last plunge and returned red and shivering to use the two
handkerchiefs.
"No, I'm not at all apt," said Cope, returning to his theme; "not even
for self-defense. I suppose I'm pretty sure to get caught some time or
other."
"You've run the gauntlet," said Cope. "You seem to have come through
all right."
"I hope I shall have the same good luck. Of your four _d_'s, it's the
dexterity that gives me the most dread."
Randolph put up his arm and pointed. A roof through a notch between two
sandhills beyond a long range of them, was seen, set high and half
hidden by the spreading limbs of pines. "There it is," he said.
Cope, with an abundance of free action, was treading along on the very
edge of things, careless of the rough shingle and indifferent to the
probability of wet feet, and swinging his hat as he went. In some such
spirit, perhaps, advanced young Stoutheart to the ogre's castle. He
even began to foot it a little faster.
"Well, I can keep up with you yet," thought Randolph. Aloud, he said:
"You've done very well with your hair. Quite an inspiration to have
carried a comb."
Cope grimaced.
"I trust I'm free to comb myself on Sunday. There are plenty of others
to do it for me through the week."
10
"You look as fit as two fiddles," said Medora Phillips, at the top of
her sandhill.
"We are," declared Randolph. "Have the rest of the orchestra arrived?"
"Most of us are here, and the rest will arrive presently. Listen. I
think I hear a honk somewhere back in the woods."
The big room of the house, made by knocking two small rooms together,
seemed fairly full already, and other guests were on the back porch.
The Graces were there, putting the finishing-touches to the
table--Helga had not come, after all, but had gone instead, with her
young man, to spend a few sunny afternoon hours among the films. And
one of the young business-men present at Mrs. Phillips' dinner was
present here; he seemed to know how to handle the oil-stove and the
pump (with the cooperation of the chauffeur), and how to aid the three
handmaidens in putting on the knives, forks, plates and napkins that
Helga had decided to ignore. The people in the distant motor-car became
less distant; soon they stopped in a clearing at the foot of the hill,
and before long they appeared at the top with a small hamper of
provisions.
"Oh, why didn't you ask _us_ to bring something!" cried Cope. Randolph
shrugged his shoulders: he saw himself lugging a basket of eatables
through five miles of sand and thicket.
There was room for the whole dozen on the dining-porch. The favored few
in one corner of it could glimpse the blue plane of the lake, or at
least catch the horizon; the rest could look over the treetops toward
the changing colors of the wide marshes inland. And when the feast was
over, the chauffeur took his refreshment off to one side, and then
amiably lent a hand with the dishes.
"There are plenty of hands to help," returned his hostess. She seemed
to be putting him on a higher plane and saving him for better things.
One of the better things was a stroll over her tumultuous domain: the
five miles he had already covered were not enough.
"I'll stay where I am," declared Randolph, who had taken this
regulation jaunt before. He followed Cope to the hook from which he was
taking down his hat. "Admire everything," he counselled in a whisper.
"Eh?"
The party consisted of four or five of the younger people and two or
three of the older. Most of them had taken the walk before; Cope, as a
novice, became the especial care of Mrs. Phillips herself. The way led
sandily along the crest of a wooded amphitheatre, with less stress on
the prospect waterward than might have been expected. Cope was not
allowed, indeed, to overlook the vague horizon where, through the pine
groves, the blue of sky and of sea blended into one; but, under Medora
Phillips' guidance, his eyes were mostly turned inland.
"People think," she said, "that 'the Dunes' means nothing beyond a
regular row of sandhills following the edge of the water; yet half the
interest and three-quarters of the variety are to be found in behind
them. See my wide marsh, off to the southeast, with those islands of
tamarack here and there, and imagine how beautiful the shadows are
toward sunset. Look at that thick wood at the foot of the slope: do you
think it is flat? No, it's as humpy and hilly as anything ever
traversed. Only this spring a fascinating murderer hid there for weeks,
and last January we could hear the howls of timber-wolves driven down
from Michigan by the cold. And see those tall dead pines rising above
it all. I call them the Three Witches. You'll get them better just a
few paces to the left. This way." She even placed her hand on his elbow
to make sure that her tragic group should appear to highest advantage.
Yes, he was an admirable young man, giving admirable attention;
thrusting out his hat toward prospects of exceptional account and
casting his frank blue eyes into her face between-times. Charmingly
perfect teeth and a wonderful sweep of yellow hair. A highly civilized
faun for her highly sylvan setting. Indifferent, perhaps, to her
precious Trio; but there were other young fellows to look after _them_.
Cope praised loudly and readily. The region was unique and every view
had its charm--every view save one. Beyond the woods and the hills and
the distant marshes which spread behind all these, there rose on the
bluish horizon a sole tall chimney, with its long black streak of
smoke. Below it and about it spread a vast rectangular structure with
watch-towers at its corners. The chimney bespoke light and heat and
power furnished in quantities--power for many shops, manned by
compulsory workers: a prison, in short.
Medora Phillips withheld her eyes and sent out a guiding finger in the
opposite direction. "Only see the red of those maples!" she said; "and
that other red just to the left--the tree with the small, fine leaves
all aflame. Do you know what it is?"
"It's a tupelo. And this shrub, right here?" She took between her
fingers one large, bland indented leaf on a small tree close to the
path.
"Why, it's a sassafras. And this?"--she thrust her toe into a thick,
lustrous bed of tiny leaves that hugged the ground. "No, again? That's
kinnikinnick. Oh, my poor boy, you have everything to learn. Brought up
in the country, too!"
Medora broke off a branch of sassafras and swished it to and fro as she
walked. "See," she said; "three kinds of leaves on the same tree: one
without lobes, one with a single lobe, and one with two."
Amy's pretty pink face brightened. "It _is_ a lovely day," she said.
"And the more of this lovely weather we have in October--and especially
in November--the more trouble it makes."
"No; but it becomes harder to shut the house up for good and all. Last
fall we opened and closed two or three times. We even tried coming out
in December."
"Almost. But the boots are better for February. At least, they would
have been last February."
"It seems hard to imagine such a future for a place like this,--or such
a past."
"Things can be pretty rough, I assure you. And the roads are not always
as good as they are to-day." And when the pump froze, she went on, they
had to depend upon the lake; and when the lake froze they had to fall
back on melted snow and ice. And even when the lake didn't freeze, the
blowing waters and the flying sands often heaped up big ridges that
quite cut them off from the open sea. Then they had to prospect along
those tawny hummocks for some small inlet that would yield a few
buckets of frozen spray, keeping on the right side of the deep fissures
that held the threat of icebergs to be cast loose at any moment; "and
sometimes," she added, in search of a little thrill, "we would get back
toward shore to find deep openings with clear water dashing beneath--we
had been walking on a mere snow-crust half the time."
"Yes, February was bad, but Mrs. Phillips wanted to make sure, toward
the end of the winter, that the house hadn't blown away,--nor the
contents; for we have housebreakers every so often. And Hortense wanted
to make some 'color-notes.' I believe she's going to try for some more
to-day."
"She says they are not subtle, but that she can use them."
Well, here he was, talking along handily enough. But he had no notion
of talking for long about Hortense. He preferred returning to the
weather.
"On paper already?" he repeated. "But not all of them? I know you
compose. You are not saying that you are about to give composition up?"
A forced and awkward "slur," perhaps; but it served.
She gave a little sigh. "Pupils don't want _my_ pieces," she said.
"Scales; exercises..."
They looked at each other and smiled. "We ought not to think of such
things to-day," she said.
Mrs. Phillips came along, shepherding her little flock for the return.
"But before we _do_ turn back," she adjured them, "just look at those
two lovely spreading pines standing together alone on that far hill."
The small group gazed obediently--though to many of them the prospect
was a familiar one. Yes, there stood two pines, one just a little
taller than the other, and just a little inclined across the other's
top. "A girl out here in August called them Paolo and Francesca. Do you
think," she asked Cope, "that those names are suitable?"
"That's it. That's the very thing!" said Medora Phillips heartily.
"Pelleas and Melisande, of course. That girl had a very ordinary mind."
"I've felt plenty of wind on the dunes, more than once," interjected
Hortense.
"Or Darby and Joan," Cope continued. "Not that I'm defending that poor
creature, whoever she was. They seem to be a pretty staid, steady-going
couple."
"Don't," said Medora. "Too many ideas are worse than too few. They
confuse one."
And Amy Leffingwell, who had seemed willing to admire him, now looked
at him with an air of plaintive protest.
"'Darby and Joan'!" muttered Hortense into a sumach bush. "You might as
well call them Jack and Jill!"
11
As they drew near the house they heard the tones of a gramophone. This
instrument rested flatly on a small table and took the place of a
piano, which would have been a fearful thing to transport from town and
back. It was jigging away merrily enough, with a quick, regular rhythm
which suggested a dance-tune; and when the party re-entered the big
room it was seen that a large corner of the center rug was still turned
back. Impossible that anybody could have been dancing on the Sabbath;
surely everybody understood that the evangelical principles of
Churchton were projected on these occasions to the dunes. Besides, the
only women left behind had been two in their forties; the men in their
company were even older. Medora Phillips looked at Randolph, but he was
staring inexpressively at the opposite wall. She found herself
wondering if there were times when the mere absence of the young served
automatically to make the middle-aged more youthful.
"Well, we've had a most lovely walk," she declared. She crossed to the
far corner of the room, contriving to turn down the rug as she went,
and opened up a new reservoir of records. She laid them on the table
rather emphatically, as if to say, "_These_ are suited to the day."
"I hope you're all rested up," she continued, and put one of the new
records on the machine. The air was from a modern opera, true; but it
was slow-going and had even been fitted out with "sacred" words.
Everybody knew it, and presently everybody was humming it.
"It ought not to be hummed," she declared; "it ought to be sung. You
can sing it, Mr. Cope?"
"Oh yes, indeed," replied Cope, readily enough. "I have the breath
left, I think,--or I can very soon find it."
The accompaniment to the air was rather rich and dense, and the general
tone-quality was somewhat blatant. But Cope stood up to it all, and had
the inspiration to treat the new combination as a sort of half-joke.
But he was relieved from the bother of accompanying himself; his
resonance overlaid in some measure the cheap quality of the record's
tone; he contrived to master a degree of momentum to let himself go;
and the general result was good,--much better than his attempt at that
tea. Hortense and Carolyn looked at him with a new respect; and Amy,
who had been willing to admire, now admired openly. Cope ended, gave a
slight grimace, and sauntered away from the table and the instrument.
He knew that he had done rather well.
"Bravo!" loudly cried one of the ladies, who felt that she was under
suspicion of having taken a step or two in the dance. And, "Oh, my
dear," said Mrs. Phillips to her, sotto voce, "isn't he utterly
charming!"
Cope wiped his brow. The walk had made him warm, and the singing had
made him warmer. One or two of the women were using chance pamphlets as
fans (despite Mrs. Phillips' ill-concealed doubts), and everybody
showed a willingness to keep in the draught from the open windows.
"Is it close here?" asked the hostess anxiously. "The day is almost
like summer. If the water is anywhere nearly as warm as the air is....
Let me see; it's a quarter to four. I have a closetful of bathing
suits, all sizes and shapes and several colors, if anybody cares to go
in."
She looked at him with interest. "Have you been trying it?"
"I have. On the way along the shore. I assure you, however warm the air
may be, the bathing season is over."
"I'll take his word," replied Randolph. "And I think all of us had
better do the same."
"We might go down to the beach, anyway," she said. "Hortense wants to
make her color-notes, and the color will be good from now on."
Several of the party threaded their way down over the sliding sandy
path which led through the pines and junipers. Cope was willing to go
with the others--on the present understanding. He objected to
promiscuous bathing even more strongly than he objected to promiscuous
dancing.
There were some new cumuli in the east, out above the water, and they
began to take the late afternoon sun. Hortense cast about for just the
right point of view, with Carolyn to help on "atmosphere" and two young
men to be superserviceable over campstool, sketch-block and box of
colors. She brought back a few dabs which may have served some future
use;--at all events they served as items in a social record.
Cope and Amy, with some of the others, strolled off in the opposite
direction. The water remained smooth, and some of the men idly skipped
stones. One of them dipped in his hand. "Cold?" he exclaimed; "I should
say!"
Amy looked admiringly at Cope, as one who had braved, beyond season,
the chill of the great deep, and he tried to reward her with a
"thought" or two. He had skipped stones himself between dips, and
Randolph had made a reflection which he could now revise and employ.
"See!" he said, as a flat, waveworn piece of slate left the hand of the
young business-man and careered over the water; "one, two, three--six,
eight--ten, thirteen; and then down, down, after all,--down to the
bottom. And so we end--every one of us. The great thing is to crowd in
all the action we can before the final plunge comes--to go skipping and
splashing as hard and long and fast and far as we may!"
She changed it herself. "You sang beautifully," she said, with some
return of warmth--even with some approach to fervor.
"I wish you had let them persuade you to sing another." She was not
only willing to admire, but desirous: conscientious amends, perhaps,
for an earlier verdict. "One or two more skips, you know, after getting
started."
"Oh, once was enough. A happy coincidence. The next might have been an
unhappy one."
"As you've seen, I'm a rather poor hand at it; I've depended a good
deal on others. Or, better, on another."
"None of my songs, thus far, has called for one. An obbligato? Never so
much honored. No, indeed. Why, to me it would seem almost like singing
with an orchestra. Imagine a 'cello. Imagine a flute--still I'm not a
soprano going mad. Or imagine a saxophone; that might be droll."
He gave out a sort of dragging bleat. She did not smile; perhaps she
felt such an approach to waggery unworthy of him. Perhaps she was
holding him up to the dignity of the natural scene, and to the
importance of the occasion as she conceived it.
She turned her eyes on him again, with a new look of sympathy and
understanding. Perhaps understanding between them had failed or lapsed
but a moment before.
She moved along toward Hortense and her little group. Hortense's
"color-notes" did not appear to amount to much. Hortense seemed to have
been "fussed"--either by an excess of company and of help, or by some
private source of discontent and disequilibrium.
"Come," Mrs. Phillips cried to her, "I need every Martha to lend a
hand." Hortense rose, and one of her young men picked up her campstool.
"So glad you haven't got to go early," said Mrs. Phillips to Randolph
and Cope. "In fact, you might stay all night. It will be warm, and
there are cots and blankets for the porch."
"Are you going to explain Pamela and Clarissa to them?" asked Hortense.
She was abrupt and possibly a bit scornful.
Cope seemed to scent a challenge and accepted it. "I am. The women may
figure on the covers, but the men play their own strong part through
the pages."
"Well, if you can't stay overnight," Mrs. Phillips proceeded, "at least
stay a few hours for the moonlight. The moon will be almost full
to-night, and the walk across the marshes to the trolley-line ought to
be beautiful. Or Peter could run you across in eight or ten minutes."
She did not urge Randolph to remain in the absence of Cope, though
Randolph's appearance at his office at ten in the morning would have
surprised no one, and have embarrassed no one.
Tea was served before the big fireplace in which a small flame to heat
the kettle was rising. Randolph set his empty cup on the shelf above.
"And at the other end of the shelf," she advised him, "is a poem in
free verse, done by a real journalist who was here in June. See:
'Homage to Dunecrest'--written with a blue pencil on a bit of
driftwood."
"Sorry _we_ can't leave any souvenir behind," said Cope, who had stolen
up and was looking at the "poem" over Randolph's shoulder. "But one
must (first) be clever; and one must (second) know how to put his
cleverness on record."
"I shall remember _your_ record," she returned with emphasis. Cope
smiled deprecatingly; but he felt sure that he had sung well.
The moonlight, when it came, was all that Medora Phillips had promised.
There was another stroll on the beach, with Cope between Medora and
Carolyn. Then he and Randolph took the causeway across the marsh,
stopped the trolley by burning a newspaper on the track, and started on
the long trip home.
As the car ran along jerkily from station to station, the earlier void
of Duneland became peopled indeed. The extraordinarily mild day had
drawn out hundreds--had given the moribund summer-excursion season a
new lease of life. Every stoppage brought so many more young men in
soiled khaki, with shapeless packs on their backs, and so many more wan
maidens, no longer young, who were trying, in little bands, to capture
from Nature the joys thus far denied by domestic life; and at one
station a belated squad of the "Lovers of Landscape"--some forty or
fifty in all--came flooding in with the day's spoils: masses of asters
and goldenrod, with the roots as often as not; festoons of bittersweet,
and sheaves of sumach and golden glow; and one ardent spirit staggered
in under the weight of an immense brown paper bag stuffed with prickly
pear. As the tight-packed company slid along, children drowsed or
whimpered, short-tempered young men quarreled with the conductor,
elderly folk sat in squeezed, plaintive resignation.... Soon the lights
of foundry fires began to show on the sky; then people started dropping
off in the streets of towns enlivened by the glitter of many saloons
and an occasional loud glare from the front of a moving-picture
theater....
Through these many miles Randolph and Cope sat silent: there seemed to
be a tacit agreement that they need no longer exert themselves to
entertain each other. Cope reached home shortly before midnight. By
next morning many of the doings of the previous day had quite passed
from his mind. Yet a few firm impressions remained. He had had a good
swim, if but a brief one, with a companion who had been willing, even
if not bold; he had imposed an acceptable nomenclature upon a somewhat
anonymous landscape; and, in circumstances slightly absurd, or at least
unfavorable, he had done his voice and his method high credit in song.
All else went for next to nothing.
12
Next morning's mail brought Cope a letter from Arthur Lemoyne. The
letter was short--at least when compared with Cope's own plentiful
pennings; but it gave our young instructor a few points to think about
while he was illuminating Clarissa Harlowe and making some careful
comments on Joseph Andrews. Released toward noon, he read the letter
over again; and he ran over it again during lunch. Lemoyne possessed a
variety of gifts, but the gift of letter-writing, in an extended form,
was not among them. He said all he had to say in four moderate pages.
Well, the "if," as the latter part of the letter indicated, was not
likely to prove insurmountable. The assurance that he wanted to come
was grateful, though superfluous: who had supposed for a moment that he
didn't? Still, the thing, put down in plain black and white, had its
look of comfort.
"Of course the business is not gaining much through my connection with
it. I expect father begins to see _that_, pretty plainly. As for the
cathedral choir and the dramatic club and all the rest, I am willing to
throw them over--expecting that larger interests can be opened to me by
you."...
Cope pushed away his coffee-cup and asked the young Greek for a cut of
pie.
"I sort of sounded father the other day, but he was pretty huffy. I'll
try again, soon; but I doubt if I can manage to come down until after
the holidays. You begin a new term, then, I suppose. The fact is, I
took a week off in the middle of September, and father hasn't forgiven
it. One of our fellows in the choir had just bought a little roadster,
and he invited me for a trip to Green Bay and beyond. We dipped along
through Fish Creek, Ephraim, and so on. Good weather, good roads, good
scenery, good hotels; and a pleasant time was had by all--or, rather,
by both."...
Cope dwelt darkly on this passage. Arthur was flighty; Arthur was
volatile; Arthur was even fickle, when the mood took him. Some
arrangement that partook more of the hard-and-fast was needed. But
there was comfort--of a kind--in the next passage.
"Though father, at best, will do very little, and though I have just
now little enough of my own, there may be somebody or other among your
faculty or trustees who could find me a niche in the college library or
in the registrar's office. Or have all such posts been snapped up by
Johnnys-on-the-spot? A small weekly stipend would rather help our
_ménage,--hein_?"
This definite inquiry (which carried its own answer) seemed to drive
one or two brass tacks with some definiteness. Cope himself was eking
out his small salary with a small allowance from home; next year, with
the thesis accomplished, better pay in some better place. A present
partner and pal ought to be a prop rather than a drag: however welcome
his company, he must bear his share.
"Look about a bit for quarters," Lemoyne went on, drawing toward his
conclusion. "I presume room-rent is little more for two than for one.
Possibly," he put down in an afterthought, "I might get a job in the
city;" and then, "with warm regards," he came to a close as "Art."
Cope finished his lunch and walked out. If Arthur could do one thing
better than another, it was to make coffee; his product was assuredly
better than the Greek's. The two had camped out more than once on the
shores of Lake Winnebago, and Arthur had deftly managed the
commissariat. They had had good times together and had needed no other
company. How had it been on Green Bay--at Eagle Cliff and Apron Bluff
and all the other places lately celebrated in lithographed "folders"
and lately popularized by motorists? And who was the particular
"fellow" who ran the roadster?
Late that afternoon Cope chanced upon Randolph among the fantastic
basins and floral parterres of the court in front of the Botany
building: Randolph had had a small matter for one of the deans.
Together they sauntered over to the lake. From the edge of the bluff
they walked out upon the concrete terrace above the general boiler-room
and its dynamos. Alongside this, the vast tonnage of coal required for
the coming winter was beginning to pile up. The weather was still mild
and sunny and the lake was as valiantly blue as ever.
"It doesn't look like the same body of water, does it?" said Cope.
"I see they're hard on beauty; and I may live to find free speech
mauled, too."
"About your immortal William. He wrote them. Don't try to rob him.
Don't try to knock him off his pedestal."
"I think I shall end by digging something out of Here and Now. 'Our
Middle-West School of Fiction,'--what would you think of that?"
"Your work, from the very nature of it, must be critical. Now the
critic, nine times out of ten, takes down a volume from its established
shelf, dusts it off, ruffles the leaves a bit, and then puts it back
where it was. The ruffling is sometimes very nice and interesting and
often gives the ruffler a good position in the glorious company of
earlier rufflers----"
"I shouldn't be satisfied with anything like that. Things have got to
move. I want to take some recent, less-known men and put _them_ on the
shelves."
"Yet you don't want to waste work on material which time may show as of
transient value, or of none."
"A fellow must chance it. Who gives quickly gives twice;--I suppose
that applies to praise as well as to money. It irks me to find more
praise bestowed on the praised-enough,--even on groups of secondary
importance, sometimes just because they are remote (in England,
perhaps), and so can be treated with an easy objectivity. To dig in
your own day and your own community is harder, but I should feel it
more rewarding."
"But aren't the English books really better? Haven't they more depth,
substance and background?"
"No; and I hope it won't. I should like to write a whole book about our
new men."
"But don't write a thesis and then expect to publish it with profit
_as_ a book. That's a common enough expectation--or temptation."
They turned away from the lake terrace and the imposing coal-pile.
Cope, Randolph saw, was in quite a glow; a generous interest had
touched him, putting fresh light into his eyes and a new vigor into his
step. He had displayed a charming enthusiasm, and a pure, disinterested
one. Randolph, under a quiet exterior, was delighted. He liked the boy
better than ever, and felt more than ever prompted to attach him to
himself.
"How are you pleased with your present quarters?" he asked, as they
returned through the Botany court. He thought of the narrow couch, the
ink-spotted cover on the deal table, the few coats and shoes (they
_couldn't_ be many) behind that calico curtain.
"None too well," replied Cope. "I shall soon begin to look for another
room. I rather expect to change about holiday time."
"Why, could you better yourself?" asked Cope, in a tone of surprise. "I
never knew a bachelor to be better fixed."
"I need a little wider margin of room. I can afford it, and ought to
have had it long ago. And I learn that the lease of the people I'm with
expires in the spring. My collection is growing; and I ought to have
another bedroom. Think of not being able to put a man up, on occasion!
I shall take a small apartment on my own account, catch some Oriental
who is studying frogs' legs or Occidental theology; and then--open
house. In a moderate measure, of course."
"That listens good--as the young fellows say," replied Cope. "A not
uncommon ideal, possibly; but I'm glad that some man, now and then, is
able to realize it."
"Thank you, indeed. Yes, while my time lasts. But my own lease is like
your landlord's--short. Next year,--who knows where?"
Then his thoughts made an excursion toward Randolph. Here was a man who
was in business in the city, and who was related, by marriage, to the
board of trustees. How soon might one feel sufficiently well acquainted
with him to ask his friendly offices in behalf of the new-comer,--the
man who might reasonably be expected the first week in January?
13
On such formal occasions her three young ladies were dispensed with.
They were encouraged to go to some sorority gathering or to some
fudge-party. On the occasion now meditated she had another young person
in mind. This was the granddaughter of one of the banking families; the
girl might come along with her father and mother. She was not very
pretty, not very entertaining; however, Mrs. Phillips needed one girl,
and if she were not very attractive, none the worse. The one girl was
for the one young man. The one young man was to be Bertram Cope. Our
fond lady meant to have him and to show him off, sure that her choicest
circle could not but find him as charming as she herself did. Most of
us, at one time or another, have thrust forward our preferences in the
same confident way.
Cope made less of an impression than his patroness had hoped for.
Somehow his lithe youthfulness, his fine hair and teeth and eyes, the
rich resonance of his voice counted for little--except, perhaps, with
the granddaughter. The middle-aged people about him were used to young
college men and indifferent to them. Cope himself felt that he was in a
new environment, and a loftier one. Several of these were important
people, with names familiar through the town and beyond. He employed a
caution that almost became inexpressiveness. He also found Mrs.
Phillips a shade more formal and stately than her wont. She herself, in
her furtive survey of the board, was disappointed to find that he was
not telling. "Perhaps it's that girl," she thought; "she may be even
duller than I supposed." But never mind; all would be made right later.
Some music had been arranged and there would be an accompanist who
would help him do himself full justice.
"I think I can have just one kind, for once," she had said to herself.
"I know several houses where they have two,--Churchton or not,--and at
least one where they sometimes have three. If this simple town thinks I
can put grape-juice and Apollinaris before such people as these...."
Besides, the interesting Cope might interestingly refuse!
As the many courses moved on, Cope smelt the flowers, which were too
many, and some of them too odoriferous; he blinked at the lights and
breathed the heavy thickening air; and he took--interestingly--a few
sips of burgundy,--for he was now in Rome, and no longer a successful
Protestant in some lesser town of the empire. He had had a hard, close
day of it, busy indoors with themes and with general reading; and he
recalled being glad that the dinner had begun with reasonable
promptitude,--for he had bothered with no lunch beyond a glass of milk
and a roll. To-night there had been everything,--even to an unnecessary
entree. He laid down a spoon on his plate, glad that the frozen
pudding--of whatever sort--was disposed of. Too much of everything
after too little. The people opposite were far away; their murmuring
had become a mumbling, and he wished it was all over. The granddaughter
at his elbow was less rewarding than ever, less justificatory of the
effortful small-talk which he had put forth with more and more labor,
and which he could scarcely put forth now at all. What was it he was
meaning to do later? To sing? Absurd! Impossible! His head ached; he
felt faint and dizzy....
"We will leave you gentlemen to your cigars," he heard a distant voice
saying; and he was conscious for an instant that his hostess was
looking down the table at him with a face of startled concern....
"Don't try to lead him out," a deep voice said. "Lay him on the floor."
He felt himself lowered; some small rug was doubled and redoubled and
placed under his head; a large, firm hand was laid to his wrist; and
something--a napkin dipped in a glass of water and then folded?--was
put to his forehead.
"His pulse will come up in a minute," he heard the same deep voice say.
"If he had taken a step he would have fainted altogether."
"My poor, dear boy! Whatever in the world...!" Thus Medora Phillips.
Cope lay there inert, but reasonably conscious of what was going on.
His eyes gave him no aid, but his ears were open. He heard the alarmed
voice of Medora Phillips directing the disconcerted maids, and the
rustle and flutter of the garments of other daughters of Eve, who had
found him interesting at last. They remarked appreciatively on his
pallor; and one of them said, next day, before forgetting him
altogether, that, with his handsome profile (she mentioned especially
his nose and chin) and with his colorlessness, he looked for a moment
like an ancient cameo.
He knew, now, that he was not going to faint, and that he was in better
case than he seemed. In the circumstances he found nothing more
original to say than: "I shall be all right in no time; just a touch of
dizziness...." He was glad his dress-coat could stand inspection, and
hoped nobody would notice that his shoes had been half-soled....
After a little while he was led away to a couch in the library. The
deep-voiced doctor was on one side of him and Medora Phillips on the
other. Soon he was left alone to recuperate in the dark,--alone, save
for one or two brief, fluttery appearances by Mrs. Phillips herself,
who allowed the coffee to be passed without any supervision on her own
part.
"I'm so sorry for this--and so ashamed. I can't think how it could have
happened."
If he had been fifteen or twenty years older he might have taken it all
rather more lightly. Basil Randolph, now----But Randolph had not been
invited, though his sister and her husband were of the company. Yet had
it been Randolph, he would have smiled a wan smile and tried for a mild
joke, conscious that he had made an original and picturesque
contribution to the affair,--had broken the bland banality of routined
dinner-giving and had provided woman with a mighty fine chance to
"minister" and fuss: a thing she rather enjoyed doing, especially if a
hapless, helpless man had been delivered into her hands as a subject.
But there was no such consolation for poor abashed Cope. He had
disclosed himself, for some reason or other, a weakling; and he had
weakened at a conspicuously wrong time and in a conspicuously mistaken
place. He had hoped, over the cigars and coffee, to lay the foundation
of an acquaintance with the brother-in-law who was a trustee,--to set
up an identity in this influential person's mind as a possible help to
the future of Arthur Lemoyne. But the man now in the dining-room, or
the drawing-room, or wherever, might as well be in the next state.
There came a slight patter of rain on the bay-window near his head. He
began to wonder how he was to get home.
"He might better stay if he can," replied the authority, who happened
to be at the nearer end of the table.
"Of course he can," she returned. Of course there was a room for him.
Cope had said, of course, "I can get home perfectly well," and, "It's a
shame for me to be putting you out this way," and so on and on,--the
things you yourself would have said in the circumstances; but he said
them with no particular spirit, and was glad, as he walked uncertainly
up stairs, that he had not far to go.
Mrs. Phillips indeed "had a room for him." She had rooms a-plenty.
There was the chintz chamber on the third floor, where the Irish poet
(who seemed not to expect very much for himself) had been put; and
there was the larger, handsomer chamber on the second floor, where the
Hindoo philosopher (who had loomed up big and important through a vague
Oriental atmosphere) had been installed in state. It was a Louis Quinze
room, and the bed had a kind of silken canopy and a great deal too much
in the way of bolsters and lace coverings. It was thought that the
Hindoo, judging from the report of the maid next morning, had been
moved by some ascetic impulse to sleep not in the bed but on the floor
beside it. This was the room now destined for Cope; surely one flight
of stairs was enough. But there must be no further practice of
asceticism,--least of all by a man who was really ill; so Mrs.
Phillips, snatching a moment from her guests, herself saw the maid
remove the lace pillow-shams and coverlet, and turn down the sheets,
and set the thermos-bottle on the stand beside the reading lamp....
"Don't get up a moment earlier than you feel like doing," she said, at
the door. "Breakfast----"
By the time Mrs. Phillips had returned to her guests, the first of the
limousines was standing before the house; its wet top shone under an
electric globe. Her own car, meanwhile, obdurately reposed in its
garage. Presently a second limousine joined the first, and a third the
second; and in another quarter of an hour her guests were well on their
way to dispersal. She bade them all goodnight in the best of good humor.
"You've never before had quite such an evening as this, I'm sure!" she
said, with great gaiety.
"Isn't it wonderful how she took it all!" said one lady to another, on
the back seat of her car. "Anything like that would have thrown me off
completely."
The other lady laughed amusedly. She often found our Medora "great fun."
Meanwhile, Cope, up stairs, was sinking deeper and deeper into his big,
wide, overupholstered bed. And as his body sank, his spirit sank with
it. He felt poor, unimportant, ill at ease. In especial, he felt
greatly subordinated; he wished that he might have capitulated to a
man. Then the mystery of handsome houses and of handsome furnishings
came to harass him. Such things were everywhere: how were they got, how
were they kept? Should he himself ever----? But no; nothing ahead for
years, even in the most favorable of circumstances, save an assistant
professorship, with its inconceivably modest emoluments....
And Medora Phillips, in the stir of getting her guests out of the
house, had her first vision of him as sinking off to sleep. Somehow or
other his fine, straight yellow hair retained its backward sweep with
no impairment by reason of turnings and tossings; his clear profile
continued to keep itself disengaged from any depression in the pillows;
his slender hands were laid in quiet symmetry over the wide edge of the
down-turned coverlet. A decorous, unperturbed young old-master ... Van
Eyck ... Carpaccio....
"Your name as an entertainer will be all over town! I'm sure you gave
some of those poky people a real touch of novelty!"
Amy Leffingwell was in the front hall at the same time, with her
music-roll. They were going the same way, to substantially the same
place, to meet about the same hour in the day's schedule. They went
along the street together.
The morning air was brisk and cool after last night's shower. Like the
trees under which they passed, it gave the first decided intimation of
autumn. They set off at a lively pace toward the college towers and the
lake.
Cope was soon sailing along with his head high, his trim square
shoulders much in action, and his feet throwing themselves spiritedly
here and there. Amy, who was not very tall, kept up as well as she
could.
"No; but it may be a little too fast for you. Excuse me; I've never
learned to keep pace with a woman. But as for myself, I never felt
better in my life. Every yard toward the good old lake"--the wind was
coming down from the north in a great sweep--"makes me feel finer."
He slowed up appreciably.
"Oh, not for me!" she said in deprecation. "I like a brisk morning walk
as well as anybody. Did you sing at all?" she asked.
"Not a note. They put the soft pedal on me. They 'muted' me," he
amended, in deference to her own branch of the profession.
"We came in by the side door about half past nine. It was a dull
meeting. I listened for you. Somebody was playing."
"It must have been the poor disappointed woman who was to have
accompanied me. She had had a list of three or four of my things--to
run them over in her own album, I suppose. Think just how disappointed
she must have been to find that she had the whole field to herself!"
"Your contribution would have been more important than hers. And your
substitution for my failure would have given added interest."
Two or three streets on, the pair separated, she to her work, he to
his. For him the walk had been a nothing in particular--he would a
little have preferred taking it alone. For her it had been--despite the
low level of expressiveness reached on either side--a privilege which
had been curtailed much too soon.
Meanwhile, back in the house, Hortense was detailing the events of the
previous evening to Joe Foster; the general access of activity on the
morning after had made it desirable that she help with his breakfast.
"Why," she said, as Foster sat at his coffee, boiled egg and toast, "he
keeled over like a baby."
However, Cope, at half past four that afternoon, was on the faculty
tennis-courts, with a racquet in his hand. But one set was enough. "I
seem to be a day ahead of my schedule," he said, pulling out and
strolling along homeward.
14
Two or three days later, Randolph put a book of essays in his pocket
and went round to spend an hour with Joseph Foster. Foster sat in his
wheeled chair in his own room. He was knitting. The past year or two
had brought knitting-needles into countenance for men, and he saw no
reason why he should not put a few hanks of yarn into shape useful for
himself. He might not have full command of his limbs nor of his eyes,
but he did have full command of his fingers. He had begun to knit socks
for his own use; and even a muffler, in the hope that on some occasion,
during the coming months, he might get outside.
As Randolph entered, Foster looked up from under his green shade with
an expression of perplexity. "Have I dropped a stitch here or not?" he
asked. "I wish you knew something about knitting; I don't like to call
Medora or one of the girls away up here to straighten me out. Look;
what do you think?"
"They count all right," said Randolph; and he sat down on the couch
opposite. "I've brought a book."
"I hope it's poetry!" said Foster, with a fierce promptness. "I hope
it's about Adonis, or Thammuz, whose mishap 'in Lebanon' set all the
Syrian females a-going. I could stand a lot more of that,--or perhaps I
couldn't!"
"I suppose you know that your young friend got up a great to-do for us
the other evening?"
"Yes; I've heard something about it." He looked at Foster's drawn face,
and heard with surprise the rasping note in his voice. "Was it as bad
as that?"
Foster drew his shade down farther over his eyes and clashed his
needles together.
"Well, the young fellow began by roaring through the house like a bull
of Bashan, and he ended by toppling over like a little wobbly calf."
He spoke like a man who had imagined a full measure of physical powers
and had envied them ... had been exasperated by the exuberant
presentation of them... had felt a series of contradictory emotions
when they had seemed to fail....
"It was only a moment of dizziness," said Randolph. "I imagine he was
fairly himself next day."
"Well, I've heard too much about it. Medora came up here and----"
"There were plenty more to help," Foster went on doggedly. "One dear
creature, who was old enough to be more cautious, spilt water down the
whole front of her dress----"
"I expect," said Randolph, "that the poor chap has been overworked; or
careless about his meals; or worried in his classes--for he may not be
fully settled in his new place; or some emotional strain may have set
itself up----"
"A guess in the dark," commented Randolph, and paused. He himself knew
little enough of Cope as a complex. He had met him but a few times, and
could not associate him with his unknown background. He knew next to
nothing of Cope's family, his connections, his intimates, his early
associations and experiences. Nor had he greatly bestirred himself to
learn. He had done little more than go to a library in the city and
turn over the leaves of the Freeford directory. This publication, like
most of those dealing with the smaller cities, gave separately the
names of all the members of a family; and repetitions of the same
address helped toward the arrangement of these individuals (disposed
alphabetically) into family groups. Freeford had no great number of
Copes, and several of them lived at 1636 Cedar Street. "Elm, Pine,
Locust, Cedar," had thought Randolph; "the regular set." And, "One of
the good streets," he surmised, "but rather far out. Cedar!" he
repeated, and thought of Lebanon and the Miltonic Adonis. Of these
various Copes, "Cope, David L., bookpr," might be the father,--unless
"Cope, Leverett C., mgr" were the right man. If the former, he was
employed by the Martin & Graves Furniture Company, and the Martins were
probably important people who lived far out--and handsomely, one might
guess--on a Prospect Avenue.... Then there was "Cope, Miss Rosalys M.,
schooltchr," same address as "David": she was likely his daughter.
"H'm!" Randolph had thought, "these pickings are scanty,--enough
anatomical reconstruction for to-day...." And now he was thinking, as
he sat opposite Foster, "If I had only picked up another bone or two, I
might really have put together the domestic organism. Yet why should I
trouble? It would all be plain, humdrum prose, no doubt. Glamour
doesn't spread indefinitely. And then--men's brothers...."
"Well," asked Foster sharply, "are you mooning? Medora sat in the same
place yesterday, and she talked for awhile too and then fell into a
moonstruck silence. What's it all about?"
Randolph came out of his reverie. "Oh, I was just hoping the poor boy
was back on his pins all right again."
"I can talk all right," returned Randolph. "In fact, I have a bit of
news for you."
"What is it?"
"Move? What for? I thought you were all right where you are.
"All right enough; except that I want more room--and a house of my own."
"No; first floor, not six feet above the street level."
"Good. If they'll lend me a hand here, to get down and out, I'll come
and see you, now and then."
"Do so."
"So it will."
"Well, be a little more cordial. You expect to see your friends, don't
you?"
"Of course. That's what it's for. Have I got to exert myself," he
added, "to be cordial with _you_?"
"Oh, this one, substantially. The next street from where I am now."
"Housekeeper?"
"Dinners?"
"Mixed parties?"
"About that."
Foster readjusted his shade, and drove his needles into his ball of
yarn.
"Their lease is up in the spring. They may go on; they may not. Fall's
the time to change."
"You ought to have seen Hortense the next morning. She put my tray on
the table, and then went down in a heap on the floor--or it sounded
like that. She was fainting away at dinner, she said."
"I don't know _how_ she found it," returned Foster shortly. "If ever
_I_ do anything like that at your house, run me home."
Foster resumed work with some excess of vigor, and presently got into a
snarl. "Dammit!" he exclaimed, "have I dropped another?"
"If two can be said to make a circle,--and if you will really come."
"I'm coming. But I never understood that only two points could
establish a circle. Three, anyway."
"It will brace him for the rest of his fall term," thought Randolph,
"and me for my confounded shopping. And during some one of our
boat-rides or rambles, I shall tell him of my plans for the winter."
The departure, it was agreed upon, should take place late on Friday
afternoon. On Friday, at half past eleven, Randolph at his office in
the city, received a long-distance call from Churchton. Cope announced,
with a breathless particularity not altogether disassociated from
self-conscious gaucherie, that he should be unable to go. Some
unexpected work had been suddenly thrown upon him.... He rather thought
that one or two of his family might be coming to town for over
Sunday....
"Peter brought me down," said the cripple. "I thought I'd rather look
at the backs of books than at the fronts of all those tedious pictures.
Besides, I'm beginning to practice for my call at your new quarters."
Then, with a sudden afterthought: "Why, I understood you were going
somewhere out of town. What prevented?"
"She likes to shop," replied Foster, "and taste is her strong suit.
I'll speak to her,--she's gone off to some meeting or other. Isn't this
just the afternoon to be spending indoors?" he commented brusquely.
"What a day it would be for the country," he added, sending his
ineffectual glance in the direction of Randolph's face.
"We Churchtonians must take what we can get," Randolph replied, with an
attempt at indifference. "Our _rus in urbs_ isn't everything, but there
are times when it must be made to serve."
15
Cope's excuse, involving the expected visit of a relative, may not have
been altogether sincere, but it received, within a week or so, the
substantial backing of actuality: a relative came. She was an
aunt,--his father's sister,--and she came at the suggestion of a
concerned landlady. This person, made anxious by a languid young man
who had begged off from his classes and who was likely to need more
attention than her scanty margin of leisure could grant, had even
suggested a hospital while yet it was easy for him to reach one. Though
Cope meant to leave her soon, it did not suit him to leave her quite as
soon as this; and so Aunt Harriet came in from Freeford to look the
situation over and to lend a hand if need be. She spent two nights in a
vacant chamber at transient rates; was grudgingly allowed to prepare
his "slops," as he called them, in the kitchen; and had time to satisfy
herself that, after all, nothing very serious was the matter.
Randolph did not meet this relative, but he heard about her; and her
coming, as a sort of family representative, helped him still further in
his picture of the _res angusta_ of a small-town household: a father
held closely to office or warehouse--his own or some one else's; a
sister confined to her school-room; a mother who found the demands of
the domestic routine too exacting even to allow a three-hour trip to
town; and a brother--Randolph added this figure quite gratuitously out
of an active imagination and a determined desire not to put any of the
circle to the test of a personal encounter--and a brother who was
perhaps off somewhere "on the road."
The one who met Aunt Harriet was Medora Phillips, and the meeting was
brief. Medora had heard from Amy Leffingwell of Cope's absence from his
class-room. She herself became concerned; she felt more or less
responsible and possibly a bit conscience-stricken. "Next time," she
said, "I shall try to have the ventilation right; and I think that,
after this, I shall keep to birch beer."
As they neared the house a colored man came out, carrying a small trunk
to a mud-bespattered surrey. "What! is he going?" said Medora, with a
start. "Well, anyway, we're in time to say good-bye." Then, "What's the
matter, Jasper?" she asked, having now recognized the driver and his
conveyance.
Cope's aunt said good-bye to him up stairs and was now putting on her
gloves in the lower hall, in the company of the landlady. Medora
appraised the visitor as a semi-rustic person--one of some substance
and standing in her own community; marriage, perhaps, had provided her
with means and leisure. She had been willing to subordinate herself to
a university town apprehended as a social organism, and she now seemed
inclined to accept with docility any observations made by a confident
urbanite with a fair degree of verve.
"These young men," said Medora dashingly, "are too careless and proud."
"Proud?" asked the other. She felt clearly enough that her nephew had
been careless; but pride is not often acknowledged among the members of
an ordinary domestic circle.
"They're all mind," Medora went on, with no lapse of momentum. She knew
she must work in brief, broad effects: the surrey was waiting and the
train would not delay. "They sometimes forget that their intellectual
efforts must rest, after all, on a good sensible physical basis. They
mustn't scorn the body."
The departing visitor gave a quick little sigh of relief. The views of
this fashionable and forthputting woman were in accord with her own,
after all.
"Well, I've told Bert," she said, buttoning her second glove, "that he
had better take all his meals in one place and at regular hours. I've
told him his health is of just as much account as his students and
their studies." She seemed gratified that, on an important point, she
had reached unanimity with an influential person who was to remain
behind; and she got away without too long delaying the muddy surrey and
the ungroomed sorrel.
Medora Phillips looked after her with a grimace. "Think of calling him
'Bert'!"
To Amy Leffingwell he seemed pale, and she felt him as glad to sit down
at once in the third and last chair the little room offered. She
noticed, too, an inkstain on his right forefinger and judged that the
daily grind of theme-correction was going on in spite of everything.
"We did," said Medora, "and we are going to add our advice to hers."
"I almost feel like taking you in myself," declared Medora boldly.
"Do you know," said Cope, with a sort of embarrassed laugh, "I feel as
if I were letting myself become the focus of interest. Oughtn't I to do
something to make the talk less personal?"
"I'm sure Amy and I are satisfied with the present subject," returned
Medora.
"For heaven's sake, Amy, don't look so concerned, and mournful, and
sympathetic! Anybody might think that, instead of your being my
chaperon, I was yours!"
"He might look better; but we can't pity a young man too openly. Pity
is akin to embarrassment, for the pitied."
Cope came down stairs the second time at a lesser pace. He carried a
sheaf of photographs. Some were large and were regularly mounted;
others were but the informal products of snap-shottery.
He drew up his chair nearer to theirs and began to spread his pictures
over the gray and brown pattern on his lap.
"You know I was teaching, last year, at Winnebago," he said. "Here are
some pictures of the place. Science Hall," he began, passing them.
"Those fellows on the front steps must be a graduating class.
Cope paused. "What do they do, indeed? Well, for one thing, they
decorate the altar--Easter, Harvest home, and so on."
"Don't drive me so! I suppose they want to tone in with the cathedral
as a special institution. 'Atmosphere,' you know. Some tracts of our
great land are rather drab and vacant, remember. Color, stir,--and
distinction, you understand."
"Not very. While I was there a young 'priest,' an offshoot from the
cathedral, started up a new parish in one of the industrial outskirts.
He was quite earnest and eloquent and put up a fine service; but nobody
except his own father and mother went to hear him preach."
"Oh, I guess so. I met two or three of them. Nice girls, yes; just
trying to be a little different. Here's the boat-house, and some of the
fellows in their rowing-clothes. Some sail-boats too."
"Can you sail?" asked Amy. She had the cathedral-choir in one hand and
now took the boat-club in the other. She studied both pictures
intently, for both were small and crowded.
"Why, I have all the theory and some of the practice. Those small
inland lakes are tricky, though."
"Probably no worse than ours," said Mrs. Phillips. "Do help poor Amy,"
she went on. "_Are_ you in either of these groups?"
"No. Didn't I tell you I was trying to get away from the personal? I'm
not in any of these pictures." Amy unconsciously let both half-drop, as
if they held no particular interest, after all. And the hand into which
the next photograph was put gave it but lukewarm welcome.
"Who is this?" inquired Mrs. Phillips, with the last of these in hand.
"Yes."
"Yes. With the first tenors. There you have him,--third from the left,
just behind that row of little devils in surplices."
"Oh, heavens!" said Cope. He threw up his head quite spiritedly. There
was now more color in his cheeks, more sparkle in his eyes, more
vibration in his voice. Amy looked at him with a vanishing pity and a
growing admiration.
"Certainly."
"'Certainly,'--of course."
Then Mrs. Phillips must know the new-comer's name, and must have an
outline of the proposed plan. And Amy Leffingwell began to look with
renewed interest on the counterfeit form and features of the young man
who enjoyed Bertram Cope's friendly regard. And so the moments of
"entertainment"--Cope's in turn--went on.
Cope, flushed and now rather tired, walked up stairs with his
photographs, took a perfunctory sip from a medicine-glass, looked at
the inkstain on his finger, and sat down at his table. Two or three
sheets of a letter were lying on it, and he re-read a paragraph or so
before dipping his pen.
"You were rather exacting about that week-end excursion. Mr. R. was all
right, and a few days of new air and new scenes would have done me a
lot of good. Still, I acknowledge your first claim. But remember that I
gave up Indian Rock for you, even if you didn't give up Green Bay for
me. I hope the fellow who took you hasn't got anything further to
propose. If he has, I ask for a tip in turn.
"B."
16
Cope was himself in a few days. He set aside his aunt's counsel in
regard to a better regimen, as well as her more specific hints, made in
view of the near approach of rough weather, that he provide himself
with rubbers and an umbrella, even if he would not hear of a rain-coat.
"Am I made of money?" he asked. He gave a like treatment to some
intimations contributed by Medora Phillips during her call: he met them
with the smiling, polite, half-weary patience which a man sometimes
employs to inform a woman that she doesn't quite know what she is
talking about. He presently in as active circulation, on the campus and
elsewhere, as ever. The few who looked after him at all came to the
view that he possessed more mettle than stamina. He had no special
fondness for athletics; he was doing little to keep--still less to
increase--a young man's natural endowment of strength and vigor.
Occasional tennis on the faculty courts, and not much else.
So the vast gymnasium went for little with him, and the wide football
field for less, and the great lake, close by, for nothing. This last,
however, counted for little more with any one else. Those who knew the
lake best were best content to leave it alone. As a source of pleasure
it had too many perils: "treacherous" was the common word. Its
treachery was reserved, of course, for the smiling period of summer;
especially did the great monster lie in wait on summer's Sunday
afternoons. Then the sun would shine on its vast placid bosom and the
breeze play gently, tempting the swimmer toward its borders and the
light pleasure craft toward its depths. And then, in mid-afternoon, a
sudden disastrous change; a quick gale from the north, with a wide
whipping-up of white caps; and the morrow's newspapers told of bathers
drowned in the undertow, of frail canoes dashed to pieces against piers
and breakwaters, and of gay, beflagged steam-launches swamped by the
newly-risen sea miles from shore: the toll of fickle, superheated
August. But in the late autumn the immense, savage creature was more
frankly itself: rude, blustery, tyrannical,--no more a smiling, cruel
hypocrite. It warned you, often and openly, if warning you would take.
It was on the last Sunday afternoon in October that Cope and Amy
Leffingwell were strolling along its edge. They had met casually, in
front of the chapel, after a lecture--or a service--by an eminent
ethical teacher from abroad,--a bird of passage who must pipe on this
Sunday afternoon if he were to pipe at all. Cope, who had lain abed
late, made this address a substitute for the forenoon service he had
missed. And Amy Leffingwell had gone out somewhat for the sake,
perhaps, of walking by the house where Cope lived.
But the way, this afternoon, was clear and easy; and there were no
annoyances save from other walkers along the same path. The sun shone
brightly at intervals. A fresh breeze swept the wide expanse streaked
with purple and green and turned an occasional broken wave-crest toward
the western light. Some large cumuli were abroad--white, or less white,
or even darkling,--the first windy sky of autumn.
Cope and Amy passed the life-saving station, where a few people sat
about idly and where one or two visitors pressed noses against glass
panes to view the boats within; and they reached presently a sort of
little public park which lay along the water. Here a small pier ran out
past the shallows, and in front of a shack close by it a man sat
resignedly near a group of beached and upturned row-boats. One or two
others were still in the water, as was a small sloop. The fellow sat
there without expectations: the season was about over; the day was none
too promising for such as knew. His attitude expressed, in fact, the
accumulated disappointment and resignation of many months. Perhaps he
was a new-comer from the interior--some region of ponds and rivers--and
had kept through an uneventful summer the notion that so big a spread
of water would surely be put to use. The sail of the sloop,
half-lowered, flapped in the breeze, and little else stirred.
"The same," returned Cope promptly. "It's just what it was a year ago,
a century ago; and a millennium ago, I suppose,--if there was anyone
here to notice."
"Oh, I see. Why, yes, it is the same old lake, though it seems hard to
realize it. Foreground makes so much difference; and so does--well,
population. I mean the human element, or the absence of it."
Amy pondered.
"The one drawback, there, was that we couldn't go out on the water."
"Go out? I should say not. No pier for miles, and the water so shallow
that hardly more than a canoe could land. Still, those fishermen out
there manage it. But plain summerites, especially if not dressed for
it, would have an unpleasant time imitating them."
Amy cast her eye about. Here was a shore, a pier, a boat, a man to let
it....
The two young people looked at each other. Neither looked at the sky.
"Well, I don't know," replied Cope slowly. The sloop was on a pretty
small scale; still, it was more to manage than a cat-boat.
"You have the theory, you know," said Amy demurely, "and some practice."
"Yes," she returned. "I have some practice, if not much theory."
"Under direction."
The misanthrope, with a twisted smile, helped them get away. The
mainsail took a steady set; but the jib, from the first, possessed an
active life of its own.
She saw Cope's predicament and let go her hold to set him free. He
helped shake himself loose with a loud forced laugh and a toss of the
head to get his long hair out of his eyes. "We'll leave the wreck," he
spluttered, "and make for the shore." The shore, fortunately, was
scarcely more than a hundred yards away,--yet never had the great twin
towers of the library seemed so distant or the wireless cage on Science
hall so futile.
The last hundred feet meant mere wading, though there was some
variability among the sand ridges of the bottom; but the water, at its
deepest, never reached their shoulders. Their small accident now began
to take on the character of a ceremonial--an immersion incident to some
religious rite or observance; and the little Sunday crowd collecting on
the water's edge might have been members of some congregation
sympathetically welcoming a pair of converts to the faith.
"Let's hold our heads high and walk straight," said Cope, his arm in
hers; "heaven knows whom we are likely to meet. And throw your hat
away--you'll look better without it. Lord knows where mine is," he
added, as he ran a smoothing hand over his long locks.
"Very well," she said, casting away her ruined, ridiculous headgear
with her free arm. The other, in his, was giving more support to him,
she felt, than he was giving to her.
Just as they were about to reach dry land, amidst the congratulations
and the amused smiles of the little group at the foot of the bluff, the
belated crew of life-savers swept up in their smallest boat and
insisted on capturing them.
"Oh, Mr. Cope," said a familiar voice, "please let us save you. We
haven't saved a soul for months."
Meanwhile, another boat belonging to the station had set out to aid the
owner of the sloop in its recovery. It was soon righted and was brought
in. There was no damage done, and there was no charge that Cope could
not meet, as he learned next day to his great relief.
The station gave him a dry outfit of clothes, assembled from here and
there, and telephoned to Mrs. Phillips to bring fresh garments for Amy.
Neither had time to get a chill. A pair of kindly servant-maids, who
were loitering on the shore with their young men, insisted on carrying
the heroine of the afternoon into retirement, where they expeditiously
undressed her, rubbed her, and wrapped her in a quilt snatched from a
life-saving bed. Amy was cold indeed, and inclined to shiver. She
understood, now, why Cope had not encouraged that bathing party at the
dunes.
In a few minutes Medora Phillips tore up in her car, with Helga and a
mountain of clothing and wraps. She was inclined to make the most of
the occasion, and she did so. With Helga she quickly superseded the
pair of sympathetic and ready maids, whom she allowed to fade into the
background with too scant recognition of their services; and when she
had got Amy thoroughly warmed and rehabilitated she turned her thought
toward Cope. Here, certainly, was a young scholastic recluse who had an
admirable faculty for getting into the public eye. If one section of
Churchton society had talked about his performance at her dinner, all
sections of it would now be discussing his new performance on the high
seas. Suddenly she was struck with the notion that possibly his first
lapse had not left him in condition to stand this second one.
"How are you feeling?" she asked anxiously. "No chill? No shock?"
"I'm all right," he declared. "One of the boys has just given me a
drink of--of----" But it was a beverage the use of which was not
generally approved in Churchton.
Mrs. Phillips turned round suddenly. "Amy, did you have a drink, too,
of--of--of--if 'Of' is what you call it?"
"I did," said Amy firmly; "and I feel the better for it."
Peter grinned from the front seat of the car; Mrs. Phillips placed
herself between the two victims on the back one; the life-savers, who
had kept the discarded garments to dry, gave them all a few smiles and
hand wavings; the two young women and their two young men looked on
with some deference; the general crowd gave a little mock-cheer before
turning its Sunday leisure to other forms of interest; and the small
party whirled away.
Amy leaned a tired, moist head, but a happy one, on Mrs. Phillips'
shoulder. "He was so quick," she breathed, "and so brave, and so
strong." She professed to believe that he had saved her life. Cope,
silent as he looked straight ahead between Peter and Helga, was almost
afraid that she had saved his.
17
After breakfast she spoke a few words to Carolyn. She had had all night
to think the matter over; she now saw it from a new angle and in a new
light.
"You should have seen how he shook himself free from that sail, and
all," she said. "And while we were swimming in he held his hand under
my chin--at least part of the time. And when we reached the sandbars he
put his arm through mine and helped me over every one." And in this
state of mind she went off to her class.
Cope was received by his own class with a subdued hilarity. His young
people felt that he had shown poor judgment in going out on the water
at all,--for the University, by tacit consent, left the lake pretty
well alone. They thought that, once out, he had shown remarkably inept
seamanship. And they thought that he had chosen a too near and too
well-lighted stage for the exhibition of both. This forenoon the
"Eighteenth Century Novelists" involved Smollett, and with every
reference to the water looks of understanding traveled from student to
student: that the class was of both sexes made the situation no better.
Cope was in good enough physical condition,--the unspeakable draught
from the unspeakable flask had ensured that,--but he felt what was in
the air of the classroom and was correspondingly ill at ease.
He had had, for several days, an understanding with Basil Randolph that
they were to go together to the next weekly reception of the
president's wife. Randolph wished to push Cope's fortunes wherever he
might, and to make him stand out from the general ranks of the young
instructors. He had the entrée to the Thursdays at the president's
house, and he wanted Cope to meet personally and intimately, under the
guidance he could provide, a few of the academic dignitaries and some
of the wealthier and more prominent townspeople. Notwithstanding Mrs.
Phillips' confident impression, Cope's exploit at her own table had
gained no wide currency. The people she had entertained were people who
expected and commanded a succession of daily impressions from one
quarter or another. With them, a few light words on Cope's achievement
were sufficient; they walked straight on toward the sensation the next
day was sure to bring. But of course the whole University knew about
his second performance. Some of its members had witnessed it, and all
of them had read about it, next day, in Churchton's four-page "Index."
She caught his hand with a good, firm, nervous grasp, and flashed on
him a broad, meaningful smile.
Mrs. Ryder, who was farther along in the line, but not too far, beamed
delightedly, yet without the slightest trace of malice. An eminent
visiting educator, five or six steps behind our hero, frowned in
question and had to have the situation explained by the lady in his
company.
Cope lost himself from Randolph, and presently got away without seeing
who was pouring coffee or who was the lightest on foot among the
younger professors. The president's wife had asked him, besides, how
the young lady had got through it, and had even inquired after her
present condition. Well, Amy Leffingwell was enrolled among the
University instructors, and doubtless the wife of the institution's
head had been well within her rights,--even duly mindful of the
proprieties. But "The Index"! That sheet, staid and proper enough on
most occasions, had seemed, on this one, to couple their names quite
unwarrantably. "Couple!" Cope repeated the word, and felt an injury. If
he had known that Amy had carefully cut out and preserved the offending
paragraph, his thought would have taken on a new and more disquieting
tone.
Mrs. Phillips' voice had kept, over the telephone, all its vibratory
quality; its tones expressed the most palpitating interest. It was
already clear--and it became even clearer when he finally called at the
house--that she was poetizing him into a hero, and that she regarded
Amy herself as but a means, an instrument. At this, Cope felt a little
more mortified than before. He knew that he had done poorly in the
boat, and he was not sure that, in the first moment of the upset, he
should have freed himself unaided; and he confessed that he had not
been quite in condition to do very well on the way landward. However,
all passed.... Within a fortnight or less the incident would have
dropped back into its proper perspective, and his students would have
found some other matter for entertainment. In the circumstances he
grasped at the first source of consolation that came. Randolph was now
installed in his new apartment and felt that, though not fully settled,
he might risk asking Cope to dinner. "You are the first," Randolph had
said. Cope could not escape the flattery; it was almost comfort.
His prompt acceptance was most welcome to Randolph. Cope had dwelt, for
a moment, on the actual presence of Aunt Harriet and on his need of
her. Randolph had made no precise study of recent chronology, taking
the reason given over the wire as a valid one and feeling glad that
there was no hitch this time.
Randolph gave Cope a rapid view of the apartment before they sat down
to dinner. There were fewer pictures on the newly-papered walls than
there were to be, and fewer rugs on the freshly-varnished floors. "My
standing lamp will be in that corner," said Randolph, in the
living-room, "--when it comes." He drew attention to a second bedroom
where a man could be put up on occasion: "you, for example, if you ever
find yourself shut out late." He saw Sir Galahad's gauntlets on the
dresser. He even gave Cope a glimpse of his kitchen, where a
self-contained Oriental, slightly smiling but otherwise inexpressive,
seemed to be dealing competently with the gas-range. But Cope was
impressed, most of all, by the dining-room table and its paraphernalia.
At Mrs. Phillips' he had accepted the china, silver and napery as a
matter of course--an elaborate entity quite outside his own thoughts
and calculations: it was all so immensely far beyond his reach and his
needs. Randolph, however, had dealt as a bachelor with a problem which
he himself as a bachelor must soon take up, on however different a
scale and plane. For everything here was rich and handsome; he should
not know how to select such things--still less how to pay for them. He
felt dashed; he felt depressed; once more the wonder of people's
"having things." He sipped his soup in the spirit of humility, and did
not quite recover with the chops.
Randolph made little talk; he was glad merely to have Cope there. He
indulged no slightest reference to the accident; he assumed, willingly
enough, that Cope had done well in a sudden emergency, but did not care
to dwell on his judgment at the beginning. Still, a young man was
properly enough experimental, venturesome...
Cope set down his demi-tasse with a slight sigh. "Well," he said, "I
suppose that, before long, I shall have to buy a few sticks of
furniture myself and a trifle of 'crockery.' And a percolator."
Randolph looked across at him in surprise.
Randolph, by this time, had led Cope into the den, established him
between padded arms, and given him a cigar. He drew Cope's attention to
the jades and swordguards, to the odd assortment of primitive musical
instruments (which would doubtless, in time, find a place at the Art
Museum in the city), and to his latest acquisition--a volume of Bembo's
"Le Prose." It had reached him but a week before from Venice,--"_in
Venetia, al segno del Pozzo_, MDLVII," said the title-page, in fact. It
was bound in vellum, pierced by bookworms, and was decorated, in quaint
seventeenth-century penmanship, with marginal annotations, and also, on
the fly leaves, with repeated honorifics due to a study of the forms of
address by some young aspirant for favor. Randolph had rather depended
on it to take Cope's interest; but now the little _envoi_ from the
Lagoons seemed lesser in its lustre. Cope indeed took the volume with
docility and looked at its classical title-page and at its quaint
Biblical colophon; but, "Just who _was_ 'Pietro Bembo'?" he asked; and
Randolph realized, with a slight shock, that young instructors teach
only what they themselves lately have learned, and that, in many cases,
they have not learned much.
But in truth neither paid much heed to the tabulated vocables of the
Venetian cardinal--nor to any of the other rarities near by. Basil
Randolph was wondering how he was to take Arthur Lemoyne, and was
asking himself if his trouble in setting up a new ménage was likely to
go for nothing; and Bertram Cope, while he pursued the course of the
bookworm through the parchment covers and the yellowed sheets within,
was wondering in what definite way his host might aid the fortunes of
Arthur Lemoyne and thus make matters a little easier for them both.
"_All' ill.'mo Sig.'r paron ossevnd.'mo.... All' ill.'mo et ecc.'mo
Sig.'r paron... All' ill'mo et R.R.d.'mo Sig.'r, Sig.'r Pio. Francesco
Bembo, Vesco et Conte di Belluno_"--thus ran the faded brown lines on
the flyleaf, in their solicitous currying of favor; but these
reiterated forms of address conveyed no meaning to Cope, and offered no
opening: now, as once before, he let the matter wait.
Randolph thought over Cope's statement of his plans, and his slight
touch of pique did not pass away. Toward the end of the evening, he
spoke of the wreck and the rescue, after all.
"Committed?"
"I was afraid, for a moment, that you might be taking a wife."
"A wife?"
Cope laughed, but with a slight disrelish. "We're in actual life still,
I'm glad to think. What I said on one stretch of the shore goes on the
other," he declared. "I don't feel any more inclination to wedded life
than ever, nor any likelihood"--here he spoke with effort, as if
conscious of a possible danger on some remote horizon--"of entering it."
"It _would_ have been sudden, wouldn't it?" commented Randolph, with a
short laugh. "Well," he went on, "one who inclines to hospitality must
work with the material at his disposal. I shall be glad, on some
occasion or other," he proceeded, with a slight trace of formality
creeping into his tone, "to entertain your friend."
"I shall be more than glad," replied Cope, "to have you meet."
18
Cope took his own time in calling upon the Ashburn Avenue circle; but
he finally made, in person, the inquiries for which those made by
telephone were an inadequate substitute. Yet he waited so long that,
only a few hours before the time he had set, he received a sweet but
somewhat urgent little note from Amy Leffingwell suggesting his early
appearance. He felt obliged to employ the first moments of his call in
explaining that he had been upon the point of coming, anyway, and that
he had set aside the present hour two or three days before for this
particular purpose: an explanation, he acknowledged inwardly, which
held no great advantage for him.
Amy's note of course minimized her aid to him and magnified his aid to
her. All this was in accord with established form, but it was in still
stronger accord with her determination to idealize his share in the
incident. His arm _had_ grasped hers firmly--and she felt it yet. But
when she went on to say--not for the first time, nor for the
second--how kind and sympathetic he had been in supporting her chin
against those slapping waves when the shore had seemed so far away, he
wondered whether he had really done so. For a moment or two, possibly;
but surely not as part of a conscious, reasoned scheme to save.
Neither did he welcome Mrs. Phillips' tendency to make him a hero. She
was as willing as the girl herself to believe that he had kept Amy's
chin above water--not for a moment merely, but through most of the
transit to shore. He sat there uneasily, pressing his thumbs between
his palms and his closed fingers and drawing up his feet crampingly
within their shoes; yet it somewhat eased his tension to find that
Medora Phillips was disposed to put Amy into a subordinate place: Amy
had been but a means to an end--her prime merit consisted in having
given him a chance to function. Any other girl would have done as well.
A slight relief, but a welcome.
Another mitigation: the house, the room, was full of people. The other
young women of the household were present; even the young business-man
who had understood the stove and the pump had looked in: no chance for
an intense, segregated appreciation. There had been another weekend at
the dunes, when this youth had nimbly ranged the forest and the beach
to find wood for the great open fireplace; and he had come, now, at the
end of the season, to make due acknowledgments for privileges enjoyed.
He, for his part, was willing enough to regard Amy as a heroine; but he
considered her as a heroine linked with the wrong man and operative in
the wrong place. He cared nothing in the world for Cope, and disparaged
him as before--when he did not ignore him altogether. If Amy had but
been rescued by him, George F. Pearson, instead of by this Bertram
Cope, and if she had been snatched from a disorderly set of breakers at
the foot of those disheveled sandhills instead of from the prim, prosy,
domestic edge of Churchton--well, wouldn't the affair have been better
set and better carried off? In such case it might have been picturesque
and heroic, instead of slightly silly.
Yes, the room was full. Even Joseph Foster had contrived to get himself
brought down by Peter: further practice for the day when he should make
a still more ambitious flight and dine at Randolph's new table. He sat
in a dark corner of the room and tried to get, as best he might, the
essential hang of the situation: the soft, insidious insistence of Amy;
the momentum and bravado of his sister-in-law; the veiled disparagement
of Cope in which George F. Pearson, seated on a sofa between Carolyn
and Hortense, indulged for their benefit, or for his own relief; above
all, he listened for tones and undertones from Cope himself. He had
never seen Cope before (if indeed it could be said that he really saw
him now), and he had never heard his speaking voice save at a remove of
two floors. Cope had taken his hand vigorously, as that of the only man
(among many women) from whom he had much to expect, and had given him a
dozen words in a loud tone which seemed to correspond with his
pressure. But Cope's voice, in his hearing, had lapsed from resonance
to non-resonance, and from that to tonelessness, and from that to
quietude.... Was the fellow in process of making a long diminuendo--a
possible matter of weeks or of months? As before, when confronted by
what had once seemed a paragon of dash and vigor, he scarcely knew
whether to be exasperated or appeased.
Through this variety of spoken words and unspoken thoughts Hortense sat
silent and watchful. Presently the talk lapsed: with the best will in
the world a small knot of people cannot go on elaborately embroidering
upon a trivial incident forever. There was a shifting of groups, a
change in subjects. Yet Hortense continued to glower and to meditate.
What had the incident really amounted to? What did the man himself
really amount to? She soon found herself at his side, behind the
library-table and its spreading lamp-shade. He was silently handling a
paper-cutter, with his eyes cast down.
"See me!" she said, in a tense, vibratory tone. "Speak to me!"--and she
glowered upon him. "I am no kitten, like Amy. I am no tame tabby, like
Carolyn, sending out written invitations. Throw a few poor words my
way."
Cope dropped the paper-cutter. Her address was like a dash of brine in
the face, and he welcomed it.
"She threw it away," said Cope shortly. "And I suppose her hair looked
as well as a woman's ever does, when she's in the water."
The pronoun "you" has its equivocal aspects. Her expression, while
marked enough, threw no clear light. Cope took the entire onus on
himself.
"I'm sure the last thing in the world I should want to do would be
to----"
Cope stared and tried to stem her protests. She was of the blood,--her
aunt's own niece. But whereas Medora Phillips sometimes "scrapped," as
he called it, merely to promote social diversion and to keep the
conversational ball a-rolling, this young person, a more vigorous
organism, and with decided, even exaggerated ideas as to her dues...
Well, the room was still full, and he was glad enough of it.
"I don't know whether I like you or not," she went on, in a low, rapid
tone; "and I don't suppose you very much like me; but I won't go on
being ignored....
She shrugged scornfully. His sense of obligation had been made none too
apparent. Certainly it had not been brought into line with her deserts
and demands.
Cope took up the paper-cutter again and looked out across the room. Amy
Leffingwell, questioningly, was looking across at him. He could change
feet--if that made the general discomfort of his position any less. He
did so.
Amy was standing near the piano and held a sheet or two of new music in
her hands. And Medora Phillips, with a word of general explication and
direction, made the girl's intention clear. Amy had a new song for
baritone, with a violin obbligato and the usual piano accompaniment,
and Cope was to sing it. 'Twas an extremely simple thing, quite within
his compass; and Carolyn, who could read easy music at sight ("It's
awfully easy," declared Amy), would play the piano part; and Amy
herself would perform the obbligato (with no statement as to whether it
was simple or not).
Carolyn approached the task and the piano in the passive spirit of
accommodation. Cope came forward with reluctance: this was not an
evening when he felt like singing; besides, he preferred to choose his
own songs. Also, he would have preferred to warm up on something
familiar. Amy took her instrument from its case with a suppressed sense
of ecstasy; and it is the ecstatic who generally sets the pace.
The thing went none too well. Amy was the only one who had seen the
music before, and she was the only one who particularly wanted to make
music now. However, the immediate need was not that the song should go
well, but that it should go: that it should go on, that it should go on
and on, repetitiously, until it should come (or even not come) to go
better. She slid her bow across the strings with tasteful passion. She
enjoyed still more than her own tones the tones of Cope's voice,--tones
which, whether in happy unison with hers or not, were, after all,
seldom misplaced, whatever they may have lacked in heartiness and
confidence. It was a short piece, and on the third time it went rather
well.
"It _has_ gone very nicely," insisted Amy; "it did, this last time."
She waved her bow with some vivacity. She had heaved the whole of her
young self into the work; she had been buoyed up by Cope's tones,
which, with repetition, had gathered assurance if not expressiveness;
and she based her estimate of the general effect on the impression
which her own inner nature had experienced. And her impression was
heightened when Pearson, forging forward, and ignoring both Cope and
Carolyn, thanked her richly and emphatically for her part--a part
which, to him, seemed the whole.
Hortense, who had kept her place behind the large lampshade, twisted
her interlocked fingers and said no word. Foster, who had disposed
himself on an inconspicuous couch, kept his own counsel. After all,
_omne ignotum_: Cope's singing had sounded better from upstairs. At
close range a ringing assertiveness had somehow failed.
Cope had come with no desire to extend his stay beyond the limits of an
evening call. He declined to sing on his own account, and soon rose as
if to make his general adieux.
"You won't give us one of your own songs, then?" asked Medora Phillips,
in a disappointed tone. "And at my dinner----"
No, she could not quite say that, at her dinner, Cope, whatever he had
failed to do, had contributed no measure of entertainment for her
guests.
"I am sure you could be," returned Medora fondly. "Just try."
Cope sat down again and began to run his eye uncomfortably about the
room, as if dredging the air for an idea. Behind one corner of a mirror
was a large bunch of drying leaves. They had been brought in from the
sand dunes as a decorative souvenir of the autumn, and had kept their
place through mere inertia: an oak bough, once crimson and russet; a
convoluted length of bittersweet, to which a few split berries still
clung; and a branch of sassafras, with its intriguing variety of
leaves--a branch selected, in fact, because it gave, within narrow
compass, the plant's entire scope and repertoire as to foliage.
"Or perhaps you would prefer folk-lore," Cope went on. "Why the
Sassafras has Three Kinds of Leaves, or something like that."
"Ovate, yes; or whatever just the right word may be. But a good many of
them traded at the Sign of the Sassafras, where they found leaves that
were similar, but rather more delicate."
"Yet the nymphs knew that they lacked thumbs and kept on wanting them.
So, during the long, dull winter, they put their minds to it, and
finally thumbs came."
"And early in April they went to the Sassafras and said: 'We have
thumbs! We have thumbs! So we need a different sort of mitten.'
"The Sassafras was only half awake. 'Thumbs?' he repeated. 'How many?'
"'That's interesting,' he said. 'I aim to supply all new needs. Come
back in a month or so, and meanwhile I'll see what I can do for you.'
"In May the nymphs returned with their thumbs and asked, 'How about our
new mittens?'"
The story was really under way now, and Cope went on with more
confidence and with greater animation.
"They looked and saw. Among its simple ordinary leaves were several
with two lobes--one on each side. 'Will these do?'
"'Do?' said the nymphs. 'We said we had two thumbs, but we meant one on
each hand, stupid. Do? We should say not!'
"The Sassafras was mortified. 'Well,' he said, 'that's all I can manage
this season. I'm sorry not to have understood you young ladies and your
needs. Come back again next spring.'
"It was a long time to wait, but they waited. Next May----"
Amy, now unworried by George Pearson, began to get the thread of the
thing. Foster was sure the thread would run through. Hortense was still
alert for ulterior meanings. Poor Cope, however, had no ambition to
spin a double thread,--a single one was all he was equal to.
"Next May the nymphs, after nursing their thumbs for a year----"
Hortense frowned.
"----came back again; and there, among the plain leaves and the
double-lobed leaves, were several fresh bright, smooth ones with a
single lobe well to one side,--the very thing for mittens. And------"
"Why the Sassafras has Three Kinds of Leaves!" cried Medora in triumph.
Mittens for midsummer made no difficulty.
Cope gave Carolyn careful thanks for her support at the piano, and did
not see that she felt he too could be a poet if he only would. He went
out of his way to shake hands with Hortense, and did not realize how
nearly a new quarrel had opened. He stepped over to do the like with
Amy; but she went out with him into the hall,--the only one of the
party who did,--and even accompanied him to the front door.
"Thank you so much," she said, looking up into his face smilingly and
holding his hand with a long, clinging touch. "It went beautifully; and
there are others that will go even better."
"Others?" He thought, for an instant, that she was thanking him for his
Legend and was even threatening to regard him as a flowing fount of
invention; but he soon realized that her mind was fixed exclusively on
their duet--if such it was to be called.
Despite his success with the Sassafras, he went home discomforted and
even flustered. That hand was too much like the hand of possession. The
girl was stealing over him like a light, intangible vapor. He struck
ahead with a quicker gait, as if trying to outwalk a creeping fog. One
consolation, however: Hortense had come like a puff of wind. Even a
second squall from the same quarter would not be altogether amiss.
And had there not been one further fleeting source of reassurance? Had
he not, on leaving, caught through the open door of the drawing room an
elevation of Medora Phillips' eyebrows which seemed to say fondly,
indulgently, yet a bit ironically, "Oh, you foolish girl!"? Yet if a
girl is foolish, and is going to persist in her folly, a lightly lifted
pair of eyebrows will not always stay her course. Her gathering
momentum is hardly to be checked by such slender means.
19
Amy knew how long and hard she had thought of Cope, and she asked for
some evidence that he had been thinking long and hard of her. She
desired a "response." But, in fact, he had been thinking of her only
when he must. He thought of her whenever he saw himself caught in that
flapping sail, and he thought of her whenever he recalled that she had
taken it on herself to select his songs. But he did not want her to
make out-and-out demands on his time and attention. Still less did he
want her to talk about "happiness." This had come to be her favorite
topic, and she discoursed on it profusely: he was almost ungracious
enough to say that she did so glibly. "Happiness"--that conventional
bliss toward which she was turning her mind as they strolled together
on these late November afternoons--was for him a long way ahead. How
furnish a house, how clothe and feed a wife?--at least until his thesis
should be written and a place, with a real salary, found in the
academic world. How, even, buy an engagement ring--that costly
superfluity? How even contrive to pay for all the small gifts and
attentions which an engagement involved? Yet why ask himself such
questions? For he was conscious of a fundamental repugnance to any such
scheme of life and was acutely aware that--for awhile, at least, and
perhaps for always--he wanted to live in quite a different mode.
The new atmosphere reached even Foster on the top floor; and when, one
evening in mid-December, he finally carried out his long-meditated plan
to dine with Randolph, the household situation was uppermost in his
mind. That he had not the clearest understanding of the situation did
not diminish his interest in it. Though he sat in the dark, and far
apart, some sense all his own, cultivated through years of deprivation,
came to his aid. Peter brought him down the street and round the
corner; and Randolph's Chinaman, fascinated by his green shade and his
tortuous method of locomotion (once out of his wheeled-chair), did the
rest. "You had better stay all night," Randolph had suggested; and he
was glad to avoid a second awkward trip on the same evening.
Foster had wondered whether Cope would be present. He had not asked to
meet him--for he hardly knew whether he wished to or not. Though this
was an "occasion,"--and his,--he had left Randolph to act quite as he
might choose. There was a third chair at table and Randolph delayed
dinner ten minutes while waiting for it to be filled.
"I expected Bertram Cope," Randolph went on; "but he isn't here, and I
have no word from him and do not know whether----"
"Not here?" repeated Foster. "Is there, then, one place where he is
not?"
"Why, Joe----!"
"Our house is full of him!" Foster burst out raucously. He had removed
the green _abat-jour_, for the candle-shades (as they sometimes will)
were performing their office. In the low but clear light his face
seemed distorted.
"He rises to my floor like incense. The very halls and stairways reek
with his charms and perfections."
"Courtship?"
"You may think it takes two, but it doesn't. That foolish girl has
thrown the whole place into discomfort and confusion; and I don't know
who's for or who's against----"
"What foolish girl?" asked Randolph quickly. Sing-Lo was at his elbow,
changing plates: it was assumed, justly enough, that he would not be
able to follow the intricacies of a situation purely occidental.
Foster had blind eyes, but alert ears. He felt that Randolph was
surprised and displeased. And indeed his host was both. That boy fallen
maladroitly in love? thought Randolph. It was a second check. He had
exerted himself to show a friendliness for Cope, had expected to enjoy
him while he stayed on for his months in town, and had hoped to help
push his fortunes in whatever other field he might enter. He had even
taken his present quarters--no light task, all the details
considered--to make Cope's winter agreeable, no less than his own. And
now? First the uncounted-upon friend from Wisconsin with whom Cope was
arranging to live; next, this sudden, unexpected affair with that girl
at Medora's. Did the fellow not know his own mind? Could he formulate
no hard-and-fast plan? Here Randolph, in his disappointment,
inconsistently forgot that a hard-and-fast plan was largely his real
annoyance and grievance. Then he remembered. He looked at the vacant
place, and tried for composure and justice.
"I shall probably hear some good reason, in due time," he said.
"I hope so," rejoined Foster; "but it takes these young fellows to be
careless--and ungrateful." He made no pretense of ignoring the fact
that Randolph had moved into this apartment more on account of Cope
than for any other reason.
"I know that _I_ was that way," continued Randolph, looking studiously
at the nearest candle-shade. "I was beyond the middle twenties before I
quite launched out for myself, and any kindness received was taken
without much question and without much thanks. I presume that he still
has some assistance from home...."
"But somehow he does seem done for. He is placed; he is cut off from
wide ranges of interesting possibilities; he offers himself less
invitingly to the roving imagination...."
Amy Leffingwell had demanded his attendance for one more walk, that
afternoon, and he had not been dextrous enough, face to face with her,
to refuse. She had expressed herself still more insistently on
"happiness"--(on hers, his, theirs; the two were one, in her view)--and
on a future shared together. In just what inadequate way had he tried
to fend her off? Had he said, "I shall have to wait?" Or had his
blundering tongue said, instead, "We should have to wait?"--or even
worse, "We shall have to wait?" In any event, he had used that
cowardly, temporizing word "wait"--for she had instantly seized upon
it. Why, yes, indeed; she was willing to wait; she had expected to
wait....
He turned out from an avenue lighted with electric globes, past which
the snowflakes were drifting, and entered a quieter and darker
side-street. In the dusk she had put up her face, expecting to be
kissed; and he, partly out of pity for the expression that came when he
hesitated, and partly out of pure embarrassment and inexpertness, had
lightly touched her lips. That had sealed it, possibly. He saw her
sitting in rapt fancy in her bedroom--if not more vocal in the rooms
below. He saw her writing to an unseen mother in a tone of joyful
complacency, and looking at her finger for a ring which he could not
place there. He saw the distaste of his own home circle, to which this
event had come at least a year too soon. He saw the amazement, and
worse, of Arthur Lemoyne, whose plans for coming to town were now all
made and to whom this turn would prove a psychological shock which
might deter him from coming at all. But, most of all, he saw--and felt
to the depths of his being--his own essential repugnance to the life
toward which he now seemed headed. What an outlook for Christmas! What
an unpleasant surprise for his parents! What opportunity in Amy
Leffingwell's holiday vacation at Fort Lodge to reinforce the written
page by the spoken word! Still forgetful of his engagement with
Randolph, he continued to walk the streets. He turned in at midnight,
hoping he might sleep, and trusting that morning would throw a less
sinister light on his misadventure.
Long before this, Joseph Foster had been put to bed, by Sing-Lo, in
this spare room. It was Foster's crutch, rather than a knightly sword,
which leaned against the door-jamb; and it was Foster's crooked
members, rather than the straight young limbs of Cope, which first
found place among the sheets and blankets of that shining new brass
bedstead.
20
Well, he must expect telephone messages and letters. They came. That
afternoon Mrs. Peck had "a lady's voice" to report: "It sounded like a
_young_ lady's voice," she added. And she looked at Cope with some
curiosity: a "young lady" asking for him over the wire was the rarest
thing in the world.
Next day came the first note. The handwriting was utterly new to him;
but his intuition, applied instantly to the envelope, told him of the
source. The nail, driven, was now to be clinched. She had the right to
ask him to come; and she did ask him to come--"soon."
Cope's troubled eyes sought the calendar above his table. How many days
to Christmas? How much time might he spend in Freeford? How long before
Christmas might he arrange to leave Churchton? The holidays at home
loomed as a harbor of refuge. By shortening as far as possible the
interval here and by lengthening as far as possible the stay with his
family, he might cut down, in some measure, the imminent threatenings
of awkwardness and constraint; then, beyond the range of anything but
letters, he might study the unpleasant situation at his leisure and
determine a future course.
"I like this!" began Lemoyne's reply, with abrupt, impetuous sarcasm.
"You have claimed, more than once," he went on, "to have steadied me
and kept me out of harm's way; but I've never yet made any such demands
on you as you are making on me. This thing can't go on, and you know it
as well as I do. Nip it. Nip it now. Don't think that our intimacy is
to end in any such fashion as this, for it isn't--especially at this
particular time."...
Cope rather took heart from these rough, outspoken lines. Lemoyne was
commonly neither rough nor outspoken; but here was an emergency,
involving his own interests, which must be dealt with decisively. Cope
seemed to feel salvation on the way. Perhaps that was why he still did
so little to save himself. He took the new room; he had one meeting
with Amy; and he left for home at least two days before he was strictly
entitled to do so.
Amy tried in vain to remove Carolyn from the board. But Carolyn, like
Hortense, had finally joined the ranks of the "recognized"; she was
determined (being still ignorant, Cope was glad to see, regarding Amy's
claims) to make this recognition so marked as to last beyond the
moment. She played a little--not well. She read. She even accompanied
Amy to the door at the close of Cope's short stay. He shook hands with
them both. He had decided that he would do no more than this with Amy,
in any event, and Carolyn's presence made his predetermined course
easy, even obligatory. Yet he went out into the night feeling, somehow,
that he had acted solely on his resolution and that he might consider
himself a man of some decisiveness, after all. Amy had looked
disappointed, but had contrived to whisper that she would write from
Iowa. That, of course, was to be looked for, and would represent the
combined efforts of herself and her home circle; yet he had a fortnight
for consideration and counsel.
Cope, during his first few days at home, was moody and abstracted: his
parents found him adding little to the Christmas cheer. His mother,
always busy over domestic cares and now busier than ever, thought that
he must have been working too hard. She would stand in the kitchen door
with a half-trimmed pie on one hand and ponder him as he sat in the
dining-room, staring absorbedly at the Franklin stove. His father, who
saw him chiefly in the evening, by the gas-light of the old-fashioned
house, found his face slightly pinched: was his pocket pinched too, and
would he be likely, before leaving, to ask help toward making up a
deficit? His sister Rosalys, who lived a life of dry routine, figured
him as deep in love. He let several days pass without hinting what the
real situation was.
There was interest all round when, the day before Christmas, the
postman came along the bleak and flimsy street and left a letter for
him. Cope was away from the house, and Rosalys, studying the envelope's
penmanship and even its postmark, found vague confirmation of her
theory: some college girl--one of his own students, probably--was home
on vacation just as he was. If so, a "small town" person of caste and
character like themselves; not brilliant, but safe. She set up the
letter edgewise on the back parlor mantelpiece.
When Cope came in at noon and saw the letter, his face fell. He put it
in his pocket, sat silent at table, and disappeared as soon as the meal
was over. Rosalys, whose pupils were off her mind for a few days and
who had thought to spare, began to shade her theory.
Cope read the letter in the low-ceiled back bedroom (the ceiling sloped
away on one side) which had been his for so many years. Those years of
happy boyhood--how far away they seemed now, and how completely past!
Surely he had never thought to come back to these familiar walls to
such effect as this.... Well, what did it say?
It said, in its four pages (yes, Amy had really limited herself thus),
how joyous she was that the dear Christmas season had brought her such
a beautiful love-gift; it said that mother was so pleased and
happy--and even mentioned a sudden aunt; it said how willingly she
would wait on until....
That evening Cope made his announcement. They were all seated round the
reading-lamp in the back parlor, where the old Brussels carpet looked
dim and where only venerated age kept the ornate French clock from
seeming tawdry. Cope looked down at the carpet and up at the clock, and
spoke.
His mother took the shock first and absorbed most of it. She led a
humdrum life and she was ready to welcome romance. To help adjust
herself she laid her hands, with a soft, sweeping motion, on the two
brown waves that drew smoothly across her temples, and then she
transferred them to his, held his head, and gave him a kiss. Rosalys
took his two hands warmly and smiled, and he tried to smile back. His
father twisted the tip of his short gray beard, watched his son's mien,
and said little. Day after to-morrow, with the major part of their
small Christmas festivities over, he would ask how this unexpected and
unwarranted situation had come about, and how, in heaven's name, the
thing was to be carried through: by what means, with whose help?... In
his complex of thought the word "thesis" came to his tongue, but he
kept from speaking it. He had been advised that his son had at last
struck out definitely into some bookish bypath--just what bypath
mattered little, he gathered, if it were but followed to the end. Yet
the end was still far--and the boy evidently realized this. He was glad
that Bertram was sober over the prospect and over his present
plan--which was a serious undertaking, just now, in truth.
Cope had to adjust himself to all this, and to endure, besides, the
congratulations--or the comments--of a number of tiresome relatives;
and it was a relief when, on the twenty-ninth, Arthur Lemoyne finally
arrived.
Lemoyne had been heralded as a young man of parts, and as the son of a
family which enjoyed, in Winnebago, some significant share of worldly
prosperity, and, therefore, of social consideration. The simpler Copes,
putting him in the other back bedroom, the ceiling of which sloped the
opposite way, wondered if they were quite giving him his just dues.
When Rosalys came to set away his handbag and to rearrange, next
morning, his brushes on the top of the dresser, she gathered from
various indications supplied by his outfit that the front chamber, at
whatever inconvenience to whomever, would have been more suitable. But,
"Never mind," said her mother; "they'll do very well as they are--side
by side, with the door conveniently between. Then Bert can look after
him a little more and we a little less."
He had had five or six hours of cross-country travel, with some tedious
waits at junctions, and at about ten o'clock, after some showy
converse, he acknowledged himself tired enough for bed. Cope saw him
up, and did not come down again. The two talked till past eleven; and
even much later, when light sleepers in other parts of the house were
awake for a few minutes, muffled sounds from the same two voices
reached their ears.
But Cope's words, many as they were, told Lemoyne nothing that he did
not know, little that he had not divined. The sum of all was this: Cope
did not quite know how he had got into it; but he knew that he was
miserable and wanted to get out of it.
Lemoyne had asked, first of all, to see the letter from Iowa. "Oh,
come," Cope had replied, half-bashful, half-chivalrous, "you know it
wasn't written for anybody but me."
"The substance of it, then," Lemoyne had demanded; and Cope, reluctant
and shame-faced, had given it. "You've never been in anything of this
sort, you know," he submitted.
"I should say not!" Lemoyne retorted. "Nor you, either. You're not in
it now,--or, if you are, you're soon going to be out of it. You would
help me through a thing like this, and I'm going to help you."
The talk went on. Lemoyne presented the case for a broken engagement.
Engagements, as it was well known to human experience, might, if
quickly made, be as quickly unmade: no novelty in that. "I had never
expected to double up with an engaged man," Lemoyne declared further.
"Nothing especially jolly about that--least of all when the poor wretch
is held dead against his will." As he went on, he made Cope feel that
he had violated an _entente_ of long standing, and had almost brought a
trusting friend down from home under false pretenses.
But phrases from Amy's letter continued to plague Cope. There was a
confiding trust, a tender who-could-say-just-what?...
"Well," said Lemoyne, at about two o'clock, "let's put it off till
morning. Turn over and go to sleep."
But before he fell asleep himself he resolved that he would make the
true situation clear next day. He would address that sympathetic mother
and that romantic sister in suitably cogent terms; the father, he felt
sure, would require no effort and would even welcome his aid with a
strong sense of relief.
So next day, Lemoyne, deploying his natural graces and his dramatic
dexterities, drew away the curtain. He did not go so far as to say that
Bertram had been tricked; he did not even go so far as to say that he
had been inexpert: he contented himself with saying that his friend had
been over-chivalrous and that his fine nature had rather been played
upon. The mother took it all with a silent, inexpressive
thoughtfulness, though it was felt that she did not want her boy to be
unhappy. Rosalys, if she admired Lemoyne a little more, now liked him
rather less. Her father, when the declaration reached him by secondary
impact, did feel the sense of relief which Lemoyne had anticipated, and
came to look upon him as an able, if somewhat fantastic, young fellow.
Cope himself, when his father questioned him, said with frank
disconsolateness, "I'm miserable!" And, "I wish to heaven I were out of
it!" he added.
"_Get_ out of it," his father counselled; and when Cope's own feelings
were clearly known through the household there was no voice of dissent.
"And then buckle down for your degree," the elder added, to finish.
21
If Cope came back from Freeford with the moral support of one family,
Amy Leffingwell came back from Fort Lodge with the moral support of
another. Hers was a fragmental family, true; but its sentiment was
unanimous; she had the combined support of a pleased mother and of an
enthusiastic maiden aunt.
Amy reached Churchton first, and it soon transpired through the house
in which she lived that she was engaged to Bertram Cope. Cope,
returning two days later, with Lemoyne, found his new status an open
book to the world--or to such a small corner of the world as cared to
read.
At the big house on Ashburn Avenue a like feeling had come to prevail.
Medora Phillips herself had passed from the indulgently satirical to
the impatient, and almost to the indignant. Her niece thought the new
relation clearly superfluous. She put away the portrait in oil, but she
rather hoped to resume work on it, some time. Meanwhile, she was far
from kind to Amy.
"We are!" returned Cope, with unhappy mien. "But it's got to be gone
through with."
"Storm or no storm, I can't put it off any longer. I've got to go."
As they started out the wind was keen, and a few fine flakes, driven
from the north, flew athwart their faces. When they reached Mrs.
Phillips' house, Peter, wrapped in furs, was sitting in the limousine
by the curb, and two or three people were seen in the open door of the
vestibule.
"Well, the best of luck, _cher Professeur_," Cope heard the voice of
Mrs. Phillips saying, in a quick expulsion of syllables. "This is going
to be a bad night, I'm afraid; but I hope your audience will get to the
hall to hear you, and that our Pierre will be able to get you back to
us."
"Oh, Madame," returned the plump little man, "what a climate!" And he
ran down the walk to the car.
"Why, Bertram Cope!" she exclaimed, as the two young men came up the
walk while the great historian ran down; "come in, come in; don't let
me stand here freezing!"
Among them was the autumn undergraduate whom Cope, at an earlier day,
had disdainfully called "Phaon," a youth of twenty. "You know," said
Medora Phillips to Randolph, a few days later, when reviewing the stay
of her newest guest, "Those sophisticated, world-worn people so
appreciate our fresh, innocent, ingenuous boys. M. Pelouse told me, on
leaving, that Roddy quite met his ideal of the young American. So
open-faced, so inexperienced, so out of the great world...."
But Medora Phillips knew all about George and Roddy. The novelty was
Lemoyne, and she must learn about him. She readily seized the points
that composed his personal aspect, which she found good: his general
darkness and richness made him a fine foil for Cope. She quickly
credited him with a pretty complete battery of artistic aptitudes and
apprehensions. She felt certain that he would appreciate her ballroom
and picture-gallery, and would figure well within it. The company was
young, the night was wild, and cheer was the word. She presently led
the way upstairs. Foster, as soon as he heard the first voices in the
hall and the first footfalls on the bare treads of the upper stairs,
shut his door.
Lemoyne felt the big bare room--bare save for a piano and a fringe of
chairs and settles, large and small--as a stage; and he surmised that
he, the new-comer, was expected to exhibit himself on it. He became
consciously the actor. He tried now the assertive note, and now the
quiet note; somehow the quiet was the louder of the two. Pearson, who
was in a conquering mood tonight, scented a rival in the general
attention, and one not wholly unworthy. Pearson was the only one of the
four in evening dress, and he felt that to be an advantage. He, at
least, had been properly attired to meet the elegant visitor from
abroad. As for poor Roddy, he had come in an ordinary sack: perhaps it
was partly this which had prompted M. Pelouse (who was of course
dressed for the platform) to find the boy such a paragon of simple
innocence.
Foster had broken from his retirement on hearing the voices of Cope and
Lemoyne combined in song. The song was "Larboard Watch," and he
remembered how his half-brother had sung in it during courtship, with
the young fellow who had acted, later, as his best man. Lemoyne, at the
first word of invitation, had seated himself at the instrument--a
lesser than the "grand" downstairs, but not unworthy; then, with but a
measure or so of prelude, the two voices had begun to ring out in the
old nautical ballad. Lemoyne felt the composition to be primitive,
antiquated and of slight value; but he had received his cue, and both
his throat and his hands wrought with an elaborate expressiveness. He
sang and played, if not with sincerity, at least with effect. His voice
was a high, ringing tenor; not too ringing for Cope's resonant
baritone, but almost too sweet: a voice which might cloy (if used
alone) within a few moments. Cope was a perfect second, and the two
went at it with a complete unity of understanding and of sentiment.
Together they viewed--in thirds--"the gath'ring clouds";
together--still in thirds--they roused themselves "at the welcome call"
of "Larboard watch, ahoy!" Disregarding the mere words, they attained,
at the finish, to something like feeling--or even like a touch of
passion. Medora Phillips had never heard Cope sing like that before;
had never seen so much animation in his singing face. By the fourth bar
there had been tears in her eyes, and there was a catch in her breath
when she exclaimed softly, "You dear boys!" It was too soon, of course,
to make Lemoyne "dear"--the one boy was Cope. It was really his voice
which she had heard through the soaring, insinuating tones of the
other. Foster, sitting beside her, suddenly raised his shade and peered
out questioningly, both at the singers and at his sister-in-law. He
seemed surprised--and more.
Pearson was surprised too, but kept his applause within limits.
However, he praised Lemoyne for his accompaniment. Then he begged Amy
for an air on the violin; and while they were determining who should
play her accompaniment, the wind raged more wildly round the gables and
the thickening snow drove with a fiercer impetus against the windows.
Shortly before ten o'clock there was a stir at the front door. Mrs.
Phillips rose hastily. "It is M. Pelouse; let me go down and pet him."
"What! Again?" cried Mrs. Phillips, while Helga, farther up the hall,
was undoing the Professor; "three times on a night like this? No,
indeed! Get back into the garage as fast as you can."
"Oh, Madame!" said the Professor, now out of his wrappings and in
better control of his voice. "They were so faithful to our beautiful
France! The _salle_ was almost full!"
"Well," said Mrs. Phillips to herself, "they got there all right, then.
I hope most of them will get back home alive!"
"It is indeed," corroborated Mrs. Phillips: she had spent her moment at
the front door. "Nobody that I can find room for leaves my house
tonight." This meant that Cope and Lemoyne were to occupy the chintz
chamber.
At half past ten Pearson rose to leave; Cope and Lemoyne rose at the
same time. "No," said Mrs. Phillips, stopping them both; "you mustn't
think of trying to go. I can't ask Peter to take you, and you could
never get across on foot in the world. I can find a place for you."
"Roddy may stay with me," declared Pearson. "I can put him up. Come on,
Aldridge," he said; "you're good for a hundred yard dash." And down
they started.
"I don't want to stay," muttered Cope to Lemoyne, under cover of the
others' departure. "Devil take it; it's the last thing in the world I
want to do!"
"It's awkward," returned Lemoyne, "but we're in for it. After all, it
isn't _her_ house, nor her family's. Besides, you've got me."
Mrs. Phillips summoned Helga and another maid, who were just on the
point of going to bed, and directed their efforts toward the chintz
chamber. "Ah, well," thought M. Pelouse, "the _fiance_, then, is going
to remain over night in the house of his _fiancee_!" It was droll; yet
there were extenuating circumstances. But--such a singular climate,
such curious temperaments, such a general chill! And M. Pelouse was
presently lost to view among the welcome trappings of Louis Quinze.
22
Next morning Cope left the house before breakfast. He had had the
forethought to plead an exceptionally early engagement, and thus he
avoided meeting, after the strain of the evening before, any of the
various units of the household. He and Lemoyne, draping their
parti-colored pajamas over the foot of the bedstead, left the chintz
chamber at seven and walked out into the new day. The air was cold and
tingling; the ground was white as a sheet; the sky was a strident,
implacable blue. The glitter and the glare assaulted their sleepy eyes.
They turned up their collars, thrust their hands deep into their
pockets, and took briskly the half mile which led to their own
percolator and electric toaster.
Cope threw himself down on the bed and let Lemoyne get the breakfast.
Well, he had called; he had done the just and expected thing; he had
held his face through it all; but he was tired after a night of much
thought and little sleep. Possibly he might not have to call again for
a full week. If 'phone messages or letters came, he would take them as
best he could.
Nor was Lemoyne very alert. He was less prompt than usual in gaining
his early morning loquacity. His coffee was lacking in spirit, and much
of his toast was burnt. But the two revived, in fair measure, after
their taxing walk.
They had talked through much of the dead middle of the night. Foster,
wakeful and restless, had become exasperated beyond all power of a
return to sleep. Concerns of youth and love kept them murmuring,
murmuring in the acute if distant ears of one whom youth had left and
for whom love was impossible. Beyond his foolish, figured wall were two
contrasted types of young vigor, and they babbled, babbled on, in the
sensitized hearing of one from whom vigor was gone and for whom hope
was set.
"What do you think of her?" Cope had asked. Then he had thrown his face
into his pillow and left one ear for the reply.
The weather still held cold: it was no day for spending time,
conversationally, outside; and they stepped back for a little into a
recess of the vestibule. Cope found an opening by bolstering up his
previous written excuses. He was still very general.
This time Foster was full of the events of Friday night. "As I make it
out, he kept away from her the whole evening, and that new man helped
him do it. Our friend down the street, Hortense says, showed every
disposition to cut in, and the girl showed at least some disposition to
let him. I don't wonder: when you come right down to it, he's twice the
man the other is."
"Young Pearson?"
"Yes."
"Clever lad. Confident. But brash. Just what his father used to be."
"He praised her playing. Cope sat dumb. And next morning he hurried
away before breakfast. You know what kind of a morning it was. Anything
very pressing at the University on a Saturday morning at eight?"
"How about this sudden new friend?" Foster twitched in his chair.
"Medora," he went on, "seems to have no special fancy for him. She even
objects to his calling Cope 'Bert.' Of course he sings. And he seems to
be self-possessed and clever. But 'self-possessed'--that doesn't
express it. He was so awfully, so publicly, at home; at least that's as
I gather it. Always hanging over the other man's chair; always finding
a reason to put his hand on his shoulder...."
"They talked half through the night, too," Foster added bitterly.
"I'll call her up later. If I can get her for Wednesday--and Pearson
too...."
"You are unhappy," said Randolph; "and I think I know why." He meant to
advance toward the problem as if it were a case of jealousy--a matter
of Pearson's intrusion and of Amy's seemingly willing acceptance of it.
Cope soon caught Randolph's idea, and he stared. He did not at all
resent Randolph's advances; misapprehension, in fact, might serve as
fairly, in the end, as the clearest understanding.
Randolph placed his hand on Cope's shoulder. "You have only to assert
yourself," he said. "The other man is an intruder; it would be easy to
warn him off before he starts in to win her."
"Well, this is no place for a talk," he said. "If you should care to
happen in on me some evening before long...."
"Not Wednesday. I have an engagement for that evening. But any evening
a little later."
Randolph had secured for his Wednesday evening Medora Phillips and
Hortense. Hortense was the young person to pair with Pearson, who had
thrown over an evening at his club for the dinner with Randolph. The
talk was to be--in sections and installments--of Amy Leffingwell, and
of Cope in so far as he might enter. Medora would speak; Hortense would
speak; Randolph himself should speak. To complete the party he had
asked his relations from the far side of the big city. His sister would
preside for him; and his brother-in-law might justify his expenditure
of time and trouble by stopping off in advance for a brief confab, as
trustee, at the administration building, with the president. A
compatriot had been secured by Sing-Lo to help in dining-room and
kitchen.
Randolph had planned a short dinner. His sister, facing the long
return-drive, would doubtless be willing to leave by nine-thirty. Then,
with two extraneous pieces removed from the board, the real matter in
hand might be got under way.
Mrs. Phillips was most lively from the start. She praised the house,
which she was seeing for the first time. She extolled Sing-Lo's
department, and Sing-Lo, who delighted in entertainments, was one broad
smile. She had a word of encouragement for his less smiling helper,
whom she informally christened Sing-Hi; and she chatted endlessly with
Mrs. Brackett--perhaps even helped tire her out. Yes, George Pearson
was to be urged forward for the rescue of Bertram Cope.
Pearson spoke up loud and clear among the males. He was a business-man
among business-men, and during the very few moments formally allowed
for the cigars he made himself, as he felt, tell. And after the
Bracketts left--at nine twenty-five--he was easily content to stay on
for three-quarters of an hour longer.
"Of course he has nothing, now," said Randolph, with deliberation. "And
he may be nothing but a poor, underpaid professor all his life."
"No ring--yet," said Hortense, further. Her "yet" meant "not even yet."
Her deep tone was plausibly indignant.
No answer. One pair of eyes sought the floor; another searched the
ceiling; a third became altogether subordinate to questioning,
high-held brows.
Pearson glanced from one face to another. The doubt as to her "caring"
seemed universal. The doubt that she cared deeply, essentially, was one
that he had brought away from the ball-room. And he went home, at ten
twenty-three, pretty well determined that he would very soon try to
change doubt to certainty.
23
On Friday evening Randolph, at home, was glancing now and then at the
clock (as on a previous occasion), while waiting for Cope. At
eight-fifteen the telephone rang; it was Cope, with excuses, as before.
He was afraid he should be unable to come; some unexpected work... It
was that autumn excursion all over again.
Randolph hung up the receiver, with some impatience. Still, never mind;
if Cope would make no effort to save himself, others were making the
effort for him. He had considerable confidence in George Pearson's
state of mind, as well as in George's egoism and drive.
"You've done so much for him," Foster went on; "and you're willing to
do so much more."
"I _could_ do a great deal, of course. There may be a good reason this
time, too," said Randolph soberly.
Cope had hung up the receiver to turn toward Lemoyne and to say: "I
really ought to have gone."
"You've been asked," Cope submitted. "He has been very friendly to me,
and I am sure he would be the same to you."
"I think that, personally, I can get along without him," the other
muttered ungraciously to himself.
Aloud he said: "As I've told you, I've got the president of the
dramatic club to see tonight, and it's high time that I was leaving."
He looked with intention at the desk which had superseded that old
table, with ink-stained cover, at which Cope had once worked. "You can
use a little time to advantage over those themes. I'll be back within
an hour."
Lemoyne had entered for Psychology, and was hoping that he now enjoyed
the status necessary for participation in the college theatricals. But
he was relying still more on a sudden defection or lapse which had left
the dramatic club without a necessary actor at a critical time. "It's
me, or postponement," he said; "and I think it's me." The new
opportunity--or bare chance--loomed before him with immensity. Cope's
affair might wait. He would even risk Cope's running over to Randolph's
place alone.
Five minutes after Lemoyne's departure Cope heard the telephone ringing
downstairs, and presently a patient, middle-aged man knocked at the
door and told him the call was for him.
Cope sighed apprehensively and went down. Of course it was Amy. Would
he not come over for an hour? Everybody was away, and they could have a
quiet talk together.
Amy's voice took on a new tone. Why, she seemed to be feeling, must
Arthur Lemoyne be mentioned, and mentioned so early? Yet Bertram had
put him--instinctively, unconsciously--at the head of the little verbal
procession just begun.
Cope's response was dry and meagre; free speech was impossible over a
lodging-house telephone set in the public hall. Amy, who knew little of
Cope's immediate surroundings at the moment, went on in accents of
protest and of grievance, and Cope went on replying in a half-hushed
voice as non-committally as he was able. He dwelt more and more on the
trying details of his work in words which conveyed no additional
information to any fellow-dwellers who might overhear.
"You haven't been to see me for a week," came Amy's voice petulantly,
indignantly.
Cope forgot Randolph, and Lemoyne, and his themes. Lemoyne, returning
within the hour, found him seated at his desk in self-absorbed
depression, his work untouched.
"Well, they've taken me," he began; "and I shall have a fairly good
part." Cope made no effort to respond to the other's glowing
self-satisfaction, but sat with thoughtful, downcast eyes at his desk
before the untouched themes. "What's the matter?" asked Lemoyne. "Has
she been calling up again?"
Cope raised his head and gave him a look. Lemoyne saw that his very
first guess had been correct.
"This is a gay life!" he broke out; "just the life I have come down
here to lead. You're making yourself miserable, and you're making me
miserable. It's got to end."
His mind was full of _cliches_ from his reading and his "scripts." He
had heard all the necessary things said: in fact, had said them
himself--now in evening dress, now in hunting costume, now in the loose
habiliments of Pierrot--time and time again. The dissatisfied _fiance_
need but say that he could not feel, after all, that they were as well
suited to each other as they ought to be, that he could not bring
himself to believe that his feeling for her was what love really should
be, and that----
Thus, with a multiplicity of "that's," they accomplished a rough draft
which might be restudied and used on the morrow. "There!" said Lemoyne
to the weary Cope at eleven o'clock; "it ought to have been written a
month ago."
Cope languidly slipped the oft-amended sheet under his pile of themes
and in a spent voice suggested bed.
Over night and through the following forenoon the draft lay on his
desk. When he returned to his room at three o'clock a note, which had
been delivered by hand, awaited him. It was from Amy Leffingwell.
Cope read it, folded his arms on his desk, bowed his head on his arms,
and, being alone, gave a half-sob. Then he lifted his head, with face
illumined and soul refreshed. Amy had asked for an end to their
engagement.
"She says what you say!" exclaimed Cope with shining eyes and a trace
of half-hysteric bravado. "She does not feel that we are quite so well
suited to each other as we ought to be, nor that her feeling toward me
is what love really... Can she have been in dramatics too!"
A few days later Lemoyne, working for his new play, met Amy Leffingwell
in the music-alcove of the University library. She had removed her
gloves with their furry wristlets, and he saw that she had a ring on
the third finger of her left hand. Its scintillations made a stirring
address to his eye.
Cope heard about the ring that evening, and about Amy Leffingwell's
engagement to George Pearson the next day.
Lemoyne attempted to put some of his visualizings before Cope, but Cope
cut him short. "Now I will settle down to work on my thesis," he said,
"and get my degree at the June convocation."
"Good," said Lemoyne; "and now I can get my mind on the club." He went
to the window and looked out on the night. The stars were a-glitter.
"Let's take a turn round the block before we turn in."
They spent ten minutes in the clear winter air. As Cope, on their
return, stooped to put his latch-key to use, Lemoyne impulsively threw
an arm across his shoulder. "Everything is all right, now," he said, in
a tone of high gratification; and Urania, through the whole width of
her starry firmament, looked down kindly upon a happier household.
24
Medora Phillips became sympathetic and tender. She let him understand
that she thought he had been unfairly treated. This did not prevent her
from being much kinder to Amy Leffingwell. Amy, earlier, had been so
affected by the general change of tone that, more than once, she had
felt prompted to take herself and her belongings out of the house. But
she still lingered on, as she was likely to do, during a short
engagement; and Mrs. Phillips was now amiability itself to George and
Amy both.
Her method of soothing Cope was to take him to the theatre and the
opera in town: he could scarcely come to the house. It was now late in
January and the opera season was near its end. People were tiring of
their boxes, or had started South: it had become almost a work of merit
to fill a friend's box for her. During the last week of the season,
Mrs. Phillips was put in position to do this. She invited Cope, and
took along Hortense, and found in the city itself a married pair who
could get to the place and home again without her help. Lemoyne would
have made six, and the third man; but he was not bidden. Why pack the
box? A better effect was made by presenting, negligently, one empty
seat. Lemoyne dressed Cope, however. He had brought to Churchton the
outgrown evening clothes; and Cope, in his exuberance, bought a new
pair of light shoes and white gloves. He looked well as he sat on the
back seat of the limousine with Medora Phillips, during the long drive
in; and he looked well--strikingly, handsomely well--in the box itself.
Indeed, thought Medora, he made other young men in nearby boxes--young
men of "means" and "position"--look almost plebian. "He is charming,"
she said to herself, over and over again.
What about him "took" her? Was it his slenderness, his grace? Was it
his youthfulness, intact to this moment and promising an extension of
agreeable possibilities into an entertaining future? Or was it more
largely his fundamental coolness of tone? Again he was an icicle on the
temple--this time the temple of song. "He is glittering." said Medora,
intent on his blazing blue eyes, his beautiful teeth ever ready for a
public smile, and the luminous backward sweep of his hair; "and he is
not soft." She thought suddenly of Arthur Lemoyne; he, by comparison,
seemed like a dark, yielding plum-pudding.
On the way into town Medora had had Hortense sit in front with Peter.
This arrangement had enabled her to lay her hand more than once on
Cope's, and to tell him again that he had been rather badly treated,
and that Amy, when you came to it, was a poor slight child who scarcely
knew her own mind. "I hope she had not made a mistake, after all,"
breathed Medora.
All this soothed Cope. The easy motion of the luxurious car
half-hypnotized him; a scene of unaccustomed splendor and brilliancy
lay just ahead... What wonder that Medora found him scenically
gratifying in her box (the dear creature's titillation made it seem
"hers" indeed), and gave his name with great gusto to the young woman
of the notebook and pencil? And the box was not at the back, but well
along to one side, where people could better see him. Its number, too,
was lower; so that, next morning, he was well up in the list, instead
of at the extreme bottom, where two or three of the young men of means
and position found themselves. Some of the girls in his class read his
name, and had no more to say about wet clothes.
Hortense, on the front seat of the car, had had the good sense to say
little and the acumen to listen much. She knew that Cope must "call"
soon, and she knew it would be on some evening when he had been advised
that Amy was not at home. There came, before long, an evening when Amy
and George Pearson went into town for a musical comedy, and Cope walked
across once more to the familiar house.
Hortense was in the drawing-room. She was brilliantly dressed, and her
dark aggressive face wore a look of bravado. In her rich contralto she
welcomed Cope with an initiative which all but crowded her aunt into
second place. Under the very nose of Medora Phillips, whom she breezily
seemed to regard as a chaperon, she brought forward the sketch of Cope
in oils, which she had done partly from observation and partly from
memory. She may have had, too, some slight aid from a photograph,--one
which her aunt had wheedled out of Cope and had missed, on one occasion
at least, from her desk in the library. Hortense now boldly asked his
cooperation for finishing her small canvas.
Though the "wood-nymphs" of last autumn's legend might indeed be, as he
had broadly said, "a nice enough lot of girls," they really were not
all alike and indistinguishable: one of them at least, as he should
learn, had thumbs.
"----but I shall need you yourself for the final touches--the ones that
will make all the difference."
She did not reply to her aunt's question. "Retouched from life, and
then framed--who knows?" she asked. Of course it would look immensely
better; would look, in fact, as it was meant to look, as she could make
it look.
She told Cope that she had set up a studio near the town square, not
far from the fountain-basin and the elms----
"Which won't count for much at this time of year," interjected her aunt.
"Well, the light is good," returned Hortense, "and the place is quiet;
and if Mr. Cope will drop in two or three times, I think he will end by
feeling that I have done him justice."
"This is a most kind attention," said Cope, slightly at sea. "I ought
to be able to find time some afternoon...."
When Lemoyne heard of this new project he gave Cope a _look_. He had no
concern as to Mrs. Phillips, who was, for him, but a rather dumpy,
over-brisk, little woman of forty-five. If she must run off with Bert
every so often in a motor-car, he could manage to stand it. Besides, he
had no desire to shut Cope--and himself--out of a good house. But the
niece, scarcely twenty-three, was a more serious matter.
"I can take care of myself," the other replied, rather tartly.
"I wish you could!" retorted Lemoyne, with poignant brevity. "I'll go
with you."
"You won't!"
"I'd rather save you near the start, than have to try at the very end."
Hortense had stepped into the shoes of a young gentlewoman who had been
trying photography, and who had rather tired of it. At any rate, she
had had a chance to go to Florida for a month and had seized it.
Hortense had succeeded to her little north skylight, and had rearranged
the rest to her own taste; it was a mingling of order and disorder, of
calculation and of careless chance. She had a Victory of Samothrace and
a green-and-gold dalmatic from some Tuscan town----But why go on?
Cope had not been in this new milieu fifteen minutes before Randolph
happened along.
"I'll go, I'll go," said Randolph obligingly. "I heard about the new
shop only yesterday, and I wanted to see it. I don't exact that I shall
witness the mysteries in active operation."
She continued to take a few dabs from her brushes and to talk tea.
"Stay for a sip," she said.
"Very well; thank you," replied Randolph, and wondered how long "a sip"
might mean.
In the end it meant no longer for him than for Cope; they came away
together. Hortense held Cope for a moment to make a second engagement
at an earlier hour.
Randolph had not met Cope for several days, except at the opera, where
he had left his regular Monday evening seat in the parquet to spend a
few moments in Mrs. Phillips' friend's box. He had never seen Cope in
evening dress before; but he found him handsome and distinguished, and
some of the glamour of that high occasion still lingered about the
young man as he now walked through High Street, in his rather shabby
tweeds, at Randolph's side.
Randolph looked back upon his dinner as a complete success: Pearson was
engaged, and Cope was free. He now said to Cope:
"Of course you must know I feel you were none too handsomely treated.
George is a pleasant, enterprising fellow, but somewhat sudden and
rapacious. If he is happy, I hope you are no less happy yourself...."
Thus he resumed the subject which had been dropped at the Library door.
Cope shrank a little, and Randolph felt him shrinking. He fell silent;
he understood. Pain sometimes took its own time to travel, and reached
its goal by a slow, circuitous route. He thought suddenly of his
bullfight in Seville, twenty-five years before. He had sat out his six
bulls with entire composure; yet, back in America, some time later, he
had encountered a bullfight in an early film and had not been able to
follow it through. Cope, perhaps, was beginning to feel the edge of the
sword and the drag at his vitals. The thing was over, and his, the
elder man's, own part in it successfully accomplished; so why had he,
conventional commentator, felt the need of further words?
He let the unhappy matter drop. When he spoke again he reminded Cope
that the invitation for himself and Lemoyne still held good. Amy had
been swept from the stage; but Lemoyne, a figure of doubt, was yet in
its background. "I must have a 'close-up'," Randolph declared to
himself, "and find out what he comes to." Cope had shown some
reluctance to meet his advances--a reluctance which, he felt, was not
altogether Cope's own.
"I know we shall be glad to come sometime," replied Cope, with seeming
heartiness. This heartiness may have had its element of the genuine; at
any rate, here was another "good house," from which no one need shut
himself out without good cause. If Lemoyne developed too extreme a
reluctance, he would be reminded that he was cherishing the hope of a
position in the registrar's office, for at least half of the day; also,
that Randolph enjoyed some standing in University circles, and that his
brother-in-law was one of the trustees.
25
Meanwhile Cope and Lemoyne refined daily on the details of their new
menage and applied themselves with new single-mindedness to their
respective interests. Cope had found a subject for his thesis in the
great field of English literature,--or, rather, in a narrow bypath
which traversed one of its corners. The important thing, as he
frequently reminded Lemoyne, was not the thesis itself, but the aid
which it might give his future. "It will make a difference, in salary,
of three or four hundred dollars," he declared.
Between-times they brought their quarters into better order; and this
despite numerous minor disputes. The last new picture did not always
find at once its proper place on the wall; and sometimes there were
discussions as to whether it should be toast or rolls, and whether
there should be eggs or not. Occasionally sharp tones and quivering
nostrils, but commonly amity and peace.
They were seen, or heard of, as going about a great deal together: to
lectures, to restaurants, to entertainments in the city. But they went
no longer, for the present, to Ashburn Avenue; they took their time to
remember Randolph's repeated invitation; and there was, as yet, no
further attendance at the studio in the Square,--for any reference to
the unfinished portrait was likely to produce sharp tones and quivering
nostrils indeed.
"What's this?" she asked. She ran her eye across to the other edge of
the cover, and read, "Two Sonnets."
"Well, well," she observed, and turned to the indicated page. And,
"When in the world----?" she asked, and turned back to the cover. It
was the latest issue of the magazine, and but a day or two old.
Then she returned to the text of the two sonnets and read the first of
them--part of it aloud.
Mrs. Phillips reread the closing lines of the first sonnet, and then
ran over the second. "Good heavens!" she exclaimed; "when _I_ was a
girl----!"
"Times change."
"I should say so." She looked from the magazine to Cope. "I wonder who
'the only begetter' may be."
"Is that quite fair? So many writers think it unjust--and even obtuse
and offensive--if the thing is put on too personal a basis. It's all
just an imagined situation, manipulated artistically...."
Mrs. Phillips looked straight at him. "Bertram Cope, it's _you_!" She
spoke with elation. These sonnets constituted a tribute. Cope, she
knew, had never looked three times, all told, at Carolyn Thorpe; yet
here was Carolyn saying that she...
"I wonder if she knows it's out?" Mrs. Phillips went on swiftly. "Did
you?"
"'Calmly'? I don't take it at all! Why should I? And why should you
think there is any ref----?"
Cope put his hand wearily to his forehead. The arts were a curse. So
were gifted girls. So were over-appreciative women. He wished he were
back home, smoking a quiet cigarette with Arthur Lemoyne.
Mrs. Ryder came bustling up--Mrs. Ryder, the mathematical lady who had
given the first tea of all.
"I have just heard about Carolyn's poems. What it must be to live in
the midst of talents! And I hear that Hortense has finally taken a
studio for her portraits."
Cope felt a half-angry tremor run through him. He was none the less
perturbed because Medora Phillips meant obviously no offense. Hortense
and Carolyn were viewed as but her delegates; they were doing for her
what she would have been glad to be able to do for herself. Clearly, in
her mind, there was not to be another Amy.
Well, that was something, he thought. He laughed uneasily, and gave the
enthusiastic Mrs. Ryder a few details of the art-world (as she called
it),--details which she would not be denied.
"Do," returned Hortense's aunt. "And mention the place. Let's keep the
dear girl as busy as possible."
They all drifted out into the larger room. Mrs. Ryder left
them,--perhaps to distribute her small change of art and literature
through the crowd.
"I only wish there were more of them," he declared, looking up from his
desk. "I'd like a lady barber for your head, a lady shoemaker for your
feet, a lady psychologist for your soul----"
"Stop it!" cried Cope. "I've had about all I can stand. If you want to
live in peace, as you sometimes say, do your share to keep the peace."
"Us? You."
"Her?"
"You may not. Your precious 'psychology' can wait. Don't be in such a
damned hurry to use it."
"It had better not be used at all. Drop it. Think about your new play,
or something."
"Oh, the devil!" sighed Lemoyne. "Winnebago seems mighty far off. We
got on there, at least." He bent again over his desk.
Cope put down his book and came across. There were tears, perhaps, in
his eyes--the moisture of vexation, or of contrition, or of both. "We
can get along here, too," he said, with an arm around Lemoyne's
shoulder.
"Let's hope so," returned Lemoyne, softening, with his hand pressed on
Cope's own.
26
_COPE AS A GO-BETWEEN_
"If you want any help of his toward a position.... Time's passing. And
a man can't be expected to bestir himself much for another man he's
never even seen."
Randolph was glad to see Cope again, whom he had not met since the half
hour in Hortense Dunton's studio. He was also glad to secure, finally,
a close and leisurely look at Lemoyne. Lemoyne took the same occasion
for a close and leisurely look at Randolph. Each viewed the other with
dislike and distrust. Each spoke, so far as might be, to Cope--or
through him. Sing-Lo, who was prepared to smile, saw few smiles
elsewhere, and became sedate, even glum.
Randolph felt a physical distaste for Lemoyne. His dark eyes were too
liquid; his person was too plump; the bit of black bristle beneath his
nose was an offense; his aura----Yet who can say anything definite
about so indefinite a thing as an aura, save that one feels it and is
attracted or repelled by it? Lemoyne, on his side, developed an equal
distaste (or repugnance) for the "little gray man"--as he called
Randolph to himself and, later, even to Cope; though Randolph, speaking
justly, was exactly neither gray nor little. Lemoyne noted, too, the
early banishment of Randolph's eyeglasses, which disappeared as they
had disappeared once or twice before. He felt that Randolph was trying
to stay young rather late, and was showing himself inclined to "go"
with younger men longer than they would welcome him. Why didn't he
consort with people of his own age and kind? He was old; so why
couldn't he _be_ old?
His eyes had begun to show excessive application; at least they looked
tired and dim. His color, too, was paler. He had come to suggest again
the young man who had been picked up from Medora Phillips' dining-room
floor and laid out on the couch in her library, and who had shown a
good deal of pallor during the few days that followed. "Take a little
more air and exercise," Randolph counselled.
"A good rule always, for everybody," said Lemoyne, with a withholding
of all tone and expression.
"I believe," Randolph continued, "that you are losing in both weight
and color. That would be no advantage to yourself--and it might
complicate Miss Dunton's problem. It's perplexing to an artist when
one's subject changes under one's very eye."
"There won't be much time for sitting, from now on," observed Lemoyne
concisely.
"I might try to go round once more," said Cope, "--in fairness. If
there are to be higher lights on my cheekbones and lower lights for my
eyes, an hour or so should serve to settle it."
The talk drifted toward dramatics, with Winnebago once more the
background; but the foreground was occupied by a new musical comedy
which one of the clubs might try in another month, and the tone became
more cheery. Sing-Lo, who had come in with a maple mousse of his own
making, smiled at last; and he smiled still more widely when, at the
end of the course, his chief occidental masterpiece was praised.
Sing-Lo also provided coffee and cigars in the den; and it was here
that Cope felt the atmosphere right for venturing a word in behalf of
Lemoyne. There had been few signs of relenting in Winnebago; and some
modest source of income would be welcome--in fact, was almost necessary.
"Of course work _is_ increasing in the offices," said Randolph, looking
from one young man to the other; "and of course I have, directly or
indirectly, some slight 'influence.'"
"Oh, I have time," replied Lemoyne jauntily, "and not many studies.
Half a day of routine work, I thought.... Of course I'm not a manager,
or director, or anything like that. I should just have a part of
moderate importance, and should have only to give good heed to
rehearsals...."
"Well," said Randolph, "I've no fondness for the new fellow, myself;
but----"
Randolph sighed. This was plainly one of Foster's off days. The only
wonder was he had not more of them. He sat in darkness, with few
diversions, occupations, ameliorations. His mind churned mightily on
the scanty materials that came his way. He founded big guesses on
nothings; he raised vast speculative edifices on the slightest of
premises. To dislike a man he could not even see! Well, the blind--and
the half-blind--had their own intuitions and followed their own
procedures.
"And what's this I hear about Hortense?" asked Foster, with bitterness.
"It won't? She's out in the open, finally. She took that place for a
month with one express object--to get him there, paint or no paint.
She's fretful and cantankerous over every day of delay, and soon she'll
be in an undisguised rage."
"Joe! Joe!"
"It won't? With Hortense scornfully ridiculing it, and Carolyn bursting
into tears before she can make her bolt from the room, and Amy
wondering whether, after all...! If things are as bad as they are for
me up here, how much worse must they be for the rest of them below! And
that confounded engagement has made it still worse all round!"
"The first week in May, I hear. But Pearson is trying for the middle of
April. His flat is taken." Foster writhed in his chair.
"Why do they care for him?" he burst out. "He's nothing in himself. And
he cares nothing for them. And he cares nothing for you," Foster added
boldly. "All he has thought for is that fellow from up north."
"Don't ask me why they care," replied Randolph, with studied sobriety.
"Why does anybody care? And for what? For the thing that is just out of
reach. He's cool; he's selfish; he's indifferent. Yet, somehow, frost
and fire join end to end and make the circle complete." He fell into
reflection. "It's all like children straining upward for an icicle, and
presently slipping, with cracked pates, on the ice below."
Foster tore off his shade and threw it on the floor. "Mine?" he cried.
"Look to your own!"
"Be a fool along with the others, if you will!" retorted Foster. "Oh!"
he went on, "Haven't I seen it all? Haven't I felt it all? You, Basil
Randolph, mind your own ways too!"
Randolph thought of words, but held his tongue. Words led to other
words, and he might soon find himself involved in what would seem like
a defense--an attitude which he did not relish, a course of which he
did not acknowledge the need. "Poor Joe!" he thought; "sitting too much
by himself and following over-closely the art of putting things
together--anyhow!" Joe Foster must have more company and different
things to consider. What large standard work--what history, biography,
or bulky mass of memoirs in from four to eight volumes--would be the
best to begin on before the winter should be too far spent?
Four or five days later, Randolph wrote to Cope that there was a good
prospect for a small position in the administration offices of the
University, and a week later Lemoyne was in that position. Cope, who
recognized Randolph's handling of the matter as a personal favor,
replied in a tone of some warmth. "He's really a very decent fellow,
after all,--of course he is," pronounced Randolph. Lemoyne himself
wrote more tardily and more coolly. He was taking time from his
Psychology and from "The Antics of Annabella," it appeared, to acquaint
himself with the routine of his new position. Randolph shrugged: he
must wait to see which of the three interests would be held the most
important.
27
Lemoyne's first week in his new berth held him rather close, and Cope
was able to move about with less need of accounting for his every hour.
One of his first concerns was to get over his sitting with Hortense
Dunton. His "sitting," he said: it was to be the first, the only and
the last.
Hortense, who had been moping, brightened too. "I thought you had
forgotten me," she said chidingly. Yet her tone had less acerbity than
that which she had employed, but a few moments before, to address him
in his absence. For she often had in mind, at intervals longer or
shorter, Cope's improvisation about the Sassafras--too truly that
dense-minded shrub had failed to understand the "young ladies" and
their "needs."
"My thesis," he said. "From now on, it must take a lot of my thought
and every moment of my spare time." He looked at the waiting canvas.
"Clinch it to-day. Hurry it through."
He mounted the model-throne, sank into the wide chair, and placed his
hands luxuriously on its arms. His general pose mattered little: she
had not gone beyond his head and shoulders.
Hortense stared. Would he push her on the moment into the right mood?
Would he have her call into instant readiness her colors and brushes?
Why, even a modest amateur must be allowed her minutes of preparation
and approach.
He smiled in his cold, distant way. The north light cut across the
forehead, nose and chin which made his priceless profile. The canvas
itself, done on theory in a lesser light, looked dull and lifeless.
Hortense felt this herself. She did not see how she was going to key it
up in a single hour. As she considered among her brushes and tubes, she
began to feel nervous, and her temper stirred.
"You have a great capacity for being interested and amused," she said.
"Most men are like you. Especially young ones. They are amused,
diverted, entertained--and there it ends."
Cope felt the prick. "Well, we are bidden," he said; "and we come. Too
many of us have little to offer in return, except appreciation and
goodwill. How better appreciate such kindness as Mrs. Phillips' than by
gratefully accepting more of it?" (Stilted copy-book talk; and he knew
it.)
"That is the date, then, is it?" The more he thought of the impending
ceremony, the more grateful he was for his escape. Thankfulness had
salved the earlier wound; no pain now came from his touching it.
"Yes; on that day the house will see the last of them."
She slanted her palette and looked toward the skylight. Cope's own
glance swept non-committally the green burlap walls. Both of them were
seeing pictures of the wedding preparations. Hortense saw delivery-boys
at the front door, with things that must be held to the light or draped
over chairs. She saw George haling Amy to the furniture-shops and to
the dealers in wall-paper. She saw them in cosy shaded confab evening
after evening, in her aunt's library. It was a period of joy, of
self-absorption, of unsettlement, of longing, of irritation, of
exasperation--oh, would it never end! Cope saw a long string of gifts
and entertainments, a diamond engagement-ring, a lavishly-furnished
apartment ... How in the world could he himself have compassed all
this? And how blessed was he among men that he had not been obliged to
try!
Hortense went through some motions with her brush, yet seemed to be
looking beyond him rather than at him.
Presently she paused, opening her eyes wider and holding aloft her
brush. "There will be a bride's-maid," she said.
"The deuce!" he thought. "That didn't end it!" But he said no thing
aloud.
"Guess who!"
"You _like_ her poetry!" cried Hortense in a high, strained voice. "You
enjoy her epithalamiums, and her--sonnets...."
"And perhaps she doesn't!" cried Hortense. "Tell her! Tell her!"
Cope stared. "She is a sweet girl," he repeated; "and she has been
filling very discreetly a somewhat difficult position----"
Cope sat bolt upright in that spacious chair. "Tell her? I have nothing
to tell her. I have nothing to tell anyone!"
His resonant words cut the air. They uttered decision. He did not mean
to make the same mistake twice.
"Then let me tell you something." There was an angry thrill in her
voice. "For I am not so selfish and cold-hearted as you are. I have
seen nobody but you all these months. I have never tried harder to
please anybody. You have scarcely noticed me--you have never given me a
glance or a thought. You could interest yourself in that silly Amy and
in our foolish Carolyn; but for me--me--Nothing!"
Cope came down from the throne. If she had lavished her maiden thoughts
on him, by day or evening or at night, he had not known and could
hardly be supposed to know. Indeed, she had begun by treating him with
a cursory roughness; nor had he noticed any great softening later on.
"Listen," he said. Under the stress of embarrassment and alarm his cold
blue eyes grew colder and his delicate nostrils quivered with an effect
a little too like disdain. "I like you as well as another; no more, no
less. I am in no position to think of love and marriage, and I have no
inclination that way. I am willing to be friends with everybody, and
nothing more with anybody." The sentences came with the cruel
detachment of bullets; but, "Not again, not twice," was his uppermost
thought. Any bluntness, any ruggedness, rather than another month like
that of the past holiday season.
He took a step away and looked to one side, toward the couch where his
hat and coat were lying.
"Go, if you will," she said. "And go as soon as you like. You are a
contemptible, cold-hearted ingrate. You have grudged me every minute of
your company, everywhere--and every second you have given me here. If I
have been foolish it is over now, and there shall be nothing to record
my folly." She stepped to the easel and hurled the canvas to the floor,
where it lay with palette and brushes.
Cope stood with his hat in his hand and his coat over his arm. He
seemed to see the open volume of some "printed play." After all, there
was a type which, even under emotional stress, gave a measure of
instinctive heed to structure and cadence. Well, if there was relief
for her in words, he could stand to hear her speak for a moment or two
more, not longer.
"One word yet," she said in a panting voice. "Your Arthur Lemoyne. That
preposterous friendship cannot go on for long. You will tire of him; or
more likely he will tire of you. Something different, something better
will be needed,--and you will live to learn so. I should be glad if I
never saw either one of you again!"
She turned her stormy face away, and Cope slipped out with a blended
sense of mortification, pain and relief.
28
Cope went out on the square with his being a-tingle. If Hortense, on
another occasion, had thrown a dash of brine, on this occasion she had
rubbed in the salt itself. And he had struck a harsh blow in turn; the
flat of his mind was still stinging, as if half the shock of the blow
had remained behind. "But it was no time for half-measures," he
muttered to himself. "Not again; not twice!" he repeated.
But Hortense, though better days intervened now and then, did not
improve essentially; and she contrived at the climacteric moment of
Amy's career to make herself felt--unduly felt--after all.
The wedding took place during the latter half of April, as demanded by
the enterprising wooer. Then there would be a rapid ten-day
wedding-journey, followed by a prompt, business-like occupancy of the
new apartment on the first of May exactly.
This young brother was alert, cheery, chatty. He was not at all put out
by Foster's wheeled chair and eyeshade, nor by the strange contortions
which Foster went through when, on occasion, he left the chair for a
couch or for some chair of ordinary type. He got behind the wheels, and
together they made the tour of the landscapes, marines, and
genre-pieces which covered the walls. The boy was sympathetic, without
being obtrusively so, and his comments on the paintings were confident
and unconventional. "So different from _ce cher_ Pelouse," said Foster,
with a grimace. He enjoyed immensely the fragmental half-hours given
him through those two days. His young companion was lavish in his
reports on life's vast vicissitudes at Fort Lodge, and was always ready
with comparisons between things as observed in his home town and in
Churchton itself. He came as a tonic breeze; and the evening after he
departed, Foster, left moping alone in the let-down which followed the
festivities, said to himself more than once, "If I had had a boy, I
should have wanted him just like Dick."
Dick's mother and aunt stood up as well as they could against the
bustling, emphatic geniality of Medora Phillips; and they were able,
after a little, to adjust themselves to the prosperity of the Pearsons.
These, they came to feel, were essentially of the same origin and
traditions as themselves: just plain people who, however, had settled
on the edge of the Big Town to make money and had made it. Pearson the
elder was hardly more prepotent than Mr. Lusk, the banker at home.
George himself was a dashing go-ahead: if he turned into a tired
business-man his wife would know how to divert him.
But Hortense did not regain her good-nature; she did not even maintain
her self-control. In the end, the ceremony was too much for her. George
and Amy had plighted their troth in a floral bower, which ordinarily
was a bay window, before a minister of a denomination which did not
countenance robes nor a ritual lifted beyond the chances of wayward
improvisation; and after a brief reception the new couple prepared for
the motor-car dash which was to take them to a late train. In the big
wide hallway, after Amy had kissed Carolyn and thanked her for her poem
and was preparing for the shower of rice which she had every reason to
think she must face, there was a burst of hysterical laughter from
somewhere behind, and Hortense Dunton, to the sufficing words, "O
Bertram, Bertram!" emitted with sufficing clearness, fainted away.
Her words, if not heard by all the company, were heard by a few to whom
they mattered; and while Hortense, immediately after the departure of
the happy pair, was being revived and led away, they left occasion for
thought. Carolyn Thorpe cast a startled glance. The aunt from Iowa, who
knew that Bertrams did not grow on every bush, and whose senses the
function had preternaturally sharpened for any address from Romance,
seized and shook her sister's arm; and, later on, in a Louis Quinze
_causeuse_, up stairs, they agreed that if young Cope really had had
another claimant on his attention, it was all the better that their Amy
had ended by taking George. And Medora Phillips, in the front hall
itself----
Well, to Medora Phillips, in the front hall, much was revealed as in a
lightning-flash, and the revelation was far from agreeable. What
advantage in Amy's departure if Hortense continued to cumber the
ground? Hortense must go off somewhere, for a sojourn of a month or
more, to recover her health and spirits and to let the house recover
its accustomed tone of cheer.
Medora forced these considerations to the back of her mind and saw most
of her guests out of the house. Toward the end of it all she found
herself relaxing in the library, with Basil Randolph in the opposite
chair. Randolph himself had figured in the ceremony. This had been a
crude imitation of a time-hallowed form and had allowed for an
extemporaneous prayer and for a brief address to the young couple; but
it had retained the familiar inquiry, "Who giveth--?" "Who _can_ give?"
asked Medora of Amy. Poor Joe was rather out of the question, and
Brother Dick was four or five years too young. Was there, then, anyone
really available except that kind Mr. Randolph? So Basil Randolph,
after remembering Amy with a rich and handsome present, had taken on a
paternal air, had stepped forward at the right moment, and was now
recovering from his novel experience.
The two, as they sat there, said little, though they looked at each
other with half-veiled, questioning glances. Medora, indeed, improvised
a little stretch of silent dialogue, and it made him take his share.
She felt dislocated, almost defeated. Hortense's performance had set
her to thinking of Bertram Cope, and she figured the same topic as
uppermost in the mind of Basil Randolph.
"You know well enough," she returned. "You have played off the whole
University against my poor house, and you have won. Your influence with
the president, your brother on the board of trustees ... If Bertram
Cope has any gratitude in his composition...."
"Oh, well," she let him say, "I don't feel that I did much; and I'm not
sure I'm glad for what I did do."
"You may regret it, of course. That other man is an uncertain quantity."
"Oh, come," he said; "you've had the inside track from the very start:
this house and everything in it...."
"Taxis can always be had. Yes," she went on, "you have held the
advantage over a poor woman cooped up in her own house. While I have
had to stick here, attending to my housekeeping, you have been
careering about everywhere,--you with a lot of partners and clerks in
your office, and no compulsion to look in more than two or three times
a week. Of _course_ you can run to theatres and clubs. I wonder they
don't dispense with you altogether!"
"Yes, you have had the world to range through: shows and restaurants;
the whole big city; strolls and excursions, and who knows what
beside...."
"I shall send her away," she said aloud. The girl might join her studio
friend, who had stopped at Asheville on her way North, and stay with
her for a few weeks. Yes, Hortense might go and meet the spring--or
even the summer, if that must be. The spring here in town she herself
would take as it came. "I shall welcome a few free, easy breaths after
this past fortnight," she finished audibly.
Randolph squared himself with her mood as best he could. "You are tired
and nervous," he said with banality. "Get the last of us out and go to
bed. I'll lead the way, and will give these loiterers as marked an
example as possible."
Medora Phillips hushed down her house finally and went thoughtfully up
stairs to her room. Amy had gone off, and Hortense was sentenced to go.
There remained only Carolyn. Was there any threat in her and her
sonnets?
29
"It's a low latitude," she said to herself; "but it's a high altitude.
The season is late, but she won't suffer."
Hortense, who had been sullen and fractious, met her aunt half-way, and
agreed passively when Medora said:
"It will benefit you to see the spring come on in a new scene and in a
new fashion. You will find the mountains more interesting than the
dunes." So Hortense packed her things and joined her friend for a brief
sojourn in sight of the Great Smokies.
Thus, when Medora herself went forth to meet the spring among the
sand-hills, she had only Carolyn and the other members of her domestic
staff. Yet no simplest week-end without a guest or so, and she asked
Cope to accompany them.
"You need it," she told him bluntly; "--you need a change, however
slight and brief. You are positively thin. You make me wish that
thesises----"
Cope, with the first warm days, had gone back to the blue serge suit of
the past autumn, and he filled it even less well than before. And his
face was thin to correspond.
"Besides," she went on, "we need you. It will be a kind of camping-out
for a day or two--merely that. We must have your help to pitch the
tent, so to speak, and to pick up firewood, and to fry the bacon....
And this time," she added, "you shall not have that long tiresome trip
by train. There will be room in the car."
She did not attempt to make room for Lemoyne. She was glad to have no
need to do so; Lemoyne was deeply engrossed otherwise--"Annabella" and
her "antics" were almost ready for the public eye. The first of May
would see the performance, and the numerous rehearsals were exacting,
whether as regarded the effort demanded or the time. Every spare hour
was going into them, as well as many an hour that could hardly be
spared. Lemoyne, who had been cast originally for a minor female part,
now found himself transferred, through the failure of a principal, to a
more important one. For him, then, rehearsals were more exigent than
ever. He cut his Psychology once or twice, nor could he succeed, during
office hours, in keeping his mind on office-routine. His superiors
became impatient and then protestant. The annual spring dislocation of
ordered student life was indeed a regular feature of the year's last
term; yet to push indulgence as far as Arthur Lemoyne was pushing
it----!
But Lemoyne's real work was in the musical comedy. "This is the biggest
chance I've ever had in my life," he declared, "and I don't want to
lose out on it."
So Cope rolled away to the dunes and left Lemoyne behind for one
Saturday night rehearsal the more.
Duneland gave him a tonic welcome. Under a breezy sky the far edge of
the lake stood out clear. Along its nearer edge the vivacious waves
tumbled noisily. The steady pines were welcoming the fresh early
foliage of such companions as dressed and undressed in accord with the
calendar; the wrecked trunks which had given up life and its leafy
pomps seemed somehow less sombre and stark; and in the threatened
woodlands behind the hills a multiplicity of small new greeneries
stirred the autumn's dead leaves and brightened up the thickets of
shrubbery. The arbutus had companioned the hepatica, and the squads of
the lupines were busily preparing their panoply of lavender-blue
racemes. Nature was breaking bounds. On the inland horizon rose the
vast bulk of the prison. As on other excursions, nobody tried too hard
to see it.
"It's all too lovely," exclaimed Medora Phillips. "And what is quite as
good," she was able to declare, "the house itself is all right." Winter
had not weakened its roof nor wrenched away its storm-windows; no
irresponsible wayfarer had used it for a lodging, nor had any casual
marauder entered to despoil. Medora directed the disposition of the
hamper of food with a relieved air and sent Cope down with Peter for an
armful or two of driftwood from the assertive shore.
"And you, Carolyn," she said, "see if the oil-stove will really go."
Down on the beach itself, where the past winter's waste was still
profusely spread, Cope rose to the greening hills, to the fresh sweep
of the wind, and to the sun-shot green and purple streakings over the
water. The wind, in particular, took its own way: dry light sand, blown
from higher shelvings, striped the dark wet edges of the shore; and
every bending blade of sandgrass drew a circle about itself with its
own revolving tip.
Cope let the robust and willing Peter pick up most of the firewood and
himself luxuriated in the spacious world round about him. Yes, a winter
had flown--or, at any rate, had passed--and here he was again. There
had been annoyances, but now he felt a wide and liberal relief. Here,
for example, was the special stretch of shore on which Amy Leffingwell
had praised his singing and had hinted her desire to accompany
him,--but never mind that. Farther on was the particular tract where
Hortense Dunton had pottered with her water-colors and had harried him
with the heroines of eighteenth century fiction,--but never mind that,
either. All those things were past, and he was free. Nobody remained
save Carolyn Thorpe, an unaggressive girl with whom one could really
trust oneself and with whom one could walk, if required, in comfort and
content. Cope threw up his head to the hills and threw out his chest to
the winds, and laid quick hands on a short length of weather-beaten
hemlock plank. "Afraid I'm not holding up my end," he said to Peter.
At the house again, he found that Carolyn had brought the oil-stove
back into service, and, with Helga, had cast the cloth over the table
and had set some necessary dishes on it. He fetched a pail or two of
water from the pump, and each time placed a fresh young half-grown
sassafras leaf on the surface. "The trade-mark of our bottling-works,"
he said facetiously; "to show that our products are pure." And Carolyn,
despite his facetiousness, felt more than ever that he might easily
become a poet. Medora viewed the floating leaves with indulgent
appreciation. "But don't let's cumber ourselves with many cares," she
suggested; "we are here to make the best of the afternoon. Let's out
and away,--the sooner the better."
The three soon set forth for a stroll through spring's reviving domain.
Cope walked between Medora and Carolyn, or ahead of them, impartially
sweeping away twigs and flowering branches from before their faces. The
young junipers were putting forth tender new tips; the bright leaves of
the sassafras shone forth against the pines. Above the newly-rounded
tops of the oaks and maples in the valley below them the Three Witches
rose gauntly; and off on their far hill the two companion pines--(how
had he named them? Romeo and Juliet? Pelleas and Melisande?)--still lay
their dark heads together in mysterious confidences under the
heightening glow of the late afternoon sun. Carolyn looked from them
back to Cope and gave him a shy smile.
He did not quite smile back. Carolyn was well enough, however. She was
suitably dressed for a walk. Her shoes were sensible, and so was her
hair. Amy had run to fluffiness. Hortense had often favored heavy waves
and emphatic bandeaux. But Carolyn's hair was drawn back plainly from
her forehead, and was gathered in a small, low-set knot. "Still, it's
no concern of mine," he reminded himself, and walked on ahead.
Her elbow was on the back of the settle and close to his shoulder. His
face caught the glow from the fire.
"You _do_ look better," observed Carolyn on her own account. "This air
is everything. Only a few hours of it----"
"Another bit of wood on the fire, if you please, Carolyn," said her
patroness.
"Let me do it," said Cope. He rose quickly and laid on a stick or two.
He remained standing on the edge of the glow. He hoped nobody would say
again that he was looking rather thin and pale.
"And what is Mr. Lemoyne doing this evening?" presently asked Mrs.
Phillips in a dreamy undertone. Her manner was casual and negligent;
her voice was low and leisurely. She seemed to place Lemoyne at a
distance of many, many leagues. "Rehearsing, I suppose?"
"Yes," replied Cope. "This new play has absorbed him completely."
"Not too much of one, I trust," she returned. "I confess I like boys
best in such parts when they frankly and honestly seem to be boys.
That's half the fun--and nine-tenths of the taste."
"Taste?"
"Yes, taste. Short for good taste. There's a great deal of room for
bad. A thing may be done too thoroughly. Once or twice I've seen it
done that way, by--artists."
"He finds time for--for all this--this technique?" Mrs. Phillips asked.
"He's very clever," replied Cope, rather unhappy still. "It does take
time, of course. I'm concerned," he added.
"Come back to your place," said Medora Phillips. "You look quite
spectral."
Cope, with a light sigh, returned to his post on the settle and to his
share in the firelight. Silence fell. From far below were heard the
active waves, moaning themselves to rest. And a featureless evening
moved on slowly.
30
_COPE AS A HERO_
At ten o'clock Cope found himself tucked away in a small room on the
ground floor. It had been left quite as planned and constructed by the
original builder of the house. It was cramped and narrow, with low
ceiling and one small window. It gave on a short side-porch which was
almost too narrow to sit on and which was apropos of no special
prospect. Doubtless more than one stalwart youth had slept there before
him,--a succession of farmers' sons who fed all day on the airs and
spaces of the great out-of-doors, and who needed little of either
through a short night's rest. It was more comfortable at the end of
April than other guests had found it in mid-August.
A little before eleven he awoke the house with a loud, ringing cry.
Some one outside had passed his narrow window; feet were heard on the
back porch and hands at the kitchen door. Peter was out as quickly as
Cope himself; and the women, in differing stages of dress and
half-dress, followed at once.
While Mrs. Phillips and Carolyn were clinging to Cope, who had rushed
out in undershirt and trousers, Peter had a short tussle on the porch
with the intruder. He came in showing a scratch or two on his face, and
he reported the pantry window broken open.
"Some tramp along the beach saw our lights," suggested Carolyn.
"It was some refugee hiding in my woods," said Medora Phillips. She
made her real thought no plainer. She never liked to see, in her walks,
that distant prison, and she never spoke of it to her guests; but the
fancy of some escaped convict lurking below among her thickets was
often present in her mind.
Her fancy was now busy with some burglar, or even some murderer, who
had made his bolt for liberty; and she clung informally to the
clarion-voiced Cope as to a savior. She saw, with displeasure, that
Carolyn was disposed to cling too. She asked Carolyn to control herself
and told her the danger was over; she even requested her to return to
her room. But Carolyn lingered.
Medora herself stood with Cope in the light of the dying fire. She was
dressed almost as inadequately as he, but she felt that she must cling
tremblingly to him and thank him for something or other.
"I don't know what you've saved us from," she panted. "We may owe our
very lives to you!"
Peter, in the background, again thoughtfully felt his face and became
conscious of a growing ache in the muscles of his arms. He retired,
with a smile, to a still more distant plane. The regular did the work
and the volunteer got the praise.
Mrs. Phillips presently gave up her drooping hold on the reluctant Cope
and called Peter forward. "Is anything missing?" she asked.
"Only part of the breakfast, I expect," said Peter, with a grin. "And
maybe some of the lunch. He surely was a hungry man!"
"Well, we sha'n't starve. See to all the doors and windows before you
go back to bed."
But going back to bed was the one thing that she herself felt unable to
do. She asked Carolyn to bring her a wrap of some kind or other, and
sat down on the settle to talk it over. Cope had modestly slipped on a
coat. The fire was dying--that was the only difference between twelve
o'clock and ten.
"If I had known what was going to happen," declared Medora volubly, "I
never could have gone to bed at all! And to think"--here she left
Carolyn's end of the settle and drew nearer to Cope's--"that I should
ever have even thought of coming out here without a man!"
She now rated her midnight intruder as a murderer, and believed more
devoutly than ever that Cope had saved all their lives. Cope, who knew
that he had contributed nothing but a loud pair of lungs, began to feel
rather foolish.
Nor did the anomalous situation commend itself in any degree to his
taste. But it hit Medora Phillips' taste precisely, and she continued
to sit there, pressing an emotional enjoyment from it. An hour passed
before her excitement--an excitement kept up, perhaps, rather
factitiously--was calmed, and she trusted herself back in her own room.
Breakfast was a scanty affair,--it must be that if anything was to be
left over for lunch. While they were busy with toast and coffee voices
were heard in the woods--loud cries in call and answer.
"There!" said Medora, setting down her cup; "I knew it!"
Presently two men came climbing up to the house, while the voices of
others were still audible in the humpy thickets below.
"He tried to break in," said Medora Phillips eagerly; "but this
gentleman...."
The men looked serious, but made no categorical reply. They glanced at
the wrecked pantry window, and they looked with more intentness at the
long sliding footprints which led away, down the half-bare sand-slope.
Then they slid down themselves.
Cope's look tended to become a stare. He thought that Carolyn had been
in pretty fair control of herself,--had been less fluttery and excited,
indeed, than her employer.
But Medora had been piqued, the night before, by Carolyn's tendency to
linger on the scene and to help skim the emotional cream from the
situation.
"And in such dishabille, too! I hope you don't think she seemed
immodest?"
But Cope had given small heed to their dress, or to their lack of it.
In fact, he had noticed little if any difference between them. He only
knew that he had felt a degree more comfortable after getting his own
coat on.
"Well, you were noticeable," declared Medora, with some archness. She
had been conscious enough of his spare waist, his sinewy arms, his
swelling chest. "It was easy enough to see where the noise came from,"
she said, looking him over.
She declined to let her mind dwell on Peter. Peter possessed no charm.
Besides, he was prosaically on the payroll.
They continued to saunter along the sand. Yesterday's sparse clouds had
vanished, along with much of yesterday's wind. The waters that had
tumbled and vociferated now merely murmured. The lake stood calmly
blue, and the new green was thickening on the hills. Confident birds
flitted busily among the trees and shrubs. Spring was disclosed in its
most alluring mood.
"Some university men said they might happen along to-day. If they
really have knapsacks, and anything to eat in them, they're welcome.
Otherwise, we had better hide quick--and hope they'll lose the place
and pass us by."
One of the advancing figures lifted a semaphoric arm. "Too late," said
Cope; "They recognize you."
The new-comers were young professors and graduate students. They were
soon in possession of the thrilling facts of the past night, and one of
them offered to be a prisoner, if a prisoner was desired. When they
heard how Bertram Cope had saved the lives of defenseless women in a
lonely land, they inclined to smile. Two of them had been present on
another shore when Cope had "saved" Amy Leffingwell from a watery
death, and they knew how far heroics might be pushed by women who were
willing to idealize. Cope saw their smiles and felt that he had fumbled
an opportunity: when he might have been a truncheon, he had been only a
megaphone.
The new arrivals, after climbing the sandy rise to the house, were
shown the devastated kitchen and were asked to declare what provisions
they carried. They had enough food for their own needs and a trifle to
spare. Lunch might be managed, but any thought of a later meal was out
of the question. "We'll start back at four-thirty," said Medora to
Peter. "Meanwhile"--to the college men--"the world is ours."
After lunch the enlarged party walked forth again. Mrs. Phillips had
old things to show to fresh eyes: she formed the new visitors into a
compact little group and let them see how good a guide she could be.
Cope and Carolyn strolled negligently--even unsystematically--behind.
Once or twice the personally conducted looked back.
"I hope she won't tell them again how I came to the rescue," said Cope.
"It makes a man feel too flat for words. Anybody might think, to hear
her go on, that I had saved you all from robbery and murder...."
31
Cope had the luck to get back to Churchton with little further in the
way of homage. He was careful with Carolyn; she had perhaps addressed
him in a sonnet, and she might go on and address him in an ode. He
thought he had done nothing to deserve the one, and he would do almost
anything to escape the other. She was a nice pleasant quiet girl; but
nice pleasant quiet girls were beginning to do such equivocal things in
poetical print!
Having returned to town by a method that put the minimum tax on his
powers, Cope was in shape, next day, for an hour on the faculty
tennis-courts. He played with no special skill or vigor, but he made a
pleasing picture in his flannels; and Carolyn, who happened to
pass--who passed by at about five in the afternoon, lingered for the
spectacle and thought of two or three lines to start a poem with.
"The thing has got to be done right," returned Lemoyne. "Feet are about
the first thing they notice."
Just who are those who enjoy the epicene on the stage? Not many women,
one prefers to think; and surely it arouses the impatience, if not
worse, of many men. Most amateur drama is based, perhaps, on the
attempted "escape": one likes to bolt from his own day, his own usual
costume, his own range of ideas, and even from his own sex. Endeavors
toward this last are most enjoyable--or least offensive--when they show
frank and patent inadequacy. It was Arthur Lemoyne's fortune--or
misfortune--to do his work all too well.
Mrs. Phillips found his performance as little to her taste as she had
anticipated. Carolyn Thorpe got as much enjoyment out of the gauche
carriage and rough voices of the "chorus girls" as she had expected,
but was not observed to warm toward "Annabella's" closest friend. The
Pearsons, back from their wedding trip, had seats near the big crimson
velvet curtain. Pearson himself openly luxuriated in the amusing
ineptitude of two or three beskirted acquaintances among the upper
classmen, but frowned at Lemoyne's light tenor tones and mincing ways.
Of course the right sort of fellow, even if he had to sing his solo in
the lightest of light tenors, would still, on lapsing into dialogue,
reinstate himself apologetically by using as rough and gruff a voice as
he could summon. Not so Lemoyne: he was doing a consistent piece of
"characterization," and he was feminine, even overfeminine, throughout.
Amy gave a nod of agreement. Yet why this critical zeal? There was but
one man to like, after all.
Basil Randolph met Cope in the back lobby at the close of the
performance. The dramatic season in the city itself had begun to
languish; besides that, Randolph, in order to maintain his place on the
edge of the life academical, always made it a point to remember the
Grayfriars each spring.
Foster might have expressed himself still more pungently if he had been
aware, as Cope was, of an episode which took place, behind the scenes,
at the close of the performance. Lemoyne's singing and dancing in the
last act had had a marked success: after all, people had come to enjoy
and to applaud. Following two or three recalls, a large sheaf of roses
had been passed over the footlights; for a close imitation of
professional procedure was held to give the advantage of strict
vraisemblance. This "tribute" Lemoyne took in character, with certain
graces, pirouettes and smiles. His success so mounted to his head (for
he was the one person in the case who approximated a professional
effect) that after he had retired he could not quiet down and leave his
part. He continued to act off-stage; and in his general state of
ebulliency he endeavored to bestow a measure of upwelling femininity
upon another performer who was in the dress of his own sex. This
downright fellow, in cutaway and silk hat, did not understand,--or at
least had no patience with a rôle carried too far. He brusquely cleared
himself of Lemoyne's arm with a good vigorous push. This effort not
only propelled Lemoyne against some scenery and left him, despite the
voluminous blond wig, with a bruise on his forehead; it immediately
pushed him out of his part, and it ended by pushing him out of the
organization and even out of the University.
When all this reached Cope, he felt a personal chagrin. Truly, the art
of human intercourse was an art that called for some care. Lemoyne's
slight wound left no trace after forty-eight hours--perhaps his
"notices" in "The Index" and "The Campus" had acted as a salve; but
certain sections of opinion remained unfriendly, and there was arising
a new atmosphere of distaste and disapproval.
The college authorities had not been satisfied, for some time, with his
clerical labors, and some of them thought that his stage
performance--an "exhibition" one of them termed it--called for reproof,
or more. They laid their heads together and Lemoyne and Cope were not
long in learning their decision. Lemoyne was pronounced a useless
element in one field, a discrepant element in another, a detriment in
both. His essentially slight connection with the real life of the
University came to be more fully recognized. Alma Mater, in fine, could
do without him, and meant to. Censure was the lot of the indignant boys
who officered the society, and who asked Lemoyne to withdraw; and
complete scission from the nourishing vine of Knowledge was his final
fate.
The two young men conferred. Again Basil Randolph was their hope.
Cope bent over him--paler, thinner, more solicitous. "I'll try it," he
said.
Cope once more approached Randolph, but Randolph shook his head. He had
no faith in Lemoyne, and he had done enough already against his own
interests and desires.
Lemoyne fluttered about to little effect for a few weeks, while Cope
was finishing up his thesis. Beyond an accustomed and desired
companionship, Lemoyne contributed nothing--was a drag, in truth. He
returned to Winnebago a fortnight before the convocation and the
conferring of degrees; and it was the understanding that, somehow, he
and Cope should share together a summer divided between Winnebago and
Freeford. Randolph was left to claim Cope's interest, if he could.
32
Medora Phillips took the same view. She let Carolyn Thorpe loose for a
week's spring vacation, and sent Cope word that she was alone in a
darkened, depopulated home. Amy married. Hortense banished. Carolyn
waved aside. With all such varying devotions removed, why should he not
look in on her loneliness, during these final days, for dinner or tea?
He was still "charming"--however difficult, however recalcitrant. And
he was soon to depart. And who could believe that the fall term would
bring his equal or his like?
Randolph, still taking his business easily, had suggestions for walks
and lunches; he had also free time to make his suggestions operative.
But Cope, though frequently seen in active movement on the campus and
through the town, gave little heed to either of his elderly friends. He
met them both, in High Street, on different occasions, and thanked and
smiled and promised--and kept away. He was doubtless absorbed in his
special work, in the details of the closing year. He may have thought
(as young men have been known to think) that, in accepting their
invitations, he had done enough for them already. He had shown his good
will on several occasions; let that suffice. Or he may have thought (as
young men have been found capable of thinking) not at all: other
concerns, more pressing and more contemporaneous, may have crowded them
out of his mind altogether.
"I don't feel that I've done so very much for him," said Randolph,
rather colorlessly.
"H'm, yes. I could have opened up avenues that would have made his year
here a very different thing. Perhaps he didn't realize what I could do.
And perhaps he found me too old."
"I go usually. I'll push him off from shore and waft him good-bye."
"Stay a few moments if you like. Forget the office a little longer.
I'll make some fresh."
"No."
He sat silent.
Medora fell silent in turn,--let the light clatter of the tea things
speak for her.
"Are you?"
She hesitated.
"Yes," she said.
"I should like to see Bertram Cope in cap and gown," he said.
"As a----?"
"I see."
Medora made a slight grimace. "Yes, we can notice." He the actor; they
the audience. "A farewell performance."
Cope looked somewhat spare, despite his voluminous gown. The trying
lights added little color to his face, and brought his cheek-bones into
undue prominence. But he took his sheepskin with a bow and a gesture
that extinguished several of his companions; and he faced the audience,
on descending from the stage, with a composed effect gained by
experience in the choir. The lustre in the ceiling lit up his yellow
hair and his blue eyes: "He is as charming as ever!" thought Medora
Phillips.
There was a recessional, and then the crowds of students flooded the
corridors and circulated under the fresh foliage of the campus.
Randolph and Medora Phillips passed out with the rest of the
assemblage. In the midst of one of the avenues of elms they noticed
Cope as the center of a little group: two plain, elderly people (his
parents, doubtless) and--and----
Medora Phillips looked twice. Yes, the other figure was Carolyn Thorpe,
offering congratulations. Carolyn had returned to her post and her work
the day before. "H'm," thought Medora, disposed to be miffed. Still,
Carolyn had, after all, the same right to attend as anyone else.
"I'm showing father and mother over the campus," he said, with an open
smile and a wave with his diploma, as he edged away.
The elders docilely took their cue, and moved away with him.
"They add nothing to him," pronounced Medora, as she looked back on the
retiring party.
"Did you expect them to?" he asked. "Charm, like guilt, is personal.
Anyhow, there seems to be no brother," he added.
"Well, come, Carolyn," said Medora, to her returned secretary, who was
looking after the party too; "let's start for home. Good afternoon,
Basil."
"What nice, good, pleasant, friendly people they are!" breathed Carolyn.
33
_COPE IN A FINAL VIEW_
Cope, after a few days, followed his parents back to Freeford. He may
have said good-bye to his landlady and to some of his associates in his
department; but he contrived no set adieux for the friends who had done
so much for him--or had tried to--through the past year. Basil Randolph
and Medora Phillips had their last view of him when, diploma in hand,
he led his parents away, over the campus.
"Oh, well," said Randolph resignedly, "we were less important to him
than we thought. Only a couple of negligible items among many. Entered
in his ledger--if we _were_ entered--and now faded away to a dim,
rusty, illegible scrawl...."
"Stop it, Basil! You make me feel old, antique, antediluvian. I don't
want to. I shan't let myself be pushed back and ignored. I'm going to
give Amy and George a rousing big dinner before long; and when the fall
term opens I shall entertain as never before. And if that young man
from the South turns up here during the summer to see Hortense, I shall
do a lot for them."
Hortense Dunton had long since returned, of course, from the Tennessee
and North Carolina mountains; but she ignored the convocation. One drop
of bitterness, if tasted again--even reminiscently--would have turned
everything to gall. Instead, she found a measure of sweetness in the
letters which followed on her return from that region. They were
addressed in a bold, dashing young hand, and bore the postmark
"Nashville." Hortense was inclined to let them lie conspicuously on the
front-hall table, for half an hour or so, before she took them up.
Little might be absolutely known about her passage with Cope; but there
the letters lay, for her aunt's eye and for Carolyn Thorpe's.
Carolyn prattled a little, not indiscreetly, about her meeting with the
Freeford family on the campus. As Basil Randolph himself had done
months before, she endeavored to construct a general environment for
them and to determine their place in the general social fabric. She
had, however, the advantage of having seen them; she was not called to
make an exiguous evocation from the void. She still held that they were
nice, good, pleasant, friendly people: if they had subordinated
themselves, docilely and automatically, to the prepotent social and
academic figures of the society about them, that in no wise detracted
from the favorable impression they had made on her.
"Just the right parents for Bertram," she said fondly, to herself. She
made, almost unconsciously, the allowance that is still generally made,
among Americans, for the difference between two generations: the elder,
of course, continues to provide a staid, sober, and somewhat primitive
background for the brilliancy of the younger. Her own people, if they
appeared in Churchton, might seem a bit simple and provincial too.
About the middle of July a letter lay on the front-hall table for
Carolyn. It was from Cope.
The letter was an affair of two small pages. "Yours very sincerely,
Bertram L. Cope" simply told "My dear Miss Thorpe" that he had been
spending three or four days in Winnebago, Wisconsin, and that he had
now returned home for a month of further study, having obtained a post
in an important university in the East, at a satisfactory stipend. A
supplementary line conveyed regards to Mrs. Phillips. And that was all.
Medora Phillips could not overlook Carolyn's general glow, nor the
sense of elevation she conveyed. Things became clearer still when
Carolyn passed on the scanty message which Cope had added at the end.
"Best regards to Mrs. Phillips"--there it was, so far as it went. And
Medora felt, along with Carolyn, that a slight mention was an immensity
of times greater than no mention at all. "Very kind, very thoughtful of
him, I'm sure," she said without irony.
Carolyn let her read the letter for herself. It was a brief, cool,
succinct thing, and not at all unsuited for general circulation. "Best
regards to Mrs. Phillips. Yours very sincerely, Bertram L. Cope," she
read again; then, like Carolyn, she retired for meditation.
Well, from its dozen or fifteen lines several things might fairly be
inferred. "Three or four days in Winnebago"--a scanty pattern for a
visit. Had three or four been enough? Had Lemoyne been found glum and
unpleasant? Had those months of close companionship brought about a
mutually diminished interest? Not a word as to Lemoyne's accompanying
him to Freeford, or joining him there later. On the contrary, a strong
implication that there would be sufficient to occupy him without the
company of Lemoyne or anybody else: evidences of an eye set solely on
the new opportunity in the East.
When, however, she touched on the matter with Basil Randolph she showed
more exactitude. Randolph had lingered late upstairs with Foster, and
he had been intercepted, on his way out, with an invitation to remain
to dinner. "Very well," he said. "Sing-Lo is not invariably inspired on
Monday evening. I shall be glad to stay."
He felt, in fact, the need of a little soothing. Foster had been taking
a farewell shot at Cope and had been rough and vindictive. He had heard
something of the antics of "Annabella's" partner and had magnified
characteristically the seriousness of the offense. "What hope for
him"--meaning Cope--"so long as he goes on liking and admiring that
fellow?"
"The sooner this one goes, the better," snapped Foster. "Have you heard
from that fellow at all?" he inquired.
"No."
"No."
"Good! Get back into harness; have 'hours' and all the rest of it. Best
thing in the world for you. The young care so much for us--the devil
they do!"
Her eyes roved the dim, cluttered room with studied mournfulness, and
she said, presently:
"Depopulation?"
"Yes; they're leaving it one by one. First, Amy. You remember Amy?"
"She married George and went away. You recall the occasion?"
"I think I was present."
She told him about the gallant young Southerner in Tennessee, and gave
a forecast of a probable pairing.
"Bertram Cope!"
"Cope," she repeated. If the boy were indeed beyond her own reach, she
would report his imminent capture by another with as much effect as she
could command.
"I don't say 'how' it stands. I don't say that it 'stands' at all. But
he has prospects and she has hopes."
Medora took the leap. "She will marry him, of course," she said
decidedly. "After his having jilted Amy----"
"And ignored me----You will let me use that mild word, 'ignored'?"
"After all that, who is there left in the house but Carolyn? Listen;
I'll tell you how it will be. She has answered his letter, of
course,--imagine whether or not she was prompt about it!--and he will
answer hers----"
"Not at once, perhaps; but soon: in the course of two or three weeks.
Then she will reply,--and there you have a correspondence in full
swing. Then, in the fall he will write her from his new post in the
East, and say: 'Dear Girl,--At last I can----,' and so on."
"You mean that you destine poor Carolyn for a man who is so apt at
jilting and trampling and ignoring?"
"Who else is there?" Medora continued to demand sturdily. "In October
they will be married----"
"I won't accept that!" cried Medora. "He will marry Carolyn, and I
shall do as much for her as I did for Amy, and as much as I expect to
do for Hortense."
"I see. The three matches made and the desolation of the house
complete."
"I scarcely think so," he returned, with slow candor. "I shouldn't care
to live in this house; and you----"
"I shall stay where I am," she declared. "Shall you stay where you
are?" she asked keenly.
"Perhaps not."
"I do. Confess that you, with all your outfit and all your goings-on,
never quite--never quite--succeeded in..."
Medora shrugged. "The young, at best, only tolerate us. We are but the
platform they dance on,--the ladder they climb by."
"After all, he was a 'charming' chap. Your own word, you know."
"Yet scarcely worth the to-do we made over him," said Medora, willing
to save her face.
Randolph shrugged in turn, and threw out his hands in a gesture which
she had never known him to employ before.
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