“It has been too much for you?”
“I am afraid so.”
It was Roger Upjohn who had asked
the question; it was Violet who answered. They
had withdrawn from a crowd of dancers to a balcony,
half-shaded, half open to the moon, a balcony
made, it would seem, for just such stolen interviews
between waltzes.
Now, as it happened, Roger’s
face was in the shadow, but Violet’s in the
full light. Very sweet it looked, very ethereal,
but also a little wan. He noticed this and impetuously
cried:
“You are pale; and your hand! see, how it trembles!”
Slowly withdrawing it from the rail
where it had rested, she sent one quick glance his
way and, in a low voice, said:
“I have not slept since that night.”
“Four days!” he murmured.
Then, after a moment of silence, “You bore yourself
so bravely at the time, I thought, or rather, I hoped,
that success had made you forget the horror.
I could not have slept myself, if I had known ”
“It is part of the price I pay,”
she broke in gently. “All good things have
to be paid for. But I see I realize
that you do not consider what I am doing good.
Though it helps other people has helped
you you wonder why, with all the advantages
I possess, I should meddle with matters so repugnant
to a woman’s natural instincts.”
Yes, he wondered. That was evident
from his silence. Seeing her as she stood there,
so quaintly pretty, so feminine in look and manner in
short, such a flower it was but natural
that he should marvel at the incongruity she had mentioned.
“It has a strange, odd look,”
she admitted, after a moment of troubled hesitation.
“The most considerate person cannot but regard
it as a display of egotism or of a most mercenary
spirit. The cheque you sent me for what I was
enabled to do for you in Massachusetts (the only one
I have ever received which I have been tempted to refuse)
shows to what extent you rated my help and my my
expectations. Had I been a poor girl struggling
for subsistence, this generosity would have warmed
my heart as a token of your desire to cut that struggle
short. But taken with your knowledge of my home
and its luxuries, it has often made me wonder what
you thought.”
“Shall I tell you?”
He had stepped forward at this question
and his countenance, hitherto concealed, became visible
in the moonlight. She no longer recognized it.
Transformed by feeling, it shone down upon her, instinct
with all that is finest and best in masculine nature.
Was she ready for this revelation of what she had
nevertheless dreamed of for many more nights than
four? She did not know, and instinctively drew
herself back till it was she who now stood in the
semi-obscurity made by the drooping vines. From
this retreat, she faltered forth a very tremulous No,
which in another moment was disavowed by a Yes so
faint it was little more than a murmur, followed by
a still fainter, Tell me.
But he did not seem in any haste to
obey, sweetly as her low-toned injunction must have
sounded in his ears. On the contrary, he hesitated
to speak, growing paler every minute as he sought to
catch a glimpse of her downcast face so tantalizingly
hidden from him. Did she recognize the nature
of the feelings which held him back, or was she simply
gathering up sufficient courage to plead her own cause?
Whatever her reason, it was she, not he, who presently
spoke saying as if no time had elapsed:
“But first, I feel obliged to
admit that it was money I wanted, that I had to have.
Not for myself. I lack nothing and could have
more if I wished. Father has never limited his
generosity in any matter affecting myself, but ”
She drew a deep breath and, coming out of the shadow,
lifted a face to him so changed from its usual expression
as to make him start. “I have a cause at
heart one which should appeal to my father
and does not; and for that purpose I have sacrificed
myself, in many ways, though though I have
not disliked my work up to this last attempt.
Not really. I want to be honest and so must admit
that much. I have even gloried (quietly and all
by myself, of course) over the solution of a mystery
which no one else seemed able to penetrate. I
am made that way. I have known it ever since but
that is a story all by itself. Some day I may
tell it to you, but not now.”
“No, not now.” The
emphasis sent the colour into her cheek but did not
relieve his pallor. “Miss Strange, I have
always felt, even in my worst days, that the man who
for selfish ends brought a woman under the shadow
of his own unhappy reputation was a man to be despised.
And I think so still, and yet and yet nothing
in the world but your own word or look can hold me
back now from telling you that I love you love
you notwithstanding my unworthy past, my scarring
memories, my all but blasted hopes. I do not
expect any response; you are young; you are beautiful;
you are gifted with every grace; but to speak, to
say over and over again, ‘I love you, I love
you!’ eases my heart and makes my future more
endurable. Oh, do not look at me like that unless unless ”
But the bright head did not fall,
nor the tender gaze falter; and driven out of himself,
Roger Upjohn was about to step passionately forward,
when, seized by fresh compunction, he hoarsely cried:
“It is not right. The balance
dips too much my way. You bring me everything.
I can give you nothing but what you already possess
abundance love, and money. Besides,
your father ”
She interrupted him with a glance
at once arch and earnest.
“I had a talk with Father this
morning. He came to my room, and and
it was very near being serious. Someone had told
him I was doing things on the sly which he had better
look into; and of course he asked questions and and
I answered them. He wasn’t pleased in
fact he was very displeased, I don’t
think we can blame him for that but we had
no open break for I love him dearly, for all my opposing
ways, and he saw that, and it helped, though he did
say after I had given my promise to stop where I was
and never to take up such work again, that ”
here she stole a shy look at the face bent so eagerly
towards her “that I had lost my social
status and need never hope now for the attentions of of well,
of such men as he admires and puts faith in. So
you see,” her dimples all showing, “that
I am not such a very good match for an Upjohn of Massachusetts,
even if he has a reputation to recover and an honourable
name to achieve. The scale hangs more evenly than
you think.”
“Violet!”
A mutual look, a moment of perfect
silence, then a low whisper, airy as the breath of
flowers rising from the garden below: “I
have never known what happiness was till this moment.
If you will take me with my story untold ”
“Take you! take you!”
The man’s whole yearning heart, the loss and
bitterness of years, the hope and promise of the future,
all spoke in that low, half-smothered exclamation.
Violet’s blushes faded under its fervency, and
only her spirit spoke, as leaning towards him, she
laid her two hands in his, and said with all a woman’s
earnestness:
“I do not forget little Roger,
or the father who I hope may have many more days before
him in which to bid good-night to the sea. Such
union as ours must be hallowed, because we have so
many persons to make happy besides ourselves.”
The evening before their marriage,
Violet put a dozen folded sheets of closely written
paper in his hand. They contained her story; let
us read it with him.
Dear Roger,
I could not have been more than seven
years old, when one night I woke up shivering, at
the sound of angry voices. A conversation which
no child should ever have heard, was going on in the
room where I lay. My father was talking to my
sister perhaps, you do not know that I have
a sister; few of my personal friends do, and
the terror she evinced I could well understand but
not his words nor the real cause of his displeasure.
There are times even yet when the
picture, forced upon my infantile consciousness at
that moment of first awakening, comes back to me with
all its original vividness. There was no light
in the room save such as the moon made; but that was
enough to reveal the passion burningly alive in either
face, as, bending towards each other, she in supplication
and he in a tempest of wrath which knew no bounds,
he uttered and she listened to what I now know to
have been a terrible arraignment.
I may have an interesting countenance;
you have told me so sometimes; but she she
was beautiful. My elder by ten years, she had
stood in my mother’s stead to me for almost
as long as I could remember, and as I saw her lovely
features contorted with pain and her hands extended
in a desperate plea to one who had never shown me
anything but love, my throat closed sharply and I
could not cry out though I wanted to, nor move head
or foot though I longed with all my heart to bury myself
in the pillows.
For the words I heard were terrifying,
little as I comprehended their full purport.
He had surprised her talking from her window to someone
down below, and after saying cruel things about that,
he shouted out: “You have disgraced me,
you have disgraced yourself, you have disgraced your
brother and your little sister. Was it not enough
that you should refuse to marry the good man I had
picked out for you, that you should stoop to this
low-down scoundrel this ”
I did not hear what else he called him, I was wondering
so to whom she had been stooping; I had never seen
her stoop except to tie my little shoes.
But when she cried out as she did
after an interval, “I love him! I love
him!” then I listened again, for she spoke as
though she were in dreadful pain, and I did not know
that loving made one ill and unhappy. “And
I am going to marry him,” I heard her add, standing
up, as she said it, very straight and tall.
Marry! I knew what that meant.
A long aisle in a church; women in white and big music
in the air behind. I had been flower-girl at a
wedding once and had not forgotten. We had had
ice cream and cake and
But my childish thoughts stopped short
at the answer she received and all the words which
followed words which burned their way into
my infantile brain and left scorched places in my
memory which will never be eradicated. He spoke
them spoke them all; she never answered
again after that once, and when he was gone did not
move for a long time and when she did it was to lie
down, stiff and straight, just as she had stood, on
her bed alongside mine.
I was frightened; so frightened, my
little brass bed rattled under me. I wonder she
did not hear it. But she heard nothing; and after
awhile she was so still I fell asleep. But I
woke again. Something hot had fallen on my cheek.
I put up my hand to brush it away and did not know
even when I felt my fingers wet that it was a tear
from my sister-mother’s eye.
For she was kneeling then; kneeling
close beside me and her arm was over my small body;
and the bed was shaking again but not this time with
my tremors only. And I was sorry and cried too
until I dropped off to sleep again with her arm still
passionately embracing me.
In the morning, she was gone.
It must have been that very afternoon
that Father came in where Arthur and I were trying
to play, trying, but not quite succeeding,
for I had been telling Arthur, for whom I had a great
respect in those days, what had happened the night
before, and we had been wondering in our childish
way if there would be a wedding after all, and a church
full of people, and flowers, and kissing, and lots
of good things to eat, and Arthur had said No, it
was too expensive; that that was why Father was so
angry; and comforted by the assertion, I was taking
up my doll again, when the door opened and Father
stepped in.
It was a great event any
visit from him to the nursery and we both
dropped our toys and stood staring, not knowing whether
he was going to be nice and kind as he sometimes was,
or scold us as I had heard him scold our beautiful
sister.
Arthur showed at once what he thought,
for without the least hesitation he took the one step
which placed him in front of me, where he stood waiting
with his two little fists hanging straight at his sides
but manfully clenched in full readiness for attack.
That this display of pigmy chivalry was not quite
without its warrant is evident to me now, for Father
did not look like himself or act like himself any more
than he had the night before.
However, we had no cause for fear.
Having no suspicion of my having been awake during
his terrible interview with Theresa, he saw only two
lonely and forsaken children, interrupted in their
play.
Can I remember what he said to us?
Not exactly, though Arthur and I often went over it
choked whispers in some secret nook of the dreary old
house; but his meaning that we took in well
enough. Theresa had left us. She would never
come back. We were not to look out of the window
for her, or run to the door when the bell rang.
Our mother had left us too, a long time ago, and she
lay in the cemetery where we sometimes carried flowers.
Theresa was not in the cemetery, but we must think
of her as there; though not as if she had any need
of flowers. Having said this, he looked at us
quietly for a minute. Arthur was trying very hard
not to cry, but I was sobbing like the lost child
I was, with my cheek against the floor where I had
thrown myself when he said that awful thing about
the cemetery. She there! my sister-mother there!
I think he felt a little sorry for me; for he half
stooped as if to lift me up. But he straightened
again and said very sternly:
“Now, children, listen to me.
When God takes people to heaven and leaves us only
their cold, dead bodies we carry flowers to their graves
and talk about them some if not very much. But
when people die because they love dark ways better
than light, then we do not remember them with gifts
and we do not talk about them. Your sister’s
name has been spoken for the last time in this house.
You, Arthur, are old enough to know what I mean when
I say that I will never listen to another word about
her from either you or Violet as long as you and I
live. She is gone and nothing that is mine shall
she ever touch again.
“You hear me, Arthur; you hear
me, Violet. Heed me, or you go too.”
His aspect was terrible, so was his
purpose; much more terrible than we realized at the
time with our limited understanding and experience.
Later, we came to know the full meaning of this black
drop which had been infused into our lives. When
we saw every picture of her destroyed which had been
in the house; her name cut out from the leaves of books;
the little tokens she had given us surreptitiously
taken away, till not a vestige of her once beloved
presence remained, we began to realize that we had
indeed lost her.
But children as young as we were then
do not long retain the poignancy of their first griefs.
Gradually my memories of that awful night ceased to
disturb my dreams and I was sixteen before they were
again recalled to me with any vividness, and then
it was by accident. I had been strolling through
a picture gallery and had stopped short to study more
particularly one which had especially taken my fancy.
There were two ladies sitting on a bench behind me
and one of them was evidently very deaf, for their
talk was loud, though I am sure they did not mean for
me to hear, for they were discussing my family.
That is, one of them had said:
“That’s Violet Strange.
She will never be the beauty her sister was; but perhaps
that’s not to be deplored. Theresa made
a great mess of it.”
“That’s true. I hear
that she and the Signor have been seen lately here
in town. In poverty, of course. He hadn’t
even as much go in him as the ordinary singing-master.”
I suppose I should have hurried away,
and left this barbed arrow to rankle where it fell.
But I could not. I had never learned a word of
Theresa’s fate and that word poverty, proving
that she was alive and suffering, held me to my place
to hear what more they might say of her who for years
had been for me an indistinct figure bathed in cruel
moonlight.
“I have never approved of Peter
Strange’s conduct at that time,” one of
the voices now went on. “He didn’t
handle her right. She had a lovely disposition
and would have listened to him had he been more gentle
with her. But it isn’t in him. I hope
this one ”
I didn’t hear the end of that.
I had no interest in anything they might say about
myself. It was of her I wanted to hear, of her.
Weren’t they going to say anything more about
my poor sister? Yes; it was a topic which interested
both and presently I heard:
“He’ll never do anything
for her, no matter what happens; I’ve heard him
say so. And Laura has vowed the same.” (Laura
is our aunt.) “Besides, Theresa has a pride
of her own quite equal to her father’s.
She wouldn’t take anything from him now.
She’d rather struggle on. I’m told I
don’t know how true it is that she’s
working in a department store; one of the Sixth Avenue
ones. Oh, there’s Mrs. Vandegraff!
Don’t you want to speak to her?”
They moved off, leaving me still gazing
with unseeing eyes at the picture before which I stood
planted, and saying over and over in monotonous iteration,
“One of the department stores in Sixth Avenue!
One of the department stores in Sixth Avenue!”
Which department store?
I meant to find out.
I do not know whether up till then
I had had the least consciousness of possessing what
is called the detective instinct. But, at the
prospect of this quest, so much like that of the proverbial
needle in a haystack, as I did not even know my sister’s
married name and something within me forbade my asking
it, I experienced an odd sense of elation followed
by a certainty of success which in five minutes changed
me from an irresponsible girl to a woman with a deliberate
purpose in life.
I am not going to write down here
all the details of that search. Some day I may
relate them to you, but not now. I looked first
for a beautiful woman, for the straight, slim, and
exquisite creature I remembered. I did not find
her. Then I tried another course. Her figure
might have changed in the ten years which had elapsed;
so might her expression. I would look for a woman
with beautiful dark eyes; time could not have altered
them. I had forgotten the effect of constant
weeping. And I saw many eyes, but not hers; not
the ones I had seen smiling upon me as I lay in my
crib before the days I was lifted to the dignity of
the little brass bed. So I gave that up too and
listened to the inner voice which said, “You
must wait for her to recognize you. You can never
hope to recognize her.” And it was by following
this plan that I found her. I had arranged to
have my name spoken aloud at every counter where I
bargained; and oh, the bargains I sought, and the
garments I had tried on! But I made little progress
until one day, after my name had been uttered a little
louder than usual I saw a woman turn from rearranging
gowns on a hanger, and give me one look.
I uttered a low cry and sprang impetuously,
forward. Instantly she turned her back and went
on hanging, or trying to hang up, gowns on the rack
before her. Had I been mistaken? She was
not the sister of my dreams, but there was something
fine in her outline; something distinguished in the
way she carried her head which
Next minute my last doubt fled!
She had fallen her length on the floor and lay with
her face buried in her hands in a dead faint.
Oh, Roger, Roger, Roger! I had
that dear head on my breast in a moment. I talked
to her, I whispered prayers in her unconscious ear.
I did everything I should not have done till they
all thought me demented. When she came to, as
she did under other ministrations than mine, I was
for carrying her off in my limousine. But she
shook her head with a gesture of such disapproval,
that I realized I could not do that. The limousine
was my father’s, and nothing of his was ever
to be used for her again. I would call a cab;
but she told me that she had not the money to pay
for it and she would not take mine. Carfare she
had; five cents would take her home. I need not
worry.
She smiled as she said this and for
an instant I saw my dream-sister again in this weary
half-disheartened woman. But the smile was a
fleeting one, for this was to be her last day in the
store; she had no talent as a saleswoman and was merely
working out her week.
I felt my heart sink heavily at this,
for the evidences of poverty were plainly to be seen
in her clothes and the thinness of her face and figure.
How could I help? What could I do? I took
her to a restaurant for food and talk, and before
she would order, she looked into her purse, with the
result that we had only a little toast and tea.
It was all she could afford and I, with a hundred
dollars in bills at that moment in my bag, could not
offer her anything more though she was needing nourishment
and dishes piled with savoury meats were going by us
every moment.
I think, if she had let me, I would
have dared my father’s displeasure and been
disobedient to his wishes by giving her one wholesome
meal. But she was as resolute of mind as he,
and, as she said afterwards, had chosen her course
in life and must abide by it. My love she would
accept. It took nothing from Father and gave her
what her heart was pining for had pined
for for years. But nothing more not
another thing more. She would not even let me
go home with her; and I knew why when her eyes fell
at the searching look I gave her. Something would
turn up, and when her husband’s health was better
and she had found another position she would send
me her address and then I could come and see her.
As we walked out of the restaurant we ran against a
gentleman I knew. He stopped me for a passing
word and in that minute she disappeared. I did
not try to follow her. I could get her street
and number from the store where she had worked.
But when I had done this and embraced
the first opportunity which offered to visit her,
I found that she had moved away in the interim, leaving
everything behind in payment of her rent, except such
small things as she and her husband could carry.
This was discouraging as it left me without any clue
by which to follow them. But I was determined
not to yield to her desire for concealment in the difficult
and disheartening task I now saw before me.
Seeking advice from the man who has
since become my employer, I entered upon this second
search with a quiet resolution which admitted of no
defeat. It took me six months, but I finally found
her, and satisfied with knowing where she was, desisted
from rushing in upon her, till I had caught one glimpse
of her husband whom, in the last six months, I had
heard described but had never seen. To understand
her, it was perhaps necessary to understand him, and
if I could not hope to do this offhand, I could not
fail to get some idea of the man from even the most
casual look.
He was, as I soon learned, the fetcher
and carrier of the small ménage; and the day
came when I met him face to face in the street where
they lived. Did he disappoint me; or did I see
something in his appearance to justify her desertion
of her father’s home and her present life of
poverty? If I say Yes to the first question, I
must also say it to the last. If handsome once,
he was not handsome now; but with a personality such
as his, this did not matter. He had that better
thing that greatest gift of the gods charm.
It was in his bearing, his movement, the regard of
his weary eye; more than that it was in his very nature
or it would have vanished long ago under disappointment
and privation.
But that was all there was to the
man, a golden net in which my sister’s
youthful fancy had been caught and no doubt held meshed
to this very day. I felt less like blaming her
for her folly, after that instant’s view of
him as we passed each other in the street. But,
as I took time to think, I found myself growing sorrier
and sorrier for her and yet, in a way, gladder and
gladder, for the man was a physical wreck and would
soon pass out of her life leaving her to my love and
possibly to our father’s forgiveness.
But I did not know Theresa. After
her husband’s death, which occurred very soon,
she let me come to her and we had a long talk Shall
I ever forget it or the sight of her beauty in that
sordid room? For, account for it as you will,
the loveliness which had fled under her sense of complete
isolation had slowly regained its own with the recognition
that she still had a place in the heart of her little
sister. Not even the sorrow she felt for the
loss of her suffering husband and she did
mourn him; this I am glad to say could
more than temporarily stay this. Six months of
ease and wholesome food would make her I
hardly dared to think what. For I knew, without
asking her, or she telling me, that she would accept
neither; that she was as determined now, as ever that
nothing which came directly or indirectly from Father
should go to the rebuilding of her life. That
she intended to start anew and work her way up to
a place where I should be glad to see her she did say.
But nothing more. She was still the sister-mother,
loving, but sufficient to herself, though she had
but ten dollars left in the world, as she showed me
with a smile that made her beautiful as an angel.
I can see that shabby little purse
yet with its one poor greasy bill; a sum
to her but to me the price of a luncheon or a gift
of flowers. How I longed, as I looked at it to
tear every jewel from my poor, bedecked body and fling
them one and all into her lap. I had worn them
in profusion, though carefully hidden under my coat,
in the hope that she would accept one of them at least,
But she refused all, even such as had been gifts of
friends and schoolmates, only humouring me this far,
that she let me hang them for a few minutes about
her neck and in her hair and then pull them all off
again. But this one vision of her in the splendour
she was born to comforted me. Henceforth in wearing
them it would be of her and not of myself I should
think.
Well, I had to leave her and go home
to my French and Italian lessons, my music-masters
and all the luxuries of our father’s house.
Should I ever see her again? I did not know;
she had not promised. I could not go often into
the quarter where she lived, without rousing suspicion;
and she had bidden me not to come again for a month.
So I waited, half fearing she would flit again before
the month was up. But she did not. She was
still there when
But I am going too fast. The
meeting I was about to mention was a very memorable
one to me, and I must describe it from the beginning.
I had ridden in my own car as near as I dared to the
street where she lived; the rest of the way I went
on foot with one of the servants a new
one following close behind me. I was
not exactly afraid, but the actions of some of the
people I had encountered at my former visit warned
me to be a little careful for my father’s sake
if not for my own. Her room she had
but one was high up in a triangular court
it was no pleasure to enter. But love and loyalty
heed nothing but the object sought, and I was hunting
about for the dark doorway which opened upon the staircase
leading to her room when and this was the
great moment of my life a sudden stream
of melody floated down into that noisome court, which
from its clearness, its accuracy, its richness, and
its feeling startled me as I had never before been
startled even by the first notes of the world’s
greatest singers. What a voice for a place like
this! What a voice for any place! Whose
could it be? With a start, I stopped short, in
the middle of that court, heedless of the crowd of
pushing, shouting children who at once gathered about
me. I had been struck by an old recollection.
My sister used to sing. I remembered where her
piano had stood in the great drawing-room. It
had been carted away during those dreadful weeks and
her music all burned; but the vision of her graceful
figure bending over the keyboard was one not to be
forgotten even by a thoughtless child. Could
it be oh, heaven! if this voice were hers!
Her future was certain; she had but to sing.
In a transport of hope I rushed for
the dim entrance the children had pointed out and
flew up to her room. As I reached it, I heard
a trill as perfect as Tetrazzini’s. The
singer was Theresa; there could be no more doubt.
Theresa! exercising a grand voice as only a great artist
would or could.
The joy of it made me almost faint.
I leaned against her door and sobbed. Then when
I thought I could speak quite calmly, I went in.
Roger, you must understand me now, my
desire for money and the means I have taken to obtain
it. My sister had the makings of a prima-donna.
Her husband, of whose ability I had formed so low
an estimate, had trained her with consummate skill
and judgment. All she needed was a year with
some great maestro in the foreign atmosphere of art.
But this meant money not hundreds but thousands,
and the one sure source to which we might rightfully
look for any such amount was effectually closed to
us. It is true we had relatives an
aunt on our mother’s side, and I mentioned her
to Theresa. But she would not listen to the suggestion.
She would take nothing from any one whom she would
find it hard to face in case of failure. Love
must go with an advance involving so much risk; love
deep enough and strong enough to feel no loss save
that of a defeated hope. In short, to be acceptable,
the money must come from me, and as this was manifestly
impossible, she considered the matter closed and began
to talk of a position she had been offered in some
choir. I let her talk, listening and not listening;
for the idea had come to me that if in some way I
could earn money, she might be induced to take it.
Finally, I asked her. She laughed, letting her
kisses answer me. But I did not laugh. If
she had capabilities in one way, I had them in another.
I went home to think.
Two weeks later, I began, in a very
quiet way to do certain work for the man who had helped
me in my second search for Theresa. The money
I have earned has been immense; since it was troubles
of the rich I was given to settle, and I was almost
always successful. Every cent has gone to her.
She has been in Europe for a year and last week she
made her debut. You read about it in the papers,
but neither you nor any one else in this country but
myself knew that under the name she chosen to assume,
Theresa Strange, the long forgotten beauty, has recovered
that place in the world, to which her love and genius
entitle her.
This is my story and hers. From
now on, you are the third in the secret. Some
day, my father will be the fourth. I think then,
a new dawn of love will arise for us all, which will
stay the whitening of his dear head for
I believe in him after all. Yesterday when he
passed the wall where her picture once hung no
other has ever hung there I saw him stop
and look up, and, Roger, when he passed me a minute
later, there was a tear in his hard eye.