A RESURRECTION
It might have been a week or so later
that Stella made a discovery which profoundly affected
the whole current of her thought. The long twilight
was just beginning. She was curled on the living-room
floor, playing with the baby. Fyfe and Charlie
Benton sat by a window, smoking, conversing, as they
frequently did, upon certain phases of the timber
industry. A draft from an open window fluttered
some sheet music down off the piano rack, and Stella
rescued it from Jack Junior’s tiny, clawing
hands. Some of the Abbeys had been there the evening
before. One bit of music was a song Linda had
tried to sing and given up because it soared above
her vocal range. Stella rose to put up the music.
Without any premeditated idea of playing, she sat
down at the piano and began to run over the accompaniment.
She could play passably.
“That doesn’t seem so
very hard,” she thought aloud. Benton turned
at sound of her words.
“Say, did you never get any
part of your voice back, Stell?” he asked.
“I never hear you try to sing.”
“No,” she answered.
“I tried and tried long after you left home,
but it was always the same old story. I haven’t
sung a note in five years.”
“Linda fell down hard on that
song last night,” he went on. “There
was a time when that wouldn’t have been a starter
for you, eh? Did you know Stella used to warble
like a prima donna, Jack?”
Fyfe shook his head.
“Fact. The governor spent
a pot of money cultivating her voice. It was
some voice, too. She
He broke off to listen. Stella
was humming the words of the song, her fingers picking
at the melody instead of the accompaniment.
“Why, you can,” Benton cried.
“Can what?” She turned on the stool.
“Sing, of course. You got
that high trill that Linda had to screech through.
You got it perfectly, without effort.”
“I didn’t,” she returned. “Why,
I wasn’t singing, just humming it over.”
“You let out a link or two on
those high notes just the same, whether you knew you
were doing it or not,” her brother returned impatiently.
“Go on. Turn yourself loose. Sing that
song.”
“Oh, I couldn’t,”
Stella said ruefully. “I haven’t tried
for so long. It’s no use. My voice
always cracks, and I want to cry.”
“Crack fiddlesticks!”
Benton retorted. “I know what it used to
be. Believe me, it sounded natural, even if you
were just lilting. Here.”
He came over to the piano and playfully
edged her off the stool.
“I’m pretty rusty,”
he said. “But I can fake what I can’t
play of this. It’s simple enough.
You stand up there and sing.”
She only stood looking at him.
“Go on,” he commanded.
“I believe you can sing anything. You have
to show me, if you can’t.”
Stella fingered the sheets reluctantly.
Then she drew a deep breath and began.
It was not a difficult selection,
merely a bit from a current light opera, with a closing
passage that ranged a trifle too high for the ordinary
untrained voice to take with ease. Stella sang
it effortlessly, the last high, trilling notes pouring
out as sweet and clear as the carol of a lark.
Benton struck the closing chord and looked up at her.
Fyfe leaned forward in his chair. Jack Junior,
among his pillows on the floor, waved his arms, kicking
and gurgling.
“You did pretty well on that,”
Charlie remarked complacently. “Now sing
something. Got any of your old pieces?”
“I wonder if I could?”
Stella murmured. “I’m almost afraid
to try.”
She hurried away to some outlying
part of the house, reappearing in a few minutes with
a dog-eared bundle of sheets in her hand. From
among these she selected three and set them on the
rack.
Benton whistled when he glanced over the music.
“The Siren Song,” he grunted.
“What is it? something new? Lord, look at
the scale. Looks like one of those screaming arias
from the ’Flying Dutchman.’ Some
stunt.”
“Marchand composed it for the
express purpose of trying out voices,” Stella
said. “It is a stunt.”
“You’ll have to play your
own accompaniment,” Charlie grinned. “That’s
too much for me.”
“Oh, just so you give me a little
support here and there,” Stella told him.
“I can’t sing sitting on a piano stool.”
Benton made a face at the music and struck the keys.
It seemed to Stella nothing short
of a miracle. She had been mute so long.
She had almost forgotten what a tragedy losing her
voice had been. And to find it again, to hear
it ring like a trumpet. It did! It was too
big for the room. She felt herself caught up in
a triumphant ecstasy as she sang. She found herself
blinking as the last note died away. Her brother
twisted about on the piano stool, fumbling for a cigarette.
“And still they say they can’t
come back,” he remarked at last. “Why,
you’re better than you ever were, Stella.
You’ve got the old sweetness and flexibility
that dad used to rave about. But your voice is
bigger, somehow different. It gets under a man’s
skin.”
She picked up the baby from the floor,
began to play with him. She didn’t want
to talk. She wanted to think, to gloat over and
hug to herself this miracle of her restored voice.
She was very quiet, very much absorbed in her own
reflections until it was time very shortly to
put Jack Junior in his bed. That was a function
she made wholly her own. The nurse might greet
his waking whimper in the morning and minister to
his wants throughout the day, but Stella “tucked
him in” his crib every night. And after
the blue eyes were closed, she sat there, very still,
thinking. In a detached way she was conscious
of hearing Charlie leave.
Later, when she was sitting beside
her dressing table brushing her hair, Fyfe came in.
He perched himself on the foot rail of the bed, looking
silently at her. She had long grown used to that.
It was a familiar trick of his.
“How did it happen that you’ve
never tried your voice lately?” he asked after
a time.
“I gave it up long ago,”
she said. “Didn’t I ever tell you
that I used to sing and lost my voice?”
“No,” he answered.
“Charlie did just now. You rather took my
breath away. It’s wonderful. You’d
be a sensation in opera.”
“I might have been,” she
corrected. “That was one of my little dreams.
You don’t know what a grief it was to me when
I got over that throat trouble and found I couldn’t
sing. I used to try and try and my
voice would break every time. I lost all heart
to try after a while. That was when I wanted
to take up nursing, and they wouldn’t let me.
I haven’t thought about singing for an age.
I’ve crooned lullabies to Jacky without remembering
that I once had volume enough to drown out an accompanist.
Dad was awfully proud of my voice.”
“You’ve reason to be proud
of it now,” Fyfe said slowly. “It’s
a voice in ten thousand. What are going to do
with it?”
Stella drew the brush mechanically
through her heavy hair. She had been asking herself
that. What could she do? A long road and
a hard one lay ahead of her or any other woman who
essayed to make her voice the basis of a career.
Over and above that she was not free to seek such a
career. Fyfe himself knew that, and it irritated
her that he should ask such a question. She swung
about on him.
“Nothing,” she said a
trifle tartly. “How can I? Granting
that my voice is worth the trouble, would you like
me to go and study in the East or abroad? Would
you be willing to bear the expense of such an undertaking?
To have me leave Jack to nursemaids and you to your
logs?”
“So that in the fullness of
time I might secure a little reflected glory as the
husband of Madame Fyfe, the famous soprano,”
he replied slowly. “Well, I can’t
say that’s a particularly pleasing prospect.”
“Then why ask me what I’m
going to do with it?” she flung back impatiently.
“It’ll be an asset like my looks and and
She dropped her face in her hands,
choking back an involuntary sob. Fyfe crossed
the room at a bound, put his arms around her.
“Stella, Stella!” he cried sharply.
“Don’t be a fool.”
“D don’t be
cross, Jack,” she whispered. “Please.
I’m sorry. I simply can’t help it.
You don’t understand.”
“Oh, don’t I?” he
said savagely. “I understand too well; that’s
the devil of it. But I suppose that’s a
woman’s way, to feed her soul with
illusions, and let the realities go hang. Look
here.”
He caught her by the shoulders and
pulled her to her feet, facing him. There was
a fire in his eye, a hard shutting together of his
lips that frightened her a little.
“Look here,” he said roughly.
“Take a brace, Stella. Do you realize what
sort of a state of mind you’re drifting into?
You married me under more or less compulsion, compulsion
of circumstances, and gradually you’re
beginning to get dissatisfied, to pity yourself.
You’ll precipitate things you maybe don’t
dream of now, if you keep on. Damn it, I didn’t
create the circumstances. I only showed you a
way out. You took it. It satisfied you for
a while; you can’t deny it did. But it doesn’t
any more. You’re nursing a lot of illusions,
Stella, that are going to make your life full of misery.”
“I’m not,” she sobbed.
“It’s because I haven’t any illusions
that that Oh, what’s the
use of talking, Jack? I’m not complaining.
I don’t even know what gave me this black mood,
just now. I suppose that queer miracle of my
voice coming back upset me. I feel well,
as if I were a different person, somehow; as if I
had forfeited any right to have it. Oh, it’s
silly, you’ll say. But it’s there.
I can’t help my feeling or my lack
of it.”
Fyfe’s face whitened a little.
His hands dropped from her shoulders.
“Now you’re talking to
the point,” he said quietly. “Especially
that last. We’ve been married some little
time now, and if anything, we’re farther apart
in the essentials of mating than we were at the beginning.
You’ve committed yourself to an undertaking,
yet more and more you encourage yourself to wish for
the moon. If you don’t stop dreaming and
try real living, don’t you see a lot of trouble
ahead for yourself? It’s simple. You’re
slowly hardening yourself against me, beginning to
resent my being a factor in your life. It’s
only a matter of time, if you keep on, until your
emotions center about some other man.”
“Why do you talk like that?”
she said bitterly. “Do you think I’ve
got neither pride nor self-respect?”
“Yes. Both a-plenty,”
he answered. “But you’re a woman,
with a rather complex nature even for your sex.
If your heart and your head ever clash over anything
like that, you’ll be in perfect hell until one
or the other gets the upper hand. You’re
a thoroughbred, and high-strung as thoroughbreds are.
It takes something besides three meals a day and plenty
of good clothes to complete your existence. If
I can’t make it complete, some other man will
make you think he can. Why don’t you try?
Haven’t I got any possibilities as a lover?
Can’t you throw a little halo of romance about
me, for your own sake if not for mine?”
He drew her up close to him, stroking
tenderly the glossy brown hair that flowed about her
shoulders.
“Try it, Stella,” he whispered
passionately. “Try wanting to like me,
for a change. I can’t make love by myself.
Shake off that infernal apathy that’s taking
possession of you where I’m concerned. If
you can’t love me, for God’s sake fight
with me. Do something!”