FREE AS THE WIND
Stella sat watching the gray lines
of rain beat down on the asphalt, the muddy rivulets
that streamed along the gutter. A forlorn sighing
of wind in the bare boughs of a gaunt elm that stood
before her window reminded her achingly of the wind
drone among the tall firs.
A ghastly two weeks had intervened
since Jack Junior’s little life blinked out.
There had been wild moments when she wished she could
keep him company on that journey into the unknown.
But grief seldom kills. Sometimes it hardens.
Always it works a change, a greater or less revamping
of the spirit. It was so with Stella Fyfe, although
she was not keenly aware of any forthright metamorphosis.
She was, for the present, too actively involved in
material changes.
The storm and stress of that period
between her yielding to the lure of Monohan’s
personality and the burial of her boy had sapped her
of all emotional reaction. When they had performed
the last melancholy service for him and went back
to the bungalow at Cougar Point, she was as physically
exhausted, as near the limit of numbed endurance in
mind and body as it is possible for a young and healthy
woman to become. And when a measure of her natural
vitality re-asserted itself, she laid her course.
She could no more abide the place where she was than
a pardoned convict can abide the prison that has restrained
him. It was empty now of everything that made
life tolerable, the hushed rooms a constant reminder
of her loss. She would catch herself listening
for that baby voice, for those pattering footsteps,
and realize with a sickening pang that she would never
hear them again.
The snapping of that last link served
to deepen and widen the gulf between her and Fyfe.
He went about his business grave and preoccupied.
They seldom talked together. She knew that his
boy had meant a lot to him; but he had his work.
He did not have to sit with folded hands and think
until thought drove him into the bogs of melancholy.
And so the break came. With desperate
abruptness Stella told him that she could not stay,
that feeling as she did, she despised herself for
unwilling acceptance of everything where she could
give nothing in return, that the original mistake
of their marriage would never be rectified by a perpetuation
of that mistake.
“What’s the use, Jack?”
she finished. “You and I are so made that
we can’t be neutral. We’ve got to
be thoroughly in accord, or we have to part.
There’s no chance for us to get back to the old
way of living. I don’t want to; I can’t.
I could never be complaisant and agreeable again.
We might as well come to a full stop, and each go his
own way.”
She had braced herself for a clash
of wills. There was none. Fyfe listened
to her, looked at her long and earnestly, and in the
end made a quick, impatient gesture with his hands.
“Your life’s your own
to make what you please of, now that the kid’s
no longer a factor,” he said quietly. “What
do you want to do? Have you made any plans?”
“I have to live, naturally,”
she replied. “Since I’ve got my voice
back, I feel sure I can turn that to account.
I should like to go to Seattle first and look around.
It can be supposed I have gone visiting, until one
or the other of us takes a decisive legal step.”
“That’s simple enough,”
he returned, after a minute’s reflection.
“Well, if it has to be, for God’s sake
let’s get it over with.”
And now it was over with. Fyfe
remarked once that with them luckily it was not a
question of money. But for Stella it was indeed
an economic problem. When she left Roaring Lake,
her private account contained over two thousand dollars.
Her last act in Vancouver was to re-deposit that to
her husband’s credit. Only so did she feel
that she could go free of all obligation, clean-handed,
without stultifying herself in her own eyes.
She had treasured as a keepsake the only money she
had ever earned in her life, her brother’s check
for two hundred and seventy dollars, the wages of
that sordid period in the cookhouse. She had it
now. Two hundred and seventy dollars capital.
She hadn’t sold herself for that. She had
given honest value, double and treble, in the sweat
of her brow. She was here now, in a five-dollar-a-week
housekeeping room, foot-loose, free as the wind.
That was Fyfe’s last word to her. He had
come with her to Seattle and waited patiently at a
hotel until she found a place to live. Then he
had gone away without protest.
“Well, Stella,” he had
said, “I guess this is the end of our experiment.
In six months, under the State law, you
can be legally free by a technicality. So far
as I’m concerned, you’re free as the wind
right now. Good luck to you.”
He turned away with a smile on his
lips, a smile that his eyes belied, and she watched
him walk to the corner through the same sort of driving
rain that now pelted in gray lines against her window.
She shook herself impatiently out
of that retrospect. It was done. Life, as
her brother had prophesied, was no kid-glove affair.
The future was her chief concern now, not the past.
Yet that immediate past, bits of it, would now and
then blaze vividly before her mental vision. The
only defense against that lay in action, in something
to occupy her mind and hands. If that motive,
the desire to shun mental reflexes that brought pain,
were not sufficient, there was the equally potent necessity
to earn her bread. Never again would she be any
man’s dependent, a pampered doll, a parasite
trading on her sex. They were hard names she called
herself.
Meantime she had not been idle; neither
had she come to Seattle on a blind impulse. She
knew of a singing teacher there whose reputation was
more than local, a vocal authority whose word carried
weight far beyond Puget Sound. First she meant
to see him, get an impartial estimate of the value
of her voice, of the training she would need.
Through him she hoped to get in touch with some outlet
for the only talent she possessed. And she had
received more encouragement than she dared hope.
He listened to her sing, then tested the range and
flexibility of her voice.
“Amazing,” he said frankly.
“You have a rare natural endowment. If you
have the determination and the sense of dramatic values
that musical discipline will give you, you should
go far. You should find your place in opera.”
“That’s my ambition,”
Stella answered. “But that requires time
and training. And that means money. I have
to earn it.”
The upshot of that conversation was
an appointment to meet the manager of a photoplay
house, who wanted a singer. Stella looked at her
watch now, and rose to go. Money, always money,
if one wanted to get anywhere, she reflected cynically.
No wonder men struggled desperately for that token
of power.
She reached the Charteris Theater,
and a doorman gave her access to the dim interior.
There was a light in the operator’s cage high
at the rear, another shaded glow at the piano, where
a young man with hair brushed sleekly back chewed
gum incessantly while he practiced picture accompaniments.
The place looked desolate, with its empty seats, its
bald stage front with the empty picture screen.
Stella sat down to wait for the manager. He came
in a few minutes; his manner was very curt, business-like.
He wanted her to sing a popular song, a bit from a
Verdi opera, Gounod’s Ave Maria, so that he
could get a line on what she could do. He appeared
to be a pessimist in regard to singers.
“Take the stage right there,”
he instructed. “Just as if the spot was
on you. Now then.”
It wasn’t a heartening process
to stand there facing the gum-chewing pianist, and
the manager’s cigar glowing redly five rows back,
and the silent emptinesses beyond, much
like singing into the mouth of a gloomy cave.
It was more or less a critical moment for Stella.
But she was keenly aware that she had to make good
in a small way before she could grasp the greater
opportunity, so she did her best, and her best was
no mediocre performance. She had never sung in
a place designed to show off or to show
up a singer’s quality. She was
even a bit astonished herself.
She elected to sing the Ave Maria
first. Her voice went pealing to the domed ceiling
as sweet as a silver bell, resonant as a trumpet.
When the last note died away, there was a momentary
silence. Then the accompanist looked up at her,
frankly admiring.
“You’re some warbler,”
he said emphatically, “believe me.”
Behind him the manager’s cigar
lost its glow. He remained silent. The pianist
struck up “Let’s Murder Care,” a
rollicking trifle from a Broadway hit. Last of
all he thumped, more or less successfully, through
the accompaniment to an aria that had in it vocal gymnastics
as well as melody.
“Come up to the office, Mrs.
Fyfe,” Howard said, with a singular change from
his first manner.
“I can give you an indefinite
engagement at thirty a week,” he made a blunt
offer. “You can sing. You’re
worth more, but right now I can’t pay more.
If you pull business, and I rather think
you will, have to sing twice in the afternoon
and twice in the evening.”
Stella considered briefly. Thirty
dollars a week meant a great deal more than mere living,
as she meant to live. And it was a start, a move
in the right direction. She accepted; they discussed
certain details. She did not care to court publicity
under her legal name, so they agreed that she should
be billed as Madame Benton, the Madame being
Howard’s suggestion, and she took
her leave.
Upon the Monday following Stella stood
for the first time in a fierce white glare that dazzled
her and so shut off partially her vision of the rows
and rows of faces. She went on with a horrible
slackness in her knees, a dry feeling in her throat;
and she was not sure whether she would sing or fly.
When she had finished her first song and bowed herself
into the wings, she felt her heart leap and hammer
at the hand-clapping that grew and grew till it was
like the beat of ocean surf.
Howard came running to meet her.
“You’ve sure got ’em
going,” he laughed. “Fine work.
Go out and give ’em some more.”
In time she grew accustomed to these
things, to the applause she never failed to get, to
the white beam that beat down from the picture cage,
to the eager, upturned faces in the first rows.
Her confidence grew; ambition began to glow like a
flame within her. She had gone through the primary
stages of voice culture, and she was following now
a method of practice which produced results.
She could see and feel that herself. Sometimes
the fear that her voice might go as it had once gone
would make her tremble. But that, her teacher
assured her, was a remote chance.
So she gained in those weeks something
of her old poise. Inevitably, she was very lonely
at times. But she fought against that with the
most effective weapon she knew, incessant
activity. She was always busy. There was
a rented piano now sitting in the opposite corner from
the gas stove on which she cooked her meals.
Howard kept his word. She “pulled business,”
and he raised her to forty a week and offered her a
contract which she refused, because other avenues,
bigger and better than singing in a motion-picture
house, were tentatively opening.
December was waning when she came
to Seattle. In the following weeks her only contact
with the past, beyond the mill of her own thoughts,
was an item in the Seattle Times touching upon
certain litigation in which Fyfe was involved.
Briefly, Monohan, under the firm name of the Abbey-Monohan
Timber Company, was suing Fyfe for heavy damages for
the loss of certain booms of logs blown up and set
adrift at the mouth of the Tyee River. There
was appended an account of the clash over the closed
channel and the killing of Billy Dale. No one
had been brought to book for that yet. Any one
of sixty men might have fired the shot.
It made Stella wince, for it took
her back to that dreadful day. She could not
bear to think that Billy Dale’s blood lay on
her and Monohan, neither could she stifle an uneasy
apprehension that something more grievous yet might
happen on Roaring Lake. But at least she had done
what she could. If she were the flame, she had
removed herself from the powder magazine. Fyfe
had pulled his cedar crew off the Tyee before she
left. If aggression came, it must come from one
direction.
They were both abstractions now, she
tried to assure herself. The glamour of Monohan
was fading, and she could not say why. She did
not know if his presence would stir again all that
old tumult of feeling, but she did know that she was
cleaving to a measure of peace, of serenity of mind,
and she did not want him or any other man to disturb
it. She told herself that she had never loved
Jack Fyfe. She recognized in him a lot that a
woman is held to admire, but there were also qualities
in him that had often baffled and sometimes frightened
her. She wondered sometimes what he really thought
of her and her actions, why, when she had been nerved
to a desperate struggle for her freedom, if she could
gain it no other way, he had let her go so easily?
After all, she reflected cynically,
love comes and goes, but one is driven to pursue material
advantages while life lasts. And she wondered,
even while the thought took form in her mind, how long
she would retain that point of view.