Laura had spent some thoughtful hours
upon her black lace dress with results that astonished
her family: it became a ball-gown and
a splendidly effective one. She arranged her dark
hair in a more elaborate fashion than ever before,
in a close coronal of faintly lustrous braids; she
had no jewellery and obviously needed none. Her
last action but one before she left her room was to
dispose of the slender chain and key she always wore
round her neck; then her final glance at the mirror which
fairly revealed a lovely woman ended in
a deprecatory little “face” she made at
herself. It meant: “Yes, old lady,
you fancy yourself very passable in here all by yourself,
don’t you? Just wait: you’ll
be standing beside Cora in a moment!”
And when she did stand beside Cora,
in the latter’s room, a moment later, her thought
seemed warranted. Cora, radiant-eyed, in high
bloom, and exquisite from head to foot in a shimmering
white dancing-dress, a glittering crescent fastening
the silver fillet that bound her vivid hair, was a
flame of enchantment. Mrs. Madison, almost weeping
with delight, led her daughters proudly, an arm round
the waist of each, into her husband’s room.
Propped with pillows, he reclined in an armchair while
Miss Peirce prepared his bed, an occupation she gave
over upon this dazzling entrance, departing tactfully.
“Look at these,” cried
the mother; “ from our garden, Jim,
dear! Don’t we feel rich, you and I?”
“And and Laura,”
said the sick man, with the slow and imperfect enunication
caused by his disease; “Laura looks pretty too.”
“Isn’t she adorable!”
Cora exclaimed warmly. “She decided to be
the portrait of a young duchess, you see, all stately
splendour made of snow and midnight!”
“Hear! hear!” laughed
Laura; but she blushed with pleasure, and taking Cora’s
hand in hers lifted it to her lips.
“And do you see Cora’s
crescent?” demanded Mrs. Madison. “What
do you think of that for magnificence?
She went down town this morning with seven dollars,
and came back with that and her party gloves and a
dollar in change! Isn’t she a bargainer?
Even for rhinestones they are the cheapest things
you ever heard of. They look precisely like stones
of the very finest water.” They did so
precisely, indeed, that if the resemblance did not
amount to actual identity, then had a jeweller of
the town been able to deceive the eye of Valentine
Corliss, which was an eye singularly learned in such
matters.
“They’re both
smart girls,” said Madison, “both of them.
And they look beautiful, to-night both.
Laura is amazing!”
When they had gone, Mrs. Madison returned
from the stairway, and, kneeling beside her husband,
put her arms round him gently: she had seen the
tear that was marking its irregular pathway down his
flaccid, gray cheek, and she understood.
“Don’t. Don’t
worry, Jim,” she whispered. “Those
bright, beautiful things! aren’t
they treasures?”
“It’s it’s
Laura,” he said. “Cora will be all
right. She looks out for herself.
I’m I’m afraid for Laura.
Aren’t you?”
“No, no,” she protested.
“I’m not afraid for either of them.”
But she was: the mother had always been afraid
for Cora.
. . . . At the dance, the two
girls, attended up the stairway to the ballroom by
a chattering covey of black-coats, made a sensational
entrance to a gallant fanfare of music, an effect
which may have been timed to the premonitory tuning
of instruments heard during the ascent; at all events,
it was a great success; and Cora, standing revealed
under the wide gilt archway, might have been a lithe
and shining figure from the year eighteen-hundred-and-one,
about to dance at the Luxembourg. She placed
her hand upon the sleeve of Richard Lindley, and, glancing
intelligently over his shoulder into the eyes of Valentine
Corliss, glided rhythmically away.
People looked at her; they always
did. Not only the non-dancers watched her; eyes
everywhere were upon her, even though the owners gyrated,
glided and dipped on distant orbits. The other
girls watched her, as a rule, with a profound, an
almost passionate curiosity; and they were prompt
to speak well of her to men, except in trustworthy
intimacy, because they did not enjoy being wrongfully
thought jealous. Many of them kept somewhat aloof
from her; but none of them ever nowadays showed “superiority”
in her presence, or snubbed her: that had been
tried and proved disastrous in rebound. Cora
never failed to pay her score and with
a terrifying interest added, her native tendency being
to take two eyes for an eye and the whole jaw for
a tooth. They let her alone, though they asked
and asked among themselves the never-monotonous question:
“Why do men fall in love with girls like that?”
a riddle which, solved, makes wives condescending to
their husbands.
Most of the people at this dance had
known one another as friends, or antagonists, or indifferent
acquaintances, for years, and in such an assembly
there are always two worlds, that of the women and
that of the men. Each has its own vision, radically
different from that of the other; but the greatest
difference is that the men are unaware of the other
world, only a few of them usually queer
ones like Ray Vilas vaguely perceiving that
there are two visions, while all the women understand
both perfectly. The men splash about on the surface;
the women keep their eyes open under water. Or,
the life of the assembly is like a bright tapestry:
the men take it as a picture and are not troubled
to know how it is produced; but women are weavers.
There was a Beauty of far-flung renown at Mrs. Villard’s
to-night: Mary Kane, a creature so made and coloured
that young men at sight of her became as water and
older men were apt to wonder regretfully why all women
could not have been made like Mary. She was a
kindly soul, and never intentionally outshone her
sisters; but the perfect sumptuousness of her had
sometimes tried the amiability of Cora Madison, to
whom such success without effort and without spark
seemed unfair, as well as bovine. Miss Kane was
a central figure at the dance, shining tranquilly
in a new triumph: that day her engagement had
been announced to Mr. George Wattling, a young man
of no special attainments, but desirable in his possessions
and suitable to his happiness. The pair radiated
the pardonable, gay importance of newly engaged people,
and Cora, who had never before bestowed any notice
upon Mr. Wattling, now examined him with thoughtful
attention.
Finding him at her elbow in a group
about a punch bowl, between dances, she offered warm
félicitations. “But I don’t suppose
you care whether I care for you to be happy
or not,” she added, with a little plaintive
laugh; “you’ve always hated
me so!”
Mr. Wattling was startled: never
before had he imagined that Cora Madison had given
him a thought; but there was not only thought, there
was feeling, in this speech. She seemed to be
concealing with bravery an even deeper feeling than
the one inadvertently expressed. “Why,
what on earth makes you think that?” he exclaimed.
“Think it? I know
it!” She gave him a strange look, luminous yet
mysterious, a curtain withdrawn only to show a shining
mist with something undefined but dazzling beyond.
“I’ve always known it!” And she
turned away from him abruptly.
He sprang after her. “But
you’re wrong. I’ve never ”
“Oh, yes, you have.”
They began to discuss it, and for better consideration
of the theme it became necessary for Cora to “cut”
the next dance, promised to another, and to give it
to Mr. Wattling. They danced several times together,
and Mr. Wattling’s expression was serious.
The weavers of the tapestry smiled and whispered things
the men would not have understood nor believed.
Ray Vilas, seated alone in a recessed
and softly lighted gallery, did not once lose sight
of the flitting sorceress. With his elbows on
the railing, he leaned out, his head swaying slowly
and mechanically as she swept up and down the tumultuously
moving room, his passionate eyes gaunt and brilliant
with his hunger. And something very like a general
thrill passed over the assembly when, a little later,
it was seen that he was dancing with her. Laura,
catching a glimpse of this couple, started and looked
profoundly disturbed.
The extravagance of Vilas’s
passion and the depths he sounded, in his absurd despair
when discarded, had been matters of almost public
gossip; he was accounted a somewhat scandalous and
unbalanced but picturesque figure; and for the lady
whose light hand had wrought such havoc upon him to
be seen dancing with him was sufficiently startling
to elicit the universal remark evidently
considered superlative that it was “just
like Cora Madison!” Cora usually perceived,
with an admirably clear head, all that went on about
her; and she was conscious of increasing the sensation,
when after a few turns round the room, she allowed
her partner to conduct her to a secluding grove of
palms in the gallery. She sank into the chair
he offered, and, fixing her eyes upon a small lamp
of coloured glass which hung overhead, ostentatiously
looked bored.
“At your feet, Cora,”
he said, seating himself upon a stool, and leaning
toward her. “Isn’t it appropriate
that we should talk to music we two?
It shouldn’t be that quick step though not
dance-music should it?”
“Don’t know ’m sure,” murmured
Cora.
“You were kind to dance with
me,” he said huskily. “I dared to
speak to you ”
She did not change her attitude nor
the direction of her glance. “I couldn’t
cut you very well with the whole town looking on.
I’m tired of being talked about. Besides,
I don’t care much who I dance with so
he doesn’t step on me.”
“Cora,” he said, “it
is the prelude to `L’Arlesienne’ that they
should play for you and me. Yes, I think it should
be that.”
“Never heard of it.”
“It’s just a rustic tragedy,
the story of a boy in the south of France who lets
love become his whole life, and then it
kills him.”
“Sounds very stupid,” she commented languidly.
“People do sometimes die of
love, even nowadays,” he said, tremulously “in
the South.”
She let her eyes drift indifferently
to him and perceived that he was trembling from head
to foot; that his hands and knees shook piteously;
that his lips quivered and twitched; and, at sight
of this agitation, an expression of strong distaste
came to her face.
“I see.” Her eyes
returned to the lamp. “You’re from
the South, and of course it’s going to kill
you.”
“You didn’t speak the
exact words you had in your mind.’”
“Oh, what words did I have `in
my mind’?” she asked impatiently.
“What you really meant was:
`If it does kill you, what of it?’”
She laughed, and sighed as for release.
“Cora,” he said huskily,
“I understand you a little because you possess
me. I’ve never literally never had
another thought since the first time I saw you:
nothing but you. I think of you actually
every moment. Drunk or sober, asleep or awake,
it’s nothing but you, you, you!
It will never be different: I don’t know
why I can’t get over it I only know
I can’t. You own me; you burn like a hot
coal in my heart. You’re through with me,
I know. You drained me dry. You’re
like a child who eats so heartily of what he likes
that he never touches it again. And I’m
a dish you’re sick of. Oh, it’s all
plain enough, I can tell you. I’m not exciting
any more no, just a nauseous slave!”
“Do you want people to hear
you?” she inquired angrily, for his voice had
risen.
He tempered his tone. “Cora,
when you liked me you went a pretty clipping gait
with me,” he said, trembling even more than before.
“But you’re infinitely more infatuated
with this Toreador of a Corliss than you were with
me; you’re lost in him; you’re slaving
for him as I would for you. How far are you going
with ”
“Do you want me to walk away
and leave you?” she asked, suddenly sitting
up straight and looking at him with dilating eyes.
“If you want a `scene’ ”
“It’s over,” he
said, more calmly. “I know now how dangerous
the man is. Of course you will tell him I said
that.” He laughed quietly. “Well between
a dangerous chap and a desperate one, we may look
for some lively times! Do you know, I believe
I think about as continuously of him, lately, as I
do of you. That’s why I put almost my last
cent into his oil company, and got what may be almost
my last dance with you!”
“I wouldn’t call it `almost’
your last dance with me!” she returned icily.
“Not after what you’ve said. I had
a foolish idea you could behave well, at
least decently.”
“Did Corliss tell you that I
insulted him in his rooms at the hotel?”
“You!” She laughed, genuinely.
“I see him letting you!”
“He did, however. By manner
and in speech I purposely and deliberately insulted
him. You’ll tell him every word of this,
of course, and he’ll laugh at it, but I give
myself the pleasure of telling you. I put the
proposition of an `investment’ to him in a way
nobody not a crook would have allowed to be smoothed
over and he allowed it to be smoothed over.
He ate it! I felt he was a swindler when he was
showing Richard Lindley his maps and papers, and now
I’ve proved it to myself, and it’s worth
the price.” Often, when they had danced,
and often during this interview, his eyes lifted curiously
to the white flaming crescent in her hair; now they
fixed themselves upon it, and in a flash of divination
he cried: “You wear it for me!”
She did not understand. “Finished
raving?” she inquired.
“I gave Corliss a thousand dollars,”
he said, slowly. “Considering the fact
that it was my last, I flatter myself it was not unhandsomely
done though I may never need it. It
has struck me that the sum was about what a man who
had just cleaned up fifty thousand might regard as
a sort of `extra’ `for lagniappe’ and
that he might have thought it an appropriate amount
to invest in a present some jewels perhaps to
place in the hair of a pretty friend!”
She sprang to her feet, furious, but
he stood in front of her and was able to bar the way
for a moment.
“Cora, I’ll have a last
word with you if I have to hold you,” he said
with great rapidity and in a voice which shook with
the intense repression he was putting upon himself.
“We do one thing in the South, where I came
from. We protect our women ”
“This looks like it! Keeping me when ”
“I love you,” he said,
his face whiter than she had ever seen it. “I
love you! I’m your dog! You take care
of yourself if you want to take care of anybody else!
As sure as ”
“My dance, Miss Madison.”
A young gentleman on vacation from the navy had approached,
and, with perfect unconsciousness of what he was interrupting,
but with well-founded certainty that he was welcome
to the lady, urged his claim in a confident voice.
“I thought it would never come, you know; but
it’s here at last and so am I.” He
laughed propitiatingly.
Ray yielded now at once. She
moved him aside with her gloved forearm as if he were
merely an awkward stranger who unwittingly stood between
her and the claiming partner. Carrying the gesture
farther, she took the latter’s arm, and smilingly,
and without a backward glance, passed onward and left
the gallery. The lieutenant, who had met her
once or twice before, was her partner for the succeeding
dance as well, and, having noted the advantages of
the place where he had discovered her, persuaded her
to return there to sit through the second. Then
without any fatiguing preamble, he proposed marriage.
Cora did not accept, but effected a compromise, which,
for the present, was to consist of an exchange of
photographs (his to be in uniform) and letters.
She was having an evening to her heart.
Ray’s attack on Corliss had no dimming effect;
her thought of it being that she was “used to
his raving”; it meant nothing; and since Ray
had prophesied she would tell Corliss about it, she
decided not to do so.
The naval young gentleman and Valentine
Corliss were the greatest of all the lions among ladies
that night; she had easily annexed the lieutenant,
and Corliss was hers already; though, for a purpose,
she had not yet been seen in company with him.
He was visibly “making an impression.”
His name, as he had said to Richard Lindley, was held
in honour in the town; and there was a flavour of
fancied romance in his absence since boyhood in unknown
parts, and his return now with a `foreign air’
and a bow that almost took the breath of some of the
younger recipients. He was, too, in his way,
the handsomest man in the room; and the smiling, open
frankness of his look, the ready cordiality of his
manner, were found very winning. He caused plenty
of flutter.
Cora waited till the evening was half
over before she gave him any visible attention.
Then, during a silence of the music, between two dances,
she made him a negligent sign with her hand, the gesture
of one indifferently beckoning a creature who is certain
to come, and went on talking casually to the man who
was with her. Corliss was the length of the room
from her, chatting gayly with a large group of girls
and women; but he immediately nodded to her, made
his bow to individuals of the group, and crossed the
vacant, glistening floor to her. Cora gave him
no greeting whatever; she dismissed her former partner
and carelessly turned away with Corliss to some chairs
in a corner.
“Do you see that?” asked
Vilas, leaning over the balcony railing with Richard
Lindley. “Look! She’s showing
the other girls don’t you see?
He’s the New Man; she let ’em hope she
wasn’t going in for him; a lot of them probably
didn’t even know that she knew him. She
sent him out on parade till they’re all excited
about him; now she shows ’em he’s entirely
her property and does it so matter-of-factly
that it’s rubbed in twice as hard as if she
seemed to take some pains about it. He doesn’t
dance: she’ll sit out with him now, till
they all read the tag she’s put on him.
She says she hates being talked about. She lives
on it! so long as it’s envious.
And did you see her with that chap from the navy?
Neptune thinks he’s dallying with Venus perhaps,
but he’ll get ”
Lindley looked at him commiseratingly.
“I think I never saw prettier decorations.
Have you noticed, Ray? Must have used a thousand
chrysanthemums.”
“Toreador!” whispered
the other between his teeth, looking at Corliss; then,
turning to his companion, he asked: “Has
it occurred to you to get any information about Basilicata,
or about the ancestral domain of the Moliterni, from
our consul-general at Naples?”
Richard hesitated. “Well yes.
Yes, I did think of that. Yes, I thought of it.”
“But you didn’t do it.”
“No. That is, I haven’t
yet. You see, Corliss explained to me that ”
His friend interrupted him with a
sour laugh. “Oh, certainly! He’s
one of the greatest explainers ever welcomed to our
city!”
Richard said mildly: “And
then, Ray, once I’ve gone into a thing I I
don’t like to seem suspicious.”
“Poor old Dick!” returned
Vilas compassionately. “You kind, easy,
sincere men are so conscientiously untruthful with
yourselves. You know in your heart that Cora
would be furious with you if you seemed suspicious,
and she’s been so nice to you since you put in
your savings to please her, that you can’t bear
to risk offending her. She’s twisted you
around her little finger, and the unnamed fear that
haunts you is that you won’t be allowed to stay
there even twisted!”
“Pretty decorations, Ray,”
said Richard; but he grew very red.
“Do you know what you’ll
do,” asked Ray, regarding him keenly, “if
this Don Giovanni from Sunny It’ is shown up
as a plain get-rich-quick swindler?”
“I haven’t considered ”
“You would do precisely,”
said Ray, “nothing! Cora’d see to
that. You’d sigh and go to work again,
beginning at the beginning where you were years ago,
and doing it all over. Admirable resignation,
but not for me! I’m a stockholder in his
company and in shape to `take steps’! I
don’t know if I’d be patient enough to
make them legal perhaps I should.
He may be safe on the legal side. I’ll
know more about that when I find out if there is a
Prince Moliterno in Naples who owns land in Basilicata.”
“You don’t doubt it?”
“I doubt everything! In
this particular matter I’ll have less to doubt
when I get an answer from the consul-general. I’ve
written, you see.”
Lindley looked disturbed. “You have?”
Vilas read him at a glance. “You’re
afraid to find out!” he cried. Then he
set his hand on the other’s shoulder. “If
there ever was a God’s fool, it’s you,
Dick Lindley. Really, I wonder the world hasn’t
kicked you around more than it has; you’d never
kick back! You’re as easy as an old shoe.
Cora makes you unhappy,” he went on, and with
the very mention of her name, his voice shook with
passion, “but on my soul I don’t
believe you know what jealousy means: you don’t
even understand hate; you don’t eat your heart ”
“Let’s go and eat something
better,” suggested Richard, laughing. “There’s
a continuous supper downstairs and I hear it’s
very good.”
Ray smiled, rescued for a second from
himself. “There isn’t anything better
than your heart, you old window-pane, and I’m
glad you don’t eat it. And if I ever mix
it up with Don Giovanni T. Corliss `T’
stands for Toreador I do believe it’ll
be partly on your ” He paused,
leaving the sentence unfinished, as his attention
was caught by the abysmal attitude of a figure in
another part of the gallery: Mr. Wade Trumble,
alone in a corner, sitting upon the small of his small
back, munching at an unlighted cigar and otherwise
manifesting a biting gloom. Ray drew Lindley’s
attention to this tableau of pain. “Here’s
a three of us!” he said. He turned to look
down into the rhythmic kaleidoscope of dancers.
“And there goes the girl we all ought
to be morbid about.”
“Who is that?”
“Laura Madison. Why aren’t
we? What a self-respecting creature she is, with
that cool, sweet steadiness of hers she’s
like a mountain lake. She’s lovely and
she plays like an angel, but so far as anybody’s
ever thinking about her is concerned she might almost
as well not exist. Yet she’s really beautiful
to-night, if you can manage to think of her except
as a sort of retinue for Cora.”
“She is rather beautiful
to-night. Laura’s always a very nice-looking
girl,” said Richard, and with the advent of an
idea, he added: “I think one reason she
isn’t more conspicuous and thought about is
that she is so quiet,” and, upon his companion’s
greeting this inspiration with a burst of laughter,
“Yes, that was a brilliant deduction,”
he said; “but I do think she’s about the
quietest person I ever knew. I’ve noticed
there are times when she’ll scarcely speak at
all for half an hour, or even more.”
“You’re not precisely
noisy yourself,” said Ray. “Have you
danced with her this evening?”
“Why, no,” returned the
other, in a tone which showed this omission to be
a discovery; “not yet. I must, of course.”
“Yes, she’s really `rather’
beautiful. Also, she dances `rather’ better
than any other girl in town. Go and perform your
painful duty.”
“Perhaps I’d better,”
said Richard thoughtfully, not perceiving the satire.
“At any rate, I’ll ask her for the next.”
He found it unengaged. There
came to Laura’s face an April change as he approached,
and she saw he meant to ask her to dance. And,
as they swam out into the maelstrom, he noticed it,
and remarked that it was rather warm, to which
she replied by a cheerful nod. Presently there
came into Richard’s mind the thought that he
was really an excellent dancer; but he did not recall
that he had always formed the same pleasing estimate
of himself when he danced with Laura, nor realize
that other young men enjoyed similar self-help when
dancing with her. And yet he repeated to her what
Ray had said of her dancing, and when she laughed as
in appreciation of a thing intended humorously, he
laughed, too, but insisted that she did dance “very
well indeed.” She laughed again at that,
and they danced on, not talking. He had no sense
of “guiding” her; there was no feeling
of effort whatever; she seemed to move spontaneously
with his wish, not to his touch; indeed, he was not
sensible of touching her at all.
“Why, Laura,” he exclaimed
suddenly, “you dance beautifully!”
She stumbled and almost fell; saved
herself by clutching at his arm; he caught her; and
the pair stopped where they were, in the middle of
the floor. A flash of dazed incredulity from her
dark eyes swept him; there was something in it of
the child dodging an unexpected blow.
“Did I trip you?” he asked anxiously.
“No,” she laughed, quickly,
and her cheeks grew even redder. “I tripped
myself. Wasn’t that too bad just
when you were thinking that I danced well! Let’s
sit down. May we?”
They went to some chairs against a
wall. There, as they sat, Cora swung by them,
dancing again with her lieutenant, and looking up
trancedly into the gallant eyes of the triumphant and
intoxicated young man. Visibly, she was a woman
with a suitor’s embracing arm about her.
Richard’s eyes followed them.
“Ah, don’t!” said Laura in a low
voice.
He turned to her. “Don’t what?”
“I didn’t mean to speak
out loud,” she said tremulously. “But
I meant: don’t look so troubled. It
doesn’t mean anything at all her
coquetting with that bird of passage. He’s
going away in the morning.”
“I don’t think I was troubling about that.”
“Well, whatever it was” she
paused, and laughed with a plaintive timidity “why,
just don’t trouble about it!”
“Do I look very much troubled?” he asked
seriously.
“Yes. And you don’t
look very gay when you’re not!” She laughed
with more assurance now. “I think you’re
always the wistfulest looking man I ever saw.”
“Everybody laughs at me, I believe,”
he said, with continued seriousness. “Even
Ray Vilas thinks I’m an utter fool. Am I,
do you think?”
He turned as he spoke and glanced
inquiringly into her eyes. What he saw surprised
and dismayed him.
“For heaven’s sake, don’t
cry!” he whispered hurriedly.
She bent her head, turning her face from him.
“I’ve been very hopeful
lately,” he said. “Cora has been so
kind to me since I did what she wanted me to, that
I ” He gave a deep sigh.
“But if you’re that sorry for me,
my chances with her must be pretty desperate.”
She did not alter her attitude, but
with her down-bent face still away from him, said
huskily: “It isn’t you I’m sorry
for. You mustn’t ever give up; you must
keep on trying and trying. If you give up, I
don’t know what will become of her!”
A moment later she rose suddenly to
her feet. “Let’s finish our dance,”
she said, giving him her hand. “I’m
sure I won’t stumble again.”