SYLVIA SKATES MERRILY ON THIN ICE
The design for the yellow chiffon
dropped almost literally at Sylvia’s feet the
next day, on the frontispiece of a theatrical magazine
left by another passenger in the streetcar in which
she chanced to be riding. Sylvia pounced on it
with instant recognition of its value. It was
“different” and yet not “queer,”
it was artistic and yet fashionable, and with its
flowing lines it would not be hard to construct.
It was the creation of a Parisian boulevard actress,
known widely for her costumes, for the extraordinary
manner in which she dressed her hair, and for the
rapidity of her succeeding emotional entanglements.
Her name meant nothing to Sylvia. She tore out
the page, folded it, and put it for safe-keeping between
the pages of her text-book on Logic.
That afternoon she began work on it,
running the long seams up on the machine with whirring
rapidity, acutely aware of her mother’s silent,
uncommenting passage back and forth through the sewing-room.
With an impulse of secrecy which she did not analyze,
she did the trying-on in her own room, craning and
turning about before her own small mirror. She
knew that her mother would think the dress was cut
too low, although, as she told herself, looking with
complacency at the smooth, white, exquisitely fine-grained
skin thus disclosed, it wasn’t nearly as low
cut as the dresses Eleanor Hubert wore to any little
dance. She had long felt it to be countrified
in the extreme to wear the mild compromises towards
evening-dress which she and most of the State University
girls adopted, as compared with the frankly disclosing
gowns of the “town girls” whose clothes
came from Chicago and New York. She knew from
several outspoken comments that Jerry admired Eleanor’s
shoulders, and as she looked at her own, she was not
sorry that he was to compare them to those of the
other girl.
After this brief disposal of the question,
she gave it no more thought, working with desperate
speed to complete all her preparations. She had
but a week for these, a week filled with incessant
hurry, since she was naturally unwilling to ask help
of her mother. Judith was off again with her
father.
This absence greatly facilitated the
moment of Sylvia’s departure, which she had
dreaded. But, as it happened, there was only her
mother to whom to say the rather difficult good-bye,
her mother who could be counted on never to make a
scene.
About the middle of the morning of
the twenty-third of December, she came down the stairs,
her hand-bag in her hand, well-hatted, well-gloved,
freshly veiled, having achieved her usual purpose of
looking to the casual eye like the daughter of a wealthy
man. She had put all of her autumn allowance
for dress into a set of furs, those being something
which no ingenuity could evolve at home. The rest
of her outfit, even to the odd little scarlet velvet
hat, with its successful and modish touch of the ugly,
was the achievement of her own hands. Under its
absurd and fashionable brim, her fresh face shone
out, excessively pretty and very young.
Mrs. Marshall kissed her good-bye
gently, not smiling at Sylvia’s attempt to lighten
the moment’s seriousness by saying playfully,
“Now, Mother, don’t you be such an old
worrier!” But she said nothing “uncomfortable,”
for which Sylvia was very grateful.
She had no sooner embarked upon the
big Interurban trolley-car which was to take her to
Mercerton than her attention was wholly diverted from
uneasy reflections by the unexpected appearance of
two of the house-party guests. Eleanor Hubert,
every detail of her Complicated costume exquisitely
finished as a Meissonier painting, sat looking out
of the window rather soberly, and so intently that
she saw neither Sylvia’s entrance, nor, close
upon her heels, that of a florid-faced, rather heavily
built young man with a large, closely shaven jaw, who
exclaimed joyfully at seeing Miss Marshall, and appropriated
with ready assurance the other half of her seat.
“Now, this is surely dandy!
You’re going to the house-party too, of course!”
he cried, unbuttoning and throwing back his bright
tan overcoat. “Here’s where I cut
Jerry out all right, all right! Wait a minute!
How much time have we?” He appealed to
the conductor as though a matter of life and death
depended on the answer. “Four minutes? here
goes ” He sprang to his feet, dashed
out of the car and disappeared, leaving his coat beside
Sylvia. It was evidently quite new, of the finest
material, with various cunningly stitched seams and
straps disposed upon its surface in a very knowing
way. Sylvia noted out of the corner of her eye
that the address of the maker, woven into the neckband,
was on Fifth Avenue, New York.
The four minutes passed and
the conductor approached Sylvia. “Your
friend’s coming back, ain’t he?”
he asked, with the tolerant, good-natured respect
natural for the vagaries of expensively dressed young
men who wore overcoats made on Fifth Avenue. Sylvia,
who had met the young man but once before, when Jerry
had introduced him as an old friend, was a little
startled at having a casual acquaintance so publicly
affixed to her; but after an instant’s hesitation,
in which she was reflecting that she positively did
not even remember her “friend’s”
name, she answered, “Oh yes, yes, I suppose so here
he is now.”
The young man bounded up on the back
platform panting, holding his hat on with one hand,
a large box of candy in the other. Sylvia glanced
at the name on the cover. “You didn’t
go all the way to Button’s!” she
cried.
He nodded, breathless, evidently proud
of his feat, and when he caught his breath enough
to speak, explained, “Yepp, it’s
the only place in this bum town where you can get
Alligretti’s, and they’re the only kind
that’re fit to eat” He tore open the box
as he spoke, demolishing with ruthless and practised
hands the various layers of fine paper and gold cord
which wrapped it about, and presented the rich layer
of black chocolates to Sylvia. “Get a move
on and take one,” he urged cordially; “I
pretend I buy ’em for the girls, but I’m
crazy about ’em myself,” He bit into one
with an air of prodigious gusto, took off his hat,
wiped his forehead, and looked at Sylvia with a relish
as frank as his enjoyment of the bonbon. “That’s
a corking hat you got on,” he commented.
“Most girls would look like the old Harry with
that dangling thing in their eyes, but you
can carry it off all right.”
Sylvia’s face assumed a provocative
expression. “Did you ever make that remark
to any other girl, I wonder?” she said reflectively.
He laughed aloud, eyeing her with
appreciation, and clapping another large black chocolate
into his mouth. “You’re the prompt
article, aren’t you?” he said. He
hitched himself over and leaned towards her.
“Something tells me I’m goin’ to
have a good time at this house-party, what?”
Sylvia stiffened. She did not
like his sitting so close to her, she detected now
on his breath a faint odor of alcohol, and she was
afraid that Eleanor Hubert would think her lacking
in dignity. She regretted having succumbed to
the temptation to answer him in his own tone; but,
under her bravado, she was really somewhat apprehensive
about this expedition, and she welcomed a diversion.
Besides, the voluble young man showed not the slightest
sign of noting her attempt to rebuff him, and she
found quite unavailing all her efforts to change the
current of the talk, the loud, free-and-easy, personally
admiring note of which had the effect on her nerves
of a draught of raw spirits. She did not enjoy
the taste while it was being administered, but the
effect was certainly stimulating, not to say exciting,
and absorbed her attention so entirely that uncomfortable
self-questionings were impossible. She was also
relieved to note that, although the young man flung
himself about in the public conveyance with the same
unceremonious self-assurance that he would have shown
in a lady’s drawing-room, Eleanor Hubert, at
the other end of the car, was apparently unaware of
his presence. Perhaps she too had some grounds
for uncomfortable thought, for throughout the hour’s
journey she continued to stare unseeingly out of the
window, or to look down fixedly and rather sadly at
her gloved hands.
Even through the confusion of her
own ideas and plans, and the need for constant verbal
self-defense against the encroaching familiarity of
her companion, the notion flitted across Sylvia’s
mind that probably Eleanor was thinking of the young
assistant in chemistry. How queer and topsy-turvy
everything was, she reflected, as she bandied lively
words with the lively young man at her side, continuing
to eat his candies, although their rich, cloying taste
had already palled on her palate here was
Mrs. Hubert throwing Eleanor at Jerry’s head,
when what Eleanor wanted was that queer, rough-neck
freak of an assistant prof; and here were Jerry’s
parents making such overtures to Sylvia, when what
she wanted she didn’t know
what she did want. Yes, she did, she wanted a
good time, which was somehow paradoxically hard to
attain. Something always kept spoiling it, half
the time something intangible inside her own mind.
She gave the candy-box a petulant push. “Oh,
take it away!” she said impatiently; “I’ve
eaten so many now, it makes me sick to look at them!”
The donor showed no resentment at
this ingratitude, holding the box on his knees, continuing
to help himself to its contents with unabated zest,
and to keep the conversation up to concert pitch:
“ the only girl I ever saw who’d
stop eating Alligretti’s while there was one
left another proof that there’s only
one of you I said right off, that any co-ed
that Jerry Fiske would take to must be a unique specimen ”
He did not further specify the period to which he
referred by his “right off,” but the phrase
gave Sylvia a tingling, uncomfortable sense of having
been for some time the subject of speculation in circles
of which she knew nothing.
They were near Mercerton now, and
as she gathered her wraps together she found that
she was bracing herself as for an ordeal of some sort.
The big car stopped, a little way out of town, in front
of a long driveway bordered with maple-trees; she
and the young man descended from one end-platform
and Eleanor Hubert from the other, into the midst
of loud and facetious greetings from the young people
who had come down to meet them. Jerry was there,
very stalwart, his white sweater stretched over his
broad chest. All the party carried skates, which
flashed like silver in the keen winter sun. They
explained with many exclamations that they had been
out on the ice, which was, so the three new-comers
were assured many times, “perfectly grand, perfectly
dandy, simply elegant!”
A big, many-seated sled came jingling
down the driveway now, driven by no less a personage
than Colonel Fiske himself, wrapped in a fur-lined
coat, his big mustache white against the red of his
strongly marked old face. With many screams and
shouts the young people got themselves into this vehicle,
the Colonel calling out in a masterful roar above
the din, “Miss Marshall’s to come up here
with me!”
He held in his pawing, excited horses
with one hand and helped Sylvia with the other.
In the seat behind them sat Jerry and Eleanor Hubert
and the young man of the trolley trip. Sylvia
strained her ears to catch Jerry’s introduction
of him to Eleanor, so that she might know his name.
It was too absurd not even to know his name! But
the high-pitched giggles and deeper shouts of mirth
from the rest of the party drowned out the words.
As a matter of fact, although he played for an instant
a rather important rôle in Sylvia’s drama, she
was destined never to know his name.
The Colonel looked back over the sleighload,
shouted out “All aboard!” loosened the
reins, and snapped his whip over the horses’
heads. They leaped forward with so violent a
spring that the front runners of the long sled were
for an instant lifted into the air. Immediately
all the joyful shrieking and screaming which had gone
on before, became as essential silence compared to
the delighted uproar which now rose from the sleigh.
The jerk had thrown most of the young people over backward
into each other’s arms and laps, where, in a
writhing, promiscuous mass, they roared and squealed
out their joy in the joke, and made ineffectual and
not very determined efforts to extricate themselves.
Sylvia had seen the jerk coming and saved herself by
a clutch forward at the dashboard. Glancing back,
she saw that Jerry and Eleanor Hubert still sat upright;
although the gay young man beside them had let himself
go backward into the waving arms and legs, and, in
a frenzy of high spirits, was shouting and kicking
and squirming with the others. It was a joke
after his own heart.
Colonel Fiske, so far from slackening
his pace to help his young guests out of their predicament,
laughed loudly and cracked his whip over the horses’
ears. They went up the long, curving driveway
like a whirlwind, and drew up under the porte-cochere
of a very large brick-and-stone house with another
abrupt jerk which upset those in the sleigh who had
succeeded in regaining their seats. Pandemonium
broke out again, in the midst of which Sylvia saw that
Mrs. Fiske had come to the doorway and stood in it
with a timid smile. The Colonel did not look
at her, Jerry nodded carelessly to her as he passed
in, and of all the disheveled, flushed, and laughing
young people who crowded past her into the house,
only Sylvia and Eleanor recognized her existence.
The others went past her without a glance, exclaimed
at the lateness of the hour, cried out that they must
go and “fix up” for lunch, and ran upstairs,
filling the house with their voices. Sylvia heard
one girl cry to another, “Oh, I’ve
had such a good time! I’ve hollered till
I’m hoarse!”
After luncheon, a meal at which more
costly food was served than Sylvia had ever before
seen, Jerry suggested between puffs of the cigarette
he was lighting that they have a game of billiards.
Most of the young people trooped off after him into
the billiard-room, but Sylvia, after a moment’s
hesitation, lingered near the big wood-fire in the
hall, unwilling to admit that she had never seen a
billiard table. She made a pretext of staying
to talk to Mrs. Fiske, who sat stooping her tall figure
forward in a chair too small for her. Sylvia
looked at this ungraceful attitude with strong disapproval.
What she thought was that such inattention to looks
was perfectly inexcusable. What she said was,
in a very gracious voice: “What a beautiful
home you have, Mrs. Fiske! How wonderfully happy
you must be in it.”
The other woman started a little at
being addressed, and looked around vaguely at the
conventional luxury of the room, with its highly polished
floors, its huge rich rugs, its antlers on the wall,
and its deeply upholstered leather chairs. When
Sylvia signified her intention of continuing the talk
by taking a seat beside the fire, Mrs. Fiske roused
herself to the responsibility of entertaining the young
guest. After some futile attempts at conversation
in the abstract, she discharged this responsibility
through the familiar expedient of the family photograph
album. With this between them, the two women were
able to go through the required form of avoiding silences.
Sylvia was fearfully bored by the succession of unknown
faces, and utterly unable to distinguish, in her hostess’
somewhat disconnected talk, between the different
sets of the Colonel’s children. “This
one is Stanley, Jermain’s brother, who died
when he was a baby,” the dull voice droned on;
“and this is Mattie in her wedding dress.”
“Oh, I didn’t know Jerry
had a married sister,” murmured Sylvia indifferently,
glad of any comment to make.
“She’s only his half-sister, a great deal
older.”
“But you haven’t
a daughter old enough to be married?” queried
Sylvia, astonished.
“Oh no no.
Mattie is the daughter of the Colonel’s first
wife.”
“Oh,” said Sylvia awkwardly,
remembering now that Mrs. Draper had spoken of the
Colonel’s several marriages. She added to
explain her question, “I’d forgotten that
Jerry’s mother was the Colonel’s second
wife and not his first.”
“She was his third,” breathed
Mrs. Fiske, looking down at the pages of the album.
Sylvia repressed a “Good gracious!”
of startled repugnance to the topic, and said, to
turn the conversation, “Oh, who is that beautiful
little girl with the fur cap?”
“That is my picture,”
said Mrs. Fiske, “when I was eighteen. I
was married soon after. I’ve changed very
much since my marriage.” Decidedly it was
not Sylvia’s lucky day for finding topics of
talk. She was wondering how the billiard game
was progressing, and was sorry she had not risked
going with the others. She was recalled by Mrs.
Fiske’s saying with a soft earnestness, “I
want you to know, Miss Marshall, how I appreciate
your kindness to me!”
Sylvia looked at her in astonishment,
half fearing that she was being made fun of.
The other went on: “It
was very nice of you your staying
here to talk with me instead of going off with the
young people the others don’t often ”
She played nervously with a gleaming pendant on a
platinum chain which hung over her flat chest, and
went on: “I you have always
seemed to me the very nicest of Jerry’s friends and
I shall never forget your mother’s kindness.
I hope I hope so much I shall see more
of her. The Colonel thinks so too we’ve
liked so much having him like you.” The
incoherence of this did not prevent Sylvia’s
having a chillingly accurate grasp on its meaning.
“It is the Colonel’s hope,” she
went on painfully, “to have Jerry marry as soon
as he graduates from the Law School. The Colonel
thinks that nothing is so good for a young man as
an early marriage though of course Jerry
isn’t so very, very young any more. He the Colonel
is a great believer in marriage ”
Her voice died away into murmurs. Her long, thin
throat contracted in a visible swallow.
At this point only Sylvia’s
perception of the other’s anguished embarrassment
prevented her from literally running away. As
it was, they sat silent, fingering over the pages
of the album and gazing unseeingly at the various
set countenances which looked out at them with the
unnatural glare of the photographed. Sylvia was
canvassing desperately one possibility of escape after
another when the door opened, and the lively young
man of the trolley-car stepped in. He tiptoed
to the fireplace with exaggerated caution, looking
theatrically over his shoulder for a pursuer.
Sylvia positively welcomed his appearance and turned
to him with a cordiality quite unlike the cool dignity
with which she had planned to treat him. He sat
down on the rug before the fire, very close to her
feet, and looked up at her, grinning. “Here’s
where I get another one on Jerry what?”
he said, ignoring Mrs. Fiske. “Old Jerry
thinks he’s playing such a wonderful game in
there he can’t tear himself away but
there’ll be something doing, I guess, when he
does come and finds where I am!” He had partaken
freely of the excellent white wine served at luncheon
(the first Sylvia had ever seen), and though entirely
master of his speech, was evidently even more uplifted
than was his usual hilarious wont. Sylvia looked
down at him, and across at the weak-faced woman opposite
her, and had a moment of wishing heartily she had
never come. She stood up impatiently, a movement
which the young man took to mean a threat of withdrawal.
“Aw, don’t go!” he pleaded,
sprawling across the rug towards her. As she turned
away, he snatched laughingly at her skirts, crying
out, “Tag! You’re caught! You’re
It!”
At this moment Jerry Fiske appeared
in the doorway. He looked darkly at his friend’s
cheerful face and said shortly: “Here, Stub quit
it! Get up out of that!” He added to Sylvia,
holding out his hand: “Come on, go skating
with me. The ice is great.”
“Are the others going?” asked Sylvia.
“Oh yes, I suppose so,” said Jerry, a
trifle impatiently.
The young man on the floor scrambled
up. “Here’s one that’s going,
whoever else don’t,” he announced.
“Get yourself a girl, then,”
commanded Jerry, “and tell the rest to come
along. There’s to be eats at four o’clock.”
The ice was even as fine as it had
been so redundantly represented to Sylvia. Out
of doors, leaning her supple, exquisitely poised body
to the wind as she veered like a bird on her flying
skates, Sylvia’s spirits rebounded with an instant
reaction into enjoyment. She adored skating,
and she had in it, as in all active exercise, the half-wild
pleasure of one whose childhood is but a short time
behind her. Furthermore, her costume prepared
for this event (Mrs. Draper had told her of the little
lake on the Fiske estate) was one of her successes.
It had been a pale cream broadcloth of the finest texture,
one of Aunt Victoria’s reception gowns, which
had evidently been spoiled by having coffee spilled
down the front breadth. Sylvia had had the bold
notion of dyeing it scarlet and making it over with
bands of black plush (the best bits from an outworn
coat of her mother’s). On her gleaming
red-brown hair she had perched a little red cap with
a small black wing on either side (one of Lawrence’s
pet chickens furnished this), and she carried the
muff which belonged with her best set of furs.
Thus equipped, she looked like some impish, slender
young Brunhilde, with her two upspringing wings.
The young men gazed at her with the most unconcealed
delight. As she skated very well, better than
any of the other girls, she felt, sweeping about the
pond in long, swift curves, that she was repaid for
her ignorance of billiards.
Jerry and the young man he called
Stub were openly in competition for her attention,
highly jocose on Stub’s part and not at all so
on Jerry’s, whose brow did not clear at the
constant crackling of the other’s witticisms.
On the shore burned a big fire, tended by a man-servant
in livery, who was occupied in setting out on a long
table a variety of sandwiches and cups of steaming
bouillon. Sylvia had never encountered before
a real man-servant in livery. She looked at him
with the curiosity she might have shown at seeing a
mediaeval knight in full armor. Jerry brought
her a cup of the bouillon, which was deliciously hot
and strong. Experienced as she was in the prudent
provisioning of the Marshall kitchen she was staggered
to think how many chickens had gone into filling with
that clear liquor the big silver tureen which steamed
over the glittering alcohol lamp. The table was
set, for that casual outdoor picnic lunch, as she could
hardly have imagined a royal board.
“What beautiful things your
people have!” she exclaimed to Jerry, looking
at a pile of small silver forks with delicately carved
ivory handles. “The rugs in the house are
superb.”
Jerry waved them aside as phenomena
of no importance. “All of ’em tributes
from Dad’s loving constituents,” he said,
repeating what was evidently an old joke in the family.
“You’d better believe Dad doesn’t
vote to get the tariff raised on anything unless he
sees to it that the manufacturers know who they have
to thank. It works something fine! Talk
about the presents a doctor gets from his grateful
patients! Nothing to it!”
This picturesque statement of practical
politics meant so little to Sylvia’s mind that
she dismissed it unheard, admiring, in spite of her
effort to take things for granted, the fabulous fineness
of the little fringed napkin set under the bouillon
cup. Jerry followed the direction of her eyes.
“Yep tariff on linen,” he commented
pregnantly.
The young man called Stub now sped
up to them, skating very fast, and swept Sylvia off.
“Here’s where we show ’em
how to do it!” he cried cheerfully, skating
backward with crazy rapidity, and pulling Sylvia after
him. There was a clang of swift steel on ice,
and Jerry bore down upon them, the muscles of his
jaw showing prominently. Without a word he thrust
his friend aside, caught at Sylvia’s hands, and
bore her in a swooping flight to the other end of
the pond, now deserted by the other skaters.
As they sped along he bent over Sylvia
fiercely and said in a low, angry tone, “You
don’t like that bounder, do you? You don’t!”
Sylvia was astonished at the heat
of his suspicion. She had known that Jerry was
not notably acute, but it had seemed to her that her
dislike for his friend must be more than apparent
to any one. They had reached the edge of the
ice now, and Sylvia’s hands were still in Jerry’s,
although they were not skating, but stood facing each
other. A bush of osier, frozen into the ice,
lifted its red twigs near them. Sylvia looked
down at it, hesitating how to express her utter denial
of any liking for the hilarious young man. Jerry
misunderstood her pause and cried out: “Good
God! Sylvia! Don’t say you do.”
Sylvia’s heart gave a frightened
leap. “Oh no no not
a bit!” she said hastily, looking longingly
across the pond at the group around the fire.
Jerry caught his breath with a gasp and gripped her
hands hard. “It makes me crazy to see you
look at another fellow,” he said. He forced
her eyes to meet his. “Sylvia you
know you know what I mean.”
Yes, Sylvia knew what he meant.
Her very white face showed that. The young man
went on, pressing, masterful, confident, towering over
her: “It’s idiotic to speak of it
now, out here with all these people around but
it just got me to see you with that I
wasn’t sure how I felt about you till I saw
how I felt when you seemed so friendly with him, when
you got off the car together. Then I knew.
It made me crazy I wanted you!”
Sylvia had not been able once to look
away from him since he began to speak. Her mouth
was a little open in her white face, her eyes fixed
with a painful intensity on his. He moistened
his lips with his tongue. “Sylvia it’s
all right isn’t it?”
With no change of expression in her
strained face, Sylvia nodded. As suddenly and
apparently as automatically she took a backward step.
The young man made a great stride
towards her there was a sound of quick
strokes on the ice and “BOO!”
shouted the hilarious young man, bursting between
them at railroad speed. He executed a marvelous
pirouette and returned instantly, calling out, “Less
spooning in the corners if you please or
if it’s got to be, let me in!” He was
followed closely by a string of young men and girls,
playing snap-the-whip. They “snapped”
just as they reached Jerry. The end girl flew
off and bumped, screaming with joy, into Jerry’s
arms. He looked furiously over her head towards
Sylvia, but she had been enveloped in a ring and was
being conveyed away to the accompaniment of the usual
squeals and shouts. The Colonel had come down
to take them all back, she was informed, and was waiting
for them with the sleigh.