Meanwhile, in the late Autumn, Eleanore
had come back to town. I had a note from her
one day.
“Come and tell me what you are writing,”
she said.
I went to see her that afternoon,
and I was deeply excited. I had often felt her
by my side when I was watching the harbor life and
as often behind me while I wrote. We had had
long talks together, absorbing talks about ourselves.
And though now in her easy welcome and through all
her cheerful questions there was not a suggestion
that we two had been or ever would be anything but
genial friends, this did not discourage me in the
least. No fellow, I thought, could be happy as
I and have nothing better than friendship ahead.
The Fates could never be so hard, for certainly now
they were smiling.
Here was her apartment, just the place
I had felt it would be, only infinitely more attractive.
High up above the Manhattan jungle, it was quiet and
sunny and charming here. From the low, wide living-room
windows you could see miles out over the harbor where
my work was going so splendidly, and all around the
room itself I saw what I was working for. Eleanore’s
touch was everywhere. An intimate, lovable feminine
home with man-sized views from its windows-just
like Eleanore herself, from whom I found it difficult
to keep my hungry eyes away. To that soft bewildering
hair of hers she had done something different-I
couldn’t tell what, but I loved it. I loved
the changing tones of her voice-I hate
monotonous voices. I watched the smiling lights
in her eyes. She was at her small tea table now.
Her motorboat, thank Heaven, was laid up for the winter,
and I had her right here in a room, with nothing to
do with her eyes but pay a decent amount of attention
to me. Then by some chance remark I learned that
she had been reading what I wrote, almost all of it,
in fact. And at the slight exclamation I made
I saw her color slightly and bite her lip as though
she were angry with herself for having let that secret
out.
“What do you want to write,”
she asked, “when you get through with the harbor?”
“Fiction,” I said.
“I want it so hard sometimes that it seems like
a long way ahead. It seems sometimes,”
I added, “like a girl I’d fallen in love
with-but I couldn’t even ask her-because
I’m so infernally poor.”
Over the tea cup at her lips Eleanore
looked thoughtfully straight into and through and
behind my eyes.
“Fiction is such a broad field,”
she remarked. “What kind do you think you’re
going to try?”
“I don’t know,”
I answered. “It still seems so far ahead.
You see, I have no name at all, and this harbor at
least is a good safe start. I’m afraid
I’m rather a cautious sort. When I find
what I want-and want so hard that it’s
the deepest part of me-I like to go slow.
I’m afraid to risk losing it all-deciding
my life one way or the other-by taking a
chance.” I made a restless movement.
“I wasn’t speaking of my work just then,”
I added gruffly.
I suddenly caught a glimpse of myself
in the mirror back of Eleanore’s chair.
And I glared at myself for the fool that I was to have
said all that. I hadn’t meant to-not
in the least! What a paltry looking cuss I was-small,
tough and wiry, hair sandy, eyes of no color at all,
snub nose and a jaw shut tight as in pain.
“You’re a queer person,” said a
voice.
“I am,” I agreed forlornly.
“I’m the queerest fellow I ever met.”
I caught a grim twinkle in my eyes. Thank God
for a sense of humor.
“Sometimes,” she went
on, reflectively, “you seem to me as old as the
hills-and again so young and obvious.
I’m so sorry to hear you say that you weren’t
talking of your work. I like to hear men talk
of their work.”
“I know you do,” I said
hungrily. “And that’s one of the reasons
why you’re going to mean so much some day-to
somebody’s work-and to his whole
life.”
Why couldn’t I stop? Had
I gone insane? I rose and moved about the room.
A low rippling laugh brought me back to my senses.
“But how about me and
my life?” she asked. “That
ought to be thought of a little, you know.”
I came close beside her:
“Let me say this. Won’t
you? I’ll promise never to say it again.
Your life is going to be all right. It’s
going to be quite wonderful-you’ll
be tremendously happy. I’m sure of that.
It’s not only the way you always-look-it’s
the way you always think and feel. It’s
everything about you.”
She had looked down at her hands for
a moment. Now she looked up suddenly.
“Thank you,” she said
smiling, in a way that told me to smile too. I
obeyed.
“I did that rather badly, didn’t I,”
I said.
“No, you did that rather well.
Especially the first part-I think I liked
that best of all-the part where you promised
so solemnly that you’d never do it again.”
I went indignantly back to my chair.
“Do you know,” I said,
“I feel sometimes when I’m with you as
though I were being managed! Absolutely managed!”
“I should think you wouldn’t
like that,” she replied. Her hands were
peacefully folded now and she looked at me serenely:
“I should think you’d rather manage yourself.”
I took the hint. From, that day
on, each time I came to see her, I managed myself
severely. And this apparently pleased her so much
that she seemed no longer the least afraid to let
me know her as well as I liked. Her father, too,
when I met him now and then in the evenings, was most
kindly in his welcome. And as winter wore on,
my hopes rose high.
But one evening, after Dillon had
read my story about the Christmas Boat, he gave me
a bitter disappointment.
“I like it,” he said,
as he handed it back. “It’s a fine
dramatic piece of work. But it’s only a
starter here. To get any idea of our problem
you’ll have to go all over the harbor. When
you’ve done that for a few months more, and
I get back from my trip abroad, I’ll be glad
to help you.”
“You’re going abroad?” I asked abruptly.
“Next month,” he said,
“with Eleanore. She seems to think I need
a rest.”
Back came the old feeling of emptiness.
And gloomily at home that night I wondered if it was
because she knew she was leaving so soon that she
had been so intimate lately. How outrageous women
are.