At eight o’clock in the inner
vestibule of the Auditorium Theatre by the window
of the box office, Laura Dearborn, her younger sister
Page, and their aunt Aunt Wess’ were
still waiting for the rest of the theatre-party to
appear. A great, slow-moving press of men and
women in evening dress filled the vestibule from one
wall to another. A confused murmur of talk and
the shuffling of many feet arose on all sides, while
from time to time, when the outside and inside doors
of the entrance chanced to be open simultaneously,
a sudden draught of air gushed in, damp, glacial,
and edged with the penetrating keenness of a Chicago
evening at the end of February.
The Italian Grand Opera Company gave
one of the most popular pieces of its repertoire on
that particular night, and the Cresslers had invited
the two sisters and their aunt to share their box with
them. It had been arranged that the party should
assemble in the Auditorium vestibule at a quarter
of eight; but by now the quarter was gone and the
Cresslers still failed to arrive.
“I don’t see,” murmured
Laura anxiously for the last time, “what can
be keeping them. Are you sure Page that Mrs.
Cressler meant here inside?”
She was a tall young girl of about
twenty-two or three, holding herself erect and with
fine dignity. Even beneath the opera cloak it
was easy to infer that her neck and shoulders were
beautiful. Her almost extreme slenderness was,
however, her characteristic; the curves of her figure,
the contour of her shoulders, the swell of hip and
breast were all low; from head to foot one could discover
no pronounced salience. Yet there was no trace,
no suggestion of angularity. She was slender as
a willow shoot is slender and equally graceful,
equally erect.
Next to this charming tenuity, perhaps
her paleness was her most noticeable trait. But
it was not a paleness of lack of colour. Laura
Dearborn’s pallour was in itself a colour.
It was a tint rather than a shade, like ivory; a warm
white, blending into an exquisite, delicate brownness
towards the throat. Set in the middle of this
paleness of brow and cheek, her deep brown eyes glowed
lambent and intense. They were not large, but
in some indefinable way they were important. It
was very natural to speak of her eyes, and in speaking
to her, her friends always found that they must look
squarely into their pupils. And all this beauty
of pallid face and brown eyes was crowned by, and sharply
contrasted with, the intense blackness of her hair,
abundant, thick, extremely heavy, continually coruscating
with sombre, murky reflections, tragic, in a sense
vaguely portentous, the coiffure of a heroine
of romance, doomed to dark crises.
On this occasion at the side of the
topmost coil, a white aigrette scintillated and trembled
with her every movement. She was unquestionably
beautiful. Her mouth was a little large, the lips
firm set, and one would not have expected that she
would smile easily; in fact, the general expression
of her face was rather serious.
“Perhaps,” continued Laura,
“they would look for us outside.”
But Page shook her head. She was five years younger
than Laura, just turned seventeen. Her hair,
dressed high for the first time this night, was brown.
But Page’s beauty was no less marked than her
sister’s. The seriousness of her expression,
however, was more noticeable. At times it amounted
to undeniable gravity. She was straight, and her
figure, all immature as yet, exhibited hardly any
softer outlines than that of a boy.
“No, no,” she said, in
answer to Laura’s question. “They
would come in here; they wouldn’t wait outside not
on such a cold night as this. Don’t you
think so, Aunt Wess’?”
But Mrs. Wessels, a lean, middle-aged
little lady, with a flat, pointed nose, had no suggestions
to offer. She disengaged herself from any responsibility
in the situation and, while waiting, found a vague
amusement in counting the number of people who filtered
in single file through the wicket where the tickets
were presented. A great, stout gentleman in evening
dress, perspiring, his cravatte limp, stood here,
tearing the checks from the tickets, and without ceasing,
maintaining a continuous outcry that dominated the
murmur of the throng:
“Have your tickets ready, please!
Have your tickets ready.”
“Such a crowd,” murmured
Page. “Did you ever see and every
one you ever knew or heard of. And such toilettes!”
With every instant the number of people
increased; progress became impossible, except an inch
at a time. The women were, almost without exception,
in light-coloured gowns, white, pale blue, Nile green,
and pink, while over these costumes were thrown opera
cloaks and capes of astonishing complexity and elaborateness.
Nearly all were bare-headed, and nearly all wore aigrettes;
a score of these, a hundred of them, nodded and vibrated
with an incessant agitation over the heads of the
crowd and flashed like mica flakes as the wearers moved.
Everywhere the eye was arrested by the luxury of stuffs,
the brilliance and delicacy of fabrics, laces as white
and soft as froth, crisp, shining silks, suave
satins, heavy gleaming velvets, and brocades and
plushes, nearly all of them white violently
so dazzling and splendid under the blaze
of the electrics. The gentlemen, in long, black
overcoats, and satin mufflers, and opera hats; their
hands under the elbows of their women-folk, urged
or guided them forward, distressed, preoccupied, adjuring
their parties to keep together; in their white-gloved
fingers they held their tickets ready. For all
the icy blasts that burst occasionally through the
storm doors, the vestibule was uncomfortably warm,
and into this steam-heated atmosphere a multitude of
heavy odours exhaled the scent of crushed
flowers, of perfume, of sachet, and even occasionally the
strong smell of damp seal-skin.
Outside it was bitterly cold.
All day a freezing wind had blown from off the Lake,
and since five in the afternoon a fine powder of snow
had been falling. The coachmen on the boxes of
the carriages that succeeded one another in an interminable
line before the entrance of the theatre, were swathed
to the eyes in furs. The spume and froth froze
on the bits of the horses, and the carriage wheels
crunching through the dry, frozen snow gave off a
shrill staccato whine. Yet for all this, a crowd
had collected about the awning on the sidewalk, and
even upon the opposite side of the street, peeping
and peering from behind the broad shoulders of policemen a
crowd of misérables, shivering in rags and tattered
comforters, who found, nevertheless, an unexplainable
satisfaction in watching this prolonged defile of millionaires.
So great was the concourse of teams,
that two blocks distant from the theatre they were
obliged to fall into line, advancing only at intervals,
and from door to door of the carriages thus immobilised
ran a score of young men, their arms encumbered with
pamphlets, shouting: “Score books, score
books and librettos; score books with photographs
of all the artists.”
However, in the vestibule the press
was thinning out. It was understood that the
overture had begun. Other people who were waiting
like Laura and her sister had been joined by their
friends and had gone inside. Laura, for whom
this opera night had been an event, a thing desired
and anticipated with all the eagerness of a girl who
had lived for twenty-two years in a second-class town
of central Massachusetts, was in great distress.
She had never seen Grand Opera, she would not have
missed a note, and now she was in a fair way to lose
the whole overture.
“Oh, dear,” she cried.
“Isn’t it too bad. I can’t imagine
why they don’t come.”
Page, more metropolitan, her keenness
of appreciation a little lost by two years of city
life and fashionable schooling, tried to reassure her.
“You won’t lose much,”
she said. “The air of the overture is repeated
in the first act I’ve heard it once
before.”
“If we even see the first act,”
mourned Laura. She scanned the faces of the late
comers anxiously. Nobody seemed to mind being
late. Even some of the other people who were
waiting, chatted calmly among themselves. Directly
behind them two men, their faces close together, elaborated
an interminable conversation, of which from time to
time they could overhear a phrase or two.
“ and I guess he’ll
do well if he settles for thirty cents on the dollar.
I tell you, dear boy, it was a smash!"
“Never should have tried to
swing a corner. The short interest was too small
and the visible supply was too great.”
Page nudged her sister and whispered:
“That’s the Helmick failure they’re
talking about, those men. Landry Court told me
all about it. Mr. Helmick had a corner in corn,
and he failed to-day, or will fail soon, or something.”
But Laura, preoccupied with looking
for the Cresslers, hardly listened. Aunt Wess’,
whose count was confused by all these figures murmured
just behind her, began over again, her lips silently
forming the words, “sixty-one, sixty-two, and
two is sixty-four.” Behind them the voice
continued:
“They say Porteous will peg the market at twenty-six.”
“Well he ought to. Corn is worth that.”
“Never saw such a call for margins
in my life. Some of the houses called eight cents.”
Page turned to Mrs. Wessels:
“By the way, Aunt Wess’; look at that man
there by the box office window, the one with his back
towards us, the one with his hands in his overcoat
pockets. Isn’t that Mr. Jadwin? The
gentleman we are going to meet to-night. See who
I mean?”
“Who? Mr. Jadwin?
I don’t know. I don’t know, child.
I never saw him, you know.”
“Well I think it is he,”
continued Page. “He was to be with our party
to-night. I heard Mrs. Cressler say she would
ask him. That’s Mr. Jadwin, I’m sure.
He’s waiting for them, too.”
“Oh, then ask him about it,
Page,” exclaimed Laura. “We’re
missing everything.”
But Page shook her head:
“I only met him once, ages ago;
he wouldn’t know me. It was at the Cresslers,
and we just said ‘How do you do.’
And then maybe it isn’t Mr. Jadwin.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t bother,
girls,” said Mrs. Wessels. “It’s
all right. They’ll be here in a minute.
I don’t believe the curtain has gone up yet.”
But the man of whom they spoke turned
around at the moment and cast a glance about the vestibule.
They saw a gentleman of an indeterminate age judged
by his face he might as well have been forty as thirty-five.
A heavy mustache touched with grey covered his lips.
The eyes were twinkling and good-tempered. Between
his teeth he held an unlighted cigar.
“It is Mr. Jadwin,” murmured
Page, looking quickly away. “But he don’t
recognise me.”
Laura also averted her eyes.
“Well, why not go right up to
him and introduce ourself, or recall yourself to him?”
she hazarded.
“Oh, Laura, I couldn’t,”
gasped Page. “I wouldn’t for worlds.”
“Couldn’t she, Aunt Wess’?”
appealed Laura. “Wouldn’t it be all
right?”
But Mrs. Wessels, ignoring forms and
customs, was helpless. Again she withdrew from
any responsibility in the matter.
“I don’t know anything
about it,” she answered. “But Page
oughtn’t to be bold.”
“Oh, bother; it isn’t
that,” protested Page. “But it’s
just because I don’t know, I don’t
want to Laura, I should just die,”
she exclaimed with abrupt irrelevance, “and
besides, how would that help any?” she added.
“Well, we’re just going
to miss it all,” declared Laura decisively.
There were actual tears in her eyes. “And
I had looked forward to it so.”
“Well,” hazarded Aunt
Wess’, “you girls can do just as you please.
Only I wouldn’t be bold.”
“Well, would it be bold if Page,
or if if I were to speak to him? We’re
going to meet him anyways in just a few minutes.”
“Better wait, hadn’t you,
Laura,” said Aunt Wess’, “and see.
Maybe he’ll come up and speak to us.”
“Oh, as if!” contradicted
Laura. “He don’t know us, just
as Page says. And if he did, he wouldn’t.
He wouldn’t think it polite.”
“Then I guess, girlie, it wouldn’t be
polite for you.”
“I think it would,” she
answered. “I think it would be a woman’s
place. If he’s a gentleman, he would feel
that he just couldn’t speak first. I’m
going to do it,” she announced suddenly.
“Just as you think best, Laura,” said
her aunt.
But nevertheless Laura did not move, and another five
minutes went by.
Page took advantage of the interval
to tell Laura about Jadwin. He was very rich,
but a bachelor, and had made his money in Chicago real
estate. Some of his holdings in the business quarter
of the city were enormous; Landry Court had told her
about him. Jadwin, unlike Mr. Cressler, was not
opposed to speculation. Though not a member of
the Board of Trade, he nevertheless at very long intervals
took part in a “deal” in wheat, or corn,
or provisions. He believed that all corners were
doomed to failure, however, and had predicted Helmick’s
collapse six months ago. He had influence, was
well known to all Chicago people, what he said carried
weight, financiers consulted him, promoters sought
his friendship, his name on the board of directors
of a company was an all-sufficing endorsement; in
a word, a “strong” man.
“I can’t understand,”
exclaimed Laura distrait, referring to the delay on
the part of the Cresslers. “This was the
night, and this was the place, and it is long past
the time. We could telephone to the house, you
know,” she said, struck with an idea, “and
see if they’ve started, or what has happened.”
“I don’t know I
don’t know,” murmured Mrs. Wessels vaguely.
No one seemed ready to act upon Laura’s suggestion,
and again the minutes passed.
“I’m going,” declared
Laura again, looking at the other two, as if to demand
what they had to say against the idea.
“I just couldn’t,” declared Page
flatly.
“Well,” continued Laura,
“I’ll wait just three minutes more, and
then if the Cresslers are not here I will speak to
him. It seems to me to be perfectly natural,
and not at all bold.”
She waited three minutes, and the
Cresslers still failing to appear, temporised yet
further, for the twentieth time repeating:
“I don’t see I can’t
understand.”
Then, abruptly drawing her cape about
her, she crossed the vestibule and came up to Jadwin.
As she approached she saw him catch
her eye. Then, as he appeared to understand that
this young woman was about to speak to him, she noticed
an expression of suspicion, almost of distrust, come
into his face. No doubt he knew nothing of this
other party who were to join the Cresslers in the
vestibule. Why should this girl speak to him?
Something had gone wrong, and the instinct of the man,
no longer very young, to keep out of strange young
women’s troubles betrayed itself in the uneasy
glance that he shot at her from under his heavy eyebrows.
But the look faded as quickly as it had come.
Laura guessed that he had decided that in such a place
as this he need have no suspicions. He took the
cigar from his mouth, and she, immensely relieved,
realised that she had to do with a man who was a gentleman.
Full of trepidation as she had been in crossing the
vestibule, she was quite mistress of herself when
the instant came for her to speak, and it was in a
steady voice and without embarrassment that she said:
“I beg your pardon, but I believe this is Mr.
Jadwin.”
He took off his hat, evidently a little
nonplussed that she should know his name, and by now
she was ready even to browbeat him a little should
it be necessary.
“Yes, yes,” he answered,
now much more confused than she, “my name is
Jadwin.”
“I believe,” continued
Laura steadily, “we were all to be in the same
party to-night with the Cresslers. But they don’t
seem to come, and we my sister and my aunt
and I don’t know what to do.”
She saw that he was embarrassed, convinced,
and the knowledge that she controlled the little situation,
that she could command him, restored her all her equanimity.
“My name is Miss Dearborn,”
she continued. “I believe you know my sister
Page.”
By some trick of manner she managed
to convey to him the impression that if he did not
know her sister Page, that if for one instant he should
deem her to be bold, he would offer a mortal affront.
She had not yet forgiven him that stare of suspicion
when first their eyes had met; he should pay her for
that yet.
“Miss Page, your
sister, Miss Page Dearborn? Certainly
I know her,” he answered. “And you
have been waiting, too? What a pity!” And
he permitted himself the awkwardness of adding:
“I did not know that you were to be of our party.”
“No,” returned Laura upon
the instant, “I did not know you were to be
one of us to-night until Page told me.”
She accented the pronouns a little, but it was enough
for him to know that he had been rebuked. How,
he could not just say; and for what it was impossible
for him at the moment to determine; and she could
see that he began to experience a certain distress,
was beating a retreat, was ceding place to her.
Who was she, then, this tall and pretty young woman,
with the serious, unsmiling face, who was so perfectly
at ease, and who hustled him about and made him feel
as though he were to blame for the Cresslers’
non-appearance; as though it was his fault that she
must wait in the draughty vestibule. She had
a great air with her; how had he offended her?
If he had introduced himself to her, had forced himself
upon her, she could not be more lofty, more reserved.
“I thought perhaps you might telephone,”
she observed.
“They haven’t a telephone, unfortunately,”
he answered.
“Oh!”
This was quite the last slight, the
Cresslers had not a telephone! He was to blame
for that, too, it seemed. At his wits’ end,
he entertained for an instant the notion of dashing
out into the street in a search for a messenger boy,
who would take a note to Cressler and set him right
again; and his agitation was not allayed when Laura,
in frigid tones, declared:
“It seems to me that something might be done.”
“I don’t know,”
he replied helplessly. “I guess there’s
nothing to be done but just wait. They are sure
to be along.”
In the background, Page and Mrs. Wessels
had watched the interview, and had guessed that Laura
was none too gracious. Always anxious that her
sister should make a good impression, the little girl
was now in great distress.
“Laura is putting on her ‘grand
manner,’” she lamented. “I just
know how she’s talking. The man will hate
the very sound of her name all the rest of his life.”
Then all at once she uttered a joyful exclamation:
“At last, at last,” she cried, “and
about time, too!”
The Cresslers and the rest of the
party two young men had appeared,
and Page and her aunt came up just in time to hear
Mrs. Cressler a fine old lady, in a wonderful
ermine-trimmed cape, whose hair was powdered exclaim
at the top of her voice, as if the mere declaration
of fact was final, absolutely the last word upon the
subject, “The bridge was turned!”
The Cresslers lived on the North Side.
The incident seemed to be closed with the abruptness
of a slammed door.
Page and Aunt Wess’ were introduced
to Jadwin, who was particular to announce that he
remembered the young girl perfectly. The two young
men were already acquainted with the Dearborn sisters
and Mrs. Wessels. Page and Laura knew one of
them well enough to address him familiarly by his
Christian name.
This was Landry Court, a young fellow
just turned twenty-three, who was “connected
with” the staff of the great brokerage firm of
Gretry, Converse and Co. He was astonishingly
good-looking, small-made, wiry, alert, nervous, debonair,
with blond hair and dark eyes that snapped like a
terrier’s. He made friends almost at first
sight, and was one of those fortunate few who were
favoured equally of men and women. The healthiness
of his eye and skin persuaded to a belief in the healthiness
of his mind; and, in fact, Landry was as clean without
as within. He was frank, open-hearted, full of
fine sentiments and exaltations and enthusiasms.
Until he was eighteen he had cherished an ambition
to become the President of the United States.
“Yes, yes,” he said to
Laura, “the bridge was turned. It was an
imposition. We had to wait while they let three
tows through. I think two at a time is as much
as is legal. And we had to wait for three.
Yes, sir; three, think of that! I shall look into
that to-morrow. Yes, sir; don’t you be
afraid of that. I’ll look into it.”
He nodded his head with profound seriousness.
“Well,” announced Mr.
Cressler, marshalling the party, “shall we go
in? I’m afraid, Laura, we’ve missed
the overture.”
Smiling, she shrugged her shoulders,
while they moved to the wicket, as if to say that
it could not be helped now.
Cressler, tall, lean, bearded, and
stoop-shouldered, belonging to the same physical type
that includes Lincoln the type of the Middle
West was almost a second father to the parentless
Dearborn girls. In Massachusetts, thirty years
before this time, he had been a farmer, and the miller
Dearborn used to grind his grain regularly. The
two had been boys together, and had always remained
fast friends, almost brothers. Then, in the years
just before the War, had come the great movement westward,
and Cressler had been one of those to leave an “abandoned”
New England farm behind him, and with his family emigrate
toward the Mississippi. He had come to Sangamon
County in Illinois. For a time he tried wheat-raising,
until the War, which skied the prices of all food-stuffs,
had made him for those days a
rich man. Giving up farming, he came to live
in Chicago, bought a seat on the Board of Trade, and
in a few years was a millionaire. At the time
of the Turco-Russian War he and two Milwaukee men
had succeeded in cornering all the visible supply
of spring wheat. At the end of the thirtieth day
of the corner the clique figured out its profits at
close upon a million; a week later it looked like
a million and a half. Then the three lost their
heads; they held the corner just a fraction of a month
too long, and when the time came that the three were
forced to take profits, they found that they were
unable to close out their immense holdings without
breaking the price. In two days wheat that they
had held at a dollar and ten cents collapsed to sixty.
The two Milwaukee men were ruined, and two-thirds
of Cressler’s immense fortune vanished like
a whiff of smoke.
But he had learned his lesson.
Never since then had he speculated. Though keeping
his seat on the Board, he had confined himself to
commission trading, uninfluenced by fluctuations in
the market. And he was never wearied of protesting
against the evil and the danger of trading in margins.
Speculation he abhorred as the small-pox, believing
it to be impossible to corner grain by any means or
under any circumstances. He was accustomed to
say: “It can’t be done; first, for
the reason that there is a great harvest of wheat somewhere
in the world for every month in the year; and, second,
because the smart man who runs the corner has every
other smart man in the world against him. And,
besides, it’s wrong; the world’s food should
not be at the mercy of the Chicago wheat pit.”
As the party filed in through the
wicket, the other young man who had come with Landry
Court managed to place himself next to Laura.
Meeting her eyes, he murmured:
“Ah, you did not wear them after
all. My poor little flowers.”
But she showed him a single American
Beauty, pinned to the shoulder of her gown beneath
her cape.
“Yes, Mr. Corthell,” she
answered, “one. I tried to select the prettiest,
and I think I succeeded don’t you?
It was hard to choose.”
“Since you have worn it, it
is the prettiest,” he answered.
He was a slightly built man of about
twenty-eight or thirty; dark, wearing a small, pointed
beard, and a mustache that he brushed away from his
lips like a Frenchman. By profession he was an
artist, devoting himself more especially to the designing
of stained windows. In this, his talent was indisputable.
But he was by no means dependent upon his profession
for a living, his parents long since dead having
left him to the enjoyment of a very considerable fortune.
He had a beautiful studio in the Fine Arts Building,
where he held receptions once every two months, or
whenever he had a fine piece of glass to expose.
He had travelled, read, studied, occasionally written,
and in matters pertaining to the colouring and fusing
of glass was cited as an authority. He was one
of the directors of the new Art Gallery that had taken
the place of the old Exposition Building on the Lake
Front.
Laura had known him for some little
time. On the occasion of her two previous visits
to Page he had found means to see her two or three
times each week. Once, even, he had asked her
to marry him, but she, deep in her studies at the
time, consumed with vague ambitions to be a great
actress of Shakespearian roles, had told him she could
care for nothing but her art. He had smiled and
said that he could wait, and, strangely enough, their
relations had resumed again upon the former footing.
Even after she had gone away they had corresponded
regularly, and he had made and sent her a tiny window a
veritable jewel illustrative of a scene
from “Twelfth Night.”
In the foyer, as the gentlemen were
checking their coats, Laura overheard Jadwin say to
Mr. Cressler:
“Well, how about Helmick?”
The other made an impatient movement of his shoulders.
“Ask me, what was the fool thinking of a
corner! Pshaw!”
There were one or two other men about,
making their overcoats and opera hats into neat bundles
preparatory to checking them; and instantly there
was a flash of a half-dozen eyes in the direction of
the two men. Evidently the collapse of the Helmick
deal was in the air. All the city seemed interested.
But from behind the heavy curtains
that draped the entrance to the theatre proper, came
a muffled burst of music, followed by a long salvo
of applause. Laura’s cheeks flamed with
impatience, she hurried after Mrs. Cressler; Corthell
drew the curtains for her to pass, and she entered.
Inside it was dark, and a prolonged
puff of hot air, thick with the mingled odours of
flowers, perfume, upholstery, and gas, enveloped her
upon the instant. It was the unmistakable, unforgettable,
entrancing aroma of the theatre, that she had known
only too seldom, but that in a second set her heart
galloping.
Every available space seemed to be
occupied. Men, even women, were standing up,
compacted into a suffocating pressure, and for the
moment everybody was applauding vigorously. On
all sides Laura heard:
“Bravo!”
“Good, good!”
“Very well done!”
“Encore! Encore!”
Between the peoples’ heads and
below the low dip of the overhanging balcony a
brilliant glare in the surrounding darkness she
caught a glimpse of the stage. It was set for
a garden; at the back and in the distance a chateau;
on the left a bower, and on the right a pavilion.
Before the footlights, a famous contralto, dressed
as a boy, was bowing to the audience, her arms full
of flowers.
“Too bad,” whispered Corthell
to Laura, as they followed the others down the side-aisle
to the box. “Too bad, this is the second
act already; you’ve missed the whole first act and
this song. She’ll sing it over again, though,
just for you, if I have to lead the applause myself.
I particularly wanted you to hear that.”
Once in the box, the party found itself
a little crowded, and Jadwin and Cressler were obliged
to stand, in order to see the stage. Although
they all spoke in whispers, their arrival was the signal
for certain murmurs of “Sh! Sh!”
Mrs. Cressler made Laura occupy the front seat.
Jadwin took her cloak from her, and she settled herself
in her chair and looked about her. She could
see but little of the house or audience. All
the lights were lowered; only through the gloom the
swaying of a multitude of fans, pale coloured, like
night-moths balancing in the twilight, defined itself.
But soon she turned towards the stage.
The applause died away, and the contralto once more
sang the aria. The melody was simple, the tempo
easily followed; it was not a very high order of music.
But to Laura it was nothing short of a revelation.
She sat spell-bound, her hands clasped
tight, her every faculty of attention at its highest
pitch. It was wonderful, such music as that;
wonderful, such a voice; wonderful, such orchestration;
wonderful, such exaltation inspired by mere beauty
of sound. Never, never was this night to be forgotten,
this her first night of Grand Opera. All this
excitement, this world of perfume, of flowers, of exquisite
costumes, of beautiful women, of fine, brave men.
She looked back with immense pity to the narrow little
life of her native town she had just left forever,
the restricted horizon, the petty round of petty duties,
the rare and barren pleasures the library,
the festival, the few concerts, the trivial plays.
How easy it was to be good and noble when music such
as this had become a part of one’s life; how
desirable was wealth when it could make possible such
exquisite happiness as hers of the moment. Nobility,
purity, courage, sacrifice seemed much more worth while
now than a few moments ago. All things not positively
unworthy became heroic, all things and all men.
Landry Court was a young chevalier, pure as Galahad.
Corthell was a beautiful artist-priest of the early
Renaissance. Even Jadwin was a merchant prince,
a great financial captain. And she herself ah,
she did not know; she dreamed of another Laura, a
better, gentler, more beautiful Laura, whom everybody,
everybody loved dearly and tenderly, and who loved
everybody, and who should die beautifully, gently,
in some garden far away die because of
a great love beautifully, gently in the
midst of flowers, die of a broken heart, and all the
world should be sorry for her, and would weep over
her when they found her dead and beautiful in her garden,
amid the flowers and the birds, in some far-off place,
where it was always early morning and where there
was soft music. And she was so sorry for herself,
and so hurt with the sheer strength of her longing
to be good and true, and noble and womanly, that as
she sat in the front of the Cresslers’ box on
that marvellous evening, the tears ran down her cheeks
again and again, and dropped upon her tight-shut, white-gloved
fingers.
But the contralto had disappeared,
and in her place the tenor held the stage a
stout, short young man in red plush doublet and grey
silk tights. His chin advanced, an arm extended,
one hand pressed to his breast, he apostrophised the
pavilion, that now and then swayed a little in the
draught from the wings.
The aria was received with furor;
thrice he was obliged to repeat it. Even Corthell,
who was critical to extremes, approved, nodding his
head. Laura and Page clapped their hands till
the very last. But Landry Court, to create an
impression, assumed a certain disaffection.
“He’s not in voice to-night.
Too bad. You should have heard him Friday in
‘Aida.’”
The opera continued. The great
soprano, the prima donna, appeared and delivered
herself of a song for which she was famous with astonishing
eclat. Then in a little while the stage grew dark,
the orchestration lapsed to a murmur, and the tenor
and the soprano reentered. He clasped her in
his arms and sang a half-dozen bars, then holding her
hand, one arm still about her waist, withdrew from
her gradually, till she occupied the front-centre
of the stage. He assumed an attitude of adoration
and wonderment, his eyes uplifted as if entranced,
and she, very softly, to the accompaniment of the
sustained, dreamy chords of the orchestra, began her
solo.
Laura shut her eyes. Never had
she felt so soothed, so cradled and lulled and languid.
Ah, to love like that! To love and be loved.
There was no such love as that to-day. She wished
that she could loose her clasp upon the sordid, material
modern life that, perforce, she must hold to, she
knew not why, and drift, drift off into the past, far
away, through rose-coloured mists and diaphanous veils,
or resign herself, reclining in a silver skiff drawn
by swans, to the gentle current of some smooth-flowing
river that ran on forever and forever.
But a discordant element developed.
Close by the lights were so low she could
not tell where a conversation, kept up in
low whispers, began by degrees to intrude itself upon
her attention. Try as she would, she could not
shut it out, and now, as the music died away fainter
and fainter, till voice and orchestra blended together
in a single, barely audible murmur, vibrating with
emotion, with romance, and with sentiment, she heard,
in a hoarse, masculine whisper, the words:
“The shortage is a million bushels
at the very least. Two hundred carloads were
to arrive from Milwaukee last night.”
She made a little gesture of despair,
turning her head for an instant, searching the gloom
about her. But she could see no one not interested
in the stage. Why could not men leave their business
outside, why must the jar of commerce spoil all the
harmony of this moment.
However, all sounds were drowned suddenly
in a long burst of applause. The tenor and soprano
bowed and smiled across the footlights. The soprano
vanished, only to reappear on the balcony of the pavilion,
and while she declared that the stars and the night-bird
together sang “He loves thee,” the voices
close at hand continued:
“ one hundred and six carloads ”
“ paralysed the bulls ”
“ fifty thousand dollars ”
Then all at once the lights went up. The act
was over.
Laura seemed only to come to herself
some five minutes later. She and Corthell were
out in the foyer behind the boxes. Everybody was
promenading. The air was filled with the staccato
chatter of a multitude of women. But she herself
seemed far away she and Sheldon Corthell.
His face, dark, romantic, with the silky beard and
eloquent eyes, appeared to be all she cared to see,
while his low voice, that spoke close to her ear,
was in a way a mere continuation of the melody of
the duet just finished.
Instinctively she knew what he was
about to say, for what he was trying to prepare her.
She felt, too, that he had not expected to talk thus
to her to-night. She knew that he loved her,
that inevitably, sooner or later, they must return
to a subject that for long had been excluded from
their conversations, but it was to have been when they
were alone, remote, secluded, not in the midst of
a crowd, brilliant electrics dazzling their eyes,
the humming of the talk of hundreds assaulting their
ears. But it seemed as if these important things
came of themselves, independent of time and place,
like birth and death. There was nothing to do
but to accept the situation, and it was without surprise
that at last, from out the murmur of Corthell’s
talk, she was suddenly conscious of the words:
“So that it is hardly necessary,
is it, to tell you once more that I love you?”
She drew a long breath.
“I know. I know you love me.”
They had sat down on a divan, at one
end of the promenade; and Corthell, skilful enough
in the little arts of the drawing-room, made it appear
as though they talked of commonplaces; as for Laura,
exalted, all but hypnotised with this marvellous evening,
she hardly cared; she would not even stoop to maintain
appearances.
“Yes, yes,” she said; “I know you
love me.”
“And is that all you can say?”
he urged. “Does it mean nothing to you
that you are everything to me?”
She was coming a little to herself
again. Love was, after all, sweeter in the actual even
in this crowded foyer, in this atmosphere of silk
and jewels, in this show-place of a great city’s
society than in a mystic garden of some
romantic dreamland. She felt herself a woman
again, modern, vital, and no longer a maiden of a legend
of chivalry.
“Nothing to me?” she answered.
“I don’t know. I should rather have
you love me than not.”
“Let me love you then for always,”
he went on. “You know what I mean.
We have understood each other from the very first.
Plainly, and very simply, I love you with all my heart.
You know now that I speak the truth, you know that
you can trust me. I shall not ask you to share
your life with mine. I ask you for the great happiness” he
raised his head sharply, suddenly proud “the
great honour of the opportunity of giving you all
that I have of good. God give me humility, but
that is much since I have known you. If I were
a better man because of myself, I would not presume
to speak of it, but if I am in anything less selfish,
if I am more loyal, if I am stronger, or braver, it
is only something of you that has become a part of
me, and made me to be born again. So when I offer
myself to you, I am only bringing back to you the
gift you gave me for a little while. I have tried
to keep it for you, to keep it bright and sacred and
un-spotted. It is yours again now if you will
have it.”
There was a long pause; a group of
men in opera hats and white gloves came up the stairway
close at hand. The tide of promenaders set towards
the entrances of the theatre. A little electric
bell shrilled a note of warning.
Laura looked up at length, and as
their glances met, he saw that there were tears in
her eyes. This declaration of his love for her
was the last touch to the greatest exhilaration of
happiness she had ever known. Ah yes, she was
loved, just as that young girl of the opera had been
loved. For this one evening, at least, the beauty
of life was unmarred, and no cruel word of hers should
spoil it. The world was beautiful. All people
were good and noble and true. To-morrow, with
the material round of duties and petty responsibilities
and cold, calm reason, was far, far away.
Suddenly she turned to him, surrendering
to the impulse, forgetful of consequences.
“Oh, I am glad, glad,”
she cried, “glad that you love me!”
But before Corthell could say anything
more Landry Court and Page came up.
“We’ve been looking for
you,” said the young girl quietly. Page
was displeased. She took herself and her sister in
fact, the whole scheme of existence with
extraordinary seriousness. She had no sense of
humour. She was not tolerant; her ideas of propriety
and the amenities were as immutable as the fixed stars.
A fine way for Laura to act, getting off into corners
with Sheldon Corthell. It would take less than
that to make talk. If she had no sense of her
obligations to Mrs. Cressler, at least she ought to
think of the looks of things.
“They’re beginning again,”
she said solemnly. “I should think you’d
feel as though you had missed about enough of this
opera.”
They returned to the box. The
rest of the party were reassembling.
“Well, Laura,” said Mrs.
Cressler, when they had sat down, “do you like
it?”
“I don’t want to leave
it ever,” she answered. “I
could stay here always.”
“I like the young man best,”
observed Aunt Wess’. “The one who
seems to be the friend of the tall fellow with a cloak.
But why does he seem so sorry? Why don’t
he marry the young lady? Let’s see, I don’t
remember his name.”
“Beastly voice,” declared
Landry Court. “He almost broke there once.
Too bad. He’s not what he used to be.
It seems he’s terribly dissipated drinks.
Yes, sir, like a fish. He had delirium tremens
once behind the scenes in Philadelphia, and stabbed
a scene shifter with his stage dagger. A bad
lot, to say the least.”
“Now, Landry,” protested
Mrs. Cressler, “you’re making it up as
you go along.” And in the laugh that followed
Landry himself joined.
“After all,” said Corthell,
“this music seems to be just the right medium
between the naïve melody of the Italian school and
the elaborate complexity of Wagner. I can’t
help but be carried away with it at times in
spite of my better judgment.”
Jadwin, who had been smoking a cigar
in the vestibule during the entr’acte, rubbed
his chin reflectively.
“Well,” he said, “it’s
all very fine. I’ve no doubt of that, but
I give you my word I would rather hear my old governor
take his guitar and sing ‘Father, oh father,
come home with me now,’ than all the fiddle-faddle,
tweedle-deedle opera business in the whole world.”
But the orchestra was returning, the
musicians crawling out one by one from a little door
beneath the stage hardly bigger than the entrance of
a rabbit hutch. They settled themselves in front
of their racks, adjusting their coat-tails, fingering
their sheet music. Soon they began to tune up,
and a vague bourdon of many sounds the subdued
snarl of the cornets, the dull mutter of the bass
viols, the liquid gurgling of the flageolets
and wood-wind instruments, now and then pierced by
the strident chirps and cries of the violins, rose
into the air dominating the incessant clamour of conversation
that came from all parts of the theatre.
Then suddenly the house lights sank
and the footlights rose. From all over the theatre
came energetic whispers of “Sh! Sh!”
Three strokes, as of a great mallet, sepulchral, grave,
came from behind the wings; the leader of the orchestra
raised his baton, then brought it slowly down, and
while from all the instruments at once issued a prolonged
minor chord, emphasised by a muffled roll of the kettle-drum,
the curtain rose upon a mediaeval public square.
The soprano was seated languidly upon a bench.
Her grande scene occurred in this act. Her hair
was un-bound; she wore a loose robe of cream white,
with flowing sleeves, which left the arms bare to
the shoulder. At the waist it was caught in by
a girdle of silk rope.
“This is the great act,”
whispered Mrs. Cressler, leaning over Laura’s
shoulder. “She is superb later on.
Superb.”
“I wish those men would stop
talking,” murmured Laura, searching the darkness
distressfully, for between the strains of the music
she had heard the words:
“ Clearing House balance of three
thousand dollars.”
Meanwhile the prima donna, rising
to her feet, delivered herself of a lengthy recitative,
her chin upon her breast, her eyes looking out from
under her brows, an arm stretched out over the footlights.
The baritone entered, striding to the left of the
footlights, apostrophising the prima donna in
a rage. She clasped her hands imploringly, supplicating
him to leave her, exclaiming from time to time:
“Va via, va
via
Vel chieco per
pieta.”
Then all at once, while the orchestra
blared, they fell into each other’s arms.
“Why do they do that?”
murmured Aunt Wess’ perplexed. “I
thought the gentleman with the beard didn’t
like her at all.”
“Why, that’s the duke,
don’t you see, Aunt Wess’?” said
Laura trying to explain. “And he forgives
her. I don’t know exactly. Look at
your libretto.”
“ a conspiracy of
the Bears ... seventy cents ... and naturally he busted.”
The mezzo-soprano, the confidante
of the prima donna, entered, and a trio developed
that had but a mediocre success. At the end the
baritone abruptly drew his sword, and the prima donna
fell to her knees, chanting:
“Io tremo, ahimè!”
“And now he’s mad again,”
whispered Aunt Wess’, consulting her libretto,
all at sea once more. “I can’t understand.
She says the opera book says she says,
‘I tremble.’ I don’t see why.”
“Look now,” said Page,
“here comes the tenor. Now they’re
going to have it out.”
The tenor, hatless, debouched suddenly
upon the scene, and furious, addressed himself to
the baritone, leaning forward, his hands upon his
chest. Though the others sang in Italian, the
tenor, a Parisian, used the French book continually,
and now villified the baritone, crying out:
“O traître infâme
O lâche et coupable”
“I don’t see why he don’t
marry the young lady and be done with it,” commented
Aunt Wess’.
The act drew to its close. The
prima donna went through her “great scene,”
wherein her voice climbed to C in alt, holding the
note so long that Aunt Wess’ became uneasy.
As she finished, the house rocked with applause, and
the soprano, who had gone out supported by her confidante,
was recalled three times. A duel followed between
the baritone and tenor, and the latter, mortally wounded,
fell into the arms of his friends uttering broken,
vehement notes. The chorus made up
of the city watch and town’s people crowded
in upon the back of the stage. The soprano and
her confidante returned. The basso, a black-bearded,
bull necked man, sombre, mysterious, parted the chorus
to right and left, and advanced to the footlights.
The contralto, dressed as a boy, appeared. The
soprano took stage, and abruptly the closing scene
of the act developed.
The violins raged and wailed in unison,
all the bows moving together like parts of a well-regulated
machine. The kettle-drums, marking the cadences,
rolled at exact intervals. The director beat time
furiously, as though dragging up the notes and chords
with the end of his baton, while the horns and cornets
blared, the bass viols growled, and the flageolets
and piccolos lost themselves in an amazing complication
of liquid gurgles and modulated roulades.
On the stage every one was singing.
The soprano in the centre, vocalised in her highest
register, bringing out the notes with vigorous twists
of her entire body, and tossing them off into the air
with sharp flirts of her head. On the right,
the basso, scowling, could be heard in the intervals
of the music repeating
“Il pérfido,
l’ingrato”
while to the left of the soprano,
the baritone intoned indistinguishable, sonorous phrases,
striking his breast and pointing to the fallen tenor
with his sword. At the extreme left of the stage
the contralto, in tights and plush doublet, turned
to the audience, extending her hands, or flinging
back her arms. She raised her eyebrows with each
high note, and sunk her chin into her ruff when her
voice descended. At certain intervals her notes
blended with those of the soprano’s while she
sang:
“Addio, felicità
del ciel!”
The tenor, raised upon one hand, his
shoulders supported by his friends, sustained the
theme which the soprano led with the words:
“Je me meurs
Ah malheur
Ah je souffre
Mon âme s’envole.”
The chorus formed a semi-circle just
behind him. The women on one side, the men on
the other. They left much to be desired; apparently
scraped hastily together from heaven knew what sources,
after the manner of a management suddenly become economical.
The women were fat, elderly, and painfully homely;
the men lean, osseous, and distressed, in misfitting
hose. But they had been conscientiously drilled.
They made all their gestures together, moved in masses
simultaneously, and, without ceasing, chanted over
and over again:
“O terror, O blasfema.”
The finale commenced. Everybody
on the stage took a step forward, beginning all over
again upon a higher key. The soprano’s voice
thrilled to the very chandelier. The orchestra
redoubled its efforts, the director beating time with
hands, head, and body.
“Il pérfido,
l’ingrato”
thundered the basso.
“Ineffabil mistero,”
answered the baritone, striking his
breast and pointing with his sword; while all at once
the soprano’s voice, thrilling out again, ran
up an astonishing crescendo that evoked veritable
gasps from all parts of the audience, then jumped
once more to her famous C in alt, and held it long
enough for the chorus to repeat
“O terror, O blasfema”
four times.
Then the director’s baton descended
with the violence of a blow. There was a prolonged
crash of harmony, a final enormous chord, to which
every voice and every instrument contributed.
The singers struck tableau attitudes, the tenor fell
back with a last wail:
“Je me meurs,”
and the soprano fainted into the arms
of her confidante. The curtain fell.
The house roared with applause.
The scene was recalled again and again. The tenor,
scrambling to his feet, joined hands with the baritone,
soprano, and other artists, and all bowed repeatedly.
Then the curtain fell for the last time, the lights
of the great chandelier clicked and blazed up, and
from every quarter of the house came the cries of the
programme sellers:
“Opera books. Books of
the opera. Words and music of the opera.”
During this, the last entr’acte,
Laura remained in the box with Mrs. Cressler, Corthell,
and Jadwin. The others went out to look down upon
the foyer from a certain balcony.
In the box the conversation turned
upon stage management, and Corthell told how, in “L’Africaine,”
at the Opera, in Paris, the entire superstructure
of the stage wings, drops, and backs turned
when Vasco da Gama put the ship about.
Jadwin having criticised the effect because none of
the actors turned with it, was voted a Philistine by
Mrs. Cressler and Corthell. But as he was about
to answer, Mrs. Cressler turned to the artist, passing
him her opera glasses, and asking:
“Who are those people down there
in the third row of the parquet see, on
the middle aisle the woman is in red.
Aren’t those the Gretrys?”
This left Jadwin and Laura out of
the conversation, and the capitalist was quick to
seize the chance of talking to her. Soon she was
surprised to notice that he was trying hard to be
agreeable, and before they had exchanged a dozen sentences,
he had turned an awkward compliment. She guessed
by his manner that paying attention to young girls
was for him a thing altogether unusual. Intuitively
she divined that she, on this, the very first night
of their acquaintance, had suddenly interested him.
She had had neither opportunity nor
inclination to observe him closely during their interview
in the vestibule, but now, as she sat and listened
to him talk, she could not help being a little attracted.
He was a heavy-built man, would have made two of Corthell,
and his hands were large and broad, the hands of a
man of affairs, who knew how to grip, and, above all,
how to hang on. Those broad, strong hands, and
keen, calm eyes would enfold and envelop a Purpose
with tremendous strength, and they would persist and
persist and persist, unswerving, unwavering, untiring,
till the Purpose was driven home. And the two
long, lean, fibrous arms of him; what a reach they
could attain, and how wide and huge and even formidable
would be their embrace of affairs. One of those
great manoeuvres of a fellow money-captain had that
very day been concluded, the Helmick failure, and between
the chords and bars of a famous opera men talked in
excited whispers, and one great leader lay at that
very moment, broken and spent, fighting with his last
breath for bare existence. Jadwin had seen it
all. Uninvolved in the crash, he had none the
less been close to it, watching it, in touch with
it, foreseeing each successive collapse by which it
reeled fatally to the final catastrophe. The voices
of the two men that had so annoyed her in the early
part of the evening were suddenly raised again:
“ It was terrific,
there on the floor of the Board this morning.
By the Lord! they fought each other when the Bears
began throwing the grain at ’em in
carload lots.”
And abruptly, midway between two phases
of that music-drama, of passion and romance, there
came to Laura the swift and vivid impression of that
other drama that simultaneously even at
that very moment was working itself out
close at hand, equally picturesque, equally romantic,
equally passionate; but more than that, real, actual,
modern, a thing in the very heart of the very life
in which she moved. And here he sat, this Jadwin,
quiet, in evening dress, listening good-naturedly to
this beautiful music, for which he did not care, to
this rant and fustian, watching quietly all this posing
and attitudinising. How small and petty it must
all seem to him!
Laura found time to be astonished.
What! She had first met this man haughtily, in
all the panoply of her “grand manner,”
and had promised herself that she would humble him,
and pay him for that first mistrustful stare at her.
And now, behold, she was studying him, and finding
the study interesting. Out of harmony though she
knew him to be with those fine emotions of hers of
the early part of the evening, she nevertheless found
much in him to admire. It was always just like
that. She told herself that she was forever doing
the unexpected thing, the inconsistent thing.
Women were queer creatures, mysterious even to themselves.
“I am so pleased that you are
enjoying it all,” said Corthell’s voice
at her shoulder. “I knew you would.
There is nothing like music such as this to appeal
to the emotions, the heart and with your
temperament.”
Straightway he made her feel her sex.
Now she was just a woman again, with all a woman’s
limitations, and her relations with Corthell could
never be so she realised any
other than sex-relations. With Jadwin somehow
it had been different. She had felt his manhood
more than her womanhood, her sex side. And between
them it was more a give-and-take affair, more equality,
more companionship. Corthell spoke only of her
heart and to her heart. But Jadwin made her feel or
rather she made herself feel when he talked to her that
she had a head as well as a heart.
And the last act of the opera did
not wholly absorb her attention. The artists
came and went, the orchestra wailed and boomed, the
audience applauded, and in the end the tenor, fired
by a sudden sense of duty and of stern obligation,
tore himself from the arms of the soprano, and calling
out upon remorseless fate and upon heaven, and declaiming
about the vanity of glory, and his heart that broke
yet disdained tears, allowed himself to be dragged
off the scene by his friend the basso. For the
fifth time during the piece the soprano fainted into
the arms of her long-suffering confidante. The
audience, suddenly remembering hats and wraps, bestirred
itself, and many parties were already upon their feet
and filing out at the time the curtain fell.
The Cresslers and their friends were
among the last to regain the vestibule. But as
they came out from the foyer, where the first draughts
of outside air began to make themselves felt, there
were exclamations:
“It’s raining.”
“Why, it’s raining right down.”
It was true. Abruptly the weather
had moderated, and the fine, dry snow that had been
falling since early evening had changed to a lugubrious
drizzle. A wave of consternation invaded the vestibule
for those who had not come in carriages, or whose
carriages had not arrived. Tempers were lost;
women, cloaked to the ears, their heads protected only
by fichus or mantillas, quarrelled with husbands
or cousins or brothers over the question of umbrellas.
The vestibules were crowded to suffocation, and
the aigrettes nodded and swayed again in alternate
gusts, now of moist, chill atmosphere from without,
and now of stale, hot air that exhaled in long puffs
from the inside doors of the theatre itself.
Here and there in the press, footmen, their top hats
in rubber cases, their hands full of umbrellas, searched
anxiously for their masters.
Outside upon the sidewalks and by
the curbs, an apparently inextricable confusion prevailed;
policemen with drawn clubs laboured and objurgated:
anxious, preoccupied young men, their opera hats and
gloves beaded with rain, hurried to and fro, searching
for their carriages. At the edge of the awning,
the caller, a gigantic fellow in gold-faced uniform,
shouted the numbers in a roaring, sing-song that dominated
every other sound. Coachmen, their wet rubber
coats reflecting the lamplight, called back and forth,
furious quarrels broke out between hansom drivers
and the police officers, steaming horses with jingling
bits, their backs covered with dark green cloths, plunged
and pranced, carriage doors banged, and the roll of
wheels upon the pavement was as the reverberation
of artillery caissons.
“Get your carriage, sir?”
cried a ragged, half-grown arab at Cressler’s
elbow.
“Hurry up, then,” said
Cressler. Then, raising his voice, for the clamour
was increasing with every second: “What’s
your number, Laura? You girls first. Ninety-three?
Get that, boy? Ninety-three. Quick now.”
The carriage appeared. Hastily
they said good-by; hastily Laura expressed to Mrs.
Cressler her appreciation and enjoyment. Corthell
saw them to the carriage, and getting in after them
shut the door behind him. They departed.
Laura sank back in the cool gloom
of the carriage’s interior redolent of damp
leather and upholstery.
“What an evening! What an evening!”
she murmured.
On the way home both she and Page
appealed to the artist, who knew the opera well, to
hum or whistle for them the arias that had pleased
them most. Each time they were enthusiastic.
Yes, yes, that was the air. Wasn’t it pretty,
wasn’t it beautiful?
But Aunt Wess’ was still unsatisfied.
“I don’t see yet,”
she complained, “why the young man, the one with
the pointed beard, didn’t marry that lady and
be done with it. Just as soon as they’d
seem to have it all settled, he’d begin to take
on again, and strike his breast and go away.
I declare, I think it was all kind of foolish.”
“Why, the duke don’t
you see. The one who sang bass ”
Page laboured to explain.
“Oh, I didn’t like him
at all,” said Aunt Wess’. “He
stamped around so.” But the audience itself
had interested her, and the decollete gowns had been
particularly impressing.
“I never saw such dressing in
all my life,” she declared. “And that
woman in the box next ours. Well! did you notice
that!” She raised her eyebrows and set her lips
together. “Well, I don’t want to say
anything.”
The carriage rolled on through the
darkened downtown streets, towards the North Side,
where the Dearborns lived. They could hear the
horses plashing through the layer of slush mud,
half-melted snow and rain that encumbered
the pavement. In the gloom the girls’ wraps
glowed pallid and diaphanous. The rain left long,
slanting parallels on the carriage windows. They
passed on down Wabash Avenue, and crossed over to
State Street and Clarke Street, dark, deserted.
Laura, after a while, lost in thought,
spoke but little. It had been a great evening because
of other things than mere music. Corthell had
again asked her to marry him, and she, carried away
by the excitement of the moment, had answered him
encouragingly. On the heels of this she had had
that little talk with the capitalist Jadwin, and somehow
since then she had been steadied, calmed. The
cold air and the rain in her face had cooled her flaming
cheeks and hot temples. She asked herself now
if she did really, honestly love the artist. No,
she did not; really and honestly she did not; and
now as the carriage rolled on through the deserted
streets of the business districts, she knew very well
that she did not want to marry him. She had done
him an injustice; but in the matter of righting herself
with him, correcting his false impression, she was
willing to procrastinate. She wanted him to love
her, to pay her all those innumerable little attentions
which he managed with such faultless delicacy.
To say: “No, Mr. Corthell, I do not love
you, I will never be your wife,” would this
time be final. He would go away, and
she had no intention of allowing him to do that.
But abruptly her reflections were
interrupted. While she thought it all over she
had been looking out of the carriage window through
a little space where she had rubbed the steam from
the pane. Now, all at once, the strange appearance
of the neighbourhood as the carriage turned north
from out Jackson Street into La Salle, forced itself
upon her attention. She uttered an exclamation.
The office buildings on both sides
of the street were lighted from basement to roof.
Through the windows she could get glimpses of clerks
and book-keepers in shirt-sleeves bending over desks.
Every office was open, and every one of them full
of a feverish activity. The sidewalks were almost
as crowded as though at noontime. Messenger boys
ran to and fro, and groups of men stood on the corners
in earnest conversation. The whole neighbourhood
was alive, and this, though it was close upon one
o’clock in the morning!
“Why, what is it all?” she murmured.
Corthell could not explain, but all at once Page cried:
“Oh, oh, I know. See this
is Jackson and La Salle streets. Landry was telling
me. The ‘commission district,’ he
called it. And these are the brokers’ offices
working overtime that Helmick deal, you
know.”
Laura looked, suddenly stupefied.
Here it was, then, that other drama, that other tragedy,
working on there furiously, fiercely through the night,
while she and all those others had sat there in that
atmosphere of flowers and perfume, listening to music.
Suddenly it loomed portentous in the eye of her mind,
terrible, tremendous. Ah, this drama of the “Provision
Pits,” where the rush of millions of bushels
of grain, and the clatter of millions of dollars,
and the tramping and the wild shouting of thousands
of men filled all the air with the noise of battle!
Yes, here was drama in deadly earnest drama
and tragedy and death, and the jar of mortal fighting.
And the echoes of it invaded the very sanctuary of
art, and cut athwart the music of Italy and the cadence
of polite conversation, and the shock of it endured
when all the world should have slept, and galvanised
into vivid life all these sombre piles of office buildings.
It was dreadful, this labour through the night.
It had all the significance of field hospitals after
the battle hospitals and the tents of commanding
generals. The wounds of the day were being bound
up, the dead were being counted, while, shut in their
headquarters, the captains and the commanders drew
the plans for the grapple of armies that was to recommence
with daylight.
“Yes, yes, that’s just
what it is,” continued Page. “See,
there’s the Rookery, and there’s the Constable
Building, where Mr. Helmick has his offices.
Landry showed me it all one day. And, look back.”
She raised the flap that covered the little window
at the back of the carriage. “See, down
there, at the end of the street. There’s
the Board of Trade Building, where the grain speculating
is done, where the wheat pits and corn
pits are.”
Laura turned and looked back.
On either side of the vista in converging lines stretched
the blazing office buildings. But over the end
of the street the lead-coloured sky was rifted a little.
A long, faint bar of light stretched across the prospect,
and silhouetted against this rose a sombre mass, unbroken
by any lights, rearing a black and formidable façade
against the blur of light behind it.
And this was her last impression of
the evening. The lighted office buildings, the
murk of rain, the haze of light in the heavens, and
raised against it the pile of the Board of Trade Building,
black, grave, monolithic, crouching on its foundations,
like a monstrous sphinx with blind eyes, silent, grave, crouching
there without a sound, without sign of life under
the night and the drifting veil of rain.