Laura Dearborn’s native town
was Barrington, in Worcester County, Massachusetts.
Both she and Page had been born there, and there had
lived until the death of their father, at a time when
Page was ready for the High School. The mother,
a North Carolina girl, had died long before.
Laura’s education had been unusual.
After leaving the High School her father had for four
years allowed her a private tutor (an impecunious
graduate from the Harvard Theological School).
She was ambitious, a devoted student, and her instructor’s
task was rather to guide than to enforce her application.
She soon acquired a reading knowledge of French, and
knew her Racine in the original almost as well as her
Shakespeare. Literature became for her an actual
passion. She delved into Tennyson and the Victorian
poets, and soon was on terms of intimacy with the
poets and essayists of New England. The novelists
of the day she ignored almost completely, and voluntarily.
Only occasionally, and then as a concession, she permitted
herself a reading of Mr. Howells.
Moderately prosperous while he himself
was conducting his little mill, Dearborn had not been
able to put by any money to speak of, and when Laura
and the local lawyer had come to close up the business,
to dispose of the mill, and to settle the claims against
what the lawyer grandiloquently termed “the
estate,” there was just enough money left to
pay for Page’s tickets to Chicago and a course
of tuition for her at a seminary.
The Cresslers on the event of Dearborn’s
death had advised both sisters to come West, and had
pledged themselves to look after Page during the period
of her schooling. Laura had sent the little girl
on at once, but delayed taking the step herself.
Fortunately, the two sisters were
not obliged to live upon their inheritance. Dearborn
himself had a sister a twin of Aunt Wess’ who
had married a wealthy woollen merchant of Boston, and
this one, long since, had provided for the two girls.
A large sum had been set aside, which was to be made
over to them when the father died. For years now
this sum had been accumulating interest. So that
when Laura and Page faced the world, alone, upon the
steps of the Barrington cemetery, they had the assurance
that, at least, they were independent.
For two years, in the solidly built
colonial dwelling, with its low ceilings and ample
fireplaces, where once the minute-men had swung their
kettles, Laura, alone, thought it all over. Mother
and father were dead; even the Boston aunt was dead.
Of all her relations, Aunt Wess’ alone remained.
Page was at her finishing school at Geneva Lake, within
two hours of Chicago. The Cresslers were the dearest
friends of the orphan girls. Aunt Wess’,
herself a widow, living also in Chicago, added her
entreaties to Mrs. Cressler’s. All things
seemed to point her westward, all things seemed to
indicate that one phase of her life was ended.
Then, too, she had her ambitions.
These hardly took definite shape in her mind; but
vaguely she chose to see herself, at some far-distant
day, an actress, a tragedienne, playing the roles of
Shakespeare’s heroines. This idea of hers
was more a desire than an ambition, but it could not
be realised in Barrington, Massachusetts. For
a year she temporised, procrastinated, loth to leave
the old home, loth to leave the grave in the cemetery
back of the Methodist-Episcopal chapel. Twice
during this time she visited Page, and each time the
great grey city threw the spell of its fascination
about her. Each time she returned to Barrington
the town dwindled in her estimation. It was picturesque,
but lamentably narrow. The life was barren, the
“New England spirit” prevailed in all
its severity; and this spirit seemed to her a veritable
cult, a sort of religion, wherein the Old Maid was
the priestess, the Spinster the officiating devotee,
the thing worshipped the Great Unbeautiful, and the
ritual unremitting, unrelenting Housework. She
detested it.
That she was an Episcopalian, and
preferred to read her prayers rather than to listen
to those written and memorised by the Presbyterian
minister, seemed to be regarded as a relic of heathenish
rites a thing almost cannibalistic.
When she elected to engage a woman and a “hired
man” to manage her house, she felt the disapprobation
of the entire village, as if she had sunk into some
decadent and enervating Lower-Empire degeneracy.
The crisis came when Laura travelled
alone to Boston to hear Modjeska in “Marie Stuart”
and “Macbeth,” and upon returning full
of enthusiasm, allowed it to be understood that she
had a half-formed desire of emulating such an example.
A group of lady-deaconesses, headed by the Presbyterian
minister, called upon her, with some intention of
reasoning and labouring with her.
They got no farther than the statement
of the cause of this visit. The spirit and temper
of the South, that she had from her mother, flamed
up in Laura at last, and the members of the “committee,”
before they were well aware, came to themselves in
the street outside the front gate, dazed and bewildered,
staring at each other, all confounded and stunned
by the violence of an outbreak of long-repressed emotion
and long-restrained anger, that like an actual physical
force had swept them out of the house.
At the same moment Laura, thrown across
her bed, wept with a vehemence that shook her from
head to foot. But she had not the least compunction
for what she had said, and before the month was out
had said good-by to Barrington forever, and was on
her way to Chicago, henceforth to be her home.
A house was bought on the North Side,
and it was arranged that Aunt Wess’ should live
with her two nieces. Pending the installation
Laura and Page lived at a little family hotel in the
same neighbourhood. The Cresslers’ invitation
to join the theatre party at the Auditorium had fallen
inopportunely enough, squarely in the midst of the
ordeal of moving in. Indeed the two girls had
already passed one night in the new home, and they
must dress for the affair by lamplight in their unfurnished
quarters and under inconceivable difficulties.
Only the lure of Italian opera, heard from a box,
could have tempted them to have accepted the invitation
at such a time and under such circumstances.
The morning after the opera, Laura
woke in her bed almost the only article
of furniture that was in place in the whole house with
the depressing consciousness of a hard day’s
work at hand. Outside it was still raining, the
room was cold, heated only by an inadequate oil stove,
and through the slats of the inside shutters, which,
pending the hanging of the curtains they had been
obliged to close, was filtering a gloomy light of
a wet Chicago morning.
It was all very mournful, and she
regretted now that she had not abided by her original
decision to remain at the hotel until the new house
was ready for occupancy. But it had happened
that their month at the hotel was just up, and rather
than engage the rooms for another four weeks she had
thought it easier as well as cheaper to come to the
house. It was all a new experience for her, and
she had imagined that everything could be moved in,
put in place, and the household running smoothly in
a week’s time.
She sat up in bed, hugging her shoulders
against the chill of the room and looking at her theatre
gown, that in default of a clean closet she
had hung from the gas fixture the night before.
From the direction of the kitchen came the sounds
of the newly engaged “girl” making the
fire for breakfast, while through the register a thin
wisp of blue smoke curled upward to prove that the
“hired man” was tinkering with the unused
furnace. The room itself was in lamentable confusion.
Crates and packing boxes encumbered the uncarpeted
floor; chairs wrapped in excelsior and jute were piled
one upon another; a roll of carpet leaned in one corner
and a pile of mattresses occupied another.
As Laura considered the prospect she
realised her blunder.
“Why, and oh, why,” she
murmured, “didn’t we stay at the hotel
till all this was straightened out?”
But in an adjoining room she heard
Aunt Wess’ stirring. She turned to Page,
who upon the pillows beside her still slept, her stocking
around her neck as a guarantee against draughts.
“Page, Page! Wake up, girlie.
It’s late, and there’s worlds to do.”
Page woke blinking.
“Oh, it’s freezing cold,
Laura. Let’s light the oil stove and stay
in bed till the room gets warm. Oh, dear, aren’t
you sleepy, and, oh, wasn’t last night lovely?
Which one of us will get up to light the stove?
We’ll count for it. Lie down, sissie, dear,”
she begged, “you’re letting all the cold
air in.”
Laura complied, and the two sisters,
their noses all but touching, the bedclothes up to
their ears, put their arms about each other to keep
the warmer.
Amused at the foolishness, they “counted”
to decide as to who should get up to light the oil
stove, Page beginning:
“Eeny meeny myny mo ”
But before the “count”
was decided Aunt Wess’ came in, already dressed,
and in a breath the two girls implored her to light
the stove. While she did so, Aunt Wess’
remarked, with the alacrity of a woman who observes
the difficulties of a proceeding in which she has no
faith:
“I don’t believe that
hired girl knows her business. She says now she
can’t light a fire in that stove. My word,
Laura, I do believe you’ll have enough of all
this before you’re done. You know I advised
you from the very first to take a flat.”
“Nonsense, Aunt Wess’,”
answered Laura, good-naturedly. “We’ll
work it out all right. I know what’s the
matter with that range. I’ll be right down
and see to it so soon as I’m dressed.”
It was nearly ten o’clock before
breakfast, such as it was, was over. They ate
it on the kitchen table, with the kitchen knives and
forks, and over the meal, Page having remarked:
“Well, what will we do first?” discussed
the plan of campaign.
“Landry Court does not have
to work to-day he told me why, but I’ve
forgotten and he said he was coming up to
help,” observed Laura, and at once Aunt Wess’
smiled. Landry Court was openly and strenuously
in love with Laura, and no one of the new household
ignored the fact. Aunt Wess’ chose to consider
the affair as ridiculous, and whenever the subject
was mentioned spoke of Landry as “that boy.”
Page, however, bridled with seriousness
as often as the matter came up. Yes, that was
all very well, but Landry was a decent, hard-working
young fellow, with all his way to make and no time
to waste, and if Laura didn’t mean that it should
come to anything it wasn’t very fair to him
to keep him dangling along like that.
“I guess,” Laura was accustomed
to reply, looking significantly at Aunt Wess’,
“that our little girlie has a little bit of an
eye on a certain hard-working young fellow herself.”
And the answer invariably roused Page.
“Now, Laura,” she would
cry, her eyes snapping, her breath coming fast.
“Now, Laura, that isn’t right at all, and
you know I don’t like it, and you just say it
because you know it makes me cross. I won’t
have you insinuate that I would run after any man
or care in the least whether he’s in love or
not. I just guess I’ve got some self-respect;
and as for Landry Court, we’re no more nor less
than just good friends, and I appreciate his business
talents and the way he rustles ’round, and he
merely respects me as a friend, and it don’t
go any farther than that. ‘An eye on him,’
I do declare! As if I hadn’t yet to see
the man I’d so much as look at a second time.”
And Laura, remembering her “Shakespeare,”
was ever ready with the words:
“The lady doth protest too much, methinks.”
Just after breakfast, in fact, Landry did appear.
“Now,” he began, with
a long breath, addressing Laura, who was unwrapping
the pieces of cut glass and bureau ornaments as Page
passed them to her from the depths of a crate.
“Now, I’ve done a lot already. That’s
what made me late. I’ve ordered your newspaper
sent here, and I’ve telephoned the hotel to
forward any mail that comes for you to this address,
and I sent word to the gas company to have your gas
turned on ”
“Oh, that’s good,” said Laura.
“Yes, I thought of that; the
man will be up right away to fix it, and I’ve
ordered a cake of ice left here every day, and told
the telephone company that you wanted a telephone
put in. Oh, yes, and the bottled-milk man I
stopped in at a dairy on the way up. Now, what
do we do first?”
He took off his coat, rolled up his
shirt sleeves, and plunged into the confusion of crates
and boxes that congested the rooms and hallways on
the first floor of the house. The two sisters
could hear him attacking his task with tremendous
blows of the kitchen hammer. From time to time
he called up the stairway:
“Hey, what do you want done
with this jardiniere thing? ... Where does this
hanging lamp go, Laura?”
Laura, having unpacked all the cut-glass
ornaments, came down-stairs, and she and Landry set
about hanging the parlour curtains.
Landry fixed the tops of the window
mouldings with a piercing eye, his arms folded.
“I see, I see,” he answered
to Laura’s explanations. “I see.
Now where’s a screw-driver, and a step-ladder?
Yes, and I’ll have to have some brass nails,
and your hired man must let me have that hammer again.”
He sent the cook after the screw-driver,
called the hired man from the furnace, shouted upstairs
to Page to ask for the whereabouts of the brass nails,
and delegated Laura to steady the step-ladder.
“Now, Landry,” directed
Laura, “those rods want to be about three inches
from the top.”
“Well,” he said, climbing
up, “I’ll mark the place with the screw
and you tell me if it is right.”
She stepped back, her head to one side.
“No; higher, Landry. There,
that’s about it or a little
lower so. That’s just right.
Come down now and help me put the hooks in.”
They pulled a number of sofa cushions
together and sat down on the floor side by side, Landry
snapping the hooks in place where Laura had gathered
the pleats. Inevitably his hands touched hers,
and their heads drew close together. Page and
Mrs. Wessels were unpacking linen in the upstairs
hall. The cook and hired man raised a great noise
of clanking stove lids and grates as they wrestled
with the range in the kitchen.
“Well,” said Landry, “you
are going to have a pretty home.” He was
meditating a phrase of which he purposed delivering
himself when opportunity afforded. It had to
do with Laura’s eyes, and her ability of understanding
him. She understood him; she was to know that
he thought so, that it was of immense importance to
him. It was thus he conceived of the manner of
love making. The evening before that palavering
artist seemed to have managed to monopolise her about
all of the time. Now it was his turn, and this
day of household affairs, of little domestic commotions,
appeared to him to be infinitely more desirous than
the pomp and formality of evening dress and opera boxes.
This morning the relations between himself and Laura
seemed charming, intimate, unconventional, and full
of opportunities. Never had she appeared prettier
to him. She wore a little pink flannel dressing-sack
with full sleeves, and her hair, carelessly twisted
into great piles, was in a beautiful disarray, curling
about her cheeks and ears. “I didn’t
see anything of you at all last night,” he grumbled.
“Well, you didn’t try.”
“Oh, it was the Other Fellow’s
turn,” he went on. “Say,” he
added, “how often are you going to let me come
to see you when you get settled here? Twice a
week three times?”
“As if you wanted to see me
as often as that. Why, Landry, I’m growing
up to be an old maid. You can’t want to
lose your time calling on old maids.”
He was voluble in protestations.
He was tired of young girls. They were all very
well to dance with, but when a man got too old for
that sort of thing, he wanted some one with sense
to talk to. Yes, he did. Some one with sense.
Why, he would rather talk five minutes with her
“Honestly, Landry?” she
asked, as though he were telling a thing incredible.
He swore to her it was true.
His eyes snapped. He struck his palm with his
fist.
“An old maid like me?” repeated Laura.
“Old maid nothing!” he
vociferated. “Ah,” he cried, “you
seem to understand me. When I look at you, straight
into your eyes ”
From the doorway the cook announced
that the man with the last load of furnace coal had
come, and handed Laura the voucher to sign. Then
needs must that Laura go with the cook to see if the
range was finally and properly adjusted, and while
she was gone the man from the gas company called to
turn on the meter, and Landry was obliged to look after
him. It was half an hour before he and Laura
could once more settle themselves on the cushions
in the parlour.
“Such a lot of things to do,”
she said; “and you are such a help, Landry.
It was so dear of you to want to come.”
“I would do anything in the
world for you, Laura,” he exclaimed, encouraged
by her words; “anything. You know I would.
It isn’t so much that I want you to care for
me and I guess I want that bad enough but
it’s because I love to be with you, and be helping
you, and all that sort of thing. Now, all this,”
he waved a hand at the confusion of furniture, “all
this to-day I just feel,” he declared
with tremendous earnestness, “I just feel as
though I were entering into your life. And just
sitting here beside you and putting in these curtain
hooks, I want you to know that it’s inspiring
to me. Yes, it is, inspiring; it’s elevating.
You don’t know how it makes a man feel to have
the companionship of a good and lovely woman.”
“Landry, as though I were all
that. Here, put another hook in here.”
She held the fold towards him.
But he took her hand as their fingers touched and
raised it to his lips and kissed it. She did not
withdraw it, nor rebuke him, crying out instead, as
though occupied with quite another matter:
“Landry, careful, my dear boy;
you’ll make me prick my fingers. Ah there,
you did.”
He was all commiseration and self-reproach
at once, and turned her hand palm upwards, looking
for the scratch.
“Um!” she breathed. “It hurts.”
“Where now,” he cried,
“where was it? Ah, I was a beast; I’m
so ashamed.” She indicated a spot on her
wrist instead of her fingers, and very naturally Landry
kissed it again.
“How foolish!” she remonstrated.
“The idea! As if I wasn’t old enough
to be ”
“You’re not so old but
what you’re going to marry me some day,”
he declared.
“How perfectly silly, Landry!”
she retorted. “Aren’t you done with
my hand yet?”
“No, indeed,” he cried,
his clasp tightening over her fingers. “It’s
mine. You can’t have it till I say or
till you say that some day you’ll
give it to me for good for better or for
worse.”
“As if you really meant that,”
she said, willing to prolong the little situation.
It was very sweet to have this clean, fine-fibred young
boy so earnestly in love with her, very sweet that
the lifting of her finger, the mere tremble of her
eyelid should so perturb him.
“Mean it! Mean it!”
he vociferated. “You don’t know how
much I do mean it. Why, Laura, why why,
I can’t think of anything else.”
“You!” she mocked.
“As if I believed that. How many other girls
have you said it to this year?”
Landry compressed his lips.
“Miss Dearborn, you insult me.”
“Oh, my!” exclaimed Laura, at last withdrawing
her hand.
“And now you’re mocking me. It isn’t
kind. No, it isn’t; it isn’t kind.”
“I never answered your question yet,”
she observed.
“What question?”
“About your coming to see me
when we were settled. I thought you wanted to
know.”
“How about lunch?” said
Page, from the doorway. “Do you know it’s
after twelve?”
“The girl has got something
for us,” said Laura. “I told her about
it. Oh, just a pick-up lunch coffee,
chops. I thought we wouldn’t bother to-day.
We’ll have to eat in the kitchen.”
“Well, let’s be about
it,” declared Landry, “and finish with
these curtains afterward. Inwardly I’m
a ravening wolf.”
It was past one o’clock by the
time that luncheon, “picked up” though
it was, was over. By then everybody was very tired.
Aunt Wess’ exclaimed that she could not stand
another minute, and retired to her room. Page,
indefatigable, declaring they never would get settled
if they let things dawdle along, set to work unpacking
her trunk and putting her clothes away. Her fox
terrier, whom the family, for obscure reasons, called
the Pig, arrived in the middle of the afternoon in
a crate, and shivering with the chill of the house,
was tied up behind the kitchen range, where, for all
the heat, he still trembled and shuddered at long
intervals, his head down, his eyes rolled up, bewildered
and discountenanced by so much confusion and so many
new faces.
Outside the weather continued lamentable.
The rain beat down steadily upon the heaps of snow
on the grass-plats by the curbstones, melting it,
dirtying it, and reducing it to viscid slush.
The sky was lead grey; the trees, bare and black as
though built of iron and wire, dripped incessantly.
The sparrows, huddling under the house-eaves or in
interstices of the mouldings, chirped feebly from time
to time, sitting disconsolate, their feathers puffed
out till their bodies assumed globular shapes.
Delivery wagons trundled up and down the street at
intervals, the horses and drivers housed in oil-skins.
The neighborhood was quiet. There
was no sound of voices in the streets. But occasionally,
from far away in the direction of the river or the
Lake Front, came the faint sounds of steamer and tug
whistles. The sidewalks in either direction were
deserted. Only a solitary policeman, his star
pinned to the outside of his dripping rubber coat,
his helmet shedding rivulets, stood on the corner absorbed
in the contemplation of the brown torrent of the gutter
plunging into a sewer vent.
Landry and Laura were in the library
at the rear of the house, a small room, two sides
of which were occupied with book-cases. They were
busy putting the books in place. Laura stood
half-way up the step-ladder taking volume after volume
from Landry as he passed them to her.
“Do you wipe them carefully, Landry?”
she asked.
He held a strip of cloth torn from
an old sheet in his hand, and rubbed the dust from
each book before he handed it to her.
“Yes, yes; very carefully,”
he assured her. “Say,” he added, “where
are all your modern novels? You’ve got
Scott and Dickens and Thackeray, of course, and Eliot yes,
and here’s Hawthorne and Poe. But I haven’t
struck anything later than Oliver Wendell Holmes.”
Laura put up her chin. “Modern
novels no indeed. When I’ve yet
to read ‘Jane Eyre,’ and have only read
‘Ivanhoe’ and ‘The Newcomes’
once.”
She made a point of the fact that
her taste was the extreme of conservatism, refusing
to acknowledge hardly any fiction that was not almost
classic. Even Stevenson aroused her suspicions.
“Well, here’s ‘The
Wrecker,’” observed Landry, handing it
up to her. “I read it last summer-vacation
at Waukesha. Just about took the top of my head
off.”
“I tried to read it,”
she answered. “Such an outlandish story,
no love story in it, and so coarse, so brutal, and
then so improbable. I couldn’t get interested.”
But abruptly Landry uttered an exclamation:
“Well, what do you call this?
‘Wanda,’ by Ouida. How is this for
modern?”
She blushed to her hair, snatching the book from him.
“Page brought it home. It’s hers.”
But her confusion betrayed her, and Landry shouted
derisively.
“Well, I did read it then,”
she suddenly declared defiantly. “No, I’m
not ashamed. Yes, I read it from cover to cover.
It made me cry like I haven’t cried over a book
since I was a little tot. You can say what you
like, but it’s beautiful a beautiful
love story and it does tell about noble,
unselfish people. I suppose it has its faults,
but it makes you feel better for reading it, and that’s
what all your ‘Wreckers’ in the world
would never do.”
“Well,” answered Landry,
“I don’t know much about that sort of thing.
Corthell does. He can talk you blind about literature.
I’ve heard him run on by the hour. He says
the novel of the future is going to be the novel without
a love story.”
But Laura nodded her head incredulously.
“It will be long after I am dead that’s
one consolation,” she said.
“Corthell is full of crazy ideas
anyhow,” Landry went on, still continuing to
pass the books up to her. “He’s a
good sort, and I like him well enough, but he’s
the kind of man that gets up a reputation for being
clever and artistic by running down the very one particular
thing that every one likes, and cracking up some book
or picture or play that no one has ever heard of.
Just let anything get popular once and Sheldon Corthell
can’t speak of it without shuddering. But
he’ll go over here to some Archer Avenue pawn
shop, dig up an old brass stewpan, or coffee-pot that
some greasy old Russian Jew has chucked away, and
he’ll stick it up in his studio and regularly
kow-tow to it, and talk about the ‘decadence
of American industrial arts.’ I’ve
heard him. I say it’s pure affectation,
that’s what it is, pure affectation.”
But the book-case meanwhile had been filling up, and
now Laura remarked:
“No more, Landry. That’s all that
will go here.”
She prepared to descend from the ladder.
In filling the higher shelves she had mounted almost
to the topmost step.
“Careful now,” said Landry, as he came
forward. “Give me your hand.”
She gave it to him, and then, as she
descended, Landry had the assurance to put his arm
around her waist as if to steady her. He was
surprised at his own audacity, for he had premeditated
nothing, and his arm was about her before he was well
aware. He yet found time to experience a qualm
of apprehension. Just how would Laura take it?
Had he gone too far?
But Laura did not even seem to notice,
all her attention apparently fixed upon coming safely
down to the floor. She descended and shook out
her skirts.
“There,” she said, “that’s
over with. Look, I’m all dusty.”
There was a knock at the half-open door. It was
the cook.
“What are you going to have
for supper, Miss Dearborn?” she inquired.
“There’s nothing in the house.”
“Oh, dear,” said Laura
with sudden blankness, “I never thought of supper.
Isn’t there anything?”
“Nothing but some eggs and coffee.”
The cook assumed an air of aloofness, as if the entire
affair were totally foreign to any interest or concern
of hers. Laura dismissed her, saying that she
would see to it.
“We’ll have to go out
and get some things,” she said. “We’ll
all go. I’m tired of staying in the house.”
“No, I’ve a better scheme,”
announced Landry. “I’ll invite you
all out to dine with me. I know a place where
you can get the best steak in America. It has
stopped raining. See,” he showed her the
window.
“But, Landry, we are all so dirty and miserable.”
“We’ll go right now and
get there early. There will be nobody there,
and we can have a room to ourselves. Oh, it’s
all right,” he declared. “You just
trust me.”
“We’ll see what Page and
Aunt Wess’ say. Of course Aunt Wess’
would have to come.”
“Of course,” he said.
“I wouldn’t think of asking you unless
she could come.”
A little later the two sisters, Mrs.
Wessels, and Landry came out of the house, but before
taking their car they crossed to the opposite side
of the street, Laura having said that she wanted to
note the effect of her parlour curtains from the outside.
“I think they are looped up
just far enough,” she declared. But Landry
was observing the house itself.
“It is the best-looking place on the block,”
he answered.
In fact, the house was not without
a certain attractiveness. It occupied a corner
lot at the intersection of Huron and North State streets.
Directly opposite was St. James’ Church, and
at one time the house had served as the rectory.
For the matter of that, it had been built for just
that purpose. Its style of architecture was distantly
ecclesiastic, with a suggestion of Gothic to some of
the doors and windows. The material used was
solid, massive, the walls thick, the foundation heavy.
It did not occupy the entire lot, the original builder
seeming to have preferred garden space to mere amplitude
of construction, and in addition to the inevitable
“back yard,” a lawn bordered it on three
sides. It gave the place a certain air of distinction
and exclusiveness. Vines grew thick upon the southern
walls; in the summer time fuchsias, geraniums,
and pansies would flourish in the flower beds by the
front stoop. The grass plat by the curb boasted
a couple of trees. The whole place was distinctive,
individual, and very homelike, and came as a grateful
relief to the endless lines of houses built of yellow
Michigan limestone that pervaded the rest of the neighbourhood
in every direction.
“I love the place,” exclaimed
Laura. “I think it’s as pretty a house
as I have seen in Chicago.”
“Well, it isn’t so spick
and span,” commented Page. “It gives
you the idea that we’re not new-rich and showy
and all.”
But Aunt Wess’ was not yet satisfied.
“You may see, Laura,”
she remarked, “how you are going to heat all
that house with that one furnace, but I declare I don’t.”
Their car, or rather their train of
cars, coupled together in threes, in Chicago style,
came, and Landry escorted them down town. All
the way Laura could not refrain from looking out of
the windows, absorbed in the contemplation of the
life and aspects of the streets.
“You will give yourself away,”
said Page. “Everybody will know you’re
from the country.”
“I am,” she retorted.
“But there’s a difference between just
mere ‘country’ and Massachusetts, and
I’m not ashamed of it.”
Chicago, the great grey city, interested
her at every instant and under every condition.
As yet she was not sure that she liked it; she could
not forgive its dirty streets, the unspeakable squalor
of some of its poorer neighbourhoods that sometimes
developed, like cancerous growths, in the very heart
of fine residence districts. The black murk that
closed every vista of the business streets oppressed
her, and the soot that stained linen and gloves each
time she stirred abroad was a never-ending distress.
But the life was tremendous.
All around, on every side, in every direction the
vast machinery of Commonwealth clashed and thundered
from dawn to dark and from dark till dawn. Even
now, as the car carried her farther into the business
quarter, she could hear it, see it, and feel in her
every fibre the trepidation of its motion. The
blackened waters of the river, seen an instant between
stanchions as the car trundled across the State Street
bridge, disappeared under fleets of tugs, of lake
steamers, of lumber barges from Sheboygan and Mackinac,
of grain boats from Duluth, of coal scows that filled
the air with impalpable dust, of cumbersome schooners
laden with produce, of grimy rowboats dodging the
prows and paddles of the larger craft, while on all
sides, blocking the horizon, red in color and designated
by Brobdignag letters, towered the hump-shouldered
grain elevators.
Just before crossing the bridge on
the north side of the river she had caught a glimpse
of a great railway terminus. Down below there,
rectilinear, scientifically paralleled and squared,
the Yard disclosed itself. A system of grey rails
beyond words complicated opened out and spread immeasurably.
Switches, semaphores, and signal towers stood here
and there. A dozen trains, freight and passenger,
puffed and steamed, waiting the word to depart.
Detached engines hurried in and out of sheds and roundhouses,
seeking their trains, or bunted the ponderous freight
cars into switches; trundling up and down, clanking,
shrieking, their bells filling the air with the clangour
of tocsins. Men in visored caps shouted
hoarsely, waving their arms or red flags; drays, their
big dappled horses, feeding in their nose bags, stood
backed up to the open doors of freight cars and received
their loads. A train departed roaring. Before
midnight it would be leagues away boring through the
Great Northwest, carrying Trade the life
blood of nations into communities of which
Laura had never heard. Another train, reeking
with fatigue, the air brakes screaming, arrived and
halted, debouching a flood of passengers, business
men, bringing Trade a galvanising elixir from
the very ends and corners of the continent.
Or, again, it was South Water Street a
jam of delivery wagons and market carts backed to
the curbs, leaving only a tortuous path between the
endless files of horses, suggestive of an actual barrack
of cavalry. Provisions, market produce, “garden
truck” and fruits, in an infinite welter of
crates and baskets, boxes, and sacks, crowded the
sidewalks. The gutter was choked with an overflow
of refuse cabbage leaves, soft oranges, decaying beet
tops. The air was thick with the heavy smell
of vegetation. Food was trodden under foot, food
crammed the stores and warehouses to bursting.
Food mingled with the mud of the highway. The
very dray horses were gorged with an unending nourishment
of snatched mouthfuls picked from backboard, from barrel
top, and from the edge of the sidewalk. The entire
locality reeked with the fatness of a hundred thousand
furrows. A land of plenty, the inordinate abundance
of the earth itself emptied itself upon the asphalt
and cobbles of the quarter. It was the Mouth
of the City, and drawn from all directions, over a
territory of immense area, this glut of crude subsistence
was sucked in, as if into a rapacious gullet, to feed
the sinews and to nourish the fibres of an immeasurable
colossus.
Suddenly the meaning and significance
of it all dawned upon Laura. The Great Grey City,
brooking no rival, imposed its dominion upon a reach
of country larger than many a kingdom of the Old World.
For, thousands of miles beyond its confines was its
influence felt. Out, far out, far away in the
snow and shadow of Northern Wisconsin forests, axes
and saws bit the bark of century-old trees, stimulated
by this city’s energy. Just as far to the
southward pick and drill leaped to the assault of
veins of anthracite, moved by her central power.
Her force turned the wheels of harvester and seeder
a thousand miles distant in Iowa and Kansas.
Her force spun the screws and propellers of innumerable
squadrons of lake steamers crowding the Sault Sainte
Marie. For her and because of her all the Central
States, all the Great Northwest roared with traffic
and industry; sawmills screamed; factories, their
smoke blackening the sky, clashed and flamed; wheels
turned, pistons leaped in their cylinders; cog gripped
cog; beltings clasped the drums of mammoth wheels;
and converters of forges belched into the clouded
air their tempest breath of molten steel.
It was Empire, the resistless subjugation
of all this central world of the lakes and the prairies.
Here, mid-most in the land, beat the Heart of the
Nation, whence inevitably must come its immeasurable
power, its infinite, infinite, inexhaustible vitality.
Here, of all her cities, throbbed the true life the
true power and spirit of America; gigantic, crude
with the crudity of youth, disdaining rivalry; sane
and healthy and vigorous; brutal in its ambition,
arrogant in the new-found knowledge of its giant strength,
prodigal of its wealth, infinite in its desires.
In its capacity boundless, in its courage indomitable;
subduing the wilderness in a single generation, defying
calamity, and through the flame and the debris of
a commonwealth in ashes, rising suddenly renewed,
formidable, and Titanic.
Laura, her eyes dizzied, her ears
stunned, watched tirelessly.
“There is something terrible
about it,” she murmured, half to herself, “something
insensate. In a way, it doesn’t seem human.
It’s like a great tidal wave. It’s
all very well for the individual just so long as he
can keep afloat, but once fallen, how horribly quick
it would crush him, annihilate him, how horribly quick,
and with such horrible indifference! I suppose
it’s civilisation in the making, the thing that
isn’t meant to be seen, as though it were too
elemental, too primordial; like the first
verses of Genesis.”
The impression remained long with
her, and not even the gaiety of their little supper
could altogether disperse it. She was a little
frightened frightened of the vast, cruel
machinery of the city’s life, and of the men
who could dare it, who conquered it. For a moment
they seemed, in a sense, more terrible than the city
itself men for whom all this crash of conflict
and commerce had no terrors. Those who could
subdue it to their purposes, must they not be themselves
more terrible, more pitiless, more brutal? She
shrank a little. What could women ever know of
the life of men, after all? Even Landry, extravagant
as he was, so young, so exuberant, so seemingly innocent she
knew that he was spoken of as a good business man.
He, too, then had his other side. For him the
Battle of the Street was an exhilaration. Beneath
that boyish exterior was the tough coarseness, the
male hardness, the callousness that met the brunt
and withstood the shock of onset.
Ah, these men of the city, what could
women ever know of them, of their lives, of that other
existence through which freed from the influence
of wife or mother, or daughter or sister they
passed every day from nine o’clock till evening?
It was a life in which women had no part, and in which,
should they enter it, they would no longer recognise
son or husband, or father or brother. The gentle-mannered
fellow, clean-minded, clean-handed, of the breakfast
or supper table was one man. The other, who and
what was he? Down there in the murk and grime
of the business district raged the Battle of the Street,
and therein he was a being transformed, case hardened,
supremely selfish, asking no quarter; no, nor giving
any. Fouled with the clutchings and grapplings
of the attack, besmirched with the elbowing of low
associates and obscure allies, he set his feet toward
conquest, and mingled with the marchings of an army
that surged forever forward and back; now in merciless
assault, beating the fallen enemy under foot, now in
repulse, equally merciless, trampling down the auxiliaries
of the day before, in a panic dash for safety; always
cruel, always selfish, always pitiless.
To contrast these men with such as
Corthell was inevitable. She remembered him,
to whom the business district was an unexplored country,
who kept himself far from the fighting, his hands unstained,
his feet unsullied. He passed his life gently,
in the calm, still atmosphere of art, in the cult
of the beautiful, unperturbed, tranquil; painting,
reading, or, piece by piece, developing his beautiful
stained glass. Him women could know, with him
they could sympathise. And he could enter fully
into their lives and help and stimulate them.
Of the two existences which did she prefer, that of
the business man, or that of the artist?
Then suddenly Laura surprised herself.
After all, she was a daughter of the frontier, and
the blood of those who had wrestled with a new world
flowed in her body. Yes, Corthell’s was
a beautiful life; the charm of dim painted windows,
the attraction of darkened studios with their harmonies
of color, their orientalisms, and their arabesques
was strong. No doubt it all had its place.
It fascinated her at times, in spite of herself.
To relax the mind, to indulge the senses, to live in
an environment of pervading beauty was delightful.
But the men to whom the woman in her turned were not
those of the studio. Terrible as the Battle of
the Street was, it was yet battle. Only the strong
and the brave might dare it, and the figure that held
her imagination and her sympathy was not the artist,
soft of hand and of speech, elaborating graces of
sound and color and form, refined, sensitive, and
temperamental; but the fighter, unknown and un-knowable
to women as he was; hard, rigorous, panoplied in the
harness of the warrior, who strove among the trumpets,
and who, in the brunt of conflict, conspicuous, formidable,
set the battle in a rage around him, and exulted like
a champion in the shoutings of the captains.
They were not long at table, and by
the time they were ready to depart it was about half-past
five. But when they emerged into the street, it
was discovered that once more the weather had abruptly
changed. It was snowing thickly. Again a
bitter wind from off the Lake tore through the streets.
The slush and melted snow was freezing, and the north
side of every lamp post and telegraph pole was sheeted
with ice.
To add to their discomfort, the North
State Street cars were blocked. When they gained
the corner of Washington Street they could see where
the congestion began, a few squares distant.
“There’s nothing for it,”
declared Landry, “but to go over and get the
Clarke Street cars and at that you may have
to stand up all the way home, at this time of day.”
They paused, irresolute, a moment
on the corner. It was the centre of the retail
quarter. Close at hand a vast dry goods house,
built in the old “iron-front” style, towered
from the pavement, and through its hundreds of windows
presented to view a world of stuffs and fabrics, upholsteries
and textiles, kaleidoscopic, gleaming in the fierce
brilliance of a multitude of lights. From each
street doorway was pouring an army of “shoppers,”
women for the most part; and these since
the store catered to a rich clientele fashionably
dressed. Many of them stood for a moment on the
threshold of the storm-doorways, turning up the collars
of their sealskins, settling their hands in their
muffs, and searching the street for their coupes
and carriages.
Among the number of those thus engaged,
one, suddenly catching sight of Laura, waved a muff
in her direction, then came quickly forward. It
was Mrs. Cressler.
“Laura, my dearest girl!
Of all the people. I am so glad to see you!”
She kissed Laura on the cheek, shook hands all around,
and asked about the sisters’ new home.
Did they want anything, or was there anything she
could do to help? Then interrupting herself, and
laying a glove on Laura’s arm:
“I’ve got more to tell you.”
She compressed her lips and stood
off from Laura, fixing her with a significant glance.
“Me? To tell me?”
“Where are you going now?”
“Home; but our cars are stopped. We must
go over to ”
“Fiddlesticks! You and
Page and Mrs. Wessels all of you are coming
home and dine with me.”
“But we’ve had dinner already,”
they all cried, speaking at once.
Page explained the situation, but Mrs. Cressler would
not be denied.
“The carriage is right here,”
she said. “I don’t have to call for
Charlie. He’s got a man from Cincinnati
in tow, and they are going to dine at the Calumet
Club.”
It ended by the two sisters and Mrs.
Wessels getting into Mrs. Cressler’s carriage.
Landry excused himself. He lived on the South
Side, on Michigan Avenue, and declaring that he knew
they had had enough of him for one day, took himself
off.
But whatever Mrs. Cressler had to
tell Laura, she evidently was determined to save for
her ears only. Arrived at the Dearborns’
home, she sent her footman in to tell the “girl”
that the family would not be home that night.
The Cresslers lived hard by on the same street, and
within ten minutes’ walk of the Dearborns.
The two sisters and their aunt would be back immediately
after breakfast.
When they had got home with Mrs. Cressler,
this latter suggested hot tea and sandwiches in the
library, for the ride had been cold. But the
others, worn out, declared for bed as soon as Mrs.
Cressler herself had dined.
“Oh, bless you, Carrie,”
said Aunt Wess’; “I couldn’t think
of tea. My back is just about broken, and I’m
going straight to my bed.”
Mrs. Cressler showed them to their
rooms. Page and Mrs. Wessels elected to sleep
together, and once the door had closed upon them the
little girl unburdened herself.
“I suppose Laura thinks it’s
all right, running off like this for the whole blessed
night, and no one to look after the house but those
two servants that nobody knows anything about.
As though there weren’t heaven knows what all
to tend to there in the morning. I just don’t
see,” she exclaimed decisively, “how we’re
going to get settled at all. That Landry Court!
My goodness, he’s more hindrance than help.
Did you ever see! He just dashes in as though
he were doing it all, and messes everything up, and
loses things, and gets things into the wrong place,
and forgets this and that, and then he and Laura sit
down and spoon. I never saw anything like it.
First it’s Corthell and then Landry, and next
it will be somebody else. Laura regularly mortifies
me; a great, grown-up girl like that, flirting, and
letting every man she meets think that he’s
just the one particular one of the whole earth.
It’s not good form. And Landry as
if he didn’t know we’ve got more to do
now than just to dawdle and dawdle. I could slap
him. I like to see a man take life seriously
and try to amount to something, and not waste the
best years of his life trailing after women who are
old enough to be his grandmother, and don’t
mean that it will ever come to anything.”
In her room, in the front of the house,
Laura was partly undressed when Mrs. Cressler knocked
at her door. The latter had put on a wrapper of
flowered silk, and her hair was bound in “invisible
nets.”
“I brought you a dressing-gown,”
she said. She hung it over the foot of the bed,
and sat down on the bed itself, watching Laura, who
stood before the glass of the bureau, her head bent
upon her breast, her hands busy with the back of her
hair. From time to time the hairpins clicked
as she laid them down in the silver trays close at
hand. Then putting her chin in the air, she shook
her head, and the great braids, unlooped, fell to
her waist.
“What pretty hair you have,
child,” murmured Mrs. Cressler. She was
settling herself for a long talk with her protege.
She had much to tell, but now that they had the whole
night before them, could afford to take her time.
Between the two women the conversation
began slowly, with detached phrases and observations
that did not call necessarily for answers mere
beginnings that they did not care to follow up.
“They tell me,” said Mrs.
Cressler, “that that Gretry girl smokes ten
cigarettes every night before she goes to bed.
You know the Gretrys they were at the opera
the other night.”
Laura permitted herself an indefinite
murmur of interest. Her head to one side, she
drew the brush in slow, deliberate movements downward
underneath the long, thick strands of her hair.
Mrs. Cressler watched her attentively.
“Why don’t you wear your
hair that new way, Laura,” she remarked, “farther
down on your neck? I see every one doing it now.”
The house was very still. Outside
the double windows they could hear the faint murmuring
click of the frozen snow. A radiator in the hallway
clanked and strangled for a moment, then fell quiet
again.
“What a pretty room this is,”
said Laura. “I think I’ll have to
do our guest room something like this a
sort of white and gold effect. My hair?
Oh, I don’t know. Wearing it low that way
makes it catch so on the hooks of your collar, and,
besides, I was afraid it would make my head look so
flat.”
There was a silence. Laura braided
a long strand, with quick, regular motions of both
hands, and letting it fall over her shoulder, shook
it into place with a twist of her head. She stepped
out of her skirt, and Mrs. Cressler handed her her
dressing-gown, and brought out a pair of quilted slippers
of red satin from the wardrobe.
In the grate, the fire that had been
lighted just before they had come upstairs was crackling
sharply. Laura drew up an armchair and sat down
in front of it, her chin in her hand. Mrs. Cressler
stretched herself upon the bed, an arm behind her
head.
“Well, Laura,” she began
at length, “I have some real news for you.
My dear, I believe you’ve made a conquest.”
“I!” murmured Laura, looking
around. She feigned a surprise, though she guessed
at once that Mrs. Cressler had Corthell in mind.
“That Mr. Jadwin the one you met
at the opera.”
Genuinely taken aback, Laura sat upright and stared
wide-eyed.
“Mr. Jadwin!” she exclaimed.
“Why, we didn’t have five minutes’
talk. Why, I hardly know the man. I only
met him last night.”
But Mrs. Cressler shook her head,
closing her eyes and putting her lips together.
“That don’t make any difference,
Laura. Trust me to tell when a man is taken with
a girl. My dear, you can have him as easy as that.”
She snapped her fingers.
“Oh, I’m sure you’re mistaken, Mrs.
Cressler.”
“Not in the least. I’ve
known Curtis Jadwin now for fifteen years nobody
better. He’s as old a family friend as Charlie
and I have. I know him like a book. And
I tell you the man is in love with you.”
“Well, I hope he didn’t
tell you as much,” cried Laura, promising herself
to be royally angry if such was the case. But
Mrs. Cressler hastened to reassure her.
“Oh my, no. But all the
way home last night he came home with us,
you know he kept referring to you, and
just so soon as the conversation got on some other
subject he would lose interest. He wanted to know
all about you oh, you know how a man will
talk,” she exclaimed. “And he said
you had more sense and more intelligence than any girl
he had ever known.”
“Oh, well,” answered Laura
deprecatingly, as if to say that that did not count
for much with her.
“And that you were simply beautiful.
He said that he never remembered to have seen a more
beautiful woman.”
Laura turned her head away, a hand
shielding her cheek. She did not answer immediately,
then at length:
“Has he this Mr.
Jadwin has he ever been married before?”
“No, no. He’s a bachelor,
and rich! He could buy and sell us. And don’t
think, Laura dear, that I’m jumping at conclusions.
I hope I’m woman of the world enough to know
that a man who’s taken with a pretty face and
smart talk isn’t going to rush right into matrimony
because of that. It wasn’t so much what
Curtis Jadwin said though, dear me suz,
he talked enough about you as what he didn’t
say. I could tell. He was thinking hard.
He was hit, Laura. I know he was. And Charlie
said he spoke about you again this morning at breakfast.
Charlie makes me tired sometimes,” she added
irrelevantly.
“Charlie?” repeated Laura.
“Well, of course I spoke to
him about Jadwin, and how taken he seemed with you,
and the man roared at me.”
“He didn’t believe it, then.”
“Yes he did when
I could get him to talk seriously about it, and when
I made him remember how Mr. Jadwin had spoken in the
carriage coming home.”
Laura curled her leg under her and
sat nursing her foot and looking into the fire.
For a long time neither spoke. A little clock
of brass and black marble began to chime, very prettily,
the half hour of nine. Mrs. Cressler observed:
“That Sheldon Corthell seems
to be a very agreeable kind of a young man, doesn’t
he?”
“Yes,” replied Laura thoughtfully, “he
is agreeable.”
“And a talented fellow, too,”
continued Mrs. Cressler. “But somehow it
never impressed me that there was very much to him.”
“Oh,” murmured Laura indifferently, “I
don’t know.”
“I suppose,” Mrs. Cressler
went on, in a tone of resignation, “I suppose
he thinks the world and all of you?”
Laura raised a shoulder without answering.
“Charlie can’t abide him,”
said Mrs. Cressler. “Funny, isn’t
it what prejudices men have? Charlie always speaks
of him as though he were a higher order of glazier.
Curtis Jadwin seems to like him.... What do you
think of him, Laura of Mr. Jadwin?”
“I don’t know,”
she answered, looking vaguely into the fire. “I
thought he was a strong man mentally I
mean, and that he would be kindly and and generous.
Somehow,” she said, musingly, “I didn’t
think he would be the sort of man that women would
take to, at first but then I don’t
know. I saw very little of him, as I say.
He didn’t impress me as being a woman’s
man.”
“All the better,” said
the other. “Who would want to marry a woman’s
man? I wouldn’t. Sheldon Corthell is
that. I tell you one thing, Laura, and when you
are as old as I am, you’ll know it’s true:
the kind of a man that men like not women is
the kind of a man that makes the best husband.”
Laura nodded her head.
“Yes,” she answered, listlessly, “I
suppose that’s true.”
“You said Jadwin struck you
as being a kindly man, a generous man. He’s
just that, and that charitable! You know he has
a Sunday-school over on the West Side, a Sunday-school
for mission children, and I do believe he’s
more interested in that than in his business.
He wants to make it the biggest Sunday-school in Chicago.
It’s an ambition of his. I don’t
want you to think that he’s good in a goody-goody
way, because he’s not. Laura,” she
exclaimed, “he’s a fine man. I didn’t
intend to brag him up to you, because I wanted you
to like him. But no one knows as I
say no one knows Curtis Jadwin better than
Charlie and I, and we just love him. The
kindliest, biggest-hearted fellow oh, well,
you’ll know him for yourself, and then you’ll
see. He passes the plate in our church.”
“Dr. Wendell’s church?” asked Laura.
“Yes you know the Second Presbyterian.”
“I’m Episcopalian myself,”
observed Laura, still thoughtfully gazing into the
fire.
“I know, I know. But Jadwin
isn’t the blue-nosed sort. And now see
here, Laura, I want to tell you. J. that’s
what Charlie and I call Jadwin J. was talking
to us the other day about supporting a ward in the
Children’s Hospital for the children of his Sunday-school
that get hurt or sick. You see he has nearly
eight hundred boys and girls in his school, and there’s
not a week passes that he don’t hear of some
one of them who has been hurt or taken sick.
And he wants to start a ward at the Children’s
Hospital, that can take care of them. He says
he wants to get other people interested, too, and
so he wants to start a contribution. He says
he’ll double any amount that’s raised in
the next six months that is, if there’s
two thousand raised, he’ll make it four thousand;
understand? And so Charlie and I and the Gretrys
are going to get up an amateur play a charity
affair and raise as much money as we can.
J. thinks it’s a good idea, and here’s
the point we were talking about it coming
home in the carriage, and J. said he wondered if that
Miss Dearborn wouldn’t take part. And we
are all wild to have you. You know you do that
sort of thing so well. Now don’t say yes
or no to-night. You sleep over it. J. is
crazy to have you in it.”
“I’d love to do it,”
answered Laura. “But I would have to see it
takes so long to get settled, and there’s so
much to do about a big house like ours, I might not
have time. But I will let you know.”
Mrs. Cressler told her in detail about
the proposed play. Landry Court was to take part,
and she enlisted Laura’s influence to get Sheldon
Corthell to undertake a rôle. Page, it appeared,
had already promised to help. Laura remembered
now that she had heard her speak of it. However,
the plan was so immature as yet, that it hardly admitted
of very much discussion, and inevitably the conversation
came back to its starting-point.
“You know,” Laura had
remarked in answer to one of Mrs. Cressler’s
observations upon the capabilities and business ability
of “J.,” “you know I never heard
of him before you spoke of our theatre party.
I don’t know anything about him.”
But Mrs. Cressler promptly supplied
the information. Curtis Jadwin was a man about
thirty-five, who had begun life without a sou in his
pockets. He was a native of Michigan. His
people were farmers, nothing more nor less than hardy,
honest fellows, who ploughed and sowed for a living.
Curtis had only a rudimentary schooling, because he
had given up the idea of finishing his studies in
the High School in Grand Rapids, on the chance of
going into business with a livery stable keeper.
Then in time he had bought out the business and had
run it for himself. Some one in Chicago owed
him money, and in default of payment had offered him
a couple of lots on Wabash Avenue. That was how
he happened to come to Chicago. Naturally enough
as the city grew the Wabash Avenue property it
was near Monroe Street increased in value.
He sold the lots and bought other real estate, sold
that and bought somewhere else, and so on, till he
owned some of the best business sites in the city.
Just his ground rent alone brought him, heaven knew
how many thousands a year. He was one of the largest
real estate owners in Chicago. But he no longer
bought and sold. His property had grown so large
that just the management of it alone took up most of
his time. He had an office in the Rookery, and
perhaps being so close to the Board of Trade Building,
had given him a taste for trying a little deal in
wheat now and then. As a rule, he deplored speculation.
He had no fixed principles about it, like Charlie.
Only he was conservative; occasionally he hazarded
small operations. Somehow he had never married.
There had been affairs. Oh, yes, one or two, of
course. Nothing very serious, He just didn’t
seem to have met the right girl, that was all.
He lived on Michigan Avenue, near the corner of Twenty-first
Street, in one of those discouraging eternal yellow
limestone houses with a basement dining-room.
His aunt kept house for him, and his nieces and nephews
overran the place. There was always a raft of
them there, either coming or going; and the way they
exploited him! He supported them all; heaven
knew how many there were; such drabs and gawks, all
elbows and knees, who soaked themselves with cologne
and made companions of the servants. They and
the second girls were always squabbling about their
things that they found in each other’s rooms.
It was growing late. At length Mrs. Cressler
rose.
“My goodness, Laura, look at
the time; and I’ve been keeping you up when
you must be killed for sleep.”
She took herself away, pausing at
the doorway long enough to say:
“Do try to manage to take part
in the play. J. made me promise that I would
get you.”
“Well, I think I can,”
Laura answered. “Only I’ll have to
see first how our new regime is going to run the
house I mean.”
When Mrs. Cressler had gone Laura
lost no time in getting to bed. But after she
turned out the gas she remembered that she had not
“covered” the fire, a custom that she
still retained from the daily round of her life at
Barrington. She did not light the gas again, but
guided by the firelight, spread a shovelful of ashes
over the top of the grate. Yet when she had done
this, she still knelt there a moment, looking wide-eyed
into the glow, thinking over the events of the last
twenty-four hours. When all was said and done,
she had, after all, found more in Chicago than the
clash and trepidation of empire-making, more than
the reverberation of the thunder of battle, more than
the piping and choiring of sweet music.
First it had been Sheldon Corthell,
quiet, persuasive, eloquent. Then Landry Court
with his exuberance and extravagance and boyishness,
and now unexpectedly behold,
a new element had appeared this other one,
this man of the world, of affairs, mature, experienced,
whom she hardly knew. It was charming she told
herself, exciting. Life never had seemed half
so delightful. Romantic, she felt Romance, unseen,
intangible, at work all about her. And love,
which of all things knowable was dearest to her, came
to her unsought.
Her first aversion to the Great Grey
City was fast disappearing. She saw it now in
a kindlier aspect.
“I think,” she said at
last, as she still knelt before the fire, looking
deep into the coals, absorbed, abstracted, “I
think that I am going to be very happy here.”