The evening had closed in wet and
misty. All day long a chill wind had blown across
the city from off the lake, and by eight o’clock,
when Laura and Jadwin came down to the dismantled
library, a heavy rain was falling.
Laura gave Jadwin her arm as they
made their way across the room their footsteps
echoing strangely from the uncarpeted boards.
“There, dear,” she said.
“Give me the valise. Now sit down on the
packing box there. Are you tired? You had
better put your hat on. It is full of draughts
here, now that all the furniture and curtains are out.”
“No, no. I’m all right, old girl.
Is the hack there yet?”
“Not yet. You’re
sure you’re not tired?” she insisted.
“You had a pretty bad siege of it, you know,
and this is only the first week you’ve been
up. You remember how the doctor ”
“I’ve had too good a nurse,”
he answered, stroking her hand, “not to be fine
as a fiddle by now. You must be tired yourself,
Laura. Why, for whole days there and
nights, too, they tell me you never left
the room.”
She shook her head, as though dismissing the subject.
“I wonder,” she said,
sitting down upon a smaller packing-box and clasping
a knee in her hands, “I wonder what the West
will be like. Do you know I think I am going
to like it, Curtis?”
“It will be starting in all
over again, old girl,” he said, with a warning
shake of his head. “Pretty hard at first,
I’m afraid.”
She laughed an almost contemptuous note.
“Hard! Now?” She took his hand and
laid it to her cheek.
“By all the rules you ought
to hate me,” he began. “What have
I done for you but hurt you and, at last, bring you
to ”
But she shut her gloved hand over his mouth.
“Stop!” she cried.
“Hush, dear. You have brought me the greatest
happiness of my life.”
Then under her breath, her eyes wide and thoughtful,
she murmured:
“A capitulation and not a triumph,
and I have won a victory by surrendering.”
“Hey what?” demanded Jadwin.
“I didn’t hear.”
“Never mind,” she answered.
“It was nothing. ’The world is all
before us where to choose,’ now, isn’t
it? And this big house and all the life we have
led in it was just an incident in our lives an
incident that is closed.”
“Looks like it, to look around
this room,” he said, grimly. “Nothing
left but the wall paper. What do you suppose are
in these boxes?”
“They’re labelled ‘books and portieres.’”
“Who bought ’em I wonder?
I’d have thought the party who bought the house
would have taken them. Well, it was a wrench to
see the place and all go so dirt cheap, and the ‘Thetis’,
too, by George! But I’m glad now.
It’s as though we had lightened ship.”
He looked at his watch. “That hack ought
to be here pretty soon. I’m glad we checked
the trunks from the house; gives us more time.”
“Oh, by the way,” exclaimed
Laura, all at once opening her satchel. “I
had a long letter from Page this morning, from New
York. Do you want to hear what she has to say?
I’ve only had time to read part of it myself.
It’s the first one I’ve had from her since
their marriage.”
He lit a cigar.
“Go ahead,” he said, settling
himself on the box. “What does Mrs. Court
have to say?”
“‘My dearest sister,’”
began Laura. “’Here we are, Landry and
I, in New York at last. Very tired and mussed
after the ride on the cars, but in a darling little
hotel where the proprietor is head cook and everybody
speaks French. I know my accent is improving,
and Landry has learned any quantity of phrases already.
We are reading George Sand out loud, and are making
up the longest vocabulary. To-night we are going
to a concert, and I’ve found out that there’s
a really fine course of lectures to be given soon
on “Literary Tendencies,” or something
like that. Quel chance. Landry
is intensely interested. You’ve no idea
what a deep mind he has, Laura a real thinker.
“’But here’s really
a big piece of news. We may not have to give up
our old home where we lived when we first came to
Chicago. Aunt Wess’ wrote the other day
to say that, if you were willing, she would rent it,
and then sublet all the lower floor to Landry and
me, so we could have a real house over our heads and
not the under side of the floor of the flat overhead.
And she is such an old dear, I know we could all get
along beautifully. Write me about this as soon
as you can. I know you’ll be willing, and
Aunt Wess, said she’d agree to whatever rent
you suggested.
“’We went to call on Mrs.
Cressler day before yesterday. She’s been
here nearly a fortnight by now, and is living with
a maiden sister of hers in a very beautiful house
fronting Central Park (not so beautiful as our palace
on North Avenue. Never, never will I forget that
house). She will probably stay here now always.
She says the very sight of the old neighbourhoods
in Chicago would be more than she could bear.
Poor Mrs. Cressler! How fortunate for her that
her sister’ and so on, and so on,”
broke in Laura, hastily.
“Read it, read it,” said
Jadwin, turning sharply away. “Don’t
skip a line. I want to hear every word.”
“That’s all there is to
it,” Laura returned. “‘We’ll
be back,’” she went on, turning a page
of the letter, “’in about three weeks,
and Landry will take up his work in that railroad
office. No more speculating for him, he says.
He talks of Mr. Jadwin continually. You never
saw or heard of such devotion. He says that Mr.
Jadwin is a genius, the greatest financier in the
country, and that he knows he could have won if they
all hadn’t turned against him that day.
He never gets tired telling me that Mr. Jadwin has
been a father to him the kindest, biggest-hearted
man he ever knew ’”
Jadwin pulled his mustache rapidly.
“Pshaw, pish, nonsense little fool!”
he blustered.
“He simply worshipped you from
the first, Curtis,” commented Laura. “Even
after he knew I was to marry you. He never once
was jealous, never once would listen to a word against
you from any one.”
“Well well, what else does Mrs. Court
say?”
“‘I am glad to hear,’”
read Laura, “’that Mr. Gretry did not fail,
though Landry tells me he must have lost a great deal
of money. Landry tells me that eighteen brokers’
houses failed in Chicago the day after Mr. Gretry
suspended. Isabel sent us a wedding present a
lovely medicine chest full of homoeopathic medicines,
little pills and things, you know. But, as Landry
and I are never sick and both laugh at homoeopathy,
I declare I don’t know just what we will do with
it. Landry is as careful of me as though I were
a wax doll. But I do wish he would think more
of his own health. He never will wear his mackintosh
in rainy weather. I’ve been studying his
tastes so carefully. He likes French light opera
better than English, and bright colours in his cravats,
and he simply adores stuffed tomatoes.
“’We both send our love,
and Landry especially wants to be remembered to Mr.
Jadwin. I hope this letter will come in time for
us to wish you both bon voyage and bon succès.
How splendid of Mr. Jadwin to have started his new
business even while he was convalescent! Landry
says he knows he will make two or three more fortunes
in the next few years.
“’Good-by, Laura, dear. Ever your
loving sister,
“’PAGE COURT.
“’P.S. I open
this letter again to tell you that we met Mr. Corthell
on the street yesterday. He sails for Europe to-day.’”
“Oh,” said Jadwin, as Laura put the letter
quickly down,
“Corthell that artist chap.
By the way, whatever became of him?”
Laura settled a comb in the back of her hair.
“He went away,” she said.
“You remember I told you told
you all about it.”
She would have turned away her head,
but he laid a hand upon her shoulder.
“I remember,” he answered,
looking squarely into her eyes, “I remember
nothing only that I have been to blame for
everything. I told you once long ago that
I understood. And I understand now, old girl,
understand as I never did before. I fancy we both
have been living according to a wrong notion of things.
We started right when we were first married, but I
worked away from it somehow and pulled you along with
me. But we’ve both been through a great
big change, honey, a great big change, and we’re
starting all over again.... Well, there’s
the carriage, I guess.”
They rose, gathering up their valises.
“Hoh!” said Jadwin.
“No servants now, Laura, to carry our things
down for us and open the door, and it’s a hack,
old girl, instead of the victoria or coupe.”
“What if it is?” she cried.
“What do ‘things,’ servants, money,
and all amount to now?”
As Jadwin laid his hand upon the knob
of the front door, he all at once put down his valise
and put his arm about his wife. She caught him
about the neck and looked deep into his eyes a long
moment. And then, without speaking, they kissed
each other.
In the outer vestibule, he raised
the umbrella and held it over her head.
“Hold it a minute, will you, Laura?” he
said.
He gave it into her hand and swung
the door of the house shut behind him. The noise
woke a hollow echo throughout all the series of empty,
denuded rooms. Jadwin slipped the key in his pocket.
“Come,” he said.
They stepped out from the vestibule.
It was already dark. The rain was falling in
gentle slants through the odorous, cool air. Across
the street in the park the first leaves were beginning
to fall; the lake lapped and washed quietly against
the stone embankments and a belated bicyclist stole
past across the asphalt, with the silent flitting of
a bat, his lamp throwing a fan of orange-coloured
haze into the mist of rain.
In the street in front of the house
the driver, descending from the box, held open the
door of the hack. Jadwin handed Laura in, gave
an address to the driver, and got in himself, slamming
the door after. They heard the driver mount to
his seat and speak to his horses.
“Well,” said Jadwin, rubbing
the fog from the window pane of the door, “look
your last at the old place, Laura. You’ll
never see it again.”
But she would not look.
“No, no,” she said.
“I’ll look at you, dearest, at you, and
our future, which is to be happier than any years
we have ever known.”
Jadwin did not answer other than by
taking her hand in his, and in silence they drove
through the city towards the train that was to carry
them to the new life. A phase of the existences
of each was closed definitely. The great corner
was a thing of the past; the great corner with the
long train of disasters its collapse had started.
The great failure had precipitated smaller failures,
and the aggregate of smaller failures had pulled down
one business house after another. For weeks afterward,
the successive crashes were like the shock and reverberation
of undermined buildings toppling to their ruin.
An important bank had suspended payment, and hundreds
of depositors had found their little fortunes swept
away. The ramifications of the catastrophe were
unbelievable. The whole tone of financial affairs
seemed changed. Money was “tight”
again, credit was withdrawn. The business world
began to speak of hard times, once more.
But Laura would not admit her husband
was in any way to blame. He had suffered, too.
She repeated to herself his words, again and again:
“The wheat cornered itself.
I simply stood between two sets of circumstances.
The wheat cornered me, not I the wheat.”
And all those millions and millions
of bushels of Wheat were gone now. The Wheat
that had killed Cressler, that had ingulfed Jadwin’s
fortune and all but unseated reason itself; the Wheat
that had intervened like a great torrent to drag her
husband from her side and drown him in the roaring
vortices of the Pit, had passed on, resistless, along
its ordered and predetermined courses from West to
East? like a vast Titanic flood, had passed, leaving
Death and Ruin in its wake, but bearing Life and Prosperity
to the crowded cities and centres of Europe.
For a moment, vague, dark perplexities
assailed her, questionings as to the elemental forces,
the forces of demand and supply that ruled the world.
This huge resistless Nourisher of the Nations why
was it that it could not reach the People, could not
fulfil its destiny, unmarred by all this suffering,
unattended by all this misery?
She did not know. But as she
searched, troubled and disturbed for an answer, she
was aware of a certain familiarity in the neighbourhood
the carriage was traversing. The strange sense
of having lived through this scene, these circumstances,
once before, took hold upon her.
She looked out quickly, on either
hand, through the blurred glasses of the carriage
doors. Surely, surely, this locality had once
before impressed itself upon her imagination.
She turned to her husband, an exclamation upon her
lips; but Jadwin, by the dim light of the carriage
lanterns, was studying a railroad folder.
All at once, intuitively, Laura turned
in her place, and raising the flap that covered the
little window at the back of the carriage, looked
behind. On either side of the vista in converging
lines stretched the tall office buildings, lights
burning in a few of their windows, even yet.
Over the end of the street the lead-coloured sky was
broken by a pale faint haze of light, and silhouetted
against this rose a sombre mass, unbroken by any glimmer,
rearing a black and formidable façade against the
blur of the sky behind it.
And this was the last impression of
the part of her life that that day brought to a close;
the tall gray 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,
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.