Mrs. Melrose never spoke again, or
showed another flicker of the clear and normal intelligence
that she had shown in the night. But she still
breathed, and the long, wet day dragged slowly, in
the big, mournful old house, until late in the unnatural
afternoon. People — all sorts of people — were
coming and going now, and being answered, or being
turned away; a few privileged old friends came softly
up the carpeted stairs, and cried quietly with Annie,
who looked unbelievably old and ashen under the double
shock. Norma began to hear, on all sides, respectful
and sympathetic references to “the family.”
The family felt this, and would like that, the family
was not seeing any one, the family must be protected
and considered in every way. The privileged old
friends talked with strange men in the lower hall,
and were heard saying “I suppose so” dubiously,
to questions of hats and veils and carriages and the
church.
Chris was gone all day, but at four
o’clock an urgent message was sent him, and
he and Acton came into Mrs. Melrose’s room about
half an hour later, for the end. His face was
ghastly, and he seemed almost unable to understand
what was said to him, but he was very quiet.
Norma never forgot the scene.
She knelt on one side of the bed, praying with all
the concentration and fervour that she could rally
under the circumstances. But her frightened,
tired eyes were impressed with every detail of the
dark old stately bedroom none the less. This was
the end of the road, for youth and beauty and power
and wealth, this sunken, unrecognizable face, this
gathering of shadows among the dull, wintry shadows
of the afternoon.
Annie was kneeling, too, her fine,
unringed hands clasping one of her mother’s
hands. Chris sat against the back of the bed,
half-supporting the piled pillows, in a futile attempt
to make more easy the fighting breath, and Acton and
Hendrick von Behrens, grave and awed, stood beside
him, their faces full of sympathy and distress.
There was an outer fringe of nurses, doctors, maids;
there was even an audible whisper from one of them
that caused Annie to frown, annoyed and rebuking, over
her shoulder.
Minutes passed. Norma, pressing
her cheek against the hand she held, began a Litany,
very low. Suddenly the dying woman opened her
eyes.
“Yes — yes — yes!”
she whispered, eagerly, and with a break in her frightened
voice Norma began more clearly, “Our Father,
Who art in Heaven — ” and they
all joined in, somewhat awkwardly and uncertainly.
Mrs. Melrose sank back; she had raised
herself just a fraction of an inch to speak.
Now her head fell, and Norma saw the florid colour
drain from her face as wine drains from an overturned
glass. A leaden pallor settled suddenly upon
her. When the prayer was finished they waited — eyed
each other — waited again. There was
no other breath.
“Doctor — ”
Annie cried, choking. The doctor gently laid down
the limp hand he had raised; it was already cool.
And behind him the maids began to sob and wail unrebuked.
Norma went out into the hall dazed
and shaken. This was her first sight of death.
It made her feel a little faint and sick. Chris
came and talked to her for a few minutes; Annie had
collapsed utterly, and was under the doctor’s
care; Acton broke down, too, and Norma heard Chris
attempting to quiet him. There was audible sobbing
all over the house when, an hour or two later, Alice’s
beautiful body in a magnificent casket was brought
to lie in the old home beside the mother she had adored.
The fragrance of masses and masses
of damp flowers began to penetrate everywhere, and
Norma made occasional pilgrimages in to Annie’s
bedside, and told her what beautiful offerings were
coming and coming and coming. Joseph had reinforcements
of sympathetic, black-clad young men, who kept opening
the front door, and murmuring at the muffled telephone.
Annie’s secretary, a young woman about Norma’s
age, was detailed by Hendrick to keep cards and messages
straight — for every little courtesy must
be acknowledged on Annie’s black-bordered card
within a few weeks’ time — and Norma
heard Joseph telephoning several of the prominent
florists that Mr. Liggett had directed that all flowers
were to come to the Melrose house. Nothing was
overlooked.
When Norma went to her room, big boxes
were on the bed, boxes that held everything that was
simple and beautiful in mourning: plain, charming
frocks, a smart long seal-bordered coat, veils and
gloves, small and elegant hats, even black-bordered
handkerchiefs. She dressed herself soberly, yet
not without that mournful thrill that fitness and
becomingness lends to bereavement. When she went
back to Annie’s side Annie was in beautiful
lengths of lustreless crape, too; they settled down
to low, sad conversation, with a few of the privileged
old friends. Chris was nowhere to be seen, but
at about six o’clock Acton came in to show them
a telegram from Leslie, flying homeward. Judge
Lee was hurrying to them from Washington, and for
a few minutes Annie’s handsome, bewildered little
boys came in with a governess, and she cried over
them, and clung to them forlornly.
After a distracted half-hour in the
dining-room, when she and Acton and Annie’s
secretary had soup and salad from a sort of buffet
meal that was going on there indefinitely, Norma went
upstairs to find that the door to the front upper
sitting-room, closed for hours, was set ajar, and to
see a vague mass of beautiful flowers within — white
and purple flowers, and wreaths of shining dark round
leaves. With a quick-beating heart she stepped
softly inside, and went to kneel at the nearer coffin,
and cover her face with her shaking hands. The
thick sweetness of the wet leaves and blossoms enveloped
her. Candles were burning; there was no other
light.
Two or three other women were in the
room, catching their breath up through their nostrils
with little gasps, pressing folded handkerchiefs against
their trembling mouths, letting fresh tears well from
their tear-reddened eyes. Chris was standing
a few feet away from the white-clad, flower-circled,
radiant sleeper who had been Alice; his arms were
folded, his splendid dark gaze fell upon her with a
sort of sombre calm; he seemed entirely unconscious
of the pitying and sorrowful friends who were moving
noiselessly to and fro.
In the candlelight there was a wavering
smile on Alice’s quiet face, her broad forehead
was unruffled, and her mouth mysteriously sweet.
Norma’s eyes fell upon a familiar black coat,
on the kneeling woman nearest her, and with a start
she recognized Aunt Kate.
They left the room together a few
minutes later, and Norma led her aunt to her own room,
where they talked tenderly of the dead. The older
woman was touched by the slender little black figure,
and badly shaken by the double tragedy, and she cried
quite openly. Norma had Regina send her up some
tea, and petted and fussed about her in her little
daughterly way.
“I saw about Miss Alice this
morning, but I had no idea the poor old lady — !”
Mrs. Sheridan commented sadly. “Well, well,
it seems only yesterday that here, in this very house — and
they were all young then — ”
Aunt Kate fell silent, and mused for a moment, before
adding briskly: “But now, will they want
you, Norma, after the funeral, I mean? Wolf wrote
me — ”
“I don’t think Aunt Annie
wants me now,” Norma said, and with a heightened
colour she added, suddenly, “But I belong here,
now, Aunt Kate — I know who I am at last!”
Mrs. Sheridan’s face did not
move; but an indefinable tightness came about her
mouth, and an indefinable sharpness to her eyes.
She looked at Norma without speaking.
“Aunt Marianna told me,”
the girl said, simply. “You’re sorry,”
she added, quickly, “I can see you are!”
“No — I wouldn’t
say that, Baby!” But Mrs. Sheridan spoke heavily,
and ended on a sigh. There was a short silence.
Then Regina came in with a note for
Norma, who read it, and turned to her aunt.
“It’s Chris — he
wants very much to see you before you go away,”
she said. “I wonder if you would ask Mr.
Liggett to come in here, Regina?” But five minutes
later, when Chris came in, he looked so ill that she
was quick to spare him. “Chris, wouldn’t
to-morrow do — you look so tired!”
“I am tired,” Chris
said, after quietly accepting Mrs. Sheridan’s
murmured condolence, with his hand holding hers, as
if he liked the big, sympathetic woman. “But
I want this off my mind before I see Judge Lee!
You are right, Mrs. Sheridan,” he said, with
a sort of boyish gruffness, not yet releasing her
hands, “my wife was an angel. I always knew
it — but I wish I could tell her so just once
more!”
“Ah, that’s the very hardest
thing about death,” Mrs. Sheridan said, sitting
down, and quite frankly wiping from her eyes the tears
that sympathy for his sorrow had made spring again.
“We’d always want one more hour!”
“But Norma perhaps has told
you — ?” Chris said, in a different
tone. “Told you of the — the remarkable
talk we had yesterday — with my poor mother-in-law — ”
Kate Sheridan nodded gravely.
“Yes,” she answered, almost
reluctantly, “Norma is Theodore Melrose’s
child. I have letters — all their letters.
I knew her mother, that was Louison Courtot, well.
It was a mixed-up business — but you’ve
got the whole truth at last. I’ve lost
more than one night’s sleep over my share of
it, Mr. Liggett, thinking who this child was, and whether
I had the right to hold my tongue.
“I was a widow when I went to
Germany with Mrs. Melrose. She begged and begged
me to, for she was sick with worry about Miss Annie.
Miss Annie had been over there about eight months,
and something she’d written had made her mother
feel that she was ill, or in trouble. Well, I
didn’t want to leave my own children, but she
coaxed me so hard that I went. We sailed without
cabling, and went straight to Leipsic, and to the
dreadful, dreary pension that Miss Annie was in — a
dismal, lonely place. She came downstairs to
see her mother, and I’ll never forget the scream
she gave, for she’d had no warning, poor child,
and Mueller had taken all her money, and she was — well,
we could see how she was. She began laughing
and crying, and her mother did, too, but Mrs. Melrose
stopped after a few minutes, and we couldn’t
stop Miss Annie at all. She shrieked and sobbed
and strangled until we saw she was ill, and her mother
gave me one look, and bundled her right out to the
carriage, and off to a better place, and we got a
doctor and a nurse. But all that night she was
in danger of her life. I went in to her room that
evening, to put things in order, and she was lying
on the bed like a dead thing — white, sick,
and with her eyes never moving off her mother’s
face. I could hear her murmuring the whole story,
the shame and the bitter cruelty of it, crying sometimes — and
her mother crying, too.
“‘And, Mama,’ she
said — the innocence of her! ’Mama,
did the doctor tell you that there might have been
a baby? — I didn’t know it myself until
a few weeks ago! And that’s why they’re
so frightened about me now. But,’ she said,
beginning to cry again, ’I should have hated
it — I’ve always hated it, and I’d
rather have it all over — I don’t want
to have to face anything more!’
“Well, it looked then as if
she couldn’t possibly live through the night,
and all her mother could think of was to comfort her.
She told her that they would go away and forget it
all, and Miss Annie clung to her through the whole
terrible thing. We none of us got any sleep that
night, and I think it was at about three o’clock
the next morning that I crept to the door, and the
doctor — Doctor Leslie — an old English
doctor who was very kind, came to the door and gave
me the poor little pitiful baby in a blanket.
I almost screamed when I took it, for the poor little
soul was alive, working her little mouth! I took
her to my room, and indeed I baptized her myself — I
named her Mary for my mother, and Leslie for the doctor,
but I never thought she’d need a name — then.
She was under four pounds, and with a little claw
like a monkey’s paw, and so thin we didn’t
dare dress her — we thought she was three
months too soon, then, and I just sat watching her,
waiting for her to die, and thinking of my own — !
“Miss Annie was given up the
next day, she’d gone into a brain fever, but
my poor little soul was wailing a good healthy wail — I
remember I cried bitterly when the doctor told me
not to hope for her! But she lived — and
on the fourth day Mrs. Melrose sent us away, and we
went and stayed in the country for two months after
that.
“Then I had a letter from the
Riviera, the first that’d come. Miss Annie
was getting well, her hair was coming out curly, and
she hardly remembered anything about what had happened
at all. She wasn’t nineteen then, poor
child! She had cried once, her mother wrote, and
had said she thanked God the baby had died and that
was all she ever said of it.
“I brought the baby home, and
for nearly three years she lived with my own, and
of course Mrs. Melrose paid me for it. And then
one day Louison Courtot came to see me — I’d
known her, of course — Mr. Theodore’s
wife, that had been Miss Annie’s maid.
She had a letter from Mrs. Melrose, and she took Leslie
away, and gave her to her grandmother — just
according to plan. Well, I didn’t like
it — though it gave the child her rights,
but it didn’t seem honest. I had no call
to interfere, and a few months later Mrs. Melrose
gave me the double house in Brooklyn, that you’ll
well remember, Norma — and your own father
made out the deed of gift, Mr. Chris — !
“And then, perhaps a year later,
Louison came to call on me again, and with her was
a little girl — four years old, and I looked
at her, and looked at Louison, and I said, ‘My
God — that’s a Melrose!’ She said,
yes, it was Theodore’s child.”
“Norma!” Chris said.
“Norma — and I remember
her as if it was yesterday! With a blue velvet
coat on her, and a white collar, and the way she dragged
off her little mittens to go over and play with Rose
and Wolf — and the little coaxing air she
had! So then Louison told me the story, how she
had never told Mrs. Melrose that Theodore really had
a daughter, because she hated her so! But she
was going to be married again, and go to Canada, and
she wanted me to keep the baby until she could send
for her. I said I would see how it went, but
I could see then that there never was in the world — ”
Mrs. Sheridan interrupted herself, coughed, and glanced
at the girl. “Well, we liked Norma right
then and there!” she finished, a little tamely.
“Oh, Aunt Kate!” Norma
said, smiling through tears, her hand tight upon the
older woman’s, “you never will praise me!”
“So Norma,” the story
went on, “had her supper that night between my
two children, and for fourteen years she never knew
that she wasn’t our own. And perhaps she
never would have known if Louison hadn’t written
me that she was in a hospital — she was to
have an operation, and she was willing at last to
make peace with her husband’s family. In
the same letter was her husband’s note that
she was gone, so I had to use my own judgment then.
And when I heard Norma talk of the rich girls she saw
in the bookstore, Mr. Chris, and knew how she loved
what money could do for her, it seemed to me that
at least I must tell her grandmother the truth.
So we came here, three years ago, and if it wasn’t
for Miss Alice’s mistake about her, perhaps
the story would have come out then! But that’s
all the truth.”
Chris nodded, his arms folded on his
chest, his tired face very thoughtful.
“It makes her a rich woman, Mrs. Sheridan,”
he said.
“I suppose so, sir. I understand
Mr. Melrose — the old gentleman — left
everything to his son, Theodore.”
“But not only that,” Chris
said. “She can claim every penny that has
ever been paid over to Leslie, all through her minority,
and since she came of age, and she also inherits the
larger part of her grandmother’s estate, under
the will. Probably Mrs. Melrose would have changed
that, if she had lived when all this came to light,
and given that same legacy to Leslie, but we can’t
act on that supposition. The court will probably
feel that a very grave injustice has been done Norma,
and exact the full arrears.”
“But, Chris,” Norma said,
quickly, “surely some way can be found to give
Leslie all that would have come to me — ”
“Well, that, of course, would
be pure generosity on your part!” he said, quietly.
“However, it would seem to me desirable all round,”
he added, “to keep this in the family.”
“Oh, I think so!” Norma agreed, eagerly.
“Annie and Hendrick must be
informed, and, as Leslie’s mother, Annie will
provide for her some day, of course. We’ll
discuss all that later. But to-day I only wanted
to clear up a few points before I see Judge Lee.
He has the will, I believe. He will be here to-morrow
morning. In the meanwhile, I think I would say
nothing, Norma, just because Annie is so upset, and
if Leslie heard any garbled story, before she got
here — ”
“Oh, I agree with you entirely,
Chris! Anything that makes it easier all round!”
Norma could afford to be magnanimous and agreeable.
She would not have been human not to feel herself
the most interesting figure in all this dramatic situation,
not to know that thoughtfulness and generosity were
the most charming parts of her new rôle. Quietly,
affectionately, she went to the door with Aunt Kate.
“I wish I could go home with
you!” she said. “But I think they
need me here! And if Wolf should come up Saturday,
Aunt Kate, you’ll tell him about the funeral — ”
“Rose said he wasn’t coming
up on Saturday,” his mother said. “But
if he does, of course he’ll understand!
Remember, Norma,” she added, drawing the girl
aside a moment, in the lower hall, “remember
that they’ve all been very kind to you, dear!
It’s going to be hard for them all!”
“Yes, I know!” Norma said,
hastily, the admonition not to her taste.
“And what you and Wolf will
do with all that money — !” her
aunt mused, shaking her head. “Well, one
thing at a time! But I know,” she finished,
fondly, “my girl will show them all what a generous
and a lovely nature she has, in all the changes and
shifts!”
Clever Aunt Kate! Norma smiled
to herself as she went upstairs. She had hundreds
of times before this guided the girl by premature confidence
and praise; she knew how Norma loved the approbation
of those about her.
Not but what Norma meant to be everything
that was broad and considerate now; she had assumed
that position from the beginning. Leslie’s
chagrin, Aunt Annie’s consternation, should
be respected and humoured. They had sometimes
shown her the arrogant, the supercilious side of the
Melrose nature, in the years gone by. Now she,
the truest Melrose of them all, would show them real
greatness of soul. She would talk it all over
with Wolf, of course —
She missed Wolf. It was, as always,
a curiously unsatisfying atmosphere, this of the old
Melrose house. The whispers, the hushed footsteps,
the lowered voices, Aunt Annie’s plaintive heroism
in her superb crapes, the almost belligerent loyalty
of the intimate friends who praised and marvelled
at her, the costly flowers — thousands of
dollars’ worth of them — the extra
men helping Joseph to keep everything decorous and
beautiful — somehow it all sickened Norma,
and she wished that Wolf could come and take her for
a walk, and talk to her about it. He would be
interested in it all, and he would laugh at her account
of the undertakers, and he would break into elementary
socialism when the cost of the whole pompous pageant
was estimated.
And what would he think of her new-found
wealth? Norma tried to imagine it, but somehow
she could not think of Wolf as very much affected.
He hated society, primarily, and he would never be
idle, not for the treasures of India. He would
let her spend it as she pleased, and go on working
rapturously at his valves and meters and gauges, perhaps
delighted if she bought him the costliest motor-car
made, or the finest of mechanical piano-players, but
quite as willing that the pearls about his wife’s
throat should cost fifty dollars as fifty thousand,
and quite as anxious that the heiress of the Melroses
should “make good” with his associate
workers as if she had been still a little clerk from
Biretta’s Bookshop!
But cheerfully indifferent as he was
to everything that made life worth living to such
a man as Christopher Liggett, she knew that he would
not go to California without her unless there was
a definite break between them. She knew she could
not persuade him to leave her here, as a normal and
pleasant solution, just until everything was settled,
and until they could see a little further ahead.
No, Wolf was annoyingly conventional where his wife
was concerned: her place was with him, unless
for some secondary reason they had decided to part.
And she knew that if he let her go it would be because
he felt that he never should have claimed her — that,
in the highest sense, he never had had her at all.