By just what mental processes Emeline
Page had come to feel herself a dignified martyr in
a world full of oppressed women, it would be difficult
to say: Emeline herself would have been the last
person from whom a reasonable explanation might have
been expected. But it was a fact that she never
missed an opportunity to belittle the male sex; she
had never had much charm for men, she had none now,
and consequently she associated chiefly with women:
with widows and grass widows of her own type, and
with the young actresses and would-be actresses of
the curious social level upon which she lived.
Emeline’s lack of charm was the most valuable
moral asset she had. Had she attracted men she
would not long have remained virtuous, for she was
violently opposed to any restriction upon her own
desires, no matter how well established a restriction
or how generally accepted it might be. For a
little while after George’s going, Emeline had
indeed frequently used the term “if I marry again,”
but of late years she had rather softened to his memory,
and enjoyed abusing other men while she revelled in
a fond recollection of George’s goodness.
“God knows I was only a foolish
girl,” Emeline would say, resting cold wet feet
against the open oven door while Julia pressed a frill.
“But your papa never was anything but a perfect
ge’man, never! I’ll never forget
one night when he took me to Grant’s Cafe for
dinner! I was all dressed up to kill, and George
looked elegant — ”
A long reminiscence followed.
“I hope to God you get as good
a man as your papa,” said Emeline more than
once, romantically.
Julia, thumping an iron, would answer
with cool common sense:
“Well, if I do, I want to tell
you right now, Mama, I’ll treat him a good deal
better than you did!”
“Oh, you’ll be a wonder,”
Emeline would concede good-naturedly.
At very long intervals Emeline dressed
herself and her daughter as elaborately as possible,
and went out into the Mission to see her parents.
With the singular readiness to change the known discomfort
for the unknown, characteristic of their class, the
various young members of the family had all gone away
now, and lonely old Mrs. Cox, a shrivelled little
shell of a woman at sixty-five, always had a warm welcome
for her oldest daughter and her beautiful grandchild.
She would limp about her bare, uninviting little rooms,
complaining of her husband’s increasing meanness
and of her own physical ills, while with gnarled, twisted
old hands she filled a “Rebecca” teapot
of cheap brown glaze, or cut into a fresh loaf of
“milk bread.”
“D’ye see George at all now, Emeline?”
“Not to speak to, Mom.
But” — and Emeline would lay down the
little mirror in which she was studying her face — “but
the Rosenthal children say that there’s a man
who’s always hanging about the lower doorway,
and that once he gave Hannah — ”
And so on and on. Mrs. Cox was
readily convinced that George, repentant, was unable
to keep away from the neighbourhood of his one and
only love. Julia, dreaming over her thick cup
of strong tea, granted only a polite, faintly weary
smile to her mother’s romances. She knew
how glad Emeline would be to really believe even one
tenth of these flattering suspicions.
A few weeks after Julia’s long
day of events with Artheris, with Carter Hazzard,
and young Rosenthal, she chanced to awaken one Saturday
morning to a pleasant, undefined sensation that life
was sweet. She thought of Mr. Hazzard, whom she
had seen twice since their first meeting, but not
alone again. And she reflected with satisfaction
that she knew her part of “The Amazons”
perfectly, and so was ready for the first rehearsal
to-day. This led to a little dream of the leading
lady failing to appear on the great night, and of
Julia herself in Lady Noel’s part; of Julia
subsequently adored and envied by the entire cast;
of Carter Hazzard —
Julia had made an engagement with
Mark for to-day, but the rehearsal plan must interfere.
She wondered how she could send him word, and finally
decided to see him herself for a moment early in the
afternoon. Mark, originally employed as office
boy, pure and simple, had now made himself a general
handy man, reference and filing clerk, in the big
piano house of Pomeroy and Parke. He had all the
good traits of his race, and some of the traits that,
without being wholly admirable, help a man toward
success. No slur at himself or his religion was
keen enough to pierce Mark’s smiling armour
of philosophy, no hours were too hard for him, no
work too menial for him to do cheerfully, nor too important
for him to undertake confidently. A wisdom far
older than his years was his. Poverty had been
his teacher, exile and deprivation. When other
children were in school, repeating mechanically that
many a little made a mickle, that genius was an infinite
capacity for taking pains, and that a man has no handicaps
but those of his own making, Mark knew these
things, he knew that the great forces of life were
no stronger than his own two hands, and that any work
of any sort must bring him to his goal — the
goal of wealth and power and position.
He knew that his father was not so
clever as he was, and why. He saw that his mother
was worn out with housework and child-bearing.
He did not idealize their home, where father, mother,
and seven children were crowded into four rooms, and
where of an evening the smell of cabbage soup and
herrings, of soap-suds and hot irons on woollen, of
inky school books and perspiring humanity, mingled
with the hot, oily breath of the lamp.
Yet Mark saw beyond this, too.
The food was good, if coarse, the bills were paid,
the bank account grew. Some day the girls would
be married, the boys in good positions; some day the
mother should have a little country house and a garden,
and the father come home early to smoke his pipe and
prune his rose bushes. Not a very brilliant future — no.
But how brilliant to them, who could remember Russia!
As for him, Mark, there was no limit
to his personal dream at all. Some day, while
yet as young as Mr. Parke, he would be as rich as Mr.
Pomeroy, he would have five splendid children, like
the Pomeroy children, he would have a wife as beautiful
as young Mrs. Parke. To his beautiful Jackson
Street palace the city’s best people should come,
and sometimes — for a favoured few — he
would play his rippling etudes and nocturnes,
his mazurkas and polonaises.
Julia Page, an unnoticed little neighbour
for many years, had, just at present, somewhat ruffled
the surface of his dream. Julia was not the ideal
wife of his mind or heart; nor was she apt to grow
to fill that ideal. Mrs. Mark Rosenthal must
be a Jewess, a wise, ripened, poised, and low-voiced
woman, a lover of music, babies, gardens, cooking,
and managing.
Yet there had been a certain evening,
not long before that spring evening upon which Julia’s
own awakening came, when Mark had been astonished
to find a sudden charm in the little girl. She
was only a little girl, of course, he said to himself
later; just a kid, but she was a mighty cunning kid!
Julia often had dinner with the Rosenthals;
she loved every separate member of the family and
she knew they all loved her. She used to run
upstairs and pop her pretty head into the Rosenthal
kitchen perhaps twice a week, sure of a welcome and
a good meal. On the occasion so significant to
Mark she had been there when he got in from work, helping
his sisters Sophy and Hannah with that careless disposition
of iron knives, great china sugar bowl, oddly assorted
plates, and thick cups that was known as “setting
the table.”
Mark had noticed then that Julia’s
figure was getting very pretty, and he watched her
coming and going with a real pleasure. She sat
next him at table, and, conscious as he was of her
nearness and of himself, he found her unconsciousness
very charming. Julia had burned her arm serving
the fried hominy, and she held it up for Mark to see,
the bare, sweet young arm close to his face.
And since then, poor Mark seemed to
be bewitched. He could not think of anything
but Julia. It made him angry and self-contemptuous,
but he was no better off for that. He did not
want to fall in love with Julia Page; he would not
admit that what he felt for Julia was love; he raged
with disappointment at the mere thought of bondage
so soon, and especially this bondage. But the
sweetness of her stole upon his senses nevertheless,
tangling about him like a drifting bit of vaporous
mist; he had no sooner detached one section of it
than another blew across his eyes, set pulses to beating
in his temples, and shook his whole body with a delicious
weakness.
And then came the night when she had
not kept her appointment, and he had followed her
to the Alcazar Theatre, and later kissed her in the
dark hallway. Then Mark knew. From the instant
her fresh lips touched his, and he felt the soft yielding
as he drew her to him, Mark knew that he was of the
world’s lovers. He wanted her with all the
deep passion of first love — first love in
an ardent and romantic and forceful nature. His
dreams did not change; Julia changed to fit them.
She was everything for which he had ever longed, she
was perfection absolute. She became his music,
his business, his life. Every little girl, every
old woman that he passed in the street, made him think
of Julia, and when he passed a young man and woman
full of concern for, and of shy pride in, their lumpy
baby in its embroidered coat, a wave of divine envy
swept Mark from head to foot.
To-day he whistled over his work,
thinking of Julia. They were to meet at three
o’clock, “just to bum,” as the girl
said, laughing. Mark thought that, as the season
was well forward, they might take a car to the park
or the beach, but the plan had been left indefinite.
He ate his lunch, of butterless bread
and sausage, and an entire five-cent pie, in a piano
wareroom, taking great bites, with dreamy studying
of the walls and long delays between. Then he
wandered down through the empty offices — it
was Saturday afternoon and Pomeroy and Parke closed
promptly at twelve — had a brief chat with
the Japanese janitor, and washed his hands and combed
his hair very conscientiously in the president’s
own lavatory.
At half-past one he went into one
of the glass showrooms, a prettily furnished apartment
whose most notable article of furniture was a grand
piano in exquisitely matched Circassian walnut.
Absorbed and radiant, Mark put back the cover, twirled
the stool, and carefully opened a green book marked
“Chopin.” Then he sat down, and, with
the sigh of a happy child falling upon a feast, he
struck an opening chord.
The big flexible fingers still needed
training, but they showed the result of hours and
hours of patient practice, too. Through his seven
years in the music house, Mark had been faithful to
his gift. He made no secret of it, his associates
knew that he came back after dinner to the very rooms
that they themselves left so eagerly at the end of
the day. Mark had indeed once asked old Mr. Pomeroy
to hear him play, an occasion to which the boy still
looked back with hot shame. For when his obliging
old employer had settled himself to listen after hours
on an appointed afternoon, and Mark had opened the
piano, the performer suddenly found his spine icy,
his hands wet and clumsy. He felt as if he had
never touched a piano before; the attempt was a failure
from the first note, as Mark well knew. When
he had finished he whisked open another book.
“That was rotten,” he
stammered. “I thought I could do it — I
can’t. But just let me play you this — ”
But the great man was in a hurry, it appeared.
“No — no, my boy, not
to-day — some other time! Perhaps a little
bit too ambitious a choice, eh? We must all be
ambitious, but we must know our limitations, too.
Some other time!”
Then Mr. Pomeroy was gone and Mark
left to bitterest reflection.
But he recovered very sensibly from
his boyish chagrin, and very sensibly went at his
practicing again. On this particular Saturday
afternoon he attacked a certain phrase in the bass,
and for almost an hour the big fingers of his left
hand rippled over it steadily. Mark, twisted
about halfway on the bench, watched the performance
steadily, his right hand hanging loose.
“Damn!” he said presently,
with a weary sigh, as a sharp and familiar little
pain sprang into his left wrist.
“Mark!” breathed a reproachful
voice behind him. He whirled about, to see Julia
Page.
She had come noiselessly in at the
glass doorway behind him, and was standing there,
laughing, a picture of fresh and demure beauty, despite
the varied colours in hat and waist and gown and gloves.
“I had to see you!” said
Julia, in a rush. “And nobody answered your
telephone — there’s a rehearsal of that
play at the theatre to-day, so I can’t meet
you — and the janitor let me in — ”
Mark found her incoherence delicious;
her being here, in his own familiar stamping-ground,
one of the thrilling and exciting episodes of his
life. He could have shouted — have danced
for pure joy as he jumped up to welcome her.
Julia declared that she had to “fly,” but
Mark insisted — and she found his insistence
curiously pleasant — upon showing her about,
leading her from office to office, beaming at her whenever
their eyes met. And he must play her the
little Schumann, he said, but no — for that
Julia positively would not wait; she jerked
him by one hand toward the door. Mark had his
second kiss before they emerged laughing and radiant
into the gaiety of Kearney Street on a Saturday afternoon.
And Julia was not late for her rehearsal,
or, if late, she was at least earlier by a full quarter
hour than the rest of the caste. She took an
orchestra seat in the empty auditorium at the doorkeeper’s
suggestion, and yawned, and stared at the coatless
back of a man who was tuning the orchestra piano.
Presently two distinguished looking
girls, beautifully dressed, came in, and sat down
near her in a rather uncertain way, and began to laugh
and talk in low tones. Neither cast a glance
at Julia, who promptly decided that they were hateful
snobs, and began to regard them with burning resentment.
They had been there only a few moments when two young
men sauntered down the aisle, unmistakably gentlemen,
and genuine enough to express their enjoyment of this
glimpse of a theatre between performances. Two
of them carried little paper copies of “The Amazons,”
so Julia knew them for fellow-performers.
Then a third young woman came in and
walked down the aisle as the others had done.
This was an extremely pretty girl of perhaps eighteen,
with dark hair and dark bright eyes, and a very fresh
bright colour. Her gown was plain but beautifully
fitting, and her wide hat was crowned with a single
long ostrich plume. She peered at the young men.
“Hello, Bobby — hello,
Gray!” she said gayly, and then, catching sight
of the two other girls across the aisle, she added:
“Oh, hello, Helen — how do you do,
Miss Carson? Come over here and meet Mr. Sumner
and Mr. Babcock!”
Babel ensued. Three or four waiting
young people said, “Oh, Barbara!” in tones
of great delight, and the fourth no less eagerly substituted,
“Oh, Miss Toland!”
“How long have you poor, long-suffering
catfish been waiting here?” demanded Miss Barbara
Toland, with a sort of easy sweetness that Julia found
instantly enviable. “Why, we’re all
out in the foyer — Mother’s here, chaperoning
away like mad, and nearly all the others! And” — she
whisked a little gold watch into sight — “my
dears, it’s twenty minutes to four!”
Every one exclaimed, as they rushed
out. Julia, unaccountably nervous, wished she
were well out of this affair, and wondered what she
ought to do.
Presently some twenty-five or thirty
well-dressed folk came streaming back down the main
aisle in a wild confusion of laughter and talk.
Somehow the principals were filtered out of this crowd,
and somehow they got on the stage, and got a few lights
turned on, and assembled for the advice of an agitated
manager. Dowagers and sympathetic friends settled
in orchestra seats to watch; the rehearsal began.
Julia had strolled up to the stage
after the others; now she sat on a shabby wooden chair
that had lost its back, leaned her back against a
piece of scenery, and surveyed the scene with as haughty
and indifferent an air as she could assume.
“And the Sergeant — who
takes that?” demanded the manager, a young fellow
of their own class, familiarly addressed as “Matty.”
The caste, which had been churning
senselessly about him, chorussed an explanation.
“A professional takes that, Mat, don’t
you remember?”
“Well, where is she?” Matty asked irritably.
Julia here sauntered superbly forward,
serenely conscious of youth, beauty, and charm.
Every one stared frankly at her, as she said languidly:
“Perhaps it’s I you’re looking for?
Mr. Artheris — ”
“Yes, that’s right!”
said Matty, relieved. He wiped his forehead.
“Miss — Page, isn’t it?”
He paused, a little at a loss, eying the other ladies
of the caste dubiously. The girl called Barbara
Toland now came forward with her ready graciousness,
and the two girls looked fairly into each other’s
eyes.
“Miss Page,” said Barbara,
and then impatiently to the manager, “Do go
ahead and get started, Matty; we’ve got to get
home some time to-night!”
Julia’s introduction was thus
waived, and business began at once. The wavering
voices of the principals drifted uncertainly into the
theatre. “Louder!” said the chaperons
and friends. The men were facetious, interpolating
their lines with jokes, good-humoured under criticism;
the girls fluttered nervously over cues, could not
repeat the simplest line without a half-giggling “Let’s
see — yes, I come in here,” and were
only fairly started before they must interrupt themselves
with an earnest, “Mat, am I standing still when
I say that, or do I walk toward her?”
Julia was the exception. She
had been instructed a fortnight before that she must
know her lines and business to-day, and she did know
them. Almost scornfully she took her cues and
walked through her part. “Matty”
clapped his hands and overpraised her, and Julia felt
with a great rush of triumph that she had “shown
those girls!” She had an exhilarating afternoon,
for the men buzzed about her on every possible occasion,
and she knew that the other girls, for all their lofty
indifference, were keenly conscious of it.
She went out through the theatre with
the others, at an early six. The young people
straggled along the aisle in great confusion, laughing
and chattering. Mrs. Toland, a plump, merry,
handsomely dressed woman, was anxious to carry off
her tall daughter in time for some early boat.
“Do hurry, Barbara!
Sally and Ted may be on that five-fifty, and if Dad
went home earlier they’ll have to make the trip
alone!”
At the doorway they found that the
street was almost dark, and foggy. Much discussion
of cars and carriages marked the breaking-up.
Enid Hazzard, a rather noisy girl, who played Noel
Belturbet, elected to go home with the Babcocks.
This freed from all responsibility her brother Carter,
who had suddenly appeared to act as escort. Julia,
slipping up the darkening street, after a few moments
spent in watching this crowd of curious young people,
found him at her side.
“No coat, Miss Page?” said the easy tones.
“I didn’t know it would
be so foggy!” said Julia, her heart beginning
to thump.
“And where are you going?”
“Home to get a coat.”
“I see. Where is it? I’ll take
you.”
“Oh, it’s just a few blocks,”
Julia said. She knew nothing of the reputation
of San Francisco’s neighbourhoods, but Carter
gave her a surprised look. When Julia, quite
unembarrassed, stopped at the door beside the saloon,
he was the more confused of the two, although the
accident of seeing him again had set the blood to racing
in Julia’s veins and made speech difficult.
She had been longing for just this; she was trembling
with eagerness and nervousness.
“Father and Mother live here?” asked Carter.
“Just Mama — she rents rooms.”
“Oh, I see!” He had stepped
into the deep doorway, and catching her by the shoulders
he said now, inconsequently: “Do you know
you’re the prettiest girl that ever was?”
“Am I?” said Julia, in a whisper.
“You know you are — you — you
little flirt!” Hazzard said, his eyes three
inches from hers. For a tense second neither stirred,
then the man straightened up suddenly: “Well!”
he said loudly. “That’ll be about
all of that. Good-night, my dear!”
He turned abruptly away, and Julia,
smiling her little inscrutable smile, went slowly
upstairs. The bedroom was dark, unaired, and in
disorder. Julia looked about it dreamily, picked
her library book from the floor and read a few pages
of “Aunt Johnnie,” sitting meanwhile on
the edge of the unmade bed, and chewing a piece of
gum that had been pressed, a neat bead, upon the back
of a chair. After a while she got up, powdered
her nose, and rubbed her finger-nails with a buffer — a
buffer lifeless and hard, and deeply stained with dirt
and red grease. Emeline had left a note, “Gone
up to Min’s — come up there for supper,”
but Julia felt that there was no hurry; meals at Mrs.
Tarbury’s were usually late.
During the ensuing fortnight there
were two or three more rehearsals of “The Amazons”
at the Grand Opera House, which only confirmed Julia’s
first impression of her fellow-players. The men
she liked, and flirted with; for the girls she had
a supreme contempt. She found herself younger,
prettier, and a better actress than the youngest, prettiest,
and cleverest among them. While these pampered
daughters of wealth went awkwardly through their parts,
and chatted in subdued tones among themselves, Julia
rattled her speeches off easily, laughed and talked
with all the young men in turn, posed and pirouetted
as one born to the footlights. If Julia fancied
that any girl was betraying a preference for any particular
man, against that man she directed the full battery
of her charms. Carter Hazzard came to every rehearsal,
and was quite openly her slave. He did not offer
to walk home with her again, but Julia knew that he
was conscious of her presence whenever she was near
him, and spun a mad little dream about a future in
which she queened it over all these girls as his wife.
It was all delightful and exciting.
Life had never been dark to Julia; now she found the
days all too short for her various occupations and
pleasures. Mark was assuming more and more the
attitude of a lover, and Julia was too much of a coquette
to discourage him utterly. She really liked him,
and loved the stolen hours in Pomeroy and Parke’s
big piano house, when Mark, flinging his hair out
of his eyes, played like an angel, and Julia nibbled
caramels and sat curled up on the davenport,
watching him. And through the casual attentions
of other men, the occasional flattering half-hours
with Carter Hazzard, the evenings of gossip at Mrs.
Tarbury’s, and round the long table at Montiverte’s,
Julia liked to sometimes think of Mark; his admiration
was a little warm, reassuring background for all the
other thoughts of the day.
At the end of the fourth or fifth
rehearsal Julia noticed that pretty Barbara Toland
was trying to manage a moment’s speech with her
alone. She amused herself with an attempt to
avoid Miss Toland just from pure mischief, but eventually
the two came face to face, in a garishly lighted bit
of passage, Barbara, for all her advantage in years
and in position, seeming the younger of the two.
“Oh, Miss Page,” said
Barbara nervously, “I wanted to — but
were you going somewhere?”
“Don’t matter if I was!”
said Julia, airily gracious, but watching shrewdly.
“Well, I — I hope you
won’t think this is funny, but, well, I’ll
tell you,” stammered Barbara, very red.
“I know you don’t know us all very well,
you know — it’s different with us — we’ve
all been brought up together — but I didn’t
know whether you knew — perhaps you did — that
Carter Hazzard is married?”
Julia felt stunned, and a little sick.
She got only the meaning of the words, their value
would come later. But with a desperate effort
she pulled herself together, and smiled with dry lips.
“Yes, I knew that,” she
said, pleasantly, not meeting Barbara’s eye.
“Oh, well, then it’s all
right,” Barbara said hastily, relieved.
“But he — he has a teasing sort of
way, you know. His wife is in San Diego now,
with her own people.”
“Yes, he told me that,”
Julia said, only longing to escape before a maddening
impulse to cry overpowered her. Barbara saw the
truth, and laid a friendly hand on Julia’s arm.
“I just wanted you to know,”
she said in her kindliest tone.
Suddenly Julia burst out crying, childishly
blubbering with her wrists in her eyes. Barbara,
very much distressed, shielded her as well as she
could from the eyes of possible passers-by, and patted
her shoulder with a gloved hand.
“I don’t know why — perfectly
crazy — ” gulped Julia, desperately
fighting the sobs that shook her. “And
I’ve had a dreadful headache all day,”
she broke out, pitifully, beginning to mop her eyes
with a folded handkerchief, her face still turned
away from Barbara.
“Oh, poor thing!” said
Barbara. “And the rehearsal must have made
it worse!”
“It’s splitting,”
Julia said sombrely. She gave Barbara one grave,
almost resentful, look, straightened her hat and fluffed
up her hair, and went away. Barbara looked after
her, and thought that Carter was a beast, and that
there was something very pitiful about common little
ignorant Miss Page, and that she wouldn’t tell
the girls about this, and give them one more cause
to laugh at the little actress. For Barbara Toland
was a conscientious girl, and very seriously impressed
with the gravity of her own responsibility toward
other people.
Meanwhile Julia walked toward the
Mechanics’ Library in a very fury of rage and
resentment. She hated the entire caste of “The
Amazons,” and she hated Barbara Toland and Carter
Hazzard more than the rest! He could play with
her and flirt with her and deceive her, and while she,
Julia, fancied herself envied and admired of the other
girls, this delicately perfumed and exquisitely superior
Barbara could be deciding in all sisterly kindness
that she must inform Miss Page of her admirer’s
real position. Angry tears came to Julia’s
eyes, but she went into the Mechanics’ Library
and washed the evidences of them away, and made herself
nice to meet Mark.
But a subtle change in the girl dated
from that day; casual and foolish as the affair with
Carter had been, it left its scar. Julia’s
heart winced away from the thought of him as she herself
might have shrunk from fire. She never forgave
him.
It was good to find Mark still enslaved,
everything soothing and reassuring. When Julia
left him, at her own door at six o’clock, she
was her radiant, confident self again, and they kissed
each other at parting like true lovers. To his
eager demand for a promise Julia still returned a
staid, “Mama’d be crazy, Mark. I ain’t
sixteen yet!” but on this enchanted afternoon
she had consented to linger, on Kearney Street, before
the trays of rings in jewellers’ windows, and
it was in the wildest spirits that Mark bounded on
upstairs to his own apartment.
Julia had expected to find her mother
at home. Instead the room was empty, but the
gas was flaring high, and all about was more than the
customary disorder; there were evidences that Emeline
had left home in something of a hurry. The girl
searched until she found the explanatory note, and
read it with knitted brow.
“I’m going to Santa Rosa
on important business, deary,” Emeline had scribbled,
“and you’d better go to Min’s for
a few days. I’ll write and leave you know
if there is anything in it, otherwise there’s
no use getting Min and the girls started talking.
There’s ten dollars in the hairpin box.
With love, Mama.”
“Well, I’d give a good
deal to know what struck Em,” said Mrs. Tarbury,
for the hundredth time. It was late in the evening
of the same day, and the lady and Julia were in the
room shared by Miss Connie Girard and Miss Rose Ransome.
Both the young actresses had previously appeared in
a skit at a local vaudeville house, but had come home
to prepare for a supper to be given by friends in
their own profession, after the theatres had closed.
Each girl had a bureau of her own, hopelessly cluttered
and crowded, and over each bureau an unshielded gas
jet flared.
“Well, I’m going
to know!” Julia added, in a heavy, significant
tone. She had come to feel herself very much
abused by her mother’s treatment, and was inclined
to entertain ugly suspicions.
“Oh, come now!” Rose Ransome
said, scowling at herself in a hand mirror as she
carefully rouged her lips. “Don’t
you get any silly notions in your head!”
“No,” Mrs. Tarbury added
heavily, as she rocked comfortably to and fro, “no,
that ain’t Em. Em is a cut-up, all right,
and she’s a great one for a josh with the boys,
but she’s as straight as a string! You’ll
find that she’s got some good reason for this!”
“Well, she’d better have!”
Julia said sulkily. “I’m going out
to see my grandmother to-morrow and see if she knows
anything!”
But she really gave less thought to
her mother than to the stinging memory of Barbara
Toland’s generosity and Carter Hazzard’s
deception. She settled down contentedly enough,
sharing the room with Connie and Rose, and sharing
their secrets, and her visit to old Mrs. Cox was indefinitely
postponed. The girls drifted about together, in
and out of theatres, in and out of restaurants and
hotels, reading cheap theatrical magazines, talking
of nothing but their profession. The days were
long and dull, the evenings feverish; Julia liked
it all. She had no very high ideal of home life;
she did not mind the disorder of their room, the jumbled
bureau drawers, the chairs and tables strewn with garments,
the fly-specked photographs nailed against the walls.
It was a comfortable, irresponsible, diverting existence,
at its worst.
Emeline did not write her daughter
for nearly two weeks, but Julia was not left in doubt
of her mother’s moral and physical safety for
that time. Only two or three days after Emeline’s
disappearance Julia was called upon by a flashily
dressed, coarse-featured man of perhaps forty who
introduced himself — in a hoarse voice heavy
with liquor — as Dick Palmer.
“I used to know your Pop when
you’s only a kid,” said the caller, “and
I know where your Mamma is now — she’s
gone down to Santa Rosa, see?”
“What’d she go there for?” Julia
demanded clearly.
Mr. Palmer cast an agitated glance
about Mrs. Tarbury’s dreadful drawing-room,
and lowered his voice confidentially:
“Well, d’ye see — here’s
how it is! Your Papa’s down there in Santa
Rosa. I run acrost him in a boarding-house a
few days ago, and d’ye see — he’s
sick. That’s right,” added the speaker
heavily, “he’s sick.”
“Dying?” said Julia dramatically.
“No, he ain’t dying.
It’s like this,” pursued the narrator,
still with his air of secrecy, “there’s
a party there that runs the boarding-house — her
name’s Lottie Clute, she’s had it for years,
and she’s got on to the fact that George is
insured for nine thousand dollars, d’ye see?
Well, she’s got him to promise to make the policy
over to her.”
“Ha!” said Julia, interested at last.
“Well, d’ye see?”
said Mr. Palmer triumphantly. “So I come
up to town last week, and I thought I’d drop
in on your Mamma! No good letting this other
little lady have it all her own way, you know!”
“That’s right, too, she’s
no more than a thief!” Julia commented simply.
“I don’t know what Mama can do, but I guess
you can leave it to Mama!”
Mr. Palmer, agreeing eagerly to this,
took his leave, after paying a hoarse tribute to the
beauty of his old friend’s daughter, and Julia
dismissed the matter from her mind.
She told Connie that she meant, as
soon as this amateur affair was over, to try the stage
in real earnest, and Connie, whose own last venture
had ended somewhat flatly, was nevertheless very sanguine
about Julia’s success. She took Julia to
see various managers, who were invariably interested
and urbane, and Julia, deciding bitterly that she would
have no more to do with her fellow-performers in the
caste of “The Amazon,” had Connie accompany
her to rehearsals, and went through her part with a
sort of sullen hauteur.
She and Connie were down in the dressing-rooms
one day after a rehearsal chatting with the woman
star of a travelling stock company, who chanced to
be there, when Barbara Toland suddenly came in upon
them.
“Oh, Miss Page,” said
Barbara in relief, “I am so glad to find
you! I don’t know whether you heard Mr.
Pope announce that we’re to have our dress rehearsal
on Saturday, at the yacht club in Sausalito? There
is quite a large stage.”
Julia shook her head.
“I don’t know that I can
come Saturday,” she objected, only anxious to
be disobliging.
“Oh, you must,”
said Barbara brightly. “Do try! You
take the one-forty-five from the Sausalito ferry,
and somebody’ll meet you! And if we should
be kept later than we expect, somebody’ll bring
you home!”
“I have a friend who would come
for me,” said Julia stiffly, thinking of Mark.
For just a second mirth threatened
Barbara’s dignity, but she said staidly:
“That’s fine! And remember, we depend
on you!”