The family of Dr. Robert Toland, discovered
at breakfast in the Tolands’ big house in Sausalito
on an exquisite May morning, presented to the casual
onlooker as charming a picture of home life as might
be found in the length and breadth of California.
The sunny dining-room, with its windows wide open
to sunshine and fresh sea air, the snowy curtains
blowing softly to and fro, the wide sideboard where
the children’s outgrown mugs stood in a battered
and glittering row, the one or two stiff, flat, old
oil portraits that looked down from the walls, the
jars of yellow acacia bloom, and bowls of mingled
wild flowers; these made a setting wonderfully well
suited to the long table and the happy family about
it.
There were seven children, five girls
and two boys; there was the gracious, genial mother
at the head and the wiry, gray-haired and gray-bearded
surgeon at the foot; there was, as usual, Jim Studdiford,
and to-day, besides, there was Aunt Sanna, an unmarried
younger sister of the doctor, and a little black-eyed,
delicate ten-year-old guest of the eleven-year-old
Janie, Keith Borroughs, who was sitting near to Janie,
and evidently adoring that spirited chatterbox.
And there was Addie, a cheerful black-clad person
in a crackling white apron, coming and going with
muffins and bacon, and Toy, who was a young cousin
of Hee, the cook, and who padded softly in Addie’s
wake, making himself generally useful.
Barbara, very pretty, very casual
as to what she ate, sat next to her father; she was
the oldest of the seven Tolands, and slipping very
reluctantly out of her eighteenth year. Ned, a
big, handsome fellow of sixteen, came next in point
of age, and then a tall, lanky, awkward blond boy,
Richie, with a plain thin face and the sweetest smile
of them all. Richie never moved without the aid
of a crutch, and perhaps never would. After Richie,
and nearing fourteen, was a sweet, fat, giggling lump
of a girl called Sally, with a beautiful skin and beautiful
untidy hair, and a petticoat always dragging, a collar
buttoned awry, and a belt that never by any chance
united her pretty shirt waist to her crisp linen skirt.
Only a year younger than Sally was Theodora, whose
staid, precocious beauty Barbara already found disquieting — “Ted”
was already giving signs of rivalling her oldest sister — then
came Jane, bold, handsome, boyish at eleven, and lastly
eight-year-old Constance, a delicate, pretty, tearful
little girl who was spoiled by every member of the
family.
The children’s mother was a
plump, handsome little woman with bright, flashing
eyes, dimples, and lovely little hands covered with
rings. There was no gray in her prettily puffed
hair, and, if she was stouter than any of her daughters,
none could show a more trimly controlled figure.
Mrs. Toland had been impressed in the days of her happy
girlhood with the romantic philosophies of the seventies.
To her, as an impulsive young woman brimful of the
zest of living, all babies had been “just too
dear and sweet,” all marriages were “simply
lovely” regardless of circumstances,
and all men were “just the dearest great big
manly fellows that ever were!” As Miss
Sally Ford, Mrs. Toland had flashed about on many
visits to her girl friends admiring, exclaiming, rejoicing
in their joys, and now, as a mother of growing girls
and boys, there still hung between her and real life
the curtain of her unquenchable optimism. She
loved babies, and they had come very fast, and been
cared for by splendid maids, and displayed in effective
juxtaposition to their gay little mother for the benefit
of admiring friends, when opportunity offered.
And if, in the early days of her married life, there
had ever been troublous waters to cross, Sally Toland
had breasted them gallantly, her fixed, confident
smile never wavering.
At first Doctor Toland had felt something
vaguely amiss in this persistent attitude of radiant
and romantic surety. “Are you sure the
boy understands?” “D’ye think Bab
isn’t old enough to know that you’re just
making that up?” he would ask uneasily, when
a question of disciplining Ned or consoling Barbara
arose. But Mrs. Toland always was sure of her
course, and would dimple at him warningly: “Of
course it’s all right, Daddykins, and we’re
all going to be happy, and not even think of our naughty
old troubles any more!”
So the doctor gave her her way, and
settled back to enjoy his children and his wife, his
yacht and his roses; growing richer and more famous,
more genial and perhaps a little more mildly cynical
as time went on. And the children grew up, their
mother, never dreaming that Barbara at eighteen was
more than the sweet, light-hearted, manageable child
she had been at ten; that Ned was beginning to taste
of a life of whose existence she was only vaguely
aware; that Sally was plotting an escape to the ranks
of trained nurses; that Ted needed a firm hand and
close watching if she were not to break all their
hearts. No, to Mrs. Toland they were still her
“rosebud garden,” “just the merriest,
romping crowd of youngsters that ever a little scrap
of a woman had to keep in order!”
“Now, you’re going to
wipe that horrid frown off your forehead, Daddy,”
she would say blithely, if Doctor Toland confessed
to a misgiving in the contemplation of any one of
his seven, “and stop worrying about Richie!
His bad old hip is going to get well, and he’ll
be walking just like any one else in no time!”
And in the same tone she said to Barbara: “I
know my darling girl is going to that luncheon, and
going to forget that her hat isn’t quite the
thing for the occasion,” and said to little
Constance, “We’re going to forget that
it’s raining, and not think about dismal things
any more!” No account of flood or fire or outrage
was great enough to win from her more than a rueful
smile, a sigh, and a brisk: “Well, I suppose
such things must be, or they wouldn’t
be permitted. Don’t let’s think about
it!”
Women who knew Mrs. Toland spoke of
her as “wonderful.” And indeed she
was wonderful in many ways, a splendid manager, a delightful
hostess, and essentially motherly and domestic in
type. She was always happy and always busy, gathering
violets, chaperoning Sally or Barbara at the dentist’s,
selecting plaids for the “girlies’”
winter suits. Her married life — all
her life, in fact — had been singularly free
from clouds, and she expected the future to be even
brighter, when “splendid, honourable men”
should claim her girls, one by one, and all the remembered
romance of her youth begin again. That the men
would be forthcoming she did not doubt; had not Fate
already delivered Jim Studdiford into her hands for
Barbara?
James Studdiford, who had just now
finished his course at medical college, was affectionately
known to the young Tolands as “Jim,” and
stood to them in a relationship peculiarly pleasing
to Mrs. Toland. He was like a brother, and yet,
actually, he bore not the faintest real kinship to — well,
to Barbara, for instance. Years before, twenty
years before, to be exact, Doctor Toland, then unmarried,
and unacquainted, as it happened, with the lovely
Miss Sally Ford, had been engaged to a beautiful young
widow, a Mrs. Studdiford, who had been left with a
large fortune and a tiny boy some two years before.
This was in Honolulu, where people did a great deal
of riding in those days, and it presently befell that
the doctor, two weeks before the day that had been
set for the wedding, found himself kneeling beside
his lovely fiancee on a rocky headland, as she lay
broken and gasping where her horse had flung her,
and straining to catch the last few agonized words
she would ever say:
“You’ll — keep Jim — with
you, Robert?”
How Doctor Toland brought the small
boy to San Francisco, how he met the dashing and indifferent
Sally, and how she came at last to console him for
his loss, was another story, one that Mrs. Toland never
tired of telling. Little Jim had his place in
their hearts from their wedding day. Barbara
was eleven years old when, with passionate grief, she
learned that he was not her half brother, and many
casual friends did not know it to this day. Jim,
to the doctor’s delight, chose to follow the
profession of his foster father, and had stumbled,
with not too much application, through medical college.
Now he was to go to New York for hospital work, and
then to Berlin for a year’s real grind, and until
the Eastern hospital should open classes, was back
in his old enormous third-floor bedroom upstairs,
enjoying a brief season of idleness and petting, the
handsome, unaffected, sunshiny big brother of Mrs.
Toland’s fondest dreams.
“And he can hardly keep his
eyes off Babbie,” the mother confided to her
sister-in-law.
Miss Toland gave her a shrewd glance.
“For heaven’s sake don’t
get that notion in your head, Sally! Babbie may
be ready to make a little fool of herself, but if ever
I saw a man who isn’t in love, it’s
Jim!” said Miss Toland, who was a thin, gray-haired,
well-dressed woman of forty, with a curious magnetism
quite her own. Miss Toland had lived in France
for the ten years before thirty, and had a Frenchwoman’s
reposeful yet alert manner, and a Frenchwoman’s
art in dressing. After many idle years, she had
suddenly become deeply interested in settlement work,
had built a little settlement house, “The Alexander
Toland Neighbourhood House,” in one of the factory
districts south of San Francisco, and was in a continual
state of agitation and upset because worthy settlement
workers were at that time almost an unknown quantity
in California. Just at present she was availing
herself of her brother’s hospitality because
she had no assistant at all at the “Alexander,”
and was afraid to stay in its very unsavoury environment
alone. She loved Barbara dearly, but she was usually
perverse with her sister-in-law.
“You may say what you like about
notions in my head,” Mrs. Toland answered with
a wise little nod. “But the dear girl is
radiant every time she looks at him, and both
Dad and I think we notice a new protective
quality in Jim — ”
“Did Robert say so?” Miss
Toland asked dryly. To this Mrs. Toland answered
with a merry laugh and a little squeeze of her sister-in-law’s
arm.
“Oh, you old Sanna!” she
chided. “You won’t believe that there’s
a blessed time when Nature just takes the young things
by the hand and pushes them right into happiness,
whether or no!”
This little talk had taken place just
before breakfast, and now Mrs. Toland was reassuring
herself of her own position with many a glance at
Barbara and at Jim. Barbara seemed serious almost
to ungraciousness — that might be a sign.
Jim was teasing Sally, who laughed deeply and richly,
like a child, and spilled her orange juice on her fresh
gown. Perhaps he was trying to pique Barbara
by assuming an indifferent manner — that
might be it —
“Jim!” It was Barbara
speaking. Jim did not hear. “Jim,”
said Barbara again, patient and cold.
“I beg your pardon!” Jim
said with swift contrition. His glance flashed
to Barbara for a second, flashed back to Sally.
“Now, you throw that — you throw that,”
said he to the latter young woman, in reference to
a glass of water with which she was carelessly toying,
“and you’ll be sorrier than you ever were
in your life!”
“Sally, what are you thinking of!” her
mother said.
“Look out — look out!”
Sally said, swinging the glass up and down. Suddenly
she set it back on the table firmly. “You
deserve that straight in your face, Jim, but Mother’d
be mad!”
“Well, I should think Mother
would!” Mrs. Toland said, in smiling reproof.
“But we interrupted Bab, I think. Bab had
something dreadfully important to say,” she
added playfully, “to judge from that great big
frown!”
“It wasn’t dreadfully
important at all,” Barbara said, in cold annoyance.
“Oh, wasn’t it? And what was it,
dear?”
“It was simply — it
was nothing at all,” Barbara protested, reddening.
“I was just thinking that we have to have that
rehearsal at the clubhouse this afternoon, and I was
wondering if Jim would walk down there with me now,
and see about getting the room ready — ”
“Dad’s got an eleven-o’clock
operation, and I’m going to assist,” said
Jim.
“Did you forget that, dear?” Mrs. Toland
asked.
“It’s of no consequence,”
said Barbara, her voice suddenly thick with tears.
Her hand trembled as she reached for a muffin.
“Keith, do you want to go down
with us to the rehearsal this afternoon?” said
Sally amiably to the little guest.
“Oh, I don’t think the
whole pack of us ought to go!” Ted protested
in alarm. “You aren’t going to let
Janey and Con go, are you, Mother?”
“Oh, why not?” Mrs. Toland
asked soothingly. Barbara here returned to the
discussion with a tragic: “Mother, they
can’t! It would look perfectly awful!”
“Well, you don’t own the
yacht club, you know, Babbie,” Ted supplied
sweetly.
“Well,” said Barbara,
rising, and speaking quickly in a low voice, “of
course the whole family, including Addie and Hee, can
troop down there if they want to, but I think it’s
too bad that I can’t do a thing in this family
without being tagged by a bunch of kids!”
The door closed behind her; they could
hear her running upstairs.
“Now she’ll cry; she’s
getting to be an awful cry baby,” said Janey,
wide eyed, pleasurably excited.
“Doesn’t seem very well,
does she, Mummie? Not a bit like herself,”
said the head of the house, raising mild eyebrows.
“Now, never mind; she’s
just a little bit tired and excited over this ‘Amazon’
thing,” Mrs. Toland assured him cheerfully, “and
she’ll have a little talk with Mother by and
by, and be her sweet self again by lunch time!”
The little episode was promptly blotted
out by the rising tide of laughter and conversation
that was usual at breakfast. Miss Toland presently
drifted into the study for some letter writing.
Jim took a deep porch rocker, and carried off the
morning papers. Richie, sitting at his father’s
left, squared about for one of the eager rambling talks
of which he and his father never tired. The doctor’s
blue eyes twinkled over his theories of religion,
science, history, poetry, and philosophy. Richie’s
lean, colourless face was bright with interest.
Ted volunteered, as she often volunteered of late,
to go for the mail, and sauntered off under a red
parasol, and Mrs. Toland slipped from the table just
in time to waylay her oldest son in the hall.
“Not going to catch the 9:40, Ned?” she
asked.
“Sure pop I am!” He was
sorry to be caught, and she saw it under his bluff,
pleasant manner.
“You couldn’t take the 10:20 with Dad
and Jim?”
“I’ve got to meet Reynolds
at half-past ten, Mother,” the boy said patiently.
“Reynolds!” she frowned.
“Don’t like my fine big boy to have friends
like that — ” His eyes warned her.
“Friends that aren’t as fine and dear
and good as he is!” she finished, her hands on
his shoulders.
“Reynolds is all right,”
said Ned, bored, and looking coldly beyond her.
“And you’ll be home for dinner, Ned?”
“Sure! Unless the Orpheum
should be awfully long. In that case we may get
a bite somewhere.”
“Try to be home for dinner,”
persisted the mother. And, as if to warrant the
claim on his consideration, she added: “I
paid the Cutter bill myself, dear, and Dad will pay
Jordan next month. I didn’t say anything
about Cutter, but he begged me to make you feel
how wrong it is to let these things run. You
have a splendid allowance, Ned,” she was almost
apologetic, “and there’s no necessity of
running over it, dear!”
“Sure. I’m not going
to do that again,” Ned said gruffly, uncomfortably.
“That’s right, dear!
And you will — you’ll try to be home
for dinner?”
“Sure I’ll try!”
and Ned was gone, down through the roses and through
the green gate.
Mrs. Toland watched him out of sight.
Then she trotted off to Hee’s domain. Sally
straggled out into the garden, with Janey and Constance
and the small boy following after. There was great
distress because the little girls were all for tennis,
and Keith Borroughs frankly admitted that he hated
tennis.
The Tolands’ rambling mansion
was built upon so sharp a hill that the garden beds
were bulkheaded like terraces, and the paths were steep.
Roses — delicious great white roses and the
apricot-coloured San Rafael rose — climbed
everywhere, and hung in fragrant festoons from the
low, scrub-oak trees that were scattered through the
garden. Every vista ended with the blue bay,
and the green gate at the garden’s foot opened
directly upon a roadway that hung like a shelf above
the water.
Sally and the children gathered nasturtiums
and cornflowers and ferns for the house. The
place had been woodland only a few years ago, the
earth was rich with rotting leaves, and all sorts of
lovely forest growths fringed the paths. Groups
of young oaks and an occasional bay or madrone tree
broke up any suggestion of formal arrangement, and
there were still wild columbine and mission bells
in the shady places.
Presently, to the immense satisfaction
of her little sisters, Sally dismissed them for tennis,
and carried the music-mad small boy off to the old
nursery, where he could bang away at an old piano to
his heart’s content, while she pasted pictures
in her camera book, in a sunny window. Now and
then she cast a look full of motherly indulgence at
the little figure at the piano: the pale, earnest
little face; the tumbled black hair, the bony, big,
unchildlike hands.
The morning slipped by, and afternoon
came, to find Barbara welcoming the arriving players
at the yacht club, and looking her very prettiest
in a gown of striped scarlet and white, and a white
hat. Hello, Matty — Hello, Enid — Hello,
Bobby — and did any one see Miss Page?
Ah, how do you do, Miss Page, awfully good of you
to make it.
The girls dressed in a square room
upstairs, lined with hooks and mirrors. Julia
was not self-conscious, because, while different from
the crisp snowy whiteness of the other girls’
linen, it did not occur to her that her well-worn
pink silk underwear, her ornate corset cover, and her
shabby ruffled green silk skirt were anything but adequate.
Carter Hazzard was not in evidence
to-day, to Julia’s relief. The rehearsal
dragged on and on, everybody thrown out because Miss
Dorothy Chase, the girl who was to play Wilhelmina,
failed to appear. Julia took the part, when it
was finally decided to go on without Dorothy, but by
that time it was late, and the weary manager assured
them that there must be another rehearsal that evening.
Hilariously the young people accepted this decree,
and Julia was carried home with the Tolands to dinner.
Good-hearted Mrs. Toland could be
nothing less than kind to any young girl, and Julia’s
place at table was next to the kindly old doctor, who
only saw an extremely pretty girl, and joked with her,
and looked out for her comfort in true fatherly fashion.
Julia carried herself with great dignity, said very
little, being in truth quite overawed and nervously
anxious not to betray herself, and after the first
frightened half-hour she enjoyed the adventure thoroughly.
The evening rehearsal went much better,
a final rehearsal was set for Sunday, and Julia was
driven to the ten o’clock boat in the station
omnibus, which smelled of leather and wet straw.
She sat yawning in the empty ferry building, smiling
over her recollection of dinner at the Tolands’:
the laughter, the quarrels, the joyous confusion of
voices.
Suddenly struck by the deserted silence
of the waiting-room, Julia jumped up and went to the
ticket office.
“Isn’t there a train at 10:03?”
The station agent yawned, eyed her with pleasant indifference.
“No train now until 12:20, lady,” said
he.
For a moment Julia was staggered. Then she thought
of the telephone.
A few minutes later she climbed out
of the station omnibus again, this time to be warmly
welcomed into the Tolands’ lamp-lighted drawing-room.
Barbara and her mother were still at the yacht club,
but the old doctor himself was eagerly apologetic.
Doctor Studdiford, Ned, and Richie added their cheerful
questions and regrets to the hospitable hubbub, and
Sally, who had been at the piano, singing Scotch ballads
to her father, took possession of Julia with heartening
and obvious pleasure.
Sally took her upstairs, lighted a
small but exquisitely appointed guest room, found
a stiffly embroidered nightgown, a wrapper of dark-blue
Japanese crepe, and a pair of straw slippers.
Julia, inwardly trembling with excitement, was outwardly
calm as she got ready for bed; she hung her clothes
in a closet delightfully redolent of pine, and brushed
and braided her splendid hair. Sally whisked
about on various errands, and presently Mrs. Toland
bustled in, brimful of horrified apologies and regrets,
and Barbara dawdled after, rolling her belt and starched
stock, generally unhooking and unbuttoning.
Perhaps the haughty Barbara found
the round-eyed, golden-haired girl in a blue wrapper
a little more companionable than the dreadful Miss
Page, or perhaps she was a little too lonely to-night
to be fastidious in her choice of a confidante.
At all events, she elected to wander in and out of
Julia’s room while she undressed, and presently
sat on Julia’s bed, and braided her dark hair.
And if the whole adventure had excited Julia, she
was doubly excited now, frantic to win Barbara’s
friendship, nervously afraid to try.
“You’re an actress, Miss
Page?” asked Barbara, scowling at her hairbrush.
“Will be, I guess! I’ve
had dozens of chances to sign up already, but Mama
don’t want me to be in any rush.”
The other girl eyed her almost enviously.
“I wish I could do something — sometimes,”
she sighed. And she added, giving Julia a shamefaced
grin, “I’ve got the blues to-night.”
It was from this second that Julia
dated her love for Barbara Toland. A delicious
sensation enveloped her — to be in Barbara’s
confidence — to know that she was sometimes
unhappy, too; to be lying in this fragrant, snowy
bed, in this enchanting room —
“Well,” said Barbara presently,
jumping up, “you’ll want some sleep.
If you hear us rushing about, at the screech of dawn
to-morrow, it’s because some of us may go out
with Dad in the Crow, if there’s a breeze.
Do you like yachting? Would you care to go?”
“I’ve never been,” said Julia.
“Oh, well, then, you ought to!”
Barbara said with round eyes. “I’ll
tell you — I’ll peep in here to-morrow,
and if you’re awake I’ll give you a call!”
she arranged, after a minute’s frowning thought.
“I sleep awfully sound!” smiled Julia.
But she was awake when Barbara, true
to her plan, peeped in at five o’clock the next
morning, and presently, in a bluejacket’s blouse
and brief blue skirt, with a white canvas hat on her
head, and a boy’s old gray jersey buttoned loosely
about her, followed muffled shapes through the cold
house and into the wet, chilly garden. Richie
was going, Sally had the gallant but shivering Jane
and the dark-eyed Keith by the hand, and Barbara hung
on her father’s arm.
The waters of the bay were gray and
cold; a sharp breeze swept their steely surfaces into
fans of ruffled water. The little Crow rocked
at her anchor, her ropes and brasswork beaded with
dew. Julia, sitting in desperate terror upon
a slanting upholstered ledge, felt her teeth chatter,
and wondered why she had come.
Barbara, Sally, Richie, and their
father all fell to work, and presently, a miracle
to Julia, the little boat was running toward Richardson’s
Bay under a good breeze. Presently glorious sunlight
enveloped them, flashed from a thousand windows on
San Francisco hills, and struck to dazzling whiteness
the breasts of the gulls that circled Sausalito’s
piers. Everything sparkled and shone: the
running blue water that slapped the Crow’s side,
the roofs of houses on the hillside, the green trees
that nearly concealed them.
Growing every instant warmer and more
content, Julia sat back and let her whole body and
soul soak in the comfort and beauty of the hour.
Her eyes roved sea and sky and encircling hills; she
saw the last wisp of mist rise and vanish from the
stern silhouette of Tamalpais, and saw an early ferryboat
cut a wake of exquisite spreading lacework across the
bay. And whenever her glance crossed Sally’s,
or the doctor’s, or Richie’s glance, she
smiled like a happy child, and the Tolands smiled
back.
They all rushed into the house, ravenous
and happy, for a nine o’clock breakfast, Julia
so lovely, in her borrowed clothing and with her bright,
loosened hair, that the young men of the family began,
without exception, to “show off” for her
benefit, as Theodora scornfully expressed it.
And there was bacon and rolls and jam for every one,
blue bowls of cereal, glass pitchers of yellow cream,
smoking hot coffee always ready to run in an amber
stream from the spout of the big silver urn.
“And you must eat at least four
waffles,” said Ned, “or my father will
never let you come again! He has to drum up trade,
you know — ”
It was all delightful, not the less
so because it was all tinged, for Julia, with a little
current of something exquisitely painful; not envy,
not regret, not resentment, a little of all three.
This happy, care-free, sun-flooded life was not for
her, how far, far, far from her, indeed! She
was here only by accident, tolerated gayly for hospitality’s
sake, her coming and going only an insignificant episode
in their lives. Wistfully she watched Mrs. Toland
tying little Constance’s sash and straightening
her flower-crowned hat for church; wistfully eyed the
cheerful, white-clad Chinese cook, grinning as he went
to gather lettuces; wistfully she stared across the
brilliant garden from her deep porch chair. Barbara,
in conference with a capped and aproned maid at the
end of a sunny corridor, Sally chatting with Richie,
as she straightened the scattered books on the library
table, Ted dashing off a popular waltz with her head
turned carelessly aside to watch the attentive Keith;
all these to Julia were glimpses of a life so free,
so full, so invigorating as to fill her with hopeless
longing and admiration.
All her affectation and arrogance
dropped from her before their simple, joyous naturalness.
Julia had no feeling of wishing to impress them, to
assert her own equality. Instead she genuinely
wanted them to like her; she carried herself like
the little girl she looked in her sailor blouse, like
the little girl she was.
At twelve o’clock a final rehearsal
of “The Amazons” was held at the yacht
club, and to-day Julia entered into her part with zest,
her enthusiasm really carrying the performance, as
the appreciative “Matty” assured her.
She had the misfortune to step on a ruffle of her borrowed
white petticoat, at the very close of the last act,
and slipped into the dressing-room to pin it up as
soon as the curtain descended.
The dressing-room was deserted.
Julia found a paper of pins, and, putting her foot
up on a chair, began to repair the damage as well as
she could. The day was warm, and only wooden shutters
screened the big window that gave on one of the club’s
wide porches. Julia, humming contentedly to herself,
presently became aware that there were chairs just
outside the window, and girls in the chairs — Barbara
Toland and Ted, and Miss Grinell and Miss Hazzard,
and one or two Julia did not know.
“Yes, Mother’s a darling,”
Barbara was saying. “You know she didn’t
get this up, Margaret; she had nothing to do
with it, and yet she’s practically carrying
the whole responsibility now! She’ll be
as nervous as we are to-morrow night!”
Julia pinned on serenely. It
was in no code of hers to move out of hearing.
“The only thing she really bucked
at was when she found Miss Page at our house last
night,” Ted said. “Mother’s
no snob — but I wish you could have seen
her face!”
“Was she perfectly awful, Ted?” somebody
asked.
“Who, Miss Page? No-o,
she wasn’t perfectly awful — yes, she
was pretty bad,” Theodora admitted. “Wasn’t
she, Babbie?”
“Oh, well” — Barbara
hesitated — “she’s — of
course she’s terribly common. Just the
second-rate actress type, don’t you know?”
“Did she call your Mother ’ma’am’?”
giggled Enid Hazzard. “Do you remember
when she said ‘Yes, ma’am?’ And did
she say ‘eyether,’ and ‘between
you and I’ again?” Something was added
to this, but Julia did not catch it. The girls
laughed again.
“Listen,” said Ted, “this
is the richest yet! Last night Sally said to
her, ‘Breakfast’s at nine, Miss Page; how
do you like your bath?’ and she looked at Sally
sort of surprised and said, ’I don’t
want a bath!’”
“Oh, I don’t think that’s
fair, Teddy,” Barbara protested; “she’s
never had any advantages; it’s a class difference,
that’s all. She’s simply not a lady;
she never will be. You’d be the same in
her place.”
“Oh, I would not! I wouldn’t
mark my eyebrows and I wouldn’t wear such dirty
clothes, and I wouldn’t try to look twenty-five — ”
Ted began.
Again there was a quick commentary
that Julia missed, and another laugh. Then Barbara
said:
“Poor kid! And she looked
so sweet in some of Sally’s things.”
Julia, still bent over her ruffle,
did not move a muscle from the instant she first heard
her name until now, when the girls dismissed the subject
with a laugh. She felt as if the house were falling
about her, as if every word were a smashing blow at
her very soul. She felt sick and dizzy, cold
and suddenly weak.
She walked across the room to the
door, and stood there with her hand on the knob, and
said in a whisper: “Now, what shall I do?
What shall I do?”
At first she thought she would hide,
then that she would run away. Then she knew what
she must do: she opened the dressing-room door,
and walked unchallenged through the big auditorium.
Groups of chattering people were scattered about it;
somebody was banging the piano; nobody paid the least
attention to Julia as she went down the stairs, and
started to walk to the Toland house.
She was not thinking now. She only wanted to
get away.
Nobody stopped her. The house
was deserted. A maid put her head in Julia’s
door, and finding Julia dressing immediately apologized.
“I beg your pardon, Miss Page! I thought — ”
“That’s all right,”
said Julia quietly. She was very pale. “Will
you tell Mrs. Toland that I had to take the two o’clock
boat?”
“Yes’m. You won’t be here for
dinner?”
“No,” said Julia, straining to make a
belt meet.
“Could I bring you a cup of tea or a sandwich?”
“Oh, no, thank you!”
The maid was gone. Julia went
down through the house quietly, a few moments later.
Her breath came quick and short until she was fairly
on the boat, with Sausalito slipping farther and farther
into the background. Even then her mind was awhirl,
and fatigue and perhaps hunger, too, made it impossible
to think seriously. Far easier to lean back lazily
in the sun, and watch the water slip by, and make no
attempt to control the confused, chaotic thoughts
that wheeled dreamily through her brain. Now
and then memory brought her to a sudden upright position,
brought the hot colour to her face.
“I don’t care!”
Julia would say then, half aloud. “They’re
nothing to me and I’m nothing to them; and good
riddance!”
May — but it was like a midsummer
afternoon in San Francisco. A hot wind blew across
the ferry place; papers and chaff swept before it.
Julia’s skirt was whisked about her knees, her
hat was twisted viciously about on her head.
She caught a reflection of herself in a car window,
dishevelled, her hat at an ugly angle, her nose reddened
by the wind.
Mrs. Tarbury’s house, when she
got to it, presented its usual Sunday afternoon appearance.
The window curtains were up at all angles in the dining-room,
hot sunshine streamed through the fly-specked panes,
the draught from the open door drove a wild whirl
of newspapers over the room. Cigarette smoke
hung heavy upon the air.
Julia peeped into the dark kitchen;
the midday meal was over, and a Japanese boy was hopelessly
and patiently attacking scattered heaps of dishes
and glassware. The girl was hungry, but the cooling
wreck of a leg of mutton and the cold vegetables swimming
in water did not appeal to her, and she went slowly
upstairs, helping herself in passing to no more substantial
luncheon than two soda crackers and a large green
pickle.
Mrs. Tarbury, dressed in a loose kimono,
with her bare feet thrust into well-worn Juliet slippers,
was lying across her bed, in the pleasant leisure
of Sunday afternoon, a Dramatic Supplement held in
one fat ringed hand, her head supported by her pillows
in soiled muslin cases, and several satin and velvet
cushions from a couch. In the room also were
Connie Girard and Rose Ransome, who had a bowl of soapsuds
and several scissors and orange-wood sticks on the
table between them, and were manicuring each other
very fastidiously. A third actress, a young Englishwoman
with a worn, hard face, rouged cheeks, and glittering
eyes, was calling, with her little son, upon Mrs.
Tarbury.
“Hello, darling!” said
the lady of the house herself, as Julia came in.
The girls gave her an affectionate welcome, and Julia
was introduced to the stranger.
“Mrs. Cloke is my real name,”
said the Englishwoman briskly. “But you’d
know me better as Alice Le Grange, I daresay.
You’ll have heard of my little sketches — the
Mirror gave Mr. Cloke and I a whole page when first
we came to this country, and we had elegant bookings — elegant.
I’d my little flat in New York all furnished,
and,” she said to Mrs. Tarbury, “I was
used to everything — the managers at
home all knew me, and all, you know — ”
She laughed with some bitterness. “It does
seem funny to be out here doing this,” she added.
“But there was the kiddy to consider — and,
as I told you, there was trouble!”
“Parties who used their influence
to get ’em out!” said Miss Girard darkly,
in explanation, with a glance at Julia. “Favouritism — ”
“And jealousy,” added Alice Le Grange.
Julia was sympathetic, but not deeply
impressed. She had heard this story in many forms
before. She attracted the attention of little
Eric Cloke, and showed him the pictures of the Katzenjammer
Kids and Foxy Grandpa in the newspaper. Later
she accompanied Rose and Connie to their room, put
on loose clothing, and lay on her bed watching them
dress.
The girls were to dine together, with
two admirers, and urged Julia to ask a third man,
and come, too. Julia refused steadily; she was
very quiet and the others thought her tired.
She lay on her side, one hand falling
idle over the edge of the bed, her serious, magnificent
eyes moving idly from Connie’s face to Rose’s,
and roving over the room. Hot sunlight poured
through the dirty windows and the torn curtains of
Nottingham lace, and flamed on the ugly wallpaper
and the flawed mirrors. A thousand useless knickknacks
made the room hideous; every possible surface was
strewn with garments large and small, each bureau
was a confusion of pins and brushes, paste and powder
boxes, silk stockings and dirty white gloves, cologne
bottles and powdered circles of discoloured chamois,
hair kids and curls of false hair, handkerchiefs and
hat pins, cheap imitations of jewellery, cheap bits
of lace, sidecombs, veils and belts and collars, and
a hundred other things, all wound up in an indistinguishable
mass. From these somewhat sodden heaps Connie
and Rose cheerfully selected what they needed, leaning
over constantly to inspect their faces closely in the
mirrors.
Julia watched them with a sudden,
new, and almost terrifying distaste growing in her
heart. How dirty and shiftless and common — yes,
common — these girls were! Julia felt
sick with the force of the revelation. She saw
Connie lace her shabby pink-brocade corset together
with a black shoestring; she saw Rose close with white
thread a great hole in the heel of a black silk stocking.
Their crimped hair nauseated her, their rouge and
powder and cologne. She could hardly listen in
patience to their careless and sometimes coarse chatter.
And when they were gone she still
lay there, thinking — thinking —
thinking! The sunlight crept lower and lower over
the room’s disorder; its last bright triangle
was gone, twilight came, and the soft early darkness.
Mrs. Tarbury presently called Julia,
in mellifluous accents, and the girl pulled herself
stiffly from the bed, and went blinking down to an
improvised supper. They two were alone in the
big house, and fell into intimate conversation over
their sardines and coffee and jam, discussing the
characters of every person in the house with much attention
to trivial detail. At nine o’clock some
friends came in to see Mrs. Tarbury, and Julia went
upstairs again.
She lighted the bedroom, and began
idly to fold and straighten the clothes that were
strewn about everywhere. But she very speedily
gave up the task: there were no closets to hang
things in, and many things were too torn or dirty
to be hung up, anyway! Julia went down one flight
of stairs to the nearest bathroom, in search of hot
water, but both faucets ran cold, and she went upstairs
again. She hunted through Connie’s bureau
and Rose’s for a fresh nightgown, but not finding
one, had to put on the limp and torn garment one of
the girls had loaned her a week or two before.
Now she sat down on the edge of her
bed, vaguely discouraged. Tears came to her eyes,
she did not quite know why. She opened a novel,
and composed herself to read, but could not become
interested, and finally pushed up the window the two
inches that the girls approved, turned out the lights,
and jumped into bed. She would want her beauty
sleep for “The Amazons” to-morrow night.
Julia had been fully determined, when she got home,
to abandon the amateur company, to fail them at the
very hour of their performance, but a casual word
from Connie had caused her to change her mind.
“Don’t you be a fool and
get in Dutch with Artheris!” Connie had said,
and upon sober reflection Julia had found the advice
good.
But she got no beauty sleep that night.
She lay hour after hour wakeful and wretched, the
jumbled memories of the last twenty-four hours slipping
through her mind in ceaseless review: the green,
swift-rushing water, with gulls flying over it; the
coffee pot reflecting a dozen joyous young faces;
the garden bright with roses —
And then, with sickening regularity,
the clubhouse and the girls’ voices —
How she hated them all, Julia said
to herself, raising herself on one elbow to punch
her sodden pillow, and sending a hot, restless glance
toward the streak of bright light that forced its way
in from a street lamp. How selfish, how smug,
how arrogant they were, with their daily baths, and
their chests full of fresh linen, and their assured
speech! What had Sally and Theodora Toland ever
done to warrant their insufferable conceit? Why
should they have lovely parents and an ideal home,
frocks and maids and delightful meals, while she, Julia,
was born to the dirt and sordidness of O’Farrell
Street?
Barbara — but no, she couldn’t
hate Barbara! The memory of that moment of confidence
last night still thrilled Julia to her heart’s
core. Barbara had been kind to her in the matter
of Carter Hazzard, had defended her to-day, in her
careless, indifferent fashion. Julia’s heart
ached with fierce envy of Barbara, ached with fierce
longing and admiration. She tortured herself
with a picture of the charm of Barbara’s life:
her waking in the sunshine, her breakfast eaten between
the old doctor and the young, her hours at her pretty
writing-desk, on the porch, at the piano. Always
dignified, always sweet and dainty, always adored.
Well, she, Julia, should be an actress,
a great actress. But even as she flung herself
on her back and stared sternly up at the ceiling,
resolving it, her heart failed her. It was a long
road. Julia was fifteen; she must count upon
ten or fifteen years at least of slavery in stock
companies, of weeks spent in rushing from one cheap
hotel to another, of associating with just such women
as Connie and Rose. No one that she knew, in
the profession, had bureaus full of ruffled fresh
linen, had a sunshiny breakfast table with flowers
on it —
Julia twisted about on her arm and
began to cry. She cried for a long time.
True, she could marry Mark, and Mark
would be rich some day. But would Barbara Toland
Studdiford — for Julia had married them as
a matter of course — ever stoop to notice
Julia Rosenthal? No, she wouldn’t marry
Mark.
Then there was her mother’s
home, over the saloon. Julia finally went to
sleep planning, in cold-blooded childish fashion, that
if her father died, and left her mother a really substantial
sum of money, she would persuade Emeline to take a
clean, bright little flat somewhere, and leave this
neighbourhood forever.
“And we could keep a few boarders,”
thought Julia drowsily, “and I will learn to
cook, and have nice little ginghams, like Janey’s — ”
The amateur performance of “The
Amazons” duly took place on the following night,
with a large and fashionable audience packing the old
Grand Opera House, and society reporters flitting from
box to box between the acts. Julia found the
experience curiously flat. She had no opportunity
to deliver to Barbara a withering little speech she
had prepared, and received no attention from any one.
The performers were excited and nervous, each frankly
bent upon scoring a personal and exclusive success,
and immediately after the last act they swarmed out
to greet friends in the house, and Babel ensued.
Walking soberly home with Mark at
half-past eleven, with her cheque in her purse, Julia
decided bitterly that she washed her hands of them
all; she was done with San Francisco’s smart
set, she would never give another thought to a single
one of them.