Nevertheless, the young Studdifords,
upon their return to San Francisco, entered heartily
upon the social joys of the hour. Barbara had
been only waiting their arrival to demurely announce
her engagement, and Julia’s delight immediately
took the form of dinners and theatre parties for the
handsome Miss Toland and her fiance. A new and
softened sweetness marked Barbara in these days; she
was more gentle and more charming than she had ever
been before. Captain Edward Francis Humphry Gunther
Fox was an officer in the English army, a blond, silent
man of forty, with kind eyes and a delightfully modulated
voice. He had a comfortable private income, a
“place” in Oxfordshire, an uncle, young
and healthy to be sure, but still a lord, and an older
sister who had married a lord, so that his credentials
were unexceptionable, and Mrs. Toland was nearly as
happy as her daughter was.
“It’s curious,”
said Barbara to Julia, in one of their first hours
alone, “but there is a distinction and
an excitement about getting engaged, and you enjoy
it just as much at thirty as at twenty — perhaps
more. People — or persons, as Francis
says — who have never paid me any attention
before, are flocking to the front now with presents
and good wishes, and some who never have seen Captain
Fox congratulate me — it amounts to congratulation — as
if any marriage were better than none!”
“Well, there is a something
about marriage,” Julia admitted; “you may
not have any reason for feeling so, but you do
feel superior, ’way down in your secret heart!
And yet, Babbie,” and a little shadow darkened
her bright face, “and yet, once you are
married, you see a sort of — well, a sort
of uncompromising brightness about girlhood, too!
When I go out to The Alexander now, and remember my
old busy days there, and walking to chapel with Aunt
Sanna, in the fresh, early mornings — I don’t
know — it makes me almost a little sad!”
“Don’t speak of it,”
said Barbara. “When I think of leaving Dad,
and home, and going off to England, and having to
make friends of awful women with high cheek bones,
and mats of crimps coming down to their eyebrows,
it scares me to death!”
And both girls laughed gayly.
They were having tea in Julia’s drawing-room
on a cold bright afternoon in May.
“I’ll miss Dad most,”
pursued Barbara seriously. “Mother’s
so much with Ted now, anyway.” She frowned
at the fire. “Mother’s curious, Ju,”
she added presently. “Every one says she’s
an ideal mother, and so on, and I suppose she is,
but — ”
“You’re more like your
father, anyway,” Julia suggested in the pause.
“It’s not only that,”
said Barbara slowly, “but Mother has never been
in sympathy with any one of us! Ned deceived
her, Sally deceived her, Theodora went deliberately
against her advice, and broke her heart, and Con and
Jane don’t really respect her opinion at all!
I’m the oldest, her first born — ”
“And she loves you dearly,” Julia said
soothingly.
“Used to Ju, when I was a baby.
And loves me theoretically now. But she has taken
my not marrying to heart much more than the curious
marriages Ned and the girls have made! Hints
about old maids, and stories about her own popularity
as a girl, regardless of the fact that no one wanted
me — ”
“Oh, Babbie!”
“Well, no one did!” Barbara
laughed a little dryly. “Why, not two months
ago,” she went on, “that little sprig of
a Paul Smith called on Con, and Mother engineered
me out of the room, and said something laughingly to
Richie and Ted about not wanting to stand in Con’s
way, ’one old maid was enough in a family!’”
“Maddening! Yes, I know,”
Julia said, laughing and shaking her head. “I’ve
heard her a hundred times!”
“Of course it’s all love
and kisses, now,” Barbara added, “and Francis
is a bold, big thief, and how can she give up her dear
big girl — ”
“Oh, Barbara, don’t be bitter!”
“Well,” Barbara flung
her head back as if she tossed the subject aside,
“I suppose I am bitter! And why you’re
not, Ju, I can’t understand, for you never had
one tenth the chance I did!”
“No,” Julia assented gravely,
“I never did. If my mother had kept me
with her — and she could have done it — if
she hadn’t left my father — he loved
me so — it would all have been different.
Mothers are strange, Babby, they have so much power — or
seem to! It seems to me that one could do so
much to straighten things out for the poor little baby
brains; this is worth while, and this isn’t worth
while, and so on! Suppose” — Julia
poured herself a fresh cup of tea, and leaned back
comfortably in her chair — “suppose
you had young daughters, Bab,” said she, “what
would you do, differently from your mother, I mean?”
“Oh, I don’t know!”
Barbara said, “only it seems funny that mothers
can’t help their daughters more. Half my
life is lived now, probably, yet Mother goes right
on theorizing, she — she doesn’t get
down to facts, somehow! I don’t
know — ”
“It all comes down to this,”
Julia said briskly, as Barbara’s voice trailed
into silence, “sitting around and waiting for
some one to ask her to marry him is not a sufficiently
absorbing life work for the average young woman!”
“She isn’t expected to
do anything else,” Barbara added, “except —
attract. And it isn’t as if she could be
deciding in her own mind about it; the decision is
in his mind: if he chooses he can ask her;
if he doesn’t, all right! It’s a
shame — it’s a shame, I say,
not to give her a more dignified existence than that!”
“Yes, but, Bab, your mother
couldn’t have put you into a shop to sell ribbons,
or made a telephone girl of you!”
“No; my brothers didn’t
sell ribbons, or go on a telephone board, either.
But I don’t see why I shouldn’t have studied
medicine, like Jim and Richie, or gone into the office
at the works in Yolo City, like Ned.”
“Yes, but, Babby, you’ve no leaning toward
medicine!”
“Well, then, something else,
just as Jim would have done something else, in that
case! Office hours and responsibility, and meeting
of men in some other than a social way. You and
I have somehow dragged a solution out of it, Julie:
we are happy in spite of all the blundering and stumbling,
but I’ve not got my Mother to thank for it, and
neither have you!”
“No, neither have I!”
Julia said, with a long sigh, and for a few moments
they both watched the coals in silence. The room
was quite dark now; the firelight winked like a drowsy
eye; here and there the gold of a picture frame or
the smooth curve of a bit of copper or brassware twinkled.
The windows showed opaque squares of dull gray; elsewhere
was only heavy shadow, except where Barbara’s
white gown made a spot of dull relief in the gloom,
and Julia’s slipper buckles caught the light.
A great jar of lilacs, somewhere in the room, sent
out a subtle and delicious scent.
“Funny world, isn’t it, Julie?”
“Oh, funny!” Julia
put out her hand, and met Barbara’s, and their
fingers pressed. “Nothing better in it,
Barbara, than a friend like you!” she said affectionately.
“That’s what I was thinking,” said
Barbara.
The Studdifords went to San Mateo
after the wedding, and Julia, who had taken herself
seriously in hand, entered upon the social life of
the summer with a perfectly simulated zest. She
rode and drove, played golf and tennis and polo, gossiped
and spent hours at bridge, she went tirelessly from
luncheon to tea, from dinner to supper party, and when
Jim was detained in town, she went without him; a little
piece of self-reliance that pleased him very much.
If society was not extremely popular with Julia, Julia
was very popular with society; her demure beauty made
her conspicuous wherever she went, and in July, prominent
in some theatricals at the clubhouse, she earned all
honours before her.
Julia found the theatricals perilously
delightful; the grease paint and the ornate costume
seemed like old friends; she was intoxicated and enchanted
by the applause. For several days after her most
successful performance she was thoughtful: what
if she had never joined the “Amazon” caste,
never gone to Sausalito, followed naturally in the
footsteps of Connie Girard and Rose Ransome? She
might have been a great actress; she would have been
a great beauty.
San Mateo, frankly, bored her, although
she could not but admire the beautiful old place,
the lovely homes set in enchanting old gardens, the
lawns and drives stretching under an endless vista
of superb oaks. There, alone with Jim, in a little
cottage — ah, there would have been nothing
boring about that!
But the Hardesty cottage never seemed
like home to her, they had rented the big, shingled
brown house for only three months, and Jim was anxious
that she should not tire herself with altering the
arrangement of furniture and curtains for so casual
a tenancy. The Hardesty’s pictures looked
down from the wall, their chairs were unfriendly, their
books under lock and key. Not a lamp, not a cup
or saucer was familiar to Julia; she felt uncomfortable
in giving dinner parties with “H” on the
silver knives and forks; she never liked the look of
the Hardesty linen. Life seemed unreal in the
“Cottage”; she seemed to be pushed further
and further away from reassuring contact with the
homely realities of love and companionship; chattering
people were always about her, pianoplayers were rippling
out the waltz from “The Merry Widow,” ice
was clinking in cocktail shakers, the air was scented
with cigarettes, with the powder and perfumery of
women. She and Jim dined alone not oftener than
once a week, and their dinner was never finished before
friendly feet crisped on the gravel curve of the drive,
and friendly invaders appeared to invite them to do
something amusing: to play cards, to take long
spins in motor cars, or to spend an idle hour or two
at the club. Sometimes they were separated, and
Julia would come in, chilled and tired after a long
drive, to find Jim ahead of her, already sound asleep.
Sometimes she left him smoking with some casual guest,
and fell asleep long before the voices downstairs
subsided. Even if they went upstairs together,
both were tired; there was neither time nor inclination
for confidences, for long and leisurely talk.
“Happy?” Jim said to his
wife one day, when Julia, looking the picture of happiness,
had come downstairs to join him for some expedition.
“Happy enough,” Julia
said, with her grave smile. She took the deep
wicker chair next his, on the porch, and sat looking
down the curve of the drive to the roadway beyond
a screen of trees.
“Heavenly afternoon,” she said. “Just
what are we doing?”
“Well, as near as I got it from
Greg,” Jim informed her a little uncertainly,
“we go first to his place, and then split up
into about three cars there; Mrs. Peter and Mrs. Billings
will take the eats, Peter will have a whole hamper
of cocktails and things, and we go up to the ridge
for a sort of English nursery tea, I think.”
“Doing it all ourselves?” Julia suggested,
brightening.
“Well, practically. Although
Greg’s cook is going ahead with a couple of
maids in the Peters’ car. They’re
going to broil trout or something; anyway, I know
Greg has been having fits about seeing that enough
plates go, and so on. I know Paula Billings is
taking something frozen — ”
“Oh, Lord, what a fuss and what
a mess!” Julia said ungratefully.
“Well, you know how the Peters
always do things. And then, after tea, if this
glorious weather holds, we’ll send the maids
and the hampers home, and all go on down to Fernand’s.”
“Fernand’s! Forty miles, Jim?”
“Oh, why not? If we’re having a good
time?”
“Well, I hope Peter Vane and
Alan Gregory keep sober, that’s all!” Julia
said. “The ride will be lovely, and it’s
a wonderful day. But Minna Vane always bores
me so!”
“Why, you little cat!”
Jim laughed, catching her hand as it hung loose over
the arm of her chair.
“They’ve no brains,”
complained Julia seriously; “they were born
doing this sort of thing, they think they like it!
Buying — buying — buying — eating — dancing — rushing — rushing — rushing!
It’s no life at all! I’d rather pack
a heavy basket, and lug it over a hot hill, and carry
water half a mile, when I picnic, instead of rolling
a few miles in a motor car, and then sitting on a
nice camp-chair, and having a maid to pass me salads
and ices and toast and broiled trout!”
“Well, if you would, I wouldn’t!”
Jim said good-naturedly.
“I wasn’t born to this,”
Julia added thoughtfully; “my life has always
been full of real things; perhaps that’s the
trouble. I think of all the things that aren’t
going right in the world, and I can’t
just turn my back on them, like a child — I
get thinking of poor little clerks whose wives have
consumption — ”
“Oh, for heaven’s sake!”
Jim protested frowningly, biting the end from his
cigar with a clip of firm white teeth.
“It isn’t as if I had
never been poor,” Julia pursued uncertainly.
“I know that there are times when a new gown
or a paid bill actually would affect a girl’s
whole life! I think of those poor little girls
at St. Anne’s — ”
“I would like to suggest,”
Jim said incisively, “that the less you let
your mind run on those little girls from St. Anne’s,
the better for you! If you have no consideration
for my feelings in this matter, Julie, for your own
I should think you would consider such topics absolutely — well,
absolutely in poor taste!”
Silence. Jim puffed on his cigar.
Julia sat without stirring, feeling that every drop
of blood in her body had rushed to her head. The
muscles of her temples and throat ached, her eyes
saw only a green-and-gold dazzle, her wet little hands
gripped the arms of her chair.
“It is all very well to criticise
these people,” pursued Jim sententiously, after
a long silence, “although they have all been
kindness and graciousness itself to you! They
may be shallow, they may be silly; I don’t hold
any brief for Minna Vane and Paula Billings. But
I know that Minna is on the Hospital Board, and Paula
a mighty kind-hearted, good little woman, and they
don’t sit around pulling long faces, and wishing
they were living south of Market Street!”
Julia sat perfectly still. She
could not have battled with the lump in her throat
if life had depended upon her speaking. She felt
her chest strain with a terrible rush of sobbing,
but she held herself stiffly, and only prayed that
her tears might be kept back until she was alone.
“Hello! Here’s Greg,”
Jim said cheerfully, after another silence. And
here, truly, was Alan Gregory, a red-faced, smooth-shaven
young man, already slightly hilarious and odorous
of drink, and very gallant to beautiful Mrs. Studdiford.
A great silky veil must be tied over Julia’s
hat; sure she was warm enough? Might be late,
might get cold, you know.
“Shall I get you your white
coat, dear?” Jim asked solicitously.
“Oh, no, thank you, Jim!”
Then they were off, and Julia told
herself that men and their wives often quarrelled
this way; it was a common enough thing to have some
woman announce, with a casual laugh, that she and her
husband had had a “terrible scene,” and
“weren’t speaking.” Only, with
Jim it seemed so different! It seemed so direfully,
so hopelessly wrong!
She felt a hypocrite when they joined
the others, and when she presently found herself laughing
and talking with them all, even with Jim. And
through the jolly afternoon and noisy evening she found
herself watching her husband, when she could do so
unobserved, with gravely analytical eyes. No
barbed sentence of his could long affect her, for Julia
had pondered and prayed too long over this matter
to find any fresh distress in a reminder of it.
Her natural simple honesty very soon adjusted the
outraged sensibilities. But Jim could hurt himself
with his wife, and this afternoon he had done so.
Unconsciously Julia said to herself, over and over,
“Oh, he should not have said that! That
was not kind!”
Mrs. Vane had a great favour to ask
the men of the party to-night. She proffered
it somewhat doubtfully, like a spoiled child who is
almost sure of being denied, yet risks its little
charms in one more entreaty. She and Paula, yes,
and Mrs. Jerome, and little Julia — wasn’t
that so, Julia? — wanted to see a roadhouse.
No — no — no — not the sort
of place where nice women went, but a regular roadhouse — oh,
please, please, please! They had their veils
to tie over their faces, and they would keep very
unobtrusively in the background, and there was a man
apiece and two men over to protect them.
“All the girls in town are doing
it!” argued Mrs. Vane, “and they say it’s
perfectly killing! Dancing, you know, and singing.
You have to keep your veil down, of course! Betty
said they’d been three times!”
“Nothing doing,” Jim said
good-naturedly, shaking his head.
“Oh, now, don’t say that,
Doctor!” Mrs. Vane commanded animatedly; “it’s
too mean! Well, if you couldn’t take
us to the very worst, where could you take
us — Hunter’s?”
“Hunter’s!” the
three men echoed, laughing and exchanging glances.
“Well, where then?” the lady pursued.
“Look here, Min,” said
her husband uneasily, “there’s nothing
to it. And you girls might get insulted and mixed
into something — ”
“Oh, divine!” Mrs. Billings said; “now
I will go!”
“White’s, huh, Jim?” Greg suggested
tentatively.
“White’s?” Jim considered
it, shook his head. “Nothing doing there,
anyway!” was his verdict.
“Larry’s, where the pretty
window boxes are,” suggested Mrs. Vane, hopeful
eyes upon the judges. “Come on! Oh, come
on! You see such flossy ladies getting out
of motor cars in front of Larry’s!”
“There’s this about Larry’s,”
Mr. Billings contributed; “we could get one
of those side places, and then, if things got too hot,
just step out on to the porch, d’ye see, and
get the girls away with no fuss at all.”
“That’s so,” Jim
conceded; “but I’ll be darned if I know
why they want to do it. However — ”
“However, you’re all angels!”
sang Mrs. Vane, and catching Julia about the waist,
she began to waltz upon the pleasant meadow grass where
they had just had their high tea. “Come
on, everybody! We won’t be at Fernand’s
until nearly night, then dinner, and then Larry’s!”
“Mind now,” growled one
of the somewhat unwilling escort, “you girls
keep your veils down. Nix on the front-page story
to-morrow!”
“Oh, we’ll behave!”
Mrs. Billings assured him. And slipping an affectionate
arm about Julia’s waist, as they walked to the
motor cars, she murmured: “My dear, there
isn’t one decent woman in the place! Isn’t
this fun!”
Julia did not answer. She got
into the car and settled herself for the run; so much
of the day at least would be pleasant. It was
the close of a lovely summer afternoon, the long shadows
of the trees lay ahead of them on the road, the sky
was palest blue and palest pink, a flock of white
baby clouds lay low against the eastern horizon.
The warm air bore the clean good scent of wilting
grass and hot pine sap. The car rolled along
smoothly, its motion stirring the still air into a
breeze. Mr. Billings, sitting next to Julia,
began an interested disquisition upon the difficulties
of breeding genuine, bat-eared, French bulldogs.
Julia scarcely heard him, but she nodded now and then,
and now and then her blue eyes met his; once she gratified
him with a dreamy smile. This quite satisfied
Morgan Billings, to whom it never occurred that Julia’s
thoughts might be on the beauties of the rolling landscape,
and her smile for the first star that came prickling
through the soft twilight.
And after a while some aching need
of her soul grew less urgent, and some of the wistfulness
left her face. She forgot the ideals that had
come with her into her married life, and crushed down
the conviction that Jim, like all men, liked his wife
to slip into the kitchen and concoct some little sweet
for his supper, even with an artist like Foo Ting
at his command. She realized that when she declined
old Mrs. Chickering’s luncheon invitation for
the mere pleasure of rushing home to have lunch with
Jim, her only reward might be a disapproving:
“My Lord! Julia, I hope you didn’t
offend Mrs. Chickering! She’s been so decent
to us!”
It was as if Julia, offering high
interest on her marriage bond, had at last learned
that one tenth of what she would pay would satisfy
Jim. Feeling as she did that no demonstration
on his part, no inclination to monopolize her, would
do more than satisfy her longing to be all in all
to him, it was not an easy lesson. For a while
she could not believe that he knew his own happiness
in the matter, and a dispassionate onlooker might
have found infinitely pathetic the experimental temerity
with which she told him that this invitation had been
accepted, this social obligation incurred, this empty
Sunday filled to overflowing with engagements.
And now Jim approved, and Julia had
to hide in the depth of her hurt soul the fact that
she had never dreamed he could approve.
However tired, he liked to come home to the necessity
of immediately assuming evening dress, and going out
into the night again. He and Julia held a cheerful
conversation between their dressing-rooms as they dressed;
later they chattered eagerly enough in the limousine,
Jim enthusiastic over his wife’s gown, and risking
a kiss on her bare shoulder when the car turned down
a dark street. Jim, across a brilliant table,
in a strange house, did not seem to Julia to belong
to her at all; but it was almost as if he found his
wife more fascinating when the eyes of outsiders were
upon her, and admired Julia in a ballroom more than
he did when they had the library and the lamplight
to themselves, at home.
They would come home together late
and silent. Ellie would come in to help her lovely
mistress out of the spangled gown, to lift the glittering
band from her bright hair. And because of Ellie,
and because Jim usually was dressed and gone before
she was up in the morning, Julia had a room to herself
now. She would have much preferred to breakfast
with her lord, but Jim himself forbade it.
“No, no, no, Ju! It’s
not necessary, and you’re much better off in
bed. That’s the time for you to get a little
extra rest. No human being can stand the whole
season without making some rest up somehow! You’ll
see the girls begin to drop with nervous prostration
in January; Barbara used to lose twenty pounds every
winter. And I won’t have you getting
pale. Just take things easy in the morning, and
sleep as late as you can!”
Julia accepted the verdict mildly.
With the opening of her second winter in San Francisco’s
most exclusive set, she had tried to analyze the whole
situation, honestly putting her prejudices on one side,
and attempting to get her husband’s point of
view. It was the harder because she had hoped
to be to Jim just what Kennedy Marbury was to Anthony,
united by a thousand needs, little and big, by the
memory of a thousand little comedies and tragedies.
Kennedy, who worried about bills and who dreaded the
coming of the new baby, could stop making a pie to
administer punishment and a lecture to her oldest son,
stop again to answer the telephone, stop again to
kiss her daughter’s little bumped nose, and
yet find in her tired soul and body enough love and
energy to put a pastry “A. M.” on
the top of her pie, to amuse the head of the house
when he should cut into it that night.
But this mixture of the ridiculous
and the sublime was not for Julia. And just as
Kennedy had adjusted herself to the life of a poor
man’s wife, so Julia must adjust herself to
her own so different destiny.
And adjust herself she did. Nobody
dreamed of the thoughts that went on behind the beautiful
blue eyes, nobody found little Mrs. Studdiford anything
but charming. With that steadfast, serious resolution
that had marked her all her life, Julia set herself
to the study of gowns, of dinners, of small talk.
She kept a slim little brown Social Register on her
dressing-table, and pored over it at odd moments; she
listened attentively to the chatter that went on all
about her. She drew infinitely less satisfaction
from the physical evidences of her success — her
beauty, her wealth, her handsome husband, and her
popularity — than any one of the women who
envied her might have done, yet she did draw some
satisfaction, loved her pretty gowns, the freedom
of bared white neck and shoulders, the atmosphere of
perfumed drawing-rooms and glittering dinner tables.
She wrote long letters to Barbara, was a devoted godmother
to Theodora Carleton’s tiny son, loved to have
Miss Toland with her for an occasional visit, and perhaps
once a month went over to Sausalito, to spoil the
old doctor with her affectionate attentions, hold
long conferences with their mother on the subject
of the girls’ love affairs, and fall into deep
talks with Richie — perhaps the happiest
talks in her life, for Richie, whose mind and body
had undergone for long years the exquisite discipline
of pain, was delightfully unexpected in his views,
and his whole lean, ungainly frame vibrated with the
eager joy of expressing them.
Perhaps once a month, too, Julia went
to see her own mother, calls which always left her
definitely depressed. Emeline was becoming more
and more crippled with rheumatism, the old grandmother
was now the more brisk of the two. May’s
two younger girls, Muriel and Geraldine, were living
there now, as Marguerite and Evelyn had done; awkward,
dark, heavy-faced girls who attended the High School.
Julia’s astonishing rise in life had necessarily
affected her relatives, but much less, she realized
in utter sickness of spirit, than might have been
imagined. She and Jim were paying for the schooling
of two of May’s boys, and a substantial check,
sent to her mother monthly, supposedly covered the
main expenses of the entire household. Besides
this, Chess was working, and paying his mother something
every week for board.
It had been Julia’s first confident
plan to move the family from the Mission entirely.
There were lovely roomy flats in the Western Addition,
or there were sunny houses out toward the end of Sutter
Street, where her mother and grandmother would be
infinitely more comfortable and more accessible.
She was stunned when her grandmother flatly refused.
Even her mother’s approval of the plan was singularly
wavering and half hearted. Mrs. Cox argued shrilly
that they were poor folks, and poor folks were better
off not trapesing all over the city, and Emeline added
that Ma would feel lost without her backyard and her
neighbours, to say nothing of the privilege of bundling
up in a flat black bonnet and brown shawl, hot weather
or cold, and trotting off to St. Charles’s Church
at all hours of the day and night.
“I don’t care, Julie,”
Mrs. Page made her daughter exquisitely uncomfortable
by saying very formally, “but there’s no
girl in God’s world that wouldn’t think
of asking her mother to stay with her for a while — till
things got settled, anyway. You haven’t
done it!”
“Well, I’ll tell you,
Mama — ” Julia began, but Emeline interrupted
her.
“You haven’t done it,
Julie, and let me tell you right now, it looks queer.
I’m not the one that says it; every one says
it. I don’t want to force myself where
I’m not — ”
“But, Mama dear, we’re
only at the hotel now!” Julia protested, feeling
a hypocrite.
“I see,” said Emeline,
“and I’m not good enough, of course.
I couldn’t meet your friends, of course!”
She laughed heartily. “That’s good!”
she said appreciatively.
Julia used to flush angrily under
these withering comments, at first; later, her poor
little mother’s attitude filled her only with
a great pity. For Emeline was suffering a great
deal now, and Julia longed to be able to take her
with her to the Pacific Avenue house, if only to prove
that its empty splendour held no particular advantages
over the life on Shotwell Street, for Emeline.
She was definitely better off in her mother’s
warm kitchen, gossiping and idling her days away, than
she would have been limping aimlessly about in Julia’s
house, and catching glimpses of Julia only between
the many claims of the daughter’s day.
More than this, Jim would not hear
of such a visit; it never even came to a discussion
between husband and wife; he would have been frankly
as much surprised as horrified at the idea. So
Julia did what was left to her, for her mother:
listened patiently to long complaints, paid bills,
and supplemented Jim’s generous cheque with many
a gold piece pressed into her mother’s hand
or slipped into her grandmother’s dreadful old
shopping-bag. She carried off her young cousins
to equip them with winter suits and sensible shoes,
aware all the while that their high-heeled slippers
and flimsy, cheap silk dresses, the bangles that they
slipped over dirty little hands, and the fancy combs
they pushed into their untidy hair, were infinitely
more prized by them.
The Shotwell Street house was still
close and stuffy, the bedrooms as dark and horrible
as Julia remembered them, and no financial aid did
more than temporarily soften the family’s settled
opinion that poor folks were poor folks, and predestined
to money trouble. Julia knew that when the clothes
she bought her cousins grew dirty they would not be
cleaned; she knew that her grandmother had never taken
a tub bath in her life and rather scorned the takers
of tub baths; she knew that such a thing as the weekly
washing of clothes, the transformation of dirty linen
into piles of fragrant whiteness, never took place
in the Shotwell Street house. Mrs. Cox indeed
liked to keep a tub full of gray suds standing in
the kitchen, and occasionally souse in it one of her
calico wrappers, or a shirt waist belonging to the
girls. These would be dried on a rope stretched
across the kitchen, and sooner or later pressed with
one of the sad irons that Julia remembered as far back
as she remembered anything; rough-looking old irons,
one with a broken handle, all with the figure seven
stamped upon them with a mould. Mrs. Cox had several
ironholders drifting about the kitchen, folds of dark
cloth that had been so often wet and singed that the
covering had split, and the folded newspaper inside
showed its burned edges, but she never could find one
when she wanted it, and usually improvised a new one
from a grocery bag or the folds of her apron, and
so burned her veined old knotted hands.
Julia came soon to see that her actual
presence did them small good, and did herself real
harm, and so, somewhat thankfully, began to confine
her attentions more and more to mere financial assistance.
She presently arranged for the best of medical care
for her mother, even for a hospital stay, but her
attitude grew more and more that of the noncommittal
outsider, who helps without argument and disapproves
without comment. Evelyn had made a great success
of her dressmaking, but such aid as she could give
must be given her sister, for Marguerite’s early
and ill-considered marriage had come to the usual point
when, with an unreliable husband, constantly arriving
and badly managed babies, and bitter poverty and want,
she found herself much in the position of her mother,
twenty years before. May was still living in Oakland,
widowed. Her two sons were at home and working,
and with a small income from rented rooms as well,
the three and her youngest daughter, Regina, somehow
managed to maintain the dreary cottage in which most
of the children were born.
“They all give me a great big
pain!” Evelyn said one day frankly, when Julia
was at Madame Carroll’s for a fitting, and the
cousins — one standing in her French hat
and exquisite underlinen, and the other kneeling,
her gown severely black, big scissors in hand, and
a pincushion dangling at her breast — were
discussing the family. “Gran’ma isn’t
so bad, because she’s old, but Aunt Emeline and
Mama have a right to get next to themselves!
Mama had a fit because I wouldn’t take a flat
over here, and have her and Regina with me; well, I
could do it perfectly well; it isn’t the money!”
Evelyn stood up, took seven pins separately and rapidly
from her mouth, and inserted them in the flimsy lining
that dangled about Julia’s arm. “You
want this tight, but not too tight, don’t you,
Julie?” said she. “That can come in
a little, still. No,” she resumed aggrievedly,
“but I board at a nice place on Fulton street;
the Lancasters, the people that keep it, are just lovely.
Mrs. Lancaster is so motherly and the girls are so
jolly; my wash costs me a dollar a week; I belong
to the library; I’ve got a lovely room; I go
to the theatre when I want to; I buy the clothes I
like, and why should I worry? I know the way
Mama keeps house, and I’ve had enough of it!”
“It’s awfully hard,”
Julia mused, “Marguerite’s just doing the
same thing over again. It’s just discouraging!”
“Well, you got out of it, and
I got out of it,” Evelyn said briskly, “and
they call it our luck! Luck? There ain’t
any such thing,” she went on indignantly.
“I’m going to New York for Madame next
year — me, to New York, if you please, and
stay at a good hotel, and put more than twenty thousand
dollars into materials and imported wraps and scarfs
and so on — is there any luck to that?
There’s ten years’ slavery, that’s
what there is! How much do you suppose you’d
have married Jim Studdiford if you hadn’t kept
yourself a little above the crowd, and worked away
at the settlement house for years and years?”
she demanded. “I can put a little hook
in here, Ju, where the lace comes, to keep that in
place for you!” she added, more quietly.
“Well, it’s true!”
Julia said, sighing. She looked with real admiration
at the capable, black-clad figure, the clear-skinned,
black-eyed face of Madame Carroll’s chief assistant.
“Why don’t you ever come and have lunch
with me, Evelyn?” she demanded affectionately.
“Oh, Lord, dearie!” Evelyn
said, in her most professional way, as she pencilled
a list of young Mrs. Studdiford’s proportions
on a printed card, “this season Madame has our
lunches, and even our dinners, sent in — simply
one rush! But some time I’d love to.”
“You like your work, don’t
you, Evelyn?” Julia said curiously.
“You go tell Madame I’m
ready for Mrs. Addison,” Evelyn said capably
to a small black-clad girl who answered her bell,
“and then carry this to Minnie and tell her
it’s rush — don’t drop the pins
out. I love my work,” she added, when she
and Julia were alone again; “I’m crazy
about it! The girls here are awfully nice, and
some of the customers treat me simply swell — most
of them do. This way, Julia. Christmas time
we get more presents than you could shake a stick
at!” said Evelyn, opening a door. “Good
afternoon, Mrs. Addison, I’m all ready for you.”
“That’s a good girl!”
the woman who was waiting in Carroll’s handsome
parlour said appreciatively; she recognized Julia.
“Well, how do you do, Mrs. Studdiford?”
she smiled, “so sorry not to see you on Saturday,
you bad little thing!”
Julia gave her excuse. “You
know Evelyn here is my cousin?” she said, in
her quiet but uncompromising way, as she hooked her
sables together.
“About eleven times removed!”
Evelyn said cheerfully. “Right in here,
please, Mrs. Addison! At the same time to-morrow,
Mrs. Studdiford. Thank you, good-night.”
“Good-night!” Julia said,
smiling. For some reason she could not fathom,
Evelyn never seemed willing to claim the full relationship;
always assumed it to be but a hazy and distant connection.
It was as if in her success the modiste wished to
recognize no element but her own worth; no wealthy
or influential relative could claim to have helped
her! Julia always left her with a certain
warmth at her heart. It was good to come in contact
now and then with such self-confidence, such capability,
such prosperity. “I could almost envy Evelyn!”
thought Julia, spinning home in the twilight.