“Dis place,”
said Emma Campbell, as the snaggle-toothed sky-line
of New York unfolded before her staring eyes, “ain’t
never growed up natchel out o’ de groun’;
it done tumbled down out o’ de sky en got busted
uneven in de fall.”
Clinging to the bird-cage in which
her cat Satan crouched, she further remarked, as the
taxi snaked its sinuous way toward the quarters which
a friendly waiter on the steamship had warmly recommended
to her:
“All I scared ob is, dat
dis unforchunit cat ’s gwine to lose ’is
min’. Seein’ places like dis
is ’nough to make any natchel cat run crazy.”
Whereupon Emma relapsed into a colossal
silence. She was fed up on surprises and they
were palling upon her palate, which fortunately wasn’t
down. Things had been happening so fast that she
couldn’t keep step with them. To begin
with, Peter had preferred to come north by sea, and
although Emma had been raised on the coast, although
she was used to the capricious tide-water rivers which
this morning may be lamb-like and to-night raging
lions, although she had crossed Caliboga Sound in
rough weather and been rolled about like a ninepin,
that had been, so to speak, near the shore-line.
This was different: here was more water than Emma
had thought was in the entire world; and she had been
assured that this wasn’t a bucketful to what
she was yet to see! Emma fell back upon silent
prayer.
Then had come this astounding city
jutting jaggedly into the clouds, and through whose
streets poured in a never-ceasing, turgid flow all
the peoples of the earth. And, more astounding
than waterful sea and peopleful city, was the last,
crowning bit of news: Peter was going to be
married! And he didn’t know the young
lady he was to marry, except that she was a Miss Anne
Simms. He knew no more about his bride than she,
Emma, knew.
That was all Emma needed to reduce
her to absolute befuddlement. When food and drink
were placed before her, she partook of both, mechanically.
If one spoke to her, she stared like a large black
owl. And when Peter had driven away in the taxi,
leaving her for the time being in the care of a highly
respectable colored family, whose children, born and
raised in New York, looked upon the old South Carolina
woman as they might have looked upon a visitor from
Mars, Emma shut and locked her door, took the cat
out of his cage, cuddled him in her arms, tried to
projeck, and couldn’t. The feel
of Satan’s soft, warm body comforted her inexpressibly.
He, at least, was real in a shifting universe.
She began to rock herself, slowly, rhythmically, back
and forth. Then the New York negroes heard a
shrill, sweet, wailing voice upraised in one of those
speretuals in which Africa concentrates her ages of
anguish into a half-articulate cry. In it were
the voices of their fathers long gone, come back from
the rice-fields and the cane-brakes and the cotton-rows,
voices so sweet and plaintive that they were haunted.
“I
we-ent out een de wilderness,
En
I fell upon mah knees,
En
I called upon mah Savior,
Whut
sh-all I do for save?
He
replied:
Halleluian!
Sinnuh,
sing!
Halleluian!
Ma-ry,
Mar-tha, halle
Hallelu
Halleluian!”
“Good Lord!” breathed
the oldest boy, who was a high-school scholar.
“How weird and primitive!”
said the daughter, who was to be a teacher.
But the father’s eyes narrowed,
and the hair of his scalp prickled. ’Way
back yonder his mother had sung like that, and his
heart leaped to it. If he hadn’t been afraid
of his educated and modern children, he would have
wept. Emma didn’t know that, of course.
She kissed the big cat, placed him carefully on the
bed, and lay down beside him in the attitude of a
corpse. She was resigning herself to whatever
should happen.
Peter, upon telephoning his uncle,
had been advised to prowl about until noon, when they
were to lunch together. Wherefore he found himself
upon the top of a bus, rolling about New York, seeing
that of which he had read. He didn’t see
it as Nancy saw it; the city appeared to him as might
some subtle, hard, and fascinatingly plain woman whose
face had flashes of piercing and unforgetable beauty,
beauty unexpected and unlike any other. Unlike
the beauty of the Carolina coast, say, which was a
part of his consciousness, there was here something
sinister and splendid.
He got off at the Metropolitan Museum.
He wished to see with his own eyes some of those pictures
Claribel Spring had described to him, among them Fortuny’s
“Spanish Lady.” He stood for a dazzled
interval before her, so disdainful, passionate, provocative,
and so profoundly human. When he moved away,
he sighed. He wasn’t wondering if he himself
should ever meet and love such a lady; but rather when
he should be able so to portray in a human face all
the secrets of the body and of the soul.
At lunch his uncle, remarking his
earnest face, said regretfully:
“Oh, Peter, why couldn’t
you be content to be a rich man and play the game
according to Hoyle? Art? Of course!
You could afford to buy the best any of ’em
could do, instead of trying to sell something you
do yourself. Art is a rich man’s recreation.
Artists exist in order that rich men may buy their
wares.”
“Rich men were invented for
the use of poor artists: it’s the only
excuse they have for existing at all, that I can see,”
said Peter, composedly.
“But you’d have a so much
better time buying, than selling or rather,
trying to sell,” said one of the rich men, smiling
good-humoredly.
“I’ll have a better time
working, than in either buying or selling,”
said Peter, and looked at his uncle with uncompromising
eyes.
Mr. Chadwick Champneys sighed, face
to face with Champneys obstinacy. Peter would
keep his promise to the letter, but aside from that
he would live his own life in his own way.
He had stared, and his jaw dropped,
when he was calmly informed that Peter intended to
take old Emma Campbell and a black cat along with
him. Then he had laughed, almost hysterically,
and incidentally discovered that being laughed at
didn’t move Peter in the least; he was too used
to it. He allowed you to laugh at him, smiled
a bit wryly himself, and went right ahead doing exactly
what he had set out to do. This sobered Mr. Champneys.
“Peter,” said he, after
a pause, “allow me to ask you a single question:
do you propose to go through life toting old niggers
and black cats?”
“Uncle Chad,” replied
Peter, “do you remember how sweet potatoes roasted
in the ashes of a colored person’s fire used
to taste, when you were a little boy?”
A reminiscent glow spread over Uncle
Chad’s face. He shaded his eyes with his
hand, and stared under it at Peter. Something
quizzical and tender was in that look.
“I see you do,” said Peter,
with the same look. “Well, Uncle Chad,
Emma used to roast those potatoes and provide
them too. Sometimes they were all the dinner
I had. Besides,” mused Peter, “when
all’s said and done, nobody has more than a
few friends from his cradle to his grave. If
I’ve got two, and they don’t want to part
with me, why should they have to?”
Mr. Chadwick Champneys spread out
his hands. “Put like that,” he admitted,
“why should they, indeed! Take ’em
along if you like, Nephew.” And of a sudden
he laughed again. “Oh, Peter!” he
gasped, “you dear dam-fool!”
Peter had a strenuous afternoon.
Reservations had to be secured for Emma, for whom
he also purchased a long coat and a steamer rug.
He himself had to have another suit: his uncle
protested vehemently against the nice new one he had
bought in Charleston.
At dusk he watched New York’s
lights come out as suddenly and as goldenly as evening
primroses. Riverton drowsing among its immemorial
oaks beside the salty tide-water, the stars reflected
in its many coves, the breath of the pines mingling
with the wild breath of the sea sweeping through it,
the little, deserted brown house left like a last
year’s nest close to the water how
far removed they were from this glittering giantess
and her pulsating power! The electric lights
winked and blinked, the roar of traffic arose in a
multitudinous hum; and all this light and noise, the
restless stir of an immense life, went to the head
like wine.
The streets were fiercely alive.
Among the throngs of well-dressed people one caught
swift glimpses of furtive, hurrying figures, and faces
that were danger signals. More than once a few
words hissed into Peter’s ears made him turn
pale.
It was nearing midnight, and the street
was virtually empty, when a girl who had looked at
him sharply in passing turned and followed him, and
after a glance about to see that no policeman was in
sight, stepped to his side and touched him on the
elbow. Peter paused, and his heart contracted.
He had seen among the negroes the careless unmorality
as of animals. There was nothing of the prude
in him, but, perhaps because all his life there had
been a Vision before his eyes, he had retained a singularly
untroubled mental chastity. His mind was clean
with the cleanliness of knowledge. He could not
pretend to misunderstand the girl. She was nothing
but a child in years. The immaturity of her body
showed through her extreme clothes, and even her sharp,
painted little face was immature, for all its bold
nonchalance. She was smiling; but one sensed behind
her deliberate smile a wolfish anxiety.
“Ain’t you lonesome?”
she asked, fluttering her eyelids, and giving the
young man a sly, upward glance.
“No,” said Peter, very gently.
“Aw, have a heart! Can’t
you stand a lady somethin’ to eat an’ maybe
somethin’ to drink?”
The boy looked at her gravely and
compassionately. Although her particular type
was quite new to him, he recognized her for what she
was, a member of the oldest profession, the strange
woman “whose mouth is smoother than oil, but
whose feet go down to death. Her steps take hold
on hell.” Somehow he could not connect those
terrible words with this sharp-featured, painted child.
There was nothing really evil about her except the
brutal waste of her.
“Will ten dollars be enough
for you?” asked Peter. The wolfish look
in her eyes hurt him. He felt ashamed and sad.
“Sure! Come on!” said she, and her
face lighted.
“Thank you, I have had my dinner,”
said Peter. But she seized his arm and hurried
him down a side street, willy-nilly. “Seen
a cop out of the tail of my eye,” she explained,
hurriedly. “They’re fierce, some
of them cops. I can’t afford to be took
up.”
When they had turned the corner, Peter
stopped, and took out his pocket-book. With another
searching glance at her, he handed her one five, and
two ten-dollar bills. Perhaps that might save
her for a while at least. He lifted
his hat, bowed, and had started to walk away, when
she ran after him and clutched him by the arm.
“Take back that fiver,”
said she, “an’ come and eat with me.
If you got a heart, come an’ eat with me.
I know a little place we can get somethin’ decent:
it’s a dago caffay, but it’s clean an’
decent enough. Will you come?” Her voice
was shaking; he could see her little body trembling.
“But why?” he asked, hesitatingly.
“Not for no reason, except I I
got to make myself believe you’re real!”
She said it with a gasp.
Peter fell in beside her and she led
the way. The small restaurant to which she piloted
him wasn’t pretentious, but it was, as she had
said, clean, and the food was excellent.
She said her name was Gracie Cantrell,
and Peter took her word for it. While she was
eating she discoursed about herself, pleased at the
interest this odd, dark-faced young fellow with the
soft, drawling voice seemed to take in her. She
had begun in a box factory, she told him. And
then she’d been a candy-dipper. Now, you
work in a lowered atmosphere in order not to spoil
your chocolate. For which reason candy-dippers,
like all the good, are likely to die young. Seven
of the girls in Gracie’s department “got
the T.B.” That made Gracie pause to think,
and the more she thought about it, the clearer it
seemed to her that if one has to have a short life,
one might at least make a bid for a merrier one than
candy-dipping. So she made her choice. The
short life and merry, rather than the T.B. and charity.
“And has it been so merry, Gracie?”
asked Peter, looking at the hard young face wonderingly.
“Well, it’s been heaps
better than choc’late-dippin’,” said
Gracie, promptly. “I don’t get no
worse treated, when all’s said an’ done.
I’ve got better clothes an’ more time an’
I don’t work nothin’ like so hard.
An’ I got chanst to see things. You don’t
see nothin’ in the fact’ry. Say I
feel like goin’ to the movies, or treatin’
myself to a ice-cream soda or a choc’late a-clair,
why, I can do it without nobody’s leave when
I’m lucky. You ain’t ever lucky in
the fact’ry: you never have nothin’,
see? So I’d rather be me like I am than
be me back in the fact’ry.”
“And do you always expect to
be lucky?” Peter winced at the word.
“I can’t afford to think
about that,” she replied, squinting at the red
ink in her glass. “You got to run your risks
an’ take your chances. All I know is, I’ll
have more and see more before I die. An’
I won’t die no sooner nor no painfuller than
if I’d stayed on in the fact’ry.”
Peter admitted to himself that she
probably wouldn’t. Also, that he had nothing
to say, where Gracie was concerned. He felt helpless
in the face of it as helpless as he had
felt one June morning long ago when he had seen old
Daddy Neptune praying, after a night of horror, to
a Something or a Somebody blind and indifferent.
And it seemed to him that life pressed upon him menacingly,
as if he and Neptune and this lost child of the New
York streets had been caught like rats in a trap.
The girl, on her part, had been watching
him with painful intensity.
“You’re a new one on me,”
she told him frankly. “I feel like pinchin’
you to see if you’re real. Say, tell me:
if you’re real, are you the sort of guy that’d
give twenty-five dollars, for nothin’, to a
girl he picked up in the street? Or, are you just
a softy fool that a girl that picks him up in the
streets can trim? There’s more of him
than the first sort,” she finished.
“You must judge that for yourself,”
said Peter. “I may tell you, though, that
I am quite used to being called a fool,” he finished,
tranquilly.
“So?” said she, after
another long look. “Well, I what
I mean to say is, I wish to God there was more fools
like you. If there was, there’d be less
fools like me.” After a pause she asked,
in a subdued voice:
“You expect to stay in this town long?”
“I leave in the morning.”
“I’m sorry,” said
she. “Not,” she added hastily, “that
I want to touch you for more money or anything like
that, I don’t. But I well, I’d
like to know you was livin’ in the same town,
see?”
Peter saw. But again he had nothing
to say. Young as he was, he knew the absurdity
of all talk of reform to such as Gracie. As things
are they can’t reform, they can’t even
be prevented. He looked at her, thoughtfully.
“I’m not only leaving
New York, I’m leaving America to-morrow,”
he said at last. “I wish there was something
I could do for you.”
She shook her head. Her little
painted face looked pinched. There were shadows
under the eyes that should have been soft and dewy.
“You can’t do nothin’. I’ll
tell you why. Somehow I I’d
like you to know.”
And she sat there and told him.
“You see?” said she, when she had finished.
“I see,” said Peter; and
the hand that held his cigarette trembled. The
thing that struck him most forcibly was the stupid
waste of it all.
“Look here, Gracie,” he
said at last, “if you ever get very
unlucky and things are too hard for you sort
of last ditch, you know, I want you to
go to a certain address. It’s to my uncle,”
he explained, seeing her look blank. “You’ll
send in the card I’m going to give you, and
you will say I sent you. He’ll probably
investigate you, you know. But you just tell
him the truth, and say I told you he’d help.
Will you do that!”
She in her turn reflected, watching
Peter curiously. Then she fell to tracing patterns
on the table-cloth with the point of her knife.
“All right,” she said.
“If ever I have to, an’ I can find him,
I will an’ say you sent me.”
Peter took out his pocket memorandum,
wrote his uncle’s name and the address of the
house in the Seventies which he was presently to occupy,
added, “I wish you’d do what you can, for
my sake,” and signed it. He handed the
girl the slip of paper, and she thrust it into her
low-necked blouse.
“And now,” he finished
kindly, “you’d better go home, Gracie,
go to bed, and sleep.” He held out his
brown hand, and she, rising from her chair, gripped
his fingers as a child might have done, and looked
at him with dog’s eyes.
“Good-by!” said she, huskily.
“You are real, ain’t you?”
“Damnably so,” admitted
Peter. “Good-by, then, Gracie.”
And he left her standing by the table, the empty wine-glass
before her. The streets stretched before him
emptily. That poor, done-for kid! What
is one to do for these Gracies?
“Mister! For God’s
sake! I’m hungry!” a hoarse voice
accosted him. A dirty hand was held out.
Mechanically Peter’s hand went
to his pocket, found a silver dollar, and held it
out. The dirty hand snatched it, and without so
much as a thank you the man rushed into a near-by
bakery. Peter shuddered.
When he reached his room, he sat for
a long time before his open window, and stared at
the myriads and myriads of lights. From the streets
far below came a subdued, ceaseless drone, as if the
huge city stirred uneasily in her sleep perhaps
because she dreamed of the girls she prostituted and
the men she starved. And it was like that everywhere.
If the great cities gave, they also took, wastefully.
Peter was tormented, confronted by the inexorable
question:
“What am I going to do about it?”
He couldn’t answer, any more
than any other earnest and decent boy could answer,
whose whole and sole weapon happened to be a paint-brush.
One thing he resolved: he wouldn’t add to
the sum total; nobody should be the worse off because
he had lived. So thinking, the bridegroom fell
asleep.
When he awoke in the morning, he lay
for a moment staring at the strange ceiling overhead;
his mind had an uneasy consciousness that something
impended. Then he sat up suddenly in his bed,
and clutched his head in his hands.
“Lord have mercy on me!”
cried Peter. “I’ve got to get up and
get married!”
By ten o’clock his luggage was
on its way to the steamer. Dressed in his new
clothes, ring and license carefully tucked away in
his pocket, Peter took an hour off and jumped on a
bus. It delighted him to roll around the streets
on top of a bus. He felt that he could never
see enough of this wonderful, terrible, beautiful,
ugly, cruel, and kind city. Everywhere he turned,
something was being torn down or up, something was
being demolished or replaced. New York was like
an inefficient and yet hard-working housekeeper, forever
house-cleaning; her house was never in order, and probably
never would be, hence this endless turmoil. Yet,
somehow, Peter liked it. She wasn’t satisfied
with things as they were.
He stopped at Grant’s Tomb,
looked at the bronze tablet commemorating the visit
of Li Hung Chang, then went inside and stared reflectively
at the torn and dusty flags.
“It was worth the price,”
he decided. “But,” he added, with
a certain deep satisfaction, “I’m glad
we gave them a run for their money while we were at
it!” The Champneyses, one remembers, were on
the other side.
When he got back to his hotel the
car that his uncle had sent for him had just arrived.
Deferential help brought out his remaining belongings,
were tipped, and stood back while the door was slammed
upon the departing one. The car was held up for
seven minutes on Forty-second Street, while Peter
leaned forward to get his first view of congested
traffic. He had once seen two Ford cars and an
ox-cart tie up the Riverton Road.
Arrived at Emma Campbell’s quarters,
he found her sitting stiffly erect, her foot upon
her new suit-case, her new cloak over her arm, and
the bird-cage under her hand. The expressman who
had called for her trunk early that morning had good-naturedly
offered to carry the bird-cage along with it, but
Emma had flatly refused to let the cat get out of
her sight. Even when she climbed into the car
she held fast to the cage.
“I don’t say nothin’
’bout me. All I scared ob is,
dat dis unforchnate cat’s gwine to lose
‘is min’ before we-all finishes up.”
It was with difficulty that Peter
persuaded her to leave the cage in the car when they
reached his uncle’s hotel.
“Mistuh,” said Emma to
the chauffeur, “is you-all got any fambly dependin’
on you?”
“One wife. Three kids,” said the
chauffeur, briefly.
“I ain’t de kin’
ob lady whut makes threats agin’ a gent’man,”
said Emma, looking him unblinklngly in the eye.
“All I says is, dat I started whah I come fum
wid dat cat an’ I ‘specks to lan’
up whah I ‘s gwine to wid dat same cat in dat
same cage. Bein’ as you ’s got dem
chillun en dat wife, I calls yo’ ‘tenshun
to dat fac’, suh.”
The chauffeur, a case-hardened pirate,
laughed. “All right, lady,” said
he, genially. “It ain’t in my line
to granny cats, but that one will be the apple of
me good eye until you git back. I wouldn’t
like the missus to be a widder: she’s too
darn good-lookin’.”
With her mind at ease on this point,
Emma consented to leave Satan in the car and follow
Peter. Emma looked resplendently respectable,
and she knew it. She was dressed as well as if
she had expected to be buried. By innate wisdom
she had retained the snowy head-handkerchief under
her sailor hat, and she wore her big gold hoop-earrings.
Smart colored servants were common enough at that
hotel, but one did not often see such as this tall
and erect old woman in her severe black-and-white.
Emma belonged almost to another day and generation,
although her face, like the faces of many old colored
women, was unwrinkled. She had a dignity that
the newer generation lacks, and a pride unknown to
them.
Peter and Emma went up in an elevator
and were ushered into a private sitting-room, where
were awaiting them Mr. Chadwick Champneys, a gentleman
who was obviously a clergyman, another who was as
obviously a member of the Bar, and the latter’s
wife, a very handsome lady handsomely and expensively
panoplied. There was the usual hand-shaking,
as Peter was introduced, and the handsome lady stared
openly at Emma; one doesn’t often see a bridegroom
come in accompanied by an old colored woman.
Emma courtesied, with the inimitable South Carolina
bending of the knees, and then took a modest seat
in the background and faded into it. She had good
manners, had Emma.
Mr. Champneys glanced at his watch,
and presently left the room. The clergyman, book
in hand, stepped into the middle of the floor, and
looked importantly religious. The lawyer smilingly
invited Peter to take his place beside him. Everybody
assumed a solemn look.
And then the door opened and the bride
appeared, leaning on her uncle’s arm. Emma
Campbell, leaning forward, got one glimpse of the
face but slightly concealed by the thin, floating tulle
veil pinned on with a wreath of orange-blossoms, caught
one gleam from the narrowed eyes; and her own eyes
bulged in her head, her mouth fell open. Emma
wished to protest, to cry, to pray aloud.
The bride was magnificently dressed,
in a gown that was much too elaborate for her angular
and undeveloped young figure. It made her look
over-dressed and absurd to a pitiful degree, as if
she were masquerading. The hair-dresser whom
she had called to her aid had done her worst.
Nancy had an unusual quantity of hair, and it had
been curled and frizzed, and puffed and pulled, until
the girl’s head appeared twice its natural size.
Through the fine lace of her sleeves were visible
her thin, sunburned arms. Her naturally dark
eyebrows had been accentuated, and there was a bright
red patch on each cheek, her lips being equally crimson.
Out of the rouged and powdered face crowned by towering
red hair, the multitude of freckles showed defiantly,
two fierce eyes lowered.
As Peter met the stare of those narrowed
eyes, to save his life he couldn’t keep from
showing his downright consternation. His aversion
and distaste were so manifest, that a deeper red than
rouge stained the girl’s cheek and mottled her
countenance. Her impulse was to raise her hand
and strike him across his wincing mouth.
What Nancy saw was a tall, thin, shambling
young fellow whose face was pale with an emotion not
at all complimentary to herself. He didn’t
like her! He thought her hideous! He despised
her! So she read Peter’s expressive eyes.
She thought him a fool, to stand there staring at
her like that, and she hated him. She detested
him. Puppy!
She saw his glance of piteous entreaty,
and Mr. Chadwick Champneys’s bland, blind ignoring
of its silent reproach and appeal. And then the
long-legged young fellow pulled himself together.
His head went up, his mouth hardened, and his voice
didn’t shake when he promised to cherish and
protect her, until death did them part.
All the while Peter felt that he was
struggling in a hideous dream. That bride in
white satin wasn’t real; his uncle wouldn’t
play him such a trick! Peter cringed when the
defiant voice of the girl snapped her “I do”
and “I will.”
The clergyman’s voice had trailed
off. He was calling her “Mrs. Champneys.”
And Mr. Vandervelde and his handsome wife were shaking
hands with her and Peter, and saying pleasant, polite,
conventional things to them both. She signed
a paper. And that old nigger-woman kept staring
at her; but Peter avoided meeting her eyes. And
her uncle was saying that she must change her frock
now, my dear: Peter’s boat sailed within
the hour, remember. And then she was back in
her room, tearing off the dress that only last night
she had so fondly fingered.
It lay on the floor in a shimmering
heap, and she trampled on it. She had torn the
tulle veil and orange-blossoms from her hair, and
she stamped on those, too. The maid who had been
engaged to help her stood aghast when the bride kicked
her wedding-gown across the room. She folded
it with shaking hands and smoothed the torn veil as
best she could. The beautiful lace-and-ivory
fan was snapped and torn beyond hope of salvage.
Nancy tossed it from her. With round eyes the
maid watched her tear hair-pins out of her hair, rush
into the bath-room, and with furious haste belabor
her head with a wet brush to remove the fatal frizzings;
but the work had been too thoroughly done to hope
to remove all traces of it so easily. Nancy brushed
it as best she could, and then rolled it into a stout
coil on the top of her head. Her satin slippers
came hurtling across the room as she kicked them off,
and the maid caught them on the fly.
Back into the bath-room again, and
the maid could hear her splashing around, as she scrubbed
her face. When she came out, it was brick-red,
but powderless and paintless. She got into her
blue tailored suit without assistance, and, sitting
on the floor, buttoned her shoes with her own fingers,
to the maid’s disgust. Then she jerked
on her hat, stuck a hat-pin through it carelessly,
snatched up gloves and hand-bag, and was ready for
departure. The expression of her face at that
moment sent the maid cowering against the wall, and
tied her tongue; the bride looked as if she were quite
capable of pitching an officious helper out of a ten-story
window.
“My God!” said the girl
to herself, as Nancy, without so much as a word or
a look in her direction, slammed the door behind her.
“My God, if that poor fellow that’s just
been married to her was any kin to me, I’d
have a High Mass said for his soul!”
The brick-red apparition that swept
into the room put the final touch upon Peter’s
dismay. He thought her the most unpleasant human
being he had ever encountered, and almost the ugliest.
The Vanderveldes had taken the clergyman off in their
car, and only Peter, his uncle, and Emma remained.
“I’m ready!” snapped
the bride. She didn’t glance at the bridegroom,
but the look she bestowed upon Emma made that doughty
warrior quail. Emma conceived a mortal terror
of Peter’s wife. She took the place of
the Boogerman and of ha’nts.
Chadwick Champneys had his hand on
his nephew’s shoulder, and was talking to him
in a low and very earnest voice rather like
a clergyman consoling a condemned man with promises
of heaven after hanging. Peter received his uncle’s
assurances in resigned silence.
Two cars were waiting outside the
hotel for the wedding-party. As Emma Campbell
stepped into the one that was to convey her and Peter
to the boat, Nancy saw her stoop and lift a large bird-cage
containing, of all things, an immense black cat, which
mewed plaintively at sight of her. It was the
final touch of grotesqueness upon her impossible wedding.
The two Champneyses wrung hands silently. The
older man said a few words to the colored woman, and
shook hands with her, too.
Then the two cars were rolling away,
Nancy sitting silent beside her uncle. At the
corner Peter’s vanished. The bride hoped
from the bottom of her heart that she would never
lay eyes upon her bridegroom again. She didn’t
exactly wish him any harm, greatly as she disliked
him, but she felt that if he would go away and die
he would be doing her a personal favor.
Peter and Emma made their boat ten
minutes before the gang-plank was pulled in.
A steward took Emma in charge, and carried off the
bird-cage containing Satan. Emma, who had been
silent during the drive to the pier, opened her mouth
now:
“Mist’ Peter,” said
she, “ef yo’ uncle ’s wuth a
million dollars, he ought to tun it over to you dis
mawnin’. ’T ain’t for me,”
said Emma, beginning to tremble, “to talk ‘bout
Mis’ Champneys whut you done got married to.
But I used to know Miss Maria. And dat ’s
how-come,” finished Emma, irrelevantly, “dat
’s how-come I mighty glad we ‘s gwine
to furrin folkses’ countries, whichin I hopes
to Gawd dey ’s a mighty long way off fum dat
gal.” And Peter’s heart echoed Emma’s
sentiments so fully that he couldn’t find it
in him to reprove her for giving utterance to them.
With a sense of relief, he watched
New York receding from his sight. Hadn’t
he paid too high a price, after all? Remembering
his bride’s eyes, pure terror assailed him.
No woman had ever looked at Peter like that before.
He tried to keep from feeling bitter toward his uncle.
Well! He was in for it! He would make his
work his bride, by way of compensation. For all
that he was a bridegroom of an hour or so, and a seeker
bound upon the quest of his heart’s desire, Peter
turned away from the steamer’s railing with a
very heavy heart.
A tall, fair-faced woman turned away
from the railing at the same instant, and their eyes
met. Hers were brightly, bravely blue, and they
widened with astonishment at sight of Peter Champneys.
She stared, and gasped. Peter stared, and gasped,
too.
“Miss Claribel!” cried Peter.
“Mrs. Hemingway,” she
corrected, smiling. “It isn’t Yes,
it is, too! Peter! Oh, that Red Admiral
is a fairy!”