During Beatrice’s house party,
at which twenty or so equally Gorgeous Girls and their
husbands were quartered in the Villa Rosa, while a
string orchestra danced them further along the road
toward nervous prostration each night, a fire ignited
in the offices of the O’Valley Leather Company.
Steve’s office and Mary’s
adjoining room were damaged by water rather than by
the slight blaze itself and during an enforced recess
from work both Mary and Steve found that a fire in
an office building may cause a loss of time from routine
yet be a great personal boon.
The day following the accident, Steve
having been summoned at midnight to view the flames,
Mary came to the office to try to rescue the files
and sweep aside the debris.
“Nothing is really hurt, but
they always mess things up,” Steve said, coming
to the doorway to hold up a precious record book.
“See this? I wonder why they always leave
such a lot of stuff to clear away. Now the whole
extent of damage is the destroying of that rickety
side stairway that is never used and could have been
done away with long ago. Some boys, playing craps
and smoking, left the makings of the fire and before
it touched these rooms there was water poured into
the whole plant. As a consequence, we have a
three-day vacation and instead of having the side
stairs torn down I’m in line for a chunk of
insurance.”
“Even the tea isn’t spilled
from my caddy,” Mary answered; “Look.”
“Wonder what they used this
side stairway for? It was rickety when I bought
the place.” He looked at the blackened remains
of steps.
“I don’t know,”
Mary answered, absent-mindedly. She could have
added that whenever she looked at those stairs or
their closed door she saw but one thing Steve
on his wedding day as he came stealing up to ask about
the long-distance telephone call, aglow with happiness
and dreams. For her own reasons, therefore, Mary
did not regret the destruction of the side stairs.
“They’ve shoved this cabinet
over as if they had a special antagonism to it,”
he was saying, righting a small piece of furniture
containing mostly Mary’s papers. “There not
hurt, is it? Do the drawers open?” He began
pulling them out, one after another. The last
refused to open.
“What’s in this one it blocks
the spring?”
Mary tried her hand at it. Something wedged right at
the edge. Im sure I dont see what it can be. I never used that
drawer for anything but
At their combined jerk the drawer
came flying into space, and with it the remains of
a white cardboard box with the monograms of B. C. and
S. O. entwined by means of a cupid and a tiny wreath
of flowers. Dried cake crumbs lay in the bottom
of the drawer. It was the Gorgeous Girl’s
box of wedding cake which Mary Faithful had found on
her desk.
Neither spoke immediately. Finally
Mary said: “I suppose that’s as bad
an omen as to break a mirror under a ladder on Friday
the thirteenth. Now shall I have the men sweep
the office out? There is no reason we cannot
get to work to-morrow.”
“Wait a moment about sweeping
out offices and going to work,” Steve insisted.
“If you want to break the hoodoo you have just
brought on yourself by smashing up wedding cake let
me talk and act as high priest.”
She shook her head. “You
promised, and you’ve been true-blue don’t
spoil it. Besides, it can do no good.”
“I want to ask a question,”
he insisted. “I’m not going to break
faith with you or take advantage of knowing what you
told me. I shall always try to appreciate the
honour done me, no matter if I am unworthy. I
want to ask a question in as impersonal a way as if
I wrote in to a woman’s column.”
He tried to laugh.
“Ask away.” Mary
sat down in the nearest chair, the broken cardboard
box at her feet.
“Why is it that a man can honestly
be in love with the woman he marries and yet in an
amazingly short time find himself playing the cad
in feeling disappointed, discontented, utterly lacking
affection? It’s a ghastly happening.
Why is it he saw no handwriting on the wall?
I am not stupid, Mary, neither am I given to inconstancy I’ve
had to struggle too much not to have my mind made
up once and for all time. Why didn’t I
see through this veneer of a good time that these
Gorgeous Girls manage to have painted over their real
selves? Why did I never suspect? And what
is a man to do when he discovers the disillusionment?
You see it all, there’s no sense in not admitting
it why do I find myself ill at ease, now
tense, now irritable over trifles, now sulky, despondent as
plainly sulky and despondent as a wild animal successfully
caged and labelled, which must perforce stay put yet
which will not afford its spectators the satisfaction
of walking wistfully from cage corner to cage corner
and yowling in unanswered anguish!”
“Is it as bad as that?” she asked, softly.
He nodded as he continued: “I
sometimes feel the way the monkish fraternity did
at Oxford when they claimed ’they banished God
and admitted women.’ I want a man-made
world, womanless, without a single trace of romance
or a good time. Not right, is it? Sometimes
I think I’ll crack under the pretense, go raving
mad and scream out the whole miserable sham under
which I live and every time I indulge myself
in such a reverie I find myself writing Beatrice an
extra check and going with her to this thing or that,
steel-hammer pulses beating at my forehead and a languor
about even the attempt at breathing.”
Mary would have spoken but he rushed
ahead: “I like this fire, this debris.
Most people would curse at it its real and rather common, sort of plain
boiled-dinner variety. It gives me an excuse to take time off from the
eternal frolic. Im glad when theres a strike or a row and I dig out of
town to stay in a commercial hotel. I have to get away from the whole
tinsel show. And yet it was what I wanted, was willing to play modern
Faust to any Wall Street Mphistophls
“And you are sure it wasn’t a Méphistophélès?”
“Of course not for
that much I can draw a deep breath and give thanks it
was my own luck.”
“Other times, other titles,” she murmured.
“One time you told me what you
thought of the future of American women, the all-round
good fellows of the world do you remember?
I wish you had not told me. It’s just another
thing to irritate. I’m driven mad by trifles Im starved for a big
tragedy; thats the way this craving for a fortune and a good time is playing
boomerang. Im so infernally weary of hearing about the cut-glass slipper
heels of some chorus girl and so hungry to hear about a shipwreck, a new creed,
a daring crime that
“You foolish, funny boy,”
she said, taking pity on his involved analysis, “don’t
you see what you have done? It’s quite the
common fate of get-rich-quick dreamers; you merely
symbolized your goal by Beatrice Constantine, she
stood for the combined relationships of wife, comrade,
lady luxury and you captured your goal,
and the greater effort ceased. You have had time
to examine your prize in microscopic fashion.
It isn’t at all what you intended but
it is quite what you deserve. No one can make
a lie serve for the truth at all times
and for an indefinite period. There is bound to
come a cropper somewhere usually where
you least expect it. And you lied to yourself
in the beginning, a passive sort of falsehood, in merely
refusing to see the truth and groping for the unreal.
You had to justify your race for wealth, so you said,
’Oho, I’ll love a story-book princess
and let that be my incentive. Story-book princesses
are expensive lovelies and you have to have money bags
to jingle before their fair selves!’ So you
became more and more infatuated with the fairy-book
princess who happened to be in your pathway and
it was Beatrice. She made you feel that anything
your slightly mad and quite unrealizing young self
might do was proper. Just as the boy with a new
air rifle deliberately sets up a target to shoot away
at because the savage in him must justify hitting something
besides the ozone, so you have merely wooed and won
your own falsehood and disillusionment.”
“You say it rather neatly; but
that isn’t all. The thing is that I’m
not game enough to go on and take the punishment.
Are you surprised?”
“No. But are you prepared
to give up the thing which won her?”
“My money? I’ve thought
of it.” He folded his arms and began walking
up and down the littered, water-soaked office.
“Would you like me any better?” he asked,
tenderly.
Mary’s eyes grew stormy.
“If the men go to work at once we can have the
rugs sent to the cleaner’s and put down old matting
for a temporary covering and I can go ahead
taking inventory,” was her answer.
“I see,” Steve made himself
respond. “Well I didn’t
trespass very much,” he whispered as he passed
her to leave the building.
Beatrice regarded the fire as an amusing
happening and before Steve realized what was being
done she had proposed that Gaylord refurnish the office
in an arts-and-crafts fashion. It had long seemed
to her a most inartistic and clumsy place and when
Steve refused her offer and told her that a splint-bottomed
chair and a kitchen chair were his office equipment
some years ago she sent for Gaylord on her own initiative
and told him to beard the lion in the den to see if
he could win Steve to the cause of painted wall panels
typifying commerce, industry, and such, and crippled
beer steins and so on as artistic wastebaskets.
There had never been an active feud
between Gaylord and Steve; it was always that hidden
enmity of a weak culprit toward a strong man.
Neither had Trudy been able to win Steve by her Titian
curls, baby-blue eyes, and obese compliments.
In fact, Gaylord had avoided Steve the last year.
He was the one Beatrice called upon to play with her,
he accompanied her shopping, even unto the milliner’s,
and had been in New York one time when Beatrice had
gone down to see about buying a moleskin wrap.
Not even Trudy knew that he had actually adopted a
monocle and squired Beatrice round in state.
So he approached Steve with the attitude
of “I hate you and am only waiting to prove
it but meanwhile I’ll play off the friend lizard
no matter how painful.”
But after a few “my dear fellows”
and “old dears” and gibes about the disordered
office with its prosaic chairs and Mary Faithful, quite
flushed and plain looking as she dashed round giving
orders, Gaylord found himself being neatly set outside
on the curbstone and told to remain in that exact
position.
“I hate this decorating business,”
Steve said in final condemnation. “I agree
with my father-in-law that when a man approaches me
with a book of sample braids and cretonnes under
his arm I feel it only righteous that he be shot at
sunrise and now you know how strong you
stand with me. I don’t mind Beatrice having
her whirl at the thing. A new colour scheme as
often as she has a manicure; that’s different.
But my office stays as I wish it and you can’t
rush in any globes of goldfish and inkstands composed
of reclining young females with their little hands
forming the ink cup, while a single spray of cherry
blossoms flourishes over the hook I hang my hat and
coat upon. Oh, no, trot back to your boudoirs
and purr your prettiest, but stop trying to tackle
real men.”
Gaylord’s one-cylinder brain
had become more efficient by dint of daily sparring
with his wife. So he retorted: “She
is going to make you a present of it your
birthday gift, I understand. Does that alter
the case?”
Steve looked at him with an even wilder
frown. “Tell her to build a bomb-proof
pergola for herself and mark it for me just the same.
When we redecorate round here it takes Miss Faithful
about a half hour to plan the show. Good-bye,
Gay, I’m awfully rushed. Thanks just as
much.”
Gaylord sauntered outside, smiling,
apparently as if he accepted the entire universe.
But his one-cylinder brain harboured an unpleasant
secret which concerned Steve. Gaylord knew that
Steve had not reckoned with his enemies and that he
was in no condition to begin doing so now. Constantine
was no longer at the helm, fearless, respected, and
dominating. Steve was quite the reckless egotist,
out of love with his wife, mentally jaded, and weary
of the game and his enemies surmised all
this in rough fashion and were making their plans accordingly.
How wonderful it would be if certain catastrophes
did happen. How lucky Beatrice had her own income!
She would never cease ordering bomb-proof pergolas
or bird cages carved from rare woods.
The next day before Beatrice
and Steve had a chance to argue the matter out to
a fine point Mark Constantine had a stroke.
It was like the sudden crashing down of a great oak
tree which within had been hollow and decayed for
some time but to all exterior appearances quite the
sturdy monarch. Without warning he became first
a mighty thing lying day after day on a bed, fussed
over and exclaimed over and prayed over by a multitude
of people. Then he assumed the new and final
proportions of a childish invalid his fierce,
true grasp of things, his wide-sweeping and ambitious
viewpoint narrowed hastily to the four walls of the
sick room. Instead of the stock-market fluctuation
bringing forth his “Gad, that’s good!”
or oaths of disapproval, the taste of an especially
good custard or the way the masseuse neglected his
left forearm were cause for joy or grief.
Life had suddenly changed into the
monotonous and wearing routine of a broken, lonesome
old man who had plenty of time to think of the past
with his wife Hannah, recalling incidents he had not
recalled until this dull, long day arrived. And
after reaching many conclusions about many things
Constantine was forced to realize that no one particularly
cared for or sought out his opinions. He was placed
in the category of all fallen oaks someone
who would have one of the largest funerals ever held
in the city. And friends murmured that for Bea’s
sake they hoped it would not be long.
But it was to be long for
with the tenacity of purpose he had always exhibited
Constantine readjusted himself to the narrow realm
of four walls. His former tyranny toward the
business world was now exercised toward his daughter
and son-in-law, his sister and his attendants.
He resolved to live or exist just
as long as life was possible, to vampire-borrow from
those about him all the vitality that he could, to
have every care and comfort and every new doctor ever
heard of called in to attend him; he now said he wished
to live as many years as God willed. There was
a God, now that he was partially paralyzed, a very
real God, to whom he prayed in orthodox fashion.
He wanted to keep remembering the past with Hannah,
to shed the tears for her death which he had never
taken the time to shed, to decide what it was that
had been so wrong in his life in order that his death
and hereafter might be very properly right.
Aunt Belle had taken this new affliction
after the fashion of a Mrs. Gummidge. It affected
her worse than any one else, first because the ridicule
and fault-finding to which her brother had always treated
her were tripled in their amount and quality, and
yet as she was dependent upon this childishly weak
brother she must endure the treatment. Secondly,
she was reminded that her age was somewhat near Mark
Constantine’s age and perhaps a similar fate
lay in store for her. Lastly, it tied her down propriety
demanded that someone be in the sick room a share
of the time and certainly Beatrice had no intention
of undertaking the responsibility.
Steve had acted as Aunt Belle fancied
he would act, genuinely concerned over the catastrophe
and seeking refuge with this tired old child a greater
share of the time. By degrees Aunt Belle left
Steve to play the rôle of comforter and companion,
since no nurse ever stayed at the Constantine bedside
for longer than a fortnight. So she was allowed
to gambol about in her pinafore frocks and high-heeled
shoes, wondering if her brother had made a fair will,
taking into account the fact that a woman is only
as old as she looks and with a tidy fortune
who knows what might happen after the proper mourning
period?
Beatrice had been prostrated at the
news. For two days she stayed in bed and sobbed
hysterically. Then she was prevailed upon to see
her father and to take the sensible attitude of preparing
for a long siege, as Steve suggested.
“How cold-hearted it sounds a
long siege!” she reproached.
“But it is true. He will
not die he will live until that splendid
vitality of his has been snuffed out by a careless
law of rhythm, so you may as well buck up and run
in to see him every day and then go about as usual.”
“A sick room drives me wild.
I wish I had taken a course in practical nursing instead
of the domestic-science things.”
Steve did not answer.
“I can’t bear to think
of it. It’s like having life-in-death in
the very house. Oh, Steve, can’t you talk
him into going to a sanitarium? They’d
have so many interesting kinds of baths to try!”
“He won’t mind your parties,
if that is what is bothering you. The only thing
he asks is to be left in peace in his room with plenty
of detective stories and plenty of medical attention,
and he won’t know if you dance the roof off.
But if you really want to hasten the end send Gay
up there with plans for remodelling his room it
will either kill or cure,” he laughed.
“I must do something to help
me forget and make it easier for him,” she said,
soberly. “I’m going to try a faith
healer not because I believe in them but
because I don’t want to leave any stone unturned.
I think a new interest would help papa. Would
you try adopting a child or my taking up classical
dancing in deadly earnest?” She was quite sincere
and emotionally wrought up as she came up to him and
laid her head on his shoulder.
“Oh, I’d take up classical dancing,”
he advised.
She gave a sigh of relief. “Yes,
it’s what I really think would be the best.
I will dance on the lawn so papa can watch me.”
He gave vent to his father-in-law’s
favourite expletive, “Gad!” under his
breath.
He did not add what was an unpleasant
probability: that, having to assume full responsibility
of affairs, there were likely to be astonishing complications.
Crashed-down oak trees are quite helpless concerning
their enemies, reckoned upon or otherwise, and Steve,
who had never taken count of his foes, would be called
upon to meet them all single-handed.