I
Through the open window the spring
sunshine fell on Calvert’s broad back.
Tennant faced the window, smoking reflectively.
“I should like to ask a favor,” he said;
“may I?”
“Certainly you may,” replied
Calvert; “everybody else asks favors three hundred
and sixty-five times a year.”
Tennant, smoking peacefully, gazed
at an open window across the narrow court-yard, where,
in the sunshine, a young girl sat sewing.
“The favor,” he said,
“is this: there is a vacancy on the staff,
and I wish you’d give Marlitt another chance.”
“Marlitt!” exclaimed Calvert. “Why
Marlitt?”
“Because,” said Tennant,
“I understand that I am wearing Marlitt’s
shoes and the shoes pinch.”
“Marlitt’s shoes would
certainly pinch you if you were wearing them,”
said Calvert, grimly. “But you are not.
Suppose you were? Better wear even Marlitt’s
shoes than hop about the world barefoot. You are
a singularly sensitive young man. I come up-town
to offer you Warrington’s place, and your reply
is a homily on Marlitt’s shoes!”
Calvert’s black eyes began to
snap and his fat, pink face turned pinker.
“Mr. Tennant,” he said,
“I am useful to those who are useful to me.
I am a business man. I know of no man or syndicate
of men wealthy enough to conduct a business for the
sake of giving employment to the unsuccessful!”
Tennant smoked thoughtfully.
“Some incompetent,” continued
Calvert, “is trying to make you uncomfortable.
You asked us for a chance; we gave you the chance.
You proved valuable to us, and we gave you Marlitt’s
job. You need not worry: Marlitt was useless,
and had to go anyway. Warrington left us to-day,
and you’ve got to do his work.”
Tennant regarded him in silence; Calvert
laid one pudgy hand on the door-knob. “You
know what we think of your work. There is not
a man in New York who has your chance. All I
say is, we gave you the chance and you took it.
Keep it; that’s what we ask!”
“That is what I ask,”
said Tennant, with a troubled laugh. “I
am sentimentalist enough to feel something like gratitude
towards those who gave me my first opportunity.”
“Obligation’s mutual,”
snapped Calvert. The hardness in his eyes, however,
had died out. “You’d better finish
that double page,” he added; “they want
to start the color-work by Monday. You’ll
hear from us if there’s any delay. Good-bye.”
Tennant opened the door for him; Calvert,
buttoning his gloves, stepped out into the hallway
and rang for the elevator. Then he turned:
“Don’t let envy make things
unpleasant for you, Mr. Tennant.”
“Nobody has shown me any envy,” said Tennant.
“I thought you said something about your friend
Marlitt ”
“I never saw Marlitt; I only know his work.”
“Oh,” said Calvert, with a peculiar smile,
“you only know his work!”
“That is all. Who is Marlitt?”
“The last of an old New York
family; reduced circumstances, proud, incompetent,
unsuccessful. Why does the artist who signs ‘Marlitt’
interest you?”
“This is why,” said Tennant,
and drew a letter from his pocket. “Do you
mind listening?”
“Go on,” said Calvert, with a wry face.
And Tennant began:
“’DEAR MR. TENNANT, Just
a few words to express my keenest interest and
delight in the work you are doing not only
the color work, but the pen-and-ink. You
know that the public has made you their idol,
but I thought you might care to know what the
unsuccessful in your own profession think. You
have already taught us so much; you are, week
by week, raising the standard so high; and you
are doing so much for me, that I venture to thank
you and wish you still greater happiness and success.
MARLITT.’”
Calvert looked up. “Is that all?”
“That is all. There is
neither date nor address on the note. I wrote
to Marlitt care of your office. Your office forwarded
it, I see, but the post-office returned it to me to-day....
What has become of Marlitt?”
Calvert touched the elevator-bell
again. “If I knew,” he said, “I’d
find a place for Marlitt.”
Tennant’s face lighted.
Calvert, scowling, avoided his eyes.
“I want you to understand,”
he said, peevishly, “that there is no sentiment
in this matter.”
“I understand,” said Tennant.
“You think you do,” sneered
Calvert, stepping into the elevator. The door
slammed; the cage descended; the fat, pink countenance
of Calvert, distorted into a furious sneer, slowly
sank out of sight.
II
Tennant entered his studio and closed
the door. In the mellow light the smile faded
from his face. Perhaps he was thinking of the
unsuccessful, from whose crowded ranks he had risen comrades
preordained to mediocrity, foredoomed to failure industrious,
hopeful, brave young fellows, who must live their
lives to learn the most terrible of all lessons that
bravery alone wins no battles.
“What luck I have had!”
he said, aloud, to himself, walking over to the table
and seating himself before the drawing. For an
hour he studied it; touched it here and there, caressing
outlines, swinging masses into vigorous composition
with a touch of point or a sweeping erasure.
Strength, knowledge, command were his; he knew it,
and he knew the pleasure of it.
Having finished the drawing, he unpinned
the pencil studies, replacing each by its detail in
color charming studies executed with sober
precision, yet sparkling with a gayety that no reticence
and self-denial could dim. He dusted the drawing,
tacked on tracing-paper, and began to transfer, whistling
softly as he bent above his work.
Sunlight fell across the corner of
the table, glittering among glasses, saucers of porcelain,
crystal bowls in which brushes dipped in brilliant
colors had been rinsed. To escape the sun he rolled
the table back a little way, then continued, using
the ivory-pointed tracing-stylus. He worked neither
rapidly nor slowly; there was a leisurely precision
in his progress; pencil, brush, tracer, eraser, did
their errands surely, steadily. Yet already he
had the reputation of being the most rapid worker
in his craft.
During intervals when he leaned back
to stretch his muscles and light a cigarette his eyes
wandered towards a window just across the court, where
sometimes a girl sat. She was there now, rocking
in a dingy rocking-chair, stitching away by her open
window. Once or twice she turned her head and
glanced across at him. After an interval he laid
his cigarette on the edge of a saucer and resumed
his work. In the golden gloom of the studio the
stillness was absolute, save for the delicate stir
of a curtain rustling at his open window. A breeze
moved the hair on his temples; his eyes wandered towards
the window across the court. The window was so
close that they could have conversed together had they
known each other.
In the court new grass was growing;
grimy shrubbery had freshened into green; a tree was
already in full leaf. Here and there cats sprawled
on sun-warmed roofs, sparrows chirked under eaves
from whence wisps of litter trailed, betraying hidden
nests.
Below his window, hanging in heavy
twists, a wistaria twined, its long bunches of lilac-tinted
blossoms alive with bees.
His eyes followed the flight of a
shabby sparrow. “If I were a bird,”
he said, aloud, “I’d not be idiot enough
to live in a New York back yard.” And he
resumed his work, whistling.
But the languor of spring was in his
veins, and he bent forward again, sniffing the mild
air. The witchery of spring had also drawn his
neighbor to her window, where she leaned on the sill,
cheeks in her hands, listlessly watching the flight
of the sparrows.
The little creatures were nest-building;
from moment to moment a bird fluttered up towards
the eaves, bearing with it a bit of straw, a feather
sometimes, sometimes a twisted end of string.
“It’s spring-fever,”
he yawned, passing one hand over his eyes. “I
feel like rolling on the grass there’s
a puppy in that yard doing it now ”
He washed a badger brush and dried
it. Perfume from the wistaria filled his throat
and lungs; his very breath, exhaling, seemed sweetened
with the scent.
“There’s that girl across
the way,” he said, aloud, as though making the
discovery for the first time.
Sunshine now lay in dazzling white
patches across his drawing. He blinked, washed
another brush, and leaned back in his chair again,
looking across at his neighbor. Youth is in itself
attractive; and she was young a white-skinned,
dark-eyed girl, a trifle colorless, perhaps, like
a healthy plant needing the sun.
“They grow like that in this
town,” he reflected, drumming idly on the table
with his pencil. “Who is she? I’ve
seen her there for months, and I don’t know.”
The girl raised her dark eyes and
gave him a serene stare.
“Oh yes,” he muttered,
“I see your eyes, but they tell me nothing about
you. You’re all alike when you look at us
out of the windows called eyes. What’s
behind those eyes? Nobody knows. Nobody knows.”
He dropped his hand on the table and
began tracing arabesques with his pencil-point.
Then his capricious fancy blossomed into a sketch of
his neighbor a rapid idealization, which
first amused, then enthralled him.
And while his pencil flew he murmured
lazily to himself: “You don’t know
what I’m doing, do you? I wonder what you’d
do if you did know?... Thank you, ma belle, for
sitting so still. Won’t you smile a little?
No?... Who are you? What are you? with
your dimpled white hands framing your face....
I had no idea you were half so lovely! ... or is it
my fancy and my pencil which endow you with qualities
that you do not possess?... There! you moved.
Don’t let it occur again."...
He passed a soft eraser over the sketch,
dimming its outline; picked out a brush and began
in color, rambling on in easy, listless self-communion:
“I’ve asked you who you are and you haven’t
told me. Pas chic, ca. There
are thousands and thousands of dark-eyed little things
like you in this city. Did you ever see the streets
when the shops close? There are thousands and
thousands like you in the throng; some
poor, some poorer; some good, some better; some young,
some younger; all trotting across the world on eager
feet. Where? Nobody knows. Why?
Nobody knows. Heigh-ho! Your portrait is
done, little neighbor.”
He hovered over the delicate sketch,
silent a moment, under the spell of his own work.
“If you were like this, a man might fall in love
with you,” he muttered, raising his eyes.
The development of ideas is always
remarkable, particularly on a sunny day in spring-time.
Sunshine, blue sky, and the perfume of the wistaria
were too much for Tennant.
“I’m going out!”
he said, abruptly, and put on his hat. Then he
drew on his gloves, lighted a cigarette, and glanced
across at his neighbor.
“I wish you were going, too,” he said.
His neighbor had risen and was now
standing by her window, hands clasped behind her,
gazing dreamily out into the sunshine.
“Upon my word,” said Tennant,
“you are really as pretty as my sketch!
Now isn’t that curious? I had no idea ”
A rich tint crept into his neighbor’s
face, staining the white skin with carmine.
“The sun is doing you good,”
he said, approvingly. “You ought to put
on your hat and go out.”
She turned, as though she had heard
his words, and picked up a big, black straw hat, placing
it daintily upon her head.
“Well! if that isn’t curious!”
said Tennant, astonished, as she swung nonchalantly
towards an invisible mirror and passed a long, gilded
pin through the crown of her hat.
“It seems that I only have to
suggest a thing ” He hesitated, watching
her.
“Of course it was coincidence,”
he said; “but suppose it wasn’t?
Suppose it was telepathy thought transmitted?”
His neighbor was buttoning her gloves.
“I’m a beast to stand
here staring,” he murmured, as she moved leisurely
towards her window, apparently unconscious of him.
“It’s a shame,” he added, “that
we don’t know each other! I’m going
to the Park; I wish you were I want you
to go because it would do you good!
You must go!”
Her left glove was now buttoned; the
right gave her some difficulty, which she started
to overcome with a hair-pin.
“If mental persuasion can do
it, you and I are going to meet under the wistaria
arbor in the Park,” he said, with emphasis.
To concentrate his thoughts he stood
rigid, thinking as hard as a young man can think with
a distractingly pretty girl fastening her glove opposite;
and the effort produced a deep crease between his eyebrows.
“You are going to the wistaria arbor in the
Park!” he repeated, solemnly.
She turned as though she had heard,
and looked straight at him. Her face was bright
with color; never had he seen such fresh beauty in
a human face.
Her eyes wandered from him upward
to the serene blue sky; then she stepped back, glanced
into the mirror, touched her hair with the tips of
her gloved fingers, and walked away, disappearing into
the gloom of the room.
An astonishing sense of loneliness
came over him a perfectly unreasonable
feeling, because every day for months he had seen her
disappear from the window, always viewing the phenomenon
with disinterested equanimity.
“Now I don’t for a moment
suppose she’s going to the wistaria arbor,”
he said, mournfully, walking towards his door.
But all the way down in the elevator
and out on the street he was comforting himself with
stories of strange coincidences; of how, sometimes,
walking alone and thinking of a person he had not seen
or thought of for years, raising his eyes he had met
that person face to face. And a presentiment
that he should meet his neighbor under the wistaria
arbor grew stronger and stronger, until, as he turned
into the broad, southeastern entrance to the Park,
his heart began beating an uneasy, expectant tattoo
under his starched white waist-coat.
“I’ve been smoking too
many cigarettes,” he muttered. “Things
like that don’t happen. It would be too
silly ”
And it was rather silly; but she was
there. He saw her the moment he entered the wistaria
arbor, seated in a rustic recess. It may be that
she was reading the book she held so unsteadily in
her small, gloved fingers, but the book was upside
down. And when his footstep echoed on the asphalt,
she raised a pair of thoroughly frightened eyes.
His expression verged on the idiotic;
they were a scared pair, and it was only when the
bright flush of guilt flooded her face that he recovered
his senses in a measure and took off his hat.
“I I hadn’t
the slightest notion that you would come,” he
stammered. “This is the the
most amazing example of telepathy I ever heard of!”
“Telepathy?” she repeated, faintly.
“Telepathy! Thought persuasion!
It’s incredible! It’s it’s
a it was a dreadful thing to do. I
don’t know what to say.”
“Is it necessary for you to say anything to me?”
“Can you ever pardon me?”
“I don’t think I understand,”
she said, slowly. “Are you asking pardon
for your rudeness in speaking to me?”
“No,” he almost groaned;
“I’ll do that later. There is something
much worse ”
Her cool self-possession unnerved
him. Composure is sometimes the culmination of
fright; but he did not know that, because he did not
know the subtler sex. His fluency left him; all
he could repeat was, “I’m sorry I’m
speaking to you but there’s something
much worse.”
“I cannot imagine anything worse,” she
said.
“Won’t you grant me a moment to explain?”
he urged.
“How can I?” she replied,
calmly. “How can a woman permit a man to
speak without shadow of excuse? You know perfectly
well what convention requires.”
Hot, uncomfortable, he looked at her
so appealingly that her eyes softened a little.
“I don’t suppose you mean
to be impertinent to me,” she said, coldly.
He said that he didn’t with
so much fervor that something perilously close to
a smile touched her lips. He told her who he was,
and the information appeared to surprise her, so it
is safe to assume she knew it already. He pleaded
in extenuation that they had been neighbors for a
year; but she had not, apparently, been aware of this
either; and the snub completed his discomfiture.
“I I was so anxious
to know you,” he said, miserably. “That
was the beginning ”
“It is a perfectly horrid thing
to say,” she said, indignantly. “Do
you suppose, because you are a public character, you
are privileged to speak to anybody?”
He attempted to say he didn’t,
but she went on: “Of course that is not
a palliation of your offence. It is a dreadful
condition of affairs if a woman cannot go out alone ”
“Please don’t say that!” he cried.
“I must. It is a terrible
comment on modern social conditions,” she repeated,
shaking her pretty head. “A woman who permits
it especially a woman who is obliged to
support herself for if I were not poor I
should be driving here in my brougham, and you know
it! oh, it is a hideously common thing
for a girl to do!” Opening her book, she appeared
to be deeply interested in it. But the book was
upside down.
Glancing at him a moment later, she
was apparently surprised to find him still standing
beside her. However, he had noted two things in
that moment of respite: she held the book upside
down, and on the title-page was written a signature
that he knew “Marlitt.”
“Under the circumstances,”
she said, coldly, “do you think it decent to
continue this conversation?”
“Yes, I do,” he said.
“I’m a decent sort of fellow, or you would
have divined the contrary long ago; and there is a
humiliating explanation that I owe you.”
“You owe me every explanation,”
she said, “but I am generous enough to spare
you the humiliation.”
“I know what you mean,”
he admitted. “I hypnotized you into coming
here, and you are aware of it.”
Pink to the ears with resentment and
confusion, she sat up very straight and stared at
him. From a pretty girl defiant, she became an
angry beauty. And he quailed.
“Did you imagine that you hypnotized
me?” she asked, incredulously.
“What was it, then?” he
muttered. “You did everything I wished for ”
“What did you wish for?”
“I I thought you
needed the sun, and as soon as I said that you ought
to go out, you you put on that big, black
hat. And then I wished I knew you I
wished you would come here to the wistaria arbor, and you
came.”
“In other words,” she
said, disdainfully, “you deliberately planned
to control my mind and induce me to meet you in a
clandestine and horrid manner.”
“I never looked at it in that
way. I only knew I admired you a lot, and and
you were tremendously charming more so than
my sketch ”
“What sketch?”
“I you see, I made
a little sketch,” he admitted “a
little picture of you ”
Her silence scared him.
“Do you mind?” he ventured.
“Of course you will send that portrait to me
at once!” she said.
“Oh yes, of course I will; I had meant to send
it anyway ”
“That,” she observed, “would have
been the very height of impertinence.”
Opening her book again, she indulged
him with a view of the most exquisite profile he had
ever dreamed of.
She despised him; there seemed to
be no doubt about that. He despised himself;
his offence, stripped by her of all extenuation, appeared
to him in its own naked hideousness; and it appalled
him.
“As a matter of fact,”
he said, “there’s nothing criminal in me.
I never imagined that a man could appear to such disadvantage
as I appear. I’ll go. There’s
no use in hoping for pardon. I’ll go.”
Studying her book, she said, without
raising her eyes, “I am offended deeply
hurt but ”
He waited anxiously.
“But I am sorry to say that
I am not as deeply offended as I ought to be.”
“That is very, very kind of you,” he said,
warmly.
“It is very depraved of me,” she retorted,
turning a page.
After a silence, he said, “Then I suppose I
must go.”
It is possible she did not hear him;
she seemed engrossed, bending a little closer over
the book on her knee, for the shadows of blossom and
foliage above had crept across the printed page.
All the silence was in tremulous vibration
with the hum of bees; the perfume of the flowers grew
sweeter as the sun sank towards the west, flinging
long, blue shadows over the grass and asphalt.
A gray squirrel came hopping along,
tail twitching, and deliberately climbed up the seat
where she was sitting, squatting beside her, paws
drooping in dumb appeal.
“You dear little thing!”
said the girl, impulsively. “I wish I had
a bonbon for you! Have you anything in the world
to give this half-starved squirrel, Mr. Tennant?”
“Nothing but a cigarette,”
muttered Tennant. “I’ll go out to
the gate if you ” He hesitated.
“They generally sell peanuts out there,”
he added, vaguely.
“Squirrels adore peanuts,”
she murmured, caressing the squirrel, who had begun
fearlessly snooping into her lap.
Tennant, enchanted at the tacit commission,
started off at a pace that brought him to the gate
and back again before he could arrange his own disordered
thoughts.
She was reading when he returned,
and she cooled his enthusiasm with a stare of surprise.
“The squirrel? Oh, I’m
sure I don’t know where that squirrel has gone.
Did you really go all the way to the gate for peanuts
to stuff that overfed squirrel?”
He looked at the four paper bags,
opened one of them, and stirred the nuts with his
hand.
“What shall I do with them?” he asked.
Then, and neither ever knew exactly
why, she began to laugh. The first laugh was
brief; an oppressive silence followed then
she laughed again; and as he grew redder and redder,
she laughed the most deliciously fresh peal of laughter
he had ever heard.
“This is dreadful!” she
said. “I should never have come alone to
the Park! You should never have dared to speak
to me. All we need to do now is to eat those
peanuts, and you have all the material for a picture
of courtship below-stairs! Oh, dear, and the
worst part of it all is that I laugh!”
“If you’d let me sit down,”
he said, “I’d complete the picture and
eat peanuts.”
“You dare not!”
He seated himself, opened a paper
bag, and deliberately cracked and ate a nut.
“Horrors! and disillusion!
The idol of the public munching peanuts!”
“You ought to try one,” he said.
She stood it for a while; but the
saving grace of humour warned her of her peril, and
she ate a peanut.
“To save my face,” she
explained. “But I didn’t suppose you
were capable of it.”
“As a matter of fact,”
he said, tranquilly, “a man can do anything in
this world if he only does it thoroughly and appears
to enjoy himself. I’ve seen the Prince
Regent of Boznovia sitting at the window of the Crown
Regiment barracks arrayed in his shirt-sleeves and
absorbing beer and pretzels.”
“But he was the Prince Regent!”
“And I’m Tennant.”
“According to that philosophy
you are at liberty to eat fish with your knife.”
“But I don’t want to.”
“But suppose you did want to?”
“That is neither philosophy
nor logic,” he insisted; “that is speculation.
May I offer you a stick of old-fashioned circus candy
flavored with wintergreen?”
“You may,” she said, accepting
it. “If there is any lower depth I may
attain, I’m sure you will suggest it.”
“I’ll try,” he said.
Their eyes met for an instant; then hers were lowered.
Squirrels came in troops; she fed
the little, fat scamps to repletion, and the green
lawn was dotted with squirrels all busily burying peanuts
for future consumption. A brilliant peacock appeared,
picking his way towards them, followed by a covey
of imbecile peafowl. She fed them until their
crops protruded.
The sun glittered on the upper windows
of the clubs and hotels along Fifth Avenue; the west
turned gold, then pink. Clouds of tiny moths came
hovering among the wistaria blossoms; and high in the
sky the metallic note of a nighthawk rang, repeating
in querulous cadence the cries of water-fowl on the
lake, where mallard and widgeon were restlessly preparing
for an evening flight.
“You know,” she said,
gravely, “a woman who over-steps convention always
suffers; a man, never. I have done something I
never expected to do never supposed was
in me to do. And now that I have gone so far,
it is perhaps better for me to go farther.”
She looked at him steadily. “Your studio
is a perfect sounding-board. You have an astonishingly
frank habit of talking to yourself; and every word
is perfectly audible to me when my window is raised.
When you chose to apostrophize me as a ‘white-faced,
dark-eyed little thing,’ and when you remarked
to yourself that there were ‘thousands like
me in New York,’ I was perfectly indignant.”
He sat staring at her, utterly incapable
of uttering a sound.
“It costs a great deal for me
to say this,” she went on. “But I
am obliged to because it is not fair to let you go
on communing aloud with yourself and I
cannot close my window in warm weather. It costs
more than you know for me to say this; for it is an
admission that I heard you say that you were coming
to the wistaria arbor ”
She bent her crimsoned face; the silence
of evening fell over the arbor.
“I don’t know why I came,”
she said “whether with a vague idea
of giving you the chance to speak, and so seizing
the opportunity to warn you that your soliloquies
were audible to me whether to tempt you
to speak and make it plain to you that I am not one
of the thousand shop-girls you have observed after
the shops close ”
“Don’t,” he said, hoarsely.
“I’m miserable enough.”
“I don’t wish you to feel
miserable,” she said. “I have a very
exalted idea of you. I I understand
artists.”
“They’re fools,”
he said. “Say anything you like before I
go. I had hoped for perhaps
for your friendship. But a woman can’t respect
a fool.”
He rose in his humiliation.
“I can ask no privileges,”
he said, “but I must say one thing before I
go. You have a book there which bears the signature
of an artist named Marlitt. I am very anxious
for his address; I think I have important news for
him good news. That is why I ask it.”
The girl looked at him quietly.
“What news have you for him?”
“I suppose you have a right
to ask,” he said, “or you would not ask.
I do not know Marlitt. I liked his work.
Mr. Calvert suggested that Marlitt should return to
resume work ”
“No,” said the girl, “you
suggested it.”
He was staggered. “Did you even hear that!”
he gasped.
“You were standing by your window,”
she said. “Mr. Tennant, I think that was
the real reason why I came to the wistaria arbor to
thank you for what you have done. You see you
see, I am Marlitt.”
He sank down on the seat opposite.
“Everything has gone wrong,”
she said. “I came to thank you and
everything turned out so differently and
I was dreadfully rude to you ”
She covered her face with her hands.
“Then you wrote me that
letter,” he said, slowly. In the silence
of the gathering dusk the electric lamps snapped alight,
flooding the arbor with silvery radiance. He
said:
“If a man had written me that
letter I should have desired his friendship and offered
mine.”
She dropped her hands and looked at
him. “Thank you for speaking to Calvert,”
she said, rising hastily; “I have been desperately
in need of work. My pride is quite dead, you
see one or the other of us had to die.”
She looked down with a gay little
smile. “If it wouldn’t spoil you I
should tell you what I think of you. Meanwhile,
as servitude becomes man, you may tie my shoe for
me Marlitt’s shoe that pinched you....
Tie it tightly, so that I shall not lose it again....
Thank you.”
As he rose, their eyes met once more;
and the perilous sweetness in hers fascinated him.
She drew a deep, unsteady breath.
“Will you take me home?” she asked.