June was ending in a very warm week.
Work in the studio lagged, partly because Dulcie,
preparing for graduation, could give Barres little
time; partly because, during June, that young man had
been away spending the week-ends with his parents
and his sister at Foreland Farms, their home.
From one of these visits he returned
to the city just in time to read a frantic little
note from Dulcie Soane:
“DEAR MR. BARRES, please, please
come to my graduation. I do want somebody
there who knows me. And my father is not well.
Is it too much to ask of you? I hadn’t
the courage to speak to you about it when you were
here, but I have ventured to write because it will
be so lonely for me to graduate without having anybody
there I know.
“DULCIE SOANE.”
It was still early in the morning;
he had taken a night train to town.
So when he had been freshened by a
bath and change of linen, he took his hat and went
down stairs.
A heavy, pasty-visaged young woman
sat at the desk in the entrance hall.
“Where is Soane?” he inquired.
“He’s sick.”
“Where is he?”
“In bed,” she replied
indifferently. The woman’s manner just
verged on impertinence. He hesitated, then walked
across to the superintendent’s apartments and
entered without knocking.
Soane, in his own room, lay sleeping
off the consequences of an evening at Grogan’s.
One glance was sufficient for Barres, and he walked
out.
On Madison Avenue he found a florist,
selected a bewildering bouquet, and despatched it
with a hasty note, by messenger, to Dulcie at her
school. In the note he wrote:
“I shall be there. Cheer up!”
He also sent more flowers to his studio,
with pencilled orders to Aristocrates.
In a toy-shop he found an appropriate
decoration for the centre of the lunch table.
Later, in a jeweller’s, he discovered
a plain gold locket, shaped like a heart and inset
with one little diamond. A slender chain by which
to suspend it was easily chosen; and an extra payment
admitted him to the emergency department where he
looked on while an expert engraved upon the locket:
“Dulcie Soane from Garret Barres,” and
the date.
After that he went into the nearest
telephone booth and called up several people, inviting
them to dine with him that evening.
It was nearly ten o’clock now.
He took his little gift, stopped a taxi, and arrived
at the big brick high-school just in time to enter
with the last straggling parents and family friends.
The hall was big and austerely bare,
except for the ribbons and flags and palms which decorated
it. It was hot, too, though all the great blank
windows had been swung open wide.
The usual exercises had already begun;
there were speeches from Authority; prayers by Divinity;
choral effects by graduating pulchritude.
The class, attired in white, appeared
to average much older than Dulcie. He could see
her now, in her reconstructed communion dress, holding
the big bouquet which he had sent her, one madonna
lily of which she had detached and pinned over her
breast.
Her features were composed and delicately
flushed; her bobbed hair was tucked up, revealing
the snowy neck.
One girl after another advanced and
read or spoke, performing the particular parlour trick
assigned her in the customary and perfectly unremarkable
manner characteristic of such affairs.
Rapturous parental demonstrations
greeted each effort; piano, violin and harp filled
in nobly. A slight haze of dust, incident to
pedalistic applause, invaded the place; there was an
odour of flowers in the heated atmosphere.
Glancing at a programme which he had
found on his seat, Barres read: “Song:
Dulcie Soane.”
Looking up at her where she sat on
the stage, among her comrades in white, he noticed
that her eyes were busy searching the audience-possibly
for him, he thought, experiencing an oddly pleasant
sensation at the possibility.
The time at length arrived for Dulcie
to do her parlour trick; she rose and came forward,
clasping the big, fragrant bouquet, prettily flushed
but self-possessed. The harp began a little minor
prelude-something Irish and not very modern.
Then Dulcie’s pure, untrained voice stole winningly
through the picked harp-strings’ hesitation:
“Heart of
a colleen,
Where do you roam?
Heart of a colleen,
Far from your home?
Laden with love you stole from her breast!
Wandering dove, return to your nest!
Sodgers are sailin’
Away to the wars;
Ladies are wailin’
Their woe to the stars;
Why is the heart of you straying so soon-
Heart that was part of you, Eileen Aroon?
Lost to a sodger,
Gone is my heart!
Lost to a sodger,
Now we must part -
I and my heart-for it journeys
afar
Along with the sodgers who sail to the
war!
Tears that near
blind me
My pride shall dry, -
Wisha! don’t
mind me!
Lave a lass cry!
Only a sodger can whistle the tune
That coaxes the heart out of Eileen Aroon!”
And Dulcie’s song ended.
Almost instantly the audience had
divined in the words she sang a significance which
concerned them-a warning-perhaps
a prophecy. The 69th Regiment of New York infantry
was Irish, and nearly every seat in the hall held
a relative of some young fellow serving in its ranks.
The applause was impulsive, stormy,
persistent; the audience was demanding the young girl’s
recall; the noise they made became overwhelming, checking
the mediating music and baffling the next embarrassed
graduate, scheduled to read an essay, and who stood
there mute, her manuscript in her hand.
Finally the principal of the school
arose, went over to Dulcie, and exchanged a few words
with her. Then he came forward, hand lifted in
appeal for silence.
“The music and words of the
little song you have just heard,” he said, “were
written, I have just learned, by the mother of the
girl who sang them. They were written in Ireland
a number of years ago, when Irish regiments were sent
away for over-seas service. Neither words nor
song have ever been published. Miss Soane found
them among her mother’s effects.
“I thought the story of the
little song might interest you. For, somehow,
I feel-as I think you all feel-that
perhaps the day may come-may be near-when
the hearts of our women, too, shall be given to their
soldiers-sons, brothers, fathers-who
are ‘sailin’ away to the wars.’
But if that time comes-which God avert!-then
I know that every man here will do his duty....
And every woman.... And I know that:
’Tears that near blind you,
Your pride shall dry! -’”
He paused a moment:
“Miss Soane has prepared no
song to sing as an encore. In her behalf, and
in my own, I thank you for your appreciation.
Be kind enough to permit the exercises to proceed.”
And the graduating exercises continued.
Barres waited for Dulcie. She
came out among the first of those departing, walking
all alone in her reconstructed white dress, and carrying
his bouquet. When she caught sight of him, her
face became radiant and she made her way toward him
through the crowd, seeking his outstretched hand with
hers, clinging to it in a passion of gratitude and
emotion that made her voice tremulous:
“My bouquet-it is
so wonderful! I love every flower in it!
Thank you with all my heart. You are so kind
to have come-so kind to me-so
k-kind -”
“It is I who should be grateful,
Dulcie, for your charming little song,” he insisted.
“It was fascinating and exquisitely done.”
“Did you really like it?” she asked shyly.
“Indeed I did! And I quite
fell in love with your voice, too-with
that trick you seem to possess of conveying a hint
of tears through some little grace-note now and then....
And there were tears hidden in the words; and
in the melody, too.... And to think that your
mother wrote it!”
“Yes.”
After a short interval of silence he released her
hand.
“I have a taxi for you,” he said gaily.
“We’ll drive home in state.”
The girl flushed again with surprise and gratitude:
“Are-are you coming, too?”
“Certainly I’m going to
take you home. Don’t you belong to me?”
he demanded laughingly.
“Yes,” she said.
But her forced little smile made the low-voiced answer
almost solemn.
“Well, then!” he said
cheerfully. “Come along. What’s
mine I look after. We’ll have lunch together
in the studio, if you are too proud to pose for a
poor artist this afternoon.”
At this her sensitive face cleared
and she laughed happily.
“The pride of a high-school
graduate!” he commented, as he seated himself
beside her in the taxicab. “Can anything
equal it?”
“Yes.”
“What?”
“Her pride in your-friendship,”
she ventured.
Which unexpected reply touched and surprised him.
“You dear child!” he said;
“I’m proud of your friendship, too.
Nothing ought to make a man prouder than winning a
young girl’s confidence.”
“You are so kind,” she
sighed, touching the blossoms in her bouquet with
slender fingers that trembled a little. For she
would have offered him a flower from it had she found
courage; but it seemed presumptuous and she dropped
her hand into her lap again.
Aristocrates opened the door for them:
Selinda took her away.
Barres had ordered flowers for the
table. In the middle of it a doll stood, attired
in academic cap and gown, the Stars and Stripes in
one hand, in the other a green flag bearing a gold
harp.
When Dulcie came in she stopped short,
enchanted at the sight of the decorated table.
But when Aristocrates opened the kitchen door and her
three cats came trotting in, she was overcome.
For each cat wore a red, white and
blue cravat on which was pinned a silk shamrock; and
although Strindberg immediately keeled over on the
rug and madly attacked her cravat with her hind toes,
the general effect remained admirable.
Aristocrates seated Dulcie. Upon
her plate was the box containing chain and locket.
And the girl cast a swift, inquiring glance across
the centre flowers at Barres.
“Yes, it’s for you, Dulcie,” he
said.
She turned quite pale at sight of
the little gift. After a silence she leaned on
the table with both elbows, shading her face with her
hands.
He let her alone-let the
first tense moment in her youthful life ebb out of
it; nor noticed, apparently, the furtive and swift
touch of her best handkerchief to her closed eyes.
Aristocrates brought her a little
glass of frosted orange juice. After an interval,
not looking at Barres, she sipped it. Then she
took the locket and chain from the satin-lined box,
read the inscription, closed her lids for a second’s
silent ecstasy, opened them looking at him through
rapturous tears, and with her eyes still fixed on him
lifted the chain and fastened it around her slender
neck.
The luncheon then proceeded, the Prophet
gravely assisting from the vantage point of a neighbouring
chair, the Houri, more emotional, promenading earnestly
at the heels of Aristocrates. As for Strindberg,
she possessed neither manners nor concentration, and
she alternately squalled her desires for food or frisked
all over the studio, attempting complicated maneuvres
with every curtain-cord and tassel within reach.
Dulcie had found her voice again-a
low, uncertain, tremulous little voice when she tried
to thank him for the happiness he had given her-a
clearer, firmer voice when he dexterously led the conversation
into channels more familiar and serene.
They talked of the graduating exercises,
of her part in them, of her classmates, of education
in general.
She told him that since she was quite
young she had learned to play the piano by remaining
for an hour every day after school, and receiving
instruction from a young teacher who needed a little
extra pin money.
As for singing, she had had no instruction.
Her voice had never been tried, never been cultivated.
“We’ll have it tried some day,”
he said casually.
But Dulcie shook her head, explaining
that it was an expensive process and not to be thought
of.
“How did you pay for your piano lessons?”
he asked.
“I paid twenty-five cents an
hour. My mother left a little money for me when
I was a baby. I spent it all that way.”
“Every bit of it?”
“Yes. I had $500.
It lasted me seven years-from the time I
was ten to now.”
“Are you seventeen? You don’t
look it.”
“I know I don’t.
My teachers tell me that my mind is very quick but
my body is slow. It annoys me to be mistaken
for a child of fifteen. And I have to dress that
way, too, because my dresses still fit me and clothes
are very expensive.”
“Are they?”
Dulcie became confidential and loquacious:
“Oh, very. You don’t
know about girls’ clothes, I suppose. But
they cost a very great deal. So I’ve had
to wear out dresses I’ve had ever since I was
fourteen and fifteen. And so I can’t put
up my hair because it would make my dresses look ridiculous;
and that renders the situation all the worse-to
be obliged to go about with bobbed hair, you see?
There doesn’t seem to be any way out of it,”
she ended, with a despairing little laugh, “and
I was seventeen last February!”
“Cheer up! You’ll
grow old fast enough. And now you’re going
to have a jolly little salary as my model, and you
ought to be able to buy suitable clothes. Oughtn’t
you?”
She did not answer, and he repeated
the question. And drew from her, reluctantly,
that her father, so far, had absorbed what money she
had earned by posing.
A dull red gathered under the young
man’s cheek-bones, but he said carelessly:
“That won’t do. I’ll
talk it over with your father. I’m very
sure he’ll agree with me that you should bank
your salary and draw out what you need for your personal
expenses.”
Dulcie sat silent over her fruit and
bon-bons. Reaction from the keen emotions of
the day had, perhaps, begun to have their effect.
They rose and reseated themselves
on the sofa, where she sat in the corner among gorgeous
Chinese cushions, her reconstructed dress now limp
and shabby, the limp madonna lily hanging from
her breast.
It had been for her the happiest day
of her life. It had dawned the loneliest, but
under the magic of this man’s kindness the day
was ending like a day in Paradise.
To Dulcie, however, happiness was
less dependent upon receiving than upon giving; and
like all things feminine, mature and immature, she
desired to serve where her heart was enlisted-began
to experience the restless desire to give. What?
And as the question silently presented itself, she
looked up at Barres:
“Could I pose for you?”
“On a day like this! Nonsense, Dulcie.
This is your holiday.”
“I’d really like to-if you
want me -”
“No. Curl up here and take
a nap. Slip off your gown so you won’t muss
it and ask Selinda for a kimono. Because you’re
going to need your gown this evening,” he added
smilingly.
“Why? Please tell me why?”
“No. You’ve had enough
excitement. Tell Selinda to give you a kimono.
Then you can lie down in my room if you like.
Selinda will call you in plenty of time. And
after that I’ll tell you how we’re going
to bring your holiday to a gay conclusion.”
She seemed disinclined to stir, curled
up there, her eyes brilliant with curiosity, her lips
a trifle parted in a happy smile. She lay that
way for a few moments, looking up at him, her fingers
caressing the locket, then she sat up swiftly.
“Must I take a nap?”
“Certainly.”
She sprang to her feet, flashed past
him, and disappeared in the corridor.
“Don’t forget to wake me!” she called
back.
“I won’t forget!”
When he heard her voice again, conversing
with Selinda, he opened the studio door and went down
stairs.
Soane, rather the worse for wear,
was at the desk, and, standing beside him, was a one-eyed
man carrying two pedlar’s boxes under his arms.
They both looked around quickly when Barres appeared.
Before he reached the desk the one-eyed man turned
and walked out hastily into the street.
“Soane,” said Barres,
“I’ve one or two things to say to you.
The first is this: if you don’t stop drinking
and if you don’t keep away from Grogan’s,
you’ll lose your job here.”
“Musha, then, Misther Barres -”
“Wait a moment; I’m not
through. I advise you to stop drinking and to
keep away from Grogan’s. That’s the
first thing. And next, go on and graft as much
as you like, only warn your pedlar-friends to keep
away from Studio N. Do you understand?”
“F’r the love o’ God -”
“Cut out the injured innocence,
Soane. I’m telling you how to avoid trouble,
that’s all.”
“Misther Barres, sorr! As God sees me -”
“I can see you, too. I
want you to behave, Soane. This is friendly advice.
That one-eyed pedlar who just beat it has been bothering
me. Other pedlars come ringing at the studio
and interrupt and annoy me. You know the rules.
If the other tenants care to stand for it, all right.
But I’m through. Is that plain?”
“It is, sorr,” said the
unabashed delinquent. The faintest glimmer of
a grin came into his battered eyes. “Sorra
a wan o’ thim ever lays a hand to N bell
or I’ll have his life!”
“One thing more,” continued
Barres, smiling in spite of himself at the Irish of
it all. “I am paying Dulcie a salary -”
“Wisha then -”
“Stop! I tell you that
she’s in my employment on a salary. Don’t
ever touch a penny of it again.”
“Sure the child’s wages -”
“No, they don’t
belong to the father. Legally, perhaps, but the
law doesn’t suit me. So if you take the
money that she earns, and blow it in at Grogan’s,
I’ll have to discharge her because I won’t
stand for what you are doing.”
“Would you do that, Mr. Barres?”
“I certainly would.”
The Irishman scratched his curly head in frank perplexity.
“Dulcie needs clothes suitable
to her age,” continued Barres. “She
needs other things. I’m going to take charge
of her savings so don’t you attempt to tamper
with them. You wouldn’t do such a thing,
anyway, Soane, if this miserable drink habit hadn’t
got a hold on you. If you don’t quit, it
will down you. You’ll lose your place here.
You know that. Try to brace up. This is
a rotten deal you’re giving yourself and your
daughter.”
Soane wept easily. He wept now.
Tearful volubility followed-picturesque,
lit up with Hibernian flashes, then rambling, and a
hint of slyness in it which kept one weeping eye on
duty watching Barres all the while.
“All right; behave yourself,”
concluded Barres. “And, Soane, I shall
have three or four people to dinner and a little dancing
afterward. I want Dulcie to enjoy her graduating
dance.”
“Sure, Misther Barres, you’re
that kind to the child -”
“Somebody ought to be.
Do you know that there was nobody she knew to see
her graduate to-day, excepting myself?”
“Oh, the poor darling! Sure, I was that
busy -”
“Busy sleeping off a souse,”
said Barres drily. “And by the way, who
is that stolid, German-looking girl who alternates
with you here at the desk?”
“Miss Kurtz, sorr.”
“Oh. She seems stupid. Where did you
dig her up?”
“A fri’nd o’ mine riccominds her
highly, sorr.”
“Is that so? Who is he?
One of your German pedlar friends at Grogan’s?
Be careful, Soane. You Sinn Feiners are headed
for trouble.”
He turned and mounted the stairs.
Soane looked after him with an uneasy expression,
partly humorous.
“Ah, then, Mr. Barres,”
he said, “don’t be botherin’ afther
the likes of us poor Irish. Is there anny harrm
in a sup o’ beer av a Dootchman pays?”
Barres looked back at him:
“A one-eyed Dutchman?”
“Ah, g’wan, sorr, wid
yer hokin’ an’ jokin’! Is it
graft ye say? An’ how can ye say it, sorr,
knowin’ me as ye do, Misther Barres?”
The impudent grin on the Irishman’s
face was too much for the young man. He continued
to mount the stairs, laughing.