The double apartment in Dragon Court,
swept by such vagrant July breezes as wandered into
the heated city, had become lively with preparations
for departure.
Barres fussed about, collecting sketching
paraphernalia, choosing brushes, colours, canvases,
field kits, and costumes from his accumulated store,
and boxing them for transportation to Foreland Farms,
with the languid assistance of Aristocrates.
Westmore had only to ship a modelling
stand, a handful of sculptors’ tools, and a
ton or two of Plasteline, an evil-smelling composite
clay, very useful to work with.
But the storm centre of preparation
revolved around Dulcie. And Thessalie, enchanted
with her new rôle as adviser, bargainer, and purchaser,
and always attaching either Westmore or Barres to her
skirts when she and Dulcie sallied forth, was selecting
and accumulating a charming and useful little impedimenta.
For the young girl had never before owned a single
pretty thing, except those first unpremeditated gifts
of Barres’, and her happiness in these expeditions
was alloyed with trepidation at Thessalie’s extravagance,
and deep misgivings concerning her ultimate ability
to repay out of the salary allowed her as a private
model.
Intoxicated by ownership, she watched
Thessalie and Selinda laying away in her brand-new
trunk the lovely things which had been selected.
And one day, thrilled but bewildered, she went into
the studio, where Barres sat opening his mail, and
confessed her fear that only lifelong devotion in
his service could ever liquidate her overwhelming
financial obligations to him.
He had begun to laugh when she opened the subject:
“Thessa is managing it,”
he said. “It looks like a lot of expense,
but it isn’t. Don’t worry about it,
Sweetness.”
“I do worry -”
“Now, what a ridiculous thing
to do!” he interrupted. “It’s
merely advanced salary-your own money.
I told you to blow it; I’m responsible.
And I shall arrange it so you won’t notice that
you are repaying the loan. All I want you to
do is to have a good time about it.”
“I am having a good time-when
it doesn’t scare me to spend so much for -”
“Can’t you trust Thessa and me?”
The girl dropped to her knees beside
his chair in a swift passion of gratitude:
“Oh, I trust you-I
do -” But she could not utter
another word, and only pressed her face against his
arm in the tense silence of emotions which were too
powerful to express, too deep and keen to comprehend
or to endure.
And she sprang to her feet, flushed,
confused, turning from him as he retained one hand
and drew her back:
“Dear child,” he said,
in his pleasant voice, “this is really a very
little thing I do for you, compared to the help you
have given me by hard, unremitting, uncomplaining
physical labour and endurance. There is no harder
work than holding a pose for painter or sculptor-nothing
more cruelly fatiguing. Add to that your cheerfulness,
your willingness, your quiet, loyal, unobtrusive companionship-and
the freshness and inspiration and interest ever new
which you always awake in me-tell me, Sweetness,
are you really in my debt, or am I in yours?”
“I am in yours. You made me.”
“You always say that. It’s
foolish. You made yourself, Dulcie. You are
making yourself all the while. Why, good heavens!-if
you hadn’t had it in you, somehow, to ignore
your surroundings-take the school opportunities
offered you-close your eyes and ears to
the sights and sounds and habits of what was supposed
to be your home -”
He checked himself, thinking of Soane,
and his brogue, and his ignorance and his habits.
“How the devil you escaped it
all I can’t understand,” he muttered to
himself. “Even when I first knew you, there
was nothing resembling your-your father
about you-even if you were almost in rags!”
“I had been with the Sisters
until I went to high school,” she murmured.
“It makes a difference in a child’s mind
what is said and thought by those around her.”
“Of course. But, Dulcie,
it is usually the unfortunate rule that the lower
subtly contaminates the higher, even in casual association-that
the weaker gradually undermines the stronger until
it sinks to lesser levels. It has not been so
with you. Your clear mind remained untarnished,
your aspiration uncontaminated. Somewhere within
you had been born the quality of recognition; and
when your eyes opened on better things you recognised
them and did not forget after they disappeared -”
Again he ceased speaking, aware, suddenly,
that for the first time he was making the effort to
analyse this girl for his own information. Heretofore,
he had accepted her, sometimes curious, sometimes amused,
puzzled, doubtful, even uneasy as her mind revealed
itself by degrees and her character glimmered through
in little fitful gleams from that still hidden thing,
herself.
He began to speak again, before he
knew he was speaking-indeed, as though
within him somewhere another man were using his lips
and voice as vehicles:
“You know, Dulcie, it’s
not going to end-our companionship.
Your real life is all ahead of you; it’s already
beginning-the life which is properly yours
to shape and direct and make the most of.
“I don’t know what kind
of life yours is going to be; I know, merely, that
your career doesn’t lie down stairs in the superintendent’s
lodgings. And this life of ours here in the studio
is only temporary, only a phase of your development
toward clearer aims, higher aspiration, nobler effort.
“Tranquillity, self-respect,
intelligent responsibility, the happiness of personal
independence are the prizes: the path on which
you have started leads to the only pleasure man has
ever really known-labour.”
He looked down at her hand lying within
his own, stroked the slender fingers thoughtfully,
noticing the whiteness and fineness of them, now that
they had rested for three months from their patient
martyrdom in Soane’s service.
“I’ll talk to my mother
and sister about it,” he concluded. “All
you need is a start in whatever you’re going
to do in life. And you bet you’re going
to get it, Sweetness!”
He patted her hand, laughed, and released
it. She couldn’t speak just then-she
tried to as she stood there, head averted and grey
eyes brilliant with tears-but she could
not utter a sound.
Perhaps aware that her overcharged
heart was meddling with her voice, he merely smiled
as he watched her moving slowly back to Thessalie’s
room, where the magic trunk was being packed.
Then he turned to his letters again. One was
from his mother:
“Garry darling, anybody you bring
to Foreland is always welcome, as you know.
Your family never inquires of its members concerning
any guests they may see fit to invite. Bring
Miss Dunois and Dulcie Soane, your little model,
if you like. There’s a world of room
here; nobody ever interferes with anybody else.
You and your guests have two thousand acres to roam
about in, ride over, fish over, paint over.
There’s plenty for everybody to do, alone or
in company.
“Your father is well. He looks
little older than you. He’s fishing
most of the time, or busy reforesting
that sandy region beyond the
Foreland hills.
“Your sister and I ride as usual
and continue to improve the
breeds of the various domestic creatures
in which we are
interested and you are not.
“The pheasants are doing well this
year, and we’re beginning to
turn them out with their foster-mothers.
“Your father wishes me to tell you
and Jim Westmore that the trout
fishing is still fairly good, although
it was better, of course,
in May and June.
“The usual parties and social amenities
continue in Northbrook. Everybody included
in that colony seems to have arrived, also the usual
influx of guests, and there is much entertaining, tennis,
golf, dances-the invariable card always
offered there.
“Claire and I go enough to keep
from being too completely
forgotten. Your father seldom bothers
himself.
“Also, the war in Europe has made
us, at Foreland, disinclined to frivolity.
Others, too, of the older society in Northbrook are
more subdued than usual, devote themselves to quieter
pursuits. And those among us who have sons
of military age are prone to take life soberly in
these strange, oppressive days when even under sunny
skies in this land aloof from war, all are conscious
of the tension, the vague foreboding, the brooding
stillness that sometimes heralds storms.
“But all north-country folk do not
feel this way. The Gerhardts, for example,
are very gay with a house full of guests and overflowing
week-ends. The German Embassy, as always, is well
represented at Hohenlinden. Your father won’t
go there at all now. As for Claire and myself,
we await political ruptures before we indulge in
social ones. And it doesn’t look like war,
now that Von Tirpitz has been sent to Coventry.
“This, Garry darling, is my budget
of news. Bring your guests whenever you please.
You wouldn’t bring anybody you oughtn’t
to; your family is liberal, informal, pleasantly
indifferent, and always delightfully busy with its
individual manías and fads; so come as
soon as you please-sooner, please-because,
strange as it may seem, your mother would like to
see you.”
The letter was what he had expected.
But, as always, it made him very grateful.
“Wonderful mother I have,”
he murmured, opening another letter from his father:
“DEAR GARRET:
“Why the devil don’t you come
up? You’ve missed the cream of the
fishing. There’s nothing doing
in the streams now, but at sunrise
and toward evening they’re breaking
nicely in the lake.
“I’ve put in sixty thousand
three-year transplants this year on
that sandy stretch. They are white,
Scotch and Austrian. Your
children will enjoy them.
“The dogs are doing well. There’s
one youngster, the litter-tyrant
of Goldenrod’s brood, who ought
to make a field winner. But
there’s no telling. You and
I’ll have ’em out on native woodcock.
“There are some grouse, but we ought
to let them alone for the next few years. As
for the pheasants, they’re everywhere now, in
the brake, silver-grass, and weeds, peeping, scurrying,
creeping-cunning little beggars and growing
wild as quail.
“The horses are all right.
The crops promise well. Labour is devilish
scarce, and unsatisfactory when induced to accept
preposterous wages. What we need are coolies,
if these lazy, native slackers continue to handicap
the farmers who have to employ them. The American
‘hired man’! He makes me sick.
With few exceptions, he is incredibly stupid, ignorant,
unwilling, lazy.
“He’s sometimes a crook, too;
he takes pay for what he doesn’t do; he steals
your time; he cares absolutely nothing about your
interests or convenience; he will leave you stranded
in harvest time, without any notice at all; decent
treatment he does not appreciate; he’ll go
without a warning even, leaving your horses unfed,
your cattle unwatered, your crops rotting!
“He’s a degenerate relic of
those real men who broke up the primaeval wilderness.
He is the reason for high prices, the cause of agricultural
and industrial distress, the inert, sodden, fermenting,
indigestible mass in the belly of the body-politic!
“The American hired man! If
the country doesn’t spew him up, he’ll
kill it!
“Perhaps you’ve heard me before
on this subject, Garret. I’m
likely to air my views, you know.
“Well, my son, I look forward to
your arrival. I am glad that
Westmore is coming with you. As for
your other guests, they are
welcome, of course.
“Your father,
“REGINALD BARRES.”
He laughed; this letter so perfectly
revealed his father.
“Dad and his trout and his birds
and his pines and his eternally accursed hired help,”
he said to himself, “Dad and his monocle and
his immaculate attire-the finest man who
ever fussed!” And he laughed tenderly to himself
as he broke the seal of his sister’s brief note:
“Garry dear, I’ve been so
busy schooling horses and dancing that I’ve
had no time for letter writing. So glad you’re
coming at last. Bring along any good novels
you see. My best to Jim. Your guests can
be well mounted, if they ride. Father is wild
because there are more foxes than usual, but he’s
promised not to treat them as vermin, and the Northbrook
pack is to hunt our territory this season, after
all. Poor Dad! He is a brick, isn’t
he?”
“Affectionately,
“LEE.”
Barres pocketed his sheaf of letters
and began to stroll about the studio, whistling the
air of some recent musical atrocity.
Westmore, in his own room, composing
verses-a secret vice unsuspected by Barres-bade
him “Shut up!”-the whistling
no doubt ruining his metre.
But Barres, with politest intentions,
forgot himself so many times that the other man locked
up his “Lines to Thessalie when she was sewing
on a button for me,” and came into the studio.
“Where is she?” he inquired naively.
“Where’s who?” demanded
Barres, still sensitive over the increasing intimacy
of this headlong young man and Thessalie Dunois.
“Thessa.”
“In there fussing with Dulcie’s togs.
Go ahead in, if you care to.”
“Is your stuff packed up?”
Barres nodded:
“Is yours?”
“Most of it. How many trunks is Thessa
taking?”
“How do I know?” said
Barres, with a trace of irritation. “She’s
at liberty to take as many as she likes.”
Westmore didn’t notice the irritation;
his mind was entirely occupied by Thessalie-an
intellectual condition which had recently become rather
painfully apparent to Barres, and, doubtless, equally
if not painfully apparent to Thessalie herself.
Probably Dulcie noticed it, too, but
gave no sign, except when the serious grey eyes stole
toward Barres at times, as though vaguely apprehensive
that he might not be entirely in sympathy with Westmore’s
enchanted state of mind.
As for Thessalie, though Westmore’s
naïve and increasing devotion could scarcely escape
her notice, it was utterly impossible to tell how
it affected her-whether, indeed, it made
any impression at all.
For there seemed to be no difference
in her attitude toward these two men; it was plain
enough that she liked them both-that she
believed in them implicitly, was happy with them,
tranquil now in her new security, and deeply penetrated
with gratitude for their kindness to her in her hour
of need.
“Come on in,” coaxed Westmore,
linking his arm in Barres’, and counting on
the latter to give him countenance.
The arm of Barres remained rigid and
unresponsive, but his legs were reluctantly obliging
and carried him along with Westmore to what had been
his own room before Thessalie had installed herself
there.
And there she was on her knees, amid
a riot of lingerie and feminine effects, while Dulcie
lovingly smoothed out and folded object after object
which Selinda placed between layers of pale blue tissue
paper in the trunks.
“How are things going, Thessa?”
inquired Westmore, in the hearty, cheerful voice of
the intruder who hopes to be made welcome. But
her attitude was discouraging.
“You know you are only in the
way,” she said. “Drive him out, Dulcie!”
Dulcie laughed and looked at them
both with shyly friendly eyes:
“Is my trousseau not beautiful?”
she asked. “If you’ll step outside
I’ll put on a hat and gown for you -”
“Oh, Dulcie!” protested
Thessalie, “I want you to dawn upon them, and
a dress rehearsal would spoil it all!”
Westmore tiptoed around amid lovely,
frail mounds of fabrics, until ordered to an empty
chair and forbidden further motion. It was all
the same to him, so long as his fascinated gaze could
rest on Thessalie.
Which further annoyed Barres, and
he backed out and walked to the studio, considerably
disturbed in his mind.
“That man,” he thought,
“is making an ass of himself, hanging around
Thessa like a half-witted child. She can’t
help noticing it, but she doesn’t seem to do
anything about it. I don’t know why she
doesn’t squelch him-unless she likes
it -” But the idea was so unpleasant
to Barres that he instantly abandoned that train of
thought and prepared for himself a comfortable nest
on the lounge, a pipe, and an uncut volume of flimsy
summer fiction.
In the middle of these somewhat sullen
preparations, there came a ring at his studio door.
Only the superintendent or strangers rang that bell
as a rule, and Barres went to his desk, slipped his
loaded pistol into his coat pocket, then walked to
the door and opened it.
Soane stood there, his face a shiny-red
from drink, his legs steady enough. As usual
when drunk, he was inclined to be garrulous.
“What’s the matter?” inquired Barres
in a low voice.
“Wisha, Misther Barres, sorr, av ye’re
not too busy f’r to -”
“S-h-h! Don’t bellow at the top of
your voice. Wait a moment!”
He picked up his hat and came out
into the corridor, closing the studio door behind
him so that Dulcie, if she appeared on the scene,
should not be humiliated before the others.
Soane began again, but the other cut him short:
“Don’t start talking here,”
he said. “Come down to your own quarters
if you’re going to yell your head off!”
And he led the way, impatiently, down the stairs,
past the desk where Miss Kurtz sat stolid and mottled-faced
as a lump of uncooked sausage, and into Soane’s
quarters.
“Now, you listen to me first!”
he said when Soane had entered and he had closed the
door behind them. “You keep out of my apartment
and out of Dulcie’s way, too, when you’re
drunk! You’re not going to last very long
on this job; I can see that plainly -”
“Faith, sorr, you’re right!
I’m fired out entirely this blessed minute!”
“You’ve been discharged?”
“I have that, sorr!”
“What for? Drunkenness?”
“Th’ divil do I know phwat
for! Wisha, then, Misther Barres, is there anny
harrm av a man -”
“Yes, there is! I told
you Grogan’s would do the trick for you.
Now you’re discharged without a reference, I
suppose.”
Soane smiled airily:
“Misther Barres, dear, don’t
lave that worrit ye! I want no riference from
anny landlord. Sure, landlords is tyrants, too!
An’ phwat the divil should I be wantin’ -”
“What are you going to do then?”
Soane hooked both thumbs into the
armholes of his vest, and swaggered about the room:
“God bless yer kind heart, sorr,
I’ve a-plenty to do and more for good measure!”
He came up to confront Barres, and laid a mysterious
finger alongside his over-red nose and began to brag:
“There’s thim in high
places as looks afther the likes o’ me, sorr.
There’s thim that thrusts me, thim that depinds
on me -”
“Have you another job?”
Soane’s scorn was superb:
“A job is ut? Misther
Barres, dear, I was injuced f’r to accept a
position of grave importance!”
“Here in town?”
“Somewhere around tin thousand
miles away or thereabouts,” remarked Soane airily.
“Do you mean to take Dulcie with you?”
“Musha, then, Misther Barres,
’tis why I come to ye above f’r to ax ye
will ye look afther Dulcie av I go away on me
thravels?”
“Yes, I will!... Where
are you going? What is all this stuff you’re
talking, anyway -”
“Shtuff? God be good to
you, it’s no shtuff I talk, Misther Barres!
Sure, can’t a decent man thravel f’r to
see the wurruld as God made it an’ no harrm
in -”
“Be careful what company you
travel in,” said Barres, looking at him intently.
“You have been travelling around New York in
very suspicious company, Soane. I know more about
it than you think I do. And it wouldn’t
surprise me if you have a run-in with the police some
day.”
“The po-lice, sorr!
Arrah, then, me fût in me hand an’ me tongue
in me cheek to the likes o’ thim! An’
lave them go hoppin’ afther me av they
like. The po-lice is ut! Open y’r
two ears, asthore, an’ listen here!-there’ll
be nary po-lice, no nor constabulary, nor excise,
nor landlords the day that Ireland flies her flag
on Dublin Castle! Sure, that will be the grand
sight, with all the rats a-runnin’, an’
all the hurryin’ and scurryin’ an’
the futther and mutther -”
“What are you gabbling
about, Soane? What’s all this boasting
about?”
“Gabble is ut? Is
it boastin’ I am? Sorra the day!
An’ there do be grand gintlemen and gay ladies
to-day that shall look for a roof an’ a sup
o’ tay this day three weeks, when th’ fût
o’ the tyrant is lifted from the neck of Ireland
an’ the landlords is runnin’ for their
lives -”
“I thought so!” exclaimed Barres, disgusted.
“An’ phwat was ye thinkin’, sorr?”
“That your German friends at
Grogan’s are stirring up trouble among the Irish.
What’s all this nonsense, anyway? Are they
trying to persuade you to follow the old Fenian tactics
and raid Canada? Or is it an armed expedition
to the Irish coast? You’d better be careful;
they’ll only lock you up here, but it’s
a hanging matter over there!”
“Is it so?” grinned Soane.
“It surely is.”
“Well, then, be aisy, Misther
Barres, dear. Av there’s hangin’
to be done this time, ’twill not be thim as
wears the green that hangs!”
Barres slowly shook his head:
“This is German work. You’re sticking
your neck into the noose.”
“Lave the noose for the Clan-na-Gael
to pull, sorr, an’ ’twill shqueeze no
Irish neck!”
“You’re a fool, Soane!
These Germans are exploiting such men as you.
Where’s your common sense? Can’t you
see you’re playing a German game? What
do they care what becomes of you or of Ireland?
All they want is for you to annoy England at any cost.
And the cost is death! Do you dream for an instant
that you and your friends stand a ghost of a chance
if you are crazy enough to invade Canada? Do you
suppose it possible to land an expedition on the Irish
coast?”
Soane deliberately winked at him.
Then he burst into laughter and stood rocking there
on heel and toe while his mirth lasted.
But the inevitable Celtic reaction
presently sobered him and switched him into a sombre
recapitulation of Erin’s wrongs. And this
tragic inventory brought the inevitable tears in time.
And Woe awoke in him the memory of the personal and
pathetic.
The world had dealt him a wretched
hand. He had sat in a crooked game from the beginning.
The cards had been stacked; the dice were cogged.
And now he meant to make the world disgorge-pay
up the living that it owed him.
Barres attempted to stem the flow
of volubility, but it instantly became a torrent.
Nobody knew the sorrows of Ireland
or of the Irish. Tyranny had marked them for
its own. As for himself-once a broth
of a boy-he had been torn from the sacred
precincts of his native shanty and consigned to a
loveless, unhappy marriage.
Then Barres listened without interrupting.
But the woes of Soane became vague at that point.
Veiled references to being “thrampled on,”
to “th’ big house,” to “thim
that was high an’ shtiff-necked,” abounded
in an unconnected way. There was something about
being a servant at the fireside of his own wife-a
footstool on the hearth of his own home-other
incomprehensible plaints and mutterings, many scalding
tears, a blub or two, and a sort of whining silence.
Then Barres said:
“Who is Dulcie, Soane?”
The man, seated now on his bed, lifted
a congested and stupid visage as though he had not
comprehended.
“Is Dulcie your daughter?” demanded Barres.
Soane’s blue eyes wandered wildly in an agony
of recollection:
“Did I say she was not,
sorr?” he faltered. “Av I told
ye that, may the saints forgive me -”
“Is it true?”
“Ah, what was I afther sayin’, Misther -”
“Never mind what you said or
left unsaid! I want to ask you another question.
Who was Eileen Fane?”
Soane bounded to his feet, his blue eyes ablaze:
“Holy Mother o’ God! What have I
said!”
“Was Eileen Fane your wife?”
“Did I say her blessed name!”
shouted Soane. “Sorra the sup I tuk
that loosed the tongue o’ me this cursed day!
’Twas the dommed whishkey inside o’ me
that told ye that-not me-not
Larry Soane! Wurra the day I said it! An’
listen, now, f’r the love o’ God!
Take pride to yourself, sorr, for all the goodness
ye done to Dulcie.
“An’ av I go,
and I come no more to vex her, I thank God ’tis
in a gintleman’s hands the child do be -”
He choked; his marred hands dropped by his side, and
he stared dumbly at Barres for a moment. Then:
“Av I come no more, will ye guard her?”
“Yes.”
“Will ye do fair by her, Misther Barres?”
“Yes.”
“Call God to hear ye say ut!”
“So-help me-God.”
Soane dropped on to the bed and took
his battered face and curly head between his hands.
“I’ll say no more,”
he said thickly. “Nor you nor she shall
know no more. An’ av ye have
guessed it out, kape it locked in. I’ll
say no more.... I was good to her-in
me own way. But ye cud see-anny wan
with half a cock-eye cud see.... I was-honest-with
her mother.... She made the bargain....
I tuk me pay an’ held me tongue.... ’Tis
whishkey talks, not me.... I tuk me pay an’
I kept to the bargain.... Wan year.... Then-she
was dead of it-like a flower, sorr-like
the rose ye pull an’ lave lyin’ in the
sun.... Like that, sorr-in a year....
An’ I done me best be Dulcie.... I done
me best. An’ held to the bargain....
An’ done me best be Dulcie-little
Dulcie-the wee baby that had come at last-her
baby-Dulcie Fane!...”