Like a country small boy waiting for
the coming of his city cousin, who will surely have
new ways of playing Indians, Carl prepared to see
Ruth Winslow and her background. What was she?
Who? Where? He pictured her as dwelling
in everything from a millionaire’s imitation
chateau, with footmen and automatic elevators, to
a bachelor girl’s flat in an old-fashioned red-brick
Harlem tenement. But more than that: What
would she herself be like against that background?
Monday he could think of nothing but
the joy of having discovered a playmate. The
secret popped out from behind everything he did.
Tuesday he was worried by finding himself unable to
remember whether Ruth’s hair was black or dark
brown. Yet he could visualize Olive’s ash-blond.
Why? Wednesday afternoon, when he was sleepy in
the office after eating too much beefsteak and kidney
pie, drinking too much coffee, and smoking too many
cigarettes, at lunch with Mr. VanZile, when he was
tortured by the desire to lay his head on his arms
and yield to drowsiness, he was suddenly invaded by
a fear that Ruth was snobbish. It seemed to him
that he ought to do something about it immediately.
The rest of the week he merely waited
to see what sort of person the totally unknown Miss
Ruth Winslow might be. His most active occupation
outside the office was feeling guilty over not telephoning
to Gertie.
At 3.30 P.M., Sunday, he was already
incased in funereal morning-clothes and warning himself
that he must not arrive at Miss Winslow’s before
five. His clothes were new, stiff as though they
belonged to a wax dummy. Their lines were straight
and without individuality. He hitched his shoulders
about and kept going to the mirror to inspect the
fit of the collar. He repeatedly re brushed his
hair, regarding the unclean state of his military brushes
with disgust. About six times he went to the
window to see if it had started to snow.
At ten minutes to four he sternly
jerked on his coat and walked far north of Ninety-second
Street, then back.
He arrived at a quarter to five, but
persuaded himself that this was a smarter hour of
arrival than five.
Ruth Winslow’s home proved to
be a rather ordinary three-story-and-basement gray
stone dwelling, with heavy Russian net curtains at
the broad, clear-glassed windows of the first floor,
and an attempt to escape from the stern drabness of
the older type of New York houses by introducing a
box-stoop and steps with a carved stone balustrade,
at the top of which perched a meek old lion of 1890,
with battered ears and a truly sensitive stone nose.
A typical house of the very well-to-do yet not wealthy
“upper middle class”; a house predicating
one motor-car, three not expensive maids, brief European
tours, and the best preparatory schools and colleges
for the sons.
A maid answered the door and took
his card — a maid in a frilly apron and black
uniform — neither a butler nor a slatternly
Biddy. In the hall, as the maid disappeared up-stairs,
Carl had an impression of furnace heat and respectability.
Rather shy, uncomfortable, anxious to be acceptable,
warning himself that as a famous aviator he need not
be in awe of any one, but finding that the warning
did not completely take, he drew off his coat and
gloves and, after a swift inspection of his tie, gazed
about with more curiosity than he had ever given to
any other house.
For all the stone lion in front, this
was quite the old-line English-basement house, with
the inevitable front and back parlors — though
here they were modified into drawing-room and dining-room.
The walls of the hall were decked with elaborate,
meaningless scrolls in plaster bas-relief, echoed by
raised circles on the ceiling just above the hanging
chandelier, which was expensive and hideous, a clutter
of brass and knobby red-and-blue glass. The floor
was of hardwood in squares, dark and richly polished,
highly self-respecting — a floor that assumed
civic responsibility from a republican point of view,
and a sound conservative business established since
1875 or 1880. By the door was a huge Japanese
vase, convenient either for depositing umbrellas or
falling over in the dark. Then, a long mirror
in a dull-red mahogany frame, and a table of mahogany
so refined that no one would ever dream of using it
for anything more useful than calling-cards.
It might have been the table by the king’s bed,
on which he leaves his crown on a little purple cushion
at night. Solid and ostentatious.
The drawing-room, to the left, was
dark and still and unsympathetic and expensive; a
vista of brocade-covered French-gilt chairs and a
marquetry table and a table of onyx top, on which was
one book bound in ooze calf, and one vase; cream-colored
heavy carpet and a crystal chandelier; fairly meretricious
paintings of rocks, and thatched cottages, and ragged
newsboys with faces like Daniel Webster, all of them
in large gilt frames protected by shadow-boxes.
In a corner was a cabinet of gilt and glass, filled
with Dresden-china figurines and toy tables and a
carven Swiss musical powder-box. The fireplace
was of smooth, chilly white marble, with an ormolu
clock on the mantelpiece, and a fire-screen painted
with Watteau shepherds and shepherdesses, making silken
unreal love and scandalously neglecting silky unreal
sheep. By the hearth were shiny fire-irons which
looked as though they had never been used. The
whole room looked as though it had never been used — except
during the formal calls of overdressed matrons with
card-cases and prejudices. The one human piece
of furniture in the room, a couch soft and slightly
worn, on which lovers might have sat and small boys
bounced, was trying to appear useless, too, under its
row of stiff satin cushions with gold cords....
Well-dusted chairs on which no one wished to sit;
expensive fireplace that never shone; prized pictures
with less imagination than the engravings on a bond — that
drawing-room had the soul of a banker with side-whiskers.
Carl by no means catalogued all the
details, but he did get the effect of ingrowing propriety.
It is not certain that he thought the room in bad
taste. It is not certain that he had any artistic
taste whatever; or that his attack upon the pretensions
of authors had been based on anything more fundamental
than a personal irritation due to having met blatant
camp-followers of the arts. And it is certain
that one of his reactions as he surveyed the abject
respectability of that room was a slight awe of the
solidity of social position which it represented,
and which he consciously lacked. But, whether
from artistic instinct or from ignorance, he was sure
that into the room ought to blow a sudden great wind,
with the scent of forest and snow. He shook his
head when the maid returned, and he followed her up-stairs.
Surely a girl reared here would never run away and
play with him.
He heard lively voices from the library
above. He entered a room to be lived in and be
happy in, with a jolly fire on the hearth and friendly
people on a big, brown davenport. Ruth Winslow
smiled at him from behind the Colonial silver and
thin cups on the tea-table, and as he saw her light-filled
eyes, saw her cock her head gaily in welcome, he was
again convinced that he had found a playmate.
A sensation of being pleasantly accepted
warmed him as she cried, “So glad — ”
and introduced him, gave him tea and a cake with nuts
in it. From a wing-chair Carl searched the room
and the people. There were two paintings — a
pale night sea and an arching Japanese bridge under
slanting rain, both imaginative and well-done.
There was a mahogany escritoire, which might have
been stiff but was made human by scattered papers
on the great blotter and books crammed into the shelves.
Other books were heaped on a table as though people
had been reading them. Later he found how amazingly
they were assorted — the latest novel of
Robert Chambers beside H. G. Wells’s First
and Last Things; a dusty expensive book on Italian
sculpture near a cheap reprint of Dodo.
The chairs were capacious, the piano
a workmanlike upright, not dominating the room, but
ready for music; and in front of the fire was an English
setter, an aristocrat of a dog, with the light glittering
in his slowly waving tail. The people fitted into
the easy life of the room. They were New-Yorkers
and, unlike over half of the population, born there,
considering New York a village where one knows everybody
and remembers when Fourteenth Street was the shopping-center.
Olive Dunleavy was shinily present, her ash-blond
hair in a new coiffure. She was arguing with
a man of tight morning-clothes and a high-bred face
about the merits of “Parsifal,” which,
Olive declared, no one ever attended except as a matter
of conscience.
“Now, Georgie,” she said,
“issa Georgie, you shall have your opera — and
you shall jolly well have it alone, too!” Olive
was vivid about it all, but Carl saw that she was
watching him, and he was shy as he wondered what Ruth
had told her.
Olive’s brother, Philip Dunleavy,
a clear-faced, slender, well-bathed boy of twenty-six,
with too high a forehead, with discontent in his face
and in his thin voice, carelessly well-dressed in a
soft-gray suit and an impressionistic tie, was also
inspecting Carl, while talking to a pretty, commonplace,
finishing-school-finished girl. Carl instantly
disliked Philip Dunleavy, and was afraid of his latent
sarcasm.
Indeed, Carl felt more and more that
beneath the friendliness with which he was greeted
there was no real welcome as yet, save possibly on
the part of Ruth. He was taken on trial.
He was a Mr. Ericson, not any Mr. Ericson in particular.
Ruth, while she poured tea, was laughing
with a man and a girl. Carl himself was part
of a hash-group — an older woman who seemed
to know Rome and Paris better than New York, and might
be anything from a milliner to a mondaine; a
keen-looking youngster with tortoise-shell spectacles;
finally, Ruth’s elder brother, Mason J. Winslow,
Jr., a tall, thin, solemn, intensely well-intentioned
man of thirty-seven, with a long, clean-shaven face,
and a long, narrow head whose growing baldness was
always spoken of as a result of his hard work.
Mason J. Winslow, Jr., spoke hesitatingly, worried
over everything, and stood for morality and good business.
He was rather dull in conversation, rather kind in
manner, and accomplished solid things by unimaginatively
sticking at them. He didn’t understand people
who did not belong to a good club.
Carl contributed a few careful platitudes
to a frivolous discussion of whether it would not
be advisable to solve the woman-suffrage question
by taking the vote away from men and women both and
conferring it on children. Mason Winslow ambled
to the big table for a cigarette, and Carl pursued
him. While they stood talking about “the
times are bad,” Carl was spying upon Ruth, and
the minute her current group wandered off to the davenport
he made a dash at the tea-table and got there before
Olive’s brother, Philip Dunleavy, who was obviously
manoeuvering like himself. Philip gave him a covert
“Who are you, fellow?” glance, took a
cake, and retired.
From his wicker chair facing Ruth’s,
Carl said, gloomily, “It isn’t done.”
“Yes,” said Ruth, “I
know it, but still some very smart people are doing
it this season.”
“But do you think the woman
that writes ‘What the man will wear’ in
the theater programs would stand for it?”
“Not,” gravely considered
Ruth, “if there were black stitching on the
dress-glove. Yet there is some authority for frilled
shirts.”
“You think it might be considered then?”
“I will not come between you and your haberdasher,
Mr. Ericson.”
“This is a foolish conversation.
But since you think the better classes do it — gee!
it’s getting hard for me to keep up this kind
of ‘Dolly Dialogue.’ What I wanted
to do was to request you to give me concisely but
fully a sketch of ‘Who is Miss Ruth Winslow?’
and save me from making any pet particular breaks.
And hereafter, I warn you, I’m going to talk
like my cousin, the carpet-slipper model.”
“Name, Ruth Winslow. Age,
between twenty and thirty. Father, Mason Winslow,
manufacturing contractor for concrete. Brothers,
Mason Winslow, Jr., whose poor dear head is getting
somewhat bald, as you observe, and Bobby Winslow,
ne’er-do-weel, who is engaged in subverting
discipline at medical school, and who dances divinely.
My mother died three years ago. I do nothing
useful, but I play a good game of bridge and possess
a voice that those as know pronounce passable.
I have a speaking knowledge of French, a reading knowledge
of German, and a singing knowledge of Italian.
I am wearing an imported gown, for which the House
of Winslow will probably never pay. I live in
this house, and am Episcopalian — not so much
High Church as highly infrequent church. I regard
the drawing-room down-stairs as the worst example
of late-Victorian abominations in my knowledge, but
I shall probably never persuade father to change it
because Mason thinks it is sacred to the past.
My ambition in life is to be catty to the Newport
set after I’ve married an English diplomat with
a divine mustache. Never having met such a personage
outside of Tatler and Vogue, I can’t
give you very many details regarding him. Oh yes,
of course, he’ll have to play a marvelous game
of polo and have a chateau in Provence and also a
ranch in Texas, where I shall wear riding-breeches
and live next to Nature and have a Chinese cook in
blue silk. I think that’s my whole history.
Oh, I forgot. I play at the piano and am very
ignorant, and completely immersed in the worst traditions
of the wealthy Micks of the Upper West Side, and I
always pretend that I live here instead of on the
Upper East Side because ‘the air is better.’”
“What is this Upper West Side? Is it a
state of mind?”
“Indeed it is not. It’s
a state of pocketbook. The Upper West Side is
composed entirely of people born in New York who want
to be in society, whatever that is, and can’t
afford to live on Fifth Avenue. You know everybody
and went to school with everybody and played in the
Park with everybody, and mostly your papa is in wholesale
trade and haughty about people in retail. You
go to Europe one summer and to the Jersey coast the
next. All your clothes and parties and weddings
and funerals might be described as ‘elegant.’
That’s the Upper West Side. Now the dread
truth about you.... Do you know, after the unscrupulous
way in which you followed up a mere chance introduction
at a tea somewhere, I suspect you to be a well-behaved
young man who leads an entirely blameless life.
Or else you’d never dare to jump the fence and
come and play in my back yard when all the other boys
politely knock at the front door and get sent home.”
“Me — well, I’m
a wage-slave of the VanZile Motor people, in charge
of the Touricar department. Age, twenty-eight — almost.
Habits, all bad.... No, I’ll tell you.
I’m one of those stern, silent men of granite
you read about, and only my man knows the human side
of me, because all the guys on Wall Street tremble
in me presence.”
“Yes, but then how can you belong
to the Blue Bowl Sodality?”
“Um, Yes — I’ve
got it. You must have read novels in which the
stern, silent man of granite has a secret tenderness
in his heart, and he keeps the band of the first cigar
he ever smoked in a little safe in the wall, and the
first dollar he ever made in a frame — that’s
me.”
“Of course! The cigar was
given him by his flaxen-haired sweetheart back in
Jenkins Corners, and in the last chapter he goes back
and marries her.”
“Not always, I hope!”
Of what Carl was thinking is not recorded. “Well,
as a matter of fact, I’ve been a fairly industrious
young man of granite the last few months, getting
out the Touricar.”
“What is a Touricar? It
sounds like an island inhabited by cannibals, exports
hemp and cocoanut, see pink dot on the map, nor’
by nor’east of Mogador.”
Carl explained.
“I’m terribly interested,”
said Ruth. (But she made it sound as though she really
was.) “I think it’s so wonderful....
I want to go off tramping through the Berkshires.
I’m so tired of going to the same old places.”
“Some time, when you’re
quite sure I’m an estimable young Y. M. C. A.
man, I’m going to try to persuade you to come
out for a real tramp.”
She seemed to be considering the idea,
not seriously, but —
Philip Dunleavy eventuated.
For some time Philip had been showing
signs of interest in Ruth and Carl. Now he sauntered
to the table, begged for another cup of tea, said
agreeable things in regard to putting orange marmalade
in tea, and calmly established himself. Ruth
turned toward him.
Carl had fancied that there was, for
himself, in Ruth’s voice, something more friendly,
in her infectious smile something more intimate than
she had given the others, but when she turned precisely
the same cheery expression upon Philip, Carl seemed
to have lost something which he had trustingly treasured
for years. He was the more forlorn as Olive Dunleavy
joined them, and Ruth, Philip, and Olive discussed
the engagement of one Mary Meldon. Olive recalled
Miss Meldon as she had been in school days at the
Convent of the Sacred Heart. Philip told of her
flirtations at the old Long Beach Hotel.
The names of New York people whom
they had always known; the names of country clubs — Baltusrol
and Meadow Brook and Peace Waters; the names of streets,
with a sharp differentiation between Seventy-fourth
Street and Seventy-fifth Street; Durland’s Riding
Academy, the Rink of a Monday morning, and other souvenirs
of a New York childhood; the score of the last American
polo team and the coming dances — these things
shut Carl out as definitely as though he were a foreigner.
He was lonely. He disliked Phil Dunleavy’s
sarcastic references. He wanted to run away.
Ruth seemed to realize that Carl was
shut out. Said she to Phil Dunleavy: “I
wish you could have seen Mr. Ericson save my life last
Sunday. I had an experience.”
“What was that?” asked
the man whom Olive called “Georgie,” joining
the tea-table set.
The whole room listened as Ruth recounted
the trip to Chinatown, Mrs. Salisbury’s party,
and the hero who had once been a passenger in an aeroplane.
Throughout she kept turning toward
Carl. It seemed to reunite him to the company.
As she closed, he said:
“The thing that amused me about
the parlor aviator was his laying down the law that
the Atlantic will be crossed before the end of 1913,
and his assumption that we’ll all have aeroplanes
in five years. I know from my own business, the
automobile business, about how much such prophecies
are worth.”
“Don’t you think the Atlantic
will be crossed soon?” asked the keen-looking
man with the tortoise-shell spectacles.
Phil Dunleavy broke in with an air
of amused sophistication: “I think the
parlor aviator was right. Really, you know, aviation
is too difficult a subject for the layman to make
any predictions about — either what it can
or can’t do.”
“Oh yes,” admitted Carl;
and the whole room breathed. “Oh yes.”
Dunleavy went on in his thin, overbred,
insolent voice, “Now I have it on good authority,
from a man who’s a member of the Aero Club, that
next year will be the greatest year aviation has ever
known, and that the Wrights have an aeroplane up their
sleeve with which they’ll cross the Atlantic
without a stop, during the spring of 1914 at the very
latest.”
“That’s unfortunate, because
the aviation game has gone up completely in this country,
except for hydro-aeroplaning and military aviation,
and possibly it never will come back,” said Carl,
a hint of pique in his voice.
“What is your authority for
that?” Phil turned a large, bizarre ring round
on his slender left little finger and the whole room
waited, testing this positive-spoken outsider.
“Well,” drawled Carl,
“I have fairly good authority. Walter MacMonnies,
for instance, and he is probably the best flier in
the country to-day, except for Lincoln Beachey.”
“Oh yes, he’s a good flier,”
said Phil, contemptuously, with a shadowy smile for
Ruth. “Still, he’s no better than
Aaron Solomons, and he isn’t half so great a
flier as that chap with the same surname as your own,
Hawk Ericson, whom I myself saw coming up the Jersey
coast when he won that big race to New York....
You see, I’ve been following this aviation pretty
closely.”
Carl saw Ruth’s head drop an
inch, and her eyes close to a slit as she inspected
him with sudden surprise. He knew that it had
just occurred to her who he was. Their eyes exchanged
understanding. “She does get things,”
he thought, and said, lightly:
“Well, I honestly hate to take
the money, Mr. Dunleavy, but I’m in a position
to know that MacMonnies is a better flier to-day than
Ericson is, be — ”
“But see here — ”
“ — because I happen to be
Hawk Ericson.”
“What a chump I am!” groaned
the man in tortoise-shell spectacles. “Of
course! I remember your picture, now.”
Phil was open-mouthed. Ruth laughed.
The rest of the room gasped. Mason Winslow, long
and bald, was worrying over the question of How to
Receive Aviators at Tea.
And Carl was shy as a small boy caught
stealing the jam.