Since the days in which Aileen had
been left more or less lonely by Cowperwood, however,
no two individuals had been more faithful in their
attentions than Taylor Lord and Kent McKibben.
Both were fond of her in a general way, finding her
interesting physically and temperamentally; but, being
beholden to the magnate for many favors, they were
exceedingly circumspect in their attitude toward her,
particularly during those early years in which they
knew that Cowperwood was intensely devoted to her.
Later they were not so careful.
It was during this latter period that
Aileen came gradually, through the agency of these
two men, to share in a form of mid-world life that
was not utterly dull. In every large city there
is a kind of social half world, where artists and
the more adventurous of the socially unconventional
and restless meet for an exchange of things which cannot
be counted mere social form and civility. It
is the age-old world of Bohemia. Hither resort
those “accidentals” of fancy that
make the stage, the drawing-room, and all the schools
of artistic endeavor interesting or peculiar.
In a number of studios in Chicago such as those of
Lane Cross and Rhees Crier, such little circles were
to be found. Rhees Crier, for instance, a purely
parlor artist, with all the airs, conventions, and
social adaptability of the tribe, had quite a following.
Here and to several other places by turns Taylor Lord
and Kent McKibben conducted Aileen, both asking and
obtaining permission to be civil to her when Cowperwood
was away.
Among the friends of these two at
this time was a certain Polk Lynde, an interesting
society figure, whose father owned an immense reaper
works, and whose time was spent in idling, racing,
gambling, socializinganything, in short,
that it came into his head to do. He was tall,
dark, athletic, straight, muscular, with a small dark
mustache, dark, black-brown eyes, kinky black hair,
and a fine, almost military carriagewhich
he clothed always to the best advantage. A clever
philanderer, it was quite his pride that he did not
boast of his conquests. One look at him, however,
by the initiated, and the story was told. Aileen
first saw him on a visit to the studio of Rhees Grier.
Being introduced to him very casually on this occasion,
she was nevertheless clearly conscious that she was
encountering a fascinating man, and that he was fixing
her with a warm, avid eye. For the moment she
recoiled from him as being a little too brazen in his
stare, and yet she admired the general appearance
of him. He was of that smart world that she
admired so much, and from which now apparently she
was hopelessly debarred. That trig, bold air
of his realized for her at last the type of man, outside
of Cowperwood, whom she would prefer within limits
to admire her. If she were going to be “bad,”
as she would have phrased it to herself, she would
be “bad” with a man such as he.
He would be winsome and coaxing, but at the same time
strong, direct, deliciously brutal, like her Frank.
He had, too, what Cowperwood could not have, a certain
social air or swagger which came with idleness, much
loafing, a sense of social superiority and securitya
devil-may-care insouciance which recks little of other
people’s will or whims.
When she next saw him, which was several
weeks later at an affair of the Courtney Tabors, friends
of Lord’s, he exclaimed:
“Oh yes. By George!
You’re the Mrs. Cowperwood I met several weeks
ago at Rhees Grier’s studio. I’ve
not forgotten you. I’ve seen you in my
eye all over Chicago. Taylor Lord introduced
me to you. Say, but you’re a beautiful
woman!”
He leaned ingratiatingly, whimsically, admiringly
near.
Aileen realized that for so early
in the afternoon, and considering the crowd, he was
curiously enthusiastic. The truth was that because
of some rounds he had made elsewhere he was verging
toward too much liquor. His eye was alight,
his color coppery, his air swagger, devil-may-care,
bacchanal. This made her a little cautious; but
she rather liked his brown, hard face, handsome mouth,
and crisp Jovian curls. His compliment was not
utterly improper; but she nevertheless attempted coyly
to avoid him.
“Come, Polk, here’s an
old friend of yours over hereSadie Boutwellshe
wants to meet you again,” some one observed,
catching him by the arm.
“No, you don’t,”
he exclaimed, genially, and yet at the same time a
little resentfullythe kind of disjointed
resentment a man who has had the least bit too much
is apt to feel on being interrupted. “I’m
not going to walk all over Chicago thinking of a woman
I’ve seen somewhere only to be carried away
the first time I do meet her. I’m going
to talk to her first.”
Aileen laughed. “It’s
charming of you, but we can meet again, perhaps.
Besides, there’s some one here”Lord
was tactfully directing her attention to another woman.
Rhees Grier and McKibben, who were present also,
came to her assistance. In the hubbub that ensued
Aileen was temporarily extricated and Lynde tactfully
steered out of her way. But they had met again,
and it was not to be the last time. Subsequent
to this second meeting, Lynde thought the matter over
quite calmly, and decided that he must make a definite
effort to become more intimate with Aileen.
Though she was not as young as some others, she suited
his present mood exactly. She was rich physicallyvoluptuous
and sentient. She was not of his world precisely,
but what of it? She was the wife of an eminent
financier, who had been in society once, and she herself
had a dramatic record. He was sure of that.
He could win her if he wanted to. It would
be easy, knowing her as he did, and knowing what he
did about her.
So not long after, Lynde ventured
to invite her, with Lord, McKibben, Mr. and Mrs. Rhees
Grier, and a young girl friend of Mrs. Grier who was
rather attractive, a Miss Chrystobel Lanman, to a theater
and supper party. The programme was to hear
a reigning farce at Hooley’s, then to sup at
the Richelieu, and finally to visit a certain exclusive
gambling-parlor which then flourished on the South
Sidethe resort of actors, society gamblers,
and the likewhere roulette, trente-et-quarante,
baccarat, and the honest game of poker, to say
nothing of various other games of chance, could be
played amid exceedingly recherche surroundings.
The party was gay, especially after
the adjournment to the Richelieu, where special dishes
of chicken, lobster, and a bucket of champagne were
served. Later at the Alcott Club, as the gambling
resort was known, Aileen, according to Lynde, was
to be taught to play baccarat, poker, and any other
game that she wished. “You follow my advice,
Mrs. Cowperwood,” he observed, cheerfully, at
dinnerbeing host, he had put her between
himself and McKibben“and I’ll
show you how to get your money back anyhow.
That’s more than some others can do,” he
added, spiritedly, recalling by a look a recent occasion
when he and McKibben, being out with friends, the
latter had advised liberally and had seen his advice
go wrong.
“Have you been gambling, Kent?”
asked Aileen, archly, turning to her long-time social
mentor and friend.
“No, I can honestly say I haven’t,”
replied McKibben, with a bland smile. “I
may have thought I was gambling, but I admit I don’t
know how. Now Polk, here, wins all the time,
don’t you, Polk? Just follow him.”
A wry smile spread over Lynde’s
face at this, for it was on record in certain circles
that he had lost as much as ten and even fifteen thousand
in an evening. He also had a record of winning
twenty-five thousand once at baccarat at an all-night
and all-day sitting, and then losing it.
Lynde all through the evening had
been casting hard, meaning glances into Aileen’s
eyes. She could not avoid this, and she did not
feel that she wanted to. He was so charming.
He was talking to her half the time at the theater,
without apparently addressing or even seeing her.
Aileen knew well enough what was in his mind.
At times, quite as in those days when she had first
met Cowperwood, she felt an unwilled titillation in
her blood. Her eyes brightened. It was just
possible that she could come to love a man like this,
although it would be hard. It would serve Cowperwood
right for neglecting her. Yet even now the shadow
of Cowperwood was over her, but also the desire for
love and a full sex life.
In the gambling-rooms was gathered
an interested and fairly smart throngactors,
actresses, clubmen, one or two very emancipated women
of the high local social world, and a number of more
or less gentlemanly young gamblers. Both Lord
and McKibben began suggesting column numbers for first
plays to their proteges, while Lynde leaned caressingly
over Aileen’s powdered shoulders. “Let
me put this on quatre premier for you,” he suggested,
throwing down a twenty-dollar gold piece.
“Oh, but let it be my money,”
complained Aileen. “I want to play with
my money. I won’t feel that it’s
mine if I don’t.”
“Very well, but you can’t
just now. You can’t play with bills.”
She was extracting a crisp roll from her purse.
“I’ll have to exchange them later for
you for gold. You can pay me then. He’s
going to call now, anyhow. There you are.
He’s done it. Wait a moment. You
may win.” And he paused to study the little
ball as it circled round and round above the receiving
pockets.
“Let me see. How much
do I get if I win quatre premier?” She was trying
to recall her experiences abroad.
“Ten for one,” replied
Lynde; “but you didn’t get it. Let’s
try it once more for luck. It comes up every
so oftenonce in ten or twelve. I’ve
made it often on a first play. How long has it
been since the last quatre premier?” he asked
of a neighbor whom he recognized.
“Seven, I think, Polk. Six or seven.
How’s tricks?”
“Oh, so so.” He turned
again to Aileen. “It ought to come up now
soon. I always make it a rule to double my plays
each time. It gets you back all you’ve
lost, some time or other.” He put down two
twenties.
“Goodness,” she exclaimed,
“that will be two hundred! I had forgotten
that.”
Just then the call came for all placements
to cease, and Aileen directed her attention to the
ball. It circled and circled in its dizzy way
and then suddenly dropped.
“Lost again,” commented
Lynde. “Well, now we’ll make it eighty,”
and he threw down four twenties. “Just
for luck we’ll put something on thirty-six,
and thirteen, and nine.” With an easy air
he laid one hundred dollars in gold on each number.
Aileen liked his manner. This
was like Frank. Lynde had the cool spirit of
a plunger. His father, recognizing his temperament,
had set over a large fixed sum to be paid to him annually.
She recognized, as in Cowperwood, the spirit of adventure,
only working out in another way. Lynde was perhaps
destined to come to some startlingly reckless end,
but what of it? He was a gentleman. His
position in life was secure. That had always
been Aileen’s sad, secret thought. Hers
had not been and might never be now.
“Oh, I’m getting foozled
already,” she exclaimed, gaily reverting to a
girlhood habit of clapping her hands. “How
much will I win if I win?” The gesture attracted
attention even as the ball fell.
“By George, you have it!”
exclaimed Lynde, who was watching the croupier.
“Eight hundred, two hundred, two hundred”he
was counting to himself“but we lose
thirteen. Very good, that makes us nearly one
thousand ahead, counting out what we put down.
Rather nice for a beginning, don’t you think?
Now, if you’ll take my advice you’ll not
play quatre premier any more for a while. Suppose
you double a thirteenyou lost on thatand
play Bates’s formula. I’ll show you
what that is.”
Already, because he was known to be
a plunger, Lynde was gathering a few spectators behind
him, and Aileen, fascinated, and not knowing these
mysteries of chance, was content to watch him.
At one stage of the playing Lynde leaned over and,
seeing her smile, whispered:
“What adorable hair and eyes
you have! You glow like a great rose. You
have a radiance that is wonderful.”
“Oh, Mr. Lynde! How you
talk! Does gambling always affect you this way?”
“No, you do. Always, apparently!”
And he stared hard into her upturned eyes. Still
playing ostensibly for Aileen’s benefit, he now
doubled the cash deposit on his system, laying down
a thousand in gold. Aileen urged him to play
for himself and let her watch. “I’ll
just put a little money on these odd numbers here
and there, and you play any system you want.
How will that do?”
“No, not at all,” he replied,
feelingly. “You’re my luck.
I play with you. You keep the gold for me.
I’ll make you a fine present if I win.
The losses are mine.”
“Just as you like. I don’t
know really enough about it to play. But I surely
get the nice present if you win?”
“You do, win or lose,”
he murmured. “And now you put the money
on the numbers I call. Twenty on seven.
Eighty on thirteen. Eighty on thirty.
Twenty on nine. Fifty on twenty-four.”
He was following a system of his own, and in obedience
Aileen’s white, plump arm reached here and there
while the spectators paused, realizing that heavier
playing was being done by this pair than by any one
else. Lynde was plunging for effect. He
lost a thousand and fifty dollars at one clip.
“Oh, all that good money!”
exclaimed Aileen, mock-pathetically, as the croupier
raked it in.
“Never mind, we’ll get
it back,” exclaimed Lynde, throwing two one-thousand-dollar
bills to the cashier. “Give me gold for
those.”
The man gave him a double handful,
which he put down between Aileen’s white arms.
“One hundred on two. One
hundred on four. One hundred on six. One
hundred on eight.”
The pieces were five-dollar gold pieces,
and Aileen quickly built up the little yellow stacks
and shoved them in place. Again the other players
stopped and began to watch the odd pair. Aileen’s
red-gold head, and pink cheeks, and swimming eyes,
her body swathed in silks and rich laces; and Lynde,
erect, his shirt bosom snowy white, his face dark,
almost coppery, his eyes and hair blackthey
were indeed a strikingly assorted pair.
“What’s this? What’s
this?” asked Grier, coming up. “Who’s
plunging? You, Mrs. Cowperwood?”
“Not plunging,” replied
Lynde, indifferently. “We’re merely
working out a formulaMrs. Cowperwood and
I. We’re doing it together.”
Aileen smiled. She was in her
element at last. She was beginning to shine.
She was attracting attention.
“One hundred on twelve.
One hundred on eighteen. One hundred on twenty-six.”
“Good heavens, what are you
up to, Lynde?” exclaimed Lord, leaving Mrs.
Rhees and coming over. She followed. Strangers
also were gathering. The business of the place
was at its topmost tossit being two o’clock
in the morningand the rooms were full.
“How interesting!” observed
Miss Lanman, at the other end of the table, pausing
in her playing and staring. McKibben, who was
beside her, also paused. “They’re
plunging. Do look at all the money! Goodness,
isn’t she daring-lookingand he?”
Aileen’s shining arm was moving deftly, showily
about.
“Look at the bills he’s
breaking!” Lynde was taking out a thick layer
of fresh, yellow bills which he was exchanging for
gold. “They make a striking pair, don’t
they?”
The board was now practically covered
with Lynde’s gold in quaint little stacks.
He had followed a system called Mazarin, which should
give him five for one, and possibly break the bank.
Quite a crowd swarmed about the table, their faces
glowing in the artificial light. The exclamation
“plunging!” “plunging!” was
to be heard whispered here and there. Lynde
was delightfully cool and straight. His lithe
body was quite erect, his eyes reflective, his teeth
set over an unlighted cigarette. Aileen was
excited as a child, delighted to be once more the
center of comment. Lord looked at her with sympathetic
eyes. He liked her. Well, let her he amused.
It was good for her now and then; but Lynde was a
fool to make a show of himself and risk so much money.
“Table closed!” called
the croupier, and instantly the little ball began
to spin. All eyes followed it. Round and
round it wentAileen as keen an observer
as any. Her face was flushed, her eyes bright.
“If we lose this,” said
Lynde, “we will make one more bet double, and
then if we don’t win that we’ll quit.”
He was already out nearly three thousand dollars.
“Oh yes, indeed! Only I
think we ought to quit now. Here goes two thousand
if we don’t win. Don’t you think
that’s quite enough? I haven’t brought
you much luck, have I?”
“You are luck,” he whispered.
“All the luck I want. One more. Stand
by me for one more try, will you? If we win I’ll
quit.”
The little ball clicked even as she
nodded, and the croupier, paying out on a few small
stacks here and there, raked all the rest solemnly
into the receiving orifice, while murmurs of sympathetic
dissatisfaction went up here and there.
“How much did they have on the
board?” asked Miss Lanman of McKibben, in surprise.
“It must have been a great deal, wasn’t
it?”
“Oh, two thousand dollars, perhaps.
That isn’t so high here, though. People
do plunge for as much as eight or ten thousand.
It all depends.” McKibben was in a belittling,
depreciating mood.
“Oh yes, but not often, surely.”
“For the love of heavens, Polk!”
exclaimed Rhees Grier, coming up and plucking at his
sleeve; “if you want to give your money away
give it to me. I can gather it in just as well
as that croupier, and I’ll go get a truck and
haul it home, where it will do some good. It’s
perfectly terrible the way you are carrying on.”
Lynde took his loss with equanimity.
“Now to double it,” he observed, “and
get all our losses back, or go downstairs and have
a rarebit and some champagne. What form of a
present would please you best?but never
mind. I know a souvenir for this occasion.”
He smiled and bought more gold.
Aileen stacked it up showily, if a little repentantly.
She did not quite approve of thishis
plungingand yet she did; she could not
help sympathizing with the plunging spirit.
In a few moments it was on the boardthe
same combination, the same stacks, only doubledfour
thousand all told. The croupier called, the ball
rolled and fell. Barring three hundred dollars
returned, the bank took it all.
“Well, now for a rarebit,”
exclaimed Lynde, easily, turning to Lord, who stood
behind him smiling. “You haven’t
a match, have you? We’ve had a run of bad
luck, that’s sure.”
Lynde was secretly the least bit disgruntled,
for if he had won he had intended to take a portion
of the winnings and put it in a necklace or some other
gewgaw for Aileen. Now he must pay for it.
Yet there was some satisfaction in having made an
impression as a calm and indifferent, though heavy
loser. He gave Aileen his arm.
“Well, my lady,” he observed,
“we didn’t win; but we had a little fun
out of it, I hope? That combination, if it had
come out, would have set us up handsomely. Better
luck next time, eh?”
He smiled genially.
“Yes, but I was to have been your luck, and
I wasn’t,” replied Aileen.
“You are all the luck I want,
if you’re willing to be. Come to the Richelieu
to-morrow with me for lunchwill you?”
“Let me see,” replied
Aileen, who, observing his ready and somewhat iron
fervor, was doubtful. “I can’t do
that,” she said, finally, “I have another
engagement.”
“How about Tuesday, then?”
Aileen, realizing of a sudden that
she was making much of a situation that ought to be
handled with a light hand, answered readily: “Very
wellTuesday! Only call me up before.
I may have to change my mind or the time.”
And she smiled good-naturedly.
After this Lynde had no opportunity
to talk to Aileen privately; but in saying good night
he ventured to press her arm suggestively. She
suffered a peculiar nervous thrill from this, but decided
curiously that she had brought it upon herself by
her eagerness for life and revenge, and must make
up her mind. Did she or did she not wish to go
on with this? This was the question uppermost,
and she felt that she must decide. However,
as in most such cases, circumstances were to help
decide for her, and, unquestionably, a portion of this
truth was in her mind as she was shown gallantly to
her door by Taylor Lord.