“Match you to see whether it’s
good, old fifteen cent feed at the Marseillaise or
a four bit bust at the Nevada,” said Bertram
Chester.
“I’ll take you,”
responded Mark Heath, flipping a silver dollar as he
spoke. “Heads the Nevada; tails the croutons
and Dago red.”
“Tails it is aw,
let’s make it the Nevada to show there’s
nothing in luck.”
“You quitter!”
“All right; but I hate to look
cabbage soup in the face,” grumbled Bertram.
He resumed, then, his languid occupation which this
parley had interrupted, and continued to review, from
an angle of Moe’s cigar stand, the passing matinee
parade.
The time was late afternoon of a fog-scented
October day. Through the wet air, street lamps
and electric signs had begun to twinkle. Under
the cross-light of retreating day and incandescent
globes, the parade of women, all in bright-colored
silks and gauds, moved solid, unbroken. Opera
bags marked off those who had really attended the
matinées; but only one in five wore this badge
of sincerity. The rest had dressed and painted
and gone abroad to display themselves just because
it was the fashion in their circles so to dress and
paint and display. Women of Greek perfection
in body and feature, free-stepping Western women who
met the gaze of men directly and fearlessly, their
costumes ran through all the exaggerations of Parisian
mode and tint. Toilettes whose brilliancy
would cause heads to turn and necks to crane on the
streets of an Eastern city, drew here no tribute of
comment. It had gone on all the afternoon.
From the Columbia Theatre corner, which formed one
boundary of “the line,” to the Sutler Street
corner of Kearney, five blocks away, certain of these
peacocks had been strutting back and forth since two
o’clock. The men who corresponded in the
social organization to these paraders of vanity lined
the sidewalks or lolled in the open-air cigar stands,
as did these two young adventurers in life Bertram
Chester, now a year and a half out of college, and
Mark Heath, cub reporter on the Herald.
When the homefarers from office and
factory had begun to tarnish the brilliance of this
show, when the women had begun to scatter this
one to dinner with her man, that one back to the hall-room
supper by whose economies she saved for her Saturday
afternoon vanities Bertram and Mark drifted
with the current up Kearney street toward the Hotel
Marseillaise. In their blood, a little whipped
already by the two cocktails which they had felt able
to afford even while they debated over the price of
dinner, ran all the sparkling currents of youth.
They drew on past Sutler Street to Adventurer’s
Lane, the dingy section of that street wherein walked
the treasure-farers of all the seven seas; and as
they walked, Bertram began to speak of the things
which lay close to his heart.
“I guess I’ll chuck the
law,” he said. “Maybe I’ll stay
with Judge Tiffany a year or so longer until
I get admitted anyway. A bar admission might
count if I wanted to go into politics.”
“Politics is a pretty poor kind
of business,” responded Mark Heath. Old
enough in journalism to have recovered somewhat from
his first enchantment with the rush of life, he was
only just beginning to acquire the cynical pose.
“Hell, it’s all according
to how you play it,” said Bertram. “When
you get to be Lincoln, nobody calls it poor business.
Do they think any the worse of my old man because
he played politics to be sheriff of Tulare? If
I should go into the game down there, his pull would
help me a lot. But it’s me for this.”
His sweeping gesture took in the whole city.
He had missed Mark’s point.
The latter felt within him a little recoil from that
loyalty for his greater, more ready, more popular friend,
which had carried him, a blind slave, through college,
and which had helped him make him settle in San Francisco
instead of Tacoma. Through his four years at
the University, Mark had shared his crusts with Bertram
Chester, yelled for him from the bleachers, played
his fag at class elections. Now Mark was out
in the world, practising the profession of lost illusions;
and a new vision had been growing within him for many
days. He turned a grave face toward his chum,
and his lips opened on the impulse of a criticism.
But he thought better of it. His mouth closed
without sound.
“The real chances for a lawyer,
though, are in business,” Bertram went on.
“Judge Tiffany never grabbed half his chances.
Attwood in the office, says so.”
“He surely didn’t keep
out of politics, that Judge,” said Mark, remembering
the turns of fate which had almost and ever
not quite made the old Judge a congressman,
a mayor, and a Justice of the California State Supreme
Court.
“Oh, he had no call to be in
politics. He hasn’t the sand. Attwood
says so. And he stuck at his desk and let his
business chances go by. Myself, I’m keeping
my lamps open. Just because the Judge doesn’t
watch his chances, that office is a great place to
pick things up. Look at those tidewater cases
of ours over in Richmond. I know, from the inside,
that we’re going to lose our case, and lots will
go whooping up. I’ve written to Bob for
a thousand dollars to invest. I’ll double
that in a year and have my first thousand ahead.
Say, why don’t you try something in business
instead of sticking to newspapers? Let’s
go in together. Reporting is a rotten kind of
business.”
“Oh, I don’t know, I like
it. I think I’ll stay with it for a while.”
Again Mark had put back the thought of his heart.
Like so many of the loyal and devoted, he could hardly
bring himself to speak of his own deeper motives and
ambitions. Least of all could he reveal them in
this moment of disillusion. He had never told
Bertram about the four-act comedy hidden in the writing
desk of their common room, to be mulled over during
the mornings of his leisure. “I think I’ll
stay with it for a while, anyway,” he added
simply.
They had turned out of Kearney Street
and were mounting the hill-rise toward the Hotel Marseillaise.
These fringes and environments of Chinatown had been
residences for the newly affluent in the days when
the Poodle Dog flourished and flaunted in the hull
of a wreck, in the days when that Chinatown site was
Rialto and Market-place for the overgrown mining camp.
The wall moss which blew in with the trade winds,
and the semi-tropic growth of old ivies and rose-bushes,
had given to these houses the seasoning of two centuries.
Unpretentious hovels beside the structures of stone
turrets and mill-work fronts by which later millionaires
shamed California Street and Van Ness Avenue, they
had the simple dignity of a mission, a colonial farm-house,
or any other structure wherein love of craft has supplanted
scanty materials. Innumerable additions of sheds
and boxes, the increment of their fallen social condition,
broke their severe lines. A massive door, a carriage
entrance, the remains of a balcony faced to catch
wind and air of the great bay, recalled what they had
been; as though a washerwoman should wear on her tattered
waist some jewel of a wealth long past.
The Hotel Marseillaise occupied one
of these houses. Where it stood, the hill rose
steep. One might enter a narrow alley, skirt a
board fence, dodge into a box hall, seasoned with
dinners long past, and mount by a steep staircase
to the dining room; or he might enter that dining
room directly from the street, such was the slope of
the hill. A row of benches parked the front door.
On the fine, out-of-doors evenings which came too
seldom in the City of Fogs, French waiters out of
work, French deserters from merchantmen in the harbor
below, French cabmen waiting for night and fares,
lolled on these benches while they smoked their black
cigarettes and chattered in their heavy, peasant accent.
Within, Madame Loisel ruled with her
cash register at the cigar counter. She, bursting
with sweet inner fatness like a California nectarine,
kept in her middle age the everlasting charm and chic
of the Frenchwoman. This Madame Loisel was a
dual personality. She of the grave mouth, the
considering eye, the business manner, who rung up
dinner fees on the cash register and bargained with
the Chinamen for vegetables at the back door, seemed
hardly even sister to the Madame Loisel of Saturday
afternoon on “the line” or Sunday morning
at the French Church. By what process man may
not imagine, this second Madame Loisel took six inches
from her girth, fifty pounds from her weight, fifteen
years from her age. Her step was like a dancer’s;
her figure was no more than comfortably plump; her
Sunday complexion brought the best out of her alluring
eyes and her black, ungrizzled hair; her hands, in
their perfect gloves, bore no resemblance to the hands
which had scraped pots for Louis Loisel in the time
before he could flaunt the luxury of a cashier.
In Madame Loisel’s background
lay the ramblings of a house built for comfort and
large hospitalities. Gone were the folding doors,
bare the niches, empty the window-seats. The
old drawing-rooms, music-room, dining-room, had become
one apartment of a sanded floor and many long tables.
Through this background of his wife moved Louis Loisel,
grizzled, fat and gay; never too busy at his serving
to exchange flamboyant banter with a patron.
Hither the peasant French of San Francisco,
menials most of them, came for luncheons and dinners
of thick, heavy vegetable soup, coarse fish, boiled
joint, third-class fruit and home-made claret, vinted
by Louis himself in a hand press during those September
days when the Latin quarter ran purple and
all for fifteen cents! Thither, too, came young
apprentices of the professions, working at wages to
shame a laborer, who had learned how much more one
got for his money at Louis’s than at the white-tiled
American places further down town. It stood for
ten years, this Hotel Marseillaise, the hope of the
impecunious. How many careers did it preserve,
how many old failures from the wreckage of Kearney
Street did it console!
Madame Loisel stood at her cash register
as the two young men entered. A fresh waist,
a ribbon at her throat, a slimness of her waist and
an artificial freshness in her complexion showed that
she had been parading that afternoon.
“Bonsoir Madame la
la la-la-la!” called Bertram.
Her face blossomed with coquetry, her teeth gleamed,
and:
“Bonsoir diable!”
she smiled back at him. Mark Heath had greeted
her more soberly. Her eyes followed Chester’s
big, square frame as he moved with lumbering grace
to a corner table.
There he sat at the beginning of his
career, such as it was, this Bertram Chester a
completed piece of work, fresh, unused, from the mills
of the gods. His strong frame was beginning to
fill out, what with the abandonment of training for
a year. He was a pretty figure of a man in his
clothes; and those clothes were so woven and cut as
to be in contrast with his surroundings. A tailor
of San Francisco, building toward fashionable patronage,
had made him suits free during his last year in college.
Varsity man and public character about the campus,
Chester paid him back in advertising of mouth.
Guided by that instinct of vanity and personal display
which runs in those who have to do with the cattle
range, he had learned to dress well before he was
really sure-mouthed in English grammar.
His face, still, as when we first
saw him, a little over-heavy, had lightened with the
growth of spirit within him. This increase of
spirit and expression manifested itself in his rolling
and merry eye, which travelled over all humanity in
his path with an air of possession, in the mobility
of his rather thick-lipped mouth. For the rest,
the face was all solidity and strength. His neck
rose big and straight from his collar, a sign of the
power which infused the figure below; his square chin,
in repose, set itself at a most aggressive angle;
his nose was low-bridged and straight and solid.
From any company which he frequented, an attraction
deeper than his obviously regular and animal beauty
brought him notice and attention.
The son of Louis, a small, cheerful
imitation of his father, slammed a bowl of cabbage
soup down before them. Bertram, sighing his young,
ravenous satisfaction, sank the ladle deep and stopped,
his hand poised, his eyes fixed. Mark followed
the direction of his glance. Louis Loisel, wearing
his best air of formal politeness, was bowing a party
of women to a table by the door.
“Slummers!” said Mark
under his breath. A habitue of the place,
he had already developed a resentment of outsiders.
Louis pulled out chairs, wiped the
table mightily; the French cabmen, the Barbary Coast
flotsam and jetsam, gazed over their soup-spoons in
silent, furtive interest.
“It’s her!” said
Bertram, lapsing into his native speech. Heath
flashed a glance of recognition at the same moment.
“Miss Gray sure Mrs.
Tiffany’s niece. I thought she was in Europe didn’t
she start a week or two after we left the ranch?”
“Oh, I knew she was coming back.
Mrs. Tiffany told me. The Mrs. Boss isn’t
so sweet on me as she used to be, but I see her in
the office now and then.”
Bertram resumed his ladling.
Both watched furtively. It was a balanced party three
men and three women. Among the men, Mark Heath
recognized him of the pointed beard as Masters, the
landscape painter. The little, brown woman who
sat with her back to them must be his wife. The
other girl, a golden, full-blown Californian thing her,
too, they marked and noted with their eyes.
Recognition of a sort had come meanwhile
from the party at the guest table. Miss Waddington,
the full-blown golden girl, had seated herself and
cooed an appreciative word or two about the quaintness
and difference of the Marseillaise, when her eyes
clutched at the two young men in the corner, whose
dress made them stand out so queerly among the lost
and soiled. As Bertram looked up with his glance
of recognition, her eyes caught his. She glanced
down at her plate.
“Eleanor,” she said, “is
that a flirtation starting, or do any of us know the
two men in the corner there under that beer
sign.”
Eleanor looked. Kate Waddington,
her indirect gaze still on that corner table, saw
the dark young man smile and bow effusively. She
slipped a sidling glance at Eleanor Gray. Something
curious, an intent look which seemed drawn to conceal
a tumult within, had filmed itself over Eleanor’s
grey eyes. But she spoke steadily.
“Why, yes. I have met them
both. They used to do summer work on the ranch
when they were in college. I believe that the
darker one Mr. Chester is in
Uncle Edward’s law office now. I haven’t
seen either of them since I went abroad.”
“I should say that this Mr.
Chester fancied you, from his expression.”
“I suppose that he fancies every
girl that he sees from his expression.”
Kate Waddington caught the shade of
irritation, uncommon with Eleanor, and noted it in
memory. Mrs. Masters, an eager little woman who
grasped at everything about her like a child, broke
in:
“If you know them, and they’re
really frequenters of the place, it would be fun to
ask them over. Sydney used to dine here a great
deal when he was young and poor, and he has such
stories of the people he used to know then!”
Eleanor hesitated. Kate looked
again toward Bertram, who was talking rapidly across
his soup to Mark Heath, and:
“Do!” she murmured.
In that instant, Bertram himself cast
the die. This had been the debate across the
soup:
“I’m going over to speak to her,”
said Bertram.
“I shouldn’t butt in,” said Mark.
“It’s a balanced party.”
“Oh, I shan’t try to stay coming
along?” He did not wait to see whether or not
Mark was following.
Miss Gray greeted him more cordially,
altogether more sweetly, than she had ever done in
their meetings on the ranch, and passed him about
the circle for introductions. Noticing, then,
that Mark had not followed, Bertram turned and beckoned
with impatience. Mark crossed the room in some
embarrassment.
“Is this your first visit to
the Hotel Marseillaise?” asked Mrs. Masters.
Mark hesitated; but Bertram laughed and beamed down
on her from his brown eyes.
“Only about my two hundred and
first,” he said. “Mr. Heath and I
dine here every night we haven’t the price to
dine anywhere else.”
Masters, with that ready tact which
he needed in order to live with Mrs. Masters, rushed
into the breach.
“And I should call it about
my four hundred and first,” he said. “It’s
back to the old scenes for the night. I haven’t
tasted real cabbage soup since the last time it
has been a canned imitation. For goodness’
sake join us and tell us the news!”
“Do!” said Miss Waddington
with animation, and “Please,” said those
two escorts who do not figure in this story. Eleanor
said nothing, but her expression was an invitation.
“Sure!” responded Bertram.
The Hotel Marseillaise had familiar
customs of its own. For one thing, guests bothered
the waiters as little as possible. Masters smiled
when the two unconscious youths went back to their
table, picked up the big soup tureen, their knives
and forks, their plates, and transported them to the
larger table.
They were dragging the lees of a rather
squalid Bohemia, these two boys; a Bohemia the more
real because they were unconscious in it. Its
components were a cheap furnished room, restaurants
like this, adventurous companionship in the underworld
which thrust itself to the surface here and there
in that master-port of the Saxon advance. Not
for months had either of them been in the society of
such women as these women who preferred
cleanliness to display, women who were nice about
their nails and hair. A kind of pleasant shyness
crept over Mark Heath; the spirit came into the face
of Bertram Chester. Masters, tactician that he
was, put the conversation into their hands. Presently,
they were telling freely about the fare at Coffee John’s,
about their familiars and companions in the little
Eddy-Street lodging house, about the drifters of the
Latin quarter. They quite eclipsed the pale youth
who was playing escort to Eleanor, and the substantial
person in the insurance business who seemed to be responsible
for Kate Waddington. Heath, speaking with a little
diffidence and lack of assurance, had twice the wit,
twice the eye for things, twice the illumination of
Bertram Chester; yet it was the latter who brought
laughter and attention. His personality, which
surrounded him like an aroma, his smile, his trick
of the eyes one listened to Bertram Chester.
When the son of Louis brought in the
little sweet oranges and arranged the goblets for
black coffee, talk shifted from monologue to dialogue.
Eleanor found herself talking to Bertram. A kind
of pride had been rising in her all the evening; a
pride born in recoil from her latest recollection
of him. The episode of that night under the bay
tree had gone with her clear across the Atlantic.
Even the influence of the wholly new environment,
in which she had grown from a girl recluse to a woman,
had not served for a long time to erase that ugly stain
on her memory. Here and now was the man who served
so to perturb her once and she could look
on him, with her more mature eyes, as an attractive,
unlicked young cub. She surprised herself taking
revenge upon the past by a hidden patronage.
At once, then, she fell to talking of Europe and the
splendors she had lived there.
“This reminds me of the places
one slips into abroad,” she said, “Mr.
and Mrs. Wark Lars Wark you know took
me to just such an old ruin in Paris. We dined
for thirty centimes, I remember, but it was no
better than this. I’ve had to go away to
know my native city. That is the thing which
strikes you when you come back San Francisco
is so like the Latin cities of Europe, and yet so
unlike!”
Kate leaned across her insurance man.
“The Society for the Narration
of European Travel is in session, Mr. Chester,”
she said. “I know the joy that Eleanor is
having. It was the passion of my life after I
first got back from abroad.”
“Oh, I eat it alive,”
said Bertram. “I’m strong for seeing
Paris.” He turned back to Eleanor; and
her double embarrassment drove her on.
“Such a good time as I had with
the Warks their studio in Munich, where
I met all the German long-haired artists a
run to Paris in the season the dearest
little village on the Coast of Brittany last summer and
three weeks in incomparable London at the end.
I haven’t thought of the ranch for a year and
a half Uncle Edward pays me the compliment
of saying that my profits fell off twenty per cent.
under Olsen’s management oh, isn’t
she a dear!”
For Madame Loisel, wearing a beaming
and affable manner, had come through the door and
approached their table. Madame made it a point
of business honor to promote personal relations with
her regular guests, asking Jean how he liked the fish,
assuring Jacques that the soup would be better to-morrow.
This visit of hers to the slumming party came after
a storm in the kitchen, whose French thunders had reached
the dining room now and then. Louis, the conservative,
hated slummers and dreaded being “discovered.”
He ran a restaurant as a social institution as well
as a business venture. Madame Loisel, with her
eye on the cash register, longed ardently for slummers
who would give large tips to Louis the younger, order
expensive wines, and put the Marseillaise on the way
to a twenty-five cent table d’hote dinner.
From that kitchen squabble, recurrent whenever slummers
visited them, Madame Loisel swept in haughty determination,
leaving Louis to take it out on the pots. As
she approached the table, all the charm of France
illuminated her smile.
She invariably paid slummers the compliment
of addressing them in French.
“Bonsoir lé souper, plait-il vous?”
she asked.
Eleanor took her up in fluent French,
and the talk sparkled back and forth between them reminiscences
of this or that restaurant on the boulevards which
Madame Loisel had known in her youth and which Eleanor
had visited. Bertram, his mouth open, followed
that talk as though summoning all his Sophomore French
to match a word here and there. Kate Waddington,
leaning again across her insurance man, was the first
to break in.
“I myself used to be keen on
French when I came back from Europe, but I’m
out of practice. Please excuse me, Madame, if
I speak English. How can you do it at this price?”
“It is kind of you to say so,
Mademoiselle economy and honesty.”
Masters patted Mark Heath on the knee.
“We can’t let you fellows
go away from us now. One doesn’t get guides
to the Latin quarter for nothing. Take us somewhere,
Mr. Heath unless you’re working to-night.”
“No, virtue has been rewarded,”
said Mr. Heath. “I’m off to-night
as a testimonial of esteem from the City Editor.
What shall it be?”
Bertram Chester, taking up the talk
again, laid out Kearney Street like a bill of fare.
Mrs. Masters, casting her vote as chaperone, chose
the Marionette Theatre tucked away under the shadow
of the Broadway Jail.
As Eleanor stepped out into California
Street, gathering her coat about her against a night
which had come up windy and raw, Bertram took her
side with a proprietary air. She turned toward
her appointed escort. It happened that he was
walking ahead with Heath just then, holding an argument
about the drift of Montgomery Street when it was the
water front. For several blocks, then, Bertram
had her alone. It seemed to her that he began
just where he left off two years or more ago.
“You’re even prettier
than you used to be,” he said caressingly; “you’ve
bully eyes. I think I told you that before.”
This time, she looked him full in
the face and smiled easily.
“Have I? Well I hope you
don’t mind my saying that they’re resting
on a bonny sight!”
Somewhat taken aback by the directness
of this answer, so different from the artificial coyness
of the girls he knew best in that period of his life,
Bertram turned in his course.
“You’re joshing me,” he said.
“Truly I’m not. You are good to look
at eyes and all.”
Although balked of his opening, Bertram tried again.
“Well your mouth is just as good as your eyes.”
The same quick look into his face,
and the same smile, as she answered:
“Yours is a little better if
anything. It is not only well formed, but it
becomes delicious when you smile, and it has most attractive
shadows in the corners.”
“Suppose we talk sense,” grumbled Bertram.
“Suppose we do; I know you can.”
They both laughed at this, and all the way up Kearney
Street she continued her chatter of Europe. Lars
Wark, who had known her mother, had done everything
for her. It had been very different from the
regular tour; she came back ignorant of all the show
places from Cologne Cathedral to the Tower. But
it had been her privilege to see and meet wonderful
people. They would not do for regular companionship,
such people. They struck one, in the end, as
goblins and trolls; but it had been an experience of
a lifetime while it lasted. The Warks
had taken her to places which the tourist never sees lost
villages in the Black Forest, undiscovered corners
of London, even.
After a little of this, she drew him
on to speak of himself. She had heard news of
him, she said, from her uncle, who said that he was
doing well and gave promise of a future in the law.
How long had he remained on the ranch that summer?
This reference put him back into his presumptive mood.
“You went away without giving
me a chance to say good-bye,” he complained.
“I never saw you again after the party on the
lawn.”
Her tongue ran away with her.
“I saw you, though,” she said.
“Where?”
“Oh, at a distance.”
He caught nothing from her tone, yet a slight change
did come into her manner, as though something had been
drawn between them. Then her escort fell in on
the other side of Eleanor, appropriating her by right
and by consent of her attitude.
Now they were in Broadway, skirting
the small bake-shops, the dark alleys, all the picture
scenes of the Latin quarter. At that very moment,
Miss Waddington drew a little apart from the group
clustering about Masters and Mark Heath. An Italian
baby of three, too late out of bed, stood by a cellar
rail surveying them with the liquid fire which was
his eyes. Kate Waddington stooped to pat his head.
As she raised herself, she was beside Bertram.
Nothing more natural than that she should fall in,
step by step, beside him. He caught step with
her, but he still looked toward Eleanor.
“Wonderful girl, isn’t she?” asked
Kate.
“She sure is.”
“Her mother,” said Kate,
“had more wit than any other woman in San Francisco and
the men she had!”
“I think Eleanor has inherited
that at any rate,” she added after a
pause.
They had reached the door of the Marionette
Theatre now. Afterward they drank beer at Norman’s;
and when they broke up, Bertram Chester found himself
with three invitations to call.
Kate Waddington spent that night with
Eleanor Gray in the Tiffany House on Russian Hill.
While they sat before the fireplace, in the half-hour
of loosened hair and confidences, Eleanor broke a minute
of silence with the inquiry:
“What did you think of him?”
An instant after she let slip this impersonal inquiry,
she would have given gold to recall it. And if
she had any hope that Kate Waddington had missed the
point, it died in her when Kate answered in an indifferent
tone:
“He? Oh, he seems to me to be a little
promiscuous.”