The Tiffany house I spare
you full description rambled with many a
balcony and addition over that hill which rose like
a citadel above San Francisco. From its Southern
windows, one looked clean over the city, lying outspread
below. Even the Call building, highest eminence
piled up by man in that vista, presented its roof to
the eye. I can picture that site no better than
by this; Over Judge Tiffany’s front wall hung
an apple tree, gnarled, convoluted, by the buffets
of the sea wind. In autumn, when the fruit was
ripe, stray apples from this tree had been seen to
tumble from the wall and roll four blocks down into
the Latin quarter.
From the rear, the house looked out
on a hedged and sloping garden, quite old, as gardens
go in that land, for a pioneer planted it; and from
the rear gate of that garden it was only a step to
the hill mount. Thence one came out suddenly
to the panorama of the Bay, stretching on three sides;
a panorama divided, as by the false panels of a mural
landscape, into three equal marvels. To left,
the narrow gate, a surge like the rush of a river
always in its teeth and the bright ocean, colored
like smelt-scales, beyond. In front the Roads,
where all strange crafts from the mysterious Pacific
anchored while they waited their turns at the docks.
Both in foreground and background, this panel changed
day by day. It might be whalers from the Arctic
which lay there in the morning, their oils making noisome
the breeze; it might be a fleet of beaten, battered
tramp wind-jammers, panting after their fight about
the Horn; it might be brigs from the South Seas; it
might be Pacific steamers, Benicia scow-schooners,
Italian fishing smacks, Chinese junks it
might be any and all of these together. As for
the background, that changed not every day but every
hour what with the shifts of wind, tide and mists.
Now its tinge was a green-gold betraying pollution
of those mountain placers which fed the San Joaquin
and the mighty Sacramento. Now it was blue and
ruffled, now black and calm, now slate-gray, a
mysterious shade this last, so that when the fog began
to shoot lances across the waters, these fleets at
anchor by Quarantine wharf seemed argosies of fairy
adventure. Even Tamalpais, the gentle mountain
which rose beyond everything, changed ever with the
change in her veil of mist or fog or rain-rift.
The third panel, lying far to the right, showed first
dim mountain ranges and the mouths of mighty rivers,
and then, nearer by, masts, stacks and shipping, fringing
the city roofs.
North into this garden ran a small
wing of the Tiffany house. Upon the death of
Alice Gray, Mattie Tiffany had set it apart for Eleanor
the baby. When, after her years with Billy Gray,
Eleanor came back, Mattie had refurnished it for the
grown baby. The upper story held her bedroom
and her closets. Below was her own particular
living-room. This opened by a vine-bordered door
into the garden, into that path which led up to the
bay view.
Judge Tiffany, sitting within the
front window to watch the shimmer of a pleasant Sunday
afternoon on the city roofs below, perceived that
his wife had walked three times to that garden wall
which looked down along the drop of Broadway to the
Spanish Church.
The second time that he perceived
this phenomenon, his eyes showed interest; the third
he smiled with inner satisfaction and rose to meet
her return as though by accident. He was leaning
upon a cane, getting ease of the sciatica which plagued
him.
The Judge had aged during the two
years since he opened these events. He had settled
now into the worldly state of a man who rests content
with the warming sun and the bright air which feed
life. But the inner soul, whose depth was his
philosophy, whose surface his whimsical humor that
still burned in his dark blue eyes. Those eyes
glistened a little as he went on to this, his daily
sport.
He met her on the piazza. She
had raked the rise of Broadway, which one mounted
by two blocks of hen-coop sidewalks; and now she was
inspecting the cross street.
“All the Sherlock Holmes in
me,” said Judge Tiffany, “tells me that
Miss Eleanor Gray is going to have a caller, and that
Mrs. Edward C. Tiffany is in a state of vicarious
perturbation.
“Further,” continued Judge
Tiffany, dropping his hand upon her arm with that
affectionate gesture which drew all sting his words
might have carried, “this is no common caller.
For that young civil engineer and Mr. Perham the painter
and Ned Greene, Mrs. Tiffany never blushes; but these
new attentions to her niece well, I hope
my approach drew as much blood from her heart to her
countenance twenty-five years ago!”
“I I am perturbed,”
said Mattie Tiffany. Running rose-bushes, just
leafing out into their fall greenery, overgrew the
pillars beside her. These she fell to pruning
with her hands, so that she turned away her face.
“I see that discipline is relaxing
in this family,” said Judge Tiffany. “Dear,
dear, after managing a wife bravely and well for a
quarter century, to fail in one’s age! Mattie,
he works in my office, this blush-compelling caller;
and I told you when I gave him the position not to
take him up socially for the present!”
“But what was I to do when he
telephoned to Eleanor and asked her?” Mrs. Tiffany
turned her head with a turn of her thought. “Did
you hear him telephone was that how you
knew?”
“I’d lose all hold on
discipline if I revealed my methods.”
Judge Tiffany settled himself in an
armchair as one prepared to make it a long session.
“Let’s begin at the start. How came
he to renew his acquaintance with Eleanor, and when,
and where and how much had Mattie Tiffany
to do with bringing them together again?”
“Not a thing truly
Edward! Some of Eleanor’s slumming with
Kate Waddington and the Masters they met
by accident at a restaurant Eleanor asked
him. You remember he was taken with her that afternoon
just before she went to Europe the time
he mortified me so dreadfully.”
“And the time he attracted my
attention,” said Judge Tiffany. “And
now behold that youth, who will always get what he
wants by frontal attack, reading my California cases
and wearing out my desk with his feet.”
“Do you think he will make a
good lawyer?” asked Mattie Tiffany. She
turned full around at this, and the glance she threw
into her husband’s face showed more than a casual
matchmaker’s interest.
“He’ll make a good something,”
said the Judge. “So far as anyone can judge
the race from the start. But that isn’t
why I have him in the office. You know how little
I care in these days for such practice as I have left.
I tell myself, of course, that it is my lingering
interest in life as a general proposition which made
me do it I am curious to see before I die
how this find of yours is coming out. That is
what I tell myself. Probably in my very inside
heart I know that it’s something else.”
“What else?” asked Mattie.
“This is one of the hidden things
which this experiment is to discover,” said
Judge Tiffany. “What made me notice him
in the first place? What made you invite him
to tea on the lawn? What has made you and me
and Eleanor remember this chance meeting so long let
me see how long was it?”
“A year ago last June,”
said Mattie. One of her functions in their partnership
was to hold small details always ready to the hand
of the wide-thinking Judge.
“Will he go back on me that’s
the question,” pursued the Judge. “Success
is probably at the end for him, but he has two ways
of success open. He may go slowly and well, or
fast and ill. Road number one: he stays
with my moth-eaten old practice, he refurbishes it,
he earns a partnership; and so to conservative clients
and, probably, to genuine success.” He
hesitated.
“And the other road?” asked Mrs. Tiffany.
“Oh, that has many by-paths.
He is trying one of them already. The stealthy,
invaluable Attwood has told me about it. This
Mr. Chester has made an investment in Richmond lots
on information which he had no right to use.
Never mind the details. If he follows that general
direction, it will be a flashy success, a pretty worm-eaten
crown of laurels.”
“Like Northrup’s,”
broke in Mrs. Tiffany. That name always jarred
on their ears. Northrup, ex-congressman, flowery
Western orator, all Christian love on the surface,
all guile beneath he had taken to himself
that success which Judge Tiffany might have had but
for his hesitations of conscience. Theirs was
a secret resentment. Judge Tiffany’s pride
would never have let him show the world one glimmer
of what he felt.
“Suppose he should follow that
path and take up with Northrup,” went
on Judge Tiffany. “Mine honorable opponent
has use for such young men as our Mr. Chester will
prove himself if he follows that path magnetic
young men to coax the rabble, young men not too nice
on moral questions. Well, a boy isn’t born
with honor, any more than he’s born with courage;
he grows to it. And God only knows just when the
boy strikes the divide which will turn his course one
way or the other.”
“But Edward, you ought to warn him!”
“In the first place, it would
do no good to warn one of his age and temperament.
In the second place, it would spoil the experiment but
I had commanded you to talk, and here I am doing it
all. How looked she; what said he?”
“To-day just before
church I was hooking up Kate and Eleanor,
and he telephoned.”
“Instinct, of course, informing
you that it was none other than he at the other end
of the wire?” On another tongue and in another
fashion of speech, this sentence might have been offensive;
between them, it was a part of his perpetual game
with her amiable weaknesses.
“If I did listen, it was no
more than right. It was what a mother would have
done by Eleanor. I heard her say, ’Good
morning Mr. Chester,’ not at all as though she
were surprised to have him call up; and I was really
quite disturbed. You had told me not to invite
him here for the present; and I hadn’t the slightest
reason for knowing that Eleanor had seen him since
she came back from abroad. Her speaking so familiarly well,
I wondered. But Kate ”
“Oh, she was listening too?”
“Well, I know that she hadn’t
the excuse for listening that I had; but I had stopped
hooking her up, and it was only natural that she should
listen too. Eleanor said, ‘Certainly I shall
be in,’ and Kate said, ’That’s the
old friend we met with Mr. Masters last night in the
Hotel Marseillaise. He is prompt!’ Rather
sharp in Kate, considering what Eleanor has been doing
for her!
“You’d have thought Eleanor
had eaten the canary bird when she came back.
Of course, she knew we had been listening. I wish
she hadn’t. I’d have liked to see
whether she’d have told us then, or waited for
him to surprise us. Kate was sharp again.
I wonder if she isn’t envious at bottom?
After all Eleanor is so much more a lady! Kate
said again, ‘The young man is prompt!’”
Judge Tiffany laughed.
“Oh, that women could dwell
together in peace and harmony! Can’t you
grant my playmate Miss Waddington a feminine jab or
two?”
“Well, she is nice to you!”
“Did it never occur to you as
a virtue in her that she puts herself out to entertain even,
Madame, I flatter myself to fancy a withered
old codger like me!”
Mrs. Tiffany’s first expression
flooded her eyes and said, “Is there anything
strange in liking you?” Her second expression
set her mouth hard and said, “What is her object?”
Her voice said nothing.
“And behold him now,” said Judge Tiffany.
There, indeed, came Bertram Chester,
visible over their garden wall as he toiled up the
hen-coop sidewalk. The Judge returned to the house;
Mattie Tiffany settled herself on the piazza with the
preen and flutter of a female thing about to be wooed.
The Tiffany drawing-room, panelled
simply in woods, furnished with the old Sturtevant
mahogany, came upon Bertram Chester like a stage setting
as he entered with Mrs. Tiffany. Upstage, burned
a driftwood fire in a low hearth of rough bricks;
Judge Tiffany sat there, in a spindle-backed chair,
reading. Across a space broken only by a painting,
a Japanese print or so, and more spindle-backed chairs,
Eleanor and Kate had grouped themselves by the piano.
Eleanor, turning the leaves on the music-rack, looked
over her shoulder at him. She was in pink that
day; the tint of her gown, blending into the tint of
her fresh skin, contrasted magically with the subdued
background. Kate, all in white, sat on a hassock
pulling a volume from the low book shelf. All
this came upon Bertram with a soothing sense which
he did not understand in that stage of his development,
did not even formulate.
Kate, tripping across the rugs with
a lightness which perfectly balanced her weight, greeted
him first; Eleanor and Judge Tiffany shook hands with
more reserve. And as Bertram settled himself in
an arm-chair before the fire, it was the ready Kate
who put him at his ease by opening fire of conversation.
“Did I tell you, Mrs. Tiffany,
about the restaurant which Mr. Chester found for us
last night? such an evening he gave us! Mr. Chester,
who is Madame Loisel you should have seen
her, Judge Tiffany you’d never dine
at home again. When these young charms fade, I’m
going to marry a French restaurant-keeper and play
hostess to the multitude and be just plump and precious
like her. How can you ever get past the counter
with her behind it, Mr. Chester?”
“I’m generally hungry that’s
how!” said Bertram Chester.
“That’s man for you!”
responded Kate. “Judge beloved, if you were
a young man and Eleanor I’m too modest
to mention myself, you see were what she’ll
be at forty, and she were behind a counter, and you
before it, would hunger tear you away? Oh dear,
it’s such a bore to keep one’s grammar
straight!”
“I ask my wife’s permission
before giving the answer which is in my heart,”
said Judge Tiffany.
Eleanor broke into the laugh which followed.
“But I would like to know about Madame Loisel.”
“Well, she’s certainly
a ripe pippin; you’ve seen that,” answered
Bertram, his smile on Eleanor. “And I’d
like to know what she’s saying when she parleys
French to the garcons. She’s all right if
she’s feeling right, but I’ve seen her
tear the place up when the service went bad.
I guess she’s a square and a pretty good fellow!”
“Tell us more about her ” this
from Eleanor.
“About her squareness?
Well, there was the time Gentle Willie Purdy got drunk.
We call him Gentle Willie because he isn’t, you
know. About three o’clock in the morning,
he took the notion it was dinner time and climbed
the side gate to the Hotel Marseillaise and pounded
at the door. He faded out about then, he says.
When he woke up, he was laid out on a couch, with
a towel on his head, and Madame was bringing him black
coffee. He tried to thank her after he felt better;
and what do you think she said? ’Meester
Purdy, nevaire, nevaire come to eat in thees place
again.’ She stayed with it too!”
“Good for her!” said Mrs. Tiffany, reaching
for her crewel work.
“Oh, yes,” responded Mr.
Chester in the uncertain tone of one who gives assent
for politeness without knowing exactly why.
“If I ever depart from the straight
and narrow paths and get drunk, may I have Madame
Loisel to hold my head,” cried Kate.
The talk ran, then, into conventional
channels the news, the latest novel, and
the season’s picking at the ranch. Judge
Tiffany dropped out gradually, and resumed his book;
and more and more did Bertram direct his talk, salted
and seasoned with his magnetism, toward Eleanor.
Kate Waddington, left out of the conversation through
three or four exchanges, crossed the room and draped
herself on a hassock at the feet of Judge Tiffany.
“Judge darling,” she said
in an aside which penetrated to the furthest corner
of the room, “I’m going back to my unsympathetic
home before tea. Don’t you think we’re
well enough chaperoned to go on with our flirtation
just where we left off?”
“Where was I when we were interrupted?”
asked Judge Tiffany, leaning forward.
“Twenty-fourth page, fifth chapter,”
said Kate. “I was just getting you jealous
and you were trying not to show it. Mr. Chester oh
excuse me well, I’ve broken in now,
so I might as well get the reward of my impoliteness may
I use you to make Judge Tiffany jealous?”
“Sure you can!” answered Bertram.
“Oh, he won’t do at all!”
Kate was addressing Judge Tiffany again. “He’s
entirely too eager. Who would be a good rival
anyway, Judge adored? Let’s create one,
like the picture of your future husband in a nickel
vaudeville!”
“Eleanor,” spoke Mrs.
Tiffany, “suppose you show Mr. Chester your end
of the house and our garden or would you
like it, Mr. Chester? We’re rather proud
of the garden.”
“I’d like it,” answered
Bertram; and he rose instantly. Mrs. Tiffany
made no move to accompany them; she sat bent over her
yarns, her ears open. And she noticed, at the
moment when Bertram made that abrupt movement from
his chair, how Kate hesitated in the middle of a sentence,
as though confused.
The rehearsed flirtation between Kate
and Judge Tiffany faded into a game of jackstones
on the floor.
Mrs. Tiffany heard the double footsteps
fade down the hall, heard the garden door open and
close. After a short interval, she heard the door
again, and the dim footsteps sounded for but a moment.
They had turned, evidently, into Eleanor’s own
living room. Would they stop there, these two,
for a talk yes, her gentle treble, his booming
bass, drifted down the hall. Presently Mrs. Tiffany
heard Eleanor’s laugh, followed by his.
In that instant, she looked at the jackstone players
by the hearth. Kate, on the crackle of that laugh,
had arrested all motion. A jack which she had
tossed in the air, descended with no hand to stop
it. For a moment, Kate held that intent pose;
then,
“Judge wonderful, I’m
a paralytic at times. You for twosies.”
She swept the jacks towards him with one of her characteristic
gestures, free and yet deft.
A bell rang in the outer hall, and the maid entered.
“Miss Waddington is wanted at the telephone,”
she announced.
Eleanor, when she saw that her visitor
had no intention of rejoining the party, commanded
him to smoke. He rolled a cigarette, Western
fashion, from powdered tobacco and brown paper, and
disposed himself in the window-seat, one leg drawn
up under him, his big shoulders settled comfortably
against the wall. Eleanor began to talk fluently,
superficially, with animation. She felt from the
first that he was throwing himself against her barriers,
trying to reach at once the deeper stages of acquaintance.
His direct look seemed both to plead and to command.
She outwitted two or three flanking movements before
he took advantage of a pause and charged her entrenchments
direct.
“I’ve said it before, but I’m going
to keep on. You are pretty.”
“Thank you,” she replied;
and smiled mainly at the ingenuousness of
this, although partly at the contrast between her present
view of him and that old memory.
“Oh, it never seems to bother
you when I say that,” went on Bert Chester,
bending his rather large and compelling black-brown
eyes upon her. “Some girls would get sore,
and some would like it; you never pay any attention.
That’s one of the ways you’re different.”
("Heavens is he making
love already he is sudden!” thought
Eleanor with amusement.)
“You are, you know. I picked
you for different the first time I saw you. I
wondered then if you were beautiful I always
knew you had nice eyes and it isn’t
so much that you’ve changed, as that the longer
a man looks at you the prettier you are.”
“Shall we discuss other things than me?”
asked Eleanor.
“Why shouldn’t we talk
about you? I’ve never had a chance before just
think, it’s the first time ever I saw you alone even
that time on the ranch a bull chaperoned us!”
This minor joke, like every play of his spirit, gained
a hundred times its own inherent effect by sifting
through his personality. She smiled back to his
smile at the boyish ripples about his mouth and eyes.
“You see, it means a lot when
a girl sticks in a man’s mind that way,”
he continued. “Why, I’ve carried you
around right through my Senior year at college and
my first year out. So of course, it must mean
something.”
The open windows of Eleanor’s
bower looked out upon a bay tree, a little thing awaiting
its slaughter for shade trees might not
grow too near the windows in San Francisco. It
was flopping its lance-leaves against the panes; puffs
of the breeze brought in a suggestion of its pungency.
That magic sense, so closely united with memory it
brought back a faint impression upon her. Her
very panic at this ghost of old imaginations inspired
the inquiry, barbed and shafted with secret malice:
“How many really nice girls
have you known in that time?”
Bertram, sitting in considerable comfort
on the window seat, flashed his eyes across his shoulder
to her.
“Oh, a few in my Senior year,
not many this year. What’s a man going
to do on twelve a week?” She noticed the indelicacy
of this, since he spoke in the house of his employer.
But the next sentence from him was even more startling:
“The last time I was in love
was down in High School at Tulare. She’s
married a fellow in the salt business now. I guess
she was pretty: anyway, her hair was the color
of molasses candy. I wrote a poem to her the
first day I saw her.”
“A poem?” asked Eleanor.
“You do well to ask that,”
said Bertram, throwing on one of those literary phrases
by which, in the midst of his plain, Anglo-Saxon speech,
he was recalling that he was a university man.
“It rhymed, after a fashion.”
“You don’t know how to
be in love until you’re older,” he went
on.
("Even that bay scent brings up only
wonder, not emotion; and I can laugh at him all the
way,” she thought. Yet in this tiny triumph
Eleanor was not entirely happy. The vision, a
little disturbing, a little shameful, but yet sweet,
was quite gone.)
“Tell me about this girl with
the molasses hair. She interests me. And
a lot about yourself.”
“Oh, I’ve forgotten most
about her long ago. And I’ve something else
to remember now, I hope. I’d like to talk
about myself, though. I’d like some girl
to hear about my ambitions. I really think it
would do me good.”
He stopped, as though expecting an
answer. None came. He bent his eyes closer
on her and repeated:
“It would!”
And at that moment, a pair of high
heels tapped in the doorway, a cheerful voice called
for admission through the portieres, and enter Kate
Waddington. Mr. Chester, Eleanor saw, rose to
her entrance as one who has not always risen for women;
there was something premeditated about the movement.
“Mrs. Tiffany said you two were
in here,” she began in her full, rich contralto,
“and I made so bold, Nell Mrs. Masters
is taking a party over to their ranch next Sunday.
One of her men has disappointed her and she’s
just telephoned to give me the commission to fill his
place. Mr. Chester, you are an inspiration sent
straight from Heaven. Any other man, positively
any other, would be a second choice but
she didn’t know you when she made up the party,
so how could she have invited you?”
She paused and threw an arch look past Eleanor.
“Sure I’ll come!”
said Bertram, jarred into the vernacular by his internal
emotion of pleasant surprise. “Sure I’d
be delighted.”
“I told Mrs. Masters you’d
be the ready accepter,” said Kate.
“You’re going too, aren’t
you?” asked Bertram of Eleanor.
“No; I had to decline, I’m sorry to say.”
“And I’m sorry; blame
sorry.” He turned back toward Kate Waddington,
and she, the lightning-minded, read his expression.
He had made a great faux pas; he had seemed
more eager toward Eleanor, to whom he owed no gratitude
for the invitation, than toward her.
“Would you care to drop in on
Mrs. Masters as you go down town to let her know that
you are coming? Or if you wish I’ll tell
them I’m going now that
way.” Her tone gave the very slightest hint
of pique; her attitude put a suggestion. The
game, plain as day to Eleanor, raised up in her only
a film of resentment. Mainly, she was enjoying
the humor of it.
Bertram rose promptly.
“It is time I was going,”
he said. “I’ve enjoyed myself very
much, Miss Gray. If you don’t mind, I’d
like to come to see you again.”
“And I’ll get into my things,” said
Kate.
They all moved toward the door.
Kate passed first; then Eleanor.
There hung beside the door-casing a hook, designed
to hold the portiere cord. Eleanor brushed too
close; it caught in the lace at her throat. She
pulled up with a jerk, gave a little cry; the lace
held fast. She turned in the wrong
direction.
Bertram saw this tiny accident; he
sprang forward, caught the lace, disentangled her.
And to do so, he must reach about her so that his
arms, never quite touching her, yet surrounded her
as a circle surrounds its centre. She turned
and looked up to thank him, surprised him, surprised
herself, in that position.
And a wave which was fear and loathing
and longing and agitation ran over her with the speed
of an electric current, and left her weak.
Her face, with its own sweet inscrutability,
showed little change of expression; but he caught
a dullness and then a glitter of her eye, a heave
of her bosom, a catch of her breath. As he stood
there, his great frame towering above her, something
which she feared might be comprehension came into
his eyes. And
“You make a picture you
two there!” called Kate Waddington from without.
The transitory expression in his eyes Eleanor
saw it now with triumph was that of one
who has thrown a pearl away. But he followed.
Dining with Mark Heath in the Hotel
Marseillaise that night, Bertram fell into a spell
of musing, a visible melancholy uncommon in him; for
his ill-humors, like his laughters, burned short and
violent. Mark Heath by this time he
was growing into a point of view on his chum and room
mate remarked it with some amusement and
more curiosity.
Mark was casting about for an opening,
when Bertram anticipated him. Staring into the
dingy wall of the Hotel Marseillaise, past the laborers,
the outcasts, the French cabmen purring over their
cabbage soup, he said in a tone of musings:
“When Bert Chester grows up
and gets rich, he’ll take unto himself a wife.
We’ll live in a big house in the Western Addition
with a bay frontage. It will be furnished with
dinky old dull stuff, and those swell Japanese prints
and paintings. And I’ll have two autos and
a toy ranch in the country to play with. We’ll
give little dances in the big hall downstairs.
I’ll lead the opening dance with the missus,
and then I’ll just take a dance or so with the
best looking girls the ones I take a special
cotton to. I’ll have my home sweet home
dance with the missus ” he fell again
to musing.
“A man up a tree,” said
Mark Heath, “would say you were in love.”
“I’ll be damned I
wonder if that ain’t the matter?” said
Bertram Chester.