The more March thought of the injustice
of the New York press (which had not, however, attacked
the literary quality of the number) the more bitterly
he resented it; and his wife’s indignation superheated
his own. ‘Every Other Week’ had become
a very personal affair with the whole family; the
children shared their parents’ disgust; Belle
was outspoken in, her denunciations of a venal press.
Mrs. March saw nothing but ruin ahead, and began tacitly
to plan a retreat to Boston, and an establishment
retrenched to the basis of two thousand a year.
She shed some secret tears in anticipation of the
privations which this must involve; but when Fulkerson
came to see March rather late the night of the publication
day, she nobly told him that if the worst came to the
worst she could only have the kindliest feeling toward
him, and should not regard him as in the slightest
degree responsible.
“Oh, hold on, hold on!”
he protested. “You don’t think we’ve
made a failure, do you?”
“Why, of course,” she
faltered, while March remained gloomily silent.
“Well, I guess we’ll wait
for the official count, first. Even New York
hasn’t gone against us, and I guess there’s
a majority coming down to Harlem River that could
sweep everything before it, anyway.”
“What do you mean, Fulkerson?” March demanded,
sternly.
“Oh, nothing! Only, the
‘News Company’ has ordered ten thousand
now; and you know we had to give them the first twenty
on commission.”
“What do you mean?” March
repeated; his wife held her breath.
“I mean that the first number
is a booming success already, and that it’s
going to a hundred thousand before it stops. That
unanimity and variety of censure in the morning papers,
combined with the attractiveness of the thing itself,
has cleared every stand in the city, and now if the
favor of the country press doesn’t turn the
tide against us, our fortune’s made.”
The Marches remained dumb. “Why, look here!
Didn’t I tell you those criticisms would be
the making of us, when they first began to turn you
blue this morning, March?”
“He came home to lunch perfectly
sick,” said Mrs. Marcli; “and I wouldn’t
let him go back again.”
“Didn’t I tell you so?” Fulkerson
persisted.
March could not remember that he had,
or that he had been anything but incoherently and
hysterically jocose over the papers, but he said, “Yes,
yes I think so.”
“I knew it from the start,”
said Fulkerson. “The only other person who
took those criticisms in the right spirit was Mother
Dryfoos I’ve just been bolstering
up the Dryfoos family. She had them read to her
by Mrs. Mandel, and she understood them to be all
the most flattering prophecies of success. Well,
I didn’t read between the lines to that extent,
quite; but I saw that they were going to help us,
if there was anything in us, more than anything that
could have been done. And there was something
in us! I tell you, March, that seven-shooting
self-cocking donkey of a Beaton has given us the greatest
start! He’s caught on like a mouse.
He’s made the thing awfully chic; it’s
jimmy; there’s lots of dog about it. He’s
managed that process so that the illustrations look
as expensive as first-class wood-cuts, and they’re
cheaper than chromos. He’s put style
into the whole thing.”
“Oh yes,” said March,
with eager meekness, “it’s Beaton that’s
done it.”
Fulkerson read jealousy of Beaton
in Mrs. March’s face. “Beaton has
given us the start because his work appeals to the
eye. There’s no denying that the pictures
have sold this first number; but I expect the literature
of this first number to sell the pictures of the second.
I’ve been reading it all over, nearly, since
I found how the cat was jumping; I was anxious about
it, and I tell you, old man, it’s good.
Yes, sir! I was afraid maybe you had got it too
good, with that Boston refinement of yours; but I
reckon you haven’t. I’ll risk it.
I don’t see how you got so much variety into
so few things, and all of them palpitant, all of ’em
on the keen jump with actuality.”
The mixture of American slang with
the jargon of European criticism in Fulkerson’s
talk made March smile, but his wife did not seem to
notice it in her exultation. “That is just
what I say,” she broke in. “It’s
perfectly wonderful. I never was anxious about
it a moment, except, as you say, Mr. Fulkerson, I
was afraid it might be too good.”
They went on in an antiphony of praise
till March said: “Really, I don’t
see what’s left me but to strike for higher wages.
I perceive that I’m indispensable.”
“Why, old man, you’re
coming in on the divvy, you know,” said Fulkerson.
They both laughed, and when Fulkerson
was gone, Mrs. March asked her husband what a divvy
was.
“It’s a chicken before it’s hatched.”
“No! Truly?”
He explained, and she began to spend the divvy.
At Mrs. Leighton’s Fulkerson
gave Alma all the honor of the success; he told her
mother that the girl’s design for the cover had
sold every number, and Mrs. Leighton believed him.
“Well, Ah think Ah maght have
some of the glory,” Miss Woodburn pouted.
“Where am Ah comin’ in?”
“You’re coming in on the
cover of the next number,” said Fulkerson.”
We’re going to have your face there; Miss Leighton’s
going to sketch it in.” He said this reckless
of the fact that he had already shown them the design
of the second number, which was Beaton’s weird
bit of gas-country landscape.
“Ah don’t see why you
don’t wrahte the fiction for your magazine, Mr.
Fulkerson,” said the girl.
This served to remind Fulkerson of
something. He turned to her father. “I’ll
tell you what, Colonel Woodburn, I want Mr. March to
see some chapters of that book of yours. I’ve
been talking to him about it.”
“I do not think it would add
to the popularity of your periodical, sir,”
said the Colonel, with a stately pleasure in being
asked. “My views of a civilization based
upon responsible slavery would hardly be acceptable
to your commercialized society.”
“Well, not as a practical thing,
of course,” Fulkerson admitted. “But
as something retrospective, speculative, I believe
it would make a hit. There’s so much going
on now about social questions; I guess people would
like to read it.”
“I do not know that my work
is intended to amuse people,” said the Colonel,
with some state.
“Mah goodness! Ah only
wish it was, then,” said his daughter; and
she added: “Yes, Mr. Fulkerson, the Colonel
will be very glad to submit po’tions of his
woak to yo’ edito’. We want to
have some of the honaw. Perhaps we can say we
helped to stop yo’ magazine, if we didn’t
help to stawt it.”
They all laughed at her boldness,
and Fulkerson said: “It ’ll take a
good deal more than that to stop ‘Every Other
Week’. The Colonel’s whole book couldn’t
do it.” Then he looked unhappy, for Colonel
Woodburn did not seem to enjoy his reassuring words;
but Miss Woodburn came to his rescue. “You
maght illustrate it with the po’trait of the
awthoris daughtaw, if it’s too late for the
covah.”
“Going to have that in every
number, Miss Woodburn!” he cried.
“Oh, mah goodness!” she said, with
mock humility.
Alma sat looking at her piquant head,
black, unconsciously outlined against the lamp, as
she sat working by the table. “Just keep
still a moment!”
She got her sketch-block and pencils,
and began to draw; Fulkerson tilted himself forward
and looked over her shoulder; he smiled outwardly;
inwardly he was divided between admiration of Miss
Woodburn’s arch beauty and appreciation of the
skill which reproduced it; at the same time he was
trying to remember whether March had authorized him
to go so far as to ask for a sight of Colonel Woodburn’s
manuscript. He felt that he had trenched upon
March’s province, and he framed one apology to
the editor for bringing him the manuscript, and another
to the author for bringing it back.
“Most Ah hold raght still like
it was a photograph?” asked Miss Woodburn.
“Can Ah toak?”
“Talk all you want,” said
Alma, squinting her eyes. “And you needn’t
be either adamantine, nor yet wooden.”
“Oh, ho’ very good of
you! Well, if Ah can toak go on, Mr.
Fulkerson!”
“Me talk? I can’t
breathe till this thing is done!” sighed Fulkerson;
at that point of his mental drama the Colonel was
behaving rustily about the return of his manuscript,
and he felt that he was looking his last on Miss Woodburn’s
profile.
“Is she getting it raght?” asked the girl.
“I don’t know which is which,” said
Fulkerson.
“Oh, Ah hope Ah shall!
Ah don’t want to go round feelin’ like
a sheet of papah half the time.”
“You could rattle on, just the same,”
suggested Alma.
“Oh, now! Jost listen to
that, Mr. Fulkerson. Do you call that any way
to toak to people?”
“You might know which you were
by the color,” Fulkerson began, and then he
broke off from the personal consideration with a business
inspiration, and smacked himself on the knee, “We
could print it in color!”
Mrs. Leighton gathered up her sewing
and held it with both hands in her lap, while she
came round, and looked critically at the sketch and
the model over her glasses. “It’s
very good, Alma,” she said.
Colonel Woodburn remained restively
on his side of the table. “Of course, Mr.
Fulkerson, you were jesting, sir, when you spoke of
printing a sketch of my daughter.”
“Why, I don’t know If you object ?
“I do, sir decidedly,” said
the Colonel.
“Then that settles it, of course, I
only meant ”
“Indeed it doesn’t!”
cried the girl. “Who’s to know who
it’s from? Ah’m jost set on havin’
it printed! Ah’m going to appear as the
head of Slavery in opposition to the head
of Liberty.”
“There’ll be a revolution
inside of forty-eight hours, and we’ll have the
Colonel’s system going wherever a copy of ‘Every
Other Week’ circulates,” said Fulkerson.
“This sketch belongs to me,”
Alma interposed. “I’m not going to
let it be printed.”
“Oh, mah goodness!”
said Miss Woodburn, laughing good-humoredly. “That’s
becose you were brought up to hate slavery.”
“I should like Mr. Beaton to
see it,” said Mrs. Leighton, in a sort of absent
tone. She added, to Fulkerson: “I rather
expected he might be in to-night.”
“Well, if he comes we’ll
leave it to Beaton,” Fulkerson said, with relief
in the solution, and an anxious glance at the Colonel,
across the table, to see how he took that form of
the joke. Miss Woodburn intercepted his glance
and laughed, and Fulkerson laughed, too, but rather
forlornly.
Alma set her lips primly and turned
her head first on one side and then on the other to
look at the sketch. “I don’t think
we’ll leave it to Mr. Beaton, even if he comes.”
“We left the other design for
the cover to Beaton,” Fulkerson insinuated.
“I guess you needn’t be afraid of him.”
“Is it a question of my being
afraid?” Alma asked; she seemed coolly intent
on her drawing.
“Miss Leighton thinks he ought
to be afraid of her,” Miss Woodburn explained.
“It’s a question of his courage, then?”
said Alma.
“Well, I don’t think there
are many young ladies that Beaton’s afraid of,”
said Fulkerson, giving himself the respite of this
purely random remark, while he interrogated the faces
of Mrs. Leighton and Colonel Woodburn for some light
upon the tendency of their daughters’ words.
He was not helped by Mrs. Leighton’s
saying, with a certain anxiety, “I don’t
know what you mean, Mr. Fulkerson.”
“Well, you’re as much
in the dark as I am myself, then,” said Fulkerson.
“I suppose I meant that Beaton is rather a favorite,
you know. The women like him.”
Mrs. Leighton sighed, and Colonel
Woodburn rose and left the room.
In the silence that followed, Fulkerson
looked from one lady to the other with dismay.
“I seem to have put my foot in it, somehow,”
he suggested, and Miss Woodburn gave a cry of laughter.
“Poo’ Mr. Fulkerson!
Poo’ Mr. Fulkerson! Papa thoat you wanted
him to go.”
“Wanted him to go?” repeated Fulkerson.
“We always mention Mr. Beaton when we want to
get rid of papa.”
“Well, it seems to me that I
have noticed that he didn’t take much interest
in Beaton, as a general topic. But I don’t
know that I ever saw it drive him out of the room
before!”
“Well, he isn’t always
so bad,” said Miss Woodburn. “But
it was a case of hate at first sight, and it seems
to be growin’ on papa.”
“Well, I can understand that,”
said Fulkerson. “The impulse to destroy
Beaton is something that everybody has to struggle
against at the start.”
“I must say, Mr. Fulkerson,”
said Mrs. Leighton, in the tremor through which she
nerved herself to differ openly with any one she liked,
“I never had to struggle with anything of the
kind, in regard to Mr. Beaton. He has always
been most respectful and and considerate,
with me, whatever he has been with others.”
“Well, of course, Mrs. Leighton!”
Fulkerson came back in a soothing tone. “But
you see you’re the rule that proves the exception.
I was speaking of the way men felt about Beaton.
It’s different with ladies; I just said so.”
“Is it always different?”
Alma asked, lifting her head and her hand from her
drawing, and staring at it absently.
Fulkerson pushed both his hands through
his whiskers. “Look here! Look here!”
he said. “Won’t somebody start some
other subject? We haven’t had the weather
up yet, have we? Or the opera? What is the
matter with a few remarks about politics?”
“Why, Ah thoat you lahked to
toak about the staff of yo’ magazine,”
said Miss Woodburn.
“Oh, I do!” said Fulkerson.
“But not always about the same member of it.
He gets monotonous, when he doesn’t get complicated.
I’ve just come round from the Marches’,”
he added, to Mrs. Leighton.
“I suppose they’ve got
thoroughly settled in their apartment by this time.”
Mrs. Leighton said something like this whenever the
Marches were mentioned. At the bottom of her
heart she had not forgiven them for not taking her
rooms; she had liked their looks so much; and she was
always hoping that they were uncomfortable or dissatisfied;
she could not help wanting them punished a little.
“Well, yes; as much as they
ever will be,” Fulkerson answered. “The
Boston style is pretty different, you know; and the
Marches are old-fashioned folks, and I reckon they
never went in much for bric-a-brac They’ve
put away nine or ten barrels of dragon candlesticks,
but they keep finding new ones.”
“Their landlady has just joined
our class,” said Alma. “Isn’t
her name Green? She happened to see my copy of
‘Every Other Week’, and said she knew
the editor; and told me.”
“Well, it’s a little world,”
said Fulkerson. “You seem to be touching
elbows with everybody. Just think of your having
had our head translator for a model.”
“Ah think that your whole publication
revolves aroand the Leighton family,” said Miss
Woodburn.
“That’s pretty much so,”
Fulkerson admitted. “Anyhow, the publisher
seems disposed to do so.”
“Are you the publisher?
I thought it was Mr. Dryfoos,” said Alma.
“It is.”
“Oh!”
The tone and the word gave Fulkerson
a discomfort which he promptly confessed. “Missed
again.”
The girls laughed, and he regained
something of his lost spirits, and smiled upon their
gayety, which lasted beyond any apparent reason for
it.
Miss Woodburn asked, “And is
Mr. Dryfoos senio’ anything like ouah Mr. Dryfoos?”
“Not the least.”
“But he’s jost as exemplary?”
“Yes; in his way.”
“Well, Ah wish Ah could see
all those pinks of puffection togethah, once.”
“Why, look here! I’ve
been thinking I’d celebrate a little, when the
old gentleman gets back. Have a little supper something
of that kind. How would you like to let me have
your parlors for it, Mrs. Leighton? You ladies
could stand on the stairs, and have a peep at us, in
the bunch.”
“Oh, mah! What a privilege!
And will Miss Alma be there, with the othah contributors?
Ah shall jost expah of envy!”
“She won’t be there in
person,” said Fulkerson, “but she’ll
be represented by the head of the art department.”
“Mah goodness! And who’ll
the head of the publishing department represent?”
“He can represent you,” said Alma.
“Well, Ah want to be represented, someho’.”
“We’ll have the banquet
the night before you appear on the cover of our fourth
number,” said Fulkerson.
“Ah thoat that was doubly fo’bidden,”
said Miss Woodburn. “By the stern parent
and the envious awtust.”
“We’ll get Beaton to get
round them, somehow. I guess we can trust him
to manage that.”
Mrs. Leighton sighed her resentment of the implication.
“I always feel that Mr. Beaton doesn’t
do himself justice,” she began.
Fulkerson could not forego the chance
of a joke. “Well, maybe he would rather
temper justice with mercy in a case like his.”
This made both the younger ladies laugh. “I
judge this is my chance to get off with my life,”
he added, and he rose as he spoke. “Mrs.
Leighton, I am about the only man of my sex who doesn’t
thirst for Beaton’s blood most of the time.
But I know him and I don’t. He’s more
kinds of a good fellow than people generally understand.
He doesn’t wear his heart upon his sleeve-not
his ulster sleeve, anyway. You can always count
me on your side when it’s a question of finding
Beaton not guilty if he’ll leave the State.”
Alma set her drawing against the wall,
in rising to say goodnight to Fulkerson. He bent
over on his stick to look at it. “Well,
it’s beautiful,” he sighed, with unconscious
sincerity.
Alma made him a courtesy of mock modesty.
“Thanks to Miss Woodburn!”
“Oh no! All she had to do was simply to
stay put.”
“Don’t you think Ah might
have improved it if Ah had, looked better?” the
girl asked, gravely.
“Oh, you couldn’t!”
said Fulkerson, and he went off triumphant in their
applause and their cries of “Which? which?”
Mrs. Leighton sank deep into an accusing
gloom when at last she found herself alone with her
daughter. “I don’t know what you are
thinking about, Alma Leighton. If you don’t
like Mr. Beaton ”
“I don’t.”
“You don’t? You know
better than that. You know that, you did care
for him.”
“Oh! that’s a very different
thing. That’s a thing that can be got over.”
“Got over!” repeated Mrs. Leighton, aghast.
“Of course, it can! Don’t
be romantic, mamma. People get over dozens of
such fancies. They even marry for love two or
three times.”
“Never!” cried her mother,
doing her best to feel shocked; and at last looking
it.
Her looking it had no effect upon
Alma. “You can easily get over caring for
people; but you can’t get over liking them if
you like them because they are sweet and good.
That’s what lasts. I was a simple goose,
and he imposed upon me because he was a sophisticated
goose. Now the case is reversed.”
“He does care for you, now.
You can see it. Why do you encourage him to come
here?”
“I don’t,” said
Alma. “I will tell him to keep away if you
like. But whether he comes or goes, it will be
the same.”
“Not to him, Alma! He is in love with you!”
“He has never said so.”
“And you would really let him say so, when you
intend to refuse him?”
“I can’t very well refuse him till he
does say so.”
This was undeniable. Mrs. Leighton
could only demand, in an awful tone, “May I
ask why if you cared for him; and I know
you care for him still you will refuse him?”
Alma laughed. “Because because
I’m wedded to my Art, and I’m not going
to commit bigamy, whatever I do.”
“Alma!”
“Well, then, because I don’t
like him that is, I don’t believe
in him, and don’t trust him. He’s
fascinating, but he’s false and he’s fickle.
He can’t help it, I dare say.”
“And you are perfectly hard.
Is it possible that you were actually pleased to have
Mr. Fulkerson tease you about Mr. Dryfoos?”
“Oh, good-night, now, mamma! This is becoming
personal”