Mrs. Adams had remained in Alice's room, but her mood seemed to have
changed, during her daughter's little more than momentary absence.
"What did he say?" she asked, quickly, and her tone was hopeful.
"'Say?' " Alice repeated, impatiently. "Why, nothing. I didn't let him.
Really, mama, I think the best thing for you to do would be to just keep
out of his room, because I don't believe you can go in there and not talk
to him about it, and if you do talk we'll never get him to do the right
thing. Never!"
The mother's response was a grieving silence; she turned from her daughter
and walked to the door.
"Now, for goodness' sake!" Alice cried. "Don't go making tragedy out of my
offering you a little practical advice!"
"I'm not," Mrs. Adams gulped, halting. "I'm just--just going to dust the
downstairs, Alice." And with her face still averted, she went out into the
little hallway, closing the door behind her. A moment later she could be
heard descending the stairs, the sound of her footsteps carrying somehow an
effect of resignation.
Alice listened, sighed, and, breathing the words, "Oh, murder!" turned to
cheerier matters. She put on a little apple-green turban with a dim gold
band round it, and then, having shrouded the turban in a white veil, which
she kept pushed up above her forehead, she got herself into a tan coat of
soft cloth fashioned with rakish severity. After that, having studied
herself gravely in a long glass, she took from one of the drawers of her
dressing- table a black leather card-case cornered in silver filigree, but
found it empty.
She opened another drawer wherein were two white pasteboard boxes of cards,
the one set showing simply "Miss Adams," the other engraved in Gothic
characters, "Miss Alys Tuttle Adams." The latter belonged to Alice's "Alys"
period--most girls go through it; and Alice must have felt that she had
graduated, for, after frowning thoughtfully at the exhibit this morning,
she took the box with its contents, and let the white shower fall from her
fingers into the waste-basket beside her small desk. She replenished the
card-case from the "Miss Adams" box; then, having found a pair of fresh
white gloves, she tucked an ivory-topped Malacca walking-stick under her
arm and set forth.
She went down the stairs, buttoning her gloves and still wearing the frown
with which she had put "Alys" finally out of her life. She descended
slowly, and paused on the lowest step, looking about her with an expression
that needed but a slight deepening to betoken bitterness. Its connection
with her dropping "Alys" forever was slight, however.
The small frame house, about fifteen years old, was already inclining to
become a new Colonial relic. The Adamses had built it, moving into it from
the "Queen Anne" house they had rented until they took this step in
fashion. But fifteen years is a long time to stand still in the midland
country, even for a house, and this one was lightly made, though the
Adamses had not realized how flimsily until they had lived in it for some
time. "Solid, compact, and convenient" were the instructions to the
architect, and he had made it compact successfully. Alice, pausing at the
foot of the stairway, was at the same time fairly in the "living-room," for
the only separation between the "living room" and the hall was a
demarcation suggested to willing imaginations by a pair of wooden columns
painted white. These columns, pine under the paint, were bruised and
chipped at the base; one of them showed a crack that threatened to become a
split; the "hard-wood" floor had become uneven; and in a corner the walls
apparently failed of solidity, where the wall-paper had declined to
accompany some staggerings of the plaster beneath it.
The furniture was in great part an accumulation begun with the wedding
gifts; though some of it was older, two large patent rocking-chairs and a
footstool having belonged to Mrs. Adams's mother in the days of hard brown
plush and veneer. For decoration there were pictures and vases. Mrs. Adams
had always been fond of vases, she said, and every year her husband's
Christmas present to her was a vase of one sort or another--whatever the
clerk showed him, marked at about twelve or fourteen dollars. The pictures
were some of them etchings framed in gilt: Rheims, Canterbury, schooners
grouped against a wharf; and Alice could remember how, in her childhood,
her father sometimes pointed out the watery reflections in this last as
very fine. But it was a long time since he had shown interest in such
things--"or in anything much," as she thought.
Other pictures were two water-colours in baroque frames; one being the
Amalfi monk on a pergola wall, while the second was a yard-wide display of
iris blossoms, painted by Alice herself at fourteen, as a birthday gift to
her mother. Alice's glance paused upon it now with no great pride, but
showed more approval of an enormous photograph of the Colosseum. This she
thought of as "the only good thing in the room"; it possessed and bestowed
distinction, she felt; and she did not regret having won her struggle to
get it hung in its conspicuous place of honour over the mantelpiece.
Formerly that place had been held for years by a steel-engraving, an
accurate representation of the Suspension Bridge at Niagara Falls. It was
almost as large as its successor, the "Colosseum," and it had been
presented to Mr. Adams by colleagues in his department at Lamb and
Company's. Adams had shown some feeling when Alice began to urge its
removal to obscurity in the "upstairs hall"; he even resisted for several
days after she had the "Colosseum" charged to him, framed in oak, and sent
to the house. She cheered him up, of course, when he gave way; and her
heart never misgave her that there might be a doubt which of the two
pictures was the more dismaying.
Over the pictures, the vases, the old brown plush rocking-chairs and the
stool, over the three gilt chairs, over the new chintz-covered easy chair
and the gray velure sofa--over everything everywhere, was the familiar
coating of smoke grime. It had worked into every fibre of the lace
curtains, dingying them to an unpleasant gray; it lay on the window- sills
and it dimmed the glass panes; it covered the walls, covered the ceiling,
and was smeared darker and thicker in all corners. Yet here was no fault of
housewifery; the curse could not be lifted, as the ingrained smudges
permanent on the once white woodwork proved. The grime was perpetually
renewed; scrubbing only ground it in.
This particular ugliness was small part of Alice's discontent, for though
the coating grew a little deeper each year she was used to it. Moreover,
she knew that she was not likely to find anything better in a thousand
miles, so long as she kept to cities, and that none of her friends, however
opulent, had any advantage of her here. Indeed, throughout all the great
soft-coal country, people who consider themselves comparatively poor may
find this consolation: cleanliness has been added to the virtues and
beatitudes that money can not buy.
Alice brightened a little as she went forward to the front door, and she
brightened more when the spring breeze met her there. Then all depression
left her as she walked down the short brick path to the sidewalk, looked up
and down the street, and saw how bravely the maple shade-trees, in spite of
the black powder they breathed, were flinging out their thousands of young
green particles overhead.
She turned north, treading the new little shadows on the pavement briskly,
and, having finished buttoning her gloves, swung down her Malacca stick
from under her arm to let it tap a more leisurely accompaniment to her
quick, short step. She had to step quickly if she was to get anywhere; for
the closeness of her skirt, in spite of its little length, permitted no
natural stride; but she was pleased to be impeded, these brevities forming
part of her show of fashion.
Other pedestrians found them not without charm, though approval may have
been lacking here and there, and at the first crossing Alice suffered what
she might have accounted an actual injury, had she allowed herself to be so
sensitive. An elderly woman in fussy black silk stood there, waiting for a
streetcar; she was all of a globular modelling, with a face patterned like
a frost-bitten peach; and that the approaching gracefulness was uncongenial
she naively made too evident. Her round, wan eyes seemed roused to bitter
life as they rose from the curved high heels of the buckled slippers to the
tight little skirt, and thence with startled ferocity to the Malacca cane,
which plainly appeared to her as a decoration not more astounding than it
was insulting.
Perceiving that the girl was bowing to her, the globular lady hurriedly
made shift to alter her injurious expression. "Good morning, Mrs. Dowling,"
Alice said, gravely. Mrs. Dowling returned the salutation with a smile as
convincingly benevolent as the ghastly smile upon a Santa Claus face; and
then, while Alice passed on, exploded toward her a single compacted breath
through tightened lips.
The sound was eloquently audible, though Mrs. Dowling remained unaware that
in this or any manner whatever she had shed a light upon her thoughts; for
it was her lifelong innocent conviction that other people saw her only as
she wished to be seen, and heard from her only what she intended to be
heard. At home it was always her husband who pulled down the shades of
their bedroom window.
Alice looked serious for a few moments after the little encounter, then
found some consolation in the behaviour of a gentleman of forty or so who
was coming toward her. Like Mrs. Dowling, he had begun to show
consciousness of Alice's approach while she was yet afar off; but his
tokens were of a kind pleasanter to her. He was like Mrs. Dowling again,
however, in his conception that Alice would not realize the significance of
what he did. He passed his hand over his neck-scarf to see that it lay
neatly to his collar, smoothed a lapel of his coat, and adjusted his hat,
seeming to be preoccupied the while with problems that kept his eyes to the
pavement; then, as he came within a few feet of her, he looked up, as in a
surprised recognition almost dramatic, smiled winningly, lifted his hat
decisively, and carried it to the full arm's length.
Alice's response was all he could have asked. The cane in her right hand
stopped short in its swing, while her left hand moved in a pretty gesture
as if an impulse carried it toward the heart; and she smiled, with her
under lip caught suddenly between her teeth. Months ago she had seen an
actress use this smile in a play, and it came perfectly to Alice now,
without conscious direction, it had been so well acquired; but the pretty
hand's little impulse toward the heart was an original bit all her own, on
the spur of the moment.
The gentleman went on, passing from her forward vision as he replaced his
hat. Of himself he was nothing to Alice, except for the gracious
circumstance that he had shown strong consciousness of a pretty girl. He
was middle-aged, substantial, a family man, securely married; and Alice had
with him one of those long acquaintances that never become emphasized by so
much as five minutes of talk; yet for this inconsequent meeting she had
enacted a little part like a fragment in a pantomime of Spanish wooing.
It was not for him--not even to impress him, except as a messenger. Alice
was herself almost unaware of her thought, which was one of the running
thousands of her thoughts that took no deliberate form in words.
Nevertheless, she had it, and it was the impulse of all her pretty bits of
pantomime when she met other acquaintances who made their appreciation
visible, as this substantial gentleman did. In Alice's unworded thought, he
was to be thus encouraged as in some measure a champion to speak well of
her to the world; but more than this: he was to tell some magnificent
unknown bachelor how wonderful, how mysterious, she was.
She hastened on gravely, a little stirred reciprocally with the supposed
stirrings in the breast of that shadowy ducal mate, who must be somewhere
"waiting," or perhaps already seeking her; for she more often thought of
herself as "waiting" while he sought her; and sometimes this view of things
became so definite that it shaped into a murmur on her lips. "Waiting. Just
waiting." And she might add, "For him!" Then, being twenty-two, she was apt
to conclude the mystic interview by laughing at herself, though not without
a continued wistfulness.
She came to a group of small coloured children playing waywardly in a
puddle at the mouth of a muddy alley; and at sight of her they gave over
their pastime in order to stare. She smiled brilliantly upon them, but they
were too struck with wonder to comprehend that the manifestation was
friendly; and as Alice picked her way in a little detour to keep from the
mud, she heard one of them say, "Lady got cane! Jeez'!"
She knew that many coloured children use impieties familiarly, and she was
not startled. She was disturbed, however, by an unfavourable hint in the
speaker's tone. He was six, probably, but the sting of a criticism is not
necessarily allayed by knowledge of its ignoble source, and Alice had
already begun to feel a slight uneasiness about her cane. Mrs. Dowling's
stare had been strikingly projected at it; other women more than merely
glanced, their brows and lips contracting impulsively; and Alice was aware
that one or two of them frankly halted as soon as she had passed.
She had seen in several magazines pictures of ladies with canes, and on
that account she had bought this one, never questioning that fashion is
recognized, even in the provinces, as soon as beheld. On the contrary,
these staring women obviously failed to realize that what they were being
shown was not an eccentric outburst, but the bright harbinger of an
illustrious mode. Alice had applied a bit of artificial pigment to her lips
and cheeks before she set forth this morning; she did not need it, having a
ready colour of her own, which now mounted high with annoyance.
Then a splendidly shining closed black automobile, with windows of polished
glass, came silently down the street toward her. Within it, as in a
luxurious little apartment, three comely ladies in mourning sat and
gossiped; but when they saw Alice they clutched one another. They instantly
recovered, bowing to her solemnly as they were borne by, yet were not gone
from her sight so swiftly but the edge of her side glance caught a flash of
teeth in mouths suddenly opened, and the dark glisten of black gloves again
clutching to share mirth.
The colour that outdid the rouge on Alice's cheek extended its area and
grew warmer as she realized how all too cordial had been her nod and smile
to these humorous ladies. But in their identity lay a significance causing
her a sharper smart, for they were of the family of that Lamb, chief of
Lamb and Company, who had employed her father since before she was born.
"And know his salary! They'd be sure to find out about that!" was her
thought, coupled with another bitter one to the effect that they had
probably made instantaneous financial estimates of what she wore though
certainly her walking-stick had most fed their hilarity.
She tucked it under her arm, not swinging it again; and her breath became
quick and irregular as emotion beset her. She had been enjoying her walk,
but within the space of the few blocks she had gone since she met the
substantial gentleman, she found that more than the walk was spoiled:
suddenly her life seemed to be spoiled, too; though she did not view the
ruin with complaisance. These Lamb women thought her and her cane
ridiculous, did they? she said to herself. That was their parvenu blood: to
think because a girl's father worked for their grandfather she had no right
to be rather striking in style, especially when the striking was her style.
Probably all the other girls and women would agree with them and would
laugh at her when they got together, and, what might be fatal, would try to
make all the men think her a silly pretender. Men were just like sheep, and
nothing was easier than for women to set up as shepherds and pen them in a
fold. "To keep out outsiders," Alice thought. "And make 'em believe I am an
outsider. What's the use of living?"
All seemed lost when a trim young man appeared, striding out of a
cross-street not far before her, and, turning at the corner, came toward
her. Visibly, he slackened his gait to lengthen the time of his approach,
and, as he was a stranger to her, no motive could be ascribed to him other
than a wish to have a longer time to look at her.
She lifted a pretty hand to a pin at her throat, bit her lip--not with the
smile, but mysteriously--and at the last instant before her shadow touched
the stranger, let her eyes gravely meet his. A moment later, having arrived
before the house which was her destination, she halted at the entrance to a
driveway leading through fine lawns to the intentionally important mansion.
It was a pleasant and impressive place to be seen entering, but Alice did
not enter at once. She paused, examining a tiny bit of mortar which the
masons had forgotten to scrape from a brick in one of the massive
gate-posts. She frowned at this tiny defacement, and with an air of
annoyance scraped it away, using the ferrule of her cane an act of
fastidious proprietorship. If any one had looked back over his shoulder he
would not have doubted that she lived there.
Alice did not turn to see whether anything of the sort happened or not, but
she may have surmised that it did. At all events, it was with an
invigorated step that she left the gateway behind her and went cheerfully
up the drive to the house of her friend Mildred.