She entered in some trepidation. She had never visited a restaurant
alone before. And this one was crowded with men, the atmosphere thick
with smoke. She asked the fat little proprietor if she might have a
table alone, and he conducted her to the end of the room, astonished
but flattered. A few women came to the restaurant occasionally to
lunch with "their boys," but no such lady of the haut ton as this. A
fashionable woman's caprice, no doubt.
Her seat faced the room, and as she felt the men staring at her, she
studied the menu carefully and did not raise her eyes until she gave
her order. In spite of her mission and its tragic cause she
experienced a fleeting satisfaction that she was well and becomingly
dressed. She had intended dropping in informally on Sibyl Forbes,
still an outcast, in spite of her intercession, and wore a gown of
dove-colored cashmere and a hat of the same shade with a long lilac
feather.
She summoned her courage and glanced about the room, her eyes casual
and remote. Would it be possible to recognize any one in that smoke?
But she saw Holt almost immediately. He sat at a table not far from
her own. She bowed cordially and received as frigid a response as
Mrs. Abbott would have bestowed on Sibyl Forbes.
Madeleine colored and dropped her eyes again. Of course he knew her
for the cause of Masters' desertion of the city that needed him, and
the disappointment of his own hopes and ambitions. Moreover, she had
inferred from his conversation the day they had all walked together
for half an hour that he regarded Masters as little short of a god.
He was several years younger, he was clever himself, and nothing like
Masters had ever come his way. He had declared that the projected
newspaper was to be the greatest in America. She had smiled at his
boyish enthusiasm, but without it she would probably have forgotten
him. She had resented his presence at the time.
Of course he hated her. But she had come too far to fail. He passed
her table a few moments later and she held out her hand with her
sweetest smile.
"Sit down a moment," she said with her pretty air of command; and
although his face did not relax he could do no less than obey.
"I feel more comfortable," she said. "I had no idea I should be the
only lady here. But Mr. Masters so often spoke to me of this
restaurant that I have always meant to visit it." She did not flutter
an eyelash as she uttered Masters' name, and her lovely eyes seemed
wooing Holt to remain at her side.
"Heartless, like all the rest of them," thought the young man
wrathfully. "Well, I'll give her one straight."
"Have you heard from him lately?" she asked, as the waiter placed
the dishes on the table. "He hasn't written to one of his old friends
since he left, and I've often wondered what has become of him."
"He's gone to the devil!" said Holt brutally. "And I guess you know
where the blame lies--Oh!--Drink this!" He hastily poured out a glass
of claret. "Here! Drink it! Brace up, for God's sake. Don't give
yourself away before all these fellows."
Madeleine swallowed the claret but pushed back her chair. "Take me
away quickly," she muttered. "I don't care what they think. Take me
where you can tell me--"
He drew her hand through his arm, for he was afraid she would fall,
and as he led her down the room he remarked audibly, "No wonder you
feel faint. There's no air in the place, and you've probably never
seen so much smoke in your life before."
At the door he nodded to the anxious proprietor, and when they
reached the sidewalk asked if he should take her home.
"No. I must talk to you alone. There is a hack. Let us drive
somewhere."
He handed her into the hack, telling the man to drive where he liked
as long as he avoided the Cliff House Road. Madeleine shrank into a
corner and began to cry wildly. He regarded her with anxiety, and
less hostility in his bright blue eyes.
"I'm awfully sorry," he said. "I was a brute. But I thought you
would know--I thought other things--"
"I knew nothing, but I can't believe it is true. There must be some
mistake. He is not like that."
"That's what's happened. You see, his world went to smash. That was
the opportunity of his life, and such opportunities don't come twice.
He has no capital of his own, and he can't raise money in New York.
Besides, he didn't want a newspaper anywhere else. And--and--of-course,
you know, newspaper men hear all the talk--he was terribly hard hit.
I couldn't help feeling a little sorry for you when I heard you
were ill and all the rest; but today you looked as if you had
forgotten poor Masters had ever lived--just a Society butterfly and a
coquette."
"Oh, I'm not blaming you! Perhaps it is all my fault. I don't know!--
But that! I can't believe it. I never knew a man with as strong a
character. He--he--always could control himself. And he had too much
pride and ambition."
"I guess you don't know it, but he had a weak spot for liquor. That
is the reason he drank less than the rest of us--and that did show
strength of character: that he could drink at all. I only saw him
half-seas over once. He told me then he was always on the watch lest
it get the best of him. His father drank himself to death after the
war, and his grandfather from mere love of his cups. Nothing but a
hopeless smash-up, though, would ever have let it get the best of
him.... He was terribly high-strung under all that fine repose of
his, and although his mind was like polished metal in a way, it was
full of quicksilver. When a man like that lets go--nothing left to
hold on to--he goes down hill at ten times the pace of an ordinary
chap. I--I--suppose I may as well tell you the whole truth. He never
drew a sober breath on the steamer and he's been drunk more or less
ever since he arrived in New York. Of course he writes--has to--but
can't hold down any responsible position. They'd be glad to give him
the best salary paid if he'd sober up, but he gets worse instead of
better. He's been thrown off two papers already; and it's only
because he can write better drunk than most men sober that he sells
an article now and again when he has to."
Madeleine had torn her handkerchief to pieces. She no longer wept.
Her eyes were wide with horror. He fancied he saw awful visions in
them. Fearing she might faint or have hysterics, he hastily extracted
a brandy flask from his pocket.
"Do you mind?" he asked diffidently. "Sorry I haven't a glass, but
this is the first time I've taken the cork out."
She lifted the flask obediently and took a draught that commanded
his respect.
She smiled faintly as she met his wide-eyed regard. "My husband
makes me live on this stuff. I was threatened with consumption. It
affects me very little, but it helps me in more ways than one."
"Well, don't let it help you too much. I suppose the doctor knows
best--but--well, it gets a hold on you when you are down on your luck."
"If it ever 'gets a hold' on me it will because I deliberately wish
it to," she said haughtily. "If Langdon Masters--has gone as far as
you say, I don't believe it is through any inherited weakness. He has
done it deliberately."
"I am only grateful to you. I feel better now and can think a
little. Something must be done. Surely he can be saved."
"I doubt it. When a man starts scientifically drinking himself to
death nothing can be done when there is nothing better to offer him.
May I be frank?"
"Masters told me nothing of course, but I heard all the talk. Old
Travers let out his part of it in his cups, and news travels from the
Clubs like water out of a sieve. We don't publish that sort of muck,
but there were innuendoes in that blackguard sheet, The Boom. They
stopped suddenly and I fancy the editor had a taste of the horsewhip.
It wouldn't be the first time.... When Masters sent for me and told me
he was leaving San Francisco for good and all, he looked like a man
who had been through Dore's Hell--was there still, for that matter. Of
course I knew what had happened; if I hadn't I'd have known it the
next day when I saw the doctor. He looked bad enough, but nothing to
Masters. He had less reason! Of course Masters threw his career to the
winds to save your good name. Noblesse oblige. Too bad he wasn't more
of a villain and less of a great gentleman. It, might have been better
all round. This town certainly needs him."
"If he were not a great gentleman nothing would have happened in the
first place," she said with cool pride. "But I asked you if there
were no way to save him."
"I can think of only two ways. If your husband would write and ask
him to return to San Francisco--"
"Then you might--you might--" He was fair and blushed easily. Being
secretly a sentimental youth he was shy of any of the verbal
expressions of sentiment; but he swallowed and continued heroically.
"You--you--I think you love him. I can see you are not heartless,
that you are terribly cut up. If you love him enough you might save
him. A man like Masters can quit cold no matter how far he has gone
if the inducement is great enough. If you went to New York--"
He paused and glanced at her apprehensively, but although she had
gasped she only shook her head sadly.
"I'll never break my husband's heart and the vows I made at the
altar, no matter what happens."
"Oh, you good women! I believe you are at the root of more disaster
than all the strumpets put together!"
"It may be. I remember he once said something of the sort. But he
loved me for what I am and I cannot change myself."
"Well, if he isn't there literally he soon will be. I've seen men of
your set in the gutter here when they'd only been on a spree for a
week. Take Alexander Groome and Jack Belmont, for instance. And after
the gutter it is sometimes the calaboose."
"You are cruel, and perhaps I deserve it. But if you will give me
his address I will write to him."
"I wouldn't. He might be too drunk to read your letter, and lose it.
Or he might tear it up in a fury. I don't fancy even drink could make
Langdon Masters maudlin, and the sight of your handwriting would be
more likely to make him empty the bottle with a curse than to awaken
tender sentiment. Anyhow, it would be a risk. Some blackguard might
get hold of it."
"Very well, I'll not write. Will you tell the man to drive to the
Occidental Hotel?"
He gave the order and when he drew in his head she laid her hand on
his and said in her sweet voice and with her soft eyes raised to his
(he no longer wondered that Masters had lost his head over her), "I
want to thank you for the kindness you have shown me and the care you
took of me in that restaurant. What you have told me has destroyed
the little peace of mind I had left, but at least I'm no longer in
the dark. I will confess that I went to that restaurant in the hope
of seeing you and learning something about Masters. Nor do I mind
that I have revealed myself to you without shame. I have had no
confidant throughout all this terrible time and it has been a relief.
I suppose it is always easier to be frank with a stranger than with
even the best of friends."
"Thanks. But I'd like you to know that I am your friend. I'd do
anything I could for you--for Masters' sake as well as your own. It's
an awful mess. Perhaps you'll think of some solution."
"I've thought of one as far as I am concerned. I shall drink myself
to death."
"What?" He was sitting sideways, embracing his knees, and he just
managed to save himself from toppling over. "Have you gone clean out
of your head?"
"Oh, no. Not yet, But I shall do as I said. If I cannot follow him I
can follow his example. Why should he go to the dogs and I go through
life with the respect and approval of the world? He is far greater
than I--and better. I can at least share his disgrace, and I shall
also forget--and, it may be, delude myself that I am with him at
times."
"My God! The logic of women! How happy do you think that will
make your husband? Good old sport, the doctor--and as for religion--
and vows!"
"One can stand so much and no more. I have reached the breaking
point here in this carriage. It is that or suicide, and that would
bring open disgrace on my husband. The other would only be suspected.
And I'll not last long."
The hack stopped in front of the hotel. She gave him her hand after
he had escorted her to the door. "Thank you once more. And I'd be
grateful if you would come and tell me if you have any further news
of him--no matter what. Will you?"
"Yes," he said. "But I feel like going off and getting drunk,
myself. I wish I hadn't told you a thing."
"It wouldn't have made much difference. If you know it others must,
and I'd have heard it sooner or later. I hope you'll call in any case."
He promised; but the next time he saw her it was not in a drawing-room.