Langdon Masters awoke from a sleep that had lasted all day and
glowered out upon the room he occupied in Baxter Street. It was as
wretched as all tenements in the Five Points, but it had the
distinguishing mark of neatness. Drunk as he might be, the drab who
lived with him knew that he would detect dirt and disorder, and that
her slender hold on his tolerance would be forfeited at once. There
were too many of her sort in the Five Points eager for the position
of mistress to this man who treated them as a sultan might treat the
meanest of his concubines, rarely throwing them a word, and
alternately indulgent and brutal. They regarded him with awe, even
forgetting to drink when, in certain stages of his cups, he
entertained by the hour in one or other of the groggeries a circle of
the most abandoned characters in New York--thieves, cracksmen,
murderers actual or potential, "shoulder-hitters," sailors who came
ashore to drink the fieriest rum they could find, prostitutes, dead-beats,
degenerates, derelicts--with a flow of talk that was like the
flashing of jewels in the gutter. He related the most stupendous
adventures that had ever befallen a mortal. If any one of his
audience had heard of Munchausen he would have dismissed him as a
poor imitation of this man who would seem to have dropped down into
their filthy and lawless quarter from a sphere where things happened
unknown to men on this planet. They dimly recognized that he was a
fallen gentleman, for at long intervals good churchmen from the
foreign territory of Broadway or Fifth Avenue came to remonstrate and
plead. They never came a second time and they usually spent the
following week in bed.
But Masters was democratic enough in manner; it was evident that he
regarded himself as no better than the worst, and nothing appeared to
be further from his mind than reform of them or himself. He had now
been with them for six months and came and went as he pleased. In the
beginning his indestructible air of superiority had subtly irritated
them in spite of his immediate acceptance of their standards, and
there had been two attempts to trounce him. But he was apparently
made of steel rope, he knew every trick of their none too subtle
"game," and he had knocked out his assailants and won the final
respect of Five Points.
And if he was finical about his room he took care to be no neater in
his dress than his associates. Although he had his hair cut and his
face shaved he wore old and rough clothes and a gray flannel shirt.
Masters, after his drab had given him a cup of strong coffee and a
rasher, followed by a glass of rum, lost the horrid sensations
incident upon the waking moment and looked forward to the night with
a sardonic but not discontented grin. He knew that he had reached the
lowest depths, and if his tough frame refused to succumb to the
vilest liquor he could pour into it, he would probably be killed in
some general shooting fray, or by one of the women he infatuated and
cast aside when another took his drunken but ever ironic fancy. Only
a week since the cyprian at present engaged in washing his dishes had
been nearly demolished by the damsel she had superseded. She still
wore a livid mark on her cheek and a plaster on her head whence a
handful of hair had been removed by the roots. He had stood aloof
during the fracas in the dirty garish dance house under the sidewalk,
laughing consumedly; and had awakened the next night to find the
victor mending her tattered finery. She made him an excellent cup of
coffee, and he had told her curtly that she could stay.
If, in his comparatively sober moments, the memory of Madeleine
intruded, he cast it out with a curse. Not because he blamed her for
his downfall; he blamed no one but himself; but because any
recollection of the past, all it had been and promised, was
unendurable. Whether he had been strong or weak in electing to go
straight to perdition when Life had scourged him, he neither knew nor
cared. He began to drink on the steamer, determined to forget for the
present, at least; but the mental condition induced was far more
agreeable than those moments of sobriety when he felt as if he were
in hell with fire in his vitals and cold terror of the future in his
brain. In New York, driven by his pride, he had made one or two
attempts to recover himself, but the writing of unsigned editorials
on subjects that interested him not at all was like wandering in a
thirsty desert without an oasis in sight--after the champagne of his
life in San Francisco with a future as glittering as its skies at
night and the daily companionship of a woman whom he had believed the
fates must give him wholly in time.
He finally renounced self-respect as a game not worth the candle.
Moreover, the clarity of mind necessary to sustained work embraced
ever the image of Madeleine; what he had lost and what he had never
possessed. And, again, he tormented himself with imaginings of her
own suffering and despair; alternated with visions of Madeleine
enthroned, secure, impeccable, admired, envied--and with other men in
love with her! Some depth of insight convinced him that she loved him
immortally, but he knew her need for mental companionship, and the
thought that she might find it, however briefly and barrenly, with
another man, sent him plunging once more.
His friends and admirers on the newspaper staffs had been loyal, but
not only was he irritated by their manifest attempts to reclaim him,
but he grew to hate them as so many accusing reminders of the great
gifts he was striving to blast out by the roots; and, finding it
difficult to avoid them, he had, as soon as he was put in possession
of his small income, deliberately transferred himself to the Five
Points, where they would hardly be likely to trace him, certainly not
to seek his society.
And, on the whole, this experience in a degraded and perilous quarter,
famous the world over as a degree or two worse than any pest-hole
of its kind, was the most enjoyable of his prolonged debauch. It
was only a few yards from Broadway, but he had never set foot in that
magnificent thoroughfare of brown stone and white marble,
aristocratic business partner of Fifth Avenue, since he entered a
precinct so different from New York, as his former world knew it,
that he might have been on a convict island in the South Seas.
The past never obtruded itself here. He was surrounded by danger and
degradation, ugliness unmitigated, and a complete indifference to
anything in the world but vice, crime, liquor and the primitive
appetites. Even the children in the swarming squalid streets looked
like little old men and women; they fought in the gutters for scraps
of refuse, or stood staring sullenly before them, the cry in their
emaciated bodies dulled with the poisons of malnutrition; or making
quick passes at the pocket of a thief. The girls had never been
young, never worn anything but rags or mean finery, the boys were in
training for a career of crime, the sodden women seemed to have no
natural affection for the young they bore as lust prompted. Men beat
their wives or strumpets with no interference from the police. The
Sixth Ward was the worst on Manhattan, and the police had enough to
do without wasting their time in this congested mass of the city's
putrid dregs; who would be conferring a favor on the great and
splendid and envied City of New York if they exterminated one another
in a grand final orgy of blood and hate.
The irony in Masters' mind might sleep when that proud and
contemptuous organ was sodden, but it was deathless. When he thought
at all it was to congratulate himself with a laugh that he had found
the proper setting for the final exit of a man whom Life had equipped
to conquer, and Fate, in her most ironic mood, had challenged to
battle; with the sting of death in victory if he won. He had beaten
her at her own game. He had always aimed at consummation, the
masterpiece; and here, in his final degradation, he had accomplished
it.
This morning he laughed aloud, and the woman--or girl?--her body was
young but her scarred face was almost aged--wondered if he were going
mad at last. There was little time lost in the Five Points upon
discussion of personal peculiarities, but all took for granted that
this man was half mad and would be wholly so before long.
"Is anything the matter?" she asked timidly, her eye on the door but
not daring to bolt.
"Oh, no, nothing! Nothing in all this broad and perfect world. Life
is a sweet-scented garden where all the good are happy and all the
bad receive their just and immediate deserts. You are the complete
epitome of life, yourself, and I gaze upon you with a satisfaction as
complete. I wouldn't change you for the most silken and secluded
beauty in Bleecker Street, and you may stay here for ever. The more
hideous you become the more pleased I shall be. And you needn't be
afraid I have gone mad. I am damnably sane. And still more damnably
sober. Go out and buy me a bottle of Lethe, and be quick about it.
This is nearly finished."
"Do you mean rum?" She was reassured, somewhat, but he had a fashion
of making what passed for her brain feel as if it had been churned.
He opened an old wallet and threw a handful of bills on the floor.
"Go round into Broadway and buy yourself a gown of white satin and a
wreath of lilies for your hair. You would be a picture to make the
angels weep, while I myself wept from pure joy. Get out."