Madeleine had forced herself to eat a light dinner, and a few
minutes before eleven she drank a cup of strong coffee; but when she
entered upon the sights and sounds and stenches of Worth Street she
nearly fainted.
The night was hot. The narrow crooked streets of the Five Points
were lit with gas that shone dimly through the grimy panes of the
lamp posts or through the open doors of groggeries and fetid shops.
The gutter was a sewer. Probably not one of those dehumanized
creatures ever bathed. Some of the children were naked and all looked
as if they had been dipped in the gutters and tossed out to dry. The
streets swarmed with them; and with men and women between the ages of
sixteen and forty. One rarely lived longer than that in the Five
Points. Some were shrieking and fighting, others were horribly quiet.
Men and women lay drunk in the streets or hunched against the
dripping walls, their mouths with black teeth or no teeth hanging
loosely, their faces purple or pallid. Screams came from one of the
tenements, but neither of the two detectives escorting the party
turned his head.
Madeleine had imagined nothing like this. Her only acquaintance with
vice had been in the dens and dives of San Francisco, and she had
pictured something of the same sort intensified. But there was hardly
a point of resemblance. San Francisco has always had a genius for
making vice picturesque. The outcasts of the rest of the world do
their worst and let it go at that. Moreover, in San Francisco she had
never seen poverty. There was work for all, there were no beggars, no
hungry tattered children, no congested districts. Vice might be an
agreeable resource but it was forced on no one; and always the
atmosphere of its indulgence was gay. She had witnessed scenes of
riotous drunkenness, but there was something debonair about even
those bent upon extermination, either of an antagonist or the
chandeliers and glass-ware, and she had never seen men sodden save on
the water front. Even then they were often grinning.
But this looked like plain Hell to Madeleine, or worse. The Hell of
the Bible and Dante had a lively accompaniment of writhing flames and
was presumably clean. This might be an underground race condemned to
a sordid filthy and living death for unimaginable crimes of a
previous existence. Even the children looked as if they had come back
to Earth with the sins of threescore and ten stamped upon their weary
wicked faces. Madeleine's strong soul faltered, and she grasped
Holt's arm.
"Well, you see for yourself," he said unsympathetically. "Better go
back and let me bring him to you. One of our men can easily knock him
out--"
"I'm here and I shall go on. I'll stay all night if necessary."
Lacey looked at her with open adoration; he had fallen truculently
in love with her. If Masters no longer loved her he felt quite equal
to killing him, although with no dreams for himself. He hoped that if
Masters were too far gone for redemption she would recognize the fact
at once, forget him, and find happiness somewhere. He was glad on the
whole that she had come to Five Points.
"What's the program?" asked one of the detectives, kicking a
sprawling form out of the way. "Do you know where he hangs out?"
"No," said Lacey. "He seems to go where fancy leads. We'll have to
go from one groggery to another, and then try the dance houses,
unless they pass the word in time. The police are supposed to have
closed them, you know."
"Yes, they have!" The man's hearty Irish laugh startled these
wretched creatures, unused to laughter, and they forsook their apathy
or belligerence for a moment to stare. "They simply moved to the
back, or to the cellar. They know we believe in lettin' 'em go to the
devil their own way. Might as well turn in here."
They entered one of the groggeries. It was a large room. The ceiling
was low. The walls were foul with the accumulations of many years, it
was long since the tables had been washed. The bar, dripping and
slimy, looked as if about to fall to pieces, and the drinks were
served in cracked mugs. The bar-tender was evidently an ex-prize-
fighter, but the loose skin, empty of muscle, hung from his bare arms
in folds. The air was dense with vile tobacco smoke, adding to the
choice assortment of stenches imported from without and conferred by
Time within. Men and women, boys and girls, sat at the tables
drinking, or lay on the floor. There they would remain until their
drunken stupor wore off, when they would stagger home to begin a new
day. A cracked fiddle was playing. The younger people and some of the
older were singing in various keys. Many were drinking solemnly as if
drinking were a ritual. Others were grinning with evident enjoyment
and a few were hilarious.
The party attracted little general attention. Investigating
travellers, escorted by detectives, had visited the Five Points more
than once, curious to see in what way it justified its reputation for
supremacy over the East End of London and the Montmartre of Paris;
and although pockets usually were picked, no violence was offered if
the detectives maintained a bland air of detachment. They did not
even resent the cologne-drenched handkerchiefs the visitors
invariably held to their noses. As evil odors meant nothing to them,
they probably mistook the gesture for modesty.
Madeleine preferred her smelling salts, and at Holt's suggestion had
wrapped her handkerchief about the gold and crystal bottle. But she
forgot the horrible atmosphere as she peered into the face of every
man who might be Masters. She wore a plain black dress and a small
black hat, but her beauty was difficult to obscure. Her cheeks were
white and her brown eyes had lost their sparkle long since, but men
not too drunk to notice a lovely woman or her manifest close
scrutiny, not only leered up into her face but would have jerked her
down beside them had it not been for their jealous partners and the
presence of the detectives. There was a rumor abroad that the new
City Administration intended to seek approval if not fame by cleaning
out the Five Points, tearing down the wretched tenements and
groggeries, and scattering its denizens; and none was too reckless
not to be on his guard against a calamity which would deprive him not
only of all he knew of pleasure but of an almost impregnable refuge
after crime.
The women, bloated, emaciated with disease, few with any pretension
to looks or finery, made insulting remarks as Madeleine examined
their partners, or stared at her in a sort of terrible wonder. She
had no eyes for them. When she reached the end of the room, looking
down into the faces of the men she was forced to step over, she
turned and methodically continued her pilgrimage up another lane
between the tables.
"Good God!" exclaimed Holt to Lacey. "There he is! I hoped we should
have to visit at least twenty of these hells, and that she'd faint or
give up."
"How on earth can you distinguish any one in this infernal smoke?"
"Got the eyes of a cat. There he is--in that corner by the door.
God! What a female thing he's got with him."
"Hope it'll cure her--and that we can get out of this pretty soon.
Strange things are happening within me."
There was an uproar on the other side of the room. One man had made
up his mind to follow this fair visitor, and his woman was beating
him in the face, shrieking her curses.
A party of drunken sailors staggered in, singing uproariously, and
almost fell over the bar.
But not a sound had penetrated Madeleine's unheeding ears. She had
seen Masters.
His drab had not taken his invitation to bedeck herself too
literally, nor had she ventured into Broadway. But after returning
with the rum she had gone as far as Fell Street and bought herself
all the tawdry finery her funds would command. She wore it with tipsy
pride: a pink frock of slazy silk with as full a flowing skirt as any
on Fifth Avenue during the hour of promenade, a green silk mantle,
and a hat as flat as a plate trimmed with faded roses, soiled
streamers hanging down over her impudent chignon. She was attracting
far more attention than the simply dressed lady from the upper world.
The eyes of the women in her vicinity were redder with envy than with
liquor and they cursed her shrilly. One of the younger women, carried
away by a sudden dictation of femininity, made a dart for the fringed
mantle with obvious intent to appropriate it by force. She received a
blow in the face from the dauntless owner that sent her sprawling,
while the others mingled jeers with their curses.
Masters was leaning on the table, supporting his head with his hands
and laughing. He had passed the stage where he wanted to talk, but it
would be morning before his brain would be completely befuddled.
Madeleine's body became so stiff that her heels left the floor and
she stood on her toes. Holt and Lacey grasped her arms, but she did
not sway; she stood staring at the man she had come for. There was
little semblance of the polished, groomed, haughty man who had won
her. His face was not swollen but it was a dark uniform red and the
lines cut it to the bone. The slight frown he had always worn had
deepened to an ugly scowl. His eyes were injected and dull, his hair
was turning gray. His mouth that he had held in such firm curves was
loose and his teeth stained. She remembered how his teeth had flashed
when he smiled, the extraordinary brilliancy of his gray eyes.... The
groggery vanished ... they were sitting before the fire in the
Occidental Hotel....
The daze and the vision lasted only a moment. She disengaged herself
from her escorts and walked rapidly toward the table.